These are
healthy and positive news for the stock broking industry. Singapore has, in the
last few years, transformed its stock broking industry into an industry of the
future. Stock and stock prices have increasingly become irrelevant in the new
business model. We used to have blue chips trading at $20 to $40, mid range
stocks between $5 to $10, and cheap stocks between $1 to $2. Today our blue
chips are trading at around $10, midrange around $1 to $3 and at the bottom, 1c
to 2c or less than 1c. But this is changing fast as the new rules required the
super penny stocks to consolidate, just like post CLOB Malaysian shares, 1000
shares became 10 or 1 share, to improve the prices to between 20c and 40c. It
will look less ridiculous for the main board when the exercise is completed.
But these
changes would mean nothing when trading activities is no longer there or
needed. The exchange doesn’t even need investors or retail traders. The computers
are doing all the trading and trading in derivatives. The net effect, there
will be no need for stock listing. That speaks for the lack of IPOs in the SGX.
There will be no need for traders and also no need for remisiers. Many have
left the industry and many on the way. Broking houses are still doing roaring
business without the need for remisiers and planning to retrench more in the
new year. Some have started.
Have no
fear, all these are just teething problems for an industry in transition to be
better. In the new stock trading business, cannot call it stock broking
business as there will be little broking activities left. The word stock would
also become misleading if trading is all about derivatives. There will be no
need for stocks, no need for traders, no need for remisiers, no need for broking
houses. The industry will just have computers trading against each other on
derivatives from anything they can write on.
The industry
of 40,000 people would become very manpower efficient. The new business model
would probably need less than 1000 people to provide the supporting roles
mainly programmers and derivative writers and the rest run virtually by
computers.
Singapore
has embarked on the most innovative change in an old industry. Not sure what
would be the new name for the stock exchange. Definitely there is no need for
the word stock as stocks would be replaced by derivatives. Exchange may need to
be changed too as it would no longer be an exchange but more like a computer
game. I am sure the new name for this industry would be something fascinating and
pleasing to the ear, futuristic like ‘You know ya’ or something like that.
This is
progress. No other exchange could have thought of it. We are ahead of the world
in transforming our stock exchange into something else, unheard of. That is how
innovative we have become.