by winston » Sat May 16, 2015 8:52 am
Hong Kong to Ban Individual Investors from ‘Dark Pool’ Trading
Ban will come into effect on December 1
By GREGOR STUART HUNTER And JACKY WONG
HONG KONG—Hong Kong’s securities regulator said Friday it will ban individual investors from trading in “dark pools” following a 15-month consultation with the city’s finance industry on how to regulate these alternative trading venues.
The ban will come into effect on December 1 this year, the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) said.
Proponents of dark pools—private trading venues and frequently operated by big banks—say they allow investors to transact more easily and cheaply away from the predations of so-called high-frequency trading firms.
But regulators in the U.S. and Europe are not convinced, and have sought to apply a greater degree of scrutiny.
In Hong Kong, the question of regulation has centered on whether retail clients—often understood as mom-and-pop investors and other nonprofessionals, but also encompassing wealthy private investors such as the city’s real estate and retailing tycoons—should be allowed to trade in the dark.
“They were very concerned about retail investors getting involved in something relatively complex,” Lee Porter, managing director for Asia-Pacific at Liquidnet, said before the announcement. “The intention is to try to protect the interests of retail investors and make sure they understand what they’re doing and getting involved with.”
Trading through automated trading systems—the SFC’s catchall term for electronic trading, which includes dark pools—accounted for HK$35.7 billion in March, or 0.9% of all market turnover, according to Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd.
Source: WSJ
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"