Data processing: financial – business practice – management – or co – Automated electrical financial or business practice or... – Finance
Reexamination Certificate
2000-07-21
2004-12-07
Patel, Jagdish N (Department: 3624)
Data processing: financial, business practice, management, or co
Automated electrical financial or business practice or...
Finance
C705S035000, C705S03600T
Reexamination Certificate
active
06829589
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to securities trading. In particular, the present invention relates to a method for trading stock options that provides an intermediary with copies of option orders destined for a market.
An option (either stock or index) provides a contractual agreement that allows the holder to buy or sell a security or its underlying cash equivalent at a designated price for a specified period of time, unaffected by movements in the security market price during that period. Put and call options, purchased both for speculative and hedging reasons, are typically made in anticipation of changes in underlying prices. A put option provides the holder an option to sell, or put, shares to the other option party at a fixed put price even though the market price for the security declines. On the other hand, a call, provides the holder an option to buy, or call for, shares at a fixed call price notwithstanding a rise in the market price for the security.
In the past, order flow providers (OFPs) generated option orders to buy or sell put and call options. In particular, the OFP accepted a customer order (e.g., a buy put order), encoded the order, and transmitted the order directly to a market. The market (e.g., the Chicago Board of Options Exchange or CBOE), received the order and presented it to traders that determined whether to fill the order in part, in full, or not at all (i.e., an out) in a process often referred to as matching. The result of the matching process is then communicated back to the OFP that subsequently alerts the customer.
The order flow processing described above, however, only provides an effective mechanism for the market itself to trade options. In other words, past order flow processing was a closed system. As a result, other individuals and organizations that could also meaningfully participate in option trading and possibly improve the customer price were excluded from the opportunity to do so.
A need has long existed in the industry for a method for trading options that addresses the problems noted above and others previously experienced.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A preferred embodiment of the present invention provides a method for stock and index option trading. The method includes the steps of receiving an option order, a copy of an option order, or option order information sufficient to ascertain the type of order and an associated contract (collectively referred to below as an “option order copy”), from an order flow provider. The option order is contemporaneously submitted to a market. The option order copy identifies, as examples, puts, calls, contract elements including a contract identifier, an underlying security, strike price, expiry, and option quantity. The method then determines a potential cross quantity and potential cross price based on the option order and submits to a market a contra-order (with respect to the originally received option order) specifying the contract (including the underlying security and expiry), as well as a potential cross quantity, and a potential cross price.
The option orders may be any of buy calls, sell calls, buy puts, and sell puts, as examples. Thus, when the option order is a buy call, the contra-order will be a sell call, when the option order is a sell call, the contra-order will be a buy call. Similarly, when the option order is a buy put, the contra-order will be a sell put, when the option order is a sell put, the contra-order will be a buy put.
The method may also, for example, translate the option order from any number of order flow provider formats into a common internal trading system format. Similarly, the contra-order may be formatted for any predetermined destination market, including the CBOE, PCOAST, AMEX, PHLX, or ISE.
In certain embodiments, the method may automatically determine the potential cross quantity and potential cross price and submit the contra-order without human intervention. In other embodiments, the method may popup a display that shows the contract elements, option bid price or option ask price, market bid and ask prices for the underlying security, risk management information, and the like, at a trader terminal, and monitor the trader terminal for a submit indicator (e.g., a click on a Submit button). In addition, the method may filter option orders before automatically submitting the contra-order, or before presenting option order related information on the trader terminal.
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Walker, Joseph A.; “How the Options Markets Work”, 1991, Chapter 6, Equity Options Strategies.*
Ronald J Blavers et al. Autocorrelated Returns and Optimal Intertemporal Portfolio Choice, Management Science; Nov. 1997 411; ABI/INFORM Global p. 1537.
McAndrews Held & Malloy
Patel Jagdish N
STC, LLC
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