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Non-Tech : Ashton Technology (ASTN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sam Quentin who wrote (3021)11/19/1999 6:56:00 AM
From: Rob W  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4443
 
Morning Sam. Just looking at an older article. Can anyone elaborate a little further on the dynamics of eOX? Can we now assume this will be a joint venture between the Philly and Ashton. At least I don't see how they could be partners on one system and competitors on the other. Will a day come when there is a connection between Nextexchange, Philly, NYSE, and World. Something to ponder while waiting for the next card to be put on the table.

Ashton Technologies Plans Electronic-Options Market

Philadelphia, Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Ashton Technologies Group, a
Philadelphia
company developing a stock-trading system for the city's stock
exchange, is
planning to start an independent electronic options market next year.

Ashton's NextExchange may take on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange's
options-trading floor, the Chicago Board Options Exchange and two other
established options markets. It also may partner with the Philadelphia,
which
trades options and stocks, or another exchange, Ashton officials said.

``We're not locked into a specific strategy,' Ashton President Arthur
Bacci said.
``How it gets deployed and whether we partner with people remains to be
seen.'

NextExchange will initially go head-to-head with the International
Securities
Exchange, expected to be the first all- electronic options market.

``We will compete on several different levels and we will be
different,' said Fred
Weingard, Ashton's chief technology officer.

Universal Trading Technologies Corp., an Ashton subsidiary, is
developing
NextExchange and will apply for Securities and Exchange Commission
approval
within three to six months, he said.

The ISE and NextExchange are planning to open amid unprecedented change
in
the options world. Federal regulators are looking into how options
trade. Several
lawsuits allege the exchanges collude by listing certain options on a
single
exchange.

This week, competition grew more intense as the CBOE and the American
Stock
Exchange listed options on Dell Computer Corp., previously an exclusive
Philadelphia exchange franchise.

Average Pricing

At the moment, Ashton staffers are focused on their volume- weighted
average
price trading system for the Philadelphia exchange. The so-called VWAP
system,
to be introduced Friday, is a crossing system to let securities firms
and institutional
investors place stock orders at 9:15 a.m. New York time, before trading
begins
at 9:30 a.m., and receive after the close the average price at which
the shares
traded. It's designed for index funds, foreign investors and
quantitative money
managers.

Like many other electronic systems, VWAP promises anonymity, so
investors
can place orders without fear others will see those orders and trade
ahead of
them. It doesn't guarantee execution, however. A buy order for 1,000
shares of a
stock is processed only when there's a corresponding sell order.

Investment Technology Group Inc.'s Posit introduced average price
crossing
systems several times in recent years with little success, said Tony
Huck, an ITG
senior vice president.

``In this market, with the volatility, there was little interest in
people being locked
into a VWAP,' he said. ``So much can happen in the course of a trading
day.'

Weingard said his system mitigates volatility and that many
institutional investors
already have expressed interest. He said VWAP trading could garner as
much as
15 percent of U.S. stock volume. Some securities firms already offer
VWAP
trading services.

The VWAP system, four years in the making, cost Ashton more than $10
million
to develop. The Philadelphia will charge between 1 cent and 2 cents a
share for
the service. Ashton will receive an undisclosed percentage.

VWAP is the first product for Ashton, which sold shares to the public
in 1996
and lost $14.3 million in its most recent fiscal year.

Earlier this month, the company received a $20 million private
placement
investment from Rose Glen Capital Management L.P., a $500 million
partnership
that invests in public companies.