T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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938.1 | Fidelity, too | WMODEV::GERARDI_B | | Fri Nov 10 1995 07:49 | 11 |
|
I don't know the reason, but when I was interviewing with
Fidelity Investments, I noticed that THEIR quotes were 15 minutes
late, too. I can't imagine that it takes that long for the
database to update and propagate itself. But, you'd figure
if anyone had quicker quotes, it'd be Fido.
Maybe they need SAP R/3.
Bart
|
938.2 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Fri Nov 10 1995 09:14 | 25 |
| > Why are most stock quotes delayed at least 15 minutes?
Because real-time stock quotes are worth $$$$.
> Who can provide up-to-the-second stock quotations?
Waterhouse Securities offers free real-time quotes via
their touch-tone system. However you have to open up
an account with them, and you only get so many free
quotes. However if you make lots of trades, you get
100 free quotes for every trade. I've got like 9,000
free quotes left in my quote bank .... (using a touch
tone system is inconvient way to get quotes, I wish
they would add support for modem'ing in instead).
If you look in Investors Business Daily, or probably the WSJ
you'll see tons of ads for places offering real-time quotes
(and finanancial headlines/news) services. Usuaully you
rent or buy a piece of equipment to receive the quotes via
FM radio (or cable TV in some places) and the unit either has
it's own display, or you can hook it up to a PC. You also
then pay for the subscription to the service.
There are some existing topics about some of these systems
in here.
|
938.3 | | NLA0::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Fri Nov 10 1995 13:06 | 2 |
| So there's no SEC or exchange rule restricting realtime quoting
to specific entities (e.g. exchange member brokerages, etc.)?
|
938.4 | some signing required for non-professionals | RANGER::UNGER | E. Mark Unger, Pathworks Server Engineering | Fri Nov 10 1995 13:55 | 2 |
| I believe some papers have to be filed with the SEC for non-professionals before
the can get realtime quotes. Just a formality.
|
938.5 | None of the gummint's business | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Mon Nov 13 1995 08:21 | 14 |
| .3>So there's no SEC or exchange rule restricting realtime quoting
.3>to specific entities (e.g. exchange member brokerages, etc.)?
Nope. The exchanges can do whatever they want with THEIR data.
.4> I believe some papers have to be filed with the SEC for non-professionals before
.4> the can get realtime quotes. Just a formality.
Not true. This is strictly a matter of exchange policies. I *have*
filed papers with both stock and futures exchanges for real-time quotes.
They are pretty much pro forma, but I had to promise not to redistribute
real-time data.
John
|
938.6 | Fidelity CAN't be delayed! | NQOS01::nqsrv412.nqo.dec.com::SteveS | Goin' for growth! | Mon Nov 13 1995 10:56 | 9 |
| Re .1
I've never used Fidelity, but I'd be willing to wager that the traders at
Fidelity do NOT have 15 minute delays on their quotes.
For a trading company, and Fidelity is one of the largest, 15 minutes is like
a lifetime.
SteveS
|
938.7 | Tick...Tick...Tick | WMODEV::GERARDI_B | | Mon Nov 13 1995 11:59 | 12 |
| re: Fidelity
Actually, what I was referring to was the ticker that the employees
get to see. (NO matter where you are in the building, you can
see a ticker.) And this was FISCo, not just the traders (sorry).
Obviously not the traders.
Bart
|
938.8 | I don't know what the name of the service is | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Tue Nov 14 1995 06:08 | 13 |
| >> Actually, what I was referring to was the ticker that the employees
>> get to see. (NO matter where you are in the building, you can
Which employee's? You mean quote_v1? If are talking about that then maybe
this should be moved to the DIGITAL_INVESTING conference.
The short answer is what ever service that Digital (corporate) has signed up
for to get the quote has a 15 minute delay. I think the phrase was "at least
15 minutes". The procedure that feeds the quote_v1 server with the new quote
takes that 15 minutes into account - as did any of the manual updaters but they
have all stopped updating the quote.
Brian J.
|
938.9 | FIDELITY | WMODEV::GERARDI_B | | Thu Nov 16 1995 08:27 | 15 |
| re .8
I'm sorry, let me explain what I meant again. If you work
for FIDELITY INVESTMENTS SYSTEMS COMPANY, or FISCo, no matter
where you sit in the buiding, there is a ticker in sight
(on a 2 foot long LED panel) IT'S quotes, I was told, are
15 minutes late. The reason they told this story was one
of thier goals was to optimize the time it took for the
database to update itself.
If this belongs in DIGITAL_INVESTING, let me know.
Bart
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938.10 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Thu Nov 16 1995 11:47 | 12 |
| > I'm sorry, let me explain what I meant again. If you work
> for FIDELITY INVESTMENTS SYSTEMS COMPANY, or FISCo, no matter
> where you sit in the buiding, there is a ticker in sight
> (on a 2 foot long LED panel) IT'S quotes, I was told, are
> 15 minutes late. The reason they told this story was one
> of thier goals was to optimize the time it took for the
> database to update itself.
Why would any of the order takers be using that board? Their
quotes should be coming off the computer (where they'll also
see the Bid/Ask). It sounds like the LED Ticker Board is for
show .....
|
938.11 | | NYOSS1::GREENBERG | | Thu Nov 16 1995 12:35 | 16 |
| Each of the exchanges (as noted prior) requires direct users or
redistributors to pay for information that is "realtime" or Up-to-time
or otherwise newer than 15 minutes old. Each of these entitlements
carries a fee determined by the particular exchange.
Information that is 15 minutes old is really old when you are making
trading decisions and therefore verrrry inexpensive (if not free). The
tickers that you see are for public consumption because they are not
electronically tied to a system where they could make a trade. Brokers
(who need them) and definitely traders, all have instantaneous
information and some of this info may also be directly input to program
trading calculations. Tickers in this case, if used at all, are
instantaneous and used to spot trends (usually through block trades),
It is interesting to watch tickers (even delayed) is you have some
shares or just to watch the reaction to current news stories.
|
938.12 | All for show? Maybe. | WMODEV::GERARDI_B | | Thu Nov 16 1995 13:09 | 13 |
|
As I understood, the ticker on the wall was also available to
run on the bottom of your screen, and some of the analyists/researchers
used it. They had all kinds of interesting flags that you could
set to check on changes and such, and not have to watch it
all the time, your machine would beep if something interesting
was happening. How much of this was for show, I have no idea.
I just remember, being a prospective employee, that they made
mention of the 15 minute delay to me...
Bart
|
938.13 | As seen on Cable TV | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Thu Nov 16 1995 17:02 | 4 |
| I've seen that ticker going by on some cable news station durign the
day -- C-span? CNN? Is that "the" ticker, with absolute
up-to-the-second quotes?
Jim
|
938.14 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Thu Nov 16 1995 19:31 | 12 |
| > I've seen that ticker going by on some cable news station durign the
> day -- C-span? CNN? Is that "the" ticker, with absolute
> up-to-the-second quotes?
CNN HN has a ticker on the bottom of the screen (sadly however
the ticker disappears during commercials). Those quotes are
15-minute delayed (they now even flash that fact every so often).
FNN (Financial News Network) which I used to see in hotel rooms
(Time-Warner in Nashua doesn't carry it) also has a ticker on
the bottom of the screen, and if I recall, it stays there even
during commercials.
|
938.15 | | CSCMA::BALICH | | Fri Mar 15 1996 16:45 | 13 |
|
Not sure where to place this but this seemed like a good note ....
YOU can now get REAL TIME stock quote for FREE on the internet.
Try http://www.dbc.com under market watch.
This got to be the BEST homepage out there ... you can get
mortgage\rates daily for any area of country, sports updates, news,
business updates, this stuff is updated often.
Check it out ...
|
938.16 | not so real time | THOLIN::TBAKER | The Spirit of Apathy | Fri Mar 15 1996 17:02 | 7 |
| I look at DBC all the time and I don't believe they're
real time. They say "as of 'timestamp'" but they're
really delayed. Try getting a quote at 4:00 pm then,
a half hour later, try getting the same quote and see
if it hasn't changed.
Tom Baker
|
938.17 | Real-time info is worth lots of $ to the exchanges | 2155::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Fri Mar 15 1996 18:17 | 1 |
| Even DBC's "market headlines" are time delayed ....
|
938.18 | | STOWOA::ROSCH | | Thu Mar 21 1996 16:14 | 2 |
|
DBC seems to be offering - at $29/month - a real time service.
|