About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all short publications by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Type
- Title


Home
About
Events
Books
Short Publications
Statements
Annual Reports

Home >  Research Areas >  Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee >  Access by Institutional Investors to Foreign Electronic Trading Venues
Access by Institutional Investors to Foreign Electronic Trading Venues
Print Mail
Posted: Monday, May 5, 2003
SHADOW COMMITTEE STATEMENTS
Statement of the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee  (Washington)
Publications Date: May 5, 2003

Statement No. 190

For information contact:

Marshall Blume
(215) 898-7616
Hal S. Scott
(617) 495-4590
Peter J. Wallison
(202) 862-5864

Institutional investors in the United States are constantly trying to reduce their trading costs, which are a direct drag on performance. The Securities and Exchange Commission should encourage any innovation that may reduce these costs. Most innovations fail, but if they succeed, U.S. investors benefit.

In the U.S., institutional investors routinely utilize electronic access to the Electronic Communications Networks and other trading venues when such access can reduce trading costs. U.S. institutional investors do not currently have similar electronic access to foreign markets.

Foreign trading venues encounter some legal risk if they permit direct electronic access to U.S. investors without prior SEC approval. The SEC has taken the position that any foreign trading venue that provides electronic assess to a U.S. institutional investor, as distinct from telephonic access through U.S. registered broker-dealer, may be subject to U.S. regulation. In the rapidly changing world of telecommunications, the differences among methods of communication between the U.S. and foreign countries should not determine whether access is permissible, and it is time that the SEC clarify how U.S. institutional investors can link themselves with foreign trading venues.

To facilitate the development and availability of new foreign trading venues to U.S. institutional investors in non-U.S. equities, the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee urges the SEC to publish conditions under which a foreign trading venue can provide electronic access to U.S. institutional investors. Providing criteria for electronic access will reduce the regulatory risk of foreign venues associated with allowing electronic access by U.S. institutional investors. The availability of such access may reduce the trading costs of U.S. institutional investors, which will benefit, among others, individual investors in mutual funds.

Related Links
More about the event
Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee


U.S. Committee Members

George G. Kaufman, Co-Chair
Loyola University Chicago

Richard Herring, Co-Chair  
University of Pennsylvania

Marshall Blume
University of Pennsylvania

Charles W. Calomiris
AEI

Kenneth W. Dam
University of Chicago School of Law 

Robert A. Eisenbeis
Cumberland Advisors

Edward J. Kane
Boston College

Robert E. Litan
Kauffman Foundation

Kenneth Scott
Stanford University

Chester Spatt
Carnegie Mellon University

Peter J. Wallison
AEI

Members of the: