Exchanges therefore need to transform themselves so that they can accommodate vast server farms just an arms length away from the trading systems. Those exchanges who can accommodate this need earn premium fees, those who can’t lose out.
The Big Are Getting Bigger - And Joining Forces
Credit: bradzone
Maple’s revised offer, on paper, outmatched the LSE’s offer but TMX was quick to reject Maple and to reiterate the board view that the LSE’s offer was the best thing TMX shareholders could possibly want, while Maple’s bid was not. It seems some shareholders were not convinced. Now, according to several media headlines, the LSE itself is in play as a merger target. The larger question behind all this merger mania is: why?
Why are exchanges all round the world looking to partner up, even if the partner is a continent away?
The answer is twofold. On the one hand, many of the mergers that are happening undoubtedly have a defensive component to them. Being a small exchange in a world dominated by big exchanges does not promise a bright future. If everyone else is scaling up, then you have no option but to eat or be eaten.
The second part of the answer is paradoxical. On one scale, distance doesn’t matter – we are in a global market so two exchanges anywhere in the world can probably find common ground, if they try. On another scale, distance, measured in metres or even millimetres, rather than miles or kilometres, matters absolutely. The rise and rise of high frequency trading, where “normal” sized trades are broken down into thousands of tiny parcels and traded as close to instantaneously as possible, in order to arbitrage tiny market pricing anomalies or market movements, has put an absolute premium on collocation, or the siting of IT hardware on the Exchange’s own site.
Exchanges therefore need to transform themselves so that they can accommodate vast server farms just an arms length away from the trading systems. Those exchanges who can accommodate this need earn premium fees, those who can’t lose out.
The problem, of course, with an exchange in country A reaching out to an exchange in country B with a marriage proposal is that exchanges tend to be viewed very much in the category of national crown jewels. When Deutsche Boerse wanted to merge with the London Stock Exchange in 2004 there was an outcry. When the LSE wanted to merge with TMX the Canadians got into a knot. When NASDAQ and ICE (the Intercontinental Exchange) decided, in April this year, to launch a hostile counter bid for the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Euronext in the teeth of an agreed Deutsche Boerse bid, NASDAQ made much of the fact that its bid would keep the NYSE headquartered in New York and would mean jobs for New York. In the event, its bid was scuppered by the regulator within a few short weeks and the Deutsche Boerse bid is still on track.
However, despite parochial and nationalist interests, it is a fact that exchanges need scale. Writing on the LSE TMX deal before its collapse, James Quinn cited UBS analyst Arnaud Giblat summary that what exchanges need are scale and distribution capabilities, technology rationalization, product development and the capacity to position themselves to gain or retain dominance in a rapidly changing market. The NYSE Deutsche Boerse deal, for example, will create a monster exchange with more than $15 trillion of listed companies on its books and the world’s largest capacity for futures and options trading.