There are many differences between online brokers and professional trading firms, and you may not realize that you can have professional trader experience and dump your online broker!
Online brokers such as E-Trade, ScotTrade, Ameritrade and many others are the only way that most people find the market to make trades. For savvy investors with an active trading style or larger balances, however, there are better options that you may not be aware of. A professional trading firm, one that specializes with even the most sophisticated of investors, can offer the same level of professional service to non-professional investors, in much the same way the online broker can, but with a much greater level of sophistication and technology. A professional trading firm like Great Point Capital can give you the same retail account management, with the latest in technology, sophistication and experience for maximum trading results. Costs of Trading with an Online Broker vs Pro Trading Firm Commissions Online brokers usually charge a flat fee of anywhere from $4.95-$9.95 per trade, while this may look enticing, professional trading firms offer per-share commissions that can be much less! Commission fees from most professional trading firms start around $.0035/share, which equates to a 100-share order with a commission of only $0.35! Working with a pro trading firm allows you to break your orders into smaller pieces, giving you more control with less market impact. Rather than sending 1000 shares all at once, you can price average your entry points and work smaller orders more efficiently, resulting in much lower costs to you. Exchange Fees Exchange fees are the other costs of trading at pro firms, and can vary from as much as $0.003/share to take liquidity, to being paid $0.002/share to add liquidity. That’s exactly right - the online brokers don’t want you to know that they get paid to put your order on the market! Placing 1000 shares on the bid, and getting filled, means you pay only $3.50 in commissions, but also get $2.00 back from the venue, for a net commission of only $1.50! It is very important to know and understand what all your trading fees are to buy and sell, and to be aware of any miscellaneous fees that surface. Great Point Capital can help you in evaluating your current fee structure with an online broker, and compare to fees from a professional trading firm. Great Point Capital has been serving the trading community since 2001. We are one of the very few firms utilizing the Takion Software Platform, enhancing the quality of trades with fast and high-quality order execution. We offer professional and experienced account and wealth management, including management of retail accounts. To earn maximum earnings on your trades, contact us today to speak with one of our knowledgeable trading experts.
0 Comments
In this complex and often predatory market environment, it is of the utmost importance to have control of your orders. With Payment for Order Flow arrangements, and Maker-Taker allowing multiple market participants to piggyback off your order and capture profits that could be yours, you need to know how to survive and thrive in the current market structure.
For the retail customers that are trading just a few times per month, the amounts made from front running your order is negligible. But to the HFT firms doing this with thousands of accounts every day it adds up to millions of dollars. To the trader with larger accounts trading 50,000+ shares per month, these amounts will add up very quickly. You need to have greater control over your orders so that you capture extra profit per trade, rather than have your orders sold to someone else. How to Take Control of Your Orders The availability of order types that allow you to go directly to dark pools, combined with an increased knowledge of the market, is necessary to enhance your order options and trading experience. It is also necessary to have experience and resources to place orders at the midpoint of the NBBO, and to capture rebates when adding liquidity to the market. Great Point Capital has the resources and the availability of order types, combined with an increased knowledge of the market to maximize your trading returns. Rather than selling your orders, we help you to direct your orders to the venue that gives you the best outcome. Great Point Capital Provides the Tools for Trading Success Great Point Capital offers modern technology with Takion Software and IT support, beneficial order types, capital, stock loans, flexibility and payouts with benefits. Technology Great Point Capital utilizes Takion Software, the most modern trading platform that meets the needs of active traders. Takion is selective in providing their software to only experienced trading firms. We employ skilled traders to take full advantage of all capabilities that Takion has to offer. Order Type Availability We offer access to the most beneficial order types, including order types to go directly to dark pools, to place orders at the midpoint of the NBBO, and capture rebates when adding liquidity. Capital Great Point Capital gives you the resources to benefit the most from your trading, providing one of the largest capital bases among prop trading firms. We give you additional leverage that you would not otherwise have, and provide excellent opportunities to earn maximum returns on your trades, without being limited to your personal resources. Flexible Location You can have the flexibility to trade remotely with internet access, or in our offices in Chicago or Austin. You can trade by hand or develop an automated strategy, the choice is yours. Stock Loan Accessibility Great Point Capital partners with firms that specialize in finding difficult-to-borrow names, giving you a wide selection of stocks to trade. Benefits and Payouts Registered prop traders with Great Point Capital have access to our group health plan, and enjoy aggressive payouts. With the multitude of choices available to traders today for routing your orders, it is challenging to know exactly how to take control of your orders. Great Point Capital has the experience, , capital, technology, and the order types to provide the most beneficial environment for you to take control of your orders and net bigger returns. Great Point Capital has been serving the trading community since 2001. Our 100+ prop traders actively trade the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are one of the select few firms that can offer access to Takion Software, enhancing your trading performance. For control of your orders and to earn to your maximum potential, contact us today to speak with one of our knowledgeable staff. Third party firms that are paying for orders under a Payment for Order Flow (POF) agreement do not enter into those arrangements to lose money, they are making money as well as the broker they are paying. Reg NMS says that your broker needs to provide you with the best execution available at the time. So how can two firms, your broker and the third-party firm paying for POF, manage to profit from your order, while still giving you to best possible price?
Maker Taker One instance where two firms can profit from your order is when they are getting paid for the liquidity you provide. If your order is not marketable immediately, they send it to the venue that will pay the most for adding liquidity. For example, providing liquidity on ARCA for a 1000-share order results in a rebate of about $3.00 that goes to the POF firm who paid your broker for the order. HFT The other instance is that the POF firm used your order as part of a profitable trading strategy. For instance, in heavily traded stocks, a good amount of trading is done at the midpoint of the NBBO (National Best Bid and Offer). If the market is 30.24x30.25, and you send your order to buy 1000 shares at 30.25, the POF firm sells you the stock at 30.25 (usually 30.24999, which allows them to jump in front of everyone at 30.25), then they sweep through the dark pools and midpoints on exchanges and buy the stock at 30.245. This nets a profit of about .005/share, or $5.00, on your order. The POF firm may also be aware that the market is just about ready to turn and go to 30.23x30.24. They know this through their sophisticated predictive algorithms based on trades and changes in quote sizes, combined with the direct market feeds that are faster than the feeds creating the NBBO. The faster direct feeds might show the market is already at 30.23x30.24, but the NBBO won’t show that for few milliseconds. This makes it easier – they can give you the “best execution” available on the current official source, the NBBO, at 30.25, then turn around and immediately buy the stock back at 30.24, which became the true offer in the market. It is vitally important for traders to have control of their orders. The amounts made from these orders is negligible for the retail customer that is only trading a couple times per month, but to the HFT firm doing this across thousands of accounts every day it adds up to millions of dollars. Contact Great Point Capital today to take control of your orders and seize additional profits per trade. We have the knowledge of the market, the experience and resources to assist you in routing your orders so that it is most profitable to you. If you need a broker with capital, and access to orders including those in dark pools, contact us today to see how we can work together to realize your true trading potential. Learn more about Great Point Capital today. Our 100+ prop traders actively trade the firm’s capital, increasing their leverage and returns. We are one of the select few firms able to offer access to Takion Software Platform, enhancing your trading performance. To take control of your orders and to capture additional profits, contact Great Point Capital today. Great Point Capital has discussed Payment for Order Flow (POF) and how High Frequency Trading (HFT) firms profit on your trades. We’ve shared how Maker-Taker affects the way that market participants execute trades. Now we would like to show you what you can do to improve your trading returns within this complex and often predatory environment.
Order Routing Options Limited with Traditional Broker If you are currently trading through a traditional retail broker, you probably have a limited number of ways for routing your order, if any. Routing your order is typically limited to a “smart” route, or perhaps a preference for NSDQ or ARCA. Some of the more advanced firms might let you choose IEX. These limited choices will not help much, as you do not see the pricing difference between the selections, and you cannot change them easily if something changes in the market. Traders use “smart” routes, which are simply computerized algorithms that aid traders in buying or selling stock, with the main goal of making the search for liquidity easier. Smart routes are not a trading system, but are instead a set of instructions that are based on certain conditions set by the trader, and are customized by the trader or pre-set by the broker or software. Thus, they are limited by the broker, or the software. In addition to limitation on orders, a trader’s ability to post bids and offers through ECNs is also limited to which venues your broker has subscriptions to use. Most retail brokers have agreements in place with third party firms where they get paid for sending orders to them for execution. This is the obviously the “smart” route if it is one of your choices. In the past, brokers had networks of people who would work together to execute your order. Your commission paid for that network and the cost to execute your order. Today, executing your order is no longer an expense for your broker, but has become a profit center. Who Profits on Your Order? The third-party firms that are paying for orders under a Payment for Order Flow arrangement obviously aren’t losing money on the transactions either, they are making money as well as the broker. Reg NMS states that your broker has to to provide you with the best execution available at the time. So how is it that two firms manage to profit from your order, while still giving you to best possible price? To take control of your orders and recognize additional profits per trade, contact Great Point Capital today. We have the experience, and the resources to help you route your orders so that it is most beneficial to you. Great Point Capital has been serving the trading community for almost two decades. Our 100+ prop traders actively trade the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are one of the very few firms able to offer access to Takion Software Platform, enhancing your trading performance. For control of your orders and to capture additional profits, contact Great Point Capital today. While most exchanges have a maker-taker pricing model, one that pays rebates to market makers for adding liquidity, or charges a modest fee for taking liquidity, IEX offers a fresh approach to an alternative by offering one flat fee rather than incentives and rebates.
IEX Flat Rate Fee Schedule IEX, the newest stock exchange, does not charge for connectivity or data fees, and they also do not encourage a Maker-Taker environment. IEX prefers to implement flat rate fees based on order visibility. For non-displayed liquidity brokers will pay a flat rate of $.0009/share, whether they are making or taking liquidity. For displayed liquidity, there is NO fee whether making or taking liquidity. Here, the choice for the customer is whether to take the discount for making their order visible, and thus part of the NBBO, or pay extra to hide it. The flat fee schedule utilized by IEX puts the incentive where it should be, on displaying your liquidity and aiding price discovery in the market. Maker Taker Pilot There was talk of a pilot program to measure the impact that reduced fees would have on market quality and behavior. In 2016. the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Equity Market Structure Advisory Committee recommended the pilot program. SEC Chairwoman at the time, Mary Jo White, stated that the pilot would be voted on by the commission in 2017. Since then, new developments such as President Trump in the White House and turnover at the SEC have put the pilot on hold. Prior to Trump’s inauguration, Mary Jo White resigned as SEC Chair. According to Trump’s advisors, incoming SEC officials are looking at broader reform rather than piecemeal reform with Maker-Taker. Paul Atkins is the former SEC commissioner, who now advises President Trump on financial regulation matters. Mr. Atkins is actually an opponent of Reg NMS, and a proponent for a holistic overall review of the market. It will be interesting to see what the coming months have in store from the new administration, and new SEC leaders. While exchanges need a compensation for providing a valuable service, a flat fee would result in revenue for the exchange, without creating a conflict of interest with rebates. There is no easy answer for such a complex situation. Most traders and brokers agree, however, that Maker-Taker needs to go! (and we do not need a pilot program to tell us that). Great Point Capital has the in-depth knowledge of the market structure and order types, including the available order types that allow you to go directly to dark pools, to place orders at the midpoint of the NBBO, and capture rebates by adding liquidity. We combine this knowledge with valuable tools like the Takion software platform, to let you direct orders to the venue giving the best outcome. Great Point Capital has been serving the trading community since 2001 and our 100+ prop traders actively trade the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are headquartered in Chicago with a location in Austin, TX. Contact Great Point Capital LLC today, in either our Chicago Office, or our Austin Office, to learn more about how we can successfully trade together with high performance results. We are one of the very few firms able to offer access to Takion Software Platform, enhancing your online trading broker performance. Each exchange has their own type of orders, with each order type carrying their own fee schedule. Nasdaq recently developed a Retail Post Only Order, which was designed for the sole purpose of assisting retail brokers in avoiding access fees. This particular order type would have allowed for it to cancel for any reason, rather that fill with an adjusted price.
For instance, if a retail broker receives your order to buy at 10.25, and the market is 10.25x10.26, they send it to the exchange to add liquidity, earning a rebate. Now suppose that just as it sends the order, the market changes to 10.24x10.25. Your order just became marketable, so instead of earning a rebate for adding liquidity, your broker will now have to pay to remove liquidity! The Retail Post Only Order protects this from happening by canceling the order if it becomes marketable and would remove liquidity. That order would then likely be re-routed back to the third party that pays for the broker’s order flow to be filled, instead of to the exchange. Proponents argue that this choice is good for competition that is good for markets. Opposition to these types of orders claim that these are one- sided order types benefit only the select few while distorting market pricing, which is never good for investors. Nasdaq withdrew their request for this order type in January of this year, under much scrutiny. Add-Liquidity Orders (ALO) An ALO order is an Add Liquidity Only order, and is executed only if it adds liquidity as a market maker. The goal behind these order types is once again to assist the user in controlling their costs, and reducing fees. They are used, however, to game the system, as entering a marketable ALO order forces the other side, which should have gotten a liquidity rebate, to now be a Taker and incur a cost. This happens with non-display orders that fall between the NBBO. If the market is at 10.14x10.16, and I have a hidden order to sell at 10.15 on ARCA, if an ALO order comes in to buy at 10.15, I would become the taker, even though I was there first. If my order was visible (NBBO at 10.14x10.15), the ALO order wouldn’t cross at all, it would just sit on that bid at 10.14, meaning a trade that would otherwise occur and aid price discovery doesn’t happen simply due to the maker-taker pricing model. Great Point Capital has vast knowledge of the market structure and order types, including available order types to go directly to dark pools, to place orders at the midpoint of the NBBO, or to capture rebates by adding liquidity. We combine this knowledge with valuable tools like the Takion software platform, to let you direct orders to the venue giving the best outcome. Great Point Capital has over 100+ prop traders actively trading the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are headquartered in Chicago with a location in Austin, TX. Contact Great Point Capital LLC today, in either our Chicago Office, or Austin Office, to learn how we can successfully trade together generating high performance results. We are one of the elite few able to offer access to Takion Software, enhancing your online trading performance. Reputable online brokers and traders all agree, the Maker-Taker pricing model distorts the market and alters the way stock orders are transacted by market participants. Maker-Taker is a pricing model existing on most exchanges, encouraging liquidity in their venue.
Most stock exchanges, although not all, and all are not the same, will give a small rebate to traders and investors upon execution of their limit order when they are providing liquidity to the market, which is the maker part of Maker-Taker. These liquidity rebates drive the Maker-Taker model. Conversely, exchanges will charge a modest fee to the market takers, those that take liquidity by entering either market orders or marketable limit orders. Maker-Taker is a hot topic among traders and brokers, many oppose the practice as brokers will use the exchanges that give the most advantageous rebates instead of committing to the best execution, which createis a conflict of interest. A rebate reward system combined with an already predatory environment including high frequency trading algorithms overtaking online equity trading in all venues across the market. High frequency trading (HFT) firms use very sophisticated and specific algorithms designed to seize as many liquidity rebates as possible, regardless of the impact this may have on the market or the National Best Bid Offer (NBBO). Maker-Taker And Price Discovery Traders and brokers have been calling for an end to the Maker-Taker system, claiming that it most certainly influences order-routing decisions, and distorts price discovery. While different exchanges having different fee schedules, this gives brokers incentive to route their orders so that it is most advantageous to them, instead of giving ‘best execution’ to their client. An example of the Maker-Taker model occurs when an exchange pays a market maker .002 per share to provide liquidity, and charges the market taker .003 per share, leaving the exchange to keep .001. With millions of shares traded on a daily basis by HFT firms, even the small rebates given to market makers add up significantly to billions of dollars simply by utilizing computerized algorithms based on their trading strategies and buildt to elicit the most rebates. Exchanges use maker-taker like marketing, drawing executions to their marketplace. If you can lure liquidity-adding orders with big rebates for that liquidity, the other side of the trade has to come to you, which increases volume, and profits, for the exchange. Of course, the opposite is also true - those taking liquidity have price sensitivity as well, and try to go to the exchange with the lowest cost to remove liquidity. This is why we have seen nearly all exchanges create separate exchanges that differ only in the pricing model. Nasdaq owns PSX and BSX exchanges, which have “inverted” pricing models that pay rebates to remove liquidity, while those adding liquidity pay small fees. EDGE does the same with EDGA, BATS the same with BATY. Those that oppose the Maker-Taker system believe that the public view of the current bid/offer price is not accurate due to the rebates and discounts. HFT firms will buy and sell at the same price, just to exploit the rebates. This activity can mask the true price discovery of stock assets. Great Point Capital has over 100+ prop traders actively trading the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are headquartered in Chicago with a location in Austin, TX. Contact Great Point Capital LLC today, in either our Chicago Office, or Austin Office, to learn how we can successfully trade together generating high performance results. We are one of the elite few able to offer access to Takion Software, enhancing your online trading performance. Latency arbitrage is a result of several factors including co-location, HFT, flash trading, and SIP latency, all with their own consequences to the marketplace. Latency arbitrage, however, has a direct effect of contributing to an altered NBBO. The National Best Bid Offer, (NBBO), is supposed to be the one accurate price of a stock across the entire market, from all exchanges and off exchange venues. It is intended to be a representation of the “best price.” The problem with this intention is that it is impossible to instantaneously update every single participant in the market, even the national exchanges, at the very moment when a change occurs to the NBBO. Information about all stock price changes need to travel among all market participants and the speed at which that occurs varies greatly depending upon the distance between the firms, and the technology a firm is using. This means that all market participants, including the national exchanges themselves, see a different view point of the NBBO at the exact same moment in time. This information leakage is not the only pitfall of latency arbitrage. When these privileged firms execute their privileged trades, the NBBO is actually altered by these front-running executions. There may be no quick solution to this latency problem, and maybe not even a long drawn out solution, but there are some tools available now that offer some assistance to traders dealing with this problem. If we cannot stop the latency arbitrage as we know it, we can tackle it another way – with modern day latency arbitrage tactics. One tool addressing this very issue is the IEX Signal that is used in their proprietary D-Peg® and Primary Peg orders. The signal acts like a yellow traffic signal, warning a trader of an upcoming change to the NBBO. Used for a predictive tool, this IEX signal is utilized in these proprietary orders, and is also termed a ‘crumbling quote indicator’. It predicts an upcoming price change to the NBBO, basically by observing a stock’s NBBO activity, any changes in that price, and then compiling a prediction of which way it’s moving. IEX’s signal predicts the upcoming NBBO change, and moves their D-Peg orders out of the way, protecting the investor. This may be one small tool in a very large fight against a long-time practice, a practice the privileged participants are not willing to give up too easily. With a computer algorithm conducting trades at lightning speed, we all must realize that we are now at a crucial point in the structure of our financial markets. Latency arbitrage must still be tolerated, although the time has come to take action whenever possible. Great Point Capital has been serving the trading community since 2001 and our 100+ prop traders actively trade the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are headquartered in Chicago with a location in Austin, TX. Contact Great Point Capital LLC today, in either our Chicago Office, or our Austin Office, to learn more about how we can successfully trade together with high performance results. We are one of the very few firms able to offer access to Takion Software Platform, enhancing your online equity trading performance. IEX is the newest stock market in the United States, founded by Brad Katsuyama and colleagues who sought answers to questions others did not even know existed. Brad and his team were recently depicted in the “Flash Boys”, the Best Seller by Michael Lewis. IEX’s proprietary D-Peg order was designed to protect against structural arbitrage by predicting changes to the NBBO. HFTs know when the NBBO is going to change, because they can cobble together the faster direct feeds from each exchange, and build their own NBBO. If you are trying to get a fill at the midpoint of the NBBO, you do not want to get a fill and then have the market immediately move against you. The proprietary signal by IEX attempts to predict that upcoming change to the NBBO, and will move D-Peg orders out of harm’s way. For example, if you have an order in to trade at the midpoint of the NBBO, while the market is 33.95 x 33.96, a favorite strategy of the HFT is to see the quote changing to 33.94 x 33.95, sell the midpoint to you at 33.955 right before the quote change occurs, thus allowing them to buy it back immediately at 33.95 and make a half-cent profit. To highlight just how much this strategy is occurring, in January 2017 47% of all midpoint volume on EDGX executed within 2ms of an NBBO change. Another way to look at it would be to see how often there is no price movement after a trade at the midpoint, which is what you want to ideally see. On EDGX, for example, there is no price movement within the following one second following a midpoint execution, only 46% of the time. IEX’s D-Peg orders are designed to keep you out of this predatory environment by moving you away from the midpoint if the NBBO is about to change. There is no change in the NBBO one second after a midpoint execution on IEX 78% of the time, and only 5% of IEX’s midpoint volume is done within 2ms of a change in the NBBO. This “crumbling quote indicator” does not in any way impede regular trading, as it is only activated for a very short period of time, five seconds per day per symbol, on average volume basis. Protecting resting orders during times of high HFT activity can provide higher trading quality on IEX, and make a huge difference to investors. Great Point Capital uses both IEX’s D-Peg and Primary Peg Orders. Contact Great Point Capital today for collaboration of successful day trading strategies. Great Point Capital has been serving the trading community since 2001 and our 100+ prop traders actively trade the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are headquartered in Chicago with a location in Austin, TX. Contact Great Point Capital LLC today, in either our Chicago Office, or our Austin Office, to learn more about how we can successfully trade together with high performance results. We are one of the very few firms able to offer access to Takion Software Platform, enhancing your online equity trading performance. Latency arbitrage occurs when one party exploits a time disparity and earns a profit, typically with a computer algorithm, when that trade is executed solely due to a latency advantage. Latency arbitrage has caused several heated discussions amongst all market participants, the government law makers and the SEC for many years now, yet this unfair access to US equity markets is still the core strategy of many predatory trading firms. An arbitrage occurs when a simultaneous purchase and sale of a stock is executed by a computer algorithm, and earns a profit based on a price difference. Latency describes the time difference that firms receives the same publicly traded stock information compared to other one another, not all firms receive the same information at the exact same time. Thus, a latency arbitrage happens when a firm earns a profit from the purchase and sale of stock when that transaction was executed because of a latency advantage. Firms pay large premiums to co-locate their equipment right next to an exchange’s servers, and pay a steep price for premium data feeds, all to reduce their latency. Cutting edge technology with the purchase of raw data feeds, combined with a reduced latency, allows these firms to see the NBBO substantially quicker than what is publicly available through the Securities Information Processor, (SIP). Let’s say that a firm issues a buy order to pay the midpoint of the NBBO (the National Best Bid and Offer) for stock XYZ, and the current market for XYZ is $10.10 x $10.11. Their bid will be at $10.105. Predatory HFT firms, using faster data feeds and co-location to reduce the transmission times, may see that the $10.10 bid is now gone and the market is now $10.09 x $10.10. However, the NBBO has not changed yet, since the SIP is slower than the HFT firms, so that midpoint order is still resting at $10.105. For the HFT firm, it is simply a matter of selling at $10.105, and immediately buying back at $10.10, making a half penny. While the half penny earned may seem miniscule, keep in mind that their computers are doing this all day long, and with the sheer volume of trades all those pennies add up to billions of dollars. Billions of dollars that is essentially skimmed off the top of your college savings, the average middle class retirement fund, and hard earned investments. Add the fact that the offending firm performing the latency arbitrage assumed absolutely no risk whatsoever. By seeing the true market before the rest of the world adjusts their orders, they know that their trade is a pretty sure bet. All due to a speed, or latency, advantage. This is extremely frustrating for the firm placing the original order as they are trying to get a fair price in the middle of the spread. At the time of execution, however, they end up paying beyond the best offers in the market. Another scenario arises due to the multiple venues available. Various dark pools in addition to the national exchanges, can each have liquidity available, but as you go through collecting that liquidity, HFT firms can front run your order. Assume the same firm above was attempting to buy 5000 at $10.11, and the NBBO showed that quantity available at that price. But as the firm begins to send orders to various venues to purchase that amount, HFT firms see that activity, and jump ahead of the order to take it all at $10.11. The original firm may only get a few hundred shares, instead of the 5000 they saw when they placed the order. Now they are required to pay $10.12 if they want to buy the balance. A trader gets whiplash from this ‘now you see it, now you don’t’ scenario. Just by placing the order, they alert the HFT’s of their intention, and can plan on closing at the higher price, unless they find a way to play in the latency game. Great Point Capital has been serving the trading community since 2001 and our 100+ prop traders actively trade the firm’s capital, specializing in equities and equity options. We are headquartered in Chicago with a location in Austin, TX. Contact Great Point Capital LLC today, in either our Chicago Office, or our Austin Office, to learn more about how we can successfully trade together with high performance results. We are one of the very few firms able to offer access to Takion Software Platform, enhancing your online equity trading performance. |
ArchivesCategories
All
|