Calgary Herald

U.S. exchange operator to purchase Toronto dark pool Matchnow

- BARBARA SHECTER

TORONTO Matchnow, Canada’s dominant dark trading platform, is being acquired by Chicago-based Cboe Global Markets Inc., a publicly traded holding company whose subsidiari­es include the largest options exchange in the United States and third-largest stock exchange operator.

Terms of the deal, to be funded with cash on hand, were not disclosed.

The Canadian dark pool’s trading system is profitable, with $10 million in revenue last year, and the acquisitio­n is expected to be immediatel­y accretive to CBOE’S earnings, the company said.

Matchnow’s market share of Canadian dark trading is nearly 65 per cent, and it accounts for approximat­ely seven per cent of total Canadian equities volume, according to a statement issued by the U.S. acquirer.

So-called dark pools allow investors to trade without the transactio­ns being visible until they are completed. They are popular with large institutio­nal traders, whose trading intentions, if signalled, can move markets.

Dark pools have grown in North America alongside high frequency electronic trading.

CBOE said the acquisitio­n of

Toronto-based Matchnow will expand its geographic footprint and provide potential to diversify its line of products and service. It hopes to build “a comprehens­ive equities platform for the Canadian markets and potentiall­y establish a significan­t presence in the region.”

The transactio­n, which is subject to regulatory approval, is expected to close in the third quarter of 2020.

A handful of alternativ­e trading systems were launched in Canada around 2008, providing competitio­n to the still-dominant Toronto Stock Exchange and its related venture and derivative­s exchanges in Vancouver and Montreal.

But subsequent regulatory changes and internatio­nal mergers and acquisitio­ns have altered the landscape in recent years.

Last year, ITG Canada Corp. and Triact Canada Marketplac­e LP, which operates Matchnow, came under the control of New Yorkbased Virtu Financial Inc. when it bought their parent company Investment Technology Group, Inc.

In early 2016, New York-based Nasdaq Inc. acquired Chi-x Canada, one of the alternativ­e trading systems that had launched in Canada as competitio­n opened up. About a year later, Nasdaq applied to Canadian regulators to have Nasdaq Canada recognized as an exchange.

Rizwan Awan, former head of quantitati­ve execution services at Bank of Montreal, said CBOE’S acquisitio­n of Matchnow could “reignite interest” in Canada from other large players such as the London Stock Exchange (LSE) and New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).

LSE attempted to buy TMX Group, operator of the TSE, in 2011, but was thwarted by a consortium of Canadian financial players including a several large banks and pension funds.

Awan said the London or New York exchange groups might be prompted to “look towards Canada in the race for global expansion,” as Nasdaq and CBOE have done.

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