Episode Transcript
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0:11
Hello, and welcome to another episode
0:13
of the Odd Lots Podcast. I'm Tracy
0:15
Allaway and I'm Joe. Wisn't
0:17
all Joe? Do you remember
0:20
Game Stop? No?
0:22
What was that? Tracy? I forgot game
0:24
stuff? Sorry, not not familiar with it. You
0:27
know, one of the most remarkable
0:29
things about that whole episode was
0:32
that, for a brief, glorious
0:34
moment in time, everyone was talking
0:36
about market structure and things
0:39
like payment for order flow, dtc
0:42
C collateral like that
0:44
was a discussion that you could actually
0:46
have in mainstream media and
0:49
sort of with your average person
0:51
on the street. Yes,
0:54
but I mean those conversations
0:57
were in many cases deeply
0:59
missing formed. So it
1:02
is true that there was a lot of talk about
1:04
market structure and payment for order
1:06
flow and the dtc C and all
1:08
that, and I actually did learn stuff,
1:11
but there was a lot of noise of people
1:13
who, like you know, spinning conspiracy
1:15
theories about all this stuff
1:17
hyprequency trading, how it really worked.
1:20
Um, So hopefully people learn something,
1:22
But I also suspect a lot of people went
1:24
away from that whole episode unless
1:26
they listen to lots of course much
1:28
less in form Look, I'll take what
1:30
I can get when it comes to getting people like interested
1:33
in market structure. But I think you're right.
1:36
I think probably especially
1:38
on the payment for order flow subject,
1:41
because it sounds kind of nefarious.
1:44
You know, why would someone pay you for
1:46
trade order flow? They must want something,
1:48
they must be doing something with the information.
1:51
I think it tends to lead to
1:54
you know, a lot of suspicion. Yeah,
1:56
I think that term in particular,
1:59
you nailed it. There's something about that term that
2:02
like invites a lot of sort of conspiratorial
2:04
thoughts. Yeah, exactly. And of
2:06
course we saw that really ramp up
2:09
during the game's top drama. We even
2:11
saw Congress start to you
2:13
know, they had an inquiry into payment for
2:15
order flow. The concern is
2:18
that high frequency traders are somehow
2:20
profiting off of that order flow in
2:23
a way that hurts retail
2:25
investors. And of course Robin
2:27
Hood uses Citadel as its market maker,
2:29
so we saw Citadel in the news
2:32
as well. Citadel is uh
2:34
one of its market makers. Uh,
2:37
I think, so, which is
2:39
something we'll get into. It's like all these a lot. I
2:41
mean, I've been sort of like spending the weekend
2:43
looking at some of these stats that the brokers
2:46
phase and I have lots of questions about
2:48
that. Um, so who are what are we going to talk
2:50
about? How are we going to get into this? Okay,
2:53
so today we are going deep into the
2:55
payment for order flow discussion,
2:57
and we're also going to talk more broadly about
3:00
what exactly a market maker actually does.
3:02
We have the perfect person to talk
3:05
about all this. We have the
3:07
CEO of Virtue, Doug
3:09
Si. Welcome, Duve. Hello,
3:12
how are you guys doing? Hey, We're
3:14
good. Thanks. Um, maybe to
3:16
begin with, we should kind of go straight
3:19
to the elephant in the room and
3:21
talk about something very very serious. But
3:24
what's up with the hot dogs? So on
3:26
your Twitter account you seem
3:29
to talk a lot about hot dogs?
3:31
What's going on? Well, I
3:34
resent the elephant in the room analogy.
3:36
I'm a bigger guy and my Twitter handle
3:39
is Dougie Large. So, against
3:42
my better judgment, about ten years ago, I
3:44
opened a Twitter account and then my partner
3:46
I bought a hockey team and I started tweeting about
3:48
hockey. And you know, hockey fans for the
3:50
most part are favorable, nice people, but then you get
3:52
to five percent of the keyboard
3:54
warriors and it started to be abusive towards
3:57
me. So I stopped tweeting about hockey to said, don't tell
3:59
I'm talking about And I happen to run,
4:01
as you say, a quote unquote high frequency trading
4:03
firm. And in two thousand fourteen, there was this little
4:05
book called flash Boys that came out and
4:07
dark pools and all these nefarious sounding
4:09
terms, and people started tweeting me like
4:12
I was a criminal. And I said, okay, well that's not a good topic.
4:14
I guess I'll stop doing that. And then
4:16
I found the one universal in this country
4:18
that nobody can say anything negative about.
4:20
It's the great American hot dog. And there's
4:23
a company called Feltman's which is founded
4:25
by two great veterans from West Point, and
4:27
they rediscovered the original
4:29
cone Allan hot dog and they're fantastic. They've got
4:32
the perfect mix of spices and they kind
4:34
of pop when you eat them. And I decided,
4:36
Okay, if I get behind these guys, I have no
4:38
financial interest. I just love them. They're great Americans
4:40
and they have a great hot dog. I said, there's not a chance
4:43
people can give me grief about tweeting
4:45
about hot dogs. And you know, I
4:48
have not had any negative comments.
4:50
These these look really good. I'm
4:52
on their website right now, and I'm
4:55
definitely going to mustard get
4:57
the mustard. Also, trust me, when I tied the mustard
5:00
better than like a sell, I put it on everything. I
5:02
put on everything. I'm definitely
5:04
gonna order or something. I know market making.
5:06
I know market making and eating. Those are the two things
5:08
I'm an expert in. Maybe we should
5:11
also talk about market making though, if you insist,
5:13
So what is H two?
5:16
So I just give us the sort of brief version of
5:18
its history and what how it fits
5:20
into the sort of market ecosystem. Sure,
5:22
sure, So we started in two thousand eight,
5:24
Beril even or not. My partner was an
5:26
old school market maker. He was in the pits, you
5:28
know those trading pits, remember the movie Trading Places
5:31
of the New York of the New York Mercantile Exchange. His
5:33
name was Vinny Viola. He was an old school market
5:35
maker. Stood in the middle of the pit and a bunch
5:37
of guys screamed orders at him, and he tried to make
5:40
what is known as the bid offer, spread the difference between
5:42
what a willing buyer and a willing seller we're
5:44
willing to pay. In that in that pit, he was trading
5:47
mostly like crude and gasoline futures,
5:49
right, So he was a futures trader. And
5:51
Vinny was smart enough to realize that two
5:54
odd guys standing in a circular
5:56
pit screaming at each other making funny hand signals
5:59
wasn't not going to be the end state of financial
6:02
intermediation, price discovery, trading,
6:04
whatever you want to call it, and that technology
6:06
was going to evolve that process. And
6:09
so that was his thought behind forming
6:11
Virtue Financial. I was a lawyer, very
6:14
happily at a l offer him in Manhattan called Paul Weis.
6:16
For eighteen years I was his lawyer, and he
6:18
said said to me one day, you
6:20
know you'd be a hell of a businessman. Do you ever think about quitting
6:22
being a lawyer? I said, not until now, and then
6:24
I quit and we started Virtue and
6:26
our idea was to be a
6:29
very large scaled, automated financial
6:31
intermediary market making firm that would try
6:33
to be the best bid and the best offer
6:35
in every electronic marketplace in
6:37
the world. We had a very ambitious goal and
6:40
obviously we're we're more well known as
6:42
you guys indicated in your lead in for US
6:45
equities and being a what's called a wholesale
6:47
market maker, but we make markets in
6:49
over two d and fifty different marketplaces
6:51
in the world, in global equities, but also in
6:53
f X, and in treasury futures,
6:56
and in commodity products and medals and
6:58
corn, sugar, cocoa, you
7:00
name a product that is trade electronically
7:03
in a venue in the world.
7:05
Frankly, where there's enough need
7:07
for liquidity, provider a market maker, and
7:09
that's what Virtue does. And we also,
7:12
through an acquisition, have a very large agency
7:14
business where we act as an agent for
7:17
clients that want to access generally the global
7:19
equities market. So it's a pretty large scaled
7:21
global financial services firm. On
7:24
the CEO of it, we've got about a thousand employees
7:26
twelve offices around the world and last
7:28
year we generated about two point three
7:31
billion dollars of net trading revenue
7:33
and that equated to roughly about a billion six
7:35
five of of IBADA so
7:37
adjusted EBADA. So we're pretty large
7:39
financial services firm. That's what we do.
7:43
Not bad. Yeah, I think your stock is up
7:45
quite a lot as well. And you're the only
7:47
publicly traded market maker
7:49
over in the US, so you have that distinction
7:52
too. That is correct. Just
7:55
on the market making business. Could
7:57
you maybe talk to us a little bit more about that.
8:00
I think we throw this term around quite a lot,
8:02
like, oh, they make markets and whatever,
8:04
But can you talk to us about what
8:07
exactly that entails
8:09
and why don't we narrow it down to US
8:11
equities? Yeah? Sure, so in US
8:13
equities, think of it. There's two
8:15
forms of market making, if you will, that we
8:18
engage in. So right now, believe
8:20
it or not, there are fifteen national securities
8:22
exchanges. You you probably know NASDAC in New York,
8:24
but there's another thirteen i E actually may have
8:26
heard of. Maybe you've heard of the cbo
8:28
E Stock Exchange. But then there's you
8:31
know a ten or other ones, including the Members Exchange,
8:33
which I helped start at Virtue, you know those kinds
8:35
of things. And so we are
8:37
a firm that does not really care
8:39
about directional risk. In other words, we're
8:41
not a hedge fund. We're not speculating.
8:44
We're not buying Tesla at at
8:46
six hundred hoping it goes to eight hundred. Really,
8:48
what we're trying to do is be the
8:51
guy that's on the inside that's willing to buy from
8:53
you and sell to you, right and sell
8:55
to somebody else to try to make that little penny
8:58
spread every single time. So are
9:00
holding time in most of the
9:02
top five names of US equities you
9:04
know will be hopefully a few seconds
9:06
or less than a second, right, because the
9:08
likelihood that a willing buyer and a willing seller
9:10
come together at exactly the same
9:13
moment in time is pretty diminimous. It's sort of like
9:15
if you think about the Civil War, the Revolution I wore
9:17
two bullets meeting in the middle of the air.
9:19
It doesn't happen all that often. So you need
9:22
a company that is willing enable,
9:24
has the financial resources, but also understands
9:26
those The US equities market, with
9:28
fifteen national securities exchanges
9:31
and forty different dark pools and a bunch of other
9:33
brokers, it's a very fragmented market. So
9:35
stitching together that marketplace takes
9:38
a lot of financial technology
9:40
and a lot of investment. We invest hundreds of millions
9:42
of dollars every year to have technology
9:45
that's able to understand and stitch that marketplace
9:47
together. But again, the difference between what we
9:49
do and when a lot of other other firms do,
9:51
like quote unquote high frequency trading firms,
9:53
is that we are a passive market maker.
9:56
We're always entering the market by saying,
9:58
here we go. We're willing to sell
10:00
you something at ten, we're willing to buy it at nine,
10:03
and there's a penny spread in between, and
10:05
we hope to collect that. More often than not, a lot of
10:07
times we get run over and we lose money.
10:09
You mentioned game stop before. I'm sure we'll talk about
10:11
that plenty. But in the game stop situation, when
10:14
the markets just crashing one way or together,
10:16
the market maker pretty much gets its face ripped
10:18
off right. It's on the train tracks, the trains coming,
10:21
and it can't get out of the way. The other
10:23
thing we do, which I'm sure you want to talk a lot
10:25
about, is what we call whole selling. So there
10:27
are these institutions called retail
10:30
brokers, wealth managers. You know robin
10:32
Hood, Fidelity, Schwab e Trade
10:34
which is now Morgan Stanley, but also
10:37
Stifle, Raymond, James, JP, Morgan
10:39
Asset Management, RBC
10:42
Wealth Management. Think of any aggregator
10:45
of high net worth or professional trading flow.
10:47
In the United States. We have this unique structure that
10:50
those institutions have a choice.
10:52
They can send their orders, their market orders
10:55
right to either in exchange
10:57
to a dark pool, or they can
10:59
send it to a whole sell or a market maker. Citadel
11:01
is the largest retail market maker. We're
11:03
number two. They've got roughly the market
11:05
we've got roughly. And then
11:07
there's a handful of other institutions,
11:10
Susquehanna too, Sigma Ubs, We're
11:13
all competing for that order flow
11:15
from roughly two hundred retail
11:17
brokers, wealth managements, wealth
11:19
managers, excuse me, aggregators of flow, etcetera.
11:23
So you just named a
11:25
bunch of market makers that you compete with, and
11:28
I'm wondering, when it comes to something like market
11:30
making, it sounds like such a basic function. You
11:32
know, you're matching up buyers with
11:34
sellers and you're taking a small
11:36
cut of the transaction. What
11:38
is competing or what does competition
11:41
actually look like in that scenario? Like
11:43
what what makes Virtuo special
11:46
or different to say Citadel or Susquehanna.
11:49
Yeah, that's a great question. So I should
11:51
have actually, uh explained
11:54
that better. So let's go back to the two
11:56
hundred institutions we we we that I
11:58
mentioned before, right, everybody from
12:00
a Merror trade to Zecho Trade eight Z and
12:02
everybody in between. Every single one of those
12:04
institutions has the best Best Execution
12:06
committee, And what they're measuring is there's
12:08
something called a national best bid and best offers.
12:10
So that's the consolidated tape.
12:12
You take those fifteen national securities
12:15
exchanges and you say, okay, at any moment
12:17
in time, right, for at least a
12:19
hundred shairs, what's the what's the best price
12:21
that someone is willing to sell in
12:24
the best price that someone is willing to buy a
12:26
particular security. That's called the n b B Okay.
12:29
And so every one of those retail brokers gets
12:31
the same feed, right, the same
12:33
consolidated feed that we do, right,
12:36
and they all measuring at the time that they send
12:38
us a market order. Right, you want to buy a hundred
12:40
shares of Tesla, what was the national
12:43
best offer for Tesla
12:45
at that moment in time? Okay. What
12:47
we do as marketmakers is we try to improve
12:50
that national best bid or best offer. That's called
12:52
price improvement or e Q. And
12:54
as you mentioned in your in your lead
12:57
in, all of the statistics around
12:59
price improvement are publicly available,
13:01
and so the brokers have their own routing
13:05
statistics where they measure our execution
13:07
quality, the ability for the market
13:09
maker to improve off
13:12
of the n b b O and
13:14
to the extent and to the amount we're willing
13:16
to do so, they will send us order
13:18
flow. Now, obviously they don't send their
13:20
order flow to Citadel or
13:23
two vertuur to Susquehanna. But
13:25
and they don't do it all as one big bucket.
13:27
Sometimes they do it by different names, depending
13:29
upon a DV, depending upon volume. They
13:31
all have their own unique routing
13:34
methodologies. But every single
13:36
one of them is based off the
13:38
the amount that the market maker
13:41
is willing and able to improve the
13:43
national best bid and best offer. Just
13:45
to give you some statistic which is pretty
13:47
compelling, in two thousand and twenty, the
13:49
five or six of us the market making firms in
13:52
the aggregate provided price
13:54
improvement, So prices better
13:56
than the n b b O in an aggregate amount
13:58
of three point seven billion dollars. Right,
14:01
So that means a retail investor in
14:03
general, right, is getting a price that
14:06
is better than what they could get
14:08
on a national securities exchange. Right.
14:11
And so that's the that's why they
14:13
rout us those orders. Right. Payment for wonder
14:15
face a separate thing. We'll talk about that in a second. But
14:17
two d Odd Brokers are saying,
14:19
hey, you can provide better execution
14:22
quality than we can get on an exchange. And the natural
14:24
question you're about to ask me is why would you like
14:26
to ask that question? You want me to just keep going. I
14:29
just want to back up real quickly. I just want
14:31
one I got. I got on a roll sometimes and
14:33
I talked forever, so I'll try to stop for you. Guys. This
14:36
is great. It's our job to stop you, but
14:38
this is super helpful. I just one. So the
14:40
NBBO it's purely
14:43
exchange price correct because that's
14:45
the only the difference between exchange
14:47
and a dark pool. Right. You know,
14:50
the marketplace is terrible at naming
14:52
things, right, A dark pool sounds like this nefarious
14:55
thing, and also it's a flash trade.
15:00
I know, if I could do my
15:02
life over again, I would have renamed all these things. But
15:04
putting that aside, virtue is named for virtue,
15:06
right, we try to be virtuous to the market, so we at least have
15:08
a nice name. So what a dark
15:10
pool is? It's actually technically it's
15:12
called an a t S or an alternative
15:15
trading system, the lynchpin of
15:17
the U S equities market. And indeed, you know, the
15:19
U S economy is competition, right,
15:21
and so a long time ago, back when
15:23
I was a lawyer, if someone said, you know what these exchanges
15:26
and it was really just the New York Stock Exchange until
15:29
let's say the early nineties. They have a monopoly,
15:31
they're really expensive. Bad things go on
15:33
there. There was you know, alleged criminal activity
15:36
with the specialist. You can google all that. So the exchanges
15:39
weren't all that, let's put it that way, right, and they were,
15:41
you know, it was kind of a private boys club, if you will.
15:44
And so a bunch of banks and other broker said,
15:46
we want to be able to create an alternative
15:48
trading system and a t S. So the SEC
15:51
has REGGAETS and it basically
15:53
says, if you want to be a
15:56
place where people are sending orders, right,
15:58
as long as you don't have more than five
16:01
of the market in a particular name, you
16:03
can do that. You have to publish your rules. We
16:05
run to a t S is at Virtue. You've got to publish
16:08
your rules, but you cannot display
16:10
market data. Okay, so it has to be
16:12
quote unquote dark. That's why people call them dark
16:15
pools. So people brokers
16:17
right can rest orders in an
16:19
A T S with the safety
16:22
and security that they know that that they're
16:24
not exposing large
16:26
size to the rest of the world. Why don't people
16:29
like to trade on exchanges is because
16:31
the entire world knows, Like you
16:33
know, I'm an agency broker. If I get in order
16:35
from a large asset manager to buy
16:38
a hundred thousand shares a Tesla and
16:40
I just post that on an exchange. Now the entire
16:42
world knows that there's a giant whale
16:45
out there that wants to buy a hundred thousand
16:47
shares a tesla. What's going to happen to the market? Right?
16:49
You can imagine people will change the
16:52
risk that they see in that market because they know that
16:54
there's a huge imbalance, right.
16:56
And so that's one of the reasons why investors,
16:59
broker a smart folks in the marketplace wanted
17:02
choices, and that's why they created these A T s s.
17:04
Right. So, an exchange has
17:07
public displayed market data, right, it gets
17:10
quoting revenue because of that they make it. They
17:12
make about four or five million dollars a year
17:14
justin consolidated tape revenue. That's one of
17:16
the benefits to being exchange, right,
17:18
Whereas an a TS is only charging a transaction
17:21
fee, right, and orders etcetera
17:24
are executed quote unquote in the dark, and that's
17:26
why people call them dark pools. There's nothing to various
17:28
about them. It's just an alternative method.
17:31
Again, always think what what the
17:33
great thing about our marketplace in the US and why
17:35
it's it's so darn efficient and why it's so damn
17:38
competitive and cheap is because you have this
17:40
competition. So I want to
17:43
esca follow up. You know, all
17:45
of the I was doing a little trying
17:47
to learn a little bit to prepare for the for
17:50
this discussion. And so I see
17:52
all of the brokerages are the retail brokerages
17:55
or I guess everyone follows the six files,
17:57
these Form six or six. We're
18:00
they talk about the market makers
18:02
to whom they're routing orders and they helpfully
18:04
sort of like basically break down
18:07
their market share and so for
18:09
eat, So for example, robin Hood in
18:12
the last quarter, it looked like almost their
18:14
shares went through Citadel Virtue
18:17
looks like got a little bit under. What
18:20
determines how a broker
18:23
allocates its routing
18:25
is it is every trade its
18:28
own discrete auction
18:31
of and you're all competing for it. There like, how does this
18:33
process work? No, not at all, not at all. So
18:35
the way it works is, as I try
18:37
to articulate, they have a best execution committee,
18:39
right, and they have their routing protocol.
18:42
Again, it's always
18:45
based off of how much are we willing
18:47
to improve off of that m B B oh so quote unquote
18:49
price improvement um. And so
18:52
in the beginning of the month. Quarter some
18:54
brokers do it weekly, but it's not daily, and
18:56
it's certainly not by symbol, right, there's just way
18:58
too many orders for every thing to be an individual
19:00
auction. So they said it in the beginning
19:03
of the week. Let's say at the beginning of the month. Every broker's
19:05
got their own rule and they say, okay, in
19:08
the prior period, right, so it's you know,
19:10
we're now in March. So in February, Virtue,
19:12
Citadel, Susquehanna too, Sigma.
19:15
I don't know who else is in you know, Ubs, Wolverine
19:18
right there, five or six firms we all bashed,
19:20
we bashed our heads against you know, each other, and
19:23
for you know, every broker's
19:25
got a different way of looking at it. But for the
19:27
top five hundred names that are
19:30
in the snph. Here's the aggrega
19:32
amount of price improvement. And Citadel came in first
19:34
place, right because they provided forty
19:37
two points of EQ. It's all measured off
19:39
of the mid of the mid So how much are you willing
19:41
to improve off of the midpoint between
19:43
the bid and the offer? And Virtue
19:46
came in second place, Susquehanna third, two
19:48
sigma, etcetera. So this therefore, in the
19:50
month of March, right, we're gonna give Citadel
19:53
for Virtue Susquehanna
19:56
twelve percent, etcetera. During the measurement
19:59
period, whether it's a eeker a month, we're
20:01
in constant dialogue with them. They will say, hey, look,
20:03
you're doing really well in the
20:05
top five indet names, but you're really doing poorly
20:08
in the bottom thousand names. Can you improve your
20:10
EQ? So they're always, you
20:12
know, trying to get us to frankly,
20:14
provide more value back to their their
20:17
clients. And if you watch
20:19
TV, and I'm not going to name the network because it's
20:21
a competing network, there's actually one of the really
20:24
really large brokers. There's two dudes sitting
20:26
having lunch and one guy shows
20:28
him his little iPhone and says, well, you know, look
20:30
at the execution quality I got, and
20:32
he buys, and he saved twelve dollars and ninety
20:34
three cents, and he pays for the grill cheese
20:37
sandwich at lunch. Right, they must be
20:39
in like not in New York because the grill cheese would cost
20:41
more. But that that's is literally that's
20:43
what we do, right, So think about how
20:45
important it is that an advertising
20:48
agency for one of the largest retail
20:50
brokers in the world. Right, that's
20:52
an American institution. I'm not going to name their
20:54
name. You can think of the commercial right, they
20:57
are spending money advertising
20:59
the word that Citadel, virtue,
21:01
sus behind, etcetera. Do I think about
21:04
how ingrained that is in the system,
21:06
and then juxtaposed that against the
21:09
frankly lunacy that people were articulating
21:11
about Robin Hood and Citadel. It's just, you
21:13
know, that's why I watched Late
21:16
January and my my job was like hitting
21:18
the table and thinking, my god, these people have no
21:20
idea what the hell they're talking about. You know, it's
21:22
such an important part of the ecosystem, and
21:25
it's so ingrained, and it's so valuable
21:28
that one of the largest American financial
21:30
institutions. You think so much
21:32
of it that it advertised it that this as as
21:34
like a service, right.
21:37
I apologize for my voice changing there,
21:39
but it's like the the the
21:41
juxtaposition of the two was just so amazing.
21:44
Here I am watching, you know, the anchors on that
21:46
network who don't have a clue what the hell they're
21:48
talking about. If you follow my Twitter
21:50
account, I actually tweeted one of them and told him that, and
21:52
then he had me on the I saw you you
21:54
tweeted your personal phone number. That seemed
21:57
kind of risky. Well not really, you
21:59
know, I got not and a hide and he was so
22:02
naive. I'll be nice about what he was saying.
22:04
It was it was embarrassing, I thought, and
22:06
I told him as much. Anyhow, so I
22:09
will get off my soapbox and allow you to continue.
22:12
Well, so why don't we get over to the GameStop
22:15
phenomenon, and maybe just to begin, I'll
22:17
ask a sort of broad question. So how
22:20
much did the shift to a
22:22
no commission trading model
22:24
and the sort of boom in retail stock
22:27
trading that we've seen over the past year, Like, how
22:30
much of a difference did that make for your business?
22:34
Yeah? Look, I mean, it was huge. I mean, and again thank
22:36
you for noting it really was the zero commission
22:38
phenomena and that that was a long time
22:41
coming. Right. There was a whole bunch of regulatory changes
22:43
in two thousand five, you know, decimalization,
22:46
right, so spreads narrowed, technological
22:49
advances, you know, give a lot of give
22:51
a shout out to all of the pioneers and guys
22:54
that started a merry trade and e trade in
22:56
etcetera, etcetera. Um Robin
22:58
Hood, Uh, you know, was the zero
23:00
commission broker. I believe
23:02
they started I think in two thousand fifteen,
23:05
and I knew at some point the incumbents,
23:08
obviously you know, Schwab, Fidelity, E Trade,
23:10
etcetera, would have to match that pricing,
23:13
and they did and that happened in November two right.
23:16
So that was like sort of the the Kuda
23:18
gra of a long period of technology
23:21
and evolution, you know. And then on top
23:23
of that, you know, the pandemic hits right, work
23:25
from home. You know, there's no sports
23:27
betting, you know what, the Tesla.
23:30
There's a whole bunch of other factors right that
23:33
led into it. It really was a zero commission phenomenon.
23:35
So if you think about retail trading as
23:38
the percentage of the US equities market, it went
23:40
from called it like fifteen percent. Two
23:43
is high on some days as like, So
23:45
that is a meaningful increase. It's kind of settled
23:48
somewhere between twenty two and of
23:51
the overall US equity market. But this is a
23:54
very important and as was
23:56
demonstrated in late January, a
23:58
powerful segment of the marketplace, and so
24:01
it needs to be understood and reckoned
24:04
with and the regulators obviously
24:06
we'll look at all this, but at the end of the day, you've seen
24:08
a systemic shift in the US
24:10
equity market. I will say, because
24:12
we're a global market maker, this is not unprecedented.
24:15
You know, if you travel over to Japan, where we
24:18
have we do a lot of business. You know, we
24:20
have a partnership with SBI Securities
24:23
where we do something similar in terms of being
24:25
a retail market maker, and over there, you
24:27
know, retail is a big part of market. You know
24:29
that people have their smartphones
24:31
and they're trading all the time, and not just equities.
24:34
I mean they're trading again futures they trade,
24:36
you know, the SMP futures, they trade, the Russell
24:39
you know. So this this shift
24:42
is important and systemic, but it's not without
24:44
global precedent. Can
25:00
we go back you you mentioned the
25:03
term payment for order flow, and it's
25:05
scary and people don't understand
25:07
it. It is an ominous sounding term andent.
25:09
But I do think it's like one of the things in this
25:11
whole game Stop story that people got super confused
25:14
about. Why would you pay
25:16
for order flow? What? What is it so value about
25:18
about my five tesla trade on robin
25:20
note that you'd pay for it? Yeah, exactly, We're waiting
25:23
for your trade, just tell me when it's coming. So
25:25
let let me take a step back. So before I mentioned there were
25:27
two hundred odd retail brokers, wealth managers,
25:29
etcetera. Right, and those are our clients, and
25:31
Citadel's got you know, a similar bunch. It's
25:34
not just US institutions, by the way, there's Canadian
25:36
and European wealth managers. They're sending us orders
25:39
and getting guaranteed execution along
25:41
the eCos you know, in the ecosystem I described
25:43
to you earlier. So of that two
25:46
hundred eye brokers, there's roughly
25:48
ten that's say, okay,
25:51
in addition, in addition, that's the key
25:53
to price improvement. We want you
25:55
to pay us a rebate, okay, and
25:58
so effectively, and
26:00
that rebate is going to be set. There's not an
26:02
auction right there, not routing flow because
26:05
Citadel is willing to pay a couple of
26:07
pennies more than virt two. It's set and
26:09
it's in stone. So there are some brokers.
26:11
Let's say give us ten mills, right, ten
26:13
ten cents per d. I don't want to be two technical. Others
26:16
say eighteen per hundred, whatever it is,
26:18
And that goes into our calculation
26:20
of how much value are we willing to provide
26:23
back to the broker from our perspective,
26:25
from the virtual perspective, I imagine City on the
26:27
other competitors look at it the same way. We're Switzerland.
26:30
There is value to us as
26:32
the market maker in extracting
26:35
the bidden offer. Really, what we're doing is,
26:37
you know, if Tesla is a nickel wide
26:40
in the marketplace, we think we can
26:42
narrow that spread, maybe by a
26:44
halfpenny, maybe by a penny. Right,
26:46
because we're really good, and we're really
26:48
good, We've invested a lot of money in it. And because
26:50
your order and literally the hundreds
26:53
of thousands of other orders that we're getting are
26:55
smaller in size, so they're not going to move the marketplace.
26:58
Right, they're not big institutional orders, and
27:00
they tend emphasis on the tend
27:03
not to be correlated with the remainder
27:05
of the marketplace. Right, because the theory
27:07
is, Hey, Joe is a retail investor.
27:09
He's gonna trade five times a day,
27:11
five times a month, whatever it is. He's going to buy
27:14
his hundred shares. He's gonna push his little
27:16
button. He's gonna want to buy a market
27:18
buy a hundred shares of Tesla at the market, and
27:21
he's gonna hold it for six months, a year,
27:23
three months, and whether he buys it at
27:26
you know, ten, or we're gonna slightly price improvement,
27:28
Joe doesn't really care, but we care
27:31
a lot. So you're not competing
27:33
with Virtue in Citadel, right. Virtue in Citadel
27:36
have this unique ability to
27:39
narrow the bid offer spread and extract
27:41
some value. Right. Joe
27:43
has a very different time, you know, a temporal
27:46
view of the world. Joe's thinking, all right, I'm
27:48
going to hold this thing for a week, a month, whatever
27:50
it is. We're trying to hold it literally for
27:53
you know, if we can ten milliseconds a second
27:55
because it's gonna be thrown into this
27:58
portfolio that we're managing, and we're gonna try to extract
28:00
that bid offer. And really, what the brokers have
28:02
done, they're smart. They realize there's value
28:05
two smaller non correlated markets,
28:08
two orders, excuse me, and they've gone to
28:10
the market makers over the last thirty years.
28:12
This is not a new phenomenon. Said listen. We
28:14
know you guys are good, We know you guys
28:16
can make money off this. We know that this money
28:19
means, this value is
28:21
only there for the market makers. It's not there
28:23
for anybody else. We're not taking money from a
28:25
retail investor, but we the
28:27
retail brokers, we want you to pay
28:30
profit share some of that bid
28:32
offer back to us, and for
28:34
the most part, we're gonna return that to our clients
28:36
in the form of price improvement the ad I mentioned
28:38
before right there. And in
28:41
some cases the brokers have made a decision
28:43
which I don't care about, that they're going
28:45
to take that money and they're gonna use it to offset
28:47
their costs of providing their service so that
28:49
they can provide that service back to
28:51
their clients for zero commission. Right,
28:54
So think about it this way and then I'll stop my my
28:57
diet tribe, which is Joe
28:59
is a retail and Tesla is offered
29:01
on the market at ten. We're
29:04
willing to say, all right, Joe, we're gonna give
29:06
it to you a nine spot nine nine, so we're actually
29:08
gonna price improve it. So Joe is happy he
29:10
bought it actually at a better price than when
29:12
he saw it in exchange. The reason we're
29:14
willing to do that is because we think we can make
29:17
maybe there was a nickel, we can make maybe half a
29:19
penny. So Joe gets price improvement, virtue
29:22
makes a little bit of money, and Joe pays
29:24
literally zero. The alternative
29:26
would be, if there's not payment for the flow,
29:29
Robin Hood's gonna charge you four dollars you
29:32
portrayed. So you bought a hundred shares
29:34
and maybe we made half a penny and you've
29:36
got a penny of price improvement. You're not buying
29:39
that Tesla at ten because you think it's gonna
29:41
go to ten oh one and you're gonna sell it and you're gonna
29:43
make you know, a dollar, right, You're
29:45
buying it a ten because you think it's gonna go to you
29:48
know, thirty and you're gonna make twenty So
29:50
where the critics are just completely asked
29:53
backwards. Is there there's no value
29:55
that I'm taking out of your pocket. I'm taking value
29:58
out of the marketplace and in fact then profit
30:00
sharing it back to you. It's a win win
30:02
for everybody. The last point I'll make and then I promise
30:05
i'll shut up, is And the reason I got
30:07
so piste off at Sorkin was because
30:09
he sits there every time he says, well, it's like
30:11
Facebook, there's an information avenge. We're getting
30:13
client information, complete and utter
30:15
bullshit. Am I allowed to say that on this It's
30:18
complete, utter bullshit. Sorkin
30:20
is wrong about that. I told
30:22
him that. I'll say it publicly, round and
30:25
round again. This is not Facebook. If anything.
30:27
You know, there's six or seven firms
30:30
competing. Every single one of the orders
30:32
we get, we get millions of them per day, are
30:35
anonymous. We have no idea if it's Joe Sally
30:38
or if it's some institution behind it. Right,
30:40
So, the notion that there's some big, nefarious
30:43
Facebook thing going on here is just you
30:45
know, a concoction of people
30:48
that spend way too much time looking at Silicon
30:50
Valley companies. This is completely opposite. If
30:53
anything, the information asymmetry
30:55
is the opposite way. We have no idea if
30:58
everybody's going to send us a hunt with chairs to buy
31:00
Tesla at the same time, and we're gonna get our faces
31:02
ripped off, and we have no way of knowing that.
31:05
We don't have a clue. So this
31:07
is something I actually wanted to ask you. So you mentioned
31:10
this idea that retail orders
31:12
tend to be uncorrelated with the wider
31:14
market, and that makes them attractive
31:17
for various reasons. So what happens when
31:19
you do get a situation like game stop
31:21
where suddenly everyone is piling
31:23
in in one direction, we lose millions
31:25
of dollars. I sit in my office and
31:28
I'm sitting there grabbing the you know, my table,
31:31
and my knuckles are turning red on the
31:33
on whatever it was, January, whatever
31:35
it was, I forgot that day. When the market
31:37
rips in one direction and there's limit up, limit down.
31:40
I mean, it doesn't always happen. Sometimes we get
31:42
lucky because we're not flat at
31:45
all, right. We can be long or short, all
31:47
right, So sometimes we get lucky. More often than not,
31:49
you do not get lucky and you get your faces ripped
31:52
off and we lose millions of dollars.
31:54
Now, uh, you know that's why we trade
31:56
eight thousand names. That's why we have
31:58
a big firm that does a lot of other
32:00
things. This business is not profitable every day
32:03
retail market making. It's not the critics
32:05
think we just sit there and we collect the spread between
32:08
Joe and Sally and we collect pennies like we're
32:10
a toll toll bridge. If
32:12
that was the case, then literally
32:15
dozens of other institutions would come in. When industry
32:18
critics say, oh, this is an easy business. You know
32:20
what I say, compete, compete,
32:24
there's no barriered entry here. Get yourself.
32:26
You know, some investors spend hundreds
32:28
of millions of dollars in technology, like we have developed
32:31
the relationships and compete. This is a very
32:33
sharp elbowed, difficult business. And
32:35
when the market rips in one direction
32:38
in a particular name, more often than
32:40
not, we lose money. And there are days where I sit
32:42
in my office and we can be down
32:44
significant eight figure amounts. That's
32:47
like tens of millions of dollars right
32:49
for time periods. More often than
32:51
not, it reverts, and we've learned
32:53
over the years, and this business predates
32:56
me and Virtue because we bought it from a firm called
32:58
Night Capital that over twenty years,
33:00
right, it tends to make more money than not. But
33:03
it is not an easy business and the market
33:05
maker has zero, zero informational
33:07
advantage. That's the thing that really pissed me
33:09
off about when Sorkin was talking,
33:12
because he made it out like there was some informational
33:15
asymmetry for the market maker, and it's exact
33:17
exactly the opposite. We have no clue when
33:20
the Redded Army is going to strike. How the how would
33:22
we know? But on the other hand,
33:24
eventually at least robin Hood
33:27
and some of the other online brokerages
33:29
did start to curb trading
33:32
in Game Stop. So setting aside
33:34
the informational asymmetry that
33:37
gave rise to concerns, and as you just said,
33:39
when you have extreme and extreme
33:41
weird situations like in game
33:43
Stub, you start to lose money and
33:46
then suddenly, you know, the
33:48
the traded curbs kick in.
33:50
So doesn't that invite questions about,
33:53
oh, well, we're these curbs put in plays because
33:55
you were losing money? Sure
33:58
of course. Now I mean, look overall, we're
34:00
making money during that time period, right, and we we
34:02
didn't have any conversations with Robin, who had ordered
34:04
citadel Ken Griffin is a once in a lifetime
34:07
you know, a business builder, entrepreneur. He's
34:10
he's extremely ethical. Right, There's not a chance
34:12
in the world he would risk his billions
34:14
dollar empire, you know, to have some kind of
34:17
conversation with with Robin. I
34:19
knew immediately immediately. I don't want
34:21
to like sound like the guy. I mean, we are a self clearing
34:24
broker dealer. We know the folks of
34:26
the DTC very well. We know how the margin
34:28
rules work. I understand the plumbing of Wall Street,
34:30
so I knew immediately what their
34:33
issue was and that they had had a huge margin
34:35
call. Could the public relations and
34:37
the explanation of that been better, Yeah,
34:40
of course. I'm sure if Lad could go back and
34:42
redo his life, and he's an incredibly talented
34:44
guy, he probably would have, you
34:47
know, been more direct or more
34:49
a little more transparent. But you know, it's
34:51
not an easy thing to explain how margining
34:54
works in this country. I'm happy to do it. I'll put you guys
34:56
to sleep. I know it very well because I started this firm
34:59
and it was my money making the margin calls, right,
35:01
So when it's your own money, you tend to really know the
35:03
rules pretty well. But they got
35:05
one sided game stop because that's where their
35:07
clients were buying or selling. It's
35:10
an enormously volatile security,
35:12
and so the rules of the DTC
35:15
technically the n SCC are
35:17
that the variation margins of the variation
35:19
at risk of our margin if you will, for
35:21
that name, is going to be. So
35:24
when they had clients literally buying billions
35:26
of dollars, right, they're gonna get margin, and
35:29
the rules do not allow you to
35:31
use customer funds to meet that margin
35:33
call. Right. So this was literally, as
35:35
he said, a five or six sigma once
35:37
in a generation kind of event that happened.
35:40
Really, it was the rules of Wall Street that really
35:42
slowed this thing down. So the system worked exceptionally
35:45
well. We were in constant communication
35:47
with the n s c C because we wanted to
35:49
make sure that we could trade with Robin Hood.
35:52
Right, there are a counterparty of ours, we take risk,
35:54
and so the n SCC did a brilliant
35:56
job in risk managing what was otherwise
35:58
the situation that was, you know, getting
36:01
out of control. Right. They didn't do it
36:03
for any nefarious reason other
36:05
than to mitigate risk in the system,
36:08
because you had a broker that had gotten a little over
36:10
at ski tips. Right. Once they
36:12
did that, obviously, Robin Hood raised an
36:14
unbelievable amount of money. So there's some really smart
36:16
people that believe in the business model. I I
36:19
applaud that, and Robin Hood did
36:21
the only thing they could do, which was de risk
36:23
their portfolio and reduced their margin. I
36:25
would have done the exact same thing where
36:27
I in the in their situation, I
36:30
would have done a much much better job, I would
36:32
think explaining it because I know these
36:34
rules exceptionally well. So
36:37
since we're on the topic of you know what
36:40
people think might be nefarious behavior.
36:42
You talked about this idea of
36:44
information a symmetry. One
36:47
other criticism that I've seen, or that
36:50
people sometimes bring up, is the idea
36:52
that retail trades are somehow treated
36:54
differently to large institutional
36:57
trades. Can you talk a little bit about that, Like,
36:59
what does sitution actually look like? They are?
37:01
They get much better, they get much better execution.
37:04
That's the irony of this thing, right, we we have both
37:06
sides of the business. Okay, So
37:08
I'll give you an example. I'll
37:11
use a couple of names. You know, these are public
37:13
companies, right or they're large, So Fidelity
37:15
and Vanguard our giant companies.
37:18
Right. They both have retail
37:20
arms and they have institutional arms.
37:23
Right. Fidelity has got an asset management business, got a retail
37:25
business. Vanguards the same. They're both great
37:27
clients of the of ours. I love them dearly.
37:30
We have fantastic relationships with both them. I literally
37:32
have been to visit both of them, and
37:36
the retail and the institutional business our clients.
37:38
And they're in different buildings, right, And I
37:40
literally we get orders from the
37:43
institutional side, and they're paying us,
37:46
right, something less than a penny to share,
37:48
but more than zero. They can't tell you exactly
37:50
how much to route orders of Tesla, and
37:53
the notional size of that order,
37:55
and the way we trade it is really
37:58
not much different than what we do in the retail outside.
38:00
On the retail side, we get paid and
38:03
and and let me go back
38:05
to institutional order. We're not We're measured
38:07
not whether we can provide them the n B b
38:10
OH, but whether over the course of a day,
38:12
what the impact of their order is on the marketplace.
38:15
So as long as we beat a certain benchmark, right,
38:17
they're happy they haven't moved the market too much
38:19
with their order. Right. So that's kind of institutional
38:21
trading. One on one. We're getting paid a commission.
38:24
We're acting as an agent. We use our order
38:26
routing skills and our financial technology
38:29
in order to route those orders uh as
38:31
adroitly as we possibly can to minimize
38:33
impact to not move the n b B
38:36
out too much. Right now, you go
38:38
to the retail side, and what the
38:41
federal securities laws say is that every
38:43
order that is retail attested from
38:45
a broker that is less than nine
38:47
listen to this, nine thou shares
38:51
is eligible for those six or six reports. So
38:53
literally, I can get a thousand share
38:55
order of Tesla. I don't know what the hell Tesla is at
38:58
right now. It's let's say it's seven hundred, right, So can
39:00
do the math. That's a large order, right.
39:02
That order comes into the retail through
39:04
the retail pipes that we have, and
39:07
as soon as it hits our environment, regardless
39:10
of what the n b B O is in terms of size,
39:13
that hundred thousand share order or five
39:15
thousand share order, it gets
39:17
measured and we price it off of the n
39:19
b BA. So even if there's only
39:21
a hundred shares right at the inside,
39:24
I'm being very technical right now, where not only
39:26
are we price improving that, we're size improving
39:28
it. And in some instances,
39:31
like you know, for robin Hood, we're
39:33
actually paying for the privilege of doing that. And
39:36
there's some other brokers that take payment
39:38
forward to flow that are very large. Right, So think
39:41
about that juxtaposition. You've got a
39:43
retail tested order that
39:45
is, you know, could be hundreds of thousands of dollars
39:48
that's getting guaranteed execution
39:51
at or better than what they could get in exchange,
39:54
and and sometimes they're getting price improvement and the brokers
39:56
getting paid for it, whereas an institutional order
39:59
we're getting aid by the broker. Now,
40:01
look, I'm not screaming poverty. For the most part,
40:03
the orders aren't that size, right.
40:05
But if you if you talk to any institutional investor
40:08
that is I would say balanced
40:11
and even killed about how they explain themselves,
40:14
right, they will say that retail investors have an amazing
40:16
deal in this country. They would love to be able to
40:18
do that. Their jobs would be so much easier.
40:20
The institutional traders all they would
40:22
be doing would say here you go, virtue sit it will take
40:24
these orders it Unfortunately, it doesn't work that way.
40:27
So the ecosystem in the United States,
40:29
where you can get literally for no
40:32
money, a guaranteed fill
40:34
of a price that you see on your smartphone
40:36
or better, is by far the
40:39
best ecosystem in the world. Where in every
40:41
marketplace in Europe and in Asia, and
40:44
there's not a market structure
40:46
that is as beneficial to retail investors
40:49
as the United States. That's why I get
40:51
so like frustrated
40:53
when I see you know, folks on on
40:55
that other network, you know, sitting there like mixing
40:58
metaphors and and cast gating, you
41:00
know, an ecosystem that they have no clue about.
41:03
They don't have it, they don't even understand. I mean Stork
41:05
and sitting there talking about his grandmother. And
41:07
I went on TV and said, yeah, your grandmother can hold
41:09
up her smartphone, and then
41:12
he talked about his grandmother, not me, And for no
41:14
money can get a price that's better than what
41:17
t ro price can get. What the hell are
41:19
you complaining about. I
41:35
want to go back to the competition
41:38
that you guys are in with the Citadels
41:41
of the world or the two sigmas and so
41:44
forth. So what are the determinants
41:46
of who can deliver better
41:48
price? So I assume like technology is a
41:51
factor, your capital probably
41:53
presumably, let's do I don't know, take risks
41:55
here and there be willing to extend a
41:58
better offer speed, Like what
42:00
do you guys uh competing on?
42:02
And why is the market such that one
42:04
firm doesn't just swallow the whole thing by building
42:07
up sur multiple edge? Why is it always
42:09
competition? Yeah? What I what I
42:11
would say is it's not in The brokers
42:13
don't want there to be a monopoly,
42:16
right, So there's sort of like a natural
42:19
cap if you will, that any one of us
42:21
has over market share. If you look at if
42:23
you go through all those six or six reports, Yeah,
42:26
I mean maybe with some with some small exceptions,
42:29
you're never gonna see anybody really north
42:31
of certainly when it comes to marketable
42:34
orders maybe non marketable limit orders, it
42:36
might be higher. But so the brokers naturally
42:39
right, What would you do if you needed vendors,
42:41
right, and you could have people bash their heads together,
42:44
You'd like to keep two, three, and
42:46
sometimes four or five of us in competition. You
42:48
want to give us enough that we can
42:51
be profitable, right, and we can
42:53
make the investments in technology, and I'll come
42:55
back to why we make money. But you don't
42:57
want to be you know, dependent on
42:59
a single provider, right, So they want competition.
43:02
So that's why when analysts research analyst
43:04
asked me about market share, I said, well, it's really overcooked
43:07
because there's a natural cap. Really, the
43:09
way we make money is look, look. And
43:12
again this predated virtues. So
43:14
there was a firm called Night Capital that actually kind
43:17
of helped create this ecosystem. It
43:19
was called night because it was the Knights of the round Table. They
43:21
got all the retail brokers around a table
43:23
and said, hey, you guys are mad as hell at
43:26
the New York Stock Exchange. Essentially, why
43:28
don't you send your orders to us? And that
43:30
was you know, the genius of the pioneers of of
43:32
Night Capital. And so, starting
43:35
you know, twenty years ago, they built
43:37
a simulation environment of research
43:40
environment obviously that we now run. That cost
43:42
us a lot of money. We've got very
43:45
sophisticated algorithms and and strategies
43:48
right that that can internalize
43:50
that order flow and hopefully more often than
43:52
not make money on it. We've got you
43:55
know, dozens and dozens of really
43:57
really smart men and women you know,
43:59
that have PhD these and things that I vaguely
44:01
understand. I'm a liberal arts guy, right, so this is
44:03
not my area of expertise. That
44:05
literally spent you know, thousands
44:08
and thousands of people hours every year
44:10
trying to be better at UM And
44:13
you know what I what I'm good at, what Virtue is good
44:15
at is we run a very very lean, efficient
44:18
environment. So yeah, we trade an awful lot,
44:20
but we're not a big bank, right, So we have less
44:22
than a thousand employees and we
44:24
have a very large scale business that's
44:27
in over two hundred and fifty marketplaces. So what's
44:29
our competitive advantage. It's we've got
44:31
great relationships. We provide great service to those
44:34
retail brokers, right, because it's a guaranteed
44:36
execution. If we f up
44:38
and the market data is wrong, or if we have like
44:41
you know, the power goes out in our data center
44:43
something like that, it's still our execution.
44:46
We got it, we eat it, right, So if we have a
44:48
mistake, we eat it. Exchanges can't
44:50
do that. So it's a service we're providing.
44:53
And as I said, we've been doing this for
44:55
a long time and invested a lot of money, and we
44:57
do it really really efficiently. So if
44:59
you think of about like what's the margin
45:01
on this, like the margin on an individual
45:04
basis, like on a single name is
45:06
literally single digits and subpenny
45:09
And why are we so profitable and why is this business
45:11
work? Again? It comes back to scale, right.
45:14
We we trade twenty five thousand
45:16
different financial instruments and if
45:18
we you know, we try to make a couple hundred
45:21
bucks, a thousand bucks on them, that kind of thing,
45:23
and it adds up over the course of a day. And this
45:25
is a very you know, scale business,
45:28
which is why it's very difficult. You know, you
45:30
didn't notice, uh in the names
45:32
of competitors Goldman Sachs or JP Morgan
45:35
or Barkley's or Morgan Stanley, Right,
45:37
they all used to do this business right
45:39
there, but they had to get out of it. If you go look at the list
45:41
like UBS is in the business, they're probably
45:44
like number four or five, and they're kind of, you
45:46
know, not as competitive frankly,
45:49
because it's really hard to do
45:51
this business. If you've got a huge
45:53
global institution, you've gotta feed. You know, someday
45:56
I'll invite you to my office when the pandemics over.
45:58
It's not that pretty right. We don't spend money
46:00
on the on you know that kind
46:02
of thing. We have to spend money on the research environment
46:05
and the simulation environment and and
46:08
so that's why this business works for these
46:10
kinds of firms. And Citadel is
46:12
by far, you know, our biggest
46:14
competitor, and they're fantastic at it. And
46:17
you know, the notion that somehow, you know, they were mixed
46:19
up in this robin hood, you know, a conspiracy
46:22
theory, was just beyond comical
46:25
to me. So I mentioned
46:27
in the intro that one
46:29
of the big things about game Stop and robin
46:32
hood was that it kind of thrust this issue
46:34
into the spotlight, which you know can
46:36
be a bad thing. And we did see politicians
46:39
and d C take a sudden interest
46:41
in payment for order flow. What's
46:43
your read on how they
46:45
are thinking about it at the moment and
46:47
would you expect them to crack
46:50
down in some way on the business. And
46:52
actually, can I just add on, so in
46:55
the UK they don't have payment
46:57
for order flow um as far as I can
47:00
member, I think they banned it. So why has
47:02
the US gone ahead with this? But other jurisdictions
47:05
have you know, there's something about the
47:07
model that has turned them off.
47:09
So why is that? Yeah,
47:11
what I would say is, look, I mean this is not
47:14
like some new Obviously people acted
47:16
like as this there was you know, a
47:18
new situation. Right, this has been you know,
47:20
this structure, this ecosystem has been going
47:23
on for thirty plus years. To answer
47:25
the first part of your question, which is, you
47:27
know, the SEC has looked at this five
47:30
or six times, the whole notion of wholesaling
47:32
and and payment for order flower rebates,
47:35
The SEC and Finraum
47:38
are always examining the
47:40
best execution statistics
47:42
and obligations of all the retail brokers
47:45
from Robin Hood to you know, z
47:47
Echo Trade, and of all the market
47:49
makers from Virtue, Cita, etcetera. Right, So this
47:51
is not like an area
47:53
that has not been looked at by
47:56
regulators because of some of
47:58
the hysteria I'll say it around down
48:00
these meme stocks and kind of the situation it
48:02
ended up in Congress, and
48:05
I will charitably say there was a lot of misinformation
48:08
at the hearing, and I felt kind of bad for Ken and
48:10
for Vlyde and for others who were basically you
48:12
know, you know they were pinionis for five and a half
48:14
hours, and I know how Washington works. It's great. I
48:17
have spoken to over half a dozen Congress
48:20
folks and more of their staff
48:22
to try to explain, Hey, this is when
48:24
you peel back the hysteria and peel
48:26
back the onion and look at it. It really
48:28
isn't that bad. And actually, if
48:31
you're a progressive, a Democrat, whatever you want to
48:33
say, you should be thrilled with
48:35
this ecosystem because the three hundred
48:37
five hundred dollar broker that used to rip
48:39
you off by making you pay you know, an
48:41
eighth or cents spread doesn't
48:44
exist anymore. So the old Wall Street
48:46
way of like really taking it to the
48:48
real retail investor has gone away. The
48:50
retail investor is totally empowered.
48:53
To use an overused word, there's been democratization
48:57
now in Europe. Right, everything isn't as
48:59
it's as it's seems. Right. What
49:01
the retail brokers do in Europe, which I think
49:03
is actually worked worse for the investors,
49:05
right, of course I'm biased, but worse with this, they just
49:08
mark up the trade so you get a worse price.
49:11
You get a worse price, so the bid offer
49:13
that we otherwise could extract
49:15
on our own right. The retail
49:18
brokers effectively are charging
49:21
more back to their clients, so you're getting
49:23
a worse price. So which environment are you're
49:25
worse in? Would you rather pay zero
49:27
commission and get the n b
49:29
BO or better or I know
49:32
there's a zero you know commission broker
49:34
or brokers in Europe? Would you rather get that or
49:36
get a price that is, instead of Joe's ten
49:39
dollars for Tesla, Joe's
49:41
now paying you know, ten oh one or ten oh two.
49:44
I would argue, you know, you
49:46
know, Joe's getting a worst deal in Europe than he is in the
49:48
United States. So you know, to me,
49:51
it's just you know, regular
49:53
regulators looking at this and kind of you know,
49:55
in a knee jerk reaction not acting
49:58
what in the best entrance of retail broke So
50:00
long and short of it, I think this will get thrown
50:02
back to the SEC. We have a
50:05
new chairman who is a brilliant
50:07
guy who I've worked with a little bit when he was at the CFTC.
50:10
There's some staff folks there that have been there
50:12
for a long time that know this ecosystem
50:15
exceptionally well. I think they'll look
50:17
at the data, and I'm very optimistic
50:19
they will conclude that this all makes sense. Wholesaling
50:21
for sure makes sense. I think
50:24
they will look at payment for word flow
50:26
or rebates and say, maybe we need more
50:28
transparency and disclosure around it, right,
50:30
so clients know. But at the end of the day, if
50:33
you don't want to trade with a broker that uses
50:35
that does payment for water flow, then
50:37
open up a new account, you know, go
50:40
to Fidelity. They don't charge payment for word
50:42
flow and they have good prices. So at the end
50:44
of the day, it's all about choices. I don't understand
50:47
this hysteria, particularly from
50:49
those that are on the left of the political spectrum,
50:51
because you think it actually would fit in nicely
50:55
with the whole notion of a progressive
50:57
that wants to empower the little guy. The little is
51:01
unbelievably empowered in this country, and
51:03
yet people look at the ecosystem
51:05
like somehow there's something the fairies going on.
51:08
So there's always questions
51:10
of power when it comes to I mean, especially
51:13
when you bring politics into it, and there's
51:15
like who has the power at any given
51:17
moment within existing market structure.
51:19
And you mentioned that the retail
51:21
brokerages that are your counterparties.
51:24
They want to maintain some leverage, so they'll never give
51:26
one of you guys too high market
51:28
share of their flow because they want
51:30
to pit you against each other. I want to go back
51:32
to something you mentioned very early in the conversation,
51:35
and that is the power that the exchanges
51:37
have over data and the data they sell.
51:39
And I know you said you're a backer of the members
51:42
exchange to one of the new like whatever
51:44
eighteen stock markets there are talk
51:47
to us about that power over data
51:49
because I'm my understanding is that that exchange
51:52
wants to sort of disrupt that a little
51:54
bit. And how do you see that, uh, that
51:56
aspect of the market potentially changing. Yeah,
51:58
I mean this was if go around and Google I
52:01
got you know, I was pretty vocal about this. I
52:03
don't know, five six years ago, I can't exactly remember,
52:05
because I got annoyed that you had
52:08
a duopoly effectively. You know, they had three
52:10
large exchange groups and between
52:13
what is called the the SIP
52:15
with a consolidated feed. Right,
52:17
that's roughly five million dollars of
52:20
quoting revenue that we all pay that gets disseminated
52:22
to those exchanges, right, and then on top
52:25
of that, the exchange is charged
52:27
for what they call a private data feed, right, which
52:29
we obviously have to buy because we're a low latency
52:32
market making firm. And then on top of that, they charge
52:34
you for physical connectivity.
52:36
So I actually went to the sec there's a article
52:39
about this, when I brought like a cable that I
52:41
had bought on Amazon that
52:44
we paid a hundred and seventy nine dollars for, right,
52:46
literally a physical Ethernet cable that connected
52:48
our server to the exchange server, and
52:51
NASDAC was charging us and being
52:53
a little hyperbolic, but really not that much. They
52:55
were charging us about a half a million dollars a year for that
52:57
because there was a monthly charge for quote unquote
52:59
connect ativity. And it literally was just an Ethernet cable
53:01
that you could buy. So I got Piste off
53:04
and said, okay, you know, uh, physical
53:06
connectivity and market data
53:09
are elements of an exchange and exchange
53:11
for your license from the government,
53:14
right, which gets you that market data
53:16
fee that I mentioned, the SIP revenue and everything like
53:18
that, and gives you immunity. Right, there's
53:20
a limited liability and the securities
53:22
laws, you know, you need to have the
53:25
SEC approved not only just
53:28
your order types, but your market data
53:30
fees, your connectivities fees. It's all part of the quote
53:32
unquote facilities of the exchange.
53:34
You said you wanted wank, I'm giving you full on work.
53:37
That's a define term in the Securities
53:39
Exchange Act. The nine four used to be a partner
53:41
Paul Wise. I researched this stuff, myself, read
53:43
all about it. So I went to the SEC
53:46
and created a star, put in a comment
53:48
letter and said, you know what, the exchanges
53:50
have been getting away with this for a long time. This should
53:53
be regulated, etcetera, etcetera. The
53:55
politics of the moment were good because Jay Clayton
53:57
and bred Redfern, who were the the chairman
53:59
and the head of trading markets at the time,
54:02
kind of had a similar view of the world as I did,
54:04
you know, on his way out the door, Clayton
54:07
and the commissioners. You know, but I think it was a five
54:09
zero vote and nothing in Washington happens unanimously
54:11
anymore. Kind of agreed with the argument
54:14
that I was starting to make a virtue was starting to make five
54:16
years ago, that those items
54:18
needed to be uh, they need to be
54:21
a cost benefit analysis, right, you couldn't just every
54:23
year keep charging us more and more and more without
54:25
any cost benefit. Because it
54:28
was part of the quote unquote facilities of a national
54:30
securities exchange that is now in
54:32
litigation. Because my friends at the exchanges,
54:34
who I get along great with, by the way, we're their biggest
54:36
customers, they kind of have to be nice to me. They
54:39
sued the sec to enjoy enforcement
54:41
if you will, that regulation. So that'll be in litigation
54:44
in the d C circuit probably for the next you
54:46
know, five years or so, given the
54:49
you know, the amount of money here at stakes. So there's a
54:52
and that that's a continuing kind
54:54
of kabuki dance between the
54:56
regulators SYTHEMA, which is the you
54:58
know, the banks and the broke is we're a member of SIFMA
55:01
and the exchanges. This is nothing that they've
55:03
been fighting over who controls
55:06
that data and who can charge for it, because if you think about
55:08
it, I'm creating the data, right, you
55:10
know, to get back to Facebook virtue sending
55:12
literally hundreds and hundreds and billions
55:15
of bids and offers every day, that's like important
55:17
value of information the exchanges. I'll
55:19
be a schmuck now, I'll say all they do is they take
55:22
it, repackage it kind of in a crappier
55:24
format, and then sell it back to us right
55:27
along, let's sit it another information at
55:29
a premium price. So that's what really pissed
55:31
me off. That in the cable really kind of pissed me off.
55:34
You're designated market maker for
55:36
the bitcoin et F that exists
55:39
in Canada. It just got started.
55:41
It's already from what I understand, like a huge hit
55:43
in Canada in terms of like how much money it's taken
55:46
in. We might get one at some point in the
55:48
in the U S. What have you learned about
55:50
that business? Like? How big and
55:52
how interesting is that whole space? Uh? For
55:55
you guys right now? Yeah.
55:57
I mean, for the record, I'm not like an expert
55:59
in crypto, a goodcoin or whatever it was. I'm
56:01
a market maker and so my determination
56:03
to get into it was okay. When I saw that
56:06
it was going to be recognized and regularized
56:09
if you will buy a regulator, we think
56:11
the world of right, We're a market maker up in kind
56:13
of big time. And so when
56:16
I Rock said that they could do this, that's the sec
56:18
up there, I was like, you know, done virtues
56:20
all over this because this plays right
56:22
into our wheelhouse. Right, it's a in e
56:25
t F with the underlying basket is a different
56:27
asset class, right, That's what we're good at, and
56:29
it's and there's also a future on
56:31
the CME. So there's various products
56:33
we can we can move back and forth.
56:35
And so I think as cryptocurrencies
56:38
like bitcoined get further regularized
56:42
and regulated, if you will end
56:45
institutions like e t F
56:47
issuers the u S securities market, future
56:49
houses like the CME recognize
56:52
that there's that this is a valuable asset class
56:54
and include them in products right
56:58
that represent the underlying coining.
57:00
You're going to see an explosion of interest because
57:02
then institutions get more comfortable. Right,
57:05
it's no longer the wild west of you
57:07
know, a hundred venues ninety
57:09
eight of which you haven't heard where you know,
57:11
we trade on coin base and Gemini because
57:14
we've done our diligence on them and there's
57:16
no central clearing there, right, So you're taking
57:18
counterparty risk against those institutions.
57:21
And so if it's you know, bitcoin
57:23
venue you've never heard of, add some you
57:26
know country far far away that
57:28
doesn't really fit our our risk parameters,
57:30
right, We're not We're not a hedge fund, we're not
57:33
day traders, right. So as it becomes
57:35
more i'll say systematized,
57:38
you're gonna need market making firms like Virtue
57:41
to you know, provide it spread
57:43
between the coin the future
57:45
and the e t F. I'm hopeful that
57:48
in this new administration you'll see the SEC
57:50
approven in the United States as well, and we'll be a big
57:53
market maker in those. A lot of people think this is
57:55
going to be the year you think it could be. I
57:57
think it will be. Yeah, I think there's just too much
58:00
know when you see it on TV and the price of
58:02
it, there's too much mainstreaming of it,
58:04
and when the institutions start buying it, and then on top
58:06
of that, you know, we've got a lot of
58:08
retail clients that have come to us and said,
58:10
hey, we want to make this available
58:13
to are a high high networks. Will you provide
58:15
a two sided price ind it. So when that happens,
58:17
when names you you know of and
58:19
you can read the articles, want to make
58:21
it available to their high networks, then it's
58:24
becoming more mainstream. And that's when obviously
58:26
we need to be there as a liquidity provider.
58:29
So since Joe brought
58:31
up something slightly different to payment for order
58:34
flow, I have one more question. Um, you mentioned
58:36
the administration there, and of course one of the big
58:38
proposals from the Democrats is this
58:41
idea of a financial transaction tax. How
58:44
much would that affect your business? You're
58:46
really trying to get me in trouble and say something really colossally
58:49
stupid and offensive about the administration,
58:51
aren't you. I want to hear your voice go high. I
58:53
guess yeah, you want to hear my voice go high. Okay, So
58:55
there's probably nothing, uh more
58:58
inane than a financial transit action tax.
59:00
I have studied this backwards and forwards.
59:03
I read about the Swedish transaction
59:05
tax of where
59:07
on Friday they closed at Reutina's market. On Monday
59:10
it moved to London. Uh. What
59:12
I have always said is liquidity is like
59:14
water. It finds its level. So if if
59:17
the folks in Washington see fit to an act
59:19
of financial transaction tax, and I don't think they will
59:21
because Chuck Schumer is in
59:24
my view of the smartest man in the Senate, and
59:27
he happens the majority leader. Smart thing.
59:29
Yeah, and uh, he happens to
59:32
represent New York. He happens to understand that Wall
59:34
Street and and Manhattan
59:36
depend on the financial services market,
59:38
and at financial transaction tax, it
59:40
wouldn't just impact virtue, right, it would
59:43
reduce volumes, the spreads would
59:45
widen, and Mr and Mrs
59:47
four oh one k would under paying the price, and the pension
59:49
plans would pay the price. So when I
59:52
see, like you know, unions, public
59:54
service unions advocating financial for
59:56
a financial transaction tax, I
59:58
say to myself, they've either been severely
1:00:01
misled by some Washington hack that's
1:00:03
trying to raise money, or they just don't understand
1:00:05
how markets work, because that's
1:00:08
just a friction in the market and what happens
1:00:10
to the market makers and to the financial communities.
1:00:12
We pass that cost on, right,
1:00:15
We're not gonna go out of business and make
1:00:17
markets, and you're gonna still need a market maker. So
1:00:19
we would just widen out and volumes
1:00:21
with decline, the exchanges would be impacted,
1:00:23
and ultimately you and I in our four
1:00:25
oh one ks and our pension plans would pay
1:00:27
that price. So as a policy matter, it
1:00:30
is a S and I. As a practical matter,
1:00:32
it has not worked in any jurisdiction the world
1:00:34
where it's ever been proposed and
1:00:36
implemented, and if
1:00:39
it ends up happy the United States, you
1:00:41
know folks up in Canada, Bermuda, Switzerland,
1:00:43
the UK, Singapore, they will
1:00:45
light up alternative exchanges and
1:00:48
all of the U S secreers will just trade on CFD
1:00:50
over there, and the Treasury will be deeply
1:00:52
disappointed that they won't collect bub Kiss.
1:00:55
How's that? That's
1:00:57
pretty good? Your voice cone higher, But I'll
1:01:00
I'll accept it. I can't say Bob.
1:01:02
I can't say bubb Kiss as a soprano. It does
1:01:04
not work. It doesn't work. That
1:01:07
doesn't work. It doesn't work. Bubb Kiss
1:01:09
is more of a baritone. Yes, Oh,
1:01:12
Doug, thank you so much for coming on all thoughts. That
1:01:15
was great. Thank you so much, guys, that
1:01:17
was great, dog, Thank you, I appreciate it. Cheers.
1:01:20
Nice to meet you, so,
1:01:39
Joe. I enjoyed that
1:01:41
conversation. Um, it's nice to talk to Doug,
1:01:44
and clearly he feels very
1:01:46
passionately about a
1:01:49
lot of these topics. One thing I was
1:01:51
thinking is just how much different
1:01:53
the conversation would be right now had
1:01:55
people decided not to name dark
1:01:58
pools dark pools or to name, you
1:02:00
know, payment for order flow, payment for order flow,
1:02:02
like imagine if you had a much
1:02:04
less evocative name. Yeah,
1:02:08
all of it very evocative,
1:02:11
and like, you know, I think like it was you
1:02:13
know, he talked about his dispute with a sworking
1:02:17
and just this whole idea. I mean, I think the
1:02:19
dominant storyline that a
1:02:21
lot or at least a lot of people came away with their the
1:02:23
idea in their heads that's like payment for order
1:02:25
flows, Like they're buying your order
1:02:27
flow because like they want some information and so
1:02:30
like the Facebook model is like, well, we want your information
1:02:32
and then we're gonna sell adds against it. Where people have
1:02:34
this idea is like Citadel is like gonna
1:02:36
buy your trade and then they're gonna like make their own
1:02:38
like side beds against the trade.
1:02:41
And I think like his description that basically
1:02:44
it's like they make a margin on a trade and so
1:02:46
the broker demands or could
1:02:49
like pursue a rebate on it. It's not sexy,
1:02:52
but I think it, Uh, it makes it makes a lot of sense
1:02:54
as he describes it. Yeah, and also,
1:02:56
I mean we did a whole episode on this before.
1:02:59
But the margin requirements for trades
1:03:01
and the idea, the idea that if
1:03:03
trade flow is going all in one direction,
1:03:06
then that kind of leaves the
1:03:08
broker at risk, and for that reason
1:03:11
they would have to stop out the game
1:03:13
stock trades, for instance. I thought that was a
1:03:15
pretty clear explanation. Yeah,
1:03:17
totally. And just beside, you know, it's like obviously
1:03:20
on any given trade, they don't, you
1:03:22
know, any specific trade, they don't make much money.
1:03:24
And so like if if trading
1:03:27
is sort of noisy and uncorrelated and
1:03:29
just one like random people doing whatever, then
1:03:32
you know that's a pretty good environment. But something
1:03:34
like Game stop. It was just I mean, that story
1:03:37
took over the whole world for like a week, that's all anyone
1:03:39
was talking about. And then so it's
1:03:41
like you said this, like and that doesn't happen
1:03:44
with a single stock trade very often,
1:03:46
Like we're sort of used to crash a certain use
1:03:48
to rallies. I don't can't think of any other
1:03:51
time we're like a single stock trade captured
1:03:53
that much attention. But you could see then how
1:03:56
like all of these sort of like the algorithms
1:03:58
that they used to like put forward a price on the
1:04:00
trade kind of got complete, would
1:04:02
get completely busted. Yeah, and
1:04:05
obviously that's sort of attention. It can
1:04:07
be a good thing for businesses, you
1:04:09
know, market making businesses, um because
1:04:11
it attracts additional retail trading.
1:04:14
Or it could be a bad thing because
1:04:16
it attracts political scrutiny
1:04:18
and we get regulators who start to take
1:04:20
a look at this and decide they don't like it for
1:04:22
whatever reason. So definitely something
1:04:25
to watch. Sounds good. I'm
1:04:27
continuing to look forward to seeing where this guest.
1:04:30
I got to check out the hot dogs as
1:04:32
well. They sound good, dude, this
1:04:34
whole to be honest, the whole time during the discussion,
1:04:37
I've just been scrolling the hot dog all
1:04:39
right, Um, this has been
1:04:41
another episode of the All Thoughts Podcast.
1:04:44
I'm Tracy Alloway. You can follow me on
1:04:46
Twitter at Tracy Alloway and
1:04:48
I'm Joe Why Isn't Though. You can follow me on
1:04:51
Twitter at the Stalwart. Follow
1:04:53
our guest Doug Seafood on Twitter. He
1:04:55
is at Dougie Large and really most
1:04:57
of his tweets are about hot dogs, but maybe sometimes
1:04:59
you'll so tweet about electronic
1:05:01
market making. Follow our producer
1:05:03
Laura Carlson. She's at Laura M.
1:05:06
Carlson. Followed the Bloomberg Head of
1:05:08
Podcasts, Francesco Levi at Francesco
1:05:10
Today, and check out all of our podcasts
1:05:13
at Bloomberg under the handle at
1:05:15
podcast Thanks for listening.
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