Self-Regulatory Organizations; Chicago Board Options Exchange, Incorporated; Notice of Proposed Rule Change and Amendment No. 1 Thereto Relating to an Interpretation of Paragraph (b) of Article Fifth of Its Certificate of Incorporation and an Amendment to Rule 3.16(b), 17739-17742 [E5-1591]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 66 / Thursday, April 7, 2005 / Notices
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–51462; File No. SR–CBOE–
2005–20]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Chicago Board Options Exchange,
Incorporated; Notice of Proposed Rule
Change and Amendment No. 1 Thereto
Relating to an Interpretation of
Paragraph (b) of Article Fifth of Its
Certificate of Incorporation and an
Amendment to Rule 3.16(b)
March 31, 2005.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 notice is hereby given that on
March 9, 2005, the Chicago Board
Options Exchange, Incorporated
(‘‘CBOE’’ or the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared by the CBOE. On
March 28, 2005, the Exchange submitted
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change.2 The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change, as amended, from
interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The proposed rule change consists of
an interpretation of paragraph (b) of
Article Fifth of the Certificate of
Incorporation of the CBOE pertaining to
the right of the 1,402 Full Members of
the Board of Trade of the City of
Chicago, Inc. (the ‘‘CBOT’’) to become
members of the CBOE without having to
purchase a CBOE membership
(‘‘Exercise Right’’). This interpretation
of the Exercise Right is embodied in an
Agreement dated October 7, 2004
(‘‘2004 Agreement’’) between the CBOE
and the CBOT and in a related proposed
amendment to CBOE Rule 3.16. The
2004 Agreement reflects the agreement
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
to a pending motion to reconsider the
Commission’s approval of SR–CBOE–2004–16,
which was submitted on March 7, 2005,
Amendment No. 1 removed certain language from
the text of CBOE Rule 3.16(b) that was included
with the original filing to reflect the stay of
effectiveness of the text added by SR–CBOE–2004–
16 pending a final Commission determination of the
motion to reconsider. Accordingly, Amendment No.
1 revised the proposed rule change to reflect the
text of CBOE Rule 3.16 as currently in effect,
without the language added to the Rule by SR–
CBOE–2004–16, and as it is proposed to be
modified by the current rule filing. Amendment No.
1 also adds Exhibit 3b to the filing, which consists
of an opinion letter received by CBOE from its
special Delaware counsel that pertains to the
proposed rule change.
2 Due
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of the CBOE and the CBOT concerning
the nature and scope of the Exercise
Right in light of the expanded operation
of the CBOT’s electronic trading system.
The text of the 2004 Agreement is
attached as Exhibit 3 to the CBOE’s
Form 19b–4, and the opinion letter of
CBOE’s special Delaware counsel is
attached as Exhibit 3b to the CBOE’s
Form 19b–4. The text of the proposed
rule change, including the abovereferenced Exhibits and Amendment
No. 1, is available on CBOE’s Web site
[https://www.cboe.org/Legal/
SubmittedSECFilings.aspx], at the
CBOE’s Office of the Secretary, and at
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
CBOE included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. The CBOE has
prepared summaries, set forth in
Sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to provide an interpretation of
the rules of the CBOE as set forth in
paragraph (b) of Article Fifth of the
CBOE Certificate of Incorporation
(‘‘Article Fifth(b)’’) concerning the effect
on the Exercise Right of the expansion
of CBOT’s electronic trading platform.
The source of the Exercise Right is
Article Fifth(b), which provides in part
that ‘‘every present and future member
of [CBOT] who applies for membership
in the [CBOE] and who otherwise
qualifies shall, so long as he remains a
member of said Board of Trade, be
entitled to be a member of the [CBOE]
notwithstanding any such limitation on
the number of members and without the
necessity of acquiring such membership
for consideration or value from the
[CBOE], its members or elsewhere.’’
This filing does not propose to amend
Article Fifth(b), but only to interpret
how it should apply in circumstances
that CBOE believes were not envisioned
at the time Article Fifth(b) was adopted
and therefore were not addressed in the
language of that Article.
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17739
Expanded electronic trading on CBOT
carries with it with the potential for
providing open access to the CBOT
market over the electronic platform on
substantially the same terms to members
and nonmembers alike. This raises the
possibility that CBOT members will no
longer need the trading rights provided
by their memberships in order to be able
to trade CBOT products, in which event
they would be free to sell or delegate
their CBOT memberships to persons
who would exercise them to become
CBOE members, or to become CBOE
exerciser members themselves, while
still retaining the right to trade on
CBOT’s open access electronic platform.
Accordingly, expanded electronic
trading of CBOT products could
facilitate the ability of CBOT members
or their delegates to trade on CBOT as
members and on CBOE as exercise
members concurrently, since physical
presence on the CBOT trading floor
would not be required to trade CBOT
products that are available in the
electronic system.
For these reasons, CBOE believes
expanded electronic trading on CBOT
could result in a mass exercise by CBOT
Full Members to an extent never
contemplated at the time the Exercise
Right was first established. When the
Exercise Right was first established, the
only way a CBOT Full Member who was
also a member of CBOE could trade as
a member of both exchanges was to
physically move from one exchange’s
trading floor to another. Although the
proximity of the two trading floors made
this theoretically possible, few CBOT
Full Members have ever attempted to
trade on both floors in this way. CBOE
believes a principal reason for this is
because a CBOT member who is also a
CBOE member would find it difficult to
fulfill his obligations to both exchanges,
as well as to manage the positions
resulting from his trading, if he
frequently had to be absent from one
exchange’s trading floor because of a
need to be on the other exchange’s floor.
Therefore, although the Exercise Right
has always been available to all 1,402
CBOT Full Members, it was inherent in
the nature of exchange trading at the
time Article Fifth(b) was adopted that
only a fraction of CBOT Full Members
would be expected to use that right to
become members of CBOE. This is
confirmed by the fact that during the
entire time the Exercise Right has been
in effect the percentage of CBOT Full
Members who have exercised has
averaged 33.12%, and has never
exceeded 52.85%. During the year
ended December 31, 2004, the
percentage of CBOT Full Members who
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 66 / Thursday, April 7, 2005 / Notices
exercised ranged from a high of 29.24%
to a low of 25.53%.
In order to permit the Exercise Right
to remain available to CBOT Full
Members in a manner consistent with
what CBOE believes was its original
intent, CBOE (with CBOT’s
concurrence) proposes to interpret
Article Fifth(b) to take into account the
development and expansion of
electronic trading that were not
anticipated at the time that Article was
adopted, and thus are not addressed in
the language of that Article.
In 2001, concurrently with
announcing the planned expansion of
electronic trading in its market, CBOT
also announced a proposed strategic
restructuring of that exchange that
would have changed CBOT from a nonprofit membership corporation to a forprofit stock corporation to be owned by
its former members as stockholders
(subsequently revised to make CBOT a
for-profit subsidiary of a for-profit
holding company to be owned by the
former members). CBOE believed that
the proposal to restructure CBOT was
also not anticipated when Article
Fifth(b) was adopted, and that it created
a separate need for CBOE to interpret
how Article Fifth(b) would apply when
former members of CBOT became
stockholders of a new holding company.
For these reasons, in early 2001 CBOE
entered into discussions with CBOT in
an effort to reach agreement regarding
how CBOE would interpret Article
Fifth(b) in response to both of these
developments at CBOT. These
discussions resulted in an agreement
between CBOE and CBOT, entered into
as of August 1, 2001 (the ‘‘2001
Agreement’’), that embodied CBOE’s
interpretation of Article Fifth(b) in
response to both developments. That
interpretation, as subsequently modified
to reflect several revisions to CBOT’s
proposed restructuring, was filed by
CBOE as a proposed rule change under
Rule 19b–4 of the Act in SR–CBOE–
2002–01.
Prior to and during the time SR–
CBOE–2002–01 was on file at the
Commission, CBOT’s proposed
restructuring was the subject of
litigation between CBOT and certain of
its members. Although this litigation
did not involve CBOE and was not
related to the Exercise Right, CBOT’s
proposed restructuring was delayed
while the litigation was pending. For
this reason, at CBOE’s request, the
Commission deferred acting on SR–
CBOE–2002–01, and on April 6, 2004,
when it remained uncertain when CBOT
would be able to go forward with its
restructuring, CBOE formally withdrew
that filing. Recently, following the
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settlement on September 20, 2004, of
the litigation that had delayed the
CBOT’s proposed restructuring and the
effectiveness on February 14, 2005, of
the registration statement of CBOT
Holdings, Inc. needed to permit the
members of the CBOT to vote on the
proposed restructuring, on March 7,
2005, CBOE refiled the interpretation of
Article Fifth(b) embodied in the 2001
Agreement.3
Although the interpretation embodied
in the 2001 Agreement addresses the
expansion of electronic trading as well
as the proposed restructuring of the
CBOT, that interpretation can become
effective, subject to Commission
approval, only upon the effectiveness of
the CBOT’s restructuring. Because
expanded electronic trading may have
an impact on the Exercise Right as
described above independent of
whether the restructuring of the CBOT
becomes effective, CBOE believes it
must interpret Article Fifth(b) to address
the expansion of electronic trading at
CBOT in a way that is not conditioned
on the effectiveness of the proposed
restructuring of CBOT. For this reason,
in late 2004 CBOE and CBOT entered
into discussions in an attempt to reach
agreement on an interpretation of
Article Fifth(b) by CBOE that would be
solely in response to expanded
electronic trading and would be
completely independent of the
restructuring of CBOT. As a result of
these discussions, CBOE and CBOT
entered into the 2004 Agreement. The
interpretation of Article Fifth(b)
embodied in the 2004 Agreement,
together with a related amendment to
CBOE Rule 3.16(b), constitutes the
proposed rule change that is the subject
of this filing.
The interpretation of Article Fifth(b)
embodied in the 2004 Agreement
mirrors that aspect of the interpretation
embodied in the 2001 Agreement that
addressed the expansion of electronic
trading to the effect that the Exercise
Right would continue to be available to
CBOT Full Members notwithstanding
the development of electronic trading
and related changes to trading hours
and access policies that may be made by
either exchange, if certain conditions
are satisfied. Included among these
conditions is the agreement of CBOT to
take various measures to promote the
value of CBOT membership while at the
same time to limit the ability of CBOT
members and their delegates to trade as
members on CBOT and CBOE
concurrently, in order to reduce the
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51463
(March 31, 2005) providing notice of File No. SR–
CBOE–2005–19.
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Sfmt 4703
likelihood of a mass exercise under
circumstances that CBOE believes were
not contemplated when the Exercise
Right was established. These measures
include restricting the ability of
exercising CBOT members to have
preferred member access to the CBOT’s
electronic trading platform while they
are present on the CBOE trading floor or
are logged on to the CBOE electronic
platform. If either of these
circumstances applies, the exercising
members may access CBOT’s electronic
platform only in the capacity of
nonmember customers. Similarly, CBOT
agreed that any CBOT Full Member
Delegates who have exercised may trade
on CBOT’s electronic platform only as
customers. Finally, the 2004 Agreement
provides that if a CBOT Full Member
delegates his only CBOT Full
Membership to a delegate who
exercises, the CBOT Full Member has
no right to exercise and may trade on
CBOE only as a customer.
Like the 2001 Agreement, the 2004
Agreement includes the agreement of
CBOT to modify its rules effective not
later than December 1, 2004, to preclude
any Full Member or Full Member
Delegate of CBOT who is also an
exercise member of CBOE from trading
as a member on the trading floor of
CBOT at any time when the member is
logged on to CBOE’s electronic trading
platform. (The CBOE represents that the
CBOT has adopted such a rule.) This
latter restriction does not apply to a
CBOT Full Member who owns more
than one CBOT membership, at least
one of which has not been delegated or,
in the case of a CBOT Full Membership,
used to acquire a CBOE membership by
exercise. Finally, the 2004 Agreement
provides that if a CBOT Full Member
delegates his only CBOT Full
Membership to a delegate who
exercises, the CBOT Full Member has
no right to exercise and may trade on
CBOE only as a customer.
In order to make these restrictions on
exercising members and delegates
effective for their intended purpose, the
2004 Agreement, like the 2001
Agreement, provides that the
application of CBOE’s interpretation of
the exercise right embodied therein is
conditioned on CBOT’s maintaining
meaningful fee preferences for the
members and delegates of CBOT as
compared with the fees payable by
nonmember customers, and maintaining
other incentives to support the value of
CBOT Full Membership. The 2004
Agreement provides that if
disagreements arise between CBOE and
CBOT as to whether meaningful fee
preferences and other incentives are
being maintained, the matter will be
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 66 / Thursday, April 7, 2005 / Notices
referred to arbitration. The arbitrators
are authorized to determine whether
meaningful member and delegate fee
preferences are being maintained, and if
not, to specify a remedy for CBOT’s
failure to maintain them and to specify
how they must be restored. The
arbitrators are also authorized to
prescribe the consequences of any
failure by the CBOT to take any action
required under the remedy specified by
the arbitrators within 30 days of the
arbitrators’ decision. The CBOE
represents that the CBOT has agreed to
amend its rules to implement the
provisions of the 2004 Agreement.
This interpretation of Article Fifth(b)
does not displace other interpretations
of Article Fifth(b) previously adopted by
CBOE and approved by the Commission
to address other unanticipated changed
circumstances. These consist of the
interpretation embodied in an
agreement between CBOE and CBOT
dated as of September 1, 1992, filed in
SR–CBOE–92–42, an interpretation filed
in SR–CBOE–2002–41, and an
interpretation embodied in an
agreement between CBOE and CBOT
dated as of December 17, 2003, filed in
SR–CBOE–2004–16.4 Because existing
CBOE Rule 3.16 refers to all of the
interpretations of Article Fifth(b), the
proposed rule change also includes an
amendment to that Rule to add a
reference to this latest interpretation.
2. Statutory Basis
The CBOE represents that the
interpretation of the Exercise Right
embodied in the 2004 Agreement and
the conforming amendment to CBOE
Rule 3.16 that together constitute the
proposed rule change are consistent
with and further the objectives of the
Act, as amended, and Section 6(b)(5) of
the Act 5 in particular, in that they
constitute an interpretation of and an
amendment to the rules of the Exchange
that are designed to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, to perfect
the mechanisms of a free and open
market, and to protect investors and the
public interest.
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 32430
(June 8, 1993), 58 FR 32969 (June 14, 1993) (File
No. SR–CBOE–1992–42); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 46719 (October 25, 2002), 67 FR 66689
(November 1, 2002) (File No. SR–CBOE–2002–41);
and Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51252
(February 25, 2005), 70 FR 10442 (File No. SR–
CBOE–2004–16). A motion for reconsideration of
the Commission’s order approving SR–CBOE–2004–
16 was filed on March 7, 2005 and is currently
pending before the Commission.
5 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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18:22 Apr 06, 2005
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B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
CBOE does not believe that the
proposed rule change will impose any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change. Comments were received
from some members in respect of the
prior filing of the interpretation of
Article Fifth(b) embodied in the 2001
Agreement, and on August 30, 2001, ten
members of the CBOE filed suit in the
Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois
seeking a temporary restraining order
and preliminary injunction against the
CBOE and the CBOT that would prevent
CBOE from implementing the 2001
Agreement.6 The allegations made by
these commenters and by the plaintiffs
in the dismissed lawsuit raised
essentially the same procedural issue,
which involved characterizing the 2001
Agreement not as an interpretation of
Article Fifth(b), but as an amendment to
that Article. Since, by its terms, Article
Fifth(b) may be amended only with the
approval of 80% of the exerciser
members of CBOE and 80% of the nonexerciser members of CBOE, these
commenters and the plaintiffs in the
lawsuit took the position that the 2001
Agreement was invalid.7
Although none of these allegations
was directed toward the 2004
Agreement and the interpretation of
Article Fifth(b) embodied therein that is
the subject of this proposed rule change,
the same procedural issue could be
raised in response to the proposed rule
change. Accordingly, CBOE will repeat
here the substance of what it said when
this issue was previously raised.
CBOE believes any allegation that the
2004 Agreement reflects an amendment
of Article Fifth(b), and not an
interpretation of that Article, is entirely
without merit. The 2004 Agreement
does not change either the language or
intended meaning of Article Fifth(b),
but instead provides an interpretation of
that Article to deal with circumstances
brought about by the expansion of
electronic trading on CBOT that were
not contemplated or addressed in the
6 On September 17, 2001, the Court granted
CBOE’s and CBOT’s motions to dismiss this
lawsuit.
7 Similar allegations were made in the petition for
Commission review of the approval by delegated
authority of SR–CBOE–2004–16. See supra note 4.
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Sfmt 4703
17741
language of that Article or in any of
CBOE’s prior interpretations of that
Article.
Exactly the same kind of
interpretation of Article Fifth(b) was
embodied in the 1992 Agreement and
the 2003 Agreement and was the subject
of SR–CBOE–2002–41. Each of these
three prior interpretations addressed
circumstances that were not
contemplated when Article Fifth(b) was
adopted, and were not addressed in the
terms of that Article. Because CBOE had
no choice but to interpret Article
Fifth(b) in response to these changed
circumstances, and because these
interpretations did not amend the terms
of that Article, none of these prior
interpretations was submitted to an 80%
class vote of the CBOE membership as
would have had to be done if they had
been treated as amendments to that
Article. They were, however, filed by
CBOE and approved by the Commission
as interpretations of an existing rule
constituting a rule change under Section
19(b) of the Act and Rule 19b–4
thereunder.8
CBOE believes the expansion of
electronic trading on CBOT, absent
appropriate safeguards, raises the
potential for a mass exercise by most or
all of the 1,402 Full Members of CBOT
in a manner that would be inconsistent
with how the Exercise Right was
expected to operate at the time it was
adopted. To prevent this from
happening, CBOE believes it is again
necessary for it to interpret how Article
Fifth(b) will apply in light of this
unanticipated changed circumstance as
it has done before when faced with
different changed circumstances at
CBOT. Such an interpretation of the
Exercise Right by CBOE is embodied in
the 2004 Agreement, and it, together
with a conforming amendment to Rule
3.16, constitutes the proposed rule
change filed hereby. CBOE represents
that neither this interpretation of Article
Fifth(b) nor the proposed change to Rule
3.16 makes any changes to the text of
Article Fifth(b), nor are they in any way
inconsistent with the language of that
Article. Instead, they simply interpret
Article Fifth(b) so it may operate as
intended in circumstances that CBOE
believes were not contemplated at the
time that Article was drafted or was
previously interpreted.
CBOE represents that if it is not able
to interpret Article Fifth(b) under
unanticipated changed circumstances
without satisfying the 80% class vote
requirements that apply in the case of
an amendment to that Article, CBOE
would be placed on the horns of a
8 See
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07APN1
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 66 / Thursday, April 7, 2005 / Notices
dilemma. If an interpretation did not
achieve the 80% approval of each class
of voting members, the interpretation
could not be enforced. However, CBOE
would still need to know how the
Exercise Right should apply under the
changed circumstances. But under the
view that any interpretation CBOE
might adopt in such circumstances must
be treated as an amendment to Article
Fifth(b), CBOE could be paralyzed
because conceivably no interpretation
would receive the necessary vote. In
other words, where CBOE has no choice
but to interpret Article Fifth(b) in
response to changed circumstances and
where its interpretation is entirely
consistent with the language of Article
Fifth(b), CBOE must be able to make
such an interpretation without having to
satisfy the requirements that would
apply if Article Fifth(b) were being
amended.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 35 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the Exchange consents,
the Commission will:
(A) By order approve such proposed
rule change, or
(B) Institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change, as amended, is consistent with
the Act. Comments may be submitted by
any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number SR–CBOE–2005–20 on the
subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington, DC
20549–0609.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CBOE–2005–20. This file
number should be included on the
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18:22 Apr 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for inspection and copying in
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room. Copies of such filing also will be
available for inspection and copying at
the principal office of the CBOE. All
comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CBOE–2005–20 and should
be submitted on or before April 28,
2005.
For the Commission by the Division of
Market Regulation, pursuant to delegated
authority.9
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E5–1591 Filed 4–6–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–51468; File No. SR–CBOE–
2005–18]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness
of Proposed Rule Change and
Amendment No. 1 Thereto by the
Chicago Board Options Exchange,
Incorporated Relating to a Fee Cap for
Options Dividend Spread Transactions
April 1, 2005.
Pursuant to section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on March 2,
2005, the Chicago Board Options
Exchange, Incorporated (‘‘CBOE’’ or
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
PO 00000
9 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
Frm 00099
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
change as described in items I, II, and
III below, which items have been
prepared by CBOE. On March 17, 2005,
CBOE filed Amendment No. 1 to the
proposed rule change.3 CBOE
designated the proposed rule change, as
amended, as establishing or changing a
due, fee, or other charge imposed by
CBOE under section 19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of
the Act,4 and Rule 19b–4(f)(2)
thereunder,5 which renders the proposal
effective upon filing with the
Commission. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested parties.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend its
Fee Schedule to modify its fee cap on
dividend spread transactions and to
update the symbol for the Nasdaq-100
Index Tracking Stock. The text of the
proposed rule change is available on
CBOE’s Web site (https://
www.cboe.com), at the Office of the
Secretary, CBOE, and at the
Commission.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
CBOE included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in item IV below. The CBOE has
prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
In July 2004, the Exchange
implemented a program under which
market-maker, firm and broker-dealer
transaction fees associated with
‘‘dividend spread’’ transactions are
3 Amendment No. 1 replaced and superseded the
proposed rule change in its entirety. Telephone
conversation between Jaime Galvan, Assistant
Secretary, CBOE, and Steve L. Kuan, Attorney,
Division of Market Regulation, Commission, on
March 30, 2005. In Amendment No. 1, CBOE
clarified that the effective date of the Fee Schedule
is March 2, 2005, the date CBOE initially filed the
proposed rule change. Further, CBOE proposed that
the fee cap on dividend spread transactions operate
on a pilot basis until September 1, 2005.
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
5 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(2).
E:\FR\FM\07APN1.SGM
07APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 66 (Thursday, April 7, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17739-17742]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-1591]
[[Page 17739]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-51462; File No. SR-CBOE-2005-20]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Chicago Board Options Exchange,
Incorporated; Notice of Proposed Rule Change and Amendment No. 1
Thereto Relating to an Interpretation of Paragraph (b) of Article Fifth
of Its Certificate of Incorporation and an Amendment to Rule 3.16(b)
March 31, 2005.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ notice is hereby given that on March 9, 2005, the Chicago
Board Options Exchange, Incorporated (``CBOE'' or the ``Exchange'')
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the
proposed rule change as described in Items I, II, and III below, which
Items have been prepared by the CBOE. On March 28, 2005, the Exchange
submitted Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change.\2\ The
Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change, as amended, from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ Due to a pending motion to reconsider the Commission's
approval of SR-CBOE-2004-16, which was submitted on March 7, 2005,
Amendment No. 1 removed certain language from the text of CBOE Rule
3.16(b) that was included with the original filing to reflect the
stay of effectiveness of the text added by SR-CBOE-2004-16 pending a
final Commission determination of the motion to reconsider.
Accordingly, Amendment No. 1 revised the proposed rule change to
reflect the text of CBOE Rule 3.16 as currently in effect, without
the language added to the Rule by SR-CBOE-2004-16, and as it is
proposed to be modified by the current rule filing. Amendment No. 1
also adds Exhibit 3b to the filing, which consists of an opinion
letter received by CBOE from its special Delaware counsel that
pertains to the proposed rule change.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The proposed rule change consists of an interpretation of paragraph
(b) of Article Fifth of the Certificate of Incorporation of the CBOE
pertaining to the right of the 1,402 Full Members of the Board of Trade
of the City of Chicago, Inc. (the ``CBOT'') to become members of the
CBOE without having to purchase a CBOE membership (``Exercise Right'').
This interpretation of the Exercise Right is embodied in an Agreement
dated October 7, 2004 (``2004 Agreement'') between the CBOE and the
CBOT and in a related proposed amendment to CBOE Rule 3.16. The 2004
Agreement reflects the agreement of the CBOE and the CBOT concerning
the nature and scope of the Exercise Right in light of the expanded
operation of the CBOT's electronic trading system. The text of the 2004
Agreement is attached as Exhibit 3 to the CBOE's Form 19b-4, and the
opinion letter of CBOE's special Delaware counsel is attached as
Exhibit 3b to the CBOE's Form 19b-4. The text of the proposed rule
change, including the above-referenced Exhibits and Amendment No. 1, is
available on CBOE's Web site [https://www.cboe.org/Legal/
SubmittedSECFilings.aspx], at the CBOE's Office of the Secretary, and
at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, CBOE included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The CBOE has prepared summaries, set forth in Sections
A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The purpose of the proposed rule change is to provide an
interpretation of the rules of the CBOE as set forth in paragraph (b)
of Article Fifth of the CBOE Certificate of Incorporation (``Article
Fifth(b)'') concerning the effect on the Exercise Right of the
expansion of CBOT's electronic trading platform. The source of the
Exercise Right is Article Fifth(b), which provides in part that ``every
present and future member of [CBOT] who applies for membership in the
[CBOE] and who otherwise qualifies shall, so long as he remains a
member of said Board of Trade, be entitled to be a member of the [CBOE]
notwithstanding any such limitation on the number of members and
without the necessity of acquiring such membership for consideration or
value from the [CBOE], its members or elsewhere.'' This filing does not
propose to amend Article Fifth(b), but only to interpret how it should
apply in circumstances that CBOE believes were not envisioned at the
time Article Fifth(b) was adopted and therefore were not addressed in
the language of that Article.
Expanded electronic trading on CBOT carries with it with the
potential for providing open access to the CBOT market over the
electronic platform on substantially the same terms to members and
nonmembers alike. This raises the possibility that CBOT members will no
longer need the trading rights provided by their memberships in order
to be able to trade CBOT products, in which event they would be free to
sell or delegate their CBOT memberships to persons who would exercise
them to become CBOE members, or to become CBOE exerciser members
themselves, while still retaining the right to trade on CBOT's open
access electronic platform. Accordingly, expanded electronic trading of
CBOT products could facilitate the ability of CBOT members or their
delegates to trade on CBOT as members and on CBOE as exercise members
concurrently, since physical presence on the CBOT trading floor would
not be required to trade CBOT products that are available in the
electronic system.
For these reasons, CBOE believes expanded electronic trading on
CBOT could result in a mass exercise by CBOT Full Members to an extent
never contemplated at the time the Exercise Right was first
established. When the Exercise Right was first established, the only
way a CBOT Full Member who was also a member of CBOE could trade as a
member of both exchanges was to physically move from one exchange's
trading floor to another. Although the proximity of the two trading
floors made this theoretically possible, few CBOT Full Members have
ever attempted to trade on both floors in this way. CBOE believes a
principal reason for this is because a CBOT member who is also a CBOE
member would find it difficult to fulfill his obligations to both
exchanges, as well as to manage the positions resulting from his
trading, if he frequently had to be absent from one exchange's trading
floor because of a need to be on the other exchange's floor. Therefore,
although the Exercise Right has always been available to all 1,402 CBOT
Full Members, it was inherent in the nature of exchange trading at the
time Article Fifth(b) was adopted that only a fraction of CBOT Full
Members would be expected to use that right to become members of CBOE.
This is confirmed by the fact that during the entire time the Exercise
Right has been in effect the percentage of CBOT Full Members who have
exercised has averaged 33.12%, and has never exceeded 52.85%. During
the year ended December 31, 2004, the percentage of CBOT Full Members
who
[[Page 17740]]
exercised ranged from a high of 29.24% to a low of 25.53%.
In order to permit the Exercise Right to remain available to CBOT
Full Members in a manner consistent with what CBOE believes was its
original intent, CBOE (with CBOT's concurrence) proposes to interpret
Article Fifth(b) to take into account the development and expansion of
electronic trading that were not anticipated at the time that Article
was adopted, and thus are not addressed in the language of that
Article.
In 2001, concurrently with announcing the planned expansion of
electronic trading in its market, CBOT also announced a proposed
strategic restructuring of that exchange that would have changed CBOT
from a non-profit membership corporation to a for-profit stock
corporation to be owned by its former members as stockholders
(subsequently revised to make CBOT a for-profit subsidiary of a for-
profit holding company to be owned by the former members). CBOE
believed that the proposal to restructure CBOT was also not anticipated
when Article Fifth(b) was adopted, and that it created a separate need
for CBOE to interpret how Article Fifth(b) would apply when former
members of CBOT became stockholders of a new holding company.
For these reasons, in early 2001 CBOE entered into discussions with
CBOT in an effort to reach agreement regarding how CBOE would interpret
Article Fifth(b) in response to both of these developments at CBOT.
These discussions resulted in an agreement between CBOE and CBOT,
entered into as of August 1, 2001 (the ``2001 Agreement''), that
embodied CBOE's interpretation of Article Fifth(b) in response to both
developments. That interpretation, as subsequently modified to reflect
several revisions to CBOT's proposed restructuring, was filed by CBOE
as a proposed rule change under Rule 19b-4 of the Act in SR-CBOE-2002-
01.
Prior to and during the time SR-CBOE-2002-01 was on file at the
Commission, CBOT's proposed restructuring was the subject of litigation
between CBOT and certain of its members. Although this litigation did
not involve CBOE and was not related to the Exercise Right, CBOT's
proposed restructuring was delayed while the litigation was pending.
For this reason, at CBOE's request, the Commission deferred acting on
SR-CBOE-2002-01, and on April 6, 2004, when it remained uncertain when
CBOT would be able to go forward with its restructuring, CBOE formally
withdrew that filing. Recently, following the settlement on September
20, 2004, of the litigation that had delayed the CBOT's proposed
restructuring and the effectiveness on February 14, 2005, of the
registration statement of CBOT Holdings, Inc. needed to permit the
members of the CBOT to vote on the proposed restructuring, on March 7,
2005, CBOE refiled the interpretation of Article Fifth(b) embodied in
the 2001 Agreement.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51463 (March 31,
2005) providing notice of File No. SR-CBOE-2005-19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although the interpretation embodied in the 2001 Agreement
addresses the expansion of electronic trading as well as the proposed
restructuring of the CBOT, that interpretation can become effective,
subject to Commission approval, only upon the effectiveness of the
CBOT's restructuring. Because expanded electronic trading may have an
impact on the Exercise Right as described above independent of whether
the restructuring of the CBOT becomes effective, CBOE believes it must
interpret Article Fifth(b) to address the expansion of electronic
trading at CBOT in a way that is not conditioned on the effectiveness
of the proposed restructuring of CBOT. For this reason, in late 2004
CBOE and CBOT entered into discussions in an attempt to reach agreement
on an interpretation of Article Fifth(b) by CBOE that would be solely
in response to expanded electronic trading and would be completely
independent of the restructuring of CBOT. As a result of these
discussions, CBOE and CBOT entered into the 2004 Agreement. The
interpretation of Article Fifth(b) embodied in the 2004 Agreement,
together with a related amendment to CBOE Rule 3.16(b), constitutes the
proposed rule change that is the subject of this filing.
The interpretation of Article Fifth(b) embodied in the 2004
Agreement mirrors that aspect of the interpretation embodied in the
2001 Agreement that addressed the expansion of electronic trading to
the effect that the Exercise Right would continue to be available to
CBOT Full Members notwithstanding the development of electronic trading
and related changes to trading hours and access policies that may be
made by either exchange, if certain conditions are satisfied. Included
among these conditions is the agreement of CBOT to take various
measures to promote the value of CBOT membership while at the same time
to limit the ability of CBOT members and their delegates to trade as
members on CBOT and CBOE concurrently, in order to reduce the
likelihood of a mass exercise under circumstances that CBOE believes
were not contemplated when the Exercise Right was established. These
measures include restricting the ability of exercising CBOT members to
have preferred member access to the CBOT's electronic trading platform
while they are present on the CBOE trading floor or are logged on to
the CBOE electronic platform. If either of these circumstances applies,
the exercising members may access CBOT's electronic platform only in
the capacity of nonmember customers. Similarly, CBOT agreed that any
CBOT Full Member Delegates who have exercised may trade on CBOT's
electronic platform only as customers. Finally, the 2004 Agreement
provides that if a CBOT Full Member delegates his only CBOT Full
Membership to a delegate who exercises, the CBOT Full Member has no
right to exercise and may trade on CBOE only as a customer.
Like the 2001 Agreement, the 2004 Agreement includes the agreement
of CBOT to modify its rules effective not later than December 1, 2004,
to preclude any Full Member or Full Member Delegate of CBOT who is also
an exercise member of CBOE from trading as a member on the trading
floor of CBOT at any time when the member is logged on to CBOE's
electronic trading platform. (The CBOE represents that the CBOT has
adopted such a rule.) This latter restriction does not apply to a CBOT
Full Member who owns more than one CBOT membership, at least one of
which has not been delegated or, in the case of a CBOT Full Membership,
used to acquire a CBOE membership by exercise. Finally, the 2004
Agreement provides that if a CBOT Full Member delegates his only CBOT
Full Membership to a delegate who exercises, the CBOT Full Member has
no right to exercise and may trade on CBOE only as a customer.
In order to make these restrictions on exercising members and
delegates effective for their intended purpose, the 2004 Agreement,
like the 2001 Agreement, provides that the application of CBOE's
interpretation of the exercise right embodied therein is conditioned on
CBOT's maintaining meaningful fee preferences for the members and
delegates of CBOT as compared with the fees payable by nonmember
customers, and maintaining other incentives to support the value of
CBOT Full Membership. The 2004 Agreement provides that if disagreements
arise between CBOE and CBOT as to whether meaningful fee preferences
and other incentives are being maintained, the matter will be
[[Page 17741]]
referred to arbitration. The arbitrators are authorized to determine
whether meaningful member and delegate fee preferences are being
maintained, and if not, to specify a remedy for CBOT's failure to
maintain them and to specify how they must be restored. The arbitrators
are also authorized to prescribe the consequences of any failure by the
CBOT to take any action required under the remedy specified by the
arbitrators within 30 days of the arbitrators' decision. The CBOE
represents that the CBOT has agreed to amend its rules to implement the
provisions of the 2004 Agreement.
This interpretation of Article Fifth(b) does not displace other
interpretations of Article Fifth(b) previously adopted by CBOE and
approved by the Commission to address other unanticipated changed
circumstances. These consist of the interpretation embodied in an
agreement between CBOE and CBOT dated as of September 1, 1992, filed in
SR-CBOE-92-42, an interpretation filed in SR-CBOE-2002-41, and an
interpretation embodied in an agreement between CBOE and CBOT dated as
of December 17, 2003, filed in SR-CBOE-2004-16.\4\ Because existing
CBOE Rule 3.16 refers to all of the interpretations of Article
Fifth(b), the proposed rule change also includes an amendment to that
Rule to add a reference to this latest interpretation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 32430 (June 8,
1993), 58 FR 32969 (June 14, 1993) (File No. SR-CBOE-1992-42);
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 46719 (October 25, 2002), 67 FR
66689 (November 1, 2002) (File No. SR-CBOE-2002-41); and Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 51252 (February 25, 2005), 70 FR 10442
(File No. SR-CBOE-2004-16). A motion for reconsideration of the
Commission's order approving SR-CBOE-2004-16 was filed on March 7,
2005 and is currently pending before the Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Statutory Basis
The CBOE represents that the interpretation of the Exercise Right
embodied in the 2004 Agreement and the conforming amendment to CBOE
Rule 3.16 that together constitute the proposed rule change are
consistent with and further the objectives of the Act, as amended, and
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act \5\ in particular, in that they constitute
an interpretation of and an amendment to the rules of the Exchange that
are designed to promote just and equitable principles of trade, to
perfect the mechanisms of a free and open market, and to protect
investors and the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
CBOE does not believe that the proposed rule change will impose any
burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants or Others
No written comments were solicited or received with respect to the
proposed rule change. Comments were received from some members in
respect of the prior filing of the interpretation of Article Fifth(b)
embodied in the 2001 Agreement, and on August 30, 2001, ten members of
the CBOE filed suit in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois
seeking a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction
against the CBOE and the CBOT that would prevent CBOE from implementing
the 2001 Agreement.\6\ The allegations made by these commenters and by
the plaintiffs in the dismissed lawsuit raised essentially the same
procedural issue, which involved characterizing the 2001 Agreement not
as an interpretation of Article Fifth(b), but as an amendment to that
Article. Since, by its terms, Article Fifth(b) may be amended only with
the approval of 80% of the exerciser members of CBOE and 80% of the
non-exerciser members of CBOE, these commenters and the plaintiffs in
the lawsuit took the position that the 2001 Agreement was invalid.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ On September 17, 2001, the Court granted CBOE's and CBOT's
motions to dismiss this lawsuit.
\7\ Similar allegations were made in the petition for Commission
review of the approval by delegated authority of SR-CBOE-2004-16.
See supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although none of these allegations was directed toward the 2004
Agreement and the interpretation of Article Fifth(b) embodied therein
that is the subject of this proposed rule change, the same procedural
issue could be raised in response to the proposed rule change.
Accordingly, CBOE will repeat here the substance of what it said when
this issue was previously raised.
CBOE believes any allegation that the 2004 Agreement reflects an
amendment of Article Fifth(b), and not an interpretation of that
Article, is entirely without merit. The 2004 Agreement does not change
either the language or intended meaning of Article Fifth(b), but
instead provides an interpretation of that Article to deal with
circumstances brought about by the expansion of electronic trading on
CBOT that were not contemplated or addressed in the language of that
Article or in any of CBOE's prior interpretations of that Article.
Exactly the same kind of interpretation of Article Fifth(b) was
embodied in the 1992 Agreement and the 2003 Agreement and was the
subject of SR-CBOE-2002-41. Each of these three prior interpretations
addressed circumstances that were not contemplated when Article
Fifth(b) was adopted, and were not addressed in the terms of that
Article. Because CBOE had no choice but to interpret Article Fifth(b)
in response to these changed circumstances, and because these
interpretations did not amend the terms of that Article, none of these
prior interpretations was submitted to an 80% class vote of the CBOE
membership as would have had to be done if they had been treated as
amendments to that Article. They were, however, filed by CBOE and
approved by the Commission as interpretations of an existing rule
constituting a rule change under Section 19(b) of the Act and Rule 19b-
4 thereunder.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CBOE believes the expansion of electronic trading on CBOT, absent
appropriate safeguards, raises the potential for a mass exercise by
most or all of the 1,402 Full Members of CBOT in a manner that would be
inconsistent with how the Exercise Right was expected to operate at the
time it was adopted. To prevent this from happening, CBOE believes it
is again necessary for it to interpret how Article Fifth(b) will apply
in light of this unanticipated changed circumstance as it has done
before when faced with different changed circumstances at CBOT. Such an
interpretation of the Exercise Right by CBOE is embodied in the 2004
Agreement, and it, together with a conforming amendment to Rule 3.16,
constitutes the proposed rule change filed hereby. CBOE represents that
neither this interpretation of Article Fifth(b) nor the proposed change
to Rule 3.16 makes any changes to the text of Article Fifth(b), nor are
they in any way inconsistent with the language of that Article.
Instead, they simply interpret Article Fifth(b) so it may operate as
intended in circumstances that CBOE believes were not contemplated at
the time that Article was drafted or was previously interpreted.
CBOE represents that if it is not able to interpret Article
Fifth(b) under unanticipated changed circumstances without satisfying
the 80% class vote requirements that apply in the case of an amendment
to that Article, CBOE would be placed on the horns of a
[[Page 17742]]
dilemma. If an interpretation did not achieve the 80% approval of each
class of voting members, the interpretation could not be enforced.
However, CBOE would still need to know how the Exercise Right should
apply under the changed circumstances. But under the view that any
interpretation CBOE might adopt in such circumstances must be treated
as an amendment to Article Fifth(b), CBOE could be paralyzed because
conceivably no interpretation would receive the necessary vote. In
other words, where CBOE has no choice but to interpret Article Fifth(b)
in response to changed circumstances and where its interpretation is
entirely consistent with the language of Article Fifth(b), CBOE must be
able to make such an interpretation without having to satisfy the
requirements that would apply if Article Fifth(b) were being amended.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 35 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the Exchange consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve such proposed rule change, or
(B) Institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change, as amended, is consistent with the Act. Comments may be
submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an e-mail to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-CBOE-2005-20 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20549-0609.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-CBOE-2005-20. This
file number should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used.
To help the Commission process and review your comments more
efficiently, please use only one method. The Commission will post all
comments on the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments,
all written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that
are filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating
to the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person,
other than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance
with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for inspection
and copying in the Commission's Public Reference Room. Copies of such
filing also will be available for inspection and copying at the
principal office of the CBOE. All comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All submissions should refer to
File Number SR-CBOE-2005-20 and should be submitted on or before April
28, 2005.
For the Commission by the Division of Market Regulation,
pursuant to delegated authority.\9\
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\9\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E5-1591 Filed 4-6-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010-01-P