Dark Horses Down Under

The Dark Side of Australia
Dark pool operators would, of course, argue that dark pools make the world a great deal better for Australian institutions. They facilitate anonymous trading in a way that was never possible before they arrived, and allow price improvement (as trades may be executed at prices better than those available on the exchange). If lit markets are all about price discovery, then dark markets could be seen as being all about size discovery.
Enter the regulators. While many have accused dark pools of being unregulated, this is far from the truth. The firms that run dark pools are heavily regulated, as are the dark pool structures themselves; but just how to do that has been, and continues to be, a thorn in the regulators’ sides.
While ASIC certainly doesn’t want to see prices moving around as institutions throw huge blocks of stock on to the ASX, they also take their lead on dark pool regulation from IOSCO, which says that national regulators should try to preference lit venues over dark ones in their thinking.
This has led to an uneasy relationship between dark pool operators and ASIC in Australia. ASIC said in 2012 that it would not impose a proposed minimum value for dark transactions and indeed would allow trades below block size, as long as they were executed within the national best bid and offer. The media squealed that the big institutions had forced ASIC out of a rule that would protect retail investors, conveniently ignoring the fact that many big buy-side institutions are aggregators of retail money anyway.
The problem now troubling regulators and market participants is that the average trade size in dark pools is shrinking. These venues were created, so we are told, to allow institutions to trade big blocks of stock. Yet the average trade size in Australia is consistently falling. However, the average trade size on the lit market is falling too, not just in Australia, but around the world. Most likely this is a result of two things: smarter algorithmic trading, chopping large trades into smaller chunks to aid the hunt for liquidity; and high frequency trading, which is the other bane of the regulators.
ASIC still maintains its right to insist upon a minimum trade size and is making the operators of non-lit venues provide it with monthly statistics on their volumes. Unfortunately for ASIC there is little hard information available from abroad. Anecdotally, however, European and US buy-sides moan that the sheer number of dark pools makes it less and less likely they will find the other side to their block orders without lifting the lid on each and every one of them. This takes both time and money and so the dark pool phenomenon risks becoming a vicious circle. More dark venues mean that firms are increasingly tempted to ping them with small orders to see if there is any relevant liquidity there. This then decreases dark trade size further and sets the alarm bells ringing with regulators (see diagrams 3 and 4).


Nevertheless, the fact remains that market ecosystems have evolved and now there is no turning back. As each country-specific or regional regulator grapples with the issue, they run the risk of encouraging regulatory arbitrage, where firms will simply move out of markets where regulation is too prescriptive and set up shop in the places they can most easily do business.
Until (if ever) a harmonised approach arrives to address what is a global phenomenon, regulators and trading institutions will need to deal with dark liquidity in their own backyards. Technology exists to piece the liquidity landscape – lit and dark – back together, and while the rulebook is being written and re-written, those who focus on simply getting the best trading results possible will, as always, come out ahead.


Note
1 Under ASX regulation, trades had to be displayed on the ASX for ten seconds before they could be crossed.
2 Based on AU$2.425bn worth of trades executed in May 2012.

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