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Business Dictionary:

Electronic Trading

Purchase or sale of stocks and options via the Internet. Customers place orders through brokers Online. Commission rates are much lower than for regular or discount brokers, with some as little as $8 for a trade involving as much as 5,000 shares.

 
 
Wikipedia: Electronic trading


Electronic trading is a mode of trading that uses information technology to bring together a buyer and a seller through electronic media to create a virtual market place. Markets such as the new age stock exchanges are prime examples of electronic market places.

Historically, stock markets used to be physical locations where buyers and sellers met and negotiated. However with the improvement in communications technology, the need for a physical location no longer is of any importance as the buyers and sellers can electronically exchange indications of interests as well as negotiate from a remote location.

Not only are these markets in tune with the current developments in information technology, but they are also easy to monitor and manage. These are major drivers for most market regulators to insist that all markets eventually must be developed electronically.

NASDAQ, set up in 1971, was the world's first electronic stock market. It took 35 more years for the NYSE to automate its trading process but it is now clear that the days of exchange floor trading are coming to an end[citation needed].

Today many investment firms on both the buy and sell side are increasing their spending on technology for electronic trading. At the same time many floor traders and brokers are being removed from the trading process. Traders are relying on algorithms to analyze market conditions and then execute their orders.[citation needed]

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Business Dictionary. Dictionary of Business Terms. Copyright © 2000 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Electronic trading" Read more

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