Market Data: The Lifeblood of Efficient Engagement in Global Markets
A New Study by Columbia Business School Professor Charles Jones Adds
Substance and Dispels Myths about Information Produced By U.S. Equity
Markets
ATLANTA & NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Columbia Business School Professor CharlesJones has released a
research paper that examines the role and evolution of equity market
data, and reaffirms that exchanges deliver moderately priced, high value
market data that enables users to fuel investment decisions for better
business returns. The New York Stock Exchange commissioned the paper to
provide the industry with a fact-based review of the U.S. equity
exchange market data landscape.
The paper entitled Understanding the Market for U.S. Equity Market
Data, released this week, concludes that the evolution of market
data, and the regulatory structure by which it is governed, “has allowed
the development of a large suite of data products with a wide variety of
features at differing prices levels, and the resulting unparalleled
transparency concerning stock trading activity is likely one of the
reasons that U.S. equity market quality is the best the world.”
In an exhaustive 50-page examination of the history and evolution of
market data, Professor Jones provides an economic analysis on usage,
pricing and revenues derived by the exchanges that produce it, and the
end-users -- such as investors, investment managers, and broker dealers
-- who use it to drive their business operations. In a comprehensive
framework, Professor Jones evaluates both exchange proprietary market
data and the consolidated data disseminated by Securities Information
Processors (SIPs).
In his paper, Professor Jones provides a number of important conclusions:
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Using a variety of metrics, both exchange proprietary market data and
SIP revenues are modest and have remained stable over time, while
market data quality has seen substantial improvement.
-
Taken in sum, the total revenues for exchange market data are orders
of magnitude smaller than those of similar industry participants,
including the revenues earned by third-party vendors who redistribute
exchange market data.
-
The market is highly regulated and characterized by robust
competition. Professor Jones notes that exchanges compete with each
other in selling proprietary market data products, and must file
pricing schedules with the SEC. They also compete with third-party
data feed vendors and with data provided by alternative trading
systems, though these providers’ fees are unregulated.
“Exchange market data is crucial for efficient, transparent price
discovery and enables automation that has reduced costs for end
investors. Market data should be heralded as a success story, but is
often misrepresented as a burden,” said Head of NYSE Transaction
Businesses, Michael Blaugrund.
“Professor Jones’s analysis reinforces the reality that everyone, from
individual investors checking a stock price on their phone to
institutions making billion dollar decisions with algorithmic systems,
benefits from exchanges producing an accessible and indispensable
element of the U.S. financial system.”
Professor Jones’s paper, Understanding the Market for U.S. Equity
Market Data, is now available online.
About Professor Charles M. Jones
Professor
Jones is the Robert W. Lear Professor of Finance and Economics and
the Senior Vice Dean at Columbia Business School, where he studies
securities markets, liquidity and trading costs. He is noted for his
research on short sales, algorithmic and high-frequency trading, and
variation of liquidity over time. Jones is currently a member of the
economic advisory committee of FINRA and has headed the economic
advisory board at Nasdaq. He has also served as co-editor of the Journal
of Financial Markets, visiting economist at both the New York Fed and
New York Stock Exchange, and as an adviser to the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission.
About Intercontinental Exchange
Intercontinental
Exchange (NYSE: ICE) is a Fortune 500 and Fortune Future 50 company
formed in the year 2000 to modernize markets. ICE serves customers by
operating the exchanges, clearing
houses and information services they rely upon to invest, trade and
manage risk across global financial and commodity markets. A leader in
market data, ICE Data
Services serves the information and connectivity needs across
virtually all asset classes. As the parent company of the New
York Stock Exchange, the company raises more capital than any other
exchange in the world, driving economic growth and transforming markets.
Trademarks of ICE and/or its affiliates include Intercontinental
Exchange, ICE, ICE block design, NYSE and New York Stock Exchange.
Information regarding additional trademarks and intellectual property
rights of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. and/or its affiliates is
located at http://www.intercontinentalexchange.com/terms-of-use.
Key Information Documents for certain products covered by the EU
Packaged Retail and Insurance-based Investment Products Regulation can
be accessed on the relevant exchange website under the heading “Key
information Documents (KIDS).”
Safe Harbor Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
of 1995 -- Statements in this press release regarding ICE's business
that are not historical facts are "forward-looking statements" that
involve risks and uncertainties. For a discussion of additional risks
and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ from those
contained in the forward-looking statements, see ICE's Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, including, but not limited to, the
risk factors in ICE's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2017, as filed with the SEC on February 7, 2018.
SOURCE: Intercontinental Exchange
ICE-CORP

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Source: Intercontinental Exchange