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Hybrid market

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A hybrid market was a stock exchange that allowed a stockbroker to choose to have an order executed through either a electronic trading system or a traditional trading floor, where it is completed manually via the more traditional live auction method, in the presence of a specialist broker.

The fully electronic method has the advantage of speed, often completing orders in less than one second, comparable manual transactions took longer but included the judgment of specialist.[1]

This was a transitional stage between wholly physical stock markets and completely electronic stock markets. The live auction method differentiates itself with the human interaction and expert judgment of the specialists, which as of 2010 were mostly obsolete. By 2008, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) was working to redefine the role played by the specialists in the market.[2] The NYSE is seen as the world's premier example of a hybrid market.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Hybrid Market on Investopedia". Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  2. ^ "WSJ: 'NYSE Plans to Revise Specialist-Trader Rules'". Archived from the original on 2010-03-03. Retrieved 2008-06-01.