Give Up

Give Up

Give up is a procedure in securities or commodities trading where an executing broker places a trade on behalf of another broker. These parties include the executing broker (Party A), the client's broker (Party B), and the broker taking the opposite side of the trade (Party C). A request is made of Party A to place the trade on behalf of Party B to ensure the timely execution of a trade. On the record books, or trade log, a give-up trade shows the information for the client's broker (Party B). Floor Broker A places the trade, he must give up the transaction and record it as if Broker B made the trade.

In a give-up agreement, an executing broker places a commodity or security trade on behalf of another broker.

What Is Give Up?

Give up is a procedure in securities or commodities trading where an executing broker places a trade on behalf of another broker. It is called a "give up" because the broker executing the trade gives up credit for the transaction on the record books. A give up usually occurs because a broker cannot place a trade for a client based on other workplace obligations. A give up may also happen because the original broker is working on behalf of an interdealer broker or prime broker.

In a give-up agreement, an executing broker places a commodity or security trade on behalf of another broker.
It is called a "give up" because the broker executing the trade gives up credit for the transaction on the record books.
Give up was common before electronic trading, but it is not generally practiced in modern financial markets.
Acceptance of a give-up trade is sometimes called a give in.
Compensation for the give-up trades is not clearly defined by industry standards and usually involves prearranged agreements between brokers.

Understanding Give-Up Trades

Give up is no longer a common trading practice in the financial markets. Give up was more common before the development of electronic trading. In the floor trading era, a broker might not be able to make it to the floor and would have another broker place the trade as a sort of proxy. Overall, the act of performing a trade in the name of another broker is generally part of a prearranged give-up agreement. Prearranged agreements typically include provisions for the give-up trade procedures as well as compensation. Give-up trades are not standard practice, so payment is not clearly defined without a prearranged agreement.

Give Up vs. Give In

Acceptance of a give-up trade is sometimes called a give in. After a give-up trade is actually executed, it can then be called a give in. However, the use of the term "give in" is much less common.

Parties Involved in the Trade

There are three main parties involved with a give-up trade. These parties include the executing broker (Party A), the client's broker (Party B), and the broker taking the opposite side of the trade (Party C). A standard trade only involves two parties, the buying broker and the selling broker. A give up also requires one other person who executes the trade (Party A).

In cases where both the original buying and selling brokers are otherwise obligated, a fourth party can become involved in a give-up trade. If the buying broker and the selling broker both ask separate traders to act on their behalf, then this scenario would result in a give up on the selling side and the buying side.

A request is made of Party A to place the trade on behalf of Party B to ensure the timely execution of a trade. On the record books, or trade log, a give-up trade shows the information for the client's broker (Party B). Party A executes the transaction on behalf of Party B and is not formally noted in the trade record.

Compensation agreements are typically created to manage the provisions of give-up trades. The executing broker (Party A) may or may not receive the standard trade spread. Executing brokers are often paid by the non-floor brokers either on retainer or with a per-trade commission. This comprehensive payment to the executing broker may or may not be part of the commission that Broker B charges his client.

An Example

Broker B gets a buy order from a client to buy 100 shares of XYZ on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Broker B works upstairs at a large brokerage firm and needs to get the order down to the floor of the NYSE. To execute the trade in a timely fashion, Broker B asks Floor Broker A to place the order. Floor Broker A then buys the stock on behalf of the client of Broker B.

Although Floor Broker A places the trade, he must give up the transaction and record it as if Broker B made the trade. The transaction is recorded as if Broker B made the trade, even though Floor Broker A executed the trade.

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Execution

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