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To: Carolyn who wrote (9913)7/20/1999 11:56:00 PM
From: Susan G  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28311
 
Sure wish I could get to the end of my e-mails...here's one on Datek.
Brokerages/Wall Street: Datek Begins After-Hours Trading

By Caroline Humer
Staff Reporter

It's here. Datek Online, the bare-bones online brokerage, quietly
started after-hours trading Tuesday evening.

Online investors were able to buy and sell Nasdaq stocks in limit
orders placed from 4 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. EDT by accessing the Island
electronic communications network through Datek, a firm spokeswoman
confirmed.

Datek says it offered trading on a limited basis through the firm's
express servers, a streamlined trading service without graphics that
only allows for limit orders. But on Wednesday, the company plans to
extend the service across its system, the spokeswoman says.

Datek is the first major online brokerage to offer its clients the
somewhat controversial opportunity to trade after hours. Discover
Brokerage, a unit of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter (MWD:NYSE), also plans
to offer extended trading through Eclipse Trading, an alternative
trading system. Eclipse said Tuesday it's on track to start up later
this summer.

Both the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market were
running quickly toward after-hours trading this spring before pulling
back to study the issue further.

At a June 30 summit of industry leaders and stock exchanges organized
by the Securities and Exchange Commission, securities firms and
regulatory officials decided to create four committees to study
extended-trading related issues and called for cooperation and
coordination among the players. And SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt has
consistently indicated that he wants to make sure investors are
protected in any after-hours trading environment. An SEC spokesman
wasn't available to comment Tuesday afternoon.

Datek told analysts during a conference call on earnings Tuesday
morning that it would be starting extended trading this summer, but
didn't say that the trading was debuting this week, a spokeswoman says.

One Datek customer said in an email that he had tried to buy 300 shares
of a telecom stock after hours but couldn't find a seller. "I did
notice a lot of activity on Microsoft (MSFT:Nasdaq) and Dell
(DELL:Nasdaq) on Island. The more liquid issues like these is where
most of the action was," he wrote.

The customer said he received an email a few days ago indicating that
the company would start online trading. Then, on Tuesday, there was an
option to enable after-hours trading by reading through a disclaimer.

Datek's disclaimer laid out some of the risks of after-hours investing
that academics, regulators and securities firms have expressed during
the past few months. "Stock prices may be more volatile. News stories
can have a greater impact on the price movement of a stock. The same
liquidity may not exist on the Island ECN during after hours as it does
during normal market hours. Less liquidity usually results in wider
spreads between bids and offers. This raises the effective cost to
trade in such markets."

Copyright 1999, TheStreet.com