SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : The Final Frontier - Online Remote Trading -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: agent99 who wrote (7814)12/8/1999 3:09:00 PM
From: Morpher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 
Nasdaq May Set Up Electronic Auction Market for NYSE Stocks
bloomberg.com

SEC Changing Rules to Heighten Market Competition
bloomberg.com



To: agent99 who wrote (7814)12/29/1999 12:05:00 PM
From: TFF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 
TRADESCAPE.com Takes First Step in Launching Tradescape PRO for

Powerful Online Stock Trading, Superior Order
Execution, Speed and Low Cost

Business Editors

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--December 29, 1999--

Next-Generation Online Broker Technology

To Deliver Quantum Leap in Service For Internet Investors

TRADESCAPE.com today introduced its Tradescape PRO(tm)
state-of-the-art Internet product for stock trading to qualified
investors among its 50,000 pre-registered subscribers. The new product
provides sophisticated features in a simple, easy-to-use graphic
format to seek out best-price execution with a revolutionary
commission structure.

Tradescape PRO provides investors with next-generation online
technology that bypasses brokers, market makers, and other middlemen
who often handle an order before it is filled. Earlier generation
online brokerage services merely used e-mail message technology to
pass orders along this chain, which often resulted in execution delays
and/or additional transaction costs to investors. Broker-dealers owned
by TRADESCAPE.com utilizing the Tradescape PRO technology will offer
commissions during this introductory period of $1.50 per hundred
shares. In other words, 500 shares would cost $7.50 plus exchange and
ECN fees.
"This product delivers what all revolutionary technologies
provide, a quantum leap in service across the board that is better,
faster and cheaper," says Omar S. Amanat, TRADESCAPE.com founder and
chief executive officer. "Its superior design is so simple yet so
powerful."

Online investors will have access to TRADESCAPE.com's exclusive
Electronic Communications Portal, or ECP(tm), a smart-order routing
system that scans all sources of liquidity, including conventional
stock exchanges and the Electronic Communications Networks (ECNs).
TRADESCAPE.com features the most direct connections to ECNs of any
firm in the industry. The result of this combination is the
opportunity for orders to be filled at the best possible price, with
the greatest speed and at the lowest cost. After hours trading will
also be available through Tradescape PRO's connectivity to all ECNs.
"Investors have been waiting for a professional quality trading
system on the Internet that they can access from home, the office or
while traveling. This has been a highly anticipated event among active
investors who are highly sensitive to the delays in trade order
processing that plague conventional online brokerage services," Mr.
Amanat continues. "Not only are we satisfying the needs of active
investors, but we are providing the best possible cost structure
available on the Internet today."

There is no special software required to receive streaming real
time market data, access to Electronic Communications Networks (ECNs),
Level II NASDAQ quotes and the ability to place orders directly in the
market. Tradescape PRO operates simply and conveniently via
browser-based technology.

Test customers have been using the system for several months.
During the initial stage of this rollout, Tradescape PRO will be
limited to qualified investors among its 50,000 pre-registered
subscribers. Certain balance requirements and restrictions will apply.
Investors can sign up online at www.tradescape.com. Free real time
Level II quotes are included with the first month of Tradescape PRO
service.

Additionally, the low Tradescape PRO commission rate is for both
limit and market orders, unlike other brokerages that charge more for
limit orders than market orders. Limit orders are another tool that
investors use to control the execution of their orders and assure that
they do not buy or sell at prices outside their desired range.
About TRADESCAPE.com

Headquartered in New York City, TRADESCAPE.com is a family of
companies that provides products and services to the financial
industry. TRADESCAPE.com owns Tradescape Technologies, LLC, a leading
provider of alternative trading systems for professional traders and
active online investors. Tradescape Technologies offers superior
interactive investment tools including Level II quotes, real time
portfolio management and real time intraday charts for the active
trader market. TRADESCAPE.com also owns the broker-dealer Momentum
Securities, LLC, member NASD. Investors in TRADESCAPE.com include
SOFTBANK Finance, the Japanese Internet pioneer.



To: agent99 who wrote (7814)1/5/2000 5:00:00 PM
From: TFF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 
Web Stock Guru `Tokyo Joe' Park Charged With Touting

Washington, Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Internet stock pundit
``Tokyo Joe' Park, whose rapid-fire trading tips have a wide
following on the Web, was charged by regulators with manipulating
securities.

The Securities and Exchange Commission alleged the high-
profile stock picker, whose real name is Yun Soo Oh Park, of New
York, urged investors to buy five stocks without disclosing that
he owned the securities and planned to sell them.

Park, 50, is contesting the fraud charges, which involve the
year between July 1998 and June 1999.

The SEC lawsuit, filed in a Chicago federal court, also
alleged Park failed to disclose that he was paid 100,000 shares
by DCGR International Holdings, a cigar maker, to promote its
stock. DCGR, based in Boca Raton, Florida, wasn't charged.

In addition, Park exaggerated his advertised investing
performance by as much as 2000 percent on at least 30 stocks, the
suit alleged.

Park's lawyer said the SEC should more clearly define the
rules that govern Internet stock recommendations before bringing
such enforcement cases.
``We do not believe that the charges, in the context of free
communication over the Internet, rises to the level in this case
of a violation of the federal securities laws,' said the
attorney, Ira Lee Sorkin of New York.

Park was returning from vacation today and couldn't be
reached.

Tokyo Joe

Park, who posts as many as 20 messages a day under the names
``TokyoJoe' and ``TokyoMex,' has a subscription-based e-mail
club called Societe Anonyme, according to the SEC suit. The club
charges as much as $200 a month to about 3,800 investors. Park
received more than $1.1 million in fees from Societe Anonyme
members during the period at issue, according to the complaint.

Park was ranked by Time magazine's Time Digital as
technology's 49th most important person in 1999, tying him with
TheStreet.com Inc. co-founder James Cramer.

His Web site has a disclaimer that says the Societe ``may
have positions in some of the stocks mentioned on this Web site
or in e-mails, and is under no obligation to disclose the amount
of the position or when it was acquired.'

The Societe ``does not advise investors to buy or sell
securities, instead it alerts investors to stocks whose price
Tokyo Joe believes may rise as a result of momentum, volume,
rumor or other factors,' the Web site says.

His trading philosophy is, ``We go for instant
gratification. We believe that every stock has Unabomber lurking
to take it down. We take our profit and move on,' according to
the site.
`Gray Line'

Park, whose trading records were subpoenaed by the SEC last
March, has said he touted stocks that he owned early in his
career but doesn't anymore.
``Yes, I was walking a borderline, a shadow gray line, but
it was the beginning of cyberspace and investing,' Money
magazine quoted him as saying in its May 1999 issue. ``We don't
do that anymore.'

Park said in a recent interview that he often discloses how
many shares he owns before recommending a stock.
``Everybody knows that I'm buying before you buy, and I'm
selling when you're buying,' Money magazine's money.com site
quoted Park as saying in its April 1999 issue. ``Otherwise, what
am I? A charity?'
`Instant Gratification'

The SEC suit, which is seeking fines and refunds, takes a
different slant. ``He misled and defrauded customers,' SEC
enforcement director Richard H. Walker said.

The suit alleges that, in at least 10 instances involving
five stocks, Park touted securities he owned, describing them as
a sure thing or saying he expected them to double.

He often placed ``limit orders' to sell a stock at a
specified price shortly before or after making his ``buy'
recommendation. Park also urged investors to hold shares of a
recommended stock or claimed it would reach a target price at the
same time he was selling that stock, the suit alleged.

Selling Shares

The five stocks were viaLink Co., an electronic commerce
company in Edmond, Oklahoma; Immune Response Corp., a
biotechnology company in Carlsbad, California; AlphaNet Solutions
Inc., an information technology company in Cedar Knolls, New
Jersey; Videonics Inc., a video equipment maker in Campbell,
California; and K2 Design Inc., an interactive marketing company
in New York.

None of the companies were charged with any wrongdoing.
Park sold all 76,925 of his shares of these stocks after issuing
buy recommendations, the suit alleged.

The suit also alleged Park was given 100,000 shares of DCGR
stock at the request of the company, which makes imported hand-
made cigars under the ``Sir Don' and ``Adolfo' brand names.
After recommending that investors buy DCGR stock, Park sold his
shares on July 21, 1998, the SEC contended, when the stock closed
at 3 17/32.

The SEC has been cracking down on alleged fraud conducted on
the Internet.

Last month, the SEC charged three California men, including
two recent University of California at Los Angeles graduates,
with illegally netting $364,000 by using Internet chat rooms to
manipulate a stock. Two of the men, Arash Aziz-Golshani and
Hootan Melamed, were indicted earlier this week by a federal
grand jury in Los Angeles.