Regulation NMS, 37496-37644 [05-11802]
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37496
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 29, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 200, 201, 230, 240, 242,
249, and 270
[Release No. 34–51808; File No. S7–10–04]
RIN 3235–AJ18
Regulation NMS
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final rules and amendments to
joint industry plans.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) is
adopting rules under Regulation NMS
and two amendments to the joint
industry plans for disseminating market
information. In addition to
redesignating the national market
system rules previously adopted under
Section 11A of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’),
Regulation NMS includes new
substantive rules that are designed to
modernize and strengthen the regulatory
structure of the U.S. equity markets.
First, the ‘‘Order Protection Rule’’
requires trading centers to establish,
maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
prevent the execution of trades at prices
inferior to protected quotations
displayed by other trading centers,
subject to an applicable exception. To
be protected, a quotation must be
immediately and automatically
accessible. Second, the ‘‘Access Rule’’
requires fair and non-discriminatory
access to quotations, establishes a limit
on access fees to harmonize the pricing
of quotations across different trading
centers, and requires each national
securities exchange and national
securities association to adopt,
maintain, and enforce written rules that
prohibit their members from engaging in
a pattern or practice of displaying
quotations that lock or cross automated
quotations. Third, the ‘‘Sub-Penny
Rule’’ prohibits market participants
from accepting, ranking, or displaying
orders, quotations, or indications of
interest in a pricing increment smaller
than a penny, except for orders,
quotations, or indications of interest
that are priced at less than $1.00 per
share. Finally, the Commission is
adopting amendments to the ‘‘Market
Data Rules’’ that update the
requirements for consolidating,
distributing, and displaying market
information, as well as amendments to
the joint industry plans for
disseminating market information that
modify the formulas for allocating plan
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revenues (‘‘Allocation Amendment’’)
and broaden participation in plan
governance (‘‘Governance
Amendment’’).
DATES: Effective Date: August 29, 2005.
Compliance Dates: For specific phase-in
dates for compliance with the final rules
and amendments, see section VII of this
release.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Order Protection Rule: Heather Seidel,
Senior Special Counsel, at (202) 551–
5608, Marc F. McKayle, Special
Counsel, at (202) 551–5633, David Hsu,
Special Counsel, at (202) 551–5664, or
Raymond Lombardo, Attorney, at (202)
551–5615; Access Rule: Heather Seidel,
Senior Special Counsel, at (202) 551–
5608, or David Liu, Attorney, at (202)
551–5645; Sub-Penny Rule: Michael
Gaw, Senior Special Counsel, at (202)
551–5602; Market Data Rules,
Allocation Amendment, and
Governance Amendment: David Hsu,
Special Counsel, at (202) 551–5664;
Regulation NMS: Yvonne Fraticelli,
Special Counsel, at (202) 551–5654; all
of whom are in the Division of Market
Regulation, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–6628.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
A. Summary of Rulemaking Process and
Record
B. NMS Principles and Objectives
1. Competition Among Markets and
Competition Among Orders
2. Serving the Interests of Long-Term
Investors and Listed Companies
C. Overview of Adopted Rules
1. Order Protection Rule
2. Access Rule
3. Sub-Penny Rule
4. Market Data Rules and Plans
II. Order Protection Rule
A. Response to Comments and Basis for
Adopted Rule
1. Need for Intermarket Order Protection
Rule
2. Limiting Protection to Automated and
Accessible Quotations
3. Workable Implementation of Intermarket
Trade-Through Protection
4. Elimination of Proposed Opt-Out
Exception
5. Scope of Protected Quotations
6. Benefits and Implementation Costs of
the Order Protection Rule
B. Description of Adopted Rule
1. Scope of Rule
2. Requirement of Reasonable Policies and
Procedures
3. Exceptions
4. Duty of Best Execution
III. Access Rule
A. Response to Comments and Basis for
Adopted Rule
1. Means of Access to Quotations
2. Limitation on Access Fees
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3. Locking or Crossing Quotations
B. Description of Adopted Rule
1. Access to Quotations
2. Limitation on Access Fees
3. Locking or Crossing Quotations
4. Regulation ATS Fair Access
IV. Sub-Penny Rule
A. Background
B. Commission Proposal and Reproposal
on Sub-Penny Quoting
C. Comments Received
1. Restriction Based on Price of the
Quotation Not Price of the Stock
2. Quotations Below $1.00
3. Revisiting the Penny Increment
4. Sub-Penny Trading
5. Acceptance of Sub-Penny Quotations
6. Application to Options Markets
7. One-to-One Negotiating Systems
8. Implementation of Rule 612
V. Market Data Rules and Plan Amendments
A. Response to Comments and Basis for
Adopted Rules
1. Alternative Data Dissemination Models
2. Level of Fees and Plan Governance
3. Revenue Allocation Formula
4. Distribution and Display of Data
B. Description of Adopted Rules and
Amendments
1. Allocation Amendment
2. Governance Amendment
3. Consolidation, Distribution, and Display
of Data
VI. Regulation NMS
A. Description of Regulation NMS
B. Rule 600—NMS Security Designation
and Definitions
1. NMS Security Designation—Transaction
Reporting Requirements for Equities and
Listed Options
2. NMS Security and NMS Stock
3. Changes to Existing Definitions in the
NMS Rules
4. Definitions in the Regulation NMS Rules
Adopted Today
C. Changes to Other Rules
VII. Effective Date and Phased-In Compliance
Dates
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
IX. Consideration of Costs and Benefits
X. Consideration of Burden on Competition,
and Promotion of Efficiency,
Competition and Capital Formation
XI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
XII. Response to Dissent
XIII. Statutory Authority
XIV. Text of Adopted Amendments to the
CTA Plan, the CQ Plan, and the Nasdaq
UTP Plan
XV. Text of Adopted Rules
I. Introduction
The Commission is adopting
Regulation NMS, a series of initiatives
designed to modernize and strengthen
the national market system (‘‘NMS’’) for
equity securities.1 These initiatives
include:
1 The Commission originally proposed Regulation
NMS in February 2004. Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 49325 (Feb. 26, 2004), 69 FR 11126
(Mar. 9, 2004) (‘‘Proposing Release’’). It issued a
supplemental request for comment in May 2004.
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 49749 (May
20, 2004), 69 FR 30142 (May 26, 2004)
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(1) A new Order Protection Rule,2
which reinforces the fundamental
principle of obtaining the best price for
investors when such price is
represented by automated quotations
that are immediately accessible;
(2) a new Access Rule, which
promotes fair and non-discriminatory
access to quotations displayed by NMS
trading centers through a private linkage
approach;
(3) a new Sub-Penny Rule, which
establishes a uniform quoting increment
of no less than one penny for quotations
in NMS stocks equal to or greater than
$1.00 per share to promote greater price
transparency and consistency;
(4) amendments to the Market Data
Rules and joint industry plans that
allocate plan revenues to self-regulatory
organizations (‘‘SROs’’) for their
contributions to public price discovery
and promote wider and more efficient
distribution of market data; and
(5) a reorganization of existing
Exchange Act rules governing the NMS
to promote greater clarity and
understanding of the rules.
The Commission is adopting
Regulation NMS in furtherance of its
statutory responsibilities. In 1975,
Congress directed the Commission,
through enactment of Section 11A of the
Exchange Act, to facilitate the
establishment of a national market
system to link together the multiple
individual markets that trade securities.
Congress intended the Commission to
take advantage of opportunities created
by new data processing and
communications technologies to
preserve and strengthen the securities
markets. By incorporating such
technologies, the NMS is designed to
achieve the objectives of efficient,
competitive, fair, and orderly markets
that are in the public interest and
protect investors. For three decades, the
Commission has adhered to these
guiding objectives in its regulation of
the NMS, which are essential to meeting
(‘‘Supplemental Release’’). On December 16, 2004,
the Commission reproposed Regulation NMS in its
entirety for public comment. Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 50870 (Dec. 16, 2004), 69 FR 77424
(Dec. 27, 2004) (‘‘Reproposing Release’’).
2 Although the Reproposing Release referred to
Rule 611 as the ‘‘Trade-Through Rule,’’ the
reproposed Rule itself was named ‘‘Order
Protection Rule.’’ The term ‘‘Trade-Through Rule’’
was used in the Reproposing Release to avoid
confusion, given that the term had been widely
used in public debate. The term ‘‘Order Protection
Rule,’’ however, better captures the nature of the
adopted Rule. For example, the term helps
distinguish the existing trade-through provisions for
exchange-listed stocks, which do not really protect
orders. Limit order users want a fast, efficient
execution of their orders, not a slow, costly
‘‘satisfaction’’ process that is provided by the
existing trade-through provisions. See infra, note 30
and accompanying text.
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the investment needs of the public and
reducing the cost of capital for listed
companies. Over this period, the
Commission has continued to revise and
refine its NMS rules in light of changing
market conditions.
Today, the NMS encompasses the
stocks of more than 5000 listed
companies, which collectively represent
more than $14 trillion in U.S. market
capitalization. Consistent with
Congressional intent, these stocks are
traded simultaneously at a variety of
different venues that participate in the
NMS, including national securities
exchanges, alternative trading systems
(‘‘ATSs’’), and market-making securities
dealers. The Commission believes that
the NMS approach adopted by Congress
is a primary reason that the U.S. equity
markets are widely recognized as being
the fairest, most efficient, and most
competitive in the world. The rules that
the Commission is now adopting
represent an important and needed step
forward in its continuing
implementation of Congress’s objectives
for the NMS. By modernizing and
strengthening the nation’s regulatory
structure, the rules are designed to
assure that the equity markets will
continue to serve the interests of
investors, listed companies, and the
public for years to come.
In recent years, the equity markets
have experienced sweeping changes,
ranging from new technologies to new
types of markets to the initiation of
trading in penny increments. The
pressing need for NMS modernization to
reflect these changes is inescapable.
Thus, for the last five years, the
Commission has undertaken a broad
and systematic review to determine how
best to keep the NMS up-to-date. This
review has required the Commission to
grapple with many difficult and
contentious issues that have lingered
unresolved for many years. We have
devoted a great deal of effort to studying
these issues, listening to the views of
the public, and have carefully
considered the comments contained in
the record to craft rule proposals that
would achieve the statutory objectives
for the NMS.
Given the wide range of perspectives
on market structure issues, it is perhaps
inevitable that there would be
differences of opinion on the
Commission’s policy choices. The time
has arrived, however, when decisions
must be made and contentious issues
must be resolved so that the markets can
move forward with certainty concerning
their future regulatory environment and
appropriately respond to fundamental
economic and competitive forces. The
Commission always seeks to achieve
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consensus, but trying to achieve
consensus should not impede the
achievement of the statutory objectives
for the NMS and should not damage the
competitiveness of the U.S. equity
markets, both at home and
internationally. We believe that further
delay is not warranted and therefore
have adopted final rules needed to
modernize and strengthen the NMS. The
following discussion briefly summarizes
the deliberate and open rulemaking
process that the Commission has
undertaken and the extensive record
that supports the adoption of Regulation
NMS, including the many empirical
studies undertaken by the Commission
staff.
A. Summary of Rulemaking Process and
Record
The Commission has engaged in a
thorough, deliberate, and open
rulemaking process that has provided at
every point an opportunity for public
participation and debate. We have
actively sought out the views of the
public and securities industry
participants. Even prior to formulating
proposals, our review included multiple
public hearings and roundtables, an
advisory committee, three concept
releases, the issuance of temporary
exemptions intended in part to generate
useful data on policy alternatives, and a
constant dialogue with industry
participants and investors. This process
continued after the proposals were
published for public comment.3 We
held a public hearing on the proposals
in April 2004 (‘‘NMS Hearing’’) that
included more than 30 panelists
representing investors, individual
markets, and market participants from a
variety of different sectors of the
securities industry.4 Because we
believed that there were a number of
important developments at the public
hearing, we published a supplemental
request for comment and extended the
comment period on the proposals in
May 2004 to give the public a full
opportunity to respond to these
developments.5 We then carefully
considered the more than 700 comment
letters submitted by the public, which
encompassed a wide range of views.
The insights of the commenters, as
well as those of the NMS Hearing
panelists, contributed to significant
refinements of the original proposals. In
addition, the Commission staff prepared
3 Proposing
Release, 69 FR at 11126.
list of all panelists and full transcript of the
NMS Hearing (‘‘Hearing Tr.’’), as well as an
archived video and audio webcast, are available on
the Commission’s Internet Web site (https://
www.sec.gov).
5 Supplemental Release, 69 FR at 30142.
4A
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several studies of relevant trading data
to help evaluate and respond to the
views of commenters. Consequently,
rather than immediately adopting rules,
the Commission reproposed Regulation
NMS in its entirety in December 2004 to
afford the public an additional
opportunity to review and comment on
the details of the rules and on the staff
studies. The Commission then received,
and carefully considered, more than
1500 additional comments on the
reproposal.6
This extensive rulemaking process
has generated an equally extensive
record, which is discussed at length
throughout this release as it relates to
each of the four substantive rulemaking
initiatives. Indeed, substantial parts of
the release are devoted to responding to
the many public comments (particularly
those opposing the proposals) and to
discussing the estimated costs and
benefits of the rules. This rulemaking
raised difficult policy issues on which
commenters submitted differing views.
To move forward, the Commission
necessarily has had to make policy
decisions that not everyone will agree
with.
The fact that each of the adopted rules
provoked conflicting views from
commenters should not, however,
obscure the very substantial evidence in
the record strongly supporting each of
the four substantive rulemaking
initiatives in Regulation NMS. Clearly,
the Order Protection Rule was most
controversial and attracted the most
public comment and attention, yet the
breadth of support in the record for the
Rule is compelling. Indeed, support for
an intermarket price protection rule
begins with the adoption by Congress in
1975 of the national market system
itself. Both the House and Senate
committees responsible for drafting
Section 11A specifically considered and
endorsed the Commission’s authority to
adopt a price protection rule as a means
to achieve the statutory objectives for
the NMS.7
Consistent with the drafters’ views, a
broad spectrum of commenters
supported adoption of the Order
Protection Rule for all NMS stocks,
6 The Reproposing Release stated that the
Commission would continue to consider all
comments received on the Proposing Release and
Supplemental Release, in addition to those on the
Reproposing Release, in evaluating further
rulemaking action. 69 FR at 77426. Accordingly,
this release discusses comments received in
response to all three previous releases. Comments
on the Proposing Release and Supplemental Release
are referred to as ‘‘[name of commenter] Letter.’’
Comments on the Reproposing Release are referred
to as ‘‘[name of commenter] Reproposal Letter.’’
7 See infra, notes 920–922 and accompanying
text.
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including investors, listed companies,
individual markets, market participants,
and academics.8 Many individual and
institutional investors particularly
supported the Commission’s view that
significant problems exist that require
the Commission to modernize its
regulations. They also suggested the
need for strengthened intermarket price
protection to further their interests, as
did major groups representing investors,
such as the Investment Company
Institute (whose mutual fund members
manage assets of $7.8 trillion that
account for more than 95% of all U.S.
mutual fund assets), the Committee on
Investment of Employee Benefit Assets
(which represents 110 of the nation’s
largest corporate retirement funds
managing $1.1 trillion on behalf of 15
million plan participants and
beneficiaries), the National Association
of Investors Corporation (whose
membership consists of investment
clubs and individual investors with
aggregate personal investments of
approximately $116 billion), and the
Consumer Federation of America.
Moreover, the commenters’ views on
the need for an intermarket price
protection rule were supported by the
various empirical studies of trading data
performed by Commission staff. These
studies found, among other things, that
an estimated 1 out of 40 trades for both
NYSE and Nasdaq stocks are executed at
prices inferior to the best displayed
quotations, or approximately 98,000
trades per day in Nasdaq stocks alone.9
While the Commission believes that the
total number of trade-throughs should
not be the sole consideration in making
its policy choices, the staff studies and
analyses demonstrate that trade-through
rates are significant and indicate the
need for strengthened order protection
for all NMS stocks.
Why did a broad spectrum of
commenters, many of which have
extensive experience and expertise
regarding the inner workings of the
equity markets, support the Order
Protection Rule and its emphasis on the
principle of best price? They based their
support on two fundamental rationales,
with which the Commission fully
agrees. First, strengthened assurance
that orders will be filled at the best
prices will give investors, particularly
retail investors, greater confidence that
they will be treated fairly when they
participate in the equity markets.
Maintaining investor confidence is an
essential element of well-functioning
8 See infra, notes 56–59, 939–941, 957–960, and
accompanying text.
9 See infra, notes 66–69, 104, and accompanying
text.
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equity markets. Second, protection of
the best displayed and accessible prices
will promote deep and stable markets
that minimize investor transaction costs.
More than 84 million individual
Americans participate, directly or
indirectly, in the U.S. equity markets.10
The transaction costs associated with
the prices at which their orders are
executed represent a continual drain on
their long-term savings. Although these
costs are difficult to calculate precisely,
they are very real and very substantial,
with estimates ranging from $30 billion
to more than $100 billion per year.11
Minimizing these investor costs to the
greatest extent possible is the hallmark
of efficient markets, which is a primary
objective of the NMS. The Order
Protection Rule is needed to help
achieve this objective, thereby
improving the long-term financial wellbeing of millions of investors and
reducing the cost of capital for listed
companies.
In sum, the rules adopted today are
the culmination of a long and
comprehensive rulemaking process.
Reaching appropriate policy decisions
in an area as complex as market
structure requires an understanding of
the relevant facts and of the often subtle
ways in which the markets work, as
well as the balancing of policy
objectives that sometimes may not point
in precisely the same direction. Based
on the extensive record that we have
developed over the course of the
rulemaking process, the Commission
firmly believes that Regulation NMS
will protect investors, promote fair
competition, and enhance market
efficiency, and therefore fulfills its
Exchange Act responsibility to facilitate
the development of the NMS.
B. NMS Principles and Objectives
1. Competition Among Markets and
Competition Among Orders
The NMS is premised on promoting
fair competition among individual
markets, while at the same time assuring
that all of these markets are linked
together, through facilities and rules, in
a unified system that promotes
interaction among the orders of buyers
and sellers in a particular NMS stock.
The NMS thereby incorporates two
distinct types of competition—
competition among individual markets
and competition among individual
orders—that together contribute to
efficient markets. Vigorous competition
among markets promotes more efficient
and innovative trading services, while
10 See
11 See
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infra, notes 25–26 and accompanying text.
infra, note 990.
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integrated competition among orders
promotes more efficient pricing of
individual stocks for all types of orders,
large and small. Together, they produce
markets that offer the greatest benefits
for investors and listed companies.
Accordingly, the Commission’s
primary challenge in facilitating the
establishment of an NMS has been to
maintain an appropriate balance
between these two vital forms of
competition. It particularly has sought
to avoid the extremes of: (1) Isolated
markets that trade an NMS stock
without regard to trading in other
markets and thereby fragment the
competition among buyers and sellers in
that stock; and (2) a totally centralized
system that loses the benefits of
vigorous competition and innovation
among individual markets. Achieving
this objective and striking the proper
balance clearly can be a difficult task.
Since Congress mandated the
establishment of an NMS in 1975, the
Commission frequently has resisted
suggestions that it adopt an approach
focusing on a single form of competition
that, while perhaps easier to administer,
would forfeit the distinct, but equally
vital, benefits associated with both
competition among markets and
competition among orders.
With respect to competition among
markets, for example, the record of the
last thirty years should give pause to
those who believe that any market
structure regulation is inherently
inconsistent with vigorous market
competition. Other countries with
significant equity trading typically have
a single, overwhelmingly dominant
public market.12 The U.S., in contrast, is
fortunate to have equity markets that are
characterized by extremely vigorous
competition among a variety of different
types of markets. These include: (1)
Traditional exchanges with active
trading floors, which even now are
evolving to expand the range of choices
that they offer investors for both
automated and manual trading; (2)
purely electronic markets, which offer
both standard limit orders and
conditional orders that are designed to
facilitate complex trading strategies; (3)
market-making securities dealers, which
offer both automated execution of
smaller orders and the commitment of
capital to facilitate the execution of
larger, institutional orders; (4) regional
exchanges, many of which have adopted
automated systems for executing smaller
orders; and (5) automated matching
12 These markets include the London Stock
Exchange in the United Kingdom, the Tokyo Stock
Exchange in Japan, Euronext in France, and the
Deutsche Bourse in Germany.
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systems that permit investors,
particularly large institutions, to seek
counter-parties to their trades
anonymously and with minimal price
impact.
In sum, while NMS regulation may
channel specific types of market
competition (e.g., by mandating the
display to investors of consolidated
prices and including the prices
displayed internally by significant
electronic markets), it has been
remarkably successful in promoting
market competition in its broader forms
that are most important to investors and
listed companies.
The difficulty, however, is that
competition among multiple markets
trading the same stocks can detract from
the most vigorous competition among
orders in an individual stock, thereby
impeding efficient price discovery for
orders of all sizes. The importance of
competition among orders has long been
recognized. Indeed, when Congress
mandated the establishment of an NMS,
it well stated this basic principle:
‘‘Investors must be assured that they are
participants in a system which
maximizes the opportunities for the
most willing seller to meet the most
willing buyer.’’ 13 To the extent that
competition among orders is lessened,
the quality of price discovery for all
sizes of orders can be compromised.
Impaired price discovery could cause
market prices to deviate from
fundamental values, reduce market
depth and liquidity,14 and create
13 H.R. Rep. 94–123, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 50
(1975). The quotation from the text of the House
Report concludes a cogent description of the
importance of maintaining the proper balance
between competition among markets and
competition among orders that is worth quoting in
full:
Critics of this development [multiple trading of
stocks] suggest that the markets are becoming
dangerously fragmented. Others contend that the
dilution of large market dominance is the result of
healthy competitive forces which have done much
to add to the liquidity and depth of the securities
markets to the benefit of the investing public. The
Committee shares the opinion that our markets will
be strengthened by the infusion of marketmaker
competition in listed securities with the
concomitant increase in capital availability and
diminution of risk which results from increased
competition among specialists and marketmakers.
Nonetheless, market fragmentation becomes of
increasing concern in the absence of mechanisms
designed to assure that public investors are able to
obtain the best price for securities regardless of the
type or physical location of the market upon which
his transaction may be executed. Investors must be
assured that they are participants in a system which
maximizes the opportunities for the most willing
seller to meet the most willing buyer.
Id.
14 The Proposing Release and Reproposing
Release frequently emphasized the importance of
promoting greater depth and liquidity. Some
commenters appeared to equate depth and liquidity
with other factors, such as trading volume and
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37499
excessive short-term volatility that is
harmful to long-term investors and
listed companies. More broadly, when
market prices do not reflect
fundamental values, resources will be
misallocated within the economy and
economic efficiency—as well as market
efficiency—will be impaired.
2. Serving the Interests of Long-Term
Investors and Listed Companies
In its extended review of market
structure issues and in assessing how
best to achieve an appropriate balance
between competition among markets
and competition among orders, the
Commission has been guided by a firm
belief that one of the most important
goals of the equity markets is to
minimize the transaction costs of longterm investors and thereby to reduce the
cost of capital for listed companies.
These functions are inherently related
because the cost of capital of listed
companies is influenced by the
transaction costs of those who are
willing to accept the risk of holding
corporate equity for an extended
period.15
The Reproposing Release touched on
this issue in the specific context of
assessing the effect of the Order
Protection Rule on the interests of
professional traders in conducting
extremely short-term trading strategies
that can depend on millisecond
differences in order response time from
markets. Noting that any protection
against trade-throughs could interfere to
some extent with such short-term
trading strategies, the release framed the
Commission’s policy choice as follows:
‘‘Should the overall efficiency of the
NMS defer to the needs of professional
frequency of quotation updates. See, e.g., Letter
from Edward J. Nicoll, Chief Executive Officer,
Instinet Group Incorporated, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005
(‘‘Instinet Reproposal Letter’’) at 9; Letter from Marc
E. Lackritz, President, Securities Industry
Association, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Feb. 1, 2005 (‘‘SIA Reproposal
Letter’’) at 12. The Commission, however, uses the
terms specifically to refer to the ability of investors
to trade in large size at low cost and in general to
a market’s capacity to absorb order imbalances with
minimized price impact. Depth is measured in
terms of the volume of stock that can be readily
traded at a particular price point. Liquidity is
measured by the price movement experienced by
investors when attempting to trade in large size. See
infra, section II.A.6 (estimate of transaction costs for
equity mutual funds). Although depth and liquidity
are correlated with trading volume, they are not
synonymous. For example, one stock might have
less trading volume than another stock, but still
have greater depth available at and close to the best
quoted prices and lower transaction costs for large
institutional investors.
15 Investors are more willing to own a stock if it
can be readily traded in the secondary market with
low transaction costs. The greater the willingness of
investors to own a stock, the higher its price will
be, thereby reducing the issuer’s cost of capital.
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traders, many of whom rarely intend to
hold a position overnight? Or should the
NMS serve the needs of longer-term
investors, both large and small, that will
benefit substantially from intermarket
price protection?’’ 16 The Reproposing
Release emphasized that the NMS must
meet the needs of longer-term investors,
noting that any other outcome would be
contrary to the Exchange Act and its
objectives of promoting fair and efficient
markets that serve the public interest.17
In response, some commenters
disputed this focus on the interests of
long-term investors in formulating
Regulation NMS, one even questioning
the Commission’s statutory authority to
do so.18 Other commenters appeared to
share this view, as evidenced by their
downplaying, or failing entirely to
address, indications of a need for
improvements in market quality that are
important to long-term investors, such
as minimizing short-term price
volatility.19
Most of the time, the interests of
short-term traders and long-term
investors will not conflict. Short-term
traders clearly provide valuable
liquidity to the market. But when the
interests of long-term investors and
short-term traders diverge, few issues
are more fundamentally important in
formulating public policy for the U.S.
equity markets than the choice between
these interests. While achieving the
right balance of competition among
markets and competition among orders
will always be a difficult task, there will
be no possibility of accomplishing it if
in the case of a conflict the Commission
cannot choose whether the U.S. equity
markets should meet the needs of longterm investors or short-term traders.
The objective of minimizing shortterm price volatility offers an important
example where the interests of long16 Reproposing
Release, 69 FR at 77440.
17 Id.
18 Letter from Phylis M. Esposito, Executive Vice
President, Chief Strategy Officer, Ameritrade, Inc.,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
Jan. 26, 2005 (‘‘Ameritrade Reproposal Letter’’) at 9
(among other issues, questioning Commission’s
statutory authority); Letter from James A. Duncan,
Chairman, and John C. Giesea, President and CEO,
Security Traders Association, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated Jan. 19, 2005 (‘‘STA
Reproposal Letter’’) at 6; Letter from William A.
Vance, Stephen Kay, and Kimberly Unger, The
Security Traders Association of New York, Inc.,
dated Jan. 24, 2005 (‘‘STANY Reproposal Letter’’)
at 8 n. 18.
19 See, e.g., Instinet Reproposal Letter at 7–8 (‘‘We
further believe there is no basis for the
Commission’s assertion that the reproposed tradethrough rule would increase fill rates or reduce
transitory volatility on the Nasdaq market (or, for
that matter, whether these are in fact ‘weaknesses’
that need to be addressed.’’). Short-term price
volatility for Nasdaq stocks is discussed further in
section II.A.1.b below.
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term investors can diverge from those of
short-term traders. Deep and liquid
markets that minimize volatility are of
most benefit to long-term investors.
Such markets help reduce transaction
costs by furthering the ability of
investors to establish and unwind
positions in a stock at prices that are as
close to previously prevailing prices as
possible. Indeed, the 1975 Senate Report
on the NMS emphasized that one of the
‘‘paramount’’ objectives for the NMS is
‘‘the maintenance of stable and orderly
markets with maximum capacity for
absorbing trading imbalances without
undue price movements.’’ 20
Excessively volatile markets, in
contrast, can generate many
opportunities for traders to earn shortterm profits from rapid price swings.
Short-term traders, in particular,
typically possess the systems
capabilities and expertise necessary to
enter and exit the market rapidly to
exploit such price swings. Moreover,
short-term traders have great flexibility
in terms of their choice of stocks, choice
of initially establishing a long or short
position, and time of entering and
exiting the market. Long-term investors
(both institutional and retail), in
contrast, typically have an opinion on
the long-term prospects for a company.
They therefore want to buy or sell a
particular stock at a particular time.
These investors thus are inherently less
able to exploit short-term price swings
and, indeed, their buying or selling
interest often can initiate short-term
price movements.21 Efficient markets
with maximum liquidity and depth
minimize such price movements and
thereby afford long-term investors an
opportunity to achieve their trading
objectives with the lowest possible
transaction costs.
The Commission recognizes that it is
important to avoid false dichotomies
between the interests of short-term
traders and long-term investors, and that
many difficult line-drawing issues
potentially can arise in precisely
defining the difference between the two
terms. For present purposes, however,
these issues can be handled by simply
noting that it makes little sense to refer
20 S. Rep. No. 94–75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 7
(1975).
21 Long-term investors, of course, also can be
interested in fast executions. One of the primary
effects of the Order Protection Rule adopted today
will be to promote much greater speed of execution
in the market for exchange-listed stocks. The
difference in speed between automated and manual
markets often is the difference between a 1-second
response and a 15-second response—a disparity
that clearly can be important to many investors.
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to someone as ‘‘investing’’ in a company
for a few seconds, minutes, or hours.22
Short-term traders and market
intermediaries unquestionably provide
needed liquidity to the equity markets
and are essential to the welfare of
investors. Consequently, much, if not
most, of the time the interests of longterm investors and short-term traders in
market quality issues such as speed and
operational efficiency will coincide.
Indeed, implementation of Regulation
NMS likely will lead to a significant
expansion of automated trading in
exchange-listed stocks that both benefits
all investors and opens up greater
potential for electronic trading in such
stocks than currently exists. But when
the interests of long-term investors and
short-term traders conflict in this
context, the Commission believes that
its clear responsibility is to uphold the
interests of long-term investors.
Indeed, the core concern for the
welfare of long-term investors who
depend on equity investments to meet
their financial goals was first expressed
in the foundation documents of the
Exchange Act itself. In language that
remains remarkably relevant today, the
1934 congressional reports noted how
the national public interest of the equity
markets had grown as more and more
Americans had begun to place their
savings in equity investments, both
directly and indirectly through
investment intermediaries.23 Given this
development, the reports emphasized
that ‘‘stock exchanges which handle the
distribution and trading of a very
substantial part of the entire national
wealth * * * cannot operate under the
same traditions and practices as pre-war
stock exchanges which handled
substantially only the transactions of
professional investors and
speculators.’’ 24
22 The concept of ownership for a significant time
period is inherent in the meaning of word ‘‘invest.’’
A dictionary definition of ‘‘investor,’’ for example,
is ‘‘one that seeks to commit funds for long-term
profit with a minimum of risk.’’ Webster’s Third
New International Dictionary of the English
Language 1190 (Unabridged 1993).
23 H.R. Rep. No. 1383, 73rd Cong., 2d Sess. 3–4
(1934) (‘‘It is estimated that more than 10,000,000
individual men and women in the United States are
the direct possessors of stocks and bonds; that over
one-fifth of all the corporate stock outstanding in
the country is held by individuals with net incomes
of less than $5,000 a year. Over 15,000,000
individuals held insurance policies, the value of
which is dependent on the security holdings of
insurance companies. Over 13,000,000 men and
women have savings accounts in mutual savings
banks and at least 25,000,000 have deposits in
national and State banks and trust companies—
which are in turn large holders of corporate stocks
and bonds.’’).
24 Id. at 4. The Congressional emphasis on the
interests of long-term investors versus short-term
traders also was expressed in the 1934 Report on
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In the years since 1934, the priority
placed by Congress on the interests of
long-term investors has grown more and
more significant. Today, more than 84
million individuals representing more
than one-half of American households
own equity securities.25 More than 70
million of these individuals participate
indirectly in the equity markets through
ownership of mutual fund shares. Most
of them hold their investments, at least
in part, in retirement plans. Indeed,
nearly all view their equity investments
as savings for the long-term, and their
median length of ownership of equity
mutual funds, both inside and outside
retirement plans, is 10 years.26
In assessing the current state of the
NMS and formulating its rule proposals,
the Commission has focused on the
interests of these millions of Americans
who depend on the performance of their
equity investments for such vital needs
as retirement security and their
children’s college education. Their
investment returns are reduced by
transaction costs of all types, including
the explicit costs of commissions and
mutual fund fees. But the largely hidden
costs associated with the prices at
which trades are executed often can
dwarf the explicit costs of trading. For
example, the implicit transaction costs
associated with the price impact of
trades and liquidity search costs of
mutual funds and other institutional
investors is estimated at more than $30
billion per year.27 Such hidden costs eat
away at the long-term returns of
millions of individual mutual fund
shareholders and pension plan
participants. One of the primary
objectives of the NMS is to help reduce
such costs by improving market
liquidity and depth. The best way to
promote market depth and liquidity is
to encourage vigorous competition
among orders. As a result, the
Commission cannot merely focus on one
Stock Exchange Practices prepared by investigators
for the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency:
‘‘Transactions in securities on organized
exchanges and over-the-counter markets are
affected with the national public interest. * * * In
former years transactions in securities were carried
on by a relatively small portion of the American
people. During the last decade, however, due
largely to the development of the means of
communication * * * the entire Nation has become
acutely sensitive to the activities on the securities
exchanges. While only a fraction of the multitude
who now own securities can be regarded as actively
trading on the exchanges, the operations of these
few profoundly affect the holdings of all.’’
S. Rep. No. 73–1455, 73rd Cong., 2d Sess. 5
(1934).
25 Investment Company Institute and Securities
Industry Association, Equity Ownership in America
17 (2002).
26 Id. at 85, 89, 92, 96.
27 See infra, section II.A.6.
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type of competition—competition
among markets to provide trading
services—at the expense of competition
among orders. The interests of U.S.
long-term investors and listed
companies require that the NMS
continue to promote both types of
competition.
C. Overview of Adopted Rules
1. Order Protection Rule
The Order Protection Rule (Rule 611
under Regulation NMS) establishes
intermarket protection against tradethroughs for all NMS stocks. A tradethrough occurs when one trading center
executes an order at a price that is
inferior to the price of a protected
quotation, often representing an investor
limit order, displayed by another
trading center.28 Many commenters on
the proposals, particularly large
institutional investors, strongly
supported the need for enhanced
protection of limit orders against tradethroughs.29 They emphasized that limit
orders are the building blocks of public
price discovery and efficient markets.
They stated that a uniform rule for all
NMS stocks, by enhancing protection of
displayed prices, would encourage
greater use of limit orders and
contribute to increased market liquidity
and depth. The Commission agrees that
strengthened protection of displayed
limit orders would help reward market
participants for displaying their trading
interest and thereby promote fairer and
more vigorous competition among
orders seeking to supply liquidity.
Moreover, strong intermarket price
protection offers greater assurance, on
an order-by-order basis, that investors
who submit market orders will receive
the best readily available prices for their
trades. The Commission therefore has
adopted the Order Protection Rule to
strengthen the protection of displayed
and automatically accessible quotations
in NMS stocks.
The Order Protection Rule takes a
substantially different approach than
the trade-through provisions currently
set forth in the Intermarket Trading
System (‘‘ITS’’) Plan,30 which apply
28 The nature and scope of quotations that will be
protected under the Order Protection Rule are
discussed in detail in sections II.A.2 and II.B.1
below.
29 See infra, note 56 (overview of commenters
supporting trade-through proposal).
30 The full title of the ITS Plan is ‘‘Plan for the
Purpose of Creating and Operating an Intermarket
Communications Linkage Pursuant to Section
11A(c)(3)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934.’’ The ITS Plan was initially approved by the
Commission in 1978. Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 14661 (Apr. 14, 1978), 43 FR 17419
(Apr. 24, 1978). All national securities exchanges
that trade exchange-listed stocks and the NASD are
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37501
only to exchange-listed stocks. The ITS
provisions are not promulgated by the
Commission, but rather are rules of the
markets participating in the ITS Plan.
These rules were drafted decades ago
and do not distinguish between manual
and automated quotations. Moreover,
they state that markets ‘‘should avoid’’
trade-throughs and provide an after-thefact complaint procedure pursuant to
which, if a trade-through occurs, the
aggrieved market may seek satisfaction
from the market that traded through.
Finally, the ITS provisions have
significant gaps in their coverage,
particularly for off-exchange positioners
of large, block transactions (10,000
shares or greater), that have weakened
their protection of limit orders.
In contrast, the adopted Order
Protection Rule protects only quotations
that are immediately accessible through
automatic execution. It thereby
addresses a serious weakness in the ITS
provisions, which were drafted for a
world of floor-based markets and fail to
reflect the disparate speed of response
between manual and automated
quotations. By requiring order routers to
wait for a response from a manual
market, the ITS trade-through
provisions can cause an order to miss
both the best price of a manual
quotation and slightly inferior prices at
automated markets that would have
been immediately accessible. The Order
Protection Rule eliminates this potential
inefficiency by protecting only
automated quotations. It also promotes
equal regulation and fair competition
among markets by eliminating any
potential advantage that the ITS tradethrough provisions may have given
manual markets over automated
markets.
In addition, the Order Protection Rule
incorporates an approach to tradethroughs that is stricter and more
comprehensive than the ITS provisions.
First, it requires trading centers to
establish, maintain, and enforce written
policies and procedures that are
reasonably designed to prevent tradethroughs, or, if relying on one of the
rule’s exceptions, that are reasonably
designed to assure compliance with the
exception. To assure effective
compliance, such policies and
procedures will need to incorporate
objective standards that are coded into
a trading center’s automated systems.
participants in the ITS Plan. It requires each
participant to provide electronic access to its
displayed best bid or offer to other participants and
provides an electronic mechanism for routing
orders, called commitments to trade, to access those
displayed prices. The participants also agreed to
avoid trade-throughs and locked markets and to
adopt rules addressing such practices.
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Moreover, a trading center is required to
regularly surveil to ascertain the
effectiveness of its policies and
procedures and to take prompt action to
remedy deficiencies. Second, the Order
Protection Rule eliminates very
significant gaps in the coverage of the
ITS provisions that have undermined
the extent to which they protect limit
orders and promote fair and orderly
trading. In particular, the ITS provisions
do not cover the transactions of brokerdealers acting as off-exchange block
positioners in exchange-listed stocks.
They also exclude trade-throughs of
100-share quotations, thereby allowing
some limit orders of small investors to
be bypassed. The Order Protection Rule
closes both of these gaps in coverage.
The definition of ‘‘protected bid’’ or
‘‘protected offer’’ in paragraph (b)(57) of
adopted Rule 600 controls the scope of
quotations that are protected by the
Order Protection Rule. The Commission
is adopting the reproposed ‘‘Market
BBO Alternative’’ that protects only the
best bids and offers (‘‘BBOs’’) of the
nine self-regulatory organizations
(‘‘SROs’’) and The Nasdaq Stock Market,
Inc. (‘‘Nasdaq’’) whose members
currently trade NMS stocks. As
discussed further in section II.A.5
below, the Commission has decided not
to adopt the reproposed ‘‘Voluntary
Depth Alternative.’’ In particular, it
believes that the Market BBO
Alternative: (1) Strikes an appropriate
balance between competition among
markets and competition among orders;
and (2) will be less difficult and costly
to implement than the Voluntary Depth
Alternative.
The rule text of the original proposal
included a general ‘‘opt-out’’ exception
that would have allowed market
participants to disregard displayed
quotations. While the opt-out proposal
was intended to provide flexibility to
market participants, such an exception
would have left a gap in protection of
the best displayed prices and thereby
reduced the proposal’s potential
benefits for investors. The elimination
of any protection for manual quotations
is the principal reason that this broad
exception is no longer necessary in the
Order Protection Rule as adopted. In
addition, the Rule adds a number of
tailored exceptions that carve out those
situations in which many investors may
otherwise have felt they legitimately
needed to opt-out of a displayed
quotation. These exceptions are more
consistent with the principle of
protecting the best price than a general
opt-out exception would have been. The
additional exceptions also will help
assure that the Order Protection Rule is
workable for high-volume stocks.
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Examples of these exceptions include
intermarket sweep orders, quotations
displayed by markets that fail to meet
the response requirements for
automated quotations, and flickering
quotations with multiple prices
displayed in a single second.31
Some commenters questioned the
need to extend the Order Protection
Rule to Nasdaq stocks.32 These
commenters generally emphasized the
much improved efficiency of trading in
Nasdaq stocks in recent years. They
particularly were concerned that
extension of intermarket price
protection to Nasdaq stocks, at least in
the absence of a general opt-out
exception, would interfere with current
trading methods.
The Commission believes, however,
that intermarket price protection will
benefit investors and strengthen the
NMS in both exchange-listed and
Nasdaq stocks. It will contribute to the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets
and, thereby, promote investor
confidence in the markets. As discussed
below,33 trade-through rates are
significant in both Nasdaq and
exchange-listed stocks. For example, an
estimated 1 of every 40 trades in both
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks represents a
significant trade-through of a displayed
quotation. For many active Nasdaq
stocks, approximately 1 of every 11
shares traded is a significant tradethrough. The execution of trades at
prices inferior to those offered by
displayed and accessible limit orders is
inconsistent with basic notions of
fairness and orderliness, particularly for
investors, both large and small, who
post limit orders and see those orders
routinely traded through. These tradethroughs can undermine incentives to
display limit orders. Moreover, many of
the investors whose market orders are
executed at inferior prices may not, in
fact, be aware they received an inferior
price from their broker and executing
market. In sum, the Commission
believes that a rule establishing price
protection on an order-by-order basis for
all NMS stocks is needed to protect the
interests of investors, promote the
display of limit orders, and thereby
improve the efficiency of the NMS as a
whole.
2. Access Rule
The Access Rule (Rule 610 under
Regulation NMS) sets forth new
standards governing access to
quotations in NMS stocks. As
31 Flickering quotations are discussed further in
section II.A.3 below.
32 See infra, notes 61–62 and accompanying text.
33 See infra, section II.A.1.a.ii.
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emphasized by many commenters on
the proposals,34 protecting the best
displayed prices against trade-throughs
would be futile if broker-dealers and
trading centers were unable to access
those prices fairly and efficiently.
Accordingly, Rule 610 is designed to
promote access to quotations in three
ways. First, it enables the use of private
linkages offered by a variety of
connectivity providers,35 rather than
mandating a collective linkage facility
such as ITS, to facilitate the necessary
access to quotations. The lower cost and
increased flexibility of connectivity in
recent years has made private linkages
a feasible alternative to hard linkages,
absent barriers to access. Using private
linkages, market participants may obtain
indirect access to quotations displayed
by a particular trading center through
the members, subscribers, or customers
of that trading center. To promote this
type of indirect access, Rule 610
prohibits a trading center from imposing
unfairly discriminatory terms that
would prevent or inhibit the access of
any person through members,
subscribers, or customers of such
trading center.
Second, Rule 610 generally limits the
fees that any trading center can charge
(or allow to be charged) for accessing its
protected quotations to no more than
$0.003 per share.36 The purpose of the
fee limitation is to ensure the fairness
and accuracy of displayed quotations by
establishing an outer limit on the cost of
accessing such quotations. For example,
if the price of a protected offer to sell
an NMS stock is displayed at $10.00, the
total cost to access the offer and buy the
stock will be $10.00, plus a fee of no
more than $0.003. The adopted rule
thereby assures order routers that
displayed prices are, within a limited
range, true prices.
The adopted fee limitation
substantially simplifies the originallyproposed limitation on fees, which, in
general, would have limited the fees of
individual market participants to $0.001
per share, with an accumulated cap of
$0.002 per share. Perhaps more than any
other single issue, the proposed
limitation on access fees splintered the
commenters.37 Some supported the
proposal as a worthwhile compromise
34 See
infra, section III.A.1.
linkages are discussed further in section
III.A.1 below.
36 If the price of a protected quotation is less than
$1.00, the fee cannot exceed 0.3% of the quotation
price. The rule as adopted also applies the fee
limitation to quotations other than protected
quotations that are the BBOs of an SRO or Nasdaq.
See infra, section III.A.2.
37 The comments on access fees are addressed in
section III.A.2 below.
35 Private
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on an extremely difficult issue. They
believed that it would level the playing
field in terms of who could charge fees,
as well as give greater certainty to
market participants that quoted prices
will, essentially, be true prices. Others
were strongly opposed to any limitation
on fees, believing that competition alone
would be sufficient to address high fees
that distort quoted prices. Still others
were equally adamant that all access
fees of electronic communications
networks (‘‘ECNs’’) charged to nonsubscribers should be prohibited
entirely, although they did not see a
problem with fees charged to a market’s
members or subscribers. Although
consensus could not be achieved on any
particular approach, commenters
expressed a strong desire for resolution
of a difficult issue that has caused
discord within the securities industry
for many years.
The Commission believes that a
single, uniform fee limitation of $0.003
per share is the fairest and most
appropriate resolution of the access fee
issue. First, it will not seriously
interfere with current business
practices, as trading centers have very
few fees on their books of more than
$0.003 per share or earn substantial
revenues from such fees.38 Second, the
uniform fee limitation promotes equal
regulation of different types of trading
centers, where previously some had
been permitted to charge fees and some
had not. Finally and most importantly,
the fee limitation of Rule 610 is
necessary to support the integrity of the
price protection requirement established
by the adopted Order Protection Rule. In
the absence of a fee limitation, some
‘‘outlier’’ trading centers might take
advantage of the requirement to protect
displayed quotations by charging
exorbitant fees to those required to
access the outlier’s quotations. Rule
610’s fee limitation precludes the
initiation of this business practice,
which would compromise the fairness
and efficiency of the NMS.
Finally, Rule 610 requires SROs to
establish, maintain, and enforce written
rules that, among other things, prohibit
their members from engaging in a
pattern or practice of displaying
quotations that lock or cross the
protected quotations of other trading
centers. Trading centers will be allowed,
however, to display automated
quotations that lock or cross the manual
quotations of other trading centers. The
Access Rule thereby reflects the
disparity in speed of response between
automated and manual quotations,
while also promoting fair and orderly
38 See
infra, section III.A.2.
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markets by establishing that the first
protected quotation at a price, whether
it be a bid or an offer, is entitled to an
execution at that price instead of being
locked or crossed by a quotation on the
other side of the market.
3. Sub-Penny Rule
The Sub-Penny Rule (adopted Rule
612 under Regulation NMS) prohibits
market participants from displaying,
ranking, or accepting quotations in NMS
stocks that are priced in an increment of
less than $0.01, unless the price of the
quotation is less than $1.00. If the price
of the quotation is less than $1.00, the
minimum increment is $0.0001. A
strong consensus of commenters
supported the sub-penny proposal as a
means to promote greater price
transparency and consistency, as well as
to protect displayed limit orders.39 In
particular, Rule 612 addresses the
practice of ‘‘stepping ahead’’ of
displayed limit orders by trivial
amounts. It therefore should further
encourage the display of limit orders
and improve the depth and liquidity of
trading in NMS stocks.
4. Market Data Rules and Plans
The adopted amendments to the
Market Data Rules (adopted Rules 601
and 603 under Regulation NMS) and
joint industry plans (‘‘Plans’’) 40 are
designed to promote the wide
availability of market data and to
allocate revenues to SROs that produce
the most useful data for investors. They
will strengthen the existing market data
system, which provides investors in the
U.S. equity markets with real-time
access to the best quotations and most
recent trades in the thousands of NMS
stocks throughout the trading day. For
each stock, quotations and trades are
continuously collected from many
different trading centers and then
disseminated to the public in a
consolidated stream of data. As a result,
investors of all types have access to a
reliable source of information for the
best prices in NMS stocks. When
Congress mandated the creation of the
NMS in 1975, it noted that the systems
for disseminating consolidated market
39 The comments on the sub-penny proposal are
discussed in section IV.C below.
40 The three joint-industry plans are (1) the CTA
Plan, which is operated by the Consolidated Tape
Association and disseminates transaction
information for exchange-listed securities, (2) the
CQ Plan, which disseminates consolidated
quotation information for exchange-listed
securities, and (3) the Nasdaq UTP Plan, which
disseminates consolidated transaction and
quotation information for Nasdaq-listed securities.
The CTA Plan and CQ Plan are available at
www.nysedata.com. The Nasdaq UTP Plan is
available at www.utpdata.com.
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37503
data would ‘‘form the heart of the
national market system.’’ 41
Accordingly, one of the Commission’s
most important responsibilities is to
preserve the integrity and affordability
of the consolidated data stream.
The adopted amendments promote
this objective in several different
respects. First, they update the formulas
for allocating revenues generated by
market data fees to the various SRO
participants in the Plans. The current
Plan formulas are seriously flawed by an
excessive focus on the number of trades,
no matter how small the size, reported
by an SRO. They thereby create an
incentive for distortive behavior, such
as wash sales and trade shredding,42
and fail to reflect an SRO’s contribution
to the best displayed quotations in NMS
stocks. The adopted formula corrects
these flaws. It also is much less complex
than the original proposal, primarily
because, consistent with the approach of
the Order Protection Rule and Access
Rule, the new formula eliminates any
allocation of revenues for manual
quotations. It therefore will promote an
allocation of revenues to the various
SROs that more closely reflects the
usefulness to investors of each SRO’s
market information.
The adopted amendments also are
intended to improve the transparency
and effective operation of the Plans by
broadening participation in Plan
governance. They require the creation of
advisory committees composed of nonSRO representatives. Such committees
will give interested parties an
opportunity to be heard on Plan
business, prior to any decision by the
Plan operating committees. Finally, the
amendments promote the wide
availability of market data by
authorizing markets to distribute their
own data independently (while still
providing their best quotations and
trades for consolidated dissemination
through the Plans) and streamlining
outdated requirements for the display of
market data to investors.
Many commenters on the market data
proposals expressed frustration with the
current operation of the Plans.43 These
commenters generally fell into two
groups. One group, primarily made up
of individual markets that receive
market data fees, believed that the
current model of consolidation should
be discarded in favor of a new model,
such as a ‘‘multiple consolidator’’ model
41 H.R. Rep. No. 94–229, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 93
(1975).
42 Trade shredding, or the splitting of large trades
into a series of 100-share trades, is discussed further
in section V.A.3 below.
43 Comments on the market data proposals are
discussed in section V.A below.
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under which each SRO would sell its
own data separately. The other group,
primarily made up of securities industry
participants that pay market data fees,
believed that the current level of fees is
too high. This group asserted that, prior
to modifying the allocation of market
data revenues, the Commission should
address the level of fees that generated
those revenues.44
The Commission has considered these
concerns at length in the recent past. As
was noted in the Proposing Release,45 a
drawback of the current market data
model, which requires all SROs to
participate jointly in disseminating data
through a single consolidator, is that it
affords little opportunity for market
forces to determine the overall level of
fees or the allocation of those fees to the
individual SROs. Prior to publishing the
proposals, therefore, the Commission
undertook an extended review of the
various alternatives for disseminating
market data to the public in an effort to
identify a better model. These
alternatives were discussed at length in
the Proposing Release, but each has
serious weaknesses. The Commission
particularly is concerned that the
integrity and reliability of the
consolidated data stream must not be
compromised by any changes to the
market data structure.
For example, although allowing each
SRO to sell its data separately to
multiple consolidators may appear at
first glance to subject the level of fees to
competitive forces, this conclusion does
not withstand closer scrutiny. If the
benefits of a fully consolidated data
stream are to be preserved, each
consolidator would need to purchase
the data of each SRO to assure that the
consolidator’s data stream in fact
included the best quotations and most
recent trade report in an NMS stock.
Payment of every SRO’s fees would
effectively be mandatory, thereby
affording little room for competitive
forces to influence the level of fees.
The Commission also has considered
the suggestion of many in the second
group of commenters that market data
fees should be cut back to encompass
only the costs of the Plans to collect and
disseminate market data. Under this
approach, the individual SROs would
no longer be allowed to fund any
portion of their operational and
regulatory functions through market
44 Some
commenters mistakenly believed that the
level of market data fees had been left unreviewed
for many years. In fact, the Commission
comprehensively reviewed market data fees in
1999, which led to a 75% reduction in fees paid by
retail investors for market data. See infra, note 574.
45 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11177.
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data fees.46 Yet, as discussed in the
Commission’s 1999 concept release on
market data,47 nearly the entire burden
of collecting and producing market data
is borne by the individual markets, not
by the Plans. If, for example, an SRO’s
systems fail on a high-volume trading
day and it can no longer provide its data
to the Plans, investors will suffer the
consequences of a flawed data stream,
regardless of whether the Plan is able to
continue operating.
If the Commission were to limit
market data fees to cover only Plan
costs, SRO funding would have been cut
by $393.7 million in 2004.48 Given the
potential harm if vital SRO functions are
not adequately funded, the Commission
believes that the level of market data
fees is most appropriately addressed in
a context that looks at SRO funding as
a whole. It therefore has requested
comment on this issue in its recent
concept release on SRO structure.49 In
addition, the recently proposed rules to
improve SRO transparency would, if
adopted, assist the public in assessing
the level and use of market data fees by
the various SROs.50
In sum, there is inherent tension
between assuring consolidated price
transparency for investors, which is a
fundamental objective of the Exchange
Act,51 and expanding the extent to
which market forces determine market
data fees and SRO revenues. Each
alternative model for data dissemination
has its particular strengths and
weaknesses. The great strength of the
current model, however, is that it
benefits investors, particularly retail
investors, by helping them to assess
quoted prices at the time they place an
order and to evaluate the best execution
of their orders against such prices by
obtaining data from a single source that
is highly reliable and comprehensive. In
the absence of full confidence that this
benefit would be retained if a different
model were adopted, the Commission
has decided to adopt such immediate
46 The U.S. equity markets are not alone in their
reliance on market information revenues as a
significant source of funding. All of the other major
world equity markets currently derive large
amounts of revenues from selling market
information. See infra, note 587 and accompanying
text.
47 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 42208
(Dec. 9, 1999), 64 FR 70613 (Dec. 17, 1999)
(‘‘Market Information Release’’).
48 See infra, text accompanying note 564 (table
setting forth revenue allocations for 2004).
49 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 50700
(Nov. 18, 2004), 69 FR 71256 (Dec. 8, 2004) (‘‘SRO
Structure Release’’).
50 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 50699
(Nov. 18, 2004), 69 FR 71126 (Dec. 8, 2004) (‘‘SRO
Transparency Release’’).
51 Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) of the Exchange Act.
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steps as are necessary to improve the
operation of the current model.
II. Order Protection Rule
The Commission is adopting Rule 611
under Regulation NMS to establish
protection against trade-throughs for all
NMS stocks. Rule 611(a)(1) requires a
trading center (which includes national
securities exchanges, exchange
specialists, ATSs, OTC market makers,
and block positioners) 52 to establish,
maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures that are reasonably
designed to prevent trade-throughs on
that trading center of protected
quotations and, if relying on an
exception, that are reasonably designed
to assure compliance with the terms of
the exception. Rule 611(a)(2) requires a
trading center to regularly surveil to
ascertain the effectiveness of its policies
and procedures and to take prompt
action to remedy deficiencies. To
qualify for protection, a quotation must
be automated. Rule 600(b)(3) defines an
automated quotation as one that, among
other things, is displayed and
immediately accessible through
automatic execution. Thus, Rule 611
does not require market participants to
route orders to access manual
quotations, which generally entail a
much slower speed of response than
automated quotations.
Rule 611(b) sets forth a variety of
exceptions to make intermarket price
protection as efficient and workable as
possible. These include an intermarket
sweep exception, which allows market
participants to access multiple price
levels simultaneously at different
trading centers—a particularly
important function now that trading in
penny increments has dispersed
liquidity across multiple price levels.
The intermarket sweep exception
enables trading centers that receive
sweep orders to execute those orders
immediately, without waiting for betterpriced quotations in other markets to be
updated. In addition, Rule 611 provides
exceptions for the quotations of trading
centers experiencing, among other
things, a material delay in providing a
response to incoming orders and for
flickering quotations with prices that
have been displayed for less than one
second. Both exceptions serve to limit
the application of Rule 611 to
52 An ‘‘OTC market maker’’ in a stock is defined
in Rule 600(b)(52) of Regulation NMS as, in general,
a dealer that holds itself out as willing to buy and
sell the stock, otherwise than on a national
securities exchange, in amounts of less than block
size (less than 10,000 shares). A block positioner in
a stock, in contrast, limits its activity in the stock
to transactions of 10,000 shares or greater.
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quotations that are truly automated and
accessible.
By strengthening price protection in
the NMS for quotations that can be
accessed fairly and efficiently, Rule 611
is designed to promote market efficiency
and further the interests of both
investors who submit displayed limit
orders and investors who submit
marketable orders.53 Price protection
encourages the display of limit orders
by increasing the likelihood that they
will receive an execution in a timely
manner and helping preserve investors’
expectations that their orders will be
executed when they represent the best
displayed quotation. Limit orders
typically establish the best prices for an
NMS stock. Greater use of limit orders
will increase price discovery and market
depth and liquidity, thereby improving
the quality of execution for the large
orders of institutional investors.
Moreover, strong intermarket price
protection offers greater assurance, on
an order-by-order basis, to investors
who submit market orders that their
orders in fact will be executed at the
best readily available prices, which can
be difficult for investors, particularly
retail investors, to monitor. Investors
generally can know the best quoted
prices at the time they place an order by
referring to the consolidated quotation
stream for a stock. In the interval
between order submission and order
execution, however, quoted prices can
change. If the order execution price
provided by a market differs from the
best quoted price at order submission, it
can be particularly difficult for retail
investors to assess whether the
difference was attributable to changing
quoted prices or to an inferior execution
by the market. The Order Protection
Rule will help assure, on an order-byorder basis, that markets effect trades at
the best available prices. Finally, market
orders need only be routed to markets
displaying quotations that are truly
accessible. Accordingly, as discussed in
detail below, the Commission finds that
the Order Protection Rule is necessary
and appropriate in the public interest,
53 For ease of reference in this release, the term
‘‘limit order’’ generally will refer to a nonmarketable order and the term ‘‘marketable order’’
will refer to both market orders and marketable
limit orders. A non-marketable limit order has a
limit price that prevents its immediate execution at
current market prices. Because these orders cannot
be executed immediately, they generally are
publicly displayed to attract contra side interest at
the price. In contrast, a ‘‘marketable limit order’’
has a limit price that potentially allows its
immediate execution at current market prices. As
discussed further below, marketable limit orders
often cannot be filled at current market prices
because of insufficient liquidity and depth at the
market price. See infra, text accompanying notes
121–123, 134–136.
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for the protection of investors, and
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes
of the Exchange Act.
A. Response to Comments and Basis for
Adopted Rule
Rule 611 as adopted reflects a number
of changes to the rule as originally
proposed. As discussed below, the
Commission has made these changes in
response to substantial public comment
on the proposed rule and on the issues
arising out of the NMS Hearing that
were addressed in the Supplemental
Release. In addition, the adopted rule
includes a new exception for certain
‘‘stopped orders’’ in response to the
suggestions of commenters on the
reproposal. The public submitted more
than 2200 comments addressing the
trade-through proposal and
reproposal.54 Although the comments
covered a very wide range of matters,
they particularly focused on the
following issues:
(1) Whether an intermarket tradethrough rule is needed to promote fair
and efficient equity markets,
particularly for Nasdaq stocks which
have not been subject to the current ITS
trade-through provisions;
(2) whether only automated and
immediately accessible quotations
should be given trade-through
protection and, if so, what is the best
approach for defining such quotations;
(3) whether intermarket protection
against trade-throughs can be
implemented in a workable manner,
particularly for high-volume stocks;
(4) whether the exception in the
original proposal allowing a general optout of protected quotations is necessary
or appropriate, particularly if manual
quotations are excluded from tradethrough protection;
(5) whether the scope of quotations
entitled to trade-through protection
should extend beyond the best bids and
offers of the various markets; and
(6) whether the benefits of an
intermarket trade-through rule would
justify its cost of implementation.
In the following sections, the
Commission responds to comments on
the trade-through proposal and
reproposal and discusses the basis for
its adoption of Rule 611.
1. Need for Intermarket Order Protection
Rule
Commenters were divided on the
central issue of whether intermarket
protection of displayed quotations is
needed to promote the fairest and most
54 The Commission has considered the views of
all commenters in formulating Rule 611 as adopted,
as well as the other rules and amendments adopted
today.
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37505
efficient markets for investors.55 Many
commenters strongly supported the
adoption of a uniform rule for all NMS
stocks to promote best execution of
market orders, to protect the best
displayed prices, and to encourage the
public display of limit orders.56 They
stressed that limit orders are the
cornerstone of efficient, liquid markets
and should be afforded as much
protection as possible.57 They noted, for
55 Nearly all commenters, both those supporting
and opposing the need for an intermarket tradethrough rule, agreed that the current ITS tradethrough provisions are seriously outdated and in
need of reform. They particularly focused on the
problems created by affording equal protection
against trade-throughs to both automated and
manual quotations. See supra, section II.A.2.
Adopted Rule 611 responds to these problems by
protecting only automated quotations.
56 Approximately 1689 commenters on the
proposal and reproposal favored a uniform tradethrough rule without an opt-out exception. These
commenters included: (1) several mutual fund
companies and the Investment Company Institute;
(2) the Consumer Federation of America and the
National Association of Individual Investors
Corporation; (3) the floor-based exchanges and their
members; (4) approximately 107 listed companies;
(5) a variety of securities industry participants; and
(6) approximately 42 members of Congress. Of the
commenters supporting the reproposal,
approximately 452 utilized ‘‘Letter Type G’’ (noting
the existence of two alternative proposals and
urging ‘‘support for the Regulation NMS proposal
without the CLOB’’ alternative), 70 utilized ‘‘Letter
Type H’’ (‘‘we support the ‘top of the book’ proposal
that has been discussed for the past year as part of
the Regulation NMS discussion’’), 204 utilized
‘‘Letter Type I’’ (‘‘I believe a better approach would
be the SEC’s proposed alternative to the CLOB, to
protect the best price in each market center’’), 548
utilized ‘‘Letter Type J’’ (‘‘Of the two alternatives
laid out in the rule as re-proposed on December 15,
2004, protecting the best bid and offer in each
market center preserves both types of competition
in a way that benefits all securities industry
participants.’’), 28 utilized ‘‘Letter Type K’’ (‘‘One
alternative is that of protecting the ‘‘best bid and
offer’’ in each market center. This concept enhances
competition, allows for price negotiation,
encourages innovation, and treats all market
participants fairly and equally.’’), and 109 utilized
‘‘Letter Type L’’ (noting the existence of two
alternative proposals and urging support for ‘‘the
Regulation NMS proposal without the CLOB’’
alternative). Each of the letter types is posted on the
Commission’s Internet Web site (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Those
commenters that only expressed opposition to the
Voluntary Depth Alternative were not included in
the foregoing summary. In addition, many
commenters supported an opt-out exception to a
trade-through rule, but varied in the extent to which
they made clear whether they supported a tradethrough rule in general. These commenters are not
included in the foregoing summary, but are
included in note 232 below addressing supporters
of an opt-out exception.
57 See, e.g., Letter from John J. Wheeler, Vice
President, Director of U.S. Equity Trading,
American Century Investment Management Inc., to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘American Century Letter’’) at 2;
Letter from Matt D. Lyons, Capital Research and
Management Company, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 28, 2004
(‘‘Capital Research Letter’’) at 2; Letter from Ari
Burstein, Associate Counsel, Investment Company
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example, that limit orders typically
establish the ‘‘market’’ for a stock.58 In
the absence of limit orders setting the
current market price, there would be no
benchmark for the submission and
execution of marketable orders.
Focusing solely on best execution of
marketable orders (and the interests of
orders that take displayed liquidity),
therefore, would miss a critical part of
the equation for promoting the most
efficient markets (i.e., the best execution
of orders that supply displayed liquidity
and thereby provide the most
transparent form of price discovery).
Commenters supporting the need for an
intermarket trade-through rule also
believed that it would increase investor
confidence by helping to eliminate the
impression of unfairness when an
investor’s order executes at a price that
is worse than the best displayed
quotation, or when a trade occurs at a
price that is inferior to the investor’s
displayed order.59
Other commenters, in contrast,
opposed any intermarket trade-through
rule.60 These commenters did not
believe that such a rule is necessary to
promote the protection of limit orders,
the best execution of market orders, or
efficient markets in general. They
asserted that, given public availability of
each market’s quotations and ready
access by all market participants to such
quotations, competition among markets,
a broker’s existing duty of best
execution, and economic self-interest
would be sufficient to protect limit
Institute, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005 (‘‘ICI Reproposal
Letter’’) at 2; Letter from Henry H. Hopkins, Vice
President and Chief Legal Counsel, and Andrew M.
Brooks, Vice President and Head of Equity Trading,
T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Commission, dated Jan. 27, 2005 (‘‘T. Rowe Price
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Letter from George U.
Sauter, Managing Director, The Vanguard Group,
Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated Jan. 27, 2005 (‘‘Vanguard Reproposal Letter’’)
at 2.
58 Id.
59 See, e.g., Letter from Barbara Roper, Director of
Investor Protection, Consumer Federation of
America, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated June 17, 2004 (‘‘Consumer
Federation Letter’’) at 2; Letter from Ari Burstein,
Associate Counsel, Investment Company Institute,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘ICI Letter’’) at 7.
60 Approximately 448 commenters on the
proposal and reproposal opposed a trade-through
rule. Approximately 179 of these commenters
utilized ‘‘Letter Type C,’’ which primarily
supported an opt-out exception to the proposed
rule, but also suggested that having no tradethrough rule would be simpler. Letter Type C is
posted on the Commission’s Internet Web site
(https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). The
remaining commenters included securities industry
participants, particularly electronic markets and
their participants, a variety of local political and
community groups and individuals, and 34
members of Congress.
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orders and produce the most fair and
efficient markets. They therefore
believed that any trade-through rule
would be unnecessary and costly. These
commenters also were concerned that
any trade-through rule could interfere
with the ability of competitive forces to
produce efficient markets, particularly
for Nasdaq stocks.
Commenters on the original proposal
who were opposed to any trade-through
rule also expressed their view that there
is a lack of empirical evidence justifying
the need for intermarket protection
against trade-throughs. They noted, for
example, that trading in Nasdaq stocks
has never been subject to a tradethrough rule, while trading in exchangelisted stocks, particularly NYSE stocks,
has been subject to the ITS tradethrough provisions. Given the difference
in regulatory requirements between
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks, many
commenters relied on two factual
contentions to show that a trade-through
rule is not needed: (1) Fewer tradethroughs occur in Nasdaq stocks than
NYSE stocks; 61 and (2) trading in
Nasdaq stocks currently is more
efficient than trading in NYSE stocks.62
Based on these factual contentions,
opposing commenters concluded that a
trade-through rule is not necessary to
promote efficiency or to protect the best
displayed prices.
61 See, e.g., Letter from Kim Bang, President &
Chief Executive Officer, Bloomberg Tradebook LLC,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘Bloomberg Tradebook Letter’’) at
10; Letter from Eric D. Roiter, Senior Vice President
& General Counsel, Fidelity Management and
Research Company, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated June 22, 2004 (‘‘Fidelity Letter
I’’) at 11; Letter from Suhas Daftuar, Managing
Director, Hudson River Trading, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated August 13, 2004
(‘‘Hudson River Trading Letter’’) at 1; Letter from
Edward J. Nicoll, Chief Executive Officer, Instinet
Group Incorporated, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated June 30, 2004 (‘‘Instinet Letter’’)
at 14; Letter from Edward S. Knight, The Nasdaq
Stock Market, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated July 2, 2004 (‘‘Nasdaq Letter II’’)
at 6 and Attachment III.
62 See, e.g., Letter from Ellen L. S. Koplow,
Executive Vice President and General Counsel,
Ameritrade Holding Corporation, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated June 30, 2004
(‘‘Ameritrade Letter I’’), Appendix at 10; Letter from
William O’Brien, Chief Operating Officer, Brut LLC,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
July 29, 2004 (‘‘Brut Letter’’) at 10; Fidelity Letter
I at 11; Instinet Letter at 3, 9 and Exhibit A; Nasdaq
Letter II at 6 and Attachment II; Letter from Bruce
N. Lehmann & Joel Hasbrouck, Organizers, Reg
NMS Study Group, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission (no date) (‘‘NMS Study Group Letter’’)
at 4; Letter from David Colker, Chief Executive
Officer & President, National Stock Exchange, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 29, 2004 (‘‘NSX Letter’’) at 3; Letter from Huw
Jenkins, Managing Director, Head of Equities for the
Americas, UBS Securities LLC, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 30, 2004 (‘‘UBS
Letter’’) at 4.
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The Commission has carefully
evaluated the views of these
commenters on both the original
proposal and the reproposal. In
addition, Commission staff has prepared
several studies of trading in Nasdaq and
NYSE stocks to help assess and respond
to commenters’ claims. The studies and
the Commission’s conclusions are
discussed in detail below. In general,
however, the Commission has found
that current trade-through rates are not
lower for Nasdaq stocks than NYSE
stocks, despite the fact that nearly all
quotations for Nasdaq stocks are
automated, rather than divided between
manual and automated as they are for
exchange-listed stocks. Moreover, the
majority of the trade-throughs that
currently occur in NYSE stocks fall
within gaps in the coverage of the
existing ITS trade-through rules that
will be closed by the Order Protection
Rule. Consequently, the Commission
believes that the Order Protection Rule,
by establishing effective intermarket
protection against trade-throughs, will
materially reduce the trade-through
rates in both the market for Nasdaq
stocks and the market for exchangelisted stocks.
In addition, the commenters’ claim
that the Order Protection Rule is not
needed because trading in Nasdaq
stocks, which currently does not have
any trade-through rule, is more efficient
than trading in NYSE stocks, which has
the ITS trade-through provisions, also is
not supported by the relevant data.63
This conclusion is particularly evident
when market efficiency is examined
from the perspective of the transaction
costs of long-term investors, as opposed
to short-term traders. The data reveals
that the markets for Nasdaq and NYSE
stocks each have their particular
strengths and weaknesses. In assessing
the need for the Order Protection Rule,
the Commission has focused primarily
on whether effective intermarket
protection against trade-throughs will
materially contribute to a fairer and
more efficient market for investors in
Nasdaq stocks, given their particular
trading characteristics, and in exchangelisted stocks, given their particular
trading characteristics. Thus, the critical
issue is whether each of the markets
would be improved by adoption of the
Order Protection Rule, not whether one
or the other currently is, on some
absolute level, superior to the other. The
Commission believes that effective
intermarket protection against tradethroughs will produce substantial
benefits for investors in both markets
and, therefore, has adopted the Order
63 See
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Protection Rule for both Nasdaq and
exchange-listed stocks.
a. Trade-Through Rates in Nasdaq and
NYSE Stocks
The first principal factual contention
of commenters on the original proposal
who were opposed to a trade-through
rule is premised on the claim that there
are fewer trade-throughs in Nasdaq
stocks, which are not covered by any
trade-through rule, than in NYSE stocks,
which are covered by the ITS tradethrough provisions.64 One commenter
asserted that, outside the exchangelisted markets, competition alone had
been sufficient to create a ‘‘no-trade
through zone.’’ 65 To respond to these
commenters, the Commissions staff
reviewed public quotation and trade
data to estimate the incidence of tradethroughs for Nasdaq and NYSE stocks.66
It found that the overall trade-through
rates for Nasdaq stocks and NYSE stocks
were, respectively, 7.9% and 7.2% of
the total volume of traded shares.67
When considered as a percentage of
number of trades, the overall tradethrough rate for both Nasdaq and NYSE
stocks was 2.5%. When considered as
the size of traded-through quotations as
a percentage of total share volume, the
overall rates for Nasdaq and NYSE
stocks were, respectively, 1.9% and
1.2%.68 In addition, the staff study
found that the amount of the trade64 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 10;
Fidelity Letter I at 11; Hudson River Trading Letter
at 1; Instinet Letter at 14; Nasdaq Letter II at 6 and
Attachment III.
65 Letter from Kevin J. P. O’Hara, Chief
Administrative Officer & General Counsel,
Archipelago Holdings, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated September 24, 2004
(‘‘ArcaEx Letter’’) at 3.
66 Memorandum to File, from Office of Economic
Analysis, dated December 15, 2004 (analysis of
trade-throughs in Nasdaq and NYSE issues)
(‘‘Trade-Through Study’’). The Trade-Through
Study has been placed in Public File No. S7–10–
04 and is available for inspection on the
Commission’s Internet Web site (https://
www.sec.gov). To eliminate false trade-throughs, the
staff calculated trade-through rates using a 3-second
window—a reference price must have been
displayed one second before a trade and still have
been displayed one second after a trade. In
addition, the staff eliminated quotations displayed
by the American Stock Exchange LLC (‘‘Amex’’)
from the analysis of Nasdaq stocks because they
were manual quotations. Finally, the staff used the
time of execution of a trade, if one was given, rather
than time of the trade report itself. This
methodology was designed to address manual
trades, such as block trades, that might not be
reported for several seconds after the trade was
effected manually.
67 Trade-Through Study, Tables 4, 11. The 7.9%
and 7.2% figures include the entire size of trades
that were executed at prices inferior to displayed
quotations.
68 Id. at 2. The 1.9% and 1.2% figures include
only the total displayed size of quotations that were
traded through by trades executed at prices inferior
to the displayed quotations.
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throughs was significant—2.3 cents per
share on average for Nasdaq stocks and
2.2 cents per share for NYSE stocks.69
The staff study also revealed that a
large volume of block transactions
(10,000 shares or greater) trade through
displayed quotations. Block transactions
represent approximately 50% of total
trade-through volume for both Nasdaq
and NYSE stocks.70 Importantly, many
block transactions currently are not
subject to the ITS trade-through
provisions that apply to exchange-listed
stocks. Broker-dealers that act solely as
block positioners are not covered by the
ITS trade-through provisions if they
print their trades in the over-the-counter
(‘‘OTC’’) market. In addition to not
covering the trades of block positioners,
the ITS trade-through provisions
include an exception for 100-share
quotations. They therefore often may
fail to protect the small orders of retail
investors. When block trade-throughs
and trade-throughs of 100-share
quotations are eliminated, the overall
trade-through rate for NYSE stocks is
reduced from 7.2% to approximately
2.3% of total share volume.71 The two
gaps in ITS coverage therefore account
for most of the trade-through volume in
NYSE stocks. The Order Protection
Rule, by closing these gaps in protection
against trade-throughs, will establish
much stronger price protection than the
ITS provisions.
Commenters opposed to the tradethrough reproposal offered a number of
criticisms of the staff study. Such
criticisms generally fall into two
categories: (1) Possible reasons why the
staff study might have overestimated
trade-through rates, particularly for
Nasdaq stocks; and (2) even assuming
the estimated trade-through rates were
accurate, arguments for why such rates
do not support a conclusion that the
Order Protection Rule is needed or will
benefit the markets, particularly for
Nasdaq stocks. These criticisms are
evaluated below.
i. Accuracy of Estimated Trade-Through
Rates
Several commenters asserted that the
staff study overestimated trade-through
rates because it failed to consider the
existence of reserve size and sweep
orders in the Nasdaq market, which
could have caused ‘‘false positive’’ trade
throughs.72 In theory, order routers
Tables 3, 10.
Tables 4, 11.
71 Id., Table 11.
72 Letter from Kim Bang, Bloomberg L.P., to
Jonathan Katz, Secretary, dated Jan. 25, 2005
(‘‘Bloomberg Reproposal Letter’’) at 6; Letter from
Edward S. Knight, The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, dated Jan. 26, 2005
PO 00000
69 Id.,
70 Id.,
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37507
could intend to sweep the market of all
superior quotations before trading at an
inferior price, but if they did not
effectively sweep both displayed size
and reserve size, the superior quotations
would not change and the staff study
would report a false indication of a
trade-through when the trade in another
market occurred at an inferior price. In
practice, however, those who truly
intend to sweep the best prices are quite
capable of routing orders to execute
against both displayed and estimated
reserve size, thereby precluding the
possibility of a false positive tradethrough. Indeed, although commenters
asserted that the staff study failed to
consider the existence of reserve size for
Nasdaq stocks, the validity of their own
argument is premised on the failure of
sophisticated market participants to
consider the existence of reserve size
when routing sweep orders.
It currently is impossible to determine
from publicly available trade and
quotation data whether the initiator of a
trade-through in one market has
simultaneously attempted to sweep
better-priced quotations in other
markets.73 The data can reveal,
however, the extent to which falsepositive indications of a trade-through
were even a possibility by examining
trading volume at the traded-through
market. If the accumulated volume of
trades in that market did not equal or
exceed the displayed size of a tradedthrough quotation, it shows that a sweep
order, even one attempting to execute
only against displayed size, could not
have been routed to the market that was
traded-through. Commission staff
therefore has supplemented its tradethrough study to check this possibility
and to help the Commission assess and
respond to commenters’ criticisms. It
found that this possibility rarely
occurs—a finding that fully supports an
inference that market participants are
capable of effectively sweeping the best
prices, both displayed and reserve,
when they intend to do so.74 Thus, it is
(‘‘Nasdaq Reproposal Letter’’), Exhibit A at 4; Letter
from Daniel Coleman, Managing Director and Head
of Equities for the Americas, UBS Securities LLC
(‘‘UBS Reproposal Letter’’) at 4.
73 After implementation of Rule 611, such orders
generally will be marked as intermarket sweep
orders pursuant to the exceptions set forth in Rule
611(b)(5) and (6). As discussed in note 317 below,
the Commission intends to request that the NMS
trade reporting plans consider collecting and
disseminating special modifiers for all trades that
are executed pursuant to an exception from Rule
611. Such modifiers would greatly enhance
transparency and minimize the potential for false
appearances of violations of Rule 611.
74 Memorandum to File, from Office of Economic
Analysis, dated April 6, 2005, at 1 (supplemental
trade-through analysis—reserve size analysis,
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very unlikely that the existence of
reserve size and sweep orders caused a
significant number of false positive
trade-throughs in Nasdaq stocks.75
One commenter asserted that the staff
study was flawed because its sample
trading days involved unusual trading
activity.76 Commission staff chose the
sample trading days, however, only after
affirming that they were representative
of normal trading. To respond to this
commenter’s claim, Commission staff
reaffirmed that all four days were well
within the norms for trading volume
and price volatility.77 In addition, the
trade-through rates remained quite
stable across the four days (e.g., ranging
only from 2.3% to 2.6% for Nasdaq
stocks).78
Two commenters asserted that, even if
the staff study’s estimate of tradethrough rates was correct for the trading
days chosen in the Fall of 2003, such
rates are now outdated for Nasdaq
stocks because of structural changes in
the market.79 In particular, they cited
the merger of the Island and Instinet
ECNs and Nasdaq’s acquisition of the
BRUT ECN. Nasdaq also presented
statistics indicating that the tradethrough rates for Nasdaq stocks in some
trading centers had dropped from the
sample day activity analysis, and analysis of quote
depth) (‘‘Supplemental Trade-Through Study’’). For
example, the Supplemental Trade-Through Study
found that, when the trade-through statistics are
adjusted to reflect possible instances in which
sweep orders could have failed to execute against
reserve size, the estimated trade-through rates for
Nasdaq stocks declined slightly from 2.5% of total
trades to 2.3% of total trades, and from 7.9% of
total share volume to 7.7% of total share volume.
These small reductions do not support the assertion
of commenters that market participants
systematically fail to take out reserve size when
routing sweep orders. Rather, the reductions are
much more consistent with the random distribution
of trade volume that would be expected to occur in
the traded-through markets from time to time.
75 ArcaEx noted that it was common practice in
the market for exchange-listed stocks to send
commitments to trade through the ITS to avoid
trading through quotations in other markets. Letter
from Kevin J. P. O’Hara, Chief Administrative
Officer and General Counsel, Archipelago Holdings,
Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated Jan. 26, 2005 (‘‘ArcaEx Reproposal Letter’’),
Annex A at 1. Given the slowness with which ITS
commitments to trade often are processed and
manual quotations are updated, ArcaEx suggested
that trade-through rates for exchange-listed stocks
might be overestimated. The Commission agrees
that this criticism may well be valid to some extent.
Thus, the trade-through rates for NYSE stocks in the
staff study may be overstated for ArcaEx and other
markets trading exchange-listed stocks. The
occurrence of apparent trade-throughs in exchangelisted stocks caused by manual quotations under
the current ITS provisions is addressed in the Order
Protection Rule by protecting only automated
quotations.
76 ArcaEx Reproposal Letter, Annex A.
77 Supplemental Trade-Through Study at 3.
78 Id.
79 Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 5; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 3–4.
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Fall of 2003 to the Fall of 2004. The staff
study used data from the Fall of 2003,
however, because it was prior to the
Commission’s proposal of a tradethrough rule and its public
announcement that the staff was
reviewing trade-through rates. While the
conduct of market participants may
have changed in certain respects when
they were a focus of regulatory
attention, the Commission cannot be
assured that such behavior would
continue if the Commission did not
adopt the proposed regulatory action to
address trade-throughs.
Indeed, Nasdaq’s own data illustrates
this possibility.80 Although Nasdaq
asserts that the reduction in tradethrough rates from 2003 to 2004 is a
result of fewer independently operating
ECNs, its data undercuts this
explanation. For example, Nasdaq’s data
shows that the trade-through rate at
internalizing securities dealers dropped
from 3.2% in 2003 to 1.4% in 2004.81
It is unlikely that ECN consolidation
could have caused such a major
reduction in trade-through rates at
securities dealers when they execute
their customer orders internally.82 The
great majority of internalized trades are
the small trades of retail investors. The
fact that, in 2003, nearly 1 of 30 of these
millions of trades appears to have been
executed at a price inferior to an
automated and accessible quotation is
troubling. Given that one of the primary
benefits of the Order Protection Rule is
to backstop a broker’s duty of best
execution on an order-by-order basis,
Nasdaq’s data appears to indicate a
continuing need for regulatory action to
reinforce the fundamental principle of
best price for all NMS stocks.
Nasdaq also criticized the staff study
for failing to address whether large
block trades ‘‘intentionally avoid
interacting with the posted quotes.’’ 83
Far from demonstrating a flaw in the
staff study, however, the fact that large
trades intentionally avoid interacting
with displayed quotations was one of
the primary reasons identified in the
Reproposing Release supporting the
need for intermarket order protection.84
The opportunity for displayed limit
80 Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 4.
81 Id.
82 Nasdaq also mentions ‘‘less developed’’
matching systems as contributing to the high rate
of trade-throughs in Fall 2003, but does not identify
any major technology advances from Fall 2003 to
Fall 2004 that would have enabled the reduction in
trade-through rates at internalizing securities
dealers. Id. at 4.
83 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 4. See
also UBS Reproposal Letter at 4 (describing
numbers in staff study as ‘‘inflated’’ because they
included institutional block trades).
84 69 FR at 77434.
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orders to begin interacting with this
substantial volume of block trades is
likely to be one of the most significant
incentives for increased display of limit
orders after implementation of the Order
Protection Rule. Moreover, the Order
Protection Rule will promote a more
level playing field for retail investors
that currently see their smaller
displayed orders bypassed by block
trades.
Two commenters did not believe the
staff study should have included trades
larger than quoted size, asserting that
‘‘[e]ven in a hard CLOB environment,
orders larger than the inside quote
would still ’trade through’ the inside
quote in effect at the time the order was
received.’’ 85 These commenters do not
appear to have understood the
methodology of the staff study or the
operation of a central limit order book
(‘‘CLOB’’). As discussed above, large
trades would not have been identified as
trade-throughs in the staff study if
orders simultaneously had been routed
to sweep displayed quotations with
superior prices. To exclude such trades
from its analysis, the study used a threesecond quotation window in which the
lowest best bid or the highest best offer
during the three-second period must be
traded-through before a trade was
identified as a trade-through. The 3second quotation window particularly
was designed to allow sufficient time for
quotations to update to reflect the
arrival of sweep orders (just as in a
CLOB environment, the execution of a
large order simultaneously would
eliminate all superior-priced
quotations). In sum, large orders would
trade with, rather than trade through,
the superior-priced displayed
quotations, thereby leaving only
quotations that did not have superior
prices to the trade price. Such large
orders therefore would not have been
identified as trade-throughs in the staff
study.
Commenters also criticized the staff
study for allegedly failing to consider
85 Letter from James J. Angel, Associate Professor
of Finance, Georgetown University, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated Jan. 25, 2005
(‘‘Angel Reproposal Letter’’) at 3; Letter from Eric
D. Roiter, Senior Vice President and General
Counsel, Fidelity Management & Research
Company, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005 (‘‘Fidelity
Reproposal Letter’’) at 7. These commenters also
criticized the staff study for including average-price
trades, even when the individual pieces of such
trades may have been executed at or within the
relevant quotations. The staff study, however,
addressed this issue by excluding any trade
reported as an average-price trade, along with all
other trades that included a non-blank condition
code (primarily out-of-sequence trades, late trades,
and previous reference price trades). Trade-Through
Study at 9.
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the effect of locked or crossed
quotations for Nasdaq stocks.86 By using
a 3-second quotation window, however,
the staff study excluded any tradethroughs that would have been caused
by short periods of locking or crossing
quotations. The staff analysis
appropriately did not exclude longer
periods of locked quotations. Indeed,
locked quotations do not qualify for an
exception from the Order Protection
Rule—both the best bid and best offer
are readily accessible at the same price
and should not be traded through.
Quotations rarely are crossed for three
seconds and therefore are unlikely to
have caused a material number of false
trade-throughs.87
Finally, commenters asserted a variety
of arguments relating to timing latencies
in the quotation and trade data that
might have caused the staff study to
include false trade-throughs, including
delayed trade reports, flickering
quotations, stale quotations, manual
quotations, and poor clock
synchronization.88 The staff study,
however, used a variety of means to
minimize the effect of these factors on
the data, as well as to check for the
extent to which timing latencies might
affect its results. The goal of the staff
study was to obtain a reasonable
estimate of the true trade-through rates
for Nasdaq and NYSE stocks. It is
important to recognize that, in designing
a methodology to achieve this goal, the
more conservative the methodology
used to eliminate potentially false
indications of trade-throughs, the
greater the number of true tradethroughs that are likely to be eliminated.
Thus, a methodology designed simply to
assure the elimination of every
conceivable false indication of a tradethrough would not have been useful to
the Commission in assessing its policy
options because it would have severely
underestimated true trade-through rates.
The staff study’s conservative
methodology was designed to produce
reasonable estimates of true tradethrough rates, but still is more likely to
have resulted in an understatement of
trade-through rates than an
overstatement, particularly for Nasdaq
stocks. Nasdaq stocks are traded
primarily on automated markets, and
the data for such stocks therefore should
be less affected by timing latencies than
86 Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 5; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 5.
87 See, e.g., Nasdaq Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1
at 5 n. 14 (‘‘rare’’ for market to be crossed for the
entirety of the three-second window).
88 Angel Reproposal Letter at 3; Bloomberg
Reproposal Letter at 7; Fidelity Reproposal Letter at
7; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 5; UBS
Reproposal Letter at 4.
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16:27 Jun 28, 2005
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the data for NYSE stocks, which is
produced by both automated and
manual markets.
For example, the staff study used a
three-second quotation window for both
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks to minimize
the effect of possible timing lags
between trade data and quotation data.
Given that in Fall 2003 the
overwhelming proportion of trades in
Nasdaq stocks were executions of
automated orders against automated
quotations, with automated reporting of
trades to the relevant Plan processor,
three seconds is a conservative time
frame to assess overall trade-through
rates. But even when the quotation
window is extended to an overly
conservative eight seconds and thereby
clearly excludes a large number of true
trade-throughs, trade-through rates
remain significant—1.7% of trades and
6.8% of share volume in Nasdaq
stocks.89
In addition, the trade execution time
derived from audit trail data for Nasdaq
stocks, rather than trade report time,
was used when it was supplied and
whenever the two times differed to
minimize timing latencies in the data
caused by delayed reporting. Separate
times derived from audit trail data are
not reported for NYSE stocks, and
delayed trade reports therefore could
have contributed to false reports of
trade-throughs in NYSE stocks.
Similarly, for Nasdaq stocks, the
quotations of Amex—the only market
that displays manual quotations—were
excluded from the staff study. Because
the NYSE currently displays primarily
manual quotations in NYSE stocks,
while other markets display automated
quotations, the difficulties of integrating
data from manual and automated
markets could have caused false
indications of trade-throughs for NYSE
stocks.90 The occurrence of false
indications of trade-throughs caused by
manual quotations in exchange-listed
stocks is addressed in the Order
Protection Rule by protecting only
automated quotations that are
immediately accessible and
immediately updated.
Fidelity incorrectly believed that the
staff study failed to use the time of trade
execution derived from audit trail data
when analyzing trade-through rates in
Nasdaq stocks.91 Fidelity also attached
Study, Table 1.
infra, section II.A.2 (discussion of need to
limit coverage of Order Protection Rule to
automated quotations).
91 Letter from Eric D. Roiter, Senior Vice
President and General Counsel, Fidelity
Management & Research Company, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated Mar. 28, 2005
(‘‘Fidelity Reproposal Letter II’’) at 2.
PO 00000
89 Trade-Through
90 See
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37509
to its comment letter a paper prepared
by two academics, Robert Battalio and
Robert Jennings, which included a
variety of criticisms of the staff study
and the Reproposing Release in general
(‘‘Battalio/Jennings Paper’’).92 Among
other things, the Battalio/Jennings Paper
cited an academic paper which, for
trading in Nasdaq stocks in 1996 and
1997, found significant delays between
the time of trade execution reflected in
proprietary trading center data and the
time of trade report in public data
disseminated by Nasdaq as Plan
processor.93 The authors of the Battalio/
Jennings Paper, however, did not
account for significant improvements in
the quality of trade data for Nasdaq
stocks since 1997. In particular, the
NASD developed and implemented a
new order audit trail system
(‘‘OATS’’).94 As summarized in a 1998
NASD Notice to Members, OATS
specifically was designed, among other
things, to address the discrepancies
between proprietary trade data and
trade data reported to Nasdaq’s
Automated Confirmation Transaction
Service (‘‘ACT’’):
OATS is designed to provide NASD
Regulation, Inc. (NASD Regulation) with the
ability to reconstruct markets promptly,
conduct efficient surveillance, and enforce
NASD and SEC rules. The SEC has directed
that OATS must provide an accurate, timesequenced record of orders and transactions
from the receipt of an order through its
execution. To accomplish this, NASD
Regulation will combine information
submitted to OATS with transaction data
reported by members through ACT and
quotation information disseminated by
Nasdaq * * *. The ACT trade data and the
OATS order information will be used to
construct an integrated audit trail. Under the
amended rules, all trade reports for OATSeligible securities entered into Nasdaq’s ACT
system will be required to have a time of
execution expressed in hours, minutes, and
seconds.95
To obtain the most accurate analysis
of trade-through rates in Nasdaq stocks,
the staff study used the audit trail
record of the time of trade execution,
rather than the time of trade report,
whenever it was supplied and whenever
92 Robert Battalio and Robert Jennings, Analysis
of the Re-Proposing Release of Reg NMS and the
OEA’s Trade-Through Study (Mar. 28, 2005)
(attached to Fidelity Reproposal Letter II). Other
claims made in the Battalio/Jennings Paper are
addressed below at notes 151–158, 296 and
accompanying text.
93 Battalio/Jennings Paper at 12–13. For example,
the academic study of 1996–1997 Nasdaq data
found that 65% of trades were reported with delays
of more than 8 seconds.
94 See, e.g., NASD Notice to Members 98–82 (Oct.
1998) at 1.
95 Id.
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the two times differed.96 The Battalio/
Jennings Paper therefore was mistaken
when it stated that ‘‘[w]ith the data OEA
chose to use, we simply cannot
conclude anything about actual tradethrough rates’’ and when it ‘‘urge[d] the
OEA to revise their methodology and
conduct a trade-through analysis using
audit-trail data.’’ 97 The staff study did
indeed use audit trail data when
available for Nasdaq stocks and
therefore provides a reasonable basis for
estimating true trade-through rates for
Nasdaq stocks.
As noted above, however, the data for
exchange-listed stocks may be more
affected by timing latencies because it is
generated by both automated and
manual markets. The trade-through rates
estimated in the staff study therefore
may somewhat overstate the true traderates for NYSE stocks. Given that the
ITS trade-through provisions currently
apply to exchange-listed stocks,
however, the Commission does not
believe that the possibility that true
trade-through rates potentially are lower
than estimated in the staff study detracts
from the strong policy reasons to
maintain and strengthen trade-through
protection for exchange-listed stocks.
Rather, eliminating any trade-through
protection for exchange-listed stocks
could lead to rates that are as high, or
higher, than were conservatively
estimated for Nasdaq stocks, which have
not been subject to any trade-through
restrictions.
Moreover, the evidence from the staff
study itself indicates that the concerns
about delayed trade reporting discussed
at length in the Battalio/Jennings Paper
with respect to historical data have
largely been resolved. For example, if
delayed trade reporting were truly a
serious problem that caused the staff
study to be flawed, one would expect to
see significant rates of trade-throughs by
a single trading center’s trades of its
own quotations—the two data feeds
would be out of synchronization with
each other because trades were reported
slower than quotation updates. In fact,
however, the staff study found very low
trade-through rates for single trading
centers of their own quotations.98 The
96 Trade-Through Study at 8 (‘‘Trade data from
the Nastraq file was used for the analysis of Nasdaq
stocks. This file contains the executed price, share
volume, trade report time, trade execution time, and
an indicator of non-regular or unusual trade
reporting or settlement conditions. The Nastraq
trade file was selected over the TAQ trade file, as
the latter does not have trade execution time, only
trade report time.’’).
97 Battalio/Jennings Paper at 20.
98 See, e.g., Trade-Through Study, Table 5 (a
rounded 0.0% of CSE trades are trade-throughs of
CSE quotations in Nasdaq stocks; a rounded 0.0%
of PCX trades are trade-throughs of PCX quotations
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primary exception is for trades reported
on Nasdaq that trade through Nasdaq
quotations, but Nasdaq, unlike the other
major markets, does not consist of a
single trading center. Rather, it includes
the NASDAQ Market Center, several
ECNs, and many market makers that
trade, to a great extent, separately. Thus,
the trade-through rates for Nasdaq
reflect true trade-throughs among
different trading centers, not false tradethroughs of a single trading center of its
own quotations.
Finally, problems with clock
synchronization at the various trading
centers are unlikely to have materially
detracted from the accuracy of the staff
study. The great majority of time stamps
were assigned to quotations and trades
as the data was received by a single
entity—Nasdaq as the Plan processor for
Nasdaq stocks and SIAC as the Plan
processor for NYSE stocks.99 One
commenter, however, asserted that the
two Plan processors themselves had
major clock synchronization problems
between quotation data and trade
data.100 If this were in fact the case, the
staff study likely would have found a
high rate of trade-throughs by a single
market of its own quotations, because
the Plan processor’s time stamps for the
market’s quotations would have been
out of synchronization with its time
stamps for the market’s trades. As noted
in the preceding paragraph, the staff
study found few trade-throughs by a
single market of its own quotations,
thereby indicating that the Plan
processors’ quotation data and trade
in Nasdaq stocks), and Table 12 (0.2% of NYSE
trades are trade-throughs of NYSE quotations in
NYSE stocks).
99 As discussed above, the staff study used the
time of trade execution assigned by individual
trading centers in their audit trail data for Nasdaq
stocks when this time was available and differed
from the time of trade report. The staff study noted
that this occurred for approximately 5–10% of
Nasdaq trades. Trade-Through Study at 8 n. 8. As
a result, problems with synchronization of clocks at
the various Nasdaq trading centers (which must be
synchronized within three seconds of the standard
set by the National Institute of Standards and
Technology) could have affected the time stamps
for these trades. Nevertheless, the fact that tradethrough rates remain significant for both Nasdaq
stocks and exchange-listed stocks even when the
quotation window is extended to a full eight
seconds (thereby eliminating many true tradethroughs as well as false trade-throughs caused by
unsynchronized time stamps) indicates that the
staff study’s estimates of trade-through rates were
not materially affected by potential clock
synchronization problems. Moreover, the trades
most likely to be reported with different trade
execution times than trade report times are large,
manually-executed block trades reported by dealers.
These are the very types of trades that commenters
admitted often deliberately bypass displayed
quotations. See, e.g., Fidelity Reproposal Letter at
3; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 4.
100 Angel Reproposal Letter at 3.
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Sfmt 4700
data are not materially out of
synchronization.
ii. Significance of Trade-Through Rates
Some commenters questioned
whether the trade-through rates found
by the staff study were significant
enough to warrant adoption of the tradethrough reproposal.101 They believed,
for example, that the rates were low,
particularly when considered as a
percentage of total trades (2.5% for both
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks) and as the
percentage of total share volume
represented by the total displayed size
of quotations that were traded through
(1.9% and 1.2%, respectively, for
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks).102 They
therefore asserted that the rates did not
demonstrate a serious problem or a need
for regulatory action to address tradethroughs.
The Commission does not agree that
the trade-through rates found in the staff
study are insignificant, nor does it
believe that the total number of tradethroughs is the sole consideration in
evaluating the need for the Order
Protection Rule. A valid assessment of
their significance and the need for
intermarket protection against tradethroughs must be made in light of the
Exchange Act objectives for the NMS
that would be furthered by the Order
Protection Rule, including: (1) To
promote best execution of customer
market orders; (2) to promote fair and
orderly treatment of customer limit
orders; and (3) by strengthening
protection of limit orders, to promote
greater depth and liquidity for NMS
stocks and thereby minimize investor
transaction costs. The staff study
examined trade-through rates from a
variety of different perspectives,
including percentage of trades,
percentage of total share volume,
percentage of share volume of trades of
less than 10,000 shares, and percentage
of total share volume of traded-through
quotations.103 In evaluating the need for
the Order Protection Rule, the different
measures vary in their relevance
depending on the particular objective
under consideration.
For example, the percentage of total
trades that receive inferior prices is a
particularly important measure when
assessing the need to promote best
101 ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 6; Fidelity
Reproposal Letter at 8; Instinet Reproposal Letter at
6 n. 6; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 4;
UBS Reproposal Letter at 4.
102 The 1.9% and 1.2% figures include only the
total displayed size of quotations that were traded
through by trades executed at prices inferior to the
displayed quotations.
103 See, e.g., Trade-Through Study at 1–2 and
Tables 1, 4, 6, 7–8, 11, 13.
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execution of customer market orders.
The staff study found that 1 of every 40
trades (2.5%) for both Nasdaq and NYSE
stocks have an execution price that is
inferior to the best displayed price, or
approximately 98,000 trades per day in
Nasdaq stocks alone.104 As discussed
above,105 investors (and particularly
retail investors) often may have
difficulty monitoring whether their
orders receive the best available prices,
given the rapid movement of quotations
in many NMS stocks. The Commission
believes that furthering the interests of
these investors in obtaining best
execution on an order-by-order basis is
a vitally important objective that
warrants adoption of the Order
Protection Rule.
The percentage of total trades that
receive inferior prices also is quite
relevant when assessing the need to
promote fair and orderly treatment of
limit orders for NMS stocks. Many of
the limit orders that are bypassed are
small orders that often will have been
submitted by retail investors. One of the
strengths of the U.S. equity markets and
the NMS is that the trading interests of
all types and sizes of investors are
integrated, to the greatest extent
possible, into a unified market system.
Such integration ultimately works to
benefit both retail and institutional
investors. Retail investors will
participate directly in the U.S. equity
markets, however, only to the extent
they perceive that their orders will be
treated fairly and efficiently. The
perception of unfairness created when a
retail investor has displayed an order
representing the best price for an NMS,
yet sees that price bypassed by 1 in 40
trades, is a matter of a great concern to
the Commission. The Order Protection
Rule is needed to maintain the
confidence of all types of investors that
their orders will be treated fairly and
efficiently in the NMS.
The third principal objective for the
Order Protection Rule is to promote
greater depth and liquidity for NMS
stocks and thereby minimize investor
transaction costs. Depth and liquidity
will be increased only to the extent that
limit order users are given greater
incentives than currently exist to
display a larger percentage of their
trading interest. The potential upside in
terms of greater incentives for display is
most appropriately measured in terms of
the share volume of trades that currently
104 Id., Tables 1, 8. In October 2004, there were
3.9 million average daily trades reported in Nasdaq
stocks. Source: https://www.nasdaqtrader.com. The
average trade-through rate of 2.5% for Nasdaq
stocks yields average daily trade-throughs of
approximately 98,000.
105 Supra, note 53 and accompanying text.
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do not interact with displayed orders. It
is this volume of trading interest that
will begin interacting with displayed
orders after implementation of the Order
Protection Rule.
The share volume of trade-throughs,
rather than the number of tradethroughs, is most useful for assessing
the effect of the Order Protection Rule
on depth and liquidity because very
small trades represent such a large
percentage of trades in today’s markets,
but a small percentage of share volume.
For example, the staff study found that,
for Nasdaq stocks, 100-share trades
represented 32.7% of the number of
trade-throughs, but only 0.8% of the
share volume of trade-throughs.106
Thus, the number of trade-throughs is
useful for assessing the number of
investors, particularly retail investors,
affected by trade-throughs, while the
share volume of trade-throughs is useful
for assessing the extent to which depth
and liquidity are affected by tradethroughs. For example, 41.1% of the
share volume of trade-throughs in
Nasdaq stocks is attributable to trades of
greater than 1000 shares that bypass
quotations of greater than 1000
shares.107 Addressing the failure of this
substantial volume of trading interest to
interact with significant displayed
quotations is a primary objective of the
Order Protection Rule.
In contrast, the share volume of
quotations that currently are traded
through grossly underestimates the
potential for increased incentives to
display because it reflects only the
current size of displayed quotations in
the absence of strong price protection.
As a result, the share volume of
quotations that currently are traded
through is a symptom of the problem
that the Order Protection Rule is
designed to address—a shortage of
quoted depth—rather than an indication
of the benefits that the Order Protection
Rule will achieve. For example, when
many Nasdaq stocks can trade millions
of shares per day, but have average
displayed size of less than 2000 shares
at the NBBO, it will be nearly
impossible for trade-throughs of
displayed size to account for a large
percentage of total share volume—there
simply is not enough displayed
depth.108 Small displayed depth is
106 Trade-Through
Study, Table 6.
107 Id.
108 See Supplemental Study at 4. Commission
staff examined the average displayed depth in
Nasdaq stocks to help evaluate commenters’ claims
concerning the current level of depth and liquidity
for such stocks. The Supplemental Study measured
the total depth displayed at the NBBO in Nasdaq
stocks as follows: an average of 1,833 shares, a
median of 581 shares, 384 shares at the 25th
percentile, and 987 shares at the 75th percentile.
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evidence of a market problem, not
market quality.
Every trade-through transaction in
today’s markets potentially sends a
message to limit order users that their
displayed quotations can be and are
ignored by other market participants.
The cumulative effect of such messages
over time as trade-throughs routinely
occur each trading day should not be
underestimated. When the total share
volume of trade-through transactions
that do not interact with displayed
quotations reaches 9% or more for many
of the most actively traded Nasdaq
stocks,109 this message is unlikely to be
missed by those who watched their
quotations being traded through.
Certainly, the routine practice of trading
through displayed size is most unlikely
to prompt market participants to display
even greater size.
Thus, the Commission believes that
the percentage of share volume in a
stock that trades through displayed and
accessible quotations is a useful
measure for assessing the potential
increase in incentives for display of
limit orders after implementation of the
Order Protection Rule. In particular, the
dual measurements of percentage of
share volume of traded-through
quotations (an overall 1.9% for Nasdaq
stocks) and the percentage of share
volume of trades that bypass displayed
quotations (an overall 7.9% for Nasdaq
stocks) likely represent the lower and
upper bounds for a potential
improvement in depth and liquidity
after implementation of the Order
Protection Rule.
Commenters opposing the tradethrough reproposal questioned whether
protection against trade-throughs would
lead to any increase in the use of limit
orders, particularly given the many
reasons militating against display (e.g.,
displayed limit orders give a free option
to all other market participants to trade
at the limit order price).110 The
Commission is aware of a variety of
reasons that currently deter market
participants from displaying their
trading interest in full. Indeed, it is the
existence of these negative factors,
combined with a shortage of positive
incentives for display, that have
contributed to the relatively small
displayed depth at the best prices that
characterizes the market for many NMS
stocks today. A large investor interested
in buying 50,000 shares of a stock is
unlikely to suddenly decide to display
all of its trading interest simply because
its order is given trade-through
109 See
Trade-Through Study, Tables 4 and 11.
e.g., Instinet Reproposal Letter at 6 and
n. 6; UBS Reproposal Letter at 3.
110 See,
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protection. The objective for the Order
Protection Rule is more modest. The
Rule is designed to increase the
perceived benefits of order display,
against which the negatives are
balanced. As a result, the market
participant that currently displays only
500 shares of its 50,000-share trading
interest might be willing to display 1000
shares. The collective effect of many
market participants reaching the same
conclusion would be a material increase
in the total displayed depth in the
market, thereby improving the
transparency of price discovery and
reducing investor transaction costs.
Moreover, because of the enormous
volume of trading in NMS stocks, even
a small percentage improvement in
depth and liquidity could lead to very
significant dollar benefits for investors
in the form of reduced transaction costs.
As discussed in section II.A.6 below, for
example, the annual implicit transaction
costs of large institutional investors are
estimated at more than $30 billion in
2003.111 As a result, even a small
percentage reduction in these costs
because of improved depth and
liquidity would result in very
substantial annual savings for millions
of mutual fund and pension fund
investors. The Commission therefore
believes that the estimated tradethrough rates in the staff study support
the need for enhanced protection of
limit orders as a means to promote
greater depth and liquidity in NMS
stocks.
b. Efficiency of Trading in Nasdaq and
NYSE Stocks
A few commenters on the original
proposal submitted empirical data to
support their claim that trading in
Nasdaq stocks currently is more
efficient than trading in NYSE stocks.112
111 Implicit transaction costs are associated with
the prices at which trades are executed, in contrast
with explicit transaction costs such as
commissions. Implicit costs include the adverse
price movements experienced by institutional
investors when searching for the liquidity and
executing the orders necessary to trade in large size.
See infra, notes 146, 300–305, 990, and
accompanying text.
112 Instinet Letter, Exhibit A; Nasdaq Letter II,
Attachment II. One commenter on the reproposal
referred the Commission to an academic study of
trading in Nasdaq and NYSE stocks, asserting that
its conclusion was that ‘‘bid-ask spreads were
shown to be narrower and liquidity shown to be
greater in Nasdaq stocks.’’ STANY Reproposal
Letter at 8. The referred study was Lehn, Patro, and
Shastri, Information Shocks and Stock Market
Liquidity: A Comparison of the New York Stock
Exchange and Nasdaq (presented at the American
Enterprise Institute on June 10, 2004) (available at
www.aei.com). The commenter misinterpreted,
however, the results of the study. The study found
that ‘‘during both the calm and stress periods,
quoted and effective bid-ask spreads are
significantly lower for NYSE versus Nasdaq stocks,
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Specifically, they submitted tables
asserting that effective spreads in
Nasdaq stocks in the S&P 500 are
significantly narrower than effective
spreads in NYSE stocks in the S&P
500.113 To help assess and respond to
the views of commenters on market
efficiency, the Commission staff
analyzed Rule 11Ac1–5 reports and
other trading data to evaluate the
markets for Nasdaq and NYSE stocks.114
In its comment on the reproposal,
Nasdaq argued that the staff studies
contained flaws in their
methodologies.115 With respect to the
S&P Index Study, Nasdaq stated that the
execution quality statistics were drawn
from an atypical month and that the
methodology for analyzing effective
spreads favored higher-priced NYSE
stocks over lower-priced Nasdaq stocks.
The S&P Index Study presented
statistics from January 2004, however,
because this was the month selected by
Nasdaq in the comment letter that it
submitted on the proposal in July 2004.
Moreover, the general statistics reported
by Nasdaq for later months do not
appear to differ materially from those
for January 2004.116 In addition, the S&P
Index Study analyzed investor
transaction costs in terms of a
percentage of investment rather cents
per share because, as discussed below,
the percentage of investment
a result generally consistent with the existing
literature.’’ Id. at 2. Finally, the Mercatus Center
referenced several statistical studies in its comment
letter and concluded that the findings of such
studies are mixed. Letter from Susan E. Dudley,
Director, Regulatory Studies Program, Mercatus
Center, George Mason University, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated May 24, 2004
(‘‘Mercatus Center Letter’’) at 3.
113 Nasdaq and Instinet based their tables on
statistics derived from the reports (‘‘Dash 5
Reports’’) on order execution quality made public
by markets pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–
5 (redesignated as Rule 605 under Regulation NMS).
Their source for these reports is Market Systems,
Inc. (‘‘MSI’’), a private vendor that collects the
reports of all markets each month and includes
them in a searchable database. MSI also is the
source of the Dash 5 Reports used in the staff
analyses.
114 Memorandum to File, from Office of Economic
Analysis, dated December 15, 2004 (comparative
analysis of execution quality for NYSE and
NASDAQ stocks based on a matched sample of
stocks) (‘‘Matched Pairs Study’’); Memorandum to
File, from Division of Market Regulation, dated
December 15, 2004 (comparative analysis of Rule
11Ac1–5 statistics by S&P Index) (‘‘S&P Index
Study’’). The Matched Pair Study and S&P Index
Study are in Public File No. S7–10–04 and are
available for inspection on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov).
115 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 1.
116 See, e.g., id., Exhibit 1 at 15 (table showing
that blended effective spread statistics in terms of
cents-per-share for both market orders and
marketable limit orders generally declined
throughout 2004 for both Nasdaq and NYSE stocks).
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methodology most reflects economic
reality for investors.117
With respect to the Matched Pairs
Study, Nasdaq asserted that it largely
examined small stocks. Nasdaq noted,
for example, that more than 25% of the
stocks included in the Matched Pairs
Study were not eligible for NYSE listing
and that only 10% of the stocks were
included in the Nasdaq-100 Index. The
purpose of the Matched Pairs Study,
however, was to compare execution
quality in Nasdaq and NYSE across a
broad range of stocks, not solely for
large stocks or those that were eligible
for NYSE listing. Although 25% of the
stocks may not have been eligible for
NYSE listing, the staff analysis used
matching criteria more directly designed
to produce an ‘‘apples-to-apples’’
comparison—market capitalization,
price, average daily dollar volume
(adjusted downward by 30% for Nasdaq
stocks to reflect trade reporting practices
in such stocks), and relative price range.
The Commission therefore believes that
the staff studies provide a valid basis to
compare trading in Nasdaq stocks and
NYSE stocks.
The staff studies indicate that the
execution quality statistics submitted by
commenters on the original proposal are
flawed. The claimed large and
systematic disparities between Nasdaq
and NYSE effective spreads disappear
when an analysis of execution quality
more appropriately controls for
differences in stocks, order types, and
order sizes.118 The staff studies reveal
that both the market for Nasdaq stocks
and the market for NYSE stocks have
significant strengths. But, as discussed
below, both markets also have
weaknesses that could be reduced by
strengthened protection against tradethroughs.
First, the effective spread analyses
submitted by commenters do not, in a
number of respects, reflect appropriately
the comparative transaction costs in
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks.119 They were
117 To the extent Nasdaq has more low-priced
stocks than the NYSE, the Dash 5 statistics favor
Nasdaq in the larger order size categories because
of ‘‘bracket creep’’ ‘‘i.e., it typically will be easier
to execute a 2000 share order in a $5 stock ($10,000
total volume) than to execute a 2000 share order in
a $40 stock ($80,000 total volume), assuming the
stocks are otherwise comparable.
118 Matched Pairs Study, Tables 4–10; S&P Index
Study, Tables 2–9.
119 The effective spread is a useful measure of
transaction costs for market orders, particularly for
small order sizes, because it reflects the prices
actually received by investors when compared to
the best quotes at the time a market received an
order. Consequently, unlike the quoted spread, the
effective spread reflects any cost to investors caused
by movement in prices during a delay between
receipt of an order and execution of an order. In
other words, the effective spread penalizes slow
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presented in terms of ‘‘cents-per-share’’
and therefore failed to control for the
varying level of stock prices between
Nasdaq stocks and NYSE stocks in the
S&P 500. Lower priced stocks naturally
will tend to have lower spreads in terms
of cents-per-share than higher priced
stocks, even when such cents-per-share
spreads constitute a larger percentage of
stock price and therefore represent
transaction costs for investors that
consume a larger percentage of their
investment. By using cents-per-share
statistics, commenters did not adjust for
the fact that the average prices of
Nasdaq stocks are significantly lower
than the average prices of NYSE stocks.
For example, the average price of
Nasdaq stocks in the S&P 500 in January
2004 was $34.14, while the average
price of NYSE stocks was $41.32.120
The effective spread analyses
submitted by commenters also were
weakened by their failure to address the
much lower fill rates of orders in
Nasdaq stocks than orders in NYSE
stocks. The commenters submitted
‘‘blended’’ statistics that encompassed
both market orders and marketable limit
orders. The effective spread statistics for
these order types are not comparable,
however, because market orders do not
have a limit price that precludes their
execution at prices inferior to the
prevailing market price at time of order
receipt. In contrast, the limit price of
marketable limit orders often precludes
an execution, particularly when there is
a lack of liquidity and depth at the
prevailing market price. For example,
the fill rates for marketable limit orders
in Nasdaq stocks generally are less than
75%, and often fall below 50% for larger
order sizes.121
Accordingly, investors must accept
trade-offs when deciding whether to
submit market orders or marketable
limit orders (particularly when the limit
price equals the current market price).
Use of a limit price generally assures a
narrower spread by precluding an
execution at an inferior price. By
precluding an execution, however, the
limit price may cause the investor to
‘‘miss the market’’ if prices move away
(for example, if prices rise when an
investor is attempting to buy). Effective
markets for failing to execute trades at their quoted
prices at the time they received an order. It
therefore provides an appropriate criterion with
which to compare execution quality between
automated and manual markets for comparable
stocks, order types, and order sizes. As discussed
below, however, effective spread statistics do not
capture transaction costs that are attributable to low
fill rates—the failure to obtain an execution—for
marketable limit orders.
120 S&P Index Study, Table 1.
121 Matched Pairs Study, Table 10; S&P Index
Study, Tables 7, 9.
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spreads for marketable limit orders
therefore represent transaction costs that
are conditional on execution, while
effective spreads for market orders
much more completely reflect the entire
implicit transaction cost for a particular
order. Market orders represent only
approximately 14% of the blended flow
of market and marketable limit orders in
Nasdaq stocks (reflecting the fact that
ECNs now dominate Nasdaq order flow
and limit orders represent the vast
majority of ECN order flow).122 In
contrast, market orders represent
approximately 36% of the blended order
flow in NYSE stocks.123 Accordingly,
the effective spread statistics for
marketable limit orders, and particularly
for orders in Nasdaq stocks, must be
considered in conjunction with the fill
rate for such orders ‘‘while a narrow
spread is good, the benefits are greatly
limited if investors are unable to obtain
an execution at that spread. The
analyses presented by the commenters,
however, did not address the respective
fill rates for Nasdaq stocks and NYSE
stocks or reflect the inherent differences
in measuring the transaction costs of
market orders and marketable limit
orders.
The analyses prepared by
Commission staff are designed to
provide appropriate evaluations of
comments on the efficiency of trading in
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks. In particular,
they are more finely tuned to evaluate
trading for different types of stocks with
varying trading volume, different types
of orders, and different sizes of orders.
These analyses indicate that the markets
for Nasdaq and NYSE stocks each have
weaknesses that an intermarket price
protection rule could help address. By
‘‘weakness,’’ the Commission simply
means that there appears to be
considerable room for improvement. For
example, the effective spread statistics
for large, electronically-received market
orders in NYSE stocks show significant
‘‘slippage’’—the amount by which
orders are executed at prices inferior to
the national best bid or offer (‘‘NBBO’’)
at the time of order receipt.124 Slippage
often results in effective spreads for
large orders that are many times wider
than the effective spreads for small
orders in the same NYSE stocks. By
protecting automated quotations, the
Order Protection Rule should enhance
the depth and liquidity available for
large, electronic orders in NYSE stocks
122 Most market orders in Nasdaq stocks are
executed by market-making dealers pursuant to
agreement with their correspondent or affiliated
brokers.
123 Matched Pairs Study at 1.
124 Matched Pairs Study, Tables 4, 7; S&P Index
Study, Tables 2, 4, 6, 8.
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and thereby improve their execution
quality.
For Nasdaq stocks, the Rule 11Ac1–5
statistics reveal very low fill rates for
larger sizes of marketable limit orders
(e.g., 2000 shares or more), which
generally fall below 50% for most
Nasdaq stocks. Contrary to the assertion
of some commenters,125 certainty of
execution for large marketable limit
orders clearly is not a strength of the
current market for Nasdaq stocks.
Certainty of a fast response is a strength,
but much of the time the response to
large orders will be a ‘‘no fill’’ at any
given trading center.126
Two commenters on the reproposal
disputed whether low fill rates for
marketable limit orders in Nasdaq
stocks indicate any weakness that
needed to be addressed.127 Instinet, for
example, believed that ‘‘the Commission
is misplaced in its contention that low
fill rates in Nasdaq stocks are a
weakness of that market,’’ and that they
are a phenomenon ‘‘intrinsic to
electronic markets in which market
participants are free to cancel and
replace orders.’’ 128 Instinet also noted
that many market centers in Nasdaq
stocks have significant reserve size in
addition to displayed size and that
market participants commonly routed
oversized marketable limit orders to
attempt to interact with reserve size.129
125 See, e.g., Instinet Reproposal Letter at 7;
Nasdaq Letter II at 6. In addition to effective spread
statistics, Instinet submitted statistics indicating
that combined market and marketable limit orders
in Nasdaq stocks were more likely to be executed
at or inside the NBBO than such orders in NYSE
stocks. Instinet Letter, Table I–C. These statistics,
however, only reflect orders that in fact receive an
execution—not the large volume of orders in
Nasdaq stocks that fail to receive any execution at
all.
126 Some commenters asserted that the large
number of limit orders in Nasdaq stocks indicates
that sufficient incentives exist for the placement of
limit orders in such stocks. See, e.g., Instinet Letter
at 11; Letter from Thomas N. McManus, Managing
Director & Counsel, Morgan Stanley & Co.
Incorporated, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated August 19, 2004 (‘‘Morgan
Stanley Letter’’) at 14. Strengthened intermarket
trade-through protection, however, is designed to
improve the quality of limit orders in a stock,
particularly their displayed size, and thereby
promote greater depth and liquidity. This goal is
not achieved, for example, by a large number of
limit orders with small sizes and high cancellation
rates.
127 Instinet Reproposal Letter at 6–7; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 5.
128 Instinet Reproposal Letter at 6–7.
129 Instinet Reproposal Letter at 7. Instinet also
asserted that low fill rates for large marketable limit
orders might be attributable to the frequent locking
of markets in low-priced stocks. In fact, however,
the Dash 5 fill rates for large orders in low-priced
stocks generally are higher than those for highpriced stocks, likely because the dollar value of
such orders is low (i.e., 5000 shares of a $5 stock
($25,000) generally will be easier to trade than 5000
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Similarly, Nasdaq stated that the staff
studies ‘‘erroneously conclude that
differential fill rates for large marketable
limit orders in Nasdaq-listed and NYSElisted stocks are evidence of a defect in
Nasdaq’s market structure,’’ and that
they failed ‘‘to consider a widely used
order routing technique of intentionally
sending oversized orders at displayed
quotes searching (also known as
‘‘pinging’’) for reserves within the many
limit order books trading Nasdaq-listed
securities.’’ 130 Nasdaq also asserted that
marketable limit orders are
‘‘exceedingly popular in electronic
venues where they have effectively
supplanted market orders as the order of
choice in accessing availability liquidity
at the current price.’’ 131
The Commission continues to believe
that fill rates for large marketable limit
orders are a useful measure of order
execution quality for Nasdaq stocks.
They are especially useful because they
measure the availability of both
displayed and undisplayed liquidity,
whereas simply measuring displayed
size would understate the total liquidity
readily available for Nasdaq stocks.
Indeed, the existence of ‘‘pinging’’
orders searching for reserve size in
Nasdaq stocks at electronic markets is
widely known. Such oversized orders
(i.e., orders with sizes greater than
displayed size) could as aptly be labeled
‘‘liquidity search’’ orders as ‘‘pinging’’
orders. Given the relatively small
displayed size in nearly all Nasdaq
stocks (i.e., significantly less than 2000
shares),132 orders with sizes of 2000 to
4999 shares and 5000 to 9999 shares
(the two largest Dash 5 size categories)
generally will exceed the displayed size.
Thus, low fill rates demonstrate that the
total displayed and reserve liquidity
available for Nasdaq stocks at any
particular trading center typically is
small compared to the demand for
liquidity at the inside prices. Moreover,
increased displayed liquidity—a
principal goal of the Order Protection
Rule—would promote market efficiency
by reducing the uncertainty and costs
associated with the need for market
participants to ‘‘ping’’ electronic
markets for liquidity that is held in
reserve.
shares of a $50 stock ($250,000)). See infra, text
accompanying notes 141–142 (average fill rates for
large orders in low-priced stocks in Nasdaq–100
Index are much higher than fill rates for most other
stocks in Index).
130 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 5.
131 Id., Exhibit 1 at 8.
132 Supplemental Trade-Through Study at 5. In
Fall 2003, only 273 Nasdaq stocks had average
displayed size at the NBBO of 2000 or greater
shares, 213 of which were low-priced stocks (prices
of less than $10 per share).
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The Reproposing Release did not
suggest, however, that the differential
fill rates for large marketable limit
orders in Nasdaq and NYSE stocks were
useful in comparing the liquidity and
depth available in each market. Instead,
the Reproposing Release focused on the
most relevant Dash 5 statistic for each
market, given its particular trading
characteristics. As noted above, the
significant amount of ‘‘slippage’’ in the
execution of electronically-received
large market orders in NYSE stocks
suggest that improved incentives for
display of automated trading interest
will help improve execution quality for
NYSE stocks. Notably, Instinet and
Nasdaq agreed that slippage rates for
automated market orders represented a
problem in the market for NYSE
stocks.133 Because market participants
generally choose not to submit market
orders to electronic markets in Nasdaq
stocks, however, the fill rates for
marketable limit orders are a more
relevant Dash 5 statistic to assess depth
and liquidity in Nasdaq stocks.
Accordingly, the Commission’s
concern with fill rates for larger orders
in Nasdaq stocks is not that they are
lower than those for NYSE stocks, but
that they are very low in absolute
terms—often falling well below 50%.134
Moreover, the larger order sizes
typically account for a small percentage
of executed shares compared to the
executed shares of smaller order
sizes.135 When considered in
conjunction with one another, the low
fill rates and small percentage of
executed shares indicate substantial
room for improvement in depth and
liquidity in many Nasdaq stocks. An
important objective for Regulation NMS
133 Instinet Reproposal Letter at 6 (‘‘we ourselves
make a point of a high level of slippage as being
an issue in the NYSE market’’); Nasdaq Letter II,
Attachment II (table comparing market order shares
traded outside the quote for Nasdaq and NYSE
stocks).
134 See, e.g., Matched Pairs Study, Table 10.
135 See, e.g., Matched Pairs Study, Table 3.
Nasdaq also asserted that the difference in share
volume of Dash 5 marketable limit orders for
Nasdaq stocks versus NYSE stocks indicated the
superiority of Nasdaq execution quality for
marketable limit orders. The difference in
marketable limit order share volume in Nasdaq and
NYSE stocks, however, is attributable to structural
differences between the two markets. For example,
many large orders in NYSE stocks are handled
manually by brokers on the NYSE floor and
therefore are not included in the Dash 5 statistics,
which only encompass electronic orders. In
addition, a greater volume of market orders are
executed in NYSE stocks than in Nasdaq stocks.
Matched Pairs Study, Table 3. As discussed below,
the need for a restrictive limit price to prevent
outside-the-quote executions likely is an additional
reason that Nasdaq market participants choose to
use marketable limit orders rather than market
orders. See infra, notes 138–139 and accompanying
text.
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as a whole is to facilitate more efficient
trading in larger sizes, an objective that
has become much more important to
large investors since decimalization.136
An improvement in fill rates for larger
sized orders (or an increase in their
percentage of executed shares) would
evidence progress toward this objective.
Fill rates for marketable limit orders,
however, offer only indirect evidence of
the total transaction costs incurred by
investors. They indicate that no
execution was obtained for an investor
order at a particular trading center, but
do not indicate how the investor
subsequently fared in obtaining an
execution. As discussed above, there are
significant trade-offs between
marketable limit orders and market
orders. The use of a restrictive limit
price at the NBBO precludes any
slippage in execution price, but also
may cause an investor to miss the
market if prices subsequently move
away from the order (i.e., rise when an
investor is attempting to buy or fall
when an investor is attempting to sell).
To evaluate the total transaction costs
associated with an order that goes
unfilled or receives a partial fill, it is
necessary to know the price at which
the investor ultimately obtained an
execution for its full order.
To help the Commission evaluate and
respond to commenters’ criticisms and,
in particular, to supplement its analysis
of fill rates as a measure of depth and
liquidity for Nasdaq stocks and to
evaluate the extent to which missed fills
may lead to higher investor transaction
costs, Commission staff also examined
execution quality statistics for
marketable limit orders in Nasdaq-100
Index stocks that are executed outside
the best quotes at the Inet ATS and the
NASDAQ Market Center.137 By
definition, such orders have been placed
with liberal limit prices that give more
flexibility for executions away from the
NBBO than orders with limit prices that
are restrictively set at the NBBO.
Accordingly, the slippage rates for such
orders give another indication of
136 See
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77425.
to File, from Division of Market
Regulation, dated April 6, 2005 (analysis of Rule
11Ac1–5 statistics for Nasdaq-100 Index) (‘‘Nasdaq100 Index Supplemental Study’’). The Nasdaq100
Index Supplemental Study has been placed in
Public File No. S7–10–04 and is available for
inspection on the Commission’s Internet Web site
(https://www.sec.gov). The staff examined Nasdaq100 stocks in response to Nasdaq’s suggestion that
they are most appropriate for evaluating execution
quality in the market for Nasdaq stocks. See Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter, Exhibit 1 at 1, 11. The statistics
are from December 2004 and are equal-stock
weighted to give a more representative view of
trading across all stocks, rather than a view
concentrated on a few stocks that are much more
actively traded than the others.
137 Memorandum
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available liquidity for Nasdaq-100
stocks.
The statistics for outside-the-quote
executions in marketable limit orders
buttress a conclusion that there is
significant room for improved depth
and liquidity in Nasdaq stocks. For
example, the Inet ATS did not fill
83.0% of its large marketable limit
orders.138 Of the orders it executed,
19.5% of shares were executed outside
the quote by an average of 2.7 cents.
Thus, while the overall quoted and
effective spreads for executed shares for
large orders were, respectively, 1.6 cents
and 2.5 cents, the spread for outside the
quote executions was 7.0 cents—438%
wider than the narrow quoted spread.
The statistics for the NASDAQ Market
Center are similar. It did not fill 68.4%
of its large marketable limit orders.139
Of the orders it executed, 14.7% were
executed outside the quote by an
average of 2.3 cents. The overall quoted
and effective spreads for large orders
were, respectively, 1.6 cents and 2.5
cents, compared to 6.2 cents for outside
the quote executions—388% wider than
the narrow quoted spread. The outsidethe-quote spreads provide the best
available indication of execution quality
that otherwise would have been
obtained at the time orders were placed
for the 83.0% and 68.4% of shares that
were not filled due to their restrictive
limit price. The outside-the-quote
spreads also are relevant in assessing
the reasons why market participants
most often use marketable limit orders
with limit prices at the NBBO rather
than market orders when trading
Nasdaq stocks.
In addition, the supplemental staff
study separately examined fill rates and
executed share volume for types of
Nasdaq-100 stocks where liquidity for
orders with large share sizes can
reasonably be expected to be highest.140
These stock groupings were selected
primarily to assess whether low fill rates
for large marketable limit orders are an
inherent part of the structure of the
market for Nasdaq stocks. Specifically,
the supplemental staff study calculated
fill rates and executed share volume for
the three Nasdaq stocks with the largest
capitalization—Microsoft, Intel, and
Cisco. These three stocks are widely
recognized among all Nasdaq stocks as
having markets with significant depth
and liquidity. In addition, the
supplemental staff study examined the
seven Nasdaq-100 stocks with share
138 Nasdaq-100 Index Supplemental Study, Table
1 (orders with sizes of 5000 to 9999 shares).
139 Nasdaq-100 Index Supplemental Study, Table
5 (orders with sizes of 5000 to 9999 shares).
140 Nasdaq-100 Index Supplemental Study, Tables
2–3, 6–7.
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prices of less than $10 per share.
Liquidity for orders with large share
sizes in these stocks can be expected to
be higher than for stocks with higher
prices because the dollar sizes are much
smaller (e.g., a 5000 share order in a $5
stock totals $25,000, whereas a 5000
share order in a $30 stock totals
$150,000). In terms of economic reality,
therefore, large orders in a low-priced
stock generally are easier to execute
than large orders in a higher-priced
stock, assuming the stocks are otherwise
comparable. Finally, the supplemental
staff study separately examined the
other 90 stocks in the Nasdaq-100 Index
(i.e., stocks with prices of at least $10
per share other than Microsoft, Intel,
and Cisco).
The supplemental staff study reveals
that low fill rates for large marketable
limit orders are not an inherent feature
of the market for Nasdaq stocks. For
example, the NASDAQ Market Center
fill rates for large orders are 76.7% for
the three large-cap stocks, 70.1% for the
low-priced stocks, and 27.1% for the
other 90 stocks in the Nasdaq-100
Index.141 Similarly, the Inet ATS fill
rates for large orders are 58.5% for the
three large-cap stocks, 55.0% for lowpriced stocks, and 12.6% for the other
90 stocks in the Nasdaq-100 Index.142
The order execution quality measures
included in Dash 5 reports do not, of
course, reflect all types of investor
transaction costs. They generally focus
on the execution price of individual
orders in comparison with the best
quoted prices at the time orders are
received. As a result, they do not
capture transaction costs that are
associated with the short-term
movement of quoted prices. To further
assist the Commission in evaluating the
views of commenters, Commission staff
has analyzed price volatility for trading
in Nasdaq and NYSE stocks.143 This
analysis particularly focuses on
transitory volatility—short-term
fluctuations away from the fundamental
or ‘‘true’’ value of a stock. Transitory
volatility should be distinguished from
fundamental volatility—price
fluctuations associated with factors
independent of market structure, such
as earnings changes and other economic
determinants of stock prices. The staff
analysis found that on average both
141 Nasdaq-100 Index Supplemental Study,
Tables, 6–8.
142 Nasdaq-100 Index Supplemental Study, Tables
2–4.
143 Memorandum to File, from Office of Economic
Analysis, dated December 15, 2004 (analysis of
volatility for stocks switching from NASDAQ to
NYSE) (‘‘Volatility Study’’). The Volatility Study
has been placed in Public File No. S7–10–04 and
is available for inspection on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov).
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37515
intraday volatility and transitory
volatility are higher for Nasdaq stocks
than for NYSE stocks.144 Excessive
transitory volatility indicates a shortage
of depth and liquidity that otherwise
would minimize the effect of short-term
order imbalances. Such volatility may
provide benefits in the form of
profitable trading opportunities for
short-term traders or market makers, but
these benefits come at the expense of
other investors, who would be buying at
artificially high or selling at artificially
low prices. Retail investors, in
particular, tend to be relatively
uninformed concerning short-term price
movements and are apt to bear the brunt
of the trading costs associated with
excessive transitory volatility.145 The
Order Protection Rule, by promoting
greater depth and liquidity, is designed
to help reduce excessive transitory
volatility in Nasdaq stocks.
Finally, an important measure of
depth and liquidity for NMS stocks is
the transaction costs actually incurred
by institutional investors when they
trade in large size. These costs are not
readily available for public view
because their measurement requires
access to a large volume of private order
and execution data of institutional
investors. One of the leading authorities
on institutional transaction costs uses
an extensive database of such data
obtained from its clients to calculate
their transaction costs. It recently
published calculations of average
transaction costs for Nasdaq and NYSE
stocks during the fourth quarter of 2003
as, respectively, 83 basis points and 55
basis points.146 Given the significant
144 Volatility Study at 1. Nasdaq raised a number
of objections to the Volatility Study in its comment
on the reproposal. Nasdaq Reproposal Letter,
Exhibit 1 at 16–19. To help the Commission
evaluate these objections, Commission staff
performed supplemental analysis to reflect
Nasdaq’s concerns and to provide a fuller
description of volatility for Nasdaq and NYSE
stocks. The results of the additional analysis
confirm the basic conclusions reached in the
original analysis ‘‘the stocks that switched from
Nasdaq listing to NYSE listing during the sample
period experienced a decrease in total volatility and
in transitory volatility. Memorandum to File, from
Office of Economic Analysis, dated April 6, 2005
(additional analysis of volatility for stocks
switching from NASDAQ to NYSE) (‘‘Supplemental
Volatility Study’’). The Supplemental Volatility
Study has been placed in Public File No. S7–10–
04 and is available for inspection on the
Commission’s Internet Web site (https://
www.sec.gov).
145 See infra, section I.A.2 (discussion of
Exchange Act emphasis on minimizing volatility to
protect interests of investors).
146 Wayne H. Wagner, Faster!, 1 FIXGlobal 54, 55
(3rd Quarter 2004) (estimate of Plexus Group, Inc.).
Explicit transaction costs such as commissions
represent only a small part of total transaction costs
calculated by Plexus (e.g., 12 basis points for large
capitalization stocks). The remaining implicit
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differences in the overall nature of
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks, these figures
cannot be used to assess the relative
efficiency of the two markets. The
figures for both, however, suggest room
for improved depth and liquidity,
particularly when compared with the
average quoted spreads in NMS stocks,
which generally are less, and often
much less, than 10 basis points for large
capitalization stocks that dominate
trading volume.147
c. Need for Intermarket Rule to Achieve
Effective Protection Against TradeThroughs
As discussed in the preceding section,
the relevant data, as well as the policy
choices the Commission has articulated
above, supports the need for
strengthened protection against tradethroughs in both Nasdaq and exchangelisted stocks. Some commenters argued,
however, that competitive forces alone
would achieve the fairest and most
efficient markets.148 In particular, they
asserted that reliance on efficient access
to markets and brokers’ duty of best
execution would be sufficient without
the need for an intermarket rule against
trade-throughs. This argument,
however, fails to take into account two
structural problems—principal/agent
conflicts of interest and ‘‘free-riding’’ on
displayed prices.
Agency conflicts may occur when
brokers have incentives to act otherwise
than in the best interest of their
customers. For example, brokers may
have strong financial and other interests
in routing orders to a particular market,
which may or may not be displaying the
best price for a stock. Moreover, the
Commission has not interpreted a
broker’s duty of best execution for retail
orders as requiring that a separate best
execution analysis be made on an orderby-order basis.149 Nevertheless, retail
investors generally expect that their
small orders will be executed at the best
displayed prices. They may have
transaction costs are attributable to the impact of
the trade on market price as it interacts with other
buyers and sellers, delay or liquidity search costs
that occur when portions of the trade are held back
for fear of upsetting the supply/demand balance,
and opportunity costs that arise when the trade is
abandoned before all desired shares have been
acquired. Id.
147 See, e.g., Matched Pairs Study, Tables 3, 8.
148 See, e.g., ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 5; STA
Reproposal Letter at 3; STANY Reproposal Letter at
2.
149 See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No.
37619A (Sept. 6, 1996), 61 FR 48290, 48323 n. 362
(‘‘Order Handling Rules Release’’) (‘‘Commission
has recognized that it may be impractical, both in
terms of time and expense, for a broker that handles
a large volume of orders to determine individually
where to route each order it received.’’). See also
infra, section II.B.4 (discussion of duty of best
execution).
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difficulty monitoring whether their
individual orders miss the best
displayed prices at the time they are
executed and evaluating the quality of
service provided by their brokers.150
Given the large number of trades that
fail to obtain the best displayed prices
(e.g., approximately 1 in 40 trades for
both Nasdaq and NYSE stocks), the
Commission is concerned that many of
the investors that ultimately received
the inferior price in these trades may
not be aware that their orders did not,
in fact, obtain the best price. The Order
Protection Rule will backstop a broker’s
duty of best execution on an order-byorder basis by prohibiting the practice of
executing orders at inferior prices,
absent an applicable exception.
Just as importantly, even when market
participants act in their own economic
self-interest, or brokers act in the best
interests of their customers, they may
deliberately choose, for various reasons,
to bypass (i.e., not protect) limit orders
with the best displayed prices. For
example, an institution may be willing
to accept a dealer’s execution of a
particular block order at a price outside
the NBBO, thereby transferring the risk
of any further price impact to the dealer.
Market participants that execute orders
at inferior prices without protecting
displayed limit orders are effectively
‘‘free-riding’’ on the price discovery
provided by those limit orders.
Displayed limit orders benefit all market
participants by establishing the best
prices, but, when bypassed, do not
themselves receive a benefit, in the form
of an execution, for providing this
public good. This economic externality,
in turn, creates a disincentive for
investors to display limit orders and
ultimately could negatively affect price
discovery and market depth and
liquidity.
Fidelity’s comment letters on the
reproposal questioned whether large
trades that bypass displayed quotations
should be considered as free-riding on
the price discovery provided by
displayed limit orders.151 It emphasized
that the price-formation process reflects
information stemming from all trading
interest and that institutional trading
interest is an important part of the
process. As evidence, it noted that
almost one-third of reported volume on
the NYSE in 2004 was of block size,
150 See supra, note 53 and accompanying text
(discussion of difficulty for investors to monitor
whether their order execution prices equal the best
quoted prices at the time of order execution).
151 Fidelity Reproposal Letter at 5; Fidelity
Reproposal Letter II at 2. See also Battalio/Jennings
Paper at 2.
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typically representing undisplayed
institutional trading interest.
Institutional trading interest, both
displayed and undisplayed,
undoubtedly is an important part of the
price discovery process. Notably, the
large volume of block trades currently
executed on the NYSE is subject both to
the NYSE’s order interaction rules and
the ITS trade-through rules.
Accordingly, NYSE block trades cannot
be considered as free-riding on
displayed limit orders, in contrast to
block trades reported by block
positioners in the OTC market that
currently do not interact with (and
thereby are free-riding on) displayed
liquidity and are not covered by the ITS
provisions.
Moreover, the Order Protection Rule
does not require that all institutional
trading interest be displayed. Rather, the
Rule strengthens the incentive for the
voluntary display of a greater proportion
of latent trading interest by assuring
that, when such interest is displayed, it
is protected against most trade-throughs.
In these circumstances, institutions will
choose to display when they determine
it is in their own interests, not because
it is mandated by Commission rule.
Greater displayed size will improve the
quality and transparency of price
discovery for all market participants.
Fidelity also asserted that ‘‘an
institutional investor, seeking to acquire
or dispose a large block of stock will be
put to a distinct and unfair advantage if
it is deprived of the ability to negotiate,
at one time and at a specified price, an
all-in price for its block trade with a
dealer.’’ 152 Similarly, the Battalio/
Jennings Paper suggests that, for large
marketable limit orders of institutions,
‘‘it might be better to ignore a penny
quote for a few hundred shares in order
to get a large order done quickly rather
than try to chase the small quote and
risk losing the ability to fill the size
desired.’’ 153 These contentions do not
recognize that the Order Protection Rule
does not, in fact, preclude institutions
from negotiating ‘‘all-in’’ prices for their
trades with dealers or immediately
routing orders to access larger-sized
depth-of-book quotations. Rather, the
Rule simply requires a dealer, at the
same time as executing a large
institutional order at an all-in price, to
route an intermarket sweep order to
execute against the displayed size of
protected quotations with superior
prices to the institution’s trade price.
Similarly, the Rule allows an institution
to simultaneously route intermarket
sweep orders to execute against both
152 Fidelity
Reproposal Letter at 3.
Paper at 29.
153 Battalio/Jennings
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small-sized quotations at the best prices
and larger-sized depth-of-book
quotations. The Rule therefore does not
require institutions to parcel out their
block orders in a series of transactions
over time.
Fidelity and the Battalio/Jennings
Paper also incorrectly asserted that the
Commission’s concern about free-riding
on displayed quotations related only to
the limit orders of retail investors, citing
a number of academic studies indicating
that institutional trades and quotations
are important contributors to price
discovery.154 In fact, however, the
Reproposing Release did not distinguish
between the limit orders of retail
investors and those of institutions when
discussing the problem of free-riding.155
Rather, the Order Protection Rule is
designed to promote displayed liquidity
from all sources, and institutional limit
orders clearly are a significant source of
such liquidity. Indeed, the Battalio/
Jennings Paper itself notes that
‘‘institutions dominate price discovery
via quoting’’ and that ‘‘the
preponderance of quote-based discovery
for NYSE-listed securities takes place at
the NYSE’’ where ‘‘institutions
dominate trading.’’ 156 Many
institutional investors and the NYSE are
strong supporters of strengthened limit
order protection for all NMS stocks.157
For example, the ICI, whose members
manage assets that account for more
than 95% of assets of all U.S. mutual
funds, stated that it ‘‘strongly supports
154 Battalio/Jennings
Paper at 4 n. 1, 30–36;
Fidelity Reproposal Letter II at 2.
155 See, e.g., Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77434
(‘‘Displayed limit orders benefit all market
participants by establishing the best prices, but,
when bypassed, do not themselves receive a benefit,
in the form of an execution, for providing this
public good. This economic externality, in turn,
creates a disincentive for investors to display limit
orders, particularly limit orders of any substantial
size.’’) (emphasis added). In contrast, the
Commission’s concern specifically for the limit
orders of retail investors relates primarily to the
perception of unfairness created when retail orders
are ignored by other market participants. Although
some of these orders may subsequently be executed
or cancelled, the retail investors that submitted
orders with the best prices have not received the
appropriate reward for their use of an aggressive
limit price—a prompt, efficient execution
consistent with the principle of price priority.
Moreover, the orders that ultimately never receive
an execution are also likely to be the very orders
that would have been most profitable for the
investor (e.g., when the order was to buy a stock
and the stock’s price climbed after the tradethrough occurred). To meet the Exchange Act’s
objectives for the NMS, investors of all types should
have confidence that their orders will be handled
in a fair and orderly fashion.
156 Battalio/Jennings Paper at 35.
157 See, e.g., American Century Letter at 2; Capital
Research Letter at 2; ICI Reproposal Letter at 2;
NYSE Reproposal Letter at 3; T. Rowe Price
Reproposal Letter at 2; Vanguard Reproposal Letter
at 2.
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the establishment of a marketwide
trade-through rule. * * * [S]uch a rule
represents a significant step in
providing protection for limit orders. By
affirming the principle of price priority,
a trade-through rule should encourage
the display of limit orders, which in
turn would improve the price discovery
process and contribute to increased
market depth and liquidity.’’ 158
Another commenter asserted that the
reproposal overly emphasized the
importance of displayed limit orders in
the price discovery process.159 It stated
that the interaction of displayed limit
orders with marketable orders is only
one aspect of price discovery, which is
‘‘a dynamic process that operates in the
context of other transactions that have
recently been made, current quotes, and
a richer tapestry of the expressed and
latent interest of a broader array of
market participants.’’ 160 The
Commission generally concurs with this
characterization of the price discovery
process, but believes that displayed
limit orders are a critically important
element of efficient price discovery that
deserve greater protection against tradethroughs. Publicly displayed and
automated limit orders are the most
transparent and accessible source of
liquidity in the equity markets.
Moreover, displayed limit orders
provide price discovery on a going
forward basis—they indicate the prices
at which trades can be effected in the
future. Trade reports, in contrast, look
backward at the prices of trades that
already have occurred, which may or
may not be still available.
There are, of course, other sources of
liquidity, including: (1) Reserve size
(limit orders with undisplayed size); (2)
‘‘not held’’ institutional orders that are
worked by floor brokers on an exchange;
(3) automated matching networks that
allow large buyers and sellers to meet
directly and anonymously; and (4)
securities dealers that are willing to
commit capital to facilitate customer
orders. Displayed limit orders, however,
give anyone the ability to trade when
Reproposal Letter at 2.
from Stewart P. Greene, Chief Counsel,
Securities Law, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005 (‘‘TIAA–CREF
Reproposal Letter’’), Attachment at 15–16. This
commenter also asserted that the reproposal failed
to appreciate the importance of ‘‘quantity
discovery,’’ in addition to price discovery. Id. at 9.
As evidenced by the repeated concern expressed in
both the proposal and reproposal for improving
market depth and liquidity, the Commission
considers the term ‘‘price discovery’’ to encompass
both the inside prices for a stock and the quantity
of stock that can be traded at and away from the
inside prices. It believes, however, that displayed
limit orders are a vital source of price discovery in
all of its forms.
160 Id. at 16.
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159 Letter
Frm 00023
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37517
they want to trade on a first-come, firstserved basis. They thereby act as a vital
reference point for all other sources of
liquidity. Specifically, reserve size,
undisplayed floor interest, automated
matching, and dealer capital
commitments all are facilitated by
displayed information concerning the
price and size of stock that is available
for immediate trading in the public
markets.
As demonstrated by the current rate of
trade-throughs of the best quotations in
Nasdaq and NYSE stocks, the problems
of agent/principal conflicts and the freeriding externality often can lead to
executions at prices that are inferior to
displayed quotations, meaning that limit
orders are being bypassed. The frequent
bypassing of limit orders can cause
fewer limit orders to be placed. The
Commission therefore believes that the
Order Protection Rule is needed to
encourage greater use of limit orders.
The more limit orders available at better
prices and greater size, the more
liquidity available to fill incoming
marketable orders. Moreover, greater
displayed liquidity will at least lower
the search costs associated with trying
to find liquidity. Increased liquidity, in
turn, could lead market participants to
interact more often with displayed
orders, which would lead to greater use
of limit orders, and thus begin the cycle
again. We expect that the end result will
be an NMS that more fully meets the
needs of a broad spectrum of investors.
2. Limiting Protection to Automated and
Accessible Quotations
The original trade-through proposal
sought to strengthen protection against
trade-throughs, while also addressing
problems posed by the inherent
differences in quotations displayed by
automated markets (which are
immediately accessible) and quotations
displayed by manual markets (which are
not), by distinguishing between
automated and non-automated markets
with respect to trade-through protection.
The proposal included an exception that
would have allowed automated markets
to trade through manual markets, but
only up to certain amounts that varied
depending upon the price of the
security. Under the proposal, a market
would have been classified as ‘‘manual’’
if it did not provide for an immediate
automated response to all incoming
orders attempting to access its displayed
quotations.161
At the NMS Hearing, a significant
portion of the discussion of the tradethrough proposal addressed issues
relating to quotations of automated and
161 Proposing
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manual markets. Representatives of two
floor-based exchanges announced their
intent to establish ‘‘hybrid’’ trading
facilities that would offer automatic
execution of orders seeking to interact
with their displayed quotations, while
at the same time maintaining a
traditional floor.162 These
representatives acknowledged the
difficulties posed in developing an
efficient hybrid market, but emphasized
that they were committed to developing
such facilities and that such facilities
were likely to become operational prior
to any implementation of Regulation
NMS.
Other panelists at the NMS Hearing
strongly believed that manual
quotations should not receive any
protection against trade-throughs and
that the proposed trade-through
amounts should be eliminated.163 They
noted, however, that existing order
routing technologies are capable of
identifying, on a quote-by-quote basis,
indications from a market that a
particular quotation is not immediately
and automatically accessible (i.e., is a
manual quotation). Using this
functionality, a trade-through rule could
classify individual quotations as
automated or manual, rather than
classifying an entire market as manual
solely because it displayed manual
quotations on occasion.
To give the public a full opportunity
to comment on these issues, the
Supplemental Release described the
developments at the NMS Hearing and
requested comment on whether a tradethrough rule should protect only
automated quotations and whether the
rule should adopt a ‘‘quote-by-quote’’
approach to identifying protected
quotations.164 The Supplemental
Release also requested comment on the
requirements for an automated
quotation, including whether the rule
should impose a maximum response
time, such as one second, on the total
time for a market to respond to an order
in an automated manner. Comment also
was requested on mechanisms for
enforcing compliance with the
automated quotation requirements.
Nearly all commenters on the original
proposal believed that only automated
quotations should receive protection
against trade-throughs and that therefore
the proposed limitation on tradethrough amounts for manual markets
should be eliminated.165 In response to
162 Hearing
Tr. at 90–92, 94–97, 120.
Tr. at 57–58, 67, 142–143, 157–158.
164 Supplemental Release, 69 FR at 30142–30144.
165 See, e.g., Ameritrade Letter I at 8; Letter from
Lou Klobuchar Jr., President and Chief Brokerage
Officer, E*TRADE Financial Corporation, to
163 Hearing
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these commenters, the Commission
modified the proposed Rule in the
Reproposing Release to protect only
those quotations that are immediately
and automatically accessible. As noted
above in Section II.A.1, a substantial
number of commenters supported the
reproposed Order Protection Rule, with
some commenters specifically
supporting limiting trade-through
protection to automated and
immediately accessible quotations.166
The Commission agrees with
commenters that providing protection to
manual quotations, even limited to
trade-throughs beyond a certain amount,
potentially would lead to undue delays
in the routing of investor orders, thereby
not justifying the benefits of price
protection. The Commission therefore is
adopting, as reproposed, an approach
that excludes manual quotations from
trade-through protection. Under the
Order Protection Rule as adopted,
investors will have the choice of
whether to access a manual quotation
and wait for a response or to access an
automated quotation with an inferior
price and obtain an immediate response.
Moreover, those who route limit orders
will be able to control whether their
orders are protected by evaluating the
extent to which various trading centers
display automated versus manual
quotations.
Commenters expressed differing
views, however, on the appropriate
standards for automated quotations and
on the standards that should govern
‘‘hybrid’’ markets—those that display
both automated and manual quotations.
These issues are discussed below.
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘E*Trade Letter’’) at 6; ICI Letter at
12; Nasdaq Letter II at 9, 14; Letter from Marc
Lackritz, President, Securities Industry Association,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘SIA Letter’’) at 15.
166 See, e.g., Letter from George W. Mann, Jr.,
General Counsel, Boston Stock Exchange, Inc., to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
January 26, 2005 (‘‘BSE Reproposal Letter’’) at 5;
Letter from David Baker, Global Head of Cash
Trading and Global Head of Portfolio Trading,
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated February 3, 2005
(‘‘Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; ICI
Reproposal Letter at 3, n. 6; Letter from James T.
Brett, Managing Director, J.P. Morgan Securities
Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated January 28, 2005 (‘‘JP Morgan Reproposal
Letter’’) at 3–4; Letter from Bernard L. Madoff and
Peter B. Madoff, Bernard L. Madoff Investment
Securities L.L.C., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated February 3, 2005 (‘‘Madoff
Reproposal Letter’’) at 1; Letter from David
Humphreville, President, The Specialist
Association of the New York Stock Exchange, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
January 26, 2005 (‘‘Specialist Assoc. Reproposal
Letter’’) at 2–3.
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a. Standards for Automated Quotations
Nearly all commenters addressing the
issue believed that only quotations that
are truly firm and fully accessible
should qualify as ‘‘automated.’’ 167 To
achieve this goal, they suggested that, at
a minimum, the market displaying an
automated quotation should be required
to provide a functionality for an
incoming order to receive an immediate
and automated (i.e., without human
intervention) execution up to the full
displayed size of the quotation. In
addition, they believed the market
should be required to provide an
immediate and automated response to
the sender of the order indicating
whether the order had been executed (in
full or in part) and an immediate and
automated updating of the quotation. A
number of commenters advocated
requiring a specific time standard for
distinguishing between manual and
automated quotations, ranging from one
second down to 250 milliseconds.168
Other commenters did not believe the
definition of automated quotation
should require a specific time standard,
generally because setting a specific
standard might discourage innovation
and become a ‘‘ceiling’’ on market
performance.169
167 See, e.g., Letter from John J. Wheeler, Vice
President, Director of U.S. Equity Trading,
American Century Investment Management Inc., to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘American Century Letter’’) at 3;
Letter from C. Thomas Richardson, Citigroup Global
Markets, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated July 20, 2004 (‘‘Citigroup
Letter’’) at 6–7; Letter from Gary Cohn, Managing
Director, Goldman, Sachs & Co., to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated July 19, 2004
(‘‘Goldman Sachs Letter’’) at 4–5; ICI Letter at 13;
Morgan Stanley Letter at 7; SIA Letter at 6.
168 See, e.g., Ameritrade Letter I at 6; Bloomberg
Tradebook Letter at 13; Letter from Kenneth R.
Leibler, Chairman, Boston Stock Exchange, Inc., to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘BSE Letter’’) at 7; Consumer
Federation Letter at 3; Letter from David A. Herron,
Chief Executive Officer, Chicago Stock Exchange, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘CHX Letter’’) at 7–8; Letter from C.
Thomas Richardson, Citigroup Global Markets, Inc.,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
July 20, 2004 (‘‘Citigroup Letter’’) at 7; Letter from
Gary Cohn, Managing Director, Goldman, Sachs &
Co., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated July 20, 2004 (‘‘Goldman Sachs Letter’’) at 4;
ICI Letter at 3, 10; Nasdaq Letter II at 3, 13; Letter
from John Martello, Managing Director, Tower
Research Capital LLC, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 30, 2004
(‘‘Tower Research Letter’’) at 5.
169 See, e.g., American Century Letter at 3; Letter
from Salvatore F. Sodano, Chairman & Chief
Executive Officer, American Stock Exchange LLC,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘Amex Letter’’), Exhibit A at 6;
Letter from Matt D. Lyons, Capital Research and
Management Company, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 28, 2004
(‘‘Capital Research Letter’’) at 2; Fidelity Letter I at
8; Letter from John H. Bluher, Executive Vice
President & General Counsel, Knight Trading
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The Commission included in the
Reproposing Release a definition of
automated quotation that incorporated
the three elements suggested by
commenters: 170 (1) Acting on an
incoming order; (2) responding to the
sender of the order; and (3) updating the
quotation. The proposed definition of
automated quotation did not set forth a
specific time standard for responding to
an incoming order. As noted above, a
significant number of commenters on
the Reproposing Release supported the
reproposed Order Protection Rule,171
with a few commenters specifically
supporting the definition of automated
quotation.172 As discussed in detail
below, the Commission has adopted the
definition of automated quotation as
proposed.
In particular, Rule 600(b)(3) requires
that the trading center displaying an
automated quotation must provide an
‘‘immediate-or-cancel’’ (‘‘IOC’’)
functionality for an incoming order to
execute immediately and automatically
against the quotation up to its full size,
and for any unexecuted portion of such
incoming order to be cancelled
immediately and automatically without
being routed elsewhere. The trading
center also must immediately and
automatically respond to the sender of
an IOC order. To qualify as ‘‘automatic,’’
no human discretion in determining any
action taken with respect to an order
Group, to William H. Donaldson, Chairman,
Commission, dated July 2, 2004 (‘‘Knight Letter II’’)
at 5; Letter from James T. Brett, J.P. Morgan
Securities Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated July 8, 2004 (‘‘JP Morgan
Letter’’) at 3; Morgan Stanley Letter at 7; Letter from
Darla C. Stuckey, Corporate Secretary, New York
Stock Exchange, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated July 2, 2004 (‘‘NYSE Letter’’),
Attachment at 3; Letter from David Humphreville,
President, The Specialist Association, to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated June 30,
2004 (‘‘Specialist Assoc. Letter’’) at 8; Letter from
Lisa M. Utasi, President, et al., The Security Traders
Association of New York, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 30, 2004
(‘‘STANY Letter’’) at 4; Letter from George U.
Sauter, Managing Director, The Vanguard Group,
Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated July 14, 2004 (‘‘Vanguard Letter’’) at 4.
170 See, e.g., Letter from Kevin J. P. O’Hara, Chief
Administrative Officer and General Counsel,
Archipelago Holdings, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated September 24, 2004
(‘‘Archipelago Letter’’) at 7; Brut Letter at 7; Letter
from Lisa M. Utasi, President, et al., The Security
Traders Association of New York, Inc., to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated June 30,
2004 (‘‘STANY Letter’’) at 4; Letter from George U.
Sauter, Managing Director, The Vanguard Group, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated July
14, 2004 (‘‘Vanguard Letter’’) at 4.
171 See supra section II.A.1.
172 Letter from Adam Cooper, Senior Managing
Director and General Counsel, Citadel Investment
Group, L.L.C., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated July 9, 2004 (‘‘Citadel
Reproposal Letter’’) at 3; ICI Reproposal Letter at 3,
n. 6; SIA Reproposal Letter at 4–5.
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may be exercised after the time an order
is received. Trading centers are required
to offer this IOC functionality only to
market participants that request
immediate action and response by
submitting an IOC order. Market
participants therefore have the choice of
whether to require an immediate
response from the trading center, or to
allow the market to take further action
on the order (such as by routing the
order elsewhere, seeking additional
liquidity for the order, or displaying the
order). Finally, trading centers are
required to immediately and
automatically update their automated
quotations to reflect any change to their
material terms (such as a change in
price, displayed size, or ‘‘automated’’
status).
The definition of automated quotation
as adopted does not set forth a specific
time standard for responding to an
incoming order. The Commission agrees
with commenters that the standard
should be ‘‘immediate’’ ‘‘i.e., a trading
center’s systems should provide the
fastest response possible without any
programmed delay. Nevertheless, the
Commission also is concerned that
trading centers with well-functioning
systems should not be unnecessarily
slowed down waiting for responses from
a trading center that is experiencing a
systems problem. Consequently, rather
than specifying a specific time standard
that may become obsolete as systems
improve over time, Rule 611(b)(1)
addresses the problem of slow trading
centers by providing an exception for
quotations displayed by trading centers
that are experiencing, among other
things, a material delay in responding to
incoming orders. Given current industry
conditions, the Commission believes
that repeatedly failing to respond within
one second after receipt of an order
would constitute a material delay.173
Accordingly, a trading center would act
reasonably in the current technological
environment if it bypassed the
quotations of another trading center that
had repeatedly failed to respond to
orders within a one-second time frame
(after adjusting for any potential delays
in transmission not attributable to the
other trading center).174 This ‘‘self-help’’
173 Cf. Ameritrade Letter I at 6 (one second
response time is appropriate); Letter from David A.
Herron, Chief Executive Officer, The Chicago Stock
Exchange, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated June 30, 2004 (‘‘CHX Letter’’) at
8 (receive, execute, and report back within one
second); Citigroup Letter at 7 (turnaround time of
no more than one second); Goldman Sachs Letter
at 4 (orders executed or cancelled within not more
than one second).
174 As discussed further in section II.B.3 below,
a trading center utilizing the material delay
exception will be required to establish specific
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37519
remedy, discussed further in sections
II.A.3 and II.B.3 below, will give trading
centers needed flexibility to deal with
another trading center that is
experiencing systems problems, rather
than forcing smoothly-functioning
trading centers to slow down for a
problem trading center.
b. Standards for Automated Trading
Centers
The original trade-through proposal
would have classified a market as
manual if it did not provide automated
access to all orders seeking access to its
displayed quotations. Many commenters
responded positively to the concept of
allowing hybrid markets to display both
automated and manual quotations that
was raised at the NMS Hearing and
discussed in the Supplemental Release.
Most national securities exchanges
believed that focusing on whether
individual quotations are automated or
manual would permit hybrid markets to
function, thereby expanding the range of
trading choices for investors.175 For
example, Amex stated that hybrid
markets would offer investors the choice
to utilize auction markets when
advantageous for them to do so, while
at the same time offering automatic
execution to those investors desiring
speed and certainty of a fast
response.176 A majority of other
commenters also believed that the
application of any trade-through rule
should depend on whether a particular
quotation is automated.177 They
believed that such a rule would achieve
the benefits of encouraging limit orders
and improving market depth and
liquidity, while avoiding indirectly
mandating a particular market structure.
Although generally supportive of the
concept of hybrid markets, several
commenters on the original proposal
expressed concern about how the
‘‘quote-by-quote’’ approach to protected
quotations would operate in practice.178
objective parameters for its use of the exception in
its required policies and procedures.
175 See, e.g., Amex Letter at 5; Letter from William
J. Brodsky, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer,
Chicago Board Options Exchange, Inc., to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated July 1, 2004
(‘‘CBOE Letter’’) at 3; CHX Letter at 7; NYSE Letter
at 4.
176 Amex Letter, Appendix A at 4–5.
177 See, e.g., Letter from Joseph M. Velli, Senior
Executive Vice President, The Bank of New York,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘BNY Letter’’) at 2; Letter from Lou
Klobuchar Jr., President and Chief Brokerage
Officer, E*Trade Financial Corporation, to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated June 30,
2004 (‘‘E*Trade Letter’’) at 6; ICI Letter at 13;
Morgan Stanley Letter at 6.
178 See, e.g., Citigroup Letter at 6; ICI Letter at 13;
Morgan Stanley Letter at 7; Nasdaq Letter II at 13–
14; Vanguard Letter at 5.
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The ICI noted that ‘‘[w]e are concerned
that if it is left completely up to an
individual market’s discretion when a
quote is ‘automated’ or manual, that
market could base its decision on what
is in the best interests of that market and
its members, as opposed to the best
interests of investors and other market
participants.’’ 179 These commenters
suggested that the Commission should
provide clear guidelines as to when and
how a market could switch its
quotations from automated to manual,
and vice versa, so as to prevent abuse
by the market.
After considering the views of
commenters, the Commission included
in the reproposed Rule certain
requirements for a trading center to
qualify as an ‘‘automated trading
center,’’ one of which requires that a
trading center adopt reasonable
standards limiting when its quotations
change from automated quotations to
manual quotations (and vice versa) to
specifically defined circumstances that
promote fair and efficient access to its
automated quotations and that are
consistent with the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets. The reproposed
Rule also provided that only a trading
center that met all of the requirements
could display protected quotations.
Although a substantial number of
commenters supported the reproposed
Rule,180 a few commenters continued to
express concern with the ability of a
trading center to switch from automated
to manual quotations.181
The Commission recognizes the
concerns of commenters regarding the
ability of a trading center to change from
automated to manual quotation mode,
but believes that the requirements
necessary to qualify as an automated
trading center will sufficiently mitigate
this concern. Any standards established
by an SRO trading center to govern
when its quotations change from
179 ICI
Letter at 13.
supra section II.A.1.
181 See Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 7
(questioning whether certain aspects of NYSE’s
hybrid proposal are ‘‘consistent with the
requirement that an automated trading center has
‘adopted reasonable standards limiting when its
quotations change from automated quotations to
manual quotations, and vice versa’ ’’); Letter from
Alistair Brown, Managing Director, Lime Brokerage
LLC, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘Lime Brokerage
Reproposal Letter’’) at 1 (expressing concerns
regarding the operation of NYSE’s hybrid proposal
in conjunction with the Order Protection Rule);
Letter from J. Greg Mills, Managing Director, Head
of Global Equity Trading, RBC Capital Markets
Corporation, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘RBC Capital
Markets Reproposal Letter’’) at 8–9 (requesting that
the Commission establish and define standards as
to when a hybrid market can switch from
automated to manual quotations).
180 See
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automated to manual will be subject to
public notice and comment and
Commission approval pursuant to the
rule filing process of Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act. If a non-SRO trading
center intends to display both
automated and non-automated
quotations, it will be subject to the
oversight of the SRO through whose
facilities its quotations are displayed
with respect to the reasonableness of its
procedures, as well as Commission
oversight.
The Commission therefore is adopting
the definition of automated trading
center as reproposed. The adopted
approach offers flexibility for a hybrid
market to display both automated and
manual quotations, but only when such
a market meets basic standards that
promote fair and efficient access by the
public to the market’s automated
quotations. This approach is designed to
allow markets to offer a variety of
trading choices to investors, but without
requiring other markets and market
participants to route orders to a hybrid
market with quotations that are not truly
accessible.
To qualify as an automated trading
center, the trading center must have
implemented such systems, procedures,
and rules as are necessary to render it
capable of displaying quotations that
meet the action, response, and updating
requirements set forth in the definition
of an automated quotation.182 Further,
the trading center must identify all
quotations other than automated
quotations as manual quotations, and
must immediately identify its
quotations as manual quotations
whenever it has reason to believe that it
is not capable of displaying automated
quotations.183 These requirements will
enable other trading centers readily to
determine whether a particular
quotation displayed by a hybrid trading
center is protected by the Order
Protection Rule. Finally, an automated
trading center must adopt reasonable
standards limiting when its quotations
change from automated quotations to
manual quotations, and vice versa, to
specifically defined circumstances that
promote fair and efficient access to its
automated quotations and are consistent
with the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets.184
These requirements are designed to
promote efficient interaction between a
hybrid market and other trading centers.
The requirement that automated
182 Rule 600(b)(4)(i). The Commission is
modifying this requirement from the reproposal to
include the term ‘‘procedures,’’ to clarify that nonSRO trading centers have procedures, not rules.
183 Rule 600(b)(4)(ii) and (iii).
184 Rule 600(b)(4)(iv).
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quotations cannot be switched on and
off except in specifically defined
circumstances is particularly intended
to assure that hybrid markets do not
give their members, or anyone else,
overbroad discretion to control the
automated or manual status of the
trading center’s quotations, which
potentially could disadvantage market
participants that must protect these
quotations. Changes from automated to
manual quotations, and vice versa, must
be subject to specific, enforceable
limitations as to the timing of switches.
For a trading center to qualify as
entitled to display any protected
quotations, the public in general must
have fair and efficient access to a
trading center’s quotations.
Some commenters on the Reproposing
Release expressed a concern about the
scope of the exception for single-priced
reopenings in Rule 611(b)(3),
particularly in the context of a trading
center switching back and forth from
automated quotation to manual
quotation mode.185 They asserted that
the applicability of the exception to the
recommencement of trading after a nonregulatory trading halt in one market
(such as a trading halt due to an intraday order imbalance) could lead to
disruptive trading activity and provide
an unfair competitive advantage for the
trading center that halted trading. They
believed this could create a significant
loophole in the protections provided by
the Rule. For instance, one commenter
expressed concern that a trading center
could halt trading and reopen solely to
enable it to trade-through other trading
centers.186 Another commenter
expressed concern regarding the
interplay of the proposed exception and
the operation of the NYSE’s proposed
hybrid trading system, stating that it is
unclear what would be considered a
reopening under NYSE’s proposal,
particularly with respect to when a
liquidity refreshment point is reached or
when the quotation is gapped.187 Two
commenters suggested that the
exception apply only to reopenings after
regulatory trading halts.188
The Commission recognizes the
commenters’ concern, but emphasizes
that the exception will not permit a
trading center to declare a trading halt
185 See Letter from C. Thomas Richardson,
Citigroup Global Markets, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated January 26, 2005
(‘‘Citigroup Reproposal Letter’’) at 8; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 6–7; SIA Reproposal Letter at
20–21.
186 Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 8.
187 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 6. See also infra,
note 190.
188 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 7; SIA Reproposal
Letter at 21 (agreeing that the exception should
apply to regulatory halts).
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 29, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
merely to be able to circumvent the
operation of the Order Protection Rule
upon reopening. The exception applies
only to single-priced reopenings and
therefore requires that a trading center
conduct, pursuant to its rules or written
procedures, a formalized and
transparent process for executing orders
during reopening after a trading halt
that involves the queuing and ultimate
execution of multiple orders at a single
equilibrium price.189 In addition, the
trading center must have formally
declared a trading halt pursuant to its
rules or written procedures. Thus, the
exception would not include a situation
where a trading center merely spread its
quotations or switched back to
automated quotation mode from manual
quotation mode.190
3. Workable Implementation of
Intermarket Trade-Through Protection
Several commenters expressed
concern that the original proposed
trade-through rule could not be
implemented in a workable manner,
particularly for high-volume stocks.191
Morgan Stanley, for example, asserted
that an inefficient trading center might
have inferior systems that would delay
routed orders and potentially diminish
their quality of execution.192 Instinet
emphasized that protecting a market’s
quotations ‘‘confers enormous power on
a market * * * Such power can and
will be abused either directly (e.g., by
quoting slower than executing orders) or
indirectly (e.g., not investing in more
than minimum system capacity or
redundancy).’’ 193 Hudson River Trading
noted that markets sometimes
experience temporary systems problems
and questioned how a trade-through
rule would address these scenarios.194
189 See section III.D.3 of the Proposing Release for
a discussion of the practical need for an exception
for single-priced openings and reopenings. 69 FR at
11142.
190 Under NYSE’s hybrid proposal, the turning off
of automatic execution, for example, for a gapquoting situation, the triggering of a liquidity
refreshment point, or the reporting of a block
transaction, would not in and of itself halt trading
and thus trigger a reopening pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3) of Rule 611.
191 See, e.g., Hudson River Trading Letter at 3;
Instinet Letter at 18–19; Morgan Stanley Letter at
11–12; Letter from Edward S. Knight, The Nasdaq
Stock Market, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated September 29, 2004 (‘‘Nasdaq
Letter III’’) at 3.
192 Morgan Stanley Letter at 12.
193 Instinet Letter at 17.
194 Hudson River Trading Letter at 3. This
commenter also raised a number of specific
questions concerning the operation of an
intermarket trade-through rule. To address these
detailed order sequencing and response scenarios,
trading centers will be able to adopt policies and
procedures that reasonably resolve the practical
difficulties of handling fast-arriving orders in a fair
and orderly fashion. For example, if a trading center
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Nasdaq observed that quotations in
many Nasdaq stocks are updated more
than two times per second. It said that
these frequent changes could lead to
many false indications of trade-throughs
and that eliminating these ‘‘false
positives’’ would greatly reduce the
percentage of transactions subject to a
trade-through rule.195 Finally, many
commenters noted that market
participants need the ability to sweep
multiple price levels simultaneously at
different trading centers. They
emphasized that a trade-through rule
should accommodate this trading
strategy by freeing each trading center to
execute orders immediately without
waiting for other trading centers to
update their better priced quotations.196
The Commission agreed with these
commenters that intermarket protection
against trade-throughs must be workable
and implemented in a way that
promotes fair and orderly markets, and
therefore amended the original proposal
in the reproposal to better achieve this
objective in a variety of ways. As
discussed below, commenters were
generally supportive of the measures
included in the reproposal as providing
necessary flexibility, although several
commenters made specific
recommendations as to how to improve
the operation of the exceptions. In
response to these comments, the
Commission has made additional
modifications to the Order Protection
Rule that, in conjunction with the
reproposed measures, will further
promote its workability.
First and most importantly, as
included in the reproposal and as
adopted today, only automated trading
centers, as defined in Rule 600(b)(4),
that are capable of providing immediate
responses to incoming orders are
eligible to have their quotations
protected. Moreover, an automated
trading center is required to identify its
quotations as manual (and therefore not
protected) whenever it has reason to
believe that it is not capable of
providing immediate responses to
orders.197 Thus, a trading center that
experiences a systems problem, whether
routed orders to another market to access the full
displayed size of its protected quotations under the
Order Protection Rule, the routing trading center
will be allowed to continue trading without regard
to that market’s quotations until it has received a
response from such market. With respect to concern
that traders will not be able to control the routing
of their own orders if markets are required to route
out to other markets, a trader’s use of the IOC
functionality specified in Rule 600(b)(3) will
preclude the first market from routing to other
markets.
195 Nasdaq Letter III at 3–4.
196 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 10; Citigroup Letter at
10; E*Trade Letter at 8; Goldman Sachs Letter at 7.
197 Rule 600(b)(4)(iii).
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37521
because of a flood of orders or
otherwise, must immediately identify its
quotations as manual.
The Commission will monitor and
enforce the adopted requirements for
automated trading centers and
automated quotations. Nevertheless, it
concurs with commenters’ concerns that
well-functioning trading centers should
not be dependent on the willingness
and capacity of other markets to meet,
and the Commission’s ability to enforce,
these automation requirements. The
adopted Order Protection Rule therefore
provides a ‘‘self-help’’ remedy that will
allow trading centers to bypass the
quotations of a trading center that fails
to meet the immediate response
requirement. Rule 611(b)(1) sets forth an
exception that applies to quotations
displayed by trading centers that are
experiencing a failure, material delay, or
malfunction of its systems or
equipment. To implement this
exception consistent with the
requirements of Rule 611(a), trading
centers will have to adopt policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
comply with the self-help remedy. Such
policies and procedures will need to set
forth specific objective parameters for
dealing with problem trading centers
and for monitoring compliance with the
self-help remedy, consistent with Rule
611. Given current industry capabilities,
the Commission believes that trading
centers should be entitled to bypass
another trading center’s quotations if it
repeatedly fails to respond within one
second to incoming orders attempting to
access its protected quotations.
Accordingly, trading centers will have
the necessary flexibility to respond to
problems at another trading center as
they occur during the trading day.
Most commenters that addressed the
self-help exception supported the
exception as providing necessary
flexibility to trading centers to avoid
inaccessible quotations.198 Some
commenters, however, objected to a
statement in the Reproposing Release
that a trading center must attempt to
contact the non-responsive trading
center to resolve a problem prior to
disregarding its quotations.199 They
believed that such a requirement would
not be practicable or workable,
especially during real-time trading.200
198 See, e.g., BSE Reproposal Letter at 5; Citigroup
Reproposal Letter at 7; ICI Reproposal Letter at 6,
n. 10; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 7; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 19.
199 Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 7; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 7–8; SIA Reproposal Letter at
19.
200 Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 7; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 7–8.
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One commenter recommended that,
instead of requiring notice as a
‘‘condition precedent,’’ the Commission
require the trading center electing the
self-help exception to contact the slow
or non-responding trading center
immediately after it elects self-help.201
The Commission agrees with the
concerns of the commenters that a prior
notice requirement may not be
practicable or workable in real-time, and
that a trading center should be allowed
simply to notify the non-responding
trading center immediately after (or at
the same time as) electing self-help
pursuant to objective standards
consistent with Rule 611 that are
contained in its policies and
procedures. An electing trading center
must also assess, however, whether the
cause of a problem lies with its own
systems and, if so, take immediate steps
to resolve the problem appropriately.
Another commenter suggested that
third-party vendors that provide
connectivity among trading centers
should be allowed to determine when a
trading center has failed to meet the
immediate response requirement.202
The Commission agrees that a thirdparty vendor could perform such a
function, but, as with use of the
intermarket sweep order exception, the
responsibility for compliance with the
exception remains with the relevant
trading center that uses the services of
the third-party vendor. Thus, a trading
center is responsible for compliance
with the requirements of the exception,
including the obligation to establish,
maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures and to surveil for their
effectiveness, regardless of whether it
routes orders using its own systems or
a third-party vendor’s systems.
Some commenters believed that the
trading center experiencing a problem
should have primary responsibility for
notifying other trading centers and
market participants when such
problems occur and when they are
resolved.203 The definition of automated
market center in both the reproposed
and adopted rule directly imposes this
responsibility on the trading center
experiencing difficulties.204 It requires
such a trading center immediately to
identify its quotations as manual
whenever it has reason to believe that it
is not capable of displaying automated
201 Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 7.
from Richard A. Kornhammer,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Lava
Trading Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘Lava
Reproposal Letter’’) at 3.
203 SIA Reproposal Letter at 19–20; STANY
Reproposal Letter at 12.
204 Rule 600(b)(4)(iii).
202 Letter
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quotations. The trading center must
continue to identify its quotations as
manual until it no longer has reason to
believe that there will be a problem with
its quotations. A trading center that
continues to identify its quotations as
automated when it has reason to believe
otherwise would make a material
misstatement to other trading centers,
investors, and the public.
One commenter believed that, in the
absence of an opt-out, the material delay
exception was too narrowly drawn, and
that market participants should be
allowed to avoid trading with trading
centers for any objective, reasonable
basis as they do today in the context of
fiduciary and best execution obligations,
and not just for slow response times.205
The Commission does not believe that
the scope of the exception should be
expanded to give a trading center the
ability to avoid another trading center
for reasons not related to reliable and
efficient accessibility because to do so
would be inconsistent with the
objectives of the Rule. The exception in
paragraph (b)(1) of Rule 611, however,
covers any failure or malfunction of a
trading center’s systems or equipment,
as well as any material delay. The
Commission believes that there may be
certain limited instances where
repeated, critical system problems, even
those that do not necessarily cause a
delayed response time during trading
(such as systems problems that
repeatedly result in the breaking of
trades), would justify use of the
exception by other trading centers until
the problem trading center has provided
reasonable assurance to all other trading
centers that the problems have been
corrected.206
In many active NMS stocks, the price
of a trading center’s best displayed
quotations can change multiple times in
a single second (‘‘flickering
quotations’’). These rapid changes can
create the impression that a quotation
was traded-through, when in fact the
trade was effected nearly
simultaneously with display of the
quotation.207 To address the problem of
205 Letter from Thomas N. McManus, Managing
Director and Counsel, Morgan Stanley & Co.
Incorporated, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated February 7, 2005 (‘‘Morgan
Stanley Reproposal Letter’’) at 11–12.
206 During the implementation period for the
Order Protection Rule, the Commission staff will be
available to provide guidance to trading centers as
they develop objective standards to implement this
exception consistent with Rule 611.
207 A number of commenters on the original
proposal were concerned about flickering
quotations and recommended an exemption to
address the problem. CHX Letter at 7, n.19; E*Trade
Letter at 9; JP Morgan Letter at 3; Letter from
Richard A. Korhammer, Chairman & Chief
Executive Officer, Lava Trading Inc., to Jonathan G.
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Sfmt 4700
flickering quotations, the Commission
included in the reproposal a proposed
exception from Rule 611 that would
allow trading centers a one-second
‘‘window’’ prior to a transaction for
trading centers to evaluate the
quotations at another trading center.
Specifically, the Commission proposed
that pursuant to Rule 611(b)(8) trading
centers would be entitled to trade at any
price equal to or better than the least
aggressive best bid or best offer, as
applicable, displayed by the other
trading center during that one-second
window. For example, if the best bid
price displayed by another trading
center has flickered between $10.00 and
$10.01 during the one-second window,
the trading center that received the
order could execute a trade at $10.00
without violating Rule 611.
Most of the commenters that
addressed this exception supported
it.208 The SIA noted that the exception
would provide ‘‘much-needed practical
relief.’’ 209 Several commenters,
however, raised issues regarding the
time frame for the exception, with some
supporting a longer window 210 and
some questioning whether it was
necessary to establish a specific time
frame in the rule, rather than through
interpretive guidance.211 One
commenter opposed the exception
because it believed that it would create
an arbitrage opportunity that could be
taken advantage of by computerized
market participants.212 Another
commenter expressed concern that the
exception would enable trading centers
to execute trades internally and route
Katz, Secretary, Commission (no date) (‘‘Lava
Trading Letter’’) at 5; Letter from Marc Lackritz,
President, Securities Industry Association, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘SIA Letter’’) at 10; Letter from Mary
McDermott-Holland, Chairman & John C. Giesea,
President, Security Traders Association, to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated June 30,
2004 (‘‘STA Letter’’) at 5.
208 BSE Reproposal Letter at 5; ICI Reproposal
Letter at 6, n. 10; JP Morgan Reproposal Letter at
4; Letter from Michael J. Lynch, Managing Director,
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
February 4, 2005 (‘‘Merrill Lynch Reproposal
Letter’’) at 7; SIA Reproposal Letter at 3, 18.
209 SIA Reproposal Letter at 18.
210 Letter from Bruce C. Turner, Managing
Director, CIBC World Markets Corp., to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated February 4,
2005 (‘‘CIBC Reproposal Letter’’) at 3 (supporting a
3 second window); SIA Reproposal Letter at 18
(questioning whether the proposed one second
window is too narrow).
211 Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 7; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 18–19.
212 Letter from Meyer S. Frucher, Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer, Philadelphia Stock
Exchange, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 31, 2005 (‘‘Phlx
Reproposal Letter’’) at 3.
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orders using the worst quotation during
the one second window.213
After reviewing the response from
commenters, the Commission is
adopting the exception as proposed.
Allowing a one-second ‘‘window’’ prior
to a transaction for trading centers to
evaluate the quotations at another
trading center will ease implementation
of and compliance with the Order
Protection Rule by giving trading
centers added flexibility to deal with the
practical difficulties of protecting
quotations displayed by other trading
centers, without significantly reducing
the benefits of the Rule.214 It appears
that many of the potential
implementation difficulties with respect
to high-volume stocks are related to the
problem of dealing with sub-second
time increments. The Commission
generally does not believe that the
benefits would justify the costs imposed
on trading centers of attempting to
implement an intermarket price priority
rule at the level of sub-second time
increments. Accordingly, Rule 611 has
been formulated to relieve trading
centers of this burden.215 The
Commission does not believe, however,
that it is necessary to allow more than
a one second window, given the
realities of today’s trading environment
and the frequency with which many
quotations update.216 The Commission
also is concerned that allowing for a
213 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 8. As emphasized
in section II.B.4 below, Rule 611 is designed to
facilitate intermarket trade-through protection only.
It does not lessen the best execution responsibilities
of broker-dealers. In making a best execution
determination, for example, a broker-dealer can not
rely on the Rule’s exception for flickering
quotations to justify ignoring a recently displayed,
better-priced quotation when experience shows that
the quotation is likely to be accessible.
214 Even with the one-second exception for
flickering quotations, Rule 611 will address a large
number of trade-throughs that currently occur in
the equity markets. The substantial trade-through
rates discussed in section II.A.1 above were
calculated using a 3-second window. Rule 611 will
address all of these trade-throughs, assuming no
other exception is applicable.
215 Several commenters raised questions
concerning ‘‘clock drift’’ and time lags between
different data sources. See, e.g., Hudson River
Trading Letter at 2; Letter from Edward S. Knight,
The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated September 29, 2004
(‘‘Nasdaq Letter III’’) at 4. These implementation
issues are most appropriately addressed in the
context of a trading center’s reasonable policies and
procedures. Clearly, one essential procedure will be
implementation of clock synchronization practices
that meet or exceed industry standards. In addition,
a trading center’s compliance with the Order
Protection Rule will be assessed based on the times
that orders and quotations are received, and trades
are executed, at that trading center.
216 Specifically, given the advanced trading and
routing technology available today, a one-second
window should significantly ease the compliance
burden of trading centers for stocks with many
quotation updates.
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Jkt 205001
greater than one second window would
permit the execution of many tradethroughs that could have been
reasonably prevented. The Commission
also notes that opportunities for
arbitrage between trading centers
displaying different prices for the same
NMS stock would exist irrespective of
whether the Commission adopted an
order protection rule, and does not
believe that the adoption of the
flickering quotation exception to the
Rule increases these arbitrage
opportunities.
The Commission also included in the
reproposal paragraphs (b)(5) and (b)(6)
of Rule 611 that provided exceptions for
intermarket sweep orders that respond
to the need of market participants to
access multiple price levels
simultaneously at different trading
centers. Commenters that addressed this
exception overwhelmingly supported
it.217 Citadel, for instance, stated that
the intermarket sweep exception is
crucial, addresses most of its concerns
about the Commission’s initial tradethrough proposal, and would have many
benefits.218 The ICI believed that the
exception would allow institutional
investors to continue to execute largesized orders in an efficient manner.219
As discussed below, the Commission is
adopting this exception as reproposed.
An intermarket sweep order is
defined in Rule 600(b)(30) as a limit
order that meets the following
requirements: (1) The limit order is
identified as an intermarket sweep order
when routed to a trading center; and (2)
simultaneously with the routing of the
limit order, one or more additional limit
orders are routed to execute against all
better-priced protected quotations
displayed by other trading centers up to
their displayed size. These additional
orders also must be marked as
intermarket sweep orders to inform the
receiving trading center that they can be
immediately executed without regard to
protected quotations in other markets.
Paragraph (b)(5) allows a trading center
to execute immediately any order
identified as an intermarket sweep
order, without regard for better-priced
protected quotations displayed at one or
more other trading centers. The
exception is fully consistent with the
principle of protecting the best
displayed prices because it is premised
on the condition that the trading center
or broker-dealer responsible for routing
the order will have attempted to access
217 See, e.g., BSE Reproposal Letter at 5; Citadel
Reproposal Letter at 1, 2; ICI Reproposal Letter at
5; JP Morgan Reproposal Letter at 4; Merrill Lynch
Reproposal Letter at 3; SIA Reproposal Letter at 3.
218 Citadel Reproposal Letter at 1, 2.
219 ICI Reproposal Letter at 5.
PO 00000
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37523
all better-priced protected quotations up
to their displayed size.220 Consequently,
there is no reason why the trading
center that receives an intermarket
sweep order while displaying an
inferior-priced quotation should be
required to delay an execution of the
order.
Paragraph (b)(6) authorizes a trading
center itself to route intermarket sweep
orders and thereby enable immediate
execution of a transaction at a price
inferior to a protected quotation at
another trading center. For example,
paragraph (b)(6) can be used by a dealer
that wishes immediately to execute a
block transaction at a price three cents
away from the NBBO, as long as the
dealer simultaneously routed orders to
access all better-priced protected
quotations. By facilitating intermarket
sweep orders of all kinds, Rule 611 as
adopted will allow a much wider range
of beneficial trading strategies than as
originally proposed. In addition, the
intermarket sweep exception will help
prevent an ‘‘indefinite loop’’ scenario in
which waves of orders otherwise might
be required to chase the same quotations
from trading center to trading center,
one price level at a time.221
Several commenters suggested that
the Commission provide an exception
from the Rule for very actively-traded
and highly liquid NMS stocks.222 They
argued that the trading of these stocks
already is highly efficient and does not
raise the concerns that the Commission
is trying to address through the
proposed Order Protection Rule, and
that imposing the Rule on the trading of
these stocks would not improve
efficiency or protect limit orders in any
meaningful way. They also believed that
providing such an exception would
make the Rule more workable,
particularly for NMS stocks with rapid
quotation updates, thus easing
compliance and surveillance costs of the
Rule. Some of these commenters
220 Reserve size, in contrast, is not displayed.
Trading centers and broker-dealers therefore will
not be required to route orders to access reserve
size.
221 The indefinite loop scenario also is addressed
by: (1) The self-help remedy in Rule 611(b)(1) for
trading centers to deal with slow response times;
and (2) the requirement that trading centers
immediately stop displaying automated (and
therefore protected) quotations when they can no
longer meet the immediate response requirement
for automated quotations.
222 CIBC Reproposal Letter at 1; Citigroup
Reproposal Letter at 2–3 (advocating granting the
exception on a pilot basis); Letter from Richard M.
Whiting, Executive Director and General Counsel,
Financial Services Roundtable, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated February 4, 2005
(‘‘FSR Reproposal Letter’’) at 4; Merrill Lynch
Reproposal Letter at 7; SIA Reproposal Letter at 2,
12–14 (advocating granting the exception on a pilot
basis).
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suggested defining liquidity and active
trading by reference to the frequency of
quotation updates.223
The Commission recognizes that
commenters have raised a serious
concern regarding implementation of
the Order Protection Rule, particularly
for many Nasdaq stocks that are very
actively traded and whose trading is
spread across many different individual
trading centers. An exemption for active
stocks, however, would be particularly
inconsistent with the investor
protection objectives of the Order
Protection Rule because these also are
the stocks that have the highest level of
investor participation. For example, the
need for a trade-through rule to
backstop a broker’s duty of best
execution by assuring that retail
investors receive the best available price
on an order-by-order basis is perhaps
most acute with respect to the most
active NMS stocks.
One of the Commission’s goals
throughout its review of market
structure issues has been to formulate
rules for the national market system that
adequately reflect current technologies
and trading practices and that promote
equal regulation of stocks and markets.
This goal does not reflect a mere desire
for uniformity, but is identified in the
Exchange Act as a vital component of a
truly national market system.224 Active
stocks obviously are a vital part of the
national market system. It should not be
that the orders of ordinary investors are
protected by a Commission rule for
some NMS stocks, but that caveat
emptor still prevails for others.
A number of provisions in the Order
Protection Rule are specifically
designed to address the legitimate
concern that the Rule must be workable
for active stocks. These include the
flickering quotation exception, the
intermarket sweep order exception, and
the self-help exception. The
Commission is committed to working
closely with trading centers and the
securities industry in general to make
these exceptions as practical and useful
as possible, consistent with the price
protection objectives of the Rule and the
technology currently available. In
addition, the operative provision of the
Order Protection Rule requires each
trading center to establish, maintain,
and enforce policies and procedures
that are reasonably designed to prevent
trade-throughs on that trading center of
protected quotations and to comply
223 CIBC Reproposal Letter at 1; Citigroup
Reproposal Letter at 3; SIA Reproposal Letter at 12.
The Commission notes that the existence of rapid
quotation updates does not necessarily mean that a
security is actively traded or highly liquid.
224 Exchange Act Section 11A(c)(1)(F).
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with the Rule’s exceptions.
Implementation of intermarket tradethrough protection is likely to present
the greatest challenge for agency
markets trading active stocks that
handle a large volume of buy and sell
orders and must assure that such orders
interact in an orderly and efficient
manner in compliance with all
applicable priority rules. The
requirements to have procedures
reasonably designed to prevent tradethroughs will mitigate this challenge. In
this regard, the Commission is
encouraged that several trading centers
executing the largest number of agency
orders currently exhibit the lowest rates
of trade-throughs.225
4. Elimination of Proposed Opt-Out
Exception
The rule text of the original proposal
included a broad exception for persons
to opt-out of the best displayed prices if
they provided informed consent. The
Proposing Release indicated that the
exception was particularly intended to
allow investors to bypass manual
markets, to execute block transactions
without moving the market price, and to
help discipline markets that provided
slow executions or inadequate access to
their quotations.226 The Commission
also noted, however, that an opt-out
exception would be inconsistent with
the principle of price protection and, if
used frequently, could undermine
investor confidence that their orders
will receive the best available price. It
therefore requested comment on an
automated execution alternative to the
opt-out exception, under which all
markets would be required to provide
an automated response to electronic
orders. At the subsequent NMS Hearing,
some panelists questioned whether,
assuming only truly accessible and
automated quotations were protected,
there was a valid reason for opting-out
of such a quotation.227 To address this
issue, the Commission requested
comment in the Supplemental Release
on whether the proposed opt-out
exception would be necessary if manual
quotations were excluded from tradethrough protection.
Many commenters on the original
proposal opposed a general opt-out
exception.228 They believed that it
would be inconsistent with the
principle of price protection and
undermine the very benefits the tradethrough rule is designed to provide.
Trade-Through Study, Tables 2, 9.
Release, 69 FR at 11138.
227 Hearing Tr. at 32, 58, 65, 74, 80, 84–85, 154.
228 See supra note 56 (overview of commenters
supporting a strong trade-through rule without an
opt-out exception).
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225 See
226 Proposing
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
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American Century, for example,
asserted that the Commission should
focus on the limit order investors who
have ‘‘opted-in’’ to the NMS, rather than
on those that wish to opt-out.229
Vanguard noted that an opt-out
exception might serve a short-term
desire to obtain an immediate
execution, but ‘‘without recognizing the
second order effect of potentially
significantly reducing liquidity in the
long term.’’ 230 Similarly, the ICI stated
that ‘‘while our members may be best
served on a particular trade by ’optingout’ from executing against the best
price placed in another market, we
believe that in the long term, all
investors will benefit by having a
market structure where all limit orders
are protected and investors are provided
with an incentive to place those orders
in the markets.’’ 231 All of the foregoing
views were conditioned on an
assumption that only accessible,
automated quotations would be
protected by a trade-through rule.
Many other commenters, in contrast,
supported the proposed opt-out
exception.232 Aside from concerns that
a trade-through rule would be
unworkable without an opt-out
exception, which were discussed in the
preceding section, the primary concerns
of these commenters were that, without
an opt-out exception, a trade-through
rule would: (1) Dampen competition
among markets, particularly with
respect to factors other than price; and
(2) restrict the freedom of choice for
market participants to route marketable
orders to trading centers that are most
appropriate for their particular trading
objectives and to achieve best execution.
The Commission formulated the
reproposed Order Protection Rule to
respond to these concerns, while still
preserving the benefits of intermarket
price protection.
In response to the Reproposing
Release, many commenters supported
the reproposed Order Protection
Rule,233 with some specifically
addressing, and supporting, the
elimination of the opt-out exception.234
229 American
Century Letter at 4.
Letter at 5.
231 ICI Letter at 14 (emphasis in original).
232 Approximately 371 commenters supported an
opt-out exception. Approximately 211 of these
commenters opposed a trade-through rule and
endorsed an opt-out to remediate what they viewed
as its adverse effects. Of these 211 commenters, 179
commenters utilized Form Letter C. The remaining
commenters supporting an opt-out exception
included a variety of securities industry
participants and 22 members of Congress.
233 See supra, section II.A.1.
234 Letter from Barbara Roper, Director of Investor
Protection, Consumer Federation of America, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
230 Vanguard
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For example, the ICI noted its strong
support of the decision to eliminate the
opt-out exception, agreeing that the
elimination of protection for manual
quotations makes such an exception
unnecessary.235 Other commenters
continued to express the concern that a
trade-through rule without an opt-out
exception would impede intermarket
competition and innovation and restrict
the ability of investors and market
intermediaries to choose how best to
execute their or their customers’ orders
to achieve best execution.236 For the
reasons discussed more fully below,
after carefully considering the views of
all commenters, the Commission has
determined to adopt the Order
Protection Rule as reproposed, without
an opt-out exception.
a. Preserving Competition Among
Markets
Many commenters believed that an
opt-out exception was necessary to
promote competition among trading
centers, particularly competition based
on factors other than price, such as
speed of response. For example, 179
commenters on the original proposal
submitted letters stating that, in the
absence of an opt-out exception, ‘‘Reg.
NMS will freeze market development
and, over the long term, could hurt
investors.’’ 237 Morgan Stanley asserted
that allowing market participants to optout ‘‘would reward markets that provide
faster and surer executions, and
conversely, would penalize those
markets that are materially slower or are
displaying smaller quote sizes by
ignoring those quotes.’’ 238 Although
agreeing that changes made to the
reproposal in the absence of an opt-out
exception generally would strengthen
any Order Protection Rule, Morgan
Stanley continued to be concerned that,
without an opt-out exception, the Order
Protection Rule may not provide a
sufficient amount of flexibility to market
January 24, 2005 (‘‘CFA Reproposal Letter’’) at 1; ICI
Reproposal Letter at 5, n. 8; Letter from Kenneth S.
Janke, Chairman, National Association of Investors
Corporation, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 14, 2005 (‘‘NAIC
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2.
235 ICI Reproposal Letter at 5, n. 8.
236 See, e.g., Letter from Daniel M. Clifton,
Executive Director, American Shareholder
Association, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘ASA
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Fidelity Reproposal Letter
at 3–6; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 5; Morgan
Stanley Reproposal Letter at 2, 5–6; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 3–4; RBC Capital Markets
Reproposal Letter at 3–5. Comments discussing
concerns that a trade-through rule would be
unworkable without an opt-out exception are
discussed in the preceding section.
237 Letter Type C.
238 Morgan Stanley Letter at 11–12.
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participants that encounter a minimally
competitive or outright non-compliant
trading center.239 Instinet believed that,
without an opt-out exception, a tradethrough rule ‘‘would virtually eliminate
intermarket competition by forcing
operational and technological
uniformity on each marketplace,
negating price competition, system
performance, or any other
differentiating feature that a market may
develop.’’ 240 In its comments on the
Reproposing Release, Instinet continued
to oppose an Order Protection Rule
without an opt-out exception, stating
that it does not believe that the
exclusion of manual quotations from
protection and the proposed ‘‘tailored
exceptions’’ are adequate substitutes for
an opt-out exception.241
The Commission recognizes the vital
importance of preserving vigorous
competition among markets, but
continues to believe that commenters
have overstated the risk that such
competition will be eliminated by
adoption of an order protection rule
without a general opt-out exception.
The Commission believes that markets
likely will have strong incentives to
continue to compete and innovate to
attract both marketable orders and limit
orders. Market participants and
intermediaries responsible for routing
marketable orders, consistent with their
desire to achieve the best price and their
duty of best execution, will continue to
rank trading centers according to the
total range of services provided by those
markets. Such services include cost,
speed of response, sweep functionality,
and a wide variety of complex order
types.242 The most competitive trading
center will be the first choice for routing
marketable orders, thereby enhancing
the likelihood of execution for limit
orders routed to that trading center.
Because likelihood of execution is of
such great importance to limit orders,
routers of limit orders will be attracted
to this preferred trading center. More
limit orders will enhance the depth and
liquidity offered by the preferred trading
Stanley Reproposal Letter at 6.
Letter at 19.
241 Instinet Reproposal Letter at 5. Other
commenters on the Reproposing Release also
continued to express a concern about the impact the
reproposed Rule would have on competition and
innovation. See, e.g., JP Morgan Reproposal Letter
at 7–8; RBC Capital Reproposal Letter at 3–4; Letter
from Jeffrey T. Brown, Senior Vice President,
Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated February 1, 2005
(‘‘Schwab Reproposal Letter’’) at 2.
242 One commenter expressed the view that
market participants would continue to compete on
a total range of services even with an Order
Protection Rule without an opt-out and with depthof-book protection. Vanguard Reproposal Letter at
4.
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240 Instinet
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center, thereby increasing its
attractiveness for marketable orders, and
beginning the cycle all over again.
Importantly, Rule 611 will not require
that limit orders be routed to any
particular market. Consequently,
competitive forces will be fully
operative to discipline markets that offer
poor services to limit orders, such as
limiting the extent to which limit orders
can be cancelled in changing market
conditions or providing slow speed of
cancellation.
Conversely, trading centers that offer
poor services, such as a slower speed of
response, likely will rank near the
bottom in order-routing preference of
most market participants and
intermediaries. Whenever the leastpreferred trading center is merely
posting the same price as other trading
centers, orders will be routed to other
trading centers. As a result, limit orders
displayed on the least preferred trading
center will be least likely to be executed
in general. Moreover, such limit orders
will be the least likely to be executed
when prices move in favor of the limit
orders, and the most likely to be
executed only when prices are moving
against the limit order, adding the cost
of ‘‘adverse selection’’ to the cost of a
low likelihood of execution. In sum, the
lowest ranked trading center in orderrouting preference, with or without
intermarket price protection, will suffer
the consequences of offering a poor
range of services to the routers of
marketable orders.243 The Commission
therefore does not believe that the
absence of an opt-out exception would
freeze market development or eliminate
competition among markets.
Commenters have, however,
identified a troubling potential for
intermarket price protection to lessen
the competitive discipline that market
participants now can impose on
inefficient trading centers in Nasdaq
stocks. The Order Protection Rule
generally requires that trading centers
match the best quoted prices, cancel
orders without an execution, or route
orders to the trading centers quoting the
best prices. This is good for investors
generally, but may not be if the quoting
market is inefficient. For example, a
trading center may have poor systems
that do not process orders quickly and
243 As discussed below in section III.A.2, a
competitive problem could arise if a least preferred
market was allowed to charge exorbitant fees to
access its protected quotations, and then pass most
of the fee on as rebates to liquidity providers to
offset adverse selection costs. To address the
problem of such an ‘‘outlier’’ market, Rule 610(c)
sets forth a uniform fee limitation for accessing
protected quotations, as well as manual quotations
that are the best bid or best offer of an exchange,
The NASDAQ Market Center, or the ADF.
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reliably. Or a low-volume trading center
may not be nearly as accessible as a
high-volume trading center.
Currently, consistent with their best
execution and other agency
responsibilities, participants in the
market for Nasdaq stocks can choose not
to deal with any trading center that they
believe provides unsatisfactory services.
Under the Order Protection Rule, market
participants can limit their involvement
with any trading center to routing IOC
orders to access only the best bid or best
offer of the trading center. Nevertheless,
even this limited involvement
potentially could lessen the competitive
discipline that otherwise would be
imposed on an inefficient trading
center. The Commission therefore
believes that this potentially serious
effect must be addressed at multiple
levels in addition to the specific
exceptions included in the Rule that
were discussed above.
First, trading centers themselves have
a legal obligation to meet their
responsibilities under the Exchange Act
to provide venues for trading that is
orderly and efficient.244 Through
registration and other requirements, the
Exchange Act regulatory regime is
designed to preclude entities that are
not capable of meeting high standards of
conduct from doing business with the
public. This critically important
function would be undermined by a
trading center that displayed quotations
in the consolidated data stream, but
could not, because of poor systems or
otherwise, provide efficient access to
market participants and efficient
handling of their orders. In addition, a
trading center would violate its
Exchange Act responsibilities if it failed
to comply fully with the requirements
set forth in Rule 600(b)(3) and (4) for
automated quotations and automated
trading centers. In particular, an
automated trading center must
implement such systems, procedures,
and rules as are necessary to render it
capable of meeting the requirements for
automated quotations and must
immediately identify its quotations as
manual whenever it has reason to
believe that it is not capable of
displaying automated quotations. These
requirements place an affirmative and
vitally important legal duty on trading
centers to identify their quotations as
manual at the first sign of a problem, not
after a problem has fully manifested
itself and thereby caused a rippling
effect at other trading centers that
244 See, e.g., Exchange Act Sections 6(b)(1) and
6(b)(5); Exchange Act Section 15; Exchange Act
Sections 15A(b)(2) and 15A(b)(6); Exchange Act
Section 11A(a)(1)(C); Regulation ATS.
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damages investors and the public
interest.
Second, those responsible for the
regulatory function at SROs have an
affirmative responsibility to examine for
and enforce all Exchange Act
requirements and the SRO rules that
apply to the trading centers that fall
within their regulatory authority. One of
the key policy justifications for a selfregulatory system is that industry
regulators have close proximity to, and
significant expertise concerning, their
particular trading centers. In addition,
industry regulators typically have
greater flexibility to address problems
than governmental authorities.
Implementation of the Order Protection
Rule will heighten the importance of
effective self-regulation. Those
responsible for the market operation
functions of an SRO may have business
incentives that militate against dealing
with potential problems in an effective
and forthright manner. Regulatory
personnel are expected to be
independent of such business concerns
and have an affirmative responsibility to
prevent improper factors from
interfering with an SRO’s full
compliance with regulatory
requirements.
Finally, the Commission itself plays a
critical role in the Exchange Act
regulatory regime. Effective
implementation of the Order Protection
Rule also will depend on the
Commission taking any action that is
necessary and appropriate to address
trading centers that fail to meet fully
their regulatory requirements. The
Commission and its staff must continue
to monitor the markets closely for signs
of problems and listen to the concerns
of market participants as they arise,
especially with regard to the new
requirements imposed by the Order
Protection Rule. Quick and effective
action will be needed to assure that all
responsible parties do not feel that
inattention to problems is an acceptable
course of action.
b. Promoting the Interests of Both
Marketable Orders and Limit Orders
Many commenters that supported an
opt-out exception believed that an
ability to opt-out of the best displayed
prices was necessary to promote full
freedom of choice in the routing of
marketable orders, and particularly to
allow factors other than quoted prices to
be considered. For example, 179
commenters on the original proposal
submitted a letter stating that
‘‘[i]nvestors are driven by price, but
prices that are inaccessible either
because of lagging execution time
within a market or insufficient liquidity
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at the best price point impact the overall
costs associated with trading securities
in today’s markets. The Trade Through
rule may harm investors by restricting
their ability to achieve best execution,
and investors deserve the opportunity to
make choices.’’ 245 Similarly, Fidelity
asserted that ‘‘as a fiduciary to the
mutual funds under our management,
we should be free to reach our own
informed judgment regarding the market
center where our funds’ trades are to be
executed, particularly when delay may
open the way for exchange floor
members and others to exploit an
informational advantage that arises not
from their greater investment or trading
acumen but merely from their privileged
presence on the physical trading
floor.’’ 246 Fidelity continues to support
an opt-out exception, stating in response
to the Reproposing Release that there is
a substantial risk that an institutional
investor, seeking to trade a large block
of stock, will be put to a ‘‘distinct and
unfair’’ disadvantage if it cannot
negotiate an all-in price for a block trade
with a dealer.247
The Commission agrees that the
interests of investors in choosing the
trading center to which to route
marketable orders are vitally important,
but believes that advocates of the optout exception have failed to consider
the interests of all investors—both those
who submit marketable orders and those
who submit limit orders. A fair and
efficient NMS must serve the interests of
both types of investors. Moreover, their
interests are inextricably linked
together. Displayed limit orders are the
primary source of public price
discovery. They typically set quoted
spreads, supply liquidity, and in general
establish the public ‘‘market’’ for a
stock. The quality of execution for
marketable orders, which, in turn, trade
with displayed liquidity, depends to a
great extent on the quality of markets
established by limit orders (i.e., the
narrowness of quoted spreads and the
available liquidity at various price
levels).
Limit orders, however, make the first
move—when submitted, they must be
displayed rather than executed, and
therefore offer a ‘‘free option’’ for other
245 Letter
Type C.
Letter I at 6–7.
247 Fidelity Reproposal Letter at 3. Other
commenters continued to express a concern that the
reproposed Order Protection Rule would limit the
ability of investors and market intermediaries to
choose how to best execute orders, and, by focusing
exclusively on price, would interfere with the
ability of institutional investors to achieve best
execution. See, e.g., JP Morgan Reproposal Letter at
4–5; Morgan Stanley Reproposal Letter at 5; RBC
Capital Reproposal Letter at 4–5; UBS Reproposal
Letter at 2.
246 Fidelity
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market participants to trade a stock by
submitting marketable orders and taking
the liquidity supplied by limit orders.
Consequently, the fate of limit orders—
whether or when they receive an
execution—is dependent on the choices
made by those who route marketable
orders. Much of the time, the interests
of marketable orders in obtaining the
best available price are aligned with
those of limit orders that are displaying
the best available price. But, as shown
by the significant trade-through rates
discussed in section II.A.1 above (even
for automated quotations in Nasdaq
stocks), the interests of marketable
orders and limit orders are not always
aligned.
One important example of where the
interests of limit orders and marketable
orders often diverge is large, block
trades. Several commenters noted that
they often are willing to bypass the best
quoted prices if they can obtain an
immediate execution of large orders at
a fixed price that is several cents away
from the best prices.248 Yet these block
trades often will be priced based on the
displayed quotations in a stock. They
thereby demonstrate the ‘‘free-riding’’
economic externality that, as discussed
in section II.A.1 above, is one of the
factors at the heart of the need for
intermarket price protection. To achieve
the full benefits of intermarket price
protection, all investors should be
governed by a uniform rule that
encompasses their individual trades.
For any particular trade, an investor
may believe that the best course of
action is to bypass displayed quotations
in favor of executing larger size
immediately. The Commission believes,
however, that the long-term strength of
the NMS as a whole is best promoted by
fostering greater depth and liquidity,
and it follows from this that the
Commission should examine the extent
to which it can encourage the limit
orders that provide this depth and
liquidity to the market at the best prices.
Allowing individual market participants
to pick and choose when to respect
displayed quotations could undercut the
fundamental reason for displaying the
liquidity in the first place.
Consequently, the Commission is
adopting the Order Protection Rule as
reproposed without an opt-out
exception because such an exception
could severely detract from the benefits
of intermarket order protection. Instead,
Rule 611 addresses the concerns of
those who otherwise may have felt they
needed to opt-out of protected
quotations in a more targeted manner. In
248 See, e.g., Fidelity Letter I at 9; Morgan Stanley
Letter at 12.
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particular, the Rule incorporates an
approach that seeks to serve the
interests of both marketable orders and
limit orders by appropriately balancing
these interests in the contexts where
they may diverge. In this way, the Order
Protection Rule is designed to promote
the fairness and efficiency of the NMS
for all investors.
First and most importantly, Rule 611
protects only immediately accessible
quotations that are available through
automatic execution. It does not require
investors submitting marketable orders
to access ‘‘maybe’’ quotations that, after
arrival of the order, are subject to
human intervention and thereby create
the potential for other market
participants to determine whether to
honor the quotation. Moreover, as
discussed in section II.A.2 above, Rule
611 includes a variety of provisions
designed to assure that marketable
orders must be routed only to wellfunctioning trading centers displaying
executable quotations.
Second, Rule 611 has been formulated
to promote the interests of investors
seeking immediate execution of specific
order types that reduce their total
trading costs, particularly for larger
orders. Although the Rule does not
provide a general exception for block
orders, it addresses the legitimate
interest of investors in obtaining an
immediate execution in large size (and
thereby minimizing price impact). The
intermarket sweep order exception will
allow broker-dealers to continue to
facilitate the execution of block
orders.249 The entire size of a large order
can be executed immediately at any
price, so long as the broker-dealer routes
orders seeking to execute against the full
displayed size of better-priced protected
quotations. The size of the order
therefore need not be parceled out over
time in smaller orders that might tip the
market about pending orders. By both
allowing immediate execution of the
large order and protecting better-priced
quotations, Rule 611 is designed to
appropriately balance the interests for
investors on both sides of the market.250
249 Cf. ICI Reproposal Letter at 5 (stating its belief
that the intermarket sweep exception would allow
institutional investors to continue to execute largesized orders in an efficient manner).
250 One commenter requested that the
Commission consider the practical aspects of
executing and reporting large block transactions in
compliance with the Rule. For instance, if a dealer
agreed to execute a large institutional investor order
at three cents outside the market and sent
intermarket sweep orders to execute against
protected quotations at the same time that it
executed and reported the trade, practical issues
could arise as to how the dealer could pass through
to the investor any better-priced executions of the
sweep orders without canceling and correcting the
reported block trade. Morgan Stanley Reproposal
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37527
In the Reproposing Release, the
Commission stated that it preliminarily
did not believe that ‘‘stopped’’ orders
should be excepted from Rule 611,251
and requested comment on the extent to
which the proposed rule language
appropriately designated those
transactions that should be excepted
because they are consistent with the
price protection objectives of Rule
611.252 Several commenters on the
Reproposing Release recommended that
the Commission except the execution of
stopped orders from the operation of
Rule 611.253 They believed that, because
dealers executing stopped orders
provide a source of liquidity that does
not otherwise exist in the market at the
time the order is stopped, the use of
stopped orders represents a common
and valuable form of capital
commitment by dealers that inures to
the benefit of investors. They were
concerned that, in the absence of an
exception for stopped orders, dealers
may be unwilling to commit capital in
this manner, or, at a minimum, may
charge investors a greater risk premium
for the capital commitment.
The Commission agrees that stopped
orders can provide a valuable tool for
the execution of institutional orders, but
is concerned that a broad exception for
all stopped orders would undermine the
price protection objectives of Rule 611.
Several commenters recognized this
concern and suggested criteria for a
stopped order exception that would
limit the possibility of abuse.254 For
instance, UBS suggested limiting the
applicability of the exception to
instances where the stop price is ‘‘in the
Letter at 7–9. The Commission agrees that
compliance with Rule 611 should not interfere with
the ability of a dealer to provide its customers the
benefit of better executions and should not cause
confusion with respect to the accurate reporting of
transactions. As the commenter noted, the practical
issues for reporting block trades could be resolved
in a variety of ways. The Commission will work
with the industry during the implementation period
to achieve the most appropriate resolution.
251 For purposes of this discussion and Rule 611,
a stopped order is an order for which a trading
center has guaranteed, at the time of order receipt,
an execution at a price no worse than a specified
price (referred to in this discussion as the ‘‘stop’’
price).
252 Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77440 n. 149.
253 See, e.g., Letter from Bruce Lisman, Bear,
Stearns & Co., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 27, 2005 (‘‘Bear Stearns
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2–3; Citigroup Reproposal
Letter at 7–8; Morgan Stanley Reproposal Letter at
9–10; SIA Reproposal Letter at 16–18; UBS
Reproposal Letter at 6. But see Goldman Sachs
Letter at 7–8, n. 14; Letter from Mary Yeager,
Assistant Secretary, New York Stock Exchange, Inc.,
to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
January 12, 2005 (‘‘NYSE Reproposal Letter I’’),
Detailed Comments at 3 n. 13.
254 Bear Stearns Reproposal Letter at 3; Morgan
Stanley Reproposal Letter at 10; SIA Reproposal
Letter at 17–18; UBS Reproposal Letter at 6.
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money’’ when elected (i.e., below the
current best bid for buy stops and above
the current best offer for sell stops). In
these circumstances, the dealer is
required to commit capital at a
disadvantageous price that would be
exacerbated if the dealer also had to
satisfy protected quotations at the time
it executed the stopped order.255 The
SIA also suggested that a stopped order
guarantee subject to the exception only
be available to a non-broker-dealer or a
broker-dealer for the benefit of a nonbroker-dealer customer and that the
customer must agree to the stopped
price on an order-by-order basis.256
In response to these comments, the
Commission has adopted a separate
exception for the execution of stopped
orders in Rule 611(b)(9). The exception
is narrowly drawn to prevent abuse,
while also facilitating the continued use
of stopped orders by institutional
customers. As suggested by the
commenters, the exception will apply to
the execution of so-called ‘‘underwater’’
stops. Specifically, the exception
applies to the execution by a trading
center of a stopped order when the price
of the execution of the order was, for a
stopped buy order, lower than the
national best bid in the stock at the time
of execution or, for a stopped sell order,
higher than the national best offer in the
stock at the time of execution. To
qualify for the exception, the stopped
order must be for the account of a
customer and the customer must have
agreed to the stop price on an order-byorder basis.257
In addition, as proposed in the
Reproposing Release, paragraph (b)(7) of
Rule 611 sets forth an exception that
would allow the execution of volumeweighted average price (‘‘VWAP’’)
orders, as well as other types of orders
that are not priced with reference to the
quoted price of a stock at the time of
execution and for which the material
terms were not reasonably available at
the time the commitment to execute the
order was made. This exception will
serve the interests of marketable orders
and is consistent with the principle of
protecting the best displayed quotations.
Several commenters suggested that
Rule 611 should include exceptions for
additional types of transactions, such as
those involving an equity security and
255 UBS Reproposal Letter at 6. See also SIA
Reproposal Letter at 17 (recommending that the
exception only be available if the customer that
received the stop guarantee is on the advantaged
side and the dealer that gave the guarantee is on the
disadvantaged side).
256 SIA Reproposing Letter at 17.
257 Rule 611(b)(9)(i), (ii), and (iii). ‘‘Customer’’ is
defined in Rule 600(b)(16) as any person that is not
a broker or dealer.
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a related derivative (for instance, a
stock-option transaction), risk arbitrage
strategies, and convertible or merger
arbitrage.258 These commenters noted
that the economics of these transactions
are based on the relationship between
the prices of a security and the related
derivative (or between two related
securities), and the execution of one
trade is contingent upon the execution
of the other trade. Thus, the parties to
these transactions are less concerned
with the price of the individual
transactions than with the spread
between the individual transaction
prices. They believed that the
economics of these transactions would
be distorted, and additional risk would
be introduced, if the dealer or an
investor was forced to comply with the
Order Protection Rule with respect to
the execution of one or both sides of the
transaction.259
The Commission has given a great
deal of consideration to the comments
favoring a general exception from Rule
611 for broad categories of transactions,
variously described as ‘‘contingency’’
transactions, ‘‘arbitrage’’ transactions,
‘‘spread’’ transactions, and transactions
priced with reference to derivatives.
Any exception for such a broad category
of transactions, however, potentially
could unduly detract from the price
protection objectives of the Rule. For
example, one of the well-known benefits
of arbitrage transactions in general is
that they promote more efficient pricing
of securities in the public markets.
Excluding all such transactions from
interacting with public quotations
potentially could lessen the price
discovery benefits of arbitrage.
Accordingly, the Commission has
determined that the most appropriate
process to handle suggestions that
specific types of transactions should be
excluded from the coverage of Rule 611
is through its exemptive procedure set
forth in paragraph (d) of the Rule. The
extended implementation period for
Regulation NMS will provide a full
opportunity for the public to request
specific exemptions that they believe
are necessary or appropriate in the
public interest and consistent with the
protection of investors. Of course, the
Commission also will consider
exemptive requests once Regulation
NMS has been implemented.
Even given all the exceptions set forth
in Rule 611, however, the Commission
recognizes that the existence of
258 Bear Stearns Reproposal Letter at 3–4;
Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 7; Morgan Stanley
Reproposal Letter at 10; SIA Reproposal Letter at
16.
259 See, e.g., Morgan Stanley Reproposal Letter at
10.
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intermarket price protection without an
opt-out exception may interfere to some
extent with the extremely short-term
trading strategies of some market
participants. Some of these strategies
can be affected by a delay in orderrouting or execution of as little as 3⁄10ths
of one second. Given the current NMS
structure with multiple competing
markets, any protection of displayed
quotations in one market could affect
the implementation of short-term
trading strategies in another market.
This conflict between protecting the
best displayed prices and facilitating
short-term trading strategies raises a
fundamental policy question—when
such a conflict exists, should the overall
efficiency of the NMS defer to the needs
of short-term traders, many of whom
rarely intend to hold a position
overnight? Or should the NMS serve the
needs of longer-term investors, both
large and small, that will benefit
substantially from intermarket price
protection?
The Commission believes that two of
the most important public policy
functions of the secondary equity
markets are to minimize trading costs
for long-term investors and to reduce
the cost of capital for listed companies.
These functions are inherently
connected, because the cost of capital of
listed companies is influenced by the
transaction costs of those who are
willing to accept the investment risk of
holding corporate stock for an extended
period. To the extent that the interests
of short-term traders and market
intermediaries in a broad opt-out
exception conflict with those of
investors, the Commission believes that
the interests of long-term investors are
entitled to take precedence.260 In this
way, the NMS will fulfill its Exchange
Act objectives to promote fair and
efficient equity markets for investors
and to serve the public interest.
5. Scope of Protected Quotations
The original trade-through proposal
would have protected all quotations
disseminated by a Plan processor in the
consolidated quote stream. Currently,
the scope of these quotations depends
on the regulatory status of an SRO.
Under Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1
(‘‘Quote Rule’’) (redesignated as Rule
602), exchange SROs are required to
provide only their best bids and offers
(‘‘BBOs’’) in a stock. In contrast, a
national securities association, which
currently encompasses Nasdaq’s trading
facilities and the NASD’s ADF, must
provide BBOs of its individual
members. Consequently, the original
260 See
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proposal would have protected only a
single BBO of an exchange and not any
additional quotations in its depth of
book (‘‘DOB’’). For Nasdaq facilities and
the ADF, however, the proposal would
have protected member BBOs at
multiple price levels. The Proposing
Release requested comment on whether
only a single BBO for Nasdaq and the
ADF should be protected.261
Commenters expressed concern that
the proposed rule text would protect the
BBOs of individual market makers and
ATSs in Nasdaq’s facilities and the
ADF, but only a single BBO of exchange
SROs.262 The Specialist Association, for
example, believed that it would be
unfair to offer greater protection to the
quotations of members of an association
SRO than to those of an exchange
SRO.263 Morgan Stanley stated that to
‘‘equalize the protections available to all
market participants, we believe the
Commission should treat SuperMontage
as a single market for purposes of the
trade-through rule, instead of treating
each individual Nasdaq market maker as
a separate quoting market
participant.’’ 264
The Commission agrees with these
commenters that Rule 611 should not
mandate a regulatory disparity between
the quotations displayed through
exchange SROs and those displayed
through Nasdaq facilities and the ADF.
Potentially, Nasdaq and the ADF could
attract a significant number of limit
orders if they were able to offer order
protection that was not available at
exchange SROs. This result would not
be consistent with the Exchange Act
goals of fair competition among markets
and the equal regulation of markets.265
The Commission therefore modified the
definition of ‘‘protected bid’’ and
‘‘protected offer’’ in the reproposal to
encompass the BBOs of an exchange,
Nasdaq, and the ADF. In this way,
exchange markets would be treated
comparably with Nasdaq and the ADF.
The Proposing Release also addressed
the issue of extending trade-through
protection to DOB quotations, but
questioned whether protecting all DOB
quotations would be feasible at this
time.266 Comment specifically was
requested, however, on whether
protection should be extended beyond
the BBOs of SROs if individual markets
voluntarily provided DOB quotations
261 Proposing
Release, 69 FR at 11136.
e.g., Goldman Sachs Letter at 6; Morgan
Stanley Letter at 8; NYSE Letter, Attachment at 4;
Specialist Assoc. Letter at 3.
263 Specialist Assoc. Letter at 3.
264 Morgan Stanley Letter at 8.
265 Exchange Act Sections 11A(a)(1)(C)(ii) and
11A(c)(1)(F).
266 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11136.
262 See,
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through the facilities of an effective
national market system plan.267 At the
subsequent NMS Hearing, a panelist
specifically endorsed the policy and
feasibility of extending trade-through
protection to DOB quotations, as long as
such quotations were automated and
accessible: ‘‘Automatically executable
quotes, whether they are on the top of
the book or up and down the book,
should be protected by the tradethrough rule, and manual quotes should
not be. This is a simple and technically
easy idea to implement* * *.’’268
Most of the subset of comment letters
on the original proposal that specifically
addressed the DOB issue supported the
approach of extending trade-through
protection to all limit orders displayed
in the NMS, not merely the BBOs of the
various markets.269 The Consumer
Federation of America, for example,
stated that ‘‘such an approach would
result in better price transparency and
help to address complaints that decimal
pricing has reduced price transparency
because of the relatively thin volume of
trading interest displayed in the best bid
and offer.’’ 270 The ICI noted that
protecting all displayed limit orders
might not be feasible at this time, but
urged the Commission to examine the
issue further.271
The Commission recognized,
however, that other commenters may
have chosen not to address the
alternative of protecting voluntary DOB
quotations because it was not included
in the proposed rule text. In the
Reproposing Release, therefore, the
Commission proposed rule text for two
alternatives: (1) The Market BBO
Alternative that would protect only the
BBOs of the exchange SROs, Nasdaq,
and the ADF; or (2) the Voluntary Depth
Alternative that, in addition to
protecting BBOs, would protect the DOB
quotations that markets voluntarily
disseminate in the consolidated
quotations stream. The Commission
requested comment on which of the two
alternatives would most further the
267 Id.
268 Hearing Tr. at 57 (testimony of Thomas
Peterffy, Chairman, Interactive Brokers Group).
269 American Century Letter at 2; Ameritrade
Letter I at 4; BNY Letter at 2; Capital Research Letter
at 2; Consumer Federation Letter at 2; Goldman
Sachs Letter at 6; ICI Letter at 8. See also ArcaEx
Letter at 7 (supported trade-through protection for
exchange-listed stocks only, but for entire depth-ofbook). But see Letter from Samuel F. Lek, Chief
Executive Officer, Lek Securities Corporation, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
May 24, 2004 (‘‘Lek Securities Letter’’) at 7; Letter
from David Humphreville, President, the Specialist
Association of the New York Stock Exchange, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘Specialist Assoc. Letter’’) at 3.
270 Consumer Federation Letter at 2.
271 ICI Letter at 8.
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Exchange Act objectives for the NMS in
a practical and workable manner. In
particular, comment was requested on
whether extending trade-through
protection to DOB quotations would
significantly increase the benefits of the
Order Protection Rule, and on the effect
that adoption of the Voluntary Depth
Alternative would have on competition
among markets. The Commission also
requested comment on whether the
Voluntary Depth Alternative could be
implemented in a practical and costeffective manner.272
A large majority of commenters that
supported the reproposed Order
Protection Rule supported the Market
BBO Alternative.273 Many commenters
272 See Section II.A.5 in the Reproposing Release
for a detailed discussion of the request for comment
on the Market BBO Alternative and the Voluntary
Depth Alternative.
273 Approximately 1,556 commenters expressed
support for the Market BBO Alternative, of which
approximately 1,411 were form letters. See, e.g.,
Letter from Brendan R. Dowd and Zdrojeski, CoPresidents, Alliance of Floor Brokers, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated January 20,
2005 (‘‘Alliance of Floor Brokers Reproposal
Letter’’) at 1; Letter from Neal L. Wolkoff, Acting
Chief Executive Officer, American Stock Exchange,
LLC, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated January 27, 2005 (‘‘Amex Reproposal Letter’’)
at 2; Bear Stearns Reproposal Letter at 1 (if properly
modified); Letter from Minder Cheng, Managing
Director, CIO, US Active Equities, Global Head of
Equity and Currency Trading, Barclays Global
Investors, N.A., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘BGI
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Letter from Joseph M.
Velli, Senior Executive Vice President, The Bank of
New York, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘BNY
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; BSE Reproposal Letter at
2; Letter from David A. Herron, Chief Executive
Officer, The Chicago Stock Exchange, to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated January 26,
2005 (‘‘CHX Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Letter from
Kimberly G. Walker, Chairman, Committee on
Investment of Employee Benefit Assets, to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated January 25,
2005 (‘‘CIEBA Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Deutsche
Bank Reproposal Letter at 2; Form Letters G, H, I,
J, and K; Letter from D. Keith Ross, Jr., Chief
Executive Officer, Getco, LLC, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated January 26, 2005
(‘‘Getco Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Letter from
Thomas Peterffy, Chairman, and David M. Battan,
Vice President, The Interactive Brokers Group, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
January 24, 2005 (‘‘Interactive Brokers Group
Reproposal Letter’’) at 1; NAIC Reproposal Letter at
2; Letter from John M. Schaible, President,
NexTrade Holdings, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated December 22, 2004
(‘‘Nextrade Reproposal Letter’’) at 3; NYSE
Reproposal Letter I at 1–3; Letter from Kenneth J.
Polcari, President, et al., Organization of
Independent Floor Brokers, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated January 12, 2005
(‘‘Organization of Independent Floor Brokers
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Phlx Reproposal Letter at
1; Letter from Richard A. Rosenblatt, CEO, and
Joseph C. Gawronski, COO, Rosenblatt Securities
Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘Rosenblatt Securities
Reproposal Letter’’) at 2; Specialist Association
Reproposal Letter at 2; T. Rowe Price Reproposal
Letter at 2.
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believed that the Market BBO
Alternative achieves the appropriate
balance between the need to promote
competition among orders and to
preserve competition among markets,274
but that the Voluntary Depth
Alternative, by focusing too exclusively
on competition among orders, would
unduly restrict competition among
markets.275 Many commenters also
believed that implementing the
Voluntary Depth Alternative would be
significantly more difficult and costly
than implementing the Market BBO
Alternative.276
The Commission has determined to
adopt the Market BBO Alternative. The
Commission believes that providing
enhanced protection for the best bids
and offers of each exchange, Nasdaq,
and the ADF will represent a major step
toward achieving the objectives of
intermarket price protection, but with
fewer of the costs and drawbacks
associated with the Voluntary Depth
Alternative. In particular, the Market
BBO Alternative will promote best
execution for retail investors on an
order-by-order basis, given that most
retail investors justifiably expect that
their orders will be executed at the
NBBO. In addition, implementation of
the Market BBO Alternative will not
require an expansion of the data
disseminated through the Plans. The
Plans currently disseminate the BBOs of
each SRO, but do not disseminate the
depth of book of all SROs.
The Commission does not agree with
commenters that the Voluntary Depth
Alternative would be a CLOB, virtual or
otherwise.277 The essential
characteristic of a CLOB is strict price/
time priority. To achieve time priority,
all orders must be funneled through a
single trading facility so that they can be
ranked by time. Such a facility would
greatly reduce the opportunity for
markets to compete by offering a variety
of different trading services. Price
priority alone, however, would not
cause nearly as significant an impact on
competition among markets because it
allows price-matching by competing
markets. Thus, while a CLOB requires
centralization of essentially all orders,
price priority (whether the Market BBO
Alternative or the Voluntary Depth
Alternative) merely requires the routing
of a much smaller subset of orders that
otherwise would be executed at inferior
prices.
A number of commenters believed
that enhanced order interaction with
quotations beyond the best bids and
offers of the various SROs would likely
result even if the Commission adopted
the Market BBO Alternative.278 Given
the existence of highly sophisticated
order routing technology and the
requirement to route orders to access the
best bids and offers under the Market
BBO Alternative, these commenters
asserted that competition and best
execution responsibilities would lead
market participants to voluntarily access
depth-of-book quotations in addition to
quotations at the top-of-book. The
Commission believes that such a
competition-driven outcome would
benefit investors and the markets in
general.
Another group of commenters
advocated protecting only the NBBO.279
274 See, e.g., Amex Reproposal Letter at 3; BGI
Reproposal Letter at 2; BNY Reproposal Letter at 2–
3; Form Letter J; Specialist Association Reproposal
Letter at 3.
275 See, e.g., Alliance of Floor Brokers Reproposal
Letter at 2; Amex Reproposal Letter at 3; Bear
Stearns Reproposal Letter at 2; BNY Reproposal
Letter at 2–3; BSE Reproposal Letter at 6; CHX
Reproposal Letter at 3; CIEBA Reproposal Letter at
2; Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter at 2; Getco
Reproposal Letter at 1–2; Interactive Brokers
Reproposal Letter at 3; NAIC Reproposal Letter at
1–2; NYSE Reproposal Letter I at 2; Organization of
Independent Floor Brokers Reproposal Letter at 2;
Rosenblatt Securities Reproposal Letter at 2;
Specialist Association Reproposal Letter at 5.
276 See, e.g., Amex Reproposal Letter at 3; BNY
Reproposal Letter, at 3; BSE Reproposal Letter at 7;
CHX Reproposal Letter at 2; Letter from W. Leo
McBlain, Chairman, and Thomas J. Jordan,
Executive Director, Financial Information Forum, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
January 26, 2005 (‘‘FIF Reproposal Letter’’) at 2–3;
Getco Reproposal Letter at 1; Interactive Brokers
Group Reproposal Letter at 1; Nextrade Reproposal
Letter at 3; NYSE Reproposal Letter I, Detailed
Comments at 8; Phlx Reproposal Letter at 2;
Specialist Association Reproposal Letter at 4.
277 Many of these commenters expressed the view
that implementation of the Voluntary Depth
Alternative effectively would amount to a virtual
CLOB. See, e.g., Alliance of Floor Brokers
Reproposal Letter at 2; BGI Reproposal Letter at 3;
BNY Reproposal Letter at 2–3; CHX Reproposal
Letter at 2–3; Letter from Congressman Peter T.
King et al., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 25, 2005
(‘‘Congressman King et al. Reproposal Letter’’) at 1;
Letter from Congressman Edward R. Royce and
Congressman George Radanovich to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated January 25,
2005 (‘‘Congressmen Royce & Radanovich
Reproposal Letter’’); Letter from Congresswoman
´
Lydia M. Velazquez to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 25, 2005
´
(‘‘Congresswoman Velazquez Letter’’) at 1; NAIC
Reproposal Letter at 1; NYC Comptroller
Reproposal Letter; NYSE Reproposal Letter at 2;
Organization of Independent Floor Brokers
Reproposal Letter at 1; Form Letters G, H, I, J, K,
and L.
278 See, e.g., Bear Stearns Reproposal Letter at 2;
BNY Reproposal Letter at 2; Interactive Brokers
Reproposal Letter at 4.
279 CIBC Reproposal Letter at 1 (joining positions
taken by SIA in its letter); Citigroup Reproposal
Letter at 6 (arguing that to the extent a tradethrough rule is necessary, it prefers protecting the
NBBO, with an exception for most liquid securities
preferred); FSR Reproposal Letter at 4; JP Morgan
Reproposal Letter at 3 (stating that if Commission
does not provide large order exception then NBBO
preferred); Lava Reproposal Letter at 1,3 (not
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They believed that NBBO protection
would be a more measured first step
forward that would strengthen existing
price protection while helping to
mitigate implementation problems and
potential unintended consequences
with either the Market BBO or
Voluntary Depth Alternative.280
The Commission does not support the
NBBO approach. The marginal benefits
to be gained from protecting only the
NBBO would not justify the costs of
implementing the approach. In addition,
protecting only the NBBO would be a
step backwards from the scope of the
existing ITS trade-through rule, which
covers the best bids and offers of each
exchange and the NASD. The
Commission also is concerned that an
order protection rule that protected only
the NBBO would be excessively
vulnerable to gaming behavior, because
a market participant could post a 100share order improving the NBBO and
then execute a much larger order away
from the NBBO while protecting only
the 100-share quotation. This result
would not be consistent with the
purposes of the Order Protection Rule.
6. Benefits and Implementation Costs of
the Order Protection Rule
Commenters were concerned about
the cost of implementing the original
trade-through proposal. Some argued
that, in general, implementing the
proposed rule would be too expensive
and would outweigh any perceived
benefits of the rule.281 Commenters also
were concerned about the cost of
specific requirements in the proposed
rule, particularly the procedural
requirements associated with the
proposed opt-out exception (e.g.,
obtaining informed consent from
customers and disclosing the NBBO to
customers).282
supporting or opposing the reproposed Order
Protection Rule but indicating NBBO would
facilitate adoption and ease implementation
concerns); Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 3; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 5–12; STANY Reproposal
Letter at 10.
280 See, e.g., SIA Reproposal Letter at 5–12.
281 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 14;
Fidelity Letter I at 12; Instinet Letter at 14, 15;
Nasdaq Letter II at 2; Letter from Junius W. Peake,
Monfort Distinguished Professor of Finance,
Kenneth W. Monfort College of Business, University
of Northern Colorado, dated April 23, 2004 (‘‘Peake
Letter I’’) at 2; NMS Study Group Letter at 4; Letter
from Richard A. Rosenblatt, Chief Executive Officer,
& Joseph C. Gawronski, Chief Operating Officer,
Rosenblatt Securities Inc., to William H. Donaldson,
Chairman, Commission, dated June 23, 2004
(‘‘Rosenblatt Securities Letter II’’) at 4; STANY
Letter at 3; UBS Letter at 8.
282 See, e.g., Ameritrade Letter I at 8; Brut Letter
at 12; Citigroup Letter at 8–9; E*TRADE Letter at
7; Letter from W. Leo McBlain, Chairman, &
Thomas J. Jordan, Executive Director, Financial
Information Forum, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
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Some of the commenters based their
concerns about implementation costs on
the estimated costs included in the
Proposing Release for purposes of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’).283 In the Reproposing Release,
the Commission revised its estimate of
the PRA costs associated with the
proposed rule to reflect the streamlined
requirements of Rule 611 as reproposed,
and to reflect a further refinement of the
estimated number of trading centers
subject to the rule.284 In particular, Rule
611 as reproposed did not contain an
opt-out exception, and thus costs
associated with the proposed exception,
which represented a large portion of the
overall estimated costs described in the
Proposing Release, were no longer
applicable.285 In total, eliminating the
opt-out procedural requirements alone
reduced the estimate of costs in the
Proposing Release by $294 million in
start-up costs and $207 million in
annual costs. In the Reproposing
Release, the Commission also refined its
estimate of the number of broker-dealers
that would be required to establish,
maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures designed to prevent
trade-throughs pursuant to the
reproposed Rule from 6,788 registered
broker-dealers to approximately 600
broker-dealers.286
Taken together, these changes
substantially reduced the estimated
costs associated with implementation of
and ongoing compliance with
reproposed Rule 611. As discussed
further in section VIII.A below, the
Commission, dated July 9, 2004 (‘‘Financial
Information Forum Letter’’) at 2; JP Morgan Letter
at 4; SIA Letter at 12–14.
283 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
284 The PRA analysis is forth in section VIII.A
below.
285 Specifically, the estimated costs of providing
investors with disclosure necessary to obtain
informed consent to opt-outs and retaining records
relating to such disclosures were $100 million in
start-up costs and $59 million annually. Further,
the estimated costs of the proposed requirement for
broker-dealers to provide every customer that opted
out with the NBBO at the time of execution were
$194 million in start-up costs and almost $148
million annually.
286 In the Proposing Release, the Commission
estimated that potentially all of the 6,768 registered
broker-dealers would be subject to this requirement,
but acknowledged that it believed the figure was
likely overly-inclusive because it might include
registered broker-dealers that do not effect
transactions in NMS stocks. As noted in the
Reproposing Release, after further consideration,
the Commission believes that this number indeed
greatly overestimated the number of registered
broker-dealers that would be subject to the rule,
given that most of those broker-dealers do not
engage in the business of executing orders
internally. The estimated number therefore was
reduced to approximately 600 broker-dealers in the
Reproposing Release. No comments were received
on this estimate. The estimate is described further
in section VIII.A below.
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estimated PRA costs associated with
reproposed Rule 611 were $17.8 million
in start-up costs and $3.5 million in
annual costs. In addition, as discussed
further in section IX.A.2 below, the
estimated implementation costs in the
Reproposing Release for necessary
systems modifications were $126
million in start-up costs and $18.4
million in annual costs. Accordingly,
the total estimated costs in the
Reproposing Release were $143.8
million in start-up costs and $21.9
million in annual costs.
Although a number of commenters
generally expressed the view that there
would be significant costs associated
with implementing and complying with
the reproposed Rule, they did not
discuss the specific estimated cost
figures included in the Reproposing
Release or include their own
estimates.287 Many commenters
expressed concerns with the costs
associated with implementing the
Voluntary Depth Alternative, believing
that the costs of implementing the
Voluntary Depth Alternative would be
substantially greater than the Market
BBO Alternative.288 As discussed above
in Section II.A.5, the Commission is
adopting the Market BBO Alternative
and not the Voluntary Depth
Alternative. The Commission does not
believe that the inclusion of a stopped
order exception will materially impact
the estimated costs included in the
Reproposing Release.289 The
Commission continues to estimate
implementation costs for the Order
Protection Rule as adopted of
approximately $143.8 million and
annual costs of approximately $21.9
million.290
In assessing the implementation costs
of the Order Protection Rule, it is
important to recognize that much, if not
287 See, e.g., CIBC Reproposal Letter at 4; Letter
from Thomas M. Joyce, CEO & President, Knight
Trading Group, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 25, 2005 (‘‘Knight
Securities Reproposal Letter’’ ‘‘Knight Reproposal
Letter’’) at 5 (expressing the view that the costs of
either the Market BBO or Voluntary Depth
Alternative outweigh the nominal benefits of the
Rule); Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 5; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 2; SIA Reproposal Letter at 11.
288 Amex Reproposal Letter at 3; Letter from Steve
Swanson, CEO & President, Automated Trading
Desk, LLC, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘ATD
Reproposal Letter’’) at 4; BNY Reproposal Letter at
3; CHX Reproposal Letter at 2; NYSE Reproposal
Letter I, Detailed Comments at 8; RBC Capital
Markets Reproposal Letter at 6; STANY Reproposal
Letter at 9.
289 The estimated cost figures included the
Reproposing Release did not include additional
costs that would be associated with the Voluntary
Depth Alternative. See section IX.A.2 of the
Reproposing Release.
290 See infra sections VIII.A and IX.A.2.
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37531
all, of the connectivity among trading
centers necessary to implement
intermarket price protection has already
been put in place. Trading centers for
exchange-listed securities already are
connected through the ITS. The
Commission understands that, at least
as an interim solution, ITS facilities and
rules can be modified relatively easily
and at low cost to provide the current
ITS participants a means of complying
with the provisions of Rule 611. With
respect to Nasdaq stocks, connectivity
among many trading centers already is
established through private linkages.
Routing out to other trading centers
when necessary to obtain the best prices
for Nasdaq stocks is an integral part of
the business plan of many trading
centers, even when not affirmatively
required by best execution
responsibilities or by Commission rule.
Moreover, a variety of private vendors
currently offer connectivity to NMS
trading centers for both exchange-listed
and Nasdaq stocks.
The Commission believes that the
benefits of strengthening price
protection for exchange-listed stocks
(e.g., by eliminating the gaps in ITS
coverage of block positioners and 100share quotes) and introducing price
protection for Nasdaq stocks will be
substantial, although the total amount is
difficult to quantify. One objective,
though quite conservative, estimate of
benefits is the dollar amount of
quotations that annually are traded
through. The Commission staff’s
analysis of trade-through rates indicates
that over 12 billion shares of displayed
quotations in Nasdaq and NYSE stocks
were traded through in 2003, by an
average amount of 2.3 cents for Nasdaq
stocks and 2.2 cents for NYSE stocks.291
These traded-through quotations
represent approximately $209 million in
Nasdaq stocks and $112 million in
NYSE stocks, for a total of $321 million
in bypassed limit orders and inferior
prices for investors in 2003 that could
have been addressed by strong tradethrough protection.292 The Commission
believes that this $321 million estimated
annual benefit, particularly when
combined with the benefits of enhanced
investor confidence in the fairness and
orderliness of the equity markets,
justifies the one-time costs of
implementation and ongoing annual
costs of the Order Protection Rule.
Two commenters on the reproposal
asserted that the dollar amount of
traded-through quotations overstated
the benefits of order protection because
‘‘trading is for the most part a zero-sum
291 Trade-Through
292 Id.
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game.’’ 293 They believed that trades
executed at inferior prices were random
noise that sometimes benefited and
sometimes disadvantaged a particular
investor, stating that ‘‘[i]t is only if one
class of investors systematically loses
out to another class as a result of tradethroughs that there is a problem.’’ 294
The Commission does not agree that
trades executed at inferior prices should
be considered merely a transfer of
benefits from one group of investors to
another equally-situated group of
investors. There are at least three parties
affected by every trade-through
transaction: (1) The party that received
an inferior price; (2) the party whose
superior-priced limit order was tradedthrough; and (3) the contra party to the
trade-through transaction that received
an advantageous price. The
redistributions of welfare resulting from
trade-through transactions cannot
reasonably be expected to occur
randomly across these parties.
Customers of brokers that are doing a
poor job of routing orders are more
likely to be harmed than customers of
brokers that are doing a better job.295
Investors who generally submit limit
orders at the best prices are more likely
to be harmed than customers who
generally submit less aggressivelypriced limit orders.
Thus, trade-through transactions can
result in direct harm to two parties, as
well as more general harm to the
efficiency of the markets by dampening
the incentive for aggressive quoting.
Moreover, even when the party
receiving an inferior price does so
willingly (such as when an institution
accepts a block trade at a price away
from the inside quotation),296 the party
293 Angel Reproposal Letter at 4; Fidelity
Reproposal Letter at 8.
294 Angel Reproposal Letter at 4.
295 As discussed above, it can be difficult for
retail investors in particular to monitor whether
their orders in fact received the best available price
at the time of order execution. See supra, note 53
and accompanying text.
296 Fidelity and the Battalio/Jennings Paper
asserted that the staff study should not have
included block trades in its estimate of the benefits
of strengthened trade-through protection. Fidelity
Reproposal Letter II at 1; Battalio/Jennings Paper at
2. The Commission does not agree. First, the
amount that block trades contributed to the $321
million estimate is very small. Block trades
represented only 1.9% of total trade-throughs in
Nasdaq stocks and 1.1% of total trade-throughs in
NYSE stocks. Trade-Through Study, Tables 6, 13.
Most importantly, the staff study used the lesser of
the size of the traded-through quotation and the size
of the trade-through transaction when calculating
the $321 million. Id. at 3. Thus, if a 10,000 share
transaction traded through a 100-share quotation,
only 100 shares counted toward the estimation of
benefits. The Battalio/Jennings Paper incorrectly
asserted that the staff study did not use this
conservative approach. Battalio/Jennings Paper at 2.
Finally, block trades are appropriately included in
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whose quotation was traded through
and the efficiency of the markets still
are harmed. Finally, many tradethroughs are dealer internalized trades,
where the party receiving the
advantageous price is not an investor
but a market intermediary, and therefore
such trades cannot be considered a
transfer of benefits from one group of
investors to another equally-situated
group of investors. This transfer of
benefits from investors to market
intermediaries cannot be dismissed as
mere ‘‘random noise.’’
In addition, economic theory predicts
that, in an auction market, buyers who
place the highest value on a stock will
bid most aggressively.297 If an incoming
market order is allocated to an investor
who is not bidding the best price, this
re-allocation is neither zero-sum nor
random. It systematically reallocates
trades away from those investors for
whom the welfare gains would be
largest. The argument also can be
framed in terms of an investor’s
preferences with respect to the tradeoff
between price and execution speed.
Among those investors who trade using
limit orders, we would expect more
aggressive limit orders to be submitted
by those investors who place more value
on speed or certainty of execution and
relatively less value on price.
Conversely, we would expect investors
who place a lower value on speed and
certainty of execution and a higher
value on price to submit less aggressive
limit orders. When an incoming market
order is executed against a limit order
with an inferior price, the result is: (1)
A faster execution for an investor who
does not place as much value on speed
of execution; and (2) a lost execution or
slower execution for the investor who
places a higher value on prompt
execution. This is not a zero-sum
redistribution.
Moreover, the $321 million estimate
is a conservative measure of the total
benefits of the Order Protection Rule. It
does not attempt to measure any gains
from trading associated with investors’
private values, beyond those expressed
in their limit order prices. The Order
Protection Rule can be expected to
generate other categories of benefits that
are not quantified in the $321 million
estimate, such as the benefits that can be
the estimation of benefits because their failure to
interact with significant displayed quotations is one
of the most serious problems with respect to the
protection of limit orders that the Order Protection
Rule is designed to address. See supra, section
II.A.1.c.
297 See, e.g., B. Hollifield, R. Miller and P. Sandas,
‘‘Empirical Analysis of Limit Order Markets,’’ 71
Review of Economic Studies 1027–1063 and n. 4
(2004).
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expected to result from increased use of
limit orders, increased depth, and
increased order interaction.
Thus, the Commission believes that
the $321 million estimate of benefits is
conservative because it is based solely
on the size of displayed quotations in
the absence of strong price protection.
In essence, it measures the problem—a
shortage of quoted depth—that the
Order Protection Rule is designed to
address, rather than the benefits that it
could achieve. Every trade-through
transaction potentially sends a message
to market participants that their
displayed quotations can be and are
ignored by other market participants.
When the total share volume of tradethrough transactions that do not interact
with displayed quotations reaches 9%
and above for hundreds of the most
actively traded NMS stocks,298 this
message is unlikely to be missed by
those who watched their quotations
being traded through. Certainly, the
common practice of trading through
displayed size is most unlikely to
prompt market participants to display
even greater size.
A primary objective of the Order
Protection Rule is to increase displayed
depth and liquidity in the NMS and
thereby reduce transaction costs for a
wide spectrum of investors, particularly
institutional investors that must trade in
large sizes. Precisely estimating the
extent to which strengthened price
protection will improve market depth
and liquidity, and thereby lower the
transaction costs of investors, is very
difficult. The difficulty of estimation
should not hide from view, however,
the enormous potential benefits for
investors of improving the depth and
efficiency of the NMS. Because of the
huge dollar amount of trading volume in
NMS stocks—more than $17 trillion in
2003 299—even the most incremental
improvement in market depth and
liquidity could generate a dollar amount
of benefits that annually would dwarf
the one-time start-up costs of
implementing trade-through protection.
One approach to evaluating the
potential benefits of the Order
Protection Rule is to examine a category
of investors that stand to benefit a great
deal from improved depth and liquidity
for NMS stocks—the shareholders in
U.S. equity mutual funds. In 2003, the
total assets of such funds were $3.68
trillion.300 The average portfolio
turnover rate for equity funds was 55%,
298 See
Trade-Through Study, Tables 4.
Federation of Exchanges, Annual
Report (2003), at 86.
300 Investment Company Institute, Mutual Fund
Fact Book (2004), at 55.
299 World
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meaning that their total purchases and
sales of securities amounted to
approximately $4.048 trillion.301 A
leading authority on the trading costs of
institutional investors has estimated
that in the second quarter of 2003 the
average price impact experienced by
investment managers ranged from 17.4
basis points for giant-capitalization
stocks, 21.4 basis points for largecapitalization stocks, and up to 35.4
basis points for micro-capitalization
stocks.302 In addition, it estimated the
cost attributable to adverse price
movements while searching for liquidity
for institutional orders, which often are
too large simply to be presented to the
market. Its estimate of these liquidity
search costs ranged from 13 basis points
for giant capitalization stocks, 23 basis
points for large capitalization stocks,
and up to 119 basis points for microcapitalization stocks.
To obtain a conservative estimate of
price impact costs and liquidity search
costs incurred across all stocks, the total
market impact and liquidity search costs
for giant capitalization stocks (30.4 basis
points) and the total market impact and
liquidity search costs for large
capitalization stocks (44.4 basis points)
are averaged together to yield a figure of
37.4 basis points.303 The much higher
market impact and liquidity search costs
of midcap, smallcap, and microcap
stocks are not included. Using this
estimate of 37.4 basis points, the
shareholders in U.S. equity mutual
funds incurred implicit transaction
costs of $15.1 billion in 2003. Based on
a hypothetical assumption that, in light
of the current share volume of tradethrough transactions that does not
interact with displayed liquidity,
intermarket trade-through protection
could improve depth and liquidity for
NMS stocks by 5% (or an average
reduction of 1.87 basis points in price
impact and liquidity search costs for
large investors), the savings in
transaction costs for U.S equity funds
alone, and the improved returns for
their millions of individual
301 Id. at 64. Portfolio turnover is reported as the
lesser of portfolio sales or purchases divided by
average net assets. Because price impact occurs for
both purchases and sales, the turnover rate must be
doubled, then multiplied by total fund assets, to
estimate the total value of trading that would be
affected by an improvement in depth and liquidity.
302 Plexus Group, Inc., Commentary 80, ‘‘Trading
Truths: How Mis-Measurement of Trading Costs Is
Leading Investors Astray,’’ (April 2004), at 2–3.
303 Cf. supra, note 146 and accompanying text
(Plexus estimate of average transaction costs,
including commissions, during the fourth quarter of
2003 for Nasdaq and NYSE stocks as, respectively,
83 basis points and 55 basis points; commissions
average 12 basis points for large capitalization
stocks).
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shareholders, would have amounted to
approximately $755 million in 2003.
Of course, the benefits of improved
depth and liquidity for the equity
holdings of other types of investors,
including pension funds, insurance
companies, and individuals, are not
incorporated in the foregoing
calculations. In 2003, these other types
of investors held 78% of the value of
publicly traded U.S. equity outstanding,
with equity mutual funds holding the
remaining 22%.304 For example,
pension funds alone held $9 trillion in
assets in 2003, of which an estimated
$4.9 trillion was held in equity
investments other than mutual funds.305
Thus, the implicit transaction costs
incurred by institutional investors each
year is likely at least double the $15.1
billion estimated for equity mutual
funds, for a total of more than $30
billion. Assuming that these other types
of investors experienced a reduction in
transaction costs that equaled the
reduction of trading costs for equity
mutual funds, the assumed 5%
improvement in market depth and
liquidity could yield total transaction
cost savings for all investors of over $1.5
billion annually. Such savings would
improve the investment returns of
equity ownership, thereby promoting
the retirement and other long-term
financial interests of individual
investors and reducing the cost of
capital for listed companies.
B. Description of Adopted Rule
Rule 611 can be divided into three
elements: (1) The provisions that
establish the scope of the Rule’s
coverage, most of which are set forth in
the definitions of Rule 600(b); (2) the
operative requirements of paragraph (a)
of Rule 611, which, among other things,
mandate the adoption and enforcement
of written policies and procedures that
are reasonably designed to prevent trade
throughs on that trading center of
protected quotations and, if relying on
an exception, that are reasonably
designed to assure compliance with the
terms of the exception; and (3) the
exceptions set forth in paragraph (b) of
Rule 611. These elements are discussed
below, followed by a section
emphasizing that a broker’s duty of best
execution is not lessened by the
adoption of Rule 611.
Fund Factbook, supra note 300, at 59.
at 91 (employer-sponsored pension market
held estimated $9.0 trillion in assets in 2003, $7.7
trillion of which were not represented by mutual
fund assets); Milliman, Inc., Pension Fund Survey
(available at www.milliman.com) (consulting firm’s
survey of 2003 annual reports for 100 of largest U.S.
corporations found that the median equity
allocation for pension fund assets was 65%).
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304 Mutual
305 Id.
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37533
1. Scope of Rule
The scope of Rule 611 is largely
determined by a series of definitions set
forth in Rule 600(b). In general, the Rule
addresses trade-throughs of protected
quotations in NMS stocks by trading
centers. A ‘‘trading center’’ is defined in
Rule 600(b)(78) as a national securities
exchange or national securities
association that operates an SRO trading
facility,306 an ATS,307 an exchange
market maker,308 an OTC market
maker,309 or any other broker or dealer
that executes orders internally by
trading as principal or crossing orders as
agent. This last phrase is intended
particularly to cover block positioners.
An ‘‘NMS stock’’ is defined in
paragraphs (b)(47) and (b)(46) of Rule
600 as a security, other than an option,
for which transaction reports are
collected, processed and made available
pursuant to an effective national market
system plan. This definition effectively
covers stocks listed on a national
securities exchange and stocks included
in either the National Market or
SmallCap tiers of Nasdaq. It does not
include stocks quoted on the OTC
Bulletin Board or elsewhere in the OTC
market.
The term ‘‘trade-through’’ is defined
in Rule 600(b)(77) as the purchase or
sale of an NMS stock during regular
trading hours,310 either as principal or
agent, at a price that is lower than a
protected bid or higher than a protected
offer. Rule 600(b)(57), which defines a
‘‘protected bid’’ or ‘‘protected offer,’’ 311
includes three main elements: (1) An
automated quotation; (2) displayed by
an automated trading center; and (3)
that is the best bid or best offer of an
exchange, The NASDAQ Stock Market,
or an association other than The
NASDAQ Stock Market (currently, the
best bid or offer of the NASD’s ADF).312
As discussed above, an ‘‘automated
quotation’’ is defined in Rule 600(b)(3)
as a quotation displayed by a trading
306 An ‘‘SRO trading facility’’ is defined in Rule
600(b)(72) as a facility operated by or on behalf of
an SRO that executes orders in a security or
presents orders to members for execution.
307 An ‘‘alternative trading system’’ is defined in
Rule 600(b)(2) with a cross reference to Regulation
ATS.
308 An ‘‘exchange market maker’’ is defined in
Rule 600(b)(24).
309 An ‘‘OTC market maker’’ is defined in Rule
600(b)(52).
310 The term ‘‘regular trading hours’’ is defined in
Rule 600(b)(64) as the time between 9:30 a.m. and
4:00 p.m. Eastern time, unless otherwise specified.
311 Protected bid and protected offer are
collectively defined as a ‘‘protected quotation’’ in
Rule 600(b)(58).
312 See section II.A.5 above for a discussion of the
Commission’s determination to adopt the Market
BBO Alternative with respect to the scope of
protected quotations.
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center that: (1) Permits an incoming
order to be marked as immediate-orcancel; (2) immediately and
automatically executes an order marked
as immediate-or-cancel against the
displayed quotation up to its full
size; 313 (3) immediately and
automatically cancels any unexecuted
portion of an order marked as
immediate-or-cancel without routing the
order elsewhere; (4) immediately and
automatically transmits a response to
the sender of an order marked as
immediate-or-cancel indicating the
action taken with respect to such order;
and (5) immediately and automatically
displays information that updates the
displayed quotation to reflect any
change to its material terms.
Consequently, a quotation will not
qualify as ‘‘automated’’ if any human
intervention after the time an order is
received is allowed to determine the
action taken with respect to the
quotation. The term ‘‘immediate’’
precludes any coding of automated
systems or other type of intentional
device that would delay the action taken
with respect to a quotation. Although a
trading center must provide an IOC/norouting functionality for incoming
orders, it also can offer additional
functionalities. Among the changes to
material terms that require an
immediate update to a quotation are
price, displayed size, and automated/
313 The requirement that an automated quotation
be accessible up to its full size does not mean that
a trading center must automate all of its available
trading interest. For example, trading centers will
be permitted to operate hybrid markets with
different order types and rules for automated
trading and manual trading. Rather, the ‘‘full size’’
term in the definition of automated quotation
requires that, once a trading center offers an
automated execution of a particular displayed
quotation and thereby obtains protection under
Rule 611, such quotation must be immediately and
automatically accessible up to its full size, which
will include both the displayed and reserve size of
the quotation. Given that to comply with Rule 611,
market participants need to be able to access the
displayed size of protected quotations at all trading
centers (even when the displayed size of the
quotation may be less than the size of the market
participant’s total trading interest), the Commission
believes trading centers must provide fair and
efficient access to the full size available for the
quotation. Cf. infra, sections III.B.1 and III.B.2
(access standard and fee limitation of Rule 610
apply to both displayed and reserve size of
displayed quotations). This requirement, which is
applicable to trading centers that display automated
quotations, does not mean that market participants
are required to route orders in an attempt to execute
against the reserve size of a protected quotation.
Rather, Rule 611 operates as follows. In the first
instance, the Rule protects prices—a trading center
cannot execute a transaction at a price inferior to
the price of a protected quotation, absent an
exception. One of the most commonly used
exceptions to the Rule is likely to be the intermarket
sweep order exception, which applies to sweep
orders that are routed to execute against the full
displayed size of better-priced protected quotations.
See infra, note 320 and accompanying text.
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manual indicator. Any quotation that
does not meet the requirements for an
automated quotation is defined in Rule
600(b)(37) as a ‘‘manual quotation.’’
As discussed above, an ‘‘automated
trading center’’ is defined in Rule
600(b)(4) as a trading center that: (1) Has
implemented such systems, procedures,
and rules as are necessary to render it
capable of displaying quotations that
meet the requirements for an automated
quotation set forth in paragraph (b)(3) of
this section; (2) identifies all quotations
other than automated quotations as
manual quotations; (3) immediately
identifies its quotations as manual
quotations whenever it has reason to
believe that it is not capable of
displaying automated quotations; and
(4) has adopted reasonable standards
limiting when its quotations change
from automated quotations to manual
quotations, and vice versa, to
specifically defined circumstances that
promote fair and efficient access to its
automated quotations and are consistent
with the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets. The requirement of reasonable
standards for switching the automated/
manual status of quotations is designed
to preclude practices that would cause
confusion among market participants
concerning the status of a trading
center’s quotations or that would
inappropriately advantage the members
or customers of a trading center at the
expense of the public.
The third element of the definition of
‘‘protected bid’’ and ‘‘protected offer’’
identifies which automated quotations
are protected under the Order Protection
Rule. Specifically, Rule 600(b)(57)
provides that an automated quotation
displayed by an automated trading
center that is the BBO of an exchange
SRO, the BBO of Nasdaq, or the BBO of
the NASD (i.e., the ADF) qualifies as a
protected quotation. Thus, only a single,
accessible best bid and best offer for
each of the exchange SROs, Nasdaq, and
the NASD is protected under the Order
Protection Rule. A best bid and best
offer must be accessible by routing an
order to a single market destination (i.e.,
currently, either to a single exchange
execution system, a single Nasdaq
execution system, or a single ADF
participant).
2. Requirement of Reasonable Policies
and Procedures
Paragraph (a)(1) of Rule 611 requires
a trading center to establish, maintain,
and enforce written policies and
procedures that are reasonably designed
to prevent trade-throughs on that
trading center of protected quotations in
NMS stocks that do not fall within an
exception set forth in paragraph (b) of
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Rule 611 and, if relying on such an
exception, that are reasonably designed
to assure compliance with the terms of
the exception.314 In addition, paragraph
(a)(2) of Rule 611 requires a trading
center to regularly surveil to ascertain
the effectiveness of the policies and
procedures required by paragraph (a)(1)
and to take prompt action to remedy
deficiencies in such policies and
procedures.
As discussed in the Proposing
Release, the Commission believes it
would be inappropriate to implement a
complete prohibition against any tradethroughs, particularly given the realities
of intermarket trading and order-routing
in many high-volume NMS stocks,315
and has not adopted such an approach.
In this trading environment, despite
reasonable attempts to prevent them,
false positive or accidental tradethroughs may result from timing
discrepancies resulting from technology
limitations, latencies in the delivery and
receipt of quotation updates, and data
discrepancies. The requirement of
written policies and procedures, as well
as the responsibility assigned to trading
centers to regularly surveil to ascertain
the effectiveness of their procedures and
take prompt remedial steps, is designed
to achieve the objective of eliminating
all trade-throughs that reasonably can be
prevented, while also recognizing the
inherent difficulties of eliminating
trade-through transactions that, despite
a trading center’s reasonable efforts,
may occur.
In the Reproposing Release, the
Commission requested comment on
whether this approach would be
sufficient to address enforceability
concerns. Several commenters
expressed a concern about the
significant burden that would be placed
on market participants to prove
compliance and defend each execution
that appears to be a trade-through (i.e.,
they could be presumed to have violated
the Rule unless they can prove they did
not), particularly in light of the
significant number of false positives that
are likely to result.316 The Commission
314 The Commission has modified the language of
Rule 611(a)(1) to make clear that a trading center’s
policies and procedures must only be reasonably
designed to prevent trade-throughs on its own
trading center of protected quotations in NMS
stocks that do not fall within an exception set forth
in paragraph (b) of Rule 611 and, if relying on such
an exception, that are reasonably designed to assure
compliance with the terms of the exception.
315 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11137 (noting the
problem of ‘‘false positive’’ trade-throughs caused
by rapidly changing quotations, even when a
trading center took reasonable precautions to
prevent trade-throughs).
316 Morgan Stanley Reproposal Letter at 15; Letter
from David Cummings, Chief Executive Officer,
Tradebot Systems, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
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recognizes this concern and intends to
work closely with industry participants
during the implementation period for
the Order Protection Rule to provide
useful and practical guidance for trading
centers on the policies and procedures
needed to comply with the Rule.
At a minimum, a trading center’s
policies and procedures must enable the
trading center (and persons responsible
for transacting on its market, such as
specialists) to monitor, on a real-time
basis, the protected quotations
displayed by other trading centers so as
to determine the prices at which the
trading center can and cannot execute
trades. In addition, a trading center’s
policies and procedures must establish
objective standards and parameters
governing its use of the exceptions set
forth in Rule 611(b). A trading center’s
automated order-handling and trading
systems must be programmed in
accordance with these policies and
procedures. Finally, the trading center
must take such steps as are necessary to
enable it to enforce its policies and
procedures effectively. For example,
trading centers will need to establish
procedures such as regular exception
reports to evaluate their trading and
order-routing practices. Such reports
will need to be examined to affirm that
a trading center’s policies and
procedures have been followed by its
personnel and properly coded into its
automated systems and, if not, to
promptly identify the reasons and take
remedial action.
Of course, surveillance is an
important component of a trading
center’s satisfaction of its legal
obligations. In the context of Rule 611,
paragraph (a)(2) of the Rule reinforces
the ongoing maintenance and
enforcement requirements of paragraph
(a)(1) of the Rule by explicitly assigning
an affirmative responsibility to trading
centers to surveil to ascertain the
effectiveness of their policies and
procedures. Trading centers cannot
merely establish policies and
procedures that may be reasonable
when created and assume that such
policies and procedures continue to
satisfy the requirements of Rule 611.
Rather, trading centers must regularly
assess the continuing effectiveness of
their procedures and take prompt action
when needed to remedy deficiencies. In
particular, trading centers must engage
in regular and periodic surveillance to
determine whether trade-throughs are
occurring without an applicable
Secretary, Commission, dated January 26, 2005
(‘‘Tradebot Reproposal Letter’’) at 1; UBS
Reproposal Letter at 5 (expressing the view that the
Rule would be unenforceable).
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exception and whether they have failed
to implement and maintain policies and
procedures that would have reasonably
prevented such trade-throughs.
As a further means to bolster
compliance with the Order Protection
Rule, the Commission has instructed its
staff to develop for our consideration
and for notice and comment a rule
proposal that would require trading
centers to publicly disclose
standardized and comparable statistics
on the incidence of trade-through
transactions that do not fall within an
exception to the Rule. Such industrywide statistics would promote greater
public accountability by trading centers
for the quality of their policies and
procedures. The statistics also would be
helpful for trading centers, as well as
regulatory authorities, in assessing the
reasonableness and effectiveness of the
policies and procedures adopted by
various trading centers. In particular, a
trading center that generated a
materially higher rate of trade-throughs
than other comparable trading centers
would need to closely evaluate the types
of policies and procedures used by the
other trading centers as a means to
upgrade its own policies and
procedures. On the other hand, the fact
that many trading centers generated
comparable rates of trade-throughs
would not shield them from a violation
of the Order Protection Rule if a
material number of the trade-through
transactions could reasonably have been
prevented by the use of particular
policies and procedures. In general, the
Commission preliminarily believes that
comparable, industry-wide statistics on
trade-throughs would provide a
valuable resource to identify the most
effective policies and procedures and to
promote their use by all relevant trading
centers.
3. Exceptions
Rule 611(b) sets forth a variety of
exceptions addressing transactions that
may fall within the definition of a tradethrough, but which are not subject to the
operative requirements of the Rule. The
exceptions primarily are designed to
achieve workable intermarket price
protection and to facilitate certain
trading strategies and order types that
are useful to investors, but also are
consistent with the principle of price
protection.317
317 Several commenters recommended that the
consolidated tape should identify trades that were
executed and reported pursuant to an exception to
the Rule. See, e.g., Citigroup Reproposal Letter at
7; SIA Reproposal Letter at 17. The Commission
agrees that increased transparency would be greatly
beneficial. Such identification would give market
participants and investors timely notice that a trade
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37535
Paragraph (b)(1) excepts a transaction
if the trading center displaying the
protected quotation that was traded
through was experiencing a failure,
material delay, or malfunction of its
systems or equipment when the tradethrough occurred. As discussed in
section II.A.3 above, the exception for a
‘‘material delay’’ gives trading centers a
self-help remedy if another trading
center repeatedly fails to provide an
immediate response (within one second)
to incoming orders attempting to access
its quotes. The trading center receiving
an order can only be held responsible
for its own turnaround time (i.e., from
the time it first received an order to the
time it transmits a response to the
order). Accordingly, the routing trading
center will be required to develop
policies and procedures that allow for
any potential delays in transmission not
attributable to the receiving trading
center. The exception in paragraph
(b)(1) also covers any failure or
malfunction of a trading center’s
systems or equipment, as well as any
material delay.
Trading centers will need to establish
specific objective parameters governing
their use of the ‘‘self-help’’ exemption as
part of their reasonable policies and
procedures. For example, a single
failure to respond within one second
generally will not justify future
bypassing of another trading center’s
quotations. Many failures to respond
within one second in a short time
period, in contrast, clearly will warrant
use of the exception. A trading center
making use of the exception must notify
the non-responding trading center
immediately after (or at the same time
as) electing this exception pursuant to
reasonable and objective standards
contained in its policies and
procedures.318
Paragraph (b)(8) of Rule 611 sets forth
an exception for flickering quotations. It
excepts a transaction if the trading
center displaying the protected
quotation that was traded through had
displayed, within one second prior to
execution of the trade-through, a best
bid or best offer, as applicable, for the
qualified for an exception and was not a true tradethrough. The Commission therefore intends to
request that the market data Plans explore the
feasibility of identifying trade-through exceptions.
It also intends to initiate a discussion with the
Plans on shortening the current 90-second time
frame for reporting trades in light of current
technology and trading practices. Reporting trades
in substantially less than 90 seconds would reduce
the number of trades that are reported out of
sequence, thus improving the accuracy and
reliability of the consolidated trade stream and
helping to reduce the false appearance of tradethroughs.
318 For instance, a trading center may wish to use
electronic mail to make this notification.
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NMS stock with a price that was equal
or inferior to the price of the tradethrough transaction. This exception
thereby provides a ‘‘window’’ to address
false indications of trade-throughs that
in actuality are attributable to rapidly
moving quotations. It also potentially
will reduce the number of instances in
which a trading center must alter its
normal trading procedures and route
orders to other trading centers to
comply with Rule 611. The exception is
thereby intended to promote more
workable intermarket price protection.
Paragraphs (b)(5) and (b)(6) of Rule
611 set forth exceptions for intermarket
sweep orders. An intermarket sweep
order is defined in Rule 600(b)(30) as a
limit order 319 that meets the following
requirements: (1) When routed to a
trading center, the limit order is
identified as an intermarket sweep
order; and (2) simultaneously with the
routing of the limit order identified as
an intermarket sweep order, one or more
additional limit orders, as necessary, are
routed to execute against the full
displayed size of all protected
quotations with a superior price. These
additional limit orders must be marked
as intermarket sweep orders to allow the
receiving market center to execute the
order immediately without regard to
better-priced quotations displayed at
other trading centers (by definition,
each of the additional limit orders
would meet the requirements for an
intermarket sweep order).
Paragraph (b)(5) allows a trading
center immediately to execute any order
identified as an intermarket sweep
order. It therefore need not delay its
execution for the updating of the betterpriced quotations at other trading
centers to which orders were routed
simultaneously with the intermarket
sweep order. Paragraph (b)(6) allows a
trading center itself to route intermarket
sweep orders and thereby clear the way
for immediate internal executions at the
trading center. This exception
particularly will facilitate the immediate
execution of block orders by dealers on
behalf of their institutional clients.
Specifically, if a dealer wishes to
execute internally a customer order at a
price that would trade through one or
more protected quotations on other
trading centers, the dealer will be able
319 Such a limit order would be ‘‘marketable’’
because it would be immediately subject to
execution at current displayed prices.
Consequently, ‘‘limit order’’ is used differently in
this context than elsewhere in this release, where
it is used to refer to non-marketable orders that
generally will be displayed, in contrast to
marketable orders that generally will not be
displayed. See supra, note 53 (description of
marketable limit orders and non-marketable limit
orders).
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to do so if it simultaneously routes one
or more intermarket sweep orders to
execute against the full displayed size of
each such better-priced protected
quotations. If there is only one betterpriced protected quotation, then the
dealer is only required to route an
intermarket sweep order to execute
against that protected quotation.
Paragraph (c) of Rule 611 requires that
the trading center, broker, or dealer
responsible for the routing of an
intermarket sweep order take reasonable
steps to establish that orders are
properly routed in an attempt to execute
against all applicable protected
quotations. A trading center, broker, or
dealer is required to satisfy this
requirement regardless whether it routes
the order through its own systems or
sponsors a customer’s access through a
third-party vendor’s systems.
To illustrate the operation of the
intermarket sweep order exception,
assume that a broker-dealer’s customer
wished to sell a large amount of an NMS
stock. Trading Center A is displaying
the national best bid of 500 shares at
$10.00, along with quotations in its
proprietary depth-of-book data feed of
1500 shares at $9.99, and 5000 shares at
$9.97. The customer decides to sweep
all liquidity on Trading Center A down
to $9.97. Assume also that Trading
Center B is displaying a protected bid of
2000 shares at $9.99, Trading Center C
is displaying a protected bid of 400
shares at $9.98, and Trading Center D is
displaying a protected bid of 200 shares
at $9.97. The broker-dealer could
execute this trade for its customer,
subject to its best execution
responsibilities, by simultaneously
routing the following orders: (1) An
intermarket sweep order to Trading
Center A with a limit price of $9.97 and
a size of 7000 shares; (2) an intermarket
sweep order to Trading Center B with a
limit price of $9.99 and a size of 2000
shares; and (3) an intermarket sweep
order to Trading Center C with a limit
price of $9.98 and a size of 400 shares.
All of these orders would meet the
requirements of Rule 600(b)(30) because
the necessary orders simultaneously
were routed to execute against the
displayed size of all better-priced
protected quotations. Trading Centers A,
B, and C all could execute their orders
immediately without regard to the
protected quotations displayed at other
trading centers. No order would need to
be routed to Trading Center D because
the price of its bid was not superior to
the most inferior limit price of the order
routed to Trading Center A. Assuming
the customer obtained a fill for each of
its orders at the displayed prices and
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sizes,320 it would have been able to
obtain an immediate execution of a
9400-share trade by sweeping through
four price levels at Trading Center A,
while also honoring the protected
quotations at two other trading
centers.321 The trade therefore would
have both upheld the principle of price
protection and served the customer’s
legitimate interest in obtaining an
immediate execution of large size.
The exception in paragraph (b)(7) of
Rule 611 will facilitate other types of
orders that often are useful to
investors—benchmark orders. It excepts
the execution of an order at a price that
was not based, directly or indirectly, on
the quoted price of an NMS stock at the
time of execution and for which the
material terms were not reasonably
determinable at the time the
commitment to execute the order was
made. A common example of a
benchmark order is a VWAP order.
Assume a broker-dealer’s customer
decides to buy a stock at 9 a.m. before
the markets open for normal trading.
The customer submits, and the brokerdealer accepts, an order to buy 100,000
shares at the volume-weighted average
price of the stock from opening until 1
p.m. At 1 p.m., the national best offer in
the stock is $20.00, but the relevant
volume-weighted average price (in a
rising market) is $19.90. The brokerdealer would be able to rely on the
benchmark order exception to execute
the order at $19.90 at 1 p.m., without
regard to better-priced protected
quotations at other trading centers. Of
course, any transactions effected by the
broker-dealer during the course of the
day to obtain sufficient stock to fill the
benchmark order would remain subject
to Rule 611. The benchmark exception
also would encompass the execution of
an order that is benchmarked to a
market’s single-priced opening, as the
320 An intermarket sweep order could go unfilled
because the protected quotation at a trading center
was accessed or withdrawn prior to the trading
center’s receipt of the intermarket sweep order. In
addition, the existence of undisplayed orders or
reserve size at some trading centers could result in
an execution at better prices than may have been
indicated by the displayed prices and sizes. The
router of an intermarket sweep order would only be
responsible, however, for routing orders in
accordance with the displayed price and size of
protected quotations. Whether the orders actually
execute against the protected quotations, or go
unfilled because the quotations have been
previously executed or withdrawn, is not within the
responsibility or control of the router of the
intermarket sweep order.
321 If a trading center has routed intermarket
sweep orders to access the full displayed size of
protected quotations under the Order Protection
Rule, it will be allowed to continue trading without
regard to a particular trading center’s quotations
until it has received a response from such trading
center. See supra, note 194.
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Commission would not interpret such
an opening price to be the ‘‘quoted
price’’ of the NMS stock at the time of
execution.
Paragraph (b)(9) of Rule 611 provides
an exception for the execution of certain
stopped orders.322 Specifically, the
exception applies to the execution by a
trading center of a stopped order where
the price of the execution of the order
was, for a stopped buy order, lower than
the national best bid at the time of
execution or, for a stopped sell order,
higher than the national best offer at the
time of execution.323 To illustrate the
operation of this requirement, assume
that a dealer’s customer wished to buy
a large amount of an NMS stock.
Assume further that the dealer has
agreed to guarantee execution of the
order at an average price no worse than
$10.12 (the stop price), and that the
national best bid and offer for the stock
at the time was 10.05 to 10.07. If the
dealer buys on behalf of the customer
until half of the order is completed and
has averaged 10.10 to that point, but the
national best bid and offer for the stock
is then 10.15 to 10.17, the dealer would
be obligated to execute the remainder of
the order by selling to the customer at
10.14 to average 10.12 for the entire
order. The exception in paragraph (b)(9)
of Rule 611 permits the dealer to
execute the remainder at 10.14 without
being obligated to route to all protected
bids at 10.15. In addition, to qualify for
the exception, the stopped order must
be for the account of a customer 324 and
the customer must have agreed to the
‘‘stop’’ price on an order-by-order
basis.325 The Commission notes that any
individual transactions executed by the
dealer in the market for the customer
must be executed in compliance with
Rule 611.
Finally, paragraph (b) of Rule 611
includes a variety of other exceptions:
(1) Transactions other than ‘‘regular
way’’ contracts; 326 (2) single-price
opening, reopening, or closing
transactions; 327 and (3) transactions
executed at a time when protected
322 See section II.A.4.b and notes 251 to 257 and
accompanying text above for a discussion of this
exception.
323 Rule 611(b)(9)(iii).
324 Rule 611(b)(9)(i). Customer is defined in Rule
600(b)(16) as any person that is not a broker or
dealer.
325 Rule 611(b)(9)(ii).
326 Rule 611(b)(2). ‘‘Regular way’’ refers to bids,
offers, and transactions that embody the standard
terms and conditions of a market. Thus, this
exception applies to a transaction that was executed
other than pursuant to standardized terms and
conditions, for instance a transaction that has
extended settlement terms.
327 Rule 611(b)(3).
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quotations were crossed.328 The crossed
quotation exception would not apply
when a protected quotation crosses a
non-protected (e.g., manual)
quotation.329 The exception for singlepriced reopenings will only apply to
single-priced reopening transactions
after a trading halt conducted pursuant
to a trading center rule. To qualify, the
reopening process must be transparent
and provide for the queuing and
ultimate execution of multiple orders at
a single equilibrium price.330
4. Duty of Best Execution
Several commenters on the original
proposal who supported excluding
manual quotations from trade-through
protection also suggested that manual
quotations should be excluded from the
NBBO that is calculated and
disseminated by Plan processors.331
Under this approach, market
participants could disregard manual
quotations for purposes of assessing the
best execution of customer orders and
calculating execution quality statistics
under Rule 11Ac1–5 (redesignated as
Rule 605 of Regulation NMS). The
Reproposing Release did not propose to
eliminate manual quotations from the
NBBO and emphasized that adoption of
Rule 611 would not lessen a brokerdealer’s duty of best execution.332
Noting the common business practice of
market makers to use the NBBO to price
investors orders (particularly retail
orders), the Reproposing Release
expressed concern that eliminating
manual quotations from the NBBO
potentially would widen the spreads in
many stocks, even though the
quotations often may in fact represent
the best indication of the current market
price of the stock.
In response to the Reproposing
Release, some commenters continued to
assert that manual quotations should be
excluded from the NBBO.333 They
believed that that it would be
inconsistent and unreasonable to
distinguish between automated and
manual quotations for purposes of tradethrough protection, market data
revenue, access fees, and requirements
328 Rule
611(b)(4).
329 Id.
330 See supra, section II.A.2.b for a discussion of
this exception.
331 See, e.g., Citigroup Letter at 3, 6; Goldman
Sachs Letter at 5–6; Morgan Stanley Letter at 2–3,
7; SIA Letter at 13.
332 Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77447.
333 See, e.g., Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 7;
ATD Reproposal Letter at 7; Citigroup Reproposal
Letter at 8; Knight Reproposal Letter at 6; Madoff
Reproposal Letter at 2–3; Morgan Stanley
Reproposal Letter at 12; SIA Reproposal Letter at 3,
14–15; STANY Reproposal Letter at 10–11; UBS
Reproposal Letter at 6.
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37537
regarding locked and crossed markets,
but not to remove such quotations from
the calculation of the NBBO.334 They
argued that including manual
quotations in the benchmark against
which a broker-dealer’s best execution
responsibility is judged provides an
unfair standard of comparison,
particularly to the extent manual
quotations are not accessible.335 Several
commenters requested that, at a
minimum, the Commission clarify a
broker-dealer’s duty of best execution
with respect to manual quotations.336
Another commenter suggested that
manual quotations be removed from the
NBBO when the manual market is not
the primary market.337
The Commission continues to be
concerned that eliminating all manual
quotations from the NBBO would
exclude not only inaccessible manual
quotations, but also manual quotations
that truly establish the best available
price for a stock, particularly for those
stocks with relatively small trading
volume in which a manual market has
a dominant share of trading. Such a
result could lead to decreased execution
quality for investors in these stocks by
allowing broker-dealers to ignore the
best available quotations when
executing customer orders. The
Commission therefore is not at this time
excluding manual quotations from the
NBBO or from the benchmark used for
calculating execution quality statistics
under Rule 605.
The Commission continues to
emphasize that adoption of Rule 611 in
no way lessens a broker-dealer’s duty of
best execution. A broker-dealer has a
legal duty to seek to obtain best
execution of customer orders.338
According to the Report of the Special
Study of Securities Markets, ‘‘[t]he
integrity of the industry can be
maintained only if the fundamental
principle that a customer should at all
times get the best available price which
334 See, e.g., ATD Reproposal Letter at 6;
Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 8; Madoff Reproposal
Letter at 4.
335 See, e.g., Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 8;
Knight Reproposal Letter at 6; STANY Reproposal
Letter at 11.
336 Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 7–8; Merrill
Lynch Reproposal Letter at 8; SIA Reproposal Letter
at 15.
337 ATD Reproposal Letter at 7.
338 See, e.g., Newton v. Merrill, Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner & Smith, Inc., 135 F.3d 266, 269–70, 274 (3d
Cir.), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 811 (1998); Certain
Market Making Activities on Nasdaq, Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 40900 (Jan. 11, 1999)
(settled case) (citing Sinclair v. SEC, 444 F.2d 399
(2d Cir. 1971); Arleen Hughes, 27 SEC 629, 636
(1948), aff’d sub nom. Hughes v. SEC, 174 F.2d 969
(D.C. Cir. 1949)). See also Order Execution
Obligations, Securities Exchange Act Release No.
37619A (Sept. 6, 1996), 61 FR 48290 (Sept. 12,
1996) (‘‘Order Handling Rules Release’’).
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can reasonably be obtained for him is
followed.’’ 339 A broker-dealer’s duty of
best execution derives from common
law agency principles and fiduciary
obligations, and is incorporated in SRO
rules and, through judicial and
Commission decisions, the antifraud
provisions of the federal securities
laws.340
The duty of best execution requires
broker-dealers to execute customers’
trades at the most favorable terms
reasonably available under the
circumstances, i.e., at the best
reasonably available price.341 The
Commission has not viewed the duty of
best execution as inconsistent with the
automated routing of orders or requiring
automated routing on an order-by-order
basis to the market with the best quoted
price at the time. Rather, the duty of
best execution requires broker-dealers to
periodically assess the quality of
competing markets to assure that order
flow is directed to the markets
providing the most beneficial terms for
their customer orders.342 Broker-dealers
339 H.R. Doc. No. 95, 88th Cong., 1st Sess. Pt. II,
624 (1963).
340 Order Handling Rules Release, 61 FR at 48322.
See also Newton, 135 F.3d at 270. Failure to satisfy
the duty of best execution can constitute fraud
because a broker-dealer, in agreeing to execute a
customer’s order, makes an implied representation
that it will execute it in a manner that maximizes
the customer’s economic gain in the transaction.
See Newton, 135 F.3d at 273 (‘‘[T]he basis for the
duty of best execution is the mutual understanding
that the client is engaging in the trade—and
retaining the services of the broker as his agent—
solely for the purpose of maximizing his own
economic benefit, and that the broker receives her
compensation because she assists the client in
reaching that goal.’’); Marc N. Geman, Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 43963 (Feb. 14, 2001)
(citing Newton, but concluding that respondent
fulfilled his duty of best execution). See also
Payment for Order Flow, Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 34902 (Oct. 27, 1994), 59 FR 55006,
55009 (Nov. 2, 1994) (‘‘Payment for Order Flow
Final Rules’’). If the broker-dealer intends not to act
in a manner that maximizes the customer’s benefit
when he accepts the order and does not disclose
this to the customer, the broker-dealer’s implied
representation is false. See Newton, 135 F.3d at
273–274.
341 Newton, 135 F.3d at 270. Newton also noted
certain factors relevant to best execution—order
size, trading characteristics of the security, speed of
execution, clearing costs, and the cost and difficulty
of executing an order in a particular market. Id. at
270 n. 2 (citing Payment for Order Flow, Exchange
Act Release No. 33026 (Oct. 6, 1993), 58 FR 52934,
52937–38 (Oct. 13, 1993) (Proposed Rules)). See In
re E.F. Hutton & Co. (‘‘Manning’’), Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 25887 (July 6, 1988). See
also Payment for Order Flow Final Rules, 59 FR at
55008–55009.
342 Order Handling Rules Release, 61 FR at
48322–48333 (‘‘In conducting the requisite
evaluation of its internal order handling
procedures, a broker-dealer must regularly and
rigorously examine execution quality likely to be
obtained from different markets or market makers
trading a security.’’). See also Newton, 135 F.3d at
271; Market 2000: An Examination of Current
Equity Market Developments V–4 (SEC Division of
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must examine their procedures for
seeking to obtain best execution in light
of market and technology changes and
modify those practices if necessary to
enable their customers to obtain the best
reasonably available prices.343 In doing
so, broker-dealers must take into
account price improvement
opportunities, and whether different
markets may be more suitable for
different types of orders or particular
securities.344
The protection against trade-throughs
required of trading centers by Rule 611
undergirds the broker-dealer’s duty of
best execution, by helping ensure that
customer orders are not executed at
prices inferior to the best protected
quotations. Nonetheless, the Order
Protection Rule does not supplant or
diminish the broker-dealer’s
responsibility for achieving best
execution, including its duty to evaluate
the execution quality of markets to
which it routes customer orders,
regardless of the exceptions set forth in
the Rule.
At the same time, however, the
Commission recognizes the validity of
concerns expressed by commenters with
respect to the need for guidance
concerning their best execution
responsibilities after implementation of
Regulation NMS. As they do today,
broker-dealers will continue to be able
to assess the level of accessibility and
availability of manual quotations in
making their best execution
determinations. In particular, when the
market for a stock is dominated by
trading centers that display automated
quotations, and a trading center that is
not a dominant market for the stock
displays manual quotations, a brokerdealer reasonably could determine, as
part of its regular and rigorous review of
execution quality, to bypass such a
market with manual quotations in the
Market Regulation January 1994) (‘‘Without specific
instructions from a customer, however, a brokerdealer should periodically assess the quality of
competing markets to ensure that its order flow is
directed to markets providing the most
advantageous terms for the customer’s order.’’);
Payment for Order Flow Final Rules, 59 FR at
55009.
343 Order Handling Rules, 61 FR at 48323.
344 Order Handling Rules, 61 FR at 48323. For
example, in connection with orders that are to be
executed at a market opening price, ‘‘[b]rokerdealers are subject to a best execution duty in
executing customer orders at the opening, and
should take into account the alternative methods in
determining how to obtain best execution for their
customer orders.’’ Disclosure of Order Execution
and Routing Practices, Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 43590 (Nov.17, 2000), 65 FR 75414,
75422 (Dec. 1, 2000) (adopting new Exchange Act
Rules 11Ac1–5 and 11Ac1–6 and noting that
alternative methods offered by some Nasdaq market
centers for pre-open orders included the mid-point
of the spread or at the bid or offer).
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particular stock if its prior experience
demonstrated that attempting to access
the market would not be in its
customers’ best interest. In making its
assessment the broker-dealer would be
entitled to consider both the likelihood
of receiving an execution at displayed
prices and the potential cost to its
customers of failed attempts. The
Commission also emphasizes that any
trading center posting quotations,
whether automated or manual, in the
public quotation stream has a
responsibility to be firm for its
quotations pursuant to Rule 602.
III. Access Rule
For the NMS to fulfill its statutory
objectives, fair and efficient access to
each of the individual markets that
participate in the NMS is essential. One
of the statutory NMS objectives, for
example, is to assure the practicability
of brokers executing investors’ orders in
the best market.345 Another is to assure
the efficient execution of securities
transactions.346 Clearly, neither of these
objectives can be achieved if brokers
cannot fairly and efficiently route orders
to execute against the best quotations for
a stock, wherever such quotations are
displayed in the NMS. In 1975,
Congress determined that the ‘‘linking
of all markets’’ for NMS stocks through
communications and data processing
facilities would ‘‘foster efficiency;
enhance competition; increase the
information available to brokers,
dealers, and investors; facilitate the
offsetting of investors’ orders; and
contribute to the best execution of
investors’ orders.’’ 347 Since 1975, there
have been dramatic improvements in
communications and processing
technologies. Rule 610 is intended to
capitalize on these improvements and
thereby enhance the ‘‘linking of all
markets’’ for the future NMS.
All SROs that trade exchange-listed
stocks currently are linked through ITS,
a collective intermarket linkage facility.
ITS provides a means of access to
exchanges and Nasdaq by permitting
each market to send a ‘‘commitment to
trade’’ through the system, with
receiving markets generally having up to
30 seconds to respond.348 ITS also
provides access to quotations of
participants without fees and
establishes uniform rules to govern
quoting practices.349 Although ITS
promotes access among participants that
is uniform and free, it also is often slow
345 Section
11A(a)(1)(C)(iv) of the Exchange Act.
11A(a)(1)(C)(i) of the Exchange Act.
347 Section 11A(a)(1)(D) of the Exchange Act.
348 ITS Plan, Section 6(b)(i).
349 ITS Plan, Sections 6(b), 8(d), and 11(b).
346 Section
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and limited. Moreover, it is governed by
a unanimous vote requirement that has
at times impeded innovation in the
system or its set of rules.
In contrast, there is no collective
intermarket linkage system for Nasdaq
stocks. Instead, access is achieved
primarily through private linkages
among individual trading centers. This
approach has demonstrated its benefits
among electronic markets; it is flexible
and can readily incorporate
technological advances as they occur.
There is no intermarket system,
however, that offers free access to
quotations in Nasdaq stocks. Nor are the
trading centers for Nasdaq stocks subject
to uniform intermarket standards
governing their quoting and trading
practices. The fees for access to ECN
quotations in Nasdaq stocks, as well as
the absence of standards for quotations
that lock and cross markets, have been
the source of disputes among
participants in the market for Nasdaq
stocks for many years. Moreover, access
problems have arisen with respect to
small market centers operating outside
of an SRO trading facility and markets
like the Amex that engage in manual
trading of Nasdaq stocks. Access
problems also have arisen with respect
to intentional barriers to access,
especially involving fees.
Rule 610 reflects the Commission’s
determination that fair and efficient
access to markets can be achieved
without a collective intermarket linkage
facility such as ITS, if baseline
intermarket access rules are
established.350 The rule adopts a private
linkage approach for all NMS stocks
with modifications to address the most
serious problems that have arisen with
this approach in the trading of Nasdaq
stocks. Rule 610 addresses three subject
areas: (1) Means of access to quotations;
(2) fees for access to protected
quotations and any other quotations that
are the best bid or best offer of an
exchange, The NASDAQ Market Center,
or the NASD’s ADF; and (3) locking and
crossing quotations.351 In response to
comments on the reproposal, the
Commission is modifying the fee
limitation to apply to any quotation at
the best bid or offer as well as protected
350 With the implementation of Rule 610, the
Commission believes that SROs can withdraw from
the ITS Plan, assuming they have otherwise
arranged to meet their access responsibilities.
351 The Commission has modified the language of
Rule 610(d) to require that an exchange or
association ‘‘establish, maintain, and enforce’’ rules
relating to certain locking and crossing activity, and
to clarify that such rules must be written, to
conform the language to the operative language of
Rule 611(a)(1). See infra note 455 and
accompanying text.
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quotations.352 In addition, the
Commission is modifying the fair access
requirements of Regulation ATS to
extend their application to ATSs with
5% of trading volume in a security.353
A. Response to Comments and Basis for
Adopted Rule
1. Means of Access to Quotations
Paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule 610
address means of access to quotations.
Among the variety of services offered by
equity markets, access to displayed
quotations, particularly the best
quotations of a trading center, is vital for
the smooth functioning of intermarket
trading. Brokers responsible for routing
their customers’ orders, as well as
investors that make their own orderrouting decisions, clearly must have fair
and efficient access to the best
displayed quotations of all trading
centers to achieve best execution of
those orders. In addition, trading centers
themselves must have the ability to
execute orders against the displayed
quotations of other trading centers.
Indeed, the very concept of intermarket
protection against trade-throughs is
premised on the ability of trading
centers to trade with, rather than trade
through, the protected quotations
displayed by other trading centers.
Access to quotations, sometimes
referred to as ‘‘order execution
access,’’ 354 should be distinguished
from broader access to all of the
different types of services offered by
markets, such as the right to display
limit orders or to submit complex order
types. To obtain the full range of their
services, markets generally require that
an individual or firm become a member
or subscriber of the market. This type of
access, or ‘‘membership access,’’
subsumes access to quotations and is
governed by particular regulatory
requirements. Sections 6(b)(2) and
15A(b)(3) of the Exchange Act, for
example, provide for fair access to
membership in SROs. Similarly, Rule
301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS prohibits
certain high volume ATSs from denying
fair access to their services.355 Rules
610(a) and (b), in contrast, only address
the responsibilities of trading centers to
provide order execution access to their
quotations.
infra, section III.A.2.
353 The modification of Regulation ATS is
discussed in section III.B.4 below.
354 See Rule 301(b)(3) of Regulation ATS (order
display and execution access requirements).
355 As discussed in section III.B.4 below, the
Commission is amending the fair access
requirements of Regulation ATS to extend their
application to ATSs with 5% of trading volume in
a security.
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Frm 00045
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37539
Rules 610(a) and (b) further the goal
of fair and efficient access to quotations
primarily by prohibiting trading centers
from unfairly discriminating against
non-members or non-subscribers that
attempt to access their quotations
through a member or subscriber of the
trading center. Market participants can
either become members or subscribers
of a trading center to obtain direct
access to its quotations, or they can
obtain indirect access by
‘‘piggybacking’’ on the direct access of
members or subscribers. These forms of
access are widely used today in the
market for Nasdaq stocks (as well as to
a lesser extent in the market for
exchange-listed stocks). Instead of every
market participant establishing separate
linkages with every trading center,
many different private firms have
entered the business of linking with a
wide range of trading centers and then
offering their customers access to those
trading centers through the private
firms’ linkages. Competitive forces
determine the types and costs of these
private linkages.
Most commenters supported this
private linkage approach for access to
quotations.356 They noted the success of
private linkages among electronic
markets for Nasdaq stocks and
contrasted the speed and usefulness of
those linkages with the ITS linkage for
exchange-listed stocks. Morgan Stanley
stated that ‘‘[p]rivate linkages are much
easier to establish and operate and can
be constructed directly between [order
execution facilities] or through market
intermediaries. The smooth operation of
the market for Nasdaq stocks today
clearly demonstrates the power of
private linkages.’’ 357 The NYSE
concluded that ‘‘[i]n the market for
listed stocks, we believe that proposed
Regulation NMS will provide the
framework for alternatives to ITS for
intermarket access.’’ 358 The SIA stated
that ‘‘[p]rivate linkages, as opposed to
ITS-type linkages, will provide the
flexibility—technologically and
otherwise—that is vital to the continued
development of the markets.359
Bloomberg expressed the belief that
private linkages have proven to be
effective in the market for Nasdaq
securities and ‘‘can readily, quickly and
356 See, e.g., Citigroup Letter at 12; Consumer
Federation Letter at 4; Goldman Sachs Letter at 4;
ICI Letter at 16–17; Morgan Stanley Letter at 17;
Nasdaq Letter II at 20; NYSE Letter, Attachment at
6; Letter from Carrie E. Dwyer, General Counsel &
Executive Vice President, Charles Schwab & Co.,
Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated June 30, 2004 (‘‘Schwab Letter’’) at 17; SIA
Letter at 16; UBS Letter at 8.
357 Morgan Stanley Letter at 17.
358 NYSE Letter, Attachment at 7.
359 SIA Reproposal Letter at 21.
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inexpensively be adapted for use in
exchange-listed securities,’’ and even
believed that ITS can be abandoned.360
A few commenters opposed the
proposed private linkages approach.361
Some questioned whether multiple
private linkages could match the
efficiency of a single, uniform
intermarket linkage, although they
generally emphasized that the current
ITS linkage needed to be enhanced. The
Alliance of Floor Brokers, for example,
suggested that problems with the ITS
linkage, such as its slow speed and lack
of structural flexibility, ‘‘should be
addressed before it is determined to
replace it with some, as yet unspecified,
routing methodology or
mechanism.’’ 362 While agreeing that
private linkages could promote access if
they were not the sole means of
communications between trading
facilities and trading centers, and that
ITS’ ‘‘archaic technology and restrictive
membership provisions actively limit
access,’’ NexTrade contended that
private linkages, if used to replace
existing and universal industry links,
could reduce total access.363 STANY
believed that the Commission vastly
underestimated the access issues
represented by the proposal, and raised
a number of concerns regarding the
costs and feasibility of implementing
the private linkage approach, including
issues relating to software, hardware,
maintenance, and protocols.364
The Commission has carefully
considered the views of all the
commenters. The Commission agrees
with the commenters that stated that
private linkages currently work well in
the market for Nasdaq securities.365 The
Commission believes that the benefits of
private linkages, including their
flexibility to meet the needs of different
market participants and the scope they
allow for competitive forces to
determine linkages, justifies reliance on
this model rather than a single
intermarket linkage. Recognizing,
however, that the adoption of the Order
Protection Rule increases the
360 Bloomberg
Reproposal Letter at 7–8.
e.g., Letter from Brendan R. Dowd, Daniel
W. Tandy & Ronald Zdrojeski, Alliance of Floor
Brokers, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated June 24, 2004 (‘‘Alliance of
Floor Brokers Letter’’) at 2; Ameritrade Letter I,
Appendix at 11; BSE Letter at 7; CHX Letter at 13;
E*Trade Letter at 9.
362 Alliance of Floor Brokers Letter at 2.
363 NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 4.
364 STANY Reproposal Letter at 3.
365 See, e.g., Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 7–8;
Brut Letter at 18; Letter from Richard M. Whiting,
Executive Director and General Counsel, Financial
Services Roundtable, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated June 30, 2004 (‘‘FSR Letter’’) at
4; Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 8; Nasdaq
Letter II at 20.
361 See,
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importance of efficient access to each
trading center, particularly with respect
to access to ADF participants, the
requirements in the Rule are designed to
mitigate concerns about the cost of
access to ADF participants, as discussed
below. In addition, the Commission
believes, given the significant number
and variety of entities that currently
provide access services and the
competitive nature of the market for
these services, that competition will be
sufficient to provide routing services for
any trading center that chooses to utilize
an outside vendor rather than incur
costs associated with building its own
linkages. One ECN, for example, can be
accessed through five extranets and at
least 21 other access providers, as well
as through direct connections.366
Several commenters, including some
that otherwise supported the proposal,
expressed concern about particular
problems that might arise under a
private linkage approach.367 Some were
concerned that requiring nondiscriminatory access to markets might
undermine the value of SRO
membership. CHX stated that ‘‘[b]y
requiring the Exchange to grant nonmembers access to the full capabilities
of its order execution systems, the
Commission’s fair access proposal
would inappropriately require the
Exchange’s members to help fund the
costs of operating a market that could be
routinely used by non-members. It
would severely undercut the value of
membership and enable non-members
to free-ride on the fees paid by
members.’’ 368 Amex stated that ‘‘to the
extent that the proposed rule
undermines our right to differentiate
between members (who pay fees and
have duties and responsibilities to the
Exchange) and non-members in our
charges, it could effectively remove any
incentive for Amex membership.’’ 369
The Commission does not believe that
the private linkage approach adopted
today will seriously undermine the
value of membership in SROs that offer
valuable services to their members.
First, the fact that markets will not be
allowed to impose unfairly
discriminatory terms on non-members
who obtain indirect access to quotations
through members does not mean that
366 See www.nasdaqtrader.com/trader/ebrut/
ourofferings/connectivity.shtm.
367 Alliance of Floor Brokers Letter at 10; Amex
Letter, Exhibit A at 25–26; BSE Letter at 12; CHX
Letter at 14; Citigroup Letter at 12; Letter from Edith
H. Hallahan, First Vice President, Deputy General
Counsel, Philadelphia Stock Exchange, to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated August 10,
2004 (‘‘Phlx Letter’’) at 2; STANY Letter at 9.
368 CHX Letter at 14.
369 Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 26.
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non-members will obtain free access to
quotations. Members who provide
piggyback access to non-members will
be providing a useful service and
presumably will charge a fee for such
service. The fee will be subject to
competitive forces and likely will reflect
the costs of SRO membership, plus
some element of profit to the SRO’s
members. As a result, non-members that
frequently make use of indirect access
are likely to contribute indirectly to the
costs of membership in the SRO market.
Moreover, the unfair discrimination
standard of Rule 610(a) will apply only
to access to quotations, not to the full
panoply of services that markets
generally provide only to their
members. These other services will be
subject to the more general fair access
provisions applicable to SROs and large
ECNs, as well as the statutory provisions
that govern SRO rules.
On the other hand, any attempt by an
SRO to charge differential fees based on
the non-member status of the person
obtaining indirect access to quotations,
such as whether it is a competing
market maker, would violate the antidiscrimination standard of Rule 610. As
noted above, fair and efficient access to
quotes is essential to the functioning of
the NMS. To comply with the Order
Protection Rule and their duty of best
execution, trading centers often may be
required to access the quotations of
other trading centers. If a trading center
charged discriminatory fees to nonmembers, including competitors,
accessing its quotations, this would
interfere with the functioning of the
private linkage approach and detract
from its usefulness to trading centers in
meeting their regulatory responsibilities.
Other types of differential fees,
however, would not violate the antidiscrimination standard of Rule 610.
Fees with volume-based discounts or
fees that are reasonably based on the
cost of providing a particular service
will be permitted, so long as they do not
vary based on the non-member status of
a person obtaining indirect access to
quotations. For example, a member
providing indirect access could be given
a volume discount on the full amount of
its volume, including the volume
accounted for by persons obtaining
indirect access to quotations.
Another specific concern expressed
by commenters about the private linkage
approach was the cost and difficulty of
building efficient linkages to trading
centers with a small amount of trading
volume that do not make their
quotations accessible through an SRO
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trading facility.370 Such concerns arise
at present with respect to the ADF, a
display-only quotation facility operated
by the NASD, because quotations
displayed by ADF participants can only
be reached by obtaining direct access to
that trading center. As a result, the
greater the number of ADF participants,
the greater the number of separate
connectivity points that market
participants will need to access to
comply with the Order Protection Rule
and to meet their best execution
responsibilities. The Commission’s
original proposal would have required
such trading centers to provide access
only to SROs and other ADF
participants. At the NMS Hearing,
several panelists expressed concern that
this requirement would be inadequate to
assure sufficient access, which
prompted the Commission to request
comment on the matter in its
Supplemental Release.371 It noted that
panelists at the NMS Hearing had
suggested that relatively inactive ATSs
and market makers should be required
to publish their quotations in an SRO
trading facility, at least until their share
of trading reached a point where the
cost of direct connections to those
markets would not be out of proportion
to their volume of trading. Alternatively,
the Supplemental Release requested
comment on whether an SRO without a
trading facility, of which the NASD is
currently the only one, should be
required to ensure that any ATS or
market maker is directly connected to
most market participants before
publishing its quotations in a displayonly facility.
Several commenters on the original
proposal supported the approach of
requiring low-volume trading centers to
make their quotations available through
an SRO trading center.372 Brut, for
example, stated that the presence of
such low-volume trading centers
‘‘requires vast industry investments to
establish private connectivity (or utilize
vendors) to access these markets—no
matter how small or potentially how
fleeting—to satisfy best execution
obligations and avoid market
disruption. The effort and investment to
establish such connectivity is
disproportionate to the liquidity on
such market.’’ 373 Brut further noted that
370 Amex Letter at 8; Brut Letter at 19; Citigroup
Letter at 13; E*Trade Letter at 9; Nasdaq Letter II
at 22; SIA Letter at 16; Specialist Assoc. Letter at
12; STA Letter at 4; STANY Letter at 10; UBS Letter
at 9.
371 Hearing Tr. at 135, 138–140; Supplemental
Release, 69 FR at 30146.
372 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 13; Citigroup Letter at
13; SIA Letter at 17 (some firms).
373 Brut Letter at 13.
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it had sought to avoid such ADF trading
centers in the past, but that the
extension of trade-through protection to
Nasdaq stocks would eliminate this
option.
The SIA also believed that ‘‘reliance
solely on the SEC’s proposed market
access rules would fail to address access
issues related to smaller markets * * *.
If the SEC obligates market participants
to trade with [a smaller ADF market
maker or ATS] by promulgating a tradethrough rule, we are concerned about
the firms’ burden of creating many
private linkages to many small ATSs
that may charge exorbitant fees for the
necessary access.’’ 374 SIA members
were divided, however, on the best
means to resolve the issue. Some
favored requiring smaller trading
centers to make their quotes accessible
through an SRO trading facility. Other
SIA members, as well as other
commenters, recommended requiring all
trading centers to make their best
quotations available through a public
intermarket linkage facility.375
One commenter, in contrast, believed
that access to trading centers quoting on
the ADF should be addressed by
requiring the NASD to add an order
execution functionality to ADF.
NexTrade stated that the ADF was
created to make participation in
Nasdaq’s SuperMontage facility
voluntary. It believed that ‘‘the
Commission should re-evaluate whether
or not ‘private sector’ solutions for SROs
without an execution mechanism are
sufficient for the investment community
to satisfy its various obligations under
the Act.’’ 376
After considering the various views of
commenters on the original proposal, in
the Reproposing Release the
Commission proposed to require ADF
participants to bear the costs of
providing the necessary connectivity
that would facilitate efficient access to
their quotations.377 Specifically, under
reproposed Rule 610(b)(1) those ATSs
and market makers that choose to
display quotations in the ADF would
bear the responsibility of providing a
level and cost of access to their
quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities.
Letter at 16.
e.g., Ameritrade Letter I, Appendix at 11;
E*Trade Letter at 9; SIA Letter at 17.
376 Letter from John M. Schaible, President,
NexTrade Holdings, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated July 29, 2004
(‘‘NexTrade Letter’’) at 14.
377 See Section III.A.1 of the Reproposing Release
for a discussion of the comments.
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375 See,
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37541
A large number of commenters on the
reproposal supported the proposed
requirements in Rule 610(b)(1).378 The
SIA, for example, stated that this
requirement would likely address most
of its previously stated concerns about
ATSs and market makers that choose to
make their quotations accessible only
through the ADF.379 One commenter
noted that it thought the approach was
fair and appropriate.380
At the same time, some commenters
(both those supporting and those
opposing the reproposed access
standards) continued to voice their
concerns about the potential need to
develop, and the costs of developing,
connections to numerous small trading
centers in the ADF.381 For instance, one
commenter, noting that the ADF is not
a single market and that the expense of
access increases proportionally by the
number of markets that must be
accessed, stated that the cost of
accessing more than one or two
additional markets would be prohibitive
for most of its members.382 Several
commenters believed that non-SRO
trading centers should make their
quotations available through the
automatic execution facilities of an
SRO, thereby requiring other market
participants to only have to maintain
access to six or seven markets, rather
than potentially dozens.383 In contrast,
one commenter that is an ADF
participant continued to express its
concerns with the proposed access
requirements, stating its belief that the
proposal to require ADF participants to
establish the necessary connectivity that
would facilitate efficient access to their
quotations would create a cost barrier
that discriminates against smaller firms
in the ADF.384
378 See, e.g., CIBC Reproposal Letter at 1; JP
Morgan Reproposal Letter at 2; Letter from Paul W.
Lerro to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated January 22, 2005 (‘‘Lerro Reproposal Letter’’)
at 14; Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 9; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 18 (although advocating
requiring trading facilities with less than a five
percent share volume to make their quotations
available through an SRO trading facility, thought
that the Commission’s proposal was the ‘‘next best
approach’’); SIA Reproposal Letter at 3, 21; UBS
Reproposal Letter at 1; Vanguard Reproposal Letter
at 5.
379 SIA Reproposal Letter at 3.
380 Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 4.
381 See, e.g., Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 9;
SIA Reproposal Letter at 21; STANY Reproposal
Letter at 3–4.
382 STANY Reproposal Letter at 3.
383 See, e.g., Knight Reproposal Letter at 5;
Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 17–18 (expressing the
view that trading facilities with less than a five
percent volume shares should be required to make
their quotations available through an SRO trading
facility); STA Reproposal Letter at 6; Type N
Reproposal Letter at 1.
384 NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 4–6.
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The Commission has decided to adopt
Rule 610(b)(1) as reproposed, but does
not believe that its adopted access
approach discriminates against smaller
firms or creates a barrier to access for
innovative new market entrants. Rather,
smaller firms and new entrants have a
range of alternatives from which to
choose that will allow them to avoid
incurring any costs to meet the
connectivity requirements of Rule
610(b)(1) if they wish to do so. This
approach is fully consistent with
Congressional policy set forth in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, which
directs the Commission to consider
significant alternatives to regulations
that accomplish the stated objectives of
the Exchange Act and minimize the
economic impact on small entities.385
Small ATSs are exempt from
participation in the consolidated
quotation system and, therefore, from
the connectivity requirements of Rule
610. Under Rule 301(b)(3) of Regulation
ATS, an ATS is required to display its
quotations in the consolidated quotation
stream only in those securities for
which its trading volume reaches 5% of
total trading volume. Consequently,
smaller ATSs are not required to
provide their quotations to any SRO
(whether an SRO trading facility or the
NASD’s ADF) and thereby trigger the
access requirements of Rule 610.
Moreover, potential new entrants with
innovative trading mechanisms can
commence business without having to
incur any costs associated with
participation in the consolidated
quotation system.
Some smaller ATSs, however, may
wish to participate voluntarily in the
consolidated quotation system. Such
participation can benefit smaller firms
and promote competition among
markets by enabling smaller firms to
obtain wide distribution of their
quotations among all market
participants.386 Here, too, such firms
will have alternatives that would not
obligate them to comply with the
connectivity requirements of Rule
610(b)(1). ATSs and market makers that
385 5 U.S.C. 603(c). In the Reproposing Release,
the Commission noted that only two of the
approximately 600 broker-dealers (including ATSs)
that would be subject to Rule 610 are considered
small (total capital of less than $500,000) for
purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. 69 FR at
77492. The adopted access approach provides
alternatives that will benefit a wider range of
smaller ATSs than the two that are considered
small entities.
386 See infra, note 566 (the Commission’s
Advisory Committee on Market Information
recommended retention of the consolidated display
requirement because, among other things, it ‘‘may
promote market competition by assuring that
information from newer or smaller exchanges is
widely distributed.’’).
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wish to trade NMS stocks can choose
from a number of options for quoting
and trading. They can become a member
of a national securities exchange and
quote and trade through the exchange’s
trading facilities. They can participate
in The NASDAQ Market Center and
quote and trade through that facility. By
choosing either of these options, an ATS
or market maker would not create a new
connectivity point that all other market
participants must reach and would not
be subject to Rule 610(b)(1). Some firms,
however, may not want to participate in
an SRO trading facility. These ATSs and
market makers can quote and trade in
the OTC market. The existence of the
NASD’s ADF makes this third choice
possible by providing a facility for
displaying quotations and reporting
transactions in the consolidated data
stream.
The NASD is not, however, statutorily
required to provide an order execution
functionality in the ADF. As a national
securities association, the NASD is
subject to different regulatory
requirements than a national securities
exchange. It is responsible for regulating
the OTC market (i.e., trading by brokerdealers otherwise than on a national
securities exchange). Section 15A(b)(11)
of the Exchange Act requires an
association to have rules governing the
form and content of quotations relating
to securities sold otherwise than on a
national securities exchange that are
published by a member of the
association. Such rules must be
designed to produce fair and
informative quotations and to promote
orderly procedures for collecting,
distributing, and publishing quotations.
The Exchange Act does not expressly
require an association to establish a
facility for executing orders against the
quotations of its members, although it
could choose to do so.
The Commission believes that market
makers and ECNs should continue to
have the option of operating in the OTC
market, rather than on an exchange or
The NASDAQ Market Center. As noted
in the Commission’s order approving
Nasdaq’s SuperMontage trading facility,
this ability to operate in the ADF is an
important competitive alternative to
Nasdaq or exchange affiliation.387
Therefore, the Commission has
determined not to require small trading
centers to make their quotations
accessible through an SRO trading
facility.
Instead, Rule 610(b)(1) requires all
trading centers that choose to display
quotations in an SRO display-only
quotation facility to provide a level and
cost of access to such quotations that is
substantially equivalent to the level and
cost of access to quotations displayed by
SRO trading facilities. Rule 610(b)
therefore may cause trading centers that
display quotations in the ADF to incur
additional costs to enhance the level of
access to their quotations and to lower
the cost of connectivity for market
participants seeking to access their
quotations. The extent to which these
trading centers in fact incur additional
costs to comply with the adopted access
standards will be largely within the
control of the trading center itself. As
noted above, ATSs and market makers
that wish to trade NMS stocks can
choose from a number of options for
quoting and trading, including quoting
and trading in the OTC market. As a
result, the additional connectivity
requirements of Rule 610(b) will be
triggered only by a trading center that
displays its quotations in the
consolidated data stream and chooses
not to provide access to those quotations
through an SRO trading facility.
Currently, nine SROs operate trading
facilities in NMS stocks. Market
participants throughout the securities
industry generally have established
connectivity to these nine points of
access to quotations in NMS stocks. By
choosing to display quotations in the
ADF, a trading center effectively could
require the entire industry to establish
connectivity to an additional point of
access. Potentially, many trading centers
could choose to display quotations in
the ADF, thereby significantly
increasing the overall costs of
connectivity in the NMS. Such an
inefficient outcome would become
much more likely if an ADF trading
center were not required to assume
responsibility for the additional costs
associated with its decision to display
quotations outside of an established
SRO trading facility.
Although the Exchange Act envisions
an individual broker-dealer having the
option of trading in the OTC market,388
it does not mandate that the securities
industry in general must subsidize the
costs of accessing a broker-dealer’s
quotations in the OTC market if the
NASD chooses not to provide
connectivity. The Commission believes
that it is reasonable and appropriate to
require those ATSs and market makers
that choose to display quotations in the
ADF to bear the responsibility of
providing a level and cost of access to
their quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
387 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
43863 (Jan. 19, 2001), 66 FR 8020 (Jan. 26, 2001).
388 See Sections 11A(c)(3)(A) and (4) of the
Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C 78k–1(c)(3)(A) and (4).
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to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities. Under Rule 610(b)(1),
therefore, ADF participants will be
required to bear the costs of the
necessary connectivity to facilitate
efficient access to their quotations. This
standard will help ensure that
additional connectivity burdens are not
imposed on the securities industry each
time that an additional ADF participant
necessitates a new connectivity point by
choosing to begin displaying quotations
in the consolidated quotation stream.
To clarify the intent of this
requirement, the Commission
emphasizes that a ‘‘substantially
equivalent’’ cost of access will not be
evaluated in terms of absolute dollar
costs of access and therefore does not
necessarily allow an ATS or market
maker quoting in the ADF to charge the
same fees or impose the same costs that
an SRO trading facility charges or
imposes. Rather, the standard in Rule
610(b)(1) compares the costs to an ADF
participant’s relative degree of trading
volume.389 Consequently, the cost of
access to an ADF participant must be
substantially equivalent to the cost of
access to SRO trading facilities on a per
transaction basis. For example, a $1000
port fee charged by an ECN participating
in the ADF that trades one million
shares a day would not be substantially
equivalent to a $1000 port fee charged
by an SRO trading facility trading 100
million shares a day.
As discussed above, the Commission
recognizes that trading centers subject to
Rule 610(b)(1) may incur costs
associated with providing access to their
quotations in compliance with the Rule,
although the costs will vary depending
upon the manner in which each trading
center determines to provide such
access. As noted in the Commission’s
order approving the pilot program for
the ADF, the reduction in
communications line costs in recent
years and the advent of competing
access providers offer the potential for
multiple competitive means of access to
the various trading centers that trade
NMS stocks.390 To meet their regulatory
requirements, ADF participants will
have the option of establishing and,
when necessary, paying for connections
to industry access providers that have
extensive connections to a wide array of
market participants through a variety of
direct access options and private
networks. The option of participation in
existing market infrastructure and
systems should reduce a trading center’s
cost of compliance.
Two commenters raised concerns
about reliance on third party private
vendors to provide access, since they
may not be regulated by the
Commission and thus could deny access
to a trading center they viewed as a
competitor, or because utilizing their
services to link to other trading centers
is outside the control of a trading
center.391 The Commission believes that
the requirement in Rule 610(b)(1) that
ADF participants provide a substantially
equivalent level of access will preclude
the ADF participant from providing
access only through a narrow range of
private access providers. The range of
access providers must be sufficient to
provide access substantially equivalent
to SRO trading facilities. In these
circumstances, and given the significant
number and variety of entities that
currently provide access services and
the competitive nature of the market for
these services, the Commission believes
that competition will be sufficient to
provide services for any trading center
choosing to utilize an outside vendor.392
One commenter emphasized the
importance of the NASD carefully
assessing and monitoring the extent to
which ADF participants meet the access
standards of Rule 610(b).393 The
Commission agrees that effective NASD
oversight of ADF participants’
compliance with the Rule is critical to
the viability of the access standards
adopted today, given that these
participants are not accessible through
an SRO trading facility. As the selfregulatory authority responsible for the
OTC market, the NASD must act as the
‘‘gatekeeper’’ for the ADF, and, as such,
will need to closely assess the extent to
which ADF participants meet the access
standards of Rule 610. Prior to
implementation of Rule 610, the NASD
will need to make an affirmative
determination that existing ADF
participants are in compliance with the
requirements of the Rule.394 If an ADF
participant is not complying with these
access standards, the NASD would have
a responsibility to stop publishing the
participant’s quotations until the
389 Cf. NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 6. See
Section III.A.1 of the Reproposing Release and
supra notes 370 to 375 discussing the concerns of
commenters and panelists at the NMS Hearings
regarding access to relatively inactive ATSs and
market makers with a small amount of trading
volume.
390 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 46249
(July 24, 2002), 67 FR 49822 (July 31, 2002).
391 NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 6; STANY
Reproposal Letter at 4.
392 For example, as noted above, one ECN can be
accessed through five extranets and at least 21 other
access providers, as well as through direct
connections.
393 SIA Reproposal Letter at 21.
394 See Section 15A of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. 78o–3.
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37543
participant comes into compliance.395
The Commission also believes that, in
light of these new access standards, the
addition of a new ADF participant
would constitute a change in a material
aspect of the operation of the NASD’s
facilities, and thus require the filing of
a proposed rule change pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act that
would be subject to public notice and
comment.396 Alternatively, the NASD
could choose to provide a
communications facility that would link
all of the ADF participants to each other
and that would provide a single point of
access to market participants attempting
to access an ADF participant.397
2. Limitation on Access Fees
A number of ECN trading centers
charge fees to incoming orders that
execute against their displayed
quotations.398 These ECNs typically
pass a substantial portion of the access
fee on to limit order customers as
rebates for supplying the accessed
liquidity (i.e., submitting nonmarketable limit orders). For Nasdaq
stocks, ECNs have charged access fees
directly to their subscribers, but also
have charged access fees to nonsubscribers when their quotations have
been displayed and executed through
Nasdaq facilities. Market makers have
not been permitted to charge any fee for
counterparties accessing their
quotations under the Quote Rule. Other
types of trading centers, including
exchange SROs, may charge fees that are
triggered when incoming orders access
their displayed quotations. These fees
have only been charged to their
members, because only members have
the right to route orders to an exchange
other than through ITS. For exchangelisted stocks, however, the ITS has
provided free intermarket access to
quotations in other markets for its
participants.
The trade-through protection and
linkage requirements adopted today will
significantly alter the conditions that
have shaped access fee practices in the
past. For exchange-listed stocks, Rule
610 adopts a private linkage approach
that relies on access through members
and subscribers rather than through a
public intermarket linkage system. For
395 Id.
396 See Rule 19b–4(b)(1) under the Exchange Act,
17 CFR 240.19b–4(b)(1).
397 The Commission does not believe that NASD,
solely by providing such a communications facility,
would fall within the definition of SRO trading
facility, which applies to an SRO that operates a
facility that executes orders in a security or presents
orders to members for execution.
398 A full description of the current framework for
access fees is provided in the Proposing Release. 69
FR at 11156.
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access outside of ITS, markets will pay,
directly or indirectly, the fees charged
by other markets to their members and
subscribers. For Nasdaq stocks, the
Order Protection Rule will, for the first
time, establish price protection, so
market participants will no longer have
the option of bypassing the quotations
of trading centers with access fees that
they view as too high.
The benefits of strengthened price
protection and more efficient linkages
could be compromised if trading centers
are able to charge substantial fees for
accessing their quotations. Moreover,
the wider the disparity in the level of
access fees among different market
centers, the less useful and accurate are
the prices of quotations displayed for
NMS stocks. For example, if two trading
centers displayed quotations to sell an
NMS stock for $10.00 per share, one
offer could be accessible for a total price
of $10.00 plus a $0.009 fee, while the
second trading center might not charge
any access fee. What appeared in the
consolidated data stream to be identical
quotations would in fact be far from
identical.
To address the potential distortions
caused by substantial, disparate fees, the
original access proposal included a
limitation on fees. Trading centers
would have been limited to a fee of no
more than $0.001 per share. Liquidity
providers also would have been limited
to a fee of no more than $0.001 per share
for attributable quotations, but could not
have charged any fee for nonattributable quotations. In addition, the
proposal established an accumulated fee
limitation of no more than $0.002 per
share for any transaction. At the NMS
Hearing, panelists sharply disagreed
about access fees, with some panelists
arguing that agency markets must be
allowed to charge access fees for their
services, and other panelists arguing
that access fees distort quotation prices
and should be banned.399 In the
Supplemental Release, therefore, the
Commission requested comment on all
aspects of the proposed fee limitations,
including whether it should adopt a
single accumulated fee limitation that
would apply to all types of market
centers, and, if so, whether the proposed
$0.002 per share was an appropriate
amount, or whether the amount should
be higher or lower.400
Commenters on the original proposal
were splintered on the issue of access
fees. A number supported the
Commission’s proposal as a worthwhile
compromise resolution on an extremely
399 See,
e.g., Hearing Tr. at 166, 168.
Release, 69 FR at 30147.
400 Supplemental
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difficult issue.401 They believed that the
proposal would level the playing field
in terms of who could charge fees, and
provide some measure of certainty to
market participants that the quoted
price will be, essentially, the price they
will pay. Other commenters were
strongly opposed to any limitation on
fees, believing that competition alone
would sufficiently address the high fees
that distort quoted prices.402 One
asserted that ‘‘[c]ompetitive forces have
satisfactorily dealt with the issue of
outlier ECNs * * * [M]arket
participants have put them at the
bottom of their order routing tables,
which means that orders placed on
these ECNs would be the last to be
executed at any price level, a position
that no market participant wants to be
in.’’ 403 In contrast, some commenters
argued that all access fees charged to
non-members and non-subscribers
should be prohibited, but believed that
the proposed fee limitations should not
apply to SRO transaction fees,
particularly those that are filed with the
Commission for approval.404 Finally, a
few commenters questioned the
Commission’s authority to set
limitations on access fees.405
After considering the many divergent
views of the commenters on the original
proposal, the Commission reproposed a
flat $0.003 per share access fee cap.406
Commenters on the reproposal also held
varying views with regard to the
proposal to limit access fees to $0.003
per share. One group of commenters
supported the reproposal’s simplified
approach to access fees.407 For example,
401 See, e.g., BNY Letter at 4; Letter from Kenneth
Griffin, President & Chief Executive Officer, Citadel
Investment Group, L.L.C., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated July 9, 2004 (‘‘Citadel
Letter’’) at 9; Citigroup Letter at 14; E*Trade Letter
at 10; Nasdaq Letter II at 3; SIA Letter (some
members) at 18.
402 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 12; Instinet Letter at
24; SIA Letter (some firms) at 18.
403 Instinet Letter at 27.
404 See, e.g., Amex Letter at 7–8; Goldman Sachs
Letter at 5; Knight Letter II at 2; NYSE Letter at 5;
STA Letter at 6.
405 See, e.g., Instinet Letter at 24; Letter from
Roderick Covlin, Executive Vice President,
TrackECN, to William H. Donaldson, Chairman,
Commission, dated May 10, 2004 (‘‘TrackECN
Letter’’) at 1.
406 For the relatively small number of NMS stocks
priced under $1.00, fees will be limited to 0.3% of
the quotation price per share to prevent fees from
constituting an excessive percentage of share price.
407 See, e.g., BNY Reproposal Letter at 1,3;
Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter at 3; FSR
Reproposal Letter at 4 (some members supported
the proposal, which they believed would provide
certainty for all market participants, while other
members believed that access fees should be
banned entirely); JP Morgan Reproposal Letter at 2;
SIA Reproposal Letter at 3 (members were split).
Nasdaq, although questioning the inflexibility of the
fee limitation, stated that the fee limits were an
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Fmt 4701
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one commenter stated that the
reproposal is a reasonable alternative to
either banning access fees outright or
permitting access fees with relatively
high price caps.408
Another group of commenters
opposed the Commission’s access fee
limitation,409 with some opposing any
effort to limit fees through regulatory
means 410 and others believing that all
access fees should be prohibited.411
Many of those against imposing any fee
limitation believed that competition was
the best means for determining
prices,412 although at least one
commenter acknowledged a tradethrough rule could change this
competitive dynamic.413 One
commenter questioned the
Commission’s statutory authority to
impose an access fee cap.414
Some of the commenters that
supported a total ban on access fees
nonetheless supported the
Commission’s efforts to limit fees, if the
Commission were to permit access
fees.415 Some commenters, although
opposed to a fee limitation, thought that
the reproposal improved on the original
proposal.416 One commenter stated that
inevitable consequence of the trade-through
proposal, needed because markets and market
participants could otherwise take advantage of the
power granted to them. Nasdaq Reproposal Letter
at 19.
408 Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter at 3.
409 See Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 10;
ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 9–10; BGI Reproposal
Letter at 3; Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 1, 8; BSE
Reproposal Letter at 2; CHX Reproposal Letter at 4;
Letter from Lawrence E. Harris, Fred V. Keenan
Chair in Finance, Department of Finance and
Business Economics, Marshall School of Business,
University of Southern California, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated February 5,
2005 (‘‘Harris Reproposal Letter’’) at 4–5; Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 10; Merrill Lynch Reproposal
Letter at 3, 9; Morgan Stanley Reproposal Letter at
12–13; NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 7–8; Phlx
Reproposal Letter at 4–5.
410 See, e.g., ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 10; BGI
Reproposal Letter at 3; BSE Reproposal Letter at 2;
CHX Reproposal Letter at 4; Phlx Reproposal Letter
at 4–5.
411 See, e.g., Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 8;
Harris Reproposal Letter at 4–5; Merrill Lynch
Reproposal Letter at 3.
412 Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 10; ArcaEx
Reproposal Letter at 10; CHX Reproposal Letter at
4; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 10.
413 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 19.
414 Instinet Reproposal Letter at 10.
415 See, e.g., Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 4
(although advocating that the access fee limitation
should be set at $0.001, or the original proposal’s
tiered cap of $0.002); Knight Trading Group
Reproposal Letter at 6; STA Reproposal Letter at 4
(supporting the $0.003 per share cap in the absence
of complete prohibition on fees); STANY
Reproposal Letter at 5 (supporting the $0.003 per
share cap in the absence of complete elimination of
non-subscriber fees).
416 Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 8 (supporting
abolishment of all access fees, but praising the
Reproposal’s simplified approach); Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 3, 10–11.
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the reproposal improved on the original
fee limitation proposal by eliminating
the attribution requirement, reducing
the potential for unintended
consequences, and simplifying its
administration.417
Although acknowledging the many
difficult issues associated with access
fees, the Commission remains
concerned that these issues must be
resolved to promote a fair and efficient
NMS, particularly under the regulatory
structure adopted today. As the SIA
noted in its discussion of access fees, its
members continue to be united in their
desire for a market-wide resolution of
the access fee issue, although divided
on the optimum solution.418
After considering the continuing
divergent views of commenters, the
Commission believes that a flat
limitation on access fees to $0.003 per
share is the fairest and most appropriate
solution to what has been a
longstanding and contentious issue.419
The limitation is intended to achieve
several objectives. First, Rule 610(c)
promotes the NMS objective of equal
regulation of markets and broker-dealers
by applying equally to all types of
trading centers and all types of market
participants.420 As noted above,
although ECNs and other types of
trading centers, including SROs, may
currently charge access fees, market
makers have not been permitted to
charge any fee for counterparties
accessing their quotations. The
Commission believes, however, that it is
consistent with the Quote Rule for
market makers to charge fees for access
to their quotations, so long as such fees
meet the requirements of Rule 610(c). In
particular, market makers will be
permitted to charge fees for executions
of orders against their quotations,
irrespective of whether the order
executions are effected on an SRO
trading facility or directly by the market
maker.
Second, the adopted fee limitation is
designed to preclude individual trading
centers from raising their fees
substantially in an attempt to take
improper advantage of strengthened
protection against trade-throughs and
the adoption of a private linkage regime.
In particular, the fee limitation is
necessary to address ‘‘outlier’’ trading
centers that otherwise might charge high
fees to other market participants
required to access their quotations by
417 Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 3, 10–11.
Reproposal Letter at 3.
419 For the relatively small number of NMS stocks
priced under $1.00, fees will be limited to 0.3% of
the quotation price per share to prevent fees from
constituting an excessive percentage of share price.
420 Section 11A(c)(1)(F) of the Exchange Act.
418 SIA
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the Order Protection Rule. It also
precludes a trading center from charging
high fees selectively to competitors,
practices that have occurred in the
market for Nasdaq stocks. In the absence
of a fee limitation, the adoption of the
Order Protection Rule and private
linkages could significantly boost the
viability of the outlier business model.
Outlier markets might well try to take
advantage of intermarket price
protection by acting essentially as a toll
booth between price levels. The high fee
market likely will be the last market to
which orders would be routed, but
prices could not move to the next level
until someone routed an order to take
out the displayed price at the outlier
market. Therefore, the outlier market
might see little downside to charging
exceptionally high fees, such as $0.009,
even if it is last in priority. While
markets would have significant
incentives to compete to be near the top
in order-routing priority,421 there might
be little incentive to avoid being the
least-preferred market if fees were not
limited.
The $0.003 cap will limit the outlier
business model. It will place all markets
on a level playing field in terms of the
fees they can charge and the rebates
they can pass on to liquidity providers.
Some markets might choose to charge
lower fees, thereby increasing their
ranking in the preferences of order
routers. Others might charge the full
$0.003 and rebate a substantial
proportion to liquidity providers.
Competition will determine which
strategy is most successful.
Moreover, the fee limitation is
necessary to achieve the purposes of the
Exchange Act. Access fees tend to be
highest when markets use them to fund
substantial rebates to liquidity
providers, rather than merely to
compensate for agency services. If
outlier markets are allowed to charge
high fees and pass most of them through
as rebates, the published quotations of
such markets would not reliably
indicate the true price that is actually
available to investors or that would be
realized by liquidity providers. Section
11A(c)(1)(B) of the Exchange Act
authorizes the Commission to adopt
rules assuring the fairness and
usefulness of quotation information. For
quotations to be fair and useful, there
must be some limit on the extent to
which the true price for those who
access quotations can vary from the
displayed price. Consequently, the
$0.003 fee limitation will further the
421 See supra, section II.A.4.a (discussion of
competitive implications of trade-through
protection).
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37545
statutory purposes of the NMS by
harmonizing quotation practices and
precluding the distortive effects of
exorbitant fees. Moreover, the fee
limitation is necessary to further the
statutory purpose of enabling brokerdealers to route orders in a manner
consistent with the operation of the
NMS.422 To protect limit orders, orders
must be routed to those markets
displaying the best-priced quotations.
This purpose would be thwarted if
market participants were allowed to
charge exorbitant fees that distort
quoted prices.
The Commission notes the $0.003 fee
limitation is consistent with current
business practices, as very few trading
centers currently charge fees that exceed
this amount.423 It appears that only two
ECNs currently charges fees that exceed
$0.003, charging $0.005 for access
through the ADF. These ECNs currently
do not account for a large percentage of
trading volume. In addition, while a few
SROs have large fees on their books for
transactions in ETFs that exceed a
certain size (e.g., 2100 shares), it is
unlikely that these fees generate a large
amount of revenues.
Accordingly, the adopted fee
limitation will not impair the agency
market business model. The
Commission recognizes that agency
trading centers perform valuable agency
services in bringing buyers and sellers
together, and that their business model
historically has relied, at least in part,
on charging fees for execution of orders
against their displayed quotations.
Under current conditions, the
Commission believes that prohibiting
access fees entirely would unduly harm
this business model.
Several commenters believed that,
because best execution responsibilities
may require a broker-dealer to access
non-protected quotations, the
Commission should extend the access
fee cap to all quotations, not just
protected quotations.424 One commenter
422 Section 11A(c)(1)(E) of the Exchange Act
authorizes the Commission to adopt rules assuring
that broker-dealers transmit orders for NMS stocks
in a manner consistent with the establishment and
operation of a national market system.
423 Cf. Instinet Letter at 38 (‘‘there is no basis for
adopting any limitation other than at the prevailing
$0.003 per share level, which was arrived at
through open competition among ATSs, ECNs, and
SRO markets in the Nasdaq market’’) and Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 11 (‘‘as for an appropriate
amount for such an accumulated fee limitation, the
Reproposal sets the cap at the prevailing $0.003 per
share level for stocks priced above $1.00, which
was arrived at through open competition among
marketplaces’’).
424 Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 10 (only if fee
limitation is adopted); Citigroup Reproposal Letter
at 4; Madoff Reproposal Letter at 5 (also stating that
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argued that the potential contribution of
manual quotations to a market center’s
execution quality could require market
participants to access those quotations
to fulfill their duty of best execution,
even though they are not protected by
Rule 611.425 Thus, the commenter
suggested that the access fee limitation
should apply to all quotations,
including manual quotations, so as not
to disincent market participants from
attempting to access those quotations.426
The Commission agrees that the
access fee limitation should apply to
manual quotations that are best bids and
offers to the same extent it applies to
protected quotations, to preclude any
incentive for trading centers to display
manual quotations as a means to charge
a higher access fee. In addition, the
Commission recognizes that at present a
trading center’s execution quality
statistics will be evaluated against the
NBBO, whether that quotation is a
manual or automated quotation. The
Commission therefore has modified the
proposed fee limitation in Rule 610(c) to
apply to any quotation that is the best
bid or best offer of an exchange, the
ADF, or The NASDAQ Market Center, in
addition to any protected quotations as
defined in Rule 600(b)(57).427
The Commission is not, however,
extending the fee cap to all quotations
displayed by a trading center. Thus, the
fee cap will not apply to depth-of-book
quotations, or to any other services
offered by markets. By applying only to
the best bid and offer of an exchange,
the ADF, or The NASDAQ Market
Center, the limitation is narrowly
drafted to have minimal impact on
competition and individual business
models while furthering the objectives
of the Exchange Act by preserving the
fairness and usefulness of quotations, as
discussed above. It will provide the
necessary support for proper
functioning of the Order Protection Rule
and private linkages, while leaving
trading centers otherwise free to set fees
subject only to other applicable
standards (e.g., prohibiting unfair
discrimination).
Two commenters expressed a concern
with the ability to determine after-thefact whether a quotation against which
an incoming order executed was subject
to an access fee cap, given that under
the Rule a market participant could be
extending the fee limitation to all quotations will
ensure that all quotations are treated fairly); Merrill
Lynch Reproposal Letter at 9; SIA Reproposal Letter
at 22; STANY Reproposal Letter at 2, 5.
425 Madoff Reproposal Letter at 5.
426 Id.
427 In addition, the Commission notes that the
access standards in Rule 610(a) and (b) apply to all
quotations, not just automated quotations.
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charged different fees based on whether
or not a quotation was protected.428 In
particular, one commenter raised the
issue in the context of a sweep order
that could hit non-protected quotations,
and advocated applying the access fee
limit to all sweep orders.429 The
Commission acknowledges these
concerns, but notes that market
participants will be able to control the
extent to which their orders interact
with protected and non-protected
quotations. First, under the Order
Protection Rule, the definition of
intermarket sweep order requires market
participants to route orders to interact
only with protected quotations. The
objective can be achieved by routing an
IOC, marketable limit order with a limit
price that equals the price of the
protected quotation. The extent to
which they route to non-protected
quotations will be subject to the full
range of competitive forces, including
the fees that trading centers choose to
charge for access to non-protected
quotations.
The Commission recognizes, however,
the concern that a market participant
could intend to interact only with a
protected quotation but in fact execute
against a non-protected quotation. For
example, at the time a market
participant routes an order to a trading
center, it may be attempting to execute
against only that trading center’s best
bid or offer, which will be subject to the
fee cap under adopted Rule 610(c) (for
instance, by sending an intermarket
sweep order with a limit price equal to
the price of the protected quotation). By
the time the order arrives at the trading
center, the incoming order may, if a
better priced bid or offer has been
displayed at the trading center for a size
smaller than the size of the incoming
order, execute against both the new best
bid or offer and the quotation that
previously was the trading center’s best
bid or offer. To meet the requirements
of Rule 610(c), however, a trading center
must ensure that it never charges a fee
in excess of the cap for executions of an
order against its quotations that are
subject to the fee cap. The operation of
this limitation will be based on
quotations as they are displayed in the
consolidated quotation stream. Thus,
the trading center is responsible for
ensuring that any time lag between
prices in its internal systems and its
quotations in the consolidated quotation
system do not cause fees to be charged
that violate the limitation of Rule 610(c).
Compliance with this requirement
428 Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 8, n. 6; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 22.
429 Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 8, n. 6.
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obviously will not be a problem for
trading centers that do not charge any
fees in excess of the cap. Given the often
rapid updating of quotations in NMS
stocks, however, the Commission does
not believe a trading center that charges
fees above the cap for quotations that
are not subject to the fee cap could
comply with the Rule unless it provides
a functionality that enables market
participants to assure that they will
never inadvertently be charged a fee in
excess of the cap. For example, such a
trading center could provide a ‘‘top-ofbook only’’ or ‘‘limited-fee only’’ order
functionality. By using this
functionality, market participants
themselves could assure that they were
never required to pay a fee in excess of
the levels set forth in Rule 610(c).
In restricting the fee cap to the top-ofbook, we are attempting to reduce the
regulatory impact to the minimum
extent necessary to effect the statutory
purposes. We intend to monitor the
operation of these rules to assess
whether in practice, distinguishing
which quotations are subject to the cap
is so difficult, and accessing nonprotected quotations is so essential, that
broader coverage of the rule is
necessary.
3. Locking or Crossing Quotations
The original access proposal provided
that the SROs must establish and
enforce rules: (1) Requiring their
members reasonably to avoid posting
quotations that lock or cross the
quotations of other markets; (2) enabling
the reconciliation of locked or crossed
markets; and (3) prohibiting their
members from engaging in a pattern or
practice of locking or crossing
quotations. In light of the discussion at
the NMS Hearing concerning automated
quotations and automated markets,430
the Supplemental Release requested
comment on whether market
participants should be allowed to
submit automated quotations that lock
or cross manual quotations.431 In the
Reproposing Release, the Commission
reproposed restrictions on the practice
of displaying locking or crossing
quotations, but, consistent with its
approach in the reproposed Order
Protection Rule, modified the proposal
to allow automated quotations to lock or
cross manual quotations. Rule 610(d) as
reproposed thereby addressed the
concern that manual quotations may not
be fully accessible and recognized that
allowing automated quotations to lock
430 See
supra, section II.A.2.
Release, 69 FR at 30147.
431 Supplemental
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or cross manual quotations may provide
useful market information.
Most of the commenters who
addressed the issue supported the
proposed restrictions on locking and
crossing quotations.432 They generally
agreed that the practice of displaying
quotations that lock or cross previously
displayed quotations is inconsistent
with fair and orderly markets and
detracts from market efficiency. One
noted, for example, that locked and
crossed markets ‘‘can be a sign of an
inefficient market structure’’ and ‘‘may
create confusion for investors, as it is
unclear under such circumstances what
is the true trading interest in a
stock.’’ 433 Another commenter stated
that ‘‘[p]ricing rationality is disrupted
by locked and crossed markets, and
efforts should be taken to reduce the
incidence of such disruptions.’’ 434
Some commenters asserted that locked
markets often occur when a market
participant deliberately posts a locking
quotation to avoid paying a fee to access
the quotation of another market and to
receive a liquidity rebate for an
execution against its own displayed
quotation.435 Nasdaq submitted data
regarding the frequency of locked and
crossed markets. During a one-week
period in March 2004, it found that
markets for Nasdaq stocks were locked
or crossed an average of 509,018 times
each day, with an average of 194,638 of
the locks and crosses lasting more than
1 second and an average duration of all
locks and crosses of 3.1 seconds.436
Nasdaq stocks currently are not subject
to provisions discouraging intermarket
locking or crossing quotations such as
those contained in the ITS Plan.
Several commenters specifically
supported the modification to allow
automated quotations to lock or cross
432 Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 27–28; Letter from
Steve Swanson, Chief Executive Officer & President,
Automated Trading Desk, LLC, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 30, 2004 (‘‘ATD
Letter’’) at 3; Brut Letter at 17; BSE Letter at 13;
Citigroup Letter at 14; E*Trade Letter at 10; ICI
Letter at 18; JP Morgan Letter at 6; Nasdaq Letter
II at 23–24; NYSE Letter, Attachment at 9; SIA
Letter at 19–20; STA Letter at 6; STANY Letter at
8; UBS Letter at 9–10.
433 ICI Letter at 18.
434 Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter at 3.
435 Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 27–28; ATD
Reproposal Letter at 5; ICI Letter at 18; Nasdaq
Letter II at 23.
436 Nasdaq Letter II at 23. One commenter pointed
to this data as support for not prohibiting locked
and crossed markets, since 314,380 of the 509,018
locks or crosses lasted less than one second, even
without a rule. Letter from Edward J. Joyce,
President and Chief Operating Officer, Chicago
Board Options Exchange, Incorporated, to Jonathan
G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated February 14,
2005 (‘‘CBOE Reproposal Letter’’) at 7.
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manual quotations.437 One commenter
stated that market participants should
not be forced to seek out slow, uncertain
executions before being permitted to
offer liquidity at prices they find
acceptable.438
A few comments opposed restricting
the practice of locking or crossing
quotations.439 They generally believed
that the proposal would impair market
transparency and efficiency, such as by
prohibiting the display of information as
to the true level of trading interest or
information that a particular market’s
quotations may be inaccessible. One
commenter identified a number of
causes, apart from access fees and
liquidity rebates, which could lead to
locked and crossed markets.440 These
included determinations by market
participants that quotations displayed
by a locked or crossed market are not
truly accessible, decisions by market
participants that the potential
disadvantages of routing away outweigh
the potential advantages (e.g., loss of
execution priority on the market place
currently displaying the order), and
decisions by market participants to
exclusively use a particular market to
run a trading strategy, even at the risk
of missing some trading opportunities.
One commenter stated that providing an
exception from the restrictions for
manual quotations would do little to
mitigate the negative impact of the
restrictions on market transparency and
efficiency.441
The Commission recognizes that Rule
610(d), by restricting locked markets
with respect to automated quotations,
can prohibit the display of an order that
would otherwise have been displayed
and reduced the quoted spread to zero.
However, although locked markets do
occur a certain percentage of the time,
they do not occur all the time, even in
extremely active stocks, and thus the
average effective spread in these stocks
typically is between one-half cent and
one cent (one cent being the minimum
price increment for all but a very few
stocks). Thus, the Commission believes
that any widening of average effective
437 Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 4; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 18; SIA Reproposal Letter at
23.
438 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 18.
439 CBOE Reproposal Letter at 1–4; Letter from
Linda Lerner, General Counsel, Domestic Securities,
Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated September 9, 2004 (‘‘Domestic Securities
Letter’’) at 2–3; Hudson River Trading Letter at 5–
6; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 3,11; Letter from
Michael J. Simon, Senior Vice President &
Secretary, International Securities Exchange, Inc., to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 30, 2004 (‘‘ISE Letter’’) at 7–8; Tower Research
Letter at 6–8; Tradebot Reproposal Letter at 1.
440 Instinet Letter at 39.
441 Instinet Reproposal Letter at 3.
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37547
spreads caused solely by the adopted
rule will be limited to the difference
between a sub-penny and penny spread.
In addition, a locked market currently
may not actually represent two market
participants willing to buy and sell at
the same price. Often, the locking
market participant is not truly willing to
trade at the displayed locking price, but
instead chooses to lock rather than
execute against the already-displayed
quotation to receive a liquidity
rebate.442
The Commission agrees with
commenters supporting the proposal
that an automated quotation is entitled
to protection from locking or crossing
quotations. When two market
participants are willing to trade at the
same quoted price, giving priority to the
first-displayed automated quotation will
encourage posting of quotations and
contribute to fair and orderly markets.
The basic principle underlying the NMS
is to promote fair competition among
markets, but within a system that also
promotes interaction between all of the
buyers and sellers in a particular NMS
stock. Allowing market participants
simply to ignore accessible quotations
in other markets and routinely display
locking and crossing quotations is
inconsistent with this principle. The
Rule will, however, not prohibit
automated quotations from locking or
crossing manual quotations, thereby
permitting market participants to reflect
information regarding the inaccessibility
of a particular trading center’s
quotations.
Two commenters requested that the
Commission include an exception to the
locked and crossed requirements for
system malfunctions and material
delays, and one commenter requested
that the Commission include an
exception for flickering quotations,
similar to the exceptions proposed for
the Order Protection Rule.443 The SIA
also requested that the Commission
further clarify the operation of the ‘‘ship
and post’’ procedures.444 The
Commission believes that it would be
reasonable for the SROs to include in
their rules implemented pursuant to
Rule 610(d) exceptions equivalent to
those included in the Order Protection
Rule.445 The Commission intends to
442 See supra, note 435. See also AFB Comment
Letter at 9; Schwab Comment Letter at 17.
443 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 18; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 23.
444 SIA Reproposal Letter at 23.
445 Specifically, such exceptions would be
included within SRO rules adopted pursuant to
Rule 610(d) that require their members to
reasonably avoid displaying quotations that lock or
cross a protected quotation or displaying manual
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work closely with the SROs and other
industry participants during the
implementation period for Regulation
NMS to achieve reasonable industrywide standards for SRO rules relating to
locked and crossed markets. In addition,
such rules must be filed for Commission
approval, thereby providing an
opportunity for public notice and
comment.
B. Description of Adopted Rule
Paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule 610
address access to all quotations
displayed by an SRO trading facility or
by an SRO display-only facility.
Paragraph (c) addresses the fees charged
for access to protected quotations, and
paragraph (d) addresses locking and
crossing quotations. The Commission
also is extending the scope of the fair
access requirements of Regulation ATS
as proposed and reproposed.
1. Access to Quotations
a. Quotations of SRO Trading Facilities
Paragraph (a) of Rule 610 applies to
quotations of an SRO trading facility. In
Rule 600(b)(72), an SRO trading facility
is defined as a facility operated by or on
behalf of a national securities exchange
or a national securities association that
executes orders in securities or presents
orders to members for execution.446
This definition therefore encompasses
the trading facilities of each of the
exchanges, as well as The NASDAQ
Market Center. The term ‘‘quotation’’ is
defined in Rule 600(b)(62) as a bid or an
offer, and ‘‘bid’’ or ‘‘offer’’ is defined in
Rule 600(b)(8) as the bid price or the
offer price communicated by a member
of a national securities exchange or
national securities association to any
broker or dealer or to any customer.
Rule 610(a) therefore applies to the
entire depth of book of displayed orders
of an SRO trading facility, including
quotations that lock or cross any quotation in an
NMS stock. The Commission notes that it has
modified the language of Rule 610(d)(3) from the
reproposal to clarify that, if an SRO’s rules (as
approved by the Commission) provide for
reasonable exceptions to the locking and crossing
requirements of Rule 610(d), the prohibition on its
members engaging in a pattern or practice of
displaying quotations that lock or cross any
protected quotation in an NMS stock, or of
displaying manual quotations that lock or cross any
quotation in an NMS stock disseminated pursuant
to an effective national market system plan, will not
apply to the display of quotations that lock or cross
any protected or other quotation as permitted by an
applicable exception.
446 The Commission has modified the definition
of SRO trading facility in Rule 600(b)(72) to include
the phrase ‘‘or on behalf of’’ after ‘‘operated by’’ to
make clear that the term includes an SRO trading
facility for which an exchange or association has
contracted out the operation to a third party.
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reserve size as well as displayed size at
each price.
Rule 610(a) prohibits an SRO from
imposing unfairly discriminatory terms
that prevent or inhibit any person from
obtaining efficient access through a
member of the SRO to the quotations in
an NMS stock displayed by the SRO
trading facility. This anti-discrimination
standard is designed to give nonmembers indirect access to quotations
through members. It is premised on fair
and efficient access of SRO members
themselves to the quotations of the
SRO’s trading facility. SRO member
access currently is addressed by a series
of provisions of the Exchange Act.
Sections (6)(b)(4) and 15A(b)(5) provide
that the rules of an exchange or
association provide for the equitable
allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and
other charges among its members and
other persons using its facilities, while
Sections 6(b)(5) and 15A(b)(6) provide
in part that its rules not be designed to
permit unfair discrimination between
customers, brokers, or dealers. In
addition, Sections 6(b)(1) and 15A(b)(2)
of the Exchange Act require that an
exchange or association must have the
capacity to be able to carry out the
purposes of the Exchange Act. Sections
6(b)(5) and 15A(b)(6) also require an
exchange or association to have rules
designed to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system. Section 11A(a)(1)(C) provides
that two of the objectives of a national
market system are to assure the
economically efficient execution of
securities transactions and the
practicability of brokers executing
investors’ orders in the best market. To
achieve these objectives, an SRO’s
members—broker-dealers that have the
right to trade directly on an SRO
facility—must themselves have fair and
efficient access to the quotations
displayed on such facility.
Rule 610(a) builds on this existing
access structure by prohibiting unfair
discrimination that prevents or inhibits
non-members from piggybacking on the
access of members. In the absence of
mandatory public linkages directly
between markets, the ability to obtain
indirect access is necessary to assure
that non-members can readily access
quotations to meet the requirements of
the Order Protection Rule and to fulfill
their duty of best execution. In general,
any SRO rule or practice that treats
orders less favorably based on the
identity of the ultimate party submitting
the order through an SRO member could
violate Rule 610(a). Thus, for example,
charging differential fees or reducing an
order’s priority based on the identity of
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a member’s customer would be
inconsistent with Rule 610(a).
Given the critical importance of
indirect access to the private linkage
approach incorporated in Rule 610(a),
the Commission intends to review the
current extent to which SRO members
have fair and efficient access to
quotations in NMS stocks that are
displayed on an SRO trading facility
(which term does not include the
NASD’s ADF, as discussed below). In
this regard, we emphasize that the SROs
with trading facilities cannot meet the
access requirements of the Exchange Act
simply by assuming direct access is
available to trading centers that
participate in the SRO trading facilities.
Thus, if a trading center displays
quotations on an SRO trading facility,
but also provides direct access to such
quotations, that SRO could not rely on
the level of direct access to the non-SRO
trading center to meet its Exchange Act
responsibilities. An SRO trading facility
must itself provide fair and efficient
access to the quotations that are
displayed as quotations of such SRO.
Stated another way, an SRO trading
facility cannot be used simply as a
conduit for the display of quotations
that cannot be accessed fairly and
efficiently through the SRO trading
facility itself. Accordingly, each SRO’s
facilities will be reviewed to determine
whether they are able to meet the
enhanced need for access under the
adopted regulatory structure.
b. Quotations of SRO Display-Only
Facility
Paragraph (b) of Rule 610 applies to
all quotations displayed by an SRO
display-only facility. The term ‘‘SRO
display-only facility’’ is defined in Rule
600(b)(71) as a facility operated by or on
behalf of a national securities exchange
or national securities association that
displays quotations in securities, but
does not execute orders against such
quotations or present orders to members
for execution.447 For quotations in NMS
447 The term ‘‘SRO trading facility’’ is defined in
Rule 600(b)(72) to mean a facility operated by or on
behalf of a national securities exchange or a
national securities association that executes orders
in a security or presents orders to members for
execution. The Commission has included the
phrase ‘‘to members’’ after the phrase ‘‘or present
orders’’ in the definition of ‘‘SRO display-only
facility’’ in Rule 600(b)(71) as adopted to conform
it to the definition of SRO trading facility. The
Commission also has modified the definition of
SRO display-only facility to include the phrase ‘‘or
on behalf of’’ after ‘‘operated by’’ to make clear that
the term includes an SRO trading facility for which
an exchange or association has contracted out the
operation to a third party.
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stocks, this definition currently
encompasses only the NASD’s ADF.448
Paragraph (b)(1) of Rule 610 requires
any trading center that displays
quotations in NMS stocks through an
SRO display-only facility to provide a
level and cost of access to such
quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities. The phrase ‘‘level and cost of
access’’ would encompass both (1) the
policies, procedures, and standards that
govern access to quotations of the
trading center, and (2) the connectivity
through which market participants can
obtain access and the cost of such
connectivity. As discussed in section
III.A.1 above, trading centers that
choose to display quotations in an SRO
display-only facility will be required to
bear the responsibility of establishing
the necessary connections to afford fair
and efficient access to their quotations.
The nature and cost of these
connections for market participants
seeking to access the trading center’s
quotations would need to be
substantially equivalent to the nature
and cost of connections to SRO trading
facilities.449 In recent years, a variety of
different types of entities have entered
the business of providing connections
for brokers and market participants to
different trading centers. The
Commission anticipates that ADF
participants will take advantage of
linking to these service providers to
establish the necessary connectivity.
The NASD, as the self-regulatory
authority responsible for enforcing
compliance by ADF participants with
the requirements of the Exchange Act,
will need to evaluate the connectivity of
ADF participants to determine whether
it meets the requirements of Rule
610(b)(1). Prior to implementation of
Rule 610, the NASD will need to make
an affirmative determination that
existing ADF participants are in
compliance with the requirements of the
Rule.450 If an ADF participant is not
complying with these access standards,
the NASD would have a responsibility
to stop publishing the participant’s
448 The Commission notes that Rule 610(b)(1)
applies to all quotations displayed on an SRO
display-only facility, even if the trading center also
displays quotations in an SRO trading facility. To
preclude the consolidated data stream from giving
a misleading indication of available liquidity,
separate quotations displayed on an SRO trading
facility and an SRO display-only facility must each
be fully accessible.
449 As stated above in section III.A.1, this
requirement does not apply on an absolute basis,
but instead applies on a per-transaction basis to
reflect the costs relative to the ADF participant’s
trading volume.
450 See Section 15A of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. 78o–3.
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quotations until the participant comes
into compliance.451 The Commission
also believes that the addition of a new
ADF participant would constitute a
material aspect of the operation of the
NASD’s facilities, and thus require the
filing of a proposed rule change
pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act that would be subject to
public notice and comment.452
Paragraph (b)(2) of Rule 610 prohibits
any trading center that displays
quotations through an SRO display-only
facility from imposing unfairly
discriminatory terms that prevent or
inhibit any person from obtaining
efficient access to such quotations
through a member, subscriber, or
customer of the trading center. This
prohibition parallels the prohibition in
Rule 610(a) that applies to the
quotations of SRO trading facilities.453
Thus, a trading center’s differential
treatment of orders based on the identity
of the party ultimately submitting an
order through a member, subscriber, or
customer of such trading center
generally is inconsistent with this Rule.
2. Limitation on Access Fees
Rule 610(c) limits the fees that can be
charged for access to protected
quotations and manual quotations at the
best bid and offer. It provides that a
trading center shall not impose, nor
permit to be imposed, any fee or fees for
the execution of an order against a
protected quotation of the trading center
or against any other quotation of the
trading center that is the best bid or best
offer of a national securities exchange,
the best bid or best offer of The Nasdaq
Stock Market, Inc., or the best bid or
best offer of a national securities
association other than the best bid or
best offer of The Nasdaq Stock Market,
Inc. in an NMS stock (‘‘BBO
quotations’’) that exceed or accumulate
to more than $0.003 per share or, for its
protected quotations and BBO
quotations with a price of less than
$1.00, that exceed or accumulate to
more than 0.3% of the quotation price
per share. Thus, the scope of Rule 610(c)
is limited to the price of the best bid and
offer, whether automated or manual, of
each exchange, The NASDAQ Market
Center, and the ADF. When triggered,
the fee limitation of Rule 610(c) will
apply to any order execution at the
displayed price of the protected
quotation or the BBO quotation. It
37549
therefore would encompass executions
against both the displayed size and any
reserve size at the price of those
quotations.
Rule 610(c) encompasses a wide
variety of fees currently charged by
trading centers, including both the fees
commonly known as access fees charged
by ECNs and the transaction fees
charged by SROs. So long as the fees are
based on the execution of an order
against a protected quotation or a BBO
quotation, the restriction of Rule 610(c)
will apply. Conversely, fees not
triggered by the execution of orders
against protected quotations or BBO
quotations (e.g., certain periodic fees
such as monthly or annual fees)
generally will not be included.
In addition, Rule 610(c) encompasses
any fee charged directly by a trading
center, as well as any fee charged by
market participants that display
quotations through the trading center’s
facilities. Nothing in Rule 610(c) will
preclude an SRO or other trading center
from taking action to limit fees beyond
what is required by the Rule, and
trading centers will have flexibility in
establishing their fee schedules to
comply with Rule 610(c). In particular,
trading centers could impose a limit on
the fees that market participants are
permitted to charge for quotations that
are accessed through a trading center’s
facilities. For example, Nasdaq has
adopted such a limit for quotations
displayed by The NASDAQ Market
Center.454
The Commission believes that it is
consistent with the Quote Rule for
market makers to charge fees for access
to their quotations, so long as such fees
meet the requirements of Rule 610(c). In
particular, market makers will be
permitted to charge fees for executions
of orders against their quotations
irrespective of whether the order
executions are effected on an SRO
trading facility or directly by the market
maker.
3. Locking or Crossing Quotations
Rule 610(d) restricts locking or
crossing quotations, but recognizes that
locked and crossed markets can occur
accidentally, especially given the
differing speeds with which trading
centers update their quotations. It
requires that each national securities
exchange and national securities
association establish, maintain, and
enforce written rules that: 455 (1) Require
451 Id.
452 See Rule 19b–4(b)(1) under the Exchange Act,
17 CFR 240.19b–4(b)(1).
453 Moreover, as with paragraph (a) of Rule 610,
paragraph (b) applies to both the displayed and
reserve size of the displayed quotations of an SRO
display-only facility.
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454 NASD
Rule 4623(b)(6).
Commission has modified the language of
adopted Rule 610(d) to require that an exchange or
association ‘‘establish, maintain, and enforce’’ such
rules, and to clarify that such rules must be written,
455 The
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its members to reasonably avoid
displaying quotations that lock or cross
any protected quotation in an NMS
stock, or of displaying manual
quotations that lock or cross any
quotation in an NMS stock disseminated
pursuant to an effective national market
system plan; (2) are reasonably designed
to assure the reconciliation of locked or
crossed quotations in an NMS stock;
and (3) prohibit its members from
engaging in a pattern or practice of
displaying quotations that lock or cross
any protected quotation in an NMS
stock, or of displaying manual
quotations that lock or cross any
quotation in an NMS stock disseminated
pursuant to an effective national market
system plan, other than displaying
quotations that lock or cross any
protected or other quotation as
permitted by an exception contained in
the SRO’s rules established pursuant to
(1). Of course, the SRO’s locking and
crossing rules should apply only to its
own quoting facility.
Rule 610(d) distinguishes between
protected (and therefore automated) 456
quotations and manual quotations.
Protected quotations can not be
intentionally crossed or locked by any
other quotations. Manual quotations, in
contrast, can be locked or crossed by
automated quotations, but can not
themselves intentionally lock or cross
any other quotations included in the
consolidated data stream, whether
automated or manual. Recognizing that
quotations may on occasion accidentally
lock or cross other quotations, Rule
610(d) requires members to ‘‘reasonably
avoid’’ locking and crossing and
prohibits a ‘‘pattern or practice’’ of
locking or crossing quotations where
this can reasonably be avoided. SRO
rules can include so-called ‘‘ship and
post’’ procedures that require a market
participant to attempt to execute against
a relevant displayed quotation while
posting a quotation that could lock or
cross such a quotation. Finally, Rule
610(d)(2) requires that each SRO’s rules
be reasonably designed to enable the
reconciliation of locked or crossed
quotations in an NMS stock. Such rules
must require the market participant
responsible for displaying the locking or
crossing quotation to take reasonable
action to resolve the locked or crossed
market.457
to conform the language to the operative language
of Rule 611(a)(1).
456 Under Rule 600(b)(57), only automated
quotations can qualify as protected quotations.
457 The Commission notes that the requirement in
Rule 610(d)(1) that an SRO establish, maintain, and
enforce rules that require its members reasonably to
avoid engaging in certain activity relating to locking
and crossing of displayed quotations may appear to
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4. Regulation ATS Fair Access
The ‘‘fair access’’ standards of Rule
301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS 458 require
a covered ATS, among other things, to:
(1) Establish written standards for
granting access on its system; and (2)
not unreasonably prohibit or limit any
person in respect to services offered by
the ATS by applying its access
standards in an unfair or discriminatory
manner. As originally proposed and
reproposed, the Commission is
amending this section of Regulation
ATS to lower the threshold that triggers
the Regulation ATS fair access
requirements from 20% of the average
daily volume in a security to 5%.459
Under the access approach adopted
today, the fairness and efficiency of
private linkages will assume heightened
importance. A critical component of
private linkages is the ability of
interested market participants to
become members or subscribers of a
trading center, particularly those trading
centers with significant trading volume.
As discussed in section III.A.1 above,
market participants then may use their
membership or subscribership access as
a means for others to obtain indirect
access by piggybacking on the direct
access of members or subscribers. The
Commission therefore believes that it is
appropriate to lower the fair access
threshold of Regulation ATS.460
Lowering the threshold for paragraph
(b)(5) of Rule 301 also makes its
be similar to the language contained in Section
8(d)(i) of the existing ITS Plan that ‘‘[t]he
Participants also agree that ‘‘locked markets’’ in
System securities should be avoided.’’ The
Commission emphasizes, however, that the intent
and meaning of Rule 610(d) is more strict and
comprehensive than the ITS Plan provision. In
particular, as noted above, Rule 610(d) requires
SROs to restrict their members’ ability to engage in
locking and crossing activity. The Commission
therefore believes that most existing SRO rules
established to implement the locked and crossed
provision of the ITS Plan likely would not be
sufficient to comply with Rule 610(d).
458 17 CFR 242.301(b)(5).
459 The Regulation ATS fair access requirements
are triggered on a security-by-security basis for
equity securities. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 40760 (Dec. 8, 1998), 63 FR 70844,
70873 (Dec. 22, 1998).
460 One commenter opposed the proposal to lower
the threshold for Regulation ATS fair access,
primarily because it largely acts as an agency broker
that routes orders to other venues. Bloomberg
Tradebook Letter at 7. The Commission believes
that ATSs, which by definition have chosen to offer
market functions beyond mere agency routing,
would appropriately be subject to regulatory
requirements that reflect such functions.
Commenters on the Proposing and Reproposing
Releases supported the proposal to lower the fair
access threshold. See, e.g., Amex Letter at 28–29;
Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 3; E*TRADE Letter
at 10; ICI Letter at 4; Instinet Reproposal Letter at
3,12; Morgan Stanley Letter at 17–18; Merrill Lynch
Reproposal Letter at 9; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at
17; Specialist Assoc. Letter at 11; UBS Letter at 9.
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coverage consistent with the 5%
threshold triggering the order display
and execution access requirements of
Rule 301(b)(3). As a result, each ATS
required to disseminate its quotations in
the consolidated data stream also will
be prohibited from unreasonably
limiting market participants from
becoming a subscriber or customer.
Aside from lowering the threshold, the
substantive requirements of Rule
301(b)(5) are left unchanged.
One commenter, Liquidnet, argued
that the fair access standards of
Regulation ATS should not apply to
systems that display orders only to one
other system subscriber, such as through
a negotiation feature.461 Among other
things, Liquidnet maintained that the
fair access requirement should not
apply to it because, in essence, it is an
institutional block trading desk that
does not publish quotations.462 By its
terms, Rule 301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS
will apply to Liquidnet. However, the
Commission believes that some form of
exemptive relief under Section 36 of the
Exchange Act may be appropriate to
maintain the fair access threshold at
20% for an ATS, such as Liquidnet,
that, among other things, limits its
business to institutional block trading
and does not disseminate quotations.
The Commission intends to consider
this matter further during the
implementation period for Regulation
NMS.
IV. Sub-Penny Rule
The Commission today is adopting
Rule 612 under the Exchange Act 463
which will govern sub-penny quoting of
NMS stocks. Rule 612 imposes new
requirements on any bid, offer, order, or
indication of interest that is displayed,
ranked, or accepted by a national
securities exchange, national securities
association, ATS, vendor, or brokerdealer. The Commission is adopting
Rule 612 as it was reproposed in
December 2004 with only a few minor
amendments for clarity.
A. Background
In June 2000, the Commission issued
an order directing NASD and the
national securities exchanges to act
jointly in developing a plan to convert
their quotations in equity securities and
options from fractions to decimals.464
461 See letter to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, from Seth Merrin, Chief Executive
Officer, Liquidnet Inc., dated January 26, 2005
(‘‘Liquidnet Reproposal Letter’’) at 3.
462 See id.
463 17 CFR 242.612.
464 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
42194 (June 8, 2000), 65 FR 38010 (June 19, 2000)
(‘‘June 2000 Order’’). On January 28, 2000, the
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The June 2000 Order stated that the plan
could fix the minimum price variation
(‘‘MPV’’) during the phase-in period,
provided the MPV was no greater than
$0.05 and no less than $0.01 for any
equity security.465 The June 2000 Order
also required NASD and the exchanges
to provide the Commission with studies
analyzing how decimal conversion had
affected systems capacity, liquidity, and
trading behavior, including an analysis
of whether there should be a uniform
MPV.466 The Commission stated that, if
NASD or an exchange wished to move
to quoting stocks in an increment less
than $0.01, its study should include a
full analysis of the potential impact on
the market requesting the change and on
the markets as a whole.467 Furthermore,
the Commission required each SRO to
propose a rule change under Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act 468 to
establish its individual choice of MPV
for securities traded on its market.469
NASD and the exchanges complied with
these requirements, and in August 2002
the Commission approved rule changes
from all of these SROs to establish an
MPV of $0.01 for equity securities.470
Between the June 2000 Order and the
August 2002 Order, the Commission
issued a Concept Release seeking public
comment on the potential impact of subpenny pricing,471 including its effect on:
(1) Price clarity (e.g., the potential to
cause ephemeral or ‘‘flickering’’
quotations); (2) market depth (i.e., the
number of shares available at a given
price); (3) compliance with the Order
Handling Rules and other priceCommission had ordered NASD and the exchanges
to facilitate an orderly transition to decimal pricing
in the securities markets. See Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 42360 (Jan. 28, 2000), 65 FR 5003
(Feb. 2, 2000) (‘‘January 2000 Order’’). In that order,
the Commission set a timetable for NASD and the
exchanges to begin trading some equity securities,
and options on those securities, in decimals by July
3, 2000, and to begin trading all equities and
options by January 3, 2001. See January 2000 Order,
65 FR at 5005. In April 2000, the Commission
issued another order staying the original deadlines
for decimalization. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 42685 (Apr. 13, 2000), 65 FR 21046
(Apr. 19, 2000).
465 See June 2000 Order, 65 FR at 38013. The June
2000 Order also required that at least some equity
securities be quoted in minimum increments of
$0.01. See Id.
466 See Id.
467 See Id.
468 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
469 See June 2000 Order, 65 FR at 38013.
470 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
46280 (July 29, 2002), 67 FR 50739 (Aug. 5, 2002)
(‘‘August 2002 Order’’) (approving SR–Amex–2002–
02, SR–BSE–2002–02, SR–CBOE–2002–02, SR–
CHX–2002–06, SR–CSE–2002–02, SR–ISE–2002–06,
SR–NASD–2002–08, SR–NYSE–2002–12, SR–PCX–
2002–04, and SR-Phlx-2002–05).
471 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 44568
(July 18, 2001), 66 FR 38390 (July 24, 2001)
(‘‘Concept Release’’).
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dependent rules; and (4) the operations
and capacity of automated systems.472
The Commission received 33 comments
on the Concept Release.473 The majority
of commenters opposed sub-penny
pricing. Some stated that the negative
effects of decimal trading would be
exacerbated by further reducing the
MPV, without meaningfully reducing
spreads or securing other benefits for
the markets or investors.474 These
commenters recommended that all
securities have an MPV of at least a
penny.475 A smaller number of
commenters believed that the forces of
competition, rather than regulation by
the Commission or Congress, should
determine the MPV.476 These
commenters suggested that a smaller
MPV could improve market efficiency
and provide investors with greater
opportunity for price improvement.
They argued generally that the problems
accompanying decimals could be
resolved through technology
enhancements, rather than through
regulation.
In August 2003, Nasdaq submitted a
proposed rule change to the
Commission to adopt an MPV of $0.001
for Nasdaq-listed securities.477 Nasdaq
stated that, unless and until a uniform
MPV were established, it felt compelled
to implement an MPV of $0.001 to
remain competitive with ECNs that
permit their subscribers to quote in subpennies. At the same time, Nasdaq filed
a petition for Commission action urging
the Commission ‘‘to adopt a uniform
rule requiring market participants to
quote and trade Nasdaq securities in a
consistent monetary increment * * *
with the exception of average price
trades.’’ 478
B. Commission Proposal and
Reproposal on Sub-Penny Quoting
In February 2004, the Commission
proposed new Rule 612 that would
govern sub-penny quoting as part of the
overall Regulation NMS proposal. In the
initial Proposing Release, the
Commission summarized the
conversion of the U.S. securities
markets from fractional to decimalized
trading and stated its view that, on
66 FR at 38391–95.
a list of the commenters, see Proposing
Release, 69 FR at 11165.
474 See Id.
475 However, some commenters that opposed subpenny quoting thought that trading in sub-pennies
should be permitted. See Id.
476 See Id. at 11165–66.
477 See SR–NASD–2003–121. Nasdaq has since
withdrawn this proposal.
478 Letter to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, from Edward S. Knight, Executive
Vice President, Nasdaq, dated August 4, 2003
(‘‘Nasdaq Petition’’).
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472 See
473 For
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Sfmt 4700
37551
balance, the benefits of decimalization
have justified the costs. The
Commission cautioned, however, that if
the MPV were to decrease beyond a
certain level, the potential costs to
investors and the markets could at some
point surpass any potential benefits.479
To address this concern, Rule 612 as
proposed would have prohibited any
national securities exchange, national
securities association, ATS, vendor, or
broker-dealer from displaying, ranking,
or accepting from any person a bid,
offer, order, or indication of interest in
an NMS stock priced in an increment
less than $0.01 per share. This
restriction would not have applied to
any NMS stock the share price of which
is below $1.00.
The proposed rule was designed to
limit the ability of a market participant
to gain execution priority over a
competing limit order by stepping ahead
by an economically insignificant
amount. In issuing the sub-penny
proposal, the Commission cited research
performed by OEA showing a high
incidence of sub-penny trades that
cluster around the $0.001 and $0.009
price points. The OEA study concluded
that this phenomenon resulted from
market participants attempting to step
ahead of competing limit orders for the
smallest economic increment
possible.480
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission pointed to a variety of
additional problems caused by subpenny quoting, including the following:
• If investors’ limit orders lose
execution priority for a nominal
amount, investors may over time
decline to use them, thus depriving the
markets of liquidity.
• When market participants can gain
execution priority for an infinitesimally
small amount, important customer
protection rules such as exchange
priority rules and NASD’s Manning
rule 481 could be rendered meaningless.
479 See
Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11165.
69 FR at 11169–70.
481 See NASD IM–2110–2 (generally requiring
that a member firm that accepts and holds an
unexecuted limit order from its customer in a
Nasdaq security and that continues to trade the
subject security for its own market-making account
at prices that would satisfy the customer’s limit
order, without executing that limit order, shall be
deemed to have acted in a manner inconsistent with
just and equitable principles of trade). The impetus
for this rule was a case brought by a customer of
an NASD member firm, William Manning, who
alleged that the firm had accepted his limit order,
failed to execute it, and violated its fiduciary duty
to him by trading ahead of the order. In the
Manning decision, In re E.F. Hutton & Co.,
Exchange Act Release No. 25887 (July 6, 1988), the
Commission affirmed NASD’s finding that a
member firm, upon acceptance of a customer’s limit
order, undertakes a fiduciary duty to its customer
480 See
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Without these protections, professional
traders would have more opportunity to
take advantage of non-professionals,
which could result in the latter either
losing executions or receiving
executions at inferior prices.
• Flickering quotations that can result
from widespread sub-penny pricing
could make it more difficult for brokerdealers to satisfy their best execution
obligations and other regulatory
responsibilities. The best execution
obligation requires a broker-dealer to
seek for its customer’s transaction the
most favorable terms reasonably
available under the circumstances.482
This standard is premised on the
practical ability of the broker-dealer to
determine whether a displayed price is
reasonably obtainable under the
circumstances.
• Widespread sub-penny quoting
could decrease market depth (i.e., the
number of shares available at the NBBO)
and lead to higher transaction costs,
particularly for institutional investors
(such as pension funds and mutual
funds) that are more likely to place large
orders. These higher transaction costs
would likely be passed on to retail
investors whose assets are managed by
the institutions.
• Decreasing depth at the inside also
could cause such institutions to rely
more on execution alternatives away
from the exchanges and Nasdaq that are
designed to help larger investors find
matches for large blocks of securities.
Such a trend could increase
fragmentation of the securities markets.
In the Reproposing Release, the subpenny rule was fundamentally
unchanged although the Commission
made certain minor modifications in
response to the comments received on
the Proposing Release. These
modifications in reproposed Rule 612
would have: (1) Based the sub-penny
restriction on the price of the quotation
rather than the price of the NMS stock
itself; and (2) limited a quotation priced
less than $1.00 per share to four decimal
places.
C. Comments Received
The Commission sought comment on
all aspects of reproposed Rule 612. Of
the total comments that the Commission
received in response to the Reproposing
and cannot trade for its own account at prices more
favorable than the customer’s order.
482 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
37619A (Sept. 6, 1996), 61 FR 48290, 48322 (Sept.
12, 1996) (adopting the Commission’s Order
Handling Rules). A broker-dealer’s duty of best
execution derives from common law agency
principles and fiduciary obligations and is
incorporated in SRO rules and, through judicial and
Commission decisions, the antifraud provisions of
the federal securities laws. See id.
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Release, approximately 33 commenters
addressed the sub-penny rule. The
majority of these commenters supported
a restriction on sub-penny quoting.483
One commenter argued that sub-penny
quoting would too easily permit market
professionals to step ahead of competing
limit orders by an economically
insignificant amount.484 Another
commenter stated that ‘‘[t]oday, SROs
are held to minimum quoting
increments, while other market centers
are not, and this arbitrage should be
eliminated.’’ 485 A third commenter
offered a similar perspective, stating
that the sub-penny prohibition ‘‘will
prevent renegade systems from allowing
a minority of traders to exploit the
majority’’ that do not offer sub-penny
quoting.486
Three commenters argued that, in the
absence of a general prohibition on subpenny quoting, market data systems
would be severely taxed.487 One
commenter—a trade organization that
addresses issues relating to market data
and securities processing automation—
doubted ‘‘whether the impact of subpenny quoting and trading on rising
infrastructure costs is adequately offset
by market quality benefits to investors
and market participants.’’ 488 A second
483 See Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 10; Angel
Reproposal Letter at 6; Archipelago Reproposal
Letter at 15; ATD Letter at 4; Barclays Global
Investors Reproposal Letter at 4; Bennett Letter at
1; BSE Reproposal Letter at 2; Citigroup Reproposal
Letter at 8–9; DBSI Reproposal Letter at 3; Financial
Information Forum Reproposal Letter at 3; Financial
Services Roundtable Reproposal Letter at 5; GETCO
Reproposal Letter at 1; Harris Letter at 3–4; JPMSI
Reproposal Letter at 2; Knight Reproposal Letter at
6; Lerro Reproposal Letter, Appendix A, at 1;
Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 9–10; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 20; e-mail from Chris Sexton
to William H. Donaldson, Chairman, Commission,
dated January 31, 2005; SIIA/FISD Reproposal
Letter at 4–5; STA Reproposal Letter at 7–8; STANY
Reproposal Letter at 2; T. Rowe Price Reproposal
Letter at 3; UBS Reproposal Letter at 1. See also
Morgan Stanley Reproposal Letter at 13 (suggesting
that ‘‘a reasonable compromise’’ would be to allow
sub-penny quotations for the sole purpose of
reflecting an access fee but to prohibit them in all
other circumstances); SIA Reproposal Letter at 23
(supporting reproposed Rule 612 while noting that
a minority of SIA members believe that Commission
rulemaking in this area is not necessary).
484 See Knight Reproposal Letter at 6. This
comment echoed similar comments in response to
the initial Proposing Release. See, e.g., Ameritrade
Letter at 10; Archipelago Letter at 14; ATD Letter
at 3; Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 2; Citadel Letter
at 9; Citigroup Letter at 14; ICI Letter at 7–8; Tullo
Letter at 8.
485 Archipelago Reproposal Letter at 15.
486 Harris Letter at 4.
487 See Financial Information Forum Reproposal
Letter at 3; Knight Reproposal Letter at 6; SIIA/FISD
Reproposal Letter at 5. These comments echoed
similar comments on the initial Proposing Release.
See Financial Information Forum Letter at 2–3;
Financial Services Roundtable Letter at 6; Knight
Letter at 7; Lehman Brothers Letter at 5; Reuters
Letter at 4.
488 SIIA/FISD Reproposal Letter at 5.
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commenter stated that an industry-wide
shift to sub-penny quoting would
‘‘forc[e] the industry into another round
of substantial capital investments to
accommodate the quote traffic.’’ 489 A
third commenter echoed that view,
stating that the new rule ‘‘will protect
industry systems from significant data
traffic that has little benefit to investors
or to the industry.’’ 490
A few commenters on the
Reproposing Release opposed Rule
612,491 as did a minority of commenters
on the initial Proposing Release.492
Some commenters argued that quoting
in sub-pennies should be permitted
because it increases liquidity, lowers
trading costs, and promotes efficient
pricing in the equity markets.493 Two
commenters believed that government
intervention was not appropriate, as
market forces should address this
issue.494 Alternatively, one commenter
who objected to reproposed Rule 612
argued that ‘‘[t]he appropriate MPV in
the equities market is at least [a] nickel
or some reasonable, tiered
alternative.’’ 495
One commenter on the Reproposing
Release—INET, an ECN that currently
offers its users the ability to quote
certain NMS stocks in sub-pennies—
argued generally that ‘‘the various
marketplaces * * * are better
positioned than regulators to evaluate
489 Knight
Reproposal Letter at 6.
Information Forum Reproposal
490 Financial
Letter at 3.
491 See letter from Alex Goor, President, INET
ATS, Inc. to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated January 26, 2005 (‘‘INET
Reproposal Letter’’); Instinet Reproposal Letter at
17–18; Malureanu E-mail (no page numbers);
NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 12.
492 See Brut Letter at 24; Domestic Securities
Summary of Intended Testimony (no page
numbers); GETCO Letter (no page numbers);
memorandum to File No. S7–10–04 from Susan M
Ameel, Counsel to Commissioner Atkins, dated
August 20, 2004 (meeting with Hudson River
Trading) (no page numbers); Instinet Letter at 50;
King Letter at 1; Mercatus Center Letter at 7;
NexTrade Letter at 9–10; Reg NMS Study Group
Letter at 9; Tower Research Letter at 8; Vie
Securities Letter at 3. In addition, one commenter
submitted a study on sub-penny pricing shortly
before the Commission approved the Reproposing
Release for publication. See also e-mail from Dr.
Bidisha Chakrabarty, Assistant Professor, John Cook
School of Business, Saint Louis University, to
marketreg@sec.gov, dated December 1, 2004,
enclosing two articles, ‘‘Can sub-penny pricing
reduce trading costs?’’ (‘‘Chakrabarty and Chung
Study’’) and ‘‘One tick fits all? A study of the Island
and Instinet ECN merger’’ (‘‘Chakrabarty and
Tripathi Study’’). While not explicitly opposing the
sub-penny proposal, the studies argued that a
general prohibition on sub-penny quoting would
keep spreads artificially high for many securities.
493 See Hudson River Trading Testimony (no page
numbers); GETCO Letter (no page numbers).
494 See Instinet Letter at 50; Tower Research
Summary of Intended Testimony (no page
numbers).
495 NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 12.
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the most appropriate trading
increment.’’ 496 In addition, INET
maintained that the existing penny MPV
exacerbates larger market structure
problems, such as internalization and
payment for order flow,497 stating that
‘‘the convention of only quoting in
pennies creates what is in effect an
underground market where better prices
are remitted back to certain firms
through payment for order flow
relationships but not reflected in any
quotation.’’ 498 Furthermore, INET
presented specific examples where, it
claimed, moving from penny to subpenny quoting reduced spreads.499
After careful consideration of all
comments received, the Commission is
adopting Rule 612 as reproposed, with
only a few minor amendments for
clarity. The Commission notes that a
large majority of commenters on both
the Reproposing Release 500 and the
initial Proposing Release 501 supported a
sub-penny quoting prohibition. The
comments received have reinforced the
Commission’s preliminary view that
there are substantial drawbacks to subpenny quoting, and the Commission
believes that a uniform rule banning this
practice (except for quotations priced
less than $1.00 per share) is appropriate.
Several commenters agreed with the
496 See
INET Reproposal Letter at 1.
observed, for example, that NYSE has
less than a 50% market share in Lucent
Technologies and Nortel Networks, two NMS stocks
trading below $5 per share, even though NYSE’s
overall market share is approximately 80%. INET
attributed this phenomenon to the internalization of
orders by other market centers that can readily
match the BBO set by NYSE, because vigorous price
competition—in the form of sub-penny
quotations—does not exist. See id. at 6.
498 Id. at 7.
499 For example, INET observed that, with a
penny MPV, JD Uniphase (ticker: JDSU) regularly
traded at a penny spread with large size quoted on
both the bid and the ask. INET claimed that,
immediately after reducing the MPV to $0.001 on
its system recently, the average spread in JDSU fell
to a tenth of a penny and trades occurred ‘‘almost
uniformly across each sub-penny increment’’ and
were not clustered around the $0.001 and $0.009
price points. Id. at 5.
500 See supra, note 483.
501 See, e.g., Alliance of Floor Brokers Letter at 12;
ACIM Letter at 2; Ameritrade Letter at 10;
Archipelago Letter at 14; ATD Letter at 3–4;
Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 2; BNY Letter at 4;
BSE Letter at 13–14; CBOE Letter at 7; Citadel Letter
at 9; Citigroup Letter at 14–15; CSE Letter at 23;
Denizkurt Letter (no page numbers); E*Trade Letter
at 11; Financial Information Forum Letter at 2–3;
Financial Services Roundtable Letter at 5–6;
Goldman Sachs Letter at 10; ICI Letter at 19–20; ISE
Letter at 8; JPMSI Letter at 6–7; Knight Letter at 7–
8; Lava Letter at 5; Lehman Brothers Letter at 5;
Liquidnet Letter at 8; LSC Letter at 11; Morgan
Stanley Letter at 3; Nasdaq Letter at 1–2; NYSE
Letter at 9–10; NSX Letter at 9; Peake Letter I at 13;
Reuters Letter at 4; SBA Letter at 2; Schwab Letter
at 17; SIA Letter at 20–21; Specialist Association
Letter at 13–15; STA Letter at 7; STANY Letter at
13–14; UBS Letter at 10; Vanguard Letter at 6.
497 INET
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Commission’s view that sub-penny
quotations can increase the incidence of
quote flickering, which in turn may
have adverse effects such as confusing
investors or impeding a broker-dealer’s
ability to fulfill its duty of best
execution.502
Moreover, the Commission agrees
with the many commenters who believe
that Rule 612 will deter the practice of
stepping ahead of exposed trading
interest by an economically
insignificant amount. Limit orders
provide liquidity to the market and
perform an important price-setting
function. The Commission is concerned
that, if orders lose execution priority
because competing orders step ahead for
an economically insignificant amount,
liquidity could diminish. As one
commenter, the Investment Company
Institute, stated, ‘‘[t]his potential for the
increased stepping-ahead of limit orders
would create a significant disincentive
for market participants to enter any
sizeable volume into the markets and
would reduce further the value of
displaying limit orders.’’ 503
Some commenters argued, however,
that investors would suffer harm from
the artificially wide spreads resulting
from a prohibition on sub-penny
quoting.504 One commenter stated, for
example, that ‘‘the primary result of
eliminating subpenny trading would be
to preserve a minimum profit for market
makers, and would result in
significantly worse realized prices for
the vast majority of market participants
not in the business of making
markets.’’ 505 These commenters offered
502 See, e.g., Citadel Letter at 9; ICI Letter at 7;
Knight Letter at 7; Reuters Letter at 4; SIA Letter
at 20–21.
503 ICI Letter at 20.
504 See Chakrabarty and Chung Study at 24; INET
Reproposal Letter at 3; Instinet Letter at 51;
Mercatus Center Letter at 9; Tower Research Letter
at 8.
505 Tower Research Letter at 8. Tower Research
also criticized the Nasdaq and OEA studies on
which the Commission relied in issuing the subpenny proposal. Tower Research argued, for
example, that the studies did not differentiate
between sub-penny trades and sub-penny
quotations, and that clustering of sub-penny trades
around the $0.001 and $0.009 price points could
result from sub-penny price improvement rather
than quotation activity. In response to this
comment, OEA reviewed the sources of data used
in the original study and found that sub-penny
trades cluster at these two price points in markets
where trades necessarily result from quotations,
such as ECNs, not only in markets where that is not
necessarily the case. See Memorandum from Office
of Economic Analysis, dated December 15, 2004
(available in Public File No. S7–10–04 and on the
Commission’s Internet Web site (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s71004.shtml)) (‘‘OEA
December 2004 Sub-Penny Analysis’’). Accordingly,
the Commission continues to believe that market
participants frequently used their ability to quote in
sub-pennies to step ahead of competing limit orders
by the smallest possible amount.
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37553
various estimates of the costs of
prohibiting sub-penny quoting.506
Even assuming that quoting in subpenny increments would reduce
spreads, the Commission continues to
believe, on balance, that the costs of
sub-penny quoting are not justified by
the benefits.507 The Commission instead
agrees with the commenters who believe
that the substantial costs associated
with sub-penny quoting—among others,
disincentives to liquidity providers
whose limit orders are jumped by an
economically insignificant amount and
the increased incidence of flickering
quotes and the resulting regulatory
compliance and capacity burdens—
make the adoption of Rule 612
appropriate at this time.
Nevertheless, the Commission
acknowledges the possibility that the
balance of costs and benefits could shift
in a limited number of cases or as the
markets continue to evolve. Therefore,
Rule 612—as proposed and as
adopted—includes a provision setting
forth procedures for the Commission, by
order, to exempt any person, security, or
506 See Chakrabarty and Chung Study at 24
(stating that, for high volume stocks, ‘‘the spread
reduction in the absence of binding constraints
* * * translates into savings of millions of
dollars’’); INET Reproposal Letter at 3 (arguing that
allowing sub-penny quoting in ‘‘23 of the most
appropriate securities’’ would generate annual
savings of anywhere between $342 million and $1.9
billion); Instinet Letter at 50 (arguing that, if all
markets traded QQQQ solely in sub-pennies, the
savings would be approximately $150 million per
year); Tower Research Letter at 9 (arguing that, just
in six high-volume securities, the proposed rule
would have would have costs of over $400 million
due to wider spreads).
507 The Commission notes that the few
commenters who provided detailed, quantitative
criticisms of the proposed sub-penny rule relied on
a very small number of NMS stocks as examples.
These cost estimates appear to assume that all
trading in the securities they discuss would occur
at narrower quoted spreads if Rule 612 did not
exist. The Commission does not believe that the
commenters provided any evidence to justify that
assumption. Currently, Nasdaq and the national
securities exchanges generally do not permit
quoting in sub-pennies; this practice exists only a
small number of ATSs, and only for a small number
of securities. Because spreads on Nasdaq and the
exchanges already cannot be smaller than $0.01,
Rule 612 will not require these markets to take any
action that would cause their spreads to widen.
Therefore, the Commission believes that the cost to
these markets of not having sub-penny spreads
should not be considered costs of the rule.
Furthermore, the INET methodology for computing
the potential savings to investors from quoting in
sub-pennies appears to be based on the unjustified
assumption that all of selected stocks in their
sample would trade with the same price-point
distribution as the average of JDSU, SIRI, and
QQQQ. With respect to the ATSs that currently do
permit some NMS stocks to be quoted in subpennies, the Commission staff has estimated that
the gross costs of widened spreads in these
securities will be approximately $48 million
annually (or approximately $33 million if the
Commission were to exempt QQQQ from Rule 612).
See OEA December 2004 Sub-Penny Analysis.
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quotation (or any class or classes or
persons, securities, or quotations) from
the sub-penny quoting restriction if it
determines that such exemption is
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, and is consistent with the
protection of investors. The Commission
could grant such exemption either
unconditionally or on specified terms
and conditions.
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission requested comment on
whether certain securities should be
exempted from Rule 612.508 In
particular, the Commission asked
whether sub-penny quoting of
exchange-traded fund shares (‘‘ETFs’’),
which are derivatively priced, raised the
same concerns as with other NMS
stocks.509 Some commenters that
addressed this issue argued that the subpenny prohibition should apply to all
NMS stocks, including ETFs.510 These
commenters generally believed that subpenny quoting raises the same type of
concerns for ETFs as for other types of
securities.511 Other commenters
provided arguments that exemptions for
at least certain securities would be
appropriate. One commenter that
opposed Rule 612 argued that, if the
Commission nevertheless did approve
the rule, it should provide an exemption
for QQQQ and other ETFs.512 This
commenter argued that these securities
‘‘uniquely lend[] themselves to
subpenny quoting and trading’’ because
‘‘the[ir] derivative nature * * * enables
investors to determine their true value
at any point in time by calculating the
aggregate price of the securities
constituting a particular ETF.’’ 513 Other
commenters, while not explicitly
recommending that the Commission
grant particular exemptions, argued that
sub-penny quoting was reasonable for
certain securities.514
As the Commission stated in the
Reproposing Release,515 a basis may
exist to exempt QQQQ and perhaps
other actively traded ETFs from Rule
612. The Commission will continue to
study this matter during the
implementation period for Regulation
NMS.
508 See
Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11172.
id.
510 See Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 10; Amex
Letter, Exhibit A, at 29; Citigroup Reproposal Letter
at 9; ICI Letter at 20; Knight Letter at 8; Morgan
Stanley Letter at 21; NYSE Letter at 10; SIA Letter
at 21; Specialist Association Letter at 14.
511 See, e.g., Amex Letter, Exhibit A, at 29; ICI
Letter at 20.
512 See Instinet Letter at 51; Instinet Reproposal
Letter at 18.
513 Id.
514 See Brut Letter at 25; Mercatus Center Letter
at 9–10; Tower Research Letter at 9, 14–15.
515 See 69 FR at 77459.
509 See
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One commenter, although not clearly
advocating that the Commission use its
authority to exempt certain securities
from Rule 612, stated that ‘‘the
Commission may want to employ
objective criteria in determining when it
is appropriate to trade in subpennies.’’ 516 In this regard, another
commenter stated: ‘‘If the Commission
wanted to permit only certain stocks to
be quoted and traded in sub-penny
increments, the main factor that should
be considered is the average spread and
the quoted size. If a security always
trades with a penny spread and there is
tremendous liquidity available on both
sides of the market, this is a strong
indication that the minimum increment
is too wide.’’ 517 The Commission
believes that this would be a reasonable
consideration in analyzing whether it
would be in the public interest and
consistent with the protection of
investors to grant an exemption
pursuant to Rule 612(c). Other factors
that the Commission might consider are:
• Whether the NMS stock is an ETF
or other derivative that can readily be
converted into its underlying securities
or vice versa, in which case the true
value of the security as derived from its
underlying components might be at a
sub-penny increment;
• Large volume of sub-penny
executions in that security due to price
improvement; and
• Low price of the security.
This list is illustrative, not exclusive.
The Commission may consider other
factors—noted by a petitioner or in its
own analysis—if and when it considers
whether to issue an exemption.
The Commission wishes to highlight
certain aspects of Rule 612, as adopted,
that were raised by commenters on both
the Proposing Release and the
Reproposing Release.
1. Restriction Based on Price of the
Quotation Not Price of the Stock
As initially proposed, the restriction
on sub-penny quoting would have been
triggered if the price of the NMS stock
itself were above $1.00. One commenter
sought clarification of when an NMS
stock would become sub-penny eligible,
suggesting a threshold of trading below
$1.00 for 30 consecutive business
days.518 A second commenter suggested
instead that the prohibition should
derive from the price of the order, rather
than the price of the stock; in other
words, the rule should permit any subpenny quotation below $1.00 and
prohibit any sub-penny quotation above
PO 00000
$1.00, regardless of the price where the
stock was in fact trading.519 The second
commenter argued that this approach
‘‘does not require countless reclassifications of stocks as ‘sub-penny
eligible’ based on fluctuations in their
valuation, stock splits, or other price
movements.’’ 520
The Commission agreed with the
second commenter and, therefore,
revised paragraph (a) of reproposed Rule
612 to prohibit any bid, offer, order, or
indication of interest priced equal to or
greater than $1.00 in an increment
smaller than $0.01. As the Commission
stated in the Reproposing Release,521
basing the restrictions on the price of
the quotation or order rather than the
price of the NMS stock itself would
spare market participants the need to
track the eligibility of stocks priced near
the $1.00 threshold.
Three commenters on the
Reproposing Release noted their
approval of basing the sub-penny
quoting restriction on the price of the
quotation rather than the price of the
NMS stock itself; 522 no commenter
objected to this approach. The
Commission continues to believe in the
rationale for this aspect of the proposal
as described in the Reproposing Release.
Therefore, the Commission is adopting
Rule 612(a) substantially in the form
reproposed in December 2004. The
Commission is making a nonsubstantive amendment to clarify the
rule. Reproposed Rule 612(a) would
have stated that no market participant
‘‘shall display, rank, or accept from any
person a bid or offer, an order, or an
indication of interest in any NMS stock
equal to or greater than $1.00 in an
increment smaller than $0.01.’’ Rule
612(a) as adopted provides that no
market participant ‘‘shall display, rank,
or accept from any person a bid or offer,
an order, or an indication of interest in
any NMS stock priced in an increment
smaller than $0.01 if that bid or offer,
order, or indication of interest is priced
equal to or greater than $1.00 per
share.’’ The purpose of this revision is
to clarify that the qualification ‘‘priced
equal to or greater than $1.00 per share’’
modifies the phrase ‘‘a bid or offer, an
order, or an indication of interest’’
rather than ‘‘any NMS stock.’’ The
adopted text also makes clear that this
proviso applies to bids, offers, orders,
and indications of interest priced equal
to or greater than $1.00 per share. The
519 See
Brut Letter at 25.
520 Id.
521 See
516 Archipelago
Reproposal Letter at 15.
517 INET Reproposal Letter at 5.
518 See Citigroup Letter at 15.
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69 FR at 77457–58.
BSE Reproposal Letter at 2; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 20; SIA Reproposal Letter at
23.
522 See
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modifying phrase ‘‘per share’’ was not
present in reproposed Rule 612(a).
As a result of Rule 612(a), a brokerdealer may not, for example, accept a
sell order in an NMS stock priced at
$1.0025 per share, even if the NMS
stock currently trades below $1.00.
2. Quotations Below $1.00
The Commission initially proposed a
threshold of $1.00 below which the
prohibition on sub-penny quoting
would not apply and requested
comment on whether that threshold was
appropriate. The majority of
commenters addressing this issue
believed that it would be useful for lowpriced securities to trade in increments
finer than a penny, because a penny
would constitute a significant
percentage of the overall price. These
commenters viewed $1.00 as an
appropriate threshold.523 One
commenter stated that there is ‘‘real
demand for sub-penny trading (and
therefore subpenny quoting) in
securities trading below $1.00, due to
the low trading value of the
security.’’ 524 However, another
commenter, Ameritrade, argued that
Rule 612 should not contain an
exception for securities trading under
$1.00.525 According to Ameritrade,
‘‘[t]he appropriate answer to this issue
is for the NYSE, AMEX and NASDAQ
markets to uniformly enforce listing
standards, which generally require a
security to trade above $1.00.’’ 526
The Commission is adopting the $1.00
threshold as proposed. The Commission
agrees with the commenters who believe
that sub-penny quotations for very lowpriced securities largely represent
genuine trading interest rather than
unfair stepping ahead. In such cases, a
sub-penny increment represents a
significant amount of the price of the
quotation or order. Accordingly, the
prohibition on sub-penny quoting in
paragraph (a) of Rule 612 will apply
only to bids, offers, orders, and
indications of interest that are priced
$1.00 or more per share. With respect to
Ameritrade’s comment, while the
Commission believes that SROs must
vigorously enforce their listing
standards, there are legitimate
circumstances where securities may be
trading below $1.00; therefore, the
Commission believes it is appropriate
for Rule 612 to address those
circumstances.
523 See Archipelago Letter at 14; BSE Letter at 14;
Citigroup Letter at 15; LSC Letter at 11; SIA Letter
at 21; STANY Letter at 14.
524 Archipelago Letter at 14.
525 See Ameritrade Reproposal Letter at 10.
526 Id.
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Before the Reproposing Release, two
commenters suggested that the
Commission establish an MPV for
quotations below $1.00 per share; both
recommended allowing such quotations
to extend to four decimal places.527 The
Commission agreed with these
commenters and added a new paragraph
(b) to reproposed Rule 612 that would
have prohibited a bid, offer, order, or
indication of interest priced less than
$1.00 per share in an increment smaller
than $0.0001. The Commission believes
that, without limiting the number of
decimal places used in quotations for
very low-priced securities, the problems
caused by sub-penny quoting of higherpriced securities, discussed above,
could arise. Restricting quotations
below $1.00 to four decimal places
should avoid these problems. The same
two commenters reacted favorably to
this aspect of the Reproposing
Release.528
The Commission is adopting, as
reproposed, the provision limiting a
quotation under $1.00 per share to four
decimal places. Thus, under new Rule
612, a quotation of $0.9987 × $1.00 is
permitted but a quotation of $0.9987 ×
$1.0001 is not.529
The Commission notes that it has
made non-substantive revisions to Rule
612(b) in a manner similar to Rule
612(a). Reproposed Rule 612(b) would
have stated that no market participant
‘‘shall display, rank, or accept from any
person a bid or offer, an order, or an
indication of interest in any NMS stock
less than $1.00 in an increment smaller
than $0.0001.’’ Rule 612(b) as adopted
provides that no market participant
‘‘shall display, rank, or accept from any
person a bid or offer, an order, or an
indication of interest in any NMS stock
priced in an increment smaller than
$0.0001 if that bid or offer, order, or
indication of interest is priced less than
$1.00 per share.’’ The purpose of this
revision is to clarify that the
qualification ‘‘priced less than $1.00 per
share’’ modifies the phrase ‘‘a bid or
offer, an order, or an indication of
interest’’ rather than ‘‘any NMS stock.’’
Citigroup Letter at 15; SIA Letter at 21.
Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 8–9; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 23.
529 One commenter, while supporting the general
prohibition on sub-penny quoting, noted that
‘‘[t]here are many ‘subpenny’ stocks on the OTCBB
that trade at prices close to or less than $.0001.
Imposing a high minimum tick for stocks in this
category may adversely trading in those stocks.’’
Angel Reproposal Letter at 6. The Commission
notes that new Rule 612 applies only to NMS
stocks, the definition of which generally does not
include stocks quoted on the OTCBB. See 17 CFR
242.600(b)(47) (defining ‘‘NMS stock’’). Therefore,
Rule 612 does not require that quotations below
$1.00 per share in securities quoted exclusively on
the OTCBB be limited to four decimal places.
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527 See
528 See
Frm 00061
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37555
The adopted text also makes clear that
this proviso applies to bids, offers,
orders, and indications of interest
priced less than $1.00 per share. The
modifying phrase ‘‘per share’’ was not
present in reproposed Rule 612(b).
During the Regulation NMS
implementation period, the Commission
intends to consult with the
administrators of the Plans to help
ensure that sub-penny quotations
permitted by Rule 612 will be widely
disseminated to the public. The
Commission believes this is necessary
so that the problem of hidden markets—
where professionals can see and access
more competitive sub-penny quotations
that average investors cannot—is fully
addressed.
3. Revisiting the Penny Increment
Some commenters, while generally
acknowledging problems caused by subpenny quoting, recommended that the
Commission consider increasing the
MPV above $0.01.530 One commenter
believed that ‘‘[t]he Commission should
seriously consider experimenting with
different tick sizes to help determine the
optimal tick policy.’’ 531 A second
commenter recommended that the
Commission establish an MPV of a
$0.01 for high-volume stocks, $0.05
middle-volume stocks, and $0.10 for the
low-volume stocks.532 A third
commenter argued that the appropriate
MPV in the equities market is at least
$0.05 ‘‘or some reasonable, tiered
alternative.’’ 533 The third commenter
previously stated that ‘‘sub-penny
quoting does little, if anything, to
degrade the market from its current
state’’ because ‘‘the true damage was
done to the market in the shift from a
fractionalized environment to a penny
spread environment.’’ 534
Rule 612, as adopted, sets a floor for
the MPV but does not, and is not
designed to, determine the optimal
MPV. Penny pricing in NMS stocks was
established by rules proposed by NASD
and the national securities exchanges
and approved by the Commission
pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act.535 While some
commenters argue that penny pricing
impedes transparency and reduces
liquidity, the move to decimals (and
specifically the move to a penny
530 See Amex Letter at 30; Angel Letter at 10; BNY
Letter at 4; Citadel Letter at 10; e-mail from
LaBranche & Co. to rule-comments@sec.gov, dated
January 26, 2005; McGuire Summary of Intended
Testimony (no page numbers); Tullo Letter at 9.
531 Angel Letter at 10.
532 See Tullo Letter at 9.
533 NextTrade Reproposal Letter at 12.
534 NexTrade Letter at 9.
535 15 U.S.C. 78s(b). See supra, note .
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quotation increment for NMS stocks)
also has significantly reduced spreads
and reduced trading costs for investors
who enter orders executed at or within
the NBBO. As the Commission stated in
the Reproposing Release,536 it believes
that the establishment of a $0.01 MPV,
on balance, has benefited many
investors. Accordingly, the Commission
did not propose to raise the MPV in
connection with Regulation NMS. The
Commission’s views on this matter have
not changed since issuance of the
Reproposing Release, and the
Commission is not amending Rule 612
to raise the MPV.
4. Sub-Penny Trading
The Commission stated in the
Proposing Release that it did not at that
time believe that trading in sub-penny
increments raised the same concerns as
sub-penny quoting. Therefore, the
proposed rule would not have
prohibited a market center or brokerdealer from executing and printing a
trade in sub-penny increments that was,
for example, the result of a midpoint or
volume-weighted pricing algorithm, as
long as it did not otherwise violate the
proposed rule. In addition, a brokerdealer could, consistent with the
proposed rule, provide price
improvement to a customer order that
resulted in a sub-penny execution as
long as the broker-dealer did not accept
an order priced above $1.00 per share in
a sub-penny increment. The
Commission sought specific comment
on this aspect of the proposal.
Every commenter that addressed this
issue in response to the Proposing
Release agreed that Rule 612 should
permit sub-penny trades that result from
midpoint and average-price
algorithms.537 While most of these
commenters believed that the rule
should permit broker-dealers to offer
sub-penny price improvement to their
customers’ orders,538 a few commenters
urged the Commission to bar this
practice.539 The Commission did not
revise this aspect of the sub-penny rule
in the Reproposing Release. Two
commenters that addressed this issue in
response to the Reproposing Release
also believed that the rule should permit
sub-penny trades that result from
536 See
69 FR at 77458.
ACIM Letter at 2; Amex Letter at 12;
E*Trade Letter at 11; Liquidnet Letter at 8; SIA
Letter at 21; STA Letter at 7; STANY Letter at 14;
UBS Letter at 10.
538 See ACIM Letter at 2; Amex Letter, Exhibit A,
at 31–32; BSE Letter at 14; E*Trade Letter at 11;
Liquidnet Letter at 8; Morgan Stanley Letter at 21;
SIA Letter at 21; STA Letter at 7; STANY Letter at
14; UBS Letter at 10.
539 See CHX Letter at 23; Goldman Sachs Letter
at 10; SIA Letter at 21.
537 See
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midpoint and average-price
algorithms.540 One of these commenters
added that sub-penny trades resulting
from price improvement also should be
permitted.541
After considering all views expressed
on this issue, the Commission is
adopting this aspect of Rule 612 as
proposed and reproposed. Rule 612 will
not prohibit a sub-penny execution
resulting from a midpoint or volumeweighted algorithm or from price
improvement, so long as the execution
did not result from an impermissible
sub-penny order or quotation. The
Commission believes at this time that
trading in sub-penny increments does
not raise the same concerns as subpenny quoting. Sub-penny executions
do not cause quote flickering and do not
decrease depth at the inside quotation.
Nor do they require the same systems
capacity as would sub-penny quoting. In
addition, sub-penny executions due to
price improvement are generally
beneficial to retail investors.
5. Acceptance of Sub-Penny Quotations
The Commission initially proposed to
prohibit national securities exchanges,
national securities associations, ATSs,
vendors, and broker-dealers from
displaying, ranking, or accepting subpenny orders or quotations in NMS
stocks. One commenter argued that Rule
612 should allow a market participant to
accept sub-penny quotations if it
consistently re-prices such quotations to
an acceptable increment and does not
give the sub-penny quotations any
special priority for ranking or execution
purposes.542 A second commenter
disagreed, arguing that rounding a subpenny quotation to the nearest penny
may be confusing for investors.543 The
Commission agreed with the second
commenter and reproposed Rule 612
continued to include a prohibition on
accepting and rounding a sub-penny
order.
In response to the Commission’s
statements on this matter in the
Reproposing Release, one commenter
stated that the Commission should
‘‘continu[e] to allow (but, of course, not
require) market centers to adjust the
pricing of disallowed sub-penny
quotations, so long as the unadjusted
quotations are not displayed or
considered for purposes of ranking.’’ 544
This commenter argued that adjusting
such quotations ‘‘is a well-established
540 See BSE Reproposal Letter at 2; Citigroup
Reproposal Letter at 9.
541 See Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 9.
542 See Brut Letter at 26.
543 See CHX Letter at 23.
544 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 20.
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Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
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practice’’ and that prohibiting the
practice ‘‘has the potential to create
needless confusion and impose
additional costs.’’ 545 Another
commenter on reproposed Rule 612
argued similarly that keeping the
established practice would not present
‘‘any real potential for confusion among
investors.’’ 546
Notwithstanding these comments, the
Commission is adopting this aspect of
Rule 612 as proposed and reproposed. A
market participant, therefore, is
prohibited from accepting a sub-penny
order or quotation that is not permitted
by the rule, even if it rounds the order
or quotation to the nearest permissible
pricing increment. While the
Commission does not believe that a
great deal of customer confusion is
likely to arise in either case, it does
believe that confusion is more likely to
result if a broker-dealer, for example,
accepted a customer order to buy at
$20.001, then rounded and ultimately
executed it at $20.00. A customer
unfamiliar with Rule 612 could
conceivably wonder why his or her
order did not have priority above orders
to buy at $20.00. A much simpler and
more transparent approach is for Rule
612 to prohibit the acceptance of subpenny orders generally (except for
orders priced below $1.00 per share,
which may extend to four decimal
places), and for the broker-dealer to
adhere to the rule by rejecting the
customer’s sub-penny order to buy at
$20.001. The Commission sees no
purpose that would be served by
allowing the broker-dealer to accept this
sub-penny order, since Rule 612 would
in any case prohibit the full order from
being displayed or considered for
ranking or execution purposes.547
545 Id.
546 Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 18.
Commission previously has granted
exemptions from Rules 11Ac1–1, 11Ac1–2, and
11Ac1–4 under the Exchange Act, 17 CFR
240.11Ac1–1, 240.11Ac1–2, and 240.11Ac1–4, that
permit orders and quotations to be accepted and
executed in sub-penny increments but displayed in
rounded, penny increments without a rounding
identifier. See letter from David S. Shillman,
Associate Director, Division, Commission, to Mai S.
Shiver, Director of Regulatory Policy, PCX, dated
Feb. 10, 2005; letter from David S. Shillman,
Associate Director, Division, Commission, to Ellen
J. Neely, Senior Vice President and General
Counsel, CHX, dated July 15, 2004; letter from
David S. Shillman, Associate Director, Division,
Commission, to James C. Yong, Senior Vice
President, Regulation, and General Counsel, NSX,
dated June 30, 2004. See also letter to Ronald Aber,
Vice President and General Counsel, Nasdaq, from
Richard Lindsey, Director, Division, Commission,
dated July 30, 1997 (no-action relief provided by
Division similar to three Commission exemptions
cited above). These exemptions are inconsistent
with new Rule 612 but by their terms expire on
June 30, 2005, before the implementation date of
Rule 612. Nasdaq’s no-action letter does not by its
547 The
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6. Application to Options Markets
As initially proposed, Rule 612, by its
terms, would have applied only to NMS
stocks. The Commission requested
comment on whether the rule also
should apply to options.548 Currently,
SRO rules require options to be quoted
on the U.S. markets in increments of
$0.05 and $0.10. Therefore, the
problems that could be created by subpenny quoting currently do not exist in
the options markets.
Two commenters believed that the
rule should not apply to quoting in
options.549 One of these commenters,
assuming that the rule as proposed
would allow options with a premium of
less than $1.00 to be quoted in subpennies and options with a premium
over $1.00 to be quoted in pennies,
argued that this approach ‘‘would
overwhelm the already taxed capacity of
existing options quote processing
systems.’’ 550 The Commission did not
believe at the time it issued the
Reproposing Release that it was
necessary for the sub-penny rule to
extend to options, nor does it believe so
now. The concerns created by subpenny quoting—present to some extent
in the equities markets—currently do
not exist in the options markets, where
the smallest quoting increment is $0.05.
Therefore, Rule 612 will not apply to
options. If a national securities
exchange seeks to quote options in
pennies or sub-pennies in the future, it
would first need to propose a rule
change to that effect under Section 19(b)
of the Exchange Act.551 The
Commission would have an opportunity
to consider such a proposal at that time,
after publishing notice and obtaining
public comment.552
A third commenter,553 while agreeing
strongly with the proposed sub-penny
rule, argued that the Commission
should prohibit the Boston Options
Exchange (‘‘BOX’’), a facility of the
Boston Stock Exchange, from using
‘‘sub-increment’’ pricing (i.e., penny
prices below the standard $0.05 and
$0.10 increments used for options) in its
terms include a sunset date. However, Nasdaq may
not rely on this letter beyond the implementation
date of Rule 612.
548 See Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11172.
549 See Amex Letter, Exhibit A, at 32–33; SIA
Letter at 21.
550 Amex Letter, Exhibit A, at 32.
551 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
552 The Commission has previously stated that,
‘‘[g]iven the implications of penny quoting for
OPRA, penny quoting would require very careful
review by the Commission.’’ Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 49068 (Jan. 13, 2004), 69 FR 2775,
2789 (Jan. 20, 2004) (‘‘BOX Approval Order’’).
553 See CBOE Letter at 8.
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‘‘Price Improvement Period’’ (‘‘PIP’’).554
By initiating a PIP auction, a BOX
market participant may execute a
portion of its agency order as principal
in pennies, and BOX market makers can
match that price or offer price
improvement to those orders in penny
increments during the three-second
auction. The Commission previously
approved the BOX trading rules,
including the rules governing the PIP,
pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act.555 The PIP uses pennies
in an auction, not in public quotations.
Therefore, the Commission does not
believe that the PIP raises the same
concerns caused by sub-penny
quotations of non-option securities and,
therefore, that it is not necessary to
prohibit the use of pennies in BOX’s
PIP.
7. One-to-One Negotiating Systems
One commenter—Liquidnet, an ATS
whose system allows institutional
traders to negotiate large-sized orders—
argued that Rule 612 should not
prohibit orders priced in half-penny
increments for one-to-one negotiating
systems.556 Liquidnet currently permits
a user to submit an order at the midpoint of the spread, which would be at
a half-penny increment if the spread
were an odd number of cents wide (e.g.,
$10.00 × $10.03). Liquidnet argues that
the ‘‘sub-penny pricing abuses that the
SEC is trying to prevent are not
applicable, because any orders are only
seen by the two negotiating parties.’’ 557
Although the Commission does not
believe it is necessary or appropriate to
include in Rule 612 an exception for
one-to-one negotiating systems such as
Liquidnet’s, it would consider a request
for exemptive relief that would permit
one-to-one negotiations of sub-penny
trades through an ATS. The
Commission will study this issue
further during the Regulation NMS
implementation period.
8. Implementation of Rule 612
While the majority of commenters
supported the sub-penny rule, a few
specifically requested that the
Commission implement it as quickly as
possible.558 One of the commenters
stated that there are no ‘‘significant
technological or structural impediments
to immediate implementation.’’ 559 The
Commission agrees with this view.
Currently, sub-penny quoting that
would be prohibited by Rule 612 exists
only on a small number of ATSs and in
a small number of NMS stocks. Nasdaq
and all of the national securities
exchanges already have rules that
permit quoting only in $0.01
increments. No commenter indicated
that converting ATS systems to comply
with the rule would impose any
significant burdens. In light of this, and
the small number of impacted NMS
stocks, the Commission believes that
only minimal systems changes will be
necessary for these ATSs to conform to
Rule 612 and has determined that the
implementation date of Rule 612 will be
August 29, 2005.
The Commission notes that it
previously has granted exemptions from
existing Rules 11Ac1–1, 11Ac1–2, and
11Ac1–4 under the Exchange Act that,
among other things, allow certain
exchanges to accept sub-penny orders
and quotations and to disseminate them
in rounded, penny increments without
a rounding identifier.560 By their terms,
these exemptions—which are not
consistent with new Rule 612—expire
on June 30, 2005.
Rule 612 permits, but does not
require, a trading center to offer its users
the ability to quote in sub-pennies in a
limited number of cases. An exchange
or association that wishes to offer this
ability to its market participants will
likely need to amend its rules before
doing so. The Commission expects the
SROs to consider this matter during the
implementation period.561
V. Market Data Rules and Plan
Amendments
The Exchange Act rules and joint-SRO
Plans for disseminating market
information to the public are the heart
of the NMS. Pursuant to these rules and
Plans, investors are able to obtain realtime access to the best current quotes
and most recent trades for all NMS
stocks. As a result, investors of all
types—large and small—have access to
a comprehensive, accurate, and reliable
source of information for the prices of
any NMS stock at any time during the
trading day.
560 See
supra, note 547.
commenter argued that the Commission
should allow ‘‘sufficient time’’ for systems
development to accommodate sub-penny quoting
permitted by Rule 612. See Amex Reproposal Letter
at 1, n.1. Because Rule 612 permits but does not
require market participants to quote very lowpriced NMS stocks in sub-penny increments, the
Commission does not believe it is necessary to offer
market participants an extended period in which to
build the systems capacity to support this activity
before making Rule 612 effective.
561 One
554 See BOX Approval Order, 69 FR at 2786–92
(explaining PIP auction).
555 See id.
556 See Liquidnet Reproposal Letter at 4.
557 Id.
558 See ACIM Letter at 2; ATD Reproposal Letter
at 4; Charles Schwab Letter at 17; Merrill Lynch
Reproposal Letter at 10; Nasdaq Letter at 1.
559 ATD Reproposal Letter at 4.
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The SROs generate consolidated
market data by participating in the
Plans.562 Pursuant to the Plans, three
separate networks disseminate
consolidated market information for
NMS stocks: (1) Network A for
securities listed on the NYSE; (2)
Network B for securities listed on the
Amex and other national securities
exchanges; and (3) Network C for
securities traded on Nasdaq. For each
security, the data includes: (1) An
NBBO with prices, sizes, and market
center identifications; (2) the best bids
and offers from each SRO that includes
prices, sizes, and market center
identifications; and (3) a consolidated
set of trade reports in the security. The
Networks establish fees for this data,
which must be filed for Commission
approval.563-564 The Networks collect
the applicable fees and, after deduction
of Network expenses (which do not
include the costs incurred by SRO
participants to generate market data and
supply such data to the Networks),
distribute the remaining revenues to
their individual SRO participants. As
set forth in the following table, the
Networks collected $434.1 million in
revenues derived from market data fees
in 2004 and distributed $393.7 million
to their individual SRO participants:
2004 FINANCIAL INFORMATION FOR NETWORKS A, B, AND C 1
Network A
1 The
Network C
$165,588,000
10,317,000
155,271,000
$103,901,000
3,921,000
99,980,000
$164,656,000
26,196,000
138,460,000
$434,145,000
40,434,000
393,711,000
140,661,000
8,296,000
2,091,000
694,000
0
1,345,000
1,995,000
189,000
0
Revenues .................................................................................................
Expenses .................................................................................................
Net Income .......................................................................................
Allocations:.
NYSE ................................................................................................
NASD/Nasdaq ..................................................................................
PCX ..................................................................................................
NSX ..................................................................................................
Amex .................................................................................................
BSE ...................................................................................................
CHX ..................................................................................................
Phlx ...................................................................................................
CBOE ................................................................................................
Network B
Total
1,296,000
8,360,000
43,276,000
14,498,000
28,301,000
850,000
2,946,000
446,000
7,000
0
61,672,000
30,804,000
36,717,000
30,000
8,757,000
480,000
0
0
141,957,000
78,328,000
76,171,000
51,909,000
28,331,000
10,952,000
5,421,000
635,000
7,000
Network financial information for 2004 is preliminary and unaudited.
The overriding objective of the Rule
and Plan amendments adopted today is
to preserve the vital benefits that
investors currently enjoy, while
addressing those particular problems
with the current rules and Plans that are
most in need of reform. The changes fall
into three categories: (1) Modifying the
current formulas for allocating market
data revenues to the SROs to more
appropriately reflect their contributions
to public price discovery; (2)
establishing non-voting advisory
committees to broaden participation in
Plan governance; and (3) updating and
streamlining the various Exchange Act
rules that govern the distribution and
display of market information.
A. Response to Comments and Basis for
Adopted Rules
1. Alternative Data Dissemination
Models
In addition to proposing specific rules
and amendments, the Proposing Release
discussed and requested comment on
the Commission’s decision not to
propose an alternative model of data
dissemination to replace the current
consolidation model.565 The great
strength of the current model is that it
benefits investors, particularly retail
investors, by enabling them to assess
562 See
supra, note 40.
Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–2(c)(1).
565 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11176–11179.
563-564 See
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prices and evaluate the best execution of
their orders by obtaining data from a
single source that is highly reliable and
comprehensive. But, by requiring
vendors and broker-dealers to display
data to investors that is consolidated
from all markets, the current model
effectively also requires the purchase of
data from all markets. As a result, the
most significant drawback of the current
model is that it offers little opportunity
for market forces to determine a
Network’s fees, or the allocation of those
fees to a Network’s SRO participants.
Network fees must be closely
scrutinized for fairness and
reasonableness, and the revenues
resulting from those fees must be
allocated to the SROs pursuant to a Plan
formula. In addition, individual markets
have less freedom to innovate in
individually providing their quotation
and trade data. On the other hand, the
consolidated display requirement can
promote competition by assuring that
markets, particularly smaller or newer
ones, can obtain wide distribution of
their displayed quotations.566 As noted
in section I.A.1 above, vigorous
competition among multiple markets
trading the same securities is one of the
distinctive characteristics of the U.S.
equity markets. Thus, the existence of
the Networks and the consolidated
display requirement has not precluded
the NMS from promoting the broad
objective of assuring competition among
markets.
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission specifically considered
three alternative models that potentially
could introduce greater competition and
flexibility into the dissemination of
market data: (1) A deconsolidation
model, (2) a competing consolidators
model, and (3) a hybrid model. It
decided not to propose any of these
alternative models after consideration of
the benefits and drawbacks of each
model. The Commission did, however,
request comment on whether it should
develop an alternative model for
disseminating market data to the public,
and, in particular, on its evaluation of
the strengths and weaknesses of the
current model and of the various
alternative models for the dissemination
of market data.
In response to the Commission’s
request for comment, a minority of
commenters expressed their views
regarding the appropriate structure for
the dissemination of market information
to the public. One group believed that
the current model requiring the display
of consolidated data in a stock through
566 See Report of the Advisory Committee on
Market Information: A Blueprint for Responsible
Change (September 14, 2001) (available at https://
www.sec.gov) (‘‘Advisory Committee Report’’)
(recommending retention of the consolidated
display requirement because it serves core investor
protection and market integrity functions, as well
as promoting market competition).
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a Plan processor has produced
significant benefits for investors and the
markets, although several also strongly
recommended that its operation needed
to be improved in significant
respects.567 Another group of
commenters, in contrast, asserted that
the current system has inhibited
competition among markets and that the
Plans should be eliminated.568 These
commenters further suggested
deregulation of market data by allowing
markets to sell their own data, and by
allowing market forces and competition
to control the pricing of such data. They
advocated a competing consolidators
model or a hybrid model.
a. Competing Consolidators Model
Under a competing consolidators
model, the consolidated display
requirement would be retained, but the
Plans and Networks would no longer be
necessary. Each of the nine SROs that
participate in the NMS, as well as
Nasdaq, would be allowed to establish
its own fees, to enter into and
administer its own market data
contracts, and to provide its own data
distribution facility. Any number of data
vendors or broker-dealers (i.e.,
‘‘competing consolidators’’) could
purchase data from the individual
SROs, consolidate the data, and
distribute it to investors and other data
users. Of the commenters that urged the
Commission to adopt a competing
consolidators model,569 the NYSE, for
example, believed that allowing the
markets to withdraw from the Plans
would ‘‘reestablish the link between the
value of a market’s data * * * and the
fair allocation of costs among * * *
users,’’ thereby ending inter-market
subsidies and market-distortive
initiatives created by the current
system.’’ 570 Similarly, ArcaEx stated
that ‘‘the best way to reform the [P]lans
is to abolish them altogether and to
adopt a competing consolidators
model.’’ 571
567 See, e.g., Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 11; Angel
Letter I at 1; CBOE Letter at 2, 9; CHX Letter at 18–
20; Financial Information Forum Reproposal Letter
at 3; Schwab Letter at 11–13; SIA Letter at 26–28;
STANY Letter at 14.
568 See, e.g., Alliance of Floor Brokers Letter at 11;
Letter from Daniel M. Clifton, Executive Director,
American Shareholders Association, to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated June 10, 2004
(‘‘ASA Letter’’) at 2; ArcaEx Letter at 4, 12, 14; Brut
Letter at 22; Financial Services Roundtable Letter at
7; ISE Letter at 8–10; Nasdaq Letter II at 24–26;
NYSE Letter, Attachment at 10–11; Reuters Letter
at 2; Specialist Assoc. Letter at 17.
569 See, e.g., ArcaEx Letter at 12, 14; ISE Letter at
8–9; NYSE Letter, Attachment at 10–11.
570 NYSE Letter at 7 and Attachment at 10. The
NYSE provided several reasons for the elimination
of the Plans.
571 ArcaEx Letter at 14.
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The Commission has considered the
comments advocating a competing
consolidators model, but continues to
question the extent to which the model
would in fact subject the level of market
data fees to competitive forces. If the
benefits of a fully consolidated data
stream are to be preserved for investors,
every consolidator would need to
purchase the data of each SRO to assure
that the consolidator’s data stream in
fact included the best quotations and
most recent trade report in all NMS
stocks. Moreover, to comply with the
adopted Order Protection Rule, each
trading center would need the quotation
data from every other trading center in
a security. As a practical matter,
payment of every SRO’s fees would be
mandatory, thereby affording little room
for competitive forces to influence the
level of fees. Consequently, far from
freeing the Commission from
involvement in market data fee
disputes, the multiple consolidator
model would require review of at least
ten separate fees for individual SROs
and Nasdaq. The overall level of fees
would not be reduced unless one or
more of the SROs or Nasdaq was willing
to accept a significantly lower amount
of revenues than they currently are
allocated by the Plans. It seems unlikely
that any SRO or Nasdaq would
voluntarily propose to lower just its
own fees and reduce its own current
revenues, and some might well propose
higher fees to increase their revenues,
particularly those with dominant market
shares whose information is most vital
to investors. No commenter offered
useful, objective standards for the
Commission to use in evaluating the
separate fees of SROs and Nasdaq. For
this and for data quality concerns,572 the
Commission remains unconvinced that
discarding the current model in favor of
a multiple consolidator model would
benefit investors and the NMS in
general.
b. Hybrid Model
In its comment on the original
proposal, Nasdaq advocated a hybrid
model of data dissemination as a
compromise if the Commission believes
that it is necessary to retain the Plans.573
Under a hybrid approach, basic
elements of the current model
(including the consolidated display
requirement and the Plans) would be
retained for quotations representing the
NBBO, but all trade reports and all
quotations other than the NBBO would
be deconsolidated. Because much less
consolidated data would be
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572 See
Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11178.
Letter II at 26–28.
573 Nasdaq
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disseminated under this model, the fees
for consolidated data would be reduced
commensurately. The individual SROs
would distribute their own trade and
quotation information separately and
establish fees for such information. To
obtain the data eliminated from the
consolidated system, investors would
need to pay the separate SRO fees.
In its proposal, Nasdaq suggested that
consolidated data fees should be
reduced,574 but only in the context of
advocating a hybrid model that would
drastically reduce the quantity of
consolidated data that would be
disseminated to investors (i.e., by
eliminating from the consolidated
systems all trade reports and all
quotations other than the NBBO).
Nasdaq stated that the Commission
should allow competitive forces to
determine the individual SRO fees for
deconsolidated data because trade
reports and non-NBBO quotations are
not ‘‘essential to investors.’’ 575
The Commission believes, however,
that comprehensive trade and quotation
information, even beyond the NBBO, is
vital to investors. The Commission
remains concerned that an SRO with a
significant share of trading in NMS
stocks could exercise market power in
setting fees for its data. Few investors
could afford to do without the best
quotations and trades of such an SRO
that is dominant in a significant number
of stocks. In the absence of a solid basis
to believe that full trade and quotation
information would continue to be
widely available and affordable to all
types of investors under a hybrid model,
the Commission has determined that the
most responsible course of action is to
574 At the NMS Hearing, a representative of
Nasdaq stated that the current $20 fee for
professionals to obtain market data in Nasdaq
stocks is too high; that the fee, based on a recent
analysis of Nasdaq’s cost structure, should be
around $5 to $7; and that the $20 fee is a monopoly
price ‘‘set almost twenty years ago without any
active review of how that relates.’’ Hearing Tr. at
223–224, 253. These remarks subsequently
engendered some confusion among the public,
which was reflected in many comments on the
market data proposals addressing the level of fees.
To put these comments in perspective and dispel
any potential misconceptions, the following points
should be kept in mind: (1) in 1999, the
Commission undertook a comprehensive review of
market data fees and revenues, which led to a 75%
reduction in the fees paid by retail investors for
market data (Market Information Release, 64 FR at
70614); (2) Nasdaq’s suggested $5 to $7 monthly fee
for professional investors would entitle them to
only the NBBO in Nasdaq stocks, which is a
fraction of the data that currently is disseminated
for the $20 monthly fee for professional investors
for consolidated trades and quotations in Nasdaq
stocks; and (3) Nasdaq’s $5 to $7 cost estimate
encompassed only its own costs and therefore
excluded the costs of other SROs that now represent
a large percentage of trading in Nasdaq-listed
stocks.
575 Nasdaq Letter II at 27.
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take such immediate steps are necessary
to improve the operation of the current
consolidation model.576
2. Level of Fees and Plan Governance
a. Level of Fees
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission emphasized that one of its
primary goals with respect to market
data is to assure reasonable fees that
promote the wide public availability of
consolidated market data. Comment was
requested on the extent to which
investors and other data users were
relatively satisfied with the products
and fees offered by the Networks.577 At
the NMS Hearing, several panelists
addressed the current level of fees and
questioned whether such fees remained
reasonably related to the cost of market
data.578 The Supplemental Release
therefore noted the panelists’ views and
welcomed comments on the
reasonableness of market data fees and
whether the Commission should modify
its approach to reviewing such fees.579
Many commenters recommended that
the level of market data fees should be
reviewed and that, in particular, greater
transparency concerning the costs of
market data and the fee-setting process
is needed.580 The Commission agrees.
To respond to commenters’ concerns, it
has sought comment on market data fees
in its concept release relating to SRO
structure.581 The release discusses and
requests comment on a number of issues
raised by commenters in the context of
SRO revenues and the funding of selfregulation—in particular, whether
market data fees are reasonable, whether
the Commission should reconsider a
flexible cost-based approach as
described in the 1999 Market
Information Release, and whether
market data fees should be used to fund
SRO operational or regulatory costs. The
Commission also has taken steps to
promote more transparency with respect
to market data fees and the use of
market data revenues through its
proposal on SRO transparency.582 The
proposal would greatly increase SRO
transparency by requiring, among other
things, that SROs file public reports
with the Commission detailing their
sources of revenues and their uses of
these revenues. Such reports would
enhance the public’s ability to evaluate
the role of market data revenues in
funding SROs. For example, proposed
amendments to Form 1, Exhibit I would
require exchange SROs to disclose their
revenues earned from market
information fees, itemized by product,
and proposed new Rule 17a–26 would
require SROs to file electronic quarterly
and annual reports on particular aspects
of their regulatory activities.
Some commenters suggested that,
instead of modifying the Plan formulas
for allocating market data revenues, the
Commission should impose a cost-based
limitation on fees.583 Most, however,
adopted a very restricted view of market
data costs—solely the costs of the
Networks to collect data from the
individual SROs and disseminate it to
the public.584 Yet nearly the entire
financial burden of collecting and
producing market data is borne by the
individual markets, not by the
Networks. If, for example, an SRO’s
systems break down on a high-volume
trading day and it can no longer provide
its data to the Networks, investors
would suffer the consequences of a
defective data stream, regardless of
whether the Networks are able to
continue operating.
The commenters’ suggested approach
to market data fees would eliminate any
funding for the SROs that supply data
to the Networks, which would have
reduced SRO funding by $393.7 million
in 2004.585 Before imposing such a
significant and sudden reduction in
SRO funding, the Commission must
carefully consider the consequences this
reduction might have on the integrity of
the U.S. equity markets. When the
Commission last reviewed market data
fees and revenues in 1999, it noted the
direct connection between an SRO’s
operational and regulatory functions
and the value of its market information:
[T]he value of a market’s information is
dependent on the quality of the market’s
operation and regulation. Information is
worthless if it is cut off during a systems
outage (particularly during a volatile, highvolume trading day when reliable access to
market information is most critical), tainted
by fraud or manipulation, or simply fails to
reflect accurately the buying and selling
interest in a security.586
Moreover, the U.S. equity markets are
not alone in their reliance on market
data revenues as a substantial source of
funding. All of the other major world
equity markets currently derive large
amounts of revenues from selling
market information, despite having
significantly less trading volume and
less market capitalization than the
NYSE and Nasdaq. To illustrate, the
following table sets forth the respective
market information revenues, dollar
value of trading, and market
capitalization for the largest world
equity markets in 2003: 587
Data revenues
(millions)
Trading volume
(trillions)
London .......................................................................................................................
NYSE .........................................................................................................................
Nasdaq .......................................................................................................................
Deutsche Bourse .......................................................................................................
Euronext .....................................................................................................................
Tokyo .........................................................................................................................
$180
172
147
146
109
60
In sum, the Commission is committed
to assuring that investors are not
required to pay unreasonable or unfair
fees for the consolidated market
information that they must have to
participate in the U.S. equity markets.
On the other hand, we must maintain
high standards of SRO performance,
without which the data they produce
576 The Commission also is concerned about the
risk of compromising the quality of market
information if the hybrid model were adopted.
Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11178.
577 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11179.
578 Hearing Tr. at 223–224, 228–229, 230–231,
233.
579 Supplemental Release, 69 FR at 30148.
580 See, e.g., Ameritrade Reproposal Letter 10;
Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 8–9; Brut Letter at
21–23; Citigroup Letter at 15; Financial Information
Forum Letter at 3; Financial Services Roundtable
Letter at 6–7; Goldman Sachs Letter at 2, 10; ICI
Letter at 21–22; Morgan Stanley Letter at 21–22;
Schwab Reproposal Letter at 3–5; SIA Reproposal
Letter at 24; STANY Letter at 14; UBS Letter at 10.
581 SRO Structure Release, supra note 49.
582 SRO Transparency Release, supra note 50.
583 See, e.g., Ameritrade Letter I at 10; Goldman
Sachs Letter at 10; SIA Letter at 22.
584 See, e.g., ASA Letter at 2; Citigroup Letter at
16; Schwab Letter at 6; SIA Letter at 25.
585 See supra, table accompanying note 564.
586 Market Information Release, 64 FR at 70614–
70615.
587 Data for this table is derived from the 2003
annual reports of the various markets and from
statistics compiled by the World Federation of
Exchanges. The exchange rates are as of August 15,
2004.
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9.7
7.1
1.3
1.9
2.1
Market capitalization
(trillions)
29JNR2
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2.8
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 29, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
would be worth little. Some
commenters suggested that SRO funding
should be provided through more
specifically targeted fees, such as an
additional regulatory fee to fund market
regulation costs.588 Given the potential
harm if vital SRO functions are not
adequately funded, we believe that the
level of market data fees is most
appropriately addressed in a context
that looks at SRO funding as a whole.
The Commission’s review of SRO
structure, governance, and transparency
provides a useful context in which these
competing policy concerns can be
evaluated and balanced appropriately.
The Commission does not believe,
however, that reform of the current
revenue allocation formulas should be
delayed until its review of fees is
completed.589 The distortions caused by
these formulas are substantial and
ongoing. In particular, it appears that
market participants increasingly are
engaging in the practice of trade
shredding (i.e., splitting large trades into
multiple 100-share trades) as a means to
increase their share of market data
revenues under the current Plan
formulas. As discussed below, the
adopted formula would represent a
substantial improvement because it is
designed to eliminate trade shredding
and other gaming of the current
formulas and because it would more
directly allocate revenues to those
markets that contribute data to the
consolidated data stream that is most
useful to investors.
b. Plan Governance
The Commission is adopting, as
proposed and reproposed, an
amendment to the Plans that requires
the creation of non-voting advisory
committees (‘‘Governance
Amendment’’). It provides that the
members of an advisory committee have
the right to submit their views to the
Plan operating committees on Plan
matters, including any new or modified
product, fee, contract, or pilot program.
Most commenters supported the
Governance Amendment.590 They
generally believed that expanding the
participation of non-SROs parties in
Plan governance would be a
constructive step. Only a few
commenters disagreed, stating that
588 See, e.g., Citigroup Reproposal Letter at 9;
Goldman Sachs Letter at 11.
589 See, e.g., SIA Reproposal Letter at 24
(allocation formula should not be revised prior to
evaluating the level of market data fees).
590 See, e.g., Amex Letter at 10; Citigroup Letter
at 17; Financial Information Forum Letter at 4;
SIIA/FISD Reproposal Letter at 2; Financial
Services Roundtable Letter at 6–7; ICI Letter at 4
and 21 n. 35; Instinet Letter at 7, 46; Nasdaq Letter
II at 33; Reuters Letter at 3; STANY Letter at 15.
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interested parties currently have the
ability to communicate their views on
Plan matters or questioning the efficacy
of the committees.591
A number of commenters, however,
believed that the proposal did not go far
enough to reform the Plans and that
even greater participation by interested
non-SRO parties in the Plans is
needed.592 The SIA recommended that
the Commission ‘‘amend the governance
structures of the Plans to incorporate the
types of changes that have been
implemented recently in corporate
governance generally.’’ 593 These
commenters also raised concerns
regarding several other aspects of Plan
governance, including current
administrative costs and burden, the
unanimous vote requirement for Plan
action, and the current process for
reviewing SRO fee filings and Plan
amendments. For instance, the SIA also
believed that inconsistencies among the
Networks regarding administrative
requirements and burdens (i.e.,
agreements and contracts, billing
policies, data use policies, and annual
audit requirements) contribute to high
market data fees and should be reduced,
streamlined, and made uniform.594
In many respects, the Commission
agrees with the concerns expressed by
commenters regarding administration of
the Plans. Nevertheless, it is reluctant at
this point to require more intrusive
changes to Plan governance that might
interfere with effective Plan operations.
The Plans fulfill significant operational
functions with respect to the systems
that deliver consolidated data to the
Letter at 2, 17; ISE Letter at 2; Specialist
Assoc. Letter at 16. Two commenters on the
reproposal suggested that the Commission should
adopt the advisory committee structure currently in
place for the Nasdaq UTP Plan. ArcaEx Reproposal
Letter at 14; Letter from Bridget M. Farrell, CoChairman, and Michael P. Rountree, Co-Chairman,
Operating Committee of the Nasdaq Unlisted
Trading Privileges Plan, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated Feb. 2, 2005
(‘‘Nasdaq UTP Plan Reproposal Letter’’) at 2. The
Nasdaq UTP Plan advisory committee meets biannually and has the right to present written
comments or inquiries to the Plan operating
committee. The Commission has retained the
reproposed committee structure, primarily because
it believes that advisory committee members should
have more direct involvement in the deliberations
of Plan operating committees. Specifically, the
Governance Amendment gives advisory committee
members the right to attend meetings of the
operating committee and to receive information
disseminated to the operating committee.
592 See, e.g., Letter from W. Hardy Callcott, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
Dec. 30, 2004 (‘‘Callcott Reproposal Letter’’) at 4;
Financial Services Roundtable Letter at 6–7;
Goldman Sachs Letter at 12–13; Instinet Reproposal
Letter at 17; Morgan Stanley Letter at 22; Schwab
Reproposal Letter at 5; SIA Reproposal Letter at 27–
28; STANY Letter at 15.
593 SIA Reproposal Letter at 28.
594 SIA Letter at 27–28.
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591 CBOE
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public on a daily basis. Moreover,
improved governance structures at the
SRO level also should contribute to
improved governance of the Plans
through their selection and guidance of
SRO representatives on the Plan
operating committees. The Commission
therefore believes that the Governance
Amendment represents a useful first
step toward improving the
responsiveness of Plan participants and
the efficiency of Plan operations.
Expanding the participation of
interested parties other than SROs in
Plan governance should increase the
transparency of Plan business, as well as
provide an established mechanism for
alternative views to be heard by the
Plans and the Commission. Earlier and
more broadly based participation could
contribute to the ability of the Plans to
achieve consensus on disputed issues.
With respect to Plan administration,
promising private efforts are underway
to improve consistency among data
providers and to reduce administrative
burdens.595 The Commission
particularly believes that the Plans
should give full consideration to the
views of industry participants on steps
that would streamline the
administrative procedures and burdens
of the three Plans. Enhanced
participation of advisory committee
members in Plan affairs should help
further this process. The Commission
will continue to monitor and evaluate
Plan developments to determine
whether any further action is warranted.
3. Revenue Allocation Formula
As discussed below, the Commission
has adopted the Allocation Amendment
with some modifications from the
proposal and reproposal.596 Given the
significant changes from the current
Plan formulas, the Commission will
monitor the operation of the new
formula to assess whether it achieves its
goals and whether any further
modifications are warranted. As with
any other aspects of the Plans, the
language added to the Plans by the
Allocation Amendment can be adjusted
in the future pursuant to the normal
595 See SIIA/FISD Reproposal Letter at 2–3 (SIIA/
FISD developing guidelines to encourage
uniformity in exchange and vendor administrative
policies and procedures; guidelines will address
exchange data delay intervals, subscriber agreement
streamlining, billing and reporting period issues,
and unit of count definitions).
596 As set forth in section VII below, the
compliance date for the Allocation Amendment is
September 1, 2006. Accordingly, Plan revenues for
the first eight months of 2006 will be allocated in
accordance with the current Plan formulas. Plan
revenues for the remaining part of 2006 will be
allocated in accordance with the new formula.
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process of Commission-approved
amendments.597
The proposal and reproposal included
an amendment to the Plans that would
modify their formulas for allocating
market data revenues to SRO
Participants. The current Plan formulas
are based solely on the trading activity
of an SRO. The proposed and
reproposed formulas were intended to
address three serious weaknesses in the
old formulas: (1) The absence of any
allocation of revenues for the quotations
contributed by an SRO to the
consolidated data stream; (2) an
excessive emphasis on the number of
trades reported by an SRO that has led
to distortive trading practices, such as
wash sales, trade shredding, and print
facilities; and (3) a disproportional
allocation of revenues for a relatively
small number of stocks with extremely
high trading volume, with a much
smaller allocation to the thousands of
other stocks included in a Network,
typically issued by smaller companies,
with less trading volume.
To address these problems, the
proposed formula included a number of
elements, including a Quoting Share, an
NBBO Improvement Share, a Trading
Share, and a Security Income
Allocation. The Quoting Share and
NBBO Improvement Share would have
provided an allocation of revenues for
an SRO’s quotations. In particular, the
Quoting Share would have allocated
revenues for all quotes, both automated
and manual, according to the dollar size
and length of time that such quotes
equaled the price of the NBBO. It
included an automatic cutoff of credit
for manual quotations, however, when
they were left alone at the NBBO. This
cut-off was intended to preclude SROs
from being allocated revenues merely
for slowness in updating their manual
quotations. The NBBO Improvement
Share would have allocated revenues to
SROs for the extent to which they
displayed quotations that improved the
price of the NBBO.
At the NMS Hearing, representatives
of floor-based exchanges stated their
intention to adopt hybrid trading
models that would primarily display
automated quotations.598 In response,
the Commission, in its Supplemental
Release, stated that the prospect of
hybrid trading models presented an
opportunity for simplifying the
597 Cf. Letter from Mary Yeager, Assistant
Secretary, NYSE, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005 (‘‘NYSE
Reproposal Letter II’’) at 5 (suggesting that, given
inability to anticipate all issues that may arise,
markets should be allowed to make adjustments to
market data plans).
598 Hearing Tr. at 85, 90–92, 94–97, 120–121.
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proposed allocation formula.599 It noted
that the purpose of the automatic cutoff
for manual quotations was to minimize
the allocation of revenues for potentially
stale quotations and requested comment
on whether only automated quotes
should be entitled to earn an allocation
of revenues. The Supplemental Release
also noted that the NBBO Improvement
Share was significantly more complex
than the other aspects of the proposed
formula and that it had been proposed
largely to counter the potential for an
excessive allocation of revenues for
manual quotations. As a result, the
Reproposing Release included a
reproposed allocation formula that
eliminated the NBBO Improvement
Share and excluded manual quotations
from the Quoting Share.600 It also
allocated revenues equally between the
trading activity and quoting activity of
Plan participants. Based on additional
comments received in response to the
reproposal, the Commission is adopting
the reproposed allocation formula with
certain modifications, as discussed
below.
The comments on the proposal and
reproposal generally addressed four
broad categories of issues: (1) Whether
the current Plan formulas need to be
updated; (2) whether quotations should
be considered in allocating revenues; (3)
whether the size of trades should be
considered in allocating revenues; and
(4) whether the allocation of revenues
should be allocated more evenly across
all of a Network’s stocks. These
comments are discussed below.
a. Need for New Formula
Many commenters agreed with the
Commission that, if the Networks were
to continue allocating revenues to the
SROs, the current allocation formulas
needed to be updated.601 Many of these
commenters also believed that the
proposed and reproposed formulas
should be modified in several respects,
and their specific suggestions to
improve the proposed formula are
discussed below. In general, however,
they agreed with the objectives of the
proposal and reproposal to eliminate
much of the incentive for distortive
trade reporting practices and to begin
providing some allocation of revenues
for the quotations that SROs contribute
to the consolidated data stream.
Release, 69 FR at 30148.
Release, 69 FR at 77464.
601 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 7;
BSE Letter at 15; Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter
at 4; Harris Reproposal Letter at 11; ICI Letter at 21;
JP Morgan Reproposal Letter at 2; NYSE Reproposal
Letter II at 3; STA Letter at 7; UBS Letter at 10;
Vanguard Letter at 6.
PO 00000
599 Supplemental
Other commenters, in contrast,
opposed changing the current allocation
formulas.602 Their specific objections to
the proposed and reproposed formulas
are discussed below, but they also
opposed changing the current formulas
for more general reasons. First, some
believed that, rather than changing the
formulas, the Commission simply
should prohibit the particular distortive
practices caused by the old formulas
and enforce the existing prohibitions
against such practices. Commenters also
opposed the proposed and reproposed
formulas because they believed they
incorporated arbitrary judgments about
the value of quotations and trades.
Finally, those opposed to changing the
Plan formulas believed that the
proposed formula was simply too
complex to be implemented effectively
and that its costs exceeded any benefits
that were likely to be gained.
The Commission has considered the
views of these commenters, but does not
believe that they warrant leaving the
current Plan formulas in place. First, the
Commission intends to continue to
enforce the existing prohibitions against
distortive trade reporting practices.
Rather than attempting to devise new
prohibitions that address every
conceivable harmful practice, however,
it has determined to address directly the
formula-driven distortions by adopting
revisions to the current formulas. As
long as the allocation of market data
revenues is based primarily on reporting
a large number of very small trades, the
incentive for distortive trade reporting
will continue. Moreover, as discussed
below, the current formulas are flawed
in several important respects beyond the
incentives they create for distortive
trade reporting practices.
The Commission does not believe that
the adopted formula incorporates
arbitrary judgments about the value of
trades and quotes. In this regard, it is
important to recognize that any formula
for allocating market data revenues
would reflect some judgment regarding
the contribution of the various SROs’
data to the consolidated data stream;
otherwise, the revenues could simply be
allocated equally among all Plan
participants. The Commission’s goal in
adopting a new formula is to improve
on the judgments incorporated in the
old Plan formulas to more fully achieve
NMS objectives.
For example, the current formula for
Network A and Network B treats a 100-
600 Reproposing
Frm 00068
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602 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 22; Instinet Reproposal
Letter at 13; Letter from David Colker, Chief
Executive Officer and President, National Stock
Exchange, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005 (‘‘NSX Reproposal
Letter’’) at 4; Phlx Letter at 4.
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share trade the same as a 20,000 share
trade in the same stock, even though
their importance for price discovery
purposes clearly is not equal. All of the
current Plan formulas value only the
trades reported by an SRO (for Networks
A and B, the number of reported trades;
for Network C, the average of number
and share volume of reported trades),
thus treating a quotation as having no
value except to the extent it resulted in
a trade. Quotations are accorded no
value even if they were fully accessible
and established the NBBO for a
substantial period of time, thereby
providing price discovery for trades
occurring at other markets that
internalize orders with reference to the
NBBO price. Such formulas based solely
on an SRO’s trading activity may have
been adequate many years ago when a
single market dominated each group of
securities, but are seriously outdated
now that trading is split among many
different markets whose contributions to
the public data stream can vary
considerably.
The adopted formula reflects fairly
straightforward determinations about
the kinds of data that, in general, are
likely to be useful to investors. For
example, a $50,000 quote at the NBBO
in a stock is likely more useful to
investors than a $2000 quote in the
same stock. Similarly, a $50,000 trade in
a stock is likely more useful to investors
in assessing the trading trend of that
stock than a $2000 trade; again, not
necessarily in every case, but in general
and on average. By more appropriately
weighing data that is useful to investors,
the adopted formula represents a
substantial improvement on the old
formulas.603
Commenters on the original proposal
generally believed that the originally
proposed formula was complex and may
have been difficult to implement
efficiently.604 They particularly noted
that the proposed NBBO Improvement
603 Some commenters were concerned that the
formula’s use of dollar volume calculations does
not sufficiently allocate revenues to markets that
trade low-priced stocks. See, e.g., BSE Letter at 18;
CHX Letter at 16. The Commission believes that
dollar volume is the most appropriate measure, in
general, of the importance to investors of trading
and quoting information. Per share stock prices, in
contrast, are a more arbitrary measure because they
are dependent, to a large extent, on the number of
shares a company chooses to issue, both originally
and through stock splits and reverse stock splits. To
the extent the commenters were concerned about
the less active stocks of smaller companies, the
Security Income Allocation of the adopted formula
incorporates the square root function precisely to
more appropriately allocate revenues to SROs that
provide a venue for price discovery in these stocks.
See section V.A.3.d below.
604 See, e.g., Angel Letter I at 11; Financial
Information Forum Letter at 3; NYSE Letter,
Attachment at 11.
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Share was difficult to understand and
had the potential to be abused through
gaming behavior. The Commission
agreed with these commenters and has
modified the reproposed formula and
adopted formula accordingly. Given that
only automated quotations will be
entitled to earn an allocation under the
adopted formula, the originally
proposed NBBO Improvement Share, as
well as the proposed cutoff of credits for
manual quotations left alone at the
NBBO, have been deleted from the
reproposed formula and remain deleted
in the adopted formula. The elimination
of these two elements greatly reduces
the complexity of the adopted formula
and promotes more efficient
implementation of the formula. In
addition, the 15% of the Security
Income Allocation that was allocated to
the NBBO Improvement Share in the
proposed formula now has been shifted
to the Quoting Share to assign an even
allocation of revenues between trading
and quoting.
Other commenters asserted that it
would overly costly and complex to
calculate the other elements of the
proposed formula.605 The Commission
does not agree with this assertion. An
SRO’s Trading Share, for example, will
not be materially more difficult to
calculate than the current Network C
formula, which is based on an average
of an SRO’s proportion of trades and
share volume. The Security Income
Allocation uses the square root function
which is a simple arithmetic
calculation. Some commenters believed
that the Quoting Share, which
incorporates the total dollar size of the
NBBO in a stock throughout the trading
year, would result in astronomically
high numbers that would be extremely
difficult to calculate.606 In fact, the
largest number of Quote Credits in a
year for even the highest price stock
with the greatest displayed depth at the
NBBO is be very unlikely to reach
beyond the trillions, a number well
within the capabilities of even the most
basic spreadsheet program.607 Moreover,
605 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 22–23; CBOE Letter at
2, 9; NSX Letter at 7.
606 See, e.g., CBOE Letter at 14 (calculation of
Quote Credits will ‘‘yield astronomical numbers’’
that ‘‘can be expressed only in exponential terms’’);
NSX Letter at 7 (calculation of large number of
Quote Credits is ‘‘particularly ludicrous’’).
607 For example, assume a stock with an average
price of $100 per share has an unusually large
average quoted size of 200,000 shares at both the
national best bid and the national best offer
throughout every second of the trading year. Over
an average 252 trading days during a year, the total
Quote Credits in this stock would be 235.9 trillion
($100*400,000*252*23,400 seconds per trading
day). Quote Credits are only calculated for
individual Network stocks and are not be totaled
across all Network stocks.
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4701
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37563
the allocation is determined by the
proportion of an SRO’s Quote Credits in
relation to other SROs, not the absolute
amount of Quote Credits.
Some commenters suggested that
revenue allocations under the formula
should be calculated and paid out on a
quarterly basis.608 Currently, the
Networks make estimated quarterly
payments subject to a final annual
calculation and payment. Commenters
believed quarterly calculations and
payments would simplify
administration of the formula and
reduce the potential for disparities
between quarterly estimated and annual
final payments. The adopted Allocation
Amendment does not alter the current
Plan provisions for annual final
payments. It is important to retain a
final annual calculation and payment to
minimize the potential for unusual
trading activity, or intentional gaming
behavior, to inappropriately distort an
allocation within a quarter. The annual
calculation will be based on numbers
that are four times larger than the
numbers for a quarterly calculation.
These larger numbers will help smooth
out the effect of unusual market activity
in a particular quarter, as well as
increase the difficulty of any attempt at
gaming behavior. Of course, all of the
formula’s calculations can be updated
daily, and quarterly estimated payments
based on these calculations can
continue to be made to SRO
participants.
Finally, a few commenters were
concerned about the effect of modifying
the current allocation formulas on the
existing business models and terms of
competition for the various markets.609
The Commission recognizes that
reforming formulas that have remained
unchanged for many years could affect
the competitive position of various
markets. Given the severe deficiencies
of these formulas, however, it does not
believe that the interests of any
particular business model should
preclude updating the formulas to
reflect current market conditions. The
adopted formula is intended to reflect
more appropriately the contributions of
the various SROs to the consolidated
data stream and thereby better align the
interests of individual markets with the
interests of investors. Moreover, by
incorporating a much more broad-based
measure of an SRO’s contribution to the
consolidated data stream, the adopted
formula should be less subject to any
particular type of gaming and distortion
608 See, e.g., NYSE Reproposal Letter II at 5;
Nasdaq UTP Plan Reproposal Letter at 3.
609 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 22; CHX Letter at 21–
22; NSX Letter at 6.
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than the narrowly-focused current Plan
formulas.610
b. Quotations That Equal the NBBO
Many commenters supported the
proposal to allocate a portion of market
data revenues based on an SRO’s
quotations, particularly if only
automated and accessible quotations
would qualify for an allocation.611 Some
commenters, however, were concerned
about the risk of harmful gaming
behavior by market participants.612 For
example, Instinet stated that the
‘‘fundamental problem with the
Commission’s proposed formula stems
from the inherently low cost for market
participants to generate quotation
information and the consequent high
potential for gaming behavior in any
formula that attempts to reward such
behavior.’’ 613 A specific type of gaming
that concerned commenters was
‘‘flickering quotes’’—quotes that are
flashed for a short period of time solely
to earn market data revenues, but are
not truly accessible and therefore do not
add any value to the consolidated quote
stream. Nasdaq discussed a number of
other potential gaming behaviors,
including posting quotations in inactive
markets or for inactive securities so that
they are less likely to be executed.614
Commenters also were concerned that
such practices would increase quotation
traffic and bandwidth costs, but with
little or no benefit for the quality of the
consolidated data stream.
The Commission recognizes that
abusive quoting behavior is a legitimate
concern, particularly given that
quotations have not been entitled to an
allocation of market data revenues in
the past. The adopted formula therefore
incorporates a number of modifications
to the reproposed formula to minimize
the potential for abusive or costly
quoting behavior.
610 Two commenters on the reproposal suggested
adopting an allocation formula based solely on the
dollar volume of trading. ArcaEx Reproposal Letter
at 13; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 14. Dollar
volume alone, however, is not a broad-based
measure and would miss important aspects of an
SRO’s contribution to the public data stream. It
would, for example, allocate a disproportionately
large amount to block trades. Block trades often are
internalized by securities dealers at prices based, at
least partly, on current public quotations. A formula
based solely on dollar volume would not
adequately allocate revenues to the source of
quotations relied on in pricing block trades.
611 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 7–8;
Morgan Stanley Letter at 22–23; NYSE Reproposal
Letter II at 3; STA Letter at 7; Vanguard Letter at
6.
612 See, e.g., ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 13; CHX
Letter at 19; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 14; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 30.
613 Instinet Letter at 41.
614 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 12–13.
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First, the adopted formula modifies
the language of the reproposed formula
to clarify that a quotation must be
displayed by the Network processor for
a minimum of one full second of time
before it is entitled to earn any Quote
Credits. This one-second time period is
consistent with the one-second time
period included in the flickering
quotation exception in the Order
Protection Rule and is designed to
assure that only quotations that are
readily accessible can earn Quote
Credits. The time stamps assigned to
quotations by the Network processors
will control this determination.
Accordingly, subsecond flickering
quotations are excluded from the
formula.
Second, the adopted formula modifies
the language of the reproposed formula
to clarify that, consistent with the
approach of the Order Protection Rule,
each SRO participant in a Network is
entitled to earn Quote Credits only for
the SRO’s best bid and best offer. Thus,
for example, only a single, accessible
best bid and best offer for each of the
exchange SROs, Nasdaq, and the NASD
will be entitled to earn Quote Credits. A
best bid and best offer must be
accessible by routing an order to a single
market destination (i.e., currently, to a
single exchange execution system, a
single Nasdaq execution system, or a
single ADF participant). By limiting the
number of separate quotations that are
entitled to earn Quote Credits, the
adopted formula both reduces the
ability of market participants to ‘‘shred’’
their quotes among many different
markets and promotes equal regulation
of exchange SROs, Nasdaq, and the
NASD.
Third, the adopted formula modifies
the language of the reproposed formula
to clarify that a quotation cannot earn
Quote Credits while it locks or crosses
a previously displayed automated
quotation. This limitation is needed to
remove any potential financial incentive
for abusive quoting behavior that would
be contrary to the purposes of the
provisions on locking and crossing
quotations set forth in the Access Rule.
Finally, as discussed further below,615
the Security Income Allocation in the
adopted formula modifies the
reproposed formula by limiting the total
revenues allocated to any particular
Network security to no more than $4 per
qualified transaction report. This
limitation on each security’s revenue
allocation therefore will apply to both
the Trading Share and Quoting Share. In
contrast, the reproposed formula limited
the allocation only for the Trading Share
PO 00000
615 Infra,
section V.A.3.d.
Frm 00070
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
of a Network security to $2 per qualified
transaction report, but shifted the excess
balance of revenues to the Quoting
Share for such Network security—
thereby potentially increasing the risk of
abusive quoting behavior in highly
inactive Network securities. Under the
adopted formula, the excess balance
above the limitation will be allocated
across all Network securities in direct
proportion to their share of dollar
volume of trading.
With these clarifications and
modifications, the Commission does not
believe that the Quoting Share of the
adopted formula will be unacceptably
vulnerable to gaming, particularly
because only automated and fully
accessible quotations will be entitled to
earn a share of market data revenues.
The potential cost of displaying such
quotations, in the form of unprofitable
trades, should not be underestimated.
Quotations would earn significant
revenues only if they represent a
significant proportion of the total size of
quotations displayed at the NBBO for a
stock throughout the trading year. The
risk of losses that could result from the
execution of orders against large
quotations would be likely to dwarf any
potential allocation of market data
revenues.616 With the advent of highly
sophisticated order-routing algorithms,
accessible automated quotations
throughout the NMS can be hit at
lightning speed. Some of these
algorithms are specifically designed to
search the market for displayed
liquidity and sweep such liquidity
immediately when it is displayed. The
market discipline imposed by these
order-routing practices should greatly
reduce the potential for ‘‘low cost’’
quotations at the NBBO. A market
participant would have to be prepared
to trade at a price, particularly a price
as attractive as the NBBO, before
displaying accessible and automated
quotations to earn market data revenues.
Moreover, any quotations submitted for
stocks that are inactively traded (and
therefore less likely to attract trading
616 For example, Nasdaq asserted that
approximately $1 million per month would be
distributed among SROs based on quoting in the
2000 least active Nasdaq stocks. Nasdaq Reproposal
Letter at 13. In this scenario, an average of $500 per
month would be allocated to each stock. Given the
approximately 491,400 seconds of trading in an
average month, the average available Quoting Share
in a stock for each second would be approximately
1/10th of one cent, which would be further divided
among bids and offers to approximately 1/20th of
one cent. Moreover, this amount would be shared
among all market participants quoting in the stock.
Consequently, even the smallest losing trade (i.e., a
one-cent loss on an executed 100-share quote)
would wipe out 2000 seconds (more than 33
minutes) of the entire Quoting Share allocation for
bids or offers in the stock.
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interest) will garner a very small
Quoting Share allocation because the
size of such allocation will be
determined by the proportional dollar
volume of trading in a stock.
Finally, commenters were concerned
that some quotations might be
submitted to ‘‘hide in the queue’’ when
a stock already has significant depth
displayed at the NBBO.617 The strategy
is risky, however, because of the desire
for greater liquidity evidenced by the
number of marketable limit orders
entered but not filled, particularly for
Nasdaq stocks, that was discussed above
in section II.A.1.b. Typically, the
volume of such orders searching for
liquidity at the NBBO far exceeds the
available liquidity (both displayed size
and reserve size). Any quotations
attempting to hide in the queue at the
NBBO when liquidity seeking orders
arrive would necessarily be executed
immediately.618
A few commenters also opposed the
proposed Quoting Share because they
believed it represented an inappropriate
attempt by the Commission to control
the quoting behavior of market
participants.619 ArcaEx, for example,
stated that the ‘‘most important question
is how paying for top-of-book quotes—
on a time- and size-weighted basis or on
any other basis—encourages beneficial
behavior,’’ and questioned whether the
Quoting Share would achieve this
result. Brut asserted that ‘‘[n]ot only
would [the proposed formula] increase
the potential unnatural trading and
quoting behavior, it signifies a desire to
use market structure regulation to
micro-manage market participant
behavior * * *.’’ 620
These commenters appear to have
misunderstood the Commission’s
objective in proposing to update the
current Plan formulas. As noted
617 Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 13; NYSE
Reproposal Letter at 2.
618 Of course, the Commission and SROs will
continue to monitor quoting activity for any
conduct that violates the federal securities laws, the
rules thereunder, or SRO rules and take appropriate
action to address such conduct. For example, one
commenter suggested that a market participant
might enter a buy order at the national best bid at
a time when there already is depth at such bid, but
with instructions to ‘‘cancel’’ the order upon
execution of orders earlier in the queue. NYSE
Reproposal Letter at 2. Such an order type would
effectively be impossible to access because it always
would be cancelled when at risk of execution. As
a result, reflecting these orders in a displayed
quotation would be a clear violation of the Rule
602(b) of Regulation NMS, which requires that
displayed quotations be firm, as well as constitute
a material misstatement to the market and investors
concerning trading interest in the stock.
619 ArcaEx Letter at 13; Brut Letter at 22, Phlx
Letter at 4.
620 Brut Letter at 22.
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above,621 it is unlikely that a marginal
increase in market data revenues would
significantly alter the quoting behavior
of market participants, at least for those
not already interested in trading a stock
for separate reasons. The potential cost
of unprofitable trades would be too
high. Rather, the Commission’s primary
objective is to correct an existing flaw in
the current formulas by allocating
revenues to those SROs that, even now,
benefit investors by contributing useful
quotations to the consolidated data
stream. Currently, such SROs do not
receive any allocation for providing a
venue for this beneficial quoting
activity. Basing an allocation on the
extent to which an SRO’s quotes equal
the NBBO is an appropriate means to
correct this flaw, even if the allocation
does not always reflect the precise value
of quotations.622
c. Number and Dollar Volume of Trades
The current Plan formulas allocate
revenues based on the number of trades
(Networks A and B) or on the average
of number of trades and share volume
of trades (Network C) reported by SROs.
By focusing solely on trading activity
(and particularly by rewarding the
reporting of many trades no matter how
small their size), these formulas have
contributed to a variety of distortive
trade reporting practices, including
wash sales, shredded trades, and SRO
print facilities. To address these
practices and to establish a more broadbased measure of an SRO’s contribution
to the consolidated trade stream, the
proposed formula provided that an
SRO’s Trading Share in a particular
stock would be calculated by taking the
average of the SRO’s percentage of total
dollar volume in the stock and the
SRO’s percentage of qualified trades in
the stock. A ‘‘qualified trade’’ was
defined as having a dollar volume of
$5000 or more. The Proposing Release
requested comment on whether this
amount should be higher or lower, or
whether trades with a size of less than
$5000 should receive credit that was
proportional to their size.623
Several commenters on the original
proposal believed that small trades
note 616 and accompanying text.
622 ArcaEx noted that top-of-book quotes make
only a partial contribution to price discovery and
that depth-of-book quotes are particularly important
since decimalization. ArcaEx Letter at 13. The
Commission agrees that depth-of-book quotes are
important to investors, and for that reason has
adopted amendments to the market data rules to
facilitate the independent dissemination of a
market’s depth of book. The rules will not prevent
such a market from charging fees for depth-of-book
quotations that are fair and reasonable and not
unreasonably discriminatory.
623 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11181.
PO 00000
621 Supra,
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37565
contribute to price discovery and should
be entitled to earn at least some credit
in the calculation of the number of
qualified trades.624 The Commission
agreed and included in the reproposed
formula a provision that awards a
fractional proportion of a qualified
report for trades of less than $5000. The
adopted formula also includes this
provision. Thus, a $2500 trade will
constitute 1/2 of a qualified transaction
report. This approach greatly reduces
the potential for large allocations
attributable to shredded trades, while
recognizing the contribution of small
trades to price discovery.
Two commenters on the original
proposal asserted that the $5000
threshold was arbitrary.625 As noted in
the Proposing Release, an analysis of
Network A data indicates that
approximately 90% of dollar volume
and 50% of trades exceed this
threshold. The Commission believes
that the $5000 figure represents a
reasonable attempt to address the
problem of shredding large trades into
100-share trades. By providing only a
proportional allocation for trades with
dollar amounts below this threshold, the
ability of market participants to generate
large revenue allocations by shredding
trades would be greatly reduced. For
example, a 2000-share trade in a $25
stock could be shredded into twenty
trades in the absence of a dollar
threshold for qualified trades, but could
be shredded into only ten qualified
trades under the reproposed formula.
Moreover, when combined with the
allocation of 50% of revenues to the
Quoting Share and the allocation of
another 25% of revenues based on the
dollar volume of trades, the $5000
threshold for qualified trades will
eliminate much of the potential reward
for trade shredding under reproposed
formula. In the example of the 2000share trade in a $25 stock, the incentive
for shredding would have been reduced
by a total of 87.5% (75% + (50% *
25%).626
624 See, e.g., BSE Letter at 16; CHX Letter at 19–
20; E*Trade Letter at 11.
625 E*Trade Letter at 11; Instinet Letter at 42.
626 One commenter on the reproposal suggested
that the dollar volume allocation for block trades be
capped at $300,000 to preclude a disproportionate
allocation. NYSE Reproposal Letter II at 4–5. The
adopted formula does not include a cap on block
trades because it would appear to be easily
avoidable through trade-shredding. Moreover, the
separate allocations for qualified transaction reports
and for Quoting Shares serve to limit the extent to
which block trades receive a disproportionate
allocation under the adopted formula.
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d. Allocation of Revenues Among
Network Stocks
The proposed formula included a
Security Income Allocation, pursuant to
which a Network’s total distributable
revenues would be allocated among
each of the Network’s stocks based on
the square root of dollar volume. The
square root function was intended to
adjust for the highly disproportionate
level of trading in the very top tier of
Network stocks. A few hundred stocks
(e.g., the top 5%) are much more heavily
traded than the other thousands of
Network stocks. The Proposing Release
noted that an allocation that simply was
directly proportional to trading volume
would fail to reflect adequately the
importance of price discovery for the
vast majority of stocks.627 The
Reproposing Release retained this
provision in the reproposed formula.628
Of the commenters that addressed this
issue, several supported the use of a
square root function to allocate revenues
among stocks.629 Nasdaq, for example,
noted that the ‘‘methodology will
reduce the disparity between the value
of data of the most active and least
active securities.’’ 630 Other
commenters, in contrast, opposed the
use of the square root function to
allocate revenues among Network
stocks.631 ArcaEx believed that the
proposed allocation method ‘‘introduces
a steeply progressive tax on liquid
stocks to subsidize illiquid stocks’’ and
that the allocation of revenues should
remain directly proportional to trading
volume.632
With one modification, the
Commission has retained the square
root function in the adopted formula to
allocate distributable Network revenues
more appropriately among all of the
stocks included in a Network. Although
the extent to which Network stocks are
tiered according to trading volume
varies among the three Networks, it is
quite pronounced in each of them. The
use of the square root function reflects
the Commission’s judgment that, on
average and not necessarily in every
particular case, information about a
$50,000 trade in a stock with an average
daily trading volume of $500,000 is
marginally more useful to investors than
627 Proposing
Release, 69 FR at 11180.
Release, 69 FR at 77466.
629 Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 15; Nasdaq Letter II
at 32; NYSE Reproposal Letter II at 3; Specialist
Assoc. Letter at 16 n. 21.
630 Nasdaq Letter II at 32.
631 ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 11; CBOE Letter
at 11; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 13; Letter from
Ronald A. Orguss, President, Xanadu Investment
Co., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated Jun. 29, 2004 (‘‘Xanadu Letter’’) at 2–3.
632 ArcaEx Letter at 12.
628 Reproposing
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a $50,000 trade in a stock with an
average daily trading volume of $500
million. Markets that provide price
discovery in less active stocks serve an
extremely important function for
investors in those stocks. Price
discovery not only benefits those
investors who choose to trade on any
particular day, but also benefits those
who simply need to monitor the status
of their investment. Efficient secondary
markets support buy-and-hold investors
by offering them a ready opportunity to
trade at any time at a fair price if they
need to buy or sell a stock. Indeed, this
enhanced assurance is one of the most
important contributions of secondary
markets to efficient capital-formation
and to reducing the cost of capital for
listed companies. The square root
function allocates revenues to markets
that perform this function for less-active
stocks by marginally increasing their
percentage of market data revenues,
while still allocating a much greater
dollar amount to more actively traded
stocks.
With respect to very inactively traded
stocks, however, the adopted formula
modifies the reproposed square root
allocation by limiting the revenues that
can be allocated to a single Network
security to an amount that is no greater
than $4 per qualified transaction report.
The amount that exceeds this $4
limitation will be reallocated among all
Network securities in direct proportion
to their dollar volume of trading (which
is heavily weighted toward the most
actively traded stocks). The Commission
is adopting this $4 limitation to respond
to commenters’ concerns about the
potential for abusive quoting behavior
in extremely inactive stocks by anyone
seeking to game the Quoting Share
allocation.633
The $4 limitation is consistent with
the $2 limitation on Trading Share
allocations in the proposed formula and
reproposed formula.634 Whereas the $2
reproposed limitation applied only to
the 50% revenue allocation for Trading
Share, the $4 adopted limitation applies
to 100% of the revenue allocation for a
Network security. The $4 limitation will
prevent extremely high allocations per
qualified transaction report for very
inactive Network stocks, particularly
when compared with the current
distributable revenues per trade of the
Networks, which ranged from $0.14 to
$1.03 in 2004.635 Consequently, the $4
supra, section V.A.3.b.
Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11181;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77467.
635 The distributable revenue per trade for a
Network is calculated by dividing the total
distributable net income of the Network by the total
number of reported trades for the Network’s
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633 See
634 See
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limitation is designed to achieve an
appropriately balanced allocation
among Network stocks by allowing
room for a significant increase in the
amounts currently allocated for many
less active stocks, while also preventing
unjustifiably high allocations for the
most extremely inactive stocks that
might create an inappropriate incentive
for abusive quoting behavior.
To illustrate the operation of the $4
limitation, assume that the initial square
root allocation for a security with 10
qualified transaction reports during the
year was $300, or an average allocation
of $30 per qualified transaction report.
Rather than allocate the full $300 to this
extremely inactive security, the adopted
formula limits the allocation to $4 per
qualified transaction report, so that a
total of only $40 would be allocated to
the stock as its Security Income
Allocation. The difference of $260 ($300
minus $40) would be reallocated among
all Network securities in direct
proportion to their share of dollar
volume of trading.
4. Distribution and Display of Data
Most commenters supported the
provisions, set forth in both the
proposal and reproposal, authorizing
the independent distribution of market
data outside of what is required by the
Plans.636 They generally agreed that the
proposal would allow investors and
vendors greater freedom to make their
own decisions regarding the data they
need. They also believed that the
proposed rule amendment’s ‘‘fair and
reasonable’’ and ‘‘not unreasonably
discriminatory’’ standards are
appropriate to ensure that the
independently distributed market data
would be made available to all investors
and data users. A few commenters, in
contrast, objected to the proposed
standards, asserting that the standards
would not effectively protect investors
and ‘‘weaker and newer markets from
securities. For the Networks in 2004, the
distributable revenue per trade was 15.1 cents for
Network A, 14.5 cents for Network C, and 103.1
cents for Network B. The foregoing Network
financial information is preliminary and unaudited.
636 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 21, 23; CBOE Letter at
2, 17; Citigroup Letter at 16; Financial Information
Forum Reproposal Letter at 4; Letter from Coleman
Stipanovich, Executive Director, State Board of
Administration of Florida, to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 29, 2004
(‘‘Florida State Board Letter’’) at 2; Financial
Services Roundtable Letter at 6; Goldman Sachs
Letter at 12; ICI Letter at 4, 21 n. 35; Instinet Letter
at 45; Nasdaq Letter II at 33; NYSE Letter,
Attachment at 12; Letter from P. Howard Edelstein,
President and CEO, Radianz Americas, Inc., to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated Jan.
27, 2005 (‘‘Radianz Reproposal Letter’’) at 1–2;
Reuters Letter at 3.
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predatory actions by stronger markets or
the potential loss of data integrity.’’ 637
The Commission is adopting Rule
603(a) as proposed and reproposed.638
The ‘‘fair and reasonable’’ and ‘‘not
unreasonably discriminatory’’
requirements in adopted Rule 603(a) are
derived from the language of Section
11A(c) of the Exchange Act. Under
Section 11A(c)(1)(C), the more stringent
‘‘fair and reasonable’’ requirement is
applicable to an ‘‘exclusive processor,’’
which is defined in Section 3(a)(22)(B)
of the Exchange Act as an SRO or other
entity that distributes the market
information of an SRO on an exclusive
basis. Adopted Rule 603(a)(1) extends
this requirement to non-SRO markets
when they act in functionally the same
manner as exclusive processors and are
the exclusive source of their own data.
Applying this requirement to non-SROs
is consistent with Section 11A(c)(1)(F)
of the Exchange Act, which grants the
Commission rulemaking authority to
‘‘assure equal regulation of all markets’’
for NMS Securities.
Commenters were concerned about
the statement in the Proposing Release
that the distribution standards would
prohibit a market from distributing its
data independently on a more timely
basis than it makes available the ‘‘core
data’’ that is required to be disseminated
through a Network processor.639
Instinet, for example, requested that the
Commission clarify that the proposal
would not require a market center to
artificially slow the independent
delivery of its data in order to
synchronize its delivery with the data
disseminated by the Network.640
Adopted Rule 603(a) will not require a
market center to synchronize the
delivery of its data to end-users with
delivery of data by a Network processor
to end-users. Rather, independently
distributed data could not be made
available on a more timely basis than
core data is made available to a Network
processor. Stated another way, adopted
Rule 603(a) prohibits an SRO or brokerdealer from transmitting data to a
vendor or user any sooner than it
637 See,
e.g., Amex Letter at 10, Exhibit A at 13.
Commission also is adopting the
reproposed amendment to current Rule 11Aa3–1
(redesignated as Rule 601 under Regulation NMS),
which rescinds the prohibition on SROs and their
members from disseminating their trade reports
independently. Given that members of an SRO will
continue to be required to transmit their trades to
the SRO (and SROs will continue to transmit trades
to the Networks pursuant to the Plans), the
Commission believe that SROs and their members
also should be free to distribute their trades
independently.
639 Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 12; Instinet Letter
at 47; Reuters Letter at 2.
640 Instinet Letter at 47.
638 The
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transmits the data to a Network
processor.
A majority of the commenters
supported the Commission’s proposed
reduction of the consolidated display
requirements, stating that it should lead
to lower costs for investors.641 A few
commenters, however, opposed
eliminating the requirement to display a
full montage of market BBOs.642 Amex,
for example, believed that elimination
of the montage would confuse investors
and make it more complicated for
vendors and broker-dealers to manage
market data. Some commenters believed
that, rather than reducing the
consolidated display requirement, the
Commission should expand the
requirement to include additional
information on depth-of-book
quotations, stating that the NBBO alone
has become less informative since
decimalization.643
The Commission does not believe that
streamlining the quotations included in
the consolidated display requirement
will detract from the quality of
information made available to investors.
Adopted Rule 603(c), which is adopted
today as proposed and reproposed, will
continue to require the disclosure of
basic quotation information (i.e., prices,
sizes and market center identifications
of the NBBO). Particularly for retail
investors, the NBBO continues to retain
a great deal of value in assessing the
current market for small trades and the
quality of execution of such trades. For
example, statistics on order execution
quality for small market orders (the
order type typically used by retail
investors) reveal that their average
execution price is very close to, if not
better than, the NBBO.644 The adopted
consolidated display requirement will
allow market forces, rather than
regulatory requirements, to determine
641 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 21, 23; Financial
Information Forum Letter at 3–4; Instinet Letter at
7, 45; Nasdaq Letter II at 27, 32; Reuters Letter at
2–3.
642 See, e.g., Amex Letter at 9 & Exhibit A at 12;
Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 9; Callcott Letter at
1, 2, 5.
643 See, e.g., Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 9;
Schwab Reproposal Letter at 5.
644 See, e.g., S&P Index Study, Table 2 (slippage
rates—the extent to which executions occur at
prices inferior to the NBBO at time of order
receipt—for small market orders range from -2.5
basis points (i.e., price improvement) to 0.5 basis
points). The Dash 5 statistics used in the S&P Index
Study were calculated using the NBBO at time of
order receipt, whereas trade-through statistics used
in the Trade-Through Study were calculated using
the market BBOs at the time of order execution. In
addition, the Dash 5 statistics reflect the overall
average of order executions inside the NBBO, at the
NBBO, and outside the NBBO. The trade-through
statistics focus solely on trades executed outside the
best prices. Consequently, the two sets of statistics
are not directly comparable.
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37567
what, if any, additional quotations
outside the NBBO are displayed to
investors. Investors who need the BBOs
of each SRO, as well as more
comprehensive depth-of-book
information, will be able to obtain such
data from markets or third party
vendors.
B. Description of Adopted Rules and
Amendments
1. Allocation Amendment
For the reasons just discussed, the
Commission is adopting with
modifications an amendment to each of
the Plans (‘‘Allocation Amendment’’)
that incorporates a broad based measure
of the contribution of an SRO’s quotes
and trades to the consolidated data
stream.645 The adopted formula reflects
a two-step process. First, a Network’s
distributable revenues (e.g., $150
million) will be allocated among the
many individual securities (e.g., 3000)
included in the Network’s data stream.
Second, the revenues that are allocated
to an individual security (e.g., $200,000)
will be allocated among the SROs based
on measures of the usefulness to
investors of the SROs’ trades and quotes
in the security. The Allocation
Amendment provides that,
notwithstanding any other provision of
a Plan, its SRO participants shall receive
an annual payment for each calendar
year that is equal to the sum of the
SRO’s Trading Shares and Quoting
Shares in each Network security for the
year.646 These two types of Shares are
dollar amounts that are calculated based
on SRO trading and quoting activity in
each Network security.
For the reasons discussed in section
V.A.3 above, the Commission finds that
645 In 2002, the Commission abrogated several
SRO proposals for rebating data revenues to market
participants. Securities Exchange Act Release No.
46159 (July 2, 2002), 67 FR 45775 (July 10, 2002).
The purpose of the abrogation was to allow more
time for the Commission to consider market data
issues. Given that the current Plan allocation
formulas will be updated to allocate revenues for
more beneficial quoting and trading behavior, the
Commission will consider whether rebates will be
permitted after implementation of the adopted
formula, taking into account whether their terms
meet applicable Exchange Act standards and SROs
are able to meet their regulatory responsibilities.
Such SRO rebates would, of course, have to be filed
with the Commission for notice, comment, and
Commission consideration pursuant to Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act.
646 Two commenters were concerned that the new
formula might prohibit the Network’s current
practice of making estimated quarterly payments of
Network revenues, with a final reconciliation at the
end of the year. BSE Letter at 18, 19; CHX Letter
at 22. The language of the reproposed formula and
adopted formula, however, merely tracks existing
Plan language for the calculation of ‘‘Annual
Shares’’ or ‘‘annual payments.’’ Nothing in the
adopted formula prohibits Networks from making
estimated quarterly payments.
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the Allocation Amendment is necessary
and appropriate in the public interest,
for the protection of investors and the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets,
to remove impediments to, and perfect
the mechanisms of, a national market
system, and otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Exchange Act.
a. Security Income Allocation
The first step of the adopted formula
is to allocate a Network’s total
distributable revenues among the many
different securities that are included in
a Network (the ‘‘Security Income
Allocation’’). Paragraph (b) of the
adopted Allocation Amendment bases
this allocation primarily on the square
root of dollar volume of trading in each
security. Use of the square root function
will more appropriately allocate
revenues among stocks with widely
differing trading volume. A small
number of Network stocks are much
more heavily traded than the great
majority of Network stocks. By
proportionally shifting revenues away
from the very top tier of active stocks
and increasing the allocation across
other stocks, the Security Income
Allocation is intended to reflect more
adequately the importance of price
discovery for all Network stocks.
For the most inactively traded
securities, however, the square root
function can disproportionately allocate
revenues for a small number of trades
during the year. For example, the square
root allocation for a security with 10
qualified transaction reports during the
year might be $300. Rather than allocate
the full $300 to such an inactively
traded security (for an average
allocation per qualified transaction
report of $30), the adopted formula
includes a cap of $4 per qualified
transaction report, so that a total of only
$40 will be allocated to the inactive
security pursuant to the square root
allocation. The difference of $260 ($300
minus $40) will be reallocated among
all Network securities in direct
proportion to the dollar volume of
transaction reports in Network
securities. A transaction report with a
dollar volume of $5000 or more
constitutes one qualified report. A
transaction report with a dollar volume
of less than $5000 constitutes a
proportional fraction of a qualified
transaction report.
b. Trading Share
Under paragraph (c) of the adopted
Allocation Amendment, an SRO’s
Trading Share in a particular Network
security will be a dollar amount that is
determined by multiplying: (1) an
amount equal to 50% of the Security
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Income Allocation for the Eligible
Security by (2) the SRO’s Trade Rating
in the security. A Trade Rating will be
a number that represents the SRO’s
proportion of dollar volume and
qualified trades in the security, as
compared to the dollar volume and
qualified trades of all SROs. The Trade
Ratings of all SROs will add up to a total
of one. Thus, for example, multiplying
50% of the Security Income Allocation
for a Network security (e.g., $200,000)
by an SRO’s Trade Rating in that
security (e.g., 0.2555) would produce a
dollar amount (e.g., 50% × $200,000 ×
0.2555 = $25,550) that is the SRO’s
Trading Share for the security for the
year.
Applying 50% of the Security Income
Allocation to the Trading Share reflects
a judgment that generally trades and
quotes are of approximately equal
importance for price discovery
purposes. An SRO’s Trade Rating will
be calculated by taking the average of:
(1) the SRO’s percentage of total dollar
volume reported in the Network
security during the year and (2) the
SRO’s percentage of the total number of
qualified transaction reports in the
Network security for the year. A
transaction report with a dollar volume
of $5000 or more will constitute one
qualified report. A transaction report
with a dollar volume of less than $5000
will constitute a proportional fraction of
a qualified transaction report. As a
result, all sizes of transaction reports
will contribute toward an SRO’s Trade
Rating.
c. Quoting Share
Under paragraph (d) of the adopted
Allocation Amendment, an SRO’s
Quoting Share in a particular Network
Security will be a dollar amount that is
determined by multiplying (1) an
amount equal to 50% of the Security
Income Allocation for the security by (2)
the SRO’s Quote Rating in the security.
A Quote Rating will be a number that
represents the SRO’s proportion of best
bids and best offers that equaled the
price of the NBBO during the year
(‘‘Quote Credits’’), as compared to the
Quote Credits of all SRO’s during the
year. The Quote Ratings of all SROs will
add up to a total of one. Multiplying
50% of the Security Income Allocation
for a Network security by an SRO’s
Quote Rating in that security will
produce a dollar amount that is the
SRO’s Quoting Share for the security for
the year.
An SRO will earn one Quote Credit
for each second of time and dollar value
of size that the SRO’s automated best
bid or best offer during regular trading
hours equals the price of the NBBO and
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does not lock or cross a previously
displayed automated quotation.647 To
qualify for credits, the quoted price
must be displayed for at least one full
second, and the relevant size will be the
minimum size that was displayed
during the second. Thus, for example, a
bid with a dollar value of $4000 (e.g., a
bid of $20 with a size of 200 shares) that
equals the national best bid for three full
seconds would be entitled to 12,000
Quote Credits. If an SRO quotes
simultaneously at both the national best
bid and the national best offer, it would
earn Quote Credits for each quote. An
automated quotation is defined by
reference to adopted Rule 600(b)(3)
under Regulation NMS. Thus, an SRO’s
manual quotations will not be entitled
to earn any Quote Credits.
2. Governance Amendment
For the reasons discussed above in
section V.A.2.b, the Governance
Amendment is adopted as proposed and
reproposed. Paragraph (a) mandates the
formation of a Plan advisory committee.
Paragraph (b) of the Governance
Amendment sets forth the composition
and selection process for such an
advisory committee. Members of the
advisory committee will be selected by
the Plan operating committee, by
majority vote, for two-year terms. At
least one representative must be
selected from each of the following five
categories: (1) A broker-dealer with a
substantial retail investor customer
base; (2) a broker-dealer with a
substantial institutional investor
customer base; (3) an ATS; (4) a data
vendor; and (5) an investor. Each Plan
participant also will have the right to
select one additional member to the
advisory committee that is not
employed by or affiliated with any Plan
participant or its affiliates or facilities.
Paragraphs (c) and (d) of the
Governance Amendment set forth the
function of the advisory committee and
the requirements for its participation in
Plan affairs. Pursuant to paragraph (c),
members of an advisory committee have
the right to submit their views to the
operating committee on Plan matters,
including, but not limited to, any new
or modified product, fee, contract, or
pilot program that is offered or used
647 Regular trading hours are defined in Rule
600(b)(64) of Regulation NMS as between 9:30 a.m.
and 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time, unless otherwise
specified pursuant to the procedures established in
Rule 605(a)(2). One commenter suggested that the
reproposal trades also should have limited trades to
those reported during regular trading hours. NYSE
Reproposal Letter II at 4. The Commission believes
that after-hours trades generally have price
discovery value and is retaining the current Plan
practice of including them in the allocation
formula.
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pursuant to the Plan. Paragraph (d)
provides that members have the right to
attend all operating committee meetings
and to receive any information
distributed to the operating committee
relating to Plan matters, except when
the operating committee, by majority
vote, decides to meet in executive
session after determining that an item of
Plan business requires confidential
treatment.
For the reasons discussed in section
V.A.2.b above, the Commission finds
that the Governance Amendment is
necessary and appropriate in the public
interest, for the protection of investors
and the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets, to remove impediments to, and
perfect the mechanisms of, a national
market system, and otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act.
3. Consolidation, Distribution, and
Display of Data
a. Independent Distribution of
Information
The Commission is adopting the
reproposed amendment to current Rule
11Aa3–1 (redesignated as Rule 601),
which rescinds the prohibition on SROs
and their members from disseminating
their trade reports independently.648
Under adopted Rule 601, members of an
SRO will continue to be required to
transmit their trades to the SRO (and
SROs would continue to transmit trades
to the Networks pursuant to the Plans),
but such members also will be free to
distribute their own data independently,
with or without fees.
For the reasons discussed above in
section V.A.4, the Commission also is
adopting, as proposed and reproposed,
Rule 603(a), which establishes uniform
standards for distribution of both
quotations and trades that will create an
equivalent regulatory regime for all
types of markets. First, Rule 603(a)(1)
requires that any market information 649
648 See supra, note 638. Adopted Regulation NMS
removes the definitions in former paragraph (a) of
Rule 11Aa3–1 and places them in adopted Rule
600(b). Current subparagraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of
Rule 11Aa3–1 are rescinded. As a result, current
subparagraph (c)(4) of current Rule 11Aa3–1 is
redesignated as subparagraph (b)(2) of adopted Rule
601.
649 The information covered by the amendment
tracks the language of Section 11A(c) of the
Exchange Act, which applies to ‘‘information with
respect to quotations for or transactions in’’
securities. This statutory language encompasses a
broad range of information, including information
relating to limit orders held by a market center. See,
e.g., S. Report No. 94–75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 9
(1975) (‘‘In the securities markets, as in most other
active markets, it is critical for those who trade to
have access to accurate, up-to-the-second
information as to the prices at which transactions
in particular securities are taking place (i.e., last
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distributed by an exclusive processor, or
by a broker or dealer (including ATSs
and market makers) that is the exclusive
source of the information, be made
available to securities information
processors on terms that are fair and
reasonable. Rule 603(a)(2) requires that
any SRO, broker, or dealer that
distributes market information must do
so on terms that are not unreasonably
discriminatory. These requirements
prohibit, for example, a market from
making its ‘‘core data’’ (i.e., data that it
is required to provide to a Network
processor) available to vendors on a
more timely basis than it makes
available the core data to a Network
processor. With respect to non-core
data, however, Network processors
occupy a unique competitive position.
As Network processor, it acts on behalf
of all markets in disseminating
consolidated information, yet it also
may be closely associated with the
competitor of a market. The
Commission believes that markets
should have considerable leeway in
determining whether, or on what terms,
they provide additional, non-core data
to a Network processor.
b. Consolidation of Information
For the reasons discussed above in
section V.A.1, the Commission is
retaining the current consolidation
model and adopting the consolidation
requirements of Rule 603(b) as proposed
and reproposed. All of the SROs
currently participate in Plans that
provide for the dissemination of
consolidated information for the NMS
stocks that they trade. The Plans were
adopted in order to enable the SROs to
comply with Exchange Act rules
regarding the reporting of trades and
distribution of quotations. With respect
to trades, paragraph (b) of Exchange Act
Rule 11Aa3–1 (redesignated as Rule
601(a)) requires each SRO to file
transaction reporting plans that specify,
among other things, how its transactions
are to be consolidated with the
transactions of other SROs. With respect
to quotations, paragraph (b)(1) of
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1
(redesignated as Rule 602(a)(1)) requires
an SRO to establish and maintain
procedures for making its best quotes
available to vendors.
To confirm by Exchange Act rule that
both existing and any new SROs will be
required to continue to participate in
such joint-SRO plans, adopted Rule
603(b) requires SROs to act jointly
pursuant to one or more NMS plans to
sale reports) and the prices at which other traders
have expressed their willingness to buy or sell (i.e.,
quotations).’’).
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disseminate consolidated information
for NMS stocks. Such consolidated
information must include an NBBO that
is calculated in accordance with the
definition set forth in adopted Rule
600(b)(42).650 In addition, the NMS
plans will be required to provide for the
dissemination of all consolidated
information for an individual NMS
stock through a single processor. Thus,
different processors would be permitted
to disseminate information for different
NMS stocks (e.g., SIAC for Network A
stocks, and Nasdaq for Network C
stocks), but all quotations and trades in
a stock must be disseminated through a
single processor. As a result,
information users, particularly retail
investors, will be able to obtain data
from a single source that reflects the
best quotations and most recent trade
price for a security, no matter where
such quotations and trade are displayed
in the NMS.
c. Display of Consolidated Information
For the reasons discussed above in
section V.A.4, the Commission is
adopting, as proposed and reproposed,
Rule 603(c) (previously Exchange Act
Rule 11Ac1–2), which substantially
revises the consolidated display
requirement. It incorporates a new
definition of ‘‘consolidated display’’ (set
forth in adopted Rule 600(b)(13)) that is
limited to the prices, sizes, and market
center identifications of the NBBO and
‘‘consolidated last sale information’’
(which is defined in Rule 600(b)(14)).
The consolidated information on
quotations and trades must be provided
in an equivalent manner to any other
information on quotations and trades
provided by a securities information
processor or broker-dealer. Beyond
disclosure of this basic information,
market forces, rather than regulatory
requirements, will be allowed to
determine what, if any, additional data
from other market centers is displayed.
In particular, investors and other
information users ultimately will be
able to decide whether they need
additional information in their displays.
In addition, adopted Rule 603(c)
narrows the contexts in which a
consolidated display is required to those
when it is most needed—a context in
which a trading or order-routing
decision could be implemented. For
example, the consolidated display
requirement will continue to cover
broker-dealers who provide on-line data
to their customers in software programs
from which trading decisions can be
implemented. Similarly, the
650 Adopted Rule 600(b)(42) of Regulation NMS
defines ‘‘national best bid and national best offer.’’
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requirement will continue to apply to
vendors who provide displays that
facilitate order routing by brokerdealers. It will not apply, however,
when market data is provided on a
purely informational Web site that does
not offer any trading or order-routing
capability.651
VI. Regulation NMS
To simplify the structure of the rules
adopted under Section 11A of the
Exchange Act (‘‘NMS rules’’), the rules
adopted today will designate the NMS
rules as Regulation NMS, renumber the
NMS rules, and establish a new
definitional rule, Rule 600 (‘‘NMS
Security Designation and Definitions’’).
Rule 600(a) replaces Exchange Act Rule
11Aa2–1, which designates ‘‘reported
securities’’ as NMS securities. In
addition, Rule 600(b) includes, in
alphabetical order, all of the defined
terms used in Regulation NMS.
Regulation NMS includes Rules 610,
611, and 612, which are adopted in this
release, in addition to the existing NMS
rules. The new rule series is Rule 600
through Rule 612 (17 CFR 242.600–612).
Rule 600 provides a single set of
definitions that will be used throughout
Regulation NMS. To create a single set
of definitions, Rule 600 updates or
deletes from the existing NMS rules
some terms that have become obsolete
and eliminates the use of multiple
inconsistent definitions for identical
terms. In addition, Rule 600 adopts new
terms, ‘‘NMS security’’ and ‘‘NMS
stock,’’ to replace some terms that have
been eliminated. These terms are
necessary to maintain distinctions
between NMS rules that apply only to
equity securities and ETFs (e.g.,
Exchange Act Rules 11Ac1–4 and
11Ac1–5, redesignated as Rules 604 and
605) and those that apply to equity
securities, ETFs, and options (e.g.,
Exchange Act Rules 11Ac1–1 and
11Ac1–6, redesignated as Rules 602 and
606). Rule 600 retains, unchanged, most
definitions used in the existing NMS
rules and includes definitions used in
the new NMS rules adopted today. The
definitional changes do not affect the
substantive requirements of the existing
NMS rules. In addition, the Commission
is adopting technical amendments to a
number of other Commission rules that
cross-reference current NMS rules or
amendment would retain the exemptions
currently set forth in Rule 11Ac1–2(f) (redesignated
as Rule 603(c)(2)) for exchange and market linkage
displays. The current exemption for displays used
by SROs for monitoring or surveillance purposes
would no longer be necessary because of the
limitation of the amendment to trading and orderrouting contexts.
that use terms that Regulation NMS
amends or eliminates.
The Commission received no
comments regarding reproposed Rule
600, the reproposed redesignation of the
NMS rules as Regulation NMS, or the
reproposed changes to other
Commission rules. Accordingly, the
Commission is adopting Rule 600 and
redesignating the NMS rules as
Regulation NMS, and adopting technical
amendments to certain other
Commission rules that cross-reference
current NMS rules or that use terms that
Regulation NMS amends or eliminates,
substantially as proposed.
A. Description of Regulation NMS
Regulation NMS renumbers and, in
some cases, renames the existing NMS
rules, and incorporates Rule 600 and the
other NMS rules adopted today. Where
applicable, existing NMS rules are being
amended to remove the definitions that
have been consolidated in Rule 600. The
titles and numbering of the rules in
Regulation NMS, including the NMS
rules adopted today, are as follows:
• Rule 600: NMS Security
Designation and Definitions (replaces
Exchange Act Rule 11Aa2–1, which the
Commission is rescinding, and
incorporates definitions from the
existing NMS rules and the new rules
adopted today);
• Rule 601: Dissemination of
Transaction Reports and Last Sale Data
with Respect to Transactions in NMS
Stocks (renumbers and renames
Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1, the
substance of which is being
modified); 652
• Rule 602: Dissemination of
Quotations in NMS Securities
(renumbers and renames Exchange Act
Rule 11Ac1–1 (‘‘Quote Rule’’), the
substance of which remains largely
intact);
• Rule 603: Distribution,
Consolidation, and Display of
Information with Respect to Quotations
for and Transactions in NMS Stocks
(renumbers and renames Exchange Act
Rule 11Ac1–2 (‘‘Vendor Display Rule’’),
the substance of which is being
modified substantially); 653
• Rule 604: Display of Customer
Limit Orders (renumbers Exchange Act
Rule 11Ac1–4 (‘‘Limit Order Display
Rule’’), the substance of which remains
largely intact);
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B. Rule 600—NMS Security Designation
and Definitions
1. NMS Security Designation—
Transaction Reporting Requirements for
Equities and Listed Options
Section 11A(a)(2) of the Exchange Act
directs the Commission to ‘‘designate
the securities or classes of securities
qualified for trading in the national
market system.’’ 654 The 1975
Amendments and the legislative history
to the 1975 Amendments were silent as
to the particular standards the
Commission should employ in
designating NMS securities.655 Instead,
Congress provided the Commission with
the flexibility and discretion to base
NMS designation standards on the
Commission’s experience in facilitating
the development of an NMS.656
To satisfy the requirement that it
designate the securities qualified for
trading in the NMS, the Commission
adopted Exchange Act Rule 11Aa2–1 in
1981.657 Exchange Act Rule 11Aa2–1
(redesignated as Rule 600(a)) defined
the term ‘‘national market system
security’’ to mean ‘‘any reported
654 15
U.S.C. 78k–1(a)(2).
Securities Exchange Act Release No.
23817 (Nov. 17, 1986), 51 FR 42856 (Nov. 26, 1986)
(proposing amendments to Exchange Act Rules
11Aa2–1 and 11Aa3–1).
656 See id.
657 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
17549 (Feb. 17, 1981), 46 FR 13992 (Feb. 25, 1981)
(adopting Exchange Act Rule 11Aa2–1).
655 See
651 The
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• Rule 605: Disclosure of Order
Execution Information (renumbers
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–5, the
substance of which remains largely
intact);
• Rule 606: Disclosure of Order
Routing Information (renumbers
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–6, the
substance of which remains largely
intact);
• Rule 607: Customer Account
Statements (renumbers Exchange Act
Rule 11Ac1–3, the substance of which
remains largely intact);
• Rule 608: Filing and Amendment of
National Market System Plans
(renumbers Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–
2, the substance of which remains
largely intact);
• Rule 609: Registration of Securities
Information Processors: Form of
Application and Amendments
(renumbers Exchange Act Rule 11Ab2–
1, the substance of which remains
largely intact);
• Rule 610: Access to Quotations
(adopted in this release);
• Rule 611: Order Protection Rule
(adopted in this release); and
• Rule 612: Minimum Pricing
Increment (adopted in this release).
652 In the market data rules, discussed in section
V, the Commission is adopting substantive
amendments to Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1
(redesignated as Rule 601).
653 See supra section V for a discussion of the
substantive amendments to the Vendor Display
Rule.
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security as defined in Rule 11Aa3–1.’’ A
‘‘reported security’’ was ‘‘any security or
class of securities for which transaction
reports are collected, processed and
made available pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan.’’ 658 An
‘‘effective transaction reporting plan’’
was ‘‘any transaction reporting plan
approved by the Commission pursuant
to this section.’’ 659 A ‘‘transaction
reporting plan’’ was ‘‘any plan for
collecting, processing, making available
or disseminating transaction reports
with respect to transactions in reported
securities filed with the Commission
pursuant to, and meeting the
requirements of, this section.’’ 660 The
effective transaction reporting plans are
the CTA Plan and the Nasdaq UTP Plan.
In addition to identifying those
securities deemed to be NMS securities,
when adopted, the Exchange Act Rule
11Aa2–1 designation also tacitly
identified those securities that did not
meet that designation (i.e., securities
other than those that were so designated
as NMS securities). Historically,
securities excluded from this
designation included standardized
options and small capitalization equity
securities (a subset of which has been
identified as Nasdaq SmallCap
securities). Trading in options and
Nasdaq SmallCap securities has
increased over the past three decades
and gradually many of the rules that
govern NMS securities have been
applied to these securities. As a result,
much of the terminology that has been
used to distinguish NMS securities from
options and Nasdaq SmallCap securities
has become obsolete.
For example, the Nasdaq UTP Plan
provides for the collection from Plan
participants, and the consolidation and
dissemination to vendors, subscribers
and others, of quotation and transaction
information in ‘‘eligible securities.’’
Prior to 2001, the Nasdaq UTP Plan
defined an ‘‘eligible security’’ as any
Nasdaq National Market security as to
which unlisted trading privileges have
been granted to a national securities
exchange pursuant to Section 12(f) of
the Exchange Act or that is listed on a
national securities exchange.661 In 2001,
the Nasdaq UTP Plan was amended to
include Nasdaq SmallCap securities.662
658 See
former Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1(a)(4).
659 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1(a)(3).
660 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1(a)(2).
661 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
28146 (June 26, 1990), 55 FR 27917 (July 6, 1990)
(order approving the Nasdaq UTP Plan on a pilot
basis
662 In 2001, the Nasdaq UTP Plan was amended
to, among other things, revise the definition of
‘‘eligible securities’’ to include Nasdaq SmallCap
securities. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
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As a result, Nasdaq SmallCap securities
became ‘‘eligible securities’’ because
they are now reported through an
effective transaction reporting plan (i.e.,
the Nasdaq UTP Plan), bringing them
within the purview of the NMS security
designation. Several definitions in the
existing NMS rules, however, do not
reflect the inclusion of Nasdaq
SmallCap securities in the Nasdaq UTP
Plan and therefore must be updated.
Regulation NMS does so.
In addition, transactions in exchangelisted options are reported through the
Plan for Reporting of Consolidated
Options Last Sale Reports and
Quotation Information (‘‘OPRA
Plan’’).663 Unlike the CTA Plan and the
Nasdaq UTP Plan—transaction reporting
plans that the Commission approved
pursuant to Exchange Act Rules 11Aa3–
1 and 11Aa3–2 (redesignated as Rules
601 and 608)—the Commission
approved the OPRA Plan pursuant to
Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–2
(redesignated as Rule 608).664 As such,
the OPRA Plan is an ‘‘effective national
market system plan’’ but not an
‘‘effective transaction reporting plan.’’
While at their core the CTA Plan, the
Nasdaq UTP Plan, and the OPRA Plan
perform essentially the same function
(i.e., they govern the consolidated
reporting of securities transactions by
Plan participants), because the OPRA
Plan is not an effective transaction
reporting plan, listed options covered by
the OPRA Plan are technically not
‘‘securities for which transaction reports
are collected, processed, and made
available pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan.’’ Therefore,
listed options were not considered NMS
securities as defined by Exchange Act
Rule 11Aa2–1. While the impact of this
distinction may not be readily apparent,
the differences in the way the Plans are
designated dictates the securities laws
and regulations that apply to securities
reported pursuant to those Plans.
Further, as discussed below, some
terms in the existing NMS rules have
become superfluous or outdated, and
some NMS rules define identical terms
differently. To provide a consolidated
set of definitions applicable to all of the
NMS rules, Regulation NMS eliminates
45081 (Nov. 19, 2001), 66 FR 59273 (Nov. 27, 2001)
(order approving Amendment No. 12 to the Nasdaq
UTP Plan). See NASD Rule 4200 for the definition
of a Nasdaq SmallCap security.
663 The exchanges that are participants to the
OPRA Plan are Amex, BSE, CBOE, ISE, PCX, and
Phlx.
664 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
17638 (Mar. 18, 1981), 22 S.E.C. Docket 484 (Mar.
31, 1981). Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–2
(redesignated as Rule 608) codifies the procedures
that SROs must follow to seek approval for or
amendment of a national market system plan.
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37571
these inconsistencies. The definitional
changes adopted today, however, are
not intended to change materially the
scope of the existing NMS rules.
2. NMS Security and NMS Stock
Some NMS rules, including the Quote
Rule (redesignated as Rule 602) and
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–6
(redesignated as Rule 606), currently
apply to both: (1) Equities, ETFs and
related securities for which transaction
reports are made available pursuant to
an effective transaction reporting plan;
and (2) listed options for which market
information is made available pursuant
to an effective national market system
plan. To provide a single term that will
be used in any provision of Regulation
NMS that applies to both categories of
securities, Regulation NMS adopts a
new term, ‘‘NMS security.’’ Specifically,
Regulation NMS defines an ‘‘NMS
security’’ as ‘‘any security or class of
securities for which transaction reports
are collected, processed, and made
available pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan, or an
effective national market system plan
for reporting transactions in listed
options.’’ 665
Because many rules in Regulation
NMS, including the Limit Order Display
Rule (redesignated as Rule 604) and
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–5
(redesignated as Rule 605), continue to
be inapplicable to listed options,
Regulation NMS adopts a new term,
‘‘NMS stock’’ that will be used in those
provisions. Regulation NMS defines the
term ‘‘NMS stock’’ as ‘‘any NMS
security other than an option.’’ 666
3. Changes to Existing Definitions in the
NMS Rules
Rule 600(b) provides a single set of
definitions that will be used throughout
Regulation NMS. To create a single set
of definitions, Regulation NMS
eliminates multiple, inconsistent
definitions of identical terms. In
addition, Regulation NMS amends some
definitions in the NMS rules to reflect
changed conditions in the marketplace
665 Rule 600(b)(46). This definition was used to
define a ‘‘reported security’’ in the Quote Rule. See
former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(20). For the
reasons described below, the Commission is
eliminating the term ‘‘reported security’’ from the
Quote Rule and does not include it in Regulation
NMS.
666 Rule 600(b)(47). The term ‘‘NMS stock’’ is
defined in part with reference to the term
‘‘transaction reporting plan.’’ The definition of the
term ‘‘transaction reporting plan’’ as proposed used
the term ‘‘NMS stocks.’’ Thus, to avoid circularity,
the Commission has clarified the definition of
‘‘transaction reporting plan’’ in Rule 600(b)(82) as
adopted by replacing the phrase ‘‘NMS stocks’’ with
the term ‘‘securities.’’
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or to modernize references.667 For
example, as discussed above, several
definitions in the existing NMS rules
have been rendered obsolete by the
extension of the Nasdaq UTP Plan to
Nasdaq SmallCap securities.668 Because
the Nasdaq UTP Plan includes Nasdaq
SmallCap securities, those securities
now are ‘‘securities for which
transaction reports are collected,
processed and made available pursuant
to an effective transaction reporting
plan’’ (i.e., they are ‘‘reported’’
securities).669 For this reason, it is no
longer necessary to distinguish, as
several existing NMS rules do, between
‘‘reported’’ securities and equity
securities for which market information
is made available through Nasdaq.670
Accordingly, Regulation NMS
eliminates or revises the defined terms
in the existing NMS rules that make this
distinction.
667 The term ‘‘electronic communications
network’’ was proposed to be defined in the
Proposing Release and Reproposing Release to
mean ‘‘any electronic system that widely
disseminates to third parties orders entered therein
by an exchange market maker or OTC market
maker, and permits such orders to be executed
against in whole or in part; except that the term
electronic communications network shall not
include: (i) Any system that crosses multiple orders
at one or more specified times at a single price set
by the system (by algorithm or by any derivative
pricing mechanism) and does not allow orders to
be crossed or executed against directly by
participants outside of such times; or (ii) Any
system operated by, or on behalf of, an OTC market
maker or exchange market maker that executes
customer orders primarily against the account of
such market maker as principal, other than riskless
principal.’’ The Commission has modified this
definition to insert the phrase ‘‘for the purposes of
§ 242.602(b)(5)’’ at the beginning of the definition
to avoid inadvertently narrowing the scope of the
term ‘‘electronic communications network’’ as used
in the term ‘‘vendor’’ in Rule 600(b)(83) (formerly
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–2(a)(2)). See also infra,
section VI.B.3.g. This modification makes the
definition consistent with the definition of
‘‘electronic communications network’’ in former
Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(8).
668 See supra, section VI.B.1.
669 The Vendor Display Rule and Exchange Act
Rule 11Aa3–1 (redesignated as Rule 601) defined
the term ‘‘reported security’’ to mean ‘‘any security
or class of securities for which transaction reports
are collected, processed and made available
pursuant to an effective transaction reporting plan.’’
See former Exchange Act Rules 11Ac1–2(a)(20) and
11Aa3–1(a)(4). As discussed more fully below, the
Quote Rule provides a different definition of
‘‘reported security.’’
670 See e.g., paragraph (a)(4) of the Vendor
Display Rule (defining ‘‘subject security’’ to mean
‘‘(i) any reported security; and (ii) any other equity
security as to which transaction reports, last sale
data or quotation information is disseminated
through NASDAQ’’); and paragraph (a)(6) of the
Quote Rule (defining ‘‘covered security’’ to mean
‘‘any reported security and any other security for
which a transaction report, last sale data or
quotation information is disseminated through an
automated quotation system as described in Section
3(a)(51)(A)(ii) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(51)(A)(ii))’’).
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a. Covered Security
Different definitions of the term
‘‘covered security’’ appeared in the
Quote Rule, the Limit Order Display
Rule, and Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–6
(redesignated as Rule 606).671 In
addition, as discussed below, the term
has become obsolete. Therefore,
Regulation NMS eliminates the term
‘‘covered security’’ from the NMS rules
and replaces it with the term ‘‘NMS
security’’ or ‘‘NMS stock,’’ as applicable,
depending upon the scope of the
particular rule.
b. Reported Security
Several NMS rules used the term
‘‘reported security.’’ Although the Limit
Order Display Rule, the Vendor Display
Rule, and Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1
(redesignated as Rule 601) contained
identical definitions of ‘‘reported
security,’’ the Quote Rule provided a
different definition.672 Because the term
‘‘reported security’’ was defined
671 Although the Quote Rule and the Limit Order
Display Rule each defined the term ‘‘covered
security’’ as ‘‘any reported security and any other
security for which a transaction report, last sale
data or quotation information is disseminated
through an automated quotation system as
described in Section 3(a)(51)(A)(ii) of the Act (15
U.S.C. 78c(a)(51)(A)(ii)),’’ the scope of the
definitions was not identical because each rule
defines the term ‘‘reported security’’ differently.
The Quote Rule defined a ‘‘reported security’’ to
mean ‘‘any security or class of securities for which
transaction reports are collected, processed and
made available pursuant to an effective transaction
reporting plan, or an effective national market
system plan for reporting transactions in listed
options.’’ See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–
1(a)(20). The Limit Order Display Rule defined a
‘‘reported security’’ to mean ‘‘any security or class
of securities for which transaction reports are
collected, processed, and made available pursuant
to an effective transaction reporting plan.’’ See
former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–4(a)(10).
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–6 (redesignated as
Rule 606) defined the term ‘‘covered security’’ to
mean: ‘‘(i) any national market system security and
any other security for which a transaction report,
last sale data or quotation information is
disseminated through an automated quotation
system as defined in Section 3(a)(51)(A)(ii) of the
Act (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(51)(A)(ii)); and (ii) any option
contract traded on a national securities exchange for
which last sale reports and quotation information
are made available pursuant to an effective national
market system plan.’’ See former Exchange Act Rule
11Ac1–6(a)(1).
672 The Limit Order Display Rule, the Vendor
Display Rule, and Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1
defined a ‘‘reported security’’ to mean ‘‘any security
or class of securities for which transaction reports
are collected, processed and made available
pursuant to an effective transaction reporting plan.’’
See former Exchange Act Rules 11Ac1–4(a)(10),
11Ac1–2(a)(20), and 11Aa3–1(a)(4). The Quote Rule
defined the term ‘‘reported security’’ to mean ‘‘any
security or class of securities for which transaction
reports are collected, processed, and made available
pursuant to an effective transaction reporting plan,
or an effective national market system plan for
reporting transactions in listed options.’’ See former
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(20). As discussed
above, this release adopts substantial modifications
to the Vendor Display Rule.
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inconsistently in the NMS rules and in
light of the changes to related terms,
Regulation NMS eliminates the term
‘‘reported security’’ from the NMS rules
and replaces it with the term ‘‘NMS
security’’ or ‘‘NMS stock,’’ depending
on the scope of the particular rule.
The Limit Order Display Rule used
the term ‘‘reported security’’ solely for
the purpose of defining the term
‘‘covered security.’’ 673 Because
Regulation NMS eliminates the term
‘‘covered security,’’ the term ‘‘reported
security’’ also is not needed in the Limit
Order Display Rule (redesignated as
Rule 604). Therefore, the term ‘‘NMS
stock’’ replaces the term ‘‘covered
security’’ in the Limit Order Display
Rule.
Similarly, the Quote Rule used the
term ‘‘reported security’’ primarily to
define the term ‘‘covered security.’’ 674
Because Regulation NMS eliminates the
term ‘‘covered security,’’ the
redesignated Quote Rule (redesignated
as Rule 602) also will not use the term
‘‘reported security.’’ 675
c. Subject Security
The Quote Rule and the Vendor
Display Rule both used the term
‘‘subject security,’’ although they define
the term differently. To eliminate this
inconsistency, the amended Vendor
Display Rule (redesignated as Rule 603)
does not use the term ‘‘subject security’’
and Regulation NMS retains a slightly
modified version of the definition of
‘‘subject security’’ currently found in
the Quote Rule.
The Vendor Display Rule defined the
term ‘‘subject security’’ to mean ‘‘(i) any
reported security; and (ii) any other
equity security as to which transaction
reports, last sale data or quotation
information is disseminated through
NASDAQ.’’ 676 As discussed above, the
extension of the Nasdaq UTP Plan to
include Nasdaq SmallCap securities
rendered obsolete the distinction
between a ‘‘reported security’’ and a
security for which market information is
disseminated through Nasdaq.
673 The Limit Order Display Rule defined a
‘‘covered security’’ to include both reported
securities and other securities for which market
information is disseminated through Nasdaq. See
former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–4(a)(5).
674 The Quote Rule defined a ‘‘covered security’’
to include both reported securities and other
securities for which market information is
disseminated through Nasdaq. See former Exchange
Act Rule 11Aa1–1(a)(6).
675 In paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of the Quote Rule
(redesignated as Rule 602), which requires a
registered national securities association to
disseminate quotations at all times when last sale
information is available with respect to ‘‘reported
securities,’’ the reference to ‘‘reported security’’ is
being replaced by a reference to ‘‘NMS security.’’
676 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–2(a)(4).
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Accordingly, the amended Vendor
Display Rule (redesignated as Rule 603)
uses the term ‘‘NMS stock’’ rather than
‘‘subject security.’’
The Quote Rule defined the term
‘‘subject security’’ to mean:
(i) With respect to an exchange: (A) Any
exchange-traded security other than a
security for which the executed volume of
such exchange, during the most recent
calendar quarter, comprised one percent or
less of the aggregate trading volume for such
security as reported in the consolidated
system; and (B) Any other covered security
for which such exchange has in effect an
election, pursuant to paragraph (b)(5)(i) of
this section, to collect, process, and make
available to quotation vendors bids, offers,
quotation sizes, and aggregate quotation sizes
communicated on such exchange; and
(ii) With respect to a member of an
association: (A) Any exchange-traded
security for which such member acts in the
capacity of an OTC market maker unless the
executed volume of such member, during the
most recent calendar quarter, comprised one
percent or less of the aggregate trading
volume for such security as reported in the
consolidated system; and (B) Any other
covered security for which such member acts
in the capacity of an OTC market maker and
has in effect an election, pursuant to
paragraph (b)(5)(ii) of this section, to
communicate to its association bids, offers
and quotation sizes for the purpose of making
such bids, offers and quotation sizes
available to quotation vendors.677
Because the Quote Rule (redesignated
as Rule 602) will continue to apply to
both listed options and equities covered
by an effective transaction reporting
plan, Regulation NMS’s definition of
‘‘subject security’’ revises the Quote
Rule’s definition of ‘‘subject security’’
by replacing references to a ‘‘covered
security’’ with references to an ‘‘NMS
security.’’ In addition, for the reasons
discussed below, Regulation NMS
replaces the phrase ‘‘reported in the
consolidated system’’ with the phrase
‘‘reported pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan or effective
national market system plan.’’
d. Consolidated System
As noted above, the definition of the
term ‘‘subject security’’ in the Quote
Rule used the phrase ‘‘reported in the
consolidated system.’’ 678 Paragraph
(a)(5) of the Quote Rule defines the term
‘‘consolidated system’’ to mean ‘‘the
consolidated transaction reporting
system, including a transaction
reporting system operating pursuant to
an effective national market system
plan.’’ 679
677 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(25)
(emphasis added).
678 Id.
679 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(5).
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Regulation NMS clarifies the
definition of ‘‘subject security’’ by
eliminating the phrase ‘‘reported in the
consolidated system’’ and replacing it
with the phrase ‘‘reported pursuant to
an effective transaction reporting plan
or an effective national market system
plan.’’ Thus, Regulation NMS defines a
‘‘subject security’’ to include, among
other things: (1) With respect to a
national securities exchange, any
exchange-traded security other than a
security for which the executed volume
of such exchange, during the most
recent calendar quarter, comprised one
percent or less of the aggregate trading
volume for such security as reported
pursuant to an effective transaction
reporting plan or effective national
market system plan; and (2) with respect
to a member of a national securities
association, any exchange-traded
security for which such member acts in
the capacity of an OTC market maker
unless the executed volume of such
member, during the most recent
calendar quarter, comprised one percent
or less of the aggregate trading volume
for such security as reported pursuant to
an effective transaction reporting plan
or effective national market system
plan.680
This change provides a clearer
definition of ‘‘subject security’’ by
indicating that the trading volume
referred to in the definition is the
trading volume in a security that is
reported pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan or an
effective national market system plan.
Although replacing the phrase ‘‘reported
in the consolidated system’’ with the
phrase ‘‘reported pursuant to an
effective transaction reporting plan or
an effective national market system
plan’’ produces a clearer definition of
‘‘subject security,’’ it does not alter the
scope or the substance of the
definition.681
e. National Securities Exchange
Section 3(a)(1) of the Exchange Act
defines the term ‘‘exchange’’ to mean
‘‘any organization, association, or group
of persons * * * which constitutes,
maintains, or provides a market place or
facilities for bringing together
purchasers and sellers of securities or
for otherwise performing with respect to
securities the functions commonly
600(b)(73).
change also impacts certain non-NMS
rules that define the term ‘‘consolidated system.’’
See, e.g., Exchange Act Rule 10b–18(a)(7)
(‘‘consolidated system means the consolidated
transaction reporting system contemplated by Rule
11Aa3–1’’). As discussed below, the Commission
also is amending certain non-NMS rules that are
affected by the definitional changes adopted today.
PO 00000
680 Rule
681 This
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37573
performed by a stock exchange as that
term is generally understood * * *.’’ 682
Exchange Act Rule 3b–16,683 adopted in
1998, interprets the statutory definition
of ‘‘exchange’’ broadly to include any
organization, association, or group of
persons that: (1) Brings together the
orders for securities of multiple buyers
and sellers; and (2) uses established,
non-discretionary methods (whether by
providing a trading facility or by setting
rules) under which such orders interact
with each other, and the buyers and
sellers entering such orders agree to the
terms of a trade. Exchange Act Rule 3b–
16 was designed to provide ‘‘a more
comprehensive and meaningful
interpretation of what an exchange is in
light of today’s markets.’’ 684
The Quote Rule’s definition of an
‘‘exchange market maker’’ defined the
term ‘‘national securities exchange’’ as
an ‘‘exchange.’’ 685 To avoid confusion
between a ‘‘national securities
exchange’’ and the broader
interpretation of ‘‘exchange’’ set forth in
Exchange Act Rule 3b–16, Regulation
NMS uses the term ‘‘national securities
exchange’’ rather than ‘‘exchange’’
throughout the Regulation. The national
securities exchange definition is
intended to capture only those entities
that operate as national securities
exchanges and that are registered as
such with the Commission. It is not
intended to capture those entities that
meet the ‘‘exchange’’ definition under
Regulation ATS but that operate as
something other than a national
securities exchange. The use of this term
is consistent with the use of the term
‘‘exchange’’ in the existing NMS rules.
f. OTC Market Maker
The Quote Rule and Exchange Act
Rule 11Ac1–5 (redesignated as Rule
605) defined the term ‘‘OTC market
maker’’ differently.686 Unlike the Quote
Rule, Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–5
defined the term ‘‘OTC market maker’’
to include an explicit reference to a
securities dealer that holds itself out as
being willing to buy from and sell to
customers or others in the United States.
682 15
U.S.C. 78c(a)(1).
CFR 240.3b–16.
684 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
40760 (Dec. 8, 1998), 63 FR 70844 (Dec. 22, 1998)
(adopting Regulation ATS).
685 Specifically, the Quote Rule stated that the
term ‘‘exchange market maker’’ shall mean ‘‘any
member of a national securities exchange
(‘exchange’) who is registered as a specialist or
market maker pursuant to the rules of such
exchange.’’ See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–
1(a)(9). The statutory requirements applicable to a
national securities exchange are set forth in Section
6 of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. 78f.
686 Compare former Exchange Act Rules 11Ac1–
1(a)(13) and 11 AC1–5(a)(18).
683 17
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Regulation NMS retains the reference to
transactions with ‘‘customers or others
in the United States’’ to indicate clearly
that a foreign dealer could be an ‘‘OTC
market maker’’ if it acts as a securities
dealer with respect to customers or
others in the United States.
Accordingly, Regulation NMS defines
‘‘OTC market maker’’ as ‘‘any dealer that
holds itself out as being willing to buy
from and sell to its customers, or others,
in the United States, an NMS stock for
its own account on a regular or
continuous basis otherwise than on a
national securities exchange.’’ 687
g. Vendor
The term ‘‘vendor’’ or ‘‘quotation
vendor’’ was defined differently in three
NMS rules: The Quote Rule, the Vendor
Display Rule, and Exchange Act Rules
11Aa3–1 (redesignated as Rule 601).688
Although the definitions are similar, the
definition of ‘‘vendor’’ in the Vendor
Display Rule was the most
comprehensive because it encompasses
any SIP that disseminates transaction
reports, last sale data, or quotation
information, whereas the other
definitions were less complete in
identifying the types of information that
vendors typically make available. To
provide a uniform and comprehensive
definition of the term ‘‘vendor,’’
Regulation NMS includes the definition
of ‘‘vendor’’ as it was defined in the
Vendor Display Rule.689
687 The definition of ‘‘OTC market maker’’ uses
the term ‘‘NMS stock’’ because there is no OTC
market in standardized options.
688 The Quote Rule defined the term ‘‘quotation
vendor’’ to mean ‘‘any securities information
processor engaged in the business of disseminating
to brokers, dealers or investors on a real-time basis,
bids and offers made available pursuant to this
section, whether distributed through an electronic
communications network or displayed on a
terminal or other display device.’’ See former
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(19). Former
Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1(a)(11) defined the term
‘‘vendor’’ to mean ‘‘any securities information
processor engaged in the business of disseminating
transaction reports or last sale data with respect to
transactions in reported securities to brokers,
dealers or investors on a real-time or other current
and continuing basis, whether through an electronic
communications network, moving ticker or
interrogation device.’’ The Vendor Display Rule
defined the term ‘‘vendor’’ to mean ‘‘any securities
information processor engaged in the business of
disseminating transaction reports, last sale data or
quotation information with respect to subject
securities to brokers, dealers or investors on a realtime or other current and continuing basis, whether
through an electronic communications network,
moving ticker or interrogation device.’’ See former
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–2(a)(2).
689 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–2(a)(2).
The Commission modified the adopted definition of
vendor to conform to a technical change being made
to the definition of ‘‘quotations’’ and ‘‘quotation
information’’ in Rule 600(b)(62). See infra, note 699
and accompanying text.
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h. Best Bid, Best Offer, and National
Best Bid and National Best Offer
The Quote Rule and the Vendor
Display Rule defined the terms ‘‘best
bid’’ and ‘‘best offer’’ differently. The
Quote Rule stated that ‘‘[t]he terms best
bid and best offer shall mean the highest
priced bid and the lowest priced
offer.’’ 690 The Vendor Display Rule
defined the terms ‘‘best bid’’ and ‘‘best
offer’’ as follows: 691
(i) With respect to quotations for a
reported security, the highest bid or
lowest offer for that security made
available by any reporting market center
pursuant to § 240.11Ac1–1 (Rule
11Ac1–1 under the Act) (excluding any
bid or offer made available by an
exchange during any period such
exchange is relieved of its obligations
under paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of
§ 240.11Ac1–1 by virtue of paragraph
(b)(3)(i) thereof); Provided, however,
that in the event two or more reporting
market centers make available identical
bids or offers for a reported security, the
best bid or best offer (as the case may
be) shall be computed by ranking all
such identical bids or offers (as the case
may be) first by size (giving the highest
ranking to the bid or offer associated
with the largest size), then by time
(giving the highest ranking to the bid or
offer received first in time); and
(ii) With respect to quotations for a
subject security other than a reported
security, the highest bid or lowest offer
(as the case may be) for such security
disseminated by an over-the-counter
market maker in Level 2 or 3 of
NASDAQ.
In addition, Exchange Act Rule
11Ac1–5(a)(7) defined the term
‘‘consolidated best bid and offer’’ to
mean ‘‘the highest firm bid and the
lowest firm offer for a security that is
calculated and disseminated on a
current and continuous basis pursuant
to an effective national market system
plan.’’
Regulation NMS retains the
definitions of ‘‘best bid’’ and ‘‘best
offer’’ used in the Quote Rule. A new
term called ‘‘national best bid and
national best offer’’: (1) Replaces the
term ‘‘best bid and best offer’’ as that
term is used in the Vendor Display Rule;
and (2) replaces the term ‘‘consolidated
best bid and offer’’ as that term is used
in Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–5
(redesignated as Rule 605). This new
term refers to the best quotations that
are calculated and disseminated by a
plan processor pursuant to an effective
PO 00000
690 See
691 See
former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(3).
former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–2(a)(15).
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national market system plan.692 The
definition of ‘‘national best bid and
national best offer’’ also addresses
instances where multiple market centers
transmit identical bids and offers to the
plan processor pursuant to an NMS plan
by establishing the way in which these
bids and offers are to be prioritized.693
i. Bid, Offer, Customer, Nasdaq Security,
Quotations, Quotation Information, and
Responsible Broker or Dealer
Regulation NMS also updates or
clarifies the following terms in the NMS
rules: ‘‘Bid;’’ ‘‘offer;’’ ‘‘customer;’’
‘‘Nasdaq security;’’ ‘‘quotations’’;
‘‘quotation information;’’ and
‘‘responsible broker or dealer.’’
The Quote Rule defined the terms
‘‘bid’’ and ‘‘offer’’ to mean ‘‘the bid
price and the offer price communicated
by an exchange member or OTC market
maker to any broker or dealer, or to any
customer, at which it is willing to buy
or sell one or more round lots of a
covered security, as either principal or
agent, but shall not include indications
of interest.’’ 694 Regulation NMS updates
this definition by replacing the term
‘‘OTC market maker’’ with the phrase
‘‘member of a national securities
association’’ and calls the term ‘‘bid or
offer’’ rather than ‘‘bid and offer’’ to
reflect the fact that the terms are not
always used in the conjunctive.
Modifying the definition to apply to any
member of a national securities
association clarifies that bids and offers
include quotations communicated not
only by OTC market makers but also by
ATSs, ECNs, and order entry firms that
are members of the NASD but that are
not market makers.
Expanding the definition of ‘‘bid’’ and
‘‘offer’’ could have the unintended
consequence of also expanding the
scope of the Quote Rule (redesignated as
Rule 602) where those terms are used to
apply to members of a national
692 The definition of ‘‘reporting market center’’ in
paragraph (a)(14) of the Vendor Display Rule, which
was incorporated into that Rule’s definitions of
‘‘best bid’’ and ‘‘best offer,’’ is no longer necessary
and therefore is being deleted.
693 See Rule 600(b)(42).
694 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(4).
Paragraph (a)(6) of the Vendor Display Rule used
the Quote Rule’s definition of ‘‘bid’’ and ‘‘offer’’ for
reported securities, but it defined ‘‘bid’’ and ‘‘offer’’
for Nasdaq SmallCap securities as ‘‘the most recent
bid or offer price of an over-the-counter market
maker disseminated through Level 2 or 3 of
NASDAQ.’’ Because Nasdaq SmallCap securities
now are reported securities, it is unnecessary to
maintain the distinction between reported
securities and Nasdaq SmallCap securities.
Accordingly, to update and provide a single
definition of the terms ‘‘bid’’ and ‘‘offer,’’
Regulation NMS eliminates the definitions of ‘‘bid’’
and ‘‘offer’’ used in the Vendor Display Rule and
retains modified versions of the terms as they are
defined in the Quote Rule.
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securities association that are not OTC
market makers (e.g., ECNs and ATSs).
To avoid this unintended expansion of
the scope of the Quote Rule
(redesignated as Rule 602), Regulation
NMS proposed a revised version of the
Quote Rule’s definition of ‘‘responsible
broker or dealer.’’ 695 In particular,
Regulation NMS proposed to amend the
portion of the definition of ‘‘responsible
broker or dealer’’ found in paragraph
(a)(21)(ii) of the Quote Rule 696 to limit
its scope to bids and offers
communicated by an OTC market
maker. The Commission does not
believe, however, that amending the
definition of ‘‘responsible broker or
dealer’’ is necessary because the
definition of the term ‘‘subject security’’
effectively serves to limit the scope of
the Quote Rule, with respect to a
member of a national securities
association, to members acting in the
capacity of an OTC market maker.697
The Commission therefore is modifying
the proposed definition of ‘‘responsible
broker or dealer’’ in Rule 600(b)(65)(ii)
to replace the term ‘‘an OTC marker
maker’’ with the term ‘‘a member of an
association’’ and to replace the term
‘‘the OTC market maker’’ with the term
‘‘the member.’’ 698
The Commission also is making a
non-substantive modification to the
definition of ‘‘quotations’’ and
695 See
former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(21).
former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–
1(a)(21)(ii).
697 Rule 600(b)(73)(ii) as adopted defines ‘‘subject
security’’ to mean, with respect to a member of a
national securities association, (A) any exchangetraded security for which such member acts in the
capacity of an OTC market maker unless the
executed volume of such member, during the most
recent calendar quarter, comprised one percent or
less of the aggregate trading volume for such
security as reported pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan or effective national
market system plan; and (B) any other NMS security
for which such member acts in the capacity of an
OTC market maker and has in effect an election,
pursuant to § 242.602(a)(5)(ii), to communicate to
its association bids, offers, and quotation sizes for
the purpose of making such bids, offers, and
quotation sizes available to a vendor.
698 As adopted, Rule 600(b)(65)(ii) defines the
term ‘‘responsible broker or dealer’’ to mean, when
used with respect to bids and offers communicated
by a member of an association to a broker or dealer
or a customer, the member communicating the bid
or offer (regardless of whether such bid or offer is
for its own account or on behalf of another person).
This modification conforms the definition of
‘‘responsible broker or dealer’’ in Rule 600(b)(65)(ii)
as adopted to the definition of ‘‘responsible broker
or dealer’’ in former Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(21)(ii) with
respect to its application to a member of an
association.
The Commission also is making a change to
paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Rule 602 from the reproposal
to insert the word ‘‘size’’ after the phrase ‘‘such
revised quotation.’’ This change will correct the
inadvertent deletion of ‘‘size’’ in a prior amendment
to this rule (the Quote Rule) and will not have any
substantive effect.
696 See
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‘‘quotation information’’ in Rule
600(b)(62) from the reproposal to delete
the term ‘‘quotation information’’ and to
delete the phrase ‘‘where applicable,
quotations sizes and aggregate quotation
sizes.’’ The deleted term and phrase are
no longer necessary because they were
included in a definition used in the
Vendor Display Rule, which is being
substantially modified and no longer
uses the deleted term or phrase.699 As
adopted, Rule 600(b)(62) simply defines
the term ‘‘quotation’’ to mean a bid or
an offer.
Regulation NMS also amends the
definition of the term ‘‘customer.’’ The
Quote Rule defined that term to mean
‘‘any person that is not a registered
broker-dealer.’’ 700 To indicate that the
scope of the definition includes brokerdealers that are exempt from registration
as well as registered broker-dealers,
Regulation NMS revises the definition
by deleting the term ‘‘registered.’’ Thus,
Regulation NMS defines the term
‘‘customer’’ to mean ‘‘any person that is
not a broker-dealer.’’
Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1
(redesignated as Rule 601) defined the
term ‘‘NASDAQ security’’ to mean ‘‘any
registered equity security for which
quotation information is disseminated
in the National Association of Securities
Dealers Automated Quotation system
(‘‘NASDAQ’’).’’ 701 This acronym is now
outdated. Therefore, to modernize this
definition and to ensure that any type of
registered security that Nasdaq lists is
covered by the definition, Regulation
NMS defines the term ‘‘Nasdaq
security’’ to mean ‘‘any registered
security listed on The Nasdaq Stock
Market, Inc.’’
4. Definitions in the Regulation NMS
Rules Adopted Today
Rule 600(b) includes a number of new
definitions used in Regulation NMS
Rules 610 through 612, which are
adopted in this release. These new
terms are discussed in detail in Sections
II through V above. Specifically, for the
reasons discussed above, Regulation
NMS adopts the following terms:
automated quotation, automated trading
center, consolidated display,
consolidated last sale information,
intermarket sweep order, manual
quotation, protected bid or protected
offer, SRO display-only facility, SRO
699 Conforming modifications are being made to
the definition of ‘‘dynamic market monitoring
device,’’ ‘‘interrogation device,’’ and ‘‘vendor’’ in
Rules 600(b)(20), 600(b)(31), and 600(b)(83) to
replace the term ‘‘quotation information’’ with the
term ‘‘quotations.’’
700 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1(a)(26).
701 See former Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1(a)(6).
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trading facility, trade-through, and
trading center.
C. Changes to Other Rules
In addition to the changes described
above, the rules adopted today amend a
number of rules that cross-reference
current NMS rules or that use terms that
Regulation NMS amends or eliminates.
These amendments are intended to be
non-substantive. Specifically, the rules
adopted today make conforming
changes to the following rules:702
§ 200.30–3; 703 § 200.800, Subpart N; 704
§ 201.101; 705 Rule 144 706 under the
Securities Act of 1933; 707 Exchange Act
Rule 0–10; 708 Exchange Act Rule 3a51–
1; 709 Exchange Act Rule 3b–16; 710
Exchange Act Rules 10a–1; 711 Exchange
Act Rule 10b–10; 712 Exchange Act Rule
10b–18; 713 Exchange Act Rule 15b9–
1; 714 Exchange Act Rule 12a–7; 715
Exchange Act Rule 12f–1; 716 Exchange
Act Rule 12f–2; 717 Exchange Act Rule
15c2–11; 718 Exchange Act Rule 19c–
702 In addition, the Commission voted to approve
a conforming amendment to Exchange Act Rule
3a55–1 and Commodity Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’) Rule
41.11. These rules were adopted jointly by the
Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’) pursuant Section
3(a)(55)(F)(ii) of the Exchange Act and Section
1a(25)(E)(ii) of the CEA and the amendment also
must be adopted jointly. Section 3(a)(55)(F)(ii) of
the Exchange Act and Section 1a(25)(E)(ii) of the
CEA provide that the two Commissions shall, by
rule or regulation, jointly specify the method to be
used to determine market capitalization and dollar
value of average daily trading volume for purposes
of definition of ‘‘narrow-based security index’’ (and
exclusions from that definition). Exchange Act Rule
3a55–1 and CEA Rule 41.11 refer to ‘‘reported
securities as defined in § 240.11Ac1–1.’’ The rules
adopted today eliminate the term ‘‘reported
security’’ from the NMS rules and replace it with
the term ‘‘NMS security’’ or ‘‘NMS stock,’’
depending on the scope of the particular rule. To
reflect these changes, the joint technical
amendment would replace the phrase ‘‘reported
securities as defined in § 240.11Ac1–1’’ with the
phrase ‘‘NMS securities, as defined in § 242.600 of
this chapter’’ in Exchange Act Rule 3a55–1 and
make a corresponding change in CEA Rule 41.11.
703 17 CFR 200.30–3. In addition to conforming
changes, the Commission is amending this rule to
delegate to the Director of the Division of Market
Regulation the authority to grant exemptions to
Rules 610 through 612.
704 17 CFR 200.800, Subpart N.
705 17 CFR 201.101.
706 17 CFR 230.144.
707 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
708 17 CFR 240.0–10.
709 17 CFR 240.3a51–1.
710 17 CFR 240.3b–16.
711 17 CFR 240.10a–1.
712 17 CFR 240.10b–10.
713 17 CFR 240.10b–18.
714 17 CFR 240.15b9–1.
715 17 CFR 240.12a–7.
716 17 CFR 240.12f–1.
717 17 CFR 240.12f–2.
718 17 CFR 240.15c2–11.
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3; 719 Exchange Act Rule 19c–4; 720
Exchange Act Rule 31; 721 Rule 100 of
Regulation M under the Exchange
Act; 722 Rule 300 of Regulation ATS
under the Exchange Act; 723 Rule 301 of
Regulation ATS under the Exchange
Act; 724 § 249.1001; 725 and Rule 17a–7
under the Investment Company Act of
1940.726
VII. Effective Date and Phased-In
Compliance Dates
Rules 610, 611, 612, the amendment
to Rule 301 of Regulation ATS, the
amendments to the Market Data Rules
and Plans discussed above in Section V,
and the Regulation NMS amendments
discussed above in Section VI will
become effective on August 29, 2005.
The compliance date for Rule 612, the
amendment to Rule 301 of Regulation
ATS, the amendments to the Market
Data Rules and Plans discussed above in
Section V other than the Allocation
Amendment, and the Regulation NMS
amendments discussed above in Section
VI will be the same date as the effective
date. Given the significant systems and
other changes necessary to implement
the remaining regulatory changes
adopted today, the Commission has
decided to establish delayed compliance
dates for these new regulatory
requirements.
Compliance with Rules 610 and Rule
611 will be phased-in as follows:
• Phase I. The first phase-in of NMS
stocks subject to Rule 610 and 611 will
begin on June 29, 2006. Beginning on
June 29, 2006, and continuing until the
beginning of Phase II, all trading centers
must begin trading 100 NMS stocks of
each of Networks A and C, and 50 NMS
stocks of Network B, pursuant to the
requirements of Rules 610 and 611. The
particular NMS stocks will be chosen by
the primary listing market, in
consultation with Commission staff, to
be reasonably representative of the
range of each Network’s securities. The
primary purpose of Phase 1 is to allow
all market participants to verify the
functionality of their systems and
procedures necessary to effectively
comply with the Rules.
• Phase II. Phase II will begin on
August 31, 2006. As of that date, trading
719 17
CFR 240.19c–3.
CFR 240.19c–4.
721 17 CFR 240.31.
722 17 CFR 242.100.
723 17 CFR 242.300.
724 17 CFR 242.301. The Commission also is
adopting a technical change to Rule 301(b)(3)(iii) of
Regulation ATS to correct a cross-reference to Rule
301(b)(3)(ii)(A) by deleting the reference to
subparagraph (A). This change has no substantive
effect.
725 17 CFR 249.1001.
726 17 CFR 270.17a–7.
720 17
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centers must begin trading all NMS
stocks pursuant to the requirements of
Rules 610 and 611.
The compliance date for the
Allocation Amendment to the Plans will
be September 1, 2006.
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Order Protection Rule
The Order Protection Rule contains
collection of information requirements
within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.727 The
Commission published a notice
requesting comment on the collection of
information requirements in both the
Proposing Release and Reproposing
Release, and submitted these
requirements to the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for
review in accordance with 44 U.S.C.
3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11. An agency
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, an
information collection unless it displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
The title of the affected collection is
‘‘Order Protection Rule’’ under OMB
control number 3235–0600.
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission proposed to create three
new information collections.728 The first
collection of information arose from the
proposed requirement that trading
centers adopt policies and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent the
execution of a transaction at prices
inferior to prices displayed by other
trading centers. The other two
collections of information related to
requirements in a proposed exception to
the Order Protection Rule included in
the Proposing Release—the opt-out
exception.729 The Order Protection Rule
as reproposed did not, and as adopted
does not, contain an opt-out exception,
and therefore, the collections of
information associated with the
proposed opt-out exception are no
longer applicable.
The discussion below reflects the
information collection requirements of
the Order Protection Rule as adopted.
1. Summary of Collection of Information
The Order Protection Rule requires a
trading center to establish, maintain,
and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
prevent the execution of trades on that
trading center at prices inferior to
protected quotations displayed by other
trading centers, unless a valid exception
applies, and, if relying on such an
727 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. (‘‘Paperwork Reduction
Act’’).
728 See section III.G.1. of the Proposing Release.
729 See section III.G.1. of the Proposing Release.
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exception, that are reasonably designed
to assure compliance with the terms of
the exception. The nature and extent of
the policies and procedures that a
trading center will be required to
establish to comply with this
requirement will depend upon the type,
size, and nature of the trading center.
2. Proposed Use of Information
The requirement that each trading
center establish, maintain, and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent the
execution of trades on that trading
center at prices inferior to protected
quotations displayed by other trading
centers or to assure compliance with the
terms of an exception will help ensure
that the trading center and its
customers, subscribers, members, and
employees, as applicable, generally
avoid engaging in trade-throughs, unless
a valid exception is applicable.
3. Respondents
The requirement for each trading
center to establish written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
prevent the execution of trade-throughs
will apply to eight registered national
securities exchanges that trade NMS
stocks and the NASD,730 and
approximately 600 broker-dealers
registered with the Commission.731 The
Commission did not receive any
comment on these estimates.
The Commission has considered each
of these respondents for the purposes of
calculating the reporting burden under
the Order Protection Rule.
4. Total Annual Reporting and
Recordkeeping Burden
Trading centers will need to develop
written policies and procedures for
preventing and monitoring for tradethroughs that do not fall within an
enumerated exception, and, if relying on
such an exception, that are reasonably
730 There are eight national securities exchanges
(Amex, BSE, CBOE, CHX, NSX, NYSE, Phlx and
PCX) and one national securities association
(NASD) that trade NMS stocks and thus will be
subject to the Rule. The ISE does not trade NMS
stocks and thus will not be subject to the Rule.
731 This estimate includes the approximately 585
firms that were registered equity market makers or
specialists at year-end 2003 (this number was
derived from annual FOCUS reports and discussion
with SRO staff), as well as ATSs that operate
trading systems that trade NMS stocks. The
Commission believes it is reasonable to assume that
in general, firms that are block positioners—i.e.,
firms that are in the business of executing orders
internally—are the same firms that are registered
market makers (for instance, they may be registered
as a market maker in one or more Nasdaq stocks
and carry on a block positioner business in
exchange-listed stocks), especially given the
amount of capital necessary to carry on such a
business.
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designed to assure compliance with the
terms of the exception, to assure that
they are in compliance with the Rule.
Although the exact nature and extent
of the required policies and procedures
that a trading center will be required to
establish likely will vary depending
upon the nature of the trading center
(e.g., SRO vs. non-SRO, full service
broker-dealer vs. market maker), the
Commission broadly estimates that it
would take an SRO trading center
approximately 270 hours of legal,732
compliance,733 information
technology 734 and business operations
personnel 735 time,736 and a non-SRO
trading center approximately 210 hours
of legal, compliance, information
technology and business operations
732 Based on industry sources, the Commission
estimates that the average hourly rate for
outsourced legal service in the securities industry
is between $150 per hour and $300 per hour. For
purposes of this Release, the Commission will use
the highest rate of $300 per hour to determine
potential outsourced legal costs associated with the
proposed rule. For in-house legal services, the
Commission estimates that the average hourly rate
for an attorney in the securities industry is
approximately $82 per hour. The $82 per hour
figure for an attorney is from the Securities Industry
Association, Report on Management & Professional
Earnings in the Securities Industry 2003 (Sept.
2003), adjusted by the SEC staff for an 1800-hour
work-year with a 35% upward adjustment for
overhead, reflecting the cost of supervision, space,
and administrative support.
733 The Commission estimates that the average
hourly rate for an assistant compliance director in
the securities industry is approximately $103 per
hour. The $103 per hour figure for an assistant
compliance director is from the Securities Industry
Association, Report on Management & Professional
Earnings in the Securities Industry 2003 (Sept.
2003), adjusted by the SEC staff for an 1800-hour
work-year with a 35% upward adjustment for
overhead, reflecting the cost of supervision, space,
and administrative support.
734 The Commission estimates that the average
hourly rate for a senior computer programmer in the
securities industry is approximately $67 per hour.
The $67 per hour figure for a senior computer
programmer is from the Securities Industry
Association, Report on Management & Professional
Earnings in the Securities Industry 2003 (Sept.
2003), adjusted by the SEC staff for an 1800-hour
work-year with a 35% upward adjustment for
overhead, reflecting the cost of supervision, space,
and administrative support.
735 The Commission estimates that the average
hourly rate for an operations manager in the
securities industry is approximately $70 per hour.
The $70 per hour figure for an operations manager
is from the Securities Industry Association, Report
on Management & Professional Earnings in the
Securities Industry 2002 (Sept. 2002), adjusted by
the SEC staff for an 1800-hour work-year with a
35% upward adjustment for overhead, reflecting the
cost of supervision, space, and administrative
support.
736 The Commission anticipates that of the 270
hours it estimates will be spent to establish the
required policies and procedures, 120 hours will be
spent by legal personnel, 105 hours will be spent
by compliance personnel, 20 hours will be spent by
information technology personnel and 25 hours will
be spent by business operations personnel of the
SRO trading center.
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personnel time,737 to develop the
required policies and procedures.
Included within this estimate, the
Commission expects that SRO and nonSRO respondents may incur one-time
external costs for out-sourced legal
services. While the Commission
recognizes that the amount of legal
outsourcing utilized to help establish
written policies and procedures may
vary widely from entity to entity, it
estimates that on average, each trading
center would outsource 50 hours of
legal time in order to establish policies
and procedures in accordance with the
Rule.
The Commission estimates that there
will be an initial one-time burden of 220
burden hours per SRO trading center or
1,980 hours,738 and 160 burden hours
per non-SRO trading center 739 or 96,000
hours, for a total of 97,980 burden hours
to establish policies and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent the
execution of a trade-through, for an
estimated one-time initial cost of
$8,646,405.740 The Commission
estimates a capital cost of approximately
$9,135,000 for both SRO and non-SRO
trading centers resulting from
outsourced legal work 741 for a total onetime initial cost of $17,781,405.742
Once a trading center has established
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent tradethroughs in its market, the Commission
estimates that it will take the average
SRO and non-SRO trading center
approximately two hours per month of
internal legal time and three hours of
internal compliance time to ensure that
its written policies and procedures are
737 The Commission anticipates that of 210 hours
it estimates will be spent to establish policies and
procedures, 87 hours will be spent by legal
personnel, 77 hours will be spent by compliance
personnel, 23 hours will be spent by information
technology personnel and 23 hours will be spent by
business operations personnel of the non-SRO
trading center.
738 The estimated 1,980 burden hours necessary
for SRO trading centers to establish policies and
procedures are calculated by multiplying nine times
220 hours (9 × 220 hours = 1,980 hours).
739 The estimated 96,000 burden hours necessary
for non-SRO trading centers to establish policies
and procedures are calculated by multiplying 600
times 160 hours (600 × 160 hours = 96,000 hours).
740 This figure was calculated as follows: (70 legal
hours × $82) + (105 compliance hours × $103) + (20
information technology hours × $67) + (25 business
operation hours × $70) = $19,645 per SRO × 9 SROs
= $176,805 total cost for SROs; (37 legal hours ×
$82) + (77 compliance hours × $103) + (23
information technology hours × $67) + (23 business
operation hours × $70) = $14,116 per broker-dealer
× 600 broker-dealers = $8,469,600 total cost for
broker-dealers; $176,805 + $8,469,600 = $8,646,405.
741 This figure was calculated as follows: (50 legal
hours × $300 × 9 SROs) + (50 legal hours × $300
× 600 broker-dealers) = $9,135,000.
742 This figured was calculated by adding
$8,646,405 and $9,135,000.
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37577
up-to-date and remain in compliance
with Rule 611. The Commission staff
estimates that these ongoing costs will
be 60 hours annually per respondent,
for a total estimated annual cost of
$3,456,684.743
The Commission did not receive any
comments on its PRA burden estimates.
5. General Information About Collection
of Information
This collection of information will be
mandatory. The Commission expects
that the written policies and procedures
that will be generated pursuant to Rule
611 will be communicated to the
members, subscribers, and employees
(as applicable) of all entities covered by
the Rule. To the extent that this
information is made available to the
Commission, it will not be kept
confidential. Any records generated in
connection with the Rule’s requirement
to establish written policies and
procedures will be required to be
preserved in accordance with, and for
the periods specified in, Exchange Act
Rules 17a–1 744 and 17a–4(e)(7).745
B. Access Rule
In the Proposing Release and
Reproposing Release, the Commission
requested comment on its preliminary
view that proposed Rule 610 and the
proposed amendment to Rule 301(b)(5)
under Regulation ATS do not contain a
collection of information requirement as
defined by the Paperwork Reduction
Act.746 No comments were received that
addressed the issue. The Commission
continues to believe that Rule 610 and
the amendment to Rule 301(b)(5) do not
contain a collection of information
requirement.
C. Sub-Penny Rule
In the Proposing Release and
Reproposing Release, the Commission
stated its preliminary view that
proposed Rule 612 does not contain a
collection of information requirement as
defined by the Paperwork Reduction
Act.747 No comments were received that
addressed this issue. The Commission
continues to believe that Rule 612 does
not contain a collection of information
requirement.
743 This figure was calculated as follows: (2 legal
hours × 12 months × $82) × (9 + 600) + (3
compliance hours × 12 months × $103) × (9 + 600))
= $3,456,684.
744 17 CFR 240.17a–1.
745 17 CFR 240.17a–4(e)(7).
746 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11160;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77476.
747 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11172;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77476.
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D. Market Data Rules and Plan
Amendments
In the Proposing Release and
Reproposing Release, the Commission
stated its preliminary view that the
proposed amendments to the jointindustry plans and to Exchange Act
Rules 11Aa3–1 and 11Ac1–2
(redesignated as Rules 601 and 603) do
not impose a collection of information
requirement as defined by the
Paperwork Reduction Act.748 No
comments were received that addressed
this issue. The Commission continues to
believe that these amendments do not
contain a collection of information
requirement.
E. Regulation NMS
In the Proposing Release and
Reproposing Release, the Commission
stated its preliminary view that
proposed Rule 600, the redesignation of
the NMS rules, and the conforming
amendments to various rules do not
impose a collection of information
requirement as defined by the
Paperwork Reduction Act.749 No
comments were received that addressed
this issue. The Commission continues to
believe that these amendments do not
contain a collection of information
requirement.
IX. Consideration of Costs and Benefits
In the Proposing Release and
Reproposing Release, the Commission
identified certain costs and benefits of
the Regulation NMS proposals, and, to
help evaluate the costs and benefits,
requested comment on all aspects of the
costs and benefits and encouraged
commenters to identify or supply any
relevant data concerning the costs or
benefits of the proposal.750 To the extent
commenters discussed costs and
benefits, the Commission has
considered those comments.
A. Order Protection Rule
Rule 611 requires a trading center
(which includes national securities
exchanges and national securities
associations that operate SRO trading
facilities, ATSs, market makers, and
block positioners) to establish, maintain,
and enforce written policies and
procedures that are reasonably designed
to prevent trade-throughs on that
trading center of protected quotations,
and, if relying on an exception, that are
748 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11186;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77476–77.
749 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11197;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77477.
750 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11148–11150,
11161, 11172–73, 11186–89, 11197–98;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77441, 77474, 77475,
77477, 77480, 77488, 77489.
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reasonably designed to assure
compliance with the terms of the
exception. To qualify for protection, a
quotation is required to be displayed
and immediately accessible through
automatic execution. The Rule also
requires a trading center to regularly
surveil to ascertain the effectiveness of
the policies and procedures and to take
prompt remedial action to remedy
deficiencies in such policies and
procedures. As discussed above in
Section II.A.5, the Commission has
determined to adopt the Market BBO
Alternative with respect to the scope of
quotations that will be protected under
the Rule. The Commission believes that
providing enhanced protection for the
best bids and offers of each exchange,
The NASDAQ Stock Market, and the
ADF will represent a major step toward
achieving the objectives of intermarket
price protection, but with fewer of the
costs and potential drawbacks
associated with the Voluntary Depth
Alternative.
Rule 611 includes a variety of
exceptions to make intermarket price
protection as efficient and workable as
possible. These include an intermarket
sweep exception, which allows market
participants simultaneously to access
multiple price levels at different trading
centers—a particularly important
function now that trading in penny
increments has dispersed liquidity
across multiple price levels. The
intermarket sweep exception enables
trading centers that receive sweep
orders to execute those orders
immediately, without waiting for betterpriced quotations in other markets to be
updated. In addition, Rule 611 provides
exceptions for the quotations of trading
centers experiencing, among other
things, a material delay in providing a
response to incoming orders, as well as
for flickering quotations with prices that
have been displayed for less than one
second. Both exceptions serve to limit
the application of Rule 611 to
quotations that are truly automated and
accessible. In response to commenters,
the Commission also is including in the
Rule an exception for certain ‘‘stopped’’
orders.751
1. Benefits
Although commenters were divided
on the central issue of whether
intermarket protection of displayed
quotations is needed to promote the
fairest and most efficient markets for
investors, many commenters strongly
supported the adoption of a rule against
trade-throughs without an opt-out for all
NMS stocks to promote best execution
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supra, section II.A.4.
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of market orders, to protect the best
displayed prices, and encourage the
public display of limit orders.752 These
commenters noted that such a rule
would encourage the use of displayed
limit orders, thus increasing depth and
liquidity in the market.753 Some of these
commenters also stated that the tradethrough proposal would increase
investor confidence by helping to
eliminate the impression of unfairness
when an investor’s order executes at a
price that is worse than the best
displayed quotation, or when a trade
occurs at a price that is inferior to the
investor’s displayed order.754 As
discussed above in Section II.A.1, the
Commission agrees with these
commenters.
The Commission believes that the
Order Protection Rule will enhance the
overall fairness and efficiency of the
NMS and produce significant benefits
for investors. The Order Protection Rule
will benefit investors by promoting the
best execution of customer market
orders, promoting the fair treatment of
customer limit orders, and
strengthening protection of limit orders
to promote greater depth and liquidity
for NMS stocks and thereby minimize
investor transaction costs. By providing
greater protection for displayed prices,
the Rule should serve to enhance the
depth and liquidity of the NMS, and
thus contribute to the maintenance of
fair and orderly markets. By better
protecting the interests of investors,
both those that post limit orders and
those that execute against posted limit
orders, the Rule will promote investor
confidence in the NMS. The Rule will
be a significant improvement over the
existing ITS trade-through rule, and will
level the competitive playing field
among markets by eliminating the
potential advantage that the ITS rule
afforded to manual markets.
By requiring trading centers to
establish written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
prevent trade-throughs on their markets
and to comply with exceptions, and by
requiring them to regularly surveil to
ascertain the effectiveness of the
policies and procedures and to take
prompt remedial action to remedy
deficiencies in such policies and
procedures, the Commission believes
that the Rule also will offer greater
assurance, on an order-by-order basis, to
investors that submit market orders that
their orders in fact will be executed at
752 See
supra, section II.A.1.
e.g., BNY Letter at 2; Consumer
Federation Letter at 2; ICI Letter at 7.
754 See, e.g., Consumer Federation Letter at 2; ICI
Letter at 7.
753 See,
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the best readily available prices, which
can be difficult for investors,
particularly retail investors, to monitor.
As noted above, some commenters
stated that the trade-through proposal
would increase investor confidence by
helping to eliminate the impression of
unfairness when an investor’s order
executes at a price that is worse than the
best displayed quotation.755 Most retail
investors justifiably expect that their
orders will be executed at the NBBO.
Investors generally can know the best
quoted prices at the time they place an
order by referring to the consolidated
quotation stream for a stock. In the
interval between order submission and
order execution, however, quoted prices
can change. If the order execution price
differs from the quoted price at order
submission, it can be particularly
difficult for retail investors to assess
whether the difference was attributable
to changing quoted prices or to an
inferior execution by the market. By
protecting the BBO of each exchange,
the NASDAQ Stock Market, and the
NASD, the Rule will further the
interests of investors, particularly retail
investors, in obtaining—and the ability
of broker-dealers to achieve—best
execution on an order-by-order basis,
because the market to which a brokerdealer routes an order will not execute
the order at a price that is inferior to a
protected bid or offer displayed on the
other market (unless an exception
applies).756
The Order Protection Rule also will
promote the fair and orderly treatment
of limit orders for NMS stocks. Many of
the limit orders that are bypassed are
small orders that often will have been
submitted by retail investors. Retail
investors will participate directly in the
U.S. equity markets only to the extent
that they perceive that their orders will
be treated fairly and efficiently. The
Commission agrees with commenters
that the Order Protection Rule will
increase investor confidence by helping
to eliminate the impression of
unfairness when a trade occurs at a
price that is inferior to the investor’s
displayed order.757 By better protecting
the interests of all investors—both those
that execute against posted limit orders
and those that post limit orders—the
Rule will bolster investor confidence in
the integrity of the NMS, which will
encourage investors to be more willing
to invest in the market, thus adding
depth and liquidity to the markets and
755 See
supra, note 59.
Commission emphasizes that adoption of
Rule 611 would in no way lessen a broker-dealer’s
duty of best execution. See supra, section II.B.4.
757 See supra, note 59.
756 The
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promoting the ability of listed
companies to raise capital.
The Order Protection Rule also is
designed to promote greater depth and
liquidity for NMS stocks and thereby
minimize implicit investor transaction
costs. Depth and liquidity will be
increased only to the extent that limit
order users are given greater incentives
than currently exist to display a larger
percentage of their trading interest.
Investors who post limit orders should
not see trades occurring on another
market at a price inferior to their orders,
except in circumstances where an
exception applies. Price protection
encourages the display of limit orders
by increasing the likelihood that they
will realize an execution in a timely
manner. Limit orders typically establish
the best prices for an NMS stock.
Greater use of limit orders will enhance
price discovery and increase market
depth and liquidity, thereby improving
the quality of execution for large orders
of institutional investors. The
Commission believes that the Order
Protection Rule is necessary to, and will
serve to, enhance protection of
displayed prices. By requiring trading
centers to establish written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
prevent trade-throughs and to comply
with exceptions, and by requiring them
to regularly surveil to ascertain the
effectiveness of the policies and
procedures and to take prompt remedial
action to remedy deficiencies in such
policies and procedures, the Rule will
help ensure that displayed limit orders
are not routinely bypassed by
transactions occurring in other markets
at inferior prices.
Almost all commenters agreed that
the current ITS trade-through rule must
be fixed to accommodate the realities of
today’s NMS, in particular the
differences in operation among
automated and non-automated markets.
The Commission believes that Rule 611,
by providing protection only for
automated quotations displayed by
automated trading centers, will
significantly update the ITS tradethrough rule. Intermarket efficiency and
certainty of execution in the NMS will
be improved as automated markets will
no longer need to wait for responses
from non-automated markets and thus
will be able to execute trades more
quickly without regard for potentially
unavailable quotations displayed on
non-automated markets. The Rule also
will level the playing field by
eliminating the potential competitive
advantage the existing ITS rule provides
to manual markets. In addition, by
providing an incentive for nonautomated markets to automate—
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37579
because market participants may be less
likely to send their order flow to a
market center whose orders are not
protected by the Order Protection
Rule—the Rule generally should
improve the accessibility of bids and
offers for all investors and increase the
efficiency of the NMS.
The Commission believes that the
benefits of strengthening price
protection for exchange-listed stocks
(e.g., by eliminating the gaps in ITS
coverage of block positioners and 100share quotes) and introducing price
protection for Nasdaq stocks will be
substantial, although the total amount is
difficult to quantify. One objective,
though quite conservative, estimate of
benefits is the dollar amount of
quotations that annually are traded
through. The Commission staff’s
analysis of trade-through rates indicates
that over 12 billion shares of displayed
quotations in Nasdaq and NYSE stocks
were traded through in 2003, by an
average amount of 2.3 cents for Nasdaq
stocks and 2.2 cents for NYSE stocks.758
These traded-through quotations
represent approximately $209 million in
Nasdaq stocks and $112 million in
NYSE stocks, for a total of $321 million
in bypassed limit orders and inferior
prices for investors in 2003 that could
have been addressed by strong tradethrough protection.759 The Commission
believes that this $321 million estimated
annual benefit, particularly when
combined with the benefits of enhanced
investor confidence in the fairness and
orderliness of the equity markets,
justifies the one-time costs of
implementation and ongoing annual
costs of the Order Protection Rule.
Two commenters on the reproposal
asserted that the dollar amount of
traded-through quotations overstated
the benefits of order protection because
‘‘trading is for the most part a zero-sum
game.’’ 760 They believed that trades
executed at inferior prices were random
noise that sometimes benefited and
sometimes disadvantaged a particular
investor, stating that ‘‘[i]t is only if one
class of investors systematically loses
out to another class as a result of tradethroughs that there is a
problem* * *’’ 761
The Commission does not agree that
trades executed at inferior prices should
be considered merely a transfer of
benefits from one group of investors to
another equally-situated group of
investors. There are at least three parties
758 Trade-Through
Study at 3, 5.
at 3.
760 Angel Reproposal Letter at 4; see also Fidelity
Reproposal Letter at 8.
761 Angel Reproposal Letter at 4.
759 Id.
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affected by every trade-through
transaction (1) The party that received
an inferior price; (2) the party whose
superior-priced limit order was tradedthrough; and (3) the contra party to the
trade-through transaction that received
an advantageous price. The
redistributions of welfare resulting from
trade-through transactions cannot
reasonably be expected to occur
randomly across these parties.
Customers of brokers that are doing a
poor job of routing orders are more
likely to be harmed than customers of
brokers that are doing a better job.762
Investors who generally submit limit
orders at the best prices are more likely
to be harmed than customers who
generally submit less aggressivelypriced limit orders.
Thus, trade-through transactions can
result in direct harm to two parties, as
well as more general harm to the
efficiency of the markets by dampening
the incentive for aggressive quoting.
Moreover, even when the party
receiving an inferior price does so
willingly (such as when an institution
accepts a block trade at a price away
from the inside quotation),763 the party
whose quotation was traded through
and the efficiency of the markets still
are harmed. Finally, many tradethroughs are dealer internalized trades,
where the party receiving the
advantageous price is not an investor
but a market intermediary, and therefore
such trades cannot be considered a
transfer of benefits from one group of
investors to another equally-situated
group of investors. This transfer of
benefits from investors to market
762 As discussed above, it can be difficult for
retail investors in particular to monitor whether
their orders in fact received the best available price
at the time of order execution. See supra, note 53
and accompanying text.
763 Fidelity and the Battalio/Jennings Paper stated
that the staff study should not have included block
trades in its estimate of the benefits of strengthened
trade-through protection. Fidelity Reproposal Letter
II at 1; Battalio/Jennings Paper at 2. The
Commission does not agree. First, the amount that
block trades contributed to the $321 million
estimate is very small. Block trades represented
only 1.9% of total trade-throughs in Nasdaq stocks
and 1.1% of total trade-throughs in NYSE stocks.
Trade-Through Study, Tables 6, 13. Most
importantly, the staff study used the lesser of the
size of the traded-through quotation and the size of
the trade-through transaction when calculating the
$321 million. Id. at 3. Thus, if a 10,000 share
transaction traded through a 100-share quotation,
only 100 shares counted toward the estimation of
benefits. The Battalio/Jennings Paper incorrectly
asserted that the staff study did not use this
conservative approach. Battalio/Jennings Paper at 2.
Finally, block trades are appropriately included in
the estimation of benefits because their failure to
interact with significant displayed quotations is one
of the most serious problems with respect to the
protection of limit orders that the Order Protection
Rule is designed to address. See supra, section
II.A.1.c.
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intermediaries cannot be dismissed as
mere ‘‘random noise.’’
In addition, economic theory predicts
that, in an auction market, buyers who
place the highest value on a stock will
bid most aggressively.764 If an incoming
market order is allocated to an investor
who is not bidding the best price, this
re-allocation is neither zero-sum nor
random. It systematically reallocates
trades away from those investors for
whom the welfare gains would be
largest. The argument also can be
framed in terms of an investor’s
preferences with respect to the tradeoff
between price and execution speed.
Among those investors who trade using
limit orders, we would expect more
aggressive limit orders to be submitted
by those investors who place more value
on speed or certainty of execution and
relatively less value on price.
Conversely, we would expect investors
who place a lower value on speed and
certainty of execution and a higher
value on price to submit less aggressive
limit orders. When an incoming market
order is executed against a limit order
with an inferior price, the result is: (1)
A faster execution for an investor who
does not place as much value on speed
of execution; and (2) a lost execution or
slower execution for the investor who
places a higher value on prompt
execution. This is not a zero-sum
redistribution.
Moreover, the $321 million estimate
is a conservative measure of the total
benefits of the Order Protection Rule. It
does not attempt to measure any gains
from trading associated with investors’
private values, beyond those expressed
in their limit order prices. The Order
Protection Rule can be expected to
generate other categories of benefits that
are not quantified in the $321 million
estimate, such as the benefits that can be
expected to result from increased use of
limit orders, increased depth, and
increased order interaction.
Thus, the Commission believes that
the $321 million estimate of benefits is
conservative because it is based solely
on the size of displayed quotations in
the absence of strong price protection.
In essence, it measures the problem—a
shortage of quoted depth—that the
Order Protection Rule is designed to
address, rather than the benefits that it
could achieve. Every trade-through
transaction potentially sends a message
to market participants that their
displayed quotations can be and are
ignored by other market participants.
764 See, e.g., B. Hollifield, R. Miller and P. Sandas,
‘‘Empirical Analysis of Limit Order Markets,’’ 71
Review of Economic Studies 1027–1063 and n. 4
(2004).
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When the total share volume of tradethrough transactions that do not interact
with displayed quotations reaches 9%
and above for hundreds of the most
actively traded NMS stocks,765 this
message is unlikely to be missed by
those who watched their quotations
being traded through. Certainly, the
common practice of trading through
displayed size is most unlikely to
prompt market participants to display
even greater size.
A primary objective of the Order
Protection Rule is to increase displayed
depth and liquidity in the NMS and
thereby reduce transaction costs for a
wide spectrum of investors, particularly
institutional investors that must trade in
large sizes. Precisely estimating the
extent to which strengthened price
protection will improve market depth
and liquidity, and thereby lower the
transaction costs of investors, is very
difficult. The difficulty of estimation
should not hide from view, however,
the enormous potential benefits for
investors of improving the depth and
efficiency of the NMS. Because of the
huge dollar amount of trading volume in
NMS stocks—more than $17 trillion in
2003 766—even the most incremental
improvement in market depth and
liquidity could generate a dollar amount
of benefits that annually would dwarf
the one-time start-up costs of
implementing trade-through protection.
One approach to evaluating the
potential benefits of the Order
Protection Rule is to examine a category
of investors that stand to benefit a great
deal from improved depth and liquidity
for NMS stocks—the shareholders in
U.S. equity mutual funds. In 2003, the
total assets of such funds were $3.68
trillion.767 The average portfolio
turnover rate for equity funds was 55%,
meaning that their total purchases and
sales of securities amounted to
approximately $4.048 trillion.768 A
leading authority on the trading costs of
institutional investors has estimated
that in the second quarter of 2003 the
average price impact experienced by
investment managers ranged from 17.4
basis points for giant-capitalization
stocks, 21.4 basis points for largecapitalization stocks, and up to 35.4
basis points for micro-capitalization
765 See
Trade-Through Study, Tables 4.
Federation of Exchanges, Annual
Report (2003), at 86.
767 Investment Company Institute, Mutual Fund
Fact Book (2004), at 55.
768 Id. at 64. Portfolio turnover is reported as the
lesser of portfolio sales or purchases divided by
average net assets. Because price impact occurs for
both purchases and sales, the turnover rate must be
doubled, then multiplied by total fund assets, to
estimate the total value of trading that would be
affected by an improvement in depth and liquidity.
766 World
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stocks.769 In addition, it estimated the
cost attributable to adverse price
movements while searching for liquidity
for institutional orders, which often are
too large simply to be presented to the
market. Its estimate of these liquidity
search costs ranged from 13 basis points
for giant capitalization stocks, 23 basis
points for large capitalization stocks,
and up to 119 basis points for microcapitalization stocks.
To obtain a conservative estimate of
price impact costs and liquidity search
costs incurred across all stocks, the total
market impact and liquidity search costs
for giant capitalization stocks (30.4 basis
points) and the total market impact and
liquidity search costs for large
capitalization stocks (44.4 basis points)
are averaged together to yield a figure of
37.4 basis points.770 The much higher
market impact and liquidity search costs
of midcap, smallcap, and microcap
stocks are not included. Using this
estimate of 37.4 basis points, the
shareholders in U.S. equity mutual
funds incurred implicit transaction
costs of $15.1 billion in 2003. Based on
a hypothetical assumption that, in light
of the current share volume of tradethrough transactions that does not
interact with displayed liquidity,
intermarket trade-through protection
could improve depth and liquidity for
NMS stocks by 5% (or an average
reduction of 1.87 basis points in price
impact and liquidity search costs for
large investors), the savings in
transaction costs for U.S equity funds
alone, and the improved returns for
their millions of individual
shareholders, would have amounted to
approximately $755 million in 2003.
Of course, the benefits of improved
depth and liquidity for the equity
holdings of other types of investors,
including pension funds, insurance
companies, and individuals, are not
incorporated in the foregoing
calculations. In 2003, these other types
of investors held 78% of the value of
publicly traded U.S. equity outstanding,
with equity mutual funds holding the
remaining 22%.771 For example,
pension funds alone held $9 trillion in
assets in 2003, of which an estimated
$4.9 trillion was held in equity
769 Plexus Group, Inc., Commentary 80, ‘‘Trading
Truths: How Mis-Measurement of Trading Costs Is
Leading Investors Astray,’’ (April 2004), at 2–3.
770 Cf. supra, note 146 and accompanying text
(Plexus estimate of average transaction costs,
including commissions, during the fourth quarter of
2003 for Nasdaq and NYSE stocks as, respectively,
83 basis points and 55 basis points; commissions
average 12 basis points for large capitalization
stocks).
771 Mutual Fund Factbook, supra note 767, at 59.
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investments other than mutual funds.772
Thus, the implicit transaction costs
incurred by institutional investors each
year is likely at least double the $15.1
billion estimated for equity mutual
funds, for a total of more than $30
billion. Assuming that these other types
of investors experienced a reduction in
transaction costs that equaled the
reduction of trading costs for equity
mutual funds, the assumed 5%
improvement in market depth and
liquidity could yield total transaction
cost savings for all investors of over $1.5
billion annually. Such savings would
improve the investment returns of
equity ownership, thereby promoting
the retirement and other long-term
financial interests of individual
investors and reducing the cost of
capital for listed companies.
2. Costs
Some commenters expressed concern
over the anticipated cost of
implementing the original trade-through
proposal.773 These commenters argued
that Rule 611 would be too expensive
and that the costs associated with
implementing it would outweigh the
perceived benefits of the Rule. Some
commenters were concerned about the
cost of specific requirements in the
proposed rule, particularly the
procedural requirements associated
with the proposed opt-out exception
(e.g., obtaining informed consent from
customers and disclosing the NBBO to
customers).774 As discussed above,
however, the Order Protection Rule as
reproposed did not (and as adopted
does not) contain an opt-out exception,
as was originally proposed.775
Therefore, the concerns expressed by
commenters relating to the costs of
implementing an opt-out exception are
not applicable, and were not included
in the Reproposing Release. In the
Reproposing Release, the Commission
also refined its estimate of the number
of broker-dealers that would be required
to establish, maintain, and enforce
written policies and procedures to
772 Id. at 91 (employer-sponsored pension market
held estimated $9.0 trillion in assets in 2003, $7.7
trillion of which were not represented by mutual
fund assets); Milliman, Inc., Pension Fund Survey
(available at www.milliman.com) (consulting firm’s
survey of 2003 annual reports for 100 of largest U.S.
corporations found that the median equity
allocation for pension fund assets was 65%).
773 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 14;
Fidelity Letter I at 12; Instinet Letter at 14, 15;
Nasdaq Letter II at 2; Peake Letter I at 2; Reg NMS
Study Group Letter at 4; Rosenblatt Securities Letter
II at 4; STANY Letter at 3; UBS Letter at 8.
774 See, e.g., Ameritrade Letter I at 8; Brut Letter
at 10–12; Citigroup Letter at 8–9; E*TRADE Letter
at 7; Financial Information Forum Letter at 2; JP
Morgan Letter at 4; SIA Letter at 12–15.
775 See supra, section II.A.4.
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37581
prevent trade-throughs.776 Taken
together, these changes substantially
reduced the estimated costs associated
with the implementation of and ongoing
compliance with the reproposed Rule.
Commenters also expressed concern
that applying the trade-through proposal
to the Nasdaq market would harm
market efficiency and execution
quality.777 As discussed above, the
Commission believes that a rule that
serves to limit the incidence of tradethroughs will improve market efficiency
and benefit execution quality.778
A number of commenters generally
expressed the view that there would be
significant costs associated with
implementing and complying with the
reproposed Rule,779 with some
commenters stating the belief that the
costs would outweigh any potential
benefits.780 Commenters did not,
however, discuss the specific estimated
cost figures included in the Reproposing
Release or include their own estimates.
Many commenters expressed concerns
with the costs associated with
implementing the Voluntary Depth
Alternative, believing that the costs of
implementing the Voluntary Depth
Alternative would be substantially
greater than the Market BBO
Alternative.781 As discussed above in
Section II.A.5, the Commission is
adopting the Market BBO Alternative
and not the Voluntary Depth
Alternative. The Commission does not
776 As noted in the Reproposing Release, the
Commission revised the estimated number of
broker-dealers that would be subject to the
reproposed Rule from the original proposal. The
revised number includes the approximately 585
firms that were registered equity market makers or
specialists at year-end 2003 (this number was
derived from annual FOCUS reports and discussion
with SRO staff), as well as ATSs that operate
trading systems that trade NMS stocks. The
Commission believes it is reasonable to assume that
in general, firms that are block positioners—i.e.,
firms that are in the business of executing orders
internally—are the same firms that are registered
market makers (for instance, they may be registered
as a market maker in one or more Nasdaq stocks
and carry on a block positioner business in
exchange-listed stocks), especially given the
amount of capital necessary to carry on such a
business.
777 See, e.g., Archipelago Reproposal Letter at 5–
6; Citadel Letter at 6; Hudson River Trading Letter
at 1–2; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 9, 14; Nasdaq
Reproposal Letter at 2.
778 See supra, section II.A.1.
779 See, e.g., CIBC Reproposal Letter at 4; Knight
Securities Reproposal Letter at 5; Lava Reproposal
Letter at 1; Merrill Lynch Reproposal Letter at 5;
SIA Reproposal Letter at 11.
780 See, e.g., Angel Reproposal Letter at 2; Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 7; Knight Securities Reproposal
Letter at 5; MFA Reproposal Letter at 2.
781 See, e.g., Amex Reproposal Letter at 3; ATD
Reproposal Letter at 4; BNY Reproposal Letter at 3;
CHX Reproposal Letter at 2; NYSE Reproposal
Letter I, Detailed Comments at 8; RBC Capital
Markets Reproposal Letter at 6; STANY Reproposal
Letter at 9.
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believe that the inclusion of a stopped
order exception will materially impact
the estimated costs included in the
Reproposing Release.782 The
Commission therefore continues to
estimate implementation costs for the
Order Protection Rule of approximately
$143.8 million and annual costs of
approximately $21.9 million, as
discussed below.
The Commission recognizes, as noted
by commenters, that there will be
significant one-time costs to implement
the Order Protection Rule. Trading
centers will necessarily incur costs
associated with establishing written
policies and procedures reasonably
designed to prevent trade-throughs—in
other words, with determining a course
of action for how the trading center will
comply with the requirements of the
Rule, including compliance with the
exceptions contained in the Rule.
Although the extent of these costs will
vary because the exact nature and extent
of each trading center’s written policies
and procedures will depend on the type,
size and nature of each entity’s
business, as discussed above in Section
VIII.A., for purposes of the PRA the
Commission broadly estimates that SRO
trading centers will incur a one-time
initial cost for establishing such policies
and procedures of approximately
$311,805 (calculated by multiplying the
average cost of $34,645 per SRO trading
center by the 9 SRO trading centers),
and non-SRO trading centers will incur
a one-time initial cost for establishing
policies and procedures of
approximately $17,469,600 (calculated
by multiplying the average cost of
$29,116 per non-SRO trading center by
the 600 non-SRO trading centers), for a
total of $17,781,405.783
Each trading center also will incur
initial up-front costs associated with
taking action necessary to implement
the written policies and procedures it
has developed, which will include
necessary modifications to order routing
and execution systems to ‘‘hard-code’’
compliance with the Rule and the
exceptions. For instance, modifications
to order routing and execution systems
will need to be made to route and
execute orders in compliance with the
requirements of the Rule to prevent
trade-throughs of protected quotations
(which include, for instance, the ability
to recognize quotations identified in the
consolidated quotation system as
manual quotations on a quotation-by782 The estimated cost figures included the
Reproposing Release did not include additional
costs that would have been associated with the
Voluntary Depth Alternative.
783 See supra, notes 736 to 742 and accompanying
text.
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quotation basis). Trading centers will
need to make sure they have
connectivity to other trading centers in
the NMS that could post protected
quotations, whether through proprietary
linkages or through use of third-party
services. As noted below, however, the
Commission believes that most of this
private linkage functionality already
exists, particularly in the market for
Nasdaq securities. Surveillance systems
will need to be modified to assure an
effective mechanism for monitoring
transactions after-the-fact for ongoing
compliance purposes. Also, trading
systems will need to be programmed to
recognize when exceptions to the
operative provisions of Rule 611 are
applicable. For example, trading centers
will need to be able to identify outgoing
and recognize incoming orders as
intermarket sweep orders. Data feeds
and market vendor systems will need to
be modified to accommodate order
identifiers for manual quotations and
intermarket sweep orders, which costs
(to the extent incurred) will likely be
passed along to the end users of these
systems, the trading centers. These costs
are included within the estimates
below.
For non-SRO trading centers that rely
upon their own internal order routing
and execution management systems, of
which the Commission estimated in the
Reproposing Release that there are
approximately 20, the Commission
estimates the average cost of necessary
systems changes to implement the Rule
will be approximately $3 million per
trading center, for a total one-time startup cost of approximately $60 million.784
The Commission estimates that the
remaining non-SRO trading centers that
will be subject to the Rule will utilize
outside vendors to provide these
services, consistent with their current
use of such services for order routing
and execution management. For these
non-SRO trading centers, the
Commission estimates the cost of
necessary systems modifications that
will be passed along to the trading
centers to be approximately $50,000 per
trading center, for a total initial cost of
$21 million.785 The Commission also
784 This number is an average estimated cost;
thus, it likely overestimates the costs for some
trading centers and underestimates it for others. For
instance, it likely overestimates the cost for ATS
trading centers, particularly smaller ones, as
opposed to full-service broker-dealer trading
centers, in part because of the narrower business
focus of some ATSs.
785 Given that floor-based market-makers and
specialists utilize exchange execution systems, the
Commission believes it is reasonable to assume that
such market-makers and specialists will not incur
substantial systems-related costs to implement the
Rule independent of the costs that will be incurred
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estimates that the average cost to the
nine SROs to make necessary system
modifications to implement the Rule
will be $5 million per SRO, for a total
of $45 million. Therefore, estimated
overall total one-time implementation
costs, added to PRA costs, are
approximately $144 million.
In addition, broker-dealers that do not
fall within the definition of a trading
center but that employ their own smartorder routing technology to route orders
to multiple trading centers could choose
to route orders in compliance with the
intermarket sweep exception. These
broker-dealers would need to make
necessary modifications to their order
routing practices and proprietary order
routing systems to monitor the protected
quotations of trading centers and to
properly identify such intermarket
sweep orders. The Commission does not
believe that this category of brokerdealers is very large. The Commission
also believes it likely that most if not all
of these non-trading center brokerdealers that employ their own orderrouting technology already have systems
in place that monitor best-priced
quotations across markets, and thus
does not believe that the changes
necessary to implement the intermarket
sweep order will be substantial.
With respect to maintaining and
updating its required written policies
and procedures to ensure they continue
to be in compliance with the Rule, for
purposes of the PRA the Commission
estimates that the average annual cost
for each trading center will be
approximately $5,676 per trading center
per year, for a total annual cost for all
trading centers of $3,456,684.786 With
regard to ongoing monitoring for and
enforcement of trading in compliance
with the Rule, the Commission believes
that, once the tools necessary to carry
out on-going monitoring have been put
in place (which are included in the
above cost estimates), a trading center
will be able to incorporate ongoing
monitoring and enforcement within the
scope of its existing surveillance and
enforcement policies and procedures
without a substantial additional burden.
The Commission recognizes, however,
that this ongoing compliance will not be
cost-free, and that trading centers will
incur some additional annual costs
associated with ongoing compliance,
including compliance costs of reviewing
transactions. For instance, the
Commission recognizes that access to a
by the exchange on whose floor they operate to
make changes to the exchange’s execution systems.
Thus, these entities (approximately 160 of the 585)
are not directly included within the cost estimates.
786 See supra, note 743 and accompanying text.
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database of BBO information for each
trading center whose quotations will be
protected by the Order Protection Rule
will be necessary to monitor
transactions for compliance with the
Rule on an after-the-fact basis. The
Commission believes that this
information currently is available and
understands that such information
currently is maintained by at least one
industry vendor. The Commission
believes that the cost to each trading
center to access this database will be
incremental in relation to the cost of
other services provided by the vendor.
The Commission estimates that each
trading center will incur an average
annual ongoing compliance cost of
$30,144 for a total annual cost of
$18,357,696 for all trading centers.787
In assessing the costs of systems
changes that may be required by the
Order Protection Rule, it is important to
recognize that much, if not all, of the
connectivity among trading centers
necessary to implement intermarket
price protection has already been put in
place. For example, trading centers for
exchange-listed securities already are
connected through the ITS. The
Commission understands that, at least
as an interim solution, ITS facilities and
rules can be modified relatively easily
and at low cost to provide the current
ITS participants a means of complying
with the provisions of Rule 611. With
respect to Nasdaq stocks, connectivity
among many trading centers already is
established through private linkages.
Routing out to other trading centers
when necessary to obtain the best prices
for Nasdaq stocks is an integral part of
the business plan of many trading
centers, even when not affirmatively
required by best execution
responsibilities. Moreover, a variety of
private vendors currently offer
connectivity to NMS trading centers for
both exchange-listed and Nasdaq stocks.
Many of the broker-dealers that are nonSRO trading centers that will be subject
to the Rule already employ smart order
routing technology, either their own
systems or those of outside vendors,
which should limit the cost of
implementing systems changes. The
Commission also understands that the
cost to the Plan processors to
787 This estimate was included in the
Reproposing Release. The Commission continues to
estimate that each trading center will incur an
average annual ongoing compliance cost of $30,144
for a total annual cost of $18,357,696 for all trading
centers. This figure was calculated as follows: (16
compliance hours × $103) + (8 information
technology hours × $67) + (4 legal hours × $82) ×
12 months = $30,144 per trading center × 609
trading centers = $18,357,696. See supra, notes 732
to 735 for notation as to hourly rates.
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incorporate the Order Protection Rule
and its exceptions will be minimal.
In determining these estimates the
Commission also has considered that
many market participants are already
making changes to their systems to
become more competitive. Many of the
changes being made will assist the
market participants in preparing for
implementation of the Order Protection
Rule. For example, Nasdaq, which
previously did not have an order routing
system, purchased Brut, LLC last year in
order to acquire access to such a system.
The Commission believes that this
acquisition should reduce the costs that
will be incurred by Nasdaq to
implement the Order Protection Rule.
The Commission also notes that the
NYSE is in the process of modifying its
Direct+ System to make more quotations
available on an automated basis.788
These changes that the NYSE has
undertaken should reduce the cost of
additional systems changes needed to
implement the Order Protection Rule.
Overall, the Commission believes that
the Order Protection Rule will produce
significant benefits that justify the costs
of implementation of the Rule.
B. Access Rule
Rule 610 of Regulation NMS sets forth
new standards governing means of
access to quotations in NMS stocks.
These standards will prohibit trading
centers from imposing unfairly
discriminatory terms that would prevent
or inhibit the efficient access of any
person through members, subscribers, or
customers of such trading center, and
enable access to NMS quotations
through private linkages, rather than
mandating a collective intermarket
linkage facility. In addition, the Rule is
designed to ensure the fairness and
accuracy of displayed quotations by
establishing an outer limit on the cost of
accessing protected quotations and any
other quotations at the best bid and offer
of no more than $0.003 per share (or
0.3% of the quotation price per share for
quotations priced less than $1). Rule
610 also requires SROs to establish,
maintain, and enforce rules that would,
among other things, prohibit their
members from engaging in a pattern or
practice of displaying quotations that
lock or cross the automated quotations
of other trading centers. Finally, the
adopted amendment to Rule 301 of
Regulation ATS lowers the threshold
that triggers the Regulation ATS fair
788 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
50173 (Aug. 10, 2004), 69 FR 50407 (Aug. 16, 2004),
50277 (Aug. 26, 2004), 69 FR 53759 (Sept. 2, 2004)
and 50667 (Nov. 15, 2004), 69 FR 67980 (Nov. 22,
2004) (SR–NYSE–2004–05).
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37583
access requirements from 20% to 5% of
average daily volume in a security.
1. Benefits
The Commission believes that the
adopted Access Rule will help achieve
the statutory objectives for the NMS by
promoting fair and efficient access to
each individual market. By enabling
reliance on private linkages, rather than
mandating a collective intermarket
linkage facility, the access provisions of
Rule 610(a) and (b) allow market centers
to connect through flexible and cost
effective technologies widely used in
the markets today, particularly in the
market for Nasdaq-listed stocks. This
will allow firms to capitalize on the
dramatic improvements in
communications and processing
technologies in recent years, and
thereby enhance the linking of all
markets for the future NMS. Private
linkages also will provide flexibility to
meet the needs of different market
participants and allow competitive
forces to determine the specific nature
and cost of connectivity. The access
provisions of Rule 610(a) and (b) thus
should allow market participants to
fairly and efficiently route orders to
execute against the best displayed
quotations for a stock, wherever such
quotations are displayed in the NMS.
The Commission believes that fair and
efficient access to the best displayed
quotations of all trading centers is
critical to achieving best execution of
those orders.
The access provisions of Rule 610(a)
and (b) also will promote fair and
efficient means of access to quotations
by prohibiting a trading center from
unfairly discriminating against nonmembers or non-subscribers that
attempt to access its quotations through
a member or subscriber of such trading
center. Such fair access to the
quotations of other trading centers is
critical for access to all displayed
quotations and compliance with the
adopted Order Protection Rule and
broker-dealers’ duty of best execution.
The fee limitation of Rule 610(c) will
address the potential distortions caused
by substantial, disparate fees. The wider
the disparity in the level of access fees
among different market centers, the less
useful and accurate are the prices of
displayed quotations. As a result of the
adopted fee limitation, displayed prices
will more closely reflect actual costs to
trade, thereby enhancing the usefulness
of market information. The fee
limitation also will establish a level
playing field across all market
participants and trading centers. The
rule promotes the NMS objective of
equal regulation of markets and broker-
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dealers by applying equally to all types
of trading centers and all types of
market participants.789 As noted above
in Section III.A.2, although ECNs and
other types of trading centers, including
SROs, may currently charge access fees,
market makers have not been permitted
to charge any fee for counterparties
accessing their quotations. The
Commission believes, however, that it is
consistent with the Quote Rule for
market makers to charge fees for access
to their quotations pursuant to Rule
610(c), so long as such fees meet the
requirements of Rule 610(c).
The fee limitation also will address
‘‘outlier’’ trading centers that otherwise
might charge high fees to other market
participants required to access their
quotations by the Order Protection Rule.
In the absence of a fee limitation, the
adoption of the Order Protection Rule
and private linkages could significantly
boost the viability of the outlier
business model. Outlier markets might
well try to take advantage of intermarket
price protection by acting essentially as
a toll booth between price levels. Even
though high fee markets likely would be
the last market to which orders would
be routed, prices could not move to the
next level until someone routed an
order to take out the displayed price at
the outlier market. Such a business
model would detract from the
usefulness of quotation information and
impede market efficiency and
competition. The fee cap will limit the
outlier business model. It will place all
markets on a level playing field in terms
of the fees they can charge and
ultimately the rebates they can pass on
to liquidity providers. Some markets
might choose to charge lower fees,
thereby increasing their ranking in the
preferences of order routers. Others
might charge the full $0.003 and rebate
a substantial proportion to liquidity
providers.790 Competition will
determine which strategy is most
successful.791 The Rule also precludes a
trading center from charging high fees
selectively to competitors, practices that
have occurred in the market for Nasdaq
stocks.792
789 Section 11A(c)(1)(F) of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. 78k–1(c)(1)(F).
790 Nothing in Rule 610(c) will preclude an SRO
or other trading center from taking action to limit
fees beyond what is required by the rule, and
trading centers will have flexibility in establishing
their fee schedules to comply with Rule 610(c),
consistent with existing requirements of the
Exchange Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder.
791 The Commission believes that the fee
limitation on protected quotations priced less than
$1.00 will provide the same benefits.
792 Rule 610(c).
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Moreover, the fee limitation is
necessary to achieve the purposes of the
Exchange Act. If outlier markets are
allowed to charge high fees and pass
most of them through as rebates, the
published quotations of such markets
would not reliably indicate the true
price that is actually available to
investors or that would be realized by
liquidity providers. Section 11A(c)(1)(B)
of the Exchange Act authorizes the
Commission to adopt rules assuring the
fairness and usefulness of quotation
information. For quotations to be fair
and useful, there must be some limit on
the extent to which the true price for
those who access quotations can vary
from the displayed price. Consequently,
the $0.003 fee limitation will further the
statutory purposes of the NMS by
harmonizing quotation practices and
precluding the distortive effects of
exorbitant fees. Moreover, the fee
limitation is necessary to further the
statutory purpose of enabling brokerdealers to route orders in a manner
consistent with the operation of the
NMS.793 To protect limit orders, orders
must be routed to those markets
displaying the best-priced quotations.
This purpose would be thwarted if
market participants were allowed to
charge exorbitant fees that distort
quoted prices.
As discussed above in Section III.A.2,
the Commission agrees that the access
fee limitation should apply to manual
quotations that are best bids and offers
to the same extent it applies to protected
quotations, to preclude any incentive for
trading centers to display manual
quotations as a means to charge a higher
access fee. In addition, the Commission
recognizes that at present a trading
center’s execution quality statistics will
be evaluated against the NBBO, whether
that quotation is a manual or automated
quotation. The Commission therefore
has modified the proposed fee
limitation in Rule 610(c) to apply to any
quotation that is the best bid or best
offer of an exchange, the ADF, or The
NASDAQ Market Center, in addition to
any protected quotations as defined in
Rule 600(b)(57).794
The restrictions on locking or crossing
quotations in Rule 610(d) will promote
fair and orderly markets. Locked and
crossed markets can cause confusion
among investors concerning trading
793 Section 11A(c)(1)(E) of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. 78k–1(c)(1)(E), authorizes the Commission to
adopt rules assuring that broker-dealers transmit
orders for NMS stocks in a manner consistent with
the establishment and operation of a national
market system.
794 In addition, the Commission notes that the
access standards in Rule 610(a) and (b) apply to all
quotations, not just automated quotations.
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interest in a stock. Restricting the
practice of submitting locking or
crossing quotations therefore will
enhance the usefulness of quotation
information. Consistent with the
approach to trade-through protection,
however, Rule 610(d) will allow
automated quotations to lock or cross
manual quotations. Rule 610(d) thereby
addresses the concern that manual
quotations may not be fully accessible
and recognizes that allowing automated
quotations to lock or cross manual
quotations may provide useful market
information regarding the accessibility
of quotations. The Commission believes,
however, that an automated quotation is
entitled to protection from locking or
crossing quotations. When two market
participants are willing to trade at the
same quoted price, giving priority to the
first-displayed automated quotation will
encourage posting of quotations and
contribute to fair and orderly markets.
The basic principle underlying the NMS
is to promote fair competition among
markets, but within a system that also
promotes interaction between all of the
buyers and sellers in a particular NMS
stock. Allowing market participants
simply to ignore accessible quotations
in other markets and routinely display
locking and crossing quotations is
inconsistent with this principle. The
restrictions on locking or crossing
quotations, in conjunction with the
Order Protection Rule, should
encourage trading against displayed
quotations and enhance the depth and
liquidity of the markets.
Finally, lowering of the fair access
threshold of Rule 301(b)(5) under
Regulation ATS 795 from 20% to 5% of
average daily trading volume in a
security will further strengthen access to
the full range of services of ATSs with
significant trading volume in NMS
stocks. Such access is particularly
important for the success of the private
linkage approach adopted for access to
quotations. The lowering of the fair
access threshold also will make its
coverage consistent with the existing
5% threshold triggering the order
display and execution access
requirements of Rule 301(b)(3) of
Regulation ATS.796 As a result, each
ATS that is required to disseminate its
quotations in the consolidated data
stream also will be prohibited from
unfairly prohibiting or limiting market
participants from becoming a subscriber
or customer.
In adopting Rule 610 and the
amendment to Rule 301 of Regulation
ATS, the Commission seeks to help
795 17
796 17
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ensure that securities transactions can
be executed efficiently, at prices
established by vigorous and fair
competition among market centers. By
enabling fair access and transparent
pricing among diverse marketplaces
within a unified national market, the
Commission believes that the access
provisions will foster efficiency,
enhance competition, and contribute to
the best execution of orders for NMS
securities.
2. Costs
The Commission believes that Rule
610 and the amendment to Rule 301 of
Regulation ATS will not impose
significant costs on most trading centers
and market participants. When
assessing the costs of access, it is
important to recognize that much, if not
all, of the connectivity among trading
centers has already been put in place.
For example, trading centers for
exchange-listed securities already are
connected through the ITS. The
Commission understands that the ITS
facilities and rules that currently
provide intermarket access for
exchange-listed stocks could be
modified relatively easily and at low
cost to provide the current ITS
participants a means of access, at least
as an interim measure until private
linkages are fully established for
exchange-listed stocks. In addition,
private linkages already are widely used
in the equity markets, particularly for
trading in Nasdaq-listed stocks.
Moreover, a variety of private vendors
currently offer connectivity to NMS
trading centers for both exchange-listed
and Nasdaq stocks, and many brokerdealers already employ smart order
routing technology. The Commission
also notes that trading centers already
are making changes to their systems to
become more competitive. The changes
being made will assist those trading
centers in preparing for implementation
of the Access Rule.797 The Commission
therefore believes that the system
changes necessary to meet the new
access standards will be minor.798
While commenters were generally
supportive of the Commission’s
proposal to employ private linkages to
797 For example, Nasdaq, which previously did
not have an order routing system, purchased Brut,
LLC last year in order to acquire access to such a
system. The Commission believes that this
acquisition should reduce the costs that will be
incurred by Nasdaq to implement the Access Rule.
798 One commenter, however, felt that the
bilateral links required for private linkages would
be particularly burdensome to smaller market
centers compared to an ITS-type structure. Letter
from Donald E. Weeden to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated June 30, 2004, at 9–
10.
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provide access between markets, some
commenters (both those supporting and
those opposing the reproposed access
standards) voiced their concerns about
the potential need to develop, and the
costs of developing, connections to
numerous small trading centers in the
ADF.799 Several commenters felt that
non-SRO trading centers should make
their quotations available through the
automatic execution facilities of an
SRO, thereby requiring other market
participants to only have to maintain
access to six or seven markets, rather
than potentially dozens.800 In contrast,
one commenter that is an ADF
participant stated its belief that the
proposal to require ADF participants to
establish the necessary connectivity that
would facilitate efficient access to their
quotations would create a cost barrier
that discriminates against smaller firms
in the ADF.801
The Commission does not believe that
its adopted access approach in Rule
610(b)(1) discriminates against smaller
firms or creates a barrier to access for
innovative new market entrants. Rather,
smaller firms and new entrants have a
range of alternatives from which to
choose that will allow them to avoid
incurring any costs to meet the
connectivity requirements of Rule
610(b)(1) if they wish to do so. This
approach is fully consistent with
Congressional policy set forth in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, which
directs the Commission to consider
significant alternatives to regulations
that accomplish the stated objectives of
the Exchange Act and minimize the
economic impact on small entities.802
Small ATSs are exempt from
participation in the consolidated
quotation system and, therefore, from
the connectivity requirements of Rule
610. Under Rule 301(b)(3) of Regulation
ATS, an ATS is required to display its
quotations in the consolidated quotation
stream only in those securities for
which its trading volume reaches 5% of
total trading volume. Consequently,
supra, section III.A.1.
e.g., Knight Trading Group Reproposal
Letter at 5; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 17–18
(expressing the view that trading facilities with less
than a five percent volume should be required to
make their quotations available through an SRO
trading facility); STA Reproposal Letter at 6; Type
N Reproposal Letter at 1.
801 NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 4–6.
802 5 U.S.C. 603(c). In the Reproposing Release,
the Commission noted that only two of the
approximately 600 broker-dealers (including ATSs)
that would be subject to Rule 610 are considered
small (total capital of less than $500,000) for
purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. 69 FR at
77493. The adopted access approach provides
alternatives that will benefit a wider range of
smaller ATSs than the two that are considered
small entities.
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800 See,
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37585
smaller ATSs are not required to
provide their quotations to any SRO
(whether an SRO trading facility or the
NASD’s ADF) and thereby trigger the
access requirements of Rule 610.
Moreover, potential new entrants with
innovative trading mechanisms can
commence business without having to
incur any costs associated with
participation in the consolidated
quotation system.
Some smaller ATSs, however, may
wish to participate voluntarily in the
consolidated quotation system. Such
participation can benefit smaller firms
and promote competition among
markets by enabling smaller firms to
obtain wide distribution of their
quotations among all market
participants.803 Here, too, such firms
will have alternatives that would not
obligate them to comply with the
connectivity requirements of Rule
610(b)(1). ATSs and market makers that
wish to trade NMS stocks can choose
from a number of options for quoting
and trading. They can become a member
of a national securities exchange and
quote and trade through the exchange’s
trading facilities. They can participate
in The NASDAQ Market Center and
quote and trade through that facility. By
choosing either of these options, an ATS
or market maker would not create a new
connectivity point that all other market
participants must reach and would not
be subject to Rule 610(b)(1). Some firms,
however, may not want to participate in
an SRO trading facility. These ATSs and
market makers can quote and trade in
the OTC market. The existence of the
NASD’s ADF makes this third choice
possible by providing a facility for
displaying quotations and reporting
transactions in the consolidated data
stream.804
As noted above in Section III.A.1,
however, the NASD is not statutorily
required to provide an order execution
functionality in the ADF. The
Commission believes that market
makers and ECNs should continue to
have the option of operating in the OTC
market, rather than on an exchange or
The NASDAQ Market Center. As noted
in the Commission’s order approving
Nasdaq’s SuperMontage trading facility,
this ability to operate in the ADF is an
803 See supra, note 566 (the Commission’s
Advisory Committee on Market Information
recommended retention of the consolidated display
requirement because, among other things, it ‘‘may
promote market competition by assuring that
information from newer or smaller exchanges is
widely distributed.’’).
804 Under Rule 301(b)(3) of Regulation ATS, 17
CFR 242.301(b)(3), an ATS is required to display its
quotations in the consolidated data stream only in
those securities for which its trading volume
reaches 5% of total trading volume.
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important competitive alternative to
Nasdaq or exchange affiliation.805
Therefore, the Commission has
determined not to require small trading
centers to make their quotations
accessible through an SRO trading
facility.
Instead, Rule 610(b)(1) requires all
trading centers that choose to display
quotations in an SRO display-only
quotation facility (currently, the ADF) to
provide a level and cost of access to
such quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities. Rule 610(b)(1) therefore may
cause trading centers that display
quotations in the ADF to incur
additional costs to enhance the level of
access to their quotations and to lower
the cost of connectivity for market
participants seeking to access their
quotations. The extent to which these
trading centers in fact incur additional
costs to comply with the adopted access
standard will be largely within the
control of the trading center itself. As
noted above, ATSs and market makers
that wish to trade NMS stocks can
choose from a number of options for
quoting and trading, including quoting
and trading in the OTC market. As a
result, the additional connectivity
requirements of Rule 610(b) will be
triggered only by a trading center that
displays its quotations in the
consolidated data stream and chooses
not to provide access to those quotations
through an SRO trading facility.
Currently, nine SROs operate trading
facilities in NMS stocks. Market
participants throughout the securities
industry generally have established
connectivity to these nine points of
access to quotations in NMS stocks. By
choosing to display quotations in the
ADF, a trading center effectively could
require the entire industry to establish
connectivity to an additional point of
access. Potentially, many trading centers
could choose to display quotations in
the ADF, thereby significantly
increasing the overall costs of
connectivity in the NMS. Such an
inefficient outcome would become
much more likely if an ADF trading
center were not required to assume
responsibility for the additional costs
associated with its decision to display
quotations outside of an established
SRO trading facility.
Although the Exchange Act envisions
an individual broker-dealer having the
option of trading in the OTC market,806
805 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
43863 (Jan. 19, 2001), 66 FR 8020 (Jan. 26, 2001).
806 See Sections 11A(c)(3)(A) and (4) of the
Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C 78k–1(c)(3)(A) and (4).
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it does not mandate that the securities
industry in general must subsidize the
costs of accessing a broker-dealer’s
quotations in the OTC market if the
NASD chooses not to provide
connectivity. The Commission believes
that it is reasonable and appropriate to
require those ATSs and market makers
that choose to display quotations in the
ADF to bear the responsibility of
providing a level and cost of access to
their quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities. Under Rule 610(b)(1),
therefore, ADF participants will be
required to bear the costs of the
necessary connectivity to facilitate
efficient access to their quotations.807
This standard will help ensure that
additional connectivity burdens are not
imposed on the securities industry each
time an additional ADF participant
necessitates a new connectivity point by
choosing to begin displaying quotations
in the consolidated quotation stream.
The Commission believes that this
requirement will help reduce overall
industry costs by more closely aligning
the burden of additional connectivity
with those entities whose choices have
created the need for additional
connectivity.
As just discussed, the Commission
recognizes that trading centers subject to
Rule 610(b)(1) may incur costs
associated with providing access to their
quotations, although the costs will vary
depending upon the manner in which
each trading center provides such
access. The Commission notes that to
meet the standard contained in Rule
610(b)(1), a trading center will be
allowed to take advantage of the greatly
expanded connectivity options that
have been offered by competing access
service providers in recent years.808
These industry access providers have
extensive connections to a wide array of
market participants through a variety of
direct access options and private
networks. A trading center potentially
could meet the requirement of Rule
610(b)(1) by establishing connections to
and offering access through such
vendors. The option of participation in
existing market infrastructure and
systems should reduce a trading center’s
cost of compliance.809
Two commenters raised concerns
about reliance on third party private
vendors to provide access, since they
may not be regulated by the
Commission and thus could deny access
to a trading center they viewed as a
competitor, or because utilizing their
services to link to other trading centers
is outside the control of a trading
center.810 The Commission believes that
the requirement in Rule 610(b)(1) that
ADF participants provide a substantially
equivalent level of access will preclude
the ADF participant from providing
access only through a narrow range of
private access providers. The range of
access providers must be sufficient to
provide access substantially equivalent
to SRO trading facilities. In these
circumstances, and given the significant
number and variety of entities that
currently provide access services and
the competitive nature of the market for
these services, the Commission believes
that competition will be sufficient to
provide services for any trading center
choosing to utilize an outside vendor.811
Several commenters, including some
that otherwise supported the proposal,
expressed concern that requiring nondiscriminatory access to markets might
undermine the value of SRO
membership.812 The Commission does
not believe that adoption of a private
linkage approach will seriously
undermine the value of membership in
SROs that offer valuable services to their
members. First, the fact that markets
will not be allowed to impose unfairly
discriminatory terms on non-members
who obtain indirect access to quotations
through members does not mean that
non-members will obtain free access to
quotations. Members who provide
piggyback access will be providing a
useful service and presumably will
charge a fee for such service. The fee
will be subject to competitive forces and
likely will reflect the costs of SRO
membership, plus some element of
profit to the SRO’s members. As a result,
807 Thus, although market participants may still
be required to access numerous trading centers in
the ADF, the Rule should reduce the cost of access
to each such trading center by requiring the ADF
trading center to provide a cost and level of access
substantially equivalent to the level and cost of
access to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities.
808 As noted in the Commission’s order approving
the pilot program for the ADF, the reduction in
communications line costs in recent years and the
advent of competing access providers offer the
potential for multiple competitive means of access
to the various trading centers that trade NMS
stocks. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 46249,
supra note 390.
809 As the self-regulatory authority responsible for
the OTC market, the NASD must act as
‘‘gatekeeper’’ for the ADF, and, as such, will need
to closely assess the extent to which ADF
participants meet the requirements of Rule 610.
810 NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 6; STANY
Reproposal Letter at 4.
811 For example, one large ECN can be accessed
through five extranets and at least 21 other access
providers, as well as through direct connections.
See supra, note 366 and accompanying text.
812 Alliance of Floor Brokers Letter at 10; Amex
Letter, Exhibit A at 25–26; BSE Letter at 12; CHX
Letter at 14; Citigroup Letter at 12; Phlx Letter at
2; STANY Letter at 9.
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non-members that frequently make use
of indirect access are likely to contribute
indirectly to the costs of membership in
the SRO market. Moreover, the unfair
discrimination standard of Rule 610(a)
will apply only to access to quotations,
not to the full panoply of services that
markets generally provide only to their
members. These other services will be
subject to the more general fair access
provisions applicable to SROs and large
ECNs, as well as the statutory provisions
that govern SRO rules.
For the reasons discussed below, the
Commission does not believe that the
fee limitation of Rule 610(c), including
the fee limitation on non-protected
quotations at the best bid and offer, will
impose significant new costs on most
trading centers. First, a few commenters
were concerned about the costs to
market participants of administering a
fee program.813 The adopted provision,
by imposing a single accumulated fee
limitation of $0.003 (when the price of
the protected quotation is $1 or more),
greatly simplifies the fee limitation and
likely will leave existing fee practices
largely intact. For trading centers that
currently charge and collect fees and
that will continue to do so, the costs of
imposing and collecting fees are already
incurred. The fee limitation does not
require trading centers that do not
currently charge fees to begin charging
fees. If market makers determine to
begin charging fees, they likely will
collect fees through an SRO trading
facility or ECN through which they
display limit orders or quotations, and
the administration of such fee program
likely will be handled by the SRO or
ECN. Therefore, the adopted fee
limitation likely will not impose
significant new administrative costs.
Two commenters expressed a concern
with the ability to determine after-thefact whether a quotation against which
an incoming order executed was subject
to an access fee cap, given that under
the Rule a market participant could be
charged different fees based on whether
or not a quotation was protected.814 The
Commission acknowledges these
concerns, but notes that market
participants will be able to control the
extent to which their orders interact
with protected and non-protected
quotations. First, under the Order
Protection Rule, the definition of
intermarket sweep order requires market
participants to route orders to interact
only with protected quotations. The
813 Brokerage America Letter at 1; NexTrade
Reproposal Letter at 8; Oppenheimer Letter at 2;
SIA Reproposal Letter at 22; STANY Letter at 11.
814 Bloomberg Reproposal Letter at 8, note 6; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 22.
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objective can be achieved by routing an
IOC, marketable limit order with a limit
price that equals the price of the
protected quotation. The extent to
which they route to non-protected
quotations will be subject to the full
range of competitive forces, including
the fees that trading centers choose to
charge for access to non-protected
quotations.
The Commission recognizes, however,
the concern that a market participant
could intend to interact only with a
protected quotation but in fact execute
against a non-protected quotation. For
example, at the time a market
participant routes an order to a trading
center, it may be attempting to execute
against only that trading center’s best
bid or offer, which will be subject to the
fee cap under adopted Rule 610(c) (for
instance, by sending an intermarket
sweep order with a limit price equal to
the price of the protected quotation). By
the time the order arrives at the trading
center, the incoming order may, if a
better bid or offer has been displayed at
the trading center for a size smaller than
the size of the incoming order, execute
against both the new best bid or offer
and the quotation that previously was
the trading center’s best bid or offer. To
meet the requirements of Rule 610(c),
however, a trading center must ensure
that it never charges a fee in excess of
the cap for executions of an order
against its quotations that are subject to
the fee cap. The operation of this
limitation will be based on quotations as
they are displayed in the consolidated
quotation stream. Thus, the trading
center is responsible for ensuring that
any time lag between prices in its
internal systems and its quotations in
the consolidated quotation system do
not cause fees to be charged that violate
the limitation of Rule 610(c).
Compliance with this requirement
obviously will not be a problem for
trading centers that do not charge any
fees in excess of the cap. Given the often
rapid updating of quotations in NMS
stocks, however, the Commission does
not believe a trading center that charges
fees above the cap for quotations that
are not subject to the fee cap could
comply with the Rule unless it provides
a functionality that enables market
participants to assure that they will
never inadvertently be charged a fee in
excess of the cap. For example, such a
trading center could provide a ‘‘top-ofbook only’’ or ‘‘limited-fee only’’ order
functionality. By using this
functionality, market participants
themselves could assure that they were
never required to pay a fee in excess of
the levels set forth in Rule 610(c).
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Although the fee limitation is
consistent with current business
practices, the fee limitation of Rule
610(c) will affect the few markets that
currently impose access fees of greater
than $0.003 per share that apply to a
wide range of NMS stocks.815 These
markets will be required to re-evaluate
their business models in light of the
adopted fee limitation. In particular,
they likely will need to reduce the
rebates they currently pay to liquidity
providers. The adopted limitation also
will affect a few trading centers that
charge significant access fees for large
transactions in specific types of NMS
stocks, such as ETFs. It is unlikely,
however, that such fees currently
generate a large amount of revenues.816
We do not believe that the locked and
crossed provisions of Rule 610(d) will
impose significant additional costs for
the SROs. All SROs currently have rules
restricting locking and crossing
quotations in exchange-listed stocks to
comply with the provisions of the ITS
Plan. Such SROs also collect the data
and related information required to
monitor locked and crossed markets,
and the Commission believes that the
additional surveillance and enforcement
costs related to the provisions will be
minor. The Commission recognizes,
however, that Rule 610(d), by restricting
locked markets with respect to
automated quotations, could prohibit
the display of an order that would
otherwise have been displayed and
reduced the quoted spread to zero.
Although locked markets do occur a
certain percentage of the time, they do
not occur all the time, even in extremely
active stocks, and thus the average
effective spread in these stocks typically
is between one-half cent and one cent
(one cent being the minimum pricing
increment for all but a very few stocks).
Thus, the Commission believes that any
widening of average effective spreads
caused solely by the adopted rule will
be limited to the difference between a
sub-penny and penny spread. In
addition, a locked market currently may
not actually represent two market
participants willing to buy and sell at
the same price. Often the locking market
participant is not truly willing to trade
at the displayed locking price, but
instead chooses to lock rather than
execute against the already-displayed
quotation to receive a liquidity
rebate.817
815 See
supra, note 423 and accompanying text.
Commission believes that the same
analysis would apply to the fee limitation on
protected quotations priced less than $1.00.
817 See supra, notes 435 and 442.
816 The
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Finally, reducing the fair access
thresholds of Regulation ATS will
require ATSs that exceed the 5%
threshold level to comply with Rule
301(b)(5) under Regulation ATS. Rule
301(b)(5) requires ATSs, among other
things, to establish written standards for
granting access to trading on its system,
to not unreasonably prohibit or limit
access to its services, to keep records of
all grants or denials of access, and to
report such information on Form ATS–
R. The Commission believes that the
costs to meet these requirements are
justified by the need to promote fair and
efficient access to trading centers with
significant volume.
Overall, the Commission believes that
the benefits of Rule 610 and the
amendment to Rule 301 of Regulation
ATS justify the costs of implementation.
C. Sub-Penny Rule
Rule 612 will prohibit market
participants from displaying, ranking, or
accepting quotations in NMS stocks that
are priced in an increment less than
$0.01 per share, except for quotations
priced less than $1.00 per share, which
may extend to four decimal places.
1. Benefits
The Commission believes that the
markets’ conversion to decimal pricing
has benefited investors by, among other
things, clarifying and simplifying
pricing for investors, making the U.S.
securities markets more competitive
internationally, and reducing trading
costs by narrowing spreads. The
Commission is concerned, however, that
if the MPV decreases beyond a certain
point, some of the benefits of decimals
could be lost while some of the negative
effects would be exacerbated. The
Commission believes that Rule 612,
which will prohibit an MPV of less than
$0.01 for the vast majority of NMS
stocks, will have several benefits. The
majority of the commenters supported
the proposal and noted various benefits
of this approach.818
The Commission believes that subpenny quoting impedes transparency by
reducing market depth at the NBBO and
increasing quote flickering. In an
environment where the NBBO can
change very quickly, broker-dealers
have more difficulty in carrying out
their duties of best execution and
complying with other regulatory
requirements that require them to
identify the best bid or offer available at
a particular moment (such as the
Commission’s short sale rule 819 and
818 See
supra, section IV.C.1.
10a–1 under the Exchange Act, 17 CFR
240.10a–1.
819 Rule
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NASD’s Manning rule 820). Rule 612
should increase market depth at the
NBBO and help reduce quote flickering.
In addition, the Commission agrees
with the many commenters who
believed that prohibiting sub-penny
quoting would deter the practice of
stepping ahead of exposed trading
interest by an economically
insignificant amount. Limit orders
provide liquidity to the market and
perform an important price-setting
function. If a quotation or order can lose
execution priority because of
economically insignificant price
improvement from a later-arriving
quotation or order, liquidity could
diminish and some market participants
could incur greater execution costs. As
one commenter, the Investment
Company Institute, stated, ‘‘[t]his
potential for the increased steppingahead of limit orders would create a
significant disincentive for market
participants to enter any sizeable
volume into the markets and would
reduce further the value of displaying
limit orders.’’ 821 Improved liquidity
should decrease the costs of trading,
especially for large orders.822 Market
participants may be more likely to place
limit orders if they know that other
market participants cannot quote ahead
of them by a sub-penny amount.
2. Costs
The Commission recognizes that Rule
612 will impose certain costs on the
U.S. securities markets. Currently, a few
NMS stocks are quoted—and in the
absence of the rule, others in the future
could be quoted—in sub-penny
increments. For these NMS stocks,
quoted spreads will be wider than they
otherwise would be, because Rule 612
will prohibit market participants from
narrowing the spread by a sub-penny
amount.
A few commenters argued that
investors would incur costs from
artificially widened spreads as a result
IM–2110–2.
Letter at 20.
822 One commenter argued that a prohibition on
sub-penny quoting should not affect institutional
investors’ trading costs because improvements in
trading technology (such as auto-execution and
VWAP trading algorithms) allow them to fill large
orders at minimal cost. See Tower Research Letter
at 9–10. While the Commission agrees that such
improvements have been useful, it believes that this
commenter did not consider the costs involved in
having to develop these technologies in response,
at least in part, to insufficient liquidity. Moreover,
the Commission believes that this commenter also
did not consider the positive externalities that limit
orders have on price discovery and price
competition; orders that execute without being
displayed do not contribute to price discovery and
price competition.
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821 ICI
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of Rule 612.823 One commenter
analyzed trading in six high-volume
securities and concluded that Rule 612
would have costs of over $400 million
in these securities alone due to wider
spreads.824 Another commenter stated
that, if all markets traded QQQQ solely
in sub-pennies, the savings would be
approximately $150 million per year.825
A third commenter argued that allowing
sub-penny quoting in ‘‘23 of the most
appropriate securities’’ would generate
annual savings of anywhere between
$342 million and $1.9 billion.826 No
other commenters provided any
quantitative analysis of the costs that a
sub-penny quoting rule would impose
by widening spreads to at least a full
penny.827
The commenters who attempted to
quantify the costs appear to assume that
all trading activity in the securities they
discuss would occur at narrower subpenny spreads if Rule 612 did not exist.
The Commission does not believe that
these commenters provided any
evidence to justify that assumption.
Currently, Nasdaq and the national
securities exchanges generally do not
permit quoting in sub-pennies; this
practice exists on only a small number
of ATSs, and only for a small number
of securities. Because spreads on
Nasdaq and the exchanges already
cannot be smaller than $0.01, Rule 612
will not require these markets to take
any action that would cause spreads to
widen. Therefore, the lack of sub-penny
spreads on these markets should not be
considered costs of Rule 612. With
respect to the ATSs that currently do
permit some NMS stocks to be quoted
in sub-pennies, Commission staff
performed a study to better assess and
respond to commenters’ claims.828
Based on that study, Commission staff
estimated that the costs of widened
spreads in these securities would be
approximately $48 million annually (or
823 See Chakrabarty and Chung Study at 24
(stating that, for high volume stocks, ‘‘the spread
reduction in the absence of binding constraints
* * * translates into savings of millions of
dollars’’); INET Reproposal Letter at 3; Instinet
Letter at 50; Mercatus Center Letter at 9; Tower
Research Letter at 9.
824 Tower Research Letter at 9.
825 Instinet Letter at 50.
826 INET Reproposal Letter at 3.
827 However, one commenter stated: ‘‘When
analyzed in terms of costs and benefits, we believe
that the costs of sub-penny quoting (i.e., less
liquidity at quotes, more transactions required to
fill large orders, increased quote flickering, and
increased ability to displace orders through
minimal price improvement) far exceed any
incremental benefits that market participants might
enjoy through additional pricing conventions for
their limit orders.’’ Deutsche Bank Reproposal
Letter at 3. This commenter did not provide
empirical evidence to justify that assertion.
828 See OEA December 2004 Sub-Penny Analysis.
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approximately $33 million if the
Commission were to exempt QQQQ
from Rule 612).829
In this study, Commission staff
obtained public data from NYSE’s
‘‘Trade and Quote’’ files for all NYSElisted and Amex-listed stocks, and
public data from the Nastraq trade file
for Nasdaq-listed stocks, for the period
June 7–10, 2004. Based on trading
activity of the Nasdaq-listed securities,
Commission staff estimated that 1.5% of
all trades executed at a per-share price
over $1.00 were reported in a sub-penny
increment.830 These trades accounted
for 4.7% of share volume. However, not
all trades that were reported as having
a sub-penny price resulted from a subpenny quotation. Commission staff
excluded VWAP trades which were
marked as such in the Nastraq file.831
Based on this screened dataset,
Commission staff estimated that 1.4% of
trades were reported in sub-penny
increments, accounting for 2.4% of
share volume. Commission staff then
calculated the dollar cost if all such
trades executed at the near-side penny
rather than at a sub-penny amount. This
price difference, multiplied by the
executed volume, produced a dollar cost
per trade.832 Summed across all subpenny trades, the average daily cost in
this sample was $80,973. At 252 trading
days per year, this resulted in an
estimate of $20,400,235 on an annual
basis.
Commission staff performed a similar
analysis on the trade data for Amexlisted stocks, except that the dataset did
not permit VWAP trades to be excluded.
Commission staff estimated that, on an
annualized basis, the gross costs
829 The Commission believes that INET overstated
the potential costs of Rule 612. INET’s methodology
for computing the potential savings to investors
from quoting in sub-pennies appears to be based on
the incorrect assumption that all of the stocks
selected for their sample would trade with the same
price-point distribution as the average of JDSU,
SIRI, and QQQQ.
830 Trades executed at a per-share price below
$1.00 were excluded from the sample as Rule 612
will not prohibit sub-penny quotations priced less
than $1.00.
831 Executions occurring at a sub-penny price
resulting from a midpoint, VWAP, or similar
volume-weighted pricing algorithm are not
prohibited by Rule 612. For purposes of this study,
Commission staff excluded all other trades that had
a condition code other than ‘‘regular way’’ (e.g.,
trades reported after normal trading hours, bunched
trades, next-day trades, previous reference price
trades, and late trades).
832 For example, the cost to a sub-penny trade at
price $25.248 for 300 shares is as follows. The
assumption is that, without sub-penny quotations,
this trade would have occurred at $25.25—a
difference of $0.002 per share. At 300 shares, this
trade incurs a cost of $0.60 ($0.002 x 300). A subpenny trade at $25.242 would incur a cost of $0.002
per share under the assumption that, under Rule
612, it would execute at $25.24.
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resulting from slightly wider spreads
would be $16 million (or only $1.2
million if QQQQ were excluded).
Similarly, Commission staff estimated
that the gross costs from wider spreads
would be approximately $12 million
annually for NYSE-listed stocks.
Another potential cost of Rule 612 is
that market participants that have
developed systems allowing their users
to quote in sub-pennies will, for most
NMS stocks, lose the ability to gain any
market advantage from such
enhancements. In addition, any market
participant that currently allows its
users to display, rank, or accept orders
or quotations in sub-pennies will incur
costs in reprogramming its systems to
prevent the entry of sub-penny orders or
quotations. The Commission believes,
however, that these costs are not
significant. Currently, only a few
ATSs—but not Nasdaq or any of the
national securities exchanges—permit
sub-penny quoting, and then only in a
small number of securities. These ATSs
will have to make only minor
adjustments to their systems to comply
with Rule 612. One commenter, a
technology firm that develops software
and systems for electronic securities
trading, stated, ‘‘we do not believe that
there are significant technological or
structural impediments to immediate
implementation’’ of Rule 612.833 No
commenter indicated that the
compliance costs of ATSs that currently
permit sub-penny quoting would be
significant.
Finally, the Commission believes that
paragraph (b) of Rule 612, which
prohibits quotations below $1.00 per
share from extending beyond four
decimal places, will have negligible
systems costs. The Commission
currently is not aware of any market that
quotes and trades NMS stocks in
increments beyond four decimal places
and believes, therefore, that no market
will incur systems costs to limit such
quotations to a maximum of four
decimal places.
After carefully considering all the
comments received, the Commission
believes that, on balance, the benefits of
Rule 612 will justify the costs.
D. Market Data Rules and Plan
Amendments
The Commission is adopting
amendments to the rules relating to the
dissemination of market information to
the public. In particular, the
Commission is adopting amendments to
the Plans to modify the current formulas
for allocating market data revenues to
the SROs, and to require the
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Reproposal Letter at 4.
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37589
establishment of non-voting advisory
committees comprised of interested
parties other than SROs. In addition, the
Commission is rescinding the current
prohibition in Exchange Act Rule
11Aa3–1 (redesignated as Rule 601) on
SROs and their members from
independently distributing their own
trade reports, and is adopting an
amendment to Exchange Act Rule
11Ac1–2 (redesignated as Rule 603) to
incorporate uniform standards pursuant
to which they may independently
distribute their own trade reports and
quotations (outside of providing the
requisite information to Plan
processors). The Commission is further
amending Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–2
(redesignated as Rule 603) to make
explicit that all SROs must act jointly
through the Plans and through a single
processor per security to disseminate
consolidated market information in
NMS stocks to the public. Finally, the
Commission is adopting amendments to
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–2
(redesignated as Rule 603) to streamline
and simplify the consolidated display
requirements by reducing the data
required to be displayed under the Rule,
and by limiting the range of the Rule to
the display of such data in trading and
order-routing contexts.
1. Revenue Allocation Formula
a. Benefits
The Commission believes, and a
number of commenters agreed, that the
adopted amendment to the Plans
modifying the current formulas for
allocating market data revenues will be
beneficial to the marketplace because
the new formula will allocate revenues
to SROs based on the value of their
quotations in addition to their trades.834
The current formulas allocate Plan
revenues based solely on the number or
share volume of an SRO’s reported
trades, and do not allocate revenues to
those market centers that generate
quotations with the best prices and the
largest sizes that are an important
source of public price discovery. The
new allocation formula also should help
to reduce the economic and regulatory
distortions caused by the current
formulas, including wash sales, trade
shredding, and SRO print facilities.
Because the adopted formula will
address these distortive practices and
would allocate revenues to those market
centers that provide the most useful
market information, the Commission
834 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 7–8;
BSE Reproposal Letter at 8; ICI Letter at 21; STA
Reproposal Letter I at 8; Vanguard Letter at 6.
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believes that the NMS will be benefited
as a whole.
The adopted new revenue allocation
formula will encompass a two-step
process. The initial step of the adopted
formula, the ‘‘Security Income
Allocation,’’ allocates a Network’s
distributable revenues among the many
different securities that are included in
the Network’s data stream primarily
based on the square root of the dollar
volume of trading in each security. Of
those that commented on this aspect of
the formula, many generally agreed with
the benefits of the Commission’s use of
square roots.835 Some commenters,
however, believed that the use of the
square root function overly rewards
illiquid stocks at the expense of liquid
stocks.836 To address this concern, the
adopted formula modifies the square
root allocation with respect to very
inactively traded stocks by limiting the
revenues that can be allocated to a
single Network security to an amount
that is no greater than $4 per qualified
transaction report.837 The amount that
exceeds this limitation will be
reallocated among all Network
securities in direct proportion to their
dollar volume of trading.
Following this initial distribution of
revenues, the next step in the process is
to allocate the revenues distributed to
an individual security among the
various SROs that trade the security
based on each SRO’s trading and
quoting activity. Specifically, under the
‘‘Trading Share’’ criterion, fifty percent
of the revenues allocated to a particular
security will be allocated to SROs based
on their proportion of the total dollar
volume and number of qualified trades
(transactions that have a dollar volume
of $5,000 or greater) in that security. A
few commenters on the original
proposal stated that small trades
(transactions that have a dollar value of
less than $5000) should be entitled to
partial credit under this criterion
because these trades also contribute to
public price discovery.838 The
Commission acknowledged the benefits
of small trades and provided for a
proportional allocation of revenues for
835 Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 15; Nasdaq Letter II
at 32; NYSE Reproposal Letter II at 3; Specialist
Assoc. Letter at 16, note 21.
836 See, e.g., ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 11;
CBOE Letter at 11; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 13.
837 The limit of $4 per qualified transaction report
is analogous to the reproposal’s limit on Trading
Shares to $2 per qualified transaction report.
Whereas the reproposed limit of $2 applied to the
50% Trading Share allocation (described below),
the adopted limit of $4 applies to the 100%
Security Income Allocation. See supra section
V.A.3.
838 See, e.g., BSE Letter at 16; CHX Letter at 19–
20; E*Trade Letter at 11–12.
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such trades under the reproposed
formula. The adopted formula also
includes this provision. The Trading
Share measure is intended to allocate
revenue to those SROs that actively
trade in the security, thereby providing
liquidity and price discovery, while
reducing the potential for the shredding
of trade volume.
Under the ‘‘Quoting Share’’ criterion,
fifty percent of the revenues allocated to
a particular security under the Security
Income Allocation measure will be
allocated to an SRO based on the SRO’s
proportion of credits earned for each
second of time and dollar value of size
that the SRO’s automated best bid or
offer during regular trading hours equals
the price of the NBBO in that security.
The Quoting Share criterion of the
adopted formula is intended to do what
the current formulas do not—allocate
revenue to those markets whose
quotations frequently equal the best
prices and for the largest sizes. Many
commenters agreed with the
Commission that, if the Networks were
to continue allocating revenues to the
SROs, the current allocation formulas
needed to be updated.839 In particular,
some of these commenters noted the
benefits of adding a quoting component
to the new formula,840 especially if
revenues are allocated only for
automated and accessible quotations.
In sum, the Commission believes that
the greatest benefit of allocating Plan
revenues to the SROs based equally on
the Trading Share and Quoting Share
measures is that such measures will
allocate revenues to an SRO for its
overall contribution of both quotations
and trades, while reducing the incentive
for distortive trade reporting practices
caused by the current formulas.
Investors will benefit from the adopted
new formula because these broad-based
measures will allocate revenues to those
SROs that provide investors with the
most useful market information, and
thus that contribute to public price
discovery, by allocating them a larger
portion of Plan revenues.
b. Costs
The Commission recognizes that the
current allocation formulas have been
used since the creation of the Plans and
Networks in the 1970s, and that the
SROs and the Network processors have
839 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 7;
BSE Letter at 15; Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter
at 4; Harris Reproposal Letter at 11; ICI Letter at 21;
JP Morgan Reproposal Letter at 2; NYSE Reproposal
Letter II at 3; STA Letter at 7; UBS Letter at 10;
Vanguard Letter at 6.
840 See, e.g., Bloomberg Tradebook Letter at 7–8;
Morgan Stanley Letter at 22–23; NYSE Reproposal
Letter II at 3; STA Letter at 7; Vanguard Letter at
6.
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become familiar with those formulas for
purposes of allocating revenues and
structuring their businesses. Because the
adopted allocation formula is more
detailed than the current formulas, the
Network processors will have to learn
the particular features of the new
formula and will have to consider SRO
quotations in addition to reported trades
as a measure for allocating Plan
revenues. Accordingly, the Network
processors, or some other entity retained
by the Networks, will be required to
develop a program to calculate the
Security Income Allocation, Trading
Shares, and Quoting Shares of the SRO
participants. All of the data necessary
for implementation of the formula will
be disseminated through the
consolidated data stream on a real-time
basis. If a single entity were retained to
handle the task for all three Networks,
the Commission estimates that it will
cost approximately $1 million annually
to make the requisite calculations under
the proposed new formula and to
disseminate the results to the SRO
participants on a daily basis. This
estimated cost of implementation and
compliance represents only 1⁄4 of one
percent of the total revenues collected
and distributed through the Plans for
2004.
The Commission received a number
of comments regarding the potential
cost and complexity of the originally
proposed revenue allocation formula.841
The Commission notes that, consistent
with the approach of the Order
Protection Rule and the Access Rule, it
eliminated in the reproposed formula
the most complex elements of the
proposed allocation formula that were
intended primarily to address the
problem of manual quotations—the
‘‘NBBO Improvement Share’’ criterion
and the automatic cut-off for manual
quotations left at the NBBO under the
Quoting Share criterion. The adopted
amendment also eliminates these two
elements. Because the adopted formula
will allocate revenues for only
automated quotations, and manual
quotations will be excluded from any
revenue allocation, the Commission
believes that an NBBO Improvement
Share criterion and automatic cut-off for
manual quotations are not necessary in
the new formula. As a result, the
adopted formula is substantially less
complex than originally proposed.
Some commenters argued that it
would be overly costly and complex to
calculate the other elements of the
841 See, e.g., Angel Letter I at 11; BSE Letter at 15,
18; Brut Letter at 22–23; Callcott Letter at 4; CBOE
Letter at 2, 9; Instinet Letter at 42; ISE Letter at 9;
Nasdaq Letter II at 31; NSX Letter at 7; NYSE Letter,
Attachment at 11; Phlx Letter at 3–4.
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proposed formula.842 The Commission
does not agree. An SRO’s Trading Share,
for example, will not be materially more
difficult to calculate than the current
Network C formula, which is based on
an average of an SRO’s proportion of
trades and share volume. The Security
Income Allocation uses the square root
function which is a simple arithmetic
calculation. In addition, some
commenters believed that the Quoting
Share, which incorporates the total
dollar size of the NBBO in a stock
throughout the trading year, would
result in astronomically high numbers
that would be extremely difficult to
calculate.843 In fact, the largest number
of quote credits in a year for even the
highest price stock with the greatest
displayed depth at the NBBO is very
unlikely to reach beyond the trillions, a
number well within the capabilities of
even the most basic spreadsheet
program.844 Moreover, the allocation is
determined by the proportion of an
SRO’s quote credits in relation to other
SROs, not the absolute amount of quote
credits.
Some commenters were concerned
that the inclusion of quotations in the
proposed new allocation formula could
lead new types of ‘‘gaming’’ of the
formula, such as flashing quotations
with no real intention to trade at those
prices simply to earn more quote
credits—and thereby more revenues—
under the Quoting Share measure.845
Commenters also were concerned that
such practices would increase quotation
traffic and bandwidth costs, but with
little or no benefit for the quality of the
consolidated data stream.846 Because
the Commission recognizes that abusive
quoting behavior is a legitimate concern,
the adopted formula incorporates a
number of modifications to minimize
the potential for abusive or costly
quoting behavior. First, the adopted
842 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 22–23; CBOE Letter at
2, 9; NSX Letter at 7.
843 See, e.g., CBOE Letter at 14 (calculation of
Quote Credits will ‘‘yield astronomical numbers’’
that ‘‘can be expressed only in exponential terms’’);
NSX Letter at 7 (calculation of large number of
Quote Credits is ‘‘particularly ludicrous’’).
844 For example, assume a stock with an average
price of $100 per share has an unusually large
average quoted size of 200,000 shares at both the
national best bid and the national best offer
throughout every second of the trading year. Over
an average 252 trading days during a year, the total
Quote Credits in this stock would be 235.9 trillion
($100*400,000*252*23,400 seconds per trading
day). Quote Credits are only calculated for
individual Network stocks and are not totaled
across all Network stocks.
845 See, e.g., ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 13; CHX
Letter at 19; Instinet Reproposal Letter at 14; SIA
Reproposal Letter at 30.
846 See, e.g., Financial Information Forum
Reproposal Letter at 4; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at
13; SIA Reproposal Letter at 30.
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formula clarifies that a quotation must
be displayed by the Network processor
for a minimum of one full second of
time before it is entitled to earn any
quote credits.847 Second, the adopted
formula clarifies that, consistent with
the approach of the Order Protection
Rule, each SRO participant in a Network
is entitled to earn quote credits only for
the SRO’s best bid and best offer.848 By
limiting the number of separate
quotations that are entitled to earn quote
credits, the adopted formula both
reduces the ability of market
participants to ‘‘shred’’ their quotes
among many different markets and
promotes equal regulation of exchange
SROs, Nasdaq, and the NASD. Third,
the adopted formula modifies the
language of the reproposed formula to
clarify that a quotation cannot earn
Quote Credits while it locks or crosses
a previously displayed automated
quotation. This limitation is needed to
remove any potential financial incentive
for abusive quoting behavior that would
be contrary to the purposes of the
provisions on locking and crossing
quotations set forth in the Access Rule.
Fourth, the formula limits the revenues
that can be allocated to a single Network
security to an amount that is no greater
than $4 per qualified transaction report,
in order to achieve an appropriately
balanced allocation among Network
stocks by allowing room for a significant
increase in the amounts currently
allocated for many less active stocks,
while also preventing unjustifiably high
allocations for the most extremely
inactive stocks that might create an
inappropriate incentive for abusive
quoting behavior.
In addition, the Commission
recognizes that some SROs are likely to
be allocated a smaller portion of Plan
revenues under the new allocation
formula than they would have received
under the prior formulas, while other
SROs will receive a larger portion of
revenues. This will result if certain
SROs are currently reporting a large
number of trades or share volume of
trades, but are not necessarily providing
the best quotations or trades with larger
sizes. A few commenters expressed
concern that certain business models
would be adversely impacted by the
proposed new allocation formula,849
particularly for those markets that
primarily handle small retail order
supra, section V.A.3.b.
supra, section V.A.3.b.
849 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 22; CHX Reproposal
Letter at 5; CHX Letter at 19, 21–22; NSX Letter at
6–7. See also BSE Reproposal Letter at 2, 3, 8
(suggesting a pilot approval process to address any
unintended consequences on individual markets).
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848 See
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37591
flow.850 The Commission recognizes
that reforming formulas that have
remained unchanged for many years
may affect the competitive position of
various markets. Given the severe
deficiencies of these formulas, however,
it does not believe that the interests of
any particular business model should
preclude updating the formulas to
reflect current market conditions. The
adopted formula is designed to reflect
more appropriately the contributions of
the various SROs to the consolidated
data stream and thereby better align the
interests of individual markets with the
interests of investors. Moreover, by
representing a much more broad-based
measure of an SRO’s contribution to the
consolidated data stream, the adopted
formula will be less subject to any
particular type of gaming and distortion
than the narrowly-focused current Plan
formulas.851 The Commission therefore
believes that the benefits of the adopted
new allocation formula justify the costs
of implementation.
2. Plan Governance
a. Benefits
The Commission believes that the
adopted amendment to the Plans
requiring the creation of Plan advisory
committees will improve Plan
governance. Most commenters generally
supported the adopted amendment to
the Plans, generally believing that
expanding the participation of nonSROs parties in Plan governance would
be a constructive step.852 Under the
Plans, a representative of each SRO
participating in the Plan is a member of
the operating committee that governs
that Plan. The adopted amendment to
the Plans will require the establishment
of non-voting advisory committees
850 See, e.g., BSE Letter at 16; CHX Letter at 19,
21–22; E*Trade Letter at 11. The adopted formula
will provide a partial allocation of revenues for
smaller trades that have a dollar value of less than
$5000. This provision should lessen impact of the
formula on exchanges that handle small retail
orders.
851 Two commenters on the reproposal suggested
adopting an allocation formula based solely on the
dollar volume of trading. ArcaEx Reproposal Letter
at 13; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at 14. Dollar
volume alone, however, is not a broad-based
measure and would miss important aspects of an
SRO’s contribution to the public data stream. It
would, for example, allocate a disproportionately
large amount to block trades. Block trades often are
internalized by securities dealers at prices based, at
least partly, on current public quotations. A formula
based solely on dollar volume would not
adequately allocate revenues to the source of
quotations relied on in pricing block trades.
852 See, e.g., Amex Letter at 10; Citigroup Letter
at 17; Financial Information Forum Letter at 4;
Financial Services Roundtable Letter at 6–7; ICI
Letter at 4 and 21 n. 35; Nasdaq Letter II at 33;
Reuters Letter at 3; SIIA/FISD Reproposal Letter at
2.
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comprised solely of persons not
employed by or affiliated with an SRO
participant. This adopted amendment is
intended to broaden participation in the
governance of the Plans.
The adopted amendment will require
the SRO participants to select the
members of the advisory committee
comprised, at a minimum, of one or
more representatives associated with:
(1) A broker-dealer with a substantial
retail investor base; (2) a broker-dealer
with a substantial institutional investor
customer base; (3) an ATS; (4) a data
vendor; and (5) an investor. In addition,
each SRO participant will be entitled to
select an additional committee member.
The Commission believes that the
composition of the advisory committee
will give interested parties other than
the SROs a voice in matters that affect
them.
The members of the advisory
committee will have the right to submit
their views to the operating committee
on Plan business (other than matters
determined to be confidential by a
majority of Plan participants), prior to
any decision made by the operating
committee, and will have the right to
attend operating committee meetings.
Broader participation in the Plans
through the creation of Plan advisory
committees will be beneficial to the
administration of the Plans because it
will provide transparency to the Plan
governance process and can promote the
formation of industry consensus on
disputed issues.
b. Costs
The adopted amendment to the Plans
requiring the formation of advisory
committees can potentially result in
costs to the SRO participants who will
be required to engage in a selection
process for purposes of establishing
such committees. A Plan’s operating
committee as a whole will be required
to select a minimum of five committee
members, while each SRO participant
will also have the right to select an
additional committee member. This
selection process can potentially result
in added costs and administrative
burden and expense to the SRO
participants.
The adopted Plan amendment also
can potentially disrupt the current
governance of the Plans by their
participants. Since the creation of the
Plans, representatives from the SROs
have been the sole participants in the
Plans and have been responsible for
their administration. A few commenters
believed that the additional
participation of non-SRO parties could
potentially increase the difficulty of
reaching a consensus on Plan business,
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stating that too many members on an
advisory committee could complicate
and disrupt, rather than assist, Plan
operations due to differing party
agendas.853 Although such a result may
occur at times, the Commission believes
that this cost would be justified by the
benefits that can be gained by increasing
the transparency of Plan operations and
giving parties other than SROs an
opportunity to submit their views. In
the past, the Plans may not have
adequately considered the viewpoints of
non-SRO parties on important issues
such as fees and administrative burdens.
Establishing advisory committees will
address this problem and thereby
potentially make the Plans more
responsive to the needs of market
participants and investors.
3. Amendments to Rules 11Aa3–1 and
11Ac1–2 (Redesignated as Rules 601
and 603)
a. Independent Distribution of
Information
i. Benefits
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the amendment to Rule
11Aa3–1 (redesignated as Rule 601),
which rescinds the prohibition on SROs
and their members from disseminating
their trade reports independently.854
Under adopted Rule 601, members of an
SRO will continue to be required to
transmit their trades to the SRO (and
SROs will continue to transmit trades to
the Networks pursuant to the Plans), but
such members also will be free to
distribute their own data independently,
with or without fees. The Commission
believes that independently distributed
information can be beneficial to
investors and other information users
because depth-of-book quotations have
become increasingly important as
decimal trading has spread displayed
depth across a greater number of price
points. Similarly, commenters that
discussed this aspect of the proposal
generally agreed that the proposal
would benefit investors and vendors by
giving them greater freedom to make
their own decisions regarding the data
they need.855 Other commenters
believed that the proposal would lead to
increased competition, the provision of
853 See, e.g., Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 21–22;
Reuters Letter at 3.
854 Regulation NMS removed the definitions in
paragraph (a) of Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–1
(redesignated as Rule 601) and placed them in Rule
600. Subparagraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of Exchange
Act Rule 11Aa3–1 are being rescinded. As a result,
subparagraph (c)(4) of Exchange Act Rule 11Aa3–
1 is redesignated as subparagraph (b)(2) of Rule 601.
855 See, e.g., CBOE Letter at 17; Financial
Information Forum Letter at 3–4; Reuters Letter at
3.
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more data products, and/or lower costs,
thus benefiting market participants.856
In addition, one commenter agreed with
the Commission that market centers
would benefit from additional revenues
and stated that the prospect of
additional revenues would encourage
markets to provide better markets.857
Adopted Rule 603(a) establishes
uniform standards for distribution of
both quotations and trades. The
standards require an exclusive
processor, or a broker or dealer with
respect to information for which it is the
exclusive source, that distributes
quotation and transaction information
in an NMS stock to a securities
information processor (‘‘SIP’’) to do so
on terms that are fair and reasonable. In
addition, those SROs, brokers, or dealers
that distribute such information to a
SIP, broker, dealer, or other persons are
required to do so on terms that are not
unreasonably discriminatory.
Furthermore, these uniform standards
are based, in part, on similar
requirements found in Sections 3 and
11A of the Exchange Act 858 for SROs
and entities that distribute SRO
information on an exclusive basis. The
Commission believes that extending
these requirements to non-SRO market
centers, including ATSs and market
makers, will help assure equal
regulation of all markets that trade NMS
stocks.
ii. Costs
The Commission recognizes that the
rescission of the prohibition on
independent distribution of trade
reports under adopted Rule 601 may
potentially lead to market centers
incurring costs associated with the
independent distribution of their market
data if they choose to distribute such
data without charging a fee. In addition,
investors may have to pay for additional
data if market centers choose to charge
a fee for the additional data.
Furthermore, a corollary to one
commenter’s assertion that market
centers could benefit from additional
revenues if market centers choose to
distribute their own quotation
information,859 is that the data from one
or more other market centers can
potentially become more or less
valuable than another market center’s
data, and thereby increase or reduce that
market center’s overall income. The
Commission does not believe that there
will be any costs associated with
856 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 23; Financial Services
Roundtable Letter at 6; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at
15–16.
857 Specialist Assoc. Letter at 16–17.
858 15 U.S.C. 78c and 15 U.S.C. 78k–1.
859 Specialist Assoc. Letter at 16–17.
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establishment of uniform standards for
the distribution of trades and quotations
pursuant to adopted Rule 603(a). The
Commission did not receive any
comments on this issue.
b. Consolidation of Information
i. Benefits
All SROs currently participate in
Plans that provide for the dissemination
of consolidated information for the NMS
stocks that they trade. Adopted Rule
603(b) confirms by Exchange Act rule
that both existing and any new SROs
will be required to continue to
participate in joint-industry plans to
disseminate consolidated information in
NMS stocks to the public. Adopted Rule
603 provides the benefit of clarifying
that all SROs—whether existing or
new—will be required to participate
jointly in one or more Plans to
disseminate consolidated information in
NMS stocks. Adopted Rule 603 also
requires that all quotation and trade
information for an individual NMS
stock be disseminated through a single
processor (currently, SIAC or Nasdaq).
The Commission believes that requiring
a single processor for a particular
security will help to ensure that
investors continue to receive the
benefits of obtaining consolidated
information from a single source.
ii. Costs
Given that consolidated market
information currently is disseminated
through a single processor per stock, the
Commission does not foresee any new
costs associated with adopted Rule
603(b).
c. Display of Consolidated Information
i. Benefits
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the amendment to Rule
11Ac1–2 (redesignated as Rule 603(c))
that substantially revises the
consolidated display requirement by
limiting its scope. It incorporates a new
definition of ‘‘consolidated display’’ (set
forth in adopted Rule 600(b)(13)) that is
limited to the prices, sizes, and market
center identifications of the NBBO and
the ‘‘consolidated last sale information.’’
Beyond disclosure of this basic
information, market forces, rather than
regulatory requirements, will be allowed
to determine what, if any, additional
data from other market centers is
displayed. In particular, investors and
other information users ultimately will
be able to decide whether they need
additional information in their displays.
As amended, Rule 603(c) also
eliminates the burden on vendors and
broker-dealers to display a complete
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montage of quotations from all market
centers trading a particular security,
which would include the price of
quotations that may be far away from
the current NBBO. Furthermore,
vendors and broker-dealers will have
the ability to decide what, if any,
additional data from other market
centers beyond this basic disclosure to
display. Vendors, broker-dealers, and
investors will benefit from this reduced
consolidated display requirement
through a more efficient use of system
capacity and because the costs of
obtaining necessary data may be
lowered. The Commission believes that
giving investors the ability to choose
(and pay for) only the data they need
and use will be beneficial.
Rule 603(c) narrows the contexts in
which a consolidated display is
required to those when it is most
needed—a context in which a trading or
order-routing decision could be
implemented. For example, the
consolidated display requirement will
continue to cover broker-dealers who
provide on-line data to their customers
in software programs from which
trading decisions can be implemented.
Similarly, the requirement will continue
to apply to vendors who provide
displays that facilitate order routing by
broker-dealers. It will not apply,
however, when market data is provided
on a purely informational website that
does not offer any trading or orderrouting capability. Rule 603(c) also
simplifies the rule language to require
that consolidated data be made available
in an equivalent manner as other data
and rescinds unnecessary provisions in
order to update the Rule.860 We expect
Rule 603(c) to benefit broker-dealers and
vendors by making compliance with the
adopted Rule’s more tailored
requirements easier and more efficient.
ii. Costs
A potential cost attributable to Rule
603(c) is that there currently may be
individuals who use the displayed
montage of quotations from all market
centers trading a particular security. If
vendors and broker-dealers determined
not to display this additional
information, these investors would be
required to obtain the additional data at
additional cost. Rule 603(c) also may
potentially result in an administrative
cost or burden for vendors and brokerdealers that will be required to assess in
what circumstances they are displaying
market data information for trading and
860 The provisions being rescinded include
requirements relating to moving tickers, categories
of market information, and representative bids and
offers.
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37593
order-routing purposes and in what
circumstances they are displaying such
information for other purposes. The
Commission believes that such a cost
will be minimal.
E. Regulation NMS
The Commission is redesignating the
current NMS rules adopted under
Section 11A of the Exchange Act 861 as
Regulation NMS, making nonsubstantive conforming changes to
various rules, and creating a separate
definitional rule, Rule 600, which will
contain all of the defined terms used in
Regulation NMS. Currently, each NMS
rule includes its own set of definitions,
and some identical terms, such as
‘‘covered security,’’ ‘‘reported security,’’
and ‘‘subject security,’’ are defined
inconsistently. Although Rule 600
retains, unchanged, most of the
definitions used in the existing NMS
rules, it deletes or revises obsolete
definitions and eliminates the use of
inconsistent definitions for identical
terms. Rule 600 does not alter the
requirements or operation of the
existing NMS rules.
1. Benefits
The Commission believes that Rule
600 and the related amendments to
various Commission rules will benefit
all entities that are and will be subject
to the requirements of the rules
contained in Regulation NMS, including
brokers, dealers, national securities
exchanges, the NASD, ECNs, SIPS, and
vendors. By eliminating or revising
obsolete and inconsistent definitions
and adopting a single set of definitions
that will be used throughout Regulation
NMS, Rule 600 should make Regulation
NMS clearer and easier to understand,
thereby facilitating compliance with the
Rules’ requirements and potentially
easing the compliance burden on
entities subject to Regulation NMS.
Increased compliance with Regulation
NMS will, in turn, benefit investors and
the public interest. Similarly, the related
non-substantive amendments to various
Commission rules will ensure that those
rules use the definitions provided in
Rule 600 and refer accurately to the
redesignated NMS rules.
2. Costs
Rule 600 will update and clarify the
definitions used in existing NMS rules.
Neither Rule 600 nor the related
conforming amendments to various
rules will alter the existing requirements
of the NMS rules or other Commission
rules. Accordingly, the Commission
believes that Rule 600 and the related
861 15
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amendments will impose few additional
costs on entities subject to Regulation
NMS. Although some additional
personnel costs may be incurred in
reviewing the changes, the Commission
believes that these costs will be
minimal.
X. Consideration of Burden on
Competition, and Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act 862
requires the Commission, when
engaging in rulemaking that requires the
Commission to consider or determine
whether an action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, to
consider whether the action will
promote efficiency, competition and
capital formation. Section 23(a)(2)
prohibits the Commission from adopting
any rule that would impose a burden on
competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act.863 To
assist the Commission in evaluating the
costs and benefits of Regulation NMS,
the Commission solicited comment in
the Proposing Release and the
Reproposing Release on whether any of
the proposals discussed therein would
have an adverse effect on competition
that was neither necessary nor
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act, and
whether they would promote efficiency,
competition and capital formation. The
Commission also requested commenters
to provide empirical data and other
factual support for their views on these
subjects. The Commission has
considered comments received and has
adopted the rules as discussed above,
taking into account these comments.
A. Order Protection Rule
The Commission agrees with
commenters that supported the
Reproposed Rule 864 that the price
protection that will be provided by the
Order Protection Rule will encourage
greater use of limit orders, which will
help improve the price discovery
process, and contribute to increased
liquidity and depth in the markets. The
more limit orders available at better
prices and greater size, the more
liquidity available to fill incoming
marketable orders. Greater depth and
liquidity will, at a minimum, lower the
search costs associated with trying to
find liquidity and should lead to
improved execution quality, particularly
for larger-sized institutional orders. The
862 15
U.S.C. 78c(f).
U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
864 See supra, section II.A.1.
863 15
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Commission also believes that the Order
Protection Rule, by providing
intermarket price protection for
accessible, automated orders (but not
requiring automated markets to wait for
responses from non-automated markets),
will help promote efficiency in the
markets by more effectively linking
markets together and integrating trading
centers with different market structures
into the NMS, and by providing an
incentive for non-automated markets to
automate. Rule 611 also will promote
investor confidence in the markets by
helping to assure, on an order-by-order
basis, that customer orders are executed
at the best price available and providing
protection against limit orders being
bypassed by inferior priced executions.
In particular, the Commission believes
that the providing enhanced protection
for the best bids and offers of each
exchange, The NASDAQ Stock Market,
and the ADF will represent a major step
toward achieving the objectives of
intermarket price protection. The Order
Protection Rule thus will promote best
execution for retail investors on an
order-by-order basis, given that most
retail investors justifiably expect that
their orders will be executed at the
NBBO.
The Commission believes that Rule
611 will promote intermarket
competition by leveling the playing
field between automated and nonautomated markets and, to the extent
that the existing trade-through rule
serves to constrain competition, by
removing this barrier to competition.
The Commission recognizes the vital
importance of preserving competition
among market centers,865 but continues
to believe that commenters have
overstated the risk that such
competition will be eliminated by
adoption of an order protection rule
without an opt-out exception. The
Commission believes that markets likely
will have strong incentives to compete
and innovate to attract both marketable
orders and limit orders. Market
participants and intermediaries
responsible for routing marketable
orders, consistent with their desire to
achieve the best price and their duty of
best execution, will continue to rank
trading centers according to the total
range of services provided by such
markets. The most competitive trading
center will be the first choice for routing
marketable orders, thereby enhancing
the likelihood of execution for limit
865 Many commenters believed that an opt-out
exception would be necessary to promote
competition among trading centers, particularly
competition based on factors other than price, such
as speed of response. See supra, section II.A.4.a.
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orders routed to that trading center.
Because likelihood of execution is very
important to limit orders, routers of
limit orders likely will be attracted to
this preferred trading center. More limit
orders will enhance the depth and
liquidity offered by the preferred trading
center, thereby increasing its
attractiveness for marketable orders, and
beginning the cycle over again. In
addition, Rule 611 will not require that
limit orders be routed to any particular
market. Consequently, the Commission
believes that competitive forces will be
fully operative to discipline markets
that offer poor services to limit orders,
such as limiting the extent to which
limit orders can be cancelled in
changing market conditions or
providing slow speed of cancellation.
Conversely, trading centers that offer
poor services, such as slow response
times, will likely rank near the bottom
in order-routing preferences of market
participants and intermediaries.
Whenever a least-preferred trading
center is merely posting the same price
as other trading centers, orders will be
routed to the other trading centers.
Competitive forces will continue to
dictate that the lowest ranked trading
center in order-routing preference will
suffer from offering a poor range of
services to the routers of marketable
orders. The Commission therefore does
not believe that Rule 611 will eliminate
competition among markets.
Commenters have, however,
identified a troubling potential for
intermarket price protection to lessen
the competitive discipline that market
participants now can impose on
inefficient trading centers.866 The Order
Protection Rule generally requires that
trading centers match the best quoted
prices, cancel orders without an
execution, or route orders to the trading
centers quoting the best prices. This is
good for investors generally, but may
not be if the quoting market is
inefficient. For example, a market center
may have poor systems that do not
process orders quickly and reliably. Or
a low-volume market may not be nearly
as accessible as a high-volume market.
Currently, consistent with their best
execution and other agency
responsibilities, participants in the
market for Nasdaq stocks can choose not
to deal with any trading center that they
believe provides unsatisfactory services.
Under the Order Protection Rule, market
participants can limit their involvement
with any trading center to routing IOC
orders to access only the best bid or best
866 See, e.g., Fidelity Reproposal Letter at 2; MFA
Reproposal Letter at 2; Morgan Stanley Reproposal
Letter at 2; TIAA–CREF Reproposal Letter at 2.
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offer of the trading center. Nevertheless,
even this limited involvement
potentially could lessen the competitive
discipline that otherwise will be
imposed on an inefficient trading
center. The Commission therefore
believes that this potentially serious
effect must be addressed at multiple
levels in addition to the specific
exceptions included in the Rule that
were discussed above.
First, trading centers themselves have
a legal obligation to meet their
responsibilities under the Exchange Act
to provide venues for trading that is
orderly and efficient.867 Through
registration and other requirements, the
Exchange Act regulatory regime is
designed to preclude entities that are
not capable of meeting high standards of
conduct from doing business with the
public. This critically important
function will be undermined by a
trading center that displayed quotations
in the consolidated data stream, but
could not, because of poor systems or
otherwise, provide efficient access to
market participants and efficient
handling of their orders. In addition, a
trading center will violate its Exchange
Act responsibilities if it failed to comply
fully with the requirements set forth in
Rule 600(b)(3) and (4) for automated
quotations and automated trading
centers. In particular, an automated
trading center must implement such
systems, procedures, and rules as are
necessary to render it capable of
meeting the requirements for automated
quotations and must immediately
identify its quotations as manual
whenever it has reason to believe that it
is not capable of displaying automated
quotations. These requirements place an
affirmative and vitally important legal
duty on trading centers to identify their
quotations as manual at the first sign of
a problem, not after a problem has fully
manifested itself and thereby caused a
rippling effect at other trading centers
that damages investors and the public
interest.
Second, those responsible for the
regulatory function at SROs have an
affirmative responsibility to examine for
and enforce all Exchange Act
requirements and the SRO rules that
apply to the trading centers that fall
within their regulatory authority. One of
the key policy justifications for a selfregulatory system is that industry
regulators will have close proximity to,
and significant expertise concerning,
their particular trading centers. In
867 See, e.g., Exchange Act Sections 6(b)(1) and
6(b)(5); Exchange Act Section 15; Exchange Act
Sections 15A(b)(2) and 15A(b)(6); Exchange Act
Section 11A(a)(1)(C); Regulation ATS.
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addition, industry regulators typically
have greater flexibility to address
problems than governmental authorities.
Implementation of the Order Protection
Rule will heighten the importance of
effective self-regulation. Those
responsible for the market operation
functions of an SRO may have business
incentives that militate against dealing
with potential problems in an effective
and forthright manner. Regulatory
personnel are expected to be
independent of such business concerns
and have an affirmative responsibility to
prevent improper factors from
interfering with an SRO’s full
compliance with regulatory
requirements.
Finally, the Commission itself plays a
critical role in the Exchange Act
regulatory regime. Effective
implementation of the Order Protection
Rule also will depend on the
Commission taking any action that is
necessary and appropriate to address
problem trading centers that fail to meet
fully their regulatory requirements. The
Commission and its staff must continue
to monitor the markets closely for signs
of problems and listen to the concerns
of market participants as they arise,
especially with regard to the new
requirements imposed by the Order
Protection Rule. Quick and effective
action will be needed to assure that all
responsible parties do not feel that
inattention to problems is an acceptable
course of action.
The Commission therefore believes
that Rule 611 will not impose any
competitive burden that is not necessary
and appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act. The
Commission believes that the Order
Protection Rule will help create an NMS
that more fully meets the needs of a
wide spectrum of investors, particularly
long-term investors and publicly traded
companies, by providing increased
efficiency and improved depth and
liquidity to our capital markets. By
providing increased efficiency and
promoting investor confidence in
quality executions, investors may be
more willing to invest in our capital
markets, thus promoting the ability of
listed companies to raise capital at
lower cost.
B. Access Rule
Rule 610 establishes standards
governing access to quotations in NMS
stocks that: (1) Prohibit trading centers
from unfairly discriminating against
non-members members or nonsubscribers that attempt to access their
quotations through a member or
subscriber of the trading center, and
enable access to NMS quotations
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37595
through private linkages; (2) establish an
outer limit on the cost of accessing such
quotations of no more than $0.003 per
share; and (3) require SROs to establish,
maintain, and enforce rules that, among
other things, prohibit their members
from engaging in a pattern or practice of
displaying quotations that lock or cross
the automated quotations of other
trading centers. The amendment to Rule
301(b)(5) under Regulation ATS lowers
the threshold that triggers the
Regulation ATS fair access requirements
from 20% to 5% of average daily
volume in a security.
The access provisions are intended to
bolster investor confidence in the
markets by helping to assure investors
that their orders will be executed at the
best prices and will not subject to
hidden fees, regardless of the market on
which the execution takes place. By
generally imposing a uniform fee
limitation of $0.003 per share, the Rule
will promote equal regulation of
different types of trading centers, where
currently some are permitted to charge
fees and some are not, thereby leveling
the playing field among diverse market
centers. Moreover, the Commission
believes that, by prohibiting a trading
center from imposing unfairly
discriminatory terms that would prevent
or inhibit the efficient access of any
person through members, subscribers, or
customers of such trading center, the
Rule will promote competition among
trading centers.
The Commission believes that Rule
610 also will increase transparency and
efficiency in the market, thereby
enhancing investor confidence, and thus
capital formation. Specifically, the Rule
will permit private linkages between
markets, rather than mandating a
collective intermarket linkage facility.
Private linkages will permit market
centers to connect through cost effective
and technologically advanced
communications networks. Such
systems are widely utilized in the
market for Nasdaq-listed stocks today
and likely will provide speed and
flexibility to trading centers and their
market participants. The use of private
linkages can encourage interaction
between the markets and reduce
fragmentation by removing
impediments to the execution of orders
between and among marketplaces,
thereby increasing efficiency and
competition.
Several commenters expressed
concerns regarding the impact that the
access fee proposal could have on
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competition.868 As discussed in detail
in Section III above, the Commission
believes that the flat limitation on
access fees of $0.003 per share is the
fairest and most appropriate solution to
what has been a longstanding and
contentious issue. A single accumulated
fee cap will apply equally to all types
of trading centers and all types of
market participants, thereby promoting
the NMS objective of equal regulation of
markets and broker-dealers, and
allowing those entities to compete on
equal footing.869
A fee limitation also is necessary to
preclude individual trading centers
from raising their fees substantially in
an attempt to take improper advantage
of strengthened protection against tradethroughs and the adoption of a private
linkage regime. In particular, the fee
limitation is necessary to address
‘‘outlier’’ trading centers that otherwise
might charge high fees to other market
participants required to access their
quotations by the Order Protection Rule.
It also precludes a trading center from
charging high fees selectively to
competitors, practices that have
occurred in the market for Nasdaq
stocks. In the absence of a fee limitation,
the adoption of the Order Protection
Rule and private linkages could
significantly boost the viability of the
outlier business model. Outlier markets
might well try to take advantage of
intermarket price protection by acting
essentially as a toll booth between price
levels. The high fee market likely would
be the last market to which orders
would be routed, but prices could not
move to the next level until someone
routed an order to take out the
displayed price at the outlier market.
Therefore, the outlier market might see
little downside to charging
exceptionally high fees, such as $0.009,
even if it is last in priority. While
markets would have significant
incentives to compete to be near the top
in order-routing priority,870 there might
be little incentive to avoid being the
least-preferred market if fees were not
limited.
868 See, e.g., Amex Letter, Exhibit A at 23–24;
ArcaEx Reproposal Letter at 10; BGI Reproposal
Letter at 3; Bloomberg Summary of Intended
Testimony at 3; BrokerageAmerica Letter at 1; Brut
Letter at 14; CHX Letter at 15; Domestic Securities
Summary of Intended Testimony; Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 10; NexTrade Reproposal
Letter at 7–8; Phlx Reproposal Letter at 4 (stating
its belief that the proposal is not justified under
Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act); TrackECN
Letter at 3.
869 Section 11A(c)(1)(F) of the Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. 78k-1(c)(1)(F).
870 See supra, section II.A.4.a (discussion of
competitive implications of trade-through
protection).
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The $0.003 cap will limit the outlier
business model. It will place all markets
on a level playing field in terms of the
fees they can charge and the rebates
they can pass on to liquidity providers.
Some markets may choose to charge
lower fees, thereby increasing their
ranking in the preferences of order
routers. Others may charge the full
$0.003 and rebate a substantial
proportion to liquidity providers.
Competition will determine which
strategy is most successful.
The Commission notes that the $0.003
fee limitation is consistent with current
business practices, as very few trading
centers currently charge fees that exceed
this amount.871 It appears that only two
ECNs currently charges fees that exceed
$0.003, charging $0.005 for access
through the ADF. These ECNs currently
do not account for a large percentage of
trading volume. In addition, while a few
SROs have large fees on their books for
transactions in ETFs that exceed a
certain size (e.g., 2100 shares), it is
unlikely that these fees generate a large
amount of revenues. Accordingly, the
adopted fee limitation will not impair
the agency market business model. The
Commission recognizes that agency
trading centers perform valuable agency
services in bringing buyers and sellers
together, and that their business model
historically has relied, at least in part,
on charging fees for execution of orders
against their displayed quotations.
Under current conditions, prohibiting
access fees entirely would unduly harm
this business model.
In addition, the Rule is designed to
reduce the instances of locked and
crossed quotations, which will promote
capital formation by providing market
participants a clear picture of the true
trading interest in a stock. Moreover, the
Commission believes that the access
provisions will encourage interaction
between the markets and reduce
fragmentation by removing
impediments to the execution of orders
between and among marketplaces,
thereby increasing efficiency and
competition. Finally, the Commission
believes that the access provisions likely
will assist broker-dealers in evaluating
and complying with their best execution
obligations. The Commission therefore
believes that Rule 610 will not impose
871 Cf. Instinet Letter at 35 (‘‘there is no basis for
adopting any limitation other than at the prevailing
$0.003 per share level, which was arrived at
through open competition among ATSs, ECNs, and
SRO markets in the Nasdaq market’’) and Instinet
Reproposal Letter at 11 (‘‘as for an appropriate
amount for such an accumulated fee limitation, the
Reproposal sets the cap at the prevailing $0.003 per
share level for stocks priced above $1.00, which
was arrived at through open competition among
marketplaces’’).
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any competitive burden that is not
necessary and appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act.
C. Sub-Penny Rule
The Commission has considered Rule
612 in light of Sections 3(f) and 23(a)(2)
of the Exchange Act and believes that
the Rule will not impose a burden on
competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act. To the
contrary, by preserving the benefits of
decimalization and guarding against the
less desirable effects of further reducing
the MPV, Rule 612 should promote fair
and vigorous competition. The
Commission acknowledges that the rule
will, in some circumstances, prevent
market participants from offering
marginally better prices (through
quoting or placing orders in subpennies). Some commenters argued that
a prohibition on quoting in sub-pennies,
at least in some NMS stocks, would
inhibit price competition and artificially
widen spreads.872 Nevertheless, the
Commission is concerned that subpenny quoting may be used by market
participants more as a means of
stepping ahead of competing limit
orders for an economically insignificant
amount than of promoting genuine price
competition.
The Commission believes that Rule
612 will assist broker-dealers in
evaluating and complying with their
best execution obligations and other
rules premised on identifying the price
of a security at a particular moment in
time. The Commission also believes that
Rule 612 will enhance market depth and
improve transparency by preventing
trading interest from being spread across
an unnecessarily large number of price
points. Therefore, we believe Rule 612
will encourage market participants to
use limit orders, an important source of
liquidity, and thereby promote market
efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. The Commission also
believes that the new Rule will bolster
investor confidence by helping ensure
that their orders, especially large orders,
can be executed without incurring large
transaction costs. This increase in
investor confidence also will promote
market efficiency, competition, and
capital formation.
Rule 612 will establish common
quoting conventions that will increase
transparency in the securities markets.
Moreover, the Commission believes that
the Rule will encourage interaction
between the markets and reduce
872 See, e.g., Instinet Letter at 47; Mercatus Center
Letter at 9–10; Tower Research Letter at 8–11.
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fragmentation by removing
impediments to the execution of orders
between and among markets. The
increased transparency in the markets
and reduction of fragmentation between
the markets will bolster investor
confidence, thereby promoting capital
formation.
D. Market Data Rules and Plan
Amendments
The Commission believes that the
adopted Plan amendment updating the
current revenue allocation formulas will
promote efficiency in the marketplace
by eliminating incentives for market
participants to engage in distortive
trading practices such as wash trades,
trade shredding, and SRO print facilities
to obtain market data revenues.
Similarly, commenters supported the
need to update the current allocation
formulas.873 In addition, the
Commission believes, and several
commenters concurred, that the adopted
Plan amendment requiring the creation
of non-voting advisory committees will
promote efficiency in the administration
of the Plans by allowing interested
parties other than SROs to have a voice
in Plan matters,874 which can, in turn,
contribute to the resolution of potential
disputes that SRO participants will
otherwise bring before the Commission.
Furthermore, we expect Rule 603(a) will
promote efficiency and competition
among market centers by helping to
assure that independently reported
trade and quotation information is
distributed on terms that are fair and
reasonable and not unreasonably
discriminatory. Commenters that
discussed this Rule generally agreed
that adopted Rule 603(a) would allow
investors and vendors greater freedom
to make their own decisions regarding
the data they need and that the proposal
should lead to lower costs to
investors.875 The Commission agrees
with these commenters and notes that
efficiency is promoted when brokerdealers who do not need the data
beyond the prices, sizes, market center
identifications of the NBBO and
consolidated last sale information are
873 See, e.g., BGI Reproposal Letter at 3; Citigroup
Reproposal Letter at 9; Deutsche Bank Reproposal
Letter at 4; Harris Reproposal Letter at 11; JP
Morgan Reproposal Letter at 2; STA Letter at 7; UBS
Letter at 10; Vanguard Letter at 6.
874 See, e.g., Financial Services Roundtable Letter
at 7; Reuters Letter at 3; SIIA/FISD Reproposal
Letter at 2.
875 See, e.g., Brut Letter at 23; Financial Services
Roundtable Letter at 6; Nasdaq Reproposal Letter at
16. In addition, two commenters believed that the
proposal would reduce some regulatory burdens
imposed on market participants. Financial
Information Forum Reproposal Letter at 4–5;
Instinet Reproposal Letter at 16.
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not required to receive (and pay for)
such data. The Commission also
believes that efficiency is promoted
when broker-dealers may choose to
receive (and pay for) additional market
data based on their own internal
analysis of the need for such data.
Adopted Rule 603(b) also likely will
promote efficiency in the dissemination
of consolidated market information by
requiring that all SROs act jointly
through the Plans to disseminate such
information to the public.
The Commission believes that the
adopted Plan amendments will assist in
capital formation through a more
appropriate allocation of the Networks’
revenues to those SROs that contribute
most to public price discovery. Rule
603(c) also will eliminate the
requirement to display a complete
montage of quotations from all market
centers and will therefore promote
capital formation by reducing the costs
to vendors and broker-dealers that are
currently required to display quotations
that may be far away from the NBBO.
One commenter stated that brokerdealers currently are discouraged from
making quotation and price information
on a stock available because, under the
current rule, this information must be
accompanied by consolidated
information for which they must pay
market data fees.876 Accordingly, the
Commission believes that, in certain
circumstances, Rule 603(c) will result in
additional market data information
being provided, which will assist capital
formation.
The Commission further believes that
the adopted amendments to the Plans
and to Rules 601 and 603 will not
impose any competitive burden that is
not necessary and appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act. One regional exchange
urged the Commission to consider the
impact of the formula on competition,
because, according to this commenter,
most regional market centers rely on
market data revenues to fund a
significant portion of their budgets and
thus a material decrease in such
revenues could affect their financial
plans, making it infeasible to compete
with listing markets, which can survive
on listing revenues.877 Although any
change to the current formulas may
result in a competitive advantage for
some SROs and in a competitive
disadvantage for other SROs, the
Commission does not believe that this
should preclude the adoption of an
allocation formula that would provide a
more useful distribution of market data
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876 Reuters
877 CHX
Letter at 2–3.
Reproposal Letter at 5.
Frm 00103
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37597
revenues based on the quality of an
SROs contribution of quotations and
trades to the consolidated data stream.
The Commission also believes that the
adopted Plan amendment requiring the
Plans to form non-voting advisory
committees will enhance and promote
competition by broadening Plan
governance to include non-SRO parties,
and thereby provide greater
transparency in the administration of
such Plans. Furthermore, we expect
adopted Rules 601 and 603 to lessen the
burden on vendors and broker-dealers
from having to comply with certain
consolidated display requirements. A
few commenters generally noted that
allowing market centers to
independently disseminate certain
market data information could increase
competition among markets.878 The
Commission agrees that the competition
among market centers will be enhanced
when such markets also choose to
independently distribute their own
market data. In addition, the
amendment providing that all SROs
consolidate information in each NMS
stock and disseminate such information
through a single processor per security
will clarify that SROs are on an equal
competitive footing with each other.
Thus, the Commission believes that the
amendments will enhance rather than
burden competition by creating a more
equal competitive environment for
market centers and others.
E. Regulation NMS
Rule 600, the redesignation of the
existing NMS rules as Regulation NMS,
and the related conforming changes to
other Commission rules will help to
promote efficiency and capital
formation by making the NMS rules
easier to understand, thereby helping to
reduce compliance costs for entities
subject to the rules. Enhanced clarity in
the definitions used in Regulation NMS
also will benefit investors and the
public interest by facilitating
compliance with the requirements of
Regulation NMS. Because Rule 600 will
clarify the existing definitions used in
Regulation NMS without imposing new
requirements, and because the
redesignation of the NMS rules as
Regulation NMS and the conforming
changes to other Commission rules will
create no new substantive requirements,
Rule 600 and the related changes will
not impose a burden on competition or
alter the competitive standing of entities
subject to Regulation NMS.
878 See, e.g., Amex Letter at 10; Specialist Assoc.
Letter at 16–17; see also Brut Letter at 23.
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XI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
A. Order Protection Rule
The Commission certified, pursuant
to Section 605(b) of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, that the Order Protection
Rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.879 This
certification was incorporated into the
Reproposing Release.880 The
Commission did not receive any
comments on this certification.
B. Access Rule
The Commission certified, pursuant
to Section 605(b) of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, that Rule 610 and the
amendments to Rule 301 of Regulation
ATS will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.881 This
certification was incorporated into the
Reproposing Release.882 The
Commission received one comment
discussing the certification. The
commenter, an ADF participant,
believed that the Commission in the
certification recognized that Rule 610
could result in a significant economic
impact on small firms, just not a
substantial number of small firms.883
This commenter continued to express
its concerns with the proposed access
requirements, stating its belief that the
proposal to require ADF participants to
establish the necessary connectivity that
would facilitate efficient access to their
quotations would create a cost barrier
that discriminates against smaller firms
in the ADF.884
The Commission does not believe that
its adopted access approach in Rule
610(b)(1) discriminates against smaller
firms or creates a barrier to access for
innovative new market entrants. Rather,
smaller firms and new entrants have a
range of alternatives from which to
choose that will allow them to avoid
incurring any costs to meet the
connectivity requirements of Rule
610(b)(1) if they wish to do so. This
approach is fully consistent with
Congressional policy set forth in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, which
directs the Commission to consider
significant alternatives to regulations
that accomplish the stated objectives of
U.S.C. 605(b).
Release, 69 FR at 77492.
881 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
882 Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77493.
883 In the Reproposing Release, the Commission
noted that only two of the approximately 600
broker-dealers (including ATSs) that would be
subject to the Rule are considered small for
purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. See
Section XII.B of the Reproposing Release, 69 FR at
77493.
884 NexTrade Reproposal Letter at 4–6.
the Exchange Act and minimize the
economic impact on small entities.885
Small ATSs are exempt from
participation in the consolidated
quotation system and, therefore, from
the connectivity requirements of Rule
610. Under Rule 301(b)(3) of Regulation
ATS, an ATS is required to display its
quotations in the consolidated quotation
stream only in those securities for
which its trading volume reaches 5% of
total trading volume. Consequently,
smaller ATSs are not required to
provide their quotations to any SRO
(whether an SRO trading facility or the
NASD’s ADF) and thereby trigger the
access requirements of Rule 610.
Moreover, potential new entrants with
innovative trading mechanisms can
commence business without having to
incur any costs associated with
participation in the consolidated
quotation system.
Some smaller ATSs, however, may
wish to participate voluntarily in the
consolidated quotation system. Such
participation can benefit smaller firms
and promote competition among
markets by enabling smaller firms to
obtain wide distribution of their
quotations among all market
participants.886 Here, too, such firms
will have alternatives that would not
obligate them to comply with the
connectivity requirements of Rule
610(b)(1). ATSs and market makers that
wish to trade NMS stocks can choose
from a number of options for quoting
and trading. They can become a member
of a national securities exchange and
quote and trade through the exchange’s
trading facilities. They can participate
in The NASDAQ Market Center and
quote and trade through that facility. By
choosing either of these options, an ATS
or market maker would not create a new
connectivity point that all other market
participants must reach and would not
be subject to Rule 610(b)(1). Some firms,
however, may not want to participate in
an SRO trading facility. These ATSs and
market makers can quote and trade in
the OTC market. The existence of the
NASD’s ADF makes this third choice
possible by providing a facility for
displaying quotations and reporting
879 5
880 Reproposing
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885 5 U.S.C. 603(c). The adopted access approach
provides alternatives that will benefit a wider range
of smaller ATSs than the two that are considered
small entities. See supra note 385.
886 See supra, note 566 (the Commission’s
Advisory Committee on Market Information
recommended retention of the consolidated display
requirement because, among other things, it ‘‘may
promote market competition by assuring that
information from newer or smaller exchanges is
widely distributed.’’).
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transactions in the consolidated data
stream.887
As noted above in Section III.A.1,
however, the NASD is not statutorily
required to provide an order execution
functionality in the ADF. The
Commission believes that market
makers and ECNs should continue to
have the option of operating in the OTC
market, rather than on an exchange or
The NASDAQ Market Center. As noted
in the Commission’s order approving
Nasdaq’s SuperMontage trading facility,
this ability to operate in the ADF is an
important competitive alternative to
Nasdaq or exchange affiliation.888
Therefore, the Commission has
determined not to require small trading
centers to make their quotations
accessible through an SRO trading
facility.
Instead, Rule 610(b)(1) requires all
trading centers that choose to display
quotations in an SRO display-only
quotation facility (currently, the ADF) to
provide a level and cost of access to
such quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities. Rule 610(b)(1) therefore may
cause trading centers that display
quotations in the ADF to incur
additional costs to enhance the level of
access to their quotations and to lower
the cost of connectivity for market
participants seeking to access their
quotations. The extent to which these
trading centers in fact incur additional
costs to comply with the adopted access
standard will be largely within the
control of the trading center itself. As
noted above, ATSs and market makers
that wish to trade NMS stocks can
choose from a number of options for
quoting and trading, including quoting
and trading in the OTC market. As a
result, the additional connectivity
requirements of Rule 610(b) will be
triggered only by a trading center that
displays its quotations in the
consolidated data stream and chooses
not to provide access to those quotations
through an SRO trading facility.
Currently, nine SROs operate trading
facilities in NMS stocks. Market
participants throughout the securities
industry generally have established
connectivity to these nine points of
access to quotations in NMS stocks. By
choosing to display quotations in the
ADF, a trading center effectively could
require the entire industry to establish
887 Under Rule 301(b)(3) of Regulation ATS, 17
CFR 242.301(b)(3), an ATS is required to display its
quotations in the consolidated data stream only in
those securities for which its trading volume
reaches 5% of total trading volume.
888 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
43863 (Jan. 19, 2001), 66 FR 8020 (Jan. 26, 2001).
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connectivity to an additional point of
access. Potentially, many trading centers
could choose to display quotations in
the ADF, thereby significantly
increasing the overall costs of
connectivity in the NMS. Such an
inefficient outcome would become
much more likely if an ADF trading
center were not required to assume
responsibility for the additional costs
associated with its decision to display
quotations outside of an established
SRO trading facility.
Although the Exchange Act envisions
an individual broker-dealer having the
option of trading in the OTC market,889
it does not mandate that the securities
industry in general must subsidize the
costs of accessing a broker-dealer’s
quotations in the OTC market if the
NASD chooses not to provide
connectivity. The Commission believes
that it is reasonable and appropriate to
require those ATSs and market makers
that choose to display quotations in the
ADF to bear the responsibility of
providing a level and cost of access to
their quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities. Under Rule 610(b)(1),
therefore, ADF participants will be
required to bear the costs of the
necessary connectivity to facilitate
efficient access to their quotations.890
This standard will help ensure that
additional connectivity burdens are not
imposed on the securities industry each
time an additional ADF participant
necessitates a new connectivity point by
choosing to begin displaying quotations
in the consolidated quotation stream.
The Commission believes that this
requirement will help reduce overall
industry costs by more closely aligning
the burden of additional connectivity
with those entities whose choices have
created the need for additional
connectivity.
As just discussed, the Commission
recognizes that trading centers subject to
Rule 610(b)(1) may incur costs
associated with providing access to their
quotations, although the costs will vary
depending upon the manner in which
each trading center provides such
access. The Commission notes that to
meet the standard contained in Rule
610(b)(1), a trading center will be
889 See Sections 11A(c)(3)(A) and (4) of the
Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C 78k–1(c)(3)(A) and (4).
890 Thus, although market participants may still
be required to access numerous trading centers in
the ADF, the Rule should reduce the cost of access
to each such trading center by requiring the ADF
trading center to provide a cost and level of access
substantially equivalent to the level and cost of
access to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities.
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allowed to take advantage of the greatly
expanded connectivity options that
have been offered by competing access
service providers in recent years.891
These industry access providers have
extensive connections to a wide array of
market participants through a variety of
direct access options and private
networks. A trading center potentially
could meet the requirement of Rule
610(b)(1) by establishing connections to
and offering access through such
vendors. The option of participation in
existing market infrastructure and
systems should reduce a trading center’s
cost of compliance.892
Section 3(a) of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act 893 requires the
Commission to undertake an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis of
proposed rules on small entities unless
the Commission certifies that the
proposed rules, if adopted, would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Commission continues to believe
that the Access Rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
C. Sub-Penny Rule
This Final Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis (‘‘FRFA’’) relating to Rule 612
of Regulation NMS has been prepared in
accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.894
1. Need for and Objective of Rule 612
Although the conversion from
fractional to decimal trading benefited
investors by clarifying and simplifying
prices, making our markets more
competitive internationally, and
reducing trading costs by narrowing
spreads, these benefits could be diluted
if market participants could quote NMS
stocks in increments less than a penny.
The Commission is particularly
concerned that sub-penny orders may be
used to step ahead of competing limit
orders for an economically insignificant
amount.
New Rule 612 prohibits an exchange,
association, vendor, ATS, or brokerdealer from accepting, ranking, or
891 As noted in the Commission’s order approving
the pilot program for the ADF, the reduction in
communications line costs in recent years and the
advent of competing access providers offer the
potential for multiple competitive means of access
to the various trading centers that trade NMS
stocks. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 46249,
supra note 390.
892 As the self-regulatory authority responsible for
the OTC market, the NASD must act as
‘‘gatekeeper’’ for the ADF, and, as such, will need
to closely assess the extent to which ADF
participants meet the requirements of Rule 610.
893 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
894 5 U.S.C. 604.
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displaying an order, quotation, or
indication of interest in an NMS stock
priced in a sub-penny increment (except
for an order, quotation, or indication of
interest priced less than $1.00 per share,
in which case the price may not extend
beyond four decimal places). The rule is
designed to improve market depth by
preventing quotations from spreading
across an unduly large number of price
points, while also encouraging the use
of limit orders—an important source of
liquidity—by preventing competing
market participants from stepping ahead
of a limit order by an economically
insignificant amount. We expect the
rule to reduce the instances of quote
flickering and to facilitate brokerdealers’ efforts to meet their best
execution and other regulatory duties
premised on identifying a security’s
prevailing market price.
2. Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comment
The IRFA appeared in the Proposing
Release and in the Reproposing
Release.895 The Commission requested
comment in the IRFA on the impact the
proposals would have on small entities
and how to quantify the impact. The
Commission did not receive any
comment letters addressing the IRFA.
3. Small Entities Subject to the Rule
Rule 612 applies to every national
securities exchange, national securities
association, ATS, vendor, and brokerdealer. Each type of market participant
that will be affected by the new Rule
612 is discussed below.
a. National Securities Exchanges and
National Securities Associations
Rule 0–10(e) under the Exchange
Act 896 provides that the term ‘‘small
business’’ or ‘‘small organization,’’
when referring to an exchange, means
any exchange that: (1) Has been
exempted from the reporting
requirements of Rule 601 under the
Exchange Act; and (2) is not affiliated
with any person (other than a natural
person) that is not a small business or
small organization, as defined by Rule
0–10. No national securities exchange
meets these criteria; therefore, no
national securities exchange is a small
entity. Currently, there is one national
securities association (NASD) that is
subject to Rule 612. NASD is not a small
entity as defined by 13 CFR 121.201.
b. Broker-Dealers
Commission rules generally define a
broker-dealer as a small entity for
895 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11174–75;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR 77493–94.
896 17 CFR 240.0–10(e).
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purposes of the Exchange Act and the
Regulatory Flexibility Act if the brokerdealer had total capital (net worth plus
subordinated liabilities) of less than
$500,000 on the date in the prior fiscal
year as of which its audited financial
statements were prepared, and the
broker-dealer is not affiliated with any
person (other than a natural person) that
is not a small entity.897 The Commission
estimates that, as of the end of 2003,
there were approximately 6,565
Commission-registered brokerdealers,898 of which approximately 905
are considered small entities pursuant
to Rule 0–10(c) under the Exchange
Act.899
c. Vendors
A vendor is any securities information
processor engaged in the business of
disseminating transaction reports or last
sale data with respect to transactions in
reported securities to brokers, dealers,
or investors on a real-time or other
current and continuing basis, whether
through an ECN, moving ticker, or
interrogation device.900 Rule 0–10(g) 901
provides that the term ‘‘small business’’
or ‘‘small organization,’’ when referring
to a securities information processor,
means any securities information
processor that: (1) Had gross revenues of
less than $10 million during the
preceding fiscal year (or in the time it
has been in business, if shorter); (2)
provided service to fewer than 100
interrogation devices or moving tickers
at all times during the preceding fiscal
year (or in the time that it has been in
business, if shorter); and (3) is not
affiliated with any person (other than a
natural person) that is not a small
business or small organization under
this section. The Commission estimates
that there are approximately 80 vendors,
16 of which are considered small
entities.
4. Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
Rule 612 will not impose any new
reporting, recordkeeping, or other
compliance requirements on any
entities subject to the rule, including
small entities.
897 See
17 CFR 240.0–10(c).
number reflects the number of FOCUS
filings. ATSs that are not registered as exchanges
are required to register as broker-dealers.
Accordingly, an ATS would be considered a small
entity if it fell within the definition of ‘‘small
entity’’ as it applies to broker-dealers.
899 17 CFR 240.0–10(c).
900 See 17 CFR 11Aa3–1(a)(11).
901 17 CFR 240.0–10(g).
898 This
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5. Agency Action To Minimize Effect on
Small Entities
Rule 612 establishes a uniform pricing
increment for NMS stocks. All entities
subject to the rule generally are
prohibited from displaying, ranking, or
accepting an order, quotation, or
indication of interest priced in a subpenny increment. Imposing different
compliance requirements for small
entities would be impractical and
undermine the goal of uniformity.
Furthermore, the Commission does not
believe it necessary or appropriate to
consider whether small entities should
be permitted to use performance rather
than design standards to comply with
Rule 612. The rule already establishes
performance standards and does not
dictate any particular design standard
that must be employed to achieve the
rule’s objectives.
D. Market Data Rules and Plan
Amendments
1. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification for the Plan Amendments
The Commission certified, pursuant
to Section 605(b) of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, that amending the Plans
to: (1) Modify the current formulas for
allocating market data revenues, and; (2)
require the establishment of non-voting
advisory committees will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.902
This certification was incorporated into
the Proposing Release and Reproposing
Release.903 The Commission did not
receive any comments on this
certification.
2. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
for Amendments to Rules 11Aa3–1 and
11Ac1–2 (Redesignated as Rules 601
and 603)
This FRFA has been prepared in
accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.904 This FRFA relates to
Exchange Act Rules 11Aa3–1 and
11Ac1–2 (redesignated as Rules 601 and
603).
a. Need for and Objectives of Rules 601
and 603
The Commission believes that an
overall modernization of the rules for
disseminating market data to the public
is necessary to address problems posed
by the current market data rules. In
adopting Rules 601 and 603 as
reproposed, the Commission retains the
core elements of the existing rules—
price discovery and mandatory
U.S.C. 605(b).
Release, 69 FR at 11190–91;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77495–96.
904 5 U.S.C. 604.
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902 5
consolidation—which provide
important benefits to investors and to
others who use market information, but
amends other parts of the existing rules
that have resulted in serious economic
and regulatory distortions. More
specifically, adopted Rules 601 and 603
reduce the burden on, and provide
simplification and uniformity for, those
market centers, broker-dealers, and data
vendors that have to comply with
requirements under the Rules.
Adopted Rules 601 and 603 are
designed to fulfill several objectives,
including: (1) Providing market centers,
including ATSs and market makers,
with flexibility to independently
distribute their own trade reports, aside
from their obligation to provide their
trade reports and best quotations to an
SRO or to the Networks (depending on
the type of market center); (2) providing
uniform standards for all market
centers, including non-SRO market
centers and entities that are exclusive
processors of SRO market data, for the
independent distribution of market data;
(3) providing that all SROs act jointly
through the Plans and disseminate their
consolidated information through a
single processor, to clarify the practice
among the SROs and to require
continued participation in the Plans and
dissemination through one processor
per security; (4) reducing consolidated
display requirements on broker-dealers
and vendors and limiting their
consolidated display obligations to the
disclosure of the NBBO and
consolidated last sale information and
to the display of market information in
a trading or order-routing context; and
(5) easing the burden of compliance by
simplifying the current consolidated
display requirements under the Rule
and by rescinding old provisions in the
Rule that are outdated and no longer
necessary.
b. Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comment
The IRFA appeared in the Proposing
Release and in the Reproposing
Release.905 The Commission requested
comment in the IRFA on the impact the
proposals would have on small entities
and how to quantify the impact. The
Commission did not receive any
comment letters addressing the IRFA.
c. Small Entities Subject to the Rule
Adopted Rules 601 and 603 affect
ATSs, market makers, broker-dealers,
and SIPs that could potentially be small
entities. Paragraph (c) of Rule 0–10
903 Proposing
Frm 00106
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905 Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11190–91;
Reproposing Release, 69 FR 77495–96.
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under the Exchange Act 906 defines the
term ‘‘small business’’ or ‘‘small
organization,’’ when referring to a
broker-dealer, to mean a broker or dealer
that had total capital of less than
$500,000 on the date in the prior fiscal
year as of which its audited financial
statements were prepared, or, if not
required to file such statements, that
had total capital of less than $500,000
on the last business day of the preceding
fiscal year; and is not affiliated with any
person (other than a natural person) that
is not a small business or small
organization. ATSs and market makers
would be considered broker-dealers for
purposes of this definition. Paragraph
(g) of Rule 0–10 907 defines the term
‘‘small business’’ or ‘‘small
organization,’’ when referring to a SIP,
to mean a SIP that had gross revenues
of less than $10 million during the
preceding fiscal year and provided
service to fewer than 100 interrogation
devices or moving tickers at all times
during the preceding fiscal year; and is
not affiliated with any person (other
than a natural person) that is not a small
business or small organization.
In the IRFA included in the
Reproposing Release, the Commission
estimated that, as of December 31, 2003,
there were approximately 905 registered
broker-dealers, including ATSs and
market makers that would be considered
small entities. In addition,
approximately 16 SIPs would be
considered small entities. In the
Proposing Release and in the
Reproposing Release, the Commission
requested comment on the number of
small entities that would be impacted
by adopted Rules 601 and 603,
including any available empirical data.
No commenters responded with cost
estimates pertaining to the requested
data listed above. Adopted Rule 601
enables small market centers, including
ATSs and market makers, that
contribute to consolidated information,
if they so choose, to also independently
distribute their own trade reports.
Adopted Rule 603 reduces the
compliance burden on small brokerdealers and SIPs by limiting the data
required to be displayed under the
Rule.908
906 17
CFR 240.0–10(c).
CFR 240.0–10(g).
908 Adopted Rule 603, providing that all SROs act
jointly through the Plans and disseminate their
consolidated information through a single
processor, would only apply to the SROs, which are
not ‘‘small entities’’ for purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
907 17
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d. Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other
Compliance Requirements
Adopted Rules 601 and 603 do not
impose any new reporting,
recordkeeping or other compliance
requirements on ATSs, market makers,
broker-dealers, and SIPs that are small
entities. SROs that would be subject to
these proposed amendments are not
considered small entities.909
e. Agency Action To Minimize Effects
on Small Entities
As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, the Commission has
considered alternatives that would
accomplish the stated objective, while
minimizing any significant adverse
impact on small entities. As discussed
in the Proposing Release and in the
Reproposing Release, the Commission
has considered the following alternative
models for disseminating market data to
the public: (1) A competing
consolidators model under which each
SRO would be allowed to sell its market
data separately to any number of
consolidators; (2) a rescission of the
consolidated display requirement and
allowing all SROs and other market
centers to distribute their market data
individually; and (3) a hybrid model
that would retain the consolidated
display requirement and existing
Networks solely for the dissemination of
the NBBO, but allow the SROs to
distribute their own quotations and
trades independently and without a
consolidated display requirement.
The primary goal of the adopted
amendments to Rules 11Aa3–1 and
11Ac1–2 (redesignated as Rules 601 and
603) is to retain the benefits of the
consolidated display requirement,
which provides a uniform, consolidated
stream of data and is the single most
important tool for unifying all of the
market centers trading NMS Stocks,
while providing market centers that
contribute to consolidated information
with the ability to independently
distribute their own market data and
reducing the consolidated display
requirements on broker-dealers and
SIPs. As stated in the Proposing Release
and in the Reproposing Release and in
Section V.A.1 above, the Commission
believes that these potential alternative
models pose an unacceptable risk of
losing important benefits that investors
and other information users receive
under the current system—an affordable
and highly reliable stream of quotations
and trades that is consolidated from all
significant market centers trading an
NMS Stock.
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909 See
supra, section XI.C.3.a.
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37601
The Commission believes that
different compliance or reporting
requirements for small entities, and
further clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of Rules 601 and 603, is
not necessary because adopted Rules
601 and 603 do not establish any new
reporting, recordkeeping or other
compliance requirements for small
entities and, in fact, adopted Rule 603
should reduce the compliance burden
on small broker-dealers and SIPs by
limiting the data required to be
consolidated and displayed under the
Rule. The Commission also notes that
the amendments contain performance
standards and do not dictate for entities
of any size any particular design
standards (e.g., technology) that must be
employed to achieve the objectives of
the adopted amendments.
E. Regulation NMS
The Commission certified, pursuant
to Section 605(b) of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, that Rule 600 and the
redesignation of the NMS rules as
Regulation NMS will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.910
This certification was incorporated into
the Reproposing Release.911 The
Commission did not receive any
comments on this certification.
XII. Response to Dissent
The Commission has added this
section to its release to respond directly
to the dissent’s claims that the
Commission’s ‘‘statutory interpretations
and policy changes are arbitrary,
unreasonable and anticompetitive’’ and
that they are ‘‘not supported by
substantial evidence that,
notwithstanding their anti-competitive
effect, they are necessary or appropriate
to further the purposes of the Exchange
Act.’’ 912 Previous sections of this
release discuss in greater detail the basis
of the Commission’s decision to adopt
Regulation NMS. By modernizing and
strengthening the regulatory structure of
the U.S. equity markets, Regulation
NMS will protect investors, promote fair
competition, and enhance market
efficiency. Because the dissent appears
to have misconstrued a number of the
Commission’s policy positions and the
reasoning underlying them, we are
including this section to clarify the
record.
We understand that reasonable minds
can disagree with the policy decisions
reflected in Regulation NMS. In light of
910 5
U.S.C. 605(b).
Release, 69 FR at 77496.
912 Dissent of Commissioners Cynthia A.
Glassman and Paul S. Atkins to the Adoption of
Regulation NMS (‘‘Dissent’’), Introduction.
911 Reproposing
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the substantial record, however, the
Commission rejects any assertion that
this rulemaking is arbitrary,
unreasonable, anticompetitive, or
otherwise outside the agency’s
authority. In making this claim, the
dissent appears to ignore the clear
statutory authority for the Commission’s
action, the many public comments
strongly supporting the adoption of
Regulation NMS, and the extensive and
comprehensive rulemaking process
undertaken by the Commission. As
discussed below, the drafters of the
Exchange Act itself repeatedly affirmed
the basic principles that underlie
Regulation NMS. In particular, they
specifically contemplated and endorsed
the Commission’s authority to adopt an
intermarket price protection rule.913 In
addition, the comments supporting
Regulation NMS were submitted by a
broad spectrum of investors, listed
companies, academics, market centers,
and other market participants, many of
which have extensive experience and
expertise regarding the inner workings
of the equity markets.914
Moreover, Regulation NMS is the
culmination of a long and open process
that included the original proposals, a
public hearing, a supplemental request
for comment, the reproposals, eight indepth analyses of relevant trading data,
and more than 2000 public comments.
The issues raised by Regulation NMS
undoubtedly are multifaceted. Reaching
decisions in this complex area requires
an understanding of the relevant facts
and of the often subtle ways in which
the markets work, and the balancing of
policy objectives that sometimes may
not point in precisely the same
direction. Perhaps not surprisingly,
there continue to be differences of
opinion, even after this long process,
among Commissioners, investors,
market participants, and the public in
general concerning the most appropriate
future regulatory structure for the U.S.
equity markets.
In sum, the Regulation NMS
rulemaking process has required the
Commission to grapple with many
difficult and contentious issues that
have lingered unresolved for many
years. The Commission has devoted a
great deal of effort to studying these
issues, assessing the views of all
commenters, and modifying its
proposals to respond appropriately to
their comments. Indeed, this release
discusses at length our response to
913 See
infra, notes 920–922 and accompanying
commenters, particularly those that
disagree with the proposals. However,
decisions must be made and contentious
issues must be resolved so that the
markets can move forward with
certainty concerning their future
regulatory environment and
appropriately respond to fundamental
economic and competitive forces. The
Commission always seeks to achieve a
consensus, but when positions have
become entrenched after many years of
study and debate, waiting for consensus
can mean indefinite gridlock that
ultimately could damage the
competitiveness of the U.S. equity
markets, both at home and
internationally. The Commission
believes that further delay is not
warranted and that the time has come to
make the difficult decisions necessary to
modernize and strengthen the national
market system.
A. Statutory Authority for Order
Protection Rule
The dissent suggests that the
Commission is exceeding its authority
by attempting to impose an ‘‘optimal
market structure.’’ 915 This claim
misconstrues the nature and impact of
the Order Protection Rule and ignores
the clear mandate provided to the
Commission by Congress in Section
11A(a)(2) of the Exchange Act to
facilitate the establishment of a national
market system. Regulation NMS does
not dictate any particular structure for
the markets; rather, it establishes basic
‘‘rules-of-the-road’’ for all markets that
will promote competition on terms that
benefit investors. In particular,
competition will be guided by three
basic principles—price transparency,
open access, and best price. As a result,
all investors will be able to ascertain the
best prices for NMS stocks, obtain fair
and non-discriminatory access to the
markets displaying such prices, and
have assurance that their orders will be
executed at the best prices that are
immediately and automatically
accessible. Within this regulatory
framework of transparency, access, and
best price, competitive forces will
determine the optimal market structure.
1. Intermarket Price Protection Rule
The dissent cites a selected few
passages from the legislative history of
the 1975 Amendments 916 to the
Exchange Act as support for the claim
that an intermarket price protection rule
is inconsistent with the Exchange
Act.917 A more complete review of the
text.
914 See supra, notes 56–59 and accompanying
text; infra, notes 939–941, 957–960, and
accompanying text.
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915 Dissent,
text accompanying note 27.
L. No. 94–29, 89 Stat. 97 (1975).
917 See, e.g., Dissent, notes 3–5, 51–52.
916 Pub.
Frm 00108
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legislative history, however, makes it
clear that the Order Protection Rule is
squarely consistent with the policy
determinations made by Congress in
1975—indeed, it may be the dissent’s
disagreement with those Congressional
policy determinations that explains its
opposition to the Order Protection Rule.
In particular, the national market system
is premised on promoting fair
competition among individual markets,
while at the same time assuring that
these markets are linked together in a
unified system that promotes
competition among the orders of buyers
and sellers in individual NMS stocks.
The most succinct statement of order
competition is found in the House
Report on the 1975 Amendments:
‘‘Investors must be assured that they are
participants in a system which
maximizes the opportunities for the
most willing seller to meet the most
willing buyer.’’ 918 This Congressional
mandate for the national market system
is not achieved when trades occur at
prices inferior to the best quotations that
are immediately and automatically
accessible.
The dissent appears to focus on the
NMS objective of fair competition
among markets, without giving
appropriate weight to the important
Congressional objective of integrating
markets into a system that promotes
order interaction and the best execution
of investor orders.919 The House Report
gives the following overview of the
‘‘goals and principles to serve as a
guide’’ to the Commission that
specifically endorses price protection
for investor orders:
Briefly stated, these embrace the principles
of competition in which all buying and
selling interests are able to participate and be
represented. The objective is to enhance
competition and to allow economic forces,
interacting within a fair regulatory field, to
arrive at appropriate variations of practices
and services. Neither the markets themselves
nor the broker-dealer participant in these
markets should be forced into a single mold.
Market centers should compete and evolve
according to their own natural genius and all
actions to compel uniformity must be
measured and justified as necessary to
accomplish the salient purposes of the
Securities Exchange Act, assure the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets and
to provide price protection for the orders of
investors.920
The establishment of a ‘‘fair regulatory
field’’ that will ‘‘provide price
protection for the orders of investors’’ is
918 H.R. Rep. 94–123, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 50
(1975) (‘‘House Report’’).
919 See supra, section I.B (discussion of NMS
principles and objectives).
920 House Report at 51.
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precisely what the Order Protection
Rule is designed to do.
Similarly, the Senate Report on the
1975 Amendments emphasizes both
competition among markets and
integration of those markets into a
unified system:
S. 249 would lay the foundation for a new
and more competitive market system, vesting
in the SEC power to eliminate all
unnecessary or inappropriate burdens on
competition while at the same time granting
to that agency complete and effective powers
to pursue the goal to centralized trading of
securities in the interest of both efficiency
and investor protection.921
By ‘‘centralized trading,’’ the Senate
Report did not mean a single market,
but rather NMS rules and facilities that
link the markets into a unified system
to assure best execution of investor
orders—the approach incorporated in
Regulation NMS. For example, the
Senate Report specifically addresses the
importance of intermarket price
protection:
[A] limited price order is presently
‘‘protected’’ as to price priority on the
exchange on which it is held but it is not
protected in any way [with] respect to trading
on another exchange or in the third market.
As a consequence, a limit order for a listed
security held in only one of several markets
for that security need not be executed before
a transaction is effected at the same price or
at a price less favorable to the other party in
another market. In the Committee’s view this
is the basic problem caused by fragmentation
of the securities markets: the lack of a
mechanism by which all buying and selling
interest in a given security can be centralized
and thus assure public investors best
execution.922
Consequently, the Commission’s
challenge in meeting its NMS
responsibilities is to promote both
competition among markets and
competition among orders, as well as to
assure a regulatory structure that is
workable and minimizes regulatory
costs. Notably, Congress chose not to
mandate any particular NMS rules in
order to give the Commission greater
flexibility to use its expertise in
achieving NMS objectives:
The Committee considered mandating
certain minimum components of the national
market system but rejected this approach.
The nation’s securities markets are in
dynamic change and in some respects are
delicate mechanisms; the sounder approach
appeared to the Committee, therefore, to be
to establish a statutory scheme clearly
granting the Commission broad authority to
oversee the implementation, operation, and
regulation of the national market system and
at the same time to charging it with the clear
921 S. Rep. No. 94–75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 2
(1975) (‘‘Senate Report’’).
922 Senate Report at 17.
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responsibility to assure that the system
develops and operates in accordance with
Congressionally determined goals and
objectives. Section 11A(a) and 11A(c), taken
together, would establish such an
arrangement.923
Although the dissent may disagree
with the policy of an intermarket price
protection rule, there is no basis for the
claim that Regulation NMS is at odds
with the Commission’s statutory
mandate to facilitate the establishment
of a national market system.
2. Long-Term Investors
The dissent questions the
Commission’s authority to give
precedence to the interests of long-term
investors in those limited contexts
where their interests conflict with the
interests of short-term traders.924 As is
discussed elsewhere in this release,925
the interests of long-term investors and
short-term traders in fair and efficient
markets coincide most of the time. In
those few contexts where the interests of
long-term investors directly conflict
with short-term trading strategies, we
believe that, in implementing regulatory
structure reform, the Commission has
both the authority and the responsibility
to further the interests of long-term
investors, and that the record provides
substantial support for the
Commission’s determination to further
their interests.
As discussed above, intermarket price
protection will significantly benefit the
more than 84 million individual
investors in the U.S. equity markets by
reducing their transaction costs and
thereby enhancing their long-term
investment returns.926 Price protection
may, however, interfere to some extent
with the extremely short-term trading
strategies that can depend on
millisecond response times from
markets for orders taking displayed
923 Senate Report at 8–9. See also H.R. Rep. No.
94–229, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 92 (1975)
(‘‘Conference Report’’) (adopting Senate approach to
‘‘provide maximum flexibility to the Commission
and the securities industry in giving specific
content to the general concept of the national
market system’’).
924 Dissent, section IV. Many short-term trading
strategies are conducted by registered brokerdealers, such as specialists and market makers.
Despite the dissent’s repeated references in section
IV to both short-term investors and market
intermediaries, we do not believe the dissent means
to suggest that the Commission lacks authority
under the Exchange Act to give precedence to the
interests of long-term investors over market
intermediaries.
925 Supra, section I.B.2.
926 See supra, text accompanying notes 25–26
(survey finding that more than 84 million
individuals representing more than 50% of
American households own equity securities,
directly or indirectly, and that nearly all view their
equity investments as savings for the long-term).
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liquidity. It also may interfere with
short-term trading strategies that benefit
from volatile and illiquid markets. The
dissent claims that the ‘‘length of time
an individual owns a stock is not a
relevant factor in distinguishing among
groups of investors’’ and that the
distinction between long-term investors
and short-term traders is arbitrary and
unreasonable.927 But in those limited
contexts where the interests of longterm investors conflict with short-term
trading strategies, the conflict cannot be
reconciled by stating that the NMS
should benefit all investors. In
particular, failing to adopt a price
protection rule because short-term
trading strategies can be dependent on
millisecond response times would be
unreasonable in that it would elevate
such strategies over the interests of
millions of long-term investors—a result
that would be directly contrary to the
purposes of the Exchange Act.928
As discussed earlier in this release,929
the legislative history of the Exchange
Act from its adoption in 1934
emphasizes the Congressional concern
to protect the interests of the many
average investors who are not active
traders or market intermediaries, but
who depend on their equity
investments, whether directly in
corporate stocks or indirectly through
their investment in mutual funds and
retirement accounts, to meet their longterm financial goals. The dissent
suggests that these statements of
Congressional concern for millions of
average investors were no longer
relevant when Congress adopted the
1975 Amendments, but the legislative
history of the 1975 Amendments does
not support this proposition.930
The dissent also argues that shortterm traders often provide liquidity to
the market and thereby benefit longterm investors. The Commission
certainly agrees with this statement as a
general matter, but believes that, in the
specific context of an intermarket price
protection rule, directly promoting the
display of limit orders, which directly
927 Dissent,
section IV.
e.g., Exchange Act Section 11A(a)(1)(C)
(‘‘It is in the public interest and appropriate for the
protection of investors and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets to assure,’’ among other things,
‘‘the economically efficient execution of securities
transactions’’ and ‘‘the practicability of brokers
executing investors’ orders in the best market.’’).
929 Supra, section I.B.2.
930 See, e.g., Conference Report at 91 (‘‘The
securities markets of the United States are an
important national asset. Under the system of
Federal regulation established in the 1930s, these
markets have flourished. They have provided a
means for millions of Americans to share in the
profits of our free enterprise system and have
facilitated the raising of capital by new and growing
businesses.’’).
928 See,
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provide liquidity to the market, rather
than promoting short-term trading
strategies that require millisecond
response times for orders that take
displayed liquidity, is the most
appropriate approach to protect
investors and enhance market
efficiency. Many commenters agreed
with this policy decision. For example,
T. Rowe Price stated that ‘‘we do not
believe that speed of access
considerations should drive market
structure issues if to do so would
jeopardize legitimate market linkage
initiatives. Connected markets provide
the opportunity for information
gathering, block trading, and improved
price discovery, as well as the
legitimacy of the ‘last-sale’ price. While
speed of access and execution are
crucial, there is a limit to how fast such
linkages need to be in order to protect
and enhance our markets.’’ 931 Similarly,
the Committee on Investment of
Employee Benefit Assets, which
represents 110 of the nation’s largest
corporate retirement funds managing
$1.1 trillion on behalf of 15 million plan
participants and beneficiaries, stated
that ‘‘it is unclear with the advance of
automation why we would need or
should allow anything other than the
best price requirement for investors. Our
constituency is concerned with longterm growth and market stability and
the ability to opt-out [of the best price
requirement] could place long-term
investors at a disadvantage.’’ 932 Finally,
the National Association of Investors
Corporation emphasized that ‘‘[m]ake
no mistake, the best price best serves
investors. It is part of the value equation
when buying and selling stock. Please
keep in mind that individual investors
are long-term investors and price is of
utmost importance to them.’’ 933
Although the dissent may disagree with
the policy views of these commenters
on the best means to protect investors
and to promote market integrity and
liquidity, it does not provide a basis for
concluding that the commenters’ views,
which the Commission shares, are
arbitrary or unreasonable.
B. Basis for Adoption of Order
Protection Rule
A prior section of this release
discusses at length the Commission’s
basis for adopting the Order Protection
931 T.
Rowe Price Reproposal Letter at 2.
from Gary A. Glynn, Chairman,
Committee on Investment of Employee Benefit
Assets, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission,
dated June 24, 2004 (‘‘CIEBA Letter’’) at 1.
933 Letter from Kenneth S. Janke, Chairman,
National Association of Investors Corporation, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
June 24, 2004 (‘‘NAIC Letter’’) at 1.
932 Letter
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Rule.934 This section responds to certain
specific claims made in the dissent
where the dissent appears to have
misconstrued the Commission’s
decision-making process and
conclusions, and highlights the critical
policy issues on which the views
expressed in the dissent simply conflict
with the considered views of the
Commission and many commenters.
The dissent asserts that the
Commission’s objectives for the Order
Protection Rule have been ‘‘a moving
target, morphing from the protection of
limit orders, to the need to increase
market depth and liquidity, to the
reduction of transaction costs for longterm investors and issuers.’’ 935 In fact,
the Commission’s objectives have
remained consistent throughout the
NMS rulemaking.936 While certain
details in the original proposal have
been modified to respond appropriately
to public comment, the policies
underlying the Rule as proposed,
reproposed, and adopted have remained
the same. Indeed, the dissent seems not
to appreciate that the ‘‘moving targets’’
it identifies—the objectives of protecting
limit orders, increasing market depth
and liquidity, and reducing investor
transaction costs—are all quite closely
inter-related. As the Commission has
explained quite consistently in this
release and in the proposing releases,
protecting limit orders contributes to
market depth, which in turn reduces
investor transaction costs. In addition,
the Commission has consistently
emphasized that intermarket price
protection will promote the best
execution of investor orders and fair and
orderly markets.937
1. Investor Protection
As discussed previously in this
release,938 the Commission believes that
the Order Protection Rule is needed to
strengthen the protection of investors in
the U.S. equity markets. Many
commenters agreed with the
Commission on the need for
strengthened price protection to protect
investors. For example, the Consumer
section II.A.
section I. The dissent asserts that the
Commission has sought to reduce transaction costs
for issuers. Stated more accurately, the Commission
has sought to reduce transaction costs for investors,
which would thereby help reduce the cost of capital
for the listed companies in which they invest. See
supra, note 15 and accompanying text.
936 For example, the Proposing Release
emphasized that one of the three overarching
objectives of the proposals was to ‘‘promote greater
order interaction and displayed depth,’’ thereby
reducing the price impact costs of large,
institutional investors. Proposing Release, 69 FR at
11129.
937 Id. at 11132.
938 See supra, section II.A.1.
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935 Dissent,
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Federation of America believed that
‘‘the brokers’’ duty of best execution is
simply too vague to serve as an effective
deterrent to abuse. It is too vague for the
broker to know with certainty that it has
satisfied its best execution obligation
and too vague to be enforced
consistently and effectively. In fact, one
of the real benefits of the proposed
trade-through rule is that it has the
potential to simplify compliance with
best execution rules.’’ 939 The
Committee on Investment of Employee
Benefit Assets also recognized the vital
importance of maintaining equity
markets in which all investors can
participate with confidence: ‘‘[I]n light
of the scandals in the securities and
mutual fund industries, our first priority
should be to restore investor confidence
in our capital markets. To allow trading
to take place outside of the best price
will continue to raise questions of
fairness and could diminish investor
confidence.’’ 940 Other commenters
shared these concerns about the impact
of trade-throughs on investor confidence
in the fairness of the U.S. equity
markets.941
939 Consumer
Federation Letter at 4.
Letter at 2.
941 See, e.g., BSE Reproposal Letter at 2 (‘‘The
Exchange believes that the reproposed TradeThrough Rule is critical to the protection of
customer limit orders through ‘protected quotes’ for
all securities.* * * Minimum investor protection
principles should not be bifurcated on the basis of
whether a security trades in either a listed or
NASDAQ environment.’’); Letter from James W.
Vitalone, Chair, U.S. Advocacy Committee, and
Linda L. Rittenhouse, CFA Institute—Advocacy, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated
Sep. 22, 2004 (‘‘CFA Institute Letter’’) at 1 (‘‘We
believe that the current way of doing business has
become a system permeated with trading practices
that often obfuscate the manner in which best price
is determined or how some limit orders are filled.
Thus, we strongly support and urge reforms that
will bring uniformity and transparency to the
current system, ultimately leveling the playing field
as much as possible among market participants. To
this end, we support a trade-through rule that
applies to all securities.’’); Letter from Lawrence E.
Harris, Marshall School of Business, University of
Southern California, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Feb. 5, 2005 (‘‘Harris
Reproposal Letter’’) at 7 (‘‘The proposed tradethrough rule would prevent exchanges from trading
through exposed electronically accessible orders at
another exchange. In principle, such rules should
not be necessary because traders generally will
access liquidity wherever it is cheapest. In practice,
dealers, brokers, and exchanges sometimes do trade
through other orders since it is generally in their
self-interest to control an execution rather than
share it. Accordingly, the primary benefit of the
proposed trade-through regulation will be to
promote investor protection.’’); NAIC Letter at 1
(‘‘Having confidence that one is receiving the best
price in stock transactions contributes greatly to the
confidence that investors have in the fairness and
integrity of the marketplace.’’); Phlx Reproposal
Letter at 1 (‘‘Phlx believes that intermarket
protection of firm and accessible quotes is not only
necessary, but should foster a more efficient
marketplace, which is consistent with protecting
investors and the public interest.’’).
940 CIEBA
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The dissent, however asserts that the
Trade-Through Study prepared by
Commission staff to estimate tradethrough rates does not substantiate
investor protection concerns.942 The
dissent further suggests that the
Commission has ‘‘cherry-picked’’
statistics that support its position, while
ignoring, or even failing to disclose,
statistics that do not support its
position.943 While the Commission
believes that the total number of tradethroughs should not be the sole
consideration in making its policy
choices, an earlier section of this release
discusses in detail the data
demonstrating the significance of tradethrough rates found in the Study,944 and
that discussion makes clear that the
Commission has not ignored or failed to
disclose the findings of the TradeThrough Study. Indeed, at the time the
Reproposing Release was published, the
Study was placed in the public file
specifically to assure that all
commenters had a full opportunity to
evaluate its data and methodologies.
The Study used a variety of
calculation methodologies that
generated many different statistics on
trade-through rates, but summarized its
findings as follows: ‘‘Depending on the
methodology applied, the overall tradethrough rate ranged from 2% to 10% of
trades and from 2% to 13% of share
volume. Using the more conservative of
these methods, we estimate that 2% to
3% of all trades and 2% to 8% of all
share volume are trade-throughs.’’ 945
The Reproposing Release explained why
the Commission believed that the most
relevant measure is 2.5% of total trades,
representing more than 7% of total
share volume, that trade through the
best displayed prices. The Reproposing
Release also explained the deficiency of
the dissent’s preferred measure—the
displayed size of quotations that are
traded through. This measure primarily
reflects the current shortage of
displayed size, which is a symptom of
one of the primary problems that the
Order Protection Rule is designed to
address.946 It therefore is not a useful
means to assess the potential upside of
strengthened price protection.
942 The Trade-Through Study is described in note
66 above.
943 Dissent, section II.A.
944 Supra, section II.A.1.a.ii. As discussed above,
different measures of trade-through rates are
relevant for assessing the extent to which the Order
Protection Rule is needed to achieve the objectives
of best execution of market orders, fair and orderly
treatment of limit orders, and greater depth and
liquidity for NMS stocks, respectively.
945 Trade-Through Study at 1 (emphasis in
original).
946 Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77443.
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The dissent also asserts that the
Trade-Through Study did not indicate
‘‘that investors are not obtaining best
execution, that their orders are being
unfairly treated, or that investors are
otherwise suffering economic harm.’’ 947
The Study, however, found that 2.5% of
trades in Nasdaq stocks do not receive
the best prices that are immediately and
electronically accessible and that the
average amount by which such trades
miss the best prices is 2.3 cents per
share.948 In addition, Nasdaq submitted
statistics with its comment letter on the
reproposal indicating that the tradethrough rate for dealers that internalize
customer orders in Nasdaq stocks was
3.2% in 2003. The dissent attempts to
minimize the seriousness of these
statistics on a variety of grounds, but it
concedes that the trade-through rate for
customers in Nasdaq stocks was
between 1% and 2% in 2004 and states
that ‘‘these numbers speak for
themselves’’ that customers are not
being treated unfairly.949
Even if the Commission accepted the
dissent’s focus on a limited portion of
the rulemaking record, we strongly
believe that the evidence contained in
this record would raise serious investor
protection concerns. Because of the
enormous volume of trading in the U.S.
equity markets, even small percentages
can translate into significant harm to
investors. For example, even a 1.5%
trade-through rate for customers in
Nasdaq stocks in 2004 would mean that
14.3 million customer orders received a
price that was inferior to an
immediately and automatically
accessible quotation.950 Because of the
difficulties faced by retail investors in
monitoring whether their orders receive
the best prices, it is likely that a great
many of these customers were not aware
that they in fact received an inferior
price for their order.951 We suspect that
the millions of customers who received
inferior prices, had they known, would
believe that they had been treated
unfairly.
Moreover, the dissent does not appear
to take into account the practical
difficulties faced by retail customers in
monitoring and obtaining best execution
of their orders. Such difficulties vary
depending on the type of order. As
section II.A.
Study at 3.
949 Dissent, text following note 47.
950 More than 955 million trades were reported in
2004 by the consolidated market data network for
Nasdaq stocks.
951 The difficulties faced by retail investors in
monitoring the execution quality of their market
orders are discussed further above in the text
accompanying note 53.
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948 Trade-Through
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37605
discussed previously in this release,952
retail customers who submit market and
marketable limit orders seeking the best
available market price generally can
ascertain the best quotations at the time
they submit their orders, but quotations
can change rapidly, thereby making it
quite difficult for customers to know
whether their orders were in fact
executed at the best quotations at the
time of order execution.953 In contrast,
retail customers who display nonmarketable limit orders at the best
prices can readily see when their orders
are traded through—the inferior trade
prices will be disseminated in the
consolidated trade stream.954 These
customers legitimately may feel that
their orders have not been treated in a
fair and orderly fashion. By establishing
strong intermarket price protection, the
Order Protection Rule will benefit
investors who use both types of orders.
It will promote the execution of investor
market orders at the best prices on an
order-by-order basis,955 as well as
protect displayed limit orders, no matter
how small or large their displayed size,
from trade throughs. In both contexts,
the Rule will significantly enhance the
protection of investors in all NMS
stocks.
2. Improved Depth and Liquidity in
Nasdaq Stocks
The dissent asserts that there is no
evidence of a need for greater depth in
Nasdaq stocks that would warrant
application of the Order Protection
Rule.956 In making this assertion, the
952 See supra, text accompanying note 53. See
also J.P. Morgan Reproposal Letter at 3 (‘‘[P]rincipal
agent conflicts can lead to less than best execution,
particularly for retail investors who may not have
the sophistication or resources to assess the quality
of the trades provided by their agents. By
prohibiting the execution of orders at prices inferior
to those displayed, a trade-through rule can
therefore help provide protection to limit orders
and further encourage their use.’’)
953 Cf. Dissent, note 42 (‘‘the majority fails to
acknowledge that retail investors have access to
consolidated information that allows them to
monitor their executions’’).
954 Cf. Dissent, note 44 (questioning the basis for
the Commission’s assertion that retail investors are
not given a level playing field when their displayed
limit orders are bypassed by large, block trades and
stating that the assertion is ‘‘also inconsistent with
the majority’s previous assertion that investors have
difficulty monitoring execution quality’’).
955 See supra, notes 341–344 and accompanying
text (duty of best execution not interpreted as
requiring order-by-order routing by brokers with
large volume of customer orders).
956 Dissent, section II.B. The dissenters imply that
a need for greater depth was the only basis relied
on by the Commission for applying the Order
Protection Rule to Nasdaq stocks. Dissent, text
accompanying note 52. As discussed in the
preceding section, the Commission believes that
enhancing investor protection, particularly for retail
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dissent does not address the views of
many commenters that intermarket
price protection is needed to improve
depth and liquidity in all NMS stocks,
including those listed on Nasdaq. For
example, the Investment Company
Institute, whose members account for
more than 95% of all U.S. mutual fund
assets, noted that ‘‘[b]y affirming the
principle of price priority, a tradethrough rule should encourage the
display of limit orders, which in turn
would improve the price discovery
process and contribute to increased
market depth and liquidity.’’ 957 It
therefore ‘‘strongly recommend[ed] that
the Commission adopt a uniform tradethrough rule that applies across all
market centers and to all types of
securities, including Nasdaq-listed
securities.’’ 958 Similarly, the Bank of
New York stated that ‘‘[w]e agree with
the Commission that a uniform tradethrough rule would encourage the use of
displayed limit orders and aggressive
quotation. In the market for Nasdaq
securities, for example, many investors
are reluctant to show their full trading
interest for fear of having others use that
information to their detriment. A
uniform trade-through rule would
incentivize these investors to display
their interest, knowing their order must
be filled before the next-priced order.
Accordingly, a well-formulated tradethrough rule will promote transparency
and liquidity in the national market
system.’’ 959 Many other commenters
similarly believed that an intermarket
price protection rule is needed to
promote market depth and liquidity in
all NMS stocks.960
investors, is a compelling reason to apply the Order
Protection Rule consistently across all NMS stocks.
957 ICI Reproposal Letter at 2.
958 Id. at 3.
959 BNY Letter at 2.
960 See, e.g., American Century Letter at 2 (‘‘[W]e
support the establishment of a uniform tradethrough rule for all securities across all market
centers within the National Market System.’’);
Letter from Yakov Amihud, New York University,
and Haim Mendelson, Stanford University, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated Jan.
25, 2005 (‘‘Amihud/Mendelson Reproposal Letter’’),
Attachment at 14 (‘‘The BBO Alternative is most
potent in protecting the interests of small,
uninformed investors. This will induce their
participation in the stock market and thus will
make the market more liquid.’’); Capital Research
Letter at 2 (‘‘We believe providing price protection
will create an incentive for buyers and sellers to
display their intentions. This will generate a more
accurate reflection of true supply and demand,
which will enhance price discovery. We also
believe that this will lead to an increased use of
limit orders outside the best bid and offer which
will increase depth in the market and dampen
volatility. For this reason we favor a trade-through
rule.’’); Consumer Federation Letter at 2 (‘‘The lack
of a trade-through rule in the Nasdaq market has
unquestionably contributed significantly to
fragmentation in that market, by allowing practices
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In addition to not addressing the
views of commenters, the dissent does
not refute the significance of data
analyses prepared by Commission staff
to assess the views of commenters that
intermarket price protection is needed
to promote depth and liquidity in
Nasdaq stocks. First, the dissent does
not mention the staff studies that found
that short-term price volatility is
significantly higher in Nasdaq stocks
than in NYSE stocks.961 Excessive shortterm price volatility indicates a need for
greater depth and liquidity to dampen
price fluctuations. Although
acknowledging that the drafters of the
1975 Amendments identified ‘‘the
maintenance of stable and orderly
markets with maximum capacity for
absorbing trading imbalances without
undue price movements’’ as one of the
‘‘paramount’’ objectives for the NMS,962
the dissent does not address the staff
volatility analyses indicating the need to
address price volatility in Nasdaq
stocks.963
such as internalization and payment for order flow
that prevent substantial pockets of orders from
interacting with the broader market while leaving
limit orders that set the best price unfilled * * *.
[W]e believe a universal trade-through rule will not
only benefit the investors who have their limit
orders filled as a result, but also will benefit the
market as a whole, through increased liquidity,
improved price discovery, and tighter spreads.’’);
Deutsche Bank Reproposal Letter at 1–2 (‘‘DBSI
agrees with the Commission that limit orders are
critically important to our markets, and we believe
that readily accessible limit orders should be
protected. In our view, protection means that the
first mover who commits to offer liquidity at a
particular price point should be rewarded with the
assurance that others in the marketplace cannot
overlook that price and trade at an inferior price.’’);
Global Electronic Trading Company Reproposal
Letter at 2 (‘‘The BBO Alternative and electronic
efficiencies will have a positive impact on the
economy by increasing market efficiency and,
thereby, GDP.’’); Interactive Brokers Group
Reproposal Letter at 1 (‘‘We strongly support
adoption of proposed Regulation NMS, which is a
common sense and long-overdue update of the
national market system rules in light of the major
technological changes that have taken place in the
equity markets in the last three decades.’’);
Vanguard Reproposal Letter (‘‘We agree with the
Commission that an intermarket trade-through rule
should be applied to Nasdaq stocks to strengthen
price protection.’’); Weaver Reproposal Letter (‘‘I
also urge the commission to extend the rule to
NASDAQ stocks. Clearly establishing price as the
primary priority rule in markets will encourage the
submission of limit orders, leading to lower
execution costs for investors, and consequently
lowering the cost of capital for traded firms.’’).
961 The relevant studies are the Volatility Study
and the Supplemental Volatility Study prepared by
the Commission’s Office of Economic Analysis,
described in notes 143–144 above.
962 Dissent, note 30 (quoting Senate Report on
1975 Amendments).
963 Dissent, section II.B. The dissenters also imply
that minimizing price volatility and enhancing
depth and liquidity are not encompassed within the
five broad objectives for the NMS specified in
Exchange Act Section 11A(a)(1)(C). Dissent, text
accompanying notes 30, 50–52. In fact, both
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Second, the dissent fails to appreciate
the significance of staff studies
examining fill rates and other order
execution quality statistics for
marketable limit orders in Nasdaq
stocks.964 The dissent incorrectly
interprets the Commission’s evaluation
of these studies as critical of the trading
strategy of submitting ‘‘pinging’’
orders—orders with sizes greater than
the displayed size of quotations.965 The
Commission’s evaluation of low fill
rates in Nasdaq stocks is not a criticism
of pinging orders. The use of pinging
orders is a valid strategy for trading
stocks on electronic markets and
certainly will continue after
implementation of the Order Protection
Rule. Indeed, an important goal of the
Rule is to improve the execution quality
for such orders by increasing their fill
rates and, thereby, the ability of
investors to trade Nasdaq stocks in
larger sizes. As discussed earlier in this
release,966 the important consideration
is not that fill rates in Nasdaq stocks are
lower than fill rates in NYSE stocks.
This difference likely is explained by
broad structural differences unrelated to
market efficiency. Rather, the problem is
that fill rates, as well as the executed
share volume, in Nasdaq stocks for
orders with sizes ranging from 2,000 to
9,999 shares are very low in absolute
terms (falling as low as 12% to 27%),
even for many active stocks included in
the Nasdaq-100 Index.967 The
Commission believes that this data
supports the views of commenters that
intermarket price protection is needed
minimizing price volatility and enhancing depth
and liquidity are essential elements for achieving
the broad objective of assuring the ‘‘economically
efficient execution of securities transactions.’’
Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(i). Both elements help reduce
investor transaction costs and thereby promote
efficient trading. See Conference Report at 91–92
(‘‘The basic goals of the Exchange Act remain
salutatory and unchallenged: To provide fair and
honest mechanisms for the pricing of securities, to
assure that dealing in securities is fair and without
under preferences or advantages among investors,
to ensure that securities can be purchased and sold
at economically efficient transaction costs, and to
provide, to the maximum degree practicable,
markets that are open and orderly.’’) (emphasis
added). The implicit costs associated with the
prices at which transactions are executed represent
one of the most significant elements of investor
transaction costs. See supra, text accompanying
notes 300–302.
964 The relevant studies are the Matched Pairs
Study, prepared by the Commission’s Office of
Economic Analysis, and the S&P Index Study and
the Nasdaq-100 Index Supplemental Study,
prepared by the Commission’s Division of Market
Regulation, described in notes 114 and 137 above.
The significance of marketable limit orders in the
market for Nasdaq stocks is addressed at length
elsewhere and will not be repeated here. See supra,
text accompanying notes 121–123.
965 Dissent, text accompanying notes 57–58.
966 Supra, text accompanying notes 132–136.
967 See supra, text accompanying notes 138–139.
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to promote greater depth and liquidity
across the whole range of Nasdaq stocks.
3. Effectiveness of Order Protection Rule
The dissent suggests that the Order
Protection Rule will not meet its goals
because some trade-throughs will
continue even after implementation of
the Rule. The dissent notes that the Rule
contains exceptions for intermarket
sweep orders, flickering quotations,
trading centers that are experiencing a
material delay, volume weighted
average price (‘‘VWAP’’) orders, and
stopped orders, and questions whether,
given these exceptions, the Rule will
lead to a significant reduction in tradethrough rates.968
The dissent fails to appreciate both
the methodology of the staff study of
trade-through rates and the operation of
the Order Protection Rule. As explained
at length earlier in this release,969 the
staff used a conservative methodology
in the Trade-Through Study that did not
include trade-throughs attributable to
intermarket sweep orders, flickering
quotations, and VWAP trades in its
calculation of trade-through rates. Thus,
given the consistency between the
Study’s methodology and the Rule’s
exceptions, the Commission believes
that implementation of the Rule will
lead to the elimination of the great
majority of the types of trade-throughs
found in the Trade-Through Study.970
Moreover, the exceptions in the Order
Protection Rule are fully consistent with
the principle of price protection. For
example, to comply with the
exemptions for intermarket sweep
orders, VWAP orders, and stopped
orders as a practical matter, market
participants must trade with, rather than
trade through, the displayed size of
protected quotations.971 Intermarket
sweep orders must, by definition, be
routed to execute against the full
displayed size of protected quotations,
while the dealers that execute VWAP
and stopped orders typically will
execute trades in the public markets to
establish the positions necessary to fill
the orders. In addition, the exceptions
for flickering quotations and trading
centers experiencing a material delay
are consistent with intermarket price
protection because they are designed to
exclude quotations that are not truly
accessible. The existence of these
exceptions, therefore, will not detract
968 Dissent,
section III.A.
section II.A.1.a.
970 See supra, notes 61–63 and accompanying
text.
971 See supra, notes 220–221, 249–257, and
accompanying text.
969 Supra,
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from the effectiveness of the Rule in
strengthening price protection.
The dissent also states that the Order
Protection Rule will not increase market
depth and liquidity because the Rule
does not provide what the dissent views
as complete protection of limit
orders.972 In particular, it points to the
Commission’s decision to protect only
quotations that are the best bids and
offers (‘‘BBOs’’) of markets, and to the
ability of markets to match the best
prices displayed in other markets. The
Commission’s reasons for protecting
market BBOs are discussed in detail
earlier in this release.973 The practice of
price matching, by definition, does not
cause investors to receive inferior prices
or result in trade-throughs of displayed
quotations. Most importantly, the
dissent’s assertion that the other
approaches might have given greater
protection to limit orders does not
dispose of the relevant question, which
is whether strengthening the current
level of price protection for market
BBOs will lead to greater depth and
liquidity.974
4. Promoting Competition
The dissent claims that the Order
Protection Rule will limit competition,
stifle innovation, and create regulatory
barriers to entry. The dissent argues that
intermarket protection of the best
accessible prices will ‘‘reduce markets
to the lowest common denominator.’’ 975
As discussed in an earlier section of this
release, the Commission believes that
markets will continue to have strong
incentives to compete and innovate,
particularly to be the first preference of
order routers at any given price and
thereby maximize their share of trading
volume.976 Liquidity providers will be
able to compete on both price and size
through use of the intermarket sweep
section III.C.
section II.A.5.
974 See, e.g., supra, notes 56–59, 957–960, and
accompanying text (commenters supporting
adoption of Order Protection Rule to promote depth
and liquidity).
975 Dissent, section V.A.1.
976 Supra, section II.A.4.a. See also Bear Stearns
Reproposal Letter at 2 (Market BBO alternative
‘‘accomplishes the right balance for trade-through
protection because it encourages competitive
quoting behavior both within and among markets,
without imposing excessive routing obligations and
related costs on receiving trading centers.’’); CHX
Reproposal Letter at 3 (‘‘[T]he Market BBO
Alternative provides an ideal balance; it recognizes
the importance of preserving essential price
protections, while permitting market centers to
control costs and to preserve intermarket
competition.’’); Letter Type J (Letter submitted by
548 commenters stating that protecting the best bid
and offer in each market center preserves both
competition among markets and competition among
quotations ‘‘in a way that benefits all securities
industry participants.’’).
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973 Supra,
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37607
order exception, which will allow them
to execute immediately a large
transaction at prices outside the best
prices by routing orders to execute
against the displayed size of betterpriced quotations.977 Finally, the Order
Protection Rule will promote
competition among markets by assuring
new or smaller markets that, if they
display the best prices, they will attract
order flow, because larger, dominant
markets will not be allowed to ignore
their quotations. New or smaller
markets also will benefit from the price
transparency and open access elements
of Regulation NMS, which preclude
dominant markets from unreasonably
restricting the availability of their
market information or unfairly
discriminating against competing
markets by denying access to their
displayed quotations.
The dissent also claims that the Order
Protection Rule will create barriers to
competition and regulatory barriers to
entry, largely because the Rule protects
quotations that are displayed by SROs
registered under the Exchange Act.978
Here, however, the dissent appears to
take issue with one of the most basic
elements of the Exchange Act regulatory
scheme—the equity market registration
requirement. Congress enacted this
registration requirement in 1934 to
assure that all significant equity markets
have the capacity and integrity to meet
their responsibilities to protect investors
and promote the public interest. The
Commission strongly believes that this
basic registration requirement is an
essential element of any effective
scheme of securities regulation.
Consistent with this requirement, the
SROs for many years have been
responsible for collecting quotations
and disseminating them to the public in
the consolidated quotation stream.
Broker-dealers and ATSs can participate
in the consolidated quotation stream by
providing their quotations to an SRO.
They will continue to be able to do so
after implementation of the Order
Protection Rule and, to the extent their
quotations constitute the best bids or
offers of the SRO, such quotations will
be protected. Moreover, small ATSs
with less than 5% of trading volume are
exempted from participation in the
consolidated quotation stream, thereby
reducing barriers to entry for new
markets.979 But these aspects of the U.S.
regulatory scheme all flow from the
basic Exchange Act registration
977 See
supra, text accompanying notes 249–250.
sections V.A.3 and V.A.4.
979 See supra, text accompanying notes 385–386.
978 Dissent,
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requirement for significant equity
markets, not Regulation NMS.
5. Scope of Order Protection Rule
The dissent argues that the scope of
the Order Protection Rule has been
substantially expanded beyond the
reproposal without the benefit of the
normal notice and comment process,
and further states that the ‘‘practical
effect is that market participants must
exhaust liquidity in reserve prior to
moving to the next price level.’’ 980 Both
of these assertions are incorrect. The
scope of the Order Protection Rule has
not been expanded from the reproposal,
nor does the Rule, as reproposed or
adopted, require market participants to
route orders to execute against reserve
size or any other liquidity that is not
displayed. As reproposed and adopted,
the Rule protects the best displayed
prices of protected quotations, without
regard to their sizes,981 but provides an
exception for transactions at inferior
prices if intermarket sweep orders
simultaneously are routed to execute
against the ‘‘full displayed size’’ of the
protected quotations.982 Therefore, the
removal of references to size in the
definition of quotation has no effect on
the operation of the Rule as adopted.
Market participants will not be
required to route oversized orders in an
attempt to execute against reserve size,
as the dissenters claim. While a
technical correction to a reproposed
Regulation NMS definition has been
made, it does not raise a notice and
comment issue. A clause was deleted
from the definition of ‘‘quotation’’ in
reproposed Rule 600(b)(63), but this
clause was not relevant to the Order
Protection Rule or to any other rule in
Regulation NMS, as reproposed or
adopted.983
980 Dissent,
text following note 63.
example, ‘‘trade-through’’ is defined in
adopted Rule 600(b)(77), as it was in the reproposal,
solely with respect to price—‘‘the purchase or sale
of an NMS stock during regular trading hours,
either as principal or agent, at a price that is lower
than a protected bid or higher than a protected
offer.’’ This definition is unchanged from the
reproposal.
982 Rule 600(b)(30) defines an ‘‘intermarket sweep
order’’ as requiring, among other things, that limit
orders be ‘‘routed to execute against the full
displayed size of any protected bid, in the case of
a limit order to sell, or the full displayed size of
any protected offer, in the case of a limit order to
buy, for the NMS stock with a price that is superior
to the limit price of the limit order identified as an
intermarket sweep order.’’ This definition is
unchanged from the reproposal.
983 Reproposed Rule 600(b)(63) provided that
‘‘quotations and quotation information means bids,
offers and, where applicable, quotation sizes and
aggregate quotation sizes.’’ As adopted, Rule
600(b)(62) simply defines ‘‘quotation’’ as ‘‘a bid or
an offer.’’ The deleted language currently is found
only in a definition from Exchange Act Rule
11Ac1–2(a)(5), which Rule has been entirely
981 For
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The dissent minimizes the role of the
intermarket sweep order exception in
the operation of the adopted Order
Protection Rule. It states that, under the
Rule as reproposed, ‘‘trading centers
could route an order to a protected
quotation’s full displayed size and
simultaneously execute an order at an
inferior price,’’ and then implies that
this practice is no longer allowed under
the adopted Rule.984 But simultaneously
executing orders at multiple price levels
is precisely what the intermarket sweep
order exception allows under the
reproposed and adopted Rule.
Regardless of the dissent’s position,
there is no indication that commenters
were confused concerning the
importance of the exception or
operation of the Rule.985
6. Benefits and Costs of Order Protection
Rule
The dissent states that the
Commission’s estimate of $321 million
in annual benefits to investors from the
Order Protection Rule constitutes a
‘‘mere rounding error’’ compared to the
$18.7 trillion in total dollar value of
trading in 2003.986 However, the dissent
also states that $143.8 million in onetime start-up costs and $22 million in
annual costs to comply with the Rule,
which ultimately will be paid by
investors, are ‘‘very high.’’ 987 These
statements appear to be inconsistent. If
more than $300 million in net annual
benefits is an inconsequential amount to
investors, why is less than one-half of
rewritten and redesignated as Rule 603 in
Regulation NMS. See supra, section V.B.3.c. The
new Rule does not use the terms ‘‘quotation
information,’’ ‘‘quotation sizes,’’ or ‘‘aggregate
quotation sizes,’’ and therefore the deleted language
now is obsolete. The language was inadvertently
left in the definition of ‘‘quotation’’ in the
reproposal and has been deleted as a technical
correction. Its deletion does not change the
substantive operation of the reproposed or adopted
Order Protection Rule.
984 Dissent, text following note 63.
985 See, e.g., Letter from Adam Cooper, Senior
Managing Director and General Counsel, Citadel
Investment Group, L.L.C., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005
(‘‘Citadel Reproposal Letter’’) at 2–3 (‘‘The proposed
intermarket sweep exception addresses most of
Citadel’s concerns about the Commission’s initial
trade-through proposal, and would have many
benefits * * *. [T]his exception would increase
execution speed and reliability because it would
allow market participants to simultaneously and
immediately sweep through multiple price
levels.’’); SIA Reproposal Letter at 20 (‘‘We continue
to believe that an exception for intermarket sweep
orders is imperative for the proper functioning of
the trade-through rule and for the facilitation of
various beneficial trading strategies, including
smart routing and block trading. Therefore, we
applaud the SEC’s decision to include such an
exception in its Reproposal.’’).
986 Dissent, text accompanying note 41.
987 Dissent, section V.C.
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that amount in one-time start-up costs a
significant burden for investors?
In fact, of course, both of the amounts
are substantial, and the dissent has used
an ‘‘apples-to-oranges’’ comparison. The
$321 million amount measures the
estimated reduction in investor
transaction costs. Even the total amount
of transaction costs will always be a
fraction of the total dollar volume of
trading in the U.S. equity markets.
Indeed, if transaction costs were ever to
represent a large proportion of the total
dollar volume of trading, investors
would cease to trade, liquidity would
dry up, and the cost of capital for listed
companies would be prohibitive. All
transaction costs, however, eat away at
the long-term returns of investors. One
of the keys to successful long-term
investing is to minimize, wherever
possible, transaction costs of all kinds.
Even under the conservative estimate
used in the Commission’s cost-benefit
analysis, which is based on the dissent’s
preferred trade-through measure—the
share volume of quotations that are
traded through 988—investors would
benefit over a five-year period by a total
of more than $1.3 billion.989 Moreover,
this estimate is conservative because it
does not include any benefits for
investors that would result from
improved market depth and liquidity,990
nor does it reflect the non-monetary
benefits associated with enhanced
investor confidence in the fairness and
orderliness of the equity markets. The
988 See Dissent, text accompanying note 33;
Trade-Through Study at 3 ($321 million ‘‘includes
only share volume that traded through depth
displayed on market center’s top of book’’).
989 The estimated net benefits of more than $1.3
billion over a five-year period are calculated by
deducting the estimated annual costs of compliance
of $22 million from the estimated annual benefits
of $321 million, multiplying by five, and then
deducting the estimated one-time start-up costs of
$143.8 million.
990 As discussed in section II.A.6 above, even
small percentage improvements in depth and
liquidity can generate enormous dollar benefits for
investors in the form of reduced transaction costs
because the total amount of transaction costs
incurred each year by investors is so large. Such
costs were conservatively estimated earlier in this
release at more than $30 billion annually. Supra,
text accompanying notes 300–305. Others have
estimated such costs as being much higher. See,
e.g., Instinet Group Incorporated, Eliminating
Unnecessary Cost: Reducing Transaction Costs and
Recapturing Value for Your Portfolio 2 (2004)
(available at www.instinetgroup.com) (‘‘Transaction
costs can have a significant effect on returns.
Implementation shortfall in U.S. equity markets has
been estimated to range from 20 basis points to as
much as 2% of the principal value of transactions
and orders. Taking the mid-point of this range,
however, even an average of 1% per year in lost
performance, before inflation and taxes,
compounded over the average life of a pension
liability, represents substantial foregone value. If we
apply it to the $12 trillion U.S. equity market, we
get approximately $120 billion lost to transaction
costs every year.’’).
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Commission believes that all of these
benefits amply justify the costs of the
Order Protection Rule.
7. Alternatives to Order Protection Rule
The dissent states that the
Commission did not seriously consider
alternatives to the Order Protection
Rule.991 It suggests that the Commission
first could have adopted only access
standards, and then adopted a price
protection rule later if deemed
necessary, or, alternatively, that the
Commission could have adopted a price
protection rule in stages for some
markets, while waiting to evaluate its
effect before applying the rule to other
markets. Both of these alternatives were
considered, and the Commission
believed that they would have led to
continued uncertainty concerning the
future regulatory structure of the U.S.
equity markets, and that the second
alternative would have perpetuated
inconsistent regulatory requirements for
different NMS markets and stocks. At
bottom, these alternatives simply reflect
the dissenters’ policy view that a price
protection rule is not needed and will
not be effective. Indeed, it is not clear
why the dissent believes that the
alternatives should have been seriously
considered when they also believe that
intermarket price protection in general
will not be effective. It is even more
difficult to understand how these
alternatives could be suggested by the
dissenters if they believe that the very
basis of intermarket price protection is
‘‘arbitrary, unreasonable and
anticompetitive.’’ The Commission
disagrees and believes that further delay
in reaching final decisions on vital NMS
issues could have caused significant
harm to the U.S. markets.
The dissent also states that the
Commission failed to consider the
alternative of prohibiting only those
trade-throughs that are more than three
cents inferior to the best prices. A threecent trade-through threshold is
analogous to the temporary exemption
from the ITS trade-through provisions
that was originally granted in 2002 for
trading in three exchange-traded
funds.992 These derivative securities,
one of which tracks the Nasdaq-100
Index (then referred to as the ‘‘QQQ’’),
are highly liquid and their value is
readily derived from the values of their
underlying stocks. The deficiencies of
the ITS trade-through provisions, which
protect both automated and manual
quotations, were most evident in these
securities. The Commission granted the
991 Dissent,
note 6.
Exchange Act Release No. 46428
(Aug. 28, 2002), 67 FR 56607 (Sep. 14, 2002).
992 Securities
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exemption to address the pressing need
for regulatory action in these securities,
while it continued to evaluate a more
comprehensive resolution of NMS
issues.
The dissent argues that the exemption
led to increased competition, narrowing
of spreads, and a significant reduction
in trade-through rates, citing an October
2002 study of trading in the QQQs by
the Commission’s Office of Economic
Analysis that was referenced in the
Proposing Release.993 This study,
however, found that trade-through rates
were extremely high both before and
after the exemption was granted—48%
before and 47% after. The exemption
therefore essentially ratified trading
activity that already was occurring.994
Consequently, data on trading before
and after the exemption provides little
basis for drawing conclusions on the
effect of the exemption.
Most importantly, the Commission
considered and rejected a rule with a
three-cent trade-through threshold
because it so clearly would fail to
achieve any of the primary objectives of
the Order Protection Rule, including
investor protection, fair and orderly
markets, and increased depth and
liquidity. Such a rule would allow
intermediaries and markets to execute
investor orders at prices significantly
inferior to the best prices that are
immediately and automatically
accessible. In many NMS stocks, quoted
spreads are as low as one penny. A
three-cent trade-through on a single
trade would represent a 300% increase
in investor transaction costs in these
stocks. In addition, allowing three-cent
trade-throughs would seriously
undercut the objectives of encouraging
the display of limit orders. The average
trade-through amount is 2.3 cents per
share in Nasdaq stocks and 2.2 cents per
share in NYSE stocks.995 Consequently,
a rule with a three-cent threshold would
not affect the majority of trade-throughs
993 Dissent, note 6 (citing Proposing Release, 69
FR at 11134 n. 50).
994 Unlike the more recent Trade-Through Study,
the October 2002 study did not incorporate a threesecond quotation window to address timing latency
issues. The earlier study also included manual
quotations disseminated by Amex and the NYSE in
the QQQs. The respective findings of the two
studies therefore are not comparable. The October
2002 study did not examine the effect of the
exemption on the spreads paid by investors. The
dissent also cites a comment letter stating that
spreads narrowed in the QQQ’s when they became
a Nasdaq-listed security in December 2004. Dissent,
note 6. Given that the three-cent trade-through
threshold already allowed an extremely high
percentage of trade-throughs even prior to the
switch from Amex to Nasdaq listing, there is no
basis to believe that the effect of the switch on
spreads, if accurately stated, is related to any
change in trade-through protection.
995 Trade-Through Study, Tables 3, 10.
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37609
and thereby have little beneficial effect
on the incentives to display limit orders.
C. Market Data
The dissent addresses issues relating
to the level of market data fees and the
single consolidator model for
disseminating market data. As discussed
above,996 the Commission has
determined that the most appropriate
forum in which to address the level of
market data fees is its review of SRO
structure, and it has retained the single
consolidator model primarily because of
its significant role in protecting
investors.
D. Conclusion
The dissent concludes by stating that
Regulation NMS is ‘‘far from final’’ and
that it fears that ‘‘inevitable delays in
obtaining guidance, the attendant
regulatory uncertainty, and concomitant
costs will harm a competitive
marketplace.’’ 997 In fact, the
Commission has taken great care to craft
clear and workable rules for market
participants to follow. Indeed, as
discussed throughout this release, a
variety of changes to the rules as
originally proposed have been made
specifically to respond to the comments
of market participants.998 Given the
wide range of participants in the
securities markets, the particular means
chosen by different entities to comply
with the NMS rules may vary. The staff,
under the purview of the Commission,
will be available to work with the
securities industry and the public to
provide any desired guidance on
implementation questions. In this
regard, the NMS rules are no different
from other rules that the Commission
adopts, including previously-adopted
NMS rules, such as those relating to
limit order display and execution
quality disclosure, which were widely
cited by commenters as effective
regulation. The Commission’s
experience with these other rules has
demonstrated the wisdom of this
approach.
XIII. Statutory Authority
Pursuant to the Exchange Act and
particularly, Sections 2, 3(b), 5, 6, 11,
11A, 15, 15A, 17(a) and (b), 19, 23(a),
and 36 thereof, 15 U.S.C. 78b, 78c(b),
78e, 78f, 78k–1, 78o, 78o–3, 78q(a) and
(b), 78s; 78w(a), and 78mm, and Rules
11Aa3–2(b)(2) and 11Aa3–2(c)(1)
996 Supra,
section V.A.
Conclusion.
998 See, e.g., supra, text accompanying notes 191–
196 (discussing rule provisions that respond to
commenters’ suggestions on ways to make rules
workable and implementable in a fair and orderly
fashion).
997 Dissent,
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thereunder, 17 CFR 240.11Aa3–2(b)(2)
and 17 CFR 240.11Aa3–2(c)(1), the
Commission: (1) Redesignates the NMS
rules under Section 11A of the
Exchange Act as Regulation NMS rules;
(2) adopts Rules 600, 610, 611, and 612
of Regulation NMS; (3) amends current
Rules 11Aa3–1 and 11Ac1–2 under the
Exchange Act and redesignates them as
Rules 601 and 603 of Regulation NMS;
(4) amends the CTA Plan, the CQ Plan,
and the Nasdaq UTP Plan; and (5)
amends various other rules to reflect the
adoption of Regulation NMS, as set forth
below.
XIV. Text of Adopted Amendments to
the CTA Plan, the CQ Plan, and the
Nasdaq UTP Plan
The Commission hereby amends the
CTA Plan, the CQ Plan, and the Nasdaq
UTP Plan to incorporate the new net
income allocation formula into each
Plan, which supersedes the existing
allocation formulas in those Plans, and
to incorporate the new Plan governance
language into each Plan.
Set forth below is the text of (1) the
new allocation formula to be
incorporated into each of the Plans, and
(2) the new Plan governance language to
be incorporated into each of the Plans.
Allocation Amendment
(#) Allocation of Net Income.
(a) Annual Payment. Notwithstanding
any other provision of this Plan, each
Participant eligible to receive
distributable net income under the Plan
shall receive an annual payment for
each calendar year that is equal to the
sum of the Participant’s Trading Shares
and Quoting Shares, as defined below,
in each Eligible Security for the
calendar year.
(b) Security Income Allocation. The
Security Income Allocation for an
Eligible Security shall be determined by
multiplying (i) the distributable net
income of the Plan for the calendar year
by (ii) the Volume Percentage for such
Eligible Security (the ‘‘initial
allocation’’), and then adding or
subtracting any amounts specified in the
reallocation set forth below. The
Volume Percentage for an Eligible
Security shall be determined by
dividing (i) the square root of the dollar
volume of transaction reports
disseminated by the Processor in such
Eligible Security during the calendar
year by (ii) the sum of the square roots
of the dollar volume of transaction
reports disseminated by the Processor in
each Eligible Security during the
calendar year. If the initial allocation of
distributable net income in accordance
with the Volume Percentage of an
Eligible Security equals an amount
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greater than $4.00 multiplied by the
total number of qualified transaction
reports in such Eligible Security during
the calendar year, the excess amount
shall be subtracted from the initial
allocation for such Eligible Security and
reallocated among all Eligible Securities
in direct proportion to the dollar
volume of transaction reports
disseminated by the Processor in
Eligible Securities during the calendar
year. A transaction report with a dollar
volume of $5000 or more shall
constitute one qualified transaction
report. A transaction report with a
dollar volume of less than $5000 shall
constitute a fraction of a qualified
transaction report that equals the dollar
volume of the transaction report divided
by $5000.
(c) Trading Share. The Trading Share
of a Participant in an Eligible Security
shall be determined by multiplying (i)
an amount equal to fifty percent of the
Security Income Allocation for the
Eligible Security by (ii) the Participant’s
Trade Rating in the Eligible Security. A
Participant’s Trade Rating in an Eligible
Security shall be determined by taking
the average of (i) the Participant’s
percentage of the total dollar volume of
transaction reports disseminated by the
Processor in the Eligible Security during
the calendar year, and (ii) the
Participant’s percentage of the total
number of qualified transaction reports
disseminated by the Processor in the
Eligible Security during the calendar
year.
(d) Quoting Share. The Quoting Share
of a Participant in an Eligible Security
shall be determined by multiplying (i)
an amount equal to fifty percent of the
Security Income Allocation for the
Eligible Security by (ii) the Participant’s
Quote Rating in the Eligible Security. A
Participant’s Quote Rating in an Eligible
Security shall be determined by
dividing (i) the sum of the Quote Credits
earned by the Participant in such
Eligible Security during the calendar
year by (ii) the sum of the Quote Credits
earned by all Participants in such
Eligible Security during the calendar
year. A Participant shall earn one Quote
Credit for each second of time (with a
minimum of one full second) multiplied
by dollar value of size that an automated
best bid (offer) transmitted by the
Participant to the Processor during
regular trading hours is equal to the
price of the national best bid (offer) in
the Eligible Security and does not lock
or cross a previously displayed
automated quotation. An automated bid
(offer) shall have the meaning specified
in Rule 600 of Regulation NMS of the
Exchange Act for an ‘‘automated
quotation.’’ The dollar value of size of
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a quote shall be determined by
multiplying the price of a quote by its
size.
Governance Amendment
(#) Advisory Committee.
(a) Formation. Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Plan, an
Advisory Committee to the Plan shall be
formed and shall function in accordance
with the provisions set forth in this
section.
(b) Composition. Members of the
Advisory Committee shall be selected
for two-year terms as follows:
(1) Operating Committee Selections.
By affirmative vote of a majority of the
Participants entitled to vote, the
Operating Committee shall select at
least one representative from each of the
following categories to be members of
the Advisory Committee: (i) a brokerdealer with a substantial retail investor
customer base, (ii) a broker-dealer with
a substantial institutional investor
customer base, (iii) an alternative
trading system, (iv) a data vendor, and
(v) an investor.
(2) Participant Selections. Each
Participant shall have the right to select
one member of the Advisory Committee.
A Participant shall not select any person
employed by or affiliated with any
Participant or its affiliates or facilities.
(c) Function. Members of the
Advisory Committee shall have the right
to submit their views to the Operating
Committee on Plan matters, prior to a
decision by the Operating Committee on
such matters. Such matters shall
include, but not be limited to, any new
or modified product, fee, contract, or
pilot program that is offered or used
pursuant to the Plan.
(d) Meetings and Information.
Members of the Advisory Committee
shall have the right to attend all
meetings of the Operating Committee
and to receive any information
concerning Plan matters that is
distributed to the Operating Committee;
provided, however, that the Operating
Committee may meet in executive
session if, by affirmative vote of a
majority of the Participants entitled to
vote, the Operating Committee
determines that an item of Plan business
requires confidential treatment.
XV. Text of Adopted Rules
List of Subjects
17 CFR Part 200
Administrative practice and
procedure, Authority delegations
(Government agencies), Organization
and functions (Government agencies).
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17 CFR Part 201
Administrative practice and
procedure, Securities.
17 CFR Parts 230 and 270
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
17 CFR Parts 240, 242, and 249
Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
I For the reasons set out in the preamble,
Title 17, Chapter II of the Code of the
Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
PART 200—ORGANIZATION;
CONDUCT AND ETHICS; AND
INFORMATION AND REQUESTS
1. The authority citation for part 200
continues to read in part as follows:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77s, 77o, 77sss, 78d,
78d–1, 78d–2, 78w, 78ll(d), 78mm, 79t, 80a–
37, 80b–11, and 7202, unless otherwise
noted.
*
*
*
*
*
2. Section 200.30–3 is amended by:
a. Removing paragraphs (a)(62) and
(a)(71);
I b. Redesignating paragraphs (a)(63)
through (a)(70) as paragraphs (a)(62)
through (a)(69);
I c. Redesignating paragraphs (a)(72)
through (a)(82) as paragraphs (a)(70)
through (a)(80);
I d. Revising paragraphs (a)(27), (a)(28),
(a)(36), (a)(37), (a)(42), (a)(49), (a)(61),
and newly redesignated paragraphs
(a)(68), and (a)(69); and
I e. Adding new paragraphs (a)(81),
(a)(82), and (a)(83).
I The revisions and additions read as
follows:
I
I
§ 200.30–3 Delegation of authority to
Director of Division of Market Regulation.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(27) To approve amendments to the
joint industry plan governing
consolidated transaction reporting
declared effective by the Commission
pursuant to Rule 601 (17 CFR 242.601)
or its predecessors, Rule 11Aa3–1 and
Rule 17a–15, and to grant exemptions
from Rule 601 pursuant to Rule 601(f)
(17 CFR 242.601(f)) to exchanges trading
listed securities that are designated as
national market system securities until
such times as a Joint Reporting Plan for
such securities is filed and approved by
the Commission.
(28) To grant exemptions from Rule
602 (17 CFR 242.602), pursuant to Rule
602(d) (17 CFR 242.602(d)).
*
*
*
*
*
(36) To grant exemptions from Rule
603 (17 CFR 242.603), pursuant to Rule
603(d) (17 CFR 242.603(d)).
(37) Pursuant to Rule 600 (17 CFR
242.600), to publish notice of the filing
of a designation plan with respect to
national market system securities, or
any proposed amendment thereto, and
to approve such plan or amendment.
*
*
*
*
*
(42) Under 17 CFR 242.608(e), to grant
or deny exemptions from 17 CFR
242.608.
*
*
*
*
*
(49) Pursuant to section 11A(b) of the
Act (15 U.S.C. 78k–1(b)) and Rule 609
thereunder (17 CFR 242.609), to publish
notice of and, by order, grant under
section 11A(b) of the Act and Rule 609
thereunder: Applications for registration
as a securities information processor;
and exemptions from that section and
any rules or regulations promulgated
thereunder, either conditionally or
unconditionally.
*
*
*
*
*
(61) To grant exemptions from Rule
604 (17 CFR 242.604), pursuant to Rule
604(c) (17 CFR 242.604(c)).
*
*
*
*
*
(68) Pursuant to Rule 605(b) (17 CFR
242.605(b)), to grant or deny
exemptions, conditionally or
unconditionally, from any provision or
provisions of Rule 605 (17 CFR
242.605).
(69) Pursuant to Rule 606(c) (17 CFR
242.606(c)), to grant or deny
exemptions, conditionally or
unconditionally, from any provision or
provisions of Rule 606 (17 CFR
242.606).
*
*
*
*
*
(81) To grant or deny exemptions
from Rule 610 (17 CFR 242.610),
pursuant to Rule 610(e) (17 CFR
242.610(e)).
(82) To grant or deny exemptions
from Rule 611 (17 CFR 242.611),
pursuant to Rule 611(d) (17 CFR
242.611(d)).
(83) To grant or deny exemptions
from Rule 612 (17 CFR 242.612),
pursuant to Rule 612(c) (17 CFR
242.612(c)).
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart N—Commission Information
Collection Requirements Under the
Paperwork Reduction Act: OMB
Control Numbers
3. The authority citation for Subpart N
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3506; 44 U.S.C. 3507.
4. Section 200.800 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
I
§ 200.800 OMB control numbers assigned
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
*
*
*
(b) Display.
*
*
Information collection requirement
17 CFR part or section where identified and described
Regulation S–X ...........................................................................
Regulation S–B ...........................................................................
Regulation S–K ...........................................................................
Rule 154 .....................................................................................
Rule 155 .....................................................................................
Rule 236 .....................................................................................
Rule 237 .....................................................................................
Regulation A ...............................................................................
Regulation C ...............................................................................
Rule 425 .....................................................................................
Rule 477 .....................................................................................
Rule 489 .....................................................................................
Rule 498 .....................................................................................
Regulation D ...............................................................................
Regulation E ...............................................................................
Rule 604 .....................................................................................
Rule 605 .....................................................................................
Rule 609 .....................................................................................
Rule 701 .....................................................................................
Regulation S ...............................................................................
PART 210 ...................................................................................
PART 228 ...................................................................................
PART 229 ...................................................................................
230.154 .......................................................................................
230.155 .......................................................................................
230.236 .......................................................................................
230.237 .......................................................................................
230.251 thru 230.263 .................................................................
230.400 thru 230.494 .................................................................
230.425 .......................................................................................
230.477 .......................................................................................
230.489 .......................................................................................
230.498 .......................................................................................
230.501 thru 230.506 .................................................................
230.601 thru 230.610a ...............................................................
230.604 .......................................................................................
230.605 .......................................................................................
230.609 .......................................................................................
230.701 .......................................................................................
230.901 thru 230.905 .................................................................
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3235–0495
3235–0549
3235–0095
3235–0528
3235–0286
3235–0074
3235–0521
3235–0550
3235–0411
3235–0488
3235–0076
3235–0232
3235–0232
3235–0232
3235–0233
3235–0522
3235–0357
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Information collection requirement
17 CFR part or section where identified and described
Regulation S–T ...........................................................................
Form SB–1 .................................................................................
Form SB–2 .................................................................................
Form S–1 ....................................................................................
Form S–2 ....................................................................................
Form S–3 ....................................................................................
Form N–2 ....................................................................................
Form N–1A .................................................................................
Form S–6 ....................................................................................
Form S–8 ....................................................................................
Form N–3 ....................................................................................
Form N–4 ....................................................................................
Form S–11 ..................................................................................
Form N–14 ..................................................................................
Form N–5 ....................................................................................
Form S–4 ....................................................................................
Form F–1 ....................................................................................
Form F–2 ....................................................................................
Form F–3 ....................................................................................
Form F–4 ....................................................................................
Form F–6 ....................................................................................
Form F–7 ....................................................................................
Form F–8 ....................................................................................
Form F–9 ....................................................................................
Form F–10 ..................................................................................
Form F–80 ..................................................................................
Form F–X ....................................................................................
Form F–N ...................................................................................
Form ET ......................................................................................
Form ID .......................................................................................
Form SE .....................................................................................
Form TH .....................................................................................
Form 1–A ....................................................................................
Form 2–A ....................................................................................
Form 144 ....................................................................................
Form 1–E ....................................................................................
Form CB .....................................................................................
Rule 6a–1 ...................................................................................
Rule 6a–3 ...................................................................................
Rule 6a–4 ...................................................................................
Rule 6h–1 ...................................................................................
Rule 8c–1 ...................................................................................
Rule 9b–1 ...................................................................................
Rule 10a–1 .................................................................................
Rule 10b–10 ...............................................................................
Rule 10b–17 ...............................................................................
Rule 10b–18 ...............................................................................
Rule 10A–1 .................................................................................
Rule 11a1–1(T) ...........................................................................
Rule 12a–5 .................................................................................
Regulation 12B ...........................................................................
Rule 12d1–3 ...............................................................................
Rule 12d2–1 ...............................................................................
Rule 12d2–2 ...............................................................................
Rule 12f–1 ..................................................................................
Rule 13a–16 ...............................................................................
Regulation 13D/G .......................................................................
Schedule 13D .............................................................................
Schedule 13G .............................................................................
Rule 13e–1 .................................................................................
Rule 13e–3 .................................................................................
Schedule 13E–3 .........................................................................
Schedule 13e–4F .......................................................................
Regulation 14A ...........................................................................
Schedule 14A .............................................................................
Regulation 14C ...........................................................................
Schedule 14C .............................................................................
Regulation 14D ...........................................................................
Schedule TO ...............................................................................
Schedule 14D–1 .........................................................................
Schedule 14D–9 .........................................................................
Schedule 14D–1F .......................................................................
Schedule 14D–9F .......................................................................
Part 232 ......................................................................................
239.9 ...........................................................................................
239.10 .........................................................................................
239.11 .........................................................................................
239.12 .........................................................................................
239.13 .........................................................................................
239.14 .........................................................................................
239.15A ......................................................................................
239.16 .........................................................................................
239.16b .......................................................................................
239.17a .......................................................................................
239.17b .......................................................................................
239.18 .........................................................................................
239.23 .........................................................................................
239.24 .........................................................................................
239.25 .........................................................................................
239.31 .........................................................................................
239.32 .........................................................................................
239.33 .........................................................................................
239.34 .........................................................................................
239.36 .........................................................................................
239.37 .........................................................................................
239.38 .........................................................................................
239.39 .........................................................................................
239.40 .........................................................................................
239.41 .........................................................................................
239.42 .........................................................................................
239.43 .........................................................................................
239.62 .........................................................................................
239.63 .........................................................................................
239.64 .........................................................................................
239.65 .........................................................................................
239.90 .........................................................................................
239.91 .........................................................................................
239.144 .......................................................................................
239.200 .......................................................................................
239.800 .......................................................................................
240.6a–1 .....................................................................................
240.6a–3 .....................................................................................
240.6a–4 .....................................................................................
240.6h–1 .....................................................................................
240.8c–1 .....................................................................................
240.9b–1 .....................................................................................
240.10a–1 ...................................................................................
240.10b–10 .................................................................................
240.10b–17 .................................................................................
240.10b–18 .................................................................................
240.10A–1 ..................................................................................
240.11a1–1(T) ............................................................................
240.12a–5 ...................................................................................
240.12b–1 thru 240.12b–36 .......................................................
240.12d1–3 .................................................................................
240.12d2–1 .................................................................................
240.12d2–2 .................................................................................
240.12f–1 ....................................................................................
240.13a–16 .................................................................................
240.13d–1 thru 240.13d–7 .........................................................
240.13d–101 ...............................................................................
240.13d–102 ...............................................................................
240.13e–1 ...................................................................................
240.13e–3 ...................................................................................
240.13e–100 ...............................................................................
240.13e–101 ...............................................................................
240.14a–1 thru 240.14a–12 .......................................................
240.14a–101 ...............................................................................
240.14c–1 ...................................................................................
240.14c–101 ...............................................................................
240.14d–1 thru 240.14d–9 .........................................................
240.14d–100 ...............................................................................
240.14d–101 ...............................................................................
240.14d–101 ...............................................................................
240.14d–102 ...............................................................................
240.14d–103 ...............................................................................
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3235–0423
3235–0418
3235–0065
3235–0072
3235–0073
3235–0026
3235–0307
3235–0184
3235–0066
3235–0316
3235–0318
3235–0067
3235–0336
3235–0169
3235–0324
3235–0258
3235–0257
3235–0256
3235–0325
3235–0292
3235–0383
3235–0378
3235–0377
3235–0380
3235–0404
3235–0379
3235–0411
3235–0329
3235–0328
3235–0327
3235–0425
3235–0286
3235–0286
3235–0101
3235–0232
3235–0518
3235–0017
3235–0021
3235–0554
3235–0555
3235–0514
3235–0480
3235–0475
3235–0444
3235–0476
3235–0474
3235–0468
3235–0478
3235–0079
3235–0062
3235–0109
3235–0081
3235–0080
3235–0128
3235–0116
3235–0145
3235–0145
3235–0145
3235–0305
3235–0007
3235–0007
3235–0375
3235–0059
3235–0059
3235–0057
3235–0057
3235–0102
3235–0515
3235–0102
3235–0102
3235–0376
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 29, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
Information collection requirement
17 CFR part or section where identified and described
Regulation 14E ...........................................................................
Rule 14f–1 ..................................................................................
Rule 15a–4 .................................................................................
Rule 15a–6 .................................................................................
Rule 15b1–1 ...............................................................................
Rule 15b6–1(a) ...........................................................................
Rule 15c1–5 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c1–6 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c1–7 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c2–1 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c2–5 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c2–7 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c2–8 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c2–11 .............................................................................
Rule 15c2–12 .............................................................................
Rule 15c3–1 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c3–1(c)(13) .....................................................................
Appendix F to Rule 15c3–1 ........................................................
Rule 15c3–3 ...............................................................................
Rule 15c3–4 ...............................................................................
Rule 15d–16 ...............................................................................
Rule 15g–2 .................................................................................
Rule 15g–3 .................................................................................
Rule 15g–4 .................................................................................
Rule 15g–5 .................................................................................
Rule 15g–6 .................................................................................
Rule 15g–9 .................................................................................
Rule 15Aj–1 ................................................................................
Rule 15Ba2–1 .............................................................................
Rule 15Ba2–5 .............................................................................
Rule 15Bc3–1 .............................................................................
Rule 17a–1 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–2 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–3 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–3(a)(16) ......................................................................
Rule 17a–4 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–4(b)(10) ......................................................................
Rule 17a–5 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–5(c) .............................................................................
Rule 17a–6 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–7 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–8 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–9T ...............................................................................
Rule 17a–10 ...............................................................................
Rule 17a–11 ...............................................................................
Rule 17a–12 ...............................................................................
Rule 17a–13 ...............................................................................
Rule 17a–19 ...............................................................................
Rule 17a–22 ...............................................................................
Rule 17a–25 ...............................................................................
Rule 17f–1(b) ..............................................................................
Rule 17f–1(c) ..............................................................................
Rule 17f–1(g) ..............................................................................
Rule 17f–2(a) ..............................................................................
Rule 17f–2(c) ..............................................................................
Rule 17f–2(d) ..............................................................................
Rule 17f–2(e) ..............................................................................
Rule 17f–5 ..................................................................................
Rule 17h–1T ...............................................................................
Rule 17h–2T ...............................................................................
Rule 17Ab2–1 .............................................................................
Rule 17Ac2–1 .............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–2(c), (d), and (h) ......................................................
Rule 17Ad–3(b) ..........................................................................
Rule 17Ad–4(b) and (c) ..............................................................
Rule 17Ad–6 ...............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–7 ...............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–10 .............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–11 .............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–13 .............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–15 .............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–16 .............................................................................
Rule 17Ad–17 .............................................................................
240.14e–1 thru 240.14e–2 .........................................................
240.14f–1 ....................................................................................
240.15a–4 ...................................................................................
240.15a–6 ...................................................................................
240.15b1–1 .................................................................................
240.15b6–1(a) ............................................................................
240.15c1–5 .................................................................................
240.15c1–6 .................................................................................
240.15c1–7 .................................................................................
240.15c2–1 .................................................................................
240.15c2–5 .................................................................................
240.15c2–7 .................................................................................
240.15c2–8 .................................................................................
240.15c2–11 ...............................................................................
240.15c2–12 ...............................................................................
240.15c3–1 .................................................................................
240.15c3–1(c)(13) ......................................................................
240.15c3–1f ................................................................................
240.15c3–3 .................................................................................
240.15c3–4 .................................................................................
240.15d–16 .................................................................................
240.15g–2 ...................................................................................
240.15g–3 ...................................................................................
240.15g–4 ...................................................................................
240.15g–5 ...................................................................................
240.15g–6 ...................................................................................
240.15g–9 ...................................................................................
240.15Aj–1 .................................................................................
240.15Ba2–1 ..............................................................................
240.15Ba2–5 ..............................................................................
240.15Bc3–1 ..............................................................................
240.17a–1 ...................................................................................
240.17a–2 ...................................................................................
240.17a–3 ...................................................................................
240.17a–3(a)(16) ........................................................................
240.17a–4 ...................................................................................
240.17a–4(b)(10) ........................................................................
240.17a–5 ...................................................................................
240.17a–5(c) ..............................................................................
240.17a–6 ...................................................................................
240.17a–7 ...................................................................................
240.17a–8 ...................................................................................
240.17a–9T ................................................................................
240.17a–10 .................................................................................
240.17a–11 .................................................................................
240.17a–12 .................................................................................
240.17a–13 .................................................................................
240.17a–19 .................................................................................
240.17a–22 .................................................................................
240.17a–25 .................................................................................
240.17f–1(b) ...............................................................................
240.17f–1(c) ...............................................................................
240.17f–1(g) ...............................................................................
240.17f–2(a) ...............................................................................
240.17f–2(c) ...............................................................................
240.17f–2(d) ...............................................................................
240.17f–2(e) ...............................................................................
240.17f–5 ....................................................................................
240.17h–1T ................................................................................
240.17h–2T ................................................................................
240.17Ab2–1(a) ..........................................................................
240.17Ac2–1 ..............................................................................
240.17Ad–2(c), (d) and (h) .........................................................
240.17Ad–3(b) ............................................................................
240.17Ad–4(b) and (c) ...............................................................
240.17Ad–6 ................................................................................
240.17Ad–7 ................................................................................
240.17Ad–10 ..............................................................................
240.17Ad–11 ..............................................................................
240.17Ad–13 ..............................................................................
240.17Ad–15 ..............................................................................
240.17Ad–16 ..............................................................................
240.17Ad–17 ..............................................................................
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3235–0010
3235–0371
3235–0012
3235–0018
3235–0471
3235–0472
3235–0134
3235–0485
3235–0198
3235–0479
3235–0481
3235–0202
3235–0372
3235–0200
3235–0499
3235–0496
3235–0078
3235–0497
3235–0116
3235–0434
3235–0392
3235–0393
3235–0394
3235–0395
3235–0385
3235–0044
3235–0083
3235–0088
3235–0087
3235–0208
3235–0201
3235–0033
3235–0508
3235–0279
3235–0506
3235–0123
3235–0199
3235–0489
3235–0131
3235–0092
3235–0524
3235–0122
3235–0085
3235–0498
3235–0035
3235–0133
3235–0196
3235–0540
3235–0032
3235–0037
3235–0290
3235–0034
3235–0029
3235–0028
3235–0031
3235–0269
3235–0410
3235–0410
3235–0195
3235–0084
3235–0130
3235–0473
3235–0341
3235–0291
3235–0291
3235–0273
3235–0274
3235–0275
3235–0409
3235–0413
3235–0469
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 29, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
Information collection requirement
17 CFR part or section where identified and described
Rule 19b–1 .................................................................................
Rule 19b–4 .................................................................................
Rule 19b–4(e) .............................................................................
Rule 19b–5 .................................................................................
Rule 19b–7 .................................................................................
Rule 19d–1 .................................................................................
Rule 19d–2 .................................................................................
Rule 19d–3 .................................................................................
Rule 19h–1 .................................................................................
Rule 24b–1 .................................................................................
Rule 101 .....................................................................................
Rule 102 .....................................................................................
Rule 103 .....................................................................................
Rule 104 .....................................................................................
Rule 301 .....................................................................................
Rule 302 .....................................................................................
Rule 303 .....................................................................................
Rule 604 .....................................................................................
Rule 605 .....................................................................................
Rule 606 .....................................................................................
Rule 607 .....................................................................................
Rule 608 .....................................................................................
Rule 609 .....................................................................................
Rule 611 .....................................................................................
Regulation S–P ...........................................................................
Form 1 ........................................................................................
Form 1–N ....................................................................................
Form 25 ......................................................................................
Form 26 ......................................................................................
Form 3 ........................................................................................
Form 4 ........................................................................................
Form 5 ........................................................................................
Form 8–A ....................................................................................
Form 10 ......................................................................................
Form 10–SB ...............................................................................
Form 18 ......................................................................................
Form 20–F ..................................................................................
Form 40–F ..................................................................................
Form 6–K ....................................................................................
Form 8–K ....................................................................................
Form 10–Q .................................................................................
Form 10–QSB .............................................................................
Form 10–K ..................................................................................
Form 10–KSB .............................................................................
Form 11–K ..................................................................................
Form 18–K ..................................................................................
Form 12B–25 ..............................................................................
Form 15 ......................................................................................
Form 13F ....................................................................................
Form SE .....................................................................................
Form ET ......................................................................................
Form ID .......................................................................................
Form DF .....................................................................................
Form BD .....................................................................................
Form BDW ..................................................................................
Form BD–N .................................................................................
Form X–17A–5 ...........................................................................
Form X–17A–19 .........................................................................
Form ATS ...................................................................................
Form ATS–R ...............................................................................
Form X–15AJ–1 ..........................................................................
Form X–15AJ–2 ..........................................................................
Form 19b–4 ................................................................................
Form 19b–4(e) ............................................................................
Form Pilot ...................................................................................
Form SIP ....................................................................................
Form MSD ..................................................................................
Form MSDW ...............................................................................
Form X–17F–1A .........................................................................
Form TA–1 ..................................................................................
Form TA–W ................................................................................
Form TA–2 ..................................................................................
Form CA–1 .................................................................................
240.19b–1 ...................................................................................
240.19b–4 ...................................................................................
240.19b–4(e) ..............................................................................
240.19b–5 ...................................................................................
240.19b–7 ...................................................................................
240.19d–1(b) thru 240.19d–1(i) .................................................
240.19d–2 ...................................................................................
240.19d–3 ...................................................................................
240.19h–1(a), (c) thru (e), and (g) .............................................
240.24b–1 ...................................................................................
242.101 .......................................................................................
242.102 .......................................................................................
242.103 .......................................................................................
242.104 .......................................................................................
242.301 .......................................................................................
242.302 .......................................................................................
242.303 .......................................................................................
242.604 .......................................................................................
242.605 .......................................................................................
242.606 .......................................................................................
242.607 .......................................................................................
242.608 .......................................................................................
242.609 .......................................................................................
242.611 .......................................................................................
Part 248 ......................................................................................
249.1 ...........................................................................................
249.10 .........................................................................................
249.25 .........................................................................................
249.26 .........................................................................................
249.103 .......................................................................................
249.104 .......................................................................................
249.105 .......................................................................................
249.208a .....................................................................................
249.210 .......................................................................................
249.210b .....................................................................................
249.218 .......................................................................................
249.220f ......................................................................................
249.240f ......................................................................................
249.306 .......................................................................................
249.308 .......................................................................................
249.308a .....................................................................................
249.308b .....................................................................................
249.310 .......................................................................................
249.310b .....................................................................................
249.311 .......................................................................................
249.318 .......................................................................................
249.322 .......................................................................................
249.323 .......................................................................................
249.325 .......................................................................................
249.444 .......................................................................................
249.445 .......................................................................................
249.446 .......................................................................................
249.448 .......................................................................................
249.501 .......................................................................................
249.501a .....................................................................................
249.501b .....................................................................................
249.617 .......................................................................................
249.635 .......................................................................................
249.637 .......................................................................................
249.638 .......................................................................................
249.802 .......................................................................................
249.803 .......................................................................................
249.819 .......................................................................................
249.820 .......................................................................................
249.821 .......................................................................................
249.1001 .....................................................................................
249.1100 .....................................................................................
249.1110 .....................................................................................
249.1200 .....................................................................................
249b.100 .....................................................................................
249b.101 .....................................................................................
249b.102 .....................................................................................
249b.200 .....................................................................................
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3235–0507
3235–0553
3235–0206
3235–0205
3235–0204
3235–0259
3235–0194
3235–0464
3235–0467
3235–0466
3235–0465
3235–0509
3235–0510
3235–0505
3235–0462
3235–0542
3235–0541
3235–0435
3235–0500
3235–0043
3235–0600
3235–0537
3235–0017
3235–0554
3235–0080
3235–0079
3235–0104
3235–0287
3235–0362
3235–0056
3235–0064
3235–0419
3235–0121
3235–0288
3235–0381
3235–0116
3235–0060
3235–0070
3235–0416
3235–0063
3235–0420
3235–0082
3235–0120
3235–0058
3235–0167
3235–0006
3235–0327
3235–0329
3235–0328
3235–0482
3235–0012
3235–0018
3235–0556
3235–0123
3235–0133
3235–0509
3235–0509
3235–0044
3235–0044
3235–0045
3235–0504
3235–0507
3235–0043
3235–0083
3235–0087
3235–0037
3235–0084
3235–0151
3235–0337
3235–0195
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17 CFR part or section where identified and described
Rule 1(a) .....................................................................................
Rule 1(b) .....................................................................................
Rule 1(c) .....................................................................................
Rule 2 .........................................................................................
Rule 3 .........................................................................................
Rule 7 .........................................................................................
Rule 7(d) .....................................................................................
Rule 20(b) ...................................................................................
Rule 20(c) ...................................................................................
Rule 20(d) ...................................................................................
Rule 23 .......................................................................................
Rule 24 .......................................................................................
Rule 26 .......................................................................................
Rule 29 .......................................................................................
Rule 44 .......................................................................................
Rule 45 .......................................................................................
Rule 47(b) ...................................................................................
Rule 52 .......................................................................................
Form 53 ......................................................................................
Rule 54 .......................................................................................
Rule 57(a) ...................................................................................
Rule 57(b) ...................................................................................
Rule 58 .......................................................................................
Rule 62 .......................................................................................
Rule 71(a) ...................................................................................
Rule 72 .......................................................................................
Rule 83 .......................................................................................
Rule 87 .......................................................................................
Rule 88 .......................................................................................
Rule 93 .......................................................................................
Rule 94 .......................................................................................
Rule 95 .......................................................................................
Rule 100(a) .................................................................................
Uniform System of Accounts for Mutual Service Companies
and Subsidiary Service Companies, Public Utility Holding
Company Act of 1935.
Preservation and Destruction of Records of Registered Public
Utility Holding Companies and of Mutual and Subsidiary
Service Companies.
Form U5A ...................................................................................
Form U5B ...................................................................................
Form U5S ...................................................................................
Form U–1 ....................................................................................
Form U–13–1 ..............................................................................
Form U–6B–2 .............................................................................
Form U–57 ..................................................................................
Form U–9C–3 .............................................................................
Form U–12(I)–A ..........................................................................
Form U–12(I)–B ..........................................................................
Form U–13E–1 ...........................................................................
Form U–R–1 ...............................................................................
Form U–13–60 ............................................................................
Form U–3A–2 .............................................................................
Form U–3A3–1 ...........................................................................
Form U–7D .................................................................................
Form U–33–S .............................................................................
Form ET ......................................................................................
Form ID .......................................................................................
Form SE .....................................................................................
Rule 7a–15 thru 7a–37 ...............................................................
Form T–1 ....................................................................................
Form T–2 ....................................................................................
Form T–3 ....................................................................................
Form T–4 ....................................................................................
Form ET ......................................................................................
Form ID .......................................................................................
Form SE .....................................................................................
Form T–6 ....................................................................................
Rule 0–1 .....................................................................................
Rule 2a–7 ...................................................................................
Rule 2a19–1 ...............................................................................
Rule 3a–4 ...................................................................................
Rule 6c–7 ...................................................................................
250.1(a) ......................................................................................
250.1(b) ......................................................................................
250.1(c) ......................................................................................
250.2 ...........................................................................................
250.3 ...........................................................................................
250.7 ...........................................................................................
250.7(d) ......................................................................................
250.20(b) ....................................................................................
250.20(c) ....................................................................................
250.20(d) ....................................................................................
250.23 .........................................................................................
250.24 .........................................................................................
250.26 .........................................................................................
250.29 .........................................................................................
250.44 .........................................................................................
250.45 .........................................................................................
250.47(b) ....................................................................................
250.52 .........................................................................................
250.53 .........................................................................................
250.54 .........................................................................................
250.57(a) ....................................................................................
250.57(b) ....................................................................................
250.58 .........................................................................................
250.62 .........................................................................................
250.71(a) ....................................................................................
250.72 .........................................................................................
250.83 .........................................................................................
250.87 .........................................................................................
250.88 .........................................................................................
250.93 .........................................................................................
250.94 .........................................................................................
250.95 .........................................................................................
250.100(a) ..................................................................................
Part 256 ......................................................................................
3235–0170
3235–0170
3235–0164
3235–0161
3235–0160
3235–0165
3235–0165
3235–0125
3235–0125
3235–0163
3235–0125
3235–0126
3235–0183
3235–0149
3235–0147
3235–0154
3235–0163
3235–0369
3235–0426
3235–0427
3235–0428
3235–0429
3235–0457
3235–0152
3235–0173
3235–0149
3235–0181
3235–0552
3235–0182
3235–0153
3235–0153
3235–0162
3235–0125
3235–0153
Part 257 ......................................................................................
3235–0306
259.5a .........................................................................................
259.5b .........................................................................................
259.5s .........................................................................................
259.101 .......................................................................................
259.113 .......................................................................................
259.206 .......................................................................................
259.207 .......................................................................................
259.208 .......................................................................................
259.212a .....................................................................................
259.212b .....................................................................................
259.213 .......................................................................................
259.221 .......................................................................................
259.313 .......................................................................................
259.402 .......................................................................................
259.403 .......................................................................................
259.404 .......................................................................................
259.405 .......................................................................................
259.601 .......................................................................................
259.602 .......................................................................................
259.603 .......................................................................................
260.7a–15 thru 260.7a–37 .........................................................
269.1 ...........................................................................................
269.2 ...........................................................................................
269.3 ...........................................................................................
269.4 ...........................................................................................
269.6 ...........................................................................................
269.7 ...........................................................................................
269.8 ...........................................................................................
269.9 ...........................................................................................
270.0–1 .......................................................................................
270.2a–7 .....................................................................................
270.2a19–1 .................................................................................
270.3a–4 .....................................................................................
270.6c–7 .....................................................................................
3235–0170
3235–0170
3235–0164
3235–0125
3235–0182
3235–0163
3235–0428
3235–0457
3235–0173
3235–0173
3235–0162
3235–0152
3235–0153
3235–0161
3235–0160
3235–0165
3235–0429
3235–0329
3235–0328
3235–0327
3235–0132
3235–0110
3235–0111
3235–0105
3235–0107
3235–0329
3235–0328
3235–0327
3235–0391
3235–0531
3235–0268
3235–0332
3235–0459
3235–0276
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Rule 6e–2 ...................................................................................
Rule 7d–1 ...................................................................................
Rule 7d–2 ...................................................................................
Section 8(b) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 ...............
Rule 10f–3 ..................................................................................
Rule 11a–2 .................................................................................
Rule 11a–3 .................................................................................
Rule 12b–1 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–7 .................................................................................
Rule 17a–8 .................................................................................
Rule 17e–1 .................................................................................
Rule 17f–1 ..................................................................................
Rule 17f–2 ..................................................................................
Rule 17f–4 ..................................................................................
Rule 17f–6 ..................................................................................
Rule 17f–7 ..................................................................................
Rule 17g–1(g) .............................................................................
Rule 17j–1 ..................................................................................
Rule 18f–1 ..................................................................................
Rule 18f–3 ..................................................................................
Rule 19a–1 .................................................................................
Rule 20a–1 .................................................................................
Rule 22d–1 .................................................................................
Rule 23c–1 .................................................................................
Rule 23c–3 .................................................................................
Rule 27e–1 .................................................................................
Rule 30b2–1 ...............................................................................
Rule 30d–2 .................................................................................
Rule 30e–1 .................................................................................
Rule 31a–1 .................................................................................
Rule 31a–2 .................................................................................
Rule 32a–4 .................................................................................
Rule 34b–1 .................................................................................
Rule 35d–1 .................................................................................
Form N–5 ....................................................................................
Form N–8A .................................................................................
Form N–2 ....................................................................................
Form N–3 ....................................................................................
Form N–4 ....................................................................................
Form N–8B–2 .............................................................................
Form N–6F .................................................................................
Form 24F–2 ................................................................................
Form N–18F–1 ...........................................................................
Form N–54A ...............................................................................
Form N–54C ...............................................................................
Form N–SAR ..............................................................................
Form N–27E–1 ...........................................................................
Form N–27F–1 ...........................................................................
Form N–17D–1 ...........................................................................
Form N–23C–1 ...........................................................................
Form N–8F .................................................................................
Form N–17F–1 ...........................................................................
Form N–17F–2 ...........................................................................
Form N–23c–3 ............................................................................
Form ET ......................................................................................
Form ID .......................................................................................
Form SE .....................................................................................
Rule 0–2 .....................................................................................
Rule 203–3 .................................................................................
Rule 204–2 .................................................................................
Rule 204–3 .................................................................................
Rule 206(3)–2 .............................................................................
Rule 206(4)–2 .............................................................................
Rule 206(4)–3 .............................................................................
Rule 206(4)–4 .............................................................................
Form ADV ...................................................................................
Schedule I to Form ADV ............................................................
Form ADV–W .............................................................................
Form ADV–H ..............................................................................
Form 4–R ....................................................................................
Form 5–R ....................................................................................
Form 6–R ....................................................................................
Form 7–R ....................................................................................
270.6e–2 .....................................................................................
270.7d–1 .....................................................................................
270.7d–2 .....................................................................................
270.8b–1 thru 270.8b–32 ...........................................................
270.10f–3 ....................................................................................
270.11a–2 ...................................................................................
270.11a–3 ...................................................................................
270.12b–1 ...................................................................................
270.17a–7 ...................................................................................
270.17a–8 ...................................................................................
270.17e–1 ...................................................................................
270.17f–1 ....................................................................................
270.17f–2 ....................................................................................
270.17f–4 ....................................................................................
270.17f–6 ....................................................................................
270.17f–7 ....................................................................................
270.17g–1(g) ..............................................................................
270.17j–1 ....................................................................................
270.18f–1 ....................................................................................
270.18f–3 ....................................................................................
270.19a–1 ...................................................................................
270.20a–1 ...................................................................................
270.22d–1 ...................................................................................
270.23c–1 ...................................................................................
270.23c–3 ...................................................................................
270.27e–1 ...................................................................................
270.30b2–1 .................................................................................
270.30d–2 ...................................................................................
270.30e–1 ...................................................................................
270.31a–1 ...................................................................................
270.31a–2 ...................................................................................
270.32a–4 ...................................................................................
270.34b–1 ...................................................................................
270.35d–1 ...................................................................................
274.5 ...........................................................................................
274.10 .........................................................................................
274.11a–1 ...................................................................................
274.11b .......................................................................................
274.11c .......................................................................................
274.12 .........................................................................................
274.15 .........................................................................................
274.24 .........................................................................................
274.51 .........................................................................................
274.53 .........................................................................................
274.54 .........................................................................................
274.101 .......................................................................................
274.127e–1 .................................................................................
274.127f–1 ..................................................................................
274.200 .......................................................................................
274.201 .......................................................................................
274.218 .......................................................................................
274.219 .......................................................................................
274.220 .......................................................................................
274.221 .......................................................................................
274.401 .......................................................................................
274.402 .......................................................................................
274.403 .......................................................................................
275.0–2 .......................................................................................
275.203–3 ...................................................................................
275.204–2 ...................................................................................
275.204–3 ...................................................................................
275.206(3)–2 ..............................................................................
275.206(4)–2 ..............................................................................
275.206(4)–3 ..............................................................................
275.206(4)–4 ..............................................................................
279.1 ...........................................................................................
279.1 ...........................................................................................
279.2 ...........................................................................................
379.3 ...........................................................................................
279.4 ...........................................................................................
279.5 ...........................................................................................
279.6 ...........................................................................................
279.7 ...........................................................................................
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3235–0311
3235–0527
3235–0176
3235–0226
3235–0272
3235–0358
3235–0212
3235–0214
3235–0235
3235–0217
3235–0222
3235–0223
3235–0225
3235–0447
3235–0529
3235–0213
3235–0224
3235–0211
3235–0441
3235–0216
3235–0158
3235–0310
3235–0260
3235–0422
3235–0545
3235–0220
3235–0494
3235–0025
3235–0178
3235–0179
3235–0530
3235–0346
3235–0548
3235–0169
3235–0175
3235–0026
3235–0316
3235–0318
3235–0186
3235–0238
3235–0456
3235–0211
3235–0237
3235–0236
3235–0330
3235–0545
3235–0546
3235–0229
3235–0230
3235–0157
3235–0359
3235–0360
3235–0422
3235–0329
3235–0328
3235–0327
3235–0240
3235–0538
3235–0278
3235–0047
3235–0243
3235–0241
3235–0242
3235–0345
3235–0049
3235–0490
3235–0313
3235–0538
3235–0240
3235–0240
3235–0240
3235–0240
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 29, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
Information collection requirement
17 CFR part or section where identified and described
Form ADV–E ..............................................................................
279.8 ...........................................................................................
during the four-week period specified in
paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 201—RULES OF PRACTICE
Subpart D—Rules of Practice
5. The authority citation for part 201,
subpart D, continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77h–1,
77j, 77s, 77u, 78c(b), 78d–1, 78d–2, 78l, 78m,
78n, 78o(d), 78o–3, 78s, 78u–2, 78u–3, 78v,
78w, 79c, 79s, 79t, 79z–5a, 77sss, 77ttt, 80a–
8, 80a–9, 80a–37, 80a–38, 80a–39, 80a–40,
80a–41, 80a–44, 80b–3, 80b–9, 80b–11, 80b12, 7202, 7215, and 7217.
6. Section 201.101 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(9)(vi) and
(a)(9)(vii) to read as follows:
I
§ 201.101
Definitions.
(a) * * *
(9) * * *
(vi) By the filing, pursuant to
§ 242.601 of this chapter, of an
application for review of an action or
failure to act in connection with the
implementation or operation of any
effective transaction reporting plan; or
(vii) By the filing, pursuant to
§ 242.608 of this chapter, of an
application for review of an action taken
or failure to act in connection with the
implementation or operation of any
effective national market system plan; or
*
*
*
*
*
PART 230—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES ACT OF
1933
7. The authority citation for part 230
continues to read in part as follows:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77b, 77c, 77d, 77f,
77g, 77h, 77j, 77r, 77s, 77z–3, 77sss, 78c, 78d,
78j, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78t, 78w, 78ll(d),
78mm, 79t, 80a–8, 80a–24, 80a–28, 80a–29,
80a–30, and 80a–37, unless otherwise noted.
*
*
*
*
*
8. Section 230.144 is amended by:
a. Removing the authority citation
following § 230.144; and
I b. Revising paragraph (e)(1)(iii).
The revision reads as follows:
I
I
§ 230.144 Persons deemed not to be
engaged in a distribution and therefore not
underwriters.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) The average weekly volume of
trading in such securities reported
pursuant to an effective transaction
reporting plan or an effective national
market system plan as those terms are
defined in § 242.600 of this chapter
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Short sales.
(a)(1)(i) No person shall, for his own
account or for the account of any other
person, effect a short sale of any security
PART 240—GENERAL RULES AND
registered on, or admitted to unlisted
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES
trading privileges on, a national
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
securities exchange, if trades in such
securities are reported pursuant to an
I 9. The authority citation for part 240
‘‘effective transaction reporting plan’’ as
continues to read as follows:
defined in § 242.600 of this chapter and
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j,
information as to such trades is made
77s, 77z–2, 77z–3, 77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn,
available in accordance with such plan
77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 78i, 78j,
on a real-time basis to vendors of market
78j–1, 78k, 78k–1, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78p,
transaction information:
78q, 78s, 78u–5, 78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm, 79q,
(A) Below the price at which the last
79t, 80a–20, 80a–23, 80a–29, 80a–37, 80b–3,
sale thereof, regular way, was reported
80b–4, 80b–11, and 7201 et seq.; and 18
pursuant to an effective transaction
U.S.C. 1350, unless otherwise noted.
reporting plan; or
*
*
*
*
*
(B) At such price unless such price is
I 10. Section 240.0–10 is amended by
above the next proceeding different
revising paragraph (e)(1) to read as
price at which a sale of such security,
follows:
regular way, was reported pursuant to
§ 240.0–10 Small entities under the
an effective transaction reporting plan.
Securities Exchange Act for purposes of
(ii) The provisions of paragraph
the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
(a)(1)(i) of this section hereof shall not
*
*
*
*
*
apply to transactions by any person in
(e) * * *
Nasdaq securities as defined in
(1) Has been exempted from the
§ 242.600 of this chapter, except for
reporting requirements of § 242.601 of
those Nasdaq securities for which
this chapter; and
transaction reports are collected,
processed, and made available pursuant
*
*
*
*
*
to the plan originally submitted to the
I 11. Section 240.3a51–1 is amended by
Commission pursuant to § 240.17a–15
revising the introductory text of
paragraphs (a) and (e) to read as follows: (subsequently amended and
redesignated as § 240.11Aa3–1 and
§ 240.3a51–1 Definition of ‘‘penny stock.’’
subsequently redesignated as § 242.601
*
*
*
*
*
of this chapter), which plan was
(a) That is an NMS stock, as defined
declared effective as of May 17, 1974.
in § 242.600 of this chapter:
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(e) That is registered, or approved for
(5) * * *
registration upon notice of issuance, on
(ii) Effected at a price equal to the
a national securities exchange that
most recent offer communicated for the
makes transaction reports available
security by such registered specialist,
pursuant to § 242.601 of this chapter,
registered exchange market maker or
provided that:
third market maker to an exchange or a
*
*
*
*
*
national securities association
(‘‘association’’) pursuant to § 242.602 of
I 12. Section 240.3b–16 is amended by
revising paragraph (d) to read as follows: this chapter, if such offer, when
communicated, was equal to or above
§ 240.3b–16 Definitions of terms used in
the last sale, regular way, reported for
Section 3(a)(1) of the Act.
such security pursuant to an effective
*
*
*
*
*
transaction reporting plan:
(d) For the purposes of this section,
Provided, however, That any
the terms bid and offer shall have the
exchange, by rule, may prohibit its
same meaning as under § 242.600 of this registered specialist and registered
chapter.
exchange market makers from availing
*
*
*
*
*
themselves of the exemption afforded by
this paragraph (e)(5) if that exchange
I 13. Section 240.10a–1 is amended by
determines that such action is necessary
revising paragraphs (a)(1), (e)(5)(ii) and
or appropriate in its market in the
(e)(11) to read as follows:
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public interest or for the protection of
investors;
*
*
*
*
*
(11) Any sale of a security covered by
paragraph (a) of this section (except a
sale to a stabilizing bid complying with
§ 242.104 of this chapter) by any broker
or dealer, for his own account or for the
account of any other person, effected at
a price equal to the most recent offer
communicated by such broker or dealer
to an exchange or association pursuant
to § 242.602 of this chapter in an
amount less than or equal to the
quotation size associated with such
offer, if such offer, when communicated,
was:
(i) Above the price at which the last
sale, regular way, for such security was
reported pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan; or
(ii) At such last sale price, if such last
sale price is above the next preceding
different price at which a sale of such
security, regular way, was reported
pursuant to an effective transaction
reporting plan.
*
*
*
*
*
I 14. Section 240.10b–10 is amended by:
I a. Revising paragraphs (a)(2)(i)(C),
(a)(2)(ii)(B) and (d)(7);
I b. Removing paragraph (d)(8); and
I c. Redesignating paragraphs (d)(9) and
(d)(10) as paragraphs (d)(8) and (d)(9).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 240.10b–10
Confirmation of transactions.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) * * *
(C) For a transaction in any NMS
stock as defined in § 242.600 of this
chapter or a security authorized for
quotation on an automated interdealer
quotation system that has the
characteristics set forth in section 17B of
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78q–2), a statement
whether payment for order flow is
received by the broker or dealer for
transactions in such securities and the
fact that the source and nature of the
compensation received in connection
with the particular transaction will be
furnished upon written request of the
customer; provided, however, that
brokers or dealers that do not receive
payment for order flow in connection
with any transaction have no disclosure
obligations under this paragraph; and
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) * * *
(B) In the case of any other transaction
in an NMS stock as defined by § 242.600
of this chapter, or an equity security that
is traded on a national securities
exchange and that is subject to last sale
reporting, the reported trade price, the
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price to the customer in the transaction,
and the difference, if any, between the
reported trade price and the price to the
customer.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(7) NMS stock shall have the meaning
provided in § 242.600 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
I 15. Section 240.10b–18 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(6) to read as
follows:
§ 240.12f–2 Extending unlisted trading
privileges to a security that is the subject
of an initial public offering.
§ 240.10b–18 Purchases of certain equity
securities by the issuer and others.
(a) General provision. A national
securities exchange may extend unlisted
trading privileges to a subject security
when at least one transaction in the
subject security has been effected on the
national securities exchange upon
which the security is listed and the
transaction has been reported pursuant
to an effective transaction reporting
plan, as defined in § 242.600 of this
chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
*
I
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(6) Consolidated system means a
consolidated transaction or quotation
reporting system that collects and
publicly disseminates on a current and
continuous basis transaction or
quotation information in common
equity securities pursuant to an effective
transaction reporting plan or an
effective national market system plan
(as those terms are defined in § 242.600
of this chapter).
*
*
*
*
*
§ 240.11Aa2–1 through 240.11Ac1–6
[Removed]
16. The undesignated center heading
preceding § 240.11Aa2–1 is removed;
and §§ 240.11Aa2–1 through
240.11Ac1–6 are removed.
I 17. Section 240.12a–7 is amended by
revising the introductory text of
paragraph (a)(2) to read as follows:
I
§ 240.12a–7 Exemption of stock contained
in standardized market baskets from
section 12(a) of the Act.
(a) * * *
(2) The stock is an NMS stock as
defined in § 242.600 of this chapter and
is either:
*
*
*
*
*
I 18. Section 240.12f–1 is amended by:
I a. Removing the authority citation
following the section;
I b. Removing ‘‘and’’ at the end of
paragraph (a)(3); and
I c. Revising paragraph (a)(4).
I The revision reads as follows:
§ 240.12f–1 Applications for permission to
reinstate unlisted trading privileges.
(a) * * *
(4) Whether transaction information
concerning such security is reported
pursuant to an effective transaction
reporting plan contemplated by
§ 242.601 of this chapter;
*
*
*
*
*
I 19. Section 240.12f–2 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
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20. Section 240.15b9–1 is amended by:
a. Removing the authority citation
following the section; and
I b. Revising paragraph (c).
I
I
The revision reads as follows:
§ 240.15b9–1 Exemption for certain
exchange members.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) For purposes of this section, the
term Intermarket Trading System shall
mean the intermarket communications
linkage operated jointly by certain selfregulatory organizations pursuant to a
plan filed with, and approved by, the
Commission pursuant to § 242.608 of
this chapter.
21. Section 240.15c2–11 is amended
by revising paragraph (f)(5) to read as
follows:
I
§ 240.15c2–11 Initiation or resumption of
quotations without specified information.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(5) The publication or submission of
a quotation respecting a Nasdaq security
(as defined in § 242.600 of this chapter),
and such security’s listing is not
suspended, terminated, or prohibited.
*
*
*
*
*
22. Section 240.19c–3 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(6) to read as
follows:
I
§ 240.19c–3 Governing off-board trading
by members of national securities
exchanges.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(6) The term effective transaction
reporting plan shall mean any plan
approved by the Commission pursuant
to § 242.601 of this chapter for
collecting, processing, and making
available transaction reports with
respect to transactions in an equity
security or class of equity securities.
I 23. Section 240.19c–4 is amended by
revising paragraph (e)(6) to read as
follows:
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§ 240.19c–4 Governing certain listing or
authorization determinations by national
securities exchanges and associations.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(6) The term exchange shall mean a
national securities exchange, registered
as such with the Securities and
Exchange Commission pursuant to
section 6 of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78f),
which makes transaction reports
available pursuant to § 242.601 of this
chapter; and
*
*
*
*
*
I 24. Section 240.31 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(11)(v) to read as
follows:
§ 240.31
Section 31 transaction fees.
(a) * * *
(11) * * *
(v) Any sale of a security that is
executed outside the United States and
is not reported, or required to be
reported, to a transaction reporting
association as defined in § 242.600 of
this chapter and any approved plan
filed thereunder;
*
*
*
*
*
PART 242—REGULATIONS M, SHO,
ATS, AC, AND NMS AND CUSTOMER
MARGIN REQUIREMENTS FOR
SECURITY FUTURES
25. The authority citation for part 242
continues to read as follow:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77g, 77q(a), 77s(a),
78b, 78c, 78g(c)(2), 78i(a), 78j, 78k–1(c), 78l,
78m, 78n, 78o(b), 78o(c), 78o(g), 78q(a),
78q(b), 78q(h), 78w(a), 78dd–1, 78mm, 80a–
23, 80a–29, and 80a–37.
26. The part heading for part 242 is
revised as set forth above.
I 27. Section 242.100 is amended by
revising the definition for ‘‘electronic
communications network’’ and
‘‘Nasdaq’’ found in paragraph (b) to read
as follows:
I
§ 242.100
Preliminary note; definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Electronic communications network
has the meaning provided in § 242.600.
*
*
*
*
*
Nasdaq means the electronic dealer
quotation system owned and operated
by The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.
*
*
*
*
*
I 28. Section 242.300 is amended by:
I a. Revising paragraphs (g) and (h);
I b. Removing paragraphs (i) and (j); and
I c. Redesignating paragraphs (k), (l),
and (m) as paragraphs (i), (j), and (k).
I The revisions read as follows:
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§ 242.300
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) NMS stock shall have the meaning
provided in § 242.600; provided,
however, that a debt or convertible debt
security shall not be deemed an NMS
stock for purposes of this Regulation
ATS.
(h) Effective transaction reporting
plan shall have the meaning provided in
§ 242.600.
*
*
*
*
*
I 29. Section 242.301 is amended by
revising paragraphs (b)(3), (b)(5), and
(b)(6) to read as follows:
§ 242.301 Requirements for alternative
trading systems.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) Order display and execution
access. (i) An alternative trading system
shall comply with the requirements set
forth in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this
section, with respect to any NMS stock
in which the alternative trading system:
(A) Displays subscriber orders to any
person (other than alternative trading
system employees); and
(B) During at least 4 of the preceding
6 calendar months, had an average daily
trading volume of 5 percent or more of
the aggregate average daily share
volume for such NMS stock as reported
by an effective transaction reporting
plan.
(ii) Such alternative trading system
shall provide to a national securities
exchange or national securities
association the prices and sizes of the
orders at the highest buy price and the
lowest sell price for such NMS stock,
displayed to more than one person in
the alternative trading system, for
inclusion in the quotation data made
available by the national securities
exchange or national securities
association to vendors pursuant to
§ 242.602.
(iii) With respect to any order
displayed pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii) of this section, an alternative
trading system shall provide to any
broker-dealer that has access to the
national securities exchange or national
securities association to which the
alternative trading system provides the
prices and sizes of displayed orders
pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this
section, the ability to effect a transaction
with such orders that is:
(A) Equivalent to the ability of such
broker-dealer to effect a transaction with
other orders displayed on the exchange
or by the association; and
(B) At the price of the highest priced
buy order or lowest priced sell order
displayed for the lesser of the
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cumulative size of such priced orders
entered therein at such price, or the size
of the execution sought by such brokerdealer.
*
*
*
*
*
(5) Fair access. (i) An alternative
trading system shall comply with the
requirements in paragraph (b)(5)(ii) of
this section, if during at least 4 of the
preceding 6 calendar months, such
alternative trading system had:
(A) With respect to any NMS stock, 5
percent or more of the average daily
volume in that security reported by an
effective transaction reporting plan;
(B) With respect to an equity security
that is not an NMS stock and for which
transactions are reported to a selfregulatory organization, 5 percent or
more of the average daily trading
volume in that security as calculated by
the self-regulatory organization to which
such transactions are reported;
(C) With respect to municipal
securities, 5 percent or more of the
average daily volume traded in the
United States;
(D) With respect to investment grade
corporate debt, 5 percent or more of the
average daily volume traded in the
United States; or
(E) With respect to non-investment
grade corporate debt, 5 percent or more
of the average daily volume traded in
the United States.
(ii) An alternative trading system
shall:
(A) Establish written standards for
granting access to trading on its system;
(B) Not unreasonably prohibit or limit
any person in respect to access to
services offered by such alternative
trading system by applying the
standards established under paragraph
(b)(5)(ii)(A) of this section in an unfair
or discriminatory manner;
(C) Make and keep records of:
(1) All grants of access including, for
all subscribers, the reasons for granting
such access; and
(2) All denials or limitations of access
and reasons, for each applicant, for
denying or limiting access; and
(D) Report the information required
on Form ATS–R (§ 249.638 of this
chapter) regarding grants, denials, and
limitations of access.
(iii) Notwithstanding paragraph
(b)(5)(i) of this section, an alternative
trading system shall not be required to
comply with the requirements in
paragraph (b)(5)(ii) of this section, if
such alternative trading system:
(A) Matches customer orders for a
security with other customer orders;
(B) Such customers’ orders are not
displayed to any person, other than
employees of the alternative trading
system; and
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(C) Such orders are executed at a price
for such security disseminated by an
effective transaction reporting plan, or
derived from such prices.
(6) Capacity, integrity, and security of
automated systems. (i) The alternative
trading system shall comply with the
requirements in paragraph (b)(6)(ii) of
this section, if during at least 4 of the
preceding 6 calendar months, such
alternative trading system had:
(A) With respect to any NMS stock, 20
percent or more of the average daily
volume reported by an effective
transaction reporting plan;
(B) With respect to equity securities
that are not NMS stocks and for which
transactions are reported to a selfregulatory organization, 20 percent or
more of the average daily volume as
calculated by the self-regulatory
organization to which such transactions
are reported;
(C) With respect to municipal
securities, 20 percent or more of the
average daily volume traded in the
United States;
(D) With respect to investment grade
corporate debt, 20 percent or more of
the average daily volume traded in the
United States; or
(E) With respect to non-investment
grade corporate debt, 20 percent or more
of the average daily volume traded in
the United States.
(ii) With respect to those systems that
support order entry, order routing, order
execution, transaction reporting, and
trade comparison, the alternative
trading system shall:
(A) Establish reasonable current and
future capacity estimates;
(B) Conduct periodic capacity stress
tests of critical systems to determine
such system’s ability to process
transactions in an accurate, timely, and
efficient manner;
(C) Develop and implement
reasonable procedures to review and
keep current its system development
and testing methodology;
(D) Review the vulnerability of its
systems and data center computer
operations to internal and external
threats, physical hazards, and natural
disasters;
(E) Establish adequate contingency
and disaster recovery plans;
(F) On an annual basis, perform an
independent review, in accordance with
established audit procedures and
standards, of such alternative trading
system’s controls for ensuring that
paragraphs (b)(6)(ii)(A) through (E) of
this section are met, and conduct a
review by senior management of a
report containing the recommendations
and conclusions of the independent
review; and
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(G) Promptly notify the Commission
staff of material systems outages and
significant systems changes.
(iii) Notwithstanding paragraph
(b)(6)(i) of this section, an alternative
trading system shall not be required to
comply with the requirements in
paragraph (b)(6)(ii) of this section, if
such alternative trading system:
(A) Matches customer orders for a
security with other customer orders;
(B) Such customers’ orders are not
displayed to any person, other than
employees of the alternative trading
system; and
(C) Such orders are executed at a price
for such security disseminated by an
effective transaction reporting plan, or
derived from such prices.
*
*
*
*
*
I 30. Part 242 is amended by adding
Regulation NMS, §§ 242.600 through
242.612, to read as follows:
Regulation NMS—Regulation of the
National Market System
Sec.
242.600 NMS security designation and
definitions.
242.601 Dissemination of transaction
reports and last sale data with respect to
transactions in NMS stocks.
242.602 Dissemination of quotations in
NMS securities.
242.603 Distribution, consolidation, and
display of information with respect to
quotations for and transactions in NMS
stocks.
242.604 Display of customer limit orders.
242.605 Disclosure of order execution
information.
242.606 Disclosure of order routing
information.
242.607 Customer account statements.
242.608 Filing and amendment of national
market system plans.
242.609 Registration of securities
information processors: form of
application and amendments.
242.610 Access to quotations.
242.611 Order protection rule.
242.612 Minimum pricing increment.
Regulation NMS—Regulation of the
National Market System
§ 242.600 NMS security designation and
definitions.
(a) The term national market system
security as used in section 11A(a)(2) of
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78k–1(a)(2)) shall
mean any NMS security as defined in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) For purposes of Regulation NMS
(§§ 242.600 through 242.612), the
following definitions shall apply:
(1) Aggregate quotation size means
the sum of the quotation sizes of all
responsible brokers or dealers who have
communicated on any national
securities exchange bids or offers for an
NMS security at the same price.
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(2) Alternative trading system has the
meaning provided in § 242.300(a).
(3) Automated quotation means a
quotation displayed by a trading center
that:
(i) Permits an incoming order to be
marked as immediate-or-cancel;
(ii) Immediately and automatically
executes an order marked as immediateor-cancel against the displayed
quotation up to its full size;
(iii) Immediately and automatically
cancels any unexecuted portion of an
order marked as immediate-or-cancel
without routing the order elsewhere;
(iv) Immediately and automatically
transmits a response to the sender of an
order marked as immediate-or-cancel
indicating the action taken with respect
to such order; and
(v) Immediately and automatically
displays information that updates the
displayed quotation to reflect any
change to its material terms.
(4) Automated trading center means a
trading center that:
(i) Has implemented such systems,
procedures, and rules as are necessary
to render it capable of displaying
quotations that meet the requirements
for an automated quotation set forth in
paragraph (b)(3) of this section;
(ii) Identifies all quotations other than
automated quotations as manual
quotations;
(iii) Immediately identifies its
quotations as manual quotations
whenever it has reason to believe that it
is not capable of displaying automated
quotations; and
(iv) Has adopted reasonable standards
limiting when its quotations change
from automated quotations to manual
quotations, and vice versa, to
specifically defined circumstances that
promote fair and efficient access to its
automated quotations and are consistent
with the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets.
(5) Average effective spread means the
share-weighted average of effective
spreads for order executions calculated,
for buy orders, as double the amount of
difference between the execution price
and the midpoint of the national best
bid and national best offer at the time
of order receipt and, for sell orders, as
double the amount of difference
between the midpoint of the national
best bid and national best offer at the
time of order receipt and the execution
price.
(6) Average realized spread means the
share-weighted average of realized
spreads for order executions calculated,
for buy orders, as double the amount of
difference between the execution price
and the midpoint of the national best
bid and national best offer five minutes
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after the time of order execution and, for
sell orders, as double the amount of
difference between the midpoint of the
national best bid and national best offer
five minutes after the time of order
execution and the execution price;
provided, however, that the midpoint of
the final national best bid and national
best offer disseminated for regular
trading hours shall be used to calculate
a realized spread if it is disseminated
less than five minutes after the time of
order execution.
(7) Best bid and best offer mean the
highest priced bid and the lowest priced
offer.
(8) Bid or offer means the bid price or
the offer price communicated by a
member of a national securities
exchange or member of a national
securities association to any broker or
dealer, or to any customer, at which it
is willing to buy or sell one or more
round lots of an NMS security, as either
principal or agent, but shall not include
indications of interest.
(9) Block size with respect to an order
means it is:
(i) Of at least 10,000 shares; or
(ii) For a quantity of stock having a
market value of at least $200,000.
(10) Categorized by order size means
dividing orders into separate categories
for sizes from 100 to 499 shares, from
500 to 1999 shares, from 2000 to 4999
shares, and 5000 or greater shares.
(11) Categorized by order type means
dividing orders into separate categories
for market orders, marketable limit
orders, inside-the-quote limit orders, atthe-quote limit orders, and near-thequote limit orders.
(12) Categorized by security means
dividing orders into separate categories
for each NMS stock that is included in
a report.
(13) Consolidated display means:
(i) The prices, sizes, and market
identifications of the national best bid
and national best offer for a security;
and
(ii) Consolidated last sale information
for a security.
(14) Consolidated last sale
information means the price, volume,
and market identification of the most
recent transaction report for a security
that is disseminated pursuant to an
effective national market system plan.
(15) Covered order means any market
order or any limit order (including
immediate-or-cancel orders) received by
a market center during regular trading
hours at a time when a national best bid
and national best offer is being
disseminated, and, if executed, is
executed during regular trading hours,
but shall exclude any order for which
the customer requests special handling
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for execution, including, but not limited
to, orders to be executed at a market
opening price or a market closing price,
orders submitted with stop prices,
orders to be executed only at their full
size, orders to be executed on a
particular type of tick or bid, orders
submitted on a ‘‘not held’’ basis, orders
for other than regular settlement, and
orders to be executed at prices unrelated
to the market price of the security at the
time of execution.
(16) Customer means any person that
is not a broker or dealer.
(17) Customer limit order means an
order to buy or sell an NMS stock at a
specified price that is not for the
account of either a broker or dealer;
provided, however, that the term
customer limit order shall include an
order transmitted by a broker or dealer
on behalf of a customer.
(18) Customer order means an order to
buy or sell an NMS security that is not
for the account of a broker or dealer, but
shall not include any order for a
quantity of a security having a market
value of at least $50,000 for an NMS
security that is an option contract and
a market value of at least $200,000 for
any other NMS security.
(19) Directed order means a customer
order that the customer specifically
instructed the broker or dealer to route
to a particular venue for execution.
(20) Dynamic market monitoring
device means any service provided by a
vendor on an interrogation device or
other display that:
(i) Permits real-time monitoring, on a
dynamic basis, of transaction reports,
last sale data, or quotations with respect
to a particular security; and
(ii) Displays the most recent
transaction report, last sale data, or
quotation with respect to that security
until such report, data, or quotation has
been superseded or supplemented by
the display of a new transaction report,
last sale data, or quotation reflecting the
next reported transaction or quotation in
that security.
(21) Effective national market system
plan means any national market system
plan approved by the Commission
(either temporarily or on a permanent
basis) pursuant to § 242.608.
(22) Effective transaction reporting
plan means any transaction reporting
plan approved by the Commission
pursuant to § 242.601.
(23) Electronic communications
network means, for the purposes of
§ 242.602(b)(5), any electronic system
that widely disseminates to third parties
orders entered therein by an exchange
market maker or OTC market maker,
and permits such orders to be executed
against in whole or in part; except that
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the term electronic communications
network shall not include:
(i) Any system that crosses multiple
orders at one or more specified times at
a single price set by the system (by
algorithm or by any derivative pricing
mechanism) and does not allow orders
to be crossed or executed against
directly by participants outside of such
times; or
(ii) Any system operated by, or on
behalf of, an OTC market maker or
exchange market maker that executes
customer orders primarily against the
account of such market maker as
principal, other than riskless principal.
(24) Exchange market maker means
any member of a national securities
exchange that is registered as a
specialist or market maker pursuant to
the rules of such exchange.
(25) Exchange-traded security means
any NMS security or class of NMS
securities listed and registered, or
admitted to unlisted trading privileges,
on a national securities exchange;
provided, however, that securities not
listed on any national securities
exchange that are traded pursuant to
unlisted trading privileges are excluded.
(26) Executed at the quote means, for
buy orders, execution at a price equal to
the national best offer at the time of
order receipt and, for sell orders,
execution at a price equal to the
national best bid at the time of order
receipt.
(27) Executed outside the quote
means, for buy orders, execution at a
price higher than the national best offer
at the time of order receipt and, for sell
orders, execution at a price lower than
the national best bid at the time of order
receipt.
(28) Executed with price improvement
means, for buy orders, execution at a
price lower than the national best offer
at the time of order receipt and, for sell
orders, execution at a price higher than
the national best bid at the time of order
receipt.
(29) Inside-the-quote limit order, atthe-quote limit order, and near-thequote limit order mean non-marketable
buy orders with limit prices that are,
respectively, higher than, equal to, and
lower by $0.10 or less than the national
best bid at the time of order receipt, and
non-marketable sell orders with limit
prices that are, respectively, lower than,
equal to, and higher by $0.10 or less
than the national best offer at the time
of order receipt.
(30) Intermarket sweep order means a
limit order for an NMS stock that meets
the following requirements:
(i) When routed to a trading center,
the limit order is identified as an
intermarket sweep order; and
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(ii) Simultaneously with the routing
of the limit order identified as an
intermarket sweep order, one or more
additional limit orders, as necessary, are
routed to execute against the full
displayed size of any protected bid, in
the case of a limit order to sell, or the
full displayed size of any protected
offer, in the case of a limit order to buy,
for the NMS stock with a price that is
superior to the limit price of the limit
order identified as an intermarket sweep
order. These additional routed orders
also must be marked as intermarket
sweep orders.
(31) Interrogation device means any
securities information retrieval system
capable of displaying transaction
reports, last sale data, or quotations
upon inquiry, on a current basis on a
terminal or other device.
(32) Joint self-regulatory organization
plan means a plan as to which two or
more self-regulatory organizations,
acting jointly, are sponsors.
(33) Last sale data means any price or
volume data associated with a
transaction.
(34) Listed equity security means any
equity security listed and registered, or
admitted to unlisted trading privileges,
on a national securities exchange.
(35) Listed option means any option
traded on a registered national securities
exchange or automated facility of a
national securities association.
(36) Make publicly available means
posting on an Internet Web site that is
free and readily accessible to the public,
furnishing a written copy to customers
on request without charge, and notifying
customers at least annually in writing
that a written copy will be furnished on
request.
(37) Manual quotation means any
quotation other than an automated
quotation.
(38) Market center means any
exchange market maker, OTC market
maker, alternative trading system,
national securities exchange, or national
securities association.
(39) Marketable limit order means any
buy order with a limit price equal to or
greater than the national best offer at the
time of order receipt, or any sell order
with a limit price equal to or less than
the national best bid at the time of order
receipt.
(40) Moving ticker means any
continuous real-time moving display of
transaction reports or last sale data
(other than a dynamic market
monitoring device) provided on an
interrogation or other display device.
(41) Nasdaq security means any
registered security listed on The Nasdaq
Stock Market, Inc.
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(42) National best bid and national
best offer means, with respect to
quotations for an NMS security, the best
bid and best offer for such security that
are calculated and disseminated on a
current and continuing basis by a plan
processor pursuant to an effective
national market system plan; provided,
that in the event two or more market
centers transmit to the plan processor
pursuant to such plan identical bids or
offers for an NMS security, the best bid
or best offer (as the case may be) shall
be determined by ranking all such
identical bids or offers (as the case may
be) first by size (giving the highest
ranking to the bid or offer associated
with the largest size), and then by time
(giving the highest ranking to the bid or
offer received first in time).
(43) National market system plan
means any joint self-regulatory
organization plan in connection with:
(i) The planning, development,
operation or regulation of a national
market system (or a subsystem thereof)
or one or more facilities thereof; or
(ii) The development and
implementation of procedures and/or
facilities designed to achieve
compliance by self-regulatory
organizations and their members with
any section of this Regulation NMS and
part 240, subpart A of this chapter
promulgated pursuant to section 11A of
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78k–1).
(44) National securities association
means any association of brokers and
dealers registered pursuant to section
15A of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78o-3).
(45) National securities exchange
means any exchange registered pursuant
to section 6 of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78f).
(46) NMS security means any security
or class of securities for which
transaction reports are collected,
processed, and made available pursuant
to an effective transaction reporting
plan, or an effective national market
system plan for reporting transactions in
listed options.
(47) NMS stock means any NMS
security other than an option.
(48) Non-directed order means any
customer order other than a directed
order.
(49) Odd-lot means an order for the
purchase or sale of an NMS stock in an
amount less than a round lot.
(50) Options class means all of the put
option or call option series overlying a
security, as defined in section 3(a)(10) of
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(10)).
(51) Options series means the
contracts in an options class that have
the same unit of trade, expiration date,
and exercise price, and other terms or
conditions.
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(52) OTC market maker means any
dealer that holds itself out as being
willing to buy from and sell to its
customers, or others, in the United
States, an NMS stock for its own
account on a regular or continuous basis
otherwise than on a national securities
exchange in amounts of less than block
size.
(53) Participants, when used in
connection with a national market
system plan, means any self-regulatory
organization which has agreed to act in
accordance with the terms of the plan
but which is not a signatory of such
plan.
(54) Payment for order flow has the
meaning provided in § 240.10b–10 of
this chapter.
(55) Plan processor means any selfregulatory organization or securities
information processor acting as an
exclusive processor in connection with
the development, implementation and/
or operation of any facility
contemplated by an effective national
market system plan.
(56) Profit-sharing relationship means
any ownership or other type of
affiliation under which the broker or
dealer, directly or indirectly, may share
in any profits that may be derived from
the execution of non-directed orders.
(57) Protected bid or protected offer
means a quotation in an NMS stock that:
(i) Is displayed by an automated
trading center;
(ii) Is disseminated pursuant to an
effective national market system plan;
and
(iii) Is an automated quotation that is
the best bid or best offer of a national
securities exchange, the best bid or best
offer of The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.,
or the best bid or best offer of a national
securities association other than the best
bid or best offer of The Nasdaq Stock
Market, Inc.
(58) Protected quotation means a
protected bid or a protected offer.
(59) Published aggregate quotation
size means the aggregate quotation size
calculated by a national securities
exchange and displayed by a vendor on
a terminal or other display device at the
time an order is presented for execution
to a responsible broker or dealer.
(60) Published bid and published offer
means the bid or offer of a responsible
broker or dealer for an NMS security
communicated by it to its national
securities exchange or association
pursuant to § 242.602 and displayed by
a vendor on a terminal or other display
device at the time an order is presented
for execution to such responsible broker
or dealer.
(61) Published quotation size means
the quotation size of a responsible
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broker or dealer communicated by it to
its national securities exchange or
association pursuant to § 242.602 and
displayed by a vendor on a terminal or
other display device at the time an order
is presented for execution to such
responsible broker or dealer.
(62) Quotation means a bid or an
offer.
(63) Quotation size, when used with
respect to a responsible broker’s or
dealer’s bid or offer for an NMS
security, means:
(i) The number of shares (or units of
trading) of that security which such
responsible broker or dealer has
specified, for purposes of dissemination
to vendors, that it is willing to buy at
the bid price or sell at the offer price
comprising its bid or offer, as either
principal or agent; or
(ii) In the event such responsible
broker or dealer has not so specified, a
normal unit of trading for that NMS
security.
(64) Regular trading hours means the
time between 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.
Eastern Time, or such other time as is
set forth in the procedures established
pursuant to § 242.605(a)(2).
(65) Responsible broker or dealer
means:
(i) When used with respect to bids or
offers communicated on a national
securities exchange, any member of
such national securities exchange who
communicates to another member on
such national securities exchange, at the
location (or locations) or through the
facility or facilities designated by such
national securities exchange for trading
in an NMS security a bid or offer for
such NMS security, as either principal
or agent; provided, however, that, in the
event two or more members of a
national securities exchange have
communicated on or through such
national securities exchange bids or
offers for an NMS security at the same
price, each such member shall be
considered a responsible broker or
dealer for that bid or offer, subject to the
rules of priority and precedence then in
effect on that national securities
exchange; and further provided, that for
a bid or offer which is transmitted from
one member of a national securities
exchange to another member who
undertakes to represent such bid or offer
on such national securities exchange as
agent, only the last member who
undertakes to represent such bid or offer
as agent shall be considered the
responsible broker or dealer for that bid
or offer; and
(ii) When used with respect to bids
and offers communicated by a member
of an association to a broker or dealer
or a customer, the member
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communicating the bid or offer
(regardless of whether such bid or offer
is for its own account or on behalf of
another person).
(66) Revised bid or offer means a
market maker’s bid or offer which
supersedes its published bid or
published offer.
(67) Revised quotation size means a
market maker’s quotation size which
supersedes its published quotation size.
(68) Self-regulatory organization
means any national securities exchange
or national securities association.
(69) Specified persons, when used in
connection with any notification
required to be provided pursuant to
§ 242.602(a)(3) and any election (or
withdrawal thereof) permitted under
§ 242.602(a)(5), means:
(i) Each vendor;
(ii) Each plan processor; and
(iii) The processor for the Options
Price Reporting Authority (in the case of
a notification for a subject security
which is a class of securities underlying
options admitted to trading on any
national securities exchange).
(70) Sponsor, when used in
connection with a national market
system plan, means any self-regulatory
organization which is a signatory to
such plan and has agreed to act in
accordance with the terms of the plan.
(71) SRO display-only facility means a
facility operated by or on behalf of a
national securities exchange or national
securities association that displays
quotations in a security, but does not
execute orders against such quotations
or present orders to members for
execution.
(72) SRO trading facility means a
facility operated by or on behalf of a
national securities exchange or a
national securities association that
executes orders in a security or presents
orders to members for execution.
(73) Subject security means:
(i) With respect to a national
securities exchange:
(A) Any exchange-traded security
other than a security for which the
executed volume of such exchange,
during the most recent calendar quarter,
comprised one percent or less of the
aggregate trading volume for such
security as reported pursuant to an
effective transaction reporting plan or
effective national market system plan;
and
(B) Any other NMS security for which
such exchange has in effect an election,
pursuant to § 242.602(a)(5)(i), to collect,
process, and make available to a vendor
bids, offers, quotation sizes, and
aggregate quotation sizes communicated
on such exchange; and
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(ii) With respect to a member of a
national securities association:
(A) Any exchange-traded security for
which such member acts in the capacity
of an OTC market maker unless the
executed volume of such member,
during the most recent calendar quarter,
comprised one percent or less of the
aggregate trading volume for such
security as reported pursuant to an
effective transaction reporting plan or
effective national market system plan;
and
(B) Any other NMS security for which
such member acts in the capacity of an
OTC market maker and has in effect an
election, pursuant to § 242.602(a)(5)(ii),
to communicate to its association bids,
offers, and quotation sizes for the
purpose of making such bids, offers, and
quotation sizes available to a vendor.
(74) Time of order execution means
the time (to the second) that an order
was executed at any venue.
(75) Time of order receipt means the
time (to the second) that an order was
received by a market center for
execution.
(76) Time of the transaction has the
meaning provided in § 240.10b–10 of
this chapter.
(77) Trade-through means the
purchase or sale of an NMS stock during
regular trading hours, either as principal
or agent, at a price that is lower than a
protected bid or higher than a protected
offer.
(78) Trading center means a national
securities exchange or national
securities association that operates an
SRO trading facility, an alternative
trading system, an exchange market
maker, an OTC market maker, or any
other broker or dealer that executes
orders internally by trading as principal
or crossing orders as agent.
(79) Trading rotation means, with
respect to an options class, the time
period on a national securities exchange
during which:
(i) Opening, re-opening, or closing
transactions in options series in such
options class are not yet completed; and
(ii) Continuous trading has not yet
commenced or has not yet ended for the
day in options series in such options
class.
(80) Transaction report means a
report containing the price and volume
associated with a transaction involving
the purchase or sale of one or more
round lots of a security.
(81) Transaction reporting association
means any person authorized to
implement or administer any
transaction reporting plan on behalf of
persons acting jointly under
§ 242.601(a).
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(82) Transaction reporting plan means
any plan for collecting, processing,
making available or disseminating
transaction reports with respect to
transactions in securities filed with the
Commission pursuant to, and meeting
the requirements of, § 242.601.
(83) Vendor means any securities
information processor engaged in the
business of disseminating transaction
reports, last sale data, or quotations with
respect to NMS securities to brokers,
dealers, or investors on a real-time or
other current and continuing basis,
whether through an electronic
communications network, moving
ticker, or interrogation device.
§ 242.601 Dissemination of transaction
reports and last sale data with respect to
transactions in NMS stocks.
(a) Filing and effectiveness of
transaction reporting plans. (1) Every
national securities exchange shall file a
transaction reporting plan regarding
transactions in listed equity and Nasdaq
securities executed through its facilities,
and every national securities association
shall file a transaction reporting plan
regarding transactions in listed equity
and Nasdaq securities executed by its
members otherwise than on a national
securities exchange.
(2) Any transaction reporting plan, or
any amendment thereto, filed pursuant
to this section shall be filed with the
Commission, and considered for
approval, in accordance with the
procedures set forth in § 242.608(a) and
(b). Any such plan, or amendment
thereto, shall specify, at a minimum:
(i) The listed equity and Nasdaq
securities or classes of such securities
for which transaction reports shall be
required by the plan;
(ii) Reporting requirements with
respect to transactions in listed equity
securities and Nasdaq securities, for any
broker or dealer subject to the plan;
(iii) The manner of collecting,
processing, sequencing, making
available and disseminating transaction
reports and last sale data reported
pursuant to such plan;
(iv) The manner in which such
transaction reports reported pursuant to
such plan are to be consolidated with
transaction reports from national
securities exchanges and national
securities associations reported
pursuant to any other effective
transaction reporting plan;
(v) The applicable standards and
methods which will be utilized to
ensure promptness of reporting, and
accuracy and completeness of
transaction reports;
(vi) Any rules or procedures which
may be adopted to ensure that
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transaction reports or last sale data will
not be disseminated in a fraudulent or
manipulative manner;
(vii) Specific terms of access to
transaction reports made available or
disseminated pursuant to the plan; and
(viii) That transaction reports or last sale
data made available to any vendor for
display on an interrogation device
identify the marketplace where each
transaction was executed.
(3) No transaction reporting plan filed
pursuant to this section, or any
amendment to an effective transaction
reporting plan, shall become effective
unless approved by the Commission or
otherwise permitted in accordance with
the procedures set forth in § 242.608.
(b) Prohibitions and reporting
requirements. (1) No broker or dealer
may execute any transaction in, or
induce or attempt to induce the
purchase or sale of, any NMS stock:
(i) On or through the facilities of a
national securities exchange unless
there is an effective transaction
reporting plan with respect to
transactions in such security executed
on or through such exchange facilities;
or
(ii) Otherwise than on a national
securities exchange unless there is an
effective transaction reporting plan with
respect to transactions in such security
executed otherwise than on a national
securities exchange by such broker or
dealer.
(2) Every broker or dealer who is a
member of a national securities
exchange or national securities
association shall promptly transmit to
the exchange or association of which it
is a member all information required by
any effective transaction reporting plan
filed by such exchange or association
(either individually or jointly with other
exchanges and/or associations).
(c) Retransmission of transaction
reports or last sale data.
Notwithstanding any provision of any
effective transaction reporting plan, no
national securities exchange or national
securities association may, either
individually or jointly, by rule, stated
policy or practice, transaction reporting
plan or otherwise, prohibit, condition or
otherwise limit, directly or indirectly,
the ability of any vendor to retransmit,
for display in moving tickers,
transaction reports or last sale data
made available pursuant to any effective
transaction reporting plan; provided,
however, that a national securities
exchange or national securities
association may, by means of an
effective transaction reporting plan,
condition such retransmission upon
appropriate undertakings to ensure that
any charges for the distribution of
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transaction reports or last sale data in
moving tickers permitted by paragraph
(d) of this section are collected.
(d) Charges. Nothing in this section
shall preclude any national securities
exchange or national securities
association, separately or jointly,
pursuant to the terms of an effective
transaction reporting plan, from
imposing reasonable, uniform charges
(irrespective of geographic location) for
distribution of transaction reports or last
sale data.
(e) Appeals. The Commission may, in
its discretion, entertain appeals in
connection with the implementation or
operation of any effective transaction
reporting plan in accordance with the
provisions of § 242.608(d).
(f) Exemptions. The Commission may
exempt from the provisions of this
section, either unconditionally or on
specified terms and conditions, any
national securities exchange, national
securities association, broker, dealer, or
specified security if the Commission
determines that such exemption is
consistent with the public interest, the
protection of investors and the removal
of impediments to, and perfection of the
mechanisms of, a national market
system.
§ 242.602 Dissemination of quotations in
NMS securities.
(a) Dissemination requirements for
national securities exchanges and
national securities associations. (1)
Every national securities exchange and
national securities association shall
establish and maintain procedures and
mechanisms for collecting bids, offers,
quotation sizes, and aggregate quotation
sizes from responsible brokers or dealers
who are members of such exchange or
association, processing such bids, offers,
and sizes, and making such bids, offers,
and sizes available to vendors, as
follows:
(i) Each national securities exchange
shall at all times such exchange is open
for trading, collect, process, and make
available to vendors the best bid, the
best offer, and aggregate quotation sizes
for each subject security listed or
admitted to unlisted trading privileges
which is communicated on any national
securities exchange by any responsible
broker or dealer, but shall not include:
(A) Any bid or offer executed
immediately after communication and
any bid or offer communicated by a
responsible broker or dealer other than
an exchange market maker which is
cancelled or withdrawn if not executed
immediately after communication; and
(B) Any bid or offer communicated
during a period when trading in that
security has been suspended or halted,
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or prior to the commencement of trading
in that security on any trading day, on
that exchange.
(ii) Each national securities
association shall, at all times that last
sale information with respect to NMS
securities is reported pursuant to an
effective transaction reporting plan,
collect, process, and make available to
vendors the best bid, best offer, and
quotation sizes communicated
otherwise than on an exchange by each
member of such association acting in
the capacity of an OTC market maker for
each subject security and the identity of
that member (excluding any bid or offer
executed immediately after
communication), except during any
period when over-the-counter trading in
that security has been suspended.
(2) Each national securities exchange
shall, with respect to each published bid
and published offer representing a bid
or offer of a member for a subject
security, establish and maintain
procedures for ascertaining and
disclosing to other members of that
exchange, upon presentation of orders
sought to be executed by them in
reliance upon paragraph (b)(2) of this
section, the identity of the responsible
broker or dealer who made such bid or
offer and the quotation size associated
with it.
(3)(i) If, at any time a national
securities exchange is open for trading,
such exchange determines, pursuant to
rules approved by the Commission
pursuant to section 19(b)(2) of the Act
(15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)), that the level of
trading activities or the existence of
unusual market conditions is such that
the exchange is incapable of collecting,
processing, and making available to
vendors the data for a subject security
required to be made available pursuant
to paragraph (a)(1) of this section in a
manner that accurately reflects the
current state of the market on such
exchange, such exchange shall
immediately notify all specified persons
of that determination. Upon such
notification, responsible brokers or
dealers that are members of that
exchange shall be relieved of their
obligation under paragraphs (b)(2) and
(c)(3) of this section and such exchange
shall be relieved of its obligations under
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section
for that security; provided, however, that
such exchange will continue, to the
maximum extent practicable under the
circumstances, to collect, process, and
make available to vendors data for that
security in accordance with paragraph
(a)(1) of this section.
(ii) During any period a national
securities exchange, or any responsible
broker or dealer that is a member of that
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exchange, is relieved of any obligation
imposed by this section for any subject
security by virtue of a notification made
pursuant to paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this
section, such exchange shall monitor
the activity or conditions which formed
the basis for such notification and shall
immediately renotify all specified
persons when that exchange is once
again capable of collecting, processing,
and making available to vendors the
data for that security required to be
made available pursuant to paragraph
(a)(1) of this section in a manner that
accurately reflects the current state of
the market on such exchange. Upon
such renotification, any exchange or
responsible broker or dealer which had
been relieved of any obligation imposed
by this section as a consequence of the
prior notification shall again be subject
to such obligation.
(4) Nothing in this section shall
preclude any national securities
exchange or national securities
association from making available to
vendors indications of interest or bids
and offers for a subject security at any
time such exchange or association is not
required to do so pursuant to paragraph
(a)(1) of this section.
(5)(i) Any national securities
exchange may make an election for
purposes of the definition of subject
security in § 242.600(b)(73) for any NMS
security, by collecting, processing, and
making available bids, offers, quotation
sizes, and aggregate quotation sizes in
that security; except that for any NMS
security previously listed or admitted to
unlisted trading privileges on only one
exchange and not traded by any OTC
market maker, such election shall be
made by notifying all specified persons,
and shall be effective at the opening of
trading on the business day following
notification.
(ii) Any member of a national
securities association acting in the
capacity of an OTC market maker may
make an election for purposes of the
definition of subject security in
§ 242.600(b)(73) for any NMS security,
by communicating to its association
bids, offers, and quotation sizes in that
security; except that for any other NMS
security listed or admitted to unlisted
trading privileges on only one exchange
and not traded by any other OTC market
maker, such election shall be made by
notifying its association and all
specified persons, and shall be effective
at the opening of trading on the business
day following notification.
(iii) The election of a national
securities exchange or member of a
national securities association for any
NMS security pursuant to this
paragraph (a)(5) shall cease to be in
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effect if such exchange or member
ceases to make available or
communicate bids, offers, and quotation
sizes in such security.
(b) Obligations of responsible brokers
and dealers. (1) Each responsible broker
or dealer shall promptly communicate
to its national securities exchange or
national securities association, pursuant
to the procedures established by that
exchange or association, its best bids,
best offers, and quotation sizes for any
subject security.
(2) Subject to the provisions of
paragraph (b)(3) of this section, each
responsible broker or dealer shall be
obligated to execute any order to buy or
sell a subject security, other than an
odd-lot order, presented to it by another
broker or dealer, or any other person
belonging to a category of persons with
whom such responsible broker or dealer
customarily deals, at a price at least as
favorable to such buyer or seller as the
responsible broker’s or dealer’s
published bid or published offer
(exclusive of any commission,
commission equivalent or differential
customarily charged by such
responsible broker or dealer in
connection with execution of any such
order) in any amount up to its published
quotation size.
(3)(i) No responsible broker or dealer
shall be obligated to execute a
transaction for any subject security as
provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section to purchase or sell that subject
security in an amount greater than such
revised quotation size if:
(A) Prior to the presentation of an
order for the purchase or sale of a
subject security, a responsible broker or
dealer has communicated to its
exchange or association, pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, a
revised quotation size; or
(B) At the time an order for the
purchase or sale of a subject security is
presented, a responsible broker or dealer
is in the process of effecting a
transaction in such subject security, and
immediately after the completion of
such transaction, it communicates to its
exchange or association a revised
quotation size, such responsible broker
or dealer shall not be obligated by
paragraph (b)(2) of this section to
purchase or sell that subject security in
an amount greater than such revised
quotation size.
(ii) No responsible broker or dealer
shall be obligated to execute a
transaction for any subject security as
provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section if:
(A) Before the order sought to be
executed is presented, such responsible
broker or dealer has communicated to
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its exchange or association pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, a
revised bid or offer; or
(B) At the time the order sought to be
executed is presented, such responsible
broker or dealer is in the process of
effecting a transaction in such subject
security, and, immediately after the
completion of such transaction, such
responsible broker or dealer
communicates to its exchange or
association pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)
of this section, a revised bid or offer;
provided, however, that such
responsible broker or dealer shall
nonetheless be obligated to execute any
such order in such subject security as
provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section at its revised bid or offer in any
amount up to its published quotation
size or revised quotation size.
(4) Subject to the provisions of
paragraph (a)(4) of this section:
(i) No national securities exchange or
OTC market maker may make available,
disseminate or otherwise communicate
to any vendor, directly or indirectly, for
display on a terminal or other display
device any bid, offer, quotation size, or
aggregate quotation size for any NMS
security which is not a subject security
with respect to such exchange or OTC
market maker; and
(ii) No vendor may disseminate or
display on a terminal or other display
device any bid, offer, quotation size, or
aggregate quotation size from any
national securities exchange or OTC
market maker for any NMS security
which is not a subject security with
respect to such exchange or OTC market
maker.
(5)(i) Entry of any priced order for an
NMS security by an exchange market
maker or OTC market maker in that
security into an electronic
communications network that widely
disseminates such order shall be
deemed to be:
(A) A bid or offer under this section,
to be communicated to the market
maker’s exchange or association
pursuant to this paragraph (b) for at
least the minimum quotation size that is
required by the rules of the market
maker’s exchange or association if the
priced order is for the account of a
market maker, or the actual size of the
order up to the minimum quotation size
required if the priced order is for the
account of a customer; and
(B) A communication of a bid or offer
to a vendor for display on a display
device for purposes of paragraph (b)(4)
of this section.
(ii) An exchange market maker or
OTC market maker that has entered a
priced order for an NMS security into an
electronic communications network that
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widely disseminates such order shall be
deemed to be in compliance with
paragraph (b)(5)(i)(A) of this section if
the electronic communications network:
(A)(1) Provides to a national securities
exchange or national securities
association (or an exclusive processor
acting on behalf of one or more
exchanges or associations) the prices
and sizes of the orders at the highest
buy price and the lowest sell price for
such security entered in, and widely
disseminated by, the electronic
communications network by exchange
market makers and OTC market makers
for the NMS security, and such prices
and sizes are included in the quotation
data made available by such exchange,
association, or exclusive processor to
vendors pursuant to this section; and
(2) Provides, to any broker or dealer,
the ability to effect a transaction with a
priced order widely disseminated by the
electronic communications network
entered therein by an exchange market
maker or OTC market maker that is:
(i) Equivalent to the ability of any
broker or dealer to effect a transaction
with an exchange market maker or OTC
market maker pursuant to the rules of
the national securities exchange or
national securities association to which
the electronic communications network
supplies such bids and offers; and
(ii) At the price of the highest priced
buy order or lowest priced sell order, or
better, for the lesser of the cumulative
size of such priced orders entered
therein by exchange market makers or
OTC market makers at such price, or the
size of the execution sought by the
broker or dealer, for such security; or
(B) Is an alternative trading system
that:
(1) Displays orders and provides the
ability to effect transactions with such
orders under § 242.301(b)(3); and
(2) Otherwise is in compliance with
Regulation ATS (§ 242.300 through
§ 242.303).
(c) Transactions in listed options. (1)
A national securities exchange or
national securities association:
(i) Shall not be required, under
paragraph (a) of this section, to collect
from responsible brokers or dealers who
are members of such exchange or
association, or to make available to
vendors, the quotation sizes and
aggregate quotation sizes for listed
options, if such exchange or association
establishes by rule and periodically
publishes the quotation size for which
such responsible brokers or dealers are
obligated to execute an order to buy or
sell an options series that is a subject
security at its published bid or offer
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section;
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(ii) May establish by rule and
periodically publish a quotation size,
which shall not be for less than one
contract, for which responsible brokers
or dealers who are members of such
exchange or association are obligated
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section to
execute an order to buy or sell a listed
option for the account of a broker or
dealer that is in an amount different
from the quotation size for which it is
obligated to execute an order for the
account of a customer; and
(iii) May establish and maintain
procedures and mechanisms for
collecting from responsible brokers and
dealers who are members of such
exchange or association, and making
available to vendors, the quotation sizes
and aggregate quotation sizes in listed
options for which such responsible
broker or dealer will be obligated under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section to
execute an order from a customer to buy
or sell a listed option and establish by
rule and periodically publish the size,
which shall not be less than one
contract, for which such responsible
brokers or dealers are obligated to
execute an order for the account of a
broker or dealer.
(2) If, pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of
this section, the rules of a national
securities exchange or national
securities association do not require its
members to communicate to it their
quotation sizes for listed options, a
responsible broker or dealer that is a
member of such exchange or association
shall:
(i) Be relieved of its obligations under
paragraph (b)(1) of this section to
communicate to such exchange or
association its quotation sizes for any
listed option; and
(ii) Comply with its obligations under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section by
executing any order to buy or sell a
listed option, in an amount up to the
size established by such exchange’s or
association’s rules under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section.
(3) Thirty second response. Each
responsible broker or dealer, within
thirty seconds of receiving an order to
buy or sell a listed option in an amount
greater than the quotation size
established by a national securities
exchange’s or national securities
association’s rules pursuant to
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, or its
published quotation size must:
(i) Execute the entire order; or
(ii)(A) Execute that portion of the
order equal to at least:
(1) The quotation size established by
a national securities exchange’s or
national securities association’s rules,
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this
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section, to the extent that such exchange
or association does not collect and make
available to vendors quotation size and
aggregate quotation size under
paragraph (a) of this section; or
(2) Its published quotation size; and
(B) Revise its bid or offer.
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (c)(3)
of this section, no responsible broker or
dealer shall be obligated to execute a
transaction for any listed option as
provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section if:
(i) Any of the circumstances in
paragraph (b)(3) of this section exist; or
(ii) The order for the purchase or sale
of a listed option is presented during a
trading rotation in that listed option.
(d) Exemptions. The Commission may
exempt from the provisions of this
section, either unconditionally or on
specified terms and conditions, any
responsible broker or dealer, electronic
communications network, national
securities exchange, or national
securities association if the Commission
determines that such exemption is
consistent with the public interest, the
protection of investors and the removal
of impediments to and perfection of the
mechanism of a national market system.
§ 242.603 Distribution, consolidation, and
display of information with respect to
quotations for and transactions in NMS
stocks.
(a) Distribution of information. (1)
Any exclusive processor, or any broker
or dealer with respect to information for
which it is the exclusive source, that
distributes information with respect to
quotations for or transactions in an NMS
stock to a securities information
processor shall do so on terms that are
fair and reasonable.
(2) Any national securities exchange,
national securities association, broker,
or dealer that distributes information
with respect to quotations for or
transactions in an NMS stock to a
securities information processor, broker,
dealer, or other persons shall do so on
terms that are not unreasonably
discriminatory.
(b) Consolidation of information.
Every national securities exchange on
which an NMS stock is traded and
national securities association shall act
jointly pursuant to one or more effective
national market system plans to
disseminate consolidated information,
including a national best bid and
national best offer, on quotations for and
transactions in NMS stocks. Such plan
or plans shall provide for the
dissemination of all consolidated
information for an individual NMS
stock through a single plan processor.
(c) Display of information. (1) No
securities information processor, broker,
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or dealer shall provide, in a context in
which a trading or order-routing
decision can be implemented, a display
of any information with respect to
quotations for or transactions in an NMS
stock without also providing, in an
equivalent manner, a consolidated
display for such stock.
(2) The provisions of paragraph (c)(1)
of this section shall not apply to a
display of information on the trading
floor or through the facilities of a
national securities exchange or to a
display in connection with the
operation of a market linkage system
implemented in accordance with an
effective national market system plan.
(d) Exemptions. The Commission, by
order, may exempt from the provisions
of this section, either unconditionally or
on specified terms and conditions, any
person, security, or item of information,
or any class or classes of persons,
securities, or items of information, if the
Commission determines that such
exemption is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, and is consistent
with the protection of investors.
§ 242.604
Display of customer limit orders.
(a) Specialists and OTC market
makers. For all NMS stocks:
(1) Each member of a national
securities exchange that is registered by
that exchange as a specialist, or is
authorized by that exchange to perform
functions substantially similar to that of
a specialist, shall publish immediately a
bid or offer that reflects:
(i) The price and the full size of each
customer limit order held by the
specialist that is at a price that would
improve the bid or offer of such
specialist in such security; and
(ii) The full size of each customer
limit order held by the specialist that:
(A) Is priced equal to the bid or offer
of such specialist for such security;
(B) Is priced equal to the national best
bid or national best offer; and
(C) Represents more than a de
minimis change in relation to the size
associated with the specialist’s bid or
offer.
(2) Each registered broker or dealer
that acts as an OTC market maker shall
publish immediately a bid or offer that
reflects:
(i) The price and the full size of each
customer limit order held by the OTC
market maker that is at a price that
would improve the bid or offer of such
OTC market maker in such security; and
(ii) The full size of each customer
limit order held by the OTC market
maker that:
(A) Is priced equal to the bid or offer
of such OTC market maker for such
security;
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37627
(B) Is priced equal to the national best
bid or national best offer; and
(C) Represents more than a de
minimis change in relation to the size
associated with the OTC market maker’s
bid or offer.
(b) Exceptions. The requirements in
paragraph (a) of this section shall not
apply to any customer limit order:
(1) That is executed upon receipt of
the order.
(2) That is placed by a customer who
expressly requests, either at the time
that the order is placed or prior thereto
pursuant to an individually negotiated
agreement with respect to such
customer’s orders, that the order not be
displayed.
(3) That is an odd-lot order.
(4) That is a block size order, unless
a customer placing such order requests
that the order be displayed.
(5) That is delivered immediately
upon receipt to a national securities
exchange or national securities
association-sponsored system, or an
electronic communications network that
complies with the requirements of
§ 242.602(b)(5)(ii) with respect to that
order.
(6) That is delivered immediately
upon receipt to another exchange
member or OTC market maker that
complies with the requirements of this
section with respect to that order.
(7) That is an ‘‘all or none’’ order.
(c) Exemptions. The Commission may
exempt from the provisions of this
section, either unconditionally or on
specified terms and conditions, any
responsible broker or dealer, electronic
communications network, national
securities exchange, or national
securities association if the Commission
determines that such exemption is
consistent with the public interest, the
protection of investors and the removal
of impediments to and perfection of the
mechanism of a national market system.
§ 242.605 Disclosure of order execution
information.
Preliminary Note: Section 242.605 requires
market centers to make available
standardized, monthly reports of statistical
information concerning their order
executions. This information is presented in
accordance with uniform standards that are
based on broad assumptions about order
execution and routing practices. The
information will provide a starting point to
promote visibility and competition on the
part of market centers and broker-dealers,
particularly on the factors of execution price
and speed. The disclosures required by this
section do not encompass all of the factors
that may be important to investors in
evaluating the order routing services of a
broker-dealer. In addition, any particular
market center’s statistics will encompass
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varying types of orders routed by different
broker-dealers on behalf of customers with a
wide range of objectives. Accordingly, the
statistical information required by this
section alone does not create a reliable basis
to address whether any particular brokerdealer failed to obtain the most favorable
terms reasonably available under the
circumstances for customer orders.
(a) Monthly electronic reports by
market centers. (1) Every market center
shall make available for each calendar
month, in accordance with the
procedures established pursuant to
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, a report
on the covered orders in NMS stocks
that it received for execution from any
person. Such report shall be in
electronic form; shall be categorized by
security, order type, and order size; and
shall include the following columns of
information:
(i) For market orders, marketable limit
orders, inside-the-quote limit orders, atthe-quote limit orders, and near-thequote limit orders:
(A) The number of covered orders;
(B) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders;
(C) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders cancelled prior to
execution;
(D) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed at the
receiving market center;
(E) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed at any other
venue;
(F) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed from 0 to 9
seconds after the time of order receipt;
(G) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed from 10 to
29 seconds after the time of order
receipt;
(H) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed from 30
seconds to 59 seconds after the time of
order receipt;
(I) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed from 60
seconds to 299 seconds after the time of
order receipt;
(J) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed from 5
minutes to 30 minutes after the time of
order receipt; and
(K) The average realized spread for
executions of covered orders; and
(ii) For market orders and marketable
limit orders:
(A) The average effective spread for
executions of covered orders;
(B) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed with price
improvement;
(C) For shares executed with price
improvement, the share-weighted
average amount per share that prices
were improved;
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(D) For shares executed with price
improvement, the share-weighted
average period from the time of order
receipt to the time of order execution;
(E) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed at the quote;
(F) For shares executed at the quote,
the share-weighted average period from
the time of order receipt to the time of
order execution;
(G) The cumulative number of shares
of covered orders executed outside the
quote;
(H) For shares executed outside the
quote, the share-weighted average
amount per share that prices were
outside the quote; and
(I) For shares executed outside the
quote, the share-weighted average
period from the time of order receipt to
the time of order execution.
(2) Every national securities exchange
on which NMS stocks are traded and
each national securities association
shall act jointly in establishing
procedures for market centers to follow
in making available to the public the
reports required by paragraph (a)(1) of
this section in a uniform, readily
accessible, and usable electronic form.
In the event there is no effective
national market system plan
establishing such procedures, market
centers shall prepare their reports in a
consistent, usable, and machinereadable electronic format, and make
such reports available for downloading
from an Internet Web site that is free
and readily accessible to the public.
(3) A market center shall make
available the report required by
paragraph (a)(1) of this section within
one month after the end of the month
addressed in the report.
(b) Exemptions. The Commission
may, by order upon application,
conditionally or unconditionally
exempt any person, security, or
transaction, or any class or classes of
persons, securities, or transactions, from
any provision or provisions of this
section, if the Commission determines
that such exemption is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, and is
consistent with the protection of
investors.
§ 242.606 Disclosure of order routing
information.
(a) Quarterly report on order routing.
(1) Every broker or dealer shall make
publicly available for each calendar
quarter a report on its routing of nondirected orders in NMS securities
during that quarter. For NMS stocks,
such report shall be divided into three
separate sections for securities that are
listed on the New York Stock Exchange,
Inc., securities that are qualified for
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inclusion in The Nasdaq Stock Market,
Inc., and securities that are listed on the
American Stock Exchange LLC or any
other national securities exchange. Such
report also shall include a separate
section for NMS securities that are
option contracts. Each of the four
sections in a report shall include the
following information:
(i) The percentage of total customer
orders for the section that were nondirected orders, and the percentages of
total non-directed orders for the section
that were market orders, limit orders,
and other orders;
(ii) The identity of the ten venues to
which the largest number of total nondirected orders for the section were
routed for execution and of any venue
to which five percent or more of nondirected orders were routed for
execution, the percentage of total nondirected orders for the section routed to
the venue, and the percentages of total
non-directed market orders, total nondirected limit orders, and total nondirected other orders for the section that
were routed to the venue; and
(iii) A discussion of the material
aspects of the broker’s or dealer’s
relationship with each venue identified
pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this
section, including a description of any
arrangement for payment for order flow
and any profit-sharing relationship.
(2) A broker or dealer shall make the
report required by paragraph (a)(1) of
this section publicly available within
one month after the end of the quarter
addressed in the report.
(b) Customer requests for information
on order routing. (1) Every broker or
dealer shall, on request of a customer,
disclose to its customer the identity of
the venue to which the customer’s
orders were routed for execution in the
six months prior to the request, whether
the orders were directed orders or nondirected orders, and the time of the
transactions, if any, that resulted from
such orders.
(2) A broker or dealer shall notify
customers in writing at least annually of
the availability on request of the
information specified in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section.
(c) Exemptions. The Commission
may, by order upon application,
conditionally or unconditionally
exempt any person, security, or
transaction, or any class or classes of
persons, securities, or transactions, from
any provision or provisions of this
section, if the Commission determines
that such exemption is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, and is
consistent with the protection of
investors.
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§ 242.607
Customer account statements.
(a) No broker or dealer acting as agent
for a customer may effect any
transaction in, induce or attempt to
induce the purchase or sale of, or direct
orders for purchase or sale of, any NMS
stock or a security authorized for
quotation on an automated inter-dealer
quotation system that has the
characteristics set forth in section 17B of
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78q–2), unless such
broker or dealer informs such customer,
in writing, upon opening a new account
and on an annual basis thereafter, of the
following:
(1) The broker’s or dealer’s policies
regarding receipt of payment for order
flow from any broker or dealer, national
securities exchange, national securities
association, or exchange member to
which it routes customers’ orders for
execution, including a statement as to
whether any payment for order flow is
received for routing customer orders
and a detailed description of the nature
of the compensation received; and
(2) The broker’s or dealer’s policies
for determining where to route customer
orders that are the subject of payment
for order flow absent specific
instructions from customers, including a
description of the extent to which
orders can be executed at prices
superior to the national best bid and
national best offer.
(b) Exemptions. The Commission,
upon request or upon its own motion,
may exempt by rule or by order, any
broker or dealer or any class of brokers
or dealers, security or class of securities
from the requirements of paragraph (a)
of this section with respect to any
transaction or class of transactions,
either unconditionally or on specified
terms and conditions, if the Commission
determines that such exemption is
consistent with the pubic interest and
the protection of investors.
§ 242.608 Filing and amendment of
national market system plans.
(a) Filing of national market system
plans and amendments thereto. (1) Any
two or more self-regulatory
organizations, acting jointly, may file a
national market system plan or may
propose an amendment to an effective
national market system plan (‘‘proposed
amendment’’) by submitting the text of
the plan or amendment to the Secretary
of the Commission, together with a
statement of the purpose of such plan or
amendment and, to the extent
applicable, the documents and
information required by paragraphs
(a)(4) and (5) of this section.
(2) The Commission may propose
amendments to any effective national
market system plan by publishing the
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text thereof, together with a statement of
the purpose of such amendment, in
accordance with the provisions of
paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) Self-regulatory organizations are
authorized to act jointly in:
(i) Planning, developing, and
operating any national market
subsystem or facility contemplated by a
national market system plan;
(ii) Preparing and filing a national
market system plan or any amendment
thereto; or
(iii) Implementing or administering an
effective national market system plan.
(4) Every national market system plan
filed pursuant to this section, or any
amendment thereto, shall be
accompanied by:
(i) Copies of all governing or
constituent documents relating to any
person (other than a self-regulatory
organization) authorized to implement
or administer such plan on behalf of its
sponsors; and
(ii) To the extent applicable:
(A) A detailed description of the
manner in which the plan or
amendment, and any facility or
procedure contemplated by the plan or
amendment, will be implemented;
(B) A listing of all significant phases
of development and implementation
(including any pilot phase)
contemplated by the plan or
amendment, together with the projected
date of completion of each phase;
(C) An analysis of the impact on
competition of implementation of the
plan or amendment or of any facility
contemplated by the plan or
amendment;
(D) A description of any written
understandings or agreements between
or among plan sponsors or participants
relating to interpretations of the plan or
conditions for becoming a sponsor or
participant in the plan; and
(E) In the case of a proposed
amendment, a statement that such
amendment has been approved by the
sponsors in accordance with the terms
of the plan.
(5) Every national market system plan,
or any amendment thereto, filed
pursuant to this section shall include a
description of the manner in which any
facility contemplated by the plan or
amendment will be operated. Such
description shall include, to the extent
applicable:
(i) The terms and conditions under
which brokers, dealers, and/or selfregulatory organizations will be granted
or denied access (including specific
procedures and standards governing the
granting or denial of access);
(ii) The method by which any fees or
charges collected on behalf of all of the
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sponsors and/or participants in
connection with access to, or use of, any
facility contemplated by the plan or
amendment will be determined and
imposed (including any provision for
distribution of any net proceeds from
such fees or charges to the sponsors
and/or participants) and the amount of
such fees or charges;
(iii) The method by which, and the
frequency with which, the performance
of any person acting as plan processor
with respect to the implementation and/
or operation of the plan will be
evaluated; and
(iv) The method by which disputes
arising in connection with the operation
of the plan will be resolved.
(6) In connection with the selection of
any person to act as plan processor with
respect to any facility contemplated by
a national market system plan
(including renewal of any contract for
any person to so act), the sponsors shall
file with the Commission a statement
identifying the person selected,
describing the material terms under
which such person is to serve as plan
processor, and indicating the
solicitation efforts, if any, for alternative
plan processors, the alternatives
considered and the reasons for selection
of such person.
(7) Any national market system plan
(or any amendment thereto) which is
intended by the sponsors to satisfy a
plan filing requirement contained in any
other section of this Regulation NMS
and part 240, subpart A of this chapter
shall, in addition to compliance with
this section, also comply with the
requirements of such other section.
(b) Effectiveness of national market
system plans. (1) The Commission shall
publish notice of the filing of any
national market system plan, or any
proposed amendment to any effective
national market system plan (including
any amendment initiated by the
Commission), together with the terms of
substance of the filing or a description
of the subjects and issues involved, and
shall provide interested persons an
opportunity to submit written
comments. No national market system
plan, or any amendment thereto, shall
become effective unless approved by the
Commission or otherwise permitted in
accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of this
section.
(2) Within 120 days of the date of
publication of notice of filing of a
national market system plan or an
amendment to an effective national
market system plan, or within such
longer period as the Commission may
designate up to 180 days of such date if
it finds such longer period to be
appropriate and publishes its reasons
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for so finding or as to which the
sponsors consent, the Commission shall
approve such plan or amendment, with
such changes or subject to such
conditions as the Commission may
deem necessary or appropriate, if it
finds that such plan or amendment is
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, for the protection of investors
and the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets, to remove impediments to, and
perfect the mechanisms of, a national
market system, or otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
Approval of a national market system
plan, or an amendment to an effective
national market system plan (other than
an amendment initiated by the
Commission), shall be by order.
Promulgation of an amendment to an
effective national market system plan
initiated by the Commission shall be by
rule.
(3) A proposed amendment may be
put into effect upon filing with the
Commission if designated by the
sponsors as:
(i) Establishing or changing a fee or
other charge collected on behalf of all of
the sponsors and/or participants in
connection with access to, or use of, any
facility contemplated by the plan or
amendment (including changes in any
provision with respect to distribution of
any net proceeds from such fees or other
charges to the sponsors and/or
participants);
(ii) Concerned solely with the
administration of the plan, or involving
the governing or constituent documents
relating to any person (other than a selfregulatory organization) authorized to
implement or administer such plan on
behalf of its sponsors; or
(iii) Involving solely technical or
ministerial matters. At any time within
60 days of the filing of any such
amendment, the Commission may
summarily abrogate the amendment and
require that such amendment be refiled
in accordance with paragraph (a)(1) of
this section and reviewed in accordance
with paragraph (b)(2) of this section, if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or the maintenance of fair and
orderly markets, to remove impediments
to, and perfect the mechanisms of, a
national market system or otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
(4) Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, a
proposed amendment may be put into
effect summarily upon publication of
notice of such amendment, on a
temporary basis not to exceed 120 days,
if the Commission finds that such action
is necessary or appropriate in the public
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interest, for the protection of investors
or the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets, to remove impediments to, and
perfect the mechanisms of, a national
market system or otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
(5) Any plan (or amendment thereto)
in connection with:
(i) The planning, development,
operation, or regulation of a national
market system (or a subsystem thereof)
or one or more facilities thereof; or
(ii) The development and
implementation of procedures and/or
facilities designed to achieve
compliance by self-regulatory
organizations and/or their members of
any section of this Regulation NMS
(§§242.600 through 242.612) and part
240, subpart A of this chapter
promulgated pursuant to section 11A of
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78k–1), approved by
the Commission pursuant to section
11A of the Act (or pursuant to any rule
or regulation thereunder) prior to the
effective date of this section (either
temporarily or permanently) shall be
deemed to have been filed and approved
pursuant to this section and no
additional filing need be made by the
sponsors with respect to such plan or
amendment; provided, however, that all
terms and conditions associated with
any such approval (including time
limitations) shall continue to be
applicable; provided, further, that any
amendment to such plan filed with or
approved by the Commission on or after
the effective date of this section shall be
subject to the provisions of, and
considered in accordance with the
procedures specified in, this section.
(c) Compliance with terms of national
market system plans. Each selfregulatory organization shall comply
with the terms of any effective national
market system plan of which it is a
sponsor or a participant. Each selfregulatory organization also shall,
absent reasonable justification or
excuse, enforce compliance with any
such plan by its members and persons
associated with its members.
(d) Appeals. The Commission may, in
its discretion, entertain appeals in
connection with the implementation or
operation of any effective national
market system plan as follows:
(1) Any action taken or failure to act
by any person in connection with an
effective national market system plan
(other than a prohibition or limitation of
access reviewable by the Commission
pursuant to section 11A(b)(5) or section
19(d) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78k–1(b)(5)
or 78s(d))) shall be subject to review by
the Commission, on its own motion or
upon application by any person
aggrieved thereby (including, but not
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limited to, self-regulatory organizations,
brokers, dealers, issuers, and vendors),
filed not later than 30 days after notice
of such action or failure to act or within
such longer period as the Commission
may determine.
(2) Application to the Commission for
review, or the institution of review by
the Commission on its own motion,
shall not operate as a stay of any such
action unless the Commission
determines otherwise, after notice and
opportunity for hearing on the question
of a stay (which hearing may consist
only of affidavits or oral arguments).
(3) In any proceedings for review, if
the Commission, after appropriate
notice and opportunity for hearing
(which hearing may consist solely of
consideration of the record of any
proceedings conducted in connection
with such action or failure to act and an
opportunity for the presentation of
reasons supporting or opposing such
action or failure to act) and upon
consideration of such other data, views,
and arguments as it deems relevant,
finds that the action or failure to act is
in accordance with the applicable
provisions of such plan and that the
applicable provisions are, and were,
applied in a manner consistent with the
public interest, the protection of
investors, the maintenance of fair and
orderly markets, and the removal of
impediments to, and the perfection of
the mechanisms of a national market
system, the Commission, by order, shall
dismiss the proceeding. If the
Commission does not make any such
finding, or if it finds that such action or
failure to act imposes any burden on
competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act, the Commission, by
order, shall set aside such action and/
or require such action with respect to
the matter reviewed as the Commission
deems necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets, or to remove
impediments to, and perfect the
mechanisms of, a national market
system.
(e) Exemptions. The Commission may
exempt from the provisions of this
section, either unconditionally or on
specified terms and conditions, any selfregulatory organization, member
thereof, or specified security, if the
Commission determines that such
exemption is consistent with the public
interest, the protection of investors, the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets
and the removal of impediments to, and
perfection of the mechanisms of, a
national market system.
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§ 242.609 Registration of securities
information processors: form of application
and amendments.
(a) An application for the registration
of a securities information processor
shall be filed on Form SIP (§ 249.1001
of this chapter) in accordance with the
instructions contained therein.
(b) If any information reported in
items 1–13 or item 21 of Form SIP or in
any amendment thereto is or becomes
inaccurate for any reason, whether
before or after the registration has been
granted, the securities information
processor shall promptly file an
amendment on Form SIP correcting
such information.
(c) The Commission, upon its own
motion or upon application by any
securities information processor, may
conditionally or unconditionally
exempt any securities information
processor from any provision of the
rules or regulations adopted under
section 11A(b) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
78k–1(b)).
(d) Every amendment filed pursuant
to this section shall constitute a
‘‘report’’ within the meaning of sections
17(a), 18(a) and 32(a) of the Act (15
U.S.C. 78q(a), 78r(a), and 78ff(a)).
§ 242.610
Access to quotations.
(a) Quotations of SRO trading facility.
A national securities exchange or
national securities association shall not
impose unfairly discriminatory terms
that prevent or inhibit any person from
obtaining efficient access through a
member of the national securities
exchange or national securities
association to the quotations in an NMS
stock displayed through its SRO trading
facility.
(b) Quotations of SRO display-only
facility. (1) Any trading center that
displays quotations in an NMS stock
through an SRO display-only facility
shall provide a level and cost of access
to such quotations that is substantially
equivalent to the level and cost of access
to quotations displayed by SRO trading
facilities in that stock.
(2) Any trading center that displays
quotations in an NMS stock through an
SRO display-only facility shall not
impose unfairly discriminatory terms
that prevent or inhibit any person from
obtaining efficient access to such
quotations through a member,
subscriber, or customer of the trading
center.
(c) Fees for access to quotations. A
trading center shall not impose, nor
permit to be imposed, any fee or fees for
the execution of an order against a
protected quotation of the trading center
or against any other quotation of the
trading center that is the best bid or best
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offer of a national securities exchange,
the best bid or best offer of The Nasdaq
Stock Market, Inc., or the best bid or
best offer of a national securities
association other than the best bid or
best offer of The Nasdaq Stock Market,
Inc. in an NMS stock that exceed or
accumulate to more than the following
limits:
(1) If the price of a protected
quotation or other quotation is $1.00 or
more, the fee or fees cannot exceed or
accumulate to more than $0.003 per
share; or
(2) If the price of a protected
quotation or other quotation is less than
$1.00, the fee or fees cannot exceed or
accumulate to more than 0.3% of the
quotation price per share.
(d) Locking or crossing quotations.
Each national securities exchange and
national securities association shall
establish, maintain, and enforce written
rules that:
(1) Require its members reasonably to
avoid:
(i) Displaying quotations that lock or
cross any protected quotation in an
NMS stock; and
(ii) Displaying manual quotations that
lock or cross any quotation in an NMS
stock disseminated pursuant to an
effective national market system plan;
(2) Are reasonably designed to assure
the reconciliation of locked or crossed
quotations in an NMS stock; and
(3) Prohibit its members from
engaging in a pattern or practice of
displaying quotations that lock or cross
any protected quotation in an NMS
stock, or of displaying manual
quotations that lock or cross any
quotation in an NMS stock disseminated
pursuant to an effective national market
system plan, other than displaying
quotations that lock or cross any
protected or other quotation as
permitted by an exception contained in
its rules established pursuant to
paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(e) Exemptions. The Commission, by
order, may exempt from the provisions
of this section, either unconditionally or
on specified terms and conditions, any
person, security, quotations, orders, or
fees, or any class or classes of persons,
securities, quotations, orders, or fees, if
the Commission determines that such
exemption is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, and is consistent
with the protection of investors.
§ 242.611
Order protection rule.
(a) Reasonable policies and
procedures. (1) A trading center shall
establish, maintain, and enforce written
policies and procedures that are
reasonably designed to prevent tradethroughs on that trading center of
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37631
protected quotations in NMS stocks that
do not fall within an exception set forth
in paragraph (b) of this section and, if
relying on such an exception, that are
reasonably designed to assure
compliance with the terms of the
exception.
(2) A trading center shall regularly
surveil to ascertain the effectiveness of
the policies and procedures required by
paragraph (a)(1) of this section and shall
take prompt action to remedy
deficiencies in such policies and
procedures.
(b) Exceptions. (1) The transaction
that constituted the trade-through was
effected when the trading center
displaying the protected quotation that
was traded through was experiencing a
failure, material delay, or malfunction of
its systems or equipment.
(2) The transaction that constituted
the trade-through was not a ‘‘regular
way’’ contract.
(3) The transaction that constituted
the trade-through was a single-priced
opening, reopening, or closing
transaction by the trading center.
(4) The transaction that constituted
the trade-through was executed at a time
when a protected bid was priced higher
than a protected offer in the NMS stock.
(5) The transaction that constituted
the trade-through was the execution of
an order identified as an intermarket
sweep order.
(6) The transaction that constituted
the trade-through was effected by a
trading center that simultaneously
routed an intermarket sweep order to
execute against the full displayed size of
any protected quotation in the NMS
stock that was traded through.
(7) The transaction that constituted
the trade-through was the execution of
an order at a price that was not based,
directly or indirectly, on the quoted
price of the NMS stock at the time of
execution and for which the material
terms were not reasonably determinable
at the time the commitment to execute
the order was made.
(8) The trading center displaying the
protected quotation that was traded
through had displayed, within one
second prior to execution of the
transaction that constituted the tradethrough, a best bid or best offer, as
applicable, for the NMS stock with a
price that was equal or inferior to the
price of the trade-through transaction.
(9) The transaction that constituted
the trade-through was the execution by
a trading center of an order for which,
at the time of receipt of the order, the
trading center had guaranteed an
execution at no worse than a specified
price (a ‘‘stopped order’’), where:
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(i) The stopped order was for the
account of a customer;
(ii) The customer agreed to the
specified price on an order-by-order
basis; and
(iii) The price of the trade-through
transaction was, for a stopped buy
order, lower than the national best bid
in the NMS stock at the time of
execution or, for a stopped sell order,
higher than the national best offer in the
NMS stock at the time of execution.
(c) Intermarket sweep orders. The
trading center, broker, or dealer
responsible for the routing of an
intermarket sweep order shall take
reasonable steps to establish that such
order meets the requirements set forth
in § 242.600(b)(30).
(d) Exemptions. The Commission, by
order, may exempt from the provisions
of this section, either unconditionally or
on specified terms and conditions, any
person, security, transaction, quotation,
or order, or any class or classes of
persons, securities, quotations, or
orders, if the Commission determines
that such exemption is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, and is
consistent with the protection of
investors.
§ 242.612
Minimum pricing increment.
(a) No national securities exchange,
national securities association,
alternative trading system, vendor, or
broker or dealer shall display, rank, or
accept from any person a bid or offer,
an order, or an indication of interest in
any NMS stock priced in an increment
smaller than $0.01 if that bid or offer,
order, or indication of interest is priced
equal to or greater than $1.00 per share.
(b) No national securities exchange,
national securities association,
alternative trading system, vendor, or
broker or dealer shall display, rank, or
accept from any person a bid or offer,
an order, or an indication of interest in
any NMS stock priced in an increment
smaller than $0.0001 if that bid or offer,
order, or indication of interest is priced
less than $1.00 per share.
(c) The Commission, by order, may
exempt from the provisions of this
section, either unconditionally or on
specified terms and conditions, any
person, security, quotation, or order, or
any class or classes of persons,
securities, quotations, or orders, if the
Commission determines that such
exemption is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, and is consistent
with the protection of investors.
PART 249—FORMS, SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
31. The authority citation for part 249
continues to read in part as follows:
I
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Authority: 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq. and 7201
et seq.; and 18 U.S.C. 1350, unless otherwise
noted.
*
*
*
*
*
32. Section 249.1001 is revised to read
as follows:
I
§ 249.1001 Form SIP, for application for
registration as a securities information
processor or to amend such an application
or registration.
This form shall be used for
application for registration as a
securities information processor,
pursuant to section 11A(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78k–1(b)) and § 242.609 of this
chapter, or to amend such an
application or registration.
I 33. Form SIP (referenced in
§ 249.1001) is amended by revising
Instruction 6 of General Instructions for
Preparing and Filing Form SIP to read as
follows:
Note: The text of Form SIP does not and
this amendment will not appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
FORM SIP
*
*
*
*
*
General Instructions for Preparing and
Filing Form SIP
*
*
*
*
*
6. Rule 609(b) of Regulation NMS
requires that if any information
contained in items 1 through 13 or item
21 of this application, or any
supplement or amendment thereto, is or
becomes inaccurate for any reason, an
amendment must be filed promptly on
Form SIP correcting such information.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 270—RULES AND
REGULATIONS, INVESTMENT
COMPANY ACT OF 1940
34. The authority citation for part 270
continues to read in part as follows:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80a–1 et seq., 80a–
34(d), 80a–37, and 80a–39, unless otherwise
noted.
*
*
*
*
*
35. Section 270.17a–7 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(1) to read as
follows:
I
§ 270.17a–7 Exemption of certain
purchase or sale transactions between an
investment company and certain affiliated
persons thereof.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) If the security is an ‘‘NMS stock’’
as that term is defined in 17 CFR
242.600, the last sale price with respect
to such security reported in the
consolidated transaction reporting
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system (‘‘consolidated system’’) or the
average of the highest current
independent bid and lowest current
independent offer for such security
(reported pursuant to 17 CFR 242.602)
if there are no reported transactions in
the consolidated system that day; or
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: June 9, 2005.
By the Commission.
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
Dissent of Commissioners Cynthia A.
Glassman and Paul S. Atkins to the
Adoption of Regulation NMS
Introduction
As a result of our strong disagreement
with the majority’s adoption of
Regulation NMS,1 we write jointly to
make clear the reasons for our dissent.
We support Regulation NMS’’
overarching goal of enhancing the
efficiency of our markets. We do not
believe, however, that Regulation NMS
will achieve this goal, and we are
concerned about its detrimental impact
on competition and innovation. In our
view, Regulation NMS is at odds with
Congress’ goal, expressed in the
Securities Acts Amendments of 1975
(‘‘1975 Act Amendments’’),2 of
protecting competition within the
national market system.3 In analyzing
1 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808
(June 9, 2005) (‘‘Adopting Release’’). Regulation
NMS is composed of four substantive rules: A
requirement that markets provide fair and nondiscriminatory access to quotations, a prohibition
on the display of quotations in pricing increments
of less than a penny, amendments to the formulas
currently used to allocate market data revenues to
self-regulatory organizations (‘‘SROs’’) under joint
industry plans, and a trade-through rule applicable
to both the listed and the Nasdaq markets. In the
Adopting Release, the trade-through rule is
renamed the ‘‘order protection rule.’’ Adopting
Release at note 2. This is a misnomer. An order
displayed at the best price is not necessarily
protected because it can be matched or an execution
can occur at an inferior price by using an exception
to the rule.
2 Pub. L. 94–29, 89 Stat. 97 (1975).
3 As the Senate Banking Committee stated in its
report on the bill that ultimately became the 1975
Act Amendments:
[T]he Commission’s responsibility [is] to balance
the perceived anti-competitive effects of the
regulatory policy or decision at issue against the
purposes of the Exchange Act that would be
advanced thereby and the costs of doing so.
Competition would not thereby become paramount
to the great purposes of the Exchange Act, but the
need for and effectiveness of regulatory actions in
achieving those purposes would have to be weighed
against any detrimental impact on competition.
Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and
Urban Affairs, S. Rep. No. 94–75, 94th Cong., 1st
Sess. (1975) (‘‘Senate Report’’), at 13–14. See also
House Committee on Interstate and Foreign
Commerce, H.R. Rep. 94–123, 94th Cong., 1st Sess.
(1975), at 47 (‘‘in the economic areas affecting the
securities industry, competition, rather than
regulation, should be the guiding force’’) (quoting
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Regulation NMS and voting to dissent
from its adoption, we have been guided
by Congress’ clear preference that
competitive forces, rather than
unnecessary regulation, guide the
development of the national market
system.4 With the adoption of
Regulation NMS, the majority’s arbitrary
notions and unfounded assumptions
about how markets and investors should
interact have taken unwarranted
precedence over the interplay of
competitive forces within the
marketplace.5 We believe that
Regulation NMS turns back Commission
policy regarding competition and
innovation and sets up roadblocks for
our markets.
The majority’s statutory
interpretations and policy changes are
arbitrary, unreasonable and
anticompetitive. They are not supported
by substantial evidence that,
notwithstanding their anti-competitive
effect, they are necessary or appropriate
to further the purposes of the Exchange
Act. The impetus for the Commission’s
efforts to modernize the securities
markets was the outdated Intermarket
Trading System (‘‘ITS’’) trade-through
rule that impeded the ability of
electronic trading centers to compete
against floor-based exchanges in the
listed market. It is ironic that the end
result of this lengthy process is the
imposition of even more complex tradethrough restrictions, not only on the
New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
(‘‘NYSE’’), but on Nasdaq, a market in
which competition is already robust.
We believe the wiser and more
practical approach to improving the
efficiency of U.S. markets for all
investors would have been to improve
access to quotations, enhance
connectivity among markets and market
participants, clarify the broker’s duty of
best execution, and reduce barriers to
competition. In our view, these steps
would improve market efficiency
without exposing our markets to
unforeseen consequences, redundant
regulatory oversight and the
Securities Industry Study, Report of the Subcomm.
on Commerce and Finance of the Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce, H.R. Rep. No. 92–
1519, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. (1972), at 1).
4 See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 94–229, 94th Cong., 1st
Sess. (1975) (‘‘Conference Report’’), at 92 (‘‘It is the
intent of the [House and Senate] conferees that the
national market system evolve through the interplay
of competitive forces as unnecessary regulatory
restrictions are removed.’’).
5 See, e.g., Senate Report, supra note , at 12 (‘‘This
is not to suggest that under S. 249 the SEC would
have either the responsibility or the power to
operate as an ‘‘economic czar’’ for the development
of a national market system.’’) (citations omitted).
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concomitant compliance costs that will
ultimately be borne by investors.6
For purposes of our dissent, we will
focus principally on the trade-through
rule. The issues raised in our dissent
reflect the same concerns we made
public at the open Commission meeting
on April 6, 2005, at which we dissented
from the adoption of Regulation NMS.
Our specific concerns are set forth
below.
I. The Majority Mischaracterizes the
Trade-Through Rule as Needed To
Increase Market Depth
One of the original catalysts for
Regulation NMS was the need to
address market inefficiencies caused by
the antiquated ITS trade-through rule.
The Commission’s policy objectives for
the trade-through rule have expanded,
however, far beyond a cure for
integrating automated and manual
markets. During the rulemaking,
rationales offered for the trade-through
rule have been a moving target,
morphing from the protection of limit
6 Given the uncertainty about the impact of the
trade-through rule and the clear determination of
the majority to pursue its chosen policy direction,
we believe that it would have been prudent for the
majority to have considered alternatives that would
have permitted the Commission to gain more
experience with the rule before requiring its
implementation on all markets. One alternative
would have been to implement access standards
first, and adopt a trade-through rule only if deemed
necessary after access and connectivity had been
improved. Another alternative would have been to
phase in the implementation of the trade-through
rule in successive stages, allowing for sufficient
time between stages to permit the Commission to
evaluate the impact of the rule before full
implementation across all markets. Yet another
alternative would have been to extend the de
minimis pilot approved in August 2002 for certain
exchange-traded funds. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 46428 (Aug. 28, 2002), 67 FR 56607
(Sept. 4, 2002). The exemption, which the
Commission extended twice, led to increased
competition, narrowing of spreads, and a reduction
in trade-through rates. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 49325 (Feb. 26, 2004), 69 FR 11126
(Mar. 9, 2004) (‘‘Proposing Release’’), at 11134 note
50 (citing October 2002 Analysis of QQQ Trading
Before and After De Minimis, Memorandum from
the Commission’s Office of Economic Analysis to
the File (Feb. 24, 2004) (available at: https://
www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s71004/
oeamemo022404.pdf)). See also Comment Letter of
C. Thomas Richardson, Managing Director,
Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. (Jan. 26, 2005)
(‘‘Citigroup Reproposal Comment Letter’’), at 2–3
(noting, with respect to trading in QQQQs: ‘‘In its
first six weeks of trading as a Nasdaq-listed product,
the average consolidated effective spread on trades
executed dropped by 34%, despite the lack of any
trade-through protection. In addition, quoted
spreads did not widen, but, in fact, decreased
approximately 15% as measured by the average
consolidated spread. What is so significant about
this comparison is that before the QQQQs began
trading in Nasdaq’s electronic market, a $0.03 de
minimis exception to the Trade-Through Rule
existed already and had narrowed spreads
significantly.’’) (citing economic research provided
by NASDAQ). However, no such alternatives were
given serious consideration.
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37633
orders, to the need to increase market
depth and liquidity, to the reduction of
transaction costs for long-term investors
and issuers.
In February 2004, the Commission
proposed a uniform trade-through rule
as part of Regulation NMS, with the
stated goals of encouraging limit orders
and aggressive quoting.7 The proposed
rule contained two major exceptions.
The first exception provided an ‘‘optout’’ from the trade-through rule for
informed customers,8 and the second
permitted an automated order execution
facility to trade through the quotations
of non-automated markets.9 The opt-out
proposal was intended to provide
investors with flexibility in choosing
where to route their orders and in
determining whether their orders
should trade-through better-priced
quotes.10 The automated market
exception was intended to resolve
problems of integrating automated and
manual markets under the ITS tradethrough rule by protecting only the
quotations of automated markets.11
Commenters on the Proposing and
Supplemental Releases were split on the
need for a trade-through rule to promote
fair and efficient markets.12 The floorbased exchanges and many institutional
investors supported a trade-through rule
and opposed an opt-out.13 Electronic
7 See Proposing Release, supra note 6, at Section
III.B.2 (‘‘Intermarket Price Protection’’).
8 See Proposing Release, supra note 6, at Section
III.D.1 (‘‘Opt-Out Orders’’).
9 See Proposing Release, supra note 6, at Section
III.D.2 (‘‘Automated Order Execution Facility
Exception’’).
10 The opt-out exception ‘‘strives to preserve the
usual customers’ expectation of having their orders
executed at the best displayed price, but allows a
choice for those investors whose trading strategies
may benefit from an immediate execution priced
outside the national best bid and offer (‘NBBO’).’’
Proposing Release, supra note 6, at 11138. ‘‘Large
traders may also want the ability to execute a block
immediately at a price outside the quotes, to avoid
parceling the block out over time in a series of
transactions that could cause the market to move to
an inferior price.’’ Id.
11 See generally Proposing Release, supra note 6,
at Sections III.B.2. (‘‘Intermarket Price Protection’’)
and III.D.2 (‘‘Automated Order Execution Facility
Exception’’). In May 2004, the Commission solicited
comment on whether individual automated
quotations, rather than automated markets, should
receive protection under the trade-through rule.
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 49749 (May
20, 2004), 69 FR 30142 (May 26, 2004)
(‘‘Supplemental Release’’).
12 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at Section
II.A.1 (‘‘Need for Intermarket Trade-Through
Rule’’).
13 See, e.g., Comment Letter of Darla C. Stuckey,
Corporate Secretary of the New York Stock
Exchange, Inc. (July 2, 2004); Comment Letter of
David Humphreville, President, Specialist
Association (June 30, 2004); Comment Letter of
Kenneth J. Polcari, President, Organization of
Independent Floor Brokers (May 12, 2004);
Comment Letter of Ari Burstein, Associate Counsel,
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markets, online retail broker-dealers,
and Nasdaq market makers were
generally opposed to a trade-through
rule,14 although there was some support
for a rule, provided that it included an
opt-out.15 Numerous commenters
particularly opposed extending the
trade-through rule to Nasdaq.16
In December 2004, the Commission
voted to repropose Regulation NMS,
over Commissioner Atkins’ dissent.17 In
the Reproposing Release, the
Commission’s prior emphasis on
encouraging aggressive quoting was
Investment Company Institute (June 30, 2004);
George U. Sauter, Managing Director, The Vanguard
Group, Inc. (July 14, 2004).
14 See, e.g., Comment Letter of John H. Bluher,
Executive Vice President and General Counsel,
Knight Trading Group (July 2, 2004) (‘‘Knight
Proposal Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter of
Edward S. Knight, Executive Vice President and
General Counsel, Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. (July 2,
2004) (‘‘Nasdaq Proposal Comment Letter’’);
Comment Letter of Eric D. Roiter, Senior Vice
President and General Counsel, Fidelity
Management & Research Co. (June 22, 2004), at 3–
6; Comment Letter of Huw Jenkins, Managing
Director, UBS Securities LLC (July 2, 2004) (‘‘UBS
Proposal Comment Letter’’), at 3; Comment Letter
of Kenneth Griffin, President and Chief Executive
Officer, Citadel Investment Group, LLC (July 9,
2004) (‘‘Citadel Proposal Comment Letter’’);
Comment Letter of Ellen L. S. Koplow, Executive
Vice President and General Counsel, Ameritrade,
Inc. (June 30, 2004), at 2–4; Comment Letter of
Carrie E. Dwyer, General Counsel and Executive
Vice President, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. (June 30,
2004) (‘‘Schwab Proposal Comment Letter’’), at 13–
16; Comment Letter of Kim Bang, President and
Chief Executive Officer, Bloomberg Tradebook LLC
(June 30, 2004), at 2 and 9–14.
15 See, e.g., Comment Letter of Thomas N.
McManus, Managing Director and Counsel, Morgan
Stanley & Co., Inc. (Aug. 19, 2004); Comment Letter
of Edward J. Nicoll, Instinet Group Inc. (June 30,
2004).
16 See, e.g., Comment Letter of Kevin O’Hara,
General Counsel, Archipelago Holdings, Inc. (Sept.
24, 2004); Nasdaq Proposal Comment Letter, supra
note 14; UBS Proposal Comment Letter, supra note
14, at 4; Citadel Proposal Comment Letter, supra
note 14, at 6; Schwab Proposal Comment Letter,
supra note 14, at 13 and 16; Knight Proposal
Comment Letter, supra note 14.
17 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 50870
(Dec. 16, 2004), 69 FR 77424 (Dec. 27, 2004)
(‘‘Reproposing Release’’). The staff had
recommended a final rule, including a tradethrough rule covering full depth of book, which was
scheduled for a Commission vote on December 15,
2004, without seeking further comment from the
public. When details of the staff’s final
recommendation for a trade-through rule became
public, however, the ensuing outcry led the
Commission instead to repropose the rule. Leaving
no doubt that there would be a trade-through rule
in the final rule, the Commission solicited comment
on whether the trade-through rule should apply to
the ‘‘top of book’’ or to a voluntary ‘‘depth of book.’’
At the December 15, 2004 open meeting at which
Regulation NMS was reproposed, Commissioner
Glassman urged commenters not to accept the
inevitability of a trade-through rule. She asked for
comment on the need for any trade-through rule,
not just whether the rule should offer ‘‘top of book’’
or ‘‘depth of book’’ protection. SEC Open Meeting
on Regulation NMS (Dec. 15, 2004) (webcast
available at: https://www.sec.gov/news/
openmeetings.shtml.).
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dropped, and concern about market
depth became more prominent.18 The
Commission noted that many
commenters opposing a trade-through
rule, particularly on Nasdaq, had
pointed to Nasdaq’s efficient
functioning without a trade-through
rule.19 In response to these comments
regarding Nasdaq’s market quality, the
Commission’s Office of Economic
Analysis (‘‘OEA’’) was asked to conduct
a study of trade-through rates on several
markets.20 The Division of Market
Regulation also prepared an analysis of
comparative execution quality statistics
between Nasdaq and NYSE stocks.21
The divide among commenters on the
need for a trade-through rule continued
in response to the Reproposing Release.
However, commenters who had
originally opposed the rule as well as
those whose support for a trade-through
rule had been conditioned on a general
opt-out provision, which was dropped
from the reproposal, were united in
their opposition to the reproposed
rule.22 They noted fallacies in the
18 Compare Proposing Release, supra note 6, 69
FR at 11134 with Reproposing Release, supra note
6, 69 FR at 77426.
19 Reproposing Release, supra note 17, 69 FR at
77427–28.
20 Analysis of Trade-throughs in Nasdaq and
NYSE Issues, Memorandum from the Commission’s
Office of Economic Analysis to the File (Dec. 15,
2004) (‘‘OEA Study’’) (available at: https://
www.sec.gov/spotlight/regnms/analysis121504.pdf).
As one commenter noted, the Proposing Release’s
‘‘complete lack of economic analysis supporting the
trade-through provisions’’ was surprising. Comment
Letter of W. Hardy Callcott (May 6, 2004), at 6.
21 Comparative Analysis of Rule 11Ac1–5
Statistics by S&P Index, Memorandum to File from
the Commission’s Division of Market Regulation
(Dec. 15, 2004) (‘‘Market Regulation Study’’)
(available at: https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/
s71004/mrmemo121504.pdf).
22 See, e.g., Comment Letter of Thomas N.
McManus, Managing Director and Counsel, Morgan
Stanley (Feb. 7, 2005) (‘‘Morgan Stanley Reproposal
Comment Letter’’), at 5; Comment Letter of Bruce
C. Turner, Managing Director, CIBC World Markets
Corp. (Feb. 4, 2005) (‘‘CIBC Reproposal Comment
Letter’’); Comment Letter of Michael J. Lynch,
Managing Director, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith Inc. (Feb. 4, 2005) (‘‘Merrill Lynch
Reproposal Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter of
Richard M. Whiting, Executive Director and General
Counsel, Financial Services Roundtable (Feb. 4,
2005); Comment Letter of David Baker, Global Head
of Cash Trading and Global Head of Portfolio
Trading, Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. (Feb. 3,
2005) (‘‘Deutsche Bank Reproposal Comment
Letter’’); Comment Letter of Jeffrey T. Brown, Senior
Vice President, Charles Schwab (Feb. 1, 2005)
(‘‘Schwab Reproposal Comment Letter’’); Comment
Letter of James T. Brett, Managing Director, J.P.
Morgan Securities, Inc. (Jan. 28, 2005) (‘‘J.P. Morgan
Reproposal Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter of
Stewart P. Greene, Chief Counsel, Securities Law,
Teachers Insurance and Annuity Assoc. of America,
College Retirement Equities Fund (Jan. 27, 2005)
(‘‘TIAA CREF Reproposal Comment Letter’’);
Citigroup Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 6;
Comment Letter of Minder Cheng, Managing
Director, Barclays Global Investors (Jan. 26, 2005)
(‘‘Barclays Reproposal Comment Letter’’); Edward
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Commission’s rationale for protecting
limit orders and pointed to flaws in the
OEA Study.23 They also stated that the
Commission had significantly
underestimated the costs of
implementation.24
Over our dissent, the majority voted
to adopt Regulation NMS on April 6,
2005, approving a trade-through rule
protecting quotations at the ‘‘top of
book.’’ The rule contains several
exceptions, but does not include a
general opt-out provision.25 In the
Adopting Release, the goal of tradethrough regulation is recast once again.
S. Knight, Executive Vice President and General
Counsel, Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. (Jan. 26, 2005)
(‘‘Nasdaq Reproposal Comment Letter’’); Comment
Letter of Adam Cooper, Senior Managing Director
and General Counsel, Citadel Investment Group,
L.L.C. (Jan. 26. 2005); Comment Letter of Phylis M.
Esposito, Executive Vice President and Chief
Strategy Officer, Ameritrade, Inc. (Jan. 26, 2005)
(‘‘Ameritrade Reproposal Comment Letter’’);
Comment Letter of Steve Swanson, CEO &
President, Automated Trading Desk, LLC (Jan. 26,
2005) (‘‘Automated Trading Desk Reproposal
Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter of the
Competitive Enterprise Institute (Jan. 26, 2005);
Comment Letter of Edward J. Nicoll, Chief
Executive Officer, Instinet Group Inc. (Jan. 26, 2005)
(‘‘Instinet Reproposal Comment Letter’’); Comment
Letter of Kevin J.P. O’Hara, Chief Administrative
Officer & General Counsel, Archipelago Holdings,
Inc. (Jan. 26, 2005) (‘‘Archipelago Reproposal
Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter of Eric D.
Roiter, Senior Vice President and General Counsel,
Fidelity Management & Research Co. (Jan. 26, 2005)
(‘‘Fidelity Reproposal Comment Letter’’); Comment
Letter of Daniel Coleman, Managing Director, Head
of Equities for the Americas, UBS Securities LLC
(Jan. 25, 2005) (‘‘UBS Reproposal Comment
Letter’’); Comment Letter of Thomas M. Joyce, CEO
and President, Knight Trading Group, Inc. (Jan. 25,
2005) (‘‘Knight Trading Reproposal Comment
Letter’’); Comment Letter of Kim Bang, Bloomberg
L.P. (Jan. 25, 2005).
23 See, e.g., Fidelity Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 7–8 (‘‘We caution that the
Commission’s analysis, particularly as set forth in
the OEA’s study * * * is open to serious question
and likely rests on serious methodological flaws.
* * * Our own preliminary review of the OEA’s
study suggests that trade-throughs of displayed
superior orders equal to or greater in size than the
incoming ‘‘trading-through’’ order may amount to
only 0.4% of Nasdaq volume, and perhaps only
0.22% pf NYSE share volume * * *.’’); Nasdaq
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, Exhibit
1, at 5; Instinet Reproposal Comment Letter, supra
note 22, at 6; Comment Letter of Kevin J.P. O’Hara,
Chief Administrative Officer & General Counsel,
Archipelago Reproposal Comment Letter, supra
note 22, at 6; UBS Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 4 (‘‘[T]he OEA Study is based
upon several improper assumptions, and thus
results in a fundamentally flawed analysis.’’). See
generally Robert Battalio and Robert Jennings,
Analysis of the Re-proposing Release of Reg NMS
and the OEA’s Trade-through Study (Mar. 28, 2005)
(‘‘Battalio-Jennings Study’’) (attachment to
Comment Letter of Eric D. Roiter, Senior Vice
President and General Counsel, Fidelity
Management & Research Co. (Mar. 28, 2005)).
24 See, e.g., Deutsche Bank Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 4–5.
25 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 236. See generally Adopting Release,
supra note 1, at Section II.A.4 (‘‘Elimination of
Proposed Opt-Out Exception’’).
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Now, the goal is increasing market
depth and liquidity in order to
minimize the impact of large orders,
while decreasing transitory volatility
and transaction costs for the benefit of
long-term investors and issuers.26
II. The Majority Has Failed To
Demonstrate the Trade-Through Rule Is
Warranted
The Proposing Release set forth three
broad objectives for a review of market
structure: equalizing regulation of
markets, updating antiquated rules and
promoting greater order interaction.27
Adopted Regulation NMS moves
beyond these objectives to establish
goals for a trade-through rule that allow
the majority to construct its own view
of optimal market structure. The
majority focuses on two types of socalled market structure ‘‘problems’’ that
it claims would be addressed by a tradethrough rule: investor protection
concerns evidenced by trade-through
rates on Nasdaq and NYSE 28 and a lack
of displayed depth on Nasdaq.29 Neither
‘‘problem’’ has been substantiated.
However, the majority has contrived
‘‘problems’’ in the Nasdaq market that
conform with Congressional goals for
the development of a national market
system in order to advance its own
market structure solutions.30 To achieve
this result, the majority portrays
successful market-driven innovations as
intractable market structure problems
that can only be solved by government
intervention.
A.The OEA Study Did Not Substantiate
Investor Protection Concerns.
The majority has failed to establish
that current trade-through rates indicate
a significant investor protection
problem. The majority has cherrypicked statistics from the results of the
OEA Study that appear to justify the
adoption of a trade-through rule, while
ignoring data that call the need for the
26 See generally Adopting Release, supra note 1,
at Section I.B.2 (‘‘Serving the Interests of Long-Term
Investors and Listed Companies’’) and text
accompanying note 15.
27 Proposing Release, supra note 6, 69 FR at
11128–29.
28 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying notes 104 and 105.
29 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying note 108.
30 There are two paramount objectives in the
development of a national market system. First, the
maintenance of stable and orderly markets with
maximum capacity for absorbing trading
imbalances without undue price movements. And
second, the centralization of all buying and selling
interest so that each investor will have the
opportunity for the best possible execution of his
order, regardless of where in the system it
originates.
Senate Report, supra note 3, at 7.
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rule into question. We do not believe
that current minimal trade-through rates
indicate that investors are not obtaining
best execution, that their orders are
being unfairly treated, or that investors
are otherwise suffering economic harm.
The Reproposing and Adopting
Releases interpret the OEA Study as
establishing a seemingly high rate of
trade-throughs. The Reproposing
Release claimed that 7.9% and 7.2% of
the total share volume on Nasdaq and
the NYSE, respectively, were traded
through.31 The Reproposing Release
failed to point out, however, that these
trade-through rates were calculated, not
on the basis of a quotation’s displayed
size, but on the size of the order. Thus,
an order executed at an inferior price
was considered to have been tradedthrough at its full size even if the order
was for a larger number of shares than
were available in the market.32
The Adopting Release cites the same
figures, but acknowledges that the tradethrough rates for total share volume on
Nasdaq and the NYSE drop dramatically
from 7.9% and 7.2%, respectively, to
1.9% and 1.2%, when executions are
measured against the displayed number
of shares available.33 This disclosure
was made only after commenters faulted
the Commission for its selective use of
statistics.34
Similarly, the majority relies on the
NYSE’s 7.2% trade-through rate to
attempt to show a reduction in tradethrough rates hoped to be achieved from
the new rule, which does not include
the block size or 100 share exceptions
contained in the ITS trade-through
rule.35 Significantly, the Adopting
Release admits that, after eliminating
the effects of both of the ITS exceptions,
the NYSE trade-through rate for total
31 Reproposing Release, supra note 17, 69 FR at
77433. The OEA Study suggests that the 7.9% and
7.2% trade-through rates cited above would be
‘‘useful in assessing the potential benefits of
increased limit order display and liquidity that the
proposed rule intends to promote,’’ but the majority
views the statistic as evidence of significant tradethroughs. OEA Study, supra note 20, at 1–2.
32 To illustrate, suppose a broker received a
10,000 share customer order to buy and a 3,000
share offer is displayed in the market at a price of
$10. Under the OEA Study’s methodology,
executing any portion of the remaining 7,000 shares
above $10 would be considered a trade-through,
regardless of the fact that only 3,000 shares were
offered for sale in the market. OEA acknowledged
that this was a very conservative approach with the
practical effect of overstating the trade-through
rates. See OEA Study, supra note 20, at 2.
33 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying note 68. See also OEA Study, supra
note 20, at text following note 3.
34 See, e.g., supra note 23 (citing comment
letters).
35 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying note 71.
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37635
share volume is actually 2.3%.36 Given
the majority’s concession that the NYSE
trade-through rate is 1.2% when
measured against displayed size,37 its
emphasis on a possible reduction in
trade-throughs to 2.3% is disingenuous.
The majority’s selective interpretation of
the OEA Study to justify the need for a
trade-through rule is unreasonable and
calls into question the basis of the rule.
An additional finding of the OEA
Study was that the majority of tradethroughs occurred within a penny or
two of a better bid or offer,38 at an
estimated total cost in 2003 of $321
million.39 These statistics overstate the
agency/principal conflict because the
OEA Study was not limited to investors
owed a duty of best execution.40
Furthermore, $321 million is a mere
rounding error compared to the dollar
value of trading on both markets which
totaled approximately $16.8 trillion in
2003.41 As a percent of the total dollar
value of trading, the $321 million cost
savings represents less than 1/100th of
one percent. These percentages do not
indicate a significant problem with
trade-throughs or best execution.42
36 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying note 71.
37 See OEA Study, supra note 20, at 2.
38 OEA Study, supra note 20, at Tables 3 and 10.
39 OEA Study, supra note 20, at note 5 and
accompanying text.
40 The OEA Study used data from TAQ and
Nastraq, neither of which distinguishes among
different types of investors. See OEA Study, supra
note 20, at 1.
41 See NYSE Reported Share And Dollar Volume,
2003, NYSE Fact Book Online (available at:
https://www.nysedata.com/factbook/viewer_edition.
asp?mode=table&key=2923&category=3) (reporting
$9.7 trillion in share trading on the NYSE in 2003);
see also World Federation of Exchanges, Annual
Report (2004) (available at: https://www.worldexchanges.org/WFE/home.asp?menu=315&
document=2174) (reporting $7.1 trillion in share
trading on Nasdaq in 2003).
42 The majority asserts that: [g]iven the large
number of trades that fail to obtain the best
displayed prices (e.g., approximately 1 in 40 trades
for both Nasdaq and NYSE stocks), the Commission
is concerned that many of the investors that
ultimately received the inferior price in these trades
may not be aware that their orders did not, in fact,
obtain the best price.
Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text following
note 150. The majority claims that: investors (and
particularly retail investors) often may have
difficulty monitoring whether their orders receive
the best available prices, given the rapid movement
of quotations in many NMS stocks. The
Commission believes that furthering the interests of
these investors in obtaining best execution on an
order-by-order basis is a vitally important objective
that warrants adoption of the Order Protection Rule.
Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text following
note 105. The majority fails to acknowledge that
retail investors have access to consolidated
information that allows them to monitor their
executions. In fact, the majority argues for a single
consolidator by noting investors need reliable
consolidated information to monitor their
executions. The majority states that ‘‘[t]he great
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Nor do we believe that the tradethrough rates establish that investors’
orders are being treated unfairly. The
Reproposing and Adopting Releases
cited statistics from the OEA Study
indicating that in 2003, approximately
2.5% of all trades on Nasdaq and the
NYSE traded-through the market.43
Notwithstanding these minimal tradethrough rates, the majority found the
rates ‘‘significant,’’ with customer
orders being ‘‘routinely’’ tradedthrough.44 Commenters identified
possible flaws in the OEA Study,
suggesting that trade-through rates were
lower than OEA’s estimate.45 They also
stated that, while the OEA Study was
based on 2003 data, data from 2004
reflected a decrease in trade-throughs on
Nasdaq to 1.5% due to increased order
routing, reduction in internalization
rates, and consolidation.46 The
majority’s 2.5% trade-through rate is
also overstated because it includes
trades other than trades for retail
customer accounts, including trades for
institutions, sophisticated investors and
intermediaries.47
Based on the record before us, it
appears that the trade-through rate on
Nasdaq during 2004 was between 1%
and 2%. It follows, therefore, that
between 98% and 99% of all trades on
strength of the current model is that it benefits
investors, particularly retail investors, by enabling
them to assess prices and evaluate the best
execution of their orders by obtaining data from a
single source that is highly reliable and
comprehensive.’’ See Adopting Release, supra note
1, at text following note 565. In addition, the NASD
and the SEC monitor brokers for compliance with
their best execution obligations.
43 See Reproposing Release, supra note 17, 69 FR
at 77433; Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying note 102.
44 See Reproposing Release, supra note 17, 69 FR
at 77428. The majority states that ‘‘the order
protection rule will promote a more level playing
field for retail investors that currently see their
smaller displayed orders bypassed by block trades.’’
Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text following
note 84. We question the majority’s basis for
asserting that retail investors are not on the same
playing field as other investors. The statement is
also inconsistent with the majority’s previous
assertion that investors have difficulty monitoring
whether their orders receive best execution. See
supra note 42.
45 See, e.g., Fidelity Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 8; Nasdaq Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 5; Archipelago Reproposal
Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 6; UBS
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 4.
46 See, e.g., Nasdaq Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22. The majority unreasonably credits
impending regulation for the decrease in
internalization rates in the Nasdaq market, rather
than increased market efficiency. See Adopting
Release, supra note 1, at text preceding note 80.
47 It is important to note, however, that the OEA
Study did not distinguish among different investor
classes. Thus, the majority would have no basis for
determining how many orders that traded through
the market were owed a duty of best execution nor
how many investors were unable to monitor their
executions.
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both markets did not trade-through
better-priced bids or offers. Given that
the hypothetical cost of trade-throughs
is less than 1/100th of 1%, the evidence
does not indicate that investors’ orders
are treated unfairly.
In sum, we believe that the numbers
speak for themselves. The minimal
trade-through results reflected in the
OEA Study do not support the
conclusion that trade-throughs are a
significant problem—certainly not one
that justifies regulatory intervention on
the scale of Regulation NMS.
B. There Is No Evidence of a Lack of
Depth on Nasdaq.
Over the past eight years, the Nasdaq
market has developed into a completely
automated market that meets the
objectives of Section 11A of the
Exchange Act.48 It provides
economically efficient executions for
investors, provides fair competition and
equal access for all investors, provides
depth of book information with respect
to all quotations and transactions in
securities, and allows investors to enter
orders directly into the market without
participating with a dealer. The Nasdaq
market is connected by private linkages
that allow both brokers and investors to
execute transactions at the best price in
the market they choose.49 This has all
been accomplished in the absence of a
trade-through rule.
Congress did not mandate that the
Commission go beyond the goals of
Section 11A to design its own view of
optimal market structure, yet this is
what the majority seeks to accomplish.50
48 15 U.S.C. 78k–1. Section 11A(a)(1)(C) provides
that ‘‘[i]t is in the public interest and appropriate
for the protection of investors and the maintenance
of fair and orderly markets to assure’’:
(i) Economically efficient execution of securities
transactions;
(ii) fair competition among brokers and dealers,
among exchange markets, and between exchange
markets and markets other than exchange markets;
(iii) the availability to brokers, dealers, and
investors of information with respect to quotations
for and transactions in, securities;
(iv) the practicability of brokers executing
investors’ orders in the best market; and
(v) an opportunity * * * for investors’ orders to
be executed without the participation of a dealer.
49 In the Adopting Release the majority notes
approvingly:
[w]ith respect to Nasdaq stocks, connectivity
among many trading centers already is established
through private linkages. Routing out to other
trading centers when necessary to obtain the best
prices for Nasdaq stocks is an integral part of the
business plan of many trading centers, even when
not affirmatively required by best execution
responsibilities or by Commission rule.
Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text following
note 290.
50 ‘‘[T]he fundamental goals of a national market
system must include (1) providing an investor or
his broker with the ability to be able to determine,
at any given time, where a particular transaction
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The majority has offered no substantive
basis for extending the trade-through
rule to the Nasdaq market.51 To justify
imposing the rule on Nasdaq,
particularly in light of the minimal
trade-through rates reflected in the OEA
Study, the majority attempts to establish
a lack of market depth. Defining
Nasdaq’s ‘‘problem’’ as a lack of depth
is critical for justifying the rule’s
extension to Nasdaq because increasing
market depth was one of Congress’ goals
for the national market system.52 The
majority relies on a staff study of
comparative execution quality
conducted by the lawyers in the
Division of Market Regulation (not the
economists in OEA),53 anecdotal
evidence, hypothetical cost savings and
conjecture specifically related to low fill
rates to attempt to show that, in
addition to the investor protection
problem, the Nasdaq market suffers
from a lack of market depth. This is
surprising, given the view of many
commenters that the large number of
limit orders in Nasdaq stocks signifies
that sufficient incentives exist for the
placement of such orders and that low
fill rates do not represent a market
weakness or cause investor harm.54 We
do not believe that there were
complaints about a lack of depth in the
Nasdaq market in the Commission’s
roundtables on market structure or the
comment letters. In fact, many brokerdealers representing retail investors and
institutions objected to extending the
trade-through rule to Nasdaq.55
can be effected at the most favorable price and (2)
creating an incentive for multiple market makers to
deal in depth on a continuous basis.’’ Senate
Report, supra note 3, at 12 (emphasis added).
51 The Proposing Release, referring to a
‘‘disparity’’ of regulation on the listed and Nasdaq
markets, simply asserted the need for a uniform
trade-through rule. No rationale for why uniformity
was important was offered. See Proposing Release,
supra note 6, at Section II.A (‘‘Promote Equal
Regulation of Market Centers’’), 69 FR at 11128–29.
We would note that if uniformity of treatment were
a valid goal, having no trade-through rule would
accomplish this. In any event, uniformity was not
a Congressional objective for the national market
system:
This is not to say that it is the goal of the
legislation to ignore or eliminate distinctions
between exchange markets and over-the-counter
markets or other inherent differences or variations
in components of a national market system. Some
present distinctions may tend to disappear in a
national market system, but it is not the intention
of the bill to force all markets for all securities into
a single mold.
Senate Report, supra note 3, at 7.
52 See Senate Report, supra note 3, at 7.
53 Market Regulation Study, supra note 21.
54 See, e.g., Instinet Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22.
55 See, e.g., Schwab Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22; Ameritrade Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 4; Comment Letter of Lou
Klobuchar Jr., President and Chief Brokerage
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In the Reproposing Release, Nasdaq’s
small average displayed share size and
low fill rate for large marketable limit
orders was characterized as evidencing
a lack of displayed depth, a purported
defect in its market structure that a
trade-through rule on Nasdaq would
address.56 In the Adopting Release, the
majority argues that the relatively low
share volume of traded-through
quotations evidences a shortage of
quoted depth.57 The Adopting Release
concedes, however, that Nasdaq’s low
fill rate is attributable to market
participants’ liquidity probing activities,
otherwise known as ‘‘pinging.’’
Generally speaking, institutional
investors seeking liquidity may ‘‘ping’’
or search for non-displayed limit orders
in the Nasdaq market by sending
electronic marketable limit orders for a
number of shares greater than a market’s
displayed size.58 If there is liquidity in
reserve, institutional investors will
receive an execution for a number of
shares greater than the displayed size. If
there is no liquidity in reserve, orders
will receive a partial execution or be left
unfilled, contributing to the purported
low fill rate on Nasdaq. ‘‘Pinging’’
provides investors with an efficient and
economical method for searching for
liquidity on an anonymous basis. The
practice is the electronic version of the
search for liquidity on manual markets
through the auction market system,
without the possibility of information
leakage that may create market impact
costs for investors. It is a fundamental
trait of any market that the knowledge
of additional trading interest will likely
affect prices. Yet the majority views this
market-based solution for searching for
liquidity as evidence of a regulatory
‘‘problem’’ with Nasdaq’s market
structure that a trade-through rule must
address.59
We believe that Nasdaq’s low fill rate
is evidence that investors are actively
Officer, E*TRADE Financial (June 30, 2004);
Fidelity Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22.
56 ‘‘Thus, low fill rates demonstrate that the total
displayed and reserve liquidity available for Nasdaq
stocks at any particular trading center typically is
small compared to the demand for liquidity at the
inside prices.’’ Adopting Release, supra note 1, at
text following note 132.
57 ‘‘[T]he share volume of quotations that
currently are traded-through is a symptom of the
problem that the Order Protection Rule is designed
to address ‘‘a shortage of quoted depth * * *.’’
Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying note 108.
58 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
preceding note 132.
59 The majority states that the trade-through rule
will increase displayed liquidity and ‘‘promote
market efficiency by reducing the uncertainty and
costs associated with the need for market
participants to ‘‘ping’’ electronic markets for
liquidity that is held in reserve.’’ Adopting Release,
supra note 1, at text following note 132.
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seeking liquidity in an efficient manner.
Unless the majority forces all liquidity
to be displayed in the market, investors
will naturally continue to search for
hidden liquidity to meet their demand.
The Adopting Release appears to
suggest that Nasdaq participants should
change their aggressive order pricing
behavior and instead expose their orders
by providing latent displayed
liquidity.60 In our view, however, the
rule will not be successful in
significantly modifying market
participant behavior.61 There are
legitimate reasons why market
participants may not want to display
their orders. For instance, concerns
about market impact will still act to
prevent market participants from
displaying the full size of their orders,
even with a trade-through rule.62
In one respect, the majority is correct
that the trade-through rule, as modified
after its adoption on April 6, 2005, will
alter market participant behavior. By
amending the rule text to remove the
reference to ‘‘size’’ from the definition
of quotation, the majority has
substantially altered the scope of
protected liquidity. We do not believe a
change of this magnitude to a major rule
should be made without the benefit of
the Commission’s usual notice and
comment process. In our view, this
change is not merely a technical
amendment, but rather cuts to the heart
of how the rule will operate.
The trade-through rule requires
trading centers to establish and
maintain written policies and
procedures designed to prevent tradethroughs of protected quotations unless
they fall within an applicable
exception.63 Prior to the amendment,
60 The majority states ‘‘the Rule strengthens the
incentive for the voluntary display of a greater
proportion of latent trading interest by assuring
that, when such interest is displayed, it is protected
against most trade-throughs.’’ Adopting Release,
supra note 1, at preceding note 152.
61 As we have previously noted, the 2–8% range
for lower and upper limits of potential benefits of
increased market depth assumes that demand will
create its own supply. See supra text accompanying
notes 32 and 33. There is no basis for OEA’s
assumption.
62 J.P. Morgan Reproposal Comment Letter, supra
note 22, at 4 (‘‘For any particular trade, multiple
factors may bear on the quality of execution,
including speed, certainty of execution, liquidity
and depth, opportunities for price improvement,
anonymity, error rates, and the quality of a trading
center’s program of self-regulation. These factors all
relate to costs that are not captured by quoted
prices, such as market access and transactional fees,
market impact costs, costs of broken or erroneous
trades, and indirect costs such as market data
costs.’’).
63 New Rule 611 states:
(a) Reasonable policies and procedures.
(1) A trading center shall establish, maintain, and
enforce written policies and procedures that are
reasonably designed to prevent trade-throughs on
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the plain text of the definition of
quotation clearly included both price
and size. Therefore, trading centers
could route an order to a protected
quotation’s full displayed size and
simultaneously execute an order at an
inferior price. This was consistent with
the policy goal of increasing displayed
size. Under the amended formulation,
however, the critical component of size
has been eliminated, thus expanding the
scope of liquidity falling under the
protected quotation umbrella. Thus,
under the new definition of quotation,
trading centers cannot trade-through a
protected quotation’s price, regardless of
available liquidity, without an
exception. The practical effect is that
market participants must exhaust
liquidity in reserve prior to moving to
the next price level. Ironically, this
seems to provide more incentive to
maintain liquidity in reserve, rather
than to display it publicly, a result that
would be contrary to the majority’s
stated goals.
III. Regulation NMS Will Not Achieve
Its Goals
The majority asserts that a uniform
trade-through rule will promote market
efficiency. By encouraging the display
of limit orders, it argues, the rule will
increase liquidity and displayed depth
and lower transaction costs for longterm investors and issuers. At the same
time, the majority asserts that the rule
will enhance best execution obligations.
We firmly believe, however, that the
hoped-for benefits of the trade-through
rule will not materialize.
A. A Trade-Through Rule Is Not Needed
as a Backstop to Best Execution
The majority believes that the tradethrough rule will further the objectives
of the Exchange Act by providing a
‘‘backstop’’ to a broker’s best execution
obligations and that it will ‘‘materially
reduce the trade-through rates in both
the market for Nasdaq stocks and the
market for exchange-listed stocks.’’ 64 Its
only response to arguments that current
trade-through rates do not justify the
need for regulatory action is to assert
that the trade-through rates found in the
OEA Study are not insignificant and to
assert that the total number of tradethroughs is not the sole consideration in
that trading center of protected quotations in NMS
stocks that do not fall within an exception set forth
in paragraph (b) of this section and, if relying on
such an exception, that are reasonably designed to
assure compliance with the terms of the exception.
64 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
preceding note 63. Furthermore, the NASD and the
Commission’s Office of Compliance, Inspections
and Examinations routinely monitor execution
quality and whether brokers are fulfilling their best
execution obligations.
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evaluating the need for the tradethrough rule.65
As stated above, we find these
assertions unreasonable given the
majority’s failure to establish a
significant trade-through problem as
well as its acknowledgement that tradethroughs will continue to occur
following the rule’s adoption. We note
that the Adopting Release does not
contain an estimate of the reduction in
trade-throughs. Moreover, consistent
with the objectives of Section 11A, the
Nasdaq market provides investors with
the ability to determine where they can
obtain the best price and provides
linkages that allow them to obtain the
best price available. Given the negative
consequences of the rule, which we
discuss below, we believe that any
potential reduction in the already low
rate of trade-throughs will be minimal,
at best, and will be outweighed by the
costs of the rule. Moreover, the
majority’s ‘‘one size fits all’’ approach to
best execution will prevent many
investors from obtaining the best
execution for themselves and their
fiduciaries.66
B. Some Trade-Throughs Will Continue
The final rule requires trading centers
to establish, maintain and enforce
written policies and procedures to
prevent trade-throughs, but it does not
prohibit trade-throughs. The rule
contains numerous exceptions for,
among others, intermarket sweeps, selfhelp, flickering quotes, volume
weighted average priced (‘‘VWAP’’)
trades, and stopped orders,67 which
means that trade-throughs will not be
eliminated. In addition, commenters
have suggested that there will be tradethroughs, even with a trade-through
rule.68 The minimal rate of tradethroughs in the current environment
and the undoubted existence of tradethroughs even after the rule’s
implementation call into question the
65 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 102.
66 See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 6 (‘‘To disenfranchise
institutional investors for whom best execution
frequently diverges from best posted quotes by
limiting their strategies for managing risk would be
to create a burden that is both unfairly distributed
and disproportionate to the limited benefits of
trade-through protection.’’).
67 Rule 611(b).
68 See, e.g., UBS Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 5; Comment Letter of Reg NMS
Study Group (May 23, 2004), at 4 (‘‘Accidental
trade-throughs may be common in a market with
fleeting quotes and limit orders that persist for only
a second or two, making it difficult to effectively
identify and sanction deliberate trade-throughs.’’);
Comment Letter of David Cummings, Chief
Executive Officer of Tradebot Systems, Inc. (Jan. 26,
2005) (‘‘Tradebot Reproposal Comment Letter’’), at
1.
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likelihood that the rule will reduce
trade-throughs to any significant degree.
C. The Trade-Through Rule Will Not
Augment Market Depth Because It
Provides Only Incomplete Protection of
Limit Orders
The majority states that the protection
of limit orders, the foundation of market
pricing, is one of its most important
goals for market structure.69 This goal
may be worthy, but Regulation NMS
will not achieve it because the adopted
trade-through rule does not protect all
limit orders. Under the voluntary
‘‘depth of book’’ alternative proposed in
the Reproposing Release, trade-through
protection would have been given to all
quotations that a trading center
voluntarily transmitted to a securities
information processor (‘‘SIP’’), not just
its best bid or offer. We recognize that
the full depth of book alternative would
create its own set of problems,
particularly with respect to its
implications for centralization,
technological complications and the
size of the market data revenue pie. It
would also have been the death knell for
floor-based exchange trading. However,
the majority’s professed commitment to
protecting limit orders is difficult to
reconcile given its rejection of the full
depth of book alternative.70
The final rule claims to protect a
market’s best bid or offer (‘‘BBO’’), but
since market participants can match a
trading center’s BBO, rather than route
orders to it, the rule does not actually
protect limit orders at each market’s
BBO. The Adopting Release
acknowledges that the BBO tradethrough rule will not draw out every
limit order, but asserts that it will
provide investors with the appropriate
incentives to post additional limit
orders.71 This assertion is highly
questionable. Given its decision to
69 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 29.
70 Commenters saw through this false claim. See,
e.g., Morgan Stanley Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 4 (‘‘[W]e cannot agree with the
SEC’s view that the single most important objective
of the SEC’s trade-through rule alternatives is the
protection of limit orders, as the only effective way
to accomplish that objective would be to impose
market-wide price/time priority * * *.’’);
Comment Letter of George U. Sauter, Managing
Director, The Vanguard Group, Inc. (Jan. 27, 2005)
(‘‘Vanguard Reproposal Comment Letter’’), at 4 (‘‘If
one believes that the trade-through rule is important
for the protection of investors, which we do, there
is no logical reason why price protection should not
be extended to all displayed liquidity. In fact,
protection for just the BBO actually codifies tradethroughs.’’); Ameritrade Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 5 (‘‘The Market BBO
Alternative would protect only the best priced limit
orders, while all other limit orders are unprotected
and can be traded through with impunity.’’).
71 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 110.
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protect limit orders only at the top-ofbook, the permissibility of
internalization, and the numerous
exceptions to the trade-through rule, the
majority cannot credibly argue that the
protection of limit orders is a high
priority.72
The majority is careful to characterize
the trade-through rule’s objective of
increasing market depth as ‘‘modest,’’
translating into a hypothetical $755
million in cost savings in 2003 for longterm investors.73 This amount is based
upon a hypothetical 5% improvement
in depth and liquidity or an average
reduction of 1.87 basis points in price
impact and liquidity search costs.74 The
majority provides no basis, however, for
positing a 5% improvement in depth
and liquidity, except to characterize it
as the ‘‘current share volume of tradethrough transactions that does not
interact with displayed liquidity.’’ 75
Although it is apparently intended to
show an order of magnitude, there is no
basis for the 5% estimate.
Further, the majority fails to provide
an estimate of the expected reductions
in trade-throughs or indicate
specifically how the new displayed
depth will be generated. It speculates
that ‘‘greater displayed liquidity will at
least lower the search costs associated
with trying to find liquidity,’’ 76 and
goes on to make unfounded
assumptions claiming that ‘‘[i]ncreased
liquidity, in turn, could lead market
participants to interact more often with
displayed orders, which would lead to
greater use of limit orders, and thus
begin the cycle again.’’ 77 The majority
fails to address how internalization,
free-riding or market impact costs will
factor into the display of additional
72 The trade-through rule will only apply during
normal trading hours. Thus, market participants
might game the system and avoid the trade-through
rule by shifting liquidity to after-hours trading
sessions.
73 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at 303. The
majority explains:
The Rule is designed to increase the perceived
benefits of order display, against which the
negatives are balanced. As a result, the market
participant that currently displays only 500 shares
of its 50,000-share trading interest might be willing
to display 1000 shares. The collective effect of
many market participants reaching the same
conclusion would be a material increase in the total
displayed depth in the market, thereby improving
the transparency of price discovery and reducing
investor transaction costs.
Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text following
note 110.
74 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 303.
75 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 303.
76 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 160.
77 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 160.
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limit orders. Instead, it provides only a
theoretical response to an extremely
complex question.
IV. The Majority’s Distinction Between
Long-Term and Short-Term Investors is
Arbitrary and Unreasonable
Essential to the majority’s argument
that a trade-through rule is necessary to
augment market depth is its decision to
favor the interests of long-term investors
and issuers for purposes of market
structure design.78 The majority
interprets Section 11A of the Exchange
Act as requiring the Commission to
facilitate the national market system—
not for the protection of ‘‘investors,’’ but
for the protection of ‘‘long-term
investors.’’ 79 We find the majority’s
parsing of the term ‘‘investor’’ arbitrary
and unreasonable. In our view, all
investors are entitled to efficient
executions and access to the best
markets. This is not the case, however,
under Regulation NMS.80
The majority characterizes short-term
investors, or traders, as holding
securities for a matter of seconds,
minutes or hours.81 It concedes that
short-term investors provide valuable
liquidity to long-term investors,82 yet
acknowledges that the rule may harm
short-term investors and market
78 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at Section
I.B.2 (‘‘Serving the Interests of Long-Term Investors
and Listed Companies’’). In the 1975 Act
Amendments, Congress did not exhibit such
favoritism:
The purpose of this title is to insure that our
Nation’s capital markets continue to be the best in
existence * * * by establishing a framework for a
national market systems in which all qualified
persons throughout our country may be linked
together electronically so that they may compete
and may bring to the marketplace their capital so
as to make for broader, deeper and more liquid
capital markets.
H.R. Rep. No. 94–123, supra note 3, at 90.
79 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
preceding note 15; see generally Adopting Release,
supra note 1, at Section I.B.2 (‘‘Serving the Interests
of Long-Term Investors and Listed Companies’’).
The majority cites the legislative history of the
adoption of the Exchange Act in 1934 to support
this position, but that history is not relevant. See
Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
accompanying notes 20 and 23. The term ‘‘investor’’
as interpreted by the Commission was contained in
Section 11A of the 1975 Act Amendments directing
the Commission to facilitate the national market
system. The legislation did not include a definition
of the term.
80 The Adopting Release does not credit
commenters’ claim that a trade-through rule is not
needed on the Nasdaq market because that market
is efficient. See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at
text preceding note 61. The majority unreasonably
views this claim as suspect ‘‘when market
efficiency is examined from the perspective of
transaction costs of long-term investors, as opposed
to short-term traders.’’ Adopting Release, supra note
1, at text following note 63.
81 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at note 22
and accompanying text.
82 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 19.
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intermediaries.83 What the majority fails
to recognize is that, by harming short
term investors, the rule may also
negatively affect long-term investors
who may face increased spreads and
decreased liquidity. Liquidity provided
by short-term investors narrows spreads
and gives long-term investors better
executions. Because short-term
investors are willing to take risks that
strengthen the marketplace and benefit
long-term investors, Congress clearly
could not have intended for short-term
investors to be harmed through the
Commission’s facilitation of the national
market system. In fact, Congress
prioritized the removal of barriers to
competition to increase the
participation of market makers and
increase the competitive trading of
securities.84
The majority also fails to take into
account that long-term and short-term
investors are not mutually exclusive
groups. Investors can be long-term and
short-term investors at the same time or
they may be a long-term investor one
moment and, for a variety of reasons,
become a short-term investor the next.
The overlapping nature of these
undefined categories highlights the
arbitrary nature of the majority’s
distinction. The length of time an
individual owns a stock or intends to
own a stock at any particular moment is
not a relevant factor in distinguishing
among groups of investors.
The majority claims that the tradethrough rule ensures that investors get
the best price. We have indicated above
why we believe this claim significantly
overstates the problem the rule is
intended to address. By making price
the sole criterion for determining how
and where orders will be executed, the
trade-through rule also restricts investor
choice and ability to obtain best
execution. As one commenter
explained:
Indeed, based on years of empirical
evidence and substantial quantitative
research into the components of transaction
costs, it is our strong belief that price is just
one element in overall execution quality.
83 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 22.
84 One of the fundamental purposes underlying
the national market system contemplated by S. 249
is to enhance the competitive structure of the
securities markets in order to foster the risk-taking
function of market makers and thereby to provide
free market incentives to active participation in the
flow of orders. The competitive structure and
incentives to participation thus provided should
supplement, and ultimately may be able to replace,
most affirmative requirements to deal imposed by
regulation.
Senate Report, supra note 3, at 14. The tradethrough rule creates comparable barriers to offboard trading restrictions, which were among the
barriers Congress sought to remove.
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Institutional traders often need to trade off
price for liquidity, speed of execution,
likelihood of completion, and other
attributes. We believe investors should have
the choice over where to execute their orders,
considering these other attributes, and that
regulatory reform should continue to
encourage market centers to compete in all
these dimensions of execution quality.85
The majority claims that the
limitation on investor choice inherent in
the trade-through rule is in the public
interest and is needed to protect retail
and long-term investors that may be
harmed by trade-throughs. Before
restricting investors’ ability to obtain the
best execution in a manner that satisfies
their investment needs, the majority
should be required not only to show
current harm, but to demonstrate the
benefits provided by the trade-through
rule.86
The majority’s distinction between
the interests of long- and short-term
investors simply provides a way for it to
attempt to justify its policy choices,
without any basis in fact, and it sets a
dangerous precedent. Once codified, the
concept may leach into other
rulemakings and alter the basic
ownership principles governing the
market. Clearly, the interests of longand short-term investors are inextricably
linked. In the words of the Proposing
Release: ‘‘A fair and efficient national
market system must serve the interests
of both types of investors.’’ 87 In the
absence of Regulation NMS, fair and
efficient markets would develop to
provide economically efficient
execution of securities transactions for
all investors, not just those favored by
the Commission.88
V. The Rule Will Have Negative
Repercussions
We believe that, not only will the
trade-through rule not achieve its
purported benefits, it will have negative
unintended consequences. The
complexity of the rule structure invites
exploitation that may create unforeseen
85 Barclays Reproposal Comment Letter, supra
note 22, at 2–3.
86 See Senate Report, supra note 3, at 12 (‘‘In
other words, in the national market system,
investors should be able to obtain the best
execution of their orders and be assured that
because of open competition among market makers
the total market for each security is as liquid and
orderly as the characteristics of that security
warrant.’’).
87 Reproposing Release, supra note 17, 69 FR at
77439.
88 The majority is selective in its reliance on the
long- and short-term investor distinction. In
rejecting the proposed opt-out, the majority claims
that advocates of the opt-out ‘‘have failed to
consider the interests of all investors—both those
who submit marketable orders and those who
submit limit orders.’’ Adopting Release, supra note
1, at text following note 247.
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market distortions. Commenters
indicated that the BBO trade-through
rule may introduce market
inefficiencies, competitive barriers, and
unnecessary costs, while stifling
innovation.
Market participants and academics
warned the Commission of unintended
consequences,89 including: (i)
Decreased price discovery and quantity
discovery,90 (ii) increased gaming
opportunities,91 (iii) the lowest common
denominator problem,92 (iv) increased
market fragmentation,93 and (v)
increased volatility.94 The lack of
consensus about the likely impact of
Regulation NMS among industry
participants, academics and investors
provides further evidence of the risks
89 See,
e.g., Comment Letter of Marc E. Lackritz,
President, Securities Industry Assoc. (Feb 1, 2005)
(‘‘SIA Reproposal Comment Letter’’), at 10;
Comment Letter of James A. Duncan, Chairman, and
John C. Giesea, President and Chief Executive
Officer, Security Traders Assoc. (Jan. 19, 2005); J.P.
Morgan Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22,
at 7; Paul L. Davis and Robert A. Schwartz, Report,
Comments on SEC Reg NMS (Jan. 26, 2005)
(attachment to TIAA CREF Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22), at 7; Battalio-Jennings Study,
supra note 34, at 5 (‘‘[T]he proposed trade-through
rule may have negative unintended
consequences.’’); Comment Letter of James J. Angel,
Assoc. Professor of Finance, McDonough School of
Business, Georgetown University (Jan. 25, 2005)
(‘‘Angel Reproposal Comment Letter’’), at 1.
90 See, e.g., TIAA CREF Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 2 (expressing concern that
‘‘both of the proposed trade-through rules will
compromise’’ price and quantity discovery).
91 See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 11.
92 See, e.g., Instinet Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 17; Merrill Lynch Reproposal
Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 5.
93 See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 10 (‘‘[T]he incentive
structure created by the Top of Book Alternative
could also lead to increased market fragmentation
despite the SEC’s intent to the contrary.’’); Citigroup
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 6, at 5
(explaining that the top of the book alternative
‘‘could cause market participants to choose market
centers for execution that are more likely to have
less liquidity and order flow so that the market
participant’s order has a greater probability of being
at the top of the book (best bid/offer) and therefore
receiving increased protection. * * * Ultimately,
we feel this could result in increased fragmentation
with each broker-dealer’s order flow being
dispersed throughout the eleven protected market
centers.’’); Tradebot Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 68, at 2 (‘‘It is not widely understood
yet, but I think a trade through rule with automated
quotes would * * * increas[e] market
fragmentation. * * *’’).
94 See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 6 (‘‘A trade-through rule
that essentially forces investors to perform sweeps
is likely to increase volatility in the marketplace,
particularly for relatively illiquid securities.’’);
Vanguard Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note
70, at 4 (‘‘The BBO alternative would produce
greater volatility, as some executions would occur
at inferior prices.’’); Automated Trading Desk
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 3
(‘‘The proposed rule will create added market
volatility due to behavioral changes by block
positioners. * * *’’).
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attendant to the rule’s implementation.
Our concerns about these negative
consequences are aggravated by the
rule’s questionable enforceability.95
A. The Rule Will Limit Competition and
Stifle Innovation
The majority speaks continually of the
importance of encouraging two types of
competition—competition among orders
and competition among markets, and
believes that the trade-through rule
promotes competition on both scores.
We find no mention of different types of
competition in the language of Section
11A, the source of the Commission’s
authority in this area, and we believe
the rule is anti-competitive.
1. Competition Among Markets
In adopting the trade-through rule, the
majority has opted for governmentcontrolled competition over competitive
market forces to determine the
appropriate market structure. Section
11A plainly states, however, that a
national market system should foster
competition among broker-dealers and
among markets. Today, broker-dealers,
electronic communications networks
(‘‘ECNs’’) and SROs compete in the
Nasdaq market on the basis of
technology, execution quality and cost.
Competition among market makers
increased significantly following the
Commission’s adoption of Rule 11Ac1–
5, which required market centers to
publish execution quality statistics.96
This information permitted brokers to
make more informed order routing
decisions, consistent with their best
execution obligations. At the same time,
overall execution quality for retail
customers improved as competition
among executing broker-dealers on the
basis of execution quality became a
means of attracting retail order flow.
Likewise, competition between markets
95 OEA, in its study on trade-throughs, remarked
on the complexity of identifying actual tradethroughs, a necessary predicate to the enforcement
of the rule. OEA Study, supra note 20, at 1 (‘‘While
trade-through identification seems straightforward,
in practice it is complicated by quickly changing
quotes, system time lags, data limitations, and
imperfect access to markets.’’). See also UBS
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 5
(‘‘[E]nforceability will be unachievable (correctly
noted by the OEA Study) due to the inability to
accurately identify when, due to quotation changes,
system imperfections and data discrepancies, a
trade-through has even occurred.’’); Morgan Stanley
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 14
(‘‘In order to monitor and enforce a trade-through
rule, it is essential that the Commission promulgate
standards for an intermarket clock. The existing
clock synchronization standards, which differ by
market, combined with penny trading increments,
would render it virtually impossible to effectively
monitor compliance with the proposed tradethrough rule.’’).
96 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 43590
(Nov. 17, 2000), 65 FR 43590 (Dec. 1, 2000).
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and ECNs drove technological
innovation as a means of attracting
orders and liquidity to their markets.
Under the trade-through rule,
competition among market makers may
decrease. Given the rule’s sole focus on
price, incentives to improve execution
quality above and beyond the tradethrough rule’s mandated execution
methodology may be reduced. Further,
by limiting order routing decisions to
the price of protected quotations, the
trade-through rule sacrifices
competition among SROs and ECNs,
which will have a negative impact on
innovation. Instead of allowing markets
to compete for order flow, the tradethrough rule forces order flow to the
SRO markets. The majority believes that
competitive pressures will continue to
drive change since orders may still be
internalized, and priority for routing
decisions can be made when SROs are
displaying the same price. We believe,
however, that the trade-through rule
will restrict competitive forces and
reduce markets to the lowest common
denominator by dampening the
incentives for markets to compete on the
basis of improved technology and
services and reduced costs. With the
government managing all aspects of the
competition, it is difficult to credit the
majority’s claim that the trade-through
rule promotes competition. In our view,
the trade-through rule limits
competition among markets.
Market share may well shift following
implementation of the trade-through
rule, but not because the rule promotes
competition. To the extent that we
observe shifting market share, it will be
attributable to limit orders being
redistributed among protected SRO
quotations. Market participants may
game the system by distributing orders
to what might normally be their secondchoice market, so that their orders will
be protected as top-of-book at the
second-choice market. To the extent that
investors spread orders among the
various SROs to obtain as much top-ofbook protection as possible, any
resulting shift in market share would
occur, not as a result of increased
market competition, but as a result of
the Commission’s attempt to engineer
market structure by imposing a tradethrough rule.97
97 See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 10 (‘‘The result likely
would be that market participants would engage in
an economically inefficient competition to develop
costly computer systems that route and re-route
limit orders to various markets based on the
probability of achieving trade-through protection.’’);
Citigroup Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 6,
at 5 (‘‘[T]his type of market regulation may serve
to support certain market centers that otherwise
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2. Competition Among Orders
The majority believes that by
protecting limit orders, that is,
restricting pricing decisions, it will
create the appropriate incentives for
investors to display more of their
interest to buy or sell, which will
decrease volatility and implicit
transaction costs. However, the tradethrough rule restricts competition
among orders by requiring a
government-mandated method of
trading. Disfavoring short-term investors
could upset the market’s liquidity
equilibrium and decrease competition
among orders because ‘‘short-term’’
investors provide much needed
liquidity to the market through their
willingness to buy and sell stock.98
Unrestricted market and order
competition in the Nasdaq market has
achieved several objectives under
Section 11A, including increased direct
order interaction, reduced execution
costs and improved execution quality
for all investors. In the absence of any
valid justification for extending the
trade-through rule to Nasdaq, the
majority is forced to argue that Nasdaq’s
vigorous order competition reflects a
weakness in market depth and liquidity
that requires a trade-through rule. As
discussed above, the use of electronic
methods of price and size discovery on
Nasdaq is evidence of a healthy,
competitive market, not evidence of
structural weakness.99
By adopting a trade-through rule, the
majority has shown itself willing to
sacrifice competition among markets to
attempt to increase competition among
orders. If increasing order competition
were its goal, however, then the
majority should have afforded full
protection of limit orders by imposing
price-time priority. It is questionable
how order competition will increase
under a rule that applies a price priority
structure that is rife with exceptions.
The negligible protection afforded to
limit orders under the trade-through
rule simply does not square with the
degree of increased order competition
that the majority hopes will materialize.
If anything, the rule’s compromised
approach favoring long-term investors
may decrease liquidity, and thus
decrease order competition.
3. Barriers to Competition
The trade-through rule creates barriers
to competition.100 We are concerned
may be incapable of competing because of poor
technology and inferior execution.’’).
98 See supra Section IV.
99 See supra Section II.B.
100 See, e.g., SIA Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 89, at 9 (‘‘[T]he SEC’s two Alternatives
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that these ‘‘regulatory restraints’’ will
prevent new competitors from entering
the market and place unnecessary
burdens on existing trading centers.101
Under the rule, only SRO quotations are
protected. Through the SRO registration
process, the Commission controls the
number of SROs in the national market
system. This barrier to entry will likely
increase if the Commission adopts
proposed regulations that would place
restrictions on SRO ownership and
substantially increase regulatory
burdens pertaining to SRO governance,
reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.102
The Commission’s involvement in
implementing the access and automated
market provisions of Regulation NMS
will create additional barriers to entry.
The access provisions require that the
Commission approve the application of
each new participant in the NASD’s
Automated Display Facility (‘‘ADF’’),
outline the requirements of
‘‘substantially equivalent’’ access, and
determine whether trading centers
engage in unfairly discriminatory
practices. The Commission will also be
involved in determining which markets
comply with the definition of an
automated market, involving the
Commission in highly technical and
subjective judgments, which may
neither be fair nor expedient.
We see troubling parallels between
the barriers to entry that we foresee
err too far in the direction of ensuring intermarket
interactions, thereby threatening intermarket
competition, discouraging innovation, and limiting
investor choice. As a result, we are concerned that
the TOB and DOB Alternatives ultimately may
cause significant harm to investors and imperil the
preeminence of the U.S. markets. Specifically, we
believe that the TOB and DOB Alternatives will
drive the markets toward one uniform market
model. Indeed, both proposals push the markets
toward intermarket competition that is based solely
on displayed price * * * [B]oth Alternatives raise
the specter of competition-stifling, micromanagement of market structure by the
government.’’); J.P. Morgan Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 7 (‘‘However, such
incentives would likely be stronger the greater the
extent of the regulatory license provided by the
trade-through rule.’’); TIAA CREF Reproposal
Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 8–9 and 11;
Citigroup Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 6,
at 2 and 5; Comment Letter of Daniel M. Clifton,
Executive Director, American Shareholders Assoc.
(Jan. 26, 2005), at 2; Comment Letter of J. Greg
Mills, Managing Director, Head of Global Equity
Trading, RBC Capital Markets Corp. (Jan. 26, 2005)
(‘‘RBC Reproposal Comment Letter’’), at 3; Instinet
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 5;
Archipelago Reproposal Comment Letter, supra
note 22, at 9; UBS Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 3.
101 See Senate Report, supra note 3, at 13
(‘‘Unfortunately, because of excessive and
unnecessary regulatory restraints, competition in
the securities industry has not been as vigorous and
as effective in advancing the public interest as it
could be.’’).
102 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 50699
(Nov. 18, 2004), 69 FR 71126 (Dec. 8, 2004).
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under the trade-through rule and the
barriers to entry created by the
Commission’s criteria for recognition of
credit rating agencies as nationally
recognized statistical rating
organizations (‘‘NRSROs’’).103 The delay
in obtaining a no-action letter from the
SEC staff by applicants for NRSRO
status, a process that often takes several
years, has raised barriers to entry for
credit rating agencies. We are concerned
that bureaucratic delay may create
similar barriers to entry for market
participants seeking to register as an
SRO, new ADF participants and SROs
seeking to make changes to their market
operations.104
4. Stifling Innovation
Innovation may be another casualty of
the trade-through rule. Decreased
competition and increased regulatory
barriers create an environment that
stifles innovation, depriving investors of
the benefits of innovation, including
efficiencies and cost savings.
Unfortunately, as we saw in the listed
market, where technology was
antiquated and price discovery
hampered, it is difficult to determine
whether a regulatory regime impedes
innovation until a marketplace is
competitively disadvantaged.
By requiring the Commission or its
staff to approve changes to an SRO’s
market operations, Regulation NMS
essentially codifies current technologies
and methods of trading through the
exceptions to the trade-through rule and
controls future innovation.105
Bureaucratic delay creates a competitive
barrier that may impede the future
development of trading and order
routing systems. In other words, the
future development of efficient and
effective methods of committing capital
and pricing securities may be inhibited.
What we find disturbing about the
majority’s policy determinations in
Regulation NMS is that they are
contrary to prior Commission
statements regarding the importance of
fostering innovation and competition. In
Regulation ATS, for example, the
Commission designed a regulatory
framework for alternative trading
systems (‘‘ATSs’’) that ‘‘encourage[d]
market innovation while ensuring basic
103 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51572
(Apr. 19, 2005), 70 FR 21306 (Apr. 25, 2005).
104 Nasdaq’s application for exchange registration
has been pending since March 15, 2001. Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 44396 (June 7, 2001), 66
FR 31952 (June 13, 2001).
105 Schwab Reproposal Comment Letter, supra
note 22, at 2 (‘‘A centralized routing algorithm
stifles innovation of new mechanisms for handling
order.’’); Archipelago Reproposal Comment letter,
supra note 22, at 5; Angel Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 89, at 2.
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investor protections.’’ 106 To help reduce
competitive impediments to innovation
by SROs, the Commission approved a
temporary exemption permitting SROs
to operate new trading systems without
filing for approval under certain
circumstances.107
Likewise, in the order approving
Nasdaq’s SuperMontage, the
Commission acknowledged that
‘‘competition and innovation are
essential to the health of the securities
markets. Indeed, competition is one of
the hallmarks of the national market
system.’’ 108 It stated that the regulatory
structure was designed to ‘‘provide all
market centers with structural flexibility
in order to enhance competition
between market centers, while
promoting market fairness, efficiency,
and transparency.’’ 109 In analyzing the
competitive issues involved in
approving SuperMontage, the
Commission stressed that:
Unfortunately, the majority fails to
use past experience as a guide. In
adopting the trade-through rule, the
majority has reversed Commission
policy, opting for governmentcontrolled competition, a failure under
ITS, instead of unfettered competition,
the more successful approach over time
as evidenced by the Nasdaq market. The
Nasdaq market has developed into an
efficient, automated and highly
competitive marketplace. Competition
among markets trading Nasdaq
securities has fulfilled the objectives of
Section 11A by creating a fully
automated and connected marketplace,
decreasing execution costs, and
increasing market data distribution.
Efficiencies born of competition have
benefited investors and issuers alike.
The majority’s adoption of the tradethrough rule assists one market to step
forward, while forcing other markets to
take two giant steps backward.
Nasdaq and traditional exchanges must
have the flexibility to rethink their structures
to permit appropriate responses to the
rapidly changing marketplace. Congress
instructed the Commission to seek to
‘‘enhance competition and to allow economic
forces, interacting with a fair regulatory field,
to arrive at appropriate variation in practices
and services.’’ 110
B. Additional Regulation Is Needed to
Address Problems Created by the TradeThrough Rule
The Commission found
SuperMontage consistent with the goals
of promoting ‘‘price discovery, best
execution, liquidity, and market
innovation, while continuing to
preserve competition among market
centers.’’ 111 Under this policy guidance,
the markets automated and real
competition emerged, due in large part
to the explosive growth of the ECNs,
which have been the greatest catalyst for
increased competition and technological
advances in the Nasdaq market. Under
the trade-through rule, ECNs will be
able to compete only if they display
quotations through an SRO and offer
substantially equivalent access.
Moreover, the fact that dominant
markets can match BBOs undercuts the
majority’s argument that competition
among markets will increase.
106 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 40760
(Dec. 8, 1998), 63 FR 70844, at 70847 (Dec. 22,
1998).
107 Id. The Commission stated that the pilot was
‘‘to provide registered exchanges and national
securities associations with a greater opportunity to
compete with alternative trading systems registered
as broker-dealers and with foreign markets.’’ Id. at
note 29.
108 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 43863
(Jan. 19, 2001), 66 FR 8020, at 8049 (Jan. 26, 2001).
109 Id. at 8052.
110 Id. at note 471 and accompanying text (citing
Senate Report, supra note 3).
111 Id. at 8055.
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To have its trade-through rule, the
majority has been compelled to engage
in rulemaking that otherwise would
have been unnecessary. The
Commission has historically analyzed a
broker’s best execution obligation on the
basis of several factors, including
execution price, speed of execution, the
size of the order, the trading
characteristics of the security involved,
the availability of accurate information
affecting choices as to the most
favorable market center for execution
and the availability of technological aids
to process such information, and the
cost and difficulty associated with
achieving an execution in a particular
market center.112 One of the
consequences of limiting investor
choice to the sole criterion of price is
that the Commission must ensure that
markets have comparable access to these
prices. This has required the
Commission to adopt a cap on access
fees so that market participants are not
held hostage by outlier markets
displaying the best price, but charging
excessive access fees.
As noted above, Regulation NMS will
also require Commission involvement in
implementation of access standards and
approval for new ADF participants. Key
standards under trade-through
exceptions, including standards for
automatic execution, will also require
determinations by the Commission and
112 Newton v. Merrill Lynch, 135 F.3d 266, 270
n.2 (3d Cir. 1998)(citing Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 33026 (Oct. 6, 1993), 58 FR 52934 (Oct.
13, 1993).
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its staff, many involving interpretation
of subjective standards. The end result
is a highly regulated and micromanaged
market that limits competition and
innovation. As one commenter
observed:
[T]he rule will require lots of filings from
SROs, and years of intense fighting over
details. It is likely that the Commission staff
will end up making numerous important
decisions on the important micro-details of
market structure with lots of unintended
consequences that will take decades to
understand and fix.113
Indeed, the majority concedes that a
trade-through rule may ‘‘lessen the
competitive discipline’’ because brokers
will not be able to avoid markets that do
not provide quality execution
services.114 The majority would replace
this competitive discipline with
increased regulatory oversight. The
Commission now must screen new
entrants’ ability to meet access
requirements and standards for
automatic execution through the SRO
registration process or the 19b-4
approval process for new ADF
participants. The majority notes that the
self-regulatory function will also be
important in monitoring compliance
with all Exchange Act and SRO rules,
including compliance with the tradethrough rule.115 Finally, the Adopting
Release notes that ‘‘[e]ffective
implementation of the Order Protection
Rule also will depend on the
Commission’s taking any action that is
necessary and appropriate to address
trading centers that fail to meet fully
their regulatory requirements.’’ 116 This
would include taking enforcement
actions against trading centers that fail
to meet regulatory requirements.
Instead of relying on competitive
forces to discipline market access and
execution services, Regulation NMS
establishes a regulatory back-up plan for
outlier SROs. We believe the better
approach would have been to clarify
best execution guidance, outlining the
appropriate balancing of factors when
routing orders. In any event, the tradethrough rule, which does not provide
protection to manual quotes,
complicates the best execution analysis
because manual quotations may not be
disregarded. Furthermore, guidance on
best execution will still be needed to
assist brokers in fulfilling their
113 Angel Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note
89, at 2.
114 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 243.
115 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 244.
116 Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 244.
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obligations for assessing the depth of
book and manual quotations.117
C. Implementation Will Be Costly
The majority’s cost-benefit analysis
underestimates the costs associated with
implementation and compliance, while
overestimating the benefits. Even by the
majority’s own estimation, the benefits
of Regulation NMS will likely be
modest. But these modest benefits will
come at a very high price. Some of the
costs of Regulation NMS will be
measured in terms of the dollars it will
cost trading centers to modify their
policies and procedures and internal
systems and monitor compliance with
the trade-through rule on an ongoing
basis.118 The cost-benefit analysis
estimates start-up costs at $143.8
million, with average annual ongoing
costs of approximately $22 million.119
Market participants will also experience
significant costs in terms of the time and
effort they will spend negotiating with
our staff on the numerous interpretive
issues and in explaining to our
examination staff that apparent tradethrough violations are not really
violations.120 Thus, even if there are no
117 See, e.g., SIA Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 89, at 15 (‘‘[W]e are concerned that
broker-dealers will be required, as a business and
legal matter, to take account of the full depth-ofbook as well as manual quotes in providing best
execution to their customers. Although the SEC
states only that best execution standards will not
change, the SEC will have changed the entire
market structure, which would appear to
necessitate a re-evaluation of best execution
standards. * * * [W]e are concerned that brokerdealers will be held liable by customers and
regulatory examiners, far beyond the requirements
of the trade-through rule, to a best execution
standard based on manual quotes.’’); Comment
Letter of Bernard L. Madoff and Peter B. Madoff,
Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC (Feb.
3, 2005), at 5 (‘‘[W]e urge that the Commission
clarify its position by providing specific guidance
as to the interplay between the trade-through and
the best execution requirement.’’); RBC Reproposal
Comment Letter, supra note 100, at 4; Merrill Lynch
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 6;
UBS Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at
2.
118 See, e.g., Deutsche Bank Reproposal Comment
Letter, supra note 22, at 5 (‘‘In sum, we are
concerned that the adoption of Regulation NMS,
unless carefully crafted with sensitivity to practical
implementation difficulties and expenses, holds the
potential to force upon broker-dealers complex
challenges and burdensome costs, the scale of
which may not be fully appreciated by the
Commission.’’); SIA Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 89, at 11; Citigroup Reproposal
Comment Letter, supra note 6, at 2; Knight Trading
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 5.
119 See Adopting Release, supra note 1, at text
following note 782.
120 As UBS explained, the difficulties associated
with inspecting for violations of the rule are likely
to result in a shifting of the burden to firms to prove
that they did not violate the rule:
[W]e foresee a process, not unlike many current
‘‘sweep’’ regulatory actions in which the SEC (or a
SRO) will provide each firm with a list containing
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trade-throughs, there will still be a
burden on trading centers to prove the
absence of trade-throughs.121
VI. Market Data Reforms Do Not
Address the Real Problem
While the discussion above focuses
on the trade-through rule, we also
believe there are serious problems with
the market data reforms included in
Regulation NMS. The availability of
market data is critical because market
data provides transparency within the
market and allows investors to evaluate
the quality of their executions.
Regulation NMS does not address the
larger issues surrounding market data,
and the majority has indicated that
these issues will be addressed in a
different forum.
We have concerns about the market
data reforms in Regulation NMS, even
though they are limited, and a particular
concern with respect to the codification
of the single consolidator model. By
entrenching the single consolidator
model, the majority grants a monopoly
for the consolidation of market data,
which erects another barrier to
encouraging competitive solutions for
market data consolidation. We intend to
advocate a reconsideration of this
hundreds of ‘‘exceptions’’ for which the regulatory
surveillance systems have detected a potential
trade-through violation. In following current
examination practice, a firm will be given an
opportunity to demonstrate to the regulator why it
believes that it did not trade through the best posted
price (thus the firm will be deemed guilty of these
violations unless it can satisfactorily demonstrate
its innocence). Due to exceptions to the rule,
technological limitations, and latency in delivery
and receipt of market updates and quotations, there
will be a substantial number of ‘‘false positives’’
that would have to be disproved. The likely end
result of this review will be a justifiable reason for
98% of the exceptions, but firms such as UBS
would, most likely, receive a regulatory sanction for
their inability to demonstrate guilt or innocence for
the remaining 2%.
UBS Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22,
at 5. See also CIBC Reproposal Comment Letter,
supra note 22, at 4 (‘‘It will result in wasted
resources sifting through market data to eliminate
false trade-throughs, and trade-throughs for
economically insignificant sums. We also believe
that this task will be inordinately expensive, both
in terms of the hard dollars required to build
systems and pay for market data to do surveillance
and the lost opportunity cost of resources that could
be spent investigating execution quality in less
liquid stocks.’’).
121 One commenter cautioned against
underestimating costs. See Deutsche Bank
Reproposal Comment Letter, supra note 22, at 4
(‘‘[W]hat in principle may appear to be a rather
straightforward measure, most assuredly involves
significant changes to a broker-dealer’s trading,
technology, operations, supervisory and compliance
platforms. * * * In our experience to date with
Regulation SHO, which was a fairly incremental
initiative that built upon existing SRO rules and
adopted a fraction of the original Commission
proposal, our costs (represented by hundreds of
collective hours * * *) have been real and
significant.’’
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decision by our colleagues when the
Commission considers the market data
issue in general.
We are also concerned about the
majority’s failure to address the level of
market data fees. The size of market data
revenues and lack of accountability for
the use of these revenues by the SROs
creates market distortions and
inefficient allocation of resources.122 By
continuing to fail to address the
reasonableness of the rates charged by
the markets, the majority sidesteps
serious questions about whether
government-sponsored monopolies
should be allowed to charge excessive
rents to cross-subsidize other functional
costs, and if so, how they should be
held accountable for the appropriate use
of such funds. What is needed is a
heightened sense of accountability for
the use of market data revenues and an
incentive for the exchanges to increase
efficiencies.
Supporters of the current pricing
schedule indicate that the extra
revenues are needed to fund the
regulatory functions performed by
exchanges. Even with the current high
levels of market data fees, our
enforcement docket does not
demonstrate that higher funding has led
to effective regulatory oversight by
SROs.123 Critics contend that the
exchanges charge an excessive rate for
122 See, e.g., Hearing on Proposed Regulation
NMS Before the Securities and Exchange
Commission (Apr. 21, 2004) (‘‘Regulation NMS
Hearings’’), at 223–24 (testimony of Robert Greifeld,
President and Chief Executive Officer, Nasdaq
Stock Market) (‘‘Currently that cost [of market data]
for professional investors is around $20. * * *
There was no great wisdom in that number, and we
look at the number today, that number is too high.
* * * With the current structure, then, data is not
provided at a low enough cost and it [creates]
unintended results and distortions in our market.
The market centers today are the beneficiaries of
that excessive rent * * *.’’); Regulation NMS
Hearings, at 229 (testimony of Jeffrey T. Brown,
General Counsel, Schwab Soundview Capital
Markets) (‘‘[L]ast year, the market data cartels took
in $424 million in revenue and had expenses of $38
million. * * * [T]hat’s a profit margin of over a
thousand percent. * * * [T]hat excess revenue
manifests itself in the types of practices that you’re
concerned with, * * * tape shredding, market data
rebates, excessive pay to executives. And there’s
clearly a link * * * between market data revenue
and these practices.’’).
123 See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No.
51163 (Feb. 9, 2005) (Report of Investigation
pursuant to Section 21(a) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 relating to violations by MarketXT, an
NASD member, and registered broker-dealer, which
were not adequately addressed by Nasdaq, as
overseen by its parent, NASD); Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 51524 (Apr. 12, 2005) and SEC
Press Release 2005–53 (April 12, 2005) (instituting
and simultaneously settling an enforcement action
against the NYSE, finding that the NYSE, ‘‘over the
course of nearly four years, failed to police
specialists, who engaged in widespread and
unlawful proprietary trading on the floor of the
NYSE’’).
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consolidating and distributing market
data. They note that the relative
opaqueness of the market data pricing
process inhibits public scrutiny on the
current cost of consolidated market
information.
It is difficult to argue that, in an era
of heightened disclosure requirements, a
virtual public utility should not be
required to openly justify and account
for the use of public funds. Moreover,
having chosen to maintain the current
single processor system, the majority, if
it is to accomplish its mission of
promoting transparency and protecting
investors, while allowing competition to
flourish, must accept the responsibility
for scrutinizing rates charged for market
data and monitoring the heavy hand of
monopoly power.124
Conclusion
We do not believe that Regulation
NMS is the appropriate policy choice.
Instead of facilitating a national market
system in which technology,
competition and innovation will
produce benefits for all investors,
Regulation NMS saddles the
124 The Senate bill required SIPs which act as
exclusive processors to register with the
Commission and provided the Commission with the
authority to require the registration of other
categories of SIPs. The reference to exclusive
processors did not constitute a mandate for a single
securities information processor at any stage in the
processing of quotation or transactional data, but
merely recognized that where SROs utilize an
exclusive processor, that processor takes on certain
of the characteristics of a public utility and should
be regulated accordingly.
Conference Report, supra note 4, at 93.
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:27 Jun 28, 2005
Jkt 205001
marketplace with anachronistic
regulation that reduces investor choice
and raises investor costs. In the name of
investor protection and uniformity, the
majority has opted for greater regulation
rather than competition to facilitate
what it perceives to be fair treatment of
customer orders and deep and liquid
markets. However, the majority has
failed to establish evidence of investor
protection concerns, and the goal of
uniformity could have been achieved by
having no trade-through rule.
Since the Commission voted on
Regulation NMS, mergers have been
announced between the NYSE and
Archipelago and between Nasdaq and
The Instinet Group.125 The timing of
these announcements so soon after the
adoption of the rule has led some to
credit Regulation NMS with enhancing
competition and equalizing regulation
among markets. We believe the timing
can be more accurately explained by the
markets’ simple desire for closure with
respect to Regulation NMS. Intensifying
competitive pressures, combined with
the Commission’s focus on market
structure, created an environment in
which the markets’ strategic business
plans likely could not be finalized until
the regulatory risk was resolved. In the
end, it was not so much the substance
of Regulation NMS that was important,
but the fact that the regulation was final.
125 See, e.g., Aaron Lucchetti et al., NYSE to
Acquire Electronic Trader and Go Public, Wall St.
J., Apr. 21, 2005, at A1; Aaron Lucchetti, Nasdaq
Chief Plays Hardball in Instinet Deal, Wall St. J.,
Apr. 25, 2005, at C1.
PO 00000
Frm 00150
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Unfortunately for the marketplace,
this version of Regulation NMS that the
majority has adopted is far from final.
Imprecise definitions, the acknowledged
need for future interpretations that the
majority has seen fit to delegate to an
opaque process of staff guidance, and
uncertainty regarding future
examination and enforcement standards
combine to produce a regulatory
framework that will keep market
participants guessing and seeking
clarification from our staff. From our
experience with analogous situations,
we fear that the inevitable delays in
obtaining guidance, the attendant
regulatory uncertainty, and concomitant
costs will harm a competitive
marketplace.
Far from enhancing competition, we
believe that Regulation NMS will have
anticompetitive effects. Increasing
consolidation in the securities industry
as a result of the proposed mergers and
the increased barriers to entry created
by the trade-through rule magnify our
concerns about the competitive impact
of Regulation NMS going forward.
For the reasons stated above, we
respectfully dissent.
Dated: June 9, 2005.
Cynthia A. Glassman,
Commissioner.
Paul S. Atkins,
Commissioner.
[FR Doc. 05–11802 Filed 6–28–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
E:\FR\FM\29JNR2.SGM
29JNR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 124 (Wednesday, June 29, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 37496-37644]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-11802]
[[Page 37495]]
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Part II
Securities and Exchange Commission
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17 CFR Parts 200, 201, et al.
Regulation NMS; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 29, 2005 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 37496]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 200, 201, 230, 240, 242, 249, and 270
[Release No. 34-51808; File No. S7-10-04]
RIN 3235-AJ18
Regulation NMS
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rules and amendments to joint industry plans.
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SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is
adopting rules under Regulation NMS and two amendments to the joint
industry plans for disseminating market information. In addition to
redesignating the national market system rules previously adopted under
Section 11A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act''),
Regulation NMS includes new substantive rules that are designed to
modernize and strengthen the regulatory structure of the U.S. equity
markets. First, the ``Order Protection Rule'' requires trading centers
to establish, maintain, and enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent the execution of trades at prices
inferior to protected quotations displayed by other trading centers,
subject to an applicable exception. To be protected, a quotation must
be immediately and automatically accessible. Second, the ``Access
Rule'' requires fair and non-discriminatory access to quotations,
establishes a limit on access fees to harmonize the pricing of
quotations across different trading centers, and requires each national
securities exchange and national securities association to adopt,
maintain, and enforce written rules that prohibit their members from
engaging in a pattern or practice of displaying quotations that lock or
cross automated quotations. Third, the ``Sub-Penny Rule'' prohibits
market participants from accepting, ranking, or displaying orders,
quotations, or indications of interest in a pricing increment smaller
than a penny, except for orders, quotations, or indications of interest
that are priced at less than $1.00 per share. Finally, the Commission
is adopting amendments to the ``Market Data Rules'' that update the
requirements for consolidating, distributing, and displaying market
information, as well as amendments to the joint industry plans for
disseminating market information that modify the formulas for
allocating plan revenues (``Allocation Amendment'') and broaden
participation in plan governance (``Governance Amendment'').
DATES: Effective Date: August 29, 2005. Compliance Dates: For specific
phase-in dates for compliance with the final rules and amendments, see
section VII of this release.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Order Protection Rule: Heather Seidel,
Senior Special Counsel, at (202) 551-5608, Marc F. McKayle, Special
Counsel, at (202) 551-5633, David Hsu, Special Counsel, at (202) 551-
5664, or Raymond Lombardo, Attorney, at (202) 551-5615; Access Rule:
Heather Seidel, Senior Special Counsel, at (202) 551-5608, or David
Liu, Attorney, at (202) 551-5645; Sub-Penny Rule: Michael Gaw, Senior
Special Counsel, at (202) 551-5602; Market Data Rules, Allocation
Amendment, and Governance Amendment: David Hsu, Special Counsel, at
(202) 551-5664; Regulation NMS: Yvonne Fraticelli, Special Counsel, at
(202) 551-5654; all of whom are in the Division of Market Regulation,
Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549-6628.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
A. Summary of Rulemaking Process and Record
B. NMS Principles and Objectives
1. Competition Among Markets and Competition Among Orders
2. Serving the Interests of Long-Term Investors and Listed
Companies
C. Overview of Adopted Rules
1. Order Protection Rule
2. Access Rule
3. Sub-Penny Rule
4. Market Data Rules and Plans
II. Order Protection Rule
A. Response to Comments and Basis for Adopted Rule
1. Need for Intermarket Order Protection Rule
2. Limiting Protection to Automated and Accessible Quotations
3. Workable Implementation of Intermarket Trade-Through
Protection
4. Elimination of Proposed Opt-Out Exception
5. Scope of Protected Quotations
6. Benefits and Implementation Costs of the Order Protection
Rule
B. Description of Adopted Rule
1. Scope of Rule
2. Requirement of Reasonable Policies and Procedures
3. Exceptions
4. Duty of Best Execution
III. Access Rule
A. Response to Comments and Basis for Adopted Rule
1. Means of Access to Quotations
2. Limitation on Access Fees
3. Locking or Crossing Quotations
B. Description of Adopted Rule
1. Access to Quotations
2. Limitation on Access Fees
3. Locking or Crossing Quotations
4. Regulation ATS Fair Access
IV. Sub-Penny Rule
A. Background
B. Commission Proposal and Reproposal on Sub-Penny Quoting
C. Comments Received
1. Restriction Based on Price of the Quotation Not Price of the
Stock
2. Quotations Below $1.00
3. Revisiting the Penny Increment
4. Sub-Penny Trading
5. Acceptance of Sub-Penny Quotations
6. Application to Options Markets
7. One-to-One Negotiating Systems
8. Implementation of Rule 612
V. Market Data Rules and Plan Amendments
A. Response to Comments and Basis for Adopted Rules
1. Alternative Data Dissemination Models
2. Level of Fees and Plan Governance
3. Revenue Allocation Formula
4. Distribution and Display of Data
B. Description of Adopted Rules and Amendments
1. Allocation Amendment
2. Governance Amendment
3. Consolidation, Distribution, and Display of Data
VI. Regulation NMS
A. Description of Regulation NMS
B. Rule 600--NMS Security Designation and Definitions
1. NMS Security Designation--Transaction Reporting Requirements
for Equities and Listed Options
2. NMS Security and NMS Stock
3. Changes to Existing Definitions in the NMS Rules
4. Definitions in the Regulation NMS Rules Adopted Today
C. Changes to Other Rules
VII. Effective Date and Phased-In Compliance Dates
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
IX. Consideration of Costs and Benefits
X. Consideration of Burden on Competition, and Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition and Capital Formation
XI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
XII. Response to Dissent
XIII. Statutory Authority
XIV. Text of Adopted Amendments to the CTA Plan, the CQ Plan, and
the Nasdaq UTP Plan
XV. Text of Adopted Rules
I. Introduction
The Commission is adopting Regulation NMS, a series of initiatives
designed to modernize and strengthen the national market system
(``NMS'') for equity securities.\1\ These initiatives include:
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\1\ The Commission originally proposed Regulation NMS in
February 2004. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 49325 (Feb. 26,
2004), 69 FR 11126 (Mar. 9, 2004) (``Proposing Release''). It issued
a supplemental request for comment in May 2004. Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 49749 (May 20, 2004), 69 FR 30142 (May 26, 2004)
(``Supplemental Release''). On December 16, 2004, the Commission
reproposed Regulation NMS in its entirety for public comment.
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 50870 (Dec. 16, 2004), 69 FR
77424 (Dec. 27, 2004) (``Reproposing Release'').
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[[Page 37497]]
(1) A new Order Protection Rule,\2\ which reinforces the
fundamental principle of obtaining the best price for investors when
such price is represented by automated quotations that are immediately
accessible;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Although the Reproposing Release referred to Rule 611 as the
``Trade-Through Rule,'' the reproposed Rule itself was named ``Order
Protection Rule.'' The term ``Trade-Through Rule'' was used in the
Reproposing Release to avoid confusion, given that the term had been
widely used in public debate. The term ``Order Protection Rule,''
however, better captures the nature of the adopted Rule. For
example, the term helps distinguish the existing trade-through
provisions for exchange-listed stocks, which do not really protect
orders. Limit order users want a fast, efficient execution of their
orders, not a slow, costly ``satisfaction'' process that is provided
by the existing trade-through provisions. See infra, note 30 and
accompanying text.
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(2) a new Access Rule, which promotes fair and non-discriminatory
access to quotations displayed by NMS trading centers through a private
linkage approach;
(3) a new Sub-Penny Rule, which establishes a uniform quoting
increment of no less than one penny for quotations in NMS stocks equal
to or greater than $1.00 per share to promote greater price
transparency and consistency;
(4) amendments to the Market Data Rules and joint industry plans
that allocate plan revenues to self-regulatory organizations (``SROs'')
for their contributions to public price discovery and promote wider and
more efficient distribution of market data; and
(5) a reorganization of existing Exchange Act rules governing the
NMS to promote greater clarity and understanding of the rules.
The Commission is adopting Regulation NMS in furtherance of its
statutory responsibilities. In 1975, Congress directed the Commission,
through enactment of Section 11A of the Exchange Act, to facilitate the
establishment of a national market system to link together the multiple
individual markets that trade securities. Congress intended the
Commission to take advantage of opportunities created by new data
processing and communications technologies to preserve and strengthen
the securities markets. By incorporating such technologies, the NMS is
designed to achieve the objectives of efficient, competitive, fair, and
orderly markets that are in the public interest and protect investors.
For three decades, the Commission has adhered to these guiding
objectives in its regulation of the NMS, which are essential to meeting
the investment needs of the public and reducing the cost of capital for
listed companies. Over this period, the Commission has continued to
revise and refine its NMS rules in light of changing market conditions.
Today, the NMS encompasses the stocks of more than 5000 listed
companies, which collectively represent more than $14 trillion in U.S.
market capitalization. Consistent with Congressional intent, these
stocks are traded simultaneously at a variety of different venues that
participate in the NMS, including national securities exchanges,
alternative trading systems (``ATSs''), and market-making securities
dealers. The Commission believes that the NMS approach adopted by
Congress is a primary reason that the U.S. equity markets are widely
recognized as being the fairest, most efficient, and most competitive
in the world. The rules that the Commission is now adopting represent
an important and needed step forward in its continuing implementation
of Congress's objectives for the NMS. By modernizing and strengthening
the nation's regulatory structure, the rules are designed to assure
that the equity markets will continue to serve the interests of
investors, listed companies, and the public for years to come.
In recent years, the equity markets have experienced sweeping
changes, ranging from new technologies to new types of markets to the
initiation of trading in penny increments. The pressing need for NMS
modernization to reflect these changes is inescapable. Thus, for the
last five years, the Commission has undertaken a broad and systematic
review to determine how best to keep the NMS up-to-date. This review
has required the Commission to grapple with many difficult and
contentious issues that have lingered unresolved for many years. We
have devoted a great deal of effort to studying these issues, listening
to the views of the public, and have carefully considered the comments
contained in the record to craft rule proposals that would achieve the
statutory objectives for the NMS.
Given the wide range of perspectives on market structure issues, it
is perhaps inevitable that there would be differences of opinion on the
Commission's policy choices. The time has arrived, however, when
decisions must be made and contentious issues must be resolved so that
the markets can move forward with certainty concerning their future
regulatory environment and appropriately respond to fundamental
economic and competitive forces. The Commission always seeks to achieve
consensus, but trying to achieve consensus should not impede the
achievement of the statutory objectives for the NMS and should not
damage the competitiveness of the U.S. equity markets, both at home and
internationally. We believe that further delay is not warranted and
therefore have adopted final rules needed to modernize and strengthen
the NMS. The following discussion briefly summarizes the deliberate and
open rulemaking process that the Commission has undertaken and the
extensive record that supports the adoption of Regulation NMS,
including the many empirical studies undertaken by the Commission
staff.
A. Summary of Rulemaking Process and Record
The Commission has engaged in a thorough, deliberate, and open
rulemaking process that has provided at every point an opportunity for
public participation and debate. We have actively sought out the views
of the public and securities industry participants. Even prior to
formulating proposals, our review included multiple public hearings and
roundtables, an advisory committee, three concept releases, the
issuance of temporary exemptions intended in part to generate useful
data on policy alternatives, and a constant dialogue with industry
participants and investors. This process continued after the proposals
were published for public comment.\3\ We held a public hearing on the
proposals in April 2004 (``NMS Hearing'') that included more than 30
panelists representing investors, individual markets, and market
participants from a variety of different sectors of the securities
industry.\4\ Because we believed that there were a number of important
developments at the public hearing, we published a supplemental request
for comment and extended the comment period on the proposals in May
2004 to give the public a full opportunity to respond to these
developments.\5\ We then carefully considered the more than 700 comment
letters submitted by the public, which encompassed a wide range of
views.
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\3\ Proposing Release, 69 FR at 11126.
\4\ A list of all panelists and full transcript of the NMS
Hearing (``Hearing Tr.''), as well as an archived video and audio
webcast, are available on the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov).
\5\ Supplemental Release, 69 FR at 30142.
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The insights of the commenters, as well as those of the NMS Hearing
panelists, contributed to significant refinements of the original
proposals. In addition, the Commission staff prepared
[[Page 37498]]
several studies of relevant trading data to help evaluate and respond
to the views of commenters. Consequently, rather than immediately
adopting rules, the Commission reproposed Regulation NMS in its
entirety in December 2004 to afford the public an additional
opportunity to review and comment on the details of the rules and on
the staff studies. The Commission then received, and carefully
considered, more than 1500 additional comments on the reproposal.\6\
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\6\ The Reproposing Release stated that the Commission would
continue to consider all comments received on the Proposing Release
and Supplemental Release, in addition to those on the Reproposing
Release, in evaluating further rulemaking action. 69 FR at 77426.
Accordingly, this release discusses comments received in response to
all three previous releases. Comments on the Proposing Release and
Supplemental Release are referred to as ``[name of commenter]
Letter.'' Comments on the Reproposing Release are referred to as
``[name of commenter] Reproposal Letter.''
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This extensive rulemaking process has generated an equally
extensive record, which is discussed at length throughout this release
as it relates to each of the four substantive rulemaking initiatives.
Indeed, substantial parts of the release are devoted to responding to
the many public comments (particularly those opposing the proposals)
and to discussing the estimated costs and benefits of the rules. This
rulemaking raised difficult policy issues on which commenters submitted
differing views. To move forward, the Commission necessarily has had to
make policy decisions that not everyone will agree with.
The fact that each of the adopted rules provoked conflicting views
from commenters should not, however, obscure the very substantial
evidence in the record strongly supporting each of the four substantive
rulemaking initiatives in Regulation NMS. Clearly, the Order Protection
Rule was most controversial and attracted the most public comment and
attention, yet the breadth of support in the record for the Rule is
compelling. Indeed, support for an intermarket price protection rule
begins with the adoption by Congress in 1975 of the national market
system itself. Both the House and Senate committees responsible for
drafting Section 11A specifically considered and endorsed the
Commission's authority to adopt a price protection rule as a means to
achieve the statutory objectives for the NMS.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See infra, notes 920-922 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the drafters' views, a broad spectrum of commenters
supported adoption of the Order Protection Rule for all NMS stocks,
including investors, listed companies, individual markets, market
participants, and academics.\8\ Many individual and institutional
investors particularly supported the Commission's view that significant
problems exist that require the Commission to modernize its
regulations. They also suggested the need for strengthened intermarket
price protection to further their interests, as did major groups
representing investors, such as the Investment Company Institute (whose
mutual fund members manage assets of $7.8 trillion that account for
more than 95% of all U.S. mutual fund assets), the Committee on
Investment of Employee Benefit Assets (which represents 110 of the
nation's largest corporate retirement funds managing $1.1 trillion on
behalf of 15 million plan participants and beneficiaries), the National
Association of Investors Corporation (whose membership consists of
investment clubs and individual investors with aggregate personal
investments of approximately $116 billion), and the Consumer Federation
of America.
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\8\ See infra, notes 56-59, 939-941, 957-960, and accompanying
text.
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Moreover, the commenters' views on the need for an intermarket
price protection rule were supported by the various empirical studies
of trading data performed by Commission staff. These studies found,
among other things, that an estimated 1 out of 40 trades for both NYSE
and Nasdaq stocks are executed at prices inferior to the best displayed
quotations, or approximately 98,000 trades per day in Nasdaq stocks
alone.\9\ While the Commission believes that the total number of trade-
throughs should not be the sole consideration in making its policy
choices, the staff studies and analyses demonstrate that trade-through
rates are significant and indicate the need for strengthened order
protection for all NMS stocks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See infra, notes 66-69, 104, and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Why did a broad spectrum of commenters, many of which have
extensive experience and expertise regarding the inner workings of the
equity markets, support the Order Protection Rule and its emphasis on
the principle of best price? They based their support on two
fundamental rationales, with which the Commission fully agrees. First,
strengthened assurance that orders will be filled at the best prices
will give investors, particularly retail investors, greater confidence
that they will be treated fairly when they participate in the equity
markets. Maintaining investor confidence is an essential element of
well-functioning equity markets. Second, protection of the best
displayed and accessible prices will promote deep and stable markets
that minimize investor transaction costs. More than 84 million
individual Americans participate, directly or indirectly, in the U.S.
equity markets.\10\ The transaction costs associated with the prices at
which their orders are executed represent a continual drain on their
long-term savings. Although these costs are difficult to calculate
precisely, they are very real and very substantial, with estimates
ranging from $30 billion to more than $100 billion per year.\11\
Minimizing these investor costs to the greatest extent possible is the
hallmark of efficient markets, which is a primary objective of the NMS.
The Order Protection Rule is needed to help achieve this objective,
thereby improving the long-term financial well-being of millions of
investors and reducing the cost of capital for listed companies.
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\10\ See infra, notes 25-26 and accompanying text.
\11\ See infra, note 990.
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In sum, the rules adopted today are the culmination of a long and
comprehensive rulemaking process. Reaching appropriate policy decisions
in an area as complex as market structure requires an understanding of
the relevant facts and of the often subtle ways in which the markets
work, as well as the balancing of policy objectives that sometimes may
not point in precisely the same direction. Based on the extensive
record that we have developed over the course of the rulemaking
process, the Commission firmly believes that Regulation NMS will
protect investors, promote fair competition, and enhance market
efficiency, and therefore fulfills its Exchange Act responsibility to
facilitate the development of the NMS.
B. NMS Principles and Objectives
1. Competition Among Markets and Competition Among Orders
The NMS is premised on promoting fair competition among individual
markets, while at the same time assuring that all of these markets are
linked together, through facilities and rules, in a unified system that
promotes interaction among the orders of buyers and sellers in a
particular NMS stock. The NMS thereby incorporates two distinct types
of competition--competition among individual markets and competition
among individual orders--that together contribute to efficient markets.
Vigorous competition among markets promotes more efficient and
innovative trading services, while
[[Page 37499]]
integrated competition among orders promotes more efficient pricing of
individual stocks for all types of orders, large and small. Together,
they produce markets that offer the greatest benefits for investors and
listed companies.
Accordingly, the Commission's primary challenge in facilitating the
establishment of an NMS has been to maintain an appropriate balance
between these two vital forms of competition. It particularly has
sought to avoid the extremes of: (1) Isolated markets that trade an NMS
stock without regard to trading in other markets and thereby fragment
the competition among buyers and sellers in that stock; and (2) a
totally centralized system that loses the benefits of vigorous
competition and innovation among individual markets. Achieving this
objective and striking the proper balance clearly can be a difficult
task. Since Congress mandated the establishment of an NMS in 1975, the
Commission frequently has resisted suggestions that it adopt an
approach focusing on a single form of competition that, while perhaps
easier to administer, would forfeit the distinct, but equally vital,
benefits associated with both competition among markets and competition
among orders.
With respect to competition among markets, for example, the record
of the last thirty years should give pause to those who believe that
any market structure regulation is inherently inconsistent with
vigorous market competition. Other countries with significant equity
trading typically have a single, overwhelmingly dominant public
market.\12\ The U.S., in contrast, is fortunate to have equity markets
that are characterized by extremely vigorous competition among a
variety of different types of markets. These include: (1) Traditional
exchanges with active trading floors, which even now are evolving to
expand the range of choices that they offer investors for both
automated and manual trading; (2) purely electronic markets, which
offer both standard limit orders and conditional orders that are
designed to facilitate complex trading strategies; (3) market-making
securities dealers, which offer both automated execution of smaller
orders and the commitment of capital to facilitate the execution of
larger, institutional orders; (4) regional exchanges, many of which
have adopted automated systems for executing smaller orders; and (5)
automated matching systems that permit investors, particularly large
institutions, to seek counter-parties to their trades anonymously and
with minimal price impact.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ These markets include the London Stock Exchange in the
United Kingdom, the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Japan, Euronext in
France, and the Deutsche Bourse in Germany.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, while NMS regulation may channel specific types of market
competition (e.g., by mandating the display to investors of
consolidated prices and including the prices displayed internally by
significant electronic markets), it has been remarkably successful in
promoting market competition in its broader forms that are most
important to investors and listed companies.
The difficulty, however, is that competition among multiple markets
trading the same stocks can detract from the most vigorous competition
among orders in an individual stock, thereby impeding efficient price
discovery for orders of all sizes. The importance of competition among
orders has long been recognized. Indeed, when Congress mandated the
establishment of an NMS, it well stated this basic principle:
``Investors must be assured that they are participants in a system
which maximizes the opportunities for the most willing seller to meet
the most willing buyer.'' \13\ To the extent that competition among
orders is lessened, the quality of price discovery for all sizes of
orders can be compromised. Impaired price discovery could cause market
prices to deviate from fundamental values, reduce market depth and
liquidity,\14\ and create excessive short-term volatility that is
harmful to long-term investors and listed companies. More broadly, when
market prices do not reflect fundamental values, resources will be
misallocated within the economy and economic efficiency--as well as
market efficiency--will be impaired.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ H.R. Rep. 94-123, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 50 (1975). The
quotation from the text of the House Report concludes a cogent
description of the importance of maintaining the proper balance
between competition among markets and competition among orders that
is worth quoting in full:
Critics of this development [multiple trading of stocks] suggest
that the markets are becoming dangerously fragmented. Others contend
that the dilution of large market dominance is the result of healthy
competitive forces which have done much to add to the liquidity and
depth of the securities markets to the benefit of the investing
public. The Committee shares the opinion that our markets will be
strengthened by the infusion of marketmaker competition in listed
securities with the concomitant increase in capital availability and
diminution of risk which results from increased competition among
specialists and marketmakers. Nonetheless, market fragmentation
becomes of increasing concern in the absence of mechanisms designed
to assure that public investors are able to obtain the best price
for securities regardless of the type or physical location of the
market upon which his transaction may be executed. Investors must be
assured that they are participants in a system which maximizes the
opportunities for the most willing seller to meet the most willing
buyer.
Id.
\14\ The Proposing Release and Reproposing Release frequently
emphasized the importance of promoting greater depth and liquidity.
Some commenters appeared to equate depth and liquidity with other
factors, such as trading volume and frequency of quotation updates.
See, e.g., Letter from Edward J. Nicoll, Chief Executive Officer,
Instinet Group Incorporated, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005 (``Instinet Reproposal Letter'') at
9; Letter from Marc E. Lackritz, President, Securities Industry
Association, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated Feb.
1, 2005 (``SIA Reproposal Letter'') at 12. The Commission, however,
uses the terms specifically to refer to the ability of investors to
trade in large size at low cost and in general to a market's
capacity to absorb order imbalances with minimized price impact.
Depth is measured in terms of the volume of stock that can be
readily traded at a particular price point. Liquidity is measured by
the price movement experienced by investors when attempting to trade
in large size. See infra, section II.A.6 (estimate of transaction
costs for equity mutual funds). Although depth and liquidity are
correlated with trading volume, they are not synonymous. For
example, one stock might have less trading volume than another
stock, but still have greater depth available at and close to the
best quoted prices and lower transaction costs for large
institutional investors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Serving the Interests of Long-Term Investors and Listed Companies
In its extended review of market structure issues and in assessing
how best to achieve an appropriate balance between competition among
markets and competition among orders, the Commission has been guided by
a firm belief that one of the most important goals of the equity
markets is to minimize the transaction costs of long-term investors and
thereby to reduce the cost of capital for listed companies. These
functions are inherently related because the cost of capital of listed
companies is influenced by the transaction costs of those who are
willing to accept the risk of holding corporate equity for an extended
period.\15\
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\15\ Investors are more willing to own a stock if it can be
readily traded in the secondary market with low transaction costs.
The greater the willingness of investors to own a stock, the higher
its price will be, thereby reducing the issuer's cost of capital.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Reproposing Release touched on this issue in the specific
context of assessing the effect of the Order Protection Rule on the
interests of professional traders in conducting extremely short-term
trading strategies that can depend on millisecond differences in order
response time from markets. Noting that any protection against trade-
throughs could interfere to some extent with such short-term trading
strategies, the release framed the Commission's policy choice as
follows: ``Should the overall efficiency of the NMS defer to the needs
of professional
[[Page 37500]]
traders, many of whom rarely intend to hold a position overnight? Or
should the NMS serve the needs of longer-term investors, both large and
small, that will benefit substantially from intermarket price
protection?'' \16\ The Reproposing Release emphasized that the NMS must
meet the needs of longer-term investors, noting that any other outcome
would be contrary to the Exchange Act and its objectives of promoting
fair and efficient markets that serve the public interest.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Reproposing Release, 69 FR at 77440.
\17\ Id.
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In response, some commenters disputed this focus on the interests
of long-term investors in formulating Regulation NMS, one even
questioning the Commission's statutory authority to do so.\18\ Other
commenters appeared to share this view, as evidenced by their
downplaying, or failing entirely to address, indications of a need for
improvements in market quality that are important to long-term
investors, such as minimizing short-term price volatility.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Letter from Phylis M. Esposito, Executive Vice President,
Chief Strategy Officer, Ameritrade, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission, dated Jan. 26, 2005 (``Ameritrade Reproposal
Letter'') at 9 (among other issues, questioning Commission's
statutory authority); Letter from James A. Duncan, Chairman, and
John C. Giesea, President and CEO, Security Traders Association, to
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated Jan. 19, 2005 (``STA
Reproposal Letter'') at 6; Letter from William A. Vance, Stephen
Kay, and Kimberly Unger, The Security Traders Association of New
York, Inc., dated Jan. 24, 2005 (``STANY Reproposal Letter'') at 8
n. 18.
\19\ See, e.g., Instinet Reproposal Letter at 7-8 (``We further
believe there is no basis for the Commission's assertion that the
reproposed trade-through rule would increase fill rates or reduce
transitory volatility on the Nasdaq market (or, for that matter,
whether these are in fact `weaknesses' that need to be
addressed.''). Short-term price volatility for Nasdaq stocks is
discussed further in section II.A.1.b below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most of the time, the interests of short-term traders and long-term
investors will not conflict. Short-term traders clearly provide
valuable liquidity to the market. But when the interests of long-term
investors and short-term traders diverge, few issues are more
fundamentally important in formulating public policy for the U.S.
equity markets than the choice between these interests. While achieving
the right balance of competition among markets and competition among
orders will always be a difficult task, there will be no possibility of
accomplishing it if in the case of a conflict the Commission cannot
choose whether the U.S. equity markets should meet the needs of long-
term investors or short-term traders.
The objective of minimizing short-term price volatility offers an
important example where the interests of long-term investors can
diverge from those of short-term traders. Deep and liquid markets that
minimize volatility are of most benefit to long-term investors. Such
markets help reduce transaction costs by furthering the ability of
investors to establish and unwind positions in a stock at prices that
are as close to previously prevailing prices as possible. Indeed, the
1975 Senate Report on the NMS emphasized that one of the ``paramount''
objectives for the NMS is ``the maintenance of stable and orderly
markets with maximum capacity for absorbing trading imbalances without
undue price movements.'' \20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ S. Rep. No. 94-75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 7 (1975).
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Excessively volatile markets, in contrast, can generate many
opportunities for traders to earn short-term profits from rapid price
swings. Short-term traders, in particular, typically possess the
systems capabilities and expertise necessary to enter and exit the
market rapidly to exploit such price swings. Moreover, short-term
traders have great flexibility in terms of their choice of stocks,
choice of initially establishing a long or short position, and time of
entering and exiting the market. Long-term investors (both
institutional and retail), in contrast, typically have an opinion on
the long-term prospects for a company. They therefore want to buy or
sell a particular stock at a particular time. These investors thus are
inherently less able to exploit short-term price swings and, indeed,
their buying or selling interest often can initiate short-term price
movements.\21\ Efficient markets with maximum liquidity and depth
minimize such price movements and thereby afford long-term investors an
opportunity to achieve their trading objectives with the lowest
possible transaction costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Long-term investors, of course, also can be interested in
fast executions. One of the primary effects of the Order Protection
Rule adopted today will be to promote much greater speed of
execution in the market for exchange-listed stocks. The difference
in speed between automated and manual markets often is the
difference between a 1-second response and a 15-second response--a
disparity that clearly can be important to many investors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission recognizes that it is important to avoid false
dichotomies between the interests of short-term traders and long-term
investors, and that many difficult line-drawing issues potentially can
arise in precisely defining the difference between the two terms. For
present purposes, however, these issues can be handled by simply noting
that it makes little sense to refer to someone as ``investing'' in a
company for a few seconds, minutes, or hours.\22\
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\22\ The concept of ownership for a significant time period is
inherent in the meaning of word ``invest.'' A dictionary definition
of ``investor,'' for example, is ``one that seeks to commit funds
for long-term profit with a minimum of risk.'' Webster's Third New
International Dictionary of the English Language 1190 (Unabridged
1993).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short-term traders and market intermediaries unquestionably provide
needed liquidity to the equity markets and are essential to the welfare
of investors. Consequently, much, if not most, of the time the
interests of long-term investors and short-term traders in market
quality issues such as speed and operational efficiency will coincide.
Indeed, implementation of Regulation NMS likely will lead to a
significant expansion of automated trading in exchange-listed stocks
that both benefits all investors and opens up greater potential for
electronic trading in such stocks than currently exists. But when the
interests of long-term investors and short-term traders conflict in
this context, the Commission believes that its clear responsibility is
to uphold the interests of long-term investors.
Indeed, the core concern for the welfare of long-term investors who
depend on equity investments to meet their financial goals was first
expressed in the foundation documents of the Exchange Act itself. In
language that remains remarkably relevant today, the 1934 congressional
reports noted how the national public interest of the equity markets
had grown as more and more Americans had begun to place their savings
in equity investments, both directly and indirectly through investment
intermediaries.\23\ Given this development, the reports emphasized that
``stock exchanges which handle the distribution and trading of a very
substantial part of the entire national wealth * * * cannot operate
under the same traditions and practices as pre-war stock exchanges
which handled substantially only the transactions of professional
investors and speculators.'' \24\
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\23\ H.R. Rep. No. 1383, 73rd Cong., 2d Sess. 3-4 (1934) (``It
is estimated that more than 10,000,000 individual men and women in
the United States are the direct possessors of stocks and bonds;
that over one-fifth of all the corporate stock outstanding in the
country is held by individuals with net incomes of less than $5,000
a year. Over 15,000,000 individuals held insurance policies, the
value of which is dependent on the security holdings of insurance
companies. Over 13,000,000 men and women have savings accounts in
mutual savings banks and at least 25,000,000 have deposits in
national and State banks and trust companies--which are in turn
large holders of corporate stocks and bonds.'').
\24\ Id. at 4. The Congressional emphasis on the interests of
long-term investors versus short-term traders also was expressed in
the 1934 Report on Stock Exchange Practices prepared by
investigators for the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency:
``Transactions in securities on organized exchanges and over-
the-counter markets are affected with the national public interest.
* * * In former years transactions in securities were carried on by
a relatively small portion of the American people. During the last
decade, however, due largely to the development of the means of
communication * * * the entire Nation has become acutely sensitive
to the activities on the securities exchanges. While only a fraction
of the multitude who now own securities can be regarded as actively
trading on the exchanges, the operations of these few profoundly
affect the holdings of all.''
S. Rep. No. 73-1455, 73rd Cong., 2d Sess. 5 (1934).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 37501]]
In the years since 1934, the priority placed by Congress on the
interests of long-term investors has grown more and more significant.
Today, more than 84 million individuals representing more than one-half
of American households own equity securities.\25\ More than 70 million
of these individuals participate indirectly in the equity markets
through ownership of mutual fund shares. Most of them hold their
investments, at least in part, in retirement plans. Indeed, nearly all
view their equity investments as savings for the long-term, and their
median length of ownership of equity mutual funds, both inside and
outside retirement plans, is 10 years.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Investment Company Institute and Securities Industry
Association, Equity Ownership in America 17 (2002).
\26\ Id. at 85, 89, 92, 96.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In assessing the current state of the NMS and formulating its rule
proposals, the Commission has focused on the interests of these
millions of Americans who depend on the performance of their equity
investments for such vital needs as retirement security and their
children's college education. Their investment returns are reduced by
transaction costs of all types, including the explicit costs of
commissions and mutual fund fees. But the largely hidden costs
associated with the prices at which trades are executed often can dwarf
the explicit costs of trading. For example, the implicit transaction
costs associated with the price impact of trades and liquidity search
costs of mutual funds and other institutional investors is estimated at
more than $30 billion per year.\27\ Such hidden costs eat away at the
long-term returns of millions of individual mutual fund shareholders
and pension plan participants. One of the primary objectives of the NMS
is to help reduce such costs by improving market liquidity and depth.
The best way to promote market depth and liquidity is to encourage
vigorous competition among orders. As a result, the Commission cannot
merely focus on one type of competition--competition among markets to
provide trading services--at the expense of competition among orders.
The interests of U.S. long-term investors and listed companies require
that the NMS continue to promote both types of competition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See infra, section II.A.6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Overview of Adopted Rules
1. Order Protection Rule
The Order Protection Rule (Rule 611 under Regulation NMS)
establishes intermarket protection against trade-throughs for all NMS
stocks. A trade-through occurs when one trading center executes an
order at a price that is inferior to the price of a protected
quotation, often representing an investor limit order, displayed by
another trading center.\28\ Many commenters on the proposals,
particularly large institutional investors, strongly supported the need
for enhanced protection of limit orders against trade-throughs.\29\
They emphasized that limit orders are the building blocks of public
price discovery and efficient markets. They stated that a uniform rule
for all NMS stocks, by enhancing protection of displayed prices, would
encourage greater use of limit orders and contribute to increased
market liquidity and depth. The Commission agrees that strengthened
protection of displayed limit orders would help reward market
participants for displaying their trading interest and thereby promote
fairer and more vigorous competition among orders seeking to supply
liquidity. Moreover, strong intermarket price protection offers greater
assurance, on an order-by-order basis, that investors who submit market
orders will receive the best readily available prices for their trades.
The Commission therefore has adopted the Order Protection Rule to
strengthen the protection of displayed and automatically accessible
quotations in NMS stocks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ The nature and scope of quotations that will be protected
under the Order Protection Rule are discussed in detail in sections
II.A.2 and II.B.1 below.
\29\ See infra, note 56 (overview of commenters supporting
trade-through proposal).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Order Protection Rule takes a substantially different approach
than the trade-through provisions currently set forth in the
Intermarket Trading System (``ITS'') Plan,\30\ which apply only to
exchange-listed stocks. The ITS provisions are not promulgated by the
Commission, but rather are rules of the markets participating in the
ITS Plan. These rules were drafted decades ago and do not distinguish
between manual and automated quotations. Moreover, they state that
markets ``should avoid'' trade-throughs and provide an after-the-fact
complaint procedure pursuant to which, if a trade-through occurs, the
aggrieved market may seek satisfaction from the market that traded
through. Finally, the ITS provisions have significant gaps in their
coverage, particularly for off-exchange positioners of large, block
transactions (10,000 shares or greater), that have weakened their
protection of limit orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ The full title of the ITS Plan is ``Plan for the Purpose of
Creating and Operating an Intermarket Communications Linkage
Pursuant to Section 11A(c)(3)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934.'' The ITS Plan was initially approved by the Commission in
1978. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 14661 (Apr. 14, 1978), 43
FR 17419 (Apr. 24, 1978). All national securities exchanges that
trade exchange-listed stocks and the NASD are participants in the
ITS Plan. It requires each participant to provide electronic access
to its displayed best bid or offer to other participants and
provides an electronic mechanism for routing orders, called
commitments to trade, to access those displayed prices. The
participants also agreed to avoid trade-throughs and locked markets
and to adopt rules addressing such practices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast, the adopted Order Protection Rule protects only
quotations that are immediately accessible through automatic execution.
It thereby addresses a serious weakness in the ITS provisions, which
were drafted for a world of floor-based markets and fail to reflect the
disparate speed of response between manual and automated quotations. By
requiring order routers to wait for a response from a manual market,
the ITS trade-through provisions can cause an order to miss both the
best price of a manual quotation and slightly inferior prices at
automated markets that would have been immediately accessible. The
Order Protection Rule eliminates this potential inefficiency by
protecting only automated quotations. It also promotes equal regulation
and fair competition among markets by eliminating any potential
advantage that the ITS trade-through provisions may have given manual
markets over automated markets.
In addition, the Order Protection Rule incorporates an approach to
trade-throughs that is stricter and more comprehensive than the ITS
provisions. First, it requires trading centers to establish, maintain,
and enforce written policies and procedures that are reasonably
designed to prevent trade-throughs, or, if relying on one of the rule's
exceptions, that are reasonably designed to assure compliance with the
exception. To assure effective compliance, such policies and procedures
will need to incorporate objective standards that are coded into a
trading center's automated systems.
[[Page 37502]]
Moreover, a trading center is required to regularly surveil to
ascertain the effectiveness of its policies and procedures and to take
prompt action to remedy deficiencies. Second, the Order Protection Rule
eliminates very significant gaps in the coverage of the ITS provisions
that have undermined the extent to which they protect limit orders and
promote fair and orderly trading. In particular, the ITS provisions do
not cover the transactions of broker-dealers acting as off-exchange
block positioners in exchange-listed stocks. They also exclude trade-
throughs of 100-share quotations, thereby allowing some limit orders of
small investors to be bypassed. The Order Protection Rule closes both
of these gaps in coverage.
The definition of ``protected bid'' or ``protected offer'' in
paragraph (b)(57) of adopted Rule 600 controls the scope of quotations
that are protected by the Order Protection Rule. The Commission is
adopting the reproposed ``Market BBO Alternative'' that protects only
the best bids and offers (``BBOs'') of the nine self-regulatory
organizations (``SROs'') and The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. (``Nasdaq'')
whose members currently trade NMS stocks. As discussed further in
section II.A.5 below, the Commission has decided not to adopt the
reproposed ``Voluntary Depth Alternative.'' In particular, it believes
that the Market BBO Alternative: (1) Strikes an appropriate balance
between competition among markets and competition among orders; and (2)
will be less difficult and costly to implement than the Voluntary Depth
Alternative.
The rule text of the original proposal included a general ``opt-
out'' exception that would have allowed market participants to
disregard displayed quotations. While the opt-out proposal was intended
to provide flexibility to market participants, such an exception would
have left a gap in protection of the best displayed prices and thereby
reduced the proposal's potential benefits for investors. The
elimination of any protection for manual quotations is the principal
reason that this broad exception is no longer necessary in the Order
Protection Rule as adopted. In addition, the Rule adds a number of
tailored exceptions that carve out those situations in which many
investors may otherwise have felt they legitimately needed to opt-out
of a displayed quotation. These exceptions are more consistent with the
principle of protecting the best price than a general opt-out exception
would have been. The additional exceptions also will help assure that
the Order Protection Rule is workable for high-volume stocks. Examples
of these exceptions include intermarket sweep orders, quotations
displayed by markets that fail to meet the response requirements for
automated quotations, and flickering quotations with multiple prices
displayed in a single second.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Flickering quotations are discussed further in section
II.A.3 below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters questioned the need to extend the Order Protection
Rule to Nasdaq stocks.\32\ These commenters generally emphasized the
much improved efficiency of trading in Nasdaq stocks in recent years.
They particularly were concerned that extension of intermarket price
protection to Nasdaq stocks, at least in the absence of a general opt-
out exception, would interfere with current trading methods.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See infra, notes 61-62 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes, however, that intermarket price protection
will benefit investors and strengthen the NMS in both exchange-listed
and Nasdaq stocks. It will contribute to the maintenance of fair and
orderly markets and, thereby, promote investor confidence in the
markets. As discussed below,\33\ trade-through rates are significant in
both Nasdaq and exchange-listed stocks. For example, an estimated 1 of
every 40 trades in both Nasdaq and NYSE stocks represents a significant
trade-through of a displayed quotation. For many active Nasdaq stocks,
approximately 1 of every 11 shares traded is a significant trade-
through. The execution of trades at prices inferior to those offered by
displayed and accessible limit orders is inconsistent with basic
notions of fairness and orderliness, particularly for investors, both
large and small, who post limit orders and see those orders routinely
traded through. These trade-throughs can undermine incentives to
display limit orders. Moreover, many of the investors whose market
orders are executed at inferior prices may not, in fact, be aware they
received an inferior price from their broker and executing market. In
sum, the Commission believes that a rule establishing price protection
on an order-by-order basis for all NMS stocks is needed to protect the
interests of investors, promote the display of limit orders, and
thereby improve the efficiency of the NMS as a whole.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See infra, section II.A.1.a.ii.
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2. Access Rule
The Access Rule (Rule 610 under Regulation NMS) sets forth new
standards governing access to quotations in NMS stocks. As emphasized
by many commenters on the proposals,\34\ protecting the best displayed
prices against trade-throughs would be futile if broker-dealers and
trading centers were unable to access those prices fairly and
efficiently. Accordingly, Rule 610 is designed to promote access to
quotations in three ways. First, it enables the use of private linkages
offered by a variety of connectivity providers,\35\ rather than
mandating a collective linkage facility such as ITS, to facilitate the
necessary access to quotations. The lower cost and increased
flexibility of connectivity in recent years has made private linkages a
feasible alternative to hard linkages, absent barriers to access. Using
private linkages, market participants may obtain indirect access to
quotations displayed by a particular trading center through the
members, subscribers, or customers of that trading center. To promote
this type of indirect access, Rule 610 prohibits a trading center from
imposing unfairly discriminatory terms that would prevent or inhibit
the access of any person through members, subscribers, or customers of
such trading center.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See infra, section III.A.1.
\35\ Private linkages are discussed further in section III.A.1
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, Rule 610 generally limits the fees that any trading center
can charge (or allow to be charged) for accessing its protected
quotations to no more than $0.003 per share.\36\ The purpose of the fee
limitation is to ensure the fairness and accuracy of displayed
quotations by establishing an outer limit on the cost of accessing such
quotations. For example, if the price of a protected offer to sell an
NMS stock is displayed at $10.00, the total cost to access the offer
and buy the stock will be $10.00, plus a fee of no more than $0.003.
The adopted rule thereby assures order routers that displayed prices
are, within a limited range, true prices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ If the price of a protected quotation is less than $1.00,
the fee cannot exceed 0.3% of the quotation price. The rule as
adopted also applies the fee limitation to quotations other than
protected quotations that are the BBOs of an SRO or Nasdaq. See
infra, section III.A.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The adopted fee limitation substantially simplifies the originally-
proposed limitation on fees, which, in general, would have limited the
fees of individual market participants to $0.001 per share, with an
accumulated cap of $0.002 per share. Perhaps more than any other single
issue, the proposed limitation on access fees splintered the
commenters.\37\ Some supported the proposal as a worthwhile compromise
[[Page 37503]]
on an extremely difficult issue. They believed that it would level the
playing field in terms of who could charge fees, as well as give
greater certainty to market participants that quoted prices will,
essentially, be true prices. Others were strongly opposed to any
limitation on fees, believing that competition alone would be
sufficient to address high fees that distort quoted prices. Still
others were equally adamant that all access fees of electronic
communications networks (``ECNs'') charged to non-subscribers should be
prohibited entirely, although they did not see a problem with fees
charged to a market's members or subscribers. Although consensus could
not be achieved on any particular approach, commenters expressed a
strong desire for resolution of a difficult issue that has caused
discord within the securities industry for many years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ The comments on access fees are addressed in section
III.A.2 below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that a single, uniform fee limitation of
$0.003 per share is the fairest and most appropriate resolution of the
access fee issue. First, it will not seriously interfere with current
business practices, as trading centers have very few fees on their
books of more than $0.003 per share or earn substantial revenues from
such fees.\38\ Second, the uniform fee limitation promotes equal
regulation of different types of trading centers, where previously some
had been permitted to charge fees and some had not. Finally and most
importantly, the fee limitation of Rule 610 is necessary to support the
integrity of the price protection requirement established by the
adopted Order Protection Rule. In the absence of a fee limitation, some
``outlier'' trading centers might take advantage of the requirement to
protect displayed quotations by charging exorbitant fees to those
required to access the outlier's quotations. Rule 610's fee limitation
precludes the initiation of this business practice, which would
compromise the fairness and efficiency of the NMS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ See infra, section III.A.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, Rule 610 requires SROs to establish, maintain, and enforce
written rules that, among other things, prohibit their members from
engaging in a pattern or practice of displaying quotations that lock or
cross the protected quotations of other trading centers. Trading
centers will be allowed, however, to display automated quotations that
lock or cross the manual quotations of other trading centers. The
Access Rule thereby reflects the disparity in speed of response between
automated and manual quotations, while also promoting fair and orderly
markets by establishing that the first protected quotation at a price,
whether it be a bid or an offer, is entitled to an execution at that
price instead of being locked or crossed by a quotation on the other
side of the market.
3. Sub-Penny Rule
The Sub-Penny Rule (adopted Rule 612 under Regulation NMS)
prohibits market participants from displaying, ranking, or accepting
quotations in NMS stocks that are priced in an increment of less than
$0.01, unless the price of the quotation is less than $1.00. If the
price of the quotation is less than $1.00, the minimum increment is
$0.0001. A strong consensus of commenters supported the sub-penny
proposal as a means to promote greater price transparency and
consistency, a