We would love to hear your thoughts about our site and services, please take our survey here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Barclays Document Confirms Drop In Dark Pool Clients Since Lawsuit

Thu, 24th Jul 2014 09:10

LONDON (Alliance News) - A new document posted in the investment banking section of Barclays PLC's website has confirmed that the number of clients using its dark pool has declined since the New York Attorney General filed a lawsuit alleging that the bank gave an unfair advantage to high-frequency traders at the expense of its other investor clients, despite presenting the trading platform as having special safeguards to protect against "predatory" or "toxic" traders.

According to the document, the LX alternative trading system continues to receive and execute client orders, and Barclays is "committed to operating an effective ATS for its clients".

"Since the announcement of the Attorney General?s complaint the number of clients, including several fiduciary clients, using LX has declined. Similarly, the amount of order flow routed to LX also has declined. However, LX continues to receive and execute client orders and Barclays is committed to operating an effective ATS for its clients," the document obtained from Barclays' website reads.

In a separate form, Barclays said that the average daily volume of shares executed in LX ATS in June declined to 82.4 million from 94.6 million in May, but the total shares executed increased to 3.46 billion from 1.99 billion. The average daily notional value of shares traded fell to USD6.27 billion from USD7.08 billion in May. The average trade size in LX increased to 178 shares from 173 shares. Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's lawsuit against the bank came on June 25.

Although May's monthly summary included a table of "execution aggressiveness", on scale from passive to mild to aggressive, June's does not.

A Barclays spokesperson declined to comment on the documents.

The statistics come after the US's Financial Industry Regulatory Authority earlier this week published data showing that the number of NMS Tier 1 equities traded in Barclays' dark pool fell by two-thirds in the week of June 30 from the week of June 23. The number traded in the pool fell to 66.4 million from 197.0 million.

In the week of June 16, immediately prior to the allegations, Barclays' dark pool had been ranked in second place in terms of volumes, with 312.1 million shares traded, only behind the 348.3 million of CROS Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC. Barclays was in the week of June 30 in twelfth place, while Credit Suisse still occupied the top spot.

The lawsuit and the fall in volumes come after Barclays put equities trading close to the heart of its investment banking division as part of a revamp unveiled in May to scale the investment banking unit down and make the bank better balanced as a whole.

Barclays shares were Thursday quoted up 0.8% at 212.60 pence.

By Samuel Agini; samagini@alliancenews.com; @samuelagini

Copyright 2014 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Related Shares

More News
2 May 2024 13:48

UK shareholder meetings calendar - next 7 days

1 May 2024 14:50

Barclays to cut jobs in investment banking - reports

(Sharecast News) - Barclays has reportedly kicked off a fresh round of redundancies, cutting "a few hundred roles" at its investment bank as it looks ...

30 Apr 2024 20:30

GM in talks with Barclays to replace Goldman Sachs in credit card partnership -source

NEW YORK April 29 (Reuters) -

29 Apr 2024 10:02

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Deutsche Bank likes Frasers; Barclays cuts JD

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Monday morning and Friday:

26 Apr 2024 16:35

London close: Stocks buoyed by banking, mining positivity

(Sharecast News) - London's equity markets closed positively on Friday, buoyed by gains in the banking sector following better-than-expected results f...

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.