Marv Gandall quotes: 

There are two simple solutions. First, change the structure. It is an
anachronism that, in such a technologically sophisticated world, a large
chunk of forex trading still takes place on the phone. A fully electronic
market is essential and initiatives by aggregators – such as Thomson
Reuters’ FXall or FTSE Cürex – to bring together data from rival fixing
platforms are a useful first step. But why not go the whole hog and force
forex trading on to an exchange where it is policed as closely as the
equities market?

------

A few years ago I was chatting with an executive at CME. CME (naturally) was
interested in more "transparent" exchange of derivatives. The established
procedure was that a buyer would go to a bank and indicate his desire to
buy; similarly a seller would indicate his desire to sell; the two would not
meet, and only the bank would know what the one offered and the other asked;
it was an inexhaustible source of  money for the bank. CME wanted to get
into it, and _its_ slogan was "Transparency."

Derivatives _also_ changed clearing-house procedures radically, form a
formerly rather simple affair to an extraordinarily complex, even
mysterious, realm of activity.

Carrol




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