Adam Sussman News
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A Wall Street regulator is considering new rules to shine light on dark trading after the largest U.S. dark pool operator stopped sharing data on the volume of its trades.
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Credit Suisse Group AG, operator of the largest U.S. dark pool, said it will no longer publicly disseminate monthly volume data for the private stock-trading venue, according to an executive at Tabb Group LLC.
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Revenue from high-frequency stock trading may increase by about 22 percent to $2.2 billion in 2013 as volume in U.S. equity markets rebounds following a three-year slump, according to Tabb Group LLC.
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A three-year effort to fine-tune curbs on volatility for individual stocks enters a new phase today in the U.S.
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A cowboy-hat-wearing robot with “Sell” emblazoned across its chest adorns a wall-length mural in the lounge of RGM Advisors LLC in Austin, Texas. Another robot, with “Buy” on it, wobbles toward a green Wall Street sign as two machines tote spark-emitting high-speed cables.
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High-frequency firms deploying fast computers made $7.2 billion in trading profits in 2009. After the May 6 10-minute crash, regulators are studying how to put the brakes on.
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Getco LLC, the closely held high- frequency trading company that negotiated a takeover of Knight Capital Group Inc. in December, said profit plunged last year as stock-market volume dropped and volatility evaporated.
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Citadel Securities, a unit of Citadel LLC in Chicago, has fired about 10 percent of its staff.
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Goldman Sachs Group Inc. last year bought stakes in Shumway Capital Partners LLC and Level Global Investors LP, as a way for its clients to share in the fees of the two multibillion-dollar hedge funds.
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The firms most likely to benefit first from new rules that would allow hedge funds to conduct wide advertising campaigns aren’t hedge funds.
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