Self-Regulatory Organizations; The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Order Approving a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1 Thereto, To Adopt New Rule 5713 and List Paired Class Shares Issued by AccuShares® Commodities Trust I, 9778-9788 [2015-03713]
Download as PDF
9778
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 36 / Tuesday, February 24, 2015 / Notices
rule change does not significantly affect
competition, but rather simply seeks to
align the Exchange rule with SEC Rule
14a–13 with respect to requirements
related to inquiry of brokers in advance
of a shareholder meeting.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The Exchange has filed the proposed
rule change pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act 6 and Rule
19b–4(f)(6) thereunder.7 Because the
proposed rule change does not (i)
significantly affect the protection of
investors or the public interest; (ii)
impose any significant burden on
competition; and (iii) become operative
prior to 30 days from the date on which
it was filed, or such shorter time as the
Commission may designate if consistent
with the protection of investors and the
public interest, it has become effective
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the
Act 8 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6) thereunder.9
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act 10 to
determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
6 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6).
8 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
9 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6). In addition, Rule 19b–
4(f)(6)(iii) requires the Exchange to give the
Commission written notice of the Exchange’s intent
to file the proposed rule change, along with a brief
description and text of the proposed rule change,
at least five business days prior to the date of filing
of the proposed rule change, or such shorter time
as designated by the Commission. The Exchange
has satisfied this requirement.
10 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NYSE–2015–07 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSE–2015–07. 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
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–NYSE–
2015–07 and should be submitted on or
before March 17, 2015.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.11
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–03658 Filed 2–23–15; 8:45 am]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–74299; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2014–065]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change,
as Modified by Amendment No. 1
Thereto, To Adopt New Rule 5713 and
List Paired Class Shares Issued by
AccuShares® Commodities Trust I
February 18, 2015.
I. Introduction
On June 11, 2014, The NASDAQ
Stock Market LLC (‘‘NASDAQ’’ or
‘‘Exchange’’) 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 a proposed rule change to:
(1) Adopt listing standards for Paired
Class Shares in new Rule 5713; and (2)
list and trade Paired Class Shares
(‘‘Shares’’) issued by AccuShares®
Commodities Trust I (‘‘Trust’’) relating
to the following funds pursuant to new
Rule 5713: (a) AccuShares S&P GSCI®
Spot Fund; (b) AccuShares S&P GSCI®
Agriculture and Livestock Spot Fund;
(c) AccuShares S&P GSCI® Industrial
Metals Spot Fund; (d) AccuShares S&P
GSCI® Crude Oil Spot Fund; (e)
AccuShares S&P GSCI® Brent Oil Spot
Fund; (f) AccuShares S&P GSCI®
Natural Gas Spot Fund; and (g)
AccuShares Spot CBOE® VIX® Fund
(each individually, ‘‘Fund,’’ and,
collectively, ‘‘Funds’’).
The proposed rule change was
published for comment in the Federal
Register on June 23, 2014.3 On August
6, 2014, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of
the Act,4 the Commission designated a
longer period within which to approve
the proposed rule change, disapprove
the proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule change.5 On September 18, 2014,
the Commission instituted proceedings
to determine whether to approve or
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72412
(June 17, 2014), 79 FR 35610 (‘‘Notice’’).
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72779,
79 FR 47162 (Aug. 12, 2014). The Commission
designated a longer period within which to take
action on the proposed rule change and designated
September 19, 2014 as the date by which it should
approve, disapprove, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the proposed rule
change.
2 17
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disapprove the proposed rule change,6
and on December 16, 2014, the
Commission extended the deadline for
Commission action until February 18,
2015.7 The Commission received six
comment letters regarding the proposal,
including one from the Exchange and
two from AccuShares Investment
Management LLC (‘‘Sponsor’’), the
sponsor of the Funds.8 On February 10,
2015, the Exchange submitted
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change.9
This order approves the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No.
1 thereto.
II. Description of the Proposal
The Exchange proposes to adopt new
Rule 5713, which permits the listing of
Paired Class Shares, and to list and
trade Shares of the Funds.
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A. General Description of Paired Class
Shares 10
Paired Class Shares will be structured
with the objective of providing investors
with exposure to changes in an index or
other numerical variable (‘‘Underlying
Benchmark’’). Paired Class Shares will
be issued by a trust on behalf of a fund,
and each fund will be a segregated
series of that trust.11 Paired Class Shares
will have values that are based on an
Underlying Benchmark where the value
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73142,
79 FR 57150 (Sept. 24, 2014) (‘‘OIP’’).
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73843,
79 FR 76428 (Dec. 22, 2014).
8 See Letter from Jack Fonss, CEO and CoFounder of the Sponsor, to Kevin O’Neill, Deputy
Secretary, Commission (Sept. 25, 2014) (‘‘Sponsor
Letter’’); Letter from Robert E. Whaley, Valere Blair
Potter Professor of Finance, Director, Financial
Markets Research Center, Vanderbilt Owen
Graduate School of Management, to Kevin O’Neill,
Deputy Secretary, Commission (Oct. 8, 2014)
(‘‘Whaley Letter’’); Letter from David B. Allen to
Commission (Oct. 11, 2014) (‘‘Allen Letter’’); Letter
from Mark Kassner to Commission (Oct. 13, 2014)
(‘‘Kassner Letter’’); Email from Ned Cataldo, Chief
Operating Officer and Co-Founder of the Sponsor,
to Heather Seidel, Associate Director, Commission
(Oct. 24, 2014) (‘‘Sponsor Email’’); Letter from Jurij
Trypupenko, Associate General Counsel, Exchange,
to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission (Oct. 28,
2014) (‘‘Exchange Letter’’). All comment letters are
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/srnasdaq-2014-065/nasdaq2014065.shtml.
9 In Amendment No. 1, the Exchange (a) corrected
references to the entity that will be calculating and
publishing the CBOE Volatility Index®, (b) deleted
Commentary .05 to Rule 5713 due to its
inapplicability to Paired Class Shares, and (c) made
technical re-numbering changes to Rule 5713 as a
result of the deletion of Commentary .05.
Amendment No. 1 provided clarification to the
proposed rule change, and because it does not
materially affect the substance of the proposed rule
change, Amendment No. 1 is not subject to notice
and comment.
10 A complete description of Rule 5713 and
Paired Class Shares can be found in the Notice,
supra note 3.
11 See NASDAQ Rule 5713(c).
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of the underlying benchmark reflects the
value of assets, prices, price volatility,
or other economic interests (‘‘Reference
Asset’’).12
The trust for each fund of Paired Class
Shares will always issue and redeem
Paired Class Shares in pairs of shares of
opposing classes of each fund: Up
Shares and Down Shares. The values of
the opposing classes will move in
opposite directions as the value of the
fund’s Underlying Benchmark varies
from its starting level. Up Shares will be
positively linked to the fund’s
Underlying Benchmark, and Down
Shares will be negatively linked to the
fund’s Underlying Benchmark.13 The
rate of linkage or leverage of a fund’s Up
Shares and Down Shares performance to
the performance of the fund’s referenced
Underlying Benchmark will be one-toone.14 Each fund will use a
mathematical formula to calculate the
liquidation value attributable to each of
its classes of Paired Class Shares (‘‘Class
Value’’) and to each share of each class
(‘‘Class Value per Share’’).15
Each fund will engage in regular
distributions 16 and may also engage in
special distributions 17 or corrective
12 See id. The Exchange states that other
economic interests would include, for example,
currencies, interest rates, non-investable economic
indices, and other measures of financial instrument
value. See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35611,
n.11. The Exchange will file separate proposals
under Section 19(b) of the Act before listing and
trading each series of Paired Class Shares. See
Commentary .02 to NASDAQ Rule 5713.
13 See NASDAQ Rule 5713(c).
14 See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35611.
15 See id. The Exchange represents that the
mathematical formula is based on the following
factors: (1) The value of the fund’s assets; (2) the
allocation of that value based on changes in the
level of the fund’s Underlying Benchmark, which
may be limited, reduced, capped, or otherwise
modified according to formula or pre-set
parameters; and (3) the daily accrual of gain and
income or loss on the assets of the fund, less the
liabilities of the fund, as such gains, income losses,
and liabilities are allocated to each class of the
fund. See id. at n.12.
16 On a scheduled basis, funds would make
regular distributions, paying a dividend to the class
of shares that had increased in value since the last
distribution. According to the Exchange, regular
and special distributions will be made in the form
of cash during the first six months of trading in
Paired Class Shares. Thereafter, each fund will pay
all or any part of any regular or special distribution
in Paired Class Shares instead of cash, where
further cash distributions would adversely affect
the liquidity of the market for the fund’s shares or
impact the fund’s ability to meet minimum
Exchange distribution requirements. See id. at
35619 (further stating that all payments made in
Paired Class Shares will be made in equal numbers
of Up and Down Shares, and that, to the extent a
share distribution would result in the distribution
of fractional Paired Class Shares, cash in an amount
equal to the value of the fractional Paired Class
Shares will be distributed rather than fractional
Paired Class Shares).
17 Funds would make special distributions when
movement in the Underlying Benchmark exceeded
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9779
distributions.18 Immediately after each
distribution, the fund’s Underlying
Benchmark participation or exposure
will be reset, and the fund’s Class Value
per Share for each of its classes will be
set to equal the lowest Class Value per
Share of the two classes of Paired Class
Shares.
Paired Class Shares of a fund will be
created and redeemed in specified
aggregations of equal quantities of Up
Shares and Down Shares 19 at their
respective Class Values per Share.
Paired Class Shares can only be created
or redeemed by authorized participants
(‘‘Authorized Participants’’).20 Paired
Class Shares creation and redemption
transactions will only occur (a) for cash
consideration, and (b) in equal predetermined quantities of Up Shares and
Down Shares.
B. The Exchange’s Description of the
Funds
The Exchange has made the following
representations and statements in
describing, among other things, the
Funds, the corresponding Underlying
Benchmarks, arbitrage, and
distributions.21
The Shares will be offered by the
Trust, which is a Delaware statutory
trust.22 Wilmington Trust, N.A., a
a specified rate of change since the previous
distribution. Special Distributions are designed to
prevent rapid movements in the Underlying
Benchmark from transferring all value in the fund
either to the Up Shares or to the Down Shares. See
id. (describing regular and special distributions to
be made in the form of cash during the first six
months of trading in Paired Class Shares, and
thereafter, in Paired Class Shares instead of cash).
18 Funds would make corrective distributions
when the trading price of a class of shares deviates
from its class value by a specified amount for a
specified period. Corrective distributions are
designed to prevent the Up Shares and Down
Shares from becoming locked in a persistent state
of equal and opposite deviations from class value.
In a corrective distribution, a fund will issue each
holder of Up Shares an equal number of Down
Shares, and each holder of Down Shares an equal
number of Up Shares.
19 A Creation Unit for each Fund will comprise
25,000 Up Shares and 25,000 Down Shares. See id.
at 35612, n.14.
20 See id. at 35612.
21 The Commission notes that additional
information regarding the Trust, the Funds, and the
Shares, including risks, information relating to the
Underlying Benchmarks and Reference Assets,
Class Value and Class Value per Share calculations,
creation and redemption procedures, trading halts
and pauses, applicable Exchange trading rules,
surveillance, information circulars, fees, disclosure
policies, distributions, and taxes, among other
information, is included in the Notice and the
Registration Statement, as applicable. See Notice,
supra note 3, and Registration Statement, infra note
22, respectively.
22 The Exchange states that the offer and sale of
Paired Class Shares of each Fund will be registered
with the Commission by means of the Trust’s
registration statement on Form S–1 under the
Securities Act of 1933 (‘‘Securities Act’’). According
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national banking association, will serve
as the trustee (‘‘Trustee’’) and the
investment advisor (‘‘Investment
Advisor’’) for each Fund. The
Investment Advisor, which is chosen by
the Sponsor, is responsible for investing
each Fund’s available cash in bills,
bonds, and notes issued and guaranteed
by the United States Treasury (‘‘United
States Treasury Securities’’) with
remaining maturities of 90 days or less
(‘‘Eligible Treasuries’’) and over-night
repurchase agreements collateralized by
United States Treasury Securities
(‘‘Eligible Repos,’’ and together with
cash and Eligible Treasuries,
collectively, ‘‘Eligible Assets’’). State
Street Bank and Trust Company (‘‘State
Street’’), a Massachusetts trust company,
will serve as the custodian,
administrator, and transfer agent
(‘‘Custodian,’’ ‘‘Administrator,’’ or
‘‘Transfer Agent’’) for each Fund.23
The Underlying Benchmark of each
Fund, other than the AccuShares Spot
CBOE VIX Fund (‘‘VIX Fund’’), is
constructed, calculated, and published
by S&P® Dow Jones Indices LLC (‘‘Index
Provider’’).24 The CBOE Volatility
Index® (‘‘VIX’’), which is the
Underlying Benchmark of the VIX Fund,
is calculated and published by CBOE.
According to the Exchange, both the
Index Provider and CBOE are
unaffiliated with the Trust and the
Sponsor.25 To the extent that an
Underlying Benchmark is maintained by
a broker-dealer or investment advisor,
such broker-dealer or investment
to the Exchange, the Registration Statement was
filed on March 18, 2014 and will be effective as of
the date of such offer and sale. See Notice, supra
note 3, 79 FR at 35615. The Commission notes that
a pre-effective amendment No. 1 to the registration
statement (‘‘Registration Statement’’) was filed on
July 17, 2014 (File No. 333–194666).
23 The Custodian will hold each Fund’s securities
and cash and will perform each Fund’s Class Value
and Class Value per Share calculations. As
Administrator, State Street will, among other
things, perform or supervise the performance of
services necessary for the operation and
administration of the Funds (other than making
investment decisions or providing services
provided by other service providers), including
accounting and other fund administrative services.
As Transfer Agent, State Street will, among other
things, provide transfer agent services with respect
to the creation and redemption of Creation Units.
The Transfer Agent will receive from Authorized
Participants creation and redemption orders and
deliver acceptances and rejections of such orders to
Authorized Participants as well as coordinate the
transmission of such orders and instructions among
the Sponsor and the Authorized Participants.
24 The Underlying Benchmarks for all of the
Funds other than the VIX Fund are: (1) The S&P
GSCI Spot index; (2) the S&P GSCI Agricultural and
Livestock Spot index; (3) the S&P GSCI Industrial
Metals Spot index; (4) the S&P GSCI Crude Oil Spot
index; (5) the S&P GSCI Brent Crude Oil Spot index;
and (6) the S&P GSCI Natural Gas Spot index,
(collectively, ‘‘S&P GSCI Commodity Indices’’).
25 See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35615.
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advisor will erect a ‘‘firewall’’ around
personnel who have access to
information concerning changes and
adjustments to the Underlying
Benchmark.26
As described above, the Trust will
issue Shares on behalf of each Fund in
offsetting pairs, where one constituent
of the pair, the Up Shares, is positively
linked to the Fund’s Underlying
Benchmark, and the other constituent,
the Down Shares, is negatively linked to
the Fund’s Underlying Benchmark.
Once created, a Fund’s Paired Class
Shares will trade independently of each
other on the Exchange. The cash
proceeds from the creation of Paired
Class Shares may be held by a Fund
only in Eligible Assets designed to
preserve capital while earning an
investment return that is consistent with
the preservation of capital. Upon any
redemption of a Fund’s Creation Units
by an Authorized Participant, the cash
of the Fund will be used to pay the
proceeds of the redemption to the
redeeming Authorized Participant.
Each Fund engaging in a regular
distribution,27 a special distribution,28 a
corrective distribution,29 or a net
income distribution 30 will provide at
least three business days’ advance
notice (or longer advance notice as may
be required by the Exchange) 31 of such
an event. Each Fund engaging in a share
split 32 will provide at least ten calendar
days’ advance notice (or longer advance
notice as may be required by the
Exchange) of such an event. In each
instance, the Sponsor will notify the
Exchange, and post a notice of such
event and its details on the Sponsor’s
Web site (www.AccuShares.com). For
regular distributions that occur on
schedule, the Sponsor will cause a press
release to be issued identifying the
receiving class, the amount of cash, the
amount of Paired Class Shares (if any),
and any other information the Sponsor
deems relevant regarding the
distribution and will post this
26 See
id.
supra note 16.
28 See supra note 17.
29 See supra note 18.
30 In a net income distribution, cash is distributed
to investors based on income (after expenses) from
the financial instruments held by the Fund.
31 The Exchange states that it may determine that
a longer notice is advisable in certain circumstances
(e.g., an extended, or unexpected, market break).
32 Reverse share splits will be declared to
maintain a positive Class Value per Share for either
the Up Shares or the Down Shares of an AccuShares
Fund should the Class Value per Share of either
class approach zero. Reverse share splits are
expected to occur in the context of special
distributions and are expected to be triggered after
Class Value per Share declines below a specified
dollar threshold as set forth in the applicable Fund
prospectus.
27 See
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information on the Sponsor’s Web site.
With respect to special distributions,
corrective distributions, and share
splits, the information provided will
include the relevant ex-, record, and
payment dates for each such event and
relevant data concerning each such
event. These events will also be
reported in press releases, on the
Sponsor’s Web site, and in current
reports on Form 8–K as material events,
as well as in the Fund’s periodic
reports.
C. Summary of the Comments
In the OIP, the Commission posed
questions regarding the proposed rule
change. Commenters responded to those
questions and offered other comments
as well. The comments are summarized
below.
1. The Effect of the Distributions on the
Premiums and Discounts Between the
Trading Price and Class Value per Share
In response to Commission questions
about the effect of the Funds’
distributions on premiums and
discounts,33 the Sponsor asserts that the
presence of regular, special, and
corrective distributions will aid in the
reduction of premiums and discounts.34
With regard to both regular and special
distributions, the Sponsor asserts that a
Fund will make these types of
distributions based on the movement of
the Underlying Benchmark since the
last distribution date, and will then
reset the index to the current market
level.35 According to the Sponsor, two
positive effects relating to potential
discounts or premiums from regular and
special distributions are: (1) An investor
will enjoy an actual distribution relating
to the index move rather than having to
rely on trading out of an intrinsic gain
that could be subject to market lags,
frictions, or a lack of realizable trading
price responsiveness; and (2) the index
reset will re-equate the intrinsic share
prices, having the effect of further
highlighting any deviations between
trading prices and Class Values, and
consequently all investors (not just
market professionals) will more clearly
observe any premium or discount, and
33 See
OIP, supra note 6, 79 FR at 57157.
Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 4.
Similarly, the Exchange states that the corrective
distribution feature is designed to prevent losses
that have occurred in other ETPs in the past. See
Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 22–23. See also
Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35611 (‘‘Immediately
after each regular, special and corrective
distribution, the Fund’s Underlying Benchmark
participation or exposure will be reset and the
Fund’s Class Value per Share for each of its classes
will be set to equal the lowest Class Value per Share
of the two classes of Paired Class Shares.’’).
35 See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 4.
34 See
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any investor can execute a trade in
response to these deviations.36
The Sponsor states its view that
almost all premium and discount
combinations of the Up Shares and
Down Shares of a Fund will be readily
cured by conventional arbitrage.
According to the Sponsor, the corrective
distribution is an investor safety feature,
above and beyond conventional
arbitrage, designed to remedy those
unique scenarios where the material
discount amount of one Fund share is
exactly equal to the material premium
amount of the opposing share.37
The Sponsor states that the corrective
distribution 38 is expected to have both
a preventative effect and a curative
effect relating to premiums and
discounts between trading prices and
Class Values per Share.39 The Sponsor
asserts that the possibility of a
corrective distribution will
disincentivize market participants from
buying or selling shares at material
premiums or discounts to the Class
Values per Share.40 Relating to the
curative impact, the Sponsor states that
following the corrective distribution: (1)
The discount class holder, potentially
stranded by low available bid prices,
would have the correct aggregate value
(inclusive of index movements) in a 50/
50 position in the discount shares and
premium shares; and (2) a premium
class holder would also have the correct
aggregate value (inclusive of index
movements) in a 50/50 position in
discount shares and premium shares.41
The Sponsor asserts that these positions
would be unaffected by a single share
class premium or discount, and would
be readily saleable at a stable and
readily identifiable price (especially
because the Fund is limited to holding
cash equivalents).42 Authorized
Participants, the Sponsor notes, may
redeem these positions in sufficient
aggregate amount.43
One commenter, who recommends
that the Commission approve the
proposed rule change, asserts that the
regular, special, and corrective
distributions will help prevent the
significant premiums and discounts that
36 See
id.
id.
38 A corrective distribution will result in: (1) The
investors holding the share class associated with
the favorable index move to realize a gain equal to
the realized move in the index; and (2) all investors
receiving an equal quantity of each share class of
a Fund. See id. at 5.
39 See id. at 4.
40 See id.
41 See id. at 5.
42 See id.
43 See id.
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have occurred in other ETPs in recent
years.44
Another commenter expressed
concern that the structure of Paired
Class Shares will result in persistent
premiums and discounts that will
fundamentally invalidate the premise of
the products in the market, making
them misleading to investors.45 This
commenter asserts that the arbitrage
mechanism will not work to keep each
of the products trading closely to its
intrinsic value; instead, the commenter
argues that the arbitrage mechanisms
will, in theory, keep the sum of the
discount on one class and the premium
on the other at zero. The commenter
states its view that it is not
economically possible to maintain
intrinsic value in the secondary market,
and predicts that any attempt to do so
will lead to massive speculation in the
products until they are pushed to a
breaking point, at which point lesssophisticated investors will suffer
significant losses.46 To support these
conclusions, the opposing commenter
provides a number of hypothetical
situations involving the trading
relationship between the VIX index, VIX
futures, and the proposed VIX Fund.47
According to the commenter, the core of
the issue is that the products are simply
not hedgeable.48 The commenter
predicts that there will be very
significant arbitrage pressures
attempting to exploit the ‘‘economic
perversity of the products’’ and
significant activity around prices that
reflect a corrective distribution.49
The Exchange asserted that
underlying the opposing commenter’s
arguments regarding ineffective
arbitrage is the misunderstanding that
spot levels and futures levels are
equivalent and interchangeable.50 The
Exchange agrees that global markets will
be broadly inter-related, including spot
markets, futures markets, stock markets,
and bond markets, but argues that, in
the case of volatility, and VIX in
particular, the spot market is not ‘‘in
line’’ and directly comparable with VIX
futures prices.51 To support this
44 See
Whaley Letter, supra note 8, at 1–2.
Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 1.
46 See id. This commenter further states that,
while his assertions regarding the possibility of
persistent premiums and discounts and the
potential failure of an effective arbitrage mechanism
for Paired Class Shares focus on the proposed VIX
Fund and VIX futures, the commenter points out
that the same economic principles apply to any
futures. See id.
47 See id. at 1–3.
48 See id. at 2.
49 See id.
50 See Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 17.
51 See id. at 18. The Exchange asserts that the
willingness of market participants to trade options
45 See
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9781
assertion, the Exchange cites guidance
from the CBOE VIX Primer Basics on the
educational section of CBOE’s Web
site.52 Additionally, the Exchange states
that, contrary to the assumptions
implicit in the opposing commenter’s
numerical examples, the Fund’s
creations, redemptions, and other
operations are not limited by VIX
futures expiration dates.53 The
Exchange asserts that, uniquely, the
intrinsic Class Values of the Funds are
not dependent upon successful trading,
rolling, or otherwise rebalancing of
securities or futures contracts.54
The Exchange also asserts that one
part of the arbitrage process for Paired
Class Shares will operate the same way
as it does for all exchange-traded funds
(‘‘ETFs’’); namely, a share trading above
or below an intrinsic Class Value can be
transacted, hedged, and traded. Paired
Class Shares have an additional
arbitrage mechanism, according to the
Exchange: Intra-fund arbitrage—through
the valuation and trading of both Up
and Down Shares—limits the discounts,
premiums, or any combination thereof
of the share classes to a value indicated
by the readily determinable net asset
value of the Fund’s cash equivalent
assets.55 The Exchange argues that
arbitrage opportunities are uniquely
easy to identify because of the direct
observability of the Underlying
Benchmark, the direct linkage of the
intrinsic Class Values to the Underlying
Benchmark, and the simplicity and very
limited number of the moving parts in
a creation or redemption—i.e., the two
Fund Share prices versus the readily
determinable value of the Fund’s cash
equivalent assets.56
2. The Ability of Investors To
Understand the Operation of the Funds
The Sponsor asserts that retail
investors and other market participants
will be able to understand the Fund’s
redemption mechanics and the types
and timing of distributions.57 Generally,
the Sponsor states that the Funds’
distributions are limited to scheduled
dates or the occurrence of large and rare
underlying index moves.58 The Sponsor
asserts that movements of the
underlying indexes will be easy to track
using public sources and therefore
overlying both the spot VIX and VIX futures
demonstrates that the market understands the
differences between spot VIX and the range of VIX
futures prices. See id. at 19.
52 See id. at 18.
53 See id. at 16, n.28, 18.
54 See id. at 17.
55 See id.
56 See id.
57 See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 6.
58 See id. at 2.
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concludes that investors will have the
information necessary to transact in the
Shares and respond to distributions.59
In addition, the Sponsor represents that
the consensus of qualified investors and
market makers is that the frequency of
the Funds’ distributions is consistent
with customary review (e.g., monitoring
prices and returns) and customary
reevaluation of share positions.60
The Sponsor states that the
prospectus contains detailed examples,
and the Funds’ Web site will contain
infographics describing each
distribution as well as the courses of
action available to investors.61 The
Sponsor also states that, except in
limited and unanticipated conditions
(listed in the prospectus), regular and
special distributions will be made to
shareholders in cash, and therefore
investors will generally be making a
straightforward decision with respect to
deploying or maintaining received
cash.62 With respect to corrective
distributions, the Sponsor states that
they are a direct response to retail
investor experiences in ETPs where
obscure technical forces or market
illiquidity have caused both large
premiums and large discounts to
persist.63 The Sponsor asserts that these
distributions, as a self-policing and selfcorrections measure, are an alternative
to real-time estimates of indicative
portfolio values, which investors may
not necessarily consider before
transacting in ETP shares.64
The Sponsor also states that: (1)
Corrective distributions are expected to
be rare; (2) without them, retail
investors otherwise may be exposed to
either paying a material premium
relating to a purchase or suffering a
material discount relating to a sale of
Shares; (3) before receipt of a
distribution, investors will see a Form
8–K, a notice from the Exchange, and a
notice on the Fund’s Web site; and (4)
upon receipt of a corrective distribution,
investors may take any of the following
actions, all of which the Sponsor asserts
are not materially different from the
options available to investors upon the
receipt of cash or shares from any
distribution or traditional corporate
action: (a) Sell their entire positions for
cash, (b) sell a portion of their positions
for cash for a modulated exposure to the
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
59 See
id.
id. The Sponsor states that its opinions and
views expressed in the Sponsor Letter were
informed by conversations with the Exchange,
prospective authorized participants, other market
makers, traders, and qualified investors. See id.
61 See id. at 6.
62 See id.
63 See id.
64 See id.
60 See
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Fund index, or (c) sell part of a position
and reinvest proceeds to maximize a
particular market exposure.65 According
to the Sponsor, prospective investors
view the corrective distribution feature
as an effective balance of ‘‘newness’’
and ‘‘benefit’’ for the entire range of
Fund shareholders.66 The Sponsor
states that the corrective distribution is
expected to encourage more active and
accurate market making and more
liquidity-enhancing position-taking by
Authorized Participants, all of which
are more likely to actually reduce the
likelihood and occurrences of a
corrective distribution declaration.67
The opposing commenter asserts that,
because of the persistent premiums and
discounts he predicts, investors would
have to be extremely diligent in tracking
their positions because the Up Shares
might frequently turn into both Up
Shares and Down Shares, which would
result in inattentive investors paying
fees to the issuer but not receiving any
notional exposure whatsoever.68
According to the commenter, an
investor in the Shares would require
extensive knowledge of the financial
markets to understand why, when being
required to re-enter the market after a
distribution to reestablish a position, the
product could be trading already at a
significant premium or discount.69 The
commenter also states its view that the
investor would have to have intimate
knowledge of the VIX futures market to
understand from where the premium or
discount was actually derived.70 The
opposing commenter states that
investors would likely receive Shares
with the opposite economics for some
distributions, and predicts that this
would confuse them.71 The commenter
distinguishes regular share
distributions, with which the
commenter concedes investors are
familiar, by stating that Share
distributions would include Shares with
the opposite economics and different
tickers.72 Further, the opposing
commenter asserts that, unlike products
that trade at or close to their intrinsic
65 See
id. at 6–7.
the Sponsor states that, while
prospective participants with expertise in retail
investing believed the corrective distribution
feature to be engineered solely for the benefit of the
retail investor and questioned whether institutional
traders would lose profitable trading opportunities,
market makers (including Authorized Participants)
applauded the addition of a corrective distribution.
See id. at 7. See supra note 60 (regarding with
whom the Sponsor consulted).
67 See id.
68 See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3.
69 See id.
70 See id.
71 See id.
72 See id.
66 Specifically,
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value, an investor in Shares needs to
know a considerable amount of
information at every point in time when
investing in the product, including for
example the coefficient of variation and
the number of days there has been a
premium or discount (in light of the
corrective distribution threshold).73 The
opposing commenter also asserts that
the investor also must check his or her
account every day, to see if there has
been a Special Distribution, and on
every Distribution Date, to see what is
in his or her account (i.e., whether there
is cash or a neutral basket, which may
be subject to fees).74
3. The Ability of Investors To
Understand the Funds’ ‘‘Resets’’ to the
Then-Current Reference Index Value
The Sponsor states its view that the
Funds are similar to comparable ETPs in
the market and that, accordingly, it
expects that both retail investors and
other market participants will
understand the effect of resets (which
will occur when regular, special, or
corrective distributions are made) on
their investments in a Fund.75 The
Sponsor states that in other comparable
ETFs and exchange-traded notes
(‘‘ETNs’’) the impact of resetting comes
through the re-trading of futures,
options, or other contracts either daily,
monthly, or on another cycle, and that
this conventional resetting has
transaction costs that are often difficult
to isolate within the context of overall
fund performance.76 Additionally,
according to the Sponsor, because the
traditional method of resetting is
accomplished through the trading of
underlying positions at telegraphed
times under prescribed fund rules, ETFs
and ETNs can be disadvantaged from
having to be a ‘‘price taker’’ in possibly
adverse or challenging markets.77 The
Sponsor states that the Funds’ resets
allow the Funds to reduce their
transaction expenses and eliminate the
need to transact in underlying positions.
The Sponsor also asserts that individual
investors will be able to more easily
track and monitor the resets of the
Funds than the resetting impact in
conventional funds.78
A supporting commenter asserts that
the Funds would deliver exact holding
period returns, which he contrasts to the
returns of levered and inverse funds that
implicitly rebalance daily and which he
73 See
id. at 4.
id.
75 See id. at 7.
76 See id.
77 See id. at 7–8.
78 See id. at 8.
74 See
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tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
asserts can be a source of confusion for
retail customers.79
4. The Adequacy of the Exchange’s
Suitability Rules
The Sponsor states its view that the
Exchange’s rules governing sales
practices adequately ensure the
suitability of recommendations
regarding the Shares and that
enhancement is unnecessary.80 The
Sponsor states that NASDAQ Rule
2111A requires that an exchange
member have a reasonable basis to
believe that a recommended transaction
or investment strategy involving a
security or securities is suitable for the
customer, based on the information
obtained through the reasonable
diligence of the exchange member to
ascertain the customer’s investment
profile.81 According to the Sponsor, a
customer’s investment profile would, in
general, include the customer’s age,
other investments, financial situation
and needs, tax status, investment
objectives, investment experience,
investment time horizon, liquidity
needs, and risk tolerance.82 The Sponsor
also states that the rule explicitly covers
recommended investment strategies
involving securities, including
recommendations to ‘‘hold’’
securities.83
The Sponsor also discusses the
Exchange’s information circular. Prior to
the commencement of trading of Fund
shares, the Exchange will inform its
members through an information
circular of the suitability requirements
of NASDAQ Rule 2111A. Specifically
the information circular will remind
members that, in recommending
transactions in Shares, they must: (1)
Have a reasonable basis to believe that
(a) the recommendation is suitable for a
customer given reasonable inquiry
concerning the customer’s investment
objectives, financial situation, needs,
and any other information known by
such member, and (b) the customer can
evaluate the special characteristics and
is able to bear the financial risks of an
investment in the shares; and (2) make
reasonable efforts to obtain the
following information: (a) The
customer’s age; (b) the customer’s other
investments; (c) the customer’s financial
situation and needs; (d) the customer’s
tax status; (e) the customer’s investment
objectives, experience, time horizon,
liquidity needs and risk tolerance; and
(f) such other information used or
79 See
Whaley Letter, supra note 8, at 2.
80 See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 8, 9.
81 See id. at 8.
82 See id.
83 See id.
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considered to be reasonable by such
members or registered representatives in
making recommendations to the
customer.84
5. The Relationship Between the Funds’
Holdings and Their Investment
Objective
The Sponsor states its view that
investors will understand that the
Funds hold cash and cash equivalent
securities, and the Cash Values per
Share will be directly responsive to
changes in the underlying index.85 The
Sponsor asserts that ETNs are similar to
the Shares in that an ETN does not have
identified ‘‘portfolio assets’’ and that
this aspect of ETNs has been well
understood.86
The Sponsor asserts that the Funds’
structure is appropriate, and will result
in certain advantages: (1) Lower fund
operating costs, because the Class Value
per Share amounts are directly related
to an independent and readily
observable index and there is no need
for a Fund to incur trading costs over
assets in an effort to track the index; (2)
improved fund performance
transparency, because the return of
Shareholders will not be impacted by
transactions costs that are difficult to
observe and underlying assets whose
pricing is opaque; (3) a higher certainty
of redemption values because the Shares
will be readily created and redeemed at
a certain and readily determinable
value, thereby eliminating the frictions
often caused where (a) a potentially
large number of in-kind securities are
challenging to value or (b) a cash
creation or redemption is based on
trading illiquid securities or trading
securities in a fast-moving market; and
(4) direct indexing, which the Sponsor
states prospective investors believe to be
more easily followed through readily
observable and free data services.87
6. Other Comments
One commenter recommends that the
Commission approve the proposed rule
change because, in its view, the
AccuShares’ products are simple and
transparent, and will provide investors,
institutions and retail customers alike
84 See id. at 8–9. In its comment letter, the
Exchange repeated the Sponsor’s statements
regarding the Exchange’s rules and information
circular. See id. at 13–14.
85 See id. at 9.
86 See id. The Sponsor, however, distinguishes
the Shares from ETNs in that, with ETNs, an
investor is subject to the performance risk of the
obligor and a market maker is subject to ETN
creation and redemptions processes which are
sometimes less standardized than ETF processes.
See id. at 10.
87 See id. at 9–10.
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9783
with the returns that they want.88 He
also recommends approval of the
proposed rule change because: (1) The
Shares would provide exposure to spot
market benchmarks that are popular to
large segments of the asset management
community; (2) the Up Shares and
Down Shares are direct investments that
track readily-observable spot market
benchmarks, unlike the futures indexes,
which he characterizes as complicated
dynamic futures trading strategies; (3)
changes in the values of the Up Shares
and Down Shares would be purely
mechanical and would correspond
directly to the price changes in the
underlying index, which is distinctly
different from many current products;
(4) unlike ETNs, investors in the Funds
would have no credit risk; and (5)
actively-managed products add market
complexity, and the Paired Class Shares
would not be actively-managed.89
Similarly, another commenter asserts
that the Funds would be both highly
relevant to a wide range of investors and
highly approachable to all of them.90 He
asserts that indexes underlying the
Funds are arguably better for individual
investors because they are easier to
follow than the indexes that underlie
some existing products.91 This
commenter also asserts that the market
has been clamoring for better spot
market proxies since the beginning of
the ETF market.92 Further, the
commenter recommends approval of the
proposed rule change because the ‘‘best
ETFs also help solve existing structural
problems for traders and investors
regarding term structure of price and/or
volatility, beta to cash prices and
tracking errors, and rebalancing
inefficiencies . . .’’ 93
The opposing commenter asserts that
the premiums and discounts, which he
predicts will result in corrective
distributions that are more frequent than
the Exchange has suggested, will result
in high implicit fees and large tracking
88 See
Whaley Letter, supra note 8, at 2.
id. at 1–2.
90 See Allen Letter, supra note 8.
91 See id.
92 See id.
93 Id.
89 See
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errors.94 He argues that the products are
not suitable for any investor.95
In response, the Exchange asserts that
the Daily Amount is not a charge, fee,
or amount that leaves the Fund, but
rather is an amount applied to both
share classes.96 The Exchange
characterizes the Daily Amount as ‘‘one
of the unique structural features of the
Funds which leads to complete
transparency of intrinsic Class Value
entitlements.’’ 97
III. Discussion and Commission’s
Findings
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After careful consideration, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the rules
and regulations thereunder applicable to
a national securities exchange.98 In
particular, and as discussed further
below, the Commission finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with:
(1) The requirements of Section 6(b)(5)
of the Act,99 which requires, among
other things, that the Exchange’s rules
be designed to promote just and
equitable principles of trade; to foster
cooperation and coordination with
persons engaged in regulating, clearing,
settling, processing information with
respect to, and facilitating transactions
in securities; 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 (2)
Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act,100
which sets forth Congress’ finding that
it is in the public interest and
appropriate for the protection of
investors and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets to assure the
availability to brokers, dealers, and
investors of information with respect to
quotations for and transactions in
securities.
94 See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3. For
example, the commenter characterizes the ‘‘Daily
Amount’’ as a fee. During any single distribution
measurement period that starts with the prior
distribution date and to create a balanced market for
the Up Shares and Down Shares of the VIX Fund,
the Class Value per Share of each Up Share of the
VIX Fund will be reduced and the Class Value per
Share of each Down Share of the VIX Fund will be
increased by an additional daily amount, the ‘‘Daily
Amount.’’ See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35617.
The opposing commenter asserts that the investors
in the Up Shares of the VIX Fund will be charged
will be charged 4.5% in Daily Amount charges.
95 See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3.
96 See Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 19.
97 Id. at 22.
98 In approving this proposed rule change, the
Commission notes that it has considered the
proposed rule’s impact on efficiency, competition,
and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
99 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
100 15 U.S.C. 78k–1(a)(1)(C)(iii).
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A. NASDAQ Rule 5713
NASDAQ Rule 5713 sets forth
provisions regarding the listing and
trading of Paired Class Shares on the
Exchange. The rule defines Paired Class
Shares,101 establishes specific
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for registered market
makers in Paired Class Shares,102 and
sets forth initial and continued listing
criteria, some of which are more fully
discussed below.103 In addition,
Commentary .05 to Nasdaq Rule 5713
101 See NASDAQ Rule 5713(c). The operation of
Paired Class Shares is described above. See supra
section II.A.
102 In accordance with NASDAQ Rule 5713(h),
market makers in Paired Class Shares must file with
the Exchange and keep current a list identifying all
accounts for trading in the applicable securities or
physical commodities included in, or options,
futures or options on futures on, the Reference
Asset of the Underlying Benchmark of any Paired
Class Shares or any other derivatives based on such
Reference Asset or based on any security or
Reference Asset included in the Underlying
Benchmark, which the registered market maker may
have or over which it may exercise investment
discretion. In addition, market makers are
prohibited from trading in the applicable securities
or physical commodities included in, or options,
futures or options on futures on, the Reference
Asset of the Underlying Benchmark of any Paired
Class Shares or any other derivatives based on such
Reference Asset or based on any security or
Reference Asset included in the Underlying
Benchmark, in an account in which a market maker,
directly or indirectly, controls trading activities, or
has a direct interest in the profits or losses thereof.
See NASDAQ Rule 5713(h)(i). In addition, market
makers in Paired Class Shares are required to make
available to the Exchange any and all books,
records, or other information pertaining to
transactions by such entity or registered or nonregistered employee affiliated with such entity for
its or their own accounts for trading the applicable
securities or physical commodities included in, or
options, futures or options on futures on, the
Reference Asset of the Underlying Benchmark of
any Paired Class Shares or any other derivatives
based on such Reference Asset or based on any
security or Reference Asset included in the
Underlying Benchmark, as may be requested by the
Exchange. See NASDAQ Rule 5713(h)(ii).
103 The Commission notes that any securities
listed in the future under NASDAQ Rule 5713 must
be the subject of a rule filing by the Exchange under
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act—providing the
Commission with the opportunity to review and to
approve or disapprove that rule filing—and that all
securities listed under NASDAQ Rule 5713 will be
subject to the full set of bylaws and other rules and
procedures of the Exchange. While Nasdaq Rule
5713(e) provides that Paired Class Shares may have
values based on assets, prices, price volatility, or
other economic interests, such as currencies,
interest rates, non-investable economic indices, and
other measures of financial instrument value, the
specific products approved for listing pursuant to
this order will have values based on price volatility
and commodity indices. The Commission staff will
consider any future proposals to list products under
Nasdaq Rule 5713 with values based on these and
other types of benchmarks and reference assets,
evaluating the specific facts and circumstances
associated with each proposal under Section 19(b)
of the Exchange Act. Further, the Commission staff
will continue to analyze the development of
exchange-traded products and their impact on
market structure and will monitor the development
of the market for Paired Class Shares.
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states that the Exchange will implement
written surveillance procedures for
trading Paired Class Shares.104
Pursuant to NASDAQ Rule
5713(f)(i)(B), the Exchange will obtain a
representation from the Trust on behalf
of each Fund that the Class Value per
Share of each of its Up Shares and
Down Shares will be calculated daily
and that these Class Values per Share
and information about the assets of the
Fund will be made available to all
market participants at the same time.105
NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(ii)(B) permits the
Exchange to suspend trading in or
remove from listing Paired Class Shares
whose Underlying Benchmark, or a
substitute or replacement Underlying
Benchmark based on the same Reference
Asset,106 is no longer calculated or
available on at least a 15-second delayed
basis during the Regular Market Session
from a major market data vendor
unaffiliated with the sponsor, the
custodian, the trustee of the Trust, the
Fund, or NASDAQ. Further, NASDAQ
Rule 5713(f)(ii)(C) permits the Exchange
to suspend trading in or remove from
104 The Exchange stated that trading in Paired
Class Shares will be subject to the existing trading
surveillances, administered by both the Exchange
and FINRA on behalf of the Exchange, which are
designed to detect violations of Exchange rules and
applicable federal securities laws. See Notice, supra
note 3, 79 FR at 35621. FINRA surveils trading on
the Exchange pursuant to a regulatory services
agreement, and the Exchange is responsible for
FINRA’s performance under this regulatory services
agreement. See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at
35621, n.51. The Exchange represented that FINRA,
on behalf of the Exchange, will communicate as
needed regarding trading in the Paired Class Shares
and in the securities in which the Fund will invest
with other markets and other entities that are
members of the Intermarket Surveillance Group
(‘‘ISG’’) or with which the Exchange has in place
a comprehensive surveillance sharing agreement.
See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35621.
Additionally, the Exchange represented that FINRA
may obtain trading information regarding trading in
the Shares from markets and other entities that are
members of the ISG or with which the Exchange has
in place a comprehensive surveillance sharing
agreement. See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at
35621. For a list of the current members of ISG, see
https://www.isgportal.org/.
105 The Commission notes that these requirements
are substantively identical to provisions applicable
to other exchange-traded derivative securities
products, including Managed Fund Shares under
NASDAQ Rule 5735(d)(1)(B). See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 57962 (June 13, 2008), 73
FR 35175 (June 20, 2008) (SR–NASDAQ–2008–039)
(approving NASDAQ listing standards applicable to
Managed Fund Shares). For a specific product
approved for listing under NASDAQ Rule 5735, see
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73480 (October
31, 2014), 79 FR 66022 (November 6, 2014) (SR–
NASDAQ–2014–090) (approving the listing and
trading of Shares of the Validea Market Legends
ETF under NASDAQ Rule 5735).
106 Commentary .04 to Rule 5713 states that, prior
to a substitute or replacement Underlying
Benchmark being selected for the Fund, NASDAQ
must file a related proposed rule change pursuant
to Rule 19b–4 under the Exchange Act to continue
trading the Paired Class Shares.
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listing Paired Class Shares whose Class
Value per Share becomes no longer
available on a daily basis to all market
participants at the same time. NASDAQ
Rule 5713(f)(ii)(D) permits the Exchange
to suspend trading in or remove from
listing Paired Class Shares whose
Intraday Indicative Value is no longer
made available on at least a 15-second
delayed basis by a major market vendor
during the Exchange’s Regular Market
Session. The Commission also notes
that NASDAQ Rules 5713(f)(i)(C) and
5713(f)(ii)(E) require the establishment
of information barriers concerning
changes and adjustments to the
Underlying Benchmark.107
Based on the foregoing, the
Commission believes that the
requirements of NASDAQ Rule 5713,
taken together with other NASDAQ
Rules regarding the trading of equity
securities on the Exchange, are
consistent with the requirement of
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act that requires
that the Exchange’s rules 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 to promote just and
equitable principles of trade and to
protect investors and the public interest.
B. Issues Raised by the Opposing
Commenter
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
1. Effectiveness of Arbitrage
In the OIP, the Commission asked for
commenters’ views on the effect that
Paired Class Share distributions would
have on premiums and discounts
between the trading price of the Paired
Class Shares and their respective Class
Value per Share.108
The opposing commenter asserts that
the structure of Paired Class Shares will
result in significant and persistent
premiums and discounts because ‘‘it is
not economically possible to construct a
two sided market for spot exposure that
does not trade in line with VIX futures
prices.’’ 109 This commenter argues that
the arbitrage mechanism of the Funds
will not work to keep Up Shares and
Down Shares trading close to their
intrinsic value, but will instead ‘‘in
theory keep the sum of the premium on
one and the discount on the other at
zero.’’ 110 To support these conclusions,
the opposing commenter provides a
number of hypothetical situations
107 The Commission notes that these provisions
are substantively identical to the firewall
requirements in NASDAQ Rule 5705(b)(2)(B)(i),
which governs the listing and trading of Index Fund
Shares.
108 See OIP, supra note 6, 79 FR at 57157.
109 Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 1. See also
supra notes 45–48 and accompanying text.
110 Id.
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involving the trading relationship
between the VIX index, VIX futures, and
the proposed VIX Fund.111 Further, the
opposing commenter argues that the
‘‘daily amount’’ applied to the VIX
Fund—a 15 basis point amount
transferred from Up Shares to Down
Shares when the VIX is at 30 or below—
means that investors in Up Shares will
suffer a 4.5% loss over a 30-day period,
even if the VIX does not move.112 The
opposing commenter also argues that,
because the arbitrage mechanism will
not work as described by the Exchange,
multiple corrective distributions will be
required per year, causing investors to
incur reinvestment expenses to
maintain their desired position.113
The Exchange argues in response that,
underlying this commenter’s argument
is a mistaken assumption that spot
levels and futures levels are equivalent
and interchangeable.114 The Exchange
agrees that markets such as spot
markets, futures markets, stock markets,
and bond markets will be broadly interrelated, but argues that, in the case of
volatility in general and VIX in
particular, the spot market is not ‘‘in
line’’ and directly comparable with VIX
futures prices. The Exchange cites the
willingness of market participants to
trade options overlying both the spot
VIX and VIX futures as evidence that
the market would understand the
differences between spot VIX and the
range of VIX futures prices. The
Exchange notes that the Web site of
CBOE, the provider of the VIX, states,
‘‘The price of a VIX futures contract can
be lower, equal to or higher in the 30day forward period covered by the VIX
futures contract than in the 30-day spot
period covered by VIX.’’ 115 The
Exchange also notes that, unlike VIX
futures, ‘‘because the shares of the Fund
are both available for creation and
redemption daily, the Fund provides for
spot VIX positions to be created or
redeemed daily, and for returns to be
realized on a daily basis.’’ 116
Additionally, the Exchange argues
that the existence of the Daily Amount
applied to the VIX Fund is disclosed
clearly and referenced more than 90
times in the prospectus for the VIX
Fund, and the Exchange argues that the
amount of the Daily Amount is closely
aligned with the estimates of several
market experts as to the roll cost
incurred by long positions in volatility
futures (e.g., VIX futures).117 As a result,
the Exchange argues, the expected
premiums and discounts encountered
by the VIX Fund should be substantially
less that the opposing commenter
predicts.118 The Exchange also argues
that the corrective distribution
mechanism is designed to prevent the
type of investor losses that occurred
when an ETN designed to track the VIX
moved substantially away from the
value of the VIX.119
The Commission believes that the
Exchange has met its burden to
demonstrate that its proposal is
consistent with the Act. The Exchange
has reasonably explained in the Notice,
the Exchange’s response letter,120 and,
as to the VIX Fund, in the Registration
Statement for the VIX Fund,121 the
methodology for the calculation of the
Underlying Benchmarks and the
differences between the value of the
Underlying Benchmark indexes and the
prices of the relevant near-month
futures contracts. In particular the
Exchange explains that, with respect to
the VIX Fund, the purpose and
derivation of the 0.15% Daily Amount
by which the Up Shares will be reduced
and the Down Shares increased, which,
as cited by the Exchange, is consistent
with price patterns historically observed
when comparing VIX futures and spot
prices.122 The Exchange further notes
the extent to which the Registration
Statement discloses the Daily Amount
transfer.123 The Exchange has also
reasonably explained the operation of
the Funds; the creation and redemption
process and procedures; the regular,
special, and corrective distributions to
be employed by the Funds; and the
resulting resetting process.
In addition, with respect to arbitrage
in Fund Shares, and, consistent with
Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act,124
which sets forth Congress’ finding that
it is in the public interest and
appropriate for the protection of
investors and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets to assure the
availability to brokers, dealers, and
investors of information with respect to
quotations for and transactions in
securities, the Commission notes that
market information regarding the value
of the Shares and of the Underlying
Benchmarks will be continuously
available to market participants.
117 See
id. at 20–21.
id. at 21.
119 See id. at 22–23.
120 See Exchange Letter, supra note 8.
121 See Registration Statement, supra note 22.
122 See Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 22.
123 See id.
124 15 U.S.C. 78k–1(a)(1)(C)(iii).
118 See
111 See
Kassner Letter, supra note 8.
112 Id.
113 Id.
at 2–3.
Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 17.
115 Id. at 18.
116 Id. at 21.
114 See
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Quotation and last-sale information for
the Shares will be available via
NASDAQ proprietary quote and trade
services, as well as in accordance with
any UTP plans for a Fund’s Shares.125
Additionally, information regarding
market price and volume of the Shares
will be continually available on a realtime basis throughout the day on
brokers’ computer screens and other
electronic services.126 Further,
information regarding the previous
day’s closing price and trading volume
information for the Shares will be
published daily in the financial section
of newspapers.127
The value of each Fund’s Underlying
Benchmark, as well as information
about each Fund’s Underlying
Benchmark constituents, the weighting
of the constituents, the Underlying
Benchmark’s methodology, and the
Underlying Benchmark’s rules, will be
available at no charge on the Index
Provider’s Web site at us.spindices.com
or, in the case of the VIX Fund, the
CBOE’s Web site at www.cboe.com/
VIX.128 The value of each Fund’s
Underlying Benchmark also will be
published by one or more major market
data vendors on at least a 15-second
delayed basis during the Regular Market
Session.129 An Intraday Indicative Value
for each Fund will be disseminated and
made available by a major market
vendor, and will be updated and widely
disseminated and broadly displayed on
at least a 15-second delayed basis
during the Regular Market Session.130
Class Values and Class Values per Share
of each Fund will be calculated by the
Fund’s Custodian at the end of each
Regular Market Session.131
Under NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(i)(B),
the Exchange will obtain a
representation from the Trust on behalf
of each Fund that the Class Value per
Share of each of its Up Shares and
Down Shares will be calculated daily
and that these Class Values per Share
and information about the assets of the
Fund will be made available to all
market participants at the same time.132
In addition, NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(2)(B)
permits the Exchange to suspend
125 See
Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35621.
id.
127 See id.
128 See id.
129 See NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(2)(B).
130 See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35622.
131 NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(ii)(C) is designed to
ensure that the Class Values and Class Values per
Share of each Fund will be made available to all
market participants at the same time.
132 The Commission notes that these requirements
are substantively identical to provisions applicable
to other exchange-traded derivative securities
products, including Managed Fund Shares under
NASDAQ Rule 5735(d)(1)(B).
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
126 See
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trading in or remove from listing Paired
Class Shares whose Underlying
Benchmark, or a substitute or
replacement Underlying Benchmark
based on the same Reference Asset,133 is
no longer calculated or available on at
least a 15-second delayed basis during
the Regular Market Session from a major
market data vendor unaffiliated with the
sponsor, the custodian, the trustee of the
Trust, the Fund or NASDAQ.
The Commission believes that, in
light of the continuous dissemination of
information about the Shares’ current
market prices, the Funds’ Underlying
Benchmarks, and the Funds’ intraday
estimated Class Value per Share,
arbitrage opportunities will be readily
identifiable to market participants. The
Commission also believes that the
creation and redemption process,
which, under Rule 5713(c), uses a
neutral basket of Up Shares and Down
Shares, is reasonably designed to allow
market participants to arbitrage away
premiums and discounts that may
develop, as long as the Up Shares and
Down Shares do not become locked in
a persistent state of approximately equal
and opposite premiums or discounts.134
The Commission acknowledges,
however, that the normal arbitrage
mechanism of the Funds will not be
effective if equal and opposite
premiums and discounts persist
between the Up Shares and Down
Shares of a Fund. Because no existing
exchange-traded products use a pairedclass structure, the Commission does
not have a basis for comparison from
which to predict how frequently such
conditions are likely to occur. As noted
above, however, the Funds would
provide for a corrective distribution
when the magnitude of the equal and
opposite premiums and discounts
exceeds a certain threshold.135 The
Exchange has represented that, ‘‘[e]ven
if a corrective distribution is not
triggered, the existence of a Fund’s
corrective distribution feature is
expected to modify investor and
133 Commentary .04 to Rule 5713 states that, prior
to a substitute or replacement Underlying
Benchmark being selected for the Fund, NASDAQ
must file a related proposed rule change pursuant
to Rule 19b–4 under the Act to continue trading the
Paired Class Shares.
134 Because the funds would create and redeem
their shares only in equal amounts of Up Shares
and Down Shares, if one class of shares traded at
a premium, and the other class traded at an
approximately equal discount, arbitrage using the
creation or redemption process could not eliminate
those price deviations. For example, if Up Shares
traded at a $0.50 premium, and down shares traded
at a $0.50 discount, the value per share of a creation
unit, composed of equal amounts of each class,
would be equal to the NAV of the fund (i.e., the
premium would cancel out the discount).
135 See supra note 18.
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Authorized Participant behavior to
prevent persistent and material
premium and discount conditions for
Paired Class Shares from becoming
locked.’’ 136 Based on the Exchange’s
representation, the Commission believes
that the corrective distribution
mechanism is reasonably designed to
limit the magnitude of such premiums
and discounts and that, when triggered,
it will provide investors with a market
neutral position that should allow them
to exit the affected Fund at Class Value.
Further, the underlying value of the
Funds and the extent of the premiums
and discounts would not be subject to
uncertainty, because, as explained
above,137 the Funds’ market prices,
Class Values per Share, and reference
benchmark values and methodologies
would be publicly available in real time.
In addition, and significantly, to the
extent that equal and opposite
premiums and discounts persist within
a Fund’s threshold for a corrective
distribution, all investors in the affected
Fund would be subject to the same
pricing conditions, and Authorized
Participants would not be able to use
the creation and redemption process to
trade in the primary market for the
shares at prices more favorable than
those available to investors trading at
market prices on the Exchange.
Thus, for the reasons described above,
the Commission believes that the
Exchange’s rules are reasonably
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.
2. Investor Understanding and
Suitability
In the OIP, the Commission solicited
comments about whether retail
investors and other market participants
would be able to understand the types
and timing of distributions as well as
the periodic resets of Paired Class
Shares’ exposure to their Underlying
Benchmarks.138
The opposing commenter argues that
the operational complexity of Paired
Class Shares renders them unsuitable
for any investor. As discussed above,
this commenter argues that extreme
diligence would be required of investors
in tracking their positions because the
Up Shares might frequently turn into
both Up Shares and Down Shares, and
that investors would need to know a
136 See
Notice, supra note 3, at 9, 79 FR at 35612.
supra text accompanying notes 125–133.
138 See OIP, supra note 6, 79 FR at 57157.
137 See
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considerable amount of information at
every point in time when holding
Shares.139
The Sponsor asserts that retail
investors and other market participants
will be able to understand the types and
timing of fund distributions. The
Sponsor states that the Registration
Statement contains detailed examples,
and the Funds’ Web site will contain
infographics describing each
distribution, as well as the courses of
action available to investors. According
to the Sponsor, distributions will
generally be limited to scheduled dates
or the occurrence of large and rare
underlying index moves, and
movements of the underlying indexes
will be easy to track using public
sources. The Sponsor states that the
consensus of qualified investors and
market makers to whom it has spoken
is that the frequency of the Funds’
distributions is consistent with
customary review (e.g., monitoring
prices and returns) and customary reevaluation of share positions.
Additionally, the Sponsor states that,
except in limited and unanticipated
conditions which are identified in the
Registration Statement, regular and
special distributions will be made to
shareholders in cash, and therefore
investors generally will face a
straightforward decision with respect to
deploying or maintaining received cash.
With respect to corrective distributions
(in which a fund would issue each
holder of Up Shares an equal number of
Down Shares, and each holder of Down
Shares an equal number of Up Shares),
the Sponsor asserts that such
distributions are expected to be rare and
to encourage among Authorized
Participants both more active and
accurate market making and more
liquidity-enhancing position-taking. The
Sponsor also argues that corrective
distributions, as a self-policing and selfcorrecting measure, are a better
alternative to detailed disclosures about
premiums and discounts in
prospectuses, which investors may not
necessarily read and which would
require affirmative investor action, and
the dissemination of real-time estimates
of indicative portfolio values, which
investors may not necessarily consider
before transacting in other types of ETP
shares. Further, the Sponsor states that
prospective investors to whom it has
spoken believe that the corrective
distribution will benefit the entire range
of shareholders.
With respect to the resets, the Sponsor
states that the Funds are similar to
comparable ETPs in the market and that
139 See
Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3–4.
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it expects that both retail investors and
other market participants will
understand the effect of Paired Class
Share resets on their investments.140
The Sponsor also asserts that individual
investors will be able to more easily
track and monitor Paired Class Share
resets than the resetting impact in other
types of ETPs.
The Sponsor also argues that the
Exchange’s sales practice rules
adequately ensure the suitability of sales
recommendations regarding the Funds’
Shares, citing NASDAQ Rule 2111A,
which requires that an exchange
member have a reasonable basis to
believe that a recommended transaction
or investment strategy is suitable for a
given customer, based on information
obtained through reasonable
diligence.141 Additionally, the Sponsor
notes that, before trading in the Shares
begins, the Exchange will inform its
members in an information circular of
the special characteristics and risks
associated with trading Paired Class
Shares.142
The Commission notes that the
Exchange’s suitability rule, NASDAQ
Rule 2111A, requires that Exchange
members and associated persons of a
member comply with Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority (‘‘FINRA’’) Rule
2111, which requires member firms and
their associated persons to ‘‘have a
reasonable basis to believe’’ that a
140 Specifically, the Sponsor states that for
comparable ETPs that seek commodity or volatility
exposure through trading in derivative products,
the impact of resetting comes through the ‘‘retrading’’ of futures, options, or other contracts.
These ETFs effect the resetting either daily,
monthly, or on another cycle. This conventional
resetting has transaction costs, which are often
difficult to isolate within the context of overall fund
performance. The Sponsor adds that, since the
traditional method of resetting is accomplished
through the trading of underlying positions at
telegraphed times under prescribed fund rules,
ETFs can be disadvantaged from having to be a
‘‘price taker’’ in possibly adverse or challenging
markets. The Sponsor asserts that these resetting
considerations in these other types of ETPs are well
known by retail investors. See Sponsor Letter, supra
note 8, at 7–8.
141 See id. at 8–9.
142 The Exchange has represented that the
information circular will discuss (a) the procedures
for purchases and redemptions of Paired Class
Shares; (b) Rule 2111A, which imposes suitability
obligations on Exchange members with respect to
recommending transactions in Paired Class Shares
to customers; (c) how information regarding the
Underlying Benchmark and Intraday Indicative
Value is disseminated; (d) the risks involved in
trading Paired Class Shares during the Pre-Market
and Post-Market sessions when an updated
Underlying Benchmark and Intraday Indicative
Value will not be calculated or publicly
disseminated; (e) the requirement that members
deliver a prospectus to investors purchasing newly
issued Paired Class Shares; (g) trading information;
and (h) how information regarding distributions
and share splits is disseminated and the
requirements of public notification of these events.
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9787
transaction or investment strategy
involving securities that they
recommend is suitable for the customer.
Specifically, this reasonable belief must
be based on the information obtained
through the reasonable diligence of the
firm or associated person to ascertain
the customer’s investment profile. The
rule requires firms and associated
persons to seek to obtain information
about the customer’s age; other
investments; financial situation and
needs, which might include questions
about annual income and liquid net
worth; tax status, such as marginal tax
rate; investment objectives, which might
include generating income, funding
retirement, buying a home, preserving
wealth, or market speculation;
investment experience; investment time
horizon, such as the expected time
available to achieve a particular
financial goal; liquidity needs, which is
the customer’s need to convert
investments to cash without incurring
significant loss in value; and risk
tolerance, which is a customer’s
willingness to risk losing some or all of
the original investment in exchange for
greater potential returns.
Additionally, the Commission notes
that the Funds will issue specific,
public notifications regarding the
unique distributions that the Funds
would provide. Each Fund engaging in
a regular distribution,143 a special
distribution, a corrective distribution, or
a net income distribution 144 will
provide at least three business days’
advance notice (or longer advance
notice as may be required by the
Exchange) 145 of such an event. Each
Fund engaging in a share split will
provide at least ten calendar days’
advance notice (or longer advance
143 With respect to regular distributions, the
information provided will consist of the schedule
of distributions and associated distribution dates,
and a notification, as of the record date for such
regular distribution, on the Sponsor’s Web site
(www.AccuShares.com) as to whether or not the
regular distribution will occur. See Notice, supra
note 3, 79 FR at 35620. For regular distributions
that occur on schedule, the Sponsor will cause a
press release to be issued identifying the receiving
class, the amount of cash, the amount of Paired
Class Shares (if any), and any other information the
Sponsor deems relevant regarding the distribution
and post such information on the Sponsor’s Web
site. See id.
144 With respect to special distributions,
corrective distributions, and share splits, the
information provided will include the relevant
ex-, record, and payment dates for each such event
and relevant data concerning each such event. In
addition, notice of net income distributions for each
class of a Fund, if any, will also be included in the
notifications of regular, special, and corrective
distributions. See id.
145 The Exchange may determine that longer
notice is advisable in some circumstances (e.g., an
extended, or unexpected, market break). See id. at
35620, n.46.
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notice as may be required by the
Exchange) 146 of such an event. In each
instance, the Sponsor will notify the
Exchange and post a notice of the event
and its details on the Sponsor’s Web
site.
The Commission further notes that
the prospectus disclosures for the Funds
state prominently that the Funds are not
suitable for all investors, and include
the following disclosures: (1) Stating
that the funds may not be suitable for
all investors; (2) describing the effect of
distributions on an investor’s exposure;
and (3) stating that ‘‘Investors who do
not intend to actively manage and
monitor their Fund investments at least
as frequently as each distribution date
should not buy shares of the Fund.’’
(Emphasis in original.)
Based on all of the foregoing, the
Commission believes that the Exchange
has adequately responded to the
opposing commenter’s concerns about
investor understanding and suitability,
and that the Exchange’s proposal is
consistent with the public interest and
the protection of investors.
For the foregoing reasons, the
Commission finds that the Exchange’s
proposal to adopt NASDAQ Rule 5713
and to list and trade the Funds pursuant
to that rule is consistent with the Act
and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to a national
securities exchange.147
IV. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,148 that the
proposed rule change (SR–NASDAQ–
2014–065), as modified by Amendment
No. 1 thereto, be, and it hereby is,
approved.
By the Commission.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–03713 Filed 2–23–15; 8:45 am]
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–74297; File No. SR–BATS–
2014–056]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; BATS
Exchange, Inc.; Order Granting
Approval of a Proposed Rule Change,
as Modified by Amendment No. 1
Thereto, To List and Trade Shares of
the iShares U.S. Fixed Income
Balanced Risk ETF of the iShares U.S.
ETF Trust Under Rule 14.11(i)
February 18, 2015.
I. Introduction
On December 19, 2014, BATS
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘BATS’’ or the
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘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 list and trade the shares
(‘‘Shares’’) of the iShares U.S. Fixed
Income Balanced Risk ETF (‘‘Fund’’)
under BATS Rule 14.11(i). The
proposed rule change was published for
comment in the Federal Register on
January 6, 2015.3 On February 12, 2015,
BATS filed Amendment No. 1 to the
proposal.4 The Commission received no
comments on the proposal. This order
grants approval of the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No.
1 thereto.
II. Description of the Proposed Rule
Change
A. The Exchange’s Proposal
The Exchange proposes to list and
trade Shares of the Fund under BATS
Rule 14.11(i), which governs the listing
and trading of Managed Fund Shares on
the Exchange. The Shares will be
offered by the iShares U.S. ETF Trust
(‘‘Trust’’), a Delaware statutory trust,
which is registered with the
Commission as an open-end investment
company.5
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73965
(December 30, 2014), 80 FR 585 (‘‘Notice’’).
4 In Amendment No. 1, the Exchange amended
the proposed rule change to note that all of the
exchange listed investment company securities and
futures in which the Fund will invest will trade on
markets that are a member of the Intermarket
Surveillance Group (‘‘ISG’’) or with which the
Exchange has in a place a comprehensive
surveillance sharing agreement. Amendment No. 1
provided clarification to the proposed rule change,
and because it does not materially affect the
substance of the proposed rule change or raise
novel or unique regulatory issues, Amendment No.
1 is not subject to notice and comment.
5 See Registration Statement on Form N–1A for
the Trust, dated April 21, 2014 (File Nos. 333–
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
2 17
146 See
id.
approval order is based on all of the
Exchange’s representations, including those set
forth above and in the Notice.
148 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
147 This
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BlackRock Fund Advisors will be the
investment adviser (‘‘BFA’’ or
‘‘Adviser’’) to the Fund.6 The Exchange
represents that the (i) Adviser is not a
registered broker-dealer, but is affiliated
with multiple broker-dealers and has
implemented fire walls with respect to
such broker dealer affiliates regarding
access to information concerning the
composition of or changes to the Fund’s
portfolio, and (ii) Adviser personnel
who make decisions regarding the
Fund’s portfolio are subject to
procedures designed to prevent the use
and dissemination of material
nonpublic information regarding the
Fund’s portfolio.7 BlackRock
Investments, LLC serves as the
distributor of the Fund’s Shares, and
State Street Bank and Trust Company is
the administrator, custodian, and
transfer agent for the Trust.
B. The Exchange’s Description of the
Fund
The Exchange has made the following
additional representations and
statements in describing the Fund and
its investment strategy, including
portfolio holdings and investment
restrictions.8
179904 and 811–22649) (‘‘Registration Statement’’).
In addition, the Exchange states that the Trust has
obtained certain exemptive relief under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (‘‘1940 Act’’). See
Investment Company Act Release No. 29571
(January 24, 2011) (File No. 812–13601)
(‘‘Exemptive Order’’).
6 BlackRock Fund Advisors is an indirect wholly
owned subsidiary of BlackRock, Inc.
7 BATS Rule 14.11(i)(7) provides that, if the
investment adviser to the investment company
issuing Managed Fund Shares is affiliated with a
broker-dealer, the investment adviser shall erect a
firewall between the investment adviser and the
broker-dealer with respect to access to information
concerning the composition of or changes to the
investment company portfolio. In addition, Rule
14.11(i)(7) further requires that personnel who
make decisions on the investment company’s
portfolio composition must be subject to procedures
designed to prevent the misuse and dissemination
of material nonpublic information regarding the
applicable investment company portfolio. The
Exchange states that, in the event that (a) the
Adviser becomes registered as a broker-dealer or
newly affiliated with a broker-dealer, or (b) any new
adviser or sub-adviser is a registered broker-dealer
or becomes affiliated with a broker-dealer, such
adviser or sub-adviser will implement a firewall
with respect to its relevant personnel or such
broker-dealer affiliate, as applicable, regarding
access to information concerning the composition
of or changes to the portfolio, and will be subject
to procedures designed to prevent the use and
dissemination of material non-public information
regarding the portfolio.
8 The Commission notes that additional
information regarding the Fund, the Trust, and the
Shares, including investment strategies, risks,
creation and redemption procedures, fees, portfolio
holdings disclosure policies, distributions, and
taxes, among other things, can be found in the
Notice and the Registration Statement, as
applicable. See Notice, supra note 3, and
Registration Statement, supra note 5, respectively.
E:\FR\FM\24FEN1.SGM
24FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 36 (Tuesday, February 24, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9778-9788]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-03713]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-74299; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2014-065]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1
Thereto, To Adopt New Rule 5713 and List Paired Class Shares Issued by
AccuShares[supreg] Commodities Trust I
February 18, 2015.
I. Introduction
On June 11, 2014, The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC (``NASDAQ'' or
``Exchange'') 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\ a
proposed rule change to: (1) Adopt listing standards for Paired Class
Shares in new Rule 5713; and (2) list and trade Paired Class Shares
(``Shares'') issued by AccuShares[supreg] Commodities Trust I
(``Trust'') relating to the following funds pursuant to new Rule 5713:
(a) AccuShares S&P GSCI[supreg] Spot Fund; (b) AccuShares S&P
GSCI[supreg] Agriculture and Livestock Spot Fund; (c) AccuShares S&P
GSCI[supreg] Industrial Metals Spot Fund; (d) AccuShares S&P
GSCI[supreg] Crude Oil Spot Fund; (e) AccuShares S&P GSCI[supreg] Brent
Oil Spot Fund; (f) AccuShares S&P GSCI[supreg] Natural Gas Spot Fund;
and (g) AccuShares Spot CBOE[supreg] VIX[supreg] Fund (each
individually, ``Fund,'' and, collectively, ``Funds'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change was published for comment in the Federal
Register on June 23, 2014.\3\ On August 6, 2014, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Act,\4\ the Commission designated a longer period
within which to approve the proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\5\ On September 18,
2014, the Commission instituted proceedings to determine whether to
approve or
[[Page 9779]]
disapprove the proposed rule change,\6\ and on December 16, 2014, the
Commission extended the deadline for Commission action until February
18, 2015.\7\ The Commission received six comment letters regarding the
proposal, including one from the Exchange and two from AccuShares
Investment Management LLC (``Sponsor''), the sponsor of the Funds.\8\
On February 10, 2015, the Exchange submitted Amendment No. 1 to the
proposed rule change.\9\
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\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72412 (June 17,
2014), 79 FR 35610 (``Notice'').
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72779, 79 FR 47162
(Aug. 12, 2014). The Commission designated a longer period within
which to take action on the proposed rule change and designated
September 19, 2014 as the date by which it should approve,
disapprove, or institute proceedings to determine whether to
disapprove the proposed rule change.
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73142, 79 FR 57150
(Sept. 24, 2014) (``OIP'').
\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73843, 79 FR 76428
(Dec. 22, 2014).
\8\ See Letter from Jack Fonss, CEO and Co-Founder of the
Sponsor, to Kevin O'Neill, Deputy Secretary, Commission (Sept. 25,
2014) (``Sponsor Letter''); Letter from Robert E. Whaley, Valere
Blair Potter Professor of Finance, Director, Financial Markets
Research Center, Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management, to
Kevin O'Neill, Deputy Secretary, Commission (Oct. 8, 2014) (``Whaley
Letter''); Letter from David B. Allen to Commission (Oct. 11, 2014)
(``Allen Letter''); Letter from Mark Kassner to Commission (Oct. 13,
2014) (``Kassner Letter''); Email from Ned Cataldo, Chief Operating
Officer and Co-Founder of the Sponsor, to Heather Seidel, Associate
Director, Commission (Oct. 24, 2014) (``Sponsor Email''); Letter
from Jurij Trypupenko, Associate General Counsel, Exchange, to Brent
J. Fields, Secretary, Commission (Oct. 28, 2014) (``Exchange
Letter''). All comment letters are available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2014-065/nasdaq2014065.shtml.
\9\ In Amendment No. 1, the Exchange (a) corrected references to
the entity that will be calculating and publishing the CBOE
Volatility Index[supreg], (b) deleted Commentary .05 to Rule 5713
due to its inapplicability to Paired Class Shares, and (c) made
technical re-numbering changes to Rule 5713 as a result of the
deletion of Commentary .05. Amendment No. 1 provided clarification
to the proposed rule change, and because it does not materially
affect the substance of the proposed rule change, Amendment No. 1 is
not subject to notice and comment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This order approves the proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 1 thereto.
II. Description of the Proposal
The Exchange proposes to adopt new Rule 5713, which permits the
listing of Paired Class Shares, and to list and trade Shares of the
Funds.
A. General Description of Paired Class Shares \10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ A complete description of Rule 5713 and Paired Class Shares
can be found in the Notice, supra note 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paired Class Shares will be structured with the objective of
providing investors with exposure to changes in an index or other
numerical variable (``Underlying Benchmark''). Paired Class Shares will
be issued by a trust on behalf of a fund, and each fund will be a
segregated series of that trust.\11\ Paired Class Shares will have
values that are based on an Underlying Benchmark where the value of the
underlying benchmark reflects the value of assets, prices, price
volatility, or other economic interests (``Reference Asset'').\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See NASDAQ Rule 5713(c).
\12\ See id. The Exchange states that other economic interests
would include, for example, currencies, interest rates, non-
investable economic indices, and other measures of financial
instrument value. See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35611, n.11.
The Exchange will file separate proposals under Section 19(b) of the
Act before listing and trading each series of Paired Class Shares.
See Commentary .02 to NASDAQ Rule 5713.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The trust for each fund of Paired Class Shares will always issue
and redeem Paired Class Shares in pairs of shares of opposing classes
of each fund: Up Shares and Down Shares. The values of the opposing
classes will move in opposite directions as the value of the fund's
Underlying Benchmark varies from its starting level. Up Shares will be
positively linked to the fund's Underlying Benchmark, and Down Shares
will be negatively linked to the fund's Underlying Benchmark.\13\ The
rate of linkage or leverage of a fund's Up Shares and Down Shares
performance to the performance of the fund's referenced Underlying
Benchmark will be one-to-one.\14\ Each fund will use a mathematical
formula to calculate the liquidation value attributable to each of its
classes of Paired Class Shares (``Class Value'') and to each share of
each class (``Class Value per Share'').\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See NASDAQ Rule 5713(c).
\14\ See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35611.
\15\ See id. The Exchange represents that the mathematical
formula is based on the following factors: (1) The value of the
fund's assets; (2) the allocation of that value based on changes in
the level of the fund's Underlying Benchmark, which may be limited,
reduced, capped, or otherwise modified according to formula or pre-
set parameters; and (3) the daily accrual of gain and income or loss
on the assets of the fund, less the liabilities of the fund, as such
gains, income losses, and liabilities are allocated to each class of
the fund. See id. at n.12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Each fund will engage in regular distributions \16\ and may also
engage in special distributions \17\ or corrective distributions.\18\
Immediately after each distribution, the fund's Underlying Benchmark
participation or exposure will be reset, and the fund's Class Value per
Share for each of its classes will be set to equal the lowest Class
Value per Share of the two classes of Paired Class Shares.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ On a scheduled basis, funds would make regular
distributions, paying a dividend to the class of shares that had
increased in value since the last distribution. According to the
Exchange, regular and special distributions will be made in the form
of cash during the first six months of trading in Paired Class
Shares. Thereafter, each fund will pay all or any part of any
regular or special distribution in Paired Class Shares instead of
cash, where further cash distributions would adversely affect the
liquidity of the market for the fund's shares or impact the fund's
ability to meet minimum Exchange distribution requirements. See id.
at 35619 (further stating that all payments made in Paired Class
Shares will be made in equal numbers of Up and Down Shares, and
that, to the extent a share distribution would result in the
distribution of fractional Paired Class Shares, cash in an amount
equal to the value of the fractional Paired Class Shares will be
distributed rather than fractional Paired Class Shares).
\17\ Funds would make special distributions when movement in the
Underlying Benchmark exceeded a specified rate of change since the
previous distribution. Special Distributions are designed to prevent
rapid movements in the Underlying Benchmark from transferring all
value in the fund either to the Up Shares or to the Down Shares. See
id. (describing regular and special distributions to be made in the
form of cash during the first six months of trading in Paired Class
Shares, and thereafter, in Paired Class Shares instead of cash).
\18\ Funds would make corrective distributions when the trading
price of a class of shares deviates from its class value by a
specified amount for a specified period. Corrective distributions
are designed to prevent the Up Shares and Down Shares from becoming
locked in a persistent state of equal and opposite deviations from
class value. In a corrective distribution, a fund will issue each
holder of Up Shares an equal number of Down Shares, and each holder
of Down Shares an equal number of Up Shares.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paired Class Shares of a fund will be created and redeemed in
specified aggregations of equal quantities of Up Shares and Down Shares
\19\ at their respective Class Values per Share. Paired Class Shares
can only be created or redeemed by authorized participants
(``Authorized Participants'').\20\ Paired Class Shares creation and
redemption transactions will only occur (a) for cash consideration, and
(b) in equal pre-determined quantities of Up Shares and Down Shares.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ A Creation Unit for each Fund will comprise 25,000 Up
Shares and 25,000 Down Shares. See id. at 35612, n.14.
\20\ See id. at 35612.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. The Exchange's Description of the Funds
The Exchange has made the following representations and statements
in describing, among other things, the Funds, the corresponding
Underlying Benchmarks, arbitrage, and distributions.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ The Commission notes that additional information regarding
the Trust, the Funds, and the Shares, including risks, information
relating to the Underlying Benchmarks and Reference Assets, Class
Value and Class Value per Share calculations, creation and
redemption procedures, trading halts and pauses, applicable Exchange
trading rules, surveillance, information circulars, fees, disclosure
policies, distributions, and taxes, among other information, is
included in the Notice and the Registration Statement, as
applicable. See Notice, supra note 3, and Registration Statement,
infra note 22, respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Shares will be offered by the Trust, which is a Delaware
statutory trust.\22\ Wilmington Trust, N.A., a
[[Page 9780]]
national banking association, will serve as the trustee (``Trustee'')
and the investment advisor (``Investment Advisor'') for each Fund. The
Investment Advisor, which is chosen by the Sponsor, is responsible for
investing each Fund's available cash in bills, bonds, and notes issued
and guaranteed by the United States Treasury (``United States Treasury
Securities'') with remaining maturities of 90 days or less (``Eligible
Treasuries'') and over-night repurchase agreements collateralized by
United States Treasury Securities (``Eligible Repos,'' and together
with cash and Eligible Treasuries, collectively, ``Eligible Assets'').
State Street Bank and Trust Company (``State Street''), a Massachusetts
trust company, will serve as the custodian, administrator, and transfer
agent (``Custodian,'' ``Administrator,'' or ``Transfer Agent'') for
each Fund.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The Exchange states that the offer and sale of Paired Class
Shares of each Fund will be registered with the Commission by means
of the Trust's registration statement on Form S-1 under the
Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act''). According to the
Exchange, the Registration Statement was filed on March 18, 2014 and
will be effective as of the date of such offer and sale. See Notice,
supra note 3, 79 FR at 35615. The Commission notes that a pre-
effective amendment No. 1 to the registration statement
(``Registration Statement'') was filed on July 17, 2014 (File No.
333-194666).
\23\ The Custodian will hold each Fund's securities and cash and
will perform each Fund's Class Value and Class Value per Share
calculations. As Administrator, State Street will, among other
things, perform or supervise the performance of services necessary
for the operation and administration of the Funds (other than making
investment decisions or providing services provided by other service
providers), including accounting and other fund administrative
services. As Transfer Agent, State Street will, among other things,
provide transfer agent services with respect to the creation and
redemption of Creation Units. The Transfer Agent will receive from
Authorized Participants creation and redemption orders and deliver
acceptances and rejections of such orders to Authorized Participants
as well as coordinate the transmission of such orders and
instructions among the Sponsor and the Authorized Participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Underlying Benchmark of each Fund, other than the AccuShares
Spot CBOE VIX Fund (``VIX Fund''), is constructed, calculated, and
published by S&P[supreg] Dow Jones Indices LLC (``Index
Provider'').\24\ The CBOE Volatility Index[supreg] (``VIX''), which is
the Underlying Benchmark of the VIX Fund, is calculated and published
by CBOE. According to the Exchange, both the Index Provider and CBOE
are unaffiliated with the Trust and the Sponsor.\25\ To the extent that
an Underlying Benchmark is maintained by a broker-dealer or investment
advisor, such broker-dealer or investment advisor will erect a
``firewall'' around personnel who have access to information concerning
changes and adjustments to the Underlying Benchmark.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ The Underlying Benchmarks for all of the Funds other than
the VIX Fund are: (1) The S&P GSCI Spot index; (2) the S&P GSCI
Agricultural and Livestock Spot index; (3) the S&P GSCI Industrial
Metals Spot index; (4) the S&P GSCI Crude Oil Spot index; (5) the
S&P GSCI Brent Crude Oil Spot index; and (6) the S&P GSCI Natural
Gas Spot index, (collectively, ``S&P GSCI Commodity Indices'').
\25\ See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35615.
\26\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described above, the Trust will issue Shares on behalf of each
Fund in offsetting pairs, where one constituent of the pair, the Up
Shares, is positively linked to the Fund's Underlying Benchmark, and
the other constituent, the Down Shares, is negatively linked to the
Fund's Underlying Benchmark. Once created, a Fund's Paired Class Shares
will trade independently of each other on the Exchange. The cash
proceeds from the creation of Paired Class Shares may be held by a Fund
only in Eligible Assets designed to preserve capital while earning an
investment return that is consistent with the preservation of capital.
Upon any redemption of a Fund's Creation Units by an Authorized
Participant, the cash of the Fund will be used to pay the proceeds of
the redemption to the redeeming Authorized Participant.
Each Fund engaging in a regular distribution,\27\ a special
distribution,\28\ a corrective distribution,\29\ or a net income
distribution \30\ will provide at least three business days' advance
notice (or longer advance notice as may be required by the Exchange)
\31\ of such an event. Each Fund engaging in a share split \32\ will
provide at least ten calendar days' advance notice (or longer advance
notice as may be required by the Exchange) of such an event. In each
instance, the Sponsor will notify the Exchange, and post a notice of
such event and its details on the Sponsor's Web site
(www.AccuShares.com). For regular distributions that occur on schedule,
the Sponsor will cause a press release to be issued identifying the
receiving class, the amount of cash, the amount of Paired Class Shares
(if any), and any other information the Sponsor deems relevant
regarding the distribution and will post this information on the
Sponsor's Web site. With respect to special distributions, corrective
distributions, and share splits, the information provided will include
the relevant ex-, record, and payment dates for each such event and
relevant data concerning each such event. These events will also be
reported in press releases, on the Sponsor's Web site, and in current
reports on Form 8-K as material events, as well as in the Fund's
periodic reports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See supra note 16.
\28\ See supra note 17.
\29\ See supra note 18.
\30\ In a net income distribution, cash is distributed to
investors based on income (after expenses) from the financial
instruments held by the Fund.
\31\ The Exchange states that it may determine that a longer
notice is advisable in certain circumstances (e.g., an extended, or
unexpected, market break).
\32\ Reverse share splits will be declared to maintain a
positive Class Value per Share for either the Up Shares or the Down
Shares of an AccuShares Fund should the Class Value per Share of
either class approach zero. Reverse share splits are expected to
occur in the context of special distributions and are expected to be
triggered after Class Value per Share declines below a specified
dollar threshold as set forth in the applicable Fund prospectus.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Summary of the Comments
In the OIP, the Commission posed questions regarding the proposed
rule change. Commenters responded to those questions and offered other
comments as well. The comments are summarized below.
1. The Effect of the Distributions on the Premiums and Discounts
Between the Trading Price and Class Value per Share
In response to Commission questions about the effect of the Funds'
distributions on premiums and discounts,\33\ the Sponsor asserts that
the presence of regular, special, and corrective distributions will aid
in the reduction of premiums and discounts.\34\ With regard to both
regular and special distributions, the Sponsor asserts that a Fund will
make these types of distributions based on the movement of the
Underlying Benchmark since the last distribution date, and will then
reset the index to the current market level.\35\ According to the
Sponsor, two positive effects relating to potential discounts or
premiums from regular and special distributions are: (1) An investor
will enjoy an actual distribution relating to the index move rather
than having to rely on trading out of an intrinsic gain that could be
subject to market lags, frictions, or a lack of realizable trading
price responsiveness; and (2) the index reset will re-equate the
intrinsic share prices, having the effect of further highlighting any
deviations between trading prices and Class Values, and consequently
all investors (not just market professionals) will more clearly observe
any premium or discount, and
[[Page 9781]]
any investor can execute a trade in response to these deviations.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See OIP, supra note 6, 79 FR at 57157.
\34\ See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 4. Similarly, the
Exchange states that the corrective distribution feature is designed
to prevent losses that have occurred in other ETPs in the past. See
Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 22-23. See also Notice, supra note
3, 79 FR at 35611 (``Immediately after each regular, special and
corrective distribution, the Fund's Underlying Benchmark
participation or exposure will be reset and the Fund's Class Value
per Share for each of its classes will be set to equal the lowest
Class Value per Share of the two classes of Paired Class Shares.'').
\35\ See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 4.
\36\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Sponsor states its view that almost all premium and discount
combinations of the Up Shares and Down Shares of a Fund will be readily
cured by conventional arbitrage. According to the Sponsor, the
corrective distribution is an investor safety feature, above and beyond
conventional arbitrage, designed to remedy those unique scenarios where
the material discount amount of one Fund share is exactly equal to the
material premium amount of the opposing share.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Sponsor states that the corrective distribution \38\ is
expected to have both a preventative effect and a curative effect
relating to premiums and discounts between trading prices and Class
Values per Share.\39\ The Sponsor asserts that the possibility of a
corrective distribution will disincentivize market participants from
buying or selling shares at material premiums or discounts to the Class
Values per Share.\40\ Relating to the curative impact, the Sponsor
states that following the corrective distribution: (1) The discount
class holder, potentially stranded by low available bid prices, would
have the correct aggregate value (inclusive of index movements) in a
50/50 position in the discount shares and premium shares; and (2) a
premium class holder would also have the correct aggregate value
(inclusive of index movements) in a 50/50 position in discount shares
and premium shares.\41\ The Sponsor asserts that these positions would
be unaffected by a single share class premium or discount, and would be
readily saleable at a stable and readily identifiable price (especially
because the Fund is limited to holding cash equivalents).\42\
Authorized Participants, the Sponsor notes, may redeem these positions
in sufficient aggregate amount.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ A corrective distribution will result in: (1) The investors
holding the share class associated with the favorable index move to
realize a gain equal to the realized move in the index; and (2) all
investors receiving an equal quantity of each share class of a Fund.
See id. at 5.
\39\ See id. at 4.
\40\ See id.
\41\ See id. at 5.
\42\ See id.
\43\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter, who recommends that the Commission approve the
proposed rule change, asserts that the regular, special, and corrective
distributions will help prevent the significant premiums and discounts
that have occurred in other ETPs in recent years.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See Whaley Letter, supra note 8, at 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another commenter expressed concern that the structure of Paired
Class Shares will result in persistent premiums and discounts that will
fundamentally invalidate the premise of the products in the market,
making them misleading to investors.\45\ This commenter asserts that
the arbitrage mechanism will not work to keep each of the products
trading closely to its intrinsic value; instead, the commenter argues
that the arbitrage mechanisms will, in theory, keep the sum of the
discount on one class and the premium on the other at zero. The
commenter states its view that it is not economically possible to
maintain intrinsic value in the secondary market, and predicts that any
attempt to do so will lead to massive speculation in the products until
they are pushed to a breaking point, at which point less-sophisticated
investors will suffer significant losses.\46\ To support these
conclusions, the opposing commenter provides a number of hypothetical
situations involving the trading relationship between the VIX index,
VIX futures, and the proposed VIX Fund.\47\ According to the commenter,
the core of the issue is that the products are simply not
hedgeable.\48\ The commenter predicts that there will be very
significant arbitrage pressures attempting to exploit the ``economic
perversity of the products'' and significant activity around prices
that reflect a corrective distribution.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 1.
\46\ See id. This commenter further states that, while his
assertions regarding the possibility of persistent premiums and
discounts and the potential failure of an effective arbitrage
mechanism for Paired Class Shares focus on the proposed VIX Fund and
VIX futures, the commenter points out that the same economic
principles apply to any futures. See id.
\47\ See id. at 1-3.
\48\ See id. at 2.
\49\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange asserted that underlying the opposing commenter's
arguments regarding ineffective arbitrage is the misunderstanding that
spot levels and futures levels are equivalent and interchangeable.\50\
The Exchange agrees that global markets will be broadly inter-related,
including spot markets, futures markets, stock markets, and bond
markets, but argues that, in the case of volatility, and VIX in
particular, the spot market is not ``in line'' and directly comparable
with VIX futures prices.\51\ To support this assertion, the Exchange
cites guidance from the CBOE VIX Primer Basics on the educational
section of CBOE's Web site.\52\ Additionally, the Exchange states that,
contrary to the assumptions implicit in the opposing commenter's
numerical examples, the Fund's creations, redemptions, and other
operations are not limited by VIX futures expiration dates.\53\ The
Exchange asserts that, uniquely, the intrinsic Class Values of the
Funds are not dependent upon successful trading, rolling, or otherwise
rebalancing of securities or futures contracts.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ See Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 17.
\51\ See id. at 18. The Exchange asserts that the willingness of
market participants to trade options overlying both the spot VIX and
VIX futures demonstrates that the market understands the differences
between spot VIX and the range of VIX futures prices. See id. at 19.
\52\ See id. at 18.
\53\ See id. at 16, n.28, 18.
\54\ See id. at 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also asserts that one part of the arbitrage process
for Paired Class Shares will operate the same way as it does for all
exchange-traded funds (``ETFs''); namely, a share trading above or
below an intrinsic Class Value can be transacted, hedged, and traded.
Paired Class Shares have an additional arbitrage mechanism, according
to the Exchange: Intra-fund arbitrage--through the valuation and
trading of both Up and Down Shares--limits the discounts, premiums, or
any combination thereof of the share classes to a value indicated by
the readily determinable net asset value of the Fund's cash equivalent
assets.\55\ The Exchange argues that arbitrage opportunities are
uniquely easy to identify because of the direct observability of the
Underlying Benchmark, the direct linkage of the intrinsic Class Values
to the Underlying Benchmark, and the simplicity and very limited number
of the moving parts in a creation or redemption--i.e., the two Fund
Share prices versus the readily determinable value of the Fund's cash
equivalent assets.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ See id.
\56\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. The Ability of Investors To Understand the Operation of the Funds
The Sponsor asserts that retail investors and other market
participants will be able to understand the Fund's redemption mechanics
and the types and timing of distributions.\57\ Generally, the Sponsor
states that the Funds' distributions are limited to scheduled dates or
the occurrence of large and rare underlying index moves.\58\ The
Sponsor asserts that movements of the underlying indexes will be easy
to track using public sources and therefore
[[Page 9782]]
concludes that investors will have the information necessary to
transact in the Shares and respond to distributions.\59\ In addition,
the Sponsor represents that the consensus of qualified investors and
market makers is that the frequency of the Funds' distributions is
consistent with customary review (e.g., monitoring prices and returns)
and customary reevaluation of share positions.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 6.
\58\ See id. at 2.
\59\ See id.
\60\ See id. The Sponsor states that its opinions and views
expressed in the Sponsor Letter were informed by conversations with
the Exchange, prospective authorized participants, other market
makers, traders, and qualified investors. See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Sponsor states that the prospectus contains detailed examples,
and the Funds' Web site will contain infographics describing each
distribution as well as the courses of action available to
investors.\61\ The Sponsor also states that, except in limited and
unanticipated conditions (listed in the prospectus), regular and
special distributions will be made to shareholders in cash, and
therefore investors will generally be making a straightforward decision
with respect to deploying or maintaining received cash.\62\ With
respect to corrective distributions, the Sponsor states that they are a
direct response to retail investor experiences in ETPs where obscure
technical forces or market illiquidity have caused both large premiums
and large discounts to persist.\63\ The Sponsor asserts that these
distributions, as a self-policing and self-corrections measure, are an
alternative to real-time estimates of indicative portfolio values,
which investors may not necessarily consider before transacting in ETP
shares.\64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ See id. at 6.
\62\ See id.
\63\ See id.
\64\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Sponsor also states that: (1) Corrective distributions are
expected to be rare; (2) without them, retail investors otherwise may
be exposed to either paying a material premium relating to a purchase
or suffering a material discount relating to a sale of Shares; (3)
before receipt of a distribution, investors will see a Form 8-K, a
notice from the Exchange, and a notice on the Fund's Web site; and (4)
upon receipt of a corrective distribution, investors may take any of
the following actions, all of which the Sponsor asserts are not
materially different from the options available to investors upon the
receipt of cash or shares from any distribution or traditional
corporate action: (a) Sell their entire positions for cash, (b) sell a
portion of their positions for cash for a modulated exposure to the
Fund index, or (c) sell part of a position and reinvest proceeds to
maximize a particular market exposure.\65\ According to the Sponsor,
prospective investors view the corrective distribution feature as an
effective balance of ``newness'' and ``benefit'' for the entire range
of Fund shareholders.\66\ The Sponsor states that the corrective
distribution is expected to encourage more active and accurate market
making and more liquidity-enhancing position-taking by Authorized
Participants, all of which are more likely to actually reduce the
likelihood and occurrences of a corrective distribution
declaration.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ See id. at 6-7.
\66\ Specifically, the Sponsor states that, while prospective
participants with expertise in retail investing believed the
corrective distribution feature to be engineered solely for the
benefit of the retail investor and questioned whether institutional
traders would lose profitable trading opportunities, market makers
(including Authorized Participants) applauded the addition of a
corrective distribution. See id. at 7. See supra note 60 (regarding
with whom the Sponsor consulted).
\67\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The opposing commenter asserts that, because of the persistent
premiums and discounts he predicts, investors would have to be
extremely diligent in tracking their positions because the Up Shares
might frequently turn into both Up Shares and Down Shares, which would
result in inattentive investors paying fees to the issuer but not
receiving any notional exposure whatsoever.\68\ According to the
commenter, an investor in the Shares would require extensive knowledge
of the financial markets to understand why, when being required to re-
enter the market after a distribution to reestablish a position, the
product could be trading already at a significant premium or
discount.\69\ The commenter also states its view that the investor
would have to have intimate knowledge of the VIX futures market to
understand from where the premium or discount was actually derived.\70\
The opposing commenter states that investors would likely receive
Shares with the opposite economics for some distributions, and predicts
that this would confuse them.\71\ The commenter distinguishes regular
share distributions, with which the commenter concedes investors are
familiar, by stating that Share distributions would include Shares with
the opposite economics and different tickers.\72\ Further, the opposing
commenter asserts that, unlike products that trade at or close to their
intrinsic value, an investor in Shares needs to know a considerable
amount of information at every point in time when investing in the
product, including for example the coefficient of variation and the
number of days there has been a premium or discount (in light of the
corrective distribution threshold).\73\ The opposing commenter also
asserts that the investor also must check his or her account every day,
to see if there has been a Special Distribution, and on every
Distribution Date, to see what is in his or her account (i.e., whether
there is cash or a neutral basket, which may be subject to fees).\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3.
\69\ See id.
\70\ See id.
\71\ See id.
\72\ See id.
\73\ See id. at 4.
\74\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. The Ability of Investors To Understand the Funds' ``Resets'' to the
Then-Current Reference Index Value
The Sponsor states its view that the Funds are similar to
comparable ETPs in the market and that, accordingly, it expects that
both retail investors and other market participants will understand the
effect of resets (which will occur when regular, special, or corrective
distributions are made) on their investments in a Fund.\75\ The Sponsor
states that in other comparable ETFs and exchange-traded notes
(``ETNs'') the impact of resetting comes through the re-trading of
futures, options, or other contracts either daily, monthly, or on
another cycle, and that this conventional resetting has transaction
costs that are often difficult to isolate within the context of overall
fund performance.\76\ Additionally, according to the Sponsor, because
the traditional method of resetting is accomplished through the trading
of underlying positions at telegraphed times under prescribed fund
rules, ETFs and ETNs can be disadvantaged from having to be a ``price
taker'' in possibly adverse or challenging markets.\77\ The Sponsor
states that the Funds' resets allow the Funds to reduce their
transaction expenses and eliminate the need to transact in underlying
positions. The Sponsor also asserts that individual investors will be
able to more easily track and monitor the resets of the Funds than the
resetting impact in conventional funds.\78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ See id. at 7.
\76\ See id.
\77\ See id. at 7-8.
\78\ See id. at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A supporting commenter asserts that the Funds would deliver exact
holding period returns, which he contrasts to the returns of levered
and inverse funds that implicitly rebalance daily and which he
[[Page 9783]]
asserts can be a source of confusion for retail customers.\79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ See Whaley Letter, supra note 8, at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. The Adequacy of the Exchange's Suitability Rules
The Sponsor states its view that the Exchange's rules governing
sales practices adequately ensure the suitability of recommendations
regarding the Shares and that enhancement is unnecessary.\80\ The
Sponsor states that NASDAQ Rule 2111A requires that an exchange member
have a reasonable basis to believe that a recommended transaction or
investment strategy involving a security or securities is suitable for
the customer, based on the information obtained through the reasonable
diligence of the exchange member to ascertain the customer's investment
profile.\81\ According to the Sponsor, a customer's investment profile
would, in general, include the customer's age, other investments,
financial situation and needs, tax status, investment objectives,
investment experience, investment time horizon, liquidity needs, and
risk tolerance.\82\ The Sponsor also states that the rule explicitly
covers recommended investment strategies involving securities,
including recommendations to ``hold'' securities.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 8, 9.
\81\ See id. at 8.
\82\ See id.
\83\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Sponsor also discusses the Exchange's information circular.
Prior to the commencement of trading of Fund shares, the Exchange will
inform its members through an information circular of the suitability
requirements of NASDAQ Rule 2111A. Specifically the information
circular will remind members that, in recommending transactions in
Shares, they must: (1) Have a reasonable basis to believe that (a) the
recommendation is suitable for a customer given reasonable inquiry
concerning the customer's investment objectives, financial situation,
needs, and any other information known by such member, and (b) the
customer can evaluate the special characteristics and is able to bear
the financial risks of an investment in the shares; and (2) make
reasonable efforts to obtain the following information: (a) The
customer's age; (b) the customer's other investments; (c) the
customer's financial situation and needs; (d) the customer's tax
status; (e) the customer's investment objectives, experience, time
horizon, liquidity needs and risk tolerance; and (f) such other
information used or considered to be reasonable by such members or
registered representatives in making recommendations to the
customer.\84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ See id. at 8-9. In its comment letter, the Exchange
repeated the Sponsor's statements regarding the Exchange's rules and
information circular. See id. at 13-14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. The Relationship Between the Funds' Holdings and Their Investment
Objective
The Sponsor states its view that investors will understand that the
Funds hold cash and cash equivalent securities, and the Cash Values per
Share will be directly responsive to changes in the underlying
index.\85\ The Sponsor asserts that ETNs are similar to the Shares in
that an ETN does not have identified ``portfolio assets'' and that this
aspect of ETNs has been well understood.\86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\85\ See id. at 9.
\86\ See id. The Sponsor, however, distinguishes the Shares from
ETNs in that, with ETNs, an investor is subject to the performance
risk of the obligor and a market maker is subject to ETN creation
and redemptions processes which are sometimes less standardized than
ETF processes. See id. at 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Sponsor asserts that the Funds' structure is appropriate, and
will result in certain advantages: (1) Lower fund operating costs,
because the Class Value per Share amounts are directly related to an
independent and readily observable index and there is no need for a
Fund to incur trading costs over assets in an effort to track the
index; (2) improved fund performance transparency, because the return
of Shareholders will not be impacted by transactions costs that are
difficult to observe and underlying assets whose pricing is opaque; (3)
a higher certainty of redemption values because the Shares will be
readily created and redeemed at a certain and readily determinable
value, thereby eliminating the frictions often caused where (a) a
potentially large number of in-kind securities are challenging to value
or (b) a cash creation or redemption is based on trading illiquid
securities or trading securities in a fast-moving market; and (4)
direct indexing, which the Sponsor states prospective investors believe
to be more easily followed through readily observable and free data
services.\87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ See id. at 9-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Other Comments
One commenter recommends that the Commission approve the proposed
rule change because, in its view, the AccuShares' products are simple
and transparent, and will provide investors, institutions and retail
customers alike with the returns that they want.\88\ He also recommends
approval of the proposed rule change because: (1) The Shares would
provide exposure to spot market benchmarks that are popular to large
segments of the asset management community; (2) the Up Shares and Down
Shares are direct investments that track readily-observable spot market
benchmarks, unlike the futures indexes, which he characterizes as
complicated dynamic futures trading strategies; (3) changes in the
values of the Up Shares and Down Shares would be purely mechanical and
would correspond directly to the price changes in the underlying index,
which is distinctly different from many current products; (4) unlike
ETNs, investors in the Funds would have no credit risk; and (5)
actively-managed products add market complexity, and the Paired Class
Shares would not be actively-managed.\89\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ See Whaley Letter, supra note 8, at 2.
\89\ See id. at 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, another commenter asserts that the Funds would be both
highly relevant to a wide range of investors and highly approachable to
all of them.\90\ He asserts that indexes underlying the Funds are
arguably better for individual investors because they are easier to
follow than the indexes that underlie some existing products.\91\ This
commenter also asserts that the market has been clamoring for better
spot market proxies since the beginning of the ETF market.\92\ Further,
the commenter recommends approval of the proposed rule change because
the ``best ETFs also help solve existing structural problems for
traders and investors regarding term structure of price and/or
volatility, beta to cash prices and tracking errors, and rebalancing
inefficiencies . . .'' \93\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ See Allen Letter, supra note 8.
\91\ See id.
\92\ See id.
\93\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The opposing commenter asserts that the premiums and discounts,
which he predicts will result in corrective distributions that are more
frequent than the Exchange has suggested, will result in high implicit
fees and large tracking
[[Page 9784]]
errors.\94\ He argues that the products are not suitable for any
investor.\95\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3. For example, the
commenter characterizes the ``Daily Amount'' as a fee. During any
single distribution measurement period that starts with the prior
distribution date and to create a balanced market for the Up Shares
and Down Shares of the VIX Fund, the Class Value per Share of each
Up Share of the VIX Fund will be reduced and the Class Value per
Share of each Down Share of the VIX Fund will be increased by an
additional daily amount, the ``Daily Amount.'' See Notice, supra
note 3, 79 FR at 35617. The opposing commenter asserts that the
investors in the Up Shares of the VIX Fund will be charged will be
charged 4.5% in Daily Amount charges.
\95\ See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, the Exchange asserts that the Daily Amount is not a
charge, fee, or amount that leaves the Fund, but rather is an amount
applied to both share classes.\96\ The Exchange characterizes the Daily
Amount as ``one of the unique structural features of the Funds which
leads to complete transparency of intrinsic Class Value entitlements.''
\97\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\96\ See Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 19.
\97\ Id. at 22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Discussion and Commission's Findings
After careful consideration, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with the requirements of the Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national securities
exchange.\98\ In particular, and as discussed further below, the
Commission finds that the proposed rule change is consistent with: (1)
The requirements of Section 6(b)(5) of the Act,\99\ which requires,
among other things, that the Exchange's rules be designed to promote
just and equitable principles of trade; to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing, settling,
processing information with respect to, and facilitating transactions
in securities; 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 (2) Section
11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act,\100\ which sets forth Congress' finding
that it is in the public interest and appropriate for the protection of
investors and the maintenance of fair and orderly markets to assure the
availability to brokers, dealers, and investors of information with
respect to quotations for and transactions in securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\98\ In approving this proposed rule change, the Commission
notes that it has considered the proposed rule's impact on
efficiency, competition, and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C.
78c(f).
\99\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\100\ 15 U.S.C. 78k-1(a)(1)(C)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. NASDAQ Rule 5713
NASDAQ Rule 5713 sets forth provisions regarding the listing and
trading of Paired Class Shares on the Exchange. The rule defines Paired
Class Shares,\101\ establishes specific recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for registered market makers in Paired Class Shares,\102\
and sets forth initial and continued listing criteria, some of which
are more fully discussed below.\103\ In addition, Commentary .05 to
Nasdaq Rule 5713 states that the Exchange will implement written
surveillance procedures for trading Paired Class Shares.\104\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\101\ See NASDAQ Rule 5713(c). The operation of Paired Class
Shares is described above. See supra section II.A.
\102\ In accordance with NASDAQ Rule 5713(h), market makers in
Paired Class Shares must file with the Exchange and keep current a
list identifying all accounts for trading in the applicable
securities or physical commodities included in, or options, futures
or options on futures on, the Reference Asset of the Underlying
Benchmark of any Paired Class Shares or any other derivatives based
on such Reference Asset or based on any security or Reference Asset
included in the Underlying Benchmark, which the registered market
maker may have or over which it may exercise investment discretion.
In addition, market makers are prohibited from trading in the
applicable securities or physical commodities included in, or
options, futures or options on futures on, the Reference Asset of
the Underlying Benchmark of any Paired Class Shares or any other
derivatives based on such Reference Asset or based on any security
or Reference Asset included in the Underlying Benchmark, in an
account in which a market maker, directly or indirectly, controls
trading activities, or has a direct interest in the profits or
losses thereof. See NASDAQ Rule 5713(h)(i). In addition, market
makers in Paired Class Shares are required to make available to the
Exchange any and all books, records, or other information pertaining
to transactions by such entity or registered or non-registered
employee affiliated with such entity for its or their own accounts
for trading the applicable securities or physical commodities
included in, or options, futures or options on futures on, the
Reference Asset of the Underlying Benchmark of any Paired Class
Shares or any other derivatives based on such Reference Asset or
based on any security or Reference Asset included in the Underlying
Benchmark, as may be requested by the Exchange. See NASDAQ Rule
5713(h)(ii).
\103\ The Commission notes that any securities listed in the
future under NASDAQ Rule 5713 must be the subject of a rule filing
by the Exchange under Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act--providing
the Commission with the opportunity to review and to approve or
disapprove that rule filing--and that all securities listed under
NASDAQ Rule 5713 will be subject to the full set of bylaws and other
rules and procedures of the Exchange. While Nasdaq Rule 5713(e)
provides that Paired Class Shares may have values based on assets,
prices, price volatility, or other economic interests, such as
currencies, interest rates, non-investable economic indices, and
other measures of financial instrument value, the specific products
approved for listing pursuant to this order will have values based
on price volatility and commodity indices. The Commission staff will
consider any future proposals to list products under Nasdaq Rule
5713 with values based on these and other types of benchmarks and
reference assets, evaluating the specific facts and circumstances
associated with each proposal under Section 19(b) of the Exchange
Act. Further, the Commission staff will continue to analyze the
development of exchange-traded products and their impact on market
structure and will monitor the development of the market for Paired
Class Shares.
\104\ The Exchange stated that trading in Paired Class Shares
will be subject to the existing trading surveillances, administered
by both the Exchange and FINRA on behalf of the Exchange, which are
designed to detect violations of Exchange rules and applicable
federal securities laws. See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35621.
FINRA surveils trading on the Exchange pursuant to a regulatory
services agreement, and the Exchange is responsible for FINRA's
performance under this regulatory services agreement. See Notice,
supra note 3, 79 FR at 35621, n.51. The Exchange represented that
FINRA, on behalf of the Exchange, will communicate as needed
regarding trading in the Paired Class Shares and in the securities
in which the Fund will invest with other markets and other entities
that are members of the Intermarket Surveillance Group (``ISG'') or
with which the Exchange has in place a comprehensive surveillance
sharing agreement. See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35621.
Additionally, the Exchange represented that FINRA may obtain trading
information regarding trading in the Shares from markets and other
entities that are members of the ISG or with which the Exchange has
in place a comprehensive surveillance sharing agreement. See Notice,
supra note 3, 79 FR at 35621. For a list of the current members of
ISG, see https://www.isgportal.org/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(i)(B), the Exchange will obtain a
representation from the Trust on behalf of each Fund that the Class
Value per Share of each of its Up Shares and Down Shares will be
calculated daily and that these Class Values per Share and information
about the assets of the Fund will be made available to all market
participants at the same time.\105\ NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(ii)(B) permits
the Exchange to suspend trading in or remove from listing Paired Class
Shares whose Underlying Benchmark, or a substitute or replacement
Underlying Benchmark based on the same Reference Asset,\106\ is no
longer calculated or available on at least a 15-second delayed basis
during the Regular Market Session from a major market data vendor
unaffiliated with the sponsor, the custodian, the trustee of the Trust,
the Fund, or NASDAQ. Further, NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(ii)(C) permits the
Exchange to suspend trading in or remove from
[[Page 9785]]
listing Paired Class Shares whose Class Value per Share becomes no
longer available on a daily basis to all market participants at the
same time. NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(ii)(D) permits the Exchange to suspend
trading in or remove from listing Paired Class Shares whose Intraday
Indicative Value is no longer made available on at least a 15-second
delayed basis by a major market vendor during the Exchange's Regular
Market Session. The Commission also notes that NASDAQ Rules
5713(f)(i)(C) and 5713(f)(ii)(E) require the establishment of
information barriers concerning changes and adjustments to the
Underlying Benchmark.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ The Commission notes that these requirements are
substantively identical to provisions applicable to other exchange-
traded derivative securities products, including Managed Fund Shares
under NASDAQ Rule 5735(d)(1)(B). See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 57962 (June 13, 2008), 73 FR 35175 (June 20, 2008) (SR-NASDAQ-
2008-039) (approving NASDAQ listing standards applicable to Managed
Fund Shares). For a specific product approved for listing under
NASDAQ Rule 5735, see Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73480
(October 31, 2014), 79 FR 66022 (November 6, 2014) (SR-NASDAQ-2014-
090) (approving the listing and trading of Shares of the Validea
Market Legends ETF under NASDAQ Rule 5735).
\106\ Commentary .04 to Rule 5713 states that, prior to a
substitute or replacement Underlying Benchmark being selected for
the Fund, NASDAQ must file a related proposed rule change pursuant
to Rule 19b-4 under the Exchange Act to continue trading the Paired
Class Shares.
\107\ The Commission notes that these provisions are
substantively identical to the firewall requirements in NASDAQ Rule
5705(b)(2)(B)(i), which governs the listing and trading of Index
Fund Shares.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the foregoing, the Commission believes that the
requirements of NASDAQ Rule 5713, taken together with other NASDAQ
Rules regarding the trading of equity securities on the Exchange, are
consistent with the requirement of Section 6(b)(5) of the Act that
requires that the Exchange's rules 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 to promote just and equitable
principles of trade and to protect investors and the public interest.
B. Issues Raised by the Opposing Commenter
1. Effectiveness of Arbitrage
In the OIP, the Commission asked for commenters' views on the
effect that Paired Class Share distributions would have on premiums and
discounts between the trading price of the Paired Class Shares and
their respective Class Value per Share.\108\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See OIP, supra note 6, 79 FR at 57157.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The opposing commenter asserts that the structure of Paired Class
Shares will result in significant and persistent premiums and discounts
because ``it is not economically possible to construct a two sided
market for spot exposure that does not trade in line with VIX futures
prices.'' \109\ This commenter argues that the arbitrage mechanism of
the Funds will not work to keep Up Shares and Down Shares trading close
to their intrinsic value, but will instead ``in theory keep the sum of
the premium on one and the discount on the other at zero.'' \110\ To
support these conclusions, the opposing commenter provides a number of
hypothetical situations involving the trading relationship between the
VIX index, VIX futures, and the proposed VIX Fund.\111\ Further, the
opposing commenter argues that the ``daily amount'' applied to the VIX
Fund--a 15 basis point amount transferred from Up Shares to Down Shares
when the VIX is at 30 or below--means that investors in Up Shares will
suffer a 4.5% loss over a 30-day period, even if the VIX does not
move.\112\ The opposing commenter also argues that, because the
arbitrage mechanism will not work as described by the Exchange,
multiple corrective distributions will be required per year, causing
investors to incur reinvestment expenses to maintain their desired
position.\113\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 1. See also supra notes
45-48 and accompanying text.
\110\ Id.
\111\ See Kassner Letter, supra note 8.
\112\ Id.
\113\ Id. at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange argues in response that, underlying this commenter's
argument is a mistaken assumption that spot levels and futures levels
are equivalent and interchangeable.\114\ The Exchange agrees that
markets such as spot markets, futures markets, stock markets, and bond
markets will be broadly inter-related, but argues that, in the case of
volatility in general and VIX in particular, the spot market is not
``in line'' and directly comparable with VIX futures prices. The
Exchange cites the willingness of market participants to trade options
overlying both the spot VIX and VIX futures as evidence that the market
would understand the differences between spot VIX and the range of VIX
futures prices. The Exchange notes that the Web site of CBOE, the
provider of the VIX, states, ``The price of a VIX futures contract can
be lower, equal to or higher in the 30-day forward period covered by
the VIX futures contract than in the 30-day spot period covered by
VIX.'' \115\ The Exchange also notes that, unlike VIX futures,
``because the shares of the Fund are both available for creation and
redemption daily, the Fund provides for spot VIX positions to be
created or redeemed daily, and for returns to be realized on a daily
basis.'' \116\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\114\ See Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 17.
\115\ Id. at 18.
\116\ Id. at 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the Exchange argues that the existence of the Daily
Amount applied to the VIX Fund is disclosed clearly and referenced more
than 90 times in the prospectus for the VIX Fund, and the Exchange
argues that the amount of the Daily Amount is closely aligned with the
estimates of several market experts as to the roll cost incurred by
long positions in volatility futures (e.g., VIX futures).\117\ As a
result, the Exchange argues, the expected premiums and discounts
encountered by the VIX Fund should be substantially less that the
opposing commenter predicts.\118\ The Exchange also argues that the
corrective distribution mechanism is designed to prevent the type of
investor losses that occurred when an ETN designed to track the VIX
moved substantially away from the value of the VIX.\119\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\117\ See id. at 20-21.
\118\ See id. at 21.
\119\ See id. at 22-23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that the Exchange has met its burden to
demonstrate that its proposal is consistent with the Act. The Exchange
has reasonably explained in the Notice, the Exchange's response
letter,\120\ and, as to the VIX Fund, in the Registration Statement for
the VIX Fund,\121\ the methodology for the calculation of the
Underlying Benchmarks and the differences between the value of the
Underlying Benchmark indexes and the prices of the relevant near-month
futures contracts. In particular the Exchange explains that, with
respect to the VIX Fund, the purpose and derivation of the 0.15% Daily
Amount by which the Up Shares will be reduced and the Down Shares
increased, which, as cited by the Exchange, is consistent with price
patterns historically observed when comparing VIX futures and spot
prices.\122\ The Exchange further notes the extent to which the
Registration Statement discloses the Daily Amount transfer.\123\ The
Exchange has also reasonably explained the operation of the Funds; the
creation and redemption process and procedures; the regular, special,
and corrective distributions to be employed by the Funds; and the
resulting resetting process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\120\ See Exchange Letter, supra note 8.
\121\ See Registration Statement, supra note 22.
\122\ See Exchange Letter, supra note 8, at 22.
\123\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, with respect to arbitrage in Fund Shares, and,
consistent with Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act,\124\ which sets
forth Congress' finding that it is in the public interest and
appropriate for the protection of investors and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets to assure the availability to brokers, dealers, and
investors of information with respect to quotations for and
transactions in securities, the Commission notes that market
information regarding the value of the Shares and of the Underlying
Benchmarks will be continuously available to market participants.
[[Page 9786]]
Quotation and last-sale information for the Shares will be available
via NASDAQ proprietary quote and trade services, as well as in
accordance with any UTP plans for a Fund's Shares.\125\ Additionally,
information regarding market price and volume of the Shares will be
continually available on a real-time basis throughout the day on
brokers' computer screens and other electronic services.\126\ Further,
information regarding the previous day's closing price and trading
volume information for the Shares will be published daily in the
financial section of newspapers.\127\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\124\ 15 U.S.C. 78k-1(a)(1)(C)(iii).
\125\ See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35621.
\126\ See id.
\127\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The value of each Fund's Underlying Benchmark, as well as
information about each Fund's Underlying Benchmark constituents, the
weighting of the constituents, the Underlying Benchmark's methodology,
and the Underlying Benchmark's rules, will be available at no charge on
the Index Provider's Web site at us.spindices.com or, in the case of
the VIX Fund, the CBOE's Web site at www.cboe.com/VIX.\128\ The value
of each Fund's Underlying Benchmark also will be published by one or
more major market data vendors on at least a 15-second delayed basis
during the Regular Market Session.\129\ An Intraday Indicative Value
for each Fund will be disseminated and made available by a major market
vendor, and will be updated and widely disseminated and broadly
displayed on at least a 15-second delayed basis during the Regular
Market Session.\130\ Class Values and Class Values per Share of each
Fund will be calculated by the Fund's Custodian at the end of each
Regular Market Session.\131\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\128\ See id.
\129\ See NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(2)(B).
\130\ See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35622.
\131\ NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(ii)(C) is designed to ensure that the
Class Values and Class Values per Share of each Fund will be made
available to all market participants at the same time.
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Under NASDAQ Rule 5713(f)(i)(B), the Exchange will obtain a
representation from the Trust on behalf of each Fund that the Class
Value per Share of each of its Up Shares and Down Shares will be
calculated daily and that these Class Values per Share and information
about the assets of the Fund will be made available to all market
participants at the same time.\132\ In addition, NASDAQ Rule
5713(f)(2)(B) permits the Exchange to suspend trading in or remove from
listing Paired Class Shares whose Underlying Benchmark, or a substitute
or replacement Underlying Benchmark based on the same Reference
Asset,\133\ is no longer calculated or available on at least a 15-
second delayed basis during the Regular Market Session from a major
market data vendor unaffiliated with the sponsor, the custodian, the
trustee of the Trust, the Fund or NASDAQ.
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\132\ The Commission notes that these requirements are
substantively identical to provisions applicable to other exchange-
traded derivative securities products, including Managed Fund Shares
under NASDAQ Rule 5735(d)(1)(B).
\133\ Commentary .04 to Rule 5713 states that, prior to a
substitute or replacement Underlying Benchmark being selected for
the Fund, NASDAQ must file a related proposed rule change pursuant
to Rule 19b-4 under the Act to continue trading the Paired Class
Shares.
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The Commission believes that, in light of the continuous
dissemination of information about the Shares' current market prices,
the Funds' Underlying Benchmarks, and the Funds' intraday estimated
Class Value per Share, arbitrage opportunities will be readily
identifiable to market participants. The Commission also believes that
the creation and redemption process, which, under Rule 5713(c), uses a
neutral basket of Up Shares and Down Shares, is reasonably designed to
allow market participants to arbitrage away premiums and discounts that
may develop, as long as the Up Shares and Down Shares do not become
locked in a persistent state of approximately equal and opposite
premiums or discounts.\134\
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\134\ Because the funds would create and redeem their shares
only in equal amounts of Up Shares and Down Shares, if one class of
shares traded at a premium, and the other class traded at an
approximately equal discount, arbitrage using the creation or
redemption process could not eliminate those price deviations. For
example, if Up Shares traded at a $0.50 premium, and down shares
traded at a $0.50 discount, the value per share of a creation unit,
composed of equal amounts of each class, would be equal to the NAV
of the fund (i.e., the premium would cancel out the discount).
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The Commission acknowledges, however, that the normal arbitrage
mechanism of the Funds will not be effective if equal and opposite
premiums and discounts persist between the Up Shares and Down Shares of
a Fund. Because no existing exchange-traded products use a paired-class
structure, the Commission does not have a basis for comparison from
which to predict how frequently such conditions are likely to occur. As
noted above, however, the Funds would provide for a corrective
distribution when the magnitude of the equal and opposite premiums and
discounts exceeds a certain threshold.\135\ The Exchange has
represented that, ``[e]ven if a corrective distribution is not
triggered, the existence of a Fund's corrective distribution feature is
expected to modify investor and Authorized Participant behavior to
prevent persistent and material premium and discount conditions for
Paired Class Shares from becoming locked.'' \136\ Based on the
Exchange's representation, the Commission believes that the corrective
distribution mechanism is reasonably designed to limit the magnitude of
such premiums and discounts and that, when triggered, it will provide
investors with a market neutral position that should allow them to exit
the affected Fund at Class Value. Further, the underlying value of the
Funds and the extent of the premiums and discounts would not be subject
to uncertainty, because, as explained above,\137\ the Funds' market
prices, Class Values per Share, and reference benchmark values and
methodologies would be publicly available in real time. In addition,
and significantly, to the extent that equal and opposite premiums and
discounts persist within a Fund's threshold for a corrective
distribution, all investors in the affected Fund would be subject to
the same pricing conditions, and Authorized Participants would not be
able to use the creation and redemption process to trade in the primary
market for the shares at prices more favorable than those available to
investors trading at market prices on the Exchange.
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\135\ See supra note 18.
\136\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 9, 79 FR at 35612.
\137\ See supra text accompanying notes 125-133.
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Thus, for the reasons described above, the Commission believes that
the Exchange's rules are reasonably 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.
2. Investor Understanding and Suitability
In the OIP, the Commission solicited comments about whether retail
investors and other market participants would be able to understand the
types and timing of distributions as well as the periodic resets of
Paired Class Shares' exposure to their Underlying Benchmarks.\138\
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\138\ See OIP, supra note 6, 79 FR at 57157.
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The opposing commenter argues that the operational complexity of
Paired Class Shares renders them unsuitable for any investor. As
discussed above, this commenter argues that extreme diligence would be
required of investors in tracking their positions because the Up Shares
might frequently turn into both Up Shares and Down Shares, and that
investors would need to know a
[[Page 9787]]
considerable amount of information at every point in time when holding
Shares.\139\
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\139\ See Kassner Letter, supra note 8, at 3-4.
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The Sponsor asserts that retail investors and other market
participants will be able to understand the types and timing of fund
distributions. The Sponsor states that the Registration Statement
contains detailed examples, and the Funds' Web site will contain
infographics describing each distribution, as well as the courses of
action available to investors. According to the Sponsor, distributions
will generally be limited to scheduled dates or the occurrence of large
and rare underlying index moves, and movements of the underlying
indexes will be easy to track using public sources. The Sponsor states
that the consensus of qualified investors and market makers to whom it
has spoken is that the frequency of the Funds' distributions is
consistent with customary review (e.g., monitoring prices and returns)
and customary re-evaluation of share positions. Additionally, the
Sponsor states that, except in limited and unanticipated conditions
which are identified in the Registration Statement, regular and special
distributions will be made to shareholders in cash, and therefore
investors generally will face a straightforward decision with respect
to deploying or maintaining received cash. With respect to corrective
distributions (in which a fund would issue each holder of Up Shares an
equal number of Down Shares, and each holder of Down Shares an equal
number of Up Shares), the Sponsor asserts that such distributions are
expected to be rare and to encourage among Authorized Participants both
more active and accurate market making and more liquidity-enhancing
position-taking. The Sponsor also argues that corrective distributions,
as a self-policing and self-correcting measure, are a better
alternative to detailed disclosures about premiums and discounts in
prospectuses, which investors may not necessarily read and which would
require affirmative investor action, and the dissemination of real-time
estimates of indicative portfolio values, which investors may not
necessarily consider before transacting in other types of ETP shares.
Further, the Sponsor states that prospective investors to whom it has
spoken believe that the corrective distribution will benefit the entire
range of shareholders.
With respect to the resets, the Sponsor states that the Funds are
similar to comparable ETPs in the market and that it expects that both
retail investors and other market participants will understand the
effect of Paired Class Share resets on their investments.\140\ The
Sponsor also asserts that individual investors will be able to more
easily track and monitor Paired Class Share resets than the resetting
impact in other types of ETPs.
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\140\ Specifically, the Sponsor states that for comparable ETPs
that seek commodity or volatility exposure through trading in
derivative products, the impact of resetting comes through the ``re-
trading'' of futures, options, or other contracts. These ETFs effect
the resetting either daily, monthly, or on another cycle. This
conventional resetting has transaction costs, which are often
difficult to isolate within the context of overall fund performance.
The Sponsor adds that, since the traditional method of resetting is
accomplished through the trading of underlying positions at
telegraphed times under prescribed fund rules, ETFs can be
disadvantaged from having to be a ``price taker'' in possibly
adverse or challenging markets. The Sponsor asserts that these
resetting considerations in these other types of ETPs are well known
by retail investors. See Sponsor Letter, supra note 8, at 7-8.
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The Sponsor also argues that the Exchange's sales practice rules
adequately ensure the suitability of sales recommendations regarding
the Funds' Shares, citing NASDAQ Rule 2111A, which requires that an
exchange member have a reasonable basis to believe that a recommended
transaction or investment strategy is suitable for a given customer,
based on information obtained through reasonable diligence.\141\
Additionally, the Sponsor notes that, before trading in the Shares
begins, the Exchange will inform its members in an information circular
of the special characteristics and risks associated with trading Paired
Class Shares.\142\
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\141\ See id. at 8-9.
\142\ The Exchange has represented that the information circular
will discuss (a) the procedures for purchases and redemptions of
Paired Class Shares; (b) Rule 2111A, which imposes suitability
obligations on Exchange members with respect to recommending
transactions in Paired Class Shares to customers; (c) how
information regarding the Underlying Benchmark and Intraday
Indicative Value is disseminated; (d) the risks involved in trading
Paired Class Shares during the Pre-Market and Post-Market sessions
when an updated Underlying Benchmark and Intraday Indicative Value
will not be calculated or publicly disseminated; (e) the requirement
that members deliver a prospectus to investors purchasing newly
issued Paired Class Shares; (g) trading information; and (h) how
information regarding distributions and share splits is disseminated
and the requirements of public notification of these events.
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The Commission notes that the Exchange's suitability rule, NASDAQ
Rule 2111A, requires that Exchange members and associated persons of a
member comply with Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (``FINRA'')
Rule 2111, which requires member firms and their associated persons to
``have a reasonable basis to believe'' that a transaction or investment
strategy involving securities that they recommend is suitable for the
customer. Specifically, this reasonable belief must be based on the
information obtained through the reasonable diligence of the firm or
associated person to ascertain the customer's investment profile. The
rule requires firms and associated persons to seek to obtain
information about the customer's age; other investments; financial
situation and needs, which might include questions about annual income
and liquid net worth; tax status, such as marginal tax rate; investment
objectives, which might include generating income, funding retirement,
buying a home, preserving wealth, or market speculation; investment
experience; investment time horizon, such as the expected time
available to achieve a particular financial goal; liquidity needs,
which is the customer's need to convert investments to cash without
incurring significant loss in value; and risk tolerance, which is a
customer's willingness to risk losing some or all of the original
investment in exchange for greater potential returns.
Additionally, the Commission notes that the Funds will issue
specific, public notifications regarding the unique distributions that
the Funds would provide. Each Fund engaging in a regular
distribution,\143\ a special distribution, a corrective distribution,
or a net income distribution \144\ will provide at least three business
days' advance notice (or longer advance notice as may be required by
the Exchange) \145\ of such an event. Each Fund engaging in a share
split will provide at least ten calendar days' advance notice (or
longer advance
[[Page 9788]]
notice as may be required by the Exchange) \146\ of such an event. In
each instance, the Sponsor will notify the Exchange and post a notice
of the event and its details on the Sponsor's Web site.
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\143\ With respect to regular distributions, the information
provided will consist of the schedule of distributions and
associated distribution dates, and a notification, as of the record
date for such regular distribution, on the Sponsor's Web site
(www.AccuShares.com) as to whether or not the regular distribution
will occur. See Notice, supra note 3, 79 FR at 35620. For regular
distributions that occur on schedule, the Sponsor will cause a press
release to be issued identifying the receiving class, the amount of
cash, the amount of Paired Class Shares (if any), and any other
information the Sponsor deems relevant regarding the distribution
and post such information on the Sponsor's Web site. See id.
\144\ With respect to special distributions, corrective
distributions, and share splits, the information provided will
include the relevant ex-, record, and payment dates for each such
event and relevant data concerning each such event. In addition,
notice of net income distributions for each class of a Fund, if any,
will also be included in the notifications of regular, special, and
corrective distributions. See id.
\145\ The Exchange may determine that longer notice is advisable
in some circumstances (e.g., an extended, or unexpected, market
break). See id. at 35620, n.46.
\146\ See id.
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The Commission further notes that the prospectus disclosures for
the Funds state prominently that the Funds are not suitable for all
investors, and include the following disclosures: (1) Stating that the
funds may not be suitable for all investors; (2) describing the effect
of distributions on an investor's exposure; and (3) stating that
``Investors who do not intend to actively manage and monitor their Fund
investments at least as frequently as each distribution date should not
buy shares of the Fund.'' (Emphasis in original.)
Based on all of the foregoing, the Commission believes that the
Exchange has adequately responded to the opposing commenter's concerns
about investor understanding and suitability, and that the Exchange's
proposal is consistent with the public interest and the protection of
investors.
For the foregoing reasons, the Commission finds that the Exchange's
proposal to adopt NASDAQ Rule 5713 and to list and trade the Funds
pursuant to that rule is consistent with the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to a national securities
exchange.\147\
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\147\ This approval order is based on all of the Exchange's
representations, including those set forth above and in the Notice.
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IV. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,\148\ that the proposed rule change (SR-NASDAQ-2014-065), as
modified by Amendment No. 1 thereto, be, and it hereby is, approved.
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\148\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
By the Commission.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-03713 Filed 2-23-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P