NYSE Euronext (NYX) announces new features to its European Warrants and Certificates market to improve its transparency and efficiency.
Designed in co-operation with the warrants and certificates market participants, the new features integrate the price discovery mechanism specific to this market segment. These features offer greater transparency ensuring investors always trade at a price in line with market conditions. The price of warrants and certificates is derived from different market parameters including the value of the underlying asset.
The issuer provides permanent liquidity by continuously proposing a bid and an offer for minimum size. One of the key new features is that no transaction may occur outside the price boundaries set by the issuer.
Before order execution, a mechanism ensures issuer prices are always updated to reflect market conditions, in particular taking into consideration the last changes in the underlying asset price.
The new features of our European Warrants and Certificates market represent real assets for investors as they ensure that all transactions are executed within a price range that is permanently secured by the issuer himself, says Alicia Suminski, product manager, Warrants and Certificates, NYSE Euronext. The new features reinforce the key role played by issuers as experts on their listed products.
These positive changes, recently introduced into the Warrants and Certificates market, will increase the transparency of the products and improve price formation, says Jean-Luc Jancel, spokesman, French Association of Securitized Listed Derivatives.
They are completely aligned with the Code of Good Practice that governs the members of the Association of Derivatives Issuers, and they also protect investors from the risks related to trading.
These changes will further stimulate growth in this product sector, which has experienced solid expansion over the last four years with the number of listed products having increased by 153% since January 2005, and the number of trades having increased by 112% percent since January 2005.
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