Changes may be coming to the
U.S. stock market. Gary Gensler, the chairman
of the Securities and Exchange Commission, has
repeatedly said since being sworn in April that he is concerned that there
is not enough transparency and too many conflicts in how stocks are
traded.
“We cannot take for granted
that the U.S. equity markets will always be considered the most efficient, the
most liquid in the world,” Gensler told Barron's this past summer. “We have to be realistic
that technology changes, and we’ve got to update things.”
One powerful person in the
market, Ken Griffin, the
billionaire founder of the investment firm Citadel and market maker Citadel
Securities, which handles about a
quarter of the stock trades in the U.S., is wary of too much change.
The U.S. "has the most
efficient equity market in the world," he told the New York Times DealBook Online Summit today.
Griffin was asked about
being "on the other end of a meme barrage" this year. The
Citadel CEO has been a target of criticism and abuse from the
"Reddit Army" of young traders, many of whom see the role of market
makers and hedge funds in the stock market as manipulative, particularly when
it comes to meme stocks. The experience, Griffin said,
"was like a bad comedy joke."
More substantively, he
pushed back on the argument that payments to brokers like Robinhood from market makers like Citadel Securities
that handle the trades -- known as payment for order flow -- are bad for
investors.
"Most of the
20-year-olds that I know are really grateful for the current market structure
in America," Griffin said. "They make a point that when I go to
trade, I can trade far cheaper on Robinhood or on Schwab's platform or
Fidelity or Etrade than I
can trade on the New York Stock
Exchange."
"You don't get price
improvement on an exchange-based world," he added.
The prospect of an overhaul
of market structure alarmed him.
"Are we going to go
back to re-regulated markets and taking back the competition that has allowed
Americans to save so much money when trading?" If Gensler does that,
Griffin said, it would be "a tragedy."
Still, Griffin acknowledged
that the market regulation could be "fine tuned." As an
example, he pointed to allowing highly liquid names to be traded in half-cent
spreads, instead of in penny spreads.
About the current stock market, Griffin said it was "really frothy," citing the recent swing in Tesla's stock price as an example of "pretty significant stock price moves on relatively small events. "
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