Barclays sued by NY attorney general over dark pools

Posted by Unknown on Wednesday, June 25, 2014


The attorney general's office quoted one Barclays employee as saying: “I had always liked the idea that we were being transparent, but happy to take liberties if we can all agree.”


Another allegedly said: "If we can help ourselves we should; it's in our control."


Barclays heavily advertised a service called Liquidity Profiling, which it claimed was a "surveillance" system that tracked every trade in its dark pool in order to spot predatory traders.


The attorney general's office claimed that "Barclays has never prohibited any trader from participating in its dark pool, regardless of how predatory its activity was determined to be" and "assigned safe ratings to traders that were otherwise determined to be toxic".


"Barclays operates its dark pool to favour high-frequency traders and has actively sought to attract them by giving them systematic advantages over others trading in the pool," it added.


The investigation into Barclays was "aided significantly" by "a number of former Barclays’ employees, who observed much of the conduct described in the complaint".


Critics have attacked dark pools for making stock markets less transparent, with nearly 40pc of stock trades now taking place away from traditional exchanges, up from a little over 15pc six years ago.


Earlier this month, Mr Schneiderman revealed that its sweeping investigation into the US stock market will include whether dark pools are conducting themselves properly


Chad Johnson, head of the agency's Investor Protection Bureau, said his office is looking into whether dark pools are operating in a way that is consistent with how they market themselves, that they have the interests of investors in mind, and that brokers directing trades to their own dark pools do so in a way that does not present conflicts of interest.


The Securities and Echange Commission has also announced proposals to extend oversight of dark pools and their traders.


Chairman Mary Jo White said the SEC will work with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street's regulator, to increase the disclosure of any trades.


To help craft the new rules, Ms White said she is creating a special new market structure advisory committee.


Barclays declined to comment.





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