Self-Regulatory Organizations; the NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Order Granting Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3 Thereto, To Establish the Market Quality Program, 18393-18402 [2013-06882]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 58 / Tuesday, March 26, 2013 / Notices
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
is similarly designed to provide market
participants with better control over
their execution costs. Specifically, the
changes will ensure that a Post Only
Order will post to the PSX book only in
circumstances where an immediate
execution of the order would not be
more economically advantageous to the
market participant that entered it.
The proposed Price to Comply Post
Order is consistent with the Act because
it provides market makers and other
market participants with a
straightforward mechanism to enter an
order that reprices to ensure that it does
not lock or cross or trade through the
Protected Quotation of another market
center. The rule has previously been
approved for use at NASDAQ and BX.42
Finally, Phlx believes that the
proposed elimination of the Minimum
Life Order is consistent with the Act
because the order has not been widely
used and has not been adopted at any
other exchange. Accordingly, Phlx
believes that offering an order of this
nature is not a required aspect of the
operation of a national securities
exchange.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
Phlx does not believe that the
proposed rule change will result in any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act, as amended.
Specifically, since its introduction with
a price/size execution algorithm, PSX
has not been a significant competitor in
the market for execution of cash equities
orders, with a market share generally
below 1 percent of total consolidated
volume. By means of the changes
proposed in this rule filing, Phlx hopes
to enhance PSX’s competitiveness by
offering functionality that is more
consistent with that offered by other
national securities exchanges. In light of
the highly competitive nature of these
markets, however, PSX will be
successful in attracting additional order
flow only if its overall offering of
functionality and pricing is successful
in convincing market participants to
direct order flow to it, rather than the
larger number of exchanges and
alternative trading systems that compete
with it. Accordingly, Phlx does not
believe that the changes proposed
herein will impose any burden on
competition, because they do not
provide any means through which PSX
may diminish the free choice with
42 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 54155
(July 14, 2006), 71 FR 41291 (July 20, 2006) (SR–
NASDAQ–2006–001); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 59154 (December 23, 2008), 73 FR
80468 (December 31, 2008) (SR–BSE–2008–48).
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regard to order routing decisions that
exists in the market. To the extent,
however, that the changes make PSX a
more attractive trading venue, they have
the potential to enhance competition by
providing market participants with
additional choices when making such
decisions.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
Written comments were neither
solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the Exchange consents,
the Commission shall: (a) By order
approve or disapprove such proposed
rule change, or (b) institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
18393
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–Phlx–
2013–24 and should be submitted on or
before April 16, 2013.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.43
Kevin M. O’Neill,
Deputy Secretary.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
[FR Doc. 2013–06880 Filed 3–25–13; 8:45 am]
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number SR–Phlx–2013–24 on the
subject line.
Self-Regulatory Organizations; the
NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Order
Granting Approval of a Proposed Rule
Change, as Modified by Amendment
Nos. 1 and 3 Thereto, To Establish the
Market Quality Program
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–Phlx–2013–24. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
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BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–69195; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2012–137]
March 20, 2013.
On December 7, 2012, The NASDAQ
Stock Market LLC (‘‘Exchange’’ or
‘‘NASDAQ’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’ or ‘‘Exchange Act’’) 1 and
Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2 a proposed rule
change to establish the Market Quality
Program (‘‘MQP’’ or ‘‘Program’’) on a
pilot basis.3 On December 20, 2012, the
43 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19–4.
3 The Exchange states that SR–NASDAQ–2012–
137 replaces SR–NASDAQ–2012–043, which was
withdrawn by the Exchange. See Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 66765 (Apr. 6, 2012), 77
FR 22042 (Apr. 12, 2012) (SR–NASDAQ–2012–043)
1 15
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Exchange submitted Amendment No. 1
to the proposed rule change, which
replaced and superseded the proposed
rule change in its entirety. The proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment
No. 1 thereto, was published for
comment in the Federal Register on
December 31, 2012.4 The Commission
initially received two comment letters
on the proposed rule change.5 On
February 7, 2013, the Exchange
submitted Amendment No. 2 to the
proposed rule change. On February 8,
2013, the Exchange withdrew
Amendment No. 2 and filed
Amendment No. 3 to the proposed rule
change.6 On February 14, 2013, the
Commission extended the time period
during which it must approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to
disapprove the proposed rule change, to
March 31, 2013.7 The Commission
subsequently received one additional
comment letter on the proposed rule
change.8 This order grants approval of
the proposed rule change, as modified
by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3.9
and 68378 (Dec. 6, 2012), 77 FR 74042 (Dec. 12,
2012). See also Notice, infra note 4, at 77141, n.3.
4 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68515 (Dec.
21, 2012), 77 FR 77141 (Dec. 31, 2012) (‘‘Notice’’).
5 See Letter From Rey Ramsey, President & CEO,
TechNet, dated Jan. 22, 2013 (‘‘TechNet Letter’’)
and Letter From Daniel G. Weaver, Ph.D., Professor
of Finance, Rutgers Business School, dated Jan. 30,
2013 (‘‘Weaver Letter’’).
6 The Exchange withdrew Amendment No. 2 due
to a technical error in the amendment. In
Amendment No. 3, the Exchange clarified that: (i)
The Exchange may limit on a Program-wide basis
the number of Exchange-Traded Funds (‘‘ETFs’’)
per MQP Company that can participate in the MQP,
and that the Exchange would not be limiting the
number of actual shares issued by an MQP
Company for a particular ETF participating in the
Program; (ii) the Exchange will provide in the
monthly public report to the Commission relating
to the MQP (a) information on the market quality
of MQP Securities after they exceed the threshold
and ‘‘graduate’’ from the Program pursuant to
proposed Rule 5950(d)(1)(A), and (b) its analysis of
the information to be included in the report and its
assessment of the efficacy of the MQP; and (iii) the
Exchange will provide to the Commission data and
analyses about comparable ETFs that are listed on
the Exchange but that are not in the MQP, as well
as any other MQP-related data and analyses
requested by Commission staff for the purpose of
evaluating the efficacy of the MQP. Amendment No.
3 provides clarification to the proposed rule change,
and because it does not materially affect the
substance of the proposed rule change, Amendment
No. 3 does not require notice and comment.
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68925
(Feb. 14, 2013), 78 FR 12116 (Feb. 21, 2013).
8 See Letter from Albert J. Menkveld, Associate
Professor of Finance, VU University Amsterdam,
dated Feb. 18, 2013 (‘‘Menkveld Letter’’).
9 Today the Commission also is granting
exemptive relief from Rule 102 under Regulation M
concerning the MQP. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 69196 (March 20, 2013) (Order Granting
a Limited Exemption from Rule 102 of Regulation
M Concerning the NASDAQ Stock Market LLC
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I. Description of the Proposal
As set forth in more detail in the
Notice,10 the Exchange is proposing to
amend its rules to add NASDAQ Rule
5950 (Market Quality Program) to
establish an MQP listing fee and related
market maker incentive program, and to
adopt interpretation IM–2460–1 to
exempt the MQP from NASDAQ Rule
2460 (Payment for Market Making), on
a pilot basis. The MQP will be a
voluntary program, and participation in
the program will be at the discretion of
each MQP Company (as defined below),
subject to the requirements set forth in
the proposed rule.
A. Proposed NASDAQ Rule 5950
(Market Quality Program)
The Exchange states that the proposed
MQP is a voluntary program designed to
promote market quality in certain
securities listed on the Exchange (‘‘MQP
Securities’’).11 MQP Securities will
consist of ETF securities issued by an
MQP Company 12 and listed on the
Exchange pursuant to NASDAQ Rule
5705.13 In addition to the standard (nonMQP) Exchange listing fee applicable to
an MQP Security set forth in the
NASDAQ Rule 5000 Series (consisting
of NASDAQ Rules 5000–5999), an MQP
Company may incur a fee (‘‘MQP Fee’’),
on behalf of an MQP Security, to
participate in the Program.14 The
Exchange represents that an MQP Fee
will be used for the purpose of
incentivizing one or more Market
Makers 15 in the MQP Security (‘‘MQP
Market Maker’’) to enhance the market
quality of the MQP Security.16 Subject
to the conditions set forth in the
Stock’s Market Quality Program Pilot Pursuant to
Regulation M Rule 102(e)).
10 See Notice, supra note 4.
11 See proposed Rule 5950 Preamble.
12 The term ‘‘MQP Company’’ means the trust or
company housing the ETF or, if the ETF is not a
series of a trust or company, then the ETF itself. See
proposed Rule 5950(e)(5).
13 See proposed Rule 5950(e)(1) (defining the term
‘‘MQP Security’’ to mean an ETF security issued by
an MQP Company that meets all of the
requirements to be listed on the Exchange pursuant
to Rule 5705). The term ‘‘Exchange Traded Fund’’
includes Portfolio Depository Receipts and Index
Fund Shares, which are defined in NASDAQ Rule
5705. See proposed Rule 5950(e)(2).
14 See proposed Rules 5950 Preamble and
5950(b)(2). MQP Fees for MQP Securities will be
paid by the Sponsors associated with the MQP
Companies. See proposed Rule 5950(e)(5). See also
proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(C)(i) (requiring that the
MQP Fee in respect of an ETF be paid by the
Sponsor(s) of the ETF). The term ‘‘Sponsor’’ means
the registered investment adviser that provides
investment management services to an MQP
Company or any of the adviser’s parents or
subsidiaries. See proposed Rule 5950(e)(5).
15 The term ‘‘Market Maker’’ has the meaning
given in NASDAQ Rule 5005(a)(24). See proposed
Rule 5950(e)(3).
16 See proposed Rule 5950 Preamble.
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proposed rule, this incentive payment
will be credited (‘‘MQP Credit’’) to one
or more MQP Market Makers that make
a high-quality market in the MQP
Security pursuant to the MQP.17
1. Application and Withdrawal
An MQP Company that wants to have
its MQP Security participate in the
MQP, and a Market Maker that wants to
participate in the MQP, will each be
required to submit an application in the
form prescribed by the Exchange.18 The
Exchange can, on a program-wide basis,
limit the number of MQP Securities that
any one MQP Company may have in the
MQP.19 In determining whether to limit
the number of MQP Securities per MQP
Company, the Exchange will consider
all relevant information, including
whether a restriction, if any, is
consistent with the goals of the MQP
and in the best interest of the Exchange,
the MQP Company, and investors.20 The
Exchange can also, on a program-wide
basis, limit the number of MQP Market
Makers permitted to register in an MQP
Security.21 If such a limit is established,
the Exchange will allocate available
MQP Market Maker registrations in a
first-come-first-served fashion based on
successful completion of an MQP
Market Maker application.22
The Exchange will provide
notification on its Web site regarding: (i)
The acceptance of an MQP Company
(on behalf of an MQP Security) and an
MQP Market Maker into the MQP; (ii)
the total number of MQP Securities that
any one MQP Company may have in the
MQP; (iii) the names of MQP Securities
and the MQP Market Maker(s) in each
MQP Security, and the dates that an
MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, commenced participation in
and withdrew or was terminated from
17 See proposed Rule 5950 Preamble. The MQP
Credit will be paid to eligible MQP Market Maker(s)
based on quoting and trading activity in the MQP
Security, as discussed in further detail below. See
infra notes 47–55 and accompanying text.
18 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1).
19 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(A). The Exchange
clarified that this provision is intended to allow the
Exchange, on a Program-wide basis, to limit the
number of ETFs that any one MQP Company may
have in the MQP, and that this provision would not
allow the Exchange to limit the number of actual
shares issued by any MQP Company for a particular
ETF participating in the MQP. See Amendment No.
3, supra note 6.
20 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(B). Factors that
could be considered by the Exchange include, but
are not limited to, the current and expected
liquidity characteristics of MQP Securities; the
projected initial and continuing market quality
needs of MQP Securities; and the trading
characteristics of MQP Securities (e.g., quoting,
trading, and volume). See proposed Rule
5950(a)(1)(B)(i).
21 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(3).
22 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(3)(A).
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the MQP; and (iv) any limit on the
number of MQP Market Makers
permitted to register in an MQP
Security.23
After an MQP Company, on behalf of
an MQP Security, has been in the MQP
for not less than two consecutive
quarters but less than one year, it can
voluntarily withdraw from the MQP on
a quarterly basis.24 An MQP Company
seeking to withdraw from the MQP must
notify the Exchange in writing not less
than one month prior to withdrawing
from the MQP. The Exchange can
determine to allow an MQP Company to
withdraw from the MQP earlier.25 In
making this determination, the
Exchange may take into account the
volume and price movements in the
MQP Security; the liquidity, size
quoted, and quality of the market in the
MQP Security; and any other relevant
factors.26 After an MQP Company, on
behalf of an MQP Security, has been in
the MQP for one year or more, it can
voluntarily withdraw from the MQP on
a monthly basis, provided that it has
notified the Exchange in writing not less
than one month prior to withdrawing
from the MQP.27 After an MQP
Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, has been in the MQP for one
year, the MQP and all obligations and
requirements of the MQP will
automatically continue on an annual
basis, unless: (a) The Exchange
terminates the MQP by providing not
less than one month prior notice of
intent to terminate; (b) the MQP
Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, withdraws from the MQP
pursuant to the proposed rule; (c) the
MQP Company is terminated from the
MQP pursuant to proposed Rule
5950(d); 28 or (d) the pilot Program is not
23 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(C) and proposed
Rule 5950(c)(3). The Exchange also will include on
its Web site a statement about the MQP that sets
forth a general description of the MQP as
implemented on a pilot basis and a fair and
balanced summation of the potentially positive
aspects of the MQP (e.g., enhancement of liquidity
and market quality in MQP Securities) as well as
the potentially negative aspects and risks of the
MQP (e.g., possible lack of liquidity and negative
price impact on MQP Securities that withdraw or
are terminated from the MQP), and indicates how
interested parties can get additional information
about products in the MQP. See proposed Rule
5950(a)(1)(C)(iv).
24 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(A).
25 Id.
26 Id.
27 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(B).
28 Proposed Rule 5950(d) states, in part, that the
MQP will terminate in respect of an MQP Security
under the following circumstances: (A) An MQP
Security sustains an average daily trading volume
(consolidated trades in all U.S. Markets) of one
million shares or more for three consecutive
months; (B) an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, withdraws from the MQP, is no longer
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extended or made permanent pursuant
to a proposed rule change approved by
the Commission under Section 19(b) 29
of the Exchange Act.30
After an MQP Market Maker has been
in the MQP for not less than one
quarter, the MQP Market Maker can
withdraw from the MQP on a quarterly
basis. The MQP Market Maker must
notify the Exchange in writing one
month prior to withdrawing from the
MQP.31
The Exchange will provide
notification on its Web site when it
receives notification that an MQP
Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, or an MQP Market Maker
intends to withdraw from the MQP,
including the date of actual withdrawal
or termination from the MQP.32
2. MQP Company Eligibility and Fee
Liability
For an MQP Company, on behalf of an
MQP Security, to be eligible to
participate in the MQP, the following
conditions must be satisfied: (i) The
Exchange must have accepted the MQP
Company’s application in respect of the
MQP Security and must have accepted
the application of at least one MQP
Market Maker in the same MQP
Security; (ii) the MQP Security must
meet all requirements to be listed on the
Exchange as an ETF; (iii) the MQP
Security must meet all Exchange
requirements for continued listing at all
times the MQP Security is in the MQP;
and (iv) while an MQP Company lists an
MQP Security, the MQP Company must,
on a product-specific Web site for each
product, indicate that the product is in
the MQP and provide the link to the
Exchange’s MQP Web site.33
An MQP Company participating in
the MQP will incur an annual basic
MQP Fee of $50,000 per MQP Security
(‘‘Basic MQP Fee’’), which must be paid
to the Exchange prospectively each
quarter.34 An MQP Company may also,
on an annual basis, voluntarily select to
incur an annual supplemental MQP Fee
per MQP Security (‘‘Supplemental MQP
eligible to be in the MQP pursuant to the proposed
rule, or its Sponsor ceases to make MQP Fee
payments to the Exchange; (C) an MQP Security is
delisted or is no longer eligible for the MQP; (D) an
MQP Security does not have at least one MQP
Market Maker for more than one quarter; or (E) an
MQP Security does not, for two consecutive
quarters, have at least one MQP Market Maker that
is eligible for the MQP Credit.
29 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
30 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(3).
31 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(C).
32 See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(D).
33 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(1).
34 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(A). MQP Fees for
MQP Securities will be paid by the Sponsors
associated with the MQP Companies. See supra
note 14.
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18395
Fee’’), which must be paid to the
Exchange prospectively each quarter.35
The Basic MQP Fee and Supplemental
MQP Fee cannot exceed $100,000 per
year when combined.36 The amount of
the Supplemental MQP Fee, if any, for
each MQP Security will be determined
by the MQP Company initially and will
remain the same for one year.37 The
Exchange will provide notification on
its Web site regarding the amount, if
any, of any Supplemental MQP Fee
determined by an MQP Company per
MQP Security.38
The Basic MQP Fee and
Supplemental MQP Fee, if any, will be
in addition to the standard (non-MQP)
NASDAQ listing fee applicable to the
MQP Security and will not offset the
standard listing fee.39 The Exchange
will prospectively bill each MQP
Company for the quarterly MQP Fee for
each MQP Security.40 Basic MQP Fees
and the Supplemental MQP Fees will be
credited to the NASDAQ General
Fund.41
3. MQP Market Maker Eligibility and
MQP Credit Distribution
For a Market Maker to be eligible to
participate in the MQP, the Exchange
must have accepted the Market Maker’s
application in respect of an MQP
Security and must have accepted the
application of the MQP Company in
respect of the same MQP Security.42 In
addition, to be eligible to receive a
periodic MQP Credit out of the
NASDAQ General Fund, MQP Market
Makers must, when making markets in
an MQP Security, meet the applicable
Market Maker obligations pursuant to
NASDAQ Rule 4613 43 and must also
35 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(B). As noted
above, MQP Fees for MQP Securities will be paid
by the Sponsors associated with the MQP
Companies. See supra notes 14 and 34.
36 Id.
37 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(B)(i).
38 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(B)(ii).
39 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(C).
40 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(D). As discussed
above, the MQP Fee for an MQP Security will be
paid by the Sponsor(s) associated with the MQP
Company. See supra note 14.
41 See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(E).
42 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(1)(A). The Exchange
also could accept the MQP applications of multiple
MQP Market Makers in the same MQP Security,
subject to any limitation on the number of MQP
Market Makers established pursuant to the
proposed rule. Id.
43 NASDAQ Rule 4613 states that market making
obligations applicable to NASDAQ members that
are registered as Market Makers include, among
other things, the following quotation requirements
and obligations: For each security in which a
member is registered as a Market Maker, the
member shall be willing to buy and sell the security
for its own account on a continuous basis during
regular market hours and shall enter and maintain
a two-sided trading interest (‘‘Two-Sided
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meet or exceed the following
requirements on a monthly basis with
respect to an MQP Security: (i) For at
least 25% of the time when quotes can
be entered in the Regular Market
Session,44 as averaged over the course of
a calendar month, maintain at least 500
shares of attributable, displayed quotes
or orders at the National Best Bid
(‘‘NBB’’) or better, and at least 500
shares of attributable, displayed quotes
or orders at the National Best Offer
(‘‘NBO’’) or better; and (ii) for at least
90% of the time when quotes can be
entered in the Regular Market Session,
as averaged over the course of a month,
maintain at least 2,500 shares of
attributable, displayed posted liquidity
on the NASDAQ Market Center 45 that
are priced no wider than 2% away from
the NBB, and at least 2,500 shares of
attributable, displayed posted liquidity
on the NASDAQ Market Center that are
priced no wider than 2% away from the
NBO.46
Obligation’’) that is identified to NASDAQ as the
interest meeting the obligation and is displayed in
NASDAQ’s quotation montage at all times. Interest
eligible to be considered as part of a Market Maker’s
Two-Sided Obligation shall have a displayed
quotation size of at least one normal unit of trading
(or a larger multiple thereof); provided, however,
that a Market Maker may augment its Two-Sided
Obligation size to display limit orders priced at the
same price as the Two-Sided Obligation. Unless
otherwise designated, a ‘‘normal unit of trading’’
shall be 100 shares. After an execution against its
Two-Sided Obligation, a Market Maker must ensure
that additional trading interest exists in NASDAQ
to satisfy its Two-Sided Obligation either by
immediately entering new interest to comply with
this obligation to maintain continuous two-sided
quotations or by identifying existing interest on the
NASDAQ book that will satisfy this obligation. See
Notice, supra note 4, at 77148, n.68.
44 The term ‘‘Regular Market Session’’ has the
meaning given in NASDAQ Rule 4120(b)(4)(D). See
proposed Rule 5950(e)(6).
45 The term ‘‘NASDAQ Market Center’’ has the
meaning given in NASDAQ Rule 4751(a). See
proposed Rule 5950(e)(4).
46 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(1)(B). The Exchange
provides the following examples to illustrate these
market quality requirements:
Regarding the first market quality standard (25%),
in an MQP Security where the NBBO is $25.00 ×
$25.10, for a minimum of 25% of the time when
quotes can be entered in the Regular Market Session
as averaged over the course of a month, an MQP
Market Maker must maintain bids at or better than
$25.00 for at least 500 shares and must maintain
offers at or better than $25.10 for at least 500 shares.
Thus, if there were 20 trading days in a given
month and the MQP Market Maker met this
requirement 20% of the time when quotes can be
entered in the Regular Market Session for 10 trading
sessions and 40% of the time when quotes can be
entered in the Regular Market Session for 10 trading
sessions then the MQP Market Maker would have
met the requirement 30% of the time in that month.
Regarding the second market quality standard
(90%), in an MQP Security where the NBBO is
$25.00 × $25.10, for a minimum of 90% of the time
when quotes can be entered in the Regular Market
Session as averaged over the course of a month, an
MQP Market Maker must post bids for an aggregate
of 2,500 shares between $24.50 and $25.00, and
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MQP Credits for each MQP Security
will be calculated monthly and credited
out of the NASDAQ General Fund
quarterly on a pro rata basis to one or
more eligible MQP Market Makers.47
Each MQP Credit will be allocated 50%
to a ‘‘Quote Share Payment’’ that is
based on ‘‘Qualified Quotes,’’ and 50%
to a ‘‘Trade Share Payment’’ that is
based on ‘‘Qualified Trades.’’ 48 A
‘‘Qualified Quote’’ represents
attributable and displayed liquidity
(either quotes or orders) entered by an
MQP Market Maker in an MQP Security
that is posted within 2% of the NBBO.49
A ‘‘Qualified Trade’’ represents a
liquidity-providing execution in an
MQP Security by an MQP Market Maker
of a Qualified Quote on the NASDAQ
Market Center.50 Quote Share Payments
will be based in equal proportions on:
(a) Average quoted size at or better than
the NBBO; and (b) average time spent
quoting at or better than the NBBO.51
Trade Share Payments will be based
upon each MQP Market Maker’s share of
total Qualified Trades in an MQP
Security executed on the NASDAQ
Market Center.52 Quote Share Payments
and Trade Share Payments will be
composed of Basic MQP Fees and
Supplemental MQP Fees, if any.53
An MQP Credit will be credited
quarterly to an MQP Market Maker on
a pro rata basis for each month during
the preceding quarter that an MQP
Market Maker is eligible to receive a
credit pursuant to the proposed rule.54
The calculation to establish the
post offers for an aggregate of 2,500 shares between
$25.10 and $25.60. Thus, if there were 20 trading
days in a given month and the MQP Market Maker
met this requirement 88% of the time when quotes
can be entered in the Regular Market Session for 10
trading sessions and 98% of the time when quotes
can be entered in the Regular Market Session for 10
trading sessions then the MQP Market Maker would
have met the requirement 93% of the time in that
month.
See Notice, supra note 4, at 77148–49, n.71.
47 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2). If only one MQP
Market Maker meets its obligations under the
proposal with respect to an MQP Security, the
entire MQP Credit available for that MQP Security
will be distributed by the Exchange to that MQP
Market Maker out of the NASDAQ General Fund.
If multiple MQP Market Makers satisfy their
obligations with respect to an MQP Security, the
available MQP Credit for the quarter will be
distributed pro rata among them. See Notice, supra
note 4, at 77150. If no MQP Market Maker is eligible
to receive an MQP Credit, the MQP Fee relating to
the MQP Security will remain in the Exchange’s
General Fund. See id. at 77147.
48 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(A).
49 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(A)(i).
50 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(A)(ii).
51 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(B)(ii).
52 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(B)(i).
53 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(B)(iii). As
discussed above, MQP Credits will be credited out
of the NASDAQ General Fund. See supra note 47
and accompanying text.
54 See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(C).
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eligibility of an MQP Market Maker will
be done on a monthly basis.55
4. Termination of the MQP
The MQP will terminate in respect of
an MQP Security under any of the
following circumstances: (i) The MQP
Security sustains an average daily
trading volume (consolidated trades in
all U.S. markets) (‘‘ATV’’) of 1,000,000
shares or more for three consecutive
months; (ii) an MQP Company, on
behalf of an MQP Security, withdraws
from the MQP, is no longer eligible to
be in the MQP, or its Sponsor ceases to
make MQP Fee payments to the
Exchange; (iii) the MQP Security is
delisted or is no longer eligible for the
MQP; (iv) the MQP Security does not
have at least one MQP Market Maker for
more than one quarter; or (v) the MQP
Security does not, for two consecutive
quarters, have at least one MQP Market
Maker that is eligible for MQP Credit.56
Any MQP Credits remaining upon
termination of the MQP in respect of an
MQP Security will be distributed on a
pro rata basis to the MQP Market
Makers that made a market in the MQP
Security and were eligible to receive
MQP Credits pursuant to the proposed
rule.57 Termination of an MQP
Company, MQP Security, or MQP
Market Maker from the MQP will not
preclude the Exchange from allowing reentry into the MQP where the Exchange
deems proper.58
5. Pilot Basis
To provide the Exchange, the
Commission, and other interested
parties an opportunity to evaluate the
impact of the MQP on the quality of
markets in MQP Securities, the
Exchange has proposed to implement
the MQP as a one-year pilot program
that will commence when the MQP is
implemented by the Exchange’s
acceptance of an MQP Company, on
behalf of an MQP Security, and relevant
MQP Market Maker into the MQP. The
MQP will end one year after
implementation, unless extended
pursuant to a proposed rule change
approved by the Commission under
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.59
55 Id. For example, if during a quarter an MQP
Market Maker was eligible to receive a credit for
two out of three months, the MQP Market Maker
would receive a quarterly pro rata MQP Credit for
those two months. Id.
56 See proposed Rule 5950(d)(1).
57 See proposed Rule 5950(d)(2). As discussed
above, if no Market Maker is eligible to receive
MQP Credits pursuant to the proposed rule, the
MQP Fee will remain in the Exchange’s General
Fund. See supra note 47.
58 See proposed Rule 5950(d)(3).
59 See proposed Rule 5950(f).
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During the pilot period, the Exchange
will periodically provide information to
the Commission about market quality in
respect of the MQP. Specifically, the
Exchange will submit monthly reports
to the Commission about market quality
in respect of the MQP (and will make
these monthly reports public). The
reports will include data and analysis
with respect to MQP Securities that are
in the Program, as well as data and
analysis about the market quality of
MQP Securities that exceed the one
million ATV threshold and ‘‘graduate’’
from the Program pursuant to proposed
Rule 5950(d)(1)(A).60 The reports will
compare, to the extent practicable,
securities before and after they are in
the MQP, and will include information
regarding the MQP such as: (i) Rule 605
metrics; 61 (ii) volume metrics; (iii) the
number of MQP Market Makers; (iv)
spread size; and (v) the availability of
shares at the NBBO.62 These reports also
will include the Exchange’s analysis of
the information and assessment of the
efficacy of the MQP.63 In addition, the
Exchange will provide similar data and
analyses to the Commission about
comparable ETFs that are listed on the
Exchange but that are not in the MQP,
as well as any other MQP-related data
and analyses requested by Commission
staff for the purpose of evaluating the
efficacy of the MQP.64 The Exchange
will post the monthly reports on its Web
site.65 The first report will be submitted
within sixty days after the MQP
becomes operative.66
B. Proposed Interpretation IM–2460–1
(Market Quality Program)
As part of its proposal to establish the
MQP by adding Rule 5950, the
Exchange is amending NASDAQ Rule
2460 (Payments for Market Making),
which prohibits direct or indirect
payment by an issuer to a Market Maker,
to adopt a new interpretive provision to
the rule.67 Specifically, the Exchange is
proposing to adopt new interpretation
IM–2460–1 (Market Quality Program) to
provide that Rule 2460 will not be
applicable to a member that is accepted
60 See
Amendment No. 3, supra note 6.
CFR 242.605.
62 See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149. See also
Amendment No. 3, supra note 6.
63 See Amendment No. 3, supra note 6.
64 See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149. See also
Amendment No. 3, supra note 6.
65 See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149.
66 Id.
67 In relevant part, Rule 2460 provides that ‘‘[n]o
member or person associated with a member shall
accept any payment or other consideration, directly
or indirectly, from an issuer of a security, or any
affiliate or promoter thereof, for publishing a
quotation, acting as market maker in a security, or
submitting an application in connection therewith.’’
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61 17
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into the MQP pursuant to proposed Rule
5950 (or to a person that is associated
with that member) for its conduct in
connection with the MQP.68
C. Information Bulletin and
Surveillance
The Exchange will issue to its
members an information bulletin about
the MQP prior to operation of the
Program.69
The Exchange represents that its
surveillance procedures are adequate to
properly monitor the trading of the MQP
Securities on the Exchange during all
trading sessions and to detect and deter
violations of the Exchange’s rules and
applicable federal securities laws.
Trading of the MQP Securities through
the Exchange will be subject to FINRA’s
surveillance procedures for derivative
products including ETFs.70 The
Exchange may obtain information
through the Intermarket Surveillance
Group (‘‘ISG’’) from other exchanges
that are members or affiliates of ISG and
from listed MQP Companies and public
and non-public data sources such as, for
example, Bloomberg.
II. Summary of Comment Letters
The Commission received three
comment letters in support of the
proposed rule change.71
One commenter believes that the
proposed MQP would be an important,
positive first step towards addressing
the lack of liquidity for many securities
in today’s market.72 This commenter
states its belief that the MQP is designed
to encourage liquidity where it generally
has not flourished, and would make
securities that participate in the
Program more attractive to a broader
range of investors.73 This commenter
also believes that the MQP has the
potential to benefit promising tech
18397
companies that today may lack liquid,
quality markets.74
Another commenter states that it fully
supports NASDAQ’s proposal and urges
the Commission to adopt a stance
allowing direct payment between
issuers and market makers.75 This
commenter states that direct payments
from issuers to market makers are used
in a number of markets outside of the
U.S., and argues that such programs are
very successful, resulting in lower
transaction costs, lower volatility, and
higher depth for investors.76 This
commenter points to academic studies
finding that such programs applied to
common stocks generally improve
market quality and benefit social
welfare.77 This commenter cites an
article finding that narrower spreads
arising from designated market makers
with an affirmative obligation to set
spreads narrower than would exist
otherwise will induce both uninformed
and informed traders to trade more,
which in turn will lead to increased
price efficiency and faster price
discovery.78 This commenter also
discusses his own study of payments
from issuers of common stock to market
makers and concludes that market
makers entering into these types of
agreements provide liquidity buffers
against supply and demand shocks.79
This commenter states that there have
been no reports of manipulation
attempts by issuers or abuses by market
makers relating to paid-for market
making arrangements abroad, and
argues that the implementation of
paying market makers to improve
market quality in other countries
probably improved investor confidence,
as evidenced by the increase in volume
and order size observed by
74 Id.
68 See
proposed IM–2460–1. The Exchange notes
that, based on discussions with the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority (‘‘FINRA’’), it
expects FINRA to file a proposed rule change to
exempt the MQP from FINRA Rule 5250. See
Notice, supra note 4, at 77141, n.7. Similar to
NASDAQ Rule 2460, FINRA Rule 5250 (formerly
NASD Rule 2460) prohibits FINRA members from
directly or indirectly accepting payment from an
issuer of a security for acting as a market maker. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 38812 (July 3,
1997), 62 FR 37105 (July 10, 1997) (SR–NASD–97–
29) (‘‘NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order’’).
69 See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149.
70 FINRA surveils trading on the Exchange
pursuant to a regulatory services agreement with
the Exchange. The Exchange states that it is
responsible for FINRA’s performance under this
regulatory services agreement. See Notice, supra
note 4, at 77149, n.79.
71 See TechNet Letter, Weaver Letter, and
Menkveld Letter, supra notes 5 and 8.
72 Id.
73 Id.
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Frm 00093
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
75 See
Weaver Letter, supra note 5, at 1.
id. at 1, 3–4 (citing Euronext, Deutsche
Borse, NASDAQ OMX’s European exchanges, and
the Oslo Stock Exchange as markets where such
programs have been successful).
77 See id. at 1–2 (citing to the following studies:
D.G. Weaver and A. Anand, ‘‘The Value of the
Specialist: Empirical Evidence from the CBOE’’
Journal of Financial Markets, Vol. 9, no. 2, 100–118
(2006); D.G. Weaver, A. Anand, and C. Tanggaard
‘‘Paying for Market Quality’’ Journal of Financial
and Quantitative Analysis, Vol. 44, 1427–1457
(2009) (‘‘Weaver Study’’); H. Bessembinder, J. Hao,
and M. Lemmon ‘‘Why Designate Market Makers?
Affirmative Obligations and Market Quality’’
Working paper, University of Utah (2006)
(‘‘Bessembinder Study’’); and A. Charitou and M.
Panayides, ‘‘Market Making in International Capital
Markets’’ International Journal of Managerial
Finance, Vol. 5, 50–80 (2009).
78 See id. at 3 (citing to the Bessembinder Study,
supra note 77).
79 See id. at 2 (citing to the Weaver Study, supra
note 77).
76 See
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 58 / Tuesday, March 26, 2013 / Notices
researchers.80 The commenter further
argues that the payments made to MQP
Market Makers under the Exchange’s
proposal will not be of sufficient size to
provide enough incentive for
manipulation.81
Another commenter is supportive of
an MQP pilot study and believes that
the MQP could create value for an issuer
by enabling an issuer to essentially
guarantee liquidity in its stock.82 The
commenter views the proposed MQP as
a form of ‘‘liquidity insurance’’ through
which shareholders in the issuer agree
ex ante to pay for a minimum liquidity
guarantee to insure against uncertain
future liquidity.83 The commenter states
that if future liquidity for a security is
less uncertain, more investors should
participate in the market for the
security, creating a beneficial
equilibrium of increased liquidity and
increased investor participation.84 Thus,
the commenter asserts, the MQP could
be a way to jump-start trading in a
particular product at launch, and if
there is intrinsic interest in the product,
the product launch should have a better
chance of being successful.85 This
commenter cites his own study of
designated market maker contracts for
common stocks at Euronext for the
finding that such contracts on average
improve the liquidity level, reduce
liquidity risk, and reduce the size of
pricing errors in such stocks, among
other things,86 and states that his study
complements the generally favorable
evidence from other European markets
on designated market maker contracts.87
This commenter further notes that the
risk that insider information at an issuer
could reach an MQP Market Maker is
low because the terms of the Program
are fixed and specific, there is no need
for communication between an issuer
and the MQP Market Maker after the
Program is in place, the Exchange
monitors the performance of the MQP
Market Makers, and the securities
proposed for inclusion in the MQP
(ETPs) are baskets of securities and
80 See
id. at 4 and 6.
id. at 7.
82 See Menkveld Letter, supra note 8, at 2.
83 Id.
84 Id.
85 Id.
86 See id. at 1–2 (citing to A.J. Menkveld & T.
Wang, ‘‘How do designated market makers create
value for small-caps?’’ Manuscript, VU University,
Amsterdam (2011)).
87 See id. at 2 (citing to the Weaver Study, supra
note 77; M. Nimalendran & G. Petrella, ‘‘Do ‘ThinlyTraded’ Stocks Benefit from Specialist
Intervention?’’ Journal of Banking and Finance, Vol.
27, 1823–54 (2003); and K. Venkataraman & A.
Waisburd, ‘‘The Value of the Designated Market
Maker’’ Journal of Financial and Quantitative
Analysis, Vol. 42, 735–58 (2007)).
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81 See
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therefore less likely to be affected by
such insider information risk.88 Finally,
this commenter suggests that the pilot
have a staggered introduction of MQP
Securities with a randomized sequence,
and a long enough pre-and post-event
period (e.g., three months) for each
introduction to identify an effect, and
that the Exchange provide the
Commission with detailed reporting of
all trades and quotes in all securities for
a pre-event period and a post-event
period (with MQP Market Maker trades
and quotes flagged).89
III. Discussion and Commission
Findings
The Commission has carefully
considered the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3
thereto, and finds that the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment
Nos. 1 and 3 thereto, is consistent with
the requirements of the Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to national securities
exchanges. In particular, as discussed
below, the Commission finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b)(4) of the Act,90 which
requires that the rules of a national
securities exchange provide for the
equitable allocation of reasonable dues,
fees, and other charges among its
members and issuers and other persons
using its facilities, and with Section
6(b)(5) of the Act,91 which requires,
among other things, that the rules of a
national securities exchange be
designed to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest, and that the rules not be
designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers. Further, as
required by Section 3(f) of the Act, the
Commission has considered the
proposed rule’s impact on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation.92
The MQP, as proposed to be
implemented on a pilot basis, is
designed to benefit investors, issuers
and market participants by improving
the market quality for ETFs that
participate in the MQP. As proposed by
the Exchange, to remain in the MQP and
to receive quarterly MQP Credit
payments out of the NASDAQ General
Fund, each MQP Market Maker will be
88 Id.
at 3.
at 4–5.
90 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
91 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
92 See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
89 Id.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
required to comply with monthly
quoting requirements that are higher
than the standard quoting requirements
applicable to market makers in ETFs on
the Exchange.93 Each MQP Market
Maker that complies with these
heightened quoting obligations will
receive a share of the MQP Credit based
upon its size quoted, and time spent
quoting, at or better than the NBBO, and
based on its liquidity-providing
executions of such quotes. In addition,
the Program is separately designed to
incentivize MQP Market Makers to
compete with each other to receive the
MQP Credit payments, as the payments
will be distributed based on each MQP
Market Maker’s average quoted size and
time spent quoting at or better than the
NBBO as compared to other MQP
Market Makers, and its share of total
Qualified Trades in an MQP Security
executed on the Exchange. Thus, the
proposal is designed to incentivize MQP
Market Makers to quote more often, and
in greater quoted size, at the NBBO,
potentially improving the market
quality of the MQP Securities that
participate in the MQP. This potential
improved market quality, were it to
occur, could benefit investors in the
form of enhanced liquidity, narrowed
spreads, and reduced transaction
costs.94
In addition, because the quoted bidask spread in a security represents one
of the main drivers of transaction costs
for investors, and because high price
volatility should generally deter
93 Specifically, with respect to the monthly
quoting requirement, an MQP Market Maker must
quote at least 500 shares of attributable, displayed
liquidity at the NBB or NBO 25% of the time during
the Regular Market Session, and at least 2,500
shares of attributable, displayed liquidity within
2% of the NBB or NBO 90% of the time during the
Regular Market Session.
94 In support of the proposal, the Exchange argues
that the MQP will, among other things, lower
transaction costs and enhance liquidity in both
ETFs and their components, making both more
attractive to a broader range of investors, and that,
in so doing, the MQP will help companies access
capital to invest and grow. See Notice, supra note
4, at 77142. The Exchange asserts that being
included in a successful ETF can provide the stocks
of these companies with enhanced liquidity and
exposure, enabling them to attract investors and
access capital markets to fund investment and
growth. See id. at 77142, n.12 and 77145, n.37–38
and accompanying text (citing to the testimony of
Eric Noll, Executive Vice President, NASDAQ
OMX, Before the Securities Subcommittee of the
Senate Banking Committee October 19, 2011). Two
commenters agree with the Exchange that the MQP
will benefit the operating companies underlying
ETFs in the MQP, in addition to the ETFs
themselves. See Weaver Letter, supra note 5, at 4–
5, and Menkveld Letter, supra note 8, at 3–4. As
constructed, any potential benefit to operating
companies from the MQP could be derived from the
company being included within an index or other
benchmark that underlies an ETF that participates
in the MQP.
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investors from trading low-liquidity
ETFs, the MQP, were the potential
benefits of the program to occur, should
facilitate a more-efficient and lessuncertain trading environment for
investors.95 Furthermore, were the
potential benefits of the MQP to occur,
improving the liquidity of certain lowvolume ETFs may help those ETFs
better compete with more established
ETFs that cover the same underlying
assets and that have an advantage over
new market entrants because they have
already attracted a significant amount of
liquidity.96
While the Commission believes that
the Program has the potential to
improve market quality of the MQP
Securities participating in the Program,
the Commission is concerned about
unintended consequences of the
Program. For example, the MQP could
have the potential to distort market
forces because the Program may act to
artificially influence trading in ETFs
that otherwise would not be traded.
Similarly, the Commission recognizes
concerns about the potential negative
impact on an MQP Security, such as
reduced liquidity and wider spreads,
when an MQP Company withdraws or
is terminated from the Program. While
the Commission is mindful of these
concerns, the Commission believes, for
95 Transaction costs are generally defined as the
penalty that an investor pays for transacting.
Transaction costs have four components:
commissions; bid/ask spread; market impact; and
opportunity cost. See Grinold, Kahn. Active
Portfolio Management, Second Edition, Chapter 16.
An increase in bid-ask spreads will inevitably
increase the transaction costs of an investor. In
addition, transactions in low-liquidity securities
have a higher market impact when compared to
other more liquid securities. See Albert Kyle’s
(1985) measure of market impact (Kyle’s Lambda),
defining an inverse relationship between volume
and price impact. Therefore, the lower the volume
of the ETF or stock, the higher the market impact
of any transaction in that stock. This last effect acts
as a disincentive to trading that security. Therefore,
an environment where an ETF trades more often
and with a larger number of shares will reduce
transaction costs both through the narrowing of
spreads and lower market impact.
96 This phenomenon can be described as
economies of scale in the management of ETFs.
Given that most ETFs track an index, it costs little
more to run a fund with $20 billion in assets under
management than one with $200 million in assets
under management. As a result, ETFs that have
established large asset holdings can be offered to
investors with lower management fees, which in
turn reinforces the cycle of growth for the large
ETFs. See Latzko, David A., ‘‘Economies of Scale in
Mutual Fund Administration.’’ Pennsylvania State
University, York Campus, 1998 (available at
https://www.personal.psu.edu/∼dxl31/research/
articles/mutual.pdf) (analyzing economies of scale
in mutual fund administration). See also Rompotis,
Gerasimos Georgiou, ‘‘The German Exchange
Traded Funds (December 4, 2012). The IUP Journal
of Applied Finance, Vol. 18, No. 4, October 2012,
pp. 62–82 (available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/
papers.cfm?abstract_id=2184748) (analyzing
economies of scale in German ETFs).
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the reasons described below, that
certain aspects of the Program could
help mitigate these concerns.97
First, the proposal contains disclosure
provisions that will help to alert and
educate potential and existing investors
in the MQP Securities about the
Program. Specifically, the Exchange will
disclose on its Web site the following
information: (i) The identities of the
MQP Companies, MQP Securities, and
MQP Market Makers accepted into the
MQP; (ii) any limits the Exchange may
impose on the number of MQP
Securities per MQP Company or MQP
Market Makers per MQP Security in the
MQP; (iii) for each MQP Security, the
amount of the Supplemental MQP Fee,
if any, per MQP Security that would be
in addition to the fixed Basic MQP Fee
of $50,000; (iv) any notification received
by the Exchange that an MQP Company,
on behalf of an MQP Security, or MQP
Market Maker intends to withdraw from
the MQP; and (v) the dates that an MQP
Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, commences participation in
and is withdrawn or terminated from
the MQP. The Exchange also will
include on its Web site a statement
about the MQP that sets forth a fair and
balanced summation of the potentially
positive and negative aspects of the
MQP. Furthermore, an MQP Company
will be required to disclose on a
product-specific Web site that the MQP
Security is participating in the MQP and
will be required to provide a link on
that Web site to the Exchange’s MQP
Web site. This disclosure will help to
inform investors and other market
participants which securities are
participating in the MQP, which and
how many MQP Market Makers are
assigned to each MQP Security, the
amount of MQP Fees an MQP Company
will incur as a result of participating in
the MQP, the amount of MQP Credits
the MQP Market Makers could
potentially receive from the Exchange
under the MQP, and the potential
benefits and risks of the MQP. A wide
variety of ETFs are currently listed and
trading today, and the Commission
believes that such disclosure could be
helpful for investors and other market
participants to discern which ETFs
listed on the Exchange are and are not
subject to the MQP and to make
informed investment decisions with
respect to ETFs.
Second, the Program is targeted at a
subset of ETFs, namely those ETFs that
97 The concurrent exemptive relief the
Commission is issuing today from Rule 102 under
Regulation M concerning the MQP also contains
additional disclosure requirements. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 69196 (March 20, 2013),
supra note 9.
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18399
are generally less liquid and which the
Exchange believes might benefit most
from the Program.98 Specifically, as
proposed, ETFs that are otherwise
eligible for the Program will not be
eligible if they have an ATV of
1,000,000 shares or more for three
consecutive months. Likewise, the
Program will terminate with respect to
a particular MQP Security if the MQP
Security sustains an ATV of 1,000,000
shares or more for three consecutive
months.
Finally, as proposed by the Exchange,
the MQP will be limited to a one-year
pilot. The Commission believes that it is
important to implement the MQP as a
pilot. Operating the MQP as a pilot will
allow assessment of whether the MQP is
in fact achieving its goal of improving
the market quality of MQP Securities,
prior to any proposal or determination
to make the Program permanent.99 In
addition, approval on a pilot basis will
allow the assessment, prior to any
proposal or determination to make the
program permanent, of whether the
MQP has any unintended impact on the
MQP Securities, securities not in the
MQP, or the market or market
participants generally.
The Exchange has represented that
during the pilot it will submit monthly
reports to the Commission about market
quality in respect of the MQP and that
these reports will be posted on the
Exchange’s public Web site and will
compare securities before and after they
are in the MQP, to the extent
practicable, and provide information
regarding MQP Security volume
metrics, the number of MQP Market
Makers in MQP Securities, quotation
spread and size statistics, and data and
analysis about the market quality of
MQP Securities that exceed the
threshold and ‘‘graduate’’ from the
Program pursuant to proposed Rule
5950(d)(1)(A), among other information
and analyses.100 The Exchange also has
represented that it will provide to the
Commission similar data and analyses
about comparable products listed on the
Exchange that are not participating in
the MQP, as well as any other MQP98 The Exchange has stated that the proposal is
designed to provide market quality support to
smaller, less frequently traded ETFs. See Notice,
supra note 4, at 77145.
99 The Exchange has indicated that if the MQP is
successful, it will seek to expand the program to
small cap stocks and other similar products that
may need liquidity enhancement. See Notice, supra
note 4, at 77145. The Exchange would be required
to file any similar proposal applicable to small cap
companies pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder. Such a filing would be published for
comment in the Federal Register pursuant to
Section 19(b) and Rule 19b–4.
100 See supra notes 60–64 and accompanying text.
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related data and analyses the
Commission staff requests from the
Exchange for the purpose of evaluating
the efficacy of the MQP.101 This
information will help the Commission,
the Exchange, and other interested
persons to evaluate whether the MQP
has resulted in the intended benefits it
is designed to achieve, any unintended
consequences resulting from the MQP,
and the extent to which the MQP
alleviates or aggravates the concerns the
Commission has noted, including
previously-stated Commission concerns
relating to issuer payments to market
makers.102
For example, the Exchange and the
Commission will look to assess what
impact, if any, there is on the market
quality of MQP Securities that withdraw
or are otherwise terminated from the
MQP.103 One way for an MQP Security
to be terminated from the MQP is if it
exceeds the 1,000,000 ATV threshold
included within the rules.104 The
Exchange states that past trading data
indicate that ‘‘graduation’’ from the
MQP during the pilot at a 1,000,000
ATV threshold should occur more
frequently than at a 2,000,000 ATV
threshold, which was the threshold
proposed in its original filing relating to
the MQP (which was later
withdrawn).105 The Commission
101 Id.
102 See
infra notes 108–111 and accompanying
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
text.
103 See Notice, supra note 4, at 77140 (stating that
the 1,000,000 ATV threshold would ‘‘better provide
NASDAQ and the Commission with an opportunity
to observe the impact, if any, on MQP Securities
that exceed the threshold and ‘graduate’ from the
Program’’).
104 See proposed Rule 5950(d)(1)(A).
105 See supra note 3. The Exchange provided
statistics on the number of ETFs that would have
graduated annually at the 1 million ATV and 2
million ATV volume thresholds from the MQP had
it been in existence over the period of 2001 to 2012.
Specifically, (i) in 2001, 2 ETPs would have
graduated from the MQP under the 2 million ATV
threshold, while 3 ETPs would have graduated
under the 1 million ATV threshold; (ii) in 2002, 1
ETP would have graduated under the 2 million
ATV threshold, while 4 ETPs would have graduated
under the 1 million ATV threshold; (iii) in 2003, 3
ETPs would have graduated under the 2 million
ATV threshold, while 5 ETPs would have graduated
under the 1 million ATV threshold; (iv) in 2004, 2
ETPs would have graduated under the 2 million
ATV threshold, while 5 ETPs would have graduated
under the 1 million ATV threshold; (v) in 2005, 7
ETPs would have graduated under the 2 million
ATV threshold, while 14 ETPs would have
graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold; (vi)
in 2006, 10 ETPs would have graduated under the
2 million ATV threshold, while 20 ETPs would
have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold;
(vii) in 2007, 23 ETPs would have graduated under
the 2 million ATV threshold, while 24 ETPs would
have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold;
(viii) in 2008, 38 ETPs would have graduated under
the 2 million ATV threshold, while 48 ETPs would
have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold;
(ix) in 2009, 20 ETPs would have graduated under
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recognizes that the MQP may not, in the
one-year pilot period, produce sufficient
data (i.e., a large number of MQP
Securities that enter and exit the MQP)
to allow a full assessment of whether
termination (or withdrawal) of an MQP
Security from the Program has resulted
in any unintended consequences on the
market quality of the MQP Security or
otherwise.106 However, the Commission
believes that the proposal strikes a
reasonable balance between (i) setting
the threshold for ‘‘graduation’’ from the
MQP high enough to encourage
participation in the MQP and (ii) setting
the threshold low enough to have a
sufficient number of MQP Securities
graduate from the Program within the
pilot period so that the Exchange, the
Commission, and other interested
persons can assess the impact, if any, of
the MQP, including ‘‘graduation’’ of
MQP Securities from the Program.
Furthermore, the pilot structure of the
MQP will provide information to help
determine whether any provisions of the
MQP should be modified. For example,
based on data from the pilot, the
Exchange may determine that the
1,000,000 ATV termination threshold is
not an appropriate threshold on which
to base eligibility for the MQP or that
the Program should be time-limited.107
The Commission believes that the
design of the MQP and the public
the 2 million ATV threshold, while 27 ETPs would
have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold;
(x) in 2010, 10 ETPs would have graduated under
the 2 million ATV threshold, while 16 ETPs would
have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold;
(xi) in 2011, 12 ETPs would have graduated under
the 2 million ATV threshold, while 16 ETPs would
have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold;
and (xii) in 2012, 3 ETPs would have graduated
under the 2 million ATV threshold, while 5 ETPs
would have graduated under the 1 million ATV
threshold. See Notice, supra note 4, at 77145. These
statistics, however, assume that all eligible
securities actually participate in the Program.
106 One commenter suggests that the pilot have a
staggered introduction of MQP Securities with a
randomized sequence, and a long enough pre- and
post-event period (e.g., three months) for each
introduction to identify any effects of the MQP. See
Menkveld Letter, supra note 8, at 4; see also supra
note 89. The Commission believes that the way the
Exchange has structured the pilot is reasonable and
consistent with the Act. As discussed above, the
Exchange has represented that it will (a) provide
reports to the Commission that include information
about MQP Securities that exceed the threshold and
‘‘graduate’’ from the Program (and make these
reports public) and (b) provide information to the
Commission about other ETPs not in the Program
and any other MQP-related data and analysis
Commission staff requests. Such information
should be useful in the evaluation of the effects of
the MQP.
107 One commenter, addressing whether a
2,000,000 ATV threshold would be appropriate,
noted that such a termination threshold would be
‘‘an arbitrary number that is no better or worse than
any other large number’’ and that the threshold may
need to be adjusted after the MQP has been
implemented. See Weaver Letter, supra note 5, at
8.
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4703
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disclosure requirements, coupled with
implementation of the proposal on a
pilot basis, should help mitigate
potential concerns the Commission has
noted above relating to any unintended
or negative effects of the MQP on the
ETF market and investors.
The Commission also believes that
proposed interpretation IM–2460–1,
which would exempt the MQP from the
Exchange’s general prohibition on
payments by an issuer to a Market
Maker contained in Exchange Rule
2460, is consistent with the Act.
Exchange Rule 2460 is almost identical
to, and is based on, FINRA Rule 5250.
FINRA Rule 5250 (formerly NASD Rule
2460) was implemented, in part, to
address concerns about issuers paying
market makers, directly or indirectly, to
improperly influence the price of an
issuer’s stock and because of conflict of
interest concerns between issuers and
market makers.108 FINRA Rule 5250 was
designed to preserve ‘‘the integrity of
the marketplace by ensuring that
quotations accurately reflect a brokerdealer’s interest in buying or selling a
security.’’ 109 Specifically, in the NASD
Rule 2460 Approval Order, the
Commission found that the ‘‘decision by
a firm to make a market in a given
security and the question of price
generally are dependent on a number of
factors, including, among others, supply
and demand, the firm’s expectations
toward the market, its current inventory
position, and exposure to risk and
competition. This decision should not
be influenced by payments to the
member from issuers or promoters.
Public investors expect broker-dealers’
quotations to be based on the factors
described above. If payments to brokerdealers by promoters and issuers were
permitted, investors would not be able
to ascertain which quotations in the
marketplace are based on actual interest
and which quotations are supported by
issuers or promoters. This structure
would harm investor confidence in the
overall integrity of the marketplace.’’ 110
The Commission also added that ‘‘such
payments may be viewed as a conflict
of interest since they may influence the
member’s decision as to whether to
quote or make a market in a security
and, thereafter, the prices that the
member would quote.’’ 111
The Commission believes that a
number of aspects of the MQP mitigate
the concerns that FINRA Rule 5250 and
108 See NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order, supra
note 68, at 37107.
109 See NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order, supra
note 68, at 37107.
110 See id.
111 See id. at 37106.
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Exchange Rule 2460 were designed to
address.112 First, the Commission
believes that the terms of the MQP are
generally objective, clear, and
transparent. The standards for the MQP
are set forth in proposed NASDAQ Rule
5950 (further described above) 113 and
describe the application and withdrawal
process, the fee and credit structure, the
market quality standards that an MQP
Market Maker must meet and maintain
to secure an MQP Credit, and the MQP
termination process. These
requirements apply to all MQP
Securities, MQP Companies, and MQP
Market Makers.114
Second, the Exchange also will
provide notification on its public Web
site regarding the various aspects of the
MQP. As discussed above, this
notification will include: (i) The names
of the MQP Companies and the MQP
Market Makers that are accepted into
the MQP; (ii) the specific names of the
MQP Securities that are participating in
the MQP; (iii) the identity of the MQP
Market Makers in each MQP Security;
(iv) any limits the Exchange may impose
on the number of MQP Securities per
MQP Company or MQP Market Makers
per MQP Security in the MQP; (v) the
amount of the Supplemental MQP Fee
of each MQP Security, if one is
established by an MQP Company; (vi)
any notification received by the
Exchange that an MQP Company, on
behalf of an MQP Security, or MQP
Market Maker intends to withdraw from
the MQP; and (v) the dates that an MQP
Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, commences participation in
and is withdrawn or terminated from
the MQP; and (vii) a statement about the
MQP that sets forth a fair and balanced
summary of the potentially positive and
negative aspects of the MQP. In
addition, an MQP Company will be
required to disclose that the MQP
Security is participating in the MQP and
to provide a link to the Exchange’s MQP
112 Two commenters have stated that the design
and overall transparency of the Program adequately
address concerns relating to manipulation. See
Weaver Letter, supra note 5, at 6–7, and Menkveld
Letter, supra note 8, at 3.
113 See supra Section I.A.
114 While the Exchange will have some amount of
discretion pursuant to the proposed rules to limit
the number of MQP Securities that any one MQP
Company may list in the MQP, if such a limit is
in the best interest of the Exchange, the MQP
Company and the goals of the MQP, or investors,
and/or to limit the number of MQP Market Makers
in an MQP Security, the Commission believes such
limits would not be unfairly discriminatory, as they
would be imposed on a MQP-wide basis. In
addition, the Commission believes that it is
reasonable and consistent with the Act for the
Exchange to have some amount of flexibility to
limit the number of MQP Securities or MQP Market
Makers, to protect investors and the ETF market.
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19:07 Mar 25, 2013
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Web page on the MQP Security’s Web
site.
And third, MQP Securities will be
traded on the Exchange, which is a
regulated market, pursuant to the
current trading and reporting rules of
the Exchange, and pursuant to the
Exchange’s established market
surveillance and trade monitoring
procedures. The Exchange will
administer the application and
acceptance of the MQP Companies and
MQP Market Makers into the MQP and
will manage the payment of the MQP
Credit to MQP Market Makers. The
Exchange has represented that the
recipient MQP Market Makers of the
MQP Credits and the size of the MQP
Credits will be determined solely by the
Exchange pursuant to objective criteria,
and MQP Companies will have no role
in selecting the MQP Market Maker
recipients or in determining the specific
amount, if any, of their MQP Credits.
Furthermore, the MQP Fees will be paid
into NASDAQ’s General Fund, and the
MQP Credits will be paid out of
NASDAQ’s General Fund. If no MQP
Market Maker is eligible to earn an MQP
Credit for a particular MQP Security
during a quarter, the MQP Fee will
remain in NASDAQ’s General Fund,
and no MQP Fees or any portion thereof
will be rebated with respect to any MQP
Security, regardless of the performance
of the MQP Security’s assigned MQP
Market Makers. The Commission
believes that these factors, taken
together, should help to mitigate the
conflict of interest and other concerns
that the Commission has previously
identified 115 relating to issuers paying
for market making.116
The Commission believes that it is
reasonable and consistent with the Act
for the Exchange to limit the MQP to
certain types of securities to allow the
Exchange, through a pilot, to assess
whether the Program will have the
desired effect of improving the market
quality of these securities before
implementing the Program on a wider
scale. The Commission believes that it
is reasonable and consistent with the
115 See NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order, supra
note 68, and supra notes 108–111. See also
Securities Act Release No. 6334 (Aug. 6, 1981), 46
FR 42001 (Aug. 18, 1981), at Section IV.B
(Treatment as Statutory Underwriter). In addition,
only index-based ETFs are eligible to participate in
the MQP. The Exchange notes that the prices of
ETFs are generally linked back to the underlying
securities and that the ETF trust structure acts as
an insulating wall between market maker and
product. See Notice, supra note 4, at 77145, n.36.
116 Until FINRA files a proposed rule change to
exempt payments made pursuant to the MQP from
FINRA Rule 5250 and the proposed rule change
becomes effective, receipt of payments pursuant to
the MQP by a market maker that is a FINRA
member would be in violation of FINRA Rule 5250.
PO 00000
Frm 00097
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18401
Act for the Exchange to limit the MQP
to products under the 1,000,000 ATV
threshold, to support the Exchange’s
stated purpose to provide market quality
support to less frequently traded ETFs.
The Commission believes that the
MQP Fees are an equitable allocation of
reasonable fees. First, participation in
the MQP is voluntary. An entity is free
to determine whether it would be
economically desirable to pay the MQP
Fee, given the amount of the fee, the
trading characteristics of the ETF (if
applicable) and the anticipated benefit.
If an MQP Company chooses to
participate in the MQP with respect to
an MQP Security, it will incur the Basic
MQP Fee of $50,000, and the MQP
Company will have discretion to incur
the Supplemental MQP Fee in an
amount up to an additional $50,000.
The MQP Fees will be paid for by the
Sponsors associated with the MQP
Companies. Thus, the MQP Fees will be
incurred and paid for by an issuer and
its sponsor, as applicable, that have
chosen to participate in, and that may
potentially benefit from, the MQP.117
An entity that chooses not to participate
will not be required to pay any
additional fee beyond the standard
listing fees. Further, the MQP Fees will
be the same for any MQP Company
wishing to participate in the program.
The Commission also believes that
availability of the discretionary
Supplemental MQP Fee is consistent
with the Act. Each MQP Company
participating in the MQP will have the
choice of whether or not to incur, as
well as the exact amount (up to $50,000)
of, the Supplemental MQP Fee. Not all
ETFs are alike, and trading in certain
products may be riskier or more costly
117 Issuers of ETFs registered under the 1940 Act
are prohibited from paying directly or indirectly for
distribution of their shares (i.e., directly or
indirectly financing any activity that is primarily
intended to result in the sale of shares), unless such
payments are made pursuant to a plan that meets
the requirements of Rule 12b–1 under the 1940 Act.
Although the services at issue could be primarily
intended to result in the sale of fund shares, the
Commission has stated that such a determination
will depend on the surrounding circumstances. See
Payment of Asset-Based Sales Loads by Registered
Open-End Management Investment Companies,
Investment Company Act Release No. 16431 (June
13, 1988) (‘‘1988 12b–1 Release’’). As the
Commission has noted previously, if a fund makes
payments that are ostensibly for a non-distribution
purpose, and the recipient of those payments
finances distribution, the question arises whether
the fund’s assets are being used indirectly for
distribution. The Commission has stated that there
can be no precise definition of what types of
expenditures constitute indirect use of fund assets,
and this determination is based on the facts and
circumstances of each individual case. In addition,
fund directors, particularly independent directors
bear substantial responsibility for making that
judgment. See Bearing of Distribution Expenses by
Mutual Funds, Investment Company Act Release
No. 11414 (October 28, 1980).
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than trading in others. The Commission
believes that it is reasonable to allow
each MQP Company to choose to
participate in the Program and to
determine whether it is desirable to
incentivize MQP Market Makers
through the Supplemental MQP Fee to
improve the market quality of certain
MQP Securities. Further, as discussed
above, the payment of the Supplemental
MQP Fee will be transparent to the
marketplace, as this information will be
disclosed on the Exchange’s Web site.118
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
IV. Section 11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act
Section 11(d)(1) of the Exchange
Act 119 generally prohibits a brokerdealer from extending or maintaining
credit, or arranging for the extension or
maintenance of credit, on shares of new
issue securities, if the broker-dealer
participated in the distribution of the
new issue securities within the
preceding 30 days. The Commission’s
view is that shares of open-end
investment companies and unit
investment trusts registered under the
1940 Act, such as ETF shares, are
distributed in a continuous manner, and
broker-dealers that sell such securities
are therefore participating in the
‘‘distribution’’ of a new issue for
purposes of Section 11(d)(1).120
The Division of Trading and Markets,
acting under delegated authority,
granted an exemption from Section
11(d)(1) and Rule 11d1–2 thereunder for
broker-dealers that have entered into an
agreement with an ETF’s distributor to
place orders with the distributor to
purchase or redeem the ETF’s shares
(‘‘Broker-Dealer APs).121 The SIA
Exemption allows a Broker-Dealer AP to
extend or maintain credit, or arrange for
the extension or maintenance of credit,
to or for customers on the shares of
qualifying ETFs subject to the condition
that neither the Broker-Dealer AP, nor
any natural person associated with the
Broker-Dealer AP, directly or indirectly
(including through any affiliate of the
Broker-Dealer AP), receives from the
fund complex any payment,
compensation, or other economic
incentive to promote or sell the shares
of the ETF to persons outside the fund
complex, other than non-cash
compensation permitted under NASD
Rule 2830(l)(5)(A), (B), or (C). This
supra note 38 and accompanying text.
119 15 U.S.C. 78k(d)(1).
120 See, e.g., Exchange Act Release Nos. 6726
(Feb. 8, 1962), 27 FR 1415 (Feb. 15, 1962) and
21577 (Dec. 18, 1984), 49 FR 50174 (Dec. 27, 1984).
121 See Letter from Catherine McGuire, Chief
Counsel, Division of Trading and Markets,
Securities and Exchange Commission to Securities
Industry Association (Nov. 21, 2005) (‘‘SIA
Exemption’’).
condition is intended to eliminate
special incentives that Broker-Dealer
APs and their associated persons might
otherwise have to ‘‘push’’ ETF shares.
The MQP will permit certain ETFs to
voluntarily incur increased listing fees
payable to the Exchange. In turn, the
Exchange will use the fees to make
incentive payments to market makers
that improve the liquidity of
participating issuers’ securities, and
thus enhance the market quality for the
participating issuers. Incentives
payments will be accrued for, among
other things, executing purchases and
sales on the Exchange. Receipt of the
incentive payments by certain brokerdealers will implicate the condition of
the SIA Exemption from the new issue
lending restriction in Section 11(d)(1) of
the Exchange Act discussed above. The
Commission’s view is that the incentive
payments market makers will receive
under the proposal are indirect
payments from the fund complex to the
market maker and that those payments
are compensation to promote or sell the
shares of the ETF. Therefore, a market
maker that also is a Broker-Dealer AP for
an ETF (or an associated person or an
affiliate of a Broker-Dealer AP) that
receives the incentives will not be able
to rely on the SIA Exemption from
Section 11(d)(1). This does not mean
that Broker-Dealer APs cannot
participate in the MQP; it merely means
they cannot rely on the SIA Exemption
while doing so. Thus, Broker-Dealer APs
that participate in the MQP will need to
comply with Section 11(d)(1) unless
there is another applicable exemption.
V. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,122 that the
proposed rule change (SR–NASDAQ–
2012–137), as modified by Amendment
Nos. 1 and 3 thereto, be, and it hereby
is, approved.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.123
Kevin M. O’Neill,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2013–06882 Filed 3–25–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
19:07 Mar 25, 2013
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[Release No. 34–69187; File Nos. SR–NYSE–
2013–08; NYSEMKT–2013–07]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New
York Stock Exchange LLC; NYSE MKT
LLC; Notice of Designation of a Longer
Period for Commission Action on
Proposed Rule Changes Amending the
Attestation Requirement of Rules 107C
and 107C-Equities, Respectively, To
Allow a Retail Member Organization To
Attest That ‘‘Substantially All’’ Orders
Submitted to The Retail Liquidity
Program Will Qualify as ‘‘Retail
Orders’’
March 20, 2013.
On January 17, 2013, New York Stock
Exchange LLC (‘‘NYSE’’) and NYSE
MKT LLC (‘‘NYSE MKT’’ and together
with NYSE, the ‘‘Exchanges’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) pursuant
to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4 thereunder,2 proposed rule
changes to allow Retail Member
Organizations (‘‘RMOs’’) to attest that
‘‘substantially all,’’ rather than all,
orders submitted to the Retail Liquidity
Program qualify as ‘‘Retail Orders.’’ The
proposed rule changes were published
for comment in the Federal Register on
February 4, 2013.3 To date, the
Commission has received one comment
on the proposals.4
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 5 provides
that within 45 days of the publication of
notice of the filing of a proposed rule
change, or within such longer period up
to 90 days as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or as to which the
self-regulatory organization consents,
the Commission shall either approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule change should be
disapproved. The 45th day for these
filings is March 21, 2013.
The Commission is extending the 45day time period for Commission action
on the proposed rule changes. The
Commission finds that it is appropriate
1 15
118 See
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 68747
(Jan. 28, 2013), 78 FR 7824 (SR–NYSE–2013–08);
and 68746 (Jan. 28, 2013), 78 FR 7842 (SR–
NYSEMKT–2013–07).
4 See Letter to the Commission from Theodore R.
Lazo, Managing Director and Associate General
Counsel, Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association (SIFMA), dated March 11, 2013.
5 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
2 17
122 15
123 17
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 58 (Tuesday, March 26, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 18393-18402]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-06882]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-69195; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2012-137]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; the NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Order
Granting Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment
Nos. 1 and 3 Thereto, To Establish the Market Quality Program
March 20, 2013.
On December 7, 2012, The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC (``Exchange'' or
``NASDAQ'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC''
or ``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'' or ``Exchange Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4
thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule change to establish the Market Quality
Program (``MQP'' or ``Program'') on a pilot basis.\3\ On December 20,
2012, the
[[Page 18394]]
Exchange submitted Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change, which
replaced and superseded the proposed rule change in its entirety. The
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1 thereto, was
published for comment in the Federal Register on December 31, 2012.\4\
The Commission initially received two comment letters on the proposed
rule change.\5\ On February 7, 2013, the Exchange submitted Amendment
No. 2 to the proposed rule change. On February 8, 2013, the Exchange
withdrew Amendment No. 2 and filed Amendment No. 3 to the proposed rule
change.\6\ On February 14, 2013, the Commission extended the time
period during which it must approve the proposed rule change,
disapprove the proposed rule change, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the proposed rule change, to March 31,
2013.\7\ The Commission subsequently received one additional comment
letter on the proposed rule change.\8\ This order grants approval of
the proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3.\9\
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19-4.
\3\ The Exchange states that SR-NASDAQ-2012-137 replaces SR-
NASDAQ-2012-043, which was withdrawn by the Exchange. See Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 66765 (Apr. 6, 2012), 77 FR 22042 (Apr.
12, 2012) (SR-NASDAQ-2012-043) and 68378 (Dec. 6, 2012), 77 FR 74042
(Dec. 12, 2012). See also Notice, infra note 4, at 77141, n.3.
\4\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68515 (Dec. 21, 2012),
77 FR 77141 (Dec. 31, 2012) (``Notice'').
\5\ See Letter From Rey Ramsey, President & CEO, TechNet, dated
Jan. 22, 2013 (``TechNet Letter'') and Letter From Daniel G. Weaver,
Ph.D., Professor of Finance, Rutgers Business School, dated Jan. 30,
2013 (``Weaver Letter'').
\6\ The Exchange withdrew Amendment No. 2 due to a technical
error in the amendment. In Amendment No. 3, the Exchange clarified
that: (i) The Exchange may limit on a Program-wide basis the number
of Exchange-Traded Funds (``ETFs'') per MQP Company that can
participate in the MQP, and that the Exchange would not be limiting
the number of actual shares issued by an MQP Company for a
particular ETF participating in the Program; (ii) the Exchange will
provide in the monthly public report to the Commission relating to
the MQP (a) information on the market quality of MQP Securities
after they exceed the threshold and ``graduate'' from the Program
pursuant to proposed Rule 5950(d)(1)(A), and (b) its analysis of the
information to be included in the report and its assessment of the
efficacy of the MQP; and (iii) the Exchange will provide to the
Commission data and analyses about comparable ETFs that are listed
on the Exchange but that are not in the MQP, as well as any other
MQP-related data and analyses requested by Commission staff for the
purpose of evaluating the efficacy of the MQP. Amendment No. 3
provides clarification to the proposed rule change, and because it
does not materially affect the substance of the proposed rule
change, Amendment No. 3 does not require notice and comment.
\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68925 (Feb. 14,
2013), 78 FR 12116 (Feb. 21, 2013).
\8\ See Letter from Albert J. Menkveld, Associate Professor of
Finance, VU University Amsterdam, dated Feb. 18, 2013 (``Menkveld
Letter'').
\9\ Today the Commission also is granting exemptive relief from
Rule 102 under Regulation M concerning the MQP. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 69196 (March 20, 2013) (Order Granting a
Limited Exemption from Rule 102 of Regulation M Concerning the
NASDAQ Stock Market LLC Stock's Market Quality Program Pilot
Pursuant to Regulation M Rule 102(e)).
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I. Description of the Proposal
As set forth in more detail in the Notice,\10\ the Exchange is
proposing to amend its rules to add NASDAQ Rule 5950 (Market Quality
Program) to establish an MQP listing fee and related market maker
incentive program, and to adopt interpretation IM-2460-1 to exempt the
MQP from NASDAQ Rule 2460 (Payment for Market Making), on a pilot
basis. The MQP will be a voluntary program, and participation in the
program will be at the discretion of each MQP Company (as defined
below), subject to the requirements set forth in the proposed rule.
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\10\ See Notice, supra note 4.
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A. Proposed NASDAQ Rule 5950 (Market Quality Program)
The Exchange states that the proposed MQP is a voluntary program
designed to promote market quality in certain securities listed on the
Exchange (``MQP Securities'').\11\ MQP Securities will consist of ETF
securities issued by an MQP Company \12\ and listed on the Exchange
pursuant to NASDAQ Rule 5705.\13\ In addition to the standard (non-MQP)
Exchange listing fee applicable to an MQP Security set forth in the
NASDAQ Rule 5000 Series (consisting of NASDAQ Rules 5000-5999), an MQP
Company may incur a fee (``MQP Fee''), on behalf of an MQP Security, to
participate in the Program.\14\ The Exchange represents that an MQP Fee
will be used for the purpose of incentivizing one or more Market Makers
\15\ in the MQP Security (``MQP Market Maker'') to enhance the market
quality of the MQP Security.\16\ Subject to the conditions set forth in
the proposed rule, this incentive payment will be credited (``MQP
Credit'') to one or more MQP Market Makers that make a high-quality
market in the MQP Security pursuant to the MQP.\17\
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\11\ See proposed Rule 5950 Preamble.
\12\ The term ``MQP Company'' means the trust or company housing
the ETF or, if the ETF is not a series of a trust or company, then
the ETF itself. See proposed Rule 5950(e)(5).
\13\ See proposed Rule 5950(e)(1) (defining the term ``MQP
Security'' to mean an ETF security issued by an MQP Company that
meets all of the requirements to be listed on the Exchange pursuant
to Rule 5705). The term ``Exchange Traded Fund'' includes Portfolio
Depository Receipts and Index Fund Shares, which are defined in
NASDAQ Rule 5705. See proposed Rule 5950(e)(2).
\14\ See proposed Rules 5950 Preamble and 5950(b)(2). MQP Fees
for MQP Securities will be paid by the Sponsors associated with the
MQP Companies. See proposed Rule 5950(e)(5). See also proposed Rule
5950(b)(2)(C)(i) (requiring that the MQP Fee in respect of an ETF be
paid by the Sponsor(s) of the ETF). The term ``Sponsor'' means the
registered investment adviser that provides investment management
services to an MQP Company or any of the adviser's parents or
subsidiaries. See proposed Rule 5950(e)(5).
\15\ The term ``Market Maker'' has the meaning given in NASDAQ
Rule 5005(a)(24). See proposed Rule 5950(e)(3).
\16\ See proposed Rule 5950 Preamble.
\17\ See proposed Rule 5950 Preamble. The MQP Credit will be
paid to eligible MQP Market Maker(s) based on quoting and trading
activity in the MQP Security, as discussed in further detail below.
See infra notes 47-55 and accompanying text.
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1. Application and Withdrawal
An MQP Company that wants to have its MQP Security participate in
the MQP, and a Market Maker that wants to participate in the MQP, will
each be required to submit an application in the form prescribed by the
Exchange.\18\ The Exchange can, on a program-wide basis, limit the
number of MQP Securities that any one MQP Company may have in the
MQP.\19\ In determining whether to limit the number of MQP Securities
per MQP Company, the Exchange will consider all relevant information,
including whether a restriction, if any, is consistent with the goals
of the MQP and in the best interest of the Exchange, the MQP Company,
and investors.\20\ The Exchange can also, on a program-wide basis,
limit the number of MQP Market Makers permitted to register in an MQP
Security.\21\ If such a limit is established, the Exchange will
allocate available MQP Market Maker registrations in a first-come-
first-served fashion based on successful completion of an MQP Market
Maker application.\22\
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\18\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1).
\19\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(A). The Exchange clarified
that this provision is intended to allow the Exchange, on a Program-
wide basis, to limit the number of ETFs that any one MQP Company may
have in the MQP, and that this provision would not allow the
Exchange to limit the number of actual shares issued by any MQP
Company for a particular ETF participating in the MQP. See Amendment
No. 3, supra note 6.
\20\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(B). Factors that could be
considered by the Exchange include, but are not limited to, the
current and expected liquidity characteristics of MQP Securities;
the projected initial and continuing market quality needs of MQP
Securities; and the trading characteristics of MQP Securities (e.g.,
quoting, trading, and volume). See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(B)(i).
\21\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(3).
\22\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(3)(A).
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The Exchange will provide notification on its Web site regarding:
(i) The acceptance of an MQP Company (on behalf of an MQP Security) and
an MQP Market Maker into the MQP; (ii) the total number of MQP
Securities that any one MQP Company may have in the MQP; (iii) the
names of MQP Securities and the MQP Market Maker(s) in each MQP
Security, and the dates that an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, commenced participation in and withdrew or was terminated
from
[[Page 18395]]
the MQP; and (iv) any limit on the number of MQP Market Makers
permitted to register in an MQP Security.\23\
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\23\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(C) and proposed Rule
5950(c)(3). The Exchange also will include on its Web site a
statement about the MQP that sets forth a general description of the
MQP as implemented on a pilot basis and a fair and balanced
summation of the potentially positive aspects of the MQP (e.g.,
enhancement of liquidity and market quality in MQP Securities) as
well as the potentially negative aspects and risks of the MQP (e.g.,
possible lack of liquidity and negative price impact on MQP
Securities that withdraw or are terminated from the MQP), and
indicates how interested parties can get additional information
about products in the MQP. See proposed Rule 5950(a)(1)(C)(iv).
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After an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, has been in the
MQP for not less than two consecutive quarters but less than one year,
it can voluntarily withdraw from the MQP on a quarterly basis.\24\ An
MQP Company seeking to withdraw from the MQP must notify the Exchange
in writing not less than one month prior to withdrawing from the MQP.
The Exchange can determine to allow an MQP Company to withdraw from the
MQP earlier.\25\ In making this determination, the Exchange may take
into account the volume and price movements in the MQP Security; the
liquidity, size quoted, and quality of the market in the MQP Security;
and any other relevant factors.\26\ After an MQP Company, on behalf of
an MQP Security, has been in the MQP for one year or more, it can
voluntarily withdraw from the MQP on a monthly basis, provided that it
has notified the Exchange in writing not less than one month prior to
withdrawing from the MQP.\27\ After an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, has been in the MQP for one year, the MQP and all obligations
and requirements of the MQP will automatically continue on an annual
basis, unless: (a) The Exchange terminates the MQP by providing not
less than one month prior notice of intent to terminate; (b) the MQP
Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, withdraws from the MQP pursuant
to the proposed rule; (c) the MQP Company is terminated from the MQP
pursuant to proposed Rule 5950(d); \28\ or (d) the pilot Program is not
extended or made permanent pursuant to a proposed rule change approved
by the Commission under Section 19(b) \29\ of the Exchange Act.\30\
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\24\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(A).
\25\ Id.
\26\ Id.
\27\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(B).
\28\ Proposed Rule 5950(d) states, in part, that the MQP will
terminate in respect of an MQP Security under the following
circumstances: (A) An MQP Security sustains an average daily trading
volume (consolidated trades in all U.S. Markets) of one million
shares or more for three consecutive months; (B) an MQP Company, on
behalf of an MQP Security, withdraws from the MQP, is no longer
eligible to be in the MQP pursuant to the proposed rule, or its
Sponsor ceases to make MQP Fee payments to the Exchange; (C) an MQP
Security is delisted or is no longer eligible for the MQP; (D) an
MQP Security does not have at least one MQP Market Maker for more
than one quarter; or (E) an MQP Security does not, for two
consecutive quarters, have at least one MQP Market Maker that is
eligible for the MQP Credit.
\29\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
\30\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After an MQP Market Maker has been in the MQP for not less than one
quarter, the MQP Market Maker can withdraw from the MQP on a quarterly
basis. The MQP Market Maker must notify the Exchange in writing one
month prior to withdrawing from the MQP.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange will provide notification on its Web site when it
receives notification that an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP
Security, or an MQP Market Maker intends to withdraw from the MQP,
including the date of actual withdrawal or termination from the
MQP.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See proposed Rule 5950(a)(2)(D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. MQP Company Eligibility and Fee Liability
For an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, to be eligible to
participate in the MQP, the following conditions must be satisfied: (i)
The Exchange must have accepted the MQP Company's application in
respect of the MQP Security and must have accepted the application of
at least one MQP Market Maker in the same MQP Security; (ii) the MQP
Security must meet all requirements to be listed on the Exchange as an
ETF; (iii) the MQP Security must meet all Exchange requirements for
continued listing at all times the MQP Security is in the MQP; and (iv)
while an MQP Company lists an MQP Security, the MQP Company must, on a
product-specific Web site for each product, indicate that the product
is in the MQP and provide the link to the Exchange's MQP Web site.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(1).
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An MQP Company participating in the MQP will incur an annual basic
MQP Fee of $50,000 per MQP Security (``Basic MQP Fee''), which must be
paid to the Exchange prospectively each quarter.\34\ An MQP Company may
also, on an annual basis, voluntarily select to incur an annual
supplemental MQP Fee per MQP Security (``Supplemental MQP Fee''), which
must be paid to the Exchange prospectively each quarter.\35\ The Basic
MQP Fee and Supplemental MQP Fee cannot exceed $100,000 per year when
combined.\36\ The amount of the Supplemental MQP Fee, if any, for each
MQP Security will be determined by the MQP Company initially and will
remain the same for one year.\37\ The Exchange will provide
notification on its Web site regarding the amount, if any, of any
Supplemental MQP Fee determined by an MQP Company per MQP Security.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(A). MQP Fees for MQP
Securities will be paid by the Sponsors associated with the MQP
Companies. See supra note 14.
\35\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(B). As noted above, MQP Fees
for MQP Securities will be paid by the Sponsors associated with the
MQP Companies. See supra notes 14 and 34.
\36\ Id.
\37\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(B)(i).
\38\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(B)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Basic MQP Fee and Supplemental MQP Fee, if any, will be in
addition to the standard (non-MQP) NASDAQ listing fee applicable to the
MQP Security and will not offset the standard listing fee.\39\ The
Exchange will prospectively bill each MQP Company for the quarterly MQP
Fee for each MQP Security.\40\ Basic MQP Fees and the Supplemental MQP
Fees will be credited to the NASDAQ General Fund.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(C).
\40\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(D). As discussed above, the
MQP Fee for an MQP Security will be paid by the Sponsor(s)
associated with the MQP Company. See supra note 14.
\41\ See proposed Rule 5950(b)(2)(E).
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3. MQP Market Maker Eligibility and MQP Credit Distribution
For a Market Maker to be eligible to participate in the MQP, the
Exchange must have accepted the Market Maker's application in respect
of an MQP Security and must have accepted the application of the MQP
Company in respect of the same MQP Security.\42\ In addition, to be
eligible to receive a periodic MQP Credit out of the NASDAQ General
Fund, MQP Market Makers must, when making markets in an MQP Security,
meet the applicable Market Maker obligations pursuant to NASDAQ Rule
4613 \43\ and must also
[[Page 18396]]
meet or exceed the following requirements on a monthly basis with
respect to an MQP Security: (i) For at least 25% of the time when
quotes can be entered in the Regular Market Session,\44\ as averaged
over the course of a calendar month, maintain at least 500 shares of
attributable, displayed quotes or orders at the National Best Bid
(``NBB'') or better, and at least 500 shares of attributable, displayed
quotes or orders at the National Best Offer (``NBO'') or better; and
(ii) for at least 90% of the time when quotes can be entered in the
Regular Market Session, as averaged over the course of a month,
maintain at least 2,500 shares of attributable, displayed posted
liquidity on the NASDAQ Market Center \45\ that are priced no wider
than 2% away from the NBB, and at least 2,500 shares of attributable,
displayed posted liquidity on the NASDAQ Market Center that are priced
no wider than 2% away from the NBO.\46\
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\42\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(1)(A). The Exchange also could
accept the MQP applications of multiple MQP Market Makers in the
same MQP Security, subject to any limitation on the number of MQP
Market Makers established pursuant to the proposed rule. Id.
\43\ NASDAQ Rule 4613 states that market making obligations
applicable to NASDAQ members that are registered as Market Makers
include, among other things, the following quotation requirements
and obligations: For each security in which a member is registered
as a Market Maker, the member shall be willing to buy and sell the
security for its own account on a continuous basis during regular
market hours and shall enter and maintain a two-sided trading
interest (``Two-Sided Obligation'') that is identified to NASDAQ as
the interest meeting the obligation and is displayed in NASDAQ's
quotation montage at all times. Interest eligible to be considered
as part of a Market Maker's Two-Sided Obligation shall have a
displayed quotation size of at least one normal unit of trading (or
a larger multiple thereof); provided, however, that a Market Maker
may augment its Two-Sided Obligation size to display limit orders
priced at the same price as the Two-Sided Obligation. Unless
otherwise designated, a ``normal unit of trading'' shall be 100
shares. After an execution against its Two-Sided Obligation, a
Market Maker must ensure that additional trading interest exists in
NASDAQ to satisfy its Two-Sided Obligation either by immediately
entering new interest to comply with this obligation to maintain
continuous two-sided quotations or by identifying existing interest
on the NASDAQ book that will satisfy this obligation. See Notice,
supra note 4, at 77148, n.68.
\44\ The term ``Regular Market Session'' has the meaning given
in NASDAQ Rule 4120(b)(4)(D). See proposed Rule 5950(e)(6).
\45\ The term ``NASDAQ Market Center'' has the meaning given in
NASDAQ Rule 4751(a). See proposed Rule 5950(e)(4).
\46\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(1)(B). The Exchange provides the
following examples to illustrate these market quality requirements:
Regarding the first market quality standard (25%), in an MQP
Security where the NBBO is $25.00 x $25.10, for a minimum of 25% of
the time when quotes can be entered in the Regular Market Session as
averaged over the course of a month, an MQP Market Maker must
maintain bids at or better than $25.00 for at least 500 shares and
must maintain offers at or better than $25.10 for at least 500
shares. Thus, if there were 20 trading days in a given month and the
MQP Market Maker met this requirement 20% of the time when quotes
can be entered in the Regular Market Session for 10 trading sessions
and 40% of the time when quotes can be entered in the Regular Market
Session for 10 trading sessions then the MQP Market Maker would have
met the requirement 30% of the time in that month.
Regarding the second market quality standard (90%), in an MQP
Security where the NBBO is $25.00 x $25.10, for a minimum of 90% of
the time when quotes can be entered in the Regular Market Session as
averaged over the course of a month, an MQP Market Maker must post
bids for an aggregate of 2,500 shares between $24.50 and $25.00, and
post offers for an aggregate of 2,500 shares between $25.10 and
$25.60. Thus, if there were 20 trading days in a given month and the
MQP Market Maker met this requirement 88% of the time when quotes
can be entered in the Regular Market Session for 10 trading sessions
and 98% of the time when quotes can be entered in the Regular Market
Session for 10 trading sessions then the MQP Market Maker would have
met the requirement 93% of the time in that month.
See Notice, supra note 4, at 77148-49, n.71.
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MQP Credits for each MQP Security will be calculated monthly and
credited out of the NASDAQ General Fund quarterly on a pro rata basis
to one or more eligible MQP Market Makers.\47\ Each MQP Credit will be
allocated 50% to a ``Quote Share Payment'' that is based on ``Qualified
Quotes,'' and 50% to a ``Trade Share Payment'' that is based on
``Qualified Trades.'' \48\ A ``Qualified Quote'' represents
attributable and displayed liquidity (either quotes or orders) entered
by an MQP Market Maker in an MQP Security that is posted within 2% of
the NBBO.\49\ A ``Qualified Trade'' represents a liquidity-providing
execution in an MQP Security by an MQP Market Maker of a Qualified
Quote on the NASDAQ Market Center.\50\ Quote Share Payments will be
based in equal proportions on: (a) Average quoted size at or better
than the NBBO; and (b) average time spent quoting at or better than the
NBBO.\51\ Trade Share Payments will be based upon each MQP Market
Maker's share of total Qualified Trades in an MQP Security executed on
the NASDAQ Market Center.\52\ Quote Share Payments and Trade Share
Payments will be composed of Basic MQP Fees and Supplemental MQP Fees,
if any.\53\
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\47\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2). If only one MQP Market Maker
meets its obligations under the proposal with respect to an MQP
Security, the entire MQP Credit available for that MQP Security will
be distributed by the Exchange to that MQP Market Maker out of the
NASDAQ General Fund. If multiple MQP Market Makers satisfy their
obligations with respect to an MQP Security, the available MQP
Credit for the quarter will be distributed pro rata among them. See
Notice, supra note 4, at 77150. If no MQP Market Maker is eligible
to receive an MQP Credit, the MQP Fee relating to the MQP Security
will remain in the Exchange's General Fund. See id. at 77147.
\48\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(A).
\49\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(A)(i).
\50\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(A)(ii).
\51\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(B)(ii).
\52\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(B)(i).
\53\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(B)(iii). As discussed above,
MQP Credits will be credited out of the NASDAQ General Fund. See
supra note 47 and accompanying text.
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An MQP Credit will be credited quarterly to an MQP Market Maker on
a pro rata basis for each month during the preceding quarter that an
MQP Market Maker is eligible to receive a credit pursuant to the
proposed rule.\54\ The calculation to establish the eligibility of an
MQP Market Maker will be done on a monthly basis.\55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See proposed Rule 5950(c)(2)(C).
\55\ Id. For example, if during a quarter an MQP Market Maker
was eligible to receive a credit for two out of three months, the
MQP Market Maker would receive a quarterly pro rata MQP Credit for
those two months. Id.
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4. Termination of the MQP
The MQP will terminate in respect of an MQP Security under any of
the following circumstances: (i) The MQP Security sustains an average
daily trading volume (consolidated trades in all U.S. markets)
(``ATV'') of 1,000,000 shares or more for three consecutive months;
(ii) an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, withdraws from the
MQP, is no longer eligible to be in the MQP, or its Sponsor ceases to
make MQP Fee payments to the Exchange; (iii) the MQP Security is
delisted or is no longer eligible for the MQP; (iv) the MQP Security
does not have at least one MQP Market Maker for more than one quarter;
or (v) the MQP Security does not, for two consecutive quarters, have at
least one MQP Market Maker that is eligible for MQP Credit.\56\ Any MQP
Credits remaining upon termination of the MQP in respect of an MQP
Security will be distributed on a pro rata basis to the MQP Market
Makers that made a market in the MQP Security and were eligible to
receive MQP Credits pursuant to the proposed rule.\57\ Termination of
an MQP Company, MQP Security, or MQP Market Maker from the MQP will not
preclude the Exchange from allowing re-entry into the MQP where the
Exchange deems proper.\58\
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\56\ See proposed Rule 5950(d)(1).
\57\ See proposed Rule 5950(d)(2). As discussed above, if no
Market Maker is eligible to receive MQP Credits pursuant to the
proposed rule, the MQP Fee will remain in the Exchange's General
Fund. See supra note 47.
\58\ See proposed Rule 5950(d)(3).
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5. Pilot Basis
To provide the Exchange, the Commission, and other interested
parties an opportunity to evaluate the impact of the MQP on the quality
of markets in MQP Securities, the Exchange has proposed to implement
the MQP as a one-year pilot program that will commence when the MQP is
implemented by the Exchange's acceptance of an MQP Company, on behalf
of an MQP Security, and relevant MQP Market Maker into the MQP. The MQP
will end one year after implementation, unless extended pursuant to a
proposed rule change approved by the Commission under Section 19(b) of
the Exchange Act.\59\
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\59\ See proposed Rule 5950(f).
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[[Page 18397]]
During the pilot period, the Exchange will periodically provide
information to the Commission about market quality in respect of the
MQP. Specifically, the Exchange will submit monthly reports to the
Commission about market quality in respect of the MQP (and will make
these monthly reports public). The reports will include data and
analysis with respect to MQP Securities that are in the Program, as
well as data and analysis about the market quality of MQP Securities
that exceed the one million ATV threshold and ``graduate'' from the
Program pursuant to proposed Rule 5950(d)(1)(A).\60\ The reports will
compare, to the extent practicable, securities before and after they
are in the MQP, and will include information regarding the MQP such as:
(i) Rule 605 metrics; \61\ (ii) volume metrics; (iii) the number of MQP
Market Makers; (iv) spread size; and (v) the availability of shares at
the NBBO.\62\ These reports also will include the Exchange's analysis
of the information and assessment of the efficacy of the MQP.\63\ In
addition, the Exchange will provide similar data and analyses to the
Commission about comparable ETFs that are listed on the Exchange but
that are not in the MQP, as well as any other MQP-related data and
analyses requested by Commission staff for the purpose of evaluating
the efficacy of the MQP.\64\ The Exchange will post the monthly reports
on its Web site.\65\ The first report will be submitted within sixty
days after the MQP becomes operative.\66\
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\60\ See Amendment No. 3, supra note 6.
\61\ 17 CFR 242.605.
\62\ See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149. See also Amendment No.
3, supra note 6.
\63\ See Amendment No. 3, supra note 6.
\64\ See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149. See also Amendment No.
3, supra note 6.
\65\ See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149.
\66\ Id.
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B. Proposed Interpretation IM-2460-1 (Market Quality Program)
As part of its proposal to establish the MQP by adding Rule 5950,
the Exchange is amending NASDAQ Rule 2460 (Payments for Market Making),
which prohibits direct or indirect payment by an issuer to a Market
Maker, to adopt a new interpretive provision to the rule.\67\
Specifically, the Exchange is proposing to adopt new interpretation IM-
2460-1 (Market Quality Program) to provide that Rule 2460 will not be
applicable to a member that is accepted into the MQP pursuant to
proposed Rule 5950 (or to a person that is associated with that member)
for its conduct in connection with the MQP.\68\
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\67\ In relevant part, Rule 2460 provides that ``[n]o member or
person associated with a member shall accept any payment or other
consideration, directly or indirectly, from an issuer of a security,
or any affiliate or promoter thereof, for publishing a quotation,
acting as market maker in a security, or submitting an application
in connection therewith.''
\68\ See proposed IM-2460-1. The Exchange notes that, based on
discussions with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
(``FINRA''), it expects FINRA to file a proposed rule change to
exempt the MQP from FINRA Rule 5250. See Notice, supra note 4, at
77141, n.7. Similar to NASDAQ Rule 2460, FINRA Rule 5250 (formerly
NASD Rule 2460) prohibits FINRA members from directly or indirectly
accepting payment from an issuer of a security for acting as a
market maker. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 38812 (July 3,
1997), 62 FR 37105 (July 10, 1997) (SR-NASD-97-29) (``NASD Rule 2460
Approval Order'').
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C. Information Bulletin and Surveillance
The Exchange will issue to its members an information bulletin
about the MQP prior to operation of the Program.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange represents that its surveillance procedures are
adequate to properly monitor the trading of the MQP Securities on the
Exchange during all trading sessions and to detect and deter violations
of the Exchange's rules and applicable federal securities laws. Trading
of the MQP Securities through the Exchange will be subject to FINRA's
surveillance procedures for derivative products including ETFs.\70\ The
Exchange may obtain information through the Intermarket Surveillance
Group (``ISG'') from other exchanges that are members or affiliates of
ISG and from listed MQP Companies and public and non-public data
sources such as, for example, Bloomberg.
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\70\ FINRA surveils trading on the Exchange pursuant to a
regulatory services agreement with the Exchange. The Exchange states
that it is responsible for FINRA's performance under this regulatory
services agreement. See Notice, supra note 4, at 77149, n.79.
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II. Summary of Comment Letters
The Commission received three comment letters in support of the
proposed rule change.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ See TechNet Letter, Weaver Letter, and Menkveld Letter,
supra notes 5 and 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter believes that the proposed MQP would be an important,
positive first step towards addressing the lack of liquidity for many
securities in today's market.\72\ This commenter states its belief that
the MQP is designed to encourage liquidity where it generally has not
flourished, and would make securities that participate in the Program
more attractive to a broader range of investors.\73\ This commenter
also believes that the MQP has the potential to benefit promising tech
companies that today may lack liquid, quality markets.\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ Id.
\73\ Id.
\74\ Id.
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Another commenter states that it fully supports NASDAQ's proposal
and urges the Commission to adopt a stance allowing direct payment
between issuers and market makers.\75\ This commenter states that
direct payments from issuers to market makers are used in a number of
markets outside of the U.S., and argues that such programs are very
successful, resulting in lower transaction costs, lower volatility, and
higher depth for investors.\76\ This commenter points to academic
studies finding that such programs applied to common stocks generally
improve market quality and benefit social welfare.\77\ This commenter
cites an article finding that narrower spreads arising from designated
market makers with an affirmative obligation to set spreads narrower
than would exist otherwise will induce both uninformed and informed
traders to trade more, which in turn will lead to increased price
efficiency and faster price discovery.\78\ This commenter also
discusses his own study of payments from issuers of common stock to
market makers and concludes that market makers entering into these
types of agreements provide liquidity buffers against supply and demand
shocks.\79\ This commenter states that there have been no reports of
manipulation attempts by issuers or abuses by market makers relating to
paid-for market making arrangements abroad, and argues that the
implementation of paying market makers to improve market quality in
other countries probably improved investor confidence, as evidenced by
the increase in volume and order size observed by
[[Page 18398]]
researchers.\80\ The commenter further argues that the payments made to
MQP Market Makers under the Exchange's proposal will not be of
sufficient size to provide enough incentive for manipulation.\81\
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\75\ See Weaver Letter, supra note 5, at 1.
\76\ See id. at 1, 3-4 (citing Euronext, Deutsche Borse, NASDAQ
OMX's European exchanges, and the Oslo Stock Exchange as markets
where such programs have been successful).
\77\ See id. at 1-2 (citing to the following studies: D.G.
Weaver and A. Anand, ``The Value of the Specialist: Empirical
Evidence from the CBOE'' Journal of Financial Markets, Vol. 9, no.
2, 100-118 (2006); D.G. Weaver, A. Anand, and C. Tanggaard ``Paying
for Market Quality'' Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis,
Vol. 44, 1427-1457 (2009) (``Weaver Study''); H. Bessembinder, J.
Hao, and M. Lemmon ``Why Designate Market Makers? Affirmative
Obligations and Market Quality'' Working paper, University of Utah
(2006) (``Bessembinder Study''); and A. Charitou and M. Panayides,
``Market Making in International Capital Markets'' International
Journal of Managerial Finance, Vol. 5, 50-80 (2009).
\78\ See id. at 3 (citing to the Bessembinder Study, supra note
77).
\79\ See id. at 2 (citing to the Weaver Study, supra note 77).
\80\ See id. at 4 and 6.
\81\ See id. at 7.
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Another commenter is supportive of an MQP pilot study and believes
that the MQP could create value for an issuer by enabling an issuer to
essentially guarantee liquidity in its stock.\82\ The commenter views
the proposed MQP as a form of ``liquidity insurance'' through which
shareholders in the issuer agree ex ante to pay for a minimum liquidity
guarantee to insure against uncertain future liquidity.\83\ The
commenter states that if future liquidity for a security is less
uncertain, more investors should participate in the market for the
security, creating a beneficial equilibrium of increased liquidity and
increased investor participation.\84\ Thus, the commenter asserts, the
MQP could be a way to jump-start trading in a particular product at
launch, and if there is intrinsic interest in the product, the product
launch should have a better chance of being successful.\85\ This
commenter cites his own study of designated market maker contracts for
common stocks at Euronext for the finding that such contracts on
average improve the liquidity level, reduce liquidity risk, and reduce
the size of pricing errors in such stocks, among other things,\86\ and
states that his study complements the generally favorable evidence from
other European markets on designated market maker contracts.\87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ See Menkveld Letter, supra note 8, at 2.
\83\ Id.
\84\ Id.
\85\ Id.
\86\ See id. at 1-2 (citing to A.J. Menkveld & T. Wang, ``How do
designated market makers create value for small-caps?'' Manuscript,
VU University, Amsterdam (2011)).
\87\ See id. at 2 (citing to the Weaver Study, supra note 77; M.
Nimalendran & G. Petrella, ``Do `Thinly-Traded' Stocks Benefit from
Specialist Intervention?'' Journal of Banking and Finance, Vol. 27,
1823-54 (2003); and K. Venkataraman & A. Waisburd, ``The Value of
the Designated Market Maker'' Journal of Financial and Quantitative
Analysis, Vol. 42, 735-58 (2007)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This commenter further notes that the risk that insider information
at an issuer could reach an MQP Market Maker is low because the terms
of the Program are fixed and specific, there is no need for
communication between an issuer and the MQP Market Maker after the
Program is in place, the Exchange monitors the performance of the MQP
Market Makers, and the securities proposed for inclusion in the MQP
(ETPs) are baskets of securities and therefore less likely to be
affected by such insider information risk.\88\ Finally, this commenter
suggests that the pilot have a staggered introduction of MQP Securities
with a randomized sequence, and a long enough pre-and post-event period
(e.g., three months) for each introduction to identify an effect, and
that the Exchange provide the Commission with detailed reporting of all
trades and quotes in all securities for a pre-event period and a post-
event period (with MQP Market Maker trades and quotes flagged).\89\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Id. at 3.
\89\ Id. at 4-5.
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III. Discussion and Commission Findings
The Commission has carefully considered the proposed rule change,
as modified by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3 thereto, and finds that the
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3 thereto, is
consistent with the requirements of the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to national securities exchanges. In
particular, as discussed below, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section 6(b)(4) of the Act,\90\ which
requires that the rules of a national securities exchange provide for
the equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and other charges
among its members and issuers and other persons using its facilities,
and with Section 6(b)(5) of the Act,\91\ which requires, among other
things, that the rules of a national securities exchange be designed to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system, and, in general, to protect investors and the public
interest, and that the rules not be designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
Further, as required by Section 3(f) of the Act, the Commission has
considered the proposed rule's impact on efficiency, competition, and
capital formation.\92\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
\91\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\92\ See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MQP, as proposed to be implemented on a pilot basis, is
designed to benefit investors, issuers and market participants by
improving the market quality for ETFs that participate in the MQP. As
proposed by the Exchange, to remain in the MQP and to receive quarterly
MQP Credit payments out of the NASDAQ General Fund, each MQP Market
Maker will be required to comply with monthly quoting requirements that
are higher than the standard quoting requirements applicable to market
makers in ETFs on the Exchange.\93\ Each MQP Market Maker that complies
with these heightened quoting obligations will receive a share of the
MQP Credit based upon its size quoted, and time spent quoting, at or
better than the NBBO, and based on its liquidity-providing executions
of such quotes. In addition, the Program is separately designed to
incentivize MQP Market Makers to compete with each other to receive the
MQP Credit payments, as the payments will be distributed based on each
MQP Market Maker's average quoted size and time spent quoting at or
better than the NBBO as compared to other MQP Market Makers, and its
share of total Qualified Trades in an MQP Security executed on the
Exchange. Thus, the proposal is designed to incentivize MQP Market
Makers to quote more often, and in greater quoted size, at the NBBO,
potentially improving the market quality of the MQP Securities that
participate in the MQP. This potential improved market quality, were it
to occur, could benefit investors in the form of enhanced liquidity,
narrowed spreads, and reduced transaction costs.\94\
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\93\ Specifically, with respect to the monthly quoting
requirement, an MQP Market Maker must quote at least 500 shares of
attributable, displayed liquidity at the NBB or NBO 25% of the time
during the Regular Market Session, and at least 2,500 shares of
attributable, displayed liquidity within 2% of the NBB or NBO 90% of
the time during the Regular Market Session.
\94\ In support of the proposal, the Exchange argues that the
MQP will, among other things, lower transaction costs and enhance
liquidity in both ETFs and their components, making both more
attractive to a broader range of investors, and that, in so doing,
the MQP will help companies access capital to invest and grow. See
Notice, supra note 4, at 77142. The Exchange asserts that being
included in a successful ETF can provide the stocks of these
companies with enhanced liquidity and exposure, enabling them to
attract investors and access capital markets to fund investment and
growth. See id. at 77142, n.12 and 77145, n.37-38 and accompanying
text (citing to the testimony of Eric Noll, Executive Vice
President, NASDAQ OMX, Before the Securities Subcommittee of the
Senate Banking Committee October 19, 2011). Two commenters agree
with the Exchange that the MQP will benefit the operating companies
underlying ETFs in the MQP, in addition to the ETFs themselves. See
Weaver Letter, supra note 5, at 4-5, and Menkveld Letter, supra note
8, at 3-4. As constructed, any potential benefit to operating
companies from the MQP could be derived from the company being
included within an index or other benchmark that underlies an ETF
that participates in the MQP.
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In addition, because the quoted bid-ask spread in a security
represents one of the main drivers of transaction costs for investors,
and because high price volatility should generally deter
[[Page 18399]]
investors from trading low-liquidity ETFs, the MQP, were the potential
benefits of the program to occur, should facilitate a more-efficient
and less-uncertain trading environment for investors.\95\ Furthermore,
were the potential benefits of the MQP to occur, improving the
liquidity of certain low-volume ETFs may help those ETFs better compete
with more established ETFs that cover the same underlying assets and
that have an advantage over new market entrants because they have
already attracted a significant amount of liquidity.\96\
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\95\ Transaction costs are generally defined as the penalty that
an investor pays for transacting. Transaction costs have four
components: commissions; bid/ask spread; market impact; and
opportunity cost. See Grinold, Kahn. Active Portfolio Management,
Second Edition, Chapter 16. An increase in bid-ask spreads will
inevitably increase the transaction costs of an investor. In
addition, transactions in low-liquidity securities have a higher
market impact when compared to other more liquid securities. See
Albert Kyle's (1985) measure of market impact (Kyle's Lambda),
defining an inverse relationship between volume and price impact.
Therefore, the lower the volume of the ETF or stock, the higher the
market impact of any transaction in that stock. This last effect
acts as a disincentive to trading that security. Therefore, an
environment where an ETF trades more often and with a larger number
of shares will reduce transaction costs both through the narrowing
of spreads and lower market impact.
\96\ This phenomenon can be described as economies of scale in
the management of ETFs. Given that most ETFs track an index, it
costs little more to run a fund with $20 billion in assets under
management than one with $200 million in assets under management. As
a result, ETFs that have established large asset holdings can be
offered to investors with lower management fees, which in turn
reinforces the cycle of growth for the large ETFs. See Latzko, David
A., ``Economies of Scale in Mutual Fund Administration.''
Pennsylvania State University, York Campus, 1998 (available at
https://www.personal.psu.edu/~dxl31/research/articles/mutual.pdf)
(analyzing economies of scale in mutual fund administration). See
also Rompotis, Gerasimos Georgiou, ``The German Exchange Traded
Funds (December 4, 2012). The IUP Journal of Applied Finance, Vol.
18, No. 4, October 2012, pp. 62-82 (available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2184748) (analyzing
economies of scale in German ETFs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the Commission believes that the Program has the potential to
improve market quality of the MQP Securities participating in the
Program, the Commission is concerned about unintended consequences of
the Program. For example, the MQP could have the potential to distort
market forces because the Program may act to artificially influence
trading in ETFs that otherwise would not be traded. Similarly, the
Commission recognizes concerns about the potential negative impact on
an MQP Security, such as reduced liquidity and wider spreads, when an
MQP Company withdraws or is terminated from the Program. While the
Commission is mindful of these concerns, the Commission believes, for
the reasons described below, that certain aspects of the Program could
help mitigate these concerns.\97\
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\97\ The concurrent exemptive relief the Commission is issuing
today from Rule 102 under Regulation M concerning the MQP also
contains additional disclosure requirements. See Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 69196 (March 20, 2013), supra note 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, the proposal contains disclosure provisions that will help
to alert and educate potential and existing investors in the MQP
Securities about the Program. Specifically, the Exchange will disclose
on its Web site the following information: (i) The identities of the
MQP Companies, MQP Securities, and MQP Market Makers accepted into the
MQP; (ii) any limits the Exchange may impose on the number of MQP
Securities per MQP Company or MQP Market Makers per MQP Security in the
MQP; (iii) for each MQP Security, the amount of the Supplemental MQP
Fee, if any, per MQP Security that would be in addition to the fixed
Basic MQP Fee of $50,000; (iv) any notification received by the
Exchange that an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, or MQP
Market Maker intends to withdraw from the MQP; and (v) the dates that
an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, commences participation
in and is withdrawn or terminated from the MQP. The Exchange also will
include on its Web site a statement about the MQP that sets forth a
fair and balanced summation of the potentially positive and negative
aspects of the MQP. Furthermore, an MQP Company will be required to
disclose on a product-specific Web site that the MQP Security is
participating in the MQP and will be required to provide a link on that
Web site to the Exchange's MQP Web site. This disclosure will help to
inform investors and other market participants which securities are
participating in the MQP, which and how many MQP Market Makers are
assigned to each MQP Security, the amount of MQP Fees an MQP Company
will incur as a result of participating in the MQP, the amount of MQP
Credits the MQP Market Makers could potentially receive from the
Exchange under the MQP, and the potential benefits and risks of the
MQP. A wide variety of ETFs are currently listed and trading today, and
the Commission believes that such disclosure could be helpful for
investors and other market participants to discern which ETFs listed on
the Exchange are and are not subject to the MQP and to make informed
investment decisions with respect to ETFs.
Second, the Program is targeted at a subset of ETFs, namely those
ETFs that are generally less liquid and which the Exchange believes
might benefit most from the Program.\98\ Specifically, as proposed,
ETFs that are otherwise eligible for the Program will not be eligible
if they have an ATV of 1,000,000 shares or more for three consecutive
months. Likewise, the Program will terminate with respect to a
particular MQP Security if the MQP Security sustains an ATV of
1,000,000 shares or more for three consecutive months.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\98\ The Exchange has stated that the proposal is designed to
provide market quality support to smaller, less frequently traded
ETFs. See Notice, supra note 4, at 77145.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, as proposed by the Exchange, the MQP will be limited to a
one-year pilot. The Commission believes that it is important to
implement the MQP as a pilot. Operating the MQP as a pilot will allow
assessment of whether the MQP is in fact achieving its goal of
improving the market quality of MQP Securities, prior to any proposal
or determination to make the Program permanent.\99\ In addition,
approval on a pilot basis will allow the assessment, prior to any
proposal or determination to make the program permanent, of whether the
MQP has any unintended impact on the MQP Securities, securities not in
the MQP, or the market or market participants generally.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\99\ The Exchange has indicated that if the MQP is successful,
it will seek to expand the program to small cap stocks and other
similar products that may need liquidity enhancement. See Notice,
supra note 4, at 77145. The Exchange would be required to file any
similar proposal applicable to small cap companies pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder. Such a filing would be published for comment in the
Federal Register pursuant to Section 19(b) and Rule 19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange has represented that during the pilot it will submit
monthly reports to the Commission about market quality in respect of
the MQP and that these reports will be posted on the Exchange's public
Web site and will compare securities before and after they are in the
MQP, to the extent practicable, and provide information regarding MQP
Security volume metrics, the number of MQP Market Makers in MQP
Securities, quotation spread and size statistics, and data and analysis
about the market quality of MQP Securities that exceed the threshold
and ``graduate'' from the Program pursuant to proposed Rule
5950(d)(1)(A), among other information and analyses.\100\ The Exchange
also has represented that it will provide to the Commission similar
data and analyses about comparable products listed on the Exchange that
are not participating in the MQP, as well as any other MQP-
[[Page 18400]]
related data and analyses the Commission staff requests from the
Exchange for the purpose of evaluating the efficacy of the MQP.\101\
This information will help the Commission, the Exchange, and other
interested persons to evaluate whether the MQP has resulted in the
intended benefits it is designed to achieve, any unintended
consequences resulting from the MQP, and the extent to which the MQP
alleviates or aggravates the concerns the Commission has noted,
including previously-stated Commission concerns relating to issuer
payments to market makers.\102\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ See supra notes 60-64 and accompanying text.
\101\ Id.
\102\ See infra notes 108-111 and accompanying text.
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For example, the Exchange and the Commission will look to assess
what impact, if any, there is on the market quality of MQP Securities
that withdraw or are otherwise terminated from the MQP.\103\ One way
for an MQP Security to be terminated from the MQP is if it exceeds the
1,000,000 ATV threshold included within the rules.\104\ The Exchange
states that past trading data indicate that ``graduation'' from the MQP
during the pilot at a 1,000,000 ATV threshold should occur more
frequently than at a 2,000,000 ATV threshold, which was the threshold
proposed in its original filing relating to the MQP (which was later
withdrawn).\105\ The Commission recognizes that the MQP may not, in the
one-year pilot period, produce sufficient data (i.e., a large number of
MQP Securities that enter and exit the MQP) to allow a full assessment
of whether termination (or withdrawal) of an MQP Security from the
Program has resulted in any unintended consequences on the market
quality of the MQP Security or otherwise.\106\ However, the Commission
believes that the proposal strikes a reasonable balance between (i)
setting the threshold for ``graduation'' from the MQP high enough to
encourage participation in the MQP and (ii) setting the threshold low
enough to have a sufficient number of MQP Securities graduate from the
Program within the pilot period so that the Exchange, the Commission,
and other interested persons can assess the impact, if any, of the MQP,
including ``graduation'' of MQP Securities from the Program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ See Notice, supra note 4, at 77140 (stating that the
1,000,000 ATV threshold would ``better provide NASDAQ and the
Commission with an opportunity to observe the impact, if any, on MQP
Securities that exceed the threshold and `graduate' from the
Program'').
\104\ See proposed Rule 5950(d)(1)(A).
\105\ See supra note 3. The Exchange provided statistics on the
number of ETFs that would have graduated annually at the 1 million
ATV and 2 million ATV volume thresholds from the MQP had it been in
existence over the period of 2001 to 2012. Specifically, (i) in
2001, 2 ETPs would have graduated from the MQP under the 2 million
ATV threshold, while 3 ETPs would have graduated under the 1 million
ATV threshold; (ii) in 2002, 1 ETP would have graduated under the 2
million ATV threshold, while 4 ETPs would have graduated under the 1
million ATV threshold; (iii) in 2003, 3 ETPs would have graduated
under the 2 million ATV threshold, while 5 ETPs would have graduated
under the 1 million ATV threshold; (iv) in 2004, 2 ETPs would have
graduated under the 2 million ATV threshold, while 5 ETPs would have
graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold; (v) in 2005, 7 ETPs
would have graduated under the 2 million ATV threshold, while 14
ETPs would have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold; (vi) in
2006, 10 ETPs would have graduated under the 2 million ATV
threshold, while 20 ETPs would have graduated under the 1 million
ATV threshold; (vii) in 2007, 23 ETPs would have graduated under the
2 million ATV threshold, while 24 ETPs would have graduated under
the 1 million ATV threshold; (viii) in 2008, 38 ETPs would have
graduated under the 2 million ATV threshold, while 48 ETPs would
have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold; (ix) in 2009, 20
ETPs would have graduated under the 2 million ATV threshold, while
27 ETPs would have graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold; (x)
in 2010, 10 ETPs would have graduated under the 2 million ATV
threshold, while 16 ETPs would have graduated under the 1 million
ATV threshold; (xi) in 2011, 12 ETPs would have graduated under the
2 million ATV threshold, while 16 ETPs would have graduated under
the 1 million ATV threshold; and (xii) in 2012, 3 ETPs would have
graduated under the 2 million ATV threshold, while 5 ETPs would have
graduated under the 1 million ATV threshold. See Notice, supra note
4, at 77145. These statistics, however, assume that all eligible
securities actually participate in the Program.
\106\ One commenter suggests that the pilot have a staggered
introduction of MQP Securities with a randomized sequence, and a
long enough pre- and post-event period (e.g., three months) for each
introduction to identify any effects of the MQP. See Menkveld
Letter, supra note 8, at 4; see also supra note 89. The Commission
believes that the way the Exchange has structured the pilot is
reasonable and consistent with the Act. As discussed above, the
Exchange has represented that it will (a) provide reports to the
Commission that include information about MQP Securities that exceed
the threshold and ``graduate'' from the Program (and make these
reports public) and (b) provide information to the Commission about
other ETPs not in the Program and any other MQP-related data and
analysis Commission staff requests. Such information should be
useful in the evaluation of the effects of the MQP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, the pilot structure of the MQP will provide
information to help determine whether any provisions of the MQP should
be modified. For example, based on data from the pilot, the Exchange
may determine that the 1,000,000 ATV termination threshold is not an
appropriate threshold on which to base eligibility for the MQP or that
the Program should be time-limited.\107\
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\107\ One commenter, addressing whether a 2,000,000 ATV
threshold would be appropriate, noted that such a termination
threshold would be ``an arbitrary number that is no better or worse
than any other large number'' and that the threshold may need to be
adjusted after the MQP has been implemented. See Weaver Letter,
supra note 5, at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that the design of the MQP and the public
disclosure requirements, coupled with implementation of the proposal on
a pilot basis, should help mitigate potential concerns the Commission
has noted above relating to any unintended or negative effects of the
MQP on the ETF market and investors.
The Commission also believes that proposed interpretation IM-2460-
1, which would exempt the MQP from the Exchange's general prohibition
on payments by an issuer to a Market Maker contained in Exchange Rule
2460, is consistent with the Act. Exchange Rule 2460 is almost
identical to, and is based on, FINRA Rule 5250. FINRA Rule 5250
(formerly NASD Rule 2460) was implemented, in part, to address concerns
about issuers paying market makers, directly or indirectly, to
improperly influence the price of an issuer's stock and because of
conflict of interest concerns between issuers and market makers.\108\
FINRA Rule 5250 was designed to preserve ``the integrity of the
marketplace by ensuring that quotations accurately reflect a broker-
dealer's interest in buying or selling a security.'' \109\
Specifically, in the NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order, the Commission
found that the ``decision by a firm to make a market in a given
security and the question of price generally are dependent on a number
of factors, including, among others, supply and demand, the firm's
expectations toward the market, its current inventory position, and
exposure to risk and competition. This decision should not be
influenced by payments to the member from issuers or promoters. Public
investors expect broker-dealers' quotations to be based on the factors
described above. If payments to broker-dealers by promoters and issuers
were permitted, investors would not be able to ascertain which
quotations in the marketplace are based on actual interest and which
quotations are supported by issuers or promoters. This structure would
harm investor confidence in the overall integrity of the marketplace.''
\110\ The Commission also added that ``such payments may be viewed as a
conflict of interest since they may influence the member's decision as
to whether to quote or make a market in a security and, thereafter, the
prices that the member would quote.'' \111\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order, supra note 68, at
37107.
\109\ See NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order, supra note 68, at
37107.
\110\ See id.
\111\ See id. at 37106.
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The Commission believes that a number of aspects of the MQP
mitigate the concerns that FINRA Rule 5250 and
[[Page 18401]]
Exchange Rule 2460 were designed to address.\112\ First, the Commission
believes that the terms of the MQP are generally objective, clear, and
transparent. The standards for the MQP are set forth in proposed NASDAQ
Rule 5950 (further described above) \113\ and describe the application
and withdrawal process, the fee and credit structure, the market
quality standards that an MQP Market Maker must meet and maintain to
secure an MQP Credit, and the MQP termination process. These
requirements apply to all MQP Securities, MQP Companies, and MQP Market
Makers.\114\
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\112\ Two commenters have stated that the design and overall
transparency of the Program adequately address concerns relating to
manipulation. See Weaver Letter, supra note 5, at 6-7, and Menkveld
Letter, supra note 8, at 3.
\113\ See supra Section I.A.
\114\ While the Exchange will have some amount of discretion
pursuant to the proposed rules to limit the number of MQP Securities
that any one MQP Company may list in the MQP, if such a limit is in
the best interest of the Exchange, the MQP Company and the goals of
the MQP, or investors, and/or to limit the number of MQP Market
Makers in an MQP Security, the Commission believes such limits would
not be unfairly discriminatory, as they would be imposed on a MQP-
wide basis. In addition, the Commission believes that it is
reasonable and consistent with the Act for the Exchange to have some
amount of flexibility to limit the number of MQP Securities or MQP
Market Makers, to protect investors and the ETF market.
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Second, the Exchange also will provide notification on its public
Web site regarding the various aspects of the MQP. As discussed above,
this notification will include: (i) The names of the MQP Companies and
the MQP Market Makers that are accepted into the MQP; (ii) the specific
names of the MQP Securities that are participating in the MQP; (iii)
the identity of the MQP Market Makers in each MQP Security; (iv) any
limits the Exchange may impose on the number of MQP Securities per MQP
Company or MQP Market Makers per MQP Security in the MQP; (v) the
amount of the Supplemental MQP Fee of each MQP Security, if one is
established by an MQP Company; (vi) any notification received by the
Exchange that an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, or MQP
Market Maker intends to withdraw from the MQP; and (v) the dates that
an MQP Company, on behalf of an MQP Security, commences participation
in and is withdrawn or terminated from the MQP; and (vii) a statement
about the MQP that sets forth a fair and balanced summary of the
potentially positive and negative aspects of the MQP. In addition, an
MQP Company will be required to disclose that the MQP Security is
participating in the MQP and to provide a link to the Exchange's MQP
Web page on the MQP Security's Web site.
And third, MQP Securities will be traded on the Exchange, which is
a regulated market, pursuant to the current trading and reporting rules
of the Exchange, and pursuant to the Exchange's established market
surveillance and trade monitoring procedures. The Exchange will
administer the application and acceptance of the MQP Companies and MQP
Market Makers into the MQP and will manage the payment of the MQP
Credit to MQP Market Makers. The Exchange has represented that the
recipient MQP Market Makers of the MQP Credits and the size of the MQP
Credits will be determined solely by the Exchange pursuant to objective
criteria, and MQP Companies will have no role in selecting the MQP
Market Maker recipients or in determining the specific amount, if any,
of their MQP Credits. Furthermore, the MQP Fees will be paid into
NASDAQ's General Fund, and the MQP Credits will be paid out of NASDAQ's
General Fund. If no MQP Market Maker is eligible to earn an MQP Credit
for a particular MQP Security during a quarter, the MQP Fee will remain
in NASDAQ's General Fund, and no MQP Fees or any portion thereof will
be rebated with respect to any MQP Security, regardless of the
performance of the MQP Security's assigned MQP Market Makers. The
Commission believes that these factors, taken together, should help to
mitigate the conflict of interest and other concerns that the
Commission has previously identified \115\ relating to issuers paying
for market making.\116\
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\115\ See NASD Rule 2460 Approval Order, supra note 68, and
supra notes 108-111. See also Securities Act Release No. 6334 (Aug.
6, 1981), 46 FR 42001 (Aug. 18, 1981), at Section IV.B (Treatment as
Statutory Underwriter). In addition, only index-based ETFs are
eligible to participate in the MQP. The Exchange notes that the
prices of ETFs are generally linked back to the underlying
securities and that the ETF trust structure acts as an insulating
wall between market maker and product. See Notice, supra note 4, at
77145, n.36.
\116\ Until FINRA files a proposed rule change to exempt
payments made pursuant to the MQP from FINRA Rule 5250 and the
proposed rule change becomes effective, receipt of payments pursuant
to the MQP by a market maker that is a FINRA member would be in
violation of FINRA Rule 5250.
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The Commission believes that it is reasonable and consistent with
the Act for the Exchange to limit the MQP to certain types of
securities to allow the Exchange, through a pilot, to assess whether
the Program will have the desired effect of improving the market
quality of these securities before implementing the Program on a wider
scale. The Commission believes that it is reasonable and consistent
with the Act for the Exchange to limit the MQP to products under the
1,000,000 ATV threshold, to support the Exchange's stated purpose to
provide market quality support to less frequently traded ETFs.
The Commission believes that the MQP Fees are an equitable
allocation of reasonable fees. First, participation in the MQP is
voluntary. An entity is free to determine whether it would be
economically desirable to pay the MQP Fee, given the amount of the fee,
the trading characteristics of the ETF (if applicable) and the
anticipated benefit. If an MQP Company chooses to participate in the
MQP with respect to an MQP Security, it will incur the Basic MQP Fee of
$50,000, and the MQP Company will have discretion to incur the
Supplemental MQP Fee in an amount up to an additional $50,000. The MQP
Fees will be paid for by the Sponsors associated with the MQP
Companies. Thus, the MQP Fees will be incurred and paid for by an
issuer and its sponsor, as applicable, that have chosen to participate
in, and that may potentially benefit from, the MQP.\117\ An entity that
chooses not to participate will not be required to pay any additional
fee beyond the standard listing fees. Further, the MQP Fees will be the
same for any MQP Company wishing to participate in the program.
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\117\ Issuers of ETFs registered under the 1940 Act are
prohibited from paying directly or indirectly for distribution of
their shares (i.e., directly or indirectly financing any activity
that is primarily intended to result in the sale of shares), unless
such payments are made pursuant to a plan that meets the
requirements of Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. Although the services
at issue could be primarily intended to result in the sale of fund
shares, the Commission has stated that such a determination will
depend on the surrounding circumstances. See Payment of Asset-Based
Sales Loads by Registered Open-End Management Investment Companies,
Investment Company Act Release No. 16431 (June 13, 1988) (``1988
12b-1 Release''). As the Commission has noted previously, if a fund
makes payments that are ostensibly for a non-distribution purpose,
and the recipient of those payments finances distribution, the
question arises whether the fund's assets are being used indirectly
for distribution. The Commission has stated that there can be no
precise definition of what types of expenditures constitute indirect
use of fund assets, and this determination is based on the facts and
circumstances of each individual case. In addition, fund directors,
particularly independent directors bear substantial responsibility
for making that judgment. See Bearing of Distribution Expenses by
Mutual Funds, Investment Company Act Release No. 11414 (October 28,
1980).
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The Commission also believes that availability of the discretionary
Supplemental MQP Fee is consistent with the Act. Each MQP Company
participating in the MQP will have the choice of whether or not to
incur, as well as the exact amount (up to $50,000) of, the Supplemental
MQP Fee. Not all ETFs are alike, and trading in certain products may be
riskier or more costly
[[Page 18402]]
than trading in others. The Commission believes that it is reasonable
to allow each MQP Company to choose to participate in the Program and
to determine whether it is desirable to incentivize MQP Market Makers
through the Supplemental MQP Fee to improve the market quality of
certain MQP Securities. Further, as discussed above, the payment of the
Supplemental MQP Fee will be transparent to the marketplace, as this
information will be disclosed on the Exchange's Web site.\118\
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\118\ See supra note 38 and accompanying text.
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IV. Section 11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act
Section 11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act \119\ generally prohibits a
broker-dealer from extending or maintaining credit, or arranging for
the extension or maintenance of credit, on shares of new issue
securities, if the broker-dealer participated in the distribution of
the new issue securities within the preceding 30 days. The Commission's
view is that shares of open-end investment companies and unit
investment trusts registered under the 1940 Act, such as ETF shares,
are distributed in a continuous manner, and broker-dealers that sell
such securities are therefore participating in the ``distribution'' of
a new issue for purposes of Section 11(d)(1).\120\
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\119\ 15 U.S.C. 78k(d)(1).
\120\ See, e.g., Exchange Act Release Nos. 6726 (Feb. 8, 1962),
27 FR 1415 (Feb. 15, 1962) and 21577 (Dec. 18, 1984), 49 FR 50174
(Dec. 27, 1984).
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The Division of Trading and Markets, acting under delegated
authority, granted an exemption from Section 11(d)(1) and Rule 11d1-2
thereunder for broker-dealers that have entered into an agreement with
an ETF's distributor to place orders with the distributor to purchase
or redeem the ETF's shares (``Broker-Dealer APs).\121\ The SIA
Exemption allows a Broker-Dealer AP to extend or maintain credit, or
arrange for the extension or maintenance of credit, to or for customers
on the shares of qualifying ETFs subject to the condition that neither
the Broker-Dealer AP, nor any natural person associated with the
Broker-Dealer AP, directly or indirectly (including through any
affiliate of the Broker-Dealer AP), receives from the fund complex any
payment, compensation, or other economic incentive to promote or sell
the shares of the ETF to persons outside the fund complex, other than
non-cash compensation permitted under NASD Rule 2830(l)(5)(A), (B), or
(C). This condition is intended to eliminate special incentives that
Broker-Dealer APs and their associated persons might otherwise have to
``push'' ETF shares.
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\121\ See Letter from Catherine McGuire, Chief Counsel, Division
of Trading and Markets, Securities and Exchange Commission to
Securities Industry Association (Nov. 21, 2005) (``SIA Exemption'').
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The MQP will permit certain ETFs to voluntarily incur increased
listing fees payable to the Exchange. In turn, the Exchange will use
the fees to make incentive payments to market makers that improve the
liquidity of participating issuers' securities, and thus enhance the
market quality for the participating issuers. Incentives payments will
be accrued for, among other things, executing purchases and sales on
the Exchange. Receipt of the incentive payments by certain broker-
dealers will implicate the condition of the SIA Exemption from the new
issue lending restriction in Section 11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act
discussed above. The Commission's view is that the incentive payments
market makers will receive under the proposal are indirect payments
from the fund complex to the market maker and that those payments are
compensation to promote or sell the shares of the ETF. Therefore, a
market maker that also is a Broker-Dealer AP for an ETF (or an
associated person or an affiliate of a Broker-Dealer AP) that receives
the incentives will not be able to rely on the SIA Exemption from
Section 11(d)(1). This does not mean that Broker-Dealer APs cannot
participate in the MQP; it merely means they cannot rely on the SIA
Exemption while doing so. Thus, Broker-Dealer APs that participate in
the MQP will need to comply with Section 11(d)(1) unless there is
another applicable exemption.
V. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,\122\ that the proposed rule change (SR-NASDAQ-2012-137), as
modified by Amendment Nos. 1 and 3 thereto, be, and it hereby is,
approved.
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\122\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\123\
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\123\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Kevin M. O'Neill,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2013-06882 Filed 3-25-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P