Proprietary trading
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2020) |
Proprietary trading (also known as prop trading) occurs when a trader trades stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, their derivatives, or other financial instruments with the firm's own money (instead of using customer funds) to make a profit for itself.[1]
Proprietary traders may use a variety of strategies such as index arbitrage, statistical arbitrage, merger arbitrage, fundamental analysis, volatility arbitrage, or global macro trading, much like a hedge fund.[2]
Famous traders
[edit]Trader Nick Leeson took down Barings Bank with unauthorized proprietary positions. UBS trader Kweku Adoboli lost $2.3 billion of the bank's money and was convicted for his actions.[3][4]
Armin S, a German private trader, sued BNP Paribas for 152m EUR because they sold to him structured products for 108 EUR each which were worth 54 00 EUR.[5]
Notable proprietary trading firms
[edit]- Akuna Capital
- Citadel Securities
- DRW Trading Group
- Flow Traders
- Global Trading Systems
- Headlands Technologies
- Hudson River Trading
- IMC Financial Markets
- Jane Street Capital
- Jump Trading
- Optiver
- Quantlab
- Radix Trading
- Susquehanna International Group
- Tibra
- Tower Research
- Tradebot
- TransMarket Group
- Virtu Financial
- XTX Markets
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Heather Stewart (21 January 2010). "What is 'proprietary trading'?". The Guardian.
- ^ "Proprietary Trading: What It Is & Related Trading Firms". DayTradeTheWorld. 28 September 2020.
- ^ dzawu, moses (22 January 2020). "After Losing $2.3 Billion at UBS He Now Seeks Redemption in Ghanaian Bonds". Bloomberg.com.
- ^ dalton, samantha (20 November 2012). "Kweku Adoboli: From 'rising star' to rogue trader". BBC News.
- ^ Binham, Caroline (2018-12-20). "BNP failed to book traders in Germany for a week". Financial Times.