XETRA may refer to:
Xetra ("Exchange Electronic Trading", MIC Code XETR is an electronic trading venue and trading technology of the same name for securities, based in Frankfurt, Germany. It was initially developed for the Frankfurt Stock Exchange which launched it in November, 1997. It is operated by Deutsche Börse Cash Market, which is a member of Deutsche Börse.
More than 14 other stock exchanges around the world have licensed the system. Xetra’s electronic trading technology proved popular with other exchanges as it had a good record of scalability, speed, reliability and the ease with which it could be adapted in other markets.
The conception and the implementation of the Xetra technology was carried out by Accenture and Deutsche Börse Systems, the technology division of Deutsche Börse.
The Xetra technology has been successfully implemented on the Irish Stock Exchange (operating as ISE Xetra), the Vienna Stock Exchange, the Bulgarian Stock Exchange, the European Energy Exchange, the Budapest Stock Exchange, and a number of other exchanges. It will also be installed on the Prague Stock Exchange and Shanghai Stock Exchange.
XEWW-AM is the call letters of a radio station operating on 690 AM and licensed to the Tijuana/Rosarito area of Baja California, Mexico, with additional studio facilities in Burbank, California, United States.
It is a high-powered station, with its 77,500 watt daytime signal sometimes reaching as far as the middle of the San Joaquin Valley, but otherwise covering nearly all of Southern California and most of Baja California. It operates with 50,000 watts at night as is required by the "Rio" treaty. This same treaty would normally allow XEWW to operate with a daytime signal of 100,000 watts. However, 77,500 watts was apparently selected as this power sends the equivalent of the station's former 50,000 day power (from its original Tijuana site, since demolished) towards Los Angeles without also increasing its prohibited overlap with 670 and 710 kHz in Los Angeles (from its present Rosarito site). Had it chosen to operate at 100,000 watts days would have required a modified daytime directional antenna at Rosarito (the night directional antenna at Rosarito would not need to be modified).