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NYSE Technologies opens Tokyo liquidity centre

Nyse Technologies, the commercial technology division of Nyse Euronext, today announced the opening of its latest Liquidity Center installation located in Tokyo, Japan.

With growth in Asian markets outpacing many others in the world, the NYSE Technologies Tokyo Liquidity Center offers customers the ability to access these markets with unparalleled speed and reliability with minimal infrastructure costs and a dramatically decreased time to market of only a few weeks to begin trading.

As a result of several recently deployed trading platforms and enhanced data feeds, Tokyo markets have experienced increased trading activity and a consolidation of liquidity from a robust community of traders and vendors, many of which are already members of the Metabit network acquired by NYSE Technologies in September 2011. Through the Liquidity Center’s low-cost, high performance product suite, customers can access key Asian markets, market information and other essential electronic trading infrastructure services utilizing NYSE Technologies’ SFTI network and other familiar infrastructure services, including the Capital Markets Community Platform. The Tokyo Liquidity Center joins existing facilities in the U.S. and London with additional centers launching in Toronto and Brazil in the coming months.

“In working with our customers to identify their primary trading needs and opportunities, we found that Tokyo and the surrounding Asian markets were a very high priority,” said Stanley Young, CEO, NYSE Technologies. “Our Tokyo Liquidity Center addresses those needs with a powerful blend of proven, familiar NYSE Technologies services with seamless connections to all major Tokyo markets. With little to no hardware investment or complicated maintenance, we can have customers connected in just a few weeks as compared to the challenging expense and arduous process of designing, building and maintaining a similar infrastructure themselves.”

The NYSE Technologies Tokyo Liquidity Center was built to facilitate seamless access to key markets and market information in Asia, including the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s new Tdex+ system and arrowne arrownetTM network. Offering a fully managed, broker neutral trading infrastructure solution that utilizes the technology expertise and customer network recently acquired in the Metabit transaction, the liquidity centers also feature many of the same components customers already use to access NYSE Euronext’s global exchanges. Each installation will feature a turn-key portfolio of trading products that include full-featured connectivity, market data, order transmission and risk management services with world-class customer support.

About the Liquidity Center Network
The NYSE Technologies Liquidity Center Network was created to provide a base set of trading, data and connectivity applications that enable traders to quickly and easily enter key global markets that may have been prohibitively difficult or expensive to access in the past. Customers will benefit from reliable, cost effective low-latency solutions for trading and market data services. Strategically located around the world, these facilities will offer many of NYSE Technologies core services, including Metabit MLH which provides low latency, risk-managed access to markets; SuperFeed™, an industrial strength, high-performance market data ticker plant and distribution system; and Marketplace™, one of the largest and most diverse FIX-based trading communities with more than 1,200 market participants.

Source, Finextra, 15.12.2011

Filed under: FIX Connectivity, Japan, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , ,

SunGard Opens Trading Network Hub in Chile

SunGard has established a SunGard Global Network (SGN) hub in Santiago, Chile. SGN provides global order routing, market data and associated services on 120 markets worldwide, linking 2000 asset managers and 500 broker dealers. The Santiago hub, SunGard’s third in Latin America after Mexico City and Sao Paulo, will provide international investors with access to Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago (BCS), Chile’s equity and derivatives exchange. In addition, financial institutions in Chile will be able to access the SGN brokerage community.

SunGard will also offer Valdi Market Access to Chile, which delivers Software-as-a-Service* (SaaS) based connectivity to markets worldwide through SGN. This direct market access service gives exchange members and their clients the ability to trade on electronic markets from any application connected to SGN. It is fully managed by SunGard, helping reduce their infrastructure and support costs. For Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago (BCS), the Valdi Market Access servers will be directly co-located at the exchange, offering low latency services.

Mr. Andres Araya Falcone, chief information officer of the Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago, said, “Chile continues to grow, and the region is focused on being an important player in the global economy. SunGard is supporting this growth by providing electronic trading solutions and global connectivity to market participants in Chile, which will help our exchange members find new investment opportunities. In facilitating exchange connectivity, this should also help attract new firms to the Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago.”

Danielle Tierney, an analyst at Aite Group, said “Opening a new hub in Santiago is a very strategic placement for SunGard. Santiago is the third largest individual exchange in Latin America by market capital and volume, in addition to being a part of the MILA integration of the Andean exchanges. By establishing this additional point of connectivity, SunGard has essentially made its SGN hub into a pan-LatAm offering.”

Philippe Carré, global head of connectivity of SunGard’s global trading business, said, “SunGard’s Valdi and SGN address the connectivity and execution challenges of trading multiple asset classes on multiple markets. SunGard already offers Valdi and SGN solutions in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru, helping traders in Latin America access new markets and diverse liquidity, as well as helping international traders access Latin America markets.”

Source: A-TEAM Electronic Trading, 13.12.2011

Filed under: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Latin America, Mexico, News, Peru, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Global Crisis Reaches China: Unrest Spreads as Growth Stalls

China’s leaders are currently contending with declining demand, rising debt and a real estate bubble. Some factories are laying off workers, suffering financial losses or even closing as orders from crisis-plagued Europe dry up. The economic strains are frustrating workers and consumers in the country, threatening the political establishment and Beijing’s economic miracle.

This October was the third straight month Chinese exports decreased. Along with it, the hopes of German manufacturers that Asia’s growth market might help lift them out of the global crisis as it did in 2008 are also evaporating. This time China faces enormous challenges of its own — a real estate market bubble and local government debt — that could even pose a risk to the global economy.

Related article: Every Chinese Province bankrupt like Greece –  Chinese Regime nearly bankrupt  – 17.11.2011

A police special forces unit appears suddenly. One moment, a worker named Liu* is marching back and forth in front of city hall in Dongguan, China, with about 300 colleagues from the bankrupt factory Bill Electronic. “Give us back the money from our blood and sweat!” they chant.

The next moment, their shouts turn to screams as a few hundred uniformed police with helmets, shields and batons, along with numerous plainclothes security forces, leap out of olive green police vans. The demonstration leaders, including Liu, are rounded up on the side of the street by police dogs. Within just a few minutes’ time, the communist authorities have successfully suffocated the protest.

The men and women, most of them young adults, are packed into yellow buses and hauled back to their factory, where the government exerts massive pressure: By afternoon, they must consent to make do with 60 percent of the wages they are owed by the employment office. Anyone who refuses, officials warn, will receive nothing at all.

The new global crisis has reached China. Debt problems in Europe, the country’s most important trading partner, are starting to dim prospects here in the nation that has effectively become the world’s factory, as well. The unstable United States economy and threat of a trade war between the two superpowers make the situation even more uncertain. As the US presidential election campaign starts too heat up, American politicians are vying to outdo one another in protectionist declarations directed toward their communist rival.

Disillusioned Workers

For Liu, the factory worker, his country’s economic miracle is certainly over for now. Until recently, he worked 12 hours a day assembling accessories for DVD players. But then there was less and less work to do, he says, and a while back, the boss informed workers that fewer orders were coming in from Europe.

After the police break up the demonstration, Liu, now daunted, wanders through his city’s dusty streets, passing row upon row of factories and residential buildings. “We just wanted our full wages, but they set the police on us,” he says. He’s lost his faith in the party and the government.

Especially here in the export region of Guangdong, an experimental laboratory of Chinese capitalism, hardly a day goes by without new bankruptcies or protests. The Yue Chen shoe factory in Dongguan, which produces athletic shoes for a parent company in Taiwan that supplies brands such as New Balance, is in a state of emergency. With orders dropping off, the manufacturer has fired 18 managers. Workers have seen overtime pay eliminated, and normal wages are barely enough to live on. Frustration is so high that some shoe factory workers also went to protest in front of city hall. About 10 of them were injured in the clash with police, some young women from the factory report.

The situation outside the gray factory complex is tense. Thugs in plainclothes guard the entrance, photographing and intimidating anyone who talks to the workers. Inside the factory, the showdown between bosses and employees goes on. Workers sit inactive in cheerless factory rooms. The management has switched off the power in some of the halls where workers normally sew and glue together shoes.

In the rest of China as well, more and more assembly lines are grinding to a halt. In Wenzhou in eastern China, a city known for making cheap lighters, shoes and clothes, a large number of business owners are on the run from their creditors, the private shadow banks that last lent them money. Some of these businesspeople even secretly removed machinery from their factories before taking off.

Demand Drop in Europe and China

China’s showcase industries are also feeling the crunch of the drop in European demand. Suntech Power Holdings, for example, which manufactures solar panels in Wuxi, near Shanghai, reported third-quarter losses of $116 million (€87 million). During the same quarter of the previous year, the company generated $33 million in profits.

Just recently, Asia’s champion exporter was the object of admiration from foreign executives and politicians, a victor in the global financial crisis. Some even believed they’d found a superior alternative to crisis-ridden Western-style market economies in Beijing’s authoritarian-style capitalism.

German carmakers, in particular, let themselves be carried away by China’s growth and made enormous investments. China is Volkswagen’s most important market, and the company hopes to sell 2 million cars there by the end of this year.

But the car boom is slowing. “We haven’t received a single new order in nine days,” admits a smartly dressed salesman at Dongguan’s Porsche dealership. “We’ve never experienced that before.” Many business owners are short on cash, he adds. “They used to mostly pay cash, but now they prefer to buy on credit.”

Cheap Chinese brands such as BYD (“Build Your Dreams”) are also having a harder time selling their cars. Important governmental tax incentives for buying cars ran out last year, and major cities such as Beijing are attempting to ease their congested streets by restricting the number of new automobiles. In October, people in China bought roughly 7 percent fewer cars than in the previous month.

Economic Missteps?

At first, it seemed as if Beijing’s state capitalists had found the magic recipe for endless growth. In 2009, they pumped 4 trillion yuan (the equivalent of €430 billion) — China’s largest stimulus package in history — into building ever more modern highways, train stations and airports. Tax incentives led millions of farmers to purchase refrigerators and computers for the first time.

More or less on the party’s orders, banks threw their money at the people’s feet, and local governments were particularly free about getting themselves into debt. By the end of 2010, outstanding debt stood at 10.7 trillion yuan — nearly a quarter of China’s entire economic output.

Much of these funds went, directly or indirectly, into real estate construction. Local governments discovered that selling land for building made for a lucrative source of revenue — and of collateral, so banks would continue to issue new loans. Thousands of farmers were driven off their fields so that villas and apartment buildings could be built.

Many of those development projects, often megalomaniac undertakings from the start, are now ghost towns. In China’s 15 largest cities in October, the number of newly auctioned building plots decreased by 39 percent compared to October 2010.

While many in the West hold out hope that China can solve the euro and dollar debt crisis with its foreign currency holdings, the rift between rich and poor within the country is growing. The “harmonious society” promised by Hu Jintao, head of the government and of the Communist Party, is at risk.

The country’s central bank has increased interest rates five times since mid-2010 to get inflation under control, while at the same time forcing banks to hold larger reserve funds. Beijing hopes this method will allow it to orchestrate a “soft landing” from its own economic boom. But the maneuver entails risks. Along with the construction industry, the motor driving China’s economy up until now, other sectors such as cement production, steelmaking and furniture construction stand to lose vitality as well.

Part 2: Will Rising Middle Class Turn against Government?

If the real estate bubble bursts, it is sure to turn China’s rising middle class against the government. Until now, the nouveau riche has viewed the Communist Party as a guarantee of their own prosperity. Recently, however, outraged apartment owners organized a demonstration in downtown Shanghai, protesting the decline in the value of their property.

Wang Jiang, 28, points to a nearly complete apartment block in Anting, one of the city’s suburbs. The software company manager bought an apartment on the 16th floor of the building for €138,000 in early September. It was a steep price for 82 square meters (883 square feet), especially since the building is located in an industrial area, hemmed in by factories and highways. But Wang was determined to get in on the boom. He didn’t even take the time to view the housing complex before he bought the apartment. Where else, after all, should he have invested his assets, if not in real estate?

Now China’s state-run banks are paying their customers negative interest and Shanghai’s stock market is considered a high-risk casino, where a few major governmental investors are believed to manipulate exchange rates at will.

Wang’s apartment isn’t even finished yet, but he no longer feels any joy about moving in — not now that the real estate company is offering similar apartments in the same complex for about 20 percent less.

Wang feels he was deceived about his apartment’s resale value. “What are they thinking?” he demands. “Surely they can’t just erase a portion of my assets?”

But they can.

Wang and many other furious apartment owners went to the real estate company’s salesroom to protest the drop in value. Suddenly, Wang relates, someone started smashing the miniature models of apartments. After that, in the blink of an eye, the company’s guards grabbed him and hauled the protesters to the police in minibuses. “We were interrogated until 2 a.m. in the morning,” Wang says. Some of the protesters, he adds, are still in prison and authorities won’t tell their families anything.

A Political Quandary

Whether in Dongguan or Shanghai, cracks seem to be forming everywhere in Chinese society. As long as the one-party dictatorship kept growth in the double digits, most people accepted their lack of freedom. Now, though, Beijing is facing a dilemma. Tough police crackdowns will hardly get the consequences of the stagnating economy under control in the long term. But nor are government subsidies enough to stimulate the economy. It seems neither money nor force will help.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao recently announced a “fine-tuning” of his economic policy: Banks should grant more generous loans, especially to small and medium-sized export companies, he said.

The economic situation now is far more complicated than it was after the 2008 global financial crisis, says economist Lin Jiang. In 2008, Chinese exports collapsed and roughly 25 million migrant workers had to return from factories to their home provinces.

Back in Dongguan, authorities have no cause at the moment to fear any further protest from Liu, the factory worker. He’s too busy looking for a new place to stay. When he lost his job, he also lost his spot in one of the electronics factory’s residences.

* Liu’s name has been changed by the editors in order to protect his identity.

Source: Spiegl Online, 08.12.2011 By Wieland Wagner

Filed under: China, Countries, News, Risk Management, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

NYSE Technologies extends CameronTec FIX enginee relationship in Asia Infrastructure

 CameronTec, the global financial industry’s long-standing provider of FIX infrastructure and connectivity solutions and wholly owned subsidiary of Orc Group (SSE: ORC), today announced an agreement with NYSE Technologies to continue providing the CameronFIX and Catalys technologies for its Asian operations.  Signed in August, the agreement also covers reseller rights for CameronTec products in Japan and is based on CameronTec’s licensing subscription model.

NYSE Technologies recently acquired Metabit, the Tokyo-based provider of high performance market access products that includes a trading community of more than 140 trading firms throughout Japan and Asia.  Continuing the existing relationship between Metabit and CameronTec, CameronFIX has powered many of Metabit’s valued market assets and solutions since 2002.

“Japan and Asia are key priorities for NYSE Technologies and our global customers.  Our products are built in Asia for the local market and CameronFIX has been an important part of that strategic offering since 2002,” said Daniel Bürgin, Head of Asia Pacific, NYSE Technologies. “As a new product line within NYSE Technologies, Metabit will continue to work with CameronTec to provide high performance connectivity to Japan’s exchanges while offering local market participants access to and support for Cameron’s suite of solutions.”

“We are especially pleased to be working alongside NYSE Technologies to continue to deliver FIX technology as part of the Metabit product suite and have them support our products throughout such a critical market as Japan,” says Anders Henriksson, CEO, CameronTec. “CameronTec is continuously working to improve the standard in FIX infrastructure and to provide our markets with cutting edge innovation for which we are renowned. These developments are a further demonstration that CameronTec continues to lead the industry in FIX innovation.”

At the core of CameronTec technology is a unique understanding of the FIX world that comes from a concentration of the world’s largest FIX deployments. With a host of industry-firsts, Catalys and CameronFIX technology provide unprecedented levels of flexibility and innovation that firms need to sustainably differentiate in today’s markets.

Source: NYSE Technologies, 07.12.2011

Filed under: Asia, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, , , , , , , , , , ,

Alternative Latin Investor: Latam Fund & Investment Trends- December 2011 Issue Nr 12

Latin America fund assets to exceed $3 trillion by 2020
-Driven by appetite for Asia – U.S. and European asset managers benefit most

While still smaller than other global regions in terms of aggregate assets – around US$1.4 trillion in mutual fund assets and about $710 billion in pension assets – fast growth in Latin America as a region is capturing the imagination of investors, distributors and asset managers alike, with tactical and strategic opportunities prompting resource allocations and investments.

Subscribe to the free issue of  at http://www.alternativelatininvestor.com/index.html.

Source: Alternative Latin Investor, 06.12.2011

Filed under: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Latin America, Mexico, News, Peru, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Mexico: BMV Mexico´s stock exchange signs agreement with MILA of Chile, Colombia and Peru

During the Second Pacific Alliance Summit celebrated in Merida, Yucatan Mexico on Sunday, December 4th, the Mexican Stock Exchange (subsidiary of BMV Group) signed an agreement of intent with the Exchanges of Colombia, Peru and Chile to join Mercado Integrado Latinoamericano (MILA). President Felipe Calderon (Mexico), President Juan Manuel Santos (Colombia), President Ollanta Humala (Peru) and President Sebastián Piñera (Chile) were all on hand to witness the accord.

The agreement, which will begin to explore operational and technology requirements of this partnership, was signed by Dr. Luis Téllez President of BMV Group, Juan Pablo Córdoba, President of Bolsa de Valores de Colombia, Francis Stenning, General Manager of Bolsa de Valores de Lima (Peru), Mr. Pablo Yrarrázaval, President of Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago and Mr José Antonio Martínez Manager of Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago.

The partnership, which is subject to the authorization of regulators and legal adjustments, will integrate BMV Group to MILA with the goal of increasing listings and bringing further technological and operational benefits to participants in the region.

About BMV Group

BMV Group is a fully integrated Exchange Group that operates cash, listed derivatives and OTC markets for multiple asset classes, including equities, fixed income and exchange traded funds, as well as custody, clearing and settlement facilities and data products for the local and international financial community.

BMV is the second largest stock exchange in Latin America with a total market capitalization of over US$ 453.8 billion. The Exchange is home to some of the most recognizable and profitable global corporations, including: beverage giant Grupo Modelo, whose brands include Corona Extra and Pacifico; América Móvil, one of the largest telecommunications companies in the world; CEMEX, the world’s biggest building materials supplier; and Televisa, the largest media company in the Spanish speaking world, among many others. In addition, MexDer (the Mexican Derivatives Exchange) is also part of BMV Group and is the leading marketplace for trading benchmark Mexican derivatives products.

About MILA

Mercado Integrado Latinoamericano (MILA) is a regional partnership of the Peruvian, Chilean and Colombian Exchanges that started with an agreement signed on November 9th, 2010 to integrate a new trading alternative for LATAM equity markets. It aims i) to expand listing opportunities, ii) to add value in order routing, and iii) to provide market data distribution of the integrated market. It was launched on May 30th, 2011.

Source: Business wire, 05.12.2011

Filed under: BMV - Mexico, Chile, Colombia, Exchanges, Latin America, Mexico, News, Peru, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Brazil: Foreign investors exempetion from paying 2% IOF tax on equity trades BM&FBOVESPA

The Brazilian government has repealed a tax placed on foreign investors trading equities, in a move which domestic exchange BM&F Bovespa believes is sure to stimulate trading activity in the country.

The IOF tax, which stood at 2% for equities since its launch in October 2009, has now been eliminated. The tax was also removed for debt instruments that have a tenor of four years or longer.

The levy was introduced by the Brazilian government in order to help it control the rapid appreciation of the Brazilian real. It was initially set at 2% for all initial investments made by foreigners in fixed income and derivatives transactions. The tax was increased to 6% for fixed income transactions in October 2010.

“We are not easing our currency policy. If there is any risk of the currency appreciating, we will increase the IOF on derivatives,” Brazilian finance minister Guido Mantega is reported to have said at a press conference today.

The announcement by the Brazilian government had an instant positive impact on equities prices in the country, with shares in BM&F Bovespa surging by almost 7% today.

“By reducing the IOF to 0% on foreign investments for equities, the government has sent a clear message about the importance of the capital markets as a way to support local companies,” Sergio Gullo, chief representative for BM&F Bovespa in EMEA, told theTRADEnews.com. “The removal of the tax will encourage more foreign investment to our market.”

The removal of the IOF tax may also help to bring more high-frequency trading (HFT) to Brazil, the increase of which BM&F Bovespa has identified as a key aspect of its growth strategy. Gullo says that the exchange believes HFT will reach 20% of overall equity trading volumes in the next few years.

As part of its plans to attract HFT, BM&F Bovespa has partnered with US exchange operator CME Group to develop Puma, a new US$200 million multi-asst class trading platform. The new platform will be able to process 200 million messages per day and offer an average round-trip latency of 1.1 milliseconds.

“The removal of the tax has very little downside and it appears that the Brazilian government is not concerned about the effect of equity trading on currency appreciation,” said Danielle Tierney, analyst at consultancy Aite Group. “It will be more of a positive for HFT firms than traditional market participants. The exchange should have no trouble in reaching its 20% HFT target.” Source: Trade News, 01.12.2011

São Paulo, December 01, 2011 – BM&FBOVESPA considers the measure that the Brazilian government announced today as bang on target, demonstrating an understanding that the Brazilian market is going through a moment of great opportunities and also constitutes a fundamental instrument for companies’ growth and the development of the country.

Between 2004 and 2011, Brazilian companies held 232 public share offerings, of which 138 were IPOs. These operations resulted in a total of BRL 370.7 billion raised, which went towards these companies’ growth projects, contributing towards a significant increase in job creation and incomes in Brazil. It is important to bear in mind that around 70% of this volume came from foreign investors.

Brazil’s capital market has a great capacity to attract foreign investment, due to its credibility built on strong regulatory foundations and on best practices in corporate governance.

In this manner, BM&FBOVESPA believes that with the government measure to exempt the IOF tax on operations by foreign investors, there will be an even more favorable picture for the more than 40 companies that are waiting for the right moment for their share offerings to raise the resources they need for their investments and growth in 2012.

Source: BM&FBOVESPA, 2.12.2011

Filed under: BM&FBOVESPA, Brazil, Exchanges, Latin America, News, , , , , , , ,

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