Posted on December 16, 2012. Filed under: Exchanges, Practitioners, Regulations, Securities and Exchange Commission, Technology | Tags: algorithmic trading, ASX, Australian Securities Exchange, Bombay Stock Exchange, BSE, capital allocation, capital markets, clearing and settlement, CME Group, custody, demutualization, depository, Derivatives, Deutsche Boerse, developed economies, economic development, economic news, economies of scale, Edgar Perez, electronic feed, emerging economies, European regulators, exchanges, financial instruments, financial services, GETCO, GFLC, government, high-frequency and algorithmic trading firms, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, Hong Kong, ICE, information services, IT infrastructure, Johannesburg Stock Exchange, Knight Capital, London Stock Exchange, LSE, matching engine, McKinsey, mergers, Nasdaq, Nasdaq OMX, New York Stock Exchange, nominee services, NYSE, NYSE Euronext, Philippines Stock Exchange, PSE, RapiData, regulatory enhancements, Richard Branson, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, SGX, Singapore Exchange, Stockholm Stock Exchange, The Speed Traders, TMX, Toronto Stock Exchange, trading data, trading hours, trading system, trading volumes, TSX, U.S. government, Virtu, Volatility |

Edgar Perez and Sir Richard Branson
Financial exchanges play a vital role in economic development as one of the primary tools for the allocation of capital in both developed economies and emerging ones. The indices created using the platforms provided by global exchanges are used by the financial services industry and the government as barometers of economic health and a predictor of national financial well-being.
However, the exchanges model has changed dramatically over the past decade starting with demutualization. The first wave began with the Stockholm Stock Exchange (STO) in 1993 and included the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) in 1995 and Borsa Italiana (BVME) in 1997. Demutualization was followed by a second stage in which a number of exchanges became publicly traded and profit-seeking companies listed on their own platform, with the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) being the first to follow this model in 1998. Such restructurings are still taking place in exchanges all over the world.
Exchanges have come under increasing regulatory attention. In the US, for instance, the Securities and Exchange Commission is expanding an enforcement probe into a broader look at how exchanges develop new products, communicate with investors and provide incentives to trade; this was sparked partly by an SEC probe into trading order types apparently benefiting high-speed traders, whose activity comprises more than half of all stock-trading volume.
As companies exercise more flexibility in seeking to raise capital outside their national boundaries, the environment has become even more competitive for exchanges. Furthermore, they are hugely capital intensive (mostly due to the IT infrastructure required for increasingly high frequency trading), reason why some exchanges are looking to grow through acquisitions in order to enjoy greater economies of scale.
While these challenges are common to exchanges worldwide, the impact on their bottom lines has been rather diverse. For instance, the Philippines Stock Exchange (PSE) doubled its profit in the first nine months of 2012 compared to last year. While the exchange benefited tremendously from the favorable economic environment and sky-high optimism in the country, there were a number of reforms implemented by the PSE, including the rollout of a new trading system, extension of trading hours and implementation of multiple regulatory and governance enhancements.
London Stock Exchange (LSE) reported a profit for the first half of the year nearly unchanged from last year as strong performance in information services helped offset weak capital markets. The exchange highlighted the benefits of its increasingly diversified international group and the growth from its Information, Post Trade and Technology businesses; the exchange reported a 66 percent increase in Information Services revenue, while Capital Markets revenue dropped 19 percent.
On the other side of the spectrum, NYSE Euronext, the operator of the New York Stock Exchange and other stock exchanges, announced that its third-quarter profit fell 46 percent, which the company attributed to reduced average daily trading volumes, primarily related to its derivatives business. It said its results last year were helped by the extreme volatility of the markets in Europe and the United States due to debt concerns. Certainly, volatility has declined considerably since then, reaching multi-year lows in August 2012.
Exchanges are responding to this increasing competition in a number of ways. Negotiating mergers has been the first option considered by a number of companies, only to be derailed in some cases by regulators or rebuffed by targets. NYSE Euronext face resistance from European regulators on its proposed combination with Deutsche Boerse; ASX’s agreement with Singapore Exchange (SGX) fell through as well; LSE dropped its bid for Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) after its owners spurned them in favor of the bid from a group of Canadian banks and pensions. However, that doesn’t mean that exchanges will not attempt to find combinations that don’t run afoul of regulations, just because mergers almost in all cases strive to provide an avenue to widen their business model and to exploit economies of scale, economies of network, cross selling opportunities and trading hours; for instance in Asia, Tokyo and Hong Kong shortened their midday halt to one hour last year, while Singapore scrapped its lunch break altogether, joining Australia, South Korea and India on the list of exchanges that have uninterrupted trading days.
Second, developing cutting edge-edge technology and its further commercialization is paving the way to extract additional profits from investments already paid. For instance, LSE leveraged its IT investments with the adoption of an outsourced managed services model that allowed the exchange to run other exchanges, such as the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, using its own platform. Building a major technology franchise through outsourcing was vital for the LSE if it was to continue to compete with the likes of NYSE Euronext and Nasdaq OMX, which had extended their brand and influence in several emerging markets through major technology deals.
Finally, exchanges are standing up to the challenge of diversifying their business model. Exchanges that were primarily focused on cash trading decided to integrate services such as the trading of derivative financial instruments markets. As it was the case for LSE, information services delivered in machine-readable format are providing growth opportunities for exchanges worldwide; RapiData, company acquired by Nasdaq OMX, enabled the company to deliver U.S. government and other economic news directly from the source to customers interested in receiving information in an electronic feed, giving them instant access to events that are incorporated into algorithmic trading systems. The perennial appetite of high-frequency and algorithmic trading firms for faster access to trading data is also encouraging exchanges to provide colocation services that bring all participants equal access to their matching engines. Ultimately, exchanges will be forced to explore all upstream and downstream opportunities in the production chain of the exchange industry, from the above mentioned information services upstream to the integration of clearing and settlement services downstream.
Revenues at exchanges will need to evolve from its reliance on volume-dependent fees and commissions for a range of activities (including trading, listing, clearing, settlement, depository, custody and nominee services) to uncorrelated income sources that might not have existed just a few years ago; the infrastructure they have, the data they manage and proximity to their matching engine are all key assets that need to be fully exploited if exchanges are to succeed in 2013 and beyond.
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Posted on August 6, 2012. Filed under: Exchanges, Flash Crash, Practitioners, Regulations, Securities and Exchange Commission, Technology | Tags: algorithmic trading, Alternative Investments, Ameritrade, automated trading, Blackstone, Broken Markets, Center for Economic and Policy Research, Chicago, Dark Pools, Dean Baker, Don’t Ban the Trades, Edgar Perez, End of Equities Investing, Facebook IPO, Forbes, Futures and FX, GETCO, Goldman Sachs, hedge fund manager, Hedge Funds, HFT Expert, HFT Seminar, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, High Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2012, High Frequency Trading Networking, high frequency trading speaker, High-Frequency Finance, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Expert, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, How Traders Profit From High Speed Trading, Investing World, Jefferies Group, Joseph Saluzzi, Kiev, Knight Capital, Knight Trading, Knightmare on Wall Street, Kuala Lumpur, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, Mary Schapiro, McKinsey, Mexico, MIT Sloan, Moscow, Neil Barsky, new york, New York Stock Exchange, New York University, NYSE, Options, Pace University, Polytechnic Institute, Quantitative Trading, Regulate Them in Real Time, Sal Arnuk, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, Stephens Inc ., Stifel Nicolaus, Stuart Theakston, The Malaysian Insider, The New York Times, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, Thomas Joyce, trading strategy, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Weibo |
In my latest piece in The New York Times, I argue that wrongdoing existed long before the advent of high-frequency trading, and it will always be a part of markets. High-frequency trading is simply a tool; it can be positive or negative for investors and markets. To maximize the benefit and minimize the downsides, regulators need to catch up with the technology.
High-frequency trading has been under a microscope since the infamous “flash crash” in 2010. Let’s remember, though: The market rebounded that day almost as fast as it fell, and regulators ultimately determined that the crash was initiated by human error. But many in the financial sector and in government were uncomfortable at the thought that high-frequency trading programs could vaporize huge amounts of equity in a matter of minutes.
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Posted on July 26, 2012. Filed under: Conference, Event Announcements, Exchanges, Practitioners, Regulations, Strategies, Workshop | Tags: algorithms, An Insider's Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, Bankier.pl, Beijing, Bloomberg Hedge Fund Brief, BMF 89.9, BNN Business Day, Business Times, Business Tonight, Caixin, CBN Newswire, CCTV China, Cents & Sensibilities, Channel NewsAsia, Chicago, China, China Financial Publishing House, Chinese Financial News, Citigroup, CNBC, CNBC Cash Flow, CNBC Squawk Box, Columbia Business School, Dalian Commodity Exchange, Dallas Morning News, Dark Pools, DCE, Dubai, Finance.QQ.com, Finance.Sina.com, FIXGlobal Trading, Futures and FX, Futures Daily, GPW Media, Harvard Business School, hexun.com, high frequency trading speaker, high frequency trading workshop, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Expert, High-Frequency Trading Forum, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, High-Frequency Trading Training, High-Frequency Trading World, High-Frequency Trading World’s Capital, HKEx, Ho Chi Minh, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Stock Exchange, How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, IBM, ifeng.com, iMoney Hong Kong, International Finance News, investment, Investment Management Conference, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Leaderonomics, London, McGraw-Hill Inc., McKinsey & Co. consultant, Mexico City, MIT Sloan, Moscow, new york, New York University Adjunct Professor, Options, Oriental Daily News, proprietary trading, quantitative, quants, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, Shanghai Futures Exchange, Shanghai Stock Exchange, SHFE, singapore, SSE, The Korea Herald, The Korea Times, The New York Times, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Hong Kong, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Shanghai, The Star, The Wall Street Journal, TheStreet.com, TODAY Online, Tradetech, Valor Econômico, Warsaw, Xinhua, ZCE, Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange |

2012国际高频交易高峰研讨会・上海
The high-frequency trading world’s capital is moving to China this August with Mr. Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, and former McKinsey & Co. consultant and New York University Adjunct Professor, presenting The Speed Traders Workshop 2012: How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, in Shanghai and Hong Kong.
Top securities firms and traders from China, Hong Kong and Singapore trading at Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange (ZCE), Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE), Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE), Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE), Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEx), and Singapore Stock Exchange (SGX), are joining these enlightening workshops, which display an agenda full of information and insights, as can be seen through the following sessions:
1. Understanding High Frequency Trading in Equities and other Asset Classes
- The need for speed and sophisticated computer programs in generating, routing, and executing orders
- Co-location and individual data feeds to minimize latency
- Time-frames for establishing and closing highly-liquid positions
- Review of the most important strategies: market making, trend following, value arbitrage and others
2. Key Enablers for High Frequency Trading
- Technological innovation: computing power, complex event processing, and low-latency bandwidth
- Shift to electronic trading and the rise of alternative trading systems
- In-depth look at strategies high frequency traders leverage to find alpha in equities, options, futures and FX
- The profitability of typical high frequency trading strategies and its evolution
3. Global Regulatory Overview: from the U.S. and Europe to China and Brazil
- Regulations in place before the “flash crash”
- Proposed regulatory initiatives after the “flash crash” in the U.S. and Europe, circuit breakers, limit up limit down and consolidated audit trail
- High frequency trading in Asia, from Japan, Singapore and India to Hong Kong and China
- Regulating speed trading to samba beats: Brazil and Mexico
4. The Future of High Frequency Trading
- Enhancing profitability: from equities to FX to cross-asset trading
- High frequency trading in the world: from the U.S. and Europe to China and Brazil
- Adding ammunition to the high frequency trader toolkit, FPGA, GPUs and enhanced technologies
- Turning the tables on high frequency trading: the transparency challenge for the buy-side
Mr. Perez has been interviewed on CNBC Cash Flow, CNBC Squawk Box, BNN Business Day, CCTV China, Bankier.pl, TheStreet.com, Leaderonomics, GPW Media, Channel NewsAsia Business Tonight and Cents & Sensibilities. In addition, Mr. Perez has been featured on Caixin, Futures Daily, Xinhua, CBN Newswire, Chinese Financial News, ifeng.com, International Finance News, hexun.com, Finance.QQ.com, Finance.Sina.com, The Korea Times, The Korea Herald, The Star, BMF 89.9, iMoney Hong Kong, CNBC, Bloomberg Hedge Fund Brief, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Dallas Morning News, Valor Econômico, FIXGlobal Trading, TODAY Online, Oriental Daily News and Business Times.
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Posted on June 24, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Uncategorized | Tags: algorithmic trading, CBN, Chicago, China, China Business Network, CNBC, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Golden Networking, HFT book, HFT firms, HFT speaker, high frequency trading firms, high frequency trading speaker, high frequency trading strategies, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, Hong Kong, McKinsey, Nasdaq, New York University, proprietary trading, Shangha, singapore, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Shanghai |
Edgar Perez援引数据介绍指出,目前在美国证券市场中的整体成交金额中有56%来自高频交易,而这种交易手法也是伴随着科技的发展、市场的竞争、以及监管政策的变化,在证券市场中自然演进所出现的。 高
频交易研究专家Edgar Perez近日在与第一财经采访时表示,高频交易是一种专注于“速度(speed)”的投资方法,主要以先进的电脑技术和设备寻求在极短时间内的获利,然 而这种投资方法与巴菲特的“价值投资”哲学并不矛盾,亦有助投资者能跳出经济周期和宏观大环境的制约,寻找到不为外界环境所左右的“阿尔法”值(即超出市 场基准的收益回报)。
Edgar Perez援引数据介绍指出,目前在美国证券市场中的整体成交金额中有56%来自高频交易,而这种交易手法也是伴随着科技的发展、市场的竞争、以及监管政策的变化,在证券市场中自然演进所出现的。
高频交易主要以电脑完成交易,数据处理可以在毫秒(0.001秒)之间,人力根本无法与之匹配,因此该种交易主要依赖先进的科学技术和电脑算法。高频交易的主要策略包括电子化交易、趋势追踪、相对价值套利、流动性监测、新闻解读分析和投资基金方法等。
与现有主流的投资方法不同,Edgar Perez介绍,高频交易并不关注宏观经济和行业公司基本面,亦不关注其技术走势,高频交易中盈利的关键就在于速度,“只要你比别人快,就能胜出”。此 外,决定高频交易胜败的还在于“买”与“卖”的决定。因此简单来说,想要倚赖高频交易盈利,最为重要的,就是比别人更快地“买入”或“卖出”。
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Posted on June 14, 2012. Filed under: Exchanges, Operations, Practitioners, Private Equity, Securities, Strategies | Tags: BATS Global Markets, Beijing, BFM 89.9, Bob Greifeld, Bursa Malaysia, Caixin Media, CBN, CFTC, Chicago, China, China Business Network, Citadel, CSRC, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Electronic Trading, Electronic Trading Platform, Flash Crash, FPGA, FSA, GETCO, Goldman Sachs, Hedge Funds, HFT book, hft consultant, HFT firms, HFT Seminar, HFT speaker, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, high frequency trading consultant, high frequency trading firms, High Frequency Trading Networking, high frequency trading speaker, high frequency trading strategies, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, Institutional Investors, IPO, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Kyiv, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, McKinsey, Mexico, MiFID, MIT Sloan, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Pace University, proprietary trading, Quantitative Trading, Renaissance, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, Trading, trading strategies, Ukraine, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Warsaw |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012
2012年6月第二个交易日,上证指数因为特殊的波动引发市场关注。来自监管当局的消息称,交易所已经注意到了市场中的高频交易,但未发现有市场操纵行为。
将通过计算机控制的高频交易(High-frequency Trading,简称HFT)行为与人为的操纵市场联系到一起引人无限遐思。高频交易到底是加剧市场波动还是缩短市场波动?如何监管高频交易?是否应该像 对“粮仓中的老鼠”一样,限制高频交易?这都是摆在全球监管者面前的一道难题。尤其对于散户众多的中国证券市场,高频交易又会成为何种角色?
“美国各界仍在争论,焦点是该不该对高频交易有限制,高频交易到底是利大于弊还是弊大于利。”纽约华尔街一家全球宏观型对冲基金数量交易组的数量投资经理杨旭对财新记者表示。
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Posted on June 13, 2012. Filed under: Economy, Exchanges, Operations, Practitioners, Private Equity, Regulations, Securities, Strategies | Tags: BATS Global Markets, Beijing, BFM 89.9, Bob Greifeld, Bursa Malaysia, CBN, CFTC, Chicago, China, China Business Network, Citadel, CSRC, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Electronic Trading, Electronic Trading Platform, Flash Crash, FPGA, FSA, GETCO, Goldman Sachs, Hedge Funds, HFT book, hft consultant, HFT firms, HFT Seminar, HFT speaker, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, high frequency trading consultant, high frequency trading firms, High Frequency Trading Networking, high frequency trading speaker, high frequency trading strategies, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, Institutional Investors, IPO, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Kyiv, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, McKinsey, Mexico, MiFID, MIT Sloan, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Pace University, proprietary trading, Quantitative Trading, Renaissance, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, Trading, trading strategies, Ukraine, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Warsaw |

Mr. Edgar Perez, Director of The Speed Traders Workshop

Edgar Perez援引数据介绍指出,目前在美国证券市场中的整体成交金额中有56%来自高频交易,而这种交易手法也是伴随着科技的发展、市场的竞争、以及监管政策的变化,在证券市场中自然演进所出现的。
高
频交易研究专家Edgar Perez近日在与第一财经采访时表示,高频交易是一种专注于“速度(speed)”的投资方法,主要以先进的电脑技术和设备寻求在极短时间内的获利,然 而这种投资方法与巴菲特的“价值投资”哲学并不矛盾,亦有助投资者能跳出经济周期和宏观大环境的制约,寻找到不为外界环境所左右的“阿尔法”值(即超出市 场基准的收益回报)。
Edgar Perez援引数据介绍指出,目前在美国证券市场中的整体成交金额中有56%来自高频交易,而这种交易手法也是伴随着科技的发展、市场的竞争、以及监管政策的变化,在证券市场中自然演进所出现的。
高频交易主要以电脑完成交易,数据处理可以在毫秒(0.001秒)之间,人力根本无法与之匹配,因此该种交易主要依赖先进的科学技术和电脑算法。高频交易的主要策略包括电子化交易、趋势追踪、相对价值套利、流动性监测、新闻解读分析和投资基金方法等。
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Posted on June 3, 2012. Filed under: Economy, Event Announcements, Exchanges, Fixed Income, Practitioners, Private Equity, Securities, Strategies, Technology | Tags: BATS Global Markets, Beijing, BFM 89.9, Bob Greifeld, Bursa Malaysia, CFTC, Chicago, China, Citadel, CSRC, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Electronic Trading, Electronic Trading Platform, Flash Crash, FPGA, FSA, GETCO, Goldman Sachs, Hedge Funds, hft consultant, HFT Seminar, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, high frequency trading consultant, High Frequency Trading Networking, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, Institutional Investors, IPO, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Kyiv, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, McKinsey, Mexico, MiFID, MIT Sloan, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Pace University, proprietary trading, Quantitative Trading, Renaissance, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, Trading, trading strategies, Ukraine, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Warsaw |

Mr. Edgar Perez, Author of The Speed Traders
Edgar Perez, Author, The Speed Traders, Speaker at The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Shanghai: How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, June 6
New York, NY, May 26, 2012 — Edgar Perez will be the presenter at upcoming The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Shanghai: How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, June 6, to be held at Hult International Business School’ Shanghai campus.
Hult International Business School (formerly known as the Arthur D. Little School of Management) is a top business school with campuses in Boston, San Francisco, London, Dubai and Shanghai. It offers a range of business-focused degree programs including MBA, Executive MBA, Master and Undergraduate degrees. Hult is affiliated with the privately held company EF Education First and is named for EF’s founder, Bertil Hult. The school is incorporated as Hult International Business School, Inc., which is a not-for-profit organization incorporated under Massachusetts law.
Hult has a list of faculty which is on par with other business schools, and includes many faculty members from colleges in the northeast of the USA. Some of the Hult faculty also teaches at Babson College, Harvard, INSEAD and other business schools.
Hult organizes the Hult Global Case Challenge, an annual international case competition that takes on global social challenges by generating ideas and solutions from students from around the world. The organization is a member of the Clinton Global Initiative. At the event, student teams of five from business schools from around the world are invited to participate at one of five international locations where teams compete to develop the best solutions around the proposed challenge area. Cities of competition include Boston, San Francisco, London, Dubai and Shanghai, where The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 will be held.
Mr. Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, published by McGraw-Hill Inc. (2011) and currently being translated into Chinese, has been engaged to present to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University and Pace University, among other institutions. In addition, Mr. Perez has spoken at Harvard Business School’s Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference (Boston), High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum (New York, Chicago, Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, London, Singapore), MIT Sloan Investment Management Conference (Cambridge), High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour (New York), Institutional Investor’s Global Growth Markets Forum (London), Technical Analysis Society (Singapore), TradeTech Asia (Singapore), FIXGlobal Face2Face (Seoul), 2nd Private Equity Convention Russia, CIS & Eurasia (London), among other global forums.
Mr. Perez is one of the great business networkers and motivators on the lecture circuit; he is available worldwide for the following speaking engagements: Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading, The Real Story behind the “Flash Crash”, Networking for Financial Executives, and Business Networking for Success.
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Posted on June 1, 2012. Filed under: Economy, Event Announcements, Exchanges, Fixed Income, Practitioners, Private Equity, Securities, Strategies, Technology | Tags: BATS Global Markets, Beijing, BFM 89.9, Bob Greifeld, Bursa Malaysia, CFTC, Chicago, China, Citadel, CSRC, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Electronic Trading, Electronic Trading Platform, Flash Crash, FPGA, FSA, GETCO, Goldman Sachs, Hedge Funds, hft consultant, HFT Seminar, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, high frequency trading consultant, High Frequency Trading Networking, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, Institutional Investors, IPO, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Kyiv, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, McKinsey, Mexico, MiFID, MIT Sloan, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Pace University, proprietary trading, Quantitative Trading, Renaissance, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, Trading, trading strategies, Ukraine, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Warsaw |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012
Edgar Perez, Author, The Speed Traders, Speaker at The Speed Traders Workshop 2012: How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, Shanghai (June 6)
Mr. Edgar Perez, author, The Speed Traders, and former McKinsey & Co. consultant, is leading the world’s only high frequency trading seminar, aptly called The Speed Traders Workshop 2012: How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, for the first time in China. The Speed Traders Workshop will next take place in Shanghai on June 6.
Mr. Edgar Perez is widely regarded as the preeminent speaker in the specialized area of high-frequency trading. He is author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, published by McGraw-Hill Inc. (2011) in English and China Financial Publishing House (2012) in Chinese. In addition, Mr. Edgar Perez is course director of The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX (Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, Seoul, Kuala Lumpur, Warsaw and Kiev).
Mr. Edgar Perez has been featured on CNBC Cash Flow (with Oriel Morrison), CNBC Squawk Box (with Geoff Cutmore), BNN Business Day (with Kim Parlee), TheStreet.com (with Gregg Greenberg), Channel NewsAsia Business Tonight and Cents & Sensibilities (with Lin Xue Ling), NHK World, iMoney Hong Kong, Hedge Fund Brief, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Dallas Morning News, Valor Econômico, FIXGlobal Trading, TODAY Online, Oriental Daily News and Business Times.
In the last months, Mr. Edgar Perez has been engaged to present to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University and Pace University, among other institutions. In addition, Mr. Edgar Perez has spoken at Harvard Business School’s Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference (Boston), High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum (New York, Chicago, Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, London, Singapore), MIT Sloan Investment Management Conference (Cambridge), High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour (New York), Institutional Investor’s Global Growth Markets Forum (London), Technical Analysis Society (Singapore), TradeTech Asia (Singapore), FIXGlobal Face2Face (Seoul), 2nd Private Equity Convention Russia, CIS & Eurasia (London), among other global forums.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 kicks off a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4, and Moscow, Russia, August 10.
Mr. Edgar Perez is one of the great business networkers and motivators on the business circuit; he is available worldwide for the following speaking engagements: Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading, The Real Story behind the “Flash Crash”, Networking for Financial Executives, and Business Networking for Success.
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Posted on May 21, 2012. Filed under: Economy, Exchanges, Regulations, Securities and Exchange Commission, Technology | Tags: BATS Global Markets, Beijing, BFM 89.9, Bob Greifeld, Bursa Malaysia, Chairman of Consob, Chicago, Chief Executive Officer, China, Commissione Nazionale per le Società e la Borsa, Course Director, Dubai, eclipse, Edgar Perez, Facebook, Futures and FX, Giuseppe Vegas, Hedge Funds, hft consultant, HFT Seminar, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, high frequency trading consultant, High Frequency Trading Networking, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, How Traders Profit From High Speed Trading, Institutional Investors, IPO, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Kyiv, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, McKinsey, Mexico, MIT Sloan, Moscow, Nasdaq, Nasdaq OMX, new york, New York University, Options, Pace University, Quantitative Trading, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, Stuart Theakston, The Malaysian Insider, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, Ukraine, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Warsaw |
Bob Greifeld, Nasdaq OMX’s Chief Executive Officer, has said on Sunday that the 20-minute delay in trading of Facebook’s $16bn offering last Friday had been caused by a millisecond systems blip due to the largest IPO auction “in the history of mankind”. The exchange had found itself in the spotlight after Facebook failed to deliver a first-day “pop” to investors, instead almost falling below its issuing price of $38. The shares, having risen briefly, quickly fell away to close the day with a gain of just 0.6%, at $38.23.
The fact that the glitch is just coming just weeks after BATS Global Markets, a firm that catered mainly to speed traders, was forced to withdraw its IPO after technical problems, nicely plays into the hands of critics who blame high-frequency trading for all types of financial and economic malaise.
For instance, Giuseppe Vegas, Chairman of Consob, Commissione Nazionale per le Società e la Borsa, Italy, suggested last week that high-frequency trading may pose systemic threats to markets and warrant bans. “Legislators and authorities need to ask themselves if certain types of innovation are good or bad for savers,” Vegas said in a speech at the Italian securities market regulator’s annual meeting in Milan today. Legislators shouldn’t hold back from “simply banning the spreading of dangerous practices and products,” he said.
“Financial innovation can be positive but legislators and authorities must avoid that it becomes a mechanism that wipes out families’ savings,” he said. That begs the question of the real possibility of high-frequency trading having any impact on families’ savings.
Nasdaq has now laid out the details of the glitch. In spite of testing 1bn in trading volumes under 100 scenarios, the exchange was caught by surprise when cancellations of trades kept interrupting the computer system’s attempt to complete the auction and produce an initial price for Facebook’s opening. Nasdaq says it designed its “IPO cross”, the process of calculating the opening price, in such a way that would allow continuous trading through an auction at the behest of its customers and has used the system in previous IPOs.
But in processing the huge volume of Facebook trades, it added two milliseconds to the time it took to produce an opening price. In those extra two milliseconds, orders to cancel the trades kept interrupting the auction process. That doesn’t seem to touch high-frequency trading at all, as shares were not even changing hands yet. As a result of the glitch the exchange decided to print the opening trade manually but was then forced to delay the process of confirming individual trades.
Systems blips and glitches will always happen as humans cannot possibly test all scenarios technical implementations will face. People can take advantage of financial innovation in a number of ways and it’s the role of regulators to make sure these ways are within the existing legal framework. Financial innovation travels fast and now becomes not a challenge for single regulatory bodies but for all of them to coordinate the best way to approach regulation and keep markets transparent and fair for all participants worldwide.
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Posted on May 4, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Flash Crash, Practitioners, Strategies | Tags: Beijing, BFM 89.9, Bursa Malaysia, Chicago, Course Director, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Futures and FX, Hedge Funds, hft consultant, HFT Seminar, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, high frequency trading consultant, High Frequency Trading Networking, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, How Traders Profit From High Speed Trading, Institutional Investors, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, McKinsey, Mexico, MIT Sloan, Moscow, new york, New York University, Options, Pace University, Quantitative Trading, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, Stuart Theakston, The Malaysian Insider, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Warsaw |
As reported by Bloomberg, Facebook Inc.’s $11.8 billion initial public offering will cement the status of 27-year-old Mark Zuckerberg as one of the world’s richest men and put his social network among the highest-valued companies in the U.S. Facebook is offering about 337.4 million shares for $28 to $35 each, according to a regulatory filing yesterday. At the upper end of that range, the co-founder’s stake would be $17.6 billion, making him richer than Microsoft Corp.’s Steve Ballmer and Russian steel billionaire Vladimir Lisin, who are both twice his age, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Zuckerberg, who began the service for Harvard classmates as a 19-year-old in his dorm room, built Facebook into the most popular social-networking site in the world, topping 900 million users last quarter. Now he has to prove he has the leadership skills to deliver enough growth to justify the company’s valuation, said Paul Saffo, managing director at Discern Analytics in San Francisco.
That being said, investors and traders in Poland and Ukraine will be paying close attention to Edgar Perez’s The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, “How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX” (http://www.TheSpeedTradersWorkshop.com) on May 11 in Warsaw and May 18 in Kiev. Edgar Perez is widely regarded as the preeminent expert in the specialized area of high-frequency trading; he is the author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.TheSpeedTraders.com), published by McGraw-Hill Inc. (2011).
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Warsaw and Kiev reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil.
Edgar Perez has been featured on CNBC Cash Flow (with Oriel Morrison), CNBC Squawk Box (with Geoff Cutmore), BNN Business Day (with Kim Parlee), TheStreet.com (with Gregg Greenberg), Channel NewsAsia Business Tonight and Cents & Sensibilities (with Lin Xue Ling), NHK World, iMoney Hong Kong, Hedge Fund Brief, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Dallas Morning News, Valor Econômico, The Korea Herald, FIXGlobal Trading, The Korea Times, TODAY Online, Oriental Daily News and Business Times.
Mr. Perez has been engaged to present to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University and Pace University, among other public and private institutions. In addition, Mr. Perez has spoken at a number of global conferences, including Harvard Business School’s Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference (Boston), High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum (New York, Chicago, London), MIT Sloan Investment Management Conference (Cambridge), Institutional Investor’s Global Growth Markets Forum (London), Technical Analysis Society (Singapore), TradeTech Asia (Singapore), FIXGlobal Face2Face (Seoul) and Private Equity Convention Russia, CIS & Eurasia (London).
Mr. Perez was a vice president at Citigroup, a senior consultant at IBM, and a consultant at McKinsey & Co. in New York City. Mr. Perez has an undergraduate degree from Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería, Lima, Peru (1994), a Master of Administration from Universidad ESAN, Lima, Peru (1997) and a Master of Business Administration from Columbia Business School, New York, with a dual major in Finance and Management (2002). He belongs to the Beta Gamma Sigma honor society. Mr. Perez resides in the New York City area and is an accomplished salsa and hustle dancer.
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Posted on April 20, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Regulations, Strategies, Technology | Tags: Beijing, BFM 89.9, Bursa Malaysia, Chicago, Course Director, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Futures and FX, Hedge Funds, hft consultant, HFT Seminar, HFT workshop, HFTLeadersForum.com, high frequency trading consultant, High Frequency Trading Networking, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, House Financial Services Committee, How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, How Traders Profit From High Speed Trading, Institutional Investors, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, London, Malaysia, Market Abuse Unit, McKinsey, Mexico, MIT Sloan, Moscow, new york, New York University, Options, Pace University, Quantitative Trading, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, Stuart Theakston, The Malaysian Insider, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, Warsaw |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012
The Speed Traders unveiled dates today for Edgar Perez’s full-day seminars, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012: How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX in Europe, presentations that will be followed by the rest of the world including dates in Southeast Asia, Latin America and North America, as published at http://www.TheSpeedTradersWorkshop.com.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, Seoul and Kuala Lumpur put Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.TheSpeedTraders.com), published by McGraw-Hill Inc. (2011) and currently being translated into Chinese and Portuguese, on the map as the preeminent global expert in algorithmic and high-frequency trading.
The global high-frequency tour’s first leg will hit Europe and Asia through early June, encompassing 5 presentations at major financial centers that include Warsaw, Kiev, Beijing, Shanghai, Jakarta and Seoul. Perez will also present in New York and London. Beyond that, current plans call for him to visit Hong Kong in August, followed by Moscow, Dubai, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore towards the beginning of the fall, and then Chicago in October.
Perez is widely regarded as the preeminent speaker in the specialized area of high-frequency trading. Perez has been featured on CNBC Cash Flow (with Oriel Morrison), CNBC Squawk Box (with Geoff Cutmore), BNN Business Day (with Kim Parlee), TheStreet.com (with Gregg Greenberg), Channel NewsAsia Business Tonight and Cents & Sensibilities (with Lin Xue Ling), NHK World, iMoney Hong Kong, Hedge Fund Brief, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Dallas Morning News, Valor Econômico, The Korea Herald, FIXGlobal Trading, The Korea Times, TODAY Online, Oriental Daily News and Business Times.
Perez has been engaged to present to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University and Pace University, among other public and private institutions. In addition, Perez has spoken at a number of global conferences, including Harvard Business School’s Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference (Boston), High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum New York, Chicago and London (http://www.HFTLeadersForum.com), MIT Sloan Investment Management Conference (Cambridge), Institutional Investor’s Global Growth Markets Forum (London), Technical Analysis Society (Singapore), TradeTech Asia (Singapore), FIXGlobal Face2Face (Seoul) and Private Equity Convention Russia, CIS & Eurasia (London).
Perez was a vice president at Citigroup, a senior consultant at IBM, and a consultant at McKinsey & Co. in New York City. Perez has an undergraduate degree from Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería, Lima, Peru (1994), a Master of Administration from Universidad ESAN, Lima, Peru (1997) and a Master of Business Administration from Columbia Business School, New York, with a dual major in Finance and Management (2002). He belongs to the Beta Gamma Sigma honor society. Perez resides in the New York City area and is an accomplished salsa and hustle dancer.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 kicks off 2012 with a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Warsaw, Poland, May 11; Kiev, Ukraine, May 18; New York, May 22; Beijing, China, May 30; Shanghai, China, June 6; Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Seoul, South Korea, June 21; London, June 26; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4; Moscow, Russia, August 10; Dubai, UAE, September 9; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, September 12; Singapore, September 15, and Chicago, October 2.
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Posted on January 24, 2012. Filed under: Exchanges, Flash Crash, Practitioners, Strategies, Technology | Tags: Argentina, Bloomberg, BM&FBOVESPA, Bogota, Brazilian tax break boosts ultra fast traders, Buenos Aires, Caracas, CFA Singapore, Chicago, Chile, China, CIS, CNBC, Colombia, Columbia Business School, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Dow Jones, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Eurasia, Event Announcements | Tags: 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, exchanges, Facebook, Financial Crisis, Flash Crash, Global Growth Markets Forum, Harvard Business School, High Frequency Trading Brazil, High Frequency Trading in Brazil, High Frequency Trading in Latin America, High Frequency Trading Review, High Frequency Trading Review Brazil, high frequency trading workshop, high speed traders, high speed trading, High Speed Trading in Brazil, High Speed Trading in Latin America, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Emerges in Brazil, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, High-frequency trading’s frontier, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, How Traders Profit With Computers Set at High Speed, Indonesia, Infinium Capital Management, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Lima, London, Malaysia, McKinsey, Mexico, Mexico City, Mirage or Miracle, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Oriel Morrison, Peru, Poland, Postcard from Brazil, product evaluation sites, proprietary trading, Russia, Santiago, Sao Paulo, search engines, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, social media, social networking, social networks, South Korea, Speed Trader, Speed Traders, Speed Trading, Speed Trading in Brazil, Speed Trading in Latin America, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Strategies, Technical Analysis Society, technology, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders in Brazil, The Speed Traders in Latin America, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, Thomson Reuters, TradeTech Asia FIXGlobal Face2Face, Tradeworx, Trading on Tweets, Twitter, Twitter and Facebook, UAE, Ukraine, Venezuela, Warsaw |

Edgar Perez, Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University
Edgar Perez, Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University and presenter at The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo: How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, February 8th, BM&FBovespa, was quoted by CNBC.com on the note “Can ‘Trading on Tweets’ Really Make Money?“.
CNBC’s Antonya Allen pointed out that social media websites like Twitter and Facebook have become increasingly important to high frequency traders looking to anticipate market moves before they happen; however, she asked, could they eventually become as significant as traditional business news providers in the world of high speed trading?
Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That Is Transforming the Investing World, said he has not come across a trader who had made money from information supplied on social networking sites. In his book, Edgar Perez follows six high speed traders and examines how ultra fast trading could develop in the future.
“I would be very interested in seeing cases where people actually made money using information from Twitter. Remember there’s a lag there of time and with high frequency trading you want to make sure you connect directly and don’t have any third party providers for information,” Perez explained.
Mr. Perez is widely regarded as the preeminent speaker and networker in the specialized area of high-frequency trading. He has been featured on CNBC Cash Flow (with Oriel Morrison), CNBC Squawk Box (with Geoff Cutmore), BNN Business Day (with Kim Parlee), TheStreet.com (with Gregg Greenberg), Channel NewsAsia Asia Business Tonight and Cents & Sensibilities (with Lin Xue Ling), NHK World, iMoney Hong Kong, Hedge Fund Brief, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Dallas Morning News, Los Angeles Times, TODAY Online, Oriental Daily News and Business Times. He has been engaged as speaker at Harvard Business School’s 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011 (New York, Chicago, Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, Singapore), CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University (New York), Global Growth Markets Forum (London), Technical Analysis Society (Singapore), TradeTech Asia (Singapore), FIXGlobal Face2Face (Seoul), and 2nd Private Equity Convention Russia, CIS & Eurasia (London), among other global forums.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo kicks off a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Dubai, January 25; Seoul, South Korea, March 28; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 11; Warsaw, Poland, May 11; Kiev, Ukraine, May 18; Singapore, May 26; Shanghai, China, June 6; Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4, and Moscow, Russia, August 10.
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Posted on January 20, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Flash Crash, Practitioners, Strategies, Technology | Tags: 2nd Private Equity Convention Russia, algorithmic trading, Argentina, BM&FBOVESPA, Bogota, Brazilian tax break boosts ultra fast traders, Buenos Aires, Caracas, CFA Singapore, Chicago, Chile, China, CIS, CNBC, Colombia, Columbia Business School, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Eurasia, Event Announcements | Tags: 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, exchanges, Financial Crisis, Flash Crash, Global Growth Markets Forum, Harvard Business School, High Frequency Trading Brazil, High Frequency Trading in Brazil, High Frequency Trading in Latin America, High Frequency Trading Review, High Frequency Trading Review Brazil, high frequency trading workshop, high speed traders, high speed trading, High Speed Trading in Brazil, High Speed Trading in Latin America, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Emerges in Brazil, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, High-frequency trading’s frontier, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, How Traders Profit With Computers Set at High Speed, Indonesia, Infinium Capital Management, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Lima, London, Malaysia, McKinsey, Mexico, Mexico City, Mirage or Miracle, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Oriel Morrison, Peru, Poland, Postcard from Brazil, proprietary trading, Russia, Santiago, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, Speed Trader, Speed Traders, Speed Trading, Speed Trading in Brazil, Speed Trading in Latin America, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Strategies, Technical Analysis Society, technology, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders in Brazil, The Speed Traders in Latin America, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, TradeTech Asia FIXGlobal Face2Face, Tradeworx, UAE, Ukraine, Venezuela, Warsaw |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo
Christian Zimmer, Head of Quantitative Trading and Research, and Hellinton Hatsuo Takada, Quantitative Trader, of Itaú Asset Management, compare the term high-frequency trading (HFT) to ‘Cleopatra’– sexy and mysterious and everyone is keen to know more about it. But the term HFT speaks for itself, so is it wasting time to go over it again? Probably not for the attendees to The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo: How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, February 8th, BM&FBovespa, to be led by Mr. Edgar Perez, Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University.
Zimmer and Hatsuo suggest at FIX GLOBAL TRADING to look at the underlying trading strategies. The incentives an exchange should create to attract flow must be adjusted to the strategies that are really needed. Each strategy deserves a different set of policies and this will help the diversification of the traders’ strategies.
A trader using a market maker strategy can live with exchange fees as long as the bid-ask spread is sufficiently high. If the spread narrows, the costs become crucial and the exchange must lower the fees in order to keep this client in the market. On the other hand, a directional trader has different issues; if the fees are high, a trader must wait longer for a relevant price move so that they can capitalize on their position. Contrary to the market maker, the directional trader loves to see narrow bid-ask spreads. There would be no need to lower fees when the spread is close. The same is true for the statistical arbitrage traders.
When looking at the third party analyses of HFT in the international markets, Zimmer and Hatsuo see that the most common strategy is the market maker approach. This fact is strongly influenced by market fragmentation, which they do not have in Brazil. Fragmentation creates new intermarket trades, which could qualify as arbitrage trades, but not necessarily as market maker trades. Fragmentation also makes exchanges and other venues compete for the customers that provide liquidity and, as a result, give incentives to market makers. As mentioned above, Brazil does not have a fragmented market and BM&FBOVESPA does not see it necessary to ask for more liquidity. At least not as long as international capital flows are strong and increasing. Liquidity is needed in second tier shares and below.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, led by Edgar Perez, author, The Speed Traders, will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo kicks off a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Dubai, January 25; Seoul, South Korea, March 28; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 11; Warsaw, Poland, May 11; Kiev, Ukraine, May 18; Singapore, May 26; Shanghai, China, June 6; Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4, and Moscow, Russia, August 10.
Mr. Perez is one of the great business networkers and motivators on the lecture circuit; he is available worldwide for the following speaking engagements: Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading, The Real Story behind the “Flash Crash”, Networking for Financial Executives, and Business Networking for Success.
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Posted on January 18, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Financial Crisis, Flash Crash, Strategies, Technology | Tags: 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, 2nd Private Equity Convention Russia, algorithmic trading, Argentina, BM&FBOVESPA, Bogota, Buenos Aires, Caracas, CFA Singapore, Chicago, Chile, China, CIS, CNBC, Colombia, Columbia Business School, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Eurasia, Flash Crash, Global Growth Markets Forum, Harvard Business School, high frequency trading workshop, high speed traders, high speed trading, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, How Traders Profit With Computers Set at High Speed, Indonesia, Infinium Capital Management, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Lima, London, Malaysia, McKinsey, Mexico, Mexico City, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Oriel Morrison, Peru, Poland, proprietary trading, Russia, Santiago, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, Speed Trader, Speed Traders, Speed Trading, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Technical Analysis Society, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, TradeTech Asia FIXGlobal Face2Face, Tradeworx, UAE, Ukraine, Venezuela, Warsaw |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo at BM&FBovespa
Emerging markets are an inviting target for high-frequency traders going forward, proclaims Advanced Trading’s Justin Grant. He contrasted it to a suggestion by Utah Senator Orrin Hatch to institute a tax on high-frequency trading. One of these key markets is Brazil, where Mr. Edgar Perez, Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, will lead The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo: How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, February 8th, BM&FBovespa.
Earlier this year, the note continues, India’s Bombay Stock Exchange predicted computer based-trading in its $1.5 trillion stock market will double over the next three years. Meanwhile the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) is planning to debut the ASEAN Trading Link next year, which would electronically link exchanges in Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia. Vietnam, the Philippines, and Indonesia are also slated to link their exchanges to ASEAN Trading Link in 2012. Liquidity in those markets will undoubtedly surge as they mature, making them an enticing target for high-frequency trading firms.
Brazil probably represents the best opportunity for high-frequency traders over the near term. Earlier this month it lifted a financial transaction tax of its own for foreign investors and the BM&FBovespa has been aggressive in its efforts to boost trading volumes and attract liquidity.
So even as lawmakers in the U.S. and Europe weigh the merits of a Tobin Tax, a world of opportunity awaits high-frequency traders overseas. Perhaps the CBO is wrong in its assessment. The U.S. doesn’t need a tax to diminish its role as the premier market. Seems that’s happening anyway.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo kicks off a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Dubai, January 25; Seoul, South Korea, March 28; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 11; Warsaw, Poland, May 11; Kiev, Ukraine, May 18; Singapore, May 26; Shanghai, China, June 6; Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4, and Moscow, Russia, August 10.
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Posted on January 18, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Flash Crash, Strategies, Technology | Tags: 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, 2nd Private Equity Convention Russia, algorithmic trading, Argentina, BM&FBOVESPA, Bogota, Buenos Aires, Caracas, CFA Singapore, Chicago, Chile, China, CIS, CNBC, Colombia, Columbia Business School, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Eurasia, Flash Crash, Global Growth Markets Forum, Harvard Business School, high frequency trading workshop, high speed traders, high speed trading, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, How Traders Profit With Computers Set at High Speed, Indonesia, Infinium Capital Management, Jakarta, Kiev, Kuala Lumpur, Lima, London, Malaysia, McKinsey, Mexico, Mexico City, Moscow, Nasdaq, new york, New York University, Oriel Morrison, Peru, Poland, proprietary trading, Russia, Santiago, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Seoul, Shanghai, singapore, South Korea, Speed Trader, Speed Traders, Speed Trading, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Technical Analysis Society, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo, TradeTech Asia FIXGlobal Face2Face, Tradeworx, UAE, Ukraine, Venezuela, Warsaw |

Edgar Perez, The Speed Traders
Edgar Perez, Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, will provide an Understanding of High Frequency Trading in Equities and other Asset Classes at The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo: How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, February 8th, BM&FBovespa. Among other topics, Mr. Perez will discuss:
· The need for speed and sophisticated computer programs in generating, routing, and executing orders
· Co-location and individual data feeds to minimize latency
· Time-frames for establishing and closing highly-liquid positions
· Review of the most important strategies: market making, trend following, value arbitrage and others
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo kicks off a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Dubai, January 25; Seoul, South Korea, March 28; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 11; Warsaw, Poland, May 11; Kiev, Ukraine, May 18; Singapore, May 26; Shanghai, China, June 6; Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4, and Moscow, Russia, August 10.
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Posted on January 13, 2012. Filed under: Economy, Event Announcements, Flash Crash, Strategies | Tags: algorithmic trading, CFTC, Chicago, Citadel, CNBC, DE Shaw, Edgar Perez, EESP), Escola de Economia de São Paulo, FGV, Flash Crash, Fundação Getulio Vargas, GETCO, Hedge Funds, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, McKinsey, Nasdaq, proprietary trading, Renaissance Technologies, Sao Paulo, São Paulo School of Economics, SEC, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore, Speed Traders, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, The Speed Traders |

São Paulo School of Economics, Fundação Getulio Vargas
Edgar Perez will deliver an exclusive presentation on ‘How Speed Traders Leverage Cutting-Edge Strategies in the Post-Flash Crash World’ to students, faculty and alumni of the Escola de Economia de São Paulo da Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV-EESP), Brazil, January 30th, 2012. Mr. Perez, the author of The Speed Traders, Modern Finance Bookof 2012, will review current developments in the algorithmic and high frequency worlds and opportunities and challenges for the industry moving forward.
São Paulo School of Economics (Escola de Economia de São Paulo) started the activities of its undergraduate course in 2004. Before that, the undergraduation activities of Fundação Getulio Vargas, in São Paulo, concentrated in the areas of public and private business administration. However, since the 80´s FGV already offered graduation courses in Economics at FGV-EAESP. Thus, aiming at enlarging the scope of its action, it created São Paulo School of Economics, encompassing the undergraduate course, the academic and professional graduate courses and the continuing education and specialization courses in Economics. In creating São Paulo School of Economics FGV had as its purpose the advancement of a centre of excellence in learning and research which contributed to the economic and social development of the country and to the pursuit of a national identity.
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Posted on January 11, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Flash Crash, Strategies, Technology | Tags: Administração e Contabilidade, BM&FBOVESPA, Business and Accounting, Edgar Perez, Faculdade de Economia, Faculdade de Economia Administração e Contabilidade, FEA, Golden Networking, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, McKinsey, Nasdaq, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, S&P 500 Index, Sao Paulo, School of Economics, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, The Speed Traders, Universidade de São Paulo, University of São Paulo, USP |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo
Edgar Perez, Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, will speak on The Present and Future of High Frequency Trading at Faculdade de Economia, Administração e Contabilidade, Universidade de São Paulo (FEA USP), Brazil, January 31st, 2012. Mr. Perez, the author of The Speed Traders, Modern Finance Bookof 2012, will review current developments in the algorithmic and high frequency worlds and opportunities and challenges for the industry moving forward:
· High-Frequency Trading is a set of tools that encompasses a rather diverse number of strategies that prioritize speed, low-latency, volume, liquid instruments and short timeframes
· High-Frequency Trading has been referred to as the natural progression of technology applied to the investing and trading worlds
· In the process, High-Frequency Trading has unmasked structural issues in the U.S. equity markets that are currently being examined by legislators and regulators
· Speed traders will continue finding alpha-generating opportunities by trading new asset classes in new geographies employing more sophisticated tools than ever
Faculdade de Economia, Administração e Contabilidade, Universidade de São Paulo (FEA USP), or School of Economics, Business and Accounting at the University of São Paulo, is a teaching and research institution renowned across the world for its excellence in academic production and undergraduate and graduate programs. The FEA-USP was founded more than 60 years ago to prepare professionals in business, economics and accounting in a nation whose economy was going through a process of democratization after World War II. The school’s initial goal, one which exists to this day, was to form professionals who can contribute to society and make a difference in a positive way. Decades after its creation, FEA continues to set national and international standards in its field. The school follows the high standards of the University of São Paulo and combines its knowledge of the Brazilian reality with the methodology of reputed international institutions to distinguish itself in the preparation of economists, administrators and accounting specialists.
Mr. Perez will also present at BM&FBovespa The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Sao Paulo: How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX, on February 8th. This workshop will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil, and kicks off a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Dubai, January 25; Seoul, South Korea, March 28; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 11; Warsaw, Poland, May 11; Kiev, Ukraine, May 18; Singapore, May 26; Shanghai, China, June 6; Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4, and Moscow, Russia, August 10.
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Posted on January 6, 2012. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Strategies, Technology | Tags: Abu Dhabi, algorithmic trading, automated trading, Burj Khalifa, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Dubai, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, GETCO, Golden Networking, Harvard Business School, Hedge Funds, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, Hong Kong, Infinium Capital Management, John Netto, McKinsey, Mission Impossible, Nasdaq, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, Sao Paulo, SEC, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, The Speed Traders, Tom Cruise, Tradeworx, UAE |

Avant-garde Burj Khalifa
Burj Khalifa, known as Burj Dubai prior to its inauguration, is a skyscraper in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and is currently the tallest manmade structure in the world, at 829.84 m. Not only that, it is the tallest skyscraper to top of antenna, the tallest structure ever built, the tallest extant structure, the tallest freestanding structure, and the building with most floors: 160. Would there be something that induces more vertigo than this avant-garde structure? Edgar Perez’s The Speed Traders Workshop 2012Dubai on January 25.
Mr. Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, and Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, will lead The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Dubai: How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX (http://www.thespeedtradersworkshop.com), on January 25, 2012. Mr. Perez will reveal at The Speed Traders Workshop 2012Dubai how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Dubai opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading, the most controversial form of investing today; in the name of protecting the algorithms they have spent so much time perfecting, speed traders almost never talk to the press and disclose as little as possible about how they operate. The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Dubai will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Dubai kicks off a series of presentations in the world’s most important financial centers: Sao Paulo, Brazil, February 8; Seoul, South Korea, March 28; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 11; Warsaw, Poland, May 11; Kiev, Ukraine, May 18; Singapore, May 26; Shanghai, China, June 6; Jakarta, Indonesia, June 13; Mexico City, Mexico, July 27; Hong Kong, August 4, and Moscow, Russia, August 10.
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Posted on December 21, 2011. Filed under: Book Review, Event Announcements, Flash Crash, Technology | Tags: Algorithm, algorithmic trading, Alternative Investments, automated trading systems, electrronic trading, Financial Institutions, Flash Crash, GETCO, Goldman Sachs, Hedge Funds, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Experts Forum 2010, Hong Kong, Individual Investors, Infinium Capital Management, Institutional Investors, Manoj Narang, Modern Finance Report, ModernFinanceReport.com, proprietary trading, Quantitative Trading, Securities and Exchange Commission, singapore, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, Tradeworx, Trading, Ultra High-Frequency Trading |
The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), by Mr. Edgar Perez , has been selected as Modern Finance Book of 2011 by prestigious financial blog Modern Finance Report. As another year draws to a close, editors at Modern Finance Report shared with readers some of their favorite business books of the year.
From Modern Finance Report, “high-frequency trading (HFT) is the most controversial form of investing today, and speed traders have generally flown under the radar; in the name of protecting the algorithms they have spent so much time perfecting, they almost never talk to the press and disclose as little as possible about how they operate—until now.” Modern Finance Report cites then Bart Chilton, United States Commodity Futures Trading Commissioner: “Edgar’s book is fantastic . . . I recommend it highly.”
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade.
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Posted on December 4, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Practitioners | Tags: algorithmic trading, automated trading, CFA Singapore, CIS, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Eurasoa, Flash Crash, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Infinium Capital Management, International Investors, Limited Partners, liquidity crisis, M3 Capital, Manoj Narang, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, Russia, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, Tradeworx |

2nd Private Equity Convention Russia (CIS) & Eurasia, Sofitel London St James
Edgar Perez, Course Director, The Speed Traders Workshop 2011: The Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading (http://www.thespeedtradersworkshop.com), will present at the 2nd Private Equity Convention Russia (CIS) & Eurasia (http://www.gdforum.co.uk/index.php?page=11&id=7), ‘invitation-only’ event exclusively designed for leading International Investors and Limited Partners (LPs) to meet the highest-quality General Partners (GPs) operating in Russia, CIS and Eurasia. Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), will participate on the discussion ‘Is “Silicon Valley” Unique and Can it be Reproduced in Eurasia?’, with Yury Frantsuzov, Strategic Business Development Manager with Intel, Peter Loukianoff , Managing Partner with Almaz Capital Partners, and Dr. Jan Dauman, Director and Senior Partner, Russia with CET (Central Europe Trust).
The aim of this convention – “meeting of minds” is to bring together leading names in private equity from across the largest and the most interesting continents on the planet and discuss the issues and opportunities in the private equity industry, acquire new business contacts in a relaxed and comfortable environment. Three out of four BRIC countries (Russia, India and China) are located here, plus a score of other extremely interesting emerging markets and “old economies”. The potential for growth in the private equity on this continent is immense. Some discussion groups “skewed” towards Russia and the CIS private equity industry. Nevertheless, Russia is the country that lies both in Europe and Asia and a huge market in itself. We strongly believe that the most interesting opportunities lie on the borderlines of interests, discussions and in the forging of personal relationships.
2nd Private Equity Convention Russia (CIS) & Eurasiawill be held at the stunning Sofitel London St James, located in the former home of Cox’s and King’s bank in the very heart of London, England. This sympathetically renovated building is English heritage grade II listed and now houses one of London’s most unique five-star hotels – combining traditional British design with a contemporary style that is unmistakably French. Sofitel London St James has one of the finest addresses in London, right on the corner of Pall Mall and Waterloo Place. The hotel lies in the heart of St. James’s, a prestigious and lively district of London, within walking distance of St. James’s Park and Buckingham Palace. The hotel is also less than a five minute stroll from Trafalgar Square, city centre theatres and the fabulous shopping on Regent, Piccadilly, Oxford and Bond streets.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2011, led by Edgar Perez, will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. Highlights of The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 include:
- The first and most comprehensive initiation to the world of high-frequency trading
- Study materials provided by Edgar Perez, the author of the latest book on the subject of speed trading, and a well-known presenter in America, Europe and Asia
- Strategies high frequency traders leverage to find alpha in equities, options, futures and FX
- Latest update on high-frequency trading in the world and current regulatory initiatives
- Techniques to detect high-frequency trading in the markets
- Key enablers of high-frequency trading in the U.S., Europe and Asia
- Proposed regulatory initiatives after the “flash crash”
- Up-to-date review of the future of high-frequency trading
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade. For more about The Speed Traders, readers can visit its Facebook and Twitter pages, as well as the most popular online retailers, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Borders, among others.
Mr. Perez, Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, is one of the great business networkers and motivators on the lecture circuit; he is available worldwide for the following speaking engagements: Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading, The Real Story behind the “Flash Crash”, Networking for Financial Executives, and Business Networking for Success.
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Posted on December 3, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Flash Crash, Practitioners | Tags: algorithmic trading, automated trading, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Infinium Capital Management, Manoj Narang, Nasdaq, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, Tradeworx |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 Hong Kong
Edgar Perez will lead The Speed Traders Workshop 2011: How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX (http://www.thespeedtradersworkshop.com), in Hong Kong, December 12, 2011. Mr. Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), will reveal at The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 Hong Kong how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil.
Charles Li, Chief Executive Officer of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited (HKEx), published on 26 July an article in Chinese on HKEx’s market reform; in the article, he pointed out that the enhancement of their infrastructure was a top priority in the Strategic Plan. They had begun upgrading their trading and information systems to the next generation, building a new data centre in Tseung Kwan O and developing hosting services.
In addition, he indicated that he didn’t not agree with the view that enhancing their IT infrastructure favored high frequency traders or the large brokers. Building the IT infrastructure was for him like building a highway: “We should not abandon highway construction just because a few do not want to invest in new cars or a few fear accidents. We believe Hong Kong’s current market framework, which includes stamp duty, effectively limits high-frequency trading, just like a highway with many toll booths discourages speeding. Besides, even if we don’t build the highway, we cannot prevent others from doing so and diverting liquidity, leading to market fragmentation.” No doubt it won’t long before high-frequency trading races on Hong Kong’s fast information highways.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 Hong Kong (http://thespeedtradersworkshophk.eventbrite.com) opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading, the most controversial form of investing today; in the name of protecting the algorithms they have spent so much time perfecting, speed traders almost never talk to the press and disclose as little as possible about how they operate. The Speed Traders Workshop 2011Hong Kong will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil.
Mr. Perez is one of the great business networkers and motivators on the lecture circuit; he is available worldwide for the following speaking engagements: Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading, The Real Story behind the “Flash Crash”, Networking for Financial Executives, and Business Networking for Success.
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Posted on November 18, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Practitioners | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, ASEAN, Bursa Malaysia, CFA Singapore, CFTC, Chicago, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Hyde Park Global Investments, Infinium Capital Management, McKinsey, new york, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, SEC, Securities and Exchanges Comission, SGX, singapore, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, Trading Link |

Edgar Perez, Author, The Speed Traders
Mr. Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), was featured on Channel NewsAsia, Asia Business Tonight, on the upcoming roll-out plan of ASEAN Trading Link.
The roll-out plan of the ASEAN Trading Link will see the collaboration of seven major stock exchanges in Asia, and experts have warned stock exchanges to approach the plans with deliberation. Announced on Thursday, the first stage will have the Singapore Exchange and Bursa Malaysia connected by June 2012. However, experts said there could be challenges along the way.
The Speed Traders author Edgar Perez said: “It’s been difficult in regulating markets individually – the US markets and specifically European countries’ and each country in Asia. Imagine what is going to be the case whenever you have different exchanges that are totally interconnected? At this moment, we are living in a world where… any change in any part of the world can easily be transmitted to other exchanges. Therefore, the potential for trouble exists there and it’s probably higher than in the past.”
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade.
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Posted on November 15, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Fixed Income, Practitioners | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, algorithmic trading, CFA Singapore, CFTC, Chicago, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, FIX Protocol, FIXGlobal Face2Face, Flash Crash, Futures, Golden Networking, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Nasdaq, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, SEC, Securities, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Seoul, South Korea, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, The Speed Traders |

FIXGlobal Face2Face
Mr. Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), will be presenting at FIXGlobal Face2Face, Seoul, South Korea, November 25, on “The Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading“.
Every year, over 200 industry professionals gather in Westin Chosun at the FIXGlobal Face2Faceforum to discuss the latest issues that are affecting the industry, from trading practices, through to the use of technologies. With the use of FIX Protocol in Korea breaks down fairly evenly in the Securities and Futures arenas and a strong growth potential of FIX Protocol adoption across Asset Managers, both new adoptions or migrating from non-standard FIX implementations, the event will continue to bring you the latest information on the usage of FIX on different stages of within the trading cycle.
FIXGlobal Face2Face forums feature lively debate between experts, sharing ideas and insight on implementing an effective electronic tradingstrategy, global exchanges competition, the use of algorithmic trading strategies etc. in Korea and regionally and what it means to the markets going forward.
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade.
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Posted on September 27, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Practitioners, Securities, Strategies, Technology | Tags: algorithmic trading, Chicago, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Manoj Narang, McKinsey, Nasdaq, S&P 500 Index, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop, Tradeworx |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2011
Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), will present first ever The Speed Traders Workshop 2011, “The Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading” (http://www.thespeedtradersworkshop.com), in Chicago, Sao Paulo, Singapore and Hong Kong. The Speed Traders Workshop 2011will be extremely helpful for all delegates who are working in finance and investments, from financial institutions, investment banks, hedge funds, pension funds, broker dealers, consultancy groups, prime brokers, solution providers and exchanges, who wish to gain a thorough understanding and practical knowledge of high-frequency trading.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2011, led by Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. Highlights of The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 include:
- The first and most comprehensive initiation to the world of high-frequency trading
- Study materials provided by Edgar Perez, the author of the latest book on the subject of speed trading, and a well-known presenter in America, Europe and Asia
- Latest update on high-frequency trading in the world and current regulatory initiatives
- Techniques to detect high-frequency trading in the markets
- Key enablers of high-frequency trading in the U.S., Europe and Asia
- Proposed regulatory initiatives after the “flash crash”
- Up-to-date review of the future of high-frequency trading
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade.
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Posted on August 30, 2011. Filed under: Exchanges, Financial Crisis, Flash Crash, Practitioners | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, algorithmic trading, Amazon, automated trading, Barnes & Noble, Borders, CFTC, Chicago, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Facebook, Flash Crash, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Expert, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, High-Frequency Trading Should be Regulated, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Infinium Capital Management, John Netto, liquidity crisis, M3 Capital, Market Expert Speak, McGraw-Hill, McKinsey, Nasdaq, new york, Oriel Morrison, Oriental Daily News, proprietary trading, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, Tradeworx, Twitter |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2011
High-frequency trading should continue to be regulated and not stopped, indicated Edgar Perez, The Speed Traders Workshop 2011: The Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading (http://www.thespeedtradersworkshop.com), on an interview with Hong Kong’s Oriental Daily News, for its column Market Expert Speak (http://orientaldaily.on.cc/cnt/finance/20110830/00275_001.html). Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), noted that high-frequency trading in particular is a development that was born out of the evolution of the regulatory environment, certainly facilitated by technology; therefore, it would be against its roots to oppose regulation per se.
As Ben van Vliet, Adjunct Professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology, says in The Speed Traders, “We all want to race fast but safe. It doesn’t do any good if someone crashes into the innocent crowd and kills people. There are external people that may be affected when things crash. What we want the government to do is to create a safe track for us to race fast.” Perez noted that regulators in the U.S. have adopted circuit breakers in May 2010 for 404 NYSE listed S&P 500 stocks and widened in September for Russell 1000 stocks to halt or slow down trades of a particular stock if the price moves 10% or more in a five-minute period; lately, they have proposed limit up, limit down rules, which would require that trades in all listed stocks be executed within a range tied to the recent prices for that security and impose a five-minute pause if trading is unable to occur within the price band for more than 15 seconds; those are measures that fall into the category of improvements to the race tracks for high-frequency trading. Additionally, they are implementing a consolidated audit trail that would help the SEC track information about trading orders so it can better understand the fast-paced markets. Ultimately, a flexible regulatory environment that can incorporate input from participants will be the optimal setting for the development of the industry.

High-Frequency Trading Should be Regulated, Not Stopped
The Speed Traders Workshop 2011, led by Edgar Perez, will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. Highlights of The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 include:
- The first and most comprehensive initiation to the world of high-frequency trading
- Study materials provided by Edgar Perez, the author of the latest book on the subject of speed trading, and a well-known presenter in America, Europe and Asia
- Latest update on high-frequency trading in the world and current regulatory initiatives
- Techniques to detect high-frequency trading in the markets
- Key enablers of high-frequency trading in the U.S., Europe and Asia
- Proposed regulatory initiatives after the “flash crash”
- Up-to-date review of the future of high-frequency trading
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade. For more about The Speed Traders, readers can visit its Facebook and Twitter pages, as well as the most popular online retailers, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Borders, among others.
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Posted on August 29, 2011. Filed under: Economy, Financial Crisis, Flash Crash, Strategies, Technology | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, algorithmic trading, An Insider's Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, automated trading, BNN, Business Day, Canada, Cash Flow, Cent & Sensibilities, CFTC, Channel NewsAsia, Chicago, CNBC, Edgar Perez, Fear, Flash Crash, Golden Networking, Gregg Greenberg, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Hyde Park Global Investments, Infinium Capital Management, John Netto, Kim Parlee, Lin Xue Ling, liquidity crisis, Long-Term Investors, M3 Capital, McKinsey, Nasdaq, new york, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, S&P 500 Index, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, TheStreet.com, Volatility |

The Speed Traders' Edgar Perez with BNN's Kim Parlee
For Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), increased volatility experienced by financial markets is being driven by long-term investors’ fears. Mr. Perez, who was recently featured on BNN’s Business Day and interviewed by Kim Parlee, reflected that similar concerns drove volatility to record heights during the Great Depression and Black Monday.
The stock market crash on October 29, 1929 set in motion a series of events that led to the Great Depression, but in fact, the American economy and global economy had been in turmoil six months prior to Black Tuesday, and a variety of factors before and after that fateful date in October caused and exacerbated the Great Depression. While America prospered during the 1920s, most of Europe, still reeling from the devastation of World War I, fell into economic decline. America soon became the world’s banker, and as Europe started defaulting on loans and buying less American products, the Great Depression spread. With only loose stock market regulations in place before the Great Depression, investors were able speculate wildly, buying stocks on margin, needing only 10% of the price of a stock to be able to complete the purchase. Rampant speculation led to falsely high stock prices, and when the stock market began to tumble in the months leading up to the October 1929 crash, speculative investors couldn’t make their margin calls, and a massive sell-off began. While the great rise in the stock market (from 181 points in early 1928 to 381 points in September 1929) was fueled by optimism and false hope, the plunge was flamed by stark fear.
Similar situation happened on Black Monday, the name given to Monday, October 19, 1987, when stock markets around the world ‘crashed’, shedding a huge value in a very short period. The crash began in Hong Kong, spread west through international time zones to Europe, hitting the United States after other markets had already declined by a significant margin. At the time, economists feared that if the U.S. economy faltered, the entire world economy would stumble and fall into recession again, as it had in 1981–82. Many observers now believe the panic of Black Monday simply reflected a spreading fear that the world situation was rapidly becoming unmanageable.
Fast forward to 2011, CNN’s Richard Quest concludes too that the causes of this latest crisis are fear, worry and concern, three uncomfortable bedfellows that have wreaked havoc on the world’s financial markets. “What pushed everyone over the edge was the debt ceiling debacle and the downgrading of U.S. debt by ratings agency Standard & Poor’s, that was followed by a 630 point fall in the Dow Jones index.”
Fear that the world situation is becoming unmanageable is driving long-term investors to dump equities and look for protection in less risky instruments, ironically, recently S&P downgraded U.S. treasuries. Economists at JPMorgan, in their weekly reprise of economic developments, blamed the recent global stock selloff on “a sense of policy paralysis in the U.S. and Europe, which has driven home the point that there is no cavalry to ride to the rescue.” While the sentiment is the same as in the 20s, 1987 and now, certain market participants will always look for a culprit, role played by high-frequency trading this time. No doubt if another crisis comes our way in the future, another group will receive the blame, only to be absolved by financial historians.

The Speed Traders' Edgar Perez on BNN's Business Day
BNN’s Business Day puts a spotlight on the stocks and stories expected to move the markets, and then switches to minute-by-minute coverage throughout the trading day in Canada and the U.S. Kim Parlee, Marty Cej, Frances Horodelski, and Martin Baccardax along with BNN‘s team of reporters and expert guests provide comprehensive reporting along with the best background and analysis in the business. Business News Network (BNN) is the Canadian English language cable television business channel; BNNbroadcasts programming related to business and financial news and analysis.
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade. For more about The Speed Traders, readers can visit its Facebook and Twitter pages, as well as the most popular online retailers, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Borders, among others.
Mr. Perez is widely regarded as the pre-eminent networker in the specialized area of high-frequency trading. He has been featured on CNBC Cash Flow with Oriel Morrison (http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=2023403523), BNN Business Day with Kim Parlee (http://watch.bnn.ca/business-day/august-2011/business-day-august-19-2011/#clip519647), TheStreet.com with Gregg Greenberg (http://www.thestreet.com/video/11144274/high-frequency-traders-not-the-enemy.html), and Channel NewsAsia Cent & Sensibilities with Lin Xue Ling, and engaged as speaker at Harvard Business School’s 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011 (New York, Chicago, Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, Singapore), CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University (New York), Global Growth Markets Forum (London), Technical Analysis Society (Singapore), Middle East Hedge Funds Investors Summit 2012 (Riyadh, Saudi Arabia), among other global forums.
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Posted on August 16, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Practitioners, Strategies, Technology | Tags: algorithmic trading, automated trading, Cash Flow, CFA Singapore, Chicago, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Harvard Business School, Hedge Funds, High-Frequency Finance Class, High-Frequency Finance Module, High-Frequency Finance Seminar, High-Frequency Finance Workshop, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Class, High-Frequency Trading Course, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, High-Frequency Trading Module, High-Frequency Trading Seminar, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Hyde Park Global Investments, Infinium Capital Management, M3 Capital, Manoj Narang, McKinsey, Nasdaq, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, S&P 500 Index, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders Workshop |

The Speed Traders Workshop 2011
Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), will present first ever The Speed Traders Workshop 2011, “The Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading” (http://www.thespeedtradersworkshop.com), in Hong Kong, Chicago, Sao Paulo and Singapore. The Speed Traders Workshop 2011will be extremely helpful for all delegates who are working in finance and investments, from financial institutions, investment banks, hedge funds, pension funds, broker dealers, consultancy groups, prime brokers, solution providers and exchanges, who wish to gain a thorough understanding and practical knowledge of high-frequency trading.
High-frequency traders have been called many things, from masters of the universe and market pioneers to exploiters, computer geeks, and even predators. Everyone in the business of investing has an opinion of speed traders, but how many really understand how they operate? The shadow people of the investing world, today’s high-frequency traders have decidedly kept a low profile, until now. The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading, the most controversial form of investing today; in the name of protecting the algorithms they have spent so much time perfecting, speed traders almost never talk to the press and disclose as little as possible about how they operate.
The Speed Traders Workshop 2011, led by Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, will reveal how high-frequency trading players are succeeding in the global markets and driving the development of algorithmic trading at breakneck speeds from the U.S. and Europe to India, Singapore and Brazil. Highlights of The Speed Traders Workshop 2011 include:
- The first and most comprehensive initiation to the world of high-frequency trading
- Study materials provided by Edgar Perez, the author of the latest book on the subject of speed trading, and a well-known presenter in America, Europe and Asia
- Latest update on high-frequency trading in the world and current regulatory initiatives
- Techniques to detect high-frequency trading in the markets
- Key enablers of high-frequency trading in the U.S., Europe and Asia
- Proposed regulatory initiatives after the “flash crash”
- Up-to-date review of the future of high-frequency trading
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade.
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Posted on August 3, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Flash Crash, Technology | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Algorithm, Algorithmic Trading Compliance, Alternative Investments, Andrew Kumiega, automated trading, Bank of America, Barclays Capital, Bart Chilton, BATS Trading, Bon Pisani, Cash Flow, Chicago, Citadel, CNBC, Commodities Futures Trading Commission, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche Borse, DirectEdge, Edgar Perez, Financial Institutions, Flash Crash, Fundraising, GETCO, Golden Networking, GoldenNetworking.com, GoldenNetworking.net, Goldman Sachs, Hedge Fund Alert, Hedge Funds, Hedge Funds Leaders Forum 2010, HedgeCo, HedgeConnections, HFTExpertsWorkshop.com, HFTHappyHour.com, HFTLeadersForum.com, High Frequency Trading 911, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Experts Forum 2010, High-Frequency Trading Forum, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, HighFrequencyTrading911.com, Hold, Hong Kong, HP, IBM, Individual Investors, Infinium Capital Management, Institutional Investors, James Austin, James Simons, Jim Simons, John Netto, LiquidNet, M3 Capital, Manoj Narang, Mary Schapiro, Merrill Lynch, Microsoft, Morgan Stanley, Nasdaq, new york, NYSE, Oriel Morrison, Prime Brokerage, Quantitative Trading, Raising Funds, Renaissance Technologies, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchange Commission, Sell, Short Sell, singapore, Starting a Fund, Steve Kroft, Sungard, The Speed Traders, Tradeworx, Trading, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, University of Chicago |
For John Netto, one of the leading high-frequency traders featured in Edgar Perez’s The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, high-frequency trading is going to get bigger, stronger and more prevalent. “There are potential regulatory changes that might impact the growth of high-frequency trading; that is always a possibility. They have talked about co-location and proximity legislation but who knows how it all shakes and if the desired results from this legislation are accomplished.”
Netto is the Founder and President of M3 Capital. Mr. Netto has worked with buy-side firms, sell-side firms, and technology providers on more efficiently combining structure, strategy, and personnel to increase trading profits. Mr. Netto has presented on behalf of Eurex, CME Group, The ICE, ISE, Interactive Brokers, Thomson Reuters, Profit-Loss Forex Conferences and Golden Networking as well as appearing regularly on Forex TV, Fox Business Channel, The Money Show Video Network, and many other media outlets.
Mr. Netto sees more traditional investment managers expanding into high-frequency trading; more managers are using technology as in means of investing. Similarly, he sees more institutional investors allocating part of their asset base to quantitative trading strategies. He adds: “I think at this moment the future is more than just technology, as it is already very robust; it would be more about the adoption of the technology which will determine how fast things go. Not every exchange has the same technology or robust infrastructure; I think what we will see is that more and more firms, more and more exchanges around the world get caught up and then it will be about the interchangeability of the technology. And not just from a hardware standpoint but also from a software standpoint. Issues such as ‘what exchange trade data can we give up to another exchange trade data’, and ‘how that data gets aggregated’. Considering the current environment, the future will be more about data aggregation and data processing, and getting that data in the hands of the right people than who will build the fastest server.”
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Posted on July 27, 2011. Filed under: Flash Crash, Strategies, Technology | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, Algorithm, Algorithmic Trading Compliance, Alternative Investments, Andrew Kumiega, artificial intelligence, automated trading, Bank of America, Barclays Capital, Bart Chilton, BATS Trading, Bon Pisani, Cash Flow, Chicago, Citadel, CNBC, Commodities Futures Trading Commission, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche Borse, DirectEdge, Edgar Perez, electronic financial markets, Financial Institutions, Flash Crash, Fundraising, GETCO, Golden Networking, GoldenNetworking.com, GoldenNetworking.net, Goldman Sachs, Hedge Fund Alert, Hedge Funds, Hedge Funds Leaders Forum 2010, HedgeCo, HedgeConnections, HFTExpertsWorkshop.com, HFTHappyHour.com, HFTLeadersForum.com, High Frequency Trading 911, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Conference, High-Frequency Trading Experts Forum 2010, High-Frequency Trading Forum, High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, HighFrequencyTrading911.com, Hold, Hong Kong, HP, Hyde Park Global Investments, IBM, Individual Investors, Infinium Capital Management, Institutional Investors, James Austin, James Simons, Jim Simons, John Netto, LiquidNet, M3 Capital, Manoj Narang, Mary Schapiro, Merrill Lynch, Microsoft, Morgan Stanley, Nasdaq, new york, NYSE, Oriel Morrison, Prime Brokerage, Quantitative Trading, Raising Funds, Renaissance Technologies, Robotic platform, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchange Commission, Sell, Short Sell, singapore, Starting a Fund, Steve Kroft, Sungard, The Speed Traders, Tradeworx, Trading, Ultra High-Frequency Trading, University of Chicago |
It took a while for Adam Afshar, one of the leading high-frequency traders featured in Edgar Perez’s The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, to believe that the markets were more or less efficient under normal circumstances and to realize that the analysts at most firms provided no value and sometimes a negative value. He says, “My first attempt at using the computer was to build a system to help traders have better information faster to enable them or their portfolio managers to make better decisions, a sort of hybrid system where the computers are helping the humans. But, in less than a year, I realized that discretionary human participation in selection, portfolio management , or trading was so deleterious that no amount of computer power or intellectual algorithms could mitigate it.”

Adam Afshar, Renowned Speed Trader- Hyde Park Global Investments
He adds: “It’s very important to stress this point because if the system allows human discretion at any level (idea generation, portfolio management, or trading) and your machine does not have the human discretionary elements modeled correctly in its learning algorithm (which we claim is not possible at this time), what you are left with is simply a quantitative trader that uses certain calculations to assist his or her trading. It becomes difficult or even impossible to assess whether the success or failure was due to the calculations, formula, or algorithms . Although we can argue on the pros and cons of humans as traders, we have to agree that this method is not and cannot be scientific. It is not scientific because it is not possible to backtest a model that allows any discretionary human intervention. For example, if you have computers that are generating trades, but the execution is done by humans, then we would argue that you cannot determine whether the success or failure of the system was due to its robust artificial intelligence or to a very good trader, and there is no way of testing and duplicating the results. Therefore, we would argue that any backtesting becomes essentially void.”
Hyde Park Global Investments, Afshar’s firm, is an investment and trading firm that has developed an artificial intelligence system built primarily on genetic algorithms and other evolutionary models to identify mispricings, arbitrage, and patterns for many electronic financial markets and the robotic platform to monetize the opportunities. The firm, which trades its own capital so far, potentially will accept investments from outside sources.
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Posted on July 23, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Flash Crash, Technology | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, algorithmic trading, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, Bloomberg, CFA Singapore, CFTC, Channel NewsAsia, Chicago, CME, CNBC, CNBC Cash Flow, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Gregg Greenberg, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, HKSI, Hong Kong, Hyde Park Global Investments, iMoney, Infinium Capital Management, Lakeview Arbitrage, Lin Xue Ling, liquidity crisis, Manoj Narang, McKinsey, News and Sentiment Trading, Oriel Morrison, presenting at Hong Kong Securities Institute, Public House, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, TheStreet.com, Thomson Reuters, Tradeworx, Waters USA 2011 |
Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.thespeedtraders.com), will host High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour Chicago (http://hfthappyhourchicago.eventbrite.com), at Public House this Tuesday July 26, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Traders, quants, investors, managers, and industry professionals will be in attendance at High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour Chicago, which follows recent presentations by Mr. Perez in New York, Hong Kong, and Singapore.
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time. In this new title, The Speed Traders, Mr. Perez opens the door to the secretive world of high-frequency trading. Inside, prominent figures drop their guard and speak with unprecedented candidness about their trade.
Mr. Perez has recently been featured on CNBC, TheStreet.com and Channel NewsAsia, and engaged as speaker at Harvard Business School’s 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, Columbia Business School’s Career Management Center and Alumni Club of New York, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, News and Sentiment Trading, Waters USA 2011, among other prestigious global forums.
RSVP for High-Frequency Trading Happy Hour Chicago at http://hfthappyhourchicago.eventbrite.com.
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Posted on July 10, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Flash Crash, Securities | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, algorithmic trading, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, Bloomberg, CFA Singapore, CFTC, Channel NewsAsia, Chicago, CNBC, CNBC Cash Flow, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Gregg Greenberg, Harvard Business School, High-Frequency Trading Book, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, HKSI, Hong Kong, Hyde Park Global Investments, iMoney, Infinium Capital Management, Lakeview Arbitrage, Lin Xue Ling, liquidity crisis, Manoj Narang, McKinsey, News and Sentiment Trading, Oriel Morrison, presenting at Hong Kong Securities Institute, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, TheStreet.com, Thomson Reuters, Tradeworx, Waters USA 2011 |

Edgar Perez, The Speed Traders, presenting at Hong Kong Securities Institute
Edgar Perez, author of The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.TheSpeedTraders.com), will give the keynote address at upcoming High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011 Hong Kong, “How Speed Traders Leverage Cutting-Edge Strategies in the Post-Flash Crash World”, September, 19-21, (http://www.HFTLeadersForum.com).
Edgar, who recently presented to a full room at the Hong Kong Securities Institute, is widely regarded as the pre-eminent networker in the specialized area of high-frequency trading. Edgar has recently been interviewed by CNBC Cash Flow (with Oriel Morrison), TheStreet.com (with Gregg Greenberg), Channel NewsAsia (with Lin Xue Ling), iMoney, Bloomberg, and Thomson Reuters, and engaged as speaker at Harvard Business School’s 17th Annual Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference, Columbia Business School’s Career Management Center and Alumni Club of New York, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, CFA Singapore, Hong Kong Securities Institute, News and Sentiment Trading, and Waters USA 2011, among other prestigious global forums.
Mr. Perez is one of the great business networkers and motivators on the lecture circuit; he is available worldwide for the following speaking engagements: Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading, The Real Story behind the “Flash Crash”, Networking for Financial Executives, and Business Networking for Success.
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Posted on July 6, 2011. Filed under: Exchanges, Flash Crash, Practitioners, Technology | Tags: Chicago, CNBC, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Infinium Capital Management, market crash, Oriel Morrison, Sao Paulo, Securities and Exchanges Comission, singapore |
Edgar Perez, Author, The Speed Traders: An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, spoke with CNBC Cash Flow’s Oriel Morrison about the criticism high-frequency trading has experimented since it started being covered by the mainstream media; the interview is available on CNBC’s website at http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=2023403523.

Oriel Morrison with Edgar Perez
CNBC’s Oriel Morrison, in particular, asked Mr. Perez his opinion regarding the criticism high-frequency trading has received. “Edgar, let’s take a look at some of the criticism because there has been a lot of controversy with kind of trading. Now, fairness has certainly been an issue that has been raised when it comes to this. Can there be fairness without transparency because with the speed of these trades, you simply you can’t get the transparency that you may well have if you have an institution putting on a big trade at any one point in time?”
Mr. Perez pointed out that some of the criticism is unfair and doesn’t address the right issues. “As I mention in my book, The Speed Traders, there has been a lot of criticism since 2009. And, I think that was influenced by the flash crash that happened last year. When that happened, people thought, ‘This is high-frequency traders. They are there in the market. They were not 10 years ago, so flash crashes didn’t happen before.’ But to be fair, we have market crashes all the time. We had the Great Depression. We had Black Monday. And, in those cases, you cannot say that high-frequency trading was prevalent. So, if you look at those occasions, long term investors are always the catalysts. Humans are very emotional and when they see bad news – and that’s what happened on May 6th – they will try to sell. Of course, computers in that day – May 6th – contributed to that decline in the markets in a very quick fashion. But at the same time, once the market came down, the market went up again very quickly because of computers. So, if you look at Black Monday, it took a month for the markets to recover. In this case, with the flash crash, it took 20 minutes for the market to recover. So, definitely, computers accelerate changes but it will be unfair to exclusively blame computers for this.”
The Speed Traders, http://www.TheSpeedTraders.com, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time.
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Posted on June 29, 2011. Filed under: Exchanges, Flash Crash, Practitioners, Securities, Technology | Tags: Aaron Lebovitz, Adam Afshar, algorithmic trading, CFA Singapore, CFTC, Chicago, CNBC, Columbia Business School, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Harvard Business School, HBS, High-Frequency Trading, High-Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, Hyde Park Global Investments, Infinium Capital Management, John Netto, liquidity crisis, Manoj Narang, Oriel Morrison, proprietary trading, Sao Paulo, SEC, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, Stuart Theakston, The Speed Traders, Tradeworx |

Edgar Perez, Author, The Speed Traders, at Hong Kong Securities Institute
Edgar Perez, Author, The Speed Traders, presented to a packed room of almost 200 attendees at the Hong Kong Securities Institute (http://www.hksi.org/eng/membership/event/m062811ps.html), professional body that aims to raise the standards of securities and finance practitioners in Hong Kong, on The Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading.
Mr. Perez described high-frequency trading as the natural progression of technology applied to the investing and trading worlds. In the process, high-frequency trading has certainly unmasked structural issues in the U.S. equity markets that are currently being examined by legislators and regulators in an effort to further strengthen financial markets. He indicated that, on balance, the impact of high-frequency trading is positive for all other market participants thanks to the increased liquidity it provides to retail and institutional investors.
The Hong Kong Securities Institute was officially formed in December 1997 as a professional body to raise the standards of securities and finance practitioners in Hong Kong. In setting standards for professional excellence in Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Securities Institute offers a platform where individuals can gain the skills, and achieve the necessary professionalism and personal competence as they proceed towards further career advancement. The Hong Kong Securities Institute provides continuous professional development by offering comprehensive examinations and an extensive programme of training courses and events. Finance professionals benefit from Hong Kong Securities Institute membership programme which provides invaluable support and professional recognition from industry peers.
The Speed Traders, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time.
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Posted on June 7, 2011. Filed under: Event Announcements, Exchanges, Securities | Tags: algorithmic trading, Edgar Perez, Flash Crash, Golden Networking, High-Frequency Trading, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Securities Institute, liquidity crisis, proprietary trading, S&P 500 Index, SEC, Securities and Exchanges Comission, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) E-Mini futures contracts, The Speed Traders |

Edgar Perez, Author, The Speed Traders, http://www.TheSpeedTraders.com, will address a members-only session of the Hong Kong Securities Institute, professional body that aims to raise the standards of securities and finance practitioners in Hong Kong, June 28, on The Present and Future of High-Frequency Trading.
Hong Kong Securities Institute was officially formed in December 1997 as a professional body to raise the standards of securities and finance practitioners in Hong Kong. In setting standards for professional excellence in Hong Kong, the HKSI offers a platform where individuals can gain the skills, and achieve the necessary professionalism and personal competence as they proceed towards further career advancement. The HKSI provides continuous professional development by offering comprehensive examinations and an extensive programme of training courses and events. Finance professionals benefit from HKSI membership programme which provides invaluable support and professional recognition from industry peers as well as substantial discounts on a variety of HKSI programmes.
The Speed Traders, http://www.TheSpeedTraders.com, published by McGraw-Hill Inc., is the most comprehensive, revealing work available on the most important development in trading in generations. High-frequency trading will no doubt play an ever larger role as computer technology advances and the global exchanges embrace fast electronic access. The Speed Traders explains everything there is to know about how today’s high-frequency traders make millions—one cent at a time.
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