Financial Markets Software - Electronic Trading Systems, Technical Analysis Software, NASDAQ, Trading Room, High-Frequency Trading, Tradestation, F (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Electronic trading systems, Technical analysis software, NASDAQ, Trading room, High-frequency trading, TradeStation, Flash trading, OTC Markets Group, Inc., ShareScope, MultiCharts, ESignal, Advisorshares, SecFinex, Sola Trading, CarryQuote, MetaTrader 4, Order management system, Adaptive Modeler, Electronic trading platform, Nettrader, Lightspeed Financial, CQG, Qtstalker, JQuantLib, WinChart, Avonko, TAURUS, Piggy Market Squeak, List of active electronic trading protocols, SEAQ, Gstock, Cotation Assistee en Continu, Low latency trading, CATS, MetaStock, Execution management system, Sierra Chart, RFQ-hub, TA-Lib, Nouveau Systeme de Cotation, SWX Europe, CompuTrac, Sola Access Information Language. Excerpt: A trading-room gathers traders operating on financial markets. RVS Trading-roomThe trading-room is also often called the front office. The terms dealing-room and trading-floor are also used, the latter being inspired from that of a open outcry stock exchange. As open outcry is gradually replaced by electronic trading, the trading-room gets the only living place that is emblematic of the financial market. It is also the likeliest place within the financial institution where the most recent technologies are implemented before being disseminated in its other businesses. Before the sixties or seventies, the banks' capital market businesses were mostly split in as many departments, sometimes scattered in several sites, as market segments: money market (domestic and currencies), foreign exchange, long-term financing, exchange, bond market... By gathering these teams to a single site, banks want to ease: Trading-rooms first appeared among US bulge bracket brokers, such as Morgan Stanley, from 1971, with the creation of NASDAQ, which requires an equity trading desk on their premises, and the growth of the secondary...

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Electronic trading systems, Technical analysis software, NASDAQ, Trading room, High-frequency trading, TradeStation, Flash trading, OTC Markets Group, Inc., ShareScope, MultiCharts, ESignal, Advisorshares, SecFinex, Sola Trading, CarryQuote, MetaTrader 4, Order management system, Adaptive Modeler, Electronic trading platform, Nettrader, Lightspeed Financial, CQG, Qtstalker, JQuantLib, WinChart, Avonko, TAURUS, Piggy Market Squeak, List of active electronic trading protocols, SEAQ, Gstock, Cotation Assistee en Continu, Low latency trading, CATS, MetaStock, Execution management system, Sierra Chart, RFQ-hub, TA-Lib, Nouveau Systeme de Cotation, SWX Europe, CompuTrac, Sola Access Information Language. Excerpt: A trading-room gathers traders operating on financial markets. RVS Trading-roomThe trading-room is also often called the front office. The terms dealing-room and trading-floor are also used, the latter being inspired from that of a open outcry stock exchange. As open outcry is gradually replaced by electronic trading, the trading-room gets the only living place that is emblematic of the financial market. It is also the likeliest place within the financial institution where the most recent technologies are implemented before being disseminated in its other businesses. Before the sixties or seventies, the banks' capital market businesses were mostly split in as many departments, sometimes scattered in several sites, as market segments: money market (domestic and currencies), foreign exchange, long-term financing, exchange, bond market... By gathering these teams to a single site, banks want to ease: Trading-rooms first appeared among US bulge bracket brokers, such as Morgan Stanley, from 1971, with the creation of NASDAQ, which requires an equity trading desk on their premises, and the growth of the secondary...

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Product Details

General

Imprint

University-Press.Org

Country of origin

United States

Release date

September 2013

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

September 2013

Authors

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 2mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

32

ISBN-13

978-1-230-83657-7

Barcode

9781230836577

Categories

LSN

1-230-83657-8



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