Self-Regulatory Organizations; NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc.; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Amend Chapter V, Section 6, 27733-27747 [2015-11594]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 93 / Thursday, May 14, 2015 / Notices
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–BOX–2015–18. 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.,
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business days between the hours of
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should refer to File Number SR–BOX–
2015–18, and should be submitted on or
before June 4, 2015.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.24
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–11591 Filed 5–13–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc.; Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Chapter V, Section 6
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
May 8, 2015.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that, on May 7,
2015, NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc. (‘‘BX’’ or
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of the Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend
Chapter V, Regulation of Trading on BX
Options, Section 6, entitled ‘‘Obvious
and Catastrophic Errors’’ (‘‘Current
Rule’’), to replace with new Section 6
entitled ‘‘Nullification and Adjustment
of Options Transactions including
Obvious Errors’’ (‘‘Proposed Rule’’).
Section 6 relates to the adjustment and
nullification of options transactions that
occur on BX Options.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s Web site
at https://
nasdaqomxbx.cchwallstreet.com/, at the
principal office of the Exchange, and at
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
[Release No. 34–74916; File No. SR–BX–
2015–028]
24 17
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the Exchange. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
1. Purpose
Background
For several months the Exchange has
been working with other options
exchanges to identify ways to improve
the process related to the adjustment
and nullification of erroneous options
transactions. The goal of the process
that the options exchanges have
undertaken is to adopt harmonized rules
related to the adjustment and
nullification of erroneous options
transactions as well as a specific
provision related to coordination in
connection with large-scale events
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27733
involving erroneous options
transactions. As described below, the
Exchange believes that the changes the
options exchanges and the Exchange
have agreed to propose will provide
transparency and finality with respect to
the adjustment and nullification of
erroneous options transactions.
Particularly, the proposed changes seek
to achieve consistent results for
participants across U.S. options
exchanges while maintaining a fair and
orderly market, protecting investors and
protecting the public interest.
The Proposed Rule is the culmination
of this coordinated effort and reflects
discussions by the options exchanges to
universally adopt: (1) certain provisions
already in place on one or more options
exchanges; and (2) new provisions that
the options exchanges collectively
believe will improve the handling of
erroneous options transactions. Thus,
although the Proposed Rule is in many
ways similar to and based on the
Exchange’s Current Rule, the Exchange
is adopting various provisions to
conform with existing rules of one or
more options exchanges and also to
adopt rules that are not currently in
place on any options exchange. As
noted above, in order to adopt a rule
that is similar in most material respects
to the rules adopted by other options
exchanges, the Exchange proposes to
delete the Current Rule in its entirety
and to replace it with the Proposed
Rule.
The Exchange notes that it has
proposed additional objective standards
in the Proposed Rule as compared to the
Current Rule. The Exchange also notes
that the Proposed Rule will ensure that
the Exchange will have the same
standards as all other options
exchanges. However, there are still areas
under the Proposed Rule where
subjective determinations need to be
made by Exchange personnel with
respect to the calculation of Theoretical
Price. The Exchange notes that the
Exchange and all other options
exchanges have been working to further
improve the review of potentially
erroneous transactions as well as their
subsequent adjustment by creating an
objective and universal way to
determine Theoretical Price in the event
a reliable NBBO is not available. For
instance, the Exchange and all other
options exchanges may utilize an
independent third party to calculate and
disseminate or make available
Theoretical Price. However, this
initiative requires additional exchange
and industry discussion as well as
additional time for development and
implementation. The Exchange will
continue to work with other options
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exchanges and the options industry
towards the goal of additional
objectivity and uniformity with respect
to the calculation of Theoretical Price.
As additional background, the
Exchange believes that the Proposed
Rule supports an approach consistent
with long-standing principles in the
options industry under which the
general policy is to adjust rather than
nullify transactions. The Exchange
acknowledges that adjustment of
transactions is contrary to the operation
of analogous rules applicable to the
equities markets, where erroneous
transactions are typically nullified
rather than adjusted and where there is
no distinction between the types of
market participants involved in a
transaction. For the reasons set forth
below, the Exchange believes that the
distinctions in market structure between
equities and options markets continue
to support these distinctions between
the rules for handling obvious errors in
the equities and options markets. The
Exchange also believes that the
Proposed Rule properly balances several
competing concerns based on the
structure of the options markets.
Various general structural differences
between the options and equities
markets point toward the need for a
different balancing of risks for options
market participants and are reflected in
the Proposed Rule. Option pricing is
formulaic and is tied to the price of the
underlying stock, the volatility of the
underlying security and other factors.
Because options market participants can
generally create new open interest in
response to trading demand, as new
open interest is created, correlated
trades in the underlying or related series
are generally also executed to hedge a
market participant’s risk. This pairing of
open interest with hedging interest
differentiates the options market
specifically (and the derivatives markets
broadly) from the cash equities markets.
In turn, the Exchange believes that the
hedging transactions engaged in by
market participants necessitates
protection of transactions through
adjustments rather than nullifications
when possible and otherwise
appropriate.
The options markets are also quote
driven markets dependent on liquidity
providers to an even greater extent than
equities markets. In contrast to the
approximately 7,000 different securities
traded in the U.S. equities markets each
day, there are more than 500,000
unique, regularly quoted option series.
Given this breadth in options series the
options markets are more dependent on
liquidity providers than equities
markets; such liquidity is provided most
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commonly by registered market makers
but also by other professional traders.
With the number of instruments in
which registered market makers must
quote and the risk attendant with
quoting so many products
simultaneously, the Exchange believes
that those liquidity providers should be
afforded a greater level of protection. In
particular, the Exchange believes that
liquidity providers should be allowed
protection of their trades given the fact
that they typically engage in hedging
activity to protect them from significant
financial risk to encourage continued
liquidity provision and maintenance of
the quote-driven options markets.
In addition to the factors described
above, there are other fundamental
differences between options and
equities markets which lend themselves
to different treatment of different classes
of participants that are reflected in the
Proposed Rule. For example, there is no
trade reporting facility in the options
markets. Thus, all transactions must
occur on an options exchange. This
leads to significantly greater retail
customer participation directly on
exchanges than in the equities markets,
where a significant amount of retail
customer participation never reaches
the Exchange but is instead executed in
off-exchange venues such as alternative
trading systems, broker-dealer market
making desks and internalizers. In turn,
because of such direct retail customer
participation, the exchanges have taken
steps to afford those retail customers—
generally Priority Customers—more
favorable treatment in some
circumstances.
Definitions
The Exchange proposes to adopt
various definitions that will be used in
the Proposed Rule, as described below.
First, the Exchange proposes to adopt
a definition of ‘‘Customer,’’ to make
clear that this term would not include
any broker-dealer or Professional.3
Although other portions of the
Exchange’s rules address the capacity of
market participants, including
customers, the proposed definition is
consistent with such rules and the
Exchange believes it is important for all
options exchanges to have the same
definition of Customer in the context of
nullifying and adjusting trades in order
to have harmonized rules. As set forth
in detail below, orders on behalf of a
Customer are in many cases treated
3 The term ‘‘Professional’’ means any person or
entity that (i) is not a broker or dealer in securities,
and (ii) places more than 390 orders in listed
options per day on average during a calendar month
for its own beneficial account(s). See Chapter I,
Section 1(a)(49).
PO 00000
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differently than non-Customer orders in
light of the fact that Customers are not
necessarily immersed in the day-to-day
trading of the markets, are less likely to
be watching trading activity in a
particular option throughout the day,
and may have limited funds in their
trading accounts.
Second, the Exchange proposes to
adopt definitions for both an ‘‘erroneous
sell transaction’’ and an ‘‘erroneous buy
transaction.’’ As proposed, an erroneous
sell transaction is one in which the
price received by the person selling the
option is erroneously low, and an
erroneous buy transaction is one in
which the price paid by the person
purchasing the option is erroneously
high. This provision helps to reduce the
possibility that a party can intentionally
submit an order hoping for the market
to move in their favor while knowing
that the transaction will be nullified or
adjusted if the market does not. For
instance, when a market participant
who is buying options in a particular
series sees an aggressively priced sell
order posted on the Exchange, and the
buyer believes that the price of the
options is such that it might qualify for
obvious error, the option buyer can
trade with the aggressively priced order,
then wait to see which direction the
market moves. If the market moves in
their direction, the buyer keeps the
trade and if it moves against them, the
buyer calls the Exchange hoping to get
the trade adjusted or busted.
Third, the Exchange proposes to
adopt a new term, ‘‘Official,’’ to apply
only to Section 6. Specifically, the term
‘‘Official’’ shall mean an Exchange staff
member or contract employee
designated as such by the Chief
Regulatory Officer. A list of individual
Officials shall be displayed on the
Exchange Web site. The Chief
Regulatory Officer shall maintain the
list of Officials and update the Web site
each time a name is added to, or deleted
from, the list of Officials. In the event
no Official is available to rule on a
particular matter, the Chief Regulatory
Officer or his/her designee shall rule on
such matter.
Fourth, the Exchange proposes to
adopt a new term, a ‘‘Size Adjustment
Modifier,’’ which would apply to
individual transactions and would
modify the applicable adjustment for
orders under certain circumstances, as
discussed in further detail below. As
proposed, the Size Adjustment Modifier
will be applied to individual
transactions as follows:
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Number of
contracts per
execution
Adjustment—TP plus/minus
Calculation of Theoretical Price
1–50 .................
51–250 .............
251–1000 .........
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1001 or more ...
N/A.
2 times adjustment amount.
2.5 times adjustment
amount.
3 times adjustment amount.
The Size Adjustment Modifier
attempts to account for the additional
risk that the parties to the trade
undertake for transactions that are larger
in scope. The Exchange believes that the
Size Adjustment Modifier creates
additional incentives to prevent more
impactful Obvious Errors and it lessens
the impact on the contra-party to an
adjusted trade. The Exchange notes that
these contra-parties may have preferred
to only trade the size involved in the
transaction at the price at which such
trade occurred, and in trading larger size
has committed a greater level of capital
and bears a larger hedge risk.
When setting the proposed size
adjustment modifier thresholds, the
Exchange has tried to correlate the size
breakpoints with typical small and
larger ‘‘block’’ execution sizes of
underlying stock. For instance, SEC
Rule 10b–18(a)(5)(ii) defines a ‘‘block’’
as a quantity of stock that is at least
5,000 shares and a purchase price of at
least $50,000, among others.4 Similarly,
NYSE Rule 72 defines a ‘‘block’’ as an
order to buy or sell ‘‘at least 10,000
shares or a quantity of stock having a
market value of $200,000 or more,
whichever is less.’’ Thus, executions of
51 to 100 option contracts, which are
generally equivalent to executions of
5,100 and 10,000 shares of underlying
stock, respectively, are proposed to be
subject to the lowest size adjustment
modifier. An execution of over 1,000
contracts is roughly equivalent to a
block transaction of more than 100,000
shares of underlying stock, and is
proposed to be subject to the highest
size adjustment modifier. The Exchange
has correlated the proposed size
adjustment modifier thresholds to
smaller and larger scale blocks because
the Exchange believes that the execution
cost associated with transacting in block
sizes scales according to the size of the
block. In other words, in the same way
that executing a 100,000 share stock
order will have a proportionately larger
market impact and will have a higher
overall execution cost than executing a
500, 1,000 or 5,000 share order in the
same stock, all other market factors
being equal, executing a 1,000 option
contract order will have a larger market
impact and higher overall execution
4 See
17 CFR 240.10b–18(a)(5)(ii).
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cost than executing a 5, 10 or 50
contract option order.
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Theoretical Price in Normal
Circumstances
Under both the Current Rule and the
Proposed Rule, when reviewing a
transaction as potentially erroneous, the
Exchange needs to first determine the
‘‘Theoretical Price’’ of the option, i.e.,
the Exchange’s estimate of the correct
market price for the option. Pursuant to
the Proposed Rule, if the applicable
option series is traded on at least one
other options exchange, then the
Theoretical Price of an option series is
the last national best bid (‘‘NBB’’) just
prior to the trade in question with
respect to an erroneous sell transaction
or the last national best offer (‘‘NBO’’)
just prior to the trade in question with
respect to an erroneous buy transaction
unless one of the exceptions described
below exists. Thus, the Exchange
proposes that whenever the Exchange
has a reliable NBB or NBO, as
applicable, just prior to the transaction,
then the Exchange will use this NBB or
NBO as the Theoretical Price.
The Exchange also proposes to specify
in the Proposed Rule that when a single
order received by the Exchange is
executed at multiple price levels, the
last NBB and last NBO just prior to the
trade in question would be the last NBB
and last NBO just prior to the
Exchange’s receipt of the order.
The Exchange also proposes to set
forth in the Proposed Rule various
provisions governing specific situations
where the NBB or NBO is not available
or may not be reliable. Specifically, the
Exchange is proposing additional detail
specifying situations in which there are
no quotes or no valid quotes (as defined
below), when the national best bid or
offer (‘‘NBBO’’) is determined to be too
wide to be reliable, and at the open of
trading on each trading day.
No Valid Quotes
As is true under the Current Rule,
pursuant to the Proposed Rule the
Exchange will determine the Theoretical
Price if there are no quotes or no valid
quotes for comparison purposes. As
proposed, quotes that are not valid are
all quotes in the applicable option series
published at a time where the last NBB
is higher than the last NBO in such
series (a ‘‘crossed market’’), quotes
published by the Exchange that were
submitted by either party to the
transaction in question, and quotes
published by another options exchange
against which the Exchange has
declared self-help. Thus, in addition to
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scenarios where there are literally no
quotes to be used as Theoretical Price,
the Exchange will exclude quotes in
certain circumstances if such quotes are
not deemed valid. The Proposed Rule is
consistent with the Exchange’s
application of the Current Rule but the
descriptions of the various scenarios
where the Exchange considers quotes to
be invalid represent additional detail
that is not included in the Current Rule.
The Exchange notes that Exchange
personnel currently are required to
determine Theoretical Price in certain
circumstances. While the Exchange
continues to pursue alternative
solutions that might further enhance the
objectivity and consistency of
determining Theoretical Price, the
Exchange believes that the discretion
currently afforded to Officials is
appropriate in the absence of a reliable
NBBO that can be used to set the
Theoretical Price. Under the current
Rule, Exchange personnel will generally
consult and refer to data such as the
prices of related series, especially the
closest strikes in the option in question.
Exchange personnel may also take into
account the price of the underlying
security and the volatility
characteristics of the option as well as
historical pricing of the option and/or
similar options.
Wide Quotes
Similarly, pursuant to the Proposed
Rule the Exchange will determine the
Theoretical Price if the bid/ask
differential of the NBB and NBO for the
affected series just prior to the
erroneous transaction was equal to or
greater than the Minimum Amount set
forth below and there was a bid/ask
differential less than the Minimum
Amount during the 10 seconds prior to
the transaction. If there was no bid/ask
differential less than the Minimum
Amount during the 10 seconds prior to
the transaction then the Theoretical
Price of an option series is the last NBB
or NBO just prior to the transaction in
question. The Exchange proposes to use
the following chart to determine
whether a quote is too wide to be
reliable:
Bid price at time of trade
Minimum amount
Below $2.00 ....................
$2.00 to $5.00 ................
Above $5.00 to $10.00 ...
Above $10.00 to $20.00
Above $20.00 to $50.00
Above $50.00 to $100.00
Above $100.00 ...............
$0.75
1.25
1.50
2.50
3.00
4.50
6.00
The Exchange notes that the values set
forth above generally represent a
multiple of 3 times the bid/ask
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differential requirements of other
options exchanges, with certain
rounding applied (e.g., $1.25 as
proposed rather than $1.20).5 The
Exchange believes that basing the Wide
Quote table on a multiple of the
permissible bid/ask differential rule
provides a reasonable baseline for
quotations that are indeed so wide that
they cannot be considered reliable for
purposes of determining Theoretical
Price unless they have been consistently
wide. As described above, while the
Exchange will determine Theoretical
Price when the bid/ask differential
equals or exceeds the amount set forth
in the chart above and within the
previous 10 seconds there was a bid/ask
differential smaller than such amount, if
a quote has been persistently wide for
at least 10 seconds the Exchange will
use such quote for purposes of
Theoretical Price. The Exchange
believes that there should be a greater
level of protection afforded to market
participants that enter the market when
there are liquidity gaps and price
fluctuations. The Exchange does not
believe that a similar level of protection
is warranted when market participants
choose to enter a market that is wide
and has been consistently wide for some
time. The Exchange notes that it has
previously determined that, given the
largely electronic nature of today’s
markets, as little as one second (or less)
is a long enough time for market
participants to receive, process and
account for and respond to new market
information.6 While introducing this
new provision the Exchange believes it
is being appropriately cautious by
selecting a time frame that is an order
of magnitude above and beyond what
the Exchange has previously determined
is sufficient for information
dissemination. The table above bases
the wide quote provision off of bid price
in order to provide a relatively
straightforward beginning point for the
analysis.
As an example, assume an option is
quoted $3.00 by $6.00 with 50 contracts
posted on each side of the market for an
extended period of time. If a market
participant were to enter a market order
to buy 20 contracts the Exchange
believes that the buyer should have a
reasonable expectation of paying $6.00
for the contracts which they are buying.
5 See,
e.g., NYSE Arca Options Rule 6.37(b)(1).
e.g., Chapter VII, Section 12, which requires
certain orders to be exposed for at least one second
before they can be executed; see also Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 66306 (February 2, 2012),
77 FR 6608 (February 8, 2012) (SR–BX–2011–084)
(order granting approval of proposed rule change to
reduce the duration of the PIP from one second to
one hundred milliseconds).
6 See,
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This should be the case even if
immediately after the purchase of those
options, the market conditions change
and the same option is then quoted at
$3.75 by $4.25. Although the quote was
wide according to the table above at the
time immediately prior to and the time
of the execution of the market order, it
was also well established and well
known. The Exchange believes that an
execution at the then prevailing market
price should not in and of itself
constitute an erroneous trade.
Transactions at the Open
Under the Proposed Rule, for a
transaction occurring as part of the
opening 7 the Exchange will determine
the Theoretical Price where there is no
NBB or NBO for the affected series just
prior to the erroneous transaction or if
the bid/ask differential of the NBBO just
prior to the erroneous transaction is
equal to or greater than the Minimum
Amount set forth in the chart proposed
for the wide quote provision described
above. The Exchange believes that this
discretion is necessary because it is
consistent with other scenarios in which
the Exchange will determine the
Theoretical Price if there are no quotes
or no valid quotes for comparison
purposes, including the wide quote
provision proposed by the Exchange as
described above. If, however, there are
valid quotes and the bid/ask differential
of the NBBO is less than the Minimum
Amount set forth in the chart proposed
for the wide quote provision described
above, then the Exchange will use the
NBB or NBO just prior to the transaction
as it would in any other normal review
scenario.
As an example of an erroneous
transaction for which the NBBO is wide
at the open, assume the NBBO at the
time of the opening transaction is $1.00
× $5.00 and the opening transaction
takes place at $1.25. The Exchange
would be responsible for determining
the Theoretical Price because the NBBO
was wider than the applicable minimum
amount set forth in the wide quote
provision as described above. The
Exchange believes that it is necessary to
determine theoretical price at the open
in the event of a wide quote at the open
for the same reason that the Exchange
has proposed to determine theoretical
price during the remainder of the
trading day pursuant to the proposed
wide quote provision, namely that a
wide quote cannot be reliably used to
determine Theoretical Price because the
Exchange does not know which of the
7 See Chapter VI, Section 8 for a description of the
Exchange’s opening process.
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two quotes, the NBB or the NBO, is
closer to the real value of the option.
Obvious Errors
The Exchange proposes to adopt
numerical thresholds that would qualify
transactions as ‘‘Obvious Errors.’’ These
thresholds are similar to those in place
under the Current Rule. As proposed, a
transaction will qualify as an Obvious
Error if the Exchange receives a properly
submitted filing and the execution price
of a transaction is higher or lower than
the Theoretical Price for the series by an
amount equal to at least the amount
shown below:
Theoretical price
Below $2.00 ..............................
$2.00 to $5.00 ..........................
Above $5.00 to $10.00 .............
Above $10.00 to $20.00 ...........
Above $20.00 to $50.00 ...........
Above $50.00 to $100.00 .........
Above $100.00 .........................
Minimum
amount
$0.25
0.40
0.50
0.80
1.00
1.50
2.00
Applying the Theoretical Price, as
described above, to determine the
applicable threshold and comparing the
Theoretical Price to the actual execution
price provides the Exchange with an
objective methodology to determine
whether an Obvious Error occurred. The
Exchange believes that the proposed
amounts are reasonable as they are
generally consistent with the standards
of the Current Rule and reflect a
significant disparity from Theoretical
Price. The Exchange notes that the
Minimum Amounts in the Proposed
Rule and as set forth above are identical
to the Current Rule except for the last
two categories, for options where the
Theoretical Price is above $50.00 to
$100.00 and above $100.00. The
Exchange believes that this additional
granularity is reasonable because given
the proliferation of additional strikes
that have been created in the past
several years there are many more highpriced options that are trading with
open interest for extended periods. The
Exchange believes that it is appropriate
to account for these high-priced options
with additional Minimum Amount
levels for options with Theoretical
Prices above $50.00.
Under the Proposed Rule, a party that
believes that it participated in a
transaction that was the result of an
Obvious Error must notify an Official in
the manner specified from time to time
by the Exchange in a notice distributed
to Participants. The Exchange currently
requires electronic notification through
a web-based application but believes
that maintaining flexibility in the Rule
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is important to allow for changes to the
process.
The Exchange also proposes to adopt
notification timeframes that must be met
in order for a transaction to qualify as
an Obvious Error. Specifically, as
proposed a filing must be received by
the Exchange within thirty (30) minutes
of the execution with respect to an
execution of a Customer order and
within fifteen (15) minutes of the
execution for any other participant. The
Exchange also proposes to provide
additional time for trades that are routed
through other options exchanges to the
Exchange. Under the Proposed Rule,
any other options exchange will have a
total of forty-five (45) minutes for
Customer orders and thirty (30) minutes
for non-Customer orders, measured from
the time of execution on the Exchange,
to file with the Exchange for review of
transactions routed to the Exchange
from that options exchange and
executed on the Exchange (‘‘linkage
trades’’). This includes filings on behalf
of another options exchange filed by a
third-party routing broker if such thirdparty broker identifies the affected
transactions as linkage trades. In order
to facilitate timely reviews of linkage
trades the Exchange will accept filings
from either the other options exchange
or, if applicable, the third-party routing
broker that routed the applicable
order(s). The additional fifteen (15)
minutes provided with respect to
linkage trades shall only apply to the
extent the options exchange that
originally received and routed the order
to the Exchange itself received a timely
filing from the entering participant (i.e.,
within 30 minutes if a Customer order
or 15 minutes if a non-Customer order).
The Exchange believes that additional
time for filings related to Customer
orders is appropriate in light of the fact
that Customers are not necessarily
immersed in the day-to-day trading of
the markets and are less likely to be
watching trading activity in a particular
option throughout the day. The
Exchange believes that the additional
time afforded to linkage trades is
appropriate given the interconnected
nature of the markets today and the
practical difficulty that an end user may
face in getting requests for review filed
in a timely fashion when the transaction
originated at a different exchange than
where the error took place. Without this
additional time the Exchange believes it
would be common for a market
participant to satisfy the filing deadline
at the original exchange to which an
order was routed but that requests for
review of executions from orders routed
to other options exchanges would not
qualify for review as potential Obvious
Errors by the time filings were received
by such other options exchanges, in turn
leading to potentially disparate results
under the applicable rules of options
exchanges to which the orders were
routed.
Pursuant to the Proposed Rule, an
Exchange Officer may review a
transaction believed to be erroneous on
his/her own motion in the interest of
maintaining a fair and orderly market
and for the protection of investors. This
proposed provision is designed to give
an Exchange Officer the ability to
provide parties relief in those situations
where they have failed to report an
apparent error within the established
notification period. A transaction
reviewed pursuant to the proposed
provision may be nullified or adjusted
only if it is determined by the Exchange
Officer that the transaction is erroneous
in accordance with the provisions of the
Proposed Rule, provided that the time
deadlines for filing a request for review
described above shall not apply. The
Proposed Rule would require the
Exchange Officer to act as soon as
possible after becoming aware of the
transaction; action by the Exchange
Officer would ordinarily be expected on
the same day that the transaction
occurred. However, because a
transaction under review may have
occurred near the close of trading or due
to unusual circumstances, the Proposed
Rule provides that the Exchange Officer
shall act no later than 8:30 a.m. Eastern
Time on the next trading day following
the date of the transaction in question.
The Exchange also proposes to state
that a party affected by a determination
to nullify or adjust a transaction after an
Exchange Officer’s review on his or her
own motion may appeal such
determination in accordance with
paragraph (k), which is described below.
The Proposed Rule would make clear
that a determination by an Exchange
Officer not to review a transaction or
determination not to nullify or adjust a
transaction for which a review was
conducted on an Exchange Officer’s
own motion is not appealable and
further that if a transaction is reviewed
and a determination is rendered
pursuant to another provision of the
Proposed Rule, no additional relief may
be granted by an Exchange Officer.
If it is determined that an Obvious
Error has occurred based on the
objective numeric criteria and time
deadlines described above, the
Exchange will adjust or nullify the
transaction as described below and
promptly notify both parties to the trade
electronically or via telephone. The
Exchange proposes different adjustment
and nullification criteria for Customers
and non-Customers.
As proposed, where neither party to
the transaction is a Customer, the
execution price of the transaction will
be adjusted by an Official pursuant to
the table below.
Buy transaction
adjustment—
TP plus
Theoretical price (TP)
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Below $3.00 .................................................................................................................................................
At or above $3.00 ........................................................................................................................................
The Exchange believes that it is
appropriate to adjust to prices a
specified amount away from Theoretical
Price rather than to adjust to Theoretical
Price because even though the Exchange
has determined a given trade to be
erroneous in nature, the parties in
question should have had some
expectation of execution at the price or
prices submitted. Also, it is common
that by the time it is determined that an
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obvious error has occurred additional
hedging and trading activity has already
occurred based on the executions that
previously happened. The Exchange is
concerned that an adjustment to
Theoretical Price in all cases would not
appropriately incentivize market
participants to maintain appropriate
controls to avoid potential errors.
Further, as proposed any nonCustomer Obvious Error exceeding 50
PO 00000
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$0.15
0.30
Sell transaction
adjustment—
TP minus
$0.15
0.30
contracts will be subject to the Size
Adjustment Modifier described above.
The Exchange believes that it is
appropriate to apply the Size
Adjustment Modifier to non-Customer
orders because the hedging cost
associated with trading larger sized
options orders and the market impact of
larger blocks of underlying can be
significant.
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As an example of the application of
the Size Adjustment Modifier, assume
Exchange A has a quoted bid to buy 50
contracts at $2.50, Exchange B has a
quoted bid to buy 100 contracts at $2.05
and there is no other options exchange
quoting a bid priced higher than $2.00.
Assume that the NBBO is $2.50 by
$3.00. Finally, assume that all orders
quoted and submitted to Exchange B in
connection with this example are nonCustomer orders.
• Assume Exchange A’s quoted bid at
$2.50 is either executed or cancelled.
• Assume Exchange B immediately
thereafter receives an incoming market
order to sell 100 contracts.
• The incoming order would be
executed against Exchange B’s resting
bid at $2.05 for 100 contracts.
• Because the 100 contract execution
of the incoming sell order was priced at
$2.05, which is $0.45 below the
Theoretical Price of $2.50, the 100
contract execution would qualify for
adjustment as an Obvious Error.
• The normal adjustment process
would adjust the execution of the 100
contracts to $2.35 per contract, which is
the Theoretical Price minus $0.15.
• However, because the execution
would qualify for the Size Adjustment
Modifier of 2 times the adjustment
price, the adjusted transaction would
instead be to $2.20 per contract, which
is the Theoretical Price minus $0.30.
By reference to the example above,
the Exchange reiterates that it believes
that a Size Adjustment Modifier is
appropriate, as the buyer in this
example was originally willing to buy
100 contracts at $2.05 and ended up
paying $2.20 per contract for such
execution. Without the Size Adjustment
Modifier the buyer would have paid
$2.35 per contract. Such buyer may be
advantaged by the trade if the
Theoretical Price is indeed closer to
$2.50 per contract, however the buyer
may not have wanted to buy so many
contracts at a higher price and does
incur increasing cost and risk due to the
additional size of their quote. Thus, the
proposed rule is attempting to strike a
balance between various competing
objectives, including recognition of cost
and risk incurred in quoting larger size
and incentivizing market participants to
maintain appropriate controls to avoid
errors.
In contrast to non-Customer orders,
where trades will be adjusted if they
qualify as Obvious Errors, pursuant the
Proposed Rule a trade that qualifies as
an Obvious Error will be nullified where
at least one party to the Obvious Error
is a Customer. The Exchange also
proposes, however, that if any
Participant submits requests to the
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Exchange for review of transactions
pursuant to the Proposed Rule, and in
aggregate that Participant has 200 or
more Customer transactions under
review concurrently and the orders
resulting in such transactions were
submitted during the course of 2
minutes or less, where at least one party
to the Obvious Error is a non-Customer,
the Exchange will apply the nonCustomer adjustment criteria described
above to such transactions. The
Exchange based its proposal of 200
transactions on the fact that the
proposed level is reasonable as it is
representative of an extremely large
number of orders submitted to the
Exchange that are, in turn, possibly
erroneous. Similarly, the Exchange
based its proposal of orders received in
2 minutes or less on the fact that this is
a very short amount of time under
which one Participant could generate
multiple erroneous transactions. In
order for a participant to have more than
200 transactions under review
concurrently when the orders triggering
such transactions were received in 2
minutes or less, the market participant
will have far exceeded the normal
behavior of customers deserving
protected status.8 While the Exchange
continues to believe that it is
appropriate to nullify transactions in
such a circumstance if both participants
to a transaction are Customers, the
Exchange does not believe it is
appropriate to place the overall risk of
a significant number of trade breaks on
non-Customers that in the normal
course of business may have engaged in
additional hedging activity or trading
activity based on such transactions.
Thus, the Exchange believes it is
necessary and appropriate to protect
non-Customers in such a circumstance
by applying the non-Customer
adjustment criteria, and thus adjusting
transactions as set forth above, in the
event a Participant has more than 200
transactions under review concurrently.
Catastrophic Errors
Consistent with the Current Rule, the
Exchange proposes to adopt separate
numerical thresholds for review of
transactions for which the Exchange
does not receive a filing requesting
review within the Obvious Error
timeframes set forth above. Based on
this review these transactions may
qualify as ‘‘Catastrophic Errors.’’ As
8 The Exchange notes that in the third quarter of
this year across all options exchanges the average
number of valid Customer orders received and
executed was less than 38 valid orders every two
minutes. The number of obvious errors resulting
from valid orders is, of course, a very small fraction
of such orders.
PO 00000
Frm 00111
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
proposed, a Catastrophic Error will be
deemed to have occurred when the
execution price of a transaction is
higher or lower than the Theoretical
Price for the series by an amount equal
to at least the amount shown below:
Theoretical price
Below $2.00 ..............................
$2.00 to $5.00 ..........................
Above $5.00 to $10.00 .............
Above $10.00 to $20.00 ...........
Above $20.00 to $50.00 ...........
Above $50.00 to $100.00 .........
Above $100.00 .........................
Minimum
amount
$0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
4.00
Based on industry feedback on the
Catastrophic Error thresholds set forth
under the Current Rule, the thresholds
proposed as set forth above are more
granular and lower (i.e., more likely to
qualify) than the thresholds under the
Current Rule. As noted above, under the
Proposed Rule as well as the Current
Rule, parties have additional time to
submit transactions for review as
Catastrophic Errors. As proposed,
notification requesting review must be
received by an Official by 8:30 a.m.
Eastern Time on the first trading day
following the execution. For
transactions in an expiring options
series that take place on an expiration
day, a party must notify an Official
within 45 minutes after the close of
trading that same day. As is true for
requests for review under the Obvious
Error provision of the Proposed Rule, a
party requesting review of a transaction
as a Catastrophic Error must notify an
Official in the manner specified from
time to time by the Exchange in a notice
distributed to Participants. By
definition, any execution that qualifies
as a Catastrophic Error is also an
Obvious Error. However, the Exchange
believes it is appropriate to maintain
these two types of errors because the
Catastrophic Error provisions provide
market participants with a longer
notification period under which they
may file a request for review with the
Exchange of a potential Catastrophic
Error than a potential Obvious Error.
This provides an additional level of
protection for transactions that are
severely erroneous even in the event a
participant does not submit a request for
review in a timely fashion.
The Proposed Rule would specify the
action to be taken by the Exchange if it
is determined that a Catastrophic Error
has occurred, as described below, and
would require the Exchange to promptly
notify both parties to the trade
electronically or via telephone. In the
event of a Catastrophic Error, the
execution price of the transaction will
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be adjusted by an Official pursuant to
the table below.
Buy transaction
adjustment—
TP plus
Theoretical price (TP)
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Below $2.00 .................................................................................................................................................
$2.00 to $5.00 ..............................................................................................................................................
Above $5.00 to $10.00 ................................................................................................................................
Above $10.00 to $20.00 ..............................................................................................................................
Above $20.00 to $50.00 ..............................................................................................................................
Above $50.00 to $100.00 ............................................................................................................................
Above $100.00 .............................................................................................................................................
Although Customer orders would be
adjusted in the same manner as nonCustomer orders, any Customer order
that qualifies as a Catastrophic Error
will be nullified if the adjustment
would result in an execution price
higher (for buy transactions) or lower
(for sell transactions) than the
Customer’s limit price. Based on
industry feedback, the levels proposed
above with respect to adjustment
amounts are the same levels as the
thresholds at which a transaction may
be deemed a Catastrophic Error
pursuant to the chart set forth above.
As is true for Obvious Errors as
described above, the Exchange believes
that it is appropriate to adjust to prices
a specified amount away from
Theoretical Price rather than to adjust to
Theoretical Price because even though
the Exchange has determined a given
trade to be erroneous in nature, the
parties in question should have had
some expectation of execution at the
price or prices submitted. Also, it is
common that by the time it is
determined that a Catastrophic Error has
occurred additional hedging and trading
activity has already occurred based on
the executions that previously
happened. The Exchange is concerned
that an adjustment to Theoretical Price
in all cases would not appropriately
incentivize market participants to
maintain appropriate controls to avoid
potential errors. Further, the Exchange
believes it is appropriate to maintain a
higher adjustment level for Catastrophic
Errors than Obvious Errors given the
significant additional time that can
potentially pass before an adjustment is
requested and applied and the amount
of hedging and trading activity that can
occur based on the executions at issue
during such time. For the same reasons,
other than honoring the limit prices
established for Customer orders, the
Exchange has proposed to treat all
market participants the same in the
context of the Catastrophic Error
provision. Specifically, the Exchange
believes that treating market
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participants the same in this context
will provide additional certainty to
market participants with respect to their
potential exposure and hedging
activities, including comfort that even if
a transaction is later adjusted (i.e., past
the standard time limit for filing under
the Obvious Error provision), such
transaction will not be fully nullified.
However, as noted above, under the
Proposed Rule where at least one party
to the transaction is a Customer, the
trade will be nullified if the adjustment
would result in an execution price
higher (for buy transactions) or lower
(for sell transactions) than the
Customer’s limit price. The Exchange
has retained the protection of a
Customer’s limit price in order to avoid
a situation where the adjustment could
be to a price that the Customer could
not afford, which is less likely to be an
issue for a market professional.
Significant Market Events
In order to improve consistency for
market participants in the case of a
widespread market event and in light of
the interconnected nature of the options
exchanges, the Exchange proposes to
adopt a new provision that calls for
coordination between the options
exchanges in certain circumstances and
provides limited flexibility in the
application of other provisions of the
Proposed Rule in order to promptly
respond to a widespread market event.9
The Exchange proposes to describe such
an event as a Significant Market Event,
and to set forth certain objective criteria
that will determine whether such an
9 Although the Exchange has proposed a specific
provision related to coordination amongst options
exchanges in the context of a widespread event, the
Exchange does not believe that the Significant
Market Event provision or any other provision of
the proposed rule alters the Exchange’s ability to
coordinate with other options exchanges in the
normal course of business with respect to market
events or activity. The Exchange does already
coordinate with other options exchanges to the
extent possible if such coordination is necessary to
maintain a fair and orderly market and/or to fulfill
the Exchange’s duties as a self-regulatory
organization.
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
$0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
4.00
Sell transaction
adjustment—
TP minus
$0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
4.00
event has occurred. The Exchange
developed these objective criteria in
consultation with the other options
exchanges by reference to historical
patterns and events with a goal of
setting thresholds that very rarely will
be triggered so as to limit the
application of the provision to truly
significant market events. As proposed,
a Significant Market Event will be
deemed to have occurred when
proposed criterion (A) below is met or
exceeded or the sum of all applicable
event statistics, where each is expressed
as a percentage of the relevant threshold
in criteria (A) through (D) below, is
greater than or equal to 150% and 75%
or more of at least one category is
reached, provided that no single
category can contribute more than 100%
to the sum. All criteria set forth below
will be measured in aggregate across all
exchanges.
The proposed criteria for determining
a Significant Market Event are as
follows:
(A) Transactions that are potentially
erroneous would result in a total WorstCase Adjustment Penalty of
$30,000,000, where the Worst-Case
Adjustment Penalty is computed as the
sum, across all potentially erroneous
trades, of: (i) $0.30 (i.e., the largest
Transaction Adjustment value listed in
sub-paragraph (e)(3)(A) below); times;
(ii) the contract multiplier for each
traded contract; times (iii) the number of
contracts for each trade; times (iv) the
appropriate Size Adjustment Modifier
for each trade, if any, as defined in subparagraph (e)(3)(A) below;
(B) Transactions involving 500,000
options contracts are potentially
erroneous;
(C) Transactions with a notional value
(i.e., number of contracts traded
multiplied by the option premium
multiplied by the contract multiplier) of
$100,000,000 are potentially erroneous;
(D) 10,000 transactions are potentially
erroneous.
As described above, the Exchange
proposes to adopt a the Worst Case
Adjustment Penalty, proposed as
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criterion (A), which is the only criterion
that can on its own result in an event
being designated as a significant market
event. The Worst Case Adjustment
Penalty is intended to develop an
objective criterion that can be quickly
determined by the Exchange in
consultation with other options
exchanges that approximates the total
overall exposure to market participants
on the negatively impacted side of each
transaction that occurs during an event.
If the Worst Case Adjustment criterion
equals or exceeds $30,000,000, then an
event is a Significant Market Event. As
an example of the Worst Case
Adjustment Penalty, assume that a
single potentially erroneous transaction
in an event is as follows: Sale of 100
contracts of a standard option (i.e., an
option with a 100 share multiplier). The
highest potential adjustment penalty for
this single transaction would be $6,000,
which would be calculated as $0.30
times 100 (contract multiplier) times
100 (number of contracts) times 2
(applicable Size Adjustment Modifier).
The Exchange would calculate the
highest potential adjustment penalty for
each of the potentially erroneous
transactions in the event and the Worst
Case Adjustment Penalty would be the
sum of such penalties on the Exchange
and all other options exchanges with
affected transactions.
As described above, under the
Proposed Rule if the Worst Case
Adjustment Penalty does not equal or
exceed $30,000,000, then a Significant
Market Event has occurred if the sum of
all applicable event statistics (expressed
as a percentage of the relevant
thresholds), is greater than or equal to
150% and 75% or more of at least one
category is reached. The Proposed Rule
further provides that no single category
can contribute more than 100% to the
sum. As an example of the application
of this provision, assume that in a given
event across all options exchanges that:
(A) The Worst Case Adjustment Penalty
is $12,000,000 (40% of $30,000,000), (B)
300,000 options contracts are
potentially erroneous (60% of 500,000),
(C) the notional value of potentially
erroneous transactions is $30,000,000
(30% of $100,000,000), and (D) 12,000
transactions are potentially erroneous
(120% of 10,000). This event would
qualify as a Significant Market Event
because the sum of all applicable event
statistics would be 230%, far exceeding
the 150% threshold. The 230% sum is
reached by adding 40%, 60%, 30% and
last, 100% (i.e., rounded down from
120%) for the number of transactions.
The Exchange notes that no single
category can contribute more than 100%
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to the sum and any category
contributing more than 100% will be
rounded down to 100%.
As an alternative example, assume a
large-scale event occurs involving lowpriced options with a small number of
contracts in each execution. Assume in
this event across all options exchanges
that: (A) The Worst Case Adjustment
Penalty is $600,000 (2% of
$30,000,000), (B) 20,000 options
contracts are potentially erroneous (4%
of 500,000), (C) the notional value of
potentially erroneous transactions is
$20,000,000 (20% of $100,000,000), and
(D) 20,000 transactions are potentially
erroneous (200% of 10,000, but rounded
down to 100%). This event would not
qualify as a Significant Market Event
because the sum of all applicable event
statistics would be 126%, below the
150% threshold. The Exchange
reiterates that as proposed, even when
a single category other than criterion (A)
is fully met, that does not necessarily
qualify an event as a Significant Market
Event.
The Exchange believes that the
breadth and scope of the obvious error
rules are appropriate and sufficient for
handling of typical and common
obvious errors. Coordination between
and among the exchanges should
generally not be necessary even when a
Participant has an error that results in
executions on more than one exchange.
In setting the thresholds above the
Exchange believes that the requirements
will be met only when truly widespread
and significant errors happen and the
benefits of coordination and information
sharing far outweigh the costs of the
logistics of additional intra-exchange
coordination. The Exchange notes that
in addition to its belief that the
proposed thresholds are sufficiently
high, the Exchange has proposed the
requirement that either criterion (A) is
met or the sum of applicable event
statistics for proposed (A) through (D)
equals or exceeds 150% in order to
ensure that an event is sufficiently large
but also to avoid situations where an
event is extremely large but just misses
potential qualifying thresholds. For
instance, the proposal is designed to
help avoid a situation where the Worst
Case Adjustment Penalty is $15,000,000,
so the event does not qualify based on
criterion (A) alone, but there are
transactions in 490,000 options
contracts that are potentially erroneous
(missing criterion (B) by 10,000
contracts), there transactions with a
notional value of $99,000,000 (missing
criterion (C) by $1,000,000), and there
are 9,000 potentially erroneous
transactions overall (missing criterion
(D) by 1,000 transactions). The
PO 00000
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Exchange believes that the proposed
formula, while slightly more
complicated than simply requiring a
certain threshold to be met in each
category, may help to avoid
inapplicability of the proposed
provisions in the context of an event
that would be deemed significant by
most subjective measures but that barely
misses each of the objective criteria
proposed by the Exchange.
To ensure consistent application
across options exchanges, in the event
of a suspected Significant Market Event,
the Exchange shall initiate a
coordinated review of potentially
erroneous transactions with all other
affected options exchanges to determine
the full scope of the event. Under the
Proposed Rule, the Exchange will
promptly coordinate with the other
options exchanges to determine the
appropriate review period as well as
select one or more specific points in
time prior to the transactions in
question and use one or more specific
points in time to determine Theoretical
Price. Other than the selected points in
time, if applicable, the Exchange will
determine Theoretical Price as
described above. For example, around
the start of a Significant Market Event
that is triggered by a large and
aggressively priced buy order, three
exchanges have multiple orders on the
offer side of the market: Exchange A has
offers priced at $2.20, $2.25, $2.30 and
several other price levels to $3.00,
Exchange B has offers at $2.45, $2.30
and several other price levels to $3.00,
Exchange C has offers at price levels
between $2.50 and $3.00. Assume an
event occurs starting at 10:05:25 a.m. ET
and in this particular series the
executions begin on Exchange A and
subsequently begin to occur on
Exchanges B and C. Without
coordination and information sharing
between the exchanges, Exchange B and
Exchange C cannot know with certainty
that whether or not the execution at
Exchange A that happened at $2.20
immediately prior to their executions at
$2.45 and $2.50 is part of the same
erroneous event or not. With proper
coordination, the exchanges can
determine that in this series, the proper
point in time from which the event
should be analyzed is 10:05:25 a.m. ET,
and thus, the NBO of $2.20 should be
used as the Theoretical Price for
purposes of all buy transactions in such
options series that occurred during the
event.
If it is determined that a Significant
Market Event has occurred then, using
the parameters agreed with respect to
the times from which Theoretical Price
will be calculated, if applicable, an
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Official will determine whether any or
all transactions under review qualify as
Obvious Errors. The Proposed Rule
would require the Exchange to use the
criteria in Proposed Section 6(c), as
described above, to determine whether
an Obvious Error has occurred for each
transaction that was part of the
Significant Market Event. Upon taking
any final action, the Exchange would be
required to promptly notify both parties
to the trade electronically or via
telephone.
The execution price of each affected
transaction will be adjusted by an
Official to the price provided below,
unless both parties agree to adjust the
transaction to a different price or agree
to bust the trade.
Buy transaction
adjustment—
TP plus
Theoretical price (TP)
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Below $3.00 .................................................................................................................................................
At or above $3.00 ........................................................................................................................................
Thus, the proposed adjustment criteria
for Significant Market Events are
identical to the proposed adjustment
levels for Obvious Errors generally. In
addition, in the context of a Significant
Market Event, any error exceeding 50
contracts will be subject to the Size
Adjustment Modifier described above.
Also, the adjustment criteria would
apply equally to all market participants
(i.e., Customers and non-Customers) in
a Significant Market Event. However, as
is true for the proposal with respect to
Catastrophic Errors, under the Proposed
Rule where at least one party to the
transaction is a Customer, the trade will
be nullified if the adjustment would
result in an execution price higher (for
buy transactions) or lower (for sell
transactions) than the Customer’s limit
price. The Exchange has retained the
protection of a Customer’s limit price in
order to avoid a situation where the
adjustment could be to a price that the
Customer could not afford, which is less
likely to be an issue for a market
professional. The Exchange has
otherwise proposed to treat all market
participants the same in the context of
a Significant Market Event to provide
additional certainty to market
participants with respect to their
potential exposure as soon as an event
has occurred.
Another significant distinction
between the proposed Obvious Error
provision and the proposed Significant
Market Event provision is that if the
Exchange, in consultation with other
options exchanges, determines that
timely adjustment is not feasible due to
the extraordinary nature of the situation,
then the Exchange will nullify some or
all transactions arising out of the
Significant Market Event during the
review period selected by the Exchange
and other options exchanges. To the
extent the Exchange, in consultation
with other options exchanges,
determines to nullify less than all
transactions arising out of the
Significant Market Event, those
transactions subject to nullification will
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be selected based upon objective criteria
with a view toward maintaining a fair
and orderly market and the protection of
investors and the public interest. For
example, assume a Significant Market
Event causes 25,000 potentially
erroneous transactions and impacts 51
options classes. Of the 25,000
transactions, 24,000 of them are
concentrated in a single options class.
The exchanges may decide the most
appropriate solution because it will
provide the most certainty to
participants and allow for the prompt
resumption of regular trading is to bust
all trades in the most heavily affected
class between two specific points in
time, while the other 1,000 trades across
the other 50 classes are reviewed and
adjusted as appropriate. A similar
situation might arise directionally
where a Customer submits both
erroneous buy and sell orders and the
number of errors that happened that
were erroneously low priced (i.e.,
erroneous sell orders) were 50,000 in
number but the number of errors that
were erroneously high (i.e., erroneous
buy orders) were only 500 in number.
The most effective and efficient
approach that provides the most
certainty to the marketplace in a
reasonable amount of time while most
closely following the generally
prescribed obvious error rules could be
to bust all of the erroneous sell
transactions but to adjust the erroneous
buy transactions.
With respect to rulings made pursuant
to the proposed Significant Market
Event provision the Exchange believes
that the number of affected transactions
is such that immediate finality is
necessary to maintain a fair and orderly
market and to protect investors and the
public interest. Accordingly, rulings by
the Exchange pursuant to the Significant
Market Event provision would be nonappealable pursuant to the Proposed
Rule.
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0.30
Sell transaction
adjustment—
TP minus
$0.15
0.30
Additional Provisions
Mutual Agreement
In addition to the objective criteria
described above, the Proposed Rule also
proposes to make clear that the
determination as to whether a trade was
executed at an erroneous price may be
made by mutual agreement of the
affected parties to a particular
transaction. The Proposed Rule would
state that a trade may be nullified or
adjusted on the terms that all parties to
a particular transaction agree, provided,
however, that such agreement to nullify
or adjust must be conveyed to the
Exchange in a manner prescribed by the
Exchange prior to 8:30 a.m. Eastern
Time on the first trading day following
the execution.
The Exchange also proposes to
explicitly state that it is considered
conduct inconsistent with just and
equitable principles of trade for any
Participant to use the mutual
adjustment process to circumvent any
applicable Exchange rule, the Act or any
of the rules and regulations thereunder.
Thus, for instance, a Participant is
precluded from seeking to avoid
applicable trade-through rules by
executing a transaction and then
adjusting such transaction to a price at
which the Exchange would not have
allowed it to execute at the time of the
execution because it traded through the
quotation of another options exchange.
The Exchange notes that in connection
with its obligations as a self-regulatory
organization, the Exchange’s Regulatory
Department reviews adjustments to
transactions to detect potential
violations of Exchange rules or the Act
and the rules and regulations
thereunder.
Trading Halts
Chapter V, Section 3 describes the
Exchange’s authority to declare trading
halts in one or more options traded on
the Exchange. The Exchange proposes to
make clear in the Proposed Rule that it
will nullify any transaction that occurs
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during a trading halt in the affected
option on the Exchange pursuant to
Section 6. If any trades occur
notwithstanding a trading halt then the
Exchange believes it appropriate to
nullify such transactions. While the
Exchange may halt options trading for
various reasons, such a scenario almost
certainly is due to extraordinary
circumstances and is potentially the
result of market-wide coordination to
halt options trading or trading generally.
Accordingly, the Exchange does not
believe it is appropriate to allow trades
to stand if such trades should not have
occurred in the first place.
The Exchange proposes to adopt
Commentary .03 to Section 6 to state
that the Exchange will nullify any
transaction that occurs: (a) During a
trading halt in the affected option on the
Exchange; (b) with respect to equity
options (including options overlying
ETFs), during a trading halt on the
primary listing market for the
underlying security; or (c) respecting
index options, the trade occurred during
a trading halt on the primary market in
underlying securities representing more
than 10 percent of the current index
value for stock index options. Currently,
the Exchange’s rules do not directly
address nullification during a trading
halt. Accordingly, and for consistency
with other exchanges’ rules, the
Exchange proposes to adopt this
provision.
Erroneous Print and Quotes in
Underlying Security
Market participants on the Exchange
likely base the pricing of their orders
submitted to the Exchange on the price
of the underlying security for the
option. Thus, the Exchange believes it is
appropriate to adopt provisions that
allow adjustment or nullification of
transactions based on erroneous prints
or erroneous quotes in the underlying
security.
The Exchange proposes to adopt
language in the Proposed Rule stating
that a trade resulting from an erroneous
print(s) disseminated by the underlying
market that is later nullified by that
underlying market shall be adjusted or
busted as set forth in the Obvious Error
provisions of the Proposed Rule,
provided a party notifies an Official in
a timely manner, as further described
below. The Exchange proposes to define
a trade resulting from an erroneous
print(s) as any options trade executed
during a period of time for which one
or more executions in the underlying
security are nullified and for one second
thereafter. The Exchange believes that
one second is an appropriate amount of
time in which an options trade would
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be directly based on executions in the
underlying equity security. The
Exchange also proposes to require that
if a party believes that it participated in
an erroneous transaction resulting from
an erroneous print(s) pursuant to the
proposed erroneous print provision it
must notify an Official within the
timeframes set forth in the Obvious
Error provision described above. The
Exchange has also proposed to state that
the allowed notification timeframe
commences at the time of notification
by the underlying market(s) of
nullification of transactions in the
underlying security. Further, the
Exchange proposes that if multiple
underlying markets nullify trades in the
underlying security, the allowed
notification timeframe will commence
at the time of the first market’s
notification.
As an example of a situation in which
a trade results from an erroneous print
disseminated by the underlying market
that is later nullified by the underlying
market, assume that a given underlying
is trading in the $49.00–$50.00 price
range then has an erroneous print at
$5.00. Given that there is the potential
perception that the underlying has gone
through a dramatic price revaluation,
numerous options trades could
promptly trigger based off of this new
price. However, because the price that
triggered them was not a valid price it
would be appropriate to review said
option trades when the underlying print
that triggered them is removed.
The Exchange also proposes to add a
provision stating that a trade resulting
from an erroneous quote(s) in the
underlying security shall be adjusted or
busted as set forth in the Obvious Error
provisions of the Proposed Rule,
provided a party notifies an Official in
a timely manner, as further described
below. Pursuant to the Proposed Rule,
an erroneous quote occurs when the
underlying security has a width of at
least $1.00 and has a width at least five
times greater than the average quote
width for such underlying security
during the time period encompassing
two minutes before and after the
dissemination of such quote. For
purposes of the Proposed Rule, the
average quote width will be determined
by adding the quote widths of sample
quotations at regular 15-second intervals
during the four-minute time period
referenced above (excluding the quote(s)
in question) and dividing by the number
of quotes during such time period
(excluding the quote(s) in question).10
10 The Exchange has proposed the price and time
parameters for quote width and average quote width
used to determine whether an erroneous quote has
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Similar to the proposal with respect to
erroneous prints described above, if a
party believes that it participated in an
erroneous transaction resulting from an
erroneous quote(s) it must notify an
Official in accordance with the
notification provisions of the Obvious
Error provision described above. The
Proposed Rule, therefore, puts the onus
on each Participant to notify the
Exchange if such Participant believes
that a trade should be reviewed
pursuant to either of the proposed
provisions, as the Exchange is not in
position to determine the impact of
erroneous prints or quotes on individual
Participants. The Exchange notes that it
does not believe that additional time is
necessary with respect to a trade based
on an erroneous quote because a
Participant has all information
necessary to detect the error at the time
of an option transaction that was
triggered by an erroneous quote, which
is in contrast to the proposed erroneous
print provision that includes a
dependency on an action by the market
where the underlying security traded.
As an example of a situation in which
a trade results from an erroneous quote
in the underlying security, assume again
that a given underlying is quoting and
trading in the $49.00–$50.00 price range
then a liquidity gap occurs, with bidders
not representing quotes in the market
place and an offer quoted at $5.00.
Quoting may quickly return to normal,
again in the $49.00–$50.00 price range,
but due to the potential perception that
the underlying has gone through a
dramatic price revaluation, numerous
options trades could trigger based off of
this new quoted price in the interim.
Because the price that triggered such
trades was not a valid price it would be
appropriate to review said option trades.
Linkage Trades
The Exchange also proposes to adopt
language that clearly provides the
Exchange with authority to take
necessary actions when another options
exchange nullifies or adjusts a
transaction pursuant to its respective
rules and the transaction resulted from
an order that has passed through the
Exchange and been routed on to another
options exchange on behalf of the
Exchange. Specifically, if the Exchange
routes an order pursuant to the Options
Order Protection and Locked/Crossed
occurred based on established rules of options
exchanges that currently apply such parameters.
See, e.g., CBOE Rule 6.25(a)(5); NYSE Arca Rule
6.87(a)(5). Based on discussions with these
exchanges, the Exchange believes that the
parameters are a reasonable approach to determine
whether an erroneous quote has occurred for
purposes of the proposed rule.
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Market Plan 11 that results in a
transaction on another options exchange
(a ‘‘Linkage Trade’’) and such options
exchange subsequently nullifies or
adjusts the Linkage Trade pursuant to
its rules, the Exchange will perform all
actions necessary to complete the
nullification or adjustment of the
Linkage Trade. Although the Exchange
is not utilizing its own authority to
nullify or adjust a transaction related to
an action taken on a Linkage Trade by
another options exchange, the Exchange
does have to assist in the processing of
the adjustment or nullification of the
order, such as notification to the
Participant and The Options Clearing
Corporation (‘‘OCC’’) of the adjustment
or nullification. Thus, the Exchange
believes that the proposed provision
adds additional transparency to the
Proposed Rule.
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Appeals
The Exchange proposes to maintain
its current appeals process in
connection with the Proposed Rule.
Specifically, a party to a transaction
affected by a decision made under this
section may appeal that decision to the
Exchange Review Council. An appeal
must be made in writing, and must be
received by Exchange within thirty (30)
minutes after the person making the
appeal is given the notification of the
determination being appealed. The
Exchange Review Council may review
any decision appealed, including
whether a complaint was timely,
whether an Obvious Error or
Catastrophic Error occurred, whether
the correct Theoretical Price was used,
and whether an adjustment was made at
the correct price.
In order to maintain a diverse group
of participants, the Exchange Review
Council panel will continue be
comprised minimally of representatives
of one (1) member engaged in Market
Making and two (2) industry
representatives not engaged in Market
Making. At no time should a review
panel have more than 50% members
engaged in Market Making. To assure
fairness, members of the Exchange
Review Council, like all members of
Board Committees, are subject to a
conflict of interest prohibition.12
No Adjustments to a Worse Price
Finally, the Exchange proposes to
include Commentary .02 to the
Proposed Rule, which would make clear
that to the extent the provisions of the
proposed Rule would result in the
Exchange applying an adjustment of an
11 See
12 See
Chapter XII, Section 1(17).
By-Law Article IV, Section 4.15.
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erroneous sell transaction to a price
lower than the execution price or an
erroneous buy transaction to a price
higher than the execution price, the
Exchange will not adjust or nullify the
transaction, but rather, the execution
price will stand.
Limit Up-Limit Down Plan
The Exchange proposes to amend
Section 3(d)(iv) to reflect the numbering
and content of the Proposed Rule. It will
then continue to cover how the
Exchange will treat Obvious and
Catastrophic Errors in response to the
Regulation NMS Plan to Address
Extraordinary Market Volatility
Pursuant to Rule 608 of Regulation NMS
under the Act (the ‘‘Limit Up-Limit
Down Plan’’ or the ‘‘Plan),13 which is
applicable to all NMS stocks, as defined
in Regulation NMS Rule 600(b)(47).14
Implementation Date
In order to ensure that other options
exchanges are able to adopt rules
consistent with this proposal and to
coordinate the effectiveness of such
harmonized rules, the Exchange
proposes to delay the operative date of
this proposal to May 8, 2015.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the rules
and regulations thereunder that are
applicable to a national securities
exchange, and, in particular, with the
requirements of Section 6(b) of the
Act.15 Specifically, the proposal is
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act 16 because it would promote just
and equitable principles of trade,
remove impediments to, and perfect the
mechanism of, a free and open market
and a national market system, and, in
general, protect investors and the public
interest.
As described above, the Exchange and
other options exchanges are seeking to
adopt harmonized rules related to the
adjustment and nullification of
erroneous options transactions. The
Exchange believes that the Proposed
Rule will provide greater transparency
and clarity with respect to the
adjustment and nullification of
erroneous options transactions.
Particularly, the proposed changes seek
to achieve consistent results for
participants across U.S. options
exchanges while maintaining a fair and
orderly market, protecting investors and
13 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67091
(May 31, 2012), 77 FR 33498 (June 6, 2012).
14 17 CFR 242.600(b)(47).
15 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
16 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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27743
protecting the public interest. Based on
the foregoing, the Exchange believes
that the proposal is consistent with
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act 17 in that the
Proposed Rule will foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged
in regulating and facilitating
transactions.
The Exchange believes the various
provisions allowing or dictating
adjustment rather than nullification of a
trade are necessary given the benefits of
adjusting a trade price rather than
nullifying the trade completely. Because
options trades are used to hedge, or are
hedged by, transactions in other
markets, including securities and
futures, many Participants, and their
customers, would rather adjust prices of
executions rather than nullify the
transactions and, thus, lose a hedge
altogether. As such, the Exchange
believes it is in the best interest of
investors to allow for price adjustments
as well as nullifications. The Exchange
further discusses specific aspects of the
Proposed Rule below.
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposal is unfairly discriminatory,
even though it differentiates in many
places between Customers and nonCustomers. The rules of the options
exchanges, including the Exchange’s
existing Obvious Error provision, often
treat Customers differently, often
affording them preferential treatment.
This treatment is appropriate in light of
the fact that Customers are not
necessarily immersed in the day-to-day
trading of the markets, are less likely to
be watching trading activity in a
particular option throughout the day,
and may have limited funds in their
trading accounts. At the same time, the
Exchange reiterates that in the U.S.
options markets generally there is
significant retail customer participation
that occurs directly on (and only on)
options exchanges such as the
Exchange. Accordingly, differentiating
among market participants with respect
to the adjustment and nullification of
erroneous options transactions is not
unfairly discriminatory because it is
reasonable and fair to provide
Customers with additional protections
as compared to non-Customers.
The Exchange believes that its
proposal with respect to the allowance
of mutual agreed upon adjustments or
nullifications is appropriate and
consistent with the Act, as such
proposal removes impediments to and
perfects the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, allowing participants to
mutually agree to correct an erroneous
17 15
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transactions without the Exchange
mandating the outcome. The Exchange
also believes that its proposal with
respect to mutual adjustments is
consistent with the Act because it is
designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices by
explicitly stating that it is considered
conduct inconsistent with just and
equitable principles of trade for any
Participant to use the mutual
adjustment process to circumvent any
applicable Exchange rule, the Act or any
of the rules and regulations thereunder.
The Exchange believes its proposal to
provide within the Proposed Rule
definitions of Customer, erroneous sell
transaction and erroneous buy
transaction, and Official is consistent
with Section 6(b)(5) of the Act because
such terms will provide more certainty
to market participants as to the meaning
of the Proposed Rule and reduce the
possibility that a party can intentionally
submit an order hoping for the market
to move in their favor in reliance on the
Rule as a safety mechanism, thereby
promoting just and fair principles of
trade. Similarly, the Exchange believes
that proposed Commentary .02 is
consistent with the Act as it would
make clear that the Exchange will not
adjust or nullify a transaction, but
rather, the execution price will stand
when the applicable adjustment criteria
would actually adjust the price of the
transaction to a worse price (i.e., higher
for an erroneous buy or lower for an
erroneous sell order).
As set forth below, the Exchange
believes it is consistent with Section
6(b)(5) of the Act for the Exchange to
determine Theoretical Price when the
NBBO cannot reasonably be relied upon
because the alternative could result in
transactions that cannot be adjusted or
nullified even when they are otherwise
clearly at a price that is significantly
away from the appropriate market for
the option. Similarly, reliance on an
NBBO that is not reliable could result in
adjustment to prices that are still
significantly away from the appropriate
market for the option.
The Exchange believes that its
proposal with respect to determining
Theoretical Price is consistent with the
Act in that it has retained the standard
of the current rule, which is to rely on
the NBBO to determine Theoretical
Price if such NBBO can reasonably be
relied upon. Because, however, there is
not always an NBBO that can or should
be used in order to administer the rule,
the Exchange has proposed various
provisions that provide the Exchange
with the authority to determine a
Theoretical Price. The Exchange
believes that the Proposed Rule is
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transparent with respect to the
circumstances under which the
Exchange will determine Theoretical
Price, and has sought to limit such
circumstances as much as possible. The
Exchange notes that Exchange personnel
currently are required to determine
Theoretical Price in certain
circumstances. While the Exchange
continues to pursue alternative
solutions that might further enhance the
objectivity and consistency of
determining Theoretical Price, the
Exchange believes that the discretion
currently afforded to Officials is
appropriate in the absence of a reliable
NBBO that can be used to set the
Theoretical Price.
With respect to the specific proposed
provisions for determining Theoretical
Price for transactions that occur as part
of the Exchange’s Opening Process and
in situations where there is a wide
quote, the Exchange believes both
provisions are consistent with the Act
because they provide objective criteria
that will determine Theoretical Price
with limited exceptions for situations
where the Exchange does not believe the
NBBO is a reasonable benchmark or
there is no NBBO. The Exchange notes
in particular with respect to the wide
quote provision that the Proposed Rule
will result in the Exchange determining
Theoretical Price less frequently than it
would pursuant to wide quote
provisions that have previously been
approved. The Exchange believes that it
is appropriate and consistent with the
Act to afford protections to market
participants by not relying on the NBBO
to determine Theoretical Price when the
quote is extremely wide but had been,
in the prior 10 seconds, at much more
reasonable width. The Exchange also
believes it is appropriate and consistent
with the Act to use the NBBO to
determine Theoretical Price when the
quote has been wider than the
applicable amount for more than 10
seconds, as the Exchange does not
believe it is necessary to apply any other
criteria in such a circumstance. The
Exchange believes that market
participants can easily use or adopt
safeguards to prevent errors when such
market conditions exist. When entering
an order into a market with a
persistently wide quote, the Exchange
does not believe that the entering party
should reasonably expect anything other
than the quoted price of an option.
The Exchange believes that its
proposal to adopt clear but disparate
standards with respect to the deadline
for submitting a request for review of
Customer and non-Customer
transactions is consistent with the Act,
particularly in that it creates a greater
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level of protection for Customers. As
noted above, the Exchange believes that
this is appropriate and not unfairly
discriminatory in light of the fact that
Customers are not necessarily immersed
in the day-to-day trading of the markets
and are less likely to be watching
trading activity in a particular option
throughout the day. Thus, Participants
representing Customer orders
reasonably may need additional time to
submit a request for review. The
Exchange also believes that its proposal
to provide additional time for
submission of requests for review of
linkage trades is reasonable and
consistent with the protection of
investors and the public interest due to
the time that it might take an options
exchange or third-party routing broker
to file a request for review with the
Exchange if the initial notification of an
error is received by the originating
options exchange near the end of such
options exchange’s filing deadline.
Without this additional time, there
could be disparate results based purely
on the existence of intermediaries and
an interconnected market structure.
In relation to the aspect of the
proposal giving Officials the ability to
review transactions for obvious errors
on their own motion, the Exchange
notes that an Official can adjust or
nullify a transaction under the authority
granted by this provision only if the
transaction meets the specific and
objective criteria for an Obvious Error
under the Proposed Rule. As noted
above, this is designed to give an
Official the ability to provide parties
relief in those situations where they
have failed to report an apparent error
within the established notification
period. However, the Exchange will
only grant relief if the transaction meets
the requirements for an Obvious Error as
described in the Proposed Rule.
The Exchange believes that its
proposal to adjust non-Customer
transactions and to nullify Customer
transactions that qualify as Obvious
Errors is appropriate for reasons
consistent with those described above.
In particular, Customers are not
necessarily immersed in the day-to-day
trading of the markets, are less likely to
be watching trading activity in a
particular option throughout the day,
and may have limited funds in their
trading accounts.
The Exchange acknowledges that the
proposal contains some uncertainty
regarding whether a trade will be
adjusted or nullified, depending on
whether one of the parties is a
Customer, because a party may not
know whether the other party to a
transaction was a Customer at the time
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of entering into the transaction.
However, the Exchange believes that the
proposal nevertheless promotes just and
equitable principles of trade and
protects investors as well as the public
interest because it eliminates the
possibility that a Customer’s order will
be adjusted to a significantly different
price. As noted above, the Exchange
believes it is consistent with the Act to
afford Customers greater protections
under the Proposed Rule than are
afforded to non-Customers. Thus, the
Exchange believes that its proposal is
consistent with the Act in that it
protects investors and the public
interest by providing additional
protections to those that are less
informed and potentially less able to
afford an adjustment of a transaction
that was executed in error. Customers
are also less likely to have engaged in
significant hedging or other trading
activity based on earlier transactions,
and thus, are less in need of maintaining
a position at an adjusted price than nonCustomers.
If any Participant submits requests to
the Exchange for review of transactions
pursuant to the Proposed Rule, and in
aggregate that Participant has 200 or
more Customer transactions under
review concurrently and the orders
resulting in such transactions were
submitted during the course of 2
minutes or less, the Exchange believes
it is appropriate for the Exchange apply
the non-Customer adjustment criteria
described above to such transactions.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed aggregation is reasonable as it
is representative of an extremely large
number of orders submitted to the
Exchange over a relatively short period
of time that are, in turn, possibly
erroneous (and within a time frame
significantly less than an entire day),
and thus is most likely to occur because
of a systems issue experienced by a
Participant representing Customer
orders or a systems issue coupled with
the erroneous marking of orders. The
Exchange does not believe it is possible
at a level of 200 Customer orders over
a 2 minute period that are under review
at one time that multiple, separate
Customers were responsible for the
errors in the ordinary course of trading.
In the event of a large-scale issue caused
by an Participant that has submitted
orders over a 2 minute period marked as
Customer that resulted in more than 200
transactions under review, the Exchange
does not believe it is appropriate to
nullify all such transactions because of
the negative impact that nullification
could have on the market participants
on the contra-side of such transactions,
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who might have engaged in hedging and
trading activity following such
transactions. In order for a participant to
have more than 200 transactions under
review concurrently when the orders
triggering such transactions were
received in 2 minutes or less, the
Exchange believes that a market
participant will have far exceeded the
normal behavior of customers deserving
protected status. While the Exchange
continues to believe that it is
appropriate to nullify transactions in
such a circumstance if both participants
to a transaction are Customers, the
Exchange does not believe it is
appropriate to place the overall risk of
a significant number of trade breaks on
non-Customers that in the normal
course of business may have engaged in
additional hedging activity or trading
activity based on such transactions.
Thus, the Exchange believes it is
necessary and appropriate to protect
non-Customers in such a circumstance
by applying the non-Customer
adjustment criteria, and thus adjusting
transactions as set forth above, in the
event a Participant has more than 200
transactions under review concurrently.
In summary, due to the extreme level at
which the proposal is set, the Exchange
believes that the proposal is consistent
with Section 6(b)(5) of the Act in that it
promotes just and equitable principles
of trade by encouraging market
participants to retain appropriate
controls over their systems to avoid
submitting a large number of erroneous
orders in a short period of time.
Similarly, the Exchange believes that
the proposed Size Adjustment Modifier,
which would increase the adjustment
amount for non-Customer transactions,
is appropriate because it attempts to
account for the additional risk that the
parties to the trade undertake for
transactions that are larger in scope. The
Exchange believes that the Size
Adjustment Modifier creates additional
incentives to prevent more impactful
Obvious Errors and it lessens the impact
on the contra-party to an adjusted trade.
The Exchange notes that these contraparties may have preferred to only trade
the size involved in the transaction at
the price at which such trade occurred,
and in trading larger size has committed
a greater level of capital and bears a
larger hedge risk.
The Exchange similarly believes that
its Proposed Rule with respect to
Catastrophic Errors is consistent with
the Act as it affords additional time for
market participants to file for review of
erroneous transactions that were further
away from the Theoretical Price. At the
same time, the Exchange believes that
the Proposed Rule is consistent with the
PO 00000
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27745
Act in that it generally would adjust
transactions, including Customer
transactions, because this will protect
against hedge risk, particularly for
transactions that may have occurred
several hours earlier and thus, which all
parties to the transaction might presume
are protected from further modification.
Similarly, by providing larger
adjustment amounts away from
Theoretical Price than are set forth
under the Obvious Error provision, the
Catastrophic Error provision also takes
into account the possibility that the
party that was advantaged by the
erroneous transaction has already taken
actions based on the assumption that
the transaction would stand. The
Exchange believes it is reasonable to
specifically protect Customers from
adjustments through their limit prices
for the reasons stated above, including
that Customers are less likely to be
watching trading throughout the day
and that they may have less capital to
afford an adjustment price. The
Exchange believes that the proposal
provides a fair process that will ensure
that Customers are not forced to accept
a trade that was executed in violation of
their limit order price. In contrast,
market professionals are more likely to
have engaged in hedging or other
trading activity based on earlier trading
activity, and thus, are more likely to be
willing to accept an adjustment rather
than a nullification to preserve their
positions even if such adjustment is to
a price through their limit price.
The Exchange believes that proposed
rule change to adopt the Significant
Market Event provision is consistent
with Section 6(b)(5) of the Act in that it
will foster cooperation and coordination
with persons engaged in regulating the
options markets. In particular, the
Exchange believes it is important for
options exchanges to coordinate when
there is a widespread and significant
event, as commonly, multiple options
exchanges are impacted in such an
event. Further, while the Exchange
recognizes that the Proposed Rule will
not guarantee a consistent result for all
market participants on every market, the
Exchange does believe that it will assist
in that outcome. For instance, if options
exchanges are able to agree as to the
time from which Theoretical Price
should be determined and the period of
time that should be reviewed, the likely
disparity between the Theoretical Prices
used by such exchanges should be very
slight and, in turn, with otherwise
consistent rules, the results should be
similar. The Exchange also believes that
the Proposed Rule is consistent with the
Act in that it generally would adjust
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transactions, including Customer
transactions, because this will protect
against hedge risk, particularly for
liquidity providers that might have been
quoting in thousands or tens of
thousands of different series and might
have affected executions throughout
such quoted series. The Exchange
believes that when weighing the
competing interests between preferring
a nullification for a Customer
transaction and an adjustment for a
transaction of a market professional,
while nullification is appropriate in a
typical one-off situation that it is
necessary to protect liquidity providers
in a widespread market event because,
presumably, they will be the most
affected by such an event (in contrast to
a Customer who, by virtue of their status
as such, likely would not have more
than a small number of affected
transactions). The Exchange believes
that the protection of liquidity providers
by favoring adjustments in the context
of Significant Market Events can also
benefit Customers indirectly by better
enabling liquidity providers, which
provides a cumulative benefit to the
market. Also, as stated above with
respect to Catastrophic Errors, the
Exchange believes it is reasonable to
specifically protect Customers from
adjustments through their limit prices
for the reasons stated above, including
that Customers are less likely to be
watching trading throughout the day
and that they may have less capital to
afford an adjustment price. The
Exchange believes that the proposal
provides a fair process that will ensure
that Customers are not forced to accept
a trade that was executed in violation of
their limit order price. In contrast,
market professionals are more likely to
have engaged in hedging or other
trading activity based on earlier trading
activity, and thus, are more likely to be
willing to accept an adjustment rather
than a nullification to preserve their
positions even if such adjustment is to
a price through their limit price. In
addition, the Exchange believes it is
important to have the ability to nullify
some or all transactions arising out of a
Significant Market Event in the event
timely adjustment is not feasible due to
the extraordinary nature of the situation.
In particular, although the Exchange has
worked to limit the circumstances in
which it has to determine Theoretical
Price, in a widespread event it is
possible that hundreds if not thousands
of series would require an Exchange
determination of Theoretical Price. In
turn, if there are hundreds or thousands
of trades in such series, it may not be
practicable for the Exchange to
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determine the adjustment levels for all
non-Customer transactions in a timely
fashion, and in turn, it would be in the
public interest to instead more promptly
deliver a simple, consistent result of
nullification.
The Exchange believes that proposed
rule change related to an erroneous
print in the underlying security or an
erroneous quote in the underlying
security is likewise consistent with
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act because the
proposal provides for the adjustment or
nullification of trades executed at
erroneous prices through no fault on the
part of the trading participants.
Allowing for Exchange review in such
situations will promote just and fair
principles of trade by protecting
investors from harm that is not of their
own making. Specifically with respect
to the proposed provisions governing
erroneous prints and quotes in the
underlying security, the Exchange notes
that market participants on the
Exchange base the value of their quotes
and orders on the price of the
underlying security. The provisions
regarding errors in prints and quotes in
the underlying security cover instances
where the information market
participants use to price options is
erroneous through no fault of their own.
In these instances, market participants
have little, if any, chance of pricing
options accurately. Thus, these
provisions are designed to provide relief
to market participants harmed by such
errors in the prints or quotes of the
underlying security.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed provision related to Linkage
Trades is consistent with the Act
because it adds additional transparency
to the Proposed Rule and makes clear
that when a Linkage Trade is adjusted
or nullified by another options
exchange, the Exchange will take
necessary actions to complete the
nullification or adjustment of the
Linkage Trade.
The Exchange believes that retaining
the same appeals process as the
Exchange maintains under the Current
Rule is consistent with the Act because
such process provides Participants with
due process in connection with
decisions made by Officials under the
Proposed Rule. The Exchange believes
that this process provides fair
representation of members by ensuring
diversity amongst the members of any
Obvious Error Review Panel, which is
consistent with Sections 6(b)(3) and
6(b)(7) of the Act.
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
BX believes the entire proposal is
consistent with Section 6(b)(8) of the
Act 18 in that it does not impose any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act as explained
below.
Importantly, the Exchange believes
the proposal will not impose a burden
on intermarket competition but will
rather alleviate any burden on
competition because it is the result of a
collaborative effort by all options
exchanges to harmonize and improve
the process related to the adjustment
and nullification of erroneous options
transactions. The Exchange does not
believe that the rules applicable to such
process is an area where options
exchanges should compete, but rather,
that all options exchanges should have
consistent rules to the extent possible.
Particularly where a market participant
trades on several different exchanges
and an erroneous trade may occur on
multiple markets nearly simultaneously,
the Exchange believes that a participant
should have a consistent experience
with respect to the nullification or
adjustment of transactions. The
Exchange understands that all other
options exchanges intend to file
proposals that are substantially similar
to this proposal.
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change imposes a
burden on intramarket competition
because the provisions apply to all
market participants equally within each
participant category (i.e., Customers and
non-Customers). With respect to
competition between Customer and
non-Customer market participants, the
Exchange believes that the Proposed
Rule acknowledges competing concerns
and tries to strike the appropriate
balance between such concerns. For
instance, as noted above, the Exchange
believes that protection of Customers is
important due to their direct
participation in the options markets as
well as the fact that they are not, by
definition, market professionals. At the
same time, the Exchange believes due to
the quote-driven nature of the options
markets, the importance of liquidity
provision in such markets and the risk
that liquidity providers bear when
quoting a large breadth of products that
are derivative of underlying securities,
that the protection of liquidity providers
and the practice of adjusting
transactions rather than nullifying them
is of critical importance. As described
18 15
E:\FR\FM\14MYN1.SGM
U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
14MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 93 / Thursday, May 14, 2015 / Notices
27747
above, the Exchange will apply specific
and objective criteria to determine
whether an erroneous transaction has
occurred and, if so, how to adjust or
nullify a transaction.
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
should be approved or disapproved.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.22
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
IV. Solicitation of Comments
[FR Doc. 2015–11594 Filed 5–13–15; 8:45 am]
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
Not applicable.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
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 for 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, the
proposed rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)
of the Act 19 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6)
thereunder.20
The Exchange has asked the
Commission to waive the 30-day
operative delay so that the proposal may
become operative immediately upon
filing. The Commission believes that
waiving the 30-day operative delay is
consistent with the protection of
investors and the public interest, as it
will enable the Exchange to meet its
proposed implementation date of May 8,
2015, which will help facilitate the
implementation of harmonized rules
related to the adjustment and
nullification of erroneous options
transactions across the options
exchanges. For this reason, the
Commission designates the proposed
rule change to be operative upon
filing.21
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
19 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6). As required under Rule
19b–4(f)(6)(iii), the Exchange provided the
Commission with written notice of its intent to file
the proposed rule change, along with a brief
description and the 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.
21 For purposes only of waiving the 30-day
operative delay, the Commission has also
considered the proposed rule’s impact on
efficiency, competition, and capital formation. See
15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
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20 17
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–74921; File No. SR–
NYSEArca–2015–41]
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–
BX–2015–028 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–BX–2015–028. 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 such
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–BX–
2015–028, and should be submitted on
or before June 4, 2015.
PO 00000
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Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change Amending Rule 6.87—
Obvious Errors and Catastrophic
Errors in Order To Harmonize
Substantial Portions of the Rule With
Recently Adopted, and Proposed
Rules of Other Options Exchanges
May 8, 2015.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) 2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that, on May 8,
2015, NYSE Arca, Inc. (the ‘‘Exchange’’
or ‘‘NYSE Arca’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(the ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the self-regulatory organization. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of the Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rule 6.87—Obvious Errors and
Catastrophic Errors 4 in order to
harmonize substantial portions of the
rule with recently adopted, and
proposed rules of other options
exchanges. The text of the proposed rule
change is available on the Exchange’s
Web site at www.nyse.com, at the
principal office of the Exchange, and at
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
22 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 15 U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
4 For the purposes of this filing, Rule 6.87—
Obvious Errors and Catastrophic Errors, in its
current format is referred to as ‘‘Current Rule.’’ Rule
6.87—Obvious Errors and Catastrophic Errors, with
proposed changes is referred to as ‘‘Proposed Rule’’.
1 15
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 93 (Thursday, May 14, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 27733-27747]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-11594]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-74916; File No. SR-BX-2015-028]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc.; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Chapter V, Section 6
May 8, 2015.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given
that, on May 7, 2015, NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc. (``BX'' or ``Exchange'')
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or
``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The Commission
is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of the
Substance of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend Chapter V, Regulation of Trading on
BX Options, Section 6, entitled ``Obvious and Catastrophic Errors''
(``Current Rule''), to replace with new Section 6 entitled
``Nullification and Adjustment of Options Transactions including
Obvious Errors'' (``Proposed Rule''). Section 6 relates to the
adjustment and nullification of options transactions that occur on BX
Options.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
Web site at https://nasdaqomxbx.cchwallstreet.com/, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
Background
For several months the Exchange has been working with other options
exchanges to identify ways to improve the process related to the
adjustment and nullification of erroneous options transactions. The
goal of the process that the options exchanges have undertaken is to
adopt harmonized rules related to the adjustment and nullification of
erroneous options transactions as well as a specific provision related
to coordination in connection with large-scale events involving
erroneous options transactions. As described below, the Exchange
believes that the changes the options exchanges and the Exchange have
agreed to propose will provide transparency and finality with respect
to the adjustment and nullification of erroneous options transactions.
Particularly, the proposed changes seek to achieve consistent results
for participants across U.S. options exchanges while maintaining a fair
and orderly market, protecting investors and protecting the public
interest.
The Proposed Rule is the culmination of this coordinated effort and
reflects discussions by the options exchanges to universally adopt: (1)
certain provisions already in place on one or more options exchanges;
and (2) new provisions that the options exchanges collectively believe
will improve the handling of erroneous options transactions. Thus,
although the Proposed Rule is in many ways similar to and based on the
Exchange's Current Rule, the Exchange is adopting various provisions to
conform with existing rules of one or more options exchanges and also
to adopt rules that are not currently in place on any options exchange.
As noted above, in order to adopt a rule that is similar in most
material respects to the rules adopted by other options exchanges, the
Exchange proposes to delete the Current Rule in its entirety and to
replace it with the Proposed Rule.
The Exchange notes that it has proposed additional objective
standards in the Proposed Rule as compared to the Current Rule. The
Exchange also notes that the Proposed Rule will ensure that the
Exchange will have the same standards as all other options exchanges.
However, there are still areas under the Proposed Rule where subjective
determinations need to be made by Exchange personnel with respect to
the calculation of Theoretical Price. The Exchange notes that the
Exchange and all other options exchanges have been working to further
improve the review of potentially erroneous transactions as well as
their subsequent adjustment by creating an objective and universal way
to determine Theoretical Price in the event a reliable NBBO is not
available. For instance, the Exchange and all other options exchanges
may utilize an independent third party to calculate and disseminate or
make available Theoretical Price. However, this initiative requires
additional exchange and industry discussion as well as additional time
for development and implementation. The Exchange will continue to work
with other options
[[Page 27734]]
exchanges and the options industry towards the goal of additional
objectivity and uniformity with respect to the calculation of
Theoretical Price.
As additional background, the Exchange believes that the Proposed
Rule supports an approach consistent with long-standing principles in
the options industry under which the general policy is to adjust rather
than nullify transactions. The Exchange acknowledges that adjustment of
transactions is contrary to the operation of analogous rules applicable
to the equities markets, where erroneous transactions are typically
nullified rather than adjusted and where there is no distinction
between the types of market participants involved in a transaction. For
the reasons set forth below, the Exchange believes that the
distinctions in market structure between equities and options markets
continue to support these distinctions between the rules for handling
obvious errors in the equities and options markets. The Exchange also
believes that the Proposed Rule properly balances several competing
concerns based on the structure of the options markets.
Various general structural differences between the options and
equities markets point toward the need for a different balancing of
risks for options market participants and are reflected in the Proposed
Rule. Option pricing is formulaic and is tied to the price of the
underlying stock, the volatility of the underlying security and other
factors. Because options market participants can generally create new
open interest in response to trading demand, as new open interest is
created, correlated trades in the underlying or related series are
generally also executed to hedge a market participant's risk. This
pairing of open interest with hedging interest differentiates the
options market specifically (and the derivatives markets broadly) from
the cash equities markets. In turn, the Exchange believes that the
hedging transactions engaged in by market participants necessitates
protection of transactions through adjustments rather than
nullifications when possible and otherwise appropriate.
The options markets are also quote driven markets dependent on
liquidity providers to an even greater extent than equities markets. In
contrast to the approximately 7,000 different securities traded in the
U.S. equities markets each day, there are more than 500,000 unique,
regularly quoted option series. Given this breadth in options series
the options markets are more dependent on liquidity providers than
equities markets; such liquidity is provided most commonly by
registered market makers but also by other professional traders. With
the number of instruments in which registered market makers must quote
and the risk attendant with quoting so many products simultaneously,
the Exchange believes that those liquidity providers should be afforded
a greater level of protection. In particular, the Exchange believes
that liquidity providers should be allowed protection of their trades
given the fact that they typically engage in hedging activity to
protect them from significant financial risk to encourage continued
liquidity provision and maintenance of the quote-driven options
markets.
In addition to the factors described above, there are other
fundamental differences between options and equities markets which lend
themselves to different treatment of different classes of participants
that are reflected in the Proposed Rule. For example, there is no trade
reporting facility in the options markets. Thus, all transactions must
occur on an options exchange. This leads to significantly greater
retail customer participation directly on exchanges than in the
equities markets, where a significant amount of retail customer
participation never reaches the Exchange but is instead executed in
off-exchange venues such as alternative trading systems, broker-dealer
market making desks and internalizers. In turn, because of such direct
retail customer participation, the exchanges have taken steps to afford
those retail customers--generally Priority Customers--more favorable
treatment in some circumstances.
Definitions
The Exchange proposes to adopt various definitions that will be
used in the Proposed Rule, as described below.
First, the Exchange proposes to adopt a definition of ``Customer,''
to make clear that this term would not include any broker-dealer or
Professional.\3\ Although other portions of the Exchange's rules
address the capacity of market participants, including customers, the
proposed definition is consistent with such rules and the Exchange
believes it is important for all options exchanges to have the same
definition of Customer in the context of nullifying and adjusting
trades in order to have harmonized rules. As set forth in detail below,
orders on behalf of a Customer are in many cases treated differently
than non-Customer orders in light of the fact that Customers are not
necessarily immersed in the day-to-day trading of the markets, are less
likely to be watching trading activity in a particular option
throughout the day, and may have limited funds in their trading
accounts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The term ``Professional'' means any person or entity that
(i) is not a broker or dealer in securities, and (ii) places more
than 390 orders in listed options per day on average during a
calendar month for its own beneficial account(s). See Chapter I,
Section 1(a)(49).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the Exchange proposes to adopt definitions for both an
``erroneous sell transaction'' and an ``erroneous buy transaction.'' As
proposed, an erroneous sell transaction is one in which the price
received by the person selling the option is erroneously low, and an
erroneous buy transaction is one in which the price paid by the person
purchasing the option is erroneously high. This provision helps to
reduce the possibility that a party can intentionally submit an order
hoping for the market to move in their favor while knowing that the
transaction will be nullified or adjusted if the market does not. For
instance, when a market participant who is buying options in a
particular series sees an aggressively priced sell order posted on the
Exchange, and the buyer believes that the price of the options is such
that it might qualify for obvious error, the option buyer can trade
with the aggressively priced order, then wait to see which direction
the market moves. If the market moves in their direction, the buyer
keeps the trade and if it moves against them, the buyer calls the
Exchange hoping to get the trade adjusted or busted.
Third, the Exchange proposes to adopt a new term, ``Official,'' to
apply only to Section 6. Specifically, the term ``Official'' shall mean
an Exchange staff member or contract employee designated as such by the
Chief Regulatory Officer. A list of individual Officials shall be
displayed on the Exchange Web site. The Chief Regulatory Officer shall
maintain the list of Officials and update the Web site each time a name
is added to, or deleted from, the list of Officials. In the event no
Official is available to rule on a particular matter, the Chief
Regulatory Officer or his/her designee shall rule on such matter.
Fourth, the Exchange proposes to adopt a new term, a ``Size
Adjustment Modifier,'' which would apply to individual transactions and
would modify the applicable adjustment for orders under certain
circumstances, as discussed in further detail below. As proposed, the
Size Adjustment Modifier will be applied to individual transactions as
follows:
[[Page 27735]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of contracts per execution Adjustment--TP plus/minus
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-50............................. N/A.
51-250........................... 2 times adjustment amount.
251-1000......................... 2.5 times adjustment amount.
1001 or more..................... 3 times adjustment amount.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Size Adjustment Modifier attempts to account for the additional
risk that the parties to the trade undertake for transactions that are
larger in scope. The Exchange believes that the Size Adjustment
Modifier creates additional incentives to prevent more impactful
Obvious Errors and it lessens the impact on the contra-party to an
adjusted trade. The Exchange notes that these contra-parties may have
preferred to only trade the size involved in the transaction at the
price at which such trade occurred, and in trading larger size has
committed a greater level of capital and bears a larger hedge risk.
When setting the proposed size adjustment modifier thresholds, the
Exchange has tried to correlate the size breakpoints with typical small
and larger ``block'' execution sizes of underlying stock. For instance,
SEC Rule 10b-18(a)(5)(ii) defines a ``block'' as a quantity of stock
that is at least 5,000 shares and a purchase price of at least $50,000,
among others.\4\ Similarly, NYSE Rule 72 defines a ``block'' as an
order to buy or sell ``at least 10,000 shares or a quantity of stock
having a market value of $200,000 or more, whichever is less.'' Thus,
executions of 51 to 100 option contracts, which are generally
equivalent to executions of 5,100 and 10,000 shares of underlying
stock, respectively, are proposed to be subject to the lowest size
adjustment modifier. An execution of over 1,000 contracts is roughly
equivalent to a block transaction of more than 100,000 shares of
underlying stock, and is proposed to be subject to the highest size
adjustment modifier. The Exchange has correlated the proposed size
adjustment modifier thresholds to smaller and larger scale blocks
because the Exchange believes that the execution cost associated with
transacting in block sizes scales according to the size of the block.
In other words, in the same way that executing a 100,000 share stock
order will have a proportionately larger market impact and will have a
higher overall execution cost than executing a 500, 1,000 or 5,000
share order in the same stock, all other market factors being equal,
executing a 1,000 option contract order will have a larger market
impact and higher overall execution cost than executing a 5, 10 or 50
contract option order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 17 CFR 240.10b-18(a)(5)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Calculation of Theoretical Price
Theoretical Price in Normal Circumstances
Under both the Current Rule and the Proposed Rule, when reviewing a
transaction as potentially erroneous, the Exchange needs to first
determine the ``Theoretical Price'' of the option, i.e., the Exchange's
estimate of the correct market price for the option. Pursuant to the
Proposed Rule, if the applicable option series is traded on at least
one other options exchange, then the Theoretical Price of an option
series is the last national best bid (``NBB'') just prior to the trade
in question with respect to an erroneous sell transaction or the last
national best offer (``NBO'') just prior to the trade in question with
respect to an erroneous buy transaction unless one of the exceptions
described below exists. Thus, the Exchange proposes that whenever the
Exchange has a reliable NBB or NBO, as applicable, just prior to the
transaction, then the Exchange will use this NBB or NBO as the
Theoretical Price.
The Exchange also proposes to specify in the Proposed Rule that
when a single order received by the Exchange is executed at multiple
price levels, the last NBB and last NBO just prior to the trade in
question would be the last NBB and last NBO just prior to the
Exchange's receipt of the order.
The Exchange also proposes to set forth in the Proposed Rule
various provisions governing specific situations where the NBB or NBO
is not available or may not be reliable. Specifically, the Exchange is
proposing additional detail specifying situations in which there are no
quotes or no valid quotes (as defined below), when the national best
bid or offer (``NBBO'') is determined to be too wide to be reliable,
and at the open of trading on each trading day.
No Valid Quotes
As is true under the Current Rule, pursuant to the Proposed Rule
the Exchange will determine the Theoretical Price if there are no
quotes or no valid quotes for comparison purposes. As proposed, quotes
that are not valid are all quotes in the applicable option series
published at a time where the last NBB is higher than the last NBO in
such series (a ``crossed market''), quotes published by the Exchange
that were submitted by either party to the transaction in question, and
quotes published by another options exchange against which the Exchange
has declared self-help. Thus, in addition to scenarios where there are
literally no quotes to be used as Theoretical Price, the Exchange will
exclude quotes in certain circumstances if such quotes are not deemed
valid. The Proposed Rule is consistent with the Exchange's application
of the Current Rule but the descriptions of the various scenarios where
the Exchange considers quotes to be invalid represent additional detail
that is not included in the Current Rule.
The Exchange notes that Exchange personnel currently are required
to determine Theoretical Price in certain circumstances. While the
Exchange continues to pursue alternative solutions that might further
enhance the objectivity and consistency of determining Theoretical
Price, the Exchange believes that the discretion currently afforded to
Officials is appropriate in the absence of a reliable NBBO that can be
used to set the Theoretical Price. Under the current Rule, Exchange
personnel will generally consult and refer to data such as the prices
of related series, especially the closest strikes in the option in
question. Exchange personnel may also take into account the price of
the underlying security and the volatility characteristics of the
option as well as historical pricing of the option and/or similar
options.
Wide Quotes
Similarly, pursuant to the Proposed Rule the Exchange will
determine the Theoretical Price if the bid/ask differential of the NBB
and NBO for the affected series just prior to the erroneous transaction
was equal to or greater than the Minimum Amount set forth below and
there was a bid/ask differential less than the Minimum Amount during
the 10 seconds prior to the transaction. If there was no bid/ask
differential less than the Minimum Amount during the 10 seconds prior
to the transaction then the Theoretical Price of an option series is
the last NBB or NBO just prior to the transaction in question. The
Exchange proposes to use the following chart to determine whether a
quote is too wide to be reliable:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bid price at time of trade Minimum amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below $2.00.......................................... $0.75
$2.00 to $5.00....................................... 1.25
Above $5.00 to $10.00................................ 1.50
Above $10.00 to $20.00............................... 2.50
Above $20.00 to $50.00............................... 3.00
Above $50.00 to $100.00.............................. 4.50
Above $100.00........................................ 6.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange notes that the values set forth above generally represent
a multiple of 3 times the bid/ask
[[Page 27736]]
differential requirements of other options exchanges, with certain
rounding applied (e.g., $1.25 as proposed rather than $1.20).\5\ The
Exchange believes that basing the Wide Quote table on a multiple of the
permissible bid/ask differential rule provides a reasonable baseline
for quotations that are indeed so wide that they cannot be considered
reliable for purposes of determining Theoretical Price unless they have
been consistently wide. As described above, while the Exchange will
determine Theoretical Price when the bid/ask differential equals or
exceeds the amount set forth in the chart above and within the previous
10 seconds there was a bid/ask differential smaller than such amount,
if a quote has been persistently wide for at least 10 seconds the
Exchange will use such quote for purposes of Theoretical Price. The
Exchange believes that there should be a greater level of protection
afforded to market participants that enter the market when there are
liquidity gaps and price fluctuations. The Exchange does not believe
that a similar level of protection is warranted when market
participants choose to enter a market that is wide and has been
consistently wide for some time. The Exchange notes that it has
previously determined that, given the largely electronic nature of
today's markets, as little as one second (or less) is a long enough
time for market participants to receive, process and account for and
respond to new market information.\6\ While introducing this new
provision the Exchange believes it is being appropriately cautious by
selecting a time frame that is an order of magnitude above and beyond
what the Exchange has previously determined is sufficient for
information dissemination. The table above bases the wide quote
provision off of bid price in order to provide a relatively
straightforward beginning point for the analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See, e.g., NYSE Arca Options Rule 6.37(b)(1).
\6\ See, e.g., Chapter VII, Section 12, which requires certain
orders to be exposed for at least one second before they can be
executed; see also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 66306
(February 2, 2012), 77 FR 6608 (February 8, 2012) (SR-BX-2011-084)
(order granting approval of proposed rule change to reduce the
duration of the PIP from one second to one hundred milliseconds).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As an example, assume an option is quoted $3.00 by $6.00 with 50
contracts posted on each side of the market for an extended period of
time. If a market participant were to enter a market order to buy 20
contracts the Exchange believes that the buyer should have a reasonable
expectation of paying $6.00 for the contracts which they are buying.
This should be the case even if immediately after the purchase of those
options, the market conditions change and the same option is then
quoted at $3.75 by $4.25. Although the quote was wide according to the
table above at the time immediately prior to and the time of the
execution of the market order, it was also well established and well
known. The Exchange believes that an execution at the then prevailing
market price should not in and of itself constitute an erroneous trade.
Transactions at the Open
Under the Proposed Rule, for a transaction occurring as part of the
opening \7\ the Exchange will determine the Theoretical Price where
there is no NBB or NBO for the affected series just prior to the
erroneous transaction or if the bid/ask differential of the NBBO just
prior to the erroneous transaction is equal to or greater than the
Minimum Amount set forth in the chart proposed for the wide quote
provision described above. The Exchange believes that this discretion
is necessary because it is consistent with other scenarios in which the
Exchange will determine the Theoretical Price if there are no quotes or
no valid quotes for comparison purposes, including the wide quote
provision proposed by the Exchange as described above. If, however,
there are valid quotes and the bid/ask differential of the NBBO is less
than the Minimum Amount set forth in the chart proposed for the wide
quote provision described above, then the Exchange will use the NBB or
NBO just prior to the transaction as it would in any other normal
review scenario.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See Chapter VI, Section 8 for a description of the
Exchange's opening process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As an example of an erroneous transaction for which the NBBO is
wide at the open, assume the NBBO at the time of the opening
transaction is $1.00 x $5.00 and the opening transaction takes place at
$1.25. The Exchange would be responsible for determining the
Theoretical Price because the NBBO was wider than the applicable
minimum amount set forth in the wide quote provision as described
above. The Exchange believes that it is necessary to determine
theoretical price at the open in the event of a wide quote at the open
for the same reason that the Exchange has proposed to determine
theoretical price during the remainder of the trading day pursuant to
the proposed wide quote provision, namely that a wide quote cannot be
reliably used to determine Theoretical Price because the Exchange does
not know which of the two quotes, the NBB or the NBO, is closer to the
real value of the option.
Obvious Errors
The Exchange proposes to adopt numerical thresholds that would
qualify transactions as ``Obvious Errors.'' These thresholds are
similar to those in place under the Current Rule. As proposed, a
transaction will qualify as an Obvious Error if the Exchange receives a
properly submitted filing and the execution price of a transaction is
higher or lower than the Theoretical Price for the series by an amount
equal to at least the amount shown below:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Minimum
Theoretical price amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below $2.00................................................ $0.25
$2.00 to $5.00............................................. 0.40
Above $5.00 to $10.00...................................... 0.50
Above $10.00 to $20.00..................................... 0.80
Above $20.00 to $50.00..................................... 1.00
Above $50.00 to $100.00.................................... 1.50
Above $100.00.............................................. 2.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applying the Theoretical Price, as described above, to determine the
applicable threshold and comparing the Theoretical Price to the actual
execution price provides the Exchange with an objective methodology to
determine whether an Obvious Error occurred. The Exchange believes that
the proposed amounts are reasonable as they are generally consistent
with the standards of the Current Rule and reflect a significant
disparity from Theoretical Price. The Exchange notes that the Minimum
Amounts in the Proposed Rule and as set forth above are identical to
the Current Rule except for the last two categories, for options where
the Theoretical Price is above $50.00 to $100.00 and above $100.00. The
Exchange believes that this additional granularity is reasonable
because given the proliferation of additional strikes that have been
created in the past several years there are many more high-priced
options that are trading with open interest for extended periods. The
Exchange believes that it is appropriate to account for these high-
priced options with additional Minimum Amount levels for options with
Theoretical Prices above $50.00.
Under the Proposed Rule, a party that believes that it participated
in a transaction that was the result of an Obvious Error must notify an
Official in the manner specified from time to time by the Exchange in a
notice distributed to Participants. The Exchange currently requires
electronic notification through a web-based application but believes
that maintaining flexibility in the Rule
[[Page 27737]]
is important to allow for changes to the process.
The Exchange also proposes to adopt notification timeframes that
must be met in order for a transaction to qualify as an Obvious Error.
Specifically, as proposed a filing must be received by the Exchange
within thirty (30) minutes of the execution with respect to an
execution of a Customer order and within fifteen (15) minutes of the
execution for any other participant. The Exchange also proposes to
provide additional time for trades that are routed through other
options exchanges to the Exchange. Under the Proposed Rule, any other
options exchange will have a total of forty-five (45) minutes for
Customer orders and thirty (30) minutes for non-Customer orders,
measured from the time of execution on the Exchange, to file with the
Exchange for review of transactions routed to the Exchange from that
options exchange and executed on the Exchange (``linkage trades'').
This includes filings on behalf of another options exchange filed by a
third-party routing broker if such third-party broker identifies the
affected transactions as linkage trades. In order to facilitate timely
reviews of linkage trades the Exchange will accept filings from either
the other options exchange or, if applicable, the third-party routing
broker that routed the applicable order(s). The additional fifteen (15)
minutes provided with respect to linkage trades shall only apply to the
extent the options exchange that originally received and routed the
order to the Exchange itself received a timely filing from the entering
participant (i.e., within 30 minutes if a Customer order or 15 minutes
if a non-Customer order). The Exchange believes that additional time
for filings related to Customer orders is appropriate in light of the
fact that Customers are not necessarily immersed in the day-to-day
trading of the markets and are less likely to be watching trading
activity in a particular option throughout the day. The Exchange
believes that the additional time afforded to linkage trades is
appropriate given the interconnected nature of the markets today and
the practical difficulty that an end user may face in getting requests
for review filed in a timely fashion when the transaction originated at
a different exchange than where the error took place. Without this
additional time the Exchange believes it would be common for a market
participant to satisfy the filing deadline at the original exchange to
which an order was routed but that requests for review of executions
from orders routed to other options exchanges would not qualify for
review as potential Obvious Errors by the time filings were received by
such other options exchanges, in turn leading to potentially disparate
results under the applicable rules of options exchanges to which the
orders were routed.
Pursuant to the Proposed Rule, an Exchange Officer may review a
transaction believed to be erroneous on his/her own motion in the
interest of maintaining a fair and orderly market and for the
protection of investors. This proposed provision is designed to give an
Exchange Officer the ability to provide parties relief in those
situations where they have failed to report an apparent error within
the established notification period. A transaction reviewed pursuant to
the proposed provision may be nullified or adjusted only if it is
determined by the Exchange Officer that the transaction is erroneous in
accordance with the provisions of the Proposed Rule, provided that the
time deadlines for filing a request for review described above shall
not apply. The Proposed Rule would require the Exchange Officer to act
as soon as possible after becoming aware of the transaction; action by
the Exchange Officer would ordinarily be expected on the same day that
the transaction occurred. However, because a transaction under review
may have occurred near the close of trading or due to unusual
circumstances, the Proposed Rule provides that the Exchange Officer
shall act no later than 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time on the next trading day
following the date of the transaction in question.
The Exchange also proposes to state that a party affected by a
determination to nullify or adjust a transaction after an Exchange
Officer's review on his or her own motion may appeal such determination
in accordance with paragraph (k), which is described below. The
Proposed Rule would make clear that a determination by an Exchange
Officer not to review a transaction or determination not to nullify or
adjust a transaction for which a review was conducted on an Exchange
Officer's own motion is not appealable and further that if a
transaction is reviewed and a determination is rendered pursuant to
another provision of the Proposed Rule, no additional relief may be
granted by an Exchange Officer.
If it is determined that an Obvious Error has occurred based on the
objective numeric criteria and time deadlines described above, the
Exchange will adjust or nullify the transaction as described below and
promptly notify both parties to the trade electronically or via
telephone. The Exchange proposes different adjustment and nullification
criteria for Customers and non-Customers.
As proposed, where neither party to the transaction is a Customer,
the execution price of the transaction will be adjusted by an Official
pursuant to the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Buy transaction Sell transaction
Theoretical price (TP) adjustment-- TP adjustment-- TP
plus minus
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below $3.00....................... $0.15 $0.15
At or above $3.00................. 0.30 0.30
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that it is appropriate to adjust to prices a
specified amount away from Theoretical Price rather than to adjust to
Theoretical Price because even though the Exchange has determined a
given trade to be erroneous in nature, the parties in question should
have had some expectation of execution at the price or prices
submitted. Also, it is common that by the time it is determined that an
obvious error has occurred additional hedging and trading activity has
already occurred based on the executions that previously happened. The
Exchange is concerned that an adjustment to Theoretical Price in all
cases would not appropriately incentivize market participants to
maintain appropriate controls to avoid potential errors.
Further, as proposed any non-Customer Obvious Error exceeding 50
contracts will be subject to the Size Adjustment Modifier described
above. The Exchange believes that it is appropriate to apply the Size
Adjustment Modifier to non-Customer orders because the hedging cost
associated with trading larger sized options orders and the market
impact of larger blocks of underlying can be significant.
[[Page 27738]]
As an example of the application of the Size Adjustment Modifier,
assume Exchange A has a quoted bid to buy 50 contracts at $2.50,
Exchange B has a quoted bid to buy 100 contracts at $2.05 and there is
no other options exchange quoting a bid priced higher than $2.00.
Assume that the NBBO is $2.50 by $3.00. Finally, assume that all orders
quoted and submitted to Exchange B in connection with this example are
non-Customer orders.
Assume Exchange A's quoted bid at $2.50 is either executed
or cancelled.
Assume Exchange B immediately thereafter receives an
incoming market order to sell 100 contracts.
The incoming order would be executed against Exchange B's
resting bid at $2.05 for 100 contracts.
Because the 100 contract execution of the incoming sell
order was priced at $2.05, which is $0.45 below the Theoretical Price
of $2.50, the 100 contract execution would qualify for adjustment as an
Obvious Error.
The normal adjustment process would adjust the execution
of the 100 contracts to $2.35 per contract, which is the Theoretical
Price minus $0.15.
However, because the execution would qualify for the Size
Adjustment Modifier of 2 times the adjustment price, the adjusted
transaction would instead be to $2.20 per contract, which is the
Theoretical Price minus $0.30.
By reference to the example above, the Exchange reiterates that it
believes that a Size Adjustment Modifier is appropriate, as the buyer
in this example was originally willing to buy 100 contracts at $2.05
and ended up paying $2.20 per contract for such execution. Without the
Size Adjustment Modifier the buyer would have paid $2.35 per contract.
Such buyer may be advantaged by the trade if the Theoretical Price is
indeed closer to $2.50 per contract, however the buyer may not have
wanted to buy so many contracts at a higher price and does incur
increasing cost and risk due to the additional size of their quote.
Thus, the proposed rule is attempting to strike a balance between
various competing objectives, including recognition of cost and risk
incurred in quoting larger size and incentivizing market participants
to maintain appropriate controls to avoid errors.
In contrast to non-Customer orders, where trades will be adjusted
if they qualify as Obvious Errors, pursuant the Proposed Rule a trade
that qualifies as an Obvious Error will be nullified where at least one
party to the Obvious Error is a Customer. The Exchange also proposes,
however, that if any Participant submits requests to the Exchange for
review of transactions pursuant to the Proposed Rule, and in aggregate
that Participant has 200 or more Customer transactions under review
concurrently and the orders resulting in such transactions were
submitted during the course of 2 minutes or less, where at least one
party to the Obvious Error is a non-Customer, the Exchange will apply
the non-Customer adjustment criteria described above to such
transactions. The Exchange based its proposal of 200 transactions on
the fact that the proposed level is reasonable as it is representative
of an extremely large number of orders submitted to the Exchange that
are, in turn, possibly erroneous. Similarly, the Exchange based its
proposal of orders received in 2 minutes or less on the fact that this
is a very short amount of time under which one Participant could
generate multiple erroneous transactions. In order for a participant to
have more than 200 transactions under review concurrently when the
orders triggering such transactions were received in 2 minutes or less,
the market participant will have far exceeded the normal behavior of
customers deserving protected status.\8\ While the Exchange continues
to believe that it is appropriate to nullify transactions in such a
circumstance if both participants to a transaction are Customers, the
Exchange does not believe it is appropriate to place the overall risk
of a significant number of trade breaks on non-Customers that in the
normal course of business may have engaged in additional hedging
activity or trading activity based on such transactions. Thus, the
Exchange believes it is necessary and appropriate to protect non-
Customers in such a circumstance by applying the non-Customer
adjustment criteria, and thus adjusting transactions as set forth
above, in the event a Participant has more than 200 transactions under
review concurrently.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The Exchange notes that in the third quarter of this year
across all options exchanges the average number of valid Customer
orders received and executed was less than 38 valid orders every two
minutes. The number of obvious errors resulting from valid orders
is, of course, a very small fraction of such orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Catastrophic Errors
Consistent with the Current Rule, the Exchange proposes to adopt
separate numerical thresholds for review of transactions for which the
Exchange does not receive a filing requesting review within the Obvious
Error timeframes set forth above. Based on this review these
transactions may qualify as ``Catastrophic Errors.'' As proposed, a
Catastrophic Error will be deemed to have occurred when the execution
price of a transaction is higher or lower than the Theoretical Price
for the series by an amount equal to at least the amount shown below:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Minimum
Theoretical price amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below $2.00................................................ $0.50
$2.00 to $5.00............................................. 1.00
Above $5.00 to $10.00...................................... 1.50
Above $10.00 to $20.00..................................... 2.00
Above $20.00 to $50.00..................................... 2.50
Above $50.00 to $100.00.................................... 3.00
Above $100.00.............................................. 4.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on industry feedback on the Catastrophic Error thresholds set
forth under the Current Rule, the thresholds proposed as set forth
above are more granular and lower (i.e., more likely to qualify) than
the thresholds under the Current Rule. As noted above, under the
Proposed Rule as well as the Current Rule, parties have additional time
to submit transactions for review as Catastrophic Errors. As proposed,
notification requesting review must be received by an Official by 8:30
a.m. Eastern Time on the first trading day following the execution. For
transactions in an expiring options series that take place on an
expiration day, a party must notify an Official within 45 minutes after
the close of trading that same day. As is true for requests for review
under the Obvious Error provision of the Proposed Rule, a party
requesting review of a transaction as a Catastrophic Error must notify
an Official in the manner specified from time to time by the Exchange
in a notice distributed to Participants. By definition, any execution
that qualifies as a Catastrophic Error is also an Obvious Error.
However, the Exchange believes it is appropriate to maintain these two
types of errors because the Catastrophic Error provisions provide
market participants with a longer notification period under which they
may file a request for review with the Exchange of a potential
Catastrophic Error than a potential Obvious Error. This provides an
additional level of protection for transactions that are severely
erroneous even in the event a participant does not submit a request for
review in a timely fashion.
The Proposed Rule would specify the action to be taken by the
Exchange if it is determined that a Catastrophic Error has occurred, as
described below, and would require the Exchange to promptly notify both
parties to the trade electronically or via telephone. In the event of a
Catastrophic Error, the execution price of the transaction will
[[Page 27739]]
be adjusted by an Official pursuant to the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Buy transaction Sell transaction
Theoretical price (TP) adjustment-- TP adjustment-- TP
plus minus
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below $2.00....................... $0.50 $0.50
$2.00 to $5.00.................... 1.00 1.00
Above $5.00 to $10.00............. 1.50 1.50
Above $10.00 to $20.00............ 2.00 2.00
Above $20.00 to $50.00............ 2.50 2.50
Above $50.00 to $100.00........... 3.00 3.00
Above $100.00..................... 4.00 4.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although Customer orders would be adjusted in the same manner as non-
Customer orders, any Customer order that qualifies as a Catastrophic
Error will be nullified if the adjustment would result in an execution
price higher (for buy transactions) or lower (for sell transactions)
than the Customer's limit price. Based on industry feedback, the levels
proposed above with respect to adjustment amounts are the same levels
as the thresholds at which a transaction may be deemed a Catastrophic
Error pursuant to the chart set forth above.
As is true for Obvious Errors as described above, the Exchange
believes that it is appropriate to adjust to prices a specified amount
away from Theoretical Price rather than to adjust to Theoretical Price
because even though the Exchange has determined a given trade to be
erroneous in nature, the parties in question should have had some
expectation of execution at the price or prices submitted. Also, it is
common that by the time it is determined that a Catastrophic Error has
occurred additional hedging and trading activity has already occurred
based on the executions that previously happened. The Exchange is
concerned that an adjustment to Theoretical Price in all cases would
not appropriately incentivize market participants to maintain
appropriate controls to avoid potential errors. Further, the Exchange
believes it is appropriate to maintain a higher adjustment level for
Catastrophic Errors than Obvious Errors given the significant
additional time that can potentially pass before an adjustment is
requested and applied and the amount of hedging and trading activity
that can occur based on the executions at issue during such time. For
the same reasons, other than honoring the limit prices established for
Customer orders, the Exchange has proposed to treat all market
participants the same in the context of the Catastrophic Error
provision. Specifically, the Exchange believes that treating market
participants the same in this context will provide additional certainty
to market participants with respect to their potential exposure and
hedging activities, including comfort that even if a transaction is
later adjusted (i.e., past the standard time limit for filing under the
Obvious Error provision), such transaction will not be fully nullified.
However, as noted above, under the Proposed Rule where at least one
party to the transaction is a Customer, the trade will be nullified if
the adjustment would result in an execution price higher (for buy
transactions) or lower (for sell transactions) than the Customer's
limit price. The Exchange has retained the protection of a Customer's
limit price in order to avoid a situation where the adjustment could be
to a price that the Customer could not afford, which is less likely to
be an issue for a market professional.
Significant Market Events
In order to improve consistency for market participants in the case
of a widespread market event and in light of the interconnected nature
of the options exchanges, the Exchange proposes to adopt a new
provision that calls for coordination between the options exchanges in
certain circumstances and provides limited flexibility in the
application of other provisions of the Proposed Rule in order to
promptly respond to a widespread market event.\9\ The Exchange proposes
to describe such an event as a Significant Market Event, and to set
forth certain objective criteria that will determine whether such an
event has occurred. The Exchange developed these objective criteria in
consultation with the other options exchanges by reference to
historical patterns and events with a goal of setting thresholds that
very rarely will be triggered so as to limit the application of the
provision to truly significant market events. As proposed, a
Significant Market Event will be deemed to have occurred when proposed
criterion (A) below is met or exceeded or the sum of all applicable
event statistics, where each is expressed as a percentage of the
relevant threshold in criteria (A) through (D) below, is greater than
or equal to 150% and 75% or more of at least one category is reached,
provided that no single category can contribute more than 100% to the
sum. All criteria set forth below will be measured in aggregate across
all exchanges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Although the Exchange has proposed a specific provision
related to coordination amongst options exchanges in the context of
a widespread event, the Exchange does not believe that the
Significant Market Event provision or any other provision of the
proposed rule alters the Exchange's ability to coordinate with other
options exchanges in the normal course of business with respect to
market events or activity. The Exchange does already coordinate with
other options exchanges to the extent possible if such coordination
is necessary to maintain a fair and orderly market and/or to fulfill
the Exchange's duties as a self-regulatory organization.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed criteria for determining a Significant Market Event
are as follows:
(A) Transactions that are potentially erroneous would result in a
total Worst-Case Adjustment Penalty of $30,000,000, where the Worst-
Case Adjustment Penalty is computed as the sum, across all potentially
erroneous trades, of: (i) $0.30 (i.e., the largest Transaction
Adjustment value listed in sub-paragraph (e)(3)(A) below); times; (ii)
the contract multiplier for each traded contract; times (iii) the
number of contracts for each trade; times (iv) the appropriate Size
Adjustment Modifier for each trade, if any, as defined in sub-paragraph
(e)(3)(A) below;
(B) Transactions involving 500,000 options contracts are
potentially erroneous;
(C) Transactions with a notional value (i.e., number of contracts
traded multiplied by the option premium multiplied by the contract
multiplier) of $100,000,000 are potentially erroneous;
(D) 10,000 transactions are potentially erroneous.
As described above, the Exchange proposes to adopt a the Worst Case
Adjustment Penalty, proposed as
[[Page 27740]]
criterion (A), which is the only criterion that can on its own result
in an event being designated as a significant market event. The Worst
Case Adjustment Penalty is intended to develop an objective criterion
that can be quickly determined by the Exchange in consultation with
other options exchanges that approximates the total overall exposure to
market participants on the negatively impacted side of each transaction
that occurs during an event. If the Worst Case Adjustment criterion
equals or exceeds $30,000,000, then an event is a Significant Market
Event. As an example of the Worst Case Adjustment Penalty, assume that
a single potentially erroneous transaction in an event is as follows:
Sale of 100 contracts of a standard option (i.e., an option with a 100
share multiplier). The highest potential adjustment penalty for this
single transaction would be $6,000, which would be calculated as $0.30
times 100 (contract multiplier) times 100 (number of contracts) times 2
(applicable Size Adjustment Modifier). The Exchange would calculate the
highest potential adjustment penalty for each of the potentially
erroneous transactions in the event and the Worst Case Adjustment
Penalty would be the sum of such penalties on the Exchange and all
other options exchanges with affected transactions.
As described above, under the Proposed Rule if the Worst Case
Adjustment Penalty does not equal or exceed $30,000,000, then a
Significant Market Event has occurred if the sum of all applicable
event statistics (expressed as a percentage of the relevant
thresholds), is greater than or equal to 150% and 75% or more of at
least one category is reached. The Proposed Rule further provides that
no single category can contribute more than 100% to the sum. As an
example of the application of this provision, assume that in a given
event across all options exchanges that: (A) The Worst Case Adjustment
Penalty is $12,000,000 (40% of $30,000,000), (B) 300,000 options
contracts are potentially erroneous (60% of 500,000), (C) the notional
value of potentially erroneous transactions is $30,000,000 (30% of
$100,000,000), and (D) 12,000 transactions are potentially erroneous
(120% of 10,000). This event would qualify as a Significant Market
Event because the sum of all applicable event statistics would be 230%,
far exceeding the 150% threshold. The 230% sum is reached by adding
40%, 60%, 30% and last, 100% (i.e., rounded down from 120%) for the
number of transactions. The Exchange notes that no single category can
contribute more than 100% to the sum and any category contributing more
than 100% will be rounded down to 100%.
As an alternative example, assume a large-scale event occurs
involving low-priced options with a small number of contracts in each
execution. Assume in this event across all options exchanges that: (A)
The Worst Case Adjustment Penalty is $600,000 (2% of $30,000,000), (B)
20,000 options contracts are potentially erroneous (4% of 500,000), (C)
the notional value of potentially erroneous transactions is $20,000,000
(20% of $100,000,000), and (D) 20,000 transactions are potentially
erroneous (200% of 10,000, but rounded down to 100%). This event would
not qualify as a Significant Market Event because the sum of all
applicable event statistics would be 126%, below the 150% threshold.
The Exchange reiterates that as proposed, even when a single category
other than criterion (A) is fully met, that does not necessarily
qualify an event as a Significant Market Event.
The Exchange believes that the breadth and scope of the obvious
error rules are appropriate and sufficient for handling of typical and
common obvious errors. Coordination between and among the exchanges
should generally not be necessary even when a Participant has an error
that results in executions on more than one exchange. In setting the
thresholds above the Exchange believes that the requirements will be
met only when truly widespread and significant errors happen and the
benefits of coordination and information sharing far outweigh the costs
of the logistics of additional intra-exchange coordination. The
Exchange notes that in addition to its belief that the proposed
thresholds are sufficiently high, the Exchange has proposed the
requirement that either criterion (A) is met or the sum of applicable
event statistics for proposed (A) through (D) equals or exceeds 150% in
order to ensure that an event is sufficiently large but also to avoid
situations where an event is extremely large but just misses potential
qualifying thresholds. For instance, the proposal is designed to help
avoid a situation where the Worst Case Adjustment Penalty is
$15,000,000, so the event does not qualify based on criterion (A)
alone, but there are transactions in 490,000 options contracts that are
potentially erroneous (missing criterion (B) by 10,000 contracts),
there transactions with a notional value of $99,000,000 (missing
criterion (C) by $1,000,000), and there are 9,000 potentially erroneous
transactions overall (missing criterion (D) by 1,000 transactions). The
Exchange believes that the proposed formula, while slightly more
complicated than simply requiring a certain threshold to be met in each
category, may help to avoid inapplicability of the proposed provisions
in the context of an event that would be deemed significant by most
subjective measures but that barely misses each of the objective
criteria proposed by the Exchange.
To ensure consistent application across options exchanges, in the
event of a suspected Significant Market Event, the Exchange shall
initiate a coordinated review of potentially erroneous transactions
with all other affected options exchanges to determine the full scope
of the event. Under the Proposed Rule, the Exchange will promptly
coordinate with the other options exchanges to determine the
appropriate review period as well as select one or more specific points
in time prior to the transactions in question and use one or more
specific points in time to determine Theoretical Price. Other than the
selected points in time, if applicable, the Exchange will determine
Theoretical Price as described above. For example, around the start of
a Significant Market Event that is triggered by a large and
aggressively priced buy order, three exchanges have multiple orders on
the offer side of the market: Exchange A has offers priced at $2.20,
$2.25, $2.30 and several other price levels to $3.00, Exchange B has
offers at $2.45, $2.30 and several other price levels to $3.00,
Exchange C has offers at price levels between $2.50 and $3.00. Assume
an event occurs starting at 10:05:25 a.m. ET and in this particular
series the executions begin on Exchange A and subsequently begin to
occur on Exchanges B and C. Without coordination and information
sharing between the exchanges, Exchange B and Exchange C cannot know
with certainty that whether or not the execution at Exchange A that
happened at $2.20 immediately prior to their executions at $2.45 and
$2.50 is part of the same erroneous event or not. With proper
coordination, the exchanges can determine that in this series, the
proper point in time from which the event should be analyzed is
10:05:25 a.m. ET, and thus, the NBO of $2.20 should be used as the
Theoretical Price for purposes of all buy transactions in such options
series that occurred during the event.
If it is determined that a Significant Market Event has occurred
then, using the parameters agreed with respect to the times from which
Theoretical Price will be calculated, if applicable, an
[[Page 27741]]
Official will determine whether any or all transactions under review
qualify as Obvious Errors. The Proposed Rule would require the Exchange
to use the criteria in Proposed Section 6(c), as described above, to
determine whether an Obvious Error has occurred for each transaction
that was part of the Significant Market Event. Upon taking any final
action, the Exchange would be required to promptly notify both parties
to the trade electronically or via telephone.
The execution price of each affected transaction will be adjusted
by an Official to the price provided below, unless both parties agree
to adjust the transaction to a different price or agree to bust the
trade.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Buy transaction Sell transaction
Theoretical price (TP) adjustment-- TP adjustment-- TP
plus minus
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below $3.00....................... $0.15 $0.15
At or above $3.00................. 0.30 0.30
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thus, the proposed adjustment criteria for Significant Market Events
are identical to the proposed adjustment levels for Obvious Errors
generally. In addition, in the context of a Significant Market Event,
any error exceeding 50 contracts will be subject to the Size Adjustment
Modifier described above. Also, the adjustment criteria would apply
equally to all market participants (i.e., Customers and non-Customers)
in a Significant Market Event. However, as is true for the proposal
with respect to Catastrophic Errors, under the Proposed Rule where at
least one party to the transaction is a Customer, the trade will be
nullified if the adjustment would result in an execution price higher
(for buy transactions) or lower (for sell transactions) than the
Customer's limit price. The Exchange has retained the protection of a
Customer's limit price in order to avoid a situation where the
adjustment could be to a price that the Customer could not afford,
which is less likely to be an issue for a market professional. The
Exchange has otherwise proposed to treat all market participants the
same in the context of a Significant Market Event to provide additional
certainty to market participants with respect to their potential
exposure as soon as an event has occurred.
Another significant distinction between the proposed Obvious Error
provision and the proposed Significant Market Event provision is that
if the Exchange, in consultation with other options exchanges,
determines that timely adjustment is not feasible due to the
extraordinary nature of the situation, then the Exchange will nullify
some or all transactions arising out of the Significant Market Event
during the review period selected by the Exchange and other options
exchanges. To the extent the Exchange, in consultation with other
options exchanges, determines to nullify less than all transactions
arising out of the Significant Market Event, those transactions subject
to nullification will be selected based upon objective criteria with a
view toward maintaining a fair and orderly market and the protection of
investors and the public interest. For example, assume a Significant
Market Event causes 25,000 potentially erroneous transactions and
impacts 51 options classes. Of the 25,000 transactions, 24,000 of them
are concentrated in a single options class. The exchanges may decide
the most appropriate solution because it will provide the most
certainty to participants and allow for the prompt resumption of
regular trading is to bust all trades in the most heavily affected
class between two specific points in time, while the other 1,000 trades
across the other 50 classes are reviewed and adjusted as appropriate. A
similar situation might arise directionally where a Customer submits
both erroneous buy and sell orders and the number of errors that
happened that were erroneously low priced (i.e., erroneous sell orders)
were 50,000 in number but the number of errors that were erroneously
high (i.e., erroneous buy orders) were only 500 in number. The most
effective and efficient approach that provides the most certainty to
the marketplace in a reasonable amount of time while most closely
following the generally prescribed obvious error rules could be to bust
all of the erroneous sell transactions but to adjust the erroneous buy
transactions.
With respect to rulings made pursuant to the proposed Significant
Market Event provision the Exchange believes that the number of
affected transactions is such that immediate finality is necessary to
maintain a fair and orderly market and to protect investors and the
public interest. Accordingly, rulings by the Exchange pursuant to the
Significant Market Event provision would be non-appealable pursuant to
the Proposed Rule.
Additional Provisions
Mutual Agreement
In addition to the objective criteria described above, the Proposed
Rule also proposes to make clear that the determination as to whether a
trade was executed at an erroneous price may be made by mutual
agreement of the affected parties to a particular transaction. The
Proposed Rule would state that a trade may be nullified or adjusted on
the terms that all parties to a particular transaction agree, provided,
however, that such agreement to nullify or adjust must be conveyed to
the Exchange in a manner prescribed by the Exchange prior to 8:30 a.m.
Eastern Time on the first trading day following the execution.
The Exchange also proposes to explicitly state that it is
considered conduct inconsistent with just and equitable principles of
trade for any Participant to use the mutual adjustment process to
circumvent any applicable Exchange rule, the Act or any of the rules
and regulations thereunder. Thus, for instance, a Participant is
precluded from seeking to avoid applicable trade-through rules by
executing a transaction and then adjusting such transaction to a price
at which the Exchange would not have allowed it to execute at the time
of the execution because it traded through the quotation of another
options exchange. The Exchange notes that in connection with its
obligations as a self-regulatory organization, the Exchange's
Regulatory Department reviews adjustments to transactions to detect
potential violations of Exchange rules or the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder.
Trading Halts
Chapter V, Section 3 describes the Exchange's authority to declare
trading halts in one or more options traded on the Exchange. The
Exchange proposes to make clear in the Proposed Rule that it will
nullify any transaction that occurs
[[Page 27742]]
during a trading halt in the affected option on the Exchange pursuant
to Section 6. If any trades occur notwithstanding a trading halt then
the Exchange believes it appropriate to nullify such transactions.
While the Exchange may halt options trading for various reasons, such a
scenario almost certainly is due to extraordinary circumstances and is
potentially the result of market-wide coordination to halt options
trading or trading generally. Accordingly, the Exchange does not
believe it is appropriate to allow trades to stand if such trades
should not have occurred in the first place.
The Exchange proposes to adopt Commentary .03 to Section 6 to state
that the Exchange will nullify any transaction that occurs: (a) During
a trading halt in the affected option on the Exchange; (b) with respect
to equity options (including options overlying ETFs), during a trading
halt on the primary listing market for the underlying security; or (c)
respecting index options, the trade occurred during a trading halt on
the primary market in underlying securities representing more than 10
percent of the current index value for stock index options. Currently,
the Exchange's rules do not directly address nullification during a
trading halt. Accordingly, and for consistency with other exchanges'
rules, the Exchange proposes to adopt this provision.
Erroneous Print and Quotes in Underlying Security
Market participants on the Exchange likely base the pricing of
their orders submitted to the Exchange on the price of the underlying
security for the option. Thus, the Exchange believes it is appropriate
to adopt provisions that allow adjustment or nullification of
transactions based on erroneous prints or erroneous quotes in the
underlying security.
The Exchange proposes to adopt language in the Proposed Rule
stating that a trade resulting from an erroneous print(s) disseminated
by the underlying market that is later nullified by that underlying
market shall be adjusted or busted as set forth in the Obvious Error
provisions of the Proposed Rule, provided a party notifies an Official
in a timely manner, as further described below. The Exchange proposes
to define a trade resulting from an erroneous print(s) as any options
trade executed during a period of time for which one or more executions
in the underlying security are nullified and for one second thereafter.
The Exchange believes that one second is an appropriate amount of time
in which an options trade would be directly based on executions in the
underlying equity security. The Exchange also proposes to require that
if a party believes that it participated in an erroneous transaction
resulting from an erroneous print(s) pursuant to the proposed erroneous
print provision it must notify an Official within the timeframes set
forth in the Obvious Error provision described above. The Exchange has
also proposed to state that the allowed notification timeframe
commences at the time of notification by the underlying market(s) of
nullification of transactions in the underlying security. Further, the
Exchange proposes that if multiple underlying markets nullify trades in
the underlying security, the allowed notification timeframe will
commence at the time of the first market's notification.
As an example of a situation in which a trade results from an
erroneous print disseminated by the underlying market that is later
nullified by the underlying market, assume that a given underlying is
trading in the $49.00-$50.00 price range then has an erroneous print at
$5.00. Given that there is the potential perception that the underlying
has gone through a dramatic price revaluation, numerous options trades
could promptly trigger based off of this new price. However, because
the price that triggered them was not a valid price it would be
appropriate to review said option trades when the underlying print that
triggered them is removed.
The Exchange also proposes to add a provision stating that a trade
resulting from an erroneous quote(s) in the underlying security shall
be adjusted or busted as set forth in the Obvious Error provisions of
the Proposed Rule, provided a party notifies an Official in a timely
manner, as further described below. Pursuant to the Proposed Rule, an
erroneous quote occurs when the underlying security has a width of at
least $1.00 and has a width at least five times greater than the
average quote width for such underlying security during the time period
encompassing two minutes before and after the dissemination of such
quote. For purposes of the Proposed Rule, the average quote width will
be determined by adding the quote widths of sample quotations at
regular 15-second intervals during the four-minute time period
referenced above (excluding the quote(s) in question) and dividing by
the number of quotes during such time period (excluding the quote(s) in
question).\10\ Similar to the proposal with respect to erroneous prints
described above, if a party believes that it participated in an
erroneous transaction resulting from an erroneous quote(s) it must
notify an Official in accordance with the notification provisions of
the Obvious Error provision described above. The Proposed Rule,
therefore, puts the onus on each Participant to notify the Exchange if
such Participant believes that a trade should be reviewed pursuant to
either of the proposed provisions, as the Exchange is not in position
to determine the impact of erroneous prints or quotes on individual
Participants. The Exchange notes that it does not believe that
additional time is necessary with respect to a trade based on an
erroneous quote because a Participant has all information necessary to
detect the error at the time of an option transaction that was
triggered by an erroneous quote, which is in contrast to the proposed
erroneous print provision that includes a dependency on an action by
the market where the underlying security traded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The Exchange has proposed the price and time parameters for
quote width and average quote width used to determine whether an
erroneous quote has occurred based on established rules of options
exchanges that currently apply such parameters. See, e.g., CBOE Rule
6.25(a)(5); NYSE Arca Rule 6.87(a)(5). Based on discussions with
these exchanges, the Exchange believes that the parameters are a
reasonable approach to determine whether an erroneous quote has
occurred for purposes of the proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As an example of a situation in which a trade results from an
erroneous quote in the underlying security, assume again that a given
underlying is quoting and trading in the $49.00-$50.00 price range then
a liquidity gap occurs, with bidders not representing quotes in the
market place and an offer quoted at $5.00. Quoting may quickly return
to normal, again in the $49.00-$50.00 price range, but due to the
potential perception that the underlying has gone through a dramatic
price revaluation, numerous options trades could trigger based off of
this new quoted price in the interim. Because the price that triggered
such trades was not a valid price it would be appropriate to review
said option trades.
Linkage Trades
The Exchange also proposes to adopt language that clearly provides
the Exchange with authority to take necessary actions when another
options exchange nullifies or adjusts a transaction pursuant to its
respective rules and the transaction resulted from an order that has
passed through the Exchange and been routed on to another options
exchange on behalf of the Exchange. Specifically, if the Exchange
routes an order pursuant to the Options Order Protection and Locked/
Crossed
[[Page 27743]]
Market Plan \11\ that results in a transaction on another options
exchange (a ``Linkage Trade'') and such options exchange subsequently
nullifies or adjusts the Linkage Trade pursuant to its rules, the
Exchange will perform all actions necessary to complete the
nullification or adjustment of the Linkage Trade. Although the Exchange
is not utilizing its own authority to nullify or adjust a transaction
related to an action taken on a Linkage Trade by another options
exchange, the Exchange does have to assist in the processing of the
adjustment or nullification of the order, such as notification to the
Participant and The Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC'') of the
adjustment or nullification. Thus, the Exchange believes that the
proposed provision adds additional transparency to the Proposed Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See Chapter XII, Section 1(17).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appeals
The Exchange proposes to maintain its current appeals process in
connection with the Proposed Rule. Specifically, a party to a
transaction affected by a decision made under this section may appeal
that decision to the Exchange Review Council. An appeal must be made in
writing, and must be received by Exchange within thirty (30) minutes
after the person making the appeal is given the notification of the
determination being appealed. The Exchange Review Council may review
any decision appealed, including whether a complaint was timely,
whether an Obvious Error or Catastrophic Error occurred, whether the
correct Theoretical Price was used, and whether an adjustment was made
at the correct price.
In order to maintain a diverse group of participants, the Exchange
Review Council panel will continue be comprised minimally of
representatives of one (1) member engaged in Market Making and two (2)
industry representatives not engaged in Market Making. At no time
should a review panel have more than 50% members engaged in Market
Making. To assure fairness, members of the Exchange Review Council,
like all members of Board Committees, are subject to a conflict of
interest prohibition.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See By-Law Article IV, Section 4.15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
No Adjustments to a Worse Price
Finally, the Exchange proposes to include Commentary .02 to the
Proposed Rule, which would make clear that to the extent the provisions
of the proposed Rule would result in the Exchange applying an
adjustment of an erroneous sell transaction to a price lower than the
execution price or an erroneous buy transaction to a price higher than
the execution price, the Exchange will not adjust or nullify the
transaction, but rather, the execution price will stand.
Limit Up-Limit Down Plan
The Exchange proposes to amend Section 3(d)(iv) to reflect the
numbering and content of the Proposed Rule. It will then continue to
cover how the Exchange will treat Obvious and Catastrophic Errors in
response to the Regulation NMS Plan to Address Extraordinary Market
Volatility Pursuant to Rule 608 of Regulation NMS under the Act (the
``Limit Up-Limit Down Plan'' or the ``Plan),\13\ which is applicable to
all NMS stocks, as defined in Regulation NMS Rule 600(b)(47).\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67091 (May 31, 2012),
77 FR 33498 (June 6, 2012).
\14\ 17 CFR 242.600(b)(47).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Implementation Date
In order to ensure that other options exchanges are able to adopt
rules consistent with this proposal and to coordinate the effectiveness
of such harmonized rules, the Exchange proposes to delay the operative
date of this proposal to May 8, 2015.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder that
are applicable to a national securities exchange, and, in particular,
with the requirements of Section 6(b) of the Act.\15\ Specifically, the
proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the Act \16\ because it
would promote just and equitable principles of trade, remove
impediments to, and perfect the mechanism of, a free and open market
and a national market system, and, in general, protect investors and
the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\16\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described above, the Exchange and other options exchanges are
seeking to adopt harmonized rules related to the adjustment and
nullification of erroneous options transactions. The Exchange believes
that the Proposed Rule will provide greater transparency and clarity
with respect to the adjustment and nullification of erroneous options
transactions. Particularly, the proposed changes seek to achieve
consistent results for participants across U.S. options exchanges while
maintaining a fair and orderly market, protecting investors and
protecting the public interest. Based on the foregoing, the Exchange
believes that the proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act \17\ in that the Proposed Rule will foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in regulating and facilitating
transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the various provisions allowing or dictating
adjustment rather than nullification of a trade are necessary given the
benefits of adjusting a trade price rather than nullifying the trade
completely. Because options trades are used to hedge, or are hedged by,
transactions in other markets, including securities and futures, many
Participants, and their customers, would rather adjust prices of
executions rather than nullify the transactions and, thus, lose a hedge
altogether. As such, the Exchange believes it is in the best interest
of investors to allow for price adjustments as well as nullifications.
The Exchange further discusses specific aspects of the Proposed Rule
below.
The Exchange does not believe that the proposal is unfairly
discriminatory, even though it differentiates in many places between
Customers and non-Customers. The rules of the options exchanges,
including the Exchange's existing Obvious Error provision, often treat
Customers differently, often affording them preferential treatment.
This treatment is appropriate in light of the fact that Customers are
not necessarily immersed in the day-to-day trading of the markets, are
less likely to be watching trading activity in a particular option
throughout the day, and may have limited funds in their trading
accounts. At the same time, the Exchange reiterates that in the U.S.
options markets generally there is significant retail customer
participation that occurs directly on (and only on) options exchanges
such as the Exchange. Accordingly, differentiating among market
participants with respect to the adjustment and nullification of
erroneous options transactions is not unfairly discriminatory because
it is reasonable and fair to provide Customers with additional
protections as compared to non-Customers.
The Exchange believes that its proposal with respect to the
allowance of mutual agreed upon adjustments or nullifications is
appropriate and consistent with the Act, as such proposal removes
impediments to and perfects the mechanism of a free and open market and
a national market system, allowing participants to mutually agree to
correct an erroneous
[[Page 27744]]
transactions without the Exchange mandating the outcome. The Exchange
also believes that its proposal with respect to mutual adjustments is
consistent with the Act because it is designed to prevent fraudulent
and manipulative acts and practices by explicitly stating that it is
considered conduct inconsistent with just and equitable principles of
trade for any Participant to use the mutual adjustment process to
circumvent any applicable Exchange rule, the Act or any of the rules
and regulations thereunder.
The Exchange believes its proposal to provide within the Proposed
Rule definitions of Customer, erroneous sell transaction and erroneous
buy transaction, and Official is consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act because such terms will provide more certainty to market
participants as to the meaning of the Proposed Rule and reduce the
possibility that a party can intentionally submit an order hoping for
the market to move in their favor in reliance on the Rule as a safety
mechanism, thereby promoting just and fair principles of trade.
Similarly, the Exchange believes that proposed Commentary .02 is
consistent with the Act as it would make clear that the Exchange will
not adjust or nullify a transaction, but rather, the execution price
will stand when the applicable adjustment criteria would actually
adjust the price of the transaction to a worse price (i.e., higher for
an erroneous buy or lower for an erroneous sell order).
As set forth below, the Exchange believes it is consistent with
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act for the Exchange to determine Theoretical
Price when the NBBO cannot reasonably be relied upon because the
alternative could result in transactions that cannot be adjusted or
nullified even when they are otherwise clearly at a price that is
significantly away from the appropriate market for the option.
Similarly, reliance on an NBBO that is not reliable could result in
adjustment to prices that are still significantly away from the
appropriate market for the option.
The Exchange believes that its proposal with respect to determining
Theoretical Price is consistent with the Act in that it has retained
the standard of the current rule, which is to rely on the NBBO to
determine Theoretical Price if such NBBO can reasonably be relied upon.
Because, however, there is not always an NBBO that can or should be
used in order to administer the rule, the Exchange has proposed various
provisions that provide the Exchange with the authority to determine a
Theoretical Price. The Exchange believes that the Proposed Rule is
transparent with respect to the circumstances under which the Exchange
will determine Theoretical Price, and has sought to limit such
circumstances as much as possible. The Exchange notes that Exchange
personnel currently are required to determine Theoretical Price in
certain circumstances. While the Exchange continues to pursue
alternative solutions that might further enhance the objectivity and
consistency of determining Theoretical Price, the Exchange believes
that the discretion currently afforded to Officials is appropriate in
the absence of a reliable NBBO that can be used to set the Theoretical
Price.
With respect to the specific proposed provisions for determining
Theoretical Price for transactions that occur as part of the Exchange's
Opening Process and in situations where there is a wide quote, the
Exchange believes both provisions are consistent with the Act because
they provide objective criteria that will determine Theoretical Price
with limited exceptions for situations where the Exchange does not
believe the NBBO is a reasonable benchmark or there is no NBBO. The
Exchange notes in particular with respect to the wide quote provision
that the Proposed Rule will result in the Exchange determining
Theoretical Price less frequently than it would pursuant to wide quote
provisions that have previously been approved. The Exchange believes
that it is appropriate and consistent with the Act to afford
protections to market participants by not relying on the NBBO to
determine Theoretical Price when the quote is extremely wide but had
been, in the prior 10 seconds, at much more reasonable width. The
Exchange also believes it is appropriate and consistent with the Act to
use the NBBO to determine Theoretical Price when the quote has been
wider than the applicable amount for more than 10 seconds, as the
Exchange does not believe it is necessary to apply any other criteria
in such a circumstance. The Exchange believes that market participants
can easily use or adopt safeguards to prevent errors when such market
conditions exist. When entering an order into a market with a
persistently wide quote, the Exchange does not believe that the
entering party should reasonably expect anything other than the quoted
price of an option.
The Exchange believes that its proposal to adopt clear but
disparate standards with respect to the deadline for submitting a
request for review of Customer and non-Customer transactions is
consistent with the Act, particularly in that it creates a greater
level of protection for Customers. As noted above, the Exchange
believes that this is appropriate and not unfairly discriminatory in
light of the fact that Customers are not necessarily immersed in the
day-to-day trading of the markets and are less likely to be watching
trading activity in a particular option throughout the day. Thus,
Participants representing Customer orders reasonably may need
additional time to submit a request for review. The Exchange also
believes that its proposal to provide additional time for submission of
requests for review of linkage trades is reasonable and consistent with
the protection of investors and the public interest due to the time
that it might take an options exchange or third-party routing broker to
file a request for review with the Exchange if the initial notification
of an error is received by the originating options exchange near the
end of such options exchange's filing deadline. Without this additional
time, there could be disparate results based purely on the existence of
intermediaries and an interconnected market structure.
In relation to the aspect of the proposal giving Officials the
ability to review transactions for obvious errors on their own motion,
the Exchange notes that an Official can adjust or nullify a transaction
under the authority granted by this provision only if the transaction
meets the specific and objective criteria for an Obvious Error under
the Proposed Rule. As noted above, this is designed to give an Official
the ability to provide parties relief in those situations where they
have failed to report an apparent error within the established
notification period. However, the Exchange will only grant relief if
the transaction meets the requirements for an Obvious Error as
described in the Proposed Rule.
The Exchange believes that its proposal to adjust non-Customer
transactions and to nullify Customer transactions that qualify as
Obvious Errors is appropriate for reasons consistent with those
described above. In particular, Customers are not necessarily immersed
in the day-to-day trading of the markets, are less likely to be
watching trading activity in a particular option throughout the day,
and may have limited funds in their trading accounts.
The Exchange acknowledges that the proposal contains some
uncertainty regarding whether a trade will be adjusted or nullified,
depending on whether one of the parties is a Customer, because a party
may not know whether the other party to a transaction was a Customer at
the time
[[Page 27745]]
of entering into the transaction. However, the Exchange believes that
the proposal nevertheless promotes just and equitable principles of
trade and protects investors as well as the public interest because it
eliminates the possibility that a Customer's order will be adjusted to
a significantly different price. As noted above, the Exchange believes
it is consistent with the Act to afford Customers greater protections
under the Proposed Rule than are afforded to non-Customers. Thus, the
Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with the Act in that
it protects investors and the public interest by providing additional
protections to those that are less informed and potentially less able
to afford an adjustment of a transaction that was executed in error.
Customers are also less likely to have engaged in significant hedging
or other trading activity based on earlier transactions, and thus, are
less in need of maintaining a position at an adjusted price than non-
Customers.
If any Participant submits requests to the Exchange for review of
transactions pursuant to the Proposed Rule, and in aggregate that
Participant has 200 or more Customer transactions under review
concurrently and the orders resulting in such transactions were
submitted during the course of 2 minutes or less, the Exchange believes
it is appropriate for the Exchange apply the non-Customer adjustment
criteria described above to such transactions. The Exchange believes
that the proposed aggregation is reasonable as it is representative of
an extremely large number of orders submitted to the Exchange over a
relatively short period of time that are, in turn, possibly erroneous
(and within a time frame significantly less than an entire day), and
thus is most likely to occur because of a systems issue experienced by
a Participant representing Customer orders or a systems issue coupled
with the erroneous marking of orders. The Exchange does not believe it
is possible at a level of 200 Customer orders over a 2 minute period
that are under review at one time that multiple, separate Customers
were responsible for the errors in the ordinary course of trading. In
the event of a large-scale issue caused by an Participant that has
submitted orders over a 2 minute period marked as Customer that
resulted in more than 200 transactions under review, the Exchange does
not believe it is appropriate to nullify all such transactions because
of the negative impact that nullification could have on the market
participants on the contra-side of such transactions, who might have
engaged in hedging and trading activity following such transactions. In
order for a participant to have more than 200 transactions under review
concurrently when the orders triggering such transactions were received
in 2 minutes or less, the Exchange believes that a market participant
will have far exceeded the normal behavior of customers deserving
protected status. While the Exchange continues to believe that it is
appropriate to nullify transactions in such a circumstance if both
participants to a transaction are Customers, the Exchange does not
believe it is appropriate to place the overall risk of a significant
number of trade breaks on non-Customers that in the normal course of
business may have engaged in additional hedging activity or trading
activity based on such transactions. Thus, the Exchange believes it is
necessary and appropriate to protect non-Customers in such a
circumstance by applying the non-Customer adjustment criteria, and thus
adjusting transactions as set forth above, in the event a Participant
has more than 200 transactions under review concurrently. In summary,
due to the extreme level at which the proposal is set, the Exchange
believes that the proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act in that it promotes just and equitable principles of trade by
encouraging market participants to retain appropriate controls over
their systems to avoid submitting a large number of erroneous orders in
a short period of time.
Similarly, the Exchange believes that the proposed Size Adjustment
Modifier, which would increase the adjustment amount for non-Customer
transactions, is appropriate because it attempts to account for the
additional risk that the parties to the trade undertake for
transactions that are larger in scope. The Exchange believes that the
Size Adjustment Modifier creates additional incentives to prevent more
impactful Obvious Errors and it lessens the impact on the contra-party
to an adjusted trade. The Exchange notes that these contra-parties may
have preferred to only trade the size involved in the transaction at
the price at which such trade occurred, and in trading larger size has
committed a greater level of capital and bears a larger hedge risk.
The Exchange similarly believes that its Proposed Rule with respect
to Catastrophic Errors is consistent with the Act as it affords
additional time for market participants to file for review of erroneous
transactions that were further away from the Theoretical Price. At the
same time, the Exchange believes that the Proposed Rule is consistent
with the Act in that it generally would adjust transactions, including
Customer transactions, because this will protect against hedge risk,
particularly for transactions that may have occurred several hours
earlier and thus, which all parties to the transaction might presume
are protected from further modification. Similarly, by providing larger
adjustment amounts away from Theoretical Price than are set forth under
the Obvious Error provision, the Catastrophic Error provision also
takes into account the possibility that the party that was advantaged
by the erroneous transaction has already taken actions based on the
assumption that the transaction would stand. The Exchange believes it
is reasonable to specifically protect Customers from adjustments
through their limit prices for the reasons stated above, including that
Customers are less likely to be watching trading throughout the day and
that they may have less capital to afford an adjustment price. The
Exchange believes that the proposal provides a fair process that will
ensure that Customers are not forced to accept a trade that was
executed in violation of their limit order price. In contrast, market
professionals are more likely to have engaged in hedging or other
trading activity based on earlier trading activity, and thus, are more
likely to be willing to accept an adjustment rather than a
nullification to preserve their positions even if such adjustment is to
a price through their limit price.
The Exchange believes that proposed rule change to adopt the
Significant Market Event provision is consistent with Section 6(b)(5)
of the Act in that it will foster cooperation and coordination with
persons engaged in regulating the options markets. In particular, the
Exchange believes it is important for options exchanges to coordinate
when there is a widespread and significant event, as commonly, multiple
options exchanges are impacted in such an event. Further, while the
Exchange recognizes that the Proposed Rule will not guarantee a
consistent result for all market participants on every market, the
Exchange does believe that it will assist in that outcome. For
instance, if options exchanges are able to agree as to the time from
which Theoretical Price should be determined and the period of time
that should be reviewed, the likely disparity between the Theoretical
Prices used by such exchanges should be very slight and, in turn, with
otherwise consistent rules, the results should be similar. The Exchange
also believes that the Proposed Rule is consistent with the Act in that
it generally would adjust
[[Page 27746]]
transactions, including Customer transactions, because this will
protect against hedge risk, particularly for liquidity providers that
might have been quoting in thousands or tens of thousands of different
series and might have affected executions throughout such quoted
series. The Exchange believes that when weighing the competing
interests between preferring a nullification for a Customer transaction
and an adjustment for a transaction of a market professional, while
nullification is appropriate in a typical one-off situation that it is
necessary to protect liquidity providers in a widespread market event
because, presumably, they will be the most affected by such an event
(in contrast to a Customer who, by virtue of their status as such,
likely would not have more than a small number of affected
transactions). The Exchange believes that the protection of liquidity
providers by favoring adjustments in the context of Significant Market
Events can also benefit Customers indirectly by better enabling
liquidity providers, which provides a cumulative benefit to the market.
Also, as stated above with respect to Catastrophic Errors, the Exchange
believes it is reasonable to specifically protect Customers from
adjustments through their limit prices for the reasons stated above,
including that Customers are less likely to be watching trading
throughout the day and that they may have less capital to afford an
adjustment price. The Exchange believes that the proposal provides a
fair process that will ensure that Customers are not forced to accept a
trade that was executed in violation of their limit order price. In
contrast, market professionals are more likely to have engaged in
hedging or other trading activity based on earlier trading activity,
and thus, are more likely to be willing to accept an adjustment rather
than a nullification to preserve their positions even if such
adjustment is to a price through their limit price. In addition, the
Exchange believes it is important to have the ability to nullify some
or all transactions arising out of a Significant Market Event in the
event timely adjustment is not feasible due to the extraordinary nature
of the situation. In particular, although the Exchange has worked to
limit the circumstances in which it has to determine Theoretical Price,
in a widespread event it is possible that hundreds if not thousands of
series would require an Exchange determination of Theoretical Price. In
turn, if there are hundreds or thousands of trades in such series, it
may not be practicable for the Exchange to determine the adjustment
levels for all non-Customer transactions in a timely fashion, and in
turn, it would be in the public interest to instead more promptly
deliver a simple, consistent result of nullification.
The Exchange believes that proposed rule change related to an
erroneous print in the underlying security or an erroneous quote in the
underlying security is likewise consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act because the proposal provides for the adjustment or nullification
of trades executed at erroneous prices through no fault on the part of
the trading participants. Allowing for Exchange review in such
situations will promote just and fair principles of trade by protecting
investors from harm that is not of their own making. Specifically with
respect to the proposed provisions governing erroneous prints and
quotes in the underlying security, the Exchange notes that market
participants on the Exchange base the value of their quotes and orders
on the price of the underlying security. The provisions regarding
errors in prints and quotes in the underlying security cover instances
where the information market participants use to price options is
erroneous through no fault of their own. In these instances, market
participants have little, if any, chance of pricing options accurately.
Thus, these provisions are designed to provide relief to market
participants harmed by such errors in the prints or quotes of the
underlying security.
The Exchange believes that the proposed provision related to
Linkage Trades is consistent with the Act because it adds additional
transparency to the Proposed Rule and makes clear that when a Linkage
Trade is adjusted or nullified by another options exchange, the
Exchange will take necessary actions to complete the nullification or
adjustment of the Linkage Trade.
The Exchange believes that retaining the same appeals process as
the Exchange maintains under the Current Rule is consistent with the
Act because such process provides Participants with due process in
connection with decisions made by Officials under the Proposed Rule.
The Exchange believes that this process provides fair representation of
members by ensuring diversity amongst the members of any Obvious Error
Review Panel, which is consistent with Sections 6(b)(3) and 6(b)(7) of
the Act.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
BX believes the entire proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)(8)
of the Act \18\ in that it does not impose any burden on competition
that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of
the Act as explained below.
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\18\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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Importantly, the Exchange believes the proposal will not impose a
burden on intermarket competition but will rather alleviate any burden
on competition because it is the result of a collaborative effort by
all options exchanges to harmonize and improve the process related to
the adjustment and nullification of erroneous options transactions. The
Exchange does not believe that the rules applicable to such process is
an area where options exchanges should compete, but rather, that all
options exchanges should have consistent rules to the extent possible.
Particularly where a market participant trades on several different
exchanges and an erroneous trade may occur on multiple markets nearly
simultaneously, the Exchange believes that a participant should have a
consistent experience with respect to the nullification or adjustment
of transactions. The Exchange understands that all other options
exchanges intend to file proposals that are substantially similar to
this proposal.
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change imposes
a burden on intramarket competition because the provisions apply to all
market participants equally within each participant category (i.e.,
Customers and non-Customers). With respect to competition between
Customer and non-Customer market participants, the Exchange believes
that the Proposed Rule acknowledges competing concerns and tries to
strike the appropriate balance between such concerns. For instance, as
noted above, the Exchange believes that protection of Customers is
important due to their direct participation in the options markets as
well as the fact that they are not, by definition, market
professionals. At the same time, the Exchange believes due to the
quote-driven nature of the options markets, the importance of liquidity
provision in such markets and the risk that liquidity providers bear
when quoting a large breadth of products that are derivative of
underlying securities, that the protection of liquidity providers and
the practice of adjusting transactions rather than nullifying them is
of critical importance. As described
[[Page 27747]]
above, the Exchange will apply specific and objective criteria to
determine whether an erroneous transaction has occurred and, if so, how
to adjust or nullify a transaction.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
Not applicable.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
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 for 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, the proposed rule change has become effective
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act \19\ and Rule 19b-4(f)(6)
thereunder.\20\
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\19\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\20\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(6). As required under Rule 19b-
4(f)(6)(iii), the Exchange provided the Commission with written
notice of its intent to file the proposed rule change, along with a
brief description and the 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.
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The Exchange has asked the Commission to waive the 30-day operative
delay so that the proposal may become operative immediately upon
filing. The Commission believes that waiving the 30-day operative delay
is consistent with the protection of investors and the public interest,
as it will enable the Exchange to meet its proposed implementation date
of May 8, 2015, which will help facilitate the implementation of
harmonized rules related to the adjustment and nullification of
erroneous options transactions across the options exchanges. For this
reason, the Commission designates the proposed rule change to be
operative upon filing.\21\
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\21\ For purposes only of waiving the 30-day operative delay,
the Commission has also considered the proposed rule's impact on
efficiency, competition, and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C.
78c(f).
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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 to
determine whether the proposed rule 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. 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-BX-2015-028 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-BX-2015-028. 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 such 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-BX-2015-028, and should be
submitted on or before June 4, 2015.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\22\
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\22\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-11594 Filed 5-13-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P