Newsvine
  • Welcome
  • Help
  • Report Bug
  • Conversation Tracker
  • Your Column
  • Replies
  • Friends
Type Comments Since You Last CheckedArticle Source Last Checked Stop Tracking All Clear Tracking All
Advertise | AdChoices
Log In | Register
Close the Login Panel
Existing users log in below. New users please register for a free account.

New Users:

Existing Users:

E-Mail:
Password:
Forgot Password?
Please enter the e-mail address or domain name you registered with:
E-Mail/Domain:
Back to Login
Log Out
  • Top News
  • Local News
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Odd News
  • More
    • Arts
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Fashion
    • History
    • Home & Garden
    • Not News
    • Religion
    • Travel
What is Newsvine?

Updated continuously by citizens like you, Newsvine is an instant reflection of what the world is talking about at any given moment.

Get a Free Account
Help
Fun Stuff
  • Your Clippings
  • Leaderboard
  • E-Mail Alerts
  • Top of the Vine
  • Newsvine Live
  • Newsvine Archives
  • The Greenhouse
  • Recommended Articles
  • Wall of Vineness
Put a Seed Newsvine link on your own site

Tokyo bourse to launch high-speed trading system

Sun Jan 3, 2010 5:26 AM EST
business, as, japan, exchange, stock-exchange, tokyo-stock-exchange
Tomoko A. Hosaka, Associated Press
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 4 photos
<p>Participants conduct a traditional handclap at the end of the ceremony to wrap up the year's trading at the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2009. The benchmark Nikkei Stock Average gained 19 percent this year. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)</p>

Participants conduct a traditional handclap at the end of the ceremony to wrap up the year's trading at the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2009. The benchmark Nikkei Stock Average gained 19 percent this year. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

Advertise | AdChoices

TOKYO — The Tokyo Stock Exchange will launch a new high-speed trading system Monday, scrapping an antiquated, glitch-prone platform for one that aims to compete with major global rivals.

The world's second-largest bourse after the New York Stock Exchange spent the weekend running final tests of its "Arrowhead" system, which can process trades in five milliseconds. That is 600 times faster than the two to three-seconds required until now, and roughly on par with its counterparts in New York and London.

The TSE is banking on the system's faster trading speeds and higher reliability to bolster its prospects ahead of plans to go public later this year.

With the upgrade, the exchange hopes to lure traders who use automated computer programs to make rapid and frequent transactions. Algorithmic trading, commonly used by institutional investors like pension funds, accounts for the majority of equity trading in the U.S. and Europe but has been slow to catch on in Asia.

The facelift should also dissipate worries about the TSE's reliability after a series of embarrassing blunders.

Last month, a court ordered the TSE to pay 10.7 billion yen ($121 million) in damages to Mizuho Securities Co. Ltd. over massive losses caused by a computer error in a botched 2005 transaction.

In 2006, a huge sell-off of Internet company Livedoor Co. overloaded the TSE, forcing it to shorten its trading day by 30 minutes for three months.

The new system can handle 46.8 million orders a day, an increase of almost 70 percent, the TSE said. When needed, it can expand capacity within a week.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 stock index, which gained 19 percent in 2009, fell 0.9 percent to 10,546.44 on Wednesday before the New Year holiday.

Monday marks the first trading day of 2010.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
  • Enjoy this article? Help vote it up the 'Vine.

Back To Top | Front Page

Published to:

  • Tomoko A. Hosaka's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: none
  • Regions: Japan , Tokyo
  • Public Discussion (0)
Leave a Comment:
You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead.
You're in XHTML Mode. If you prefer, you can use Easy Mode instead.
(XHTML tags allowed - a,b,blockquote,br,code,dd,dl,dt,del,em,h2,h3,h4,i,ins,li,ol,p,pre,q,strong,ul)
Newsvine Privacy Statement
As a new user, you may notice a few temporary content restrictions. Click here for more info.
FUN STUFF:
  • Leaderboard |
  • E-Mail Alerts |
  • Top of the Vine |
  • Newsvine Live |
  • Newsvine Archives |
  • The Greenhouse
COMPANY STUFF:
  • Code of Honor |
  • Company Info |
  • Contact Us |
  • Jobs |
  • User Agreement |
  • Privacy Policy |
  • About our ads
LEGAL STUFF:
  • © 2005-2012 Newsvine, Inc. |
  • Newsvine® is a registered trademark of Newsvine, Inc. |
  • Newsvine is a property of msnbc.com