Archives: November , 2013

ETF and Options Execution Firm Expands Global Footprint: More Hiring In Store

wall-street-letter-logo  Courtesy of Wall Street Letter reporter Sean Creamer

Institutional brokerage WallachBeth Capital LLC will expand its staff to bolster electronic trading across exchange-traded funds and options over the next two years, according to Michael Wallach, CEO.

The agency broker-dealer aims to bring on 15-20 people, some of whom may be college interns who transition to permanent employment with the company, according to Wallach.  He added “this strategy ensures the staff has a rounded experience in the firm before taking up a permanent role.”

WB CEO Michael Wallach (r), Pres/COO David Beth (l)
WB CEO Michael Wallach (r), Pres/COO David Beth (l)

Beyond staff expansion, the brokerage, whose headquarters is based in the heart of Wall Street and maintains a footprint in the UK, is aiming to expand its ETF execution presence to South America to serve pension fund managers in these regions, Wallach noted. “ Many money managers throughout the world now trade US ETFs. We want to introduce our model to any region whose managers want and need real best execution services.”   To view the full article from WSL, please click here.

No Hiding The Housing Recovery: $ITB and $XHB

Rareview Macro LogoExcerpt from Nov 22 edition of Rareview Macro’s “Sight Beyond Sight” morning commentary; courtesy of macro market trading expert Neil Azous..

At a micro level in the US, all one has to do is look at the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (ITB) and SPDR S&P
Homebuilders ETF (XHB) to see the new found interest in the return of the Housing recovery call come early next
year.

The Bloomberg Chart of the Day illustrates that between Nov 15th  and January 31st the S&P 500 Homebuilding Index has come out ahead of the SP500 every year since 2005, and led last year by ~17%. The Raymond James analyst who is the source of this observation said this “…might be the most powerful and consistent seasonal trading phenomenon we’ve witnessed among any industry group.”

To continue reading the entire day’s edition of Sight Beyond Sight, please click here (subscription required, free 2-week trial, no credit card required.)

Pre-Thanksgiving Special: Custodians Flip The Bird to RIA Customers Seeking ETF Best Execution

riabiz logo  Courtesy of RIABiz and reporter Lisa Shidler

MarketsMuse Editor Note: Kudos to Lisa “Lois Lane” Shidler for her insightful expose profiling how custodians to RIAs excel at squeezing lemons from customers who they must think are lemmings. Though Ms. Schilder neglected to spotlight the fact that custodians systematically sell their customer orders to select principal trading firms (e.g KCG) who cherry-pick orders they can exploit for trading profit, her insight i.e. the practice of imposing exorbitant trade-away fees on those very same customers who seek to secure the real best prices via independent execution only firms is a topic worthy of sharing this story with industry regulators. Too bad those latter folks don’t get it…perhaps because they’re beholden to the biggest custodians in the industry?

Here are a few excerpts:

The big four RIA custodians are now charging advisory firms giant new fees — in the tens of thousands in some cases — relating to some ETF purchases.

Schwab Advisor Services, TD Ameritrade Institutional, Pershing Advisor Solutions LLC and Fidelity Institutional Wealth Services are levying what are known as “trade-away” fees to RIA firms that buy exchange traded funds through a broker-dealer other than the one owned by the custodian. The advisor typically chooses to use these third parties because they believe that RIA custodians are executing trades poorly along the bid-ask curve and forcing them to make ETF purchases at unacceptably high prices.

At first blush the fees look fairly benign. The fee at Fidelity is a $20 fee per account per trade. TD Ameritrade charges $25 per account. Pershing’s fee ranges from $8 to $20 per account depending on the volume of the trade. Schwab declined to disclose its fee through its spokesman, Greg Gable.

These fees have put RIAs like Chris Romano, director of research and trading with Fusion Investments Group LLC in Pittsburgh invests, in a bind in certain instances.

Though his firm manages about $139 million in assets, the bulk of them are institutional and banks custody them. Fusion advises for other RIAs but those assets are held away. In short, his firm manages just $11 million of mostly ETFs with Fidelity’s RIA custody platform, which means Fidelity’s $20 fee is too costly for the size of trades that he does.

“We don’t even consider trading away [in effort to get best execution] at Fidelity because of the high ticket trade away fee,” Romano says. “On the smaller account sizes, it can be a really significant fee. If the fee is $20, that can really add up.” Continue reading

The Buffet ETF

wallstcheatsheet Courtesy of WallStreet Cheat Sheet

Warren Buffett is one of the most successful investors in history. The chief executive officer and largestshareholder of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKA) has navigated numerous bull and bear markets, becoming a multi-billionaire in the process. As a result, he is also one of the most closely followed investors. Courtesy of a new filing, individual investors have a peek at how Buffett is investing.

Warren-Buffett.........

The Oracle of Omaha is best known as a value investor who takes large positions in well-established companies, waiting for Mr. Market to value them properly. His recent filing with the SEC reaffirms that image. Berkshire Hathaway raised its stake in Suncor Energy (NYSE:SU) and Verisign(NASDAQ:VRSN), but its biggest investments include some of the most popular blue chips known to Wall Street. Here’s a look at Berkshire’s top ten stocks, according to dollar value at the end of September. To continue reading, please click here to visit WallStreet CheatSheet

Trading Twitter ($TWTR) Options: Eye On Implied Volatility

moneybeat-logo  Courtesy of Kaitlyn Kiernan, Wall Street Journal

Twitter Inc.’sTWTR -1.67% frenzied initial public offering last week is about to be followed by a highly anticipated debut on Friday of options tracking the company’s stock.

But with such a short track record in the stock, prices on the newly listed options contracts might be volatile, options traders say, as they try to pin down an important aspect of an options price.

One key aspect of an option contracts price is a measure known as “implied volatility,” or an estimated measure of the magnitude and frequency of future stock price swings. But with options trading beginning just over a week after the initial offering, there is little data on which to base such a measure.

“It’ll probably take a couple days to figure out where [implied volatility] should fall in,” said Mickey Harned, a broker at WallachBeth Capital LLC. “When GoogleGOOG -0.12% options started, the [implied volatilities] were all mispriced and people lost a lot of money, so people are going to be afraid to make too large a market,” he said.

That means Twitter options traded Friday might be in smaller blocks of less than 100 contracts, Mr. Harned said.

For the full story from WSJ MONEYBEAT, please click here

iBillionaire Index To Track Big Buck Bets; ETF in the Works

indexuniverseCourtesy of Hung Tran/IndexUniverse

MarketsMuse editor: In the category of “what will they think of next?”

A new index tracking the success of billionaire investors went live today, and a related “Billionaire ETF”—perhaps a bit like the Global X Guru ETF (GURU | C-48)—appears to be in the works as well.

iBillionaire Inc. today launched a new index designed for investors to track the investment portfolios of luminaries such as Warren Buffett, Carl Icahn and George Soros. The New York-based firm said in a press release it’s also designing an iBillionaire ETF to boost investors’ portfolios “like a billionaire,” according to the firm.

The iBillionaire Index, like Global X’s $251 million ETF ‘GURU,’  is devised from 13F filings and is composed of the top 30 large-cap equities listed on the S&P 500 in which the billionaire investors have made the most bets. The index will be calculated and distributed by the New York Stock Exchange.

For the full article, please visit IndexUniverse.com

Veteran’s Day: Wall Street Firm Pledges November Profits to Children of Fallen Patriots Foundation

MischlerLogo Nov 2012In honor of this coming Veteran’s Day, Mischler Financial Group, Wall Street’s oldest (and largest) service-disabled veteran (SDV) owned institutional brokerage/banking firm (and 1 of 9 investment bank selling group members for yesterdays Twitter IPO) announced last week the firm has pledged 10% of November profits to Children of Fallen Patriots Foundation.

CEO Dean Chamberlain, Mischler Financial Group
CEO Dean Chamberlain, Mischler Financial Group

According to Dean Chamberlain, CEO of Mischler Financial Group, “In the course of our serving leading corporations, public plan sponsors and the industry’s most recognized investment managers, our mandate is to dedicate the fruits of those labors to veteran-centric organizations that make a crucial difference in the lives of military veterans and their families. Towards that goal, our embracing an organization that sponsors college education for deserving, yet financially-challenged children of military members killed in the line of duty is perhaps one of the most impactful ways that we can “pay it forward.”

Noted David Kim, the Founder and President of Children of Fallen Patriots and the co-head of Investor Relations for Apax Partners, one of the world’s most recognized private equity firms, “Among the many formidable organizations and individuals who support our efforts, having the additional financial support of the oldest veteran-owned Wall Street firm speaks volumes to the very heart of our mission.”

For the full story, please click here

Hedge Fund Traders Favor ETFs For a Reason

indexuniverseCourtesy of Paul Amery, IndexUniverse.com

Hedge funds and index trackers are polar opposites: the highest- and lowest-fee ends of the investment product scale.

 

And yet a surprising number of hedge funders are fans of indexing. Reportedly, many are closet admirers, buying ETFs and index funds for their own portfolios—as though stepping out of a Ferrari and into a well-used family diesel when away from the public gaze.

 

Others have switched career to embrace tracker funds. Alan Miller, manager of a fund of ETFs at SCM Private, was once a hedge fund investor at New Star. Victor Haghani, partner at Long Term Capital Management in the 1990s, now looks after a $200 million portfolio of index funds and ETFs, Elm Partners.

 

Lars Kroijer, who ran an equity hedge fund, Holte Capital, between 2002 and 2008, is another convert. But the Dane no longer manages client money himself (though he sits on several fund boards). Instead, he’s turned author.

Following a well-received account of his hedge fund experiences (“Confessions of a Hedge Fund Manager”), published three years ago, Kroijer has written a new book, “Investing Demystified”, with the objective of explaining why index investing is the rational approach for almost all of us.

To continue reading the full story from IndexUniverse, please click above IU logo.

 

 

Professional ETF Trading Insight: Through The Lens Of A Leading Market Expert

One of the best video elements for sophisticated investment managers [and all others] seeking expert insight re ETF portfolio management. Interview below with one of the global ETF market’s most recognized trade execution experts is courtesy of financial industry publisher and conference producer MarketsMedia. Many thanks to them for making this clip available.

Wall Street Boutique Honors Military; Pledges Profits to Children of Fallen Patriots

ChildrenFallenPatriots (1) Newport Beach, CA & Stamford, CT, Nov 4–Mischler Financial Group, Wall Street’s oldest minority investment bank and institutional brokerage owned and operated by service-disabled veterans announced today that in honor of this upcoming Veteran’s Day, the firm has pledged 10% of its entire November profits to Children of Fallen Patriots Foundation (“CFPF”), a national organization that provides college scholarships and educational counseling to military children who have a lost a parent in the line of duty.

According to Dean Chamberlain, CEO of Mischler Financial Group, “In the course of our serving leading corporations, public plan sponsors and the industry’s most recognized investment managers, our mandate is to dedicate the fruits of those labors to veteran-centric organizations that can make a crucial difference in the lives of military veterans and their families. Towards that goal, our embracing an organization that sponsors college education for deserving, yet financially-challenged children of military members killed in the line of duty is perhaps one of the most impactful ways that we can “pay it forward.”  MischlerLogo Nov 2012

Noted David Kim, a U.S. Military Academy graduate, the Founder and President of Children of Fallen Patriots and the co-head of Investor Relations for Apax Partners, one of the world’s most recognized private equity firms, “Among the many formidable organizations and individuals who support our efforts, having the additional financial support of the oldest veteran-owned Wall Street firm speaks volumes to the very heart of our mission.”  For the entire story, please click here.

Wall Street Women Awards Winner: Jennica Ross – Rising Star

tradersmagazine logo Courtesy of John D’Antona, TRADERS magazine.

Recognizing today’s and tomorrow’s leaders, the Rising Star Award is intended for high-impact professionals who will continue to lead the industry for years to come.

Rising Star: Jennica Ross, Director of Strategic Relationships, WallachBeth Capital

To fully understand the business of trading, one must be able to see the whole picture clearly, else risk missing something.

Rising Star Jennica Ross

It’s very easy in trading to get highly specialized, niche-oriented and absorbed in market microstructure, and to lose sight of what the trading industry’s goal is, said Jennica Ross, director of strategic relationships at WallachBeth Capital. That’s why she chooses to view things from a client-centric, holistic approach.

“We tend to be very critical on what our immediate function is—get down into the weeds—but sometimes we forget to step back and look at the industry as a whole,” Ross said. “We’ve got to challenge ourselves to see what we do on a day-to-day and how it affects our clients and what trends it gives way to.”

A self-described “big-picture person,” Ross is always moving ahead, learning new concepts and implementing fresh ideas that keep her and WallachBeth Capital ahead of the curve. She credits her ethos in part to her liberal arts background—she is a graduate of Princeton University—and to her parents, one a former principal and the other a former teacher.  To continue reading the entire story, please click here