Reuters Cancels Instinet.Com Plan, Plans Partnerships
London, Dec. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Reuters Group Plc is scrapping plans to start an online brokerage for individuals, as U.S. markets slump and trading volume declines.
The decision to cancel plans for Instinet.com comes after the Reuters unit postponed plans for the Internet trading service because of trouble with the technology. Instinet plans to partner with other brokerage and securities firms to offer online trading to individuals.
The world's biggest financial information provider cited ``lower levels of trading activity, slowing rate of new customer growth, and substantial declines in the value of online brokerage businesses,'' as reasons for its decision.
The securities business is slowing down as U.S. markets tumble. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. yesterday said their fourth-quarter profit fell. Charles Schwab Corp., the No. 1 online brokerage, last week said the market's decline may make it ``tough'' for the firm to meet analysts' forecasts.
The U.S. listing of Reuters fell $3.88 to $104.13. The shares fell 83, or 6.6 percent, to 1185 in London.
Partners
London-based Reuters said in February it would offer Instinet, as well as its news and information services, through the Internet to increase its potential base of clients to an estimated 65 million from 1.1 million worldwide. The company first planned to introduce the service last May.
``Key elements of the service will be combined with existing functionality to address the retail market indirectly via the brands of other financial services and brokerage firms which wish to utilize Instinet's execution and clearing services,'' the company said in an e-mailed press release.
``They're avoiding the additional business risk and financial risk associated with the retail customers and not exposing themselves to a skill set (dealing with small investors) they haven't previously had'' said Simon Baker, an analyst at SG Securities in London who rates Reuters shares ``buy.''
``They're keeping at what they do best, and that is dealing with businesses and offering value-added systems for those companies.''
In October, Reuters said it plans to sell shares in Instinet to raise funds and create stock for acquisitions. The company didn't immediately return calls seeking comment.
``Looking at the value of e-brokers, I would say that this adds value for the planned IPO,'' said Amy Butte, an analyst for Bear Stearns & Co. in New York. Since their high, online brokers' shares have plunged. Schwab's fallen 19 percent since their April 11, 1999 high. E*Trade, the No. 2 online broker, has fallen 68 percent in the same time.
Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News, competes with Reuters in providing news, information, and trading systems to the financial community.
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