Skip to content
107217823-1680189191302-gettyimages-1249879533-US_STOCKS.jpeg

Any quary

Stock trade settlement moves to single day as GameStop mania underscores need for faster transactions

Stock trade settlement moves to single day as GameStop mania underscores need for faster transactions

CNBC

Starting Tuesday, trades of stocks and several other securities will need to be settled by the end of the next business day. For most retail traders, the change is expected to be seamless. The change comes after the GameStop mania in 2021 put the settlement process under closer scrutiny. The New York Stock Exchange in New York, March 28, 2023. Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Years of work on Wall Street to pick up the pace of trading will be put to the test this week. If all goes well, most people won’t notice the difference.

Starting Tuesday, trades of stocks and several other securities will need to be settled by the end of the next business day. Settlement involves the actual swap of money for a security. This so-called “T+1 settlement” is an acceleration of the previous process, which allowed for two business days.

The move is the latest evolution to make the plumbing of Wall Street look more like the front-end, which is increasingly moving toward trading apps and around-the-clock markets.

“For everyday investors who sell their stock on a Monday, shortening the settlement cycle will allow them to get their money on Tuesday. Shortening the settlement cycle also will help the markets because time is money and time is risk. It will make our market plumbing more resilient, timely, and orderly,” Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler said in a statement on May 21.

For most retail traders, the change is expected to be seamless. As physical paper versions of equity shares are all but extinct, most brokerage firms handle settlement automatically for their customers.

It could be trickier for large dollar trades and funds, especially those that hold international stocks since not all markets are aligned on settlement time frame.

“When you start talking about larger trades, block liquidity, that’s where you may see the movements in cost depending on the product, depending on the underlying market,” said Tim Huver, managing director at investment bank Brown Brothers Harriman.

This is not the first time that the SEC has shortened settlement time on trades, with the move to T+2 from T+3 happening in 2017. The SEC officially adopted the change to T+1 in February, though many industry experts had long expected the move.

The latest change comes after the

CNBC

The full article is available here. This article was published at CNBC Finance.

Comments are closed for this article!