Nasdaq May Acquire Archipelago to Boost Volume
New York, Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) -- The Nasdaq Stock Market, the world's first electronic equity market, may buy Archipelago LLC or another rival to boost volume as trading has slid 30 percent this year, executives of the two companies said.
``We've talked with just about anyone active in the market'' about combining companies, said Nasdaq President Richard Ketchum, adding that Nasdaq's board supports building trading volume through mergers or rule changes that would let more brokers trade on its system. ``It's hard to look at this environment and not conclude that there will be more consolidation.''
Falling share prices and the slide in trading have forced companies such as Nasdaq and Archipelago to slash fees as much as 90 percent. A merger would help Nasdaq increase its revenue after spending $107 million to create a new trading system, SuperMontage, which it unveiled in October.
``We all make a tiny sliver of money on every trade, so there is an advantage in getting bigger,'' said Gerald Putnam Jr., chief executive and co-founder of Chicago-based Archipelago. ``I don't have a deal with anybody to either acquire or be merged, but the level of activity and conversations has increased.''
Three transactions last year have already helped consolidate the industry: Instinet Group's $508 million purchase of Island ECN Inc., Archipelago's merger with fellow ECN RediBook LLC for an undisclosed price, and Sungard Data Systems Inc.'s $100 million acquisition of Brut LLC, an ECN that was owned by 25 broker dealers including Merrill Lynch & Co. and Morgan Stanley.
Boosting market share ``through merging is one way to get more money,'' said Jamie Selway, Archipelago's former chief economist who left with three colleagues two weeks ago to start an electronic brokerage.
SuperMontage
Nasdaq's $107 million SuperMontage trading system, started in October for dealers in Nasdaq stocks to list quotes and make trades, executes about 19 percent of shares in companies that list on the Nasdaq Stock Market. A combination with Archipelago would increase that to about 29 percent, just shy of Instinet's leading 30 percent share. It may also end price cutting among trading systems that is eroding profits, company executives said.
``If our share at the end of 2003 is still about 20 percent, we will be very disappointed,'' Nasdaq's Ketchum said.
To capture a bigger piece of a shrinking pie, Nasdaq this month opened SuperMontage to firms that until now had to send their trades through traditional market makers such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. The pilot, aimed at program- trading firms and professional day traders, didn't attract trades in its first week.
SuperMontage was built to clear more than 4 billion shares a day. Nasdaq stock trading across all venues has fallen to about 1.2 billion daily from an average of 1.7 billion last year.
Instinet's Loss
``Volume stinks,'' said Ketchum, a former lawyer at the Securities and Exchange Commission who said he is competing to succeed Nasdaq Chairman Wick Simmons this year.
Nasdaq has followed its rivals in cutting prices. Earlier this month it eliminated fees for most of the millions of quote updates made daily on SuperMontage. Electronic communication networks such as Archipelago and Instinet's Island pay brokers 2 cents for every 1,000 shares they offer to sell on their systems, and charge 3 cents per 1,000 shares removed through purchases.
Nasdaq's fee revenue from trading and from selling market data and services to its listed companies fell 4 percent in the first nine months of 2002, to $616 million from the same period in 2001. The company will report fourth-quarter and full-year earnings on March 10.
Instinet's October purchase of Island, the biggest ECN, wasn't enough to offset declining fees and a fourth-quarter loss of $112 million, Chief Executive Ed Nicoll said earlier this month. Reuters Group Plc, owner of 63 percent of Instinet, last week said the unit will lose money this year, sparking talk that the trading company may be up for sale.
Liquidity
``Our biggest challenge right now is riding out the markets,'' said Jean-Marc Bouhelier, Instinet's chief operating officer. He said he wasn't aware of any merger talks involving Instinet.
Behind the battle for orders is the preference of mutual funds and other large investors to trade where supply is strongest so their orders can be executed gradually at minimal impact to market prices.
``Liquidity begets liquidity,'' said Charlotte Chamberlain, an analyst at Jefferies Group Inc. in Los Angeles who has been critical of the $107 million Nasdaq spent to build SuperMontage. If Nasdaq can buy Archipelago, ``presumably more people would execute trades there,'' she said.
Regulatory approval of an Archipelago-Nasdaq combination might be complicated by cross-ownership positions among ECNs. Instinet, for example, owns five percent of Archipelago, said Putnam, who himself owns 5 percent. Goldman Sachs, part of the consortium that owned RediBook, is Archipelago's biggest shareholder.
ArcaEx Feud
Nasdaq is also feuding with Archipelago over its plan to transfer orders for Nasdaq stocks from SuperMontage to ArcaEx, the exchange Archipelago formed after buying the Pacific Stock Exchange trading system in October 2001. ArcaEx trades all New York Stock Exchange stocks, and two weeks ago listed its first Nasdaq stock. The company said it hopes to quote all Nasdaq stocks on ArcaEx by summer.
Archipelago's Putnam estimated the company pays Nasdaq $30 million in SuperMontage access fees annually, much of which could be avoided by the switch. He also said the ECN will continue sending orders to SuperMontage or other venues when they display better prices than ArcaEx. Nasdaq has tried to thwart the plan, he said.
Hours before its first Nasdaq stock was listed on ArcaEx on Feb. 14, Nasdaq told Archipelago general counsel Kevin O'Hara the ECN lacked the proper legal structure for funneling orders to SuperMontage.
``We are a very good customer of Nasdaq, paying the full freight, and they don't want us to have access to their liquidity,'' O'Hara said. Nasdaq relented temporarily and the spat is now under discussion with the SEC, he said.
Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News, owns Bloomberg Tradebook, an ECN that competes with Archipelago, SuperMontage and Instinet. Bloomberg also competes with Reuters in the distribution of financial data and news.
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