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Monday, June 13, 2016

The FTSE 100 has new competition

[8d149532 9138 4c2c 8ea2 b498a34a0867]The FTSE100 has new competition.  Bats Global Markets, the exchange operator and trading specialist, is launching a series of UK-focused benchmark indices. There will be 18 different indices in total, covering large and small cap securities and different industry sectors.  The list includes the BUK100, which will go head to head with the FTSE 100, which is owned by the London Stock Exchange.  The indices are free of charge to private and professional investors, media firms and for benchmarking purposes. Most index providers license them to large asset managers and others for a fee. Mark Helmsley, the chief executive of Bats Europe, told Business Insider that the launch was driven by retail brokers who were dissatisfied with the existing indices. "The cost of indices is rising, and so they're unhappy about that," he said. "The nature of the licenses is that they have become more complex and intrusive." The Bats indices have been developed with the help of several wealth management firms and retail brokers, including Alliance Trust Savings, Charles Stanley Direct, Hargreaves Lansdown and TD Direct Investing.  “The launch of the new indices is extremely positive news for the industry, giving investors the chance to access real-time stock market information from a respected source," Sara Wilson, head of platform proposition at Alliance Trust Savings, said in a statement.  The indices will also be available in real-time, in contrast to most offerings, which have a 15-minute delay.  "15 minutes is an enormous amount of time in financial markets," Helmsley said. "You can look to see where your taxi is in real time, and yet the average retail investor can't see the direction of the market in real time." [London Stock Exchange]The launch is the latest new product from Bats, which went public earlier this year. Started in 2005, the firm is known for aggressively competing for market share. It trades around a quarter of European stocks every day, and around 20% of US stocks.  Now it is employing the same strategy in the market data business. "What we're saying here is, the level of our pricing is aggressive, the commercial structures with brokers and fund managers are flexible and simplified, the data is real time and that is great for their customers and their own usage," Helmsley said about the launch. The fresh competition with the London Stock Exchange in the indices business follows the launch of a new volatility index in the US earlier this year. The index, which is known as SPYIX, or Spikes, competes with the widely used VIX index, which is often described as the "Fear Index." The Vix index is owned by the Chicago Board Options Exchange. Indices are a particularly attractive business for exchanges, and they offer the possibility of having exchange-traded funds built from a particular index, like an ETF based on the BUK100, for example. Bats has set out to win business from New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, and become the number one listing venue for exchange-traded funds.   "We would definitely like to see that," Helmsley said, when asked about an ETF based on the UK indices. "We have already put that into the licensing structure, and the pricing structure."  Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: FORMER GREEK FINANCE MINISTER: How I dealt with stress when Greece nearly defaulted


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.businessinsider.com