Archive for the ‘dealers’ Category

Currenex

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Currenex, Inc. is based in New York, New York, providing a platform for the electronic foreign exchange service industry, including private labels. It was founded in 1999 and focuses on connecting buy and sell sides using the FIX protocol and other application programming interfaces.

State Street Corporation bought Currenex for $564 million in March 2007 and Currenex is now an operating division of State Street with offices in New York; Redwood City, California; Chicago; Vancouver; and London. New York was the corporate office and remains the principal office for sales, operations, and customer service. Engineering is based out of Redwood City, with developers in Vancouver, New York, and London.

Currenex has several patents which focus on lowering latency and improving execution technology. Traders can trade spot, forwards, swaps, and loans and deposits with a counterparty in a chosen currency. Currenex offers Executable Streaming Prices (ESP), Request for Quotation (RFQ), Benchmarking, Algorithmic Trading, and complete Prime brokerage functionality with integrated Straight Through Processing (STP).

The debacle of Long-Term Capital Management

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) lost 4.6 billion U.S. dollars in fixed income arbitrage in September 1998. LTCM had attempted to make money on the price difference between different bonds. For example, it would sell U.S. Treasury securities and buy Italian bond futures. The concept was that because Italian bond futures had a less liquid market, in the short term Italian bond futures would have a higher return than U.S. bonds, but in the long term, the prices would converge. Because the difference was small, a large amount of money had to be borrowed to make the buying and selling profitable.

The downfall in this system began on August 17, 1998, when Russia defaulted on its ruble debt and domestic dollar debt. Because the markets were already nervous due to the Asian financial crisis, investors began selling non-U.S. treasury debt and buying U.S. treasuries, which were considered a safe investment. As a result the price on US treasuries began to increase and the return began decreasing because there were many buyers, and the return on other bonds began to increase because there were many sellers. This caused the difference between the prices of U.S. treasuries and other bonds to increase, rather than to decrease as LTCM was expecting. Eventually this caused LTCM to fold, and their creditors had to arrange a bail-out. More controversially, officials of the Federal Reserve assisted in the negotiations that led to this bail-out, on the grounds that so many companies and deals were intertwined with LTCM that if LTCM actually failed, they would as well, causing a collapse in confidence in the economic system. Thus LTCM failed as a fixed income arbitrage fund, although it is unclear what sort of profit was realized by the banks that bailed LTCM out.