Options Price Reporting Authority; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Amendment to the Plan for Reporting of Consolidated Options Last Sale Reports and Quotation Information To Amend Certain Provisions of the OPRA's Fee Schedule, 22670-22673 [2016-08815]
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22670
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 74 / Monday, April 18, 2016 / Notices
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–77584; File No. SR–OPRA–
2015–01]
Options Price Reporting Authority;
Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of Proposed Amendment
to the Plan for Reporting of
Consolidated Options Last Sale
Reports and Quotation Information To
Amend Certain Provisions of the
OPRA’s Fee Schedule
April 12, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 11A of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’ 1 and Rule 608 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on
September 22, 2015, the Options Price
Reporting Authority (‘‘OPRA’’)
submitted to the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
an amendment to the Plan for Reporting
of Consolidated Options Last Sale
Reports and Quotation Information
(‘‘OPRA Plan’’).3 Effective January 1,
2016, the amendment revised the
structure and the amount of OPRA’s fees
for ‘‘Non-Display’’ use of OPRA data.
The Commission is publishing this
notice to provide interested persons an
opportunity to submit written
comments on the OPRA Plan
amendment.
I. Description and Purpose of the Plan
Amendment
The purpose of the amendment is to
amend the OPRA Fee Schedule to revise
the structure and the amounts of OPRA
fees for ‘‘Non-Display’’ use of OPRA
Data. ‘‘Non-Display’’ use of OPRA data
is use of the OPRA data for a purpose
other than the display of the data to
natural persons or in support of the
display of the data or the internal or
external redistribution of the data.
1 15
U.S.C. 78k–1.
CFR 242.608.
3 The OPRA Plan is a national market system plan
approved by the Commission pursuant to Section
11A of the Act and Rule 608 thereunder (Formerly
Rule 11Aa3–2). See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 17638 (March 18, 1981), 22 S.E.C.
Docket 484 (March 31, 1981). The full text of the
OPRA Plain is available at https://
www.opradata.com. The OPRA Plan provides for
the collection and dissemination of last sale and
quotation information on options that are traded on
the participant exchanges. The fourteen participants
to the OPRA Plan are BATS Exchange, Inc., BOX
Options Exchange, LLC, Chicago Board Options
Exchange, Incorporated, C2 Options Exchange,
Incorporated, EDGX Exchange, Inc., International
Securities Exchange, LLC, ISE Gemini, LLC, ISE
Mercury, LLC, Miami International Securities
Exchange, LLC, NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc., NASDAQ
OMX PHLX LLC, The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC,
NYSE MKT LLC, and NYSE Arca, Inc.
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OPRA first implemented ‘‘NonDisplay Application Fees’’ in 2012.4 At
that time, OPRA defined the term ‘‘NonDisplay Application’’ essentially as an
application used for purposes of
generating orders and/or quotations on
an automated basis including any
application that is used for ‘‘black box’’
trading, automated trading, algorithmic
trading and/or program trading.’’ 5
OPRA adopted those fees in response to
two long-term trends in the use of OPRA
market data. The first trend was the
increasingly common use of OPRA
market data for use in ‘‘Non-Display
Applications.’’ The second trend was
the decline, which has persisted over
many years, in the number of devices
and User IDs 6 displaying OPRA data
and subject to OPRA’s Professional
Subscriber Device-Based Fees. OPRA
noted in its 2012 filing that, in 2004, an
average of 223,000 devices and User IDs
were reported to OPRA in each month
of the year, and that, in 2011, an average
of 164,000 devices and User IDs were
reported to OPRA in each month of the
year.7
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67648
(August 14, 2012), 77 FR 49837 (August 17, 2012)
(SR–OPRA–2012–04).
5 The complete definition of the term ‘‘NonDisplay Application’’ in File No. SR–OPRA–2012–
04 is as follows: ‘‘A ‘Non-Display Application’ is an
application used by a Professional Subscriber that:
(i) Is capable of accessing OPRA market data, (ii)
does not display the data in a form for direct use
by a human being and (iii) is used for purposes of
generating orders and/or quotations on an
automated basis for purposes other than complying
with the Rules of one or more of the OPRA
Participant Exchanges. The term includes any
application that is used for ‘‘black box’’ trading,
automated trading, algorithmic trading and/or
program trading. The term does not include any
application that is used only to generate two-sided
continuous quotations, in fulfillment of the
obligation to act in a market-making capacity
pursuant to the Rules of one or more of the OPRA
Participant Exchanges, of a Professional Subscriber
that has been designated by such Exchange or
Exchanges to act as a dealer/specialist for all
purposes under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
and the Rules and Regulations thereunder. The term
also does not include an application that is used
solely to perform surveillance, risk management or
portfolio management functions in support of a
firm’s trading operations.’’
6 OPRA permits Professional Subscribers to count
‘‘User IDs’’ that are capable of receiving OPRA
information as a surrogate for counting devices, and
to pay fees based on the number of User IDs using
the ‘‘Professional Subscriber Device-Based Fees’’ in
OPRA’s Fee Schedule. See OPRA’s ‘‘Policies with
respect to Device-Based Fees,’’ available on the
OPRA Web site, www.opradata.com.
7 See supra note 4, at n.9. The decline in the
number of devices and User IDs displaying OPRA
data and subject to OPRA’s Professional Subscriber
Device-Based Fees has continued: In 2014 an
average of 148,400 devices and User IDs were
reported to OPRA as receiving OPRA data in each
month of the year, and OPRA projects that in 2015
an average of 136,600 devices and User IDs will be
reported to OPRA as receiving OPRA data in each
month of the year.
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In 2014, the Consolidated Tape
Association (‘‘CTA’’) Plan and
Consolidated Quotation (‘‘CQ’’) Plan
participants (collectively, the ‘‘CTA/CQ
Plan Participants’’) proposed to amend
the CTA Plan and the CQ Plan
(collectively the ‘‘CTA/CQ Plans’’) to
implement fees for Non-Display use of
the market data disseminated pursuant
to the CTA/CQ Plans.8 At the same time,
the operating committee (the ‘‘Nasdaq/
UTP Plan Operating Committee’’) of the
Joint Self-Regulatory Organization Plan
Governing the Collection,
Consolidation, and Dissemination of
Quotation and Transaction Information
for Nasdaq-Listed Securities Traded on
Exchanges on an Unlisted Trading
Privilege Basis (the ‘‘Nasdaq/UTP Plan’’)
proposed to amend the Nasdaq/UTP
Plan to implement fees for Non-Display
use of the market data disseminated
pursuant to the Nasdaq/UTP Plan.9
The OPRA Plan amendment
comprehensively revised the structure
of OPRA’s Non-Display fees so that
OPRA’s fee structure parallels the NonDisplay fee structures implemented by
the CTA/CQ Plan Participants and the
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee.
In addition, the OPRA Plan amendment
revised the amounts of OPRA’s NonDisplay fees.
A. Description of the Concepts
Underlying the CTA/CQ Plan and
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Non-Display Fees;
Comparison to the Current OPRA
Structure; Revised OPRA Structure
1. Definition of ‘‘Non-Display Use’’
The CTA/CQ Plan Participants have
defined the term ‘‘Non-Display Use,’’
with respect to the market data
disseminated pursuant to the CTA/CQ
Plans as referring to ‘‘accessing,
processing or consuming real-time
Network A or Network B quotation
information or last sale price
information, whether delivered via
direct and/or redistributor data feeds,
for a purpose other than in support of
a data recipient’s display or further
internal or external redistribution.’’ 10
The Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating
Committee has implemented a parallel
definition of the term: ‘‘Non-Display use
refers to accessing, processing or
consuming data, whether received via
direct and/or redistributor Data Feeds,
for a purpose other than solely
facilitating the delivery of the data to
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73278
(October 1, 2014), 79 FR 60536 (October 7, 2014)
(SR–CTA/CQ–2014–03).
9 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73279
(October 1, 2014), 79 FR 60522 (October 7, 2014)
(File No. S7–24–89).
10 See supra note 8, at 60538.
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the Data Feed Recipient’s display or for
the purpose of further internally or
externally redistributing the data.’’ 11
These definitions are broader than
OPRA’s prior definition of the term
‘‘Non-Display Application’’ which, as
noted above, encompassed only
‘‘applications . . . used for purposes of
generating orders and/or quotations on
an automated basis. . . .’’ For example,
the CTA/CQ Plan and Nasdaq/UTP
definitions specifically include within
their definitions of the term ‘‘NonDisplay Use’’ use of their respective
datasets for price referencing for smart
order routing, operations control
programs, investment analysis, order
verification, surveillance programs, risk
management, compliance and portfolio
valuation purposes.12
The OPRA Plan amendment replaced
the definition of ‘‘Non-Display
Application’’ with a definition of the
term ‘‘Non-Display Use’’ that parallels
the definitions implemented by the
CTA/CQ Plan Participants and the
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee.
Specifically, the OPRA Plan amendment
defined the term ‘‘Non-Display Use’’ as
follows:
Non-Display Use refers to the accessing,
processing or consuming by an OPRA data
feed recipient (either an OPRA vendor or an
OPRA professional subscriber) of OPRA
market data received on a current basis,
whether delivered via data feed directly from
OPRA’s processor and/or indirect data feed
from an OPRA vendor, for a purpose other
than in support of the data feed recipient’s
display or further internal or external
redistribution. Non-Display Use includes,
without limitation, trading (such as in a
‘‘black box’’ or a trading engine that performs
automated trading, algorithmic trading or
program trading, or generates arbitrage or
program trading orders); automated order or
quote generation and/or order pegging; price
referencing for algorithmic trading;
operations control programs; investment
analysis; order verification; surveillance
programs; risk management; compliance; and
portfolio valuation.
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2. Three Categories of Non-Display Use
and Fee Basis for Non-Display Use in
Each Category
The CTA/CQ Plan Participants and
the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating
Committee have each established three
‘‘categories’’ of Non-Display Use. Using
the nomenclature established by the
CTA/CQ Plan Participants, the three
categories are as follows:
Category 1 applies when a data recipient
makes non-display uses of real time market
data on its own behalf.
11 See
supra note 9, at 60525.
12 See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plan); and
see supra note 9, at 60526 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
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Category 2 applies when a data recipient
makes non-display uses of real time market
data on behalf of its clients.
Category 3 applies when a data recipient
makes non-display uses of real time market
data for the purpose of internally matching
buy and sell orders within the data feed
recipient. Category 3 includes matching buy
and sell orders on a data recipient’s own
behalf and/or on behalf of its clients.
Category 3 includes, but is not restricted to,
use in trading platform(s), such as exchanges,
alternative trading systems (‘‘ATSs’’), broker
crossing networks, broker crossing systems
not filed as ATSs, dark pools, multilateral
trading facilities, and systematic
internalization systems.13
The OPRA Plan amendment adopted
the three categories of Non-Display Use
that have been implemented by the
CTA/CQ Plans and the Nasdaq/UTP
Plan.
For the first two of these categories of
Non-Display Use (‘‘Category 1’’ and
‘‘Category 2’’ in the CTA/CQ
nomenclature), the CTA/CQ Plan
Participants and the Nasdaq/UTP Plan
Operating Committee have established
fees on an ‘‘Enterprise’’ basis, so that a
recipient of the market data pays only
one ‘‘Category 1’’ fee if it makes any
Non-Display Use of the market data in
Category 1, and only one ‘‘Category 2’’
fee if it makes any Non-Display Use of
the market data in Category 2.14 The
OPRA Plan amendment adopted fees for
Category 1 Non-Display Use and
Category 2 Non-Display Use that are
also on an ‘‘Enterprise’’ basis.15
For the third of these categories of
Non-Display Use (‘‘Category 3’’ in the
CTA/CQ nomenclature), the CTA/CQ
Plan Participants and the Nasdaq/UTP
Plan Operating Committee have
established fees on a ‘‘per platform’’
13 See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plan). The
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee has
established the same three categories, identical in
substance, but using a somewhat different
vocabulary: the Nasdaq/UTP Plan refers to its fee
for its counterpart to CTA/CQ Category 1 as the
‘‘Non-Display fee for Internal Use’’; for its
counterpart to CTA/CQ Category 2 as the ‘‘NonDisplay Fee for External Use’’; and for its
counterpart to CTA/CQ Category 3 as the ‘‘NonDisplay Fee for Electronic Trading Systems.’’ See
supra note 9, at 60525. To the extent that the
nomenclatures used by the CTA/CQ Plan
Participants and the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating
Committee are different, OPRA’s amendment tracks
the CTA/CQ nomenclature.
14 See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plans); see
supra note 9, at 60525–26 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
15 OPRA included a footnote in its revised Fee
Schedule to state that the wholly-owned
subsidiaries of a data feed recipient are within the
definition of the term ‘‘Enterprise’’ as applied to the
data feed recipient. This is consistent with the way
in which OPRA addresses questions relating to
affiliate relationships generally, as is stated in
Section 1 (‘‘Contracting on behalf of Affiliates’’) of
OPRA’s ‘‘Policies with respect to Device-Based
Fees’’, available on OPRA’s Web site,
www.opradata.com.
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22671
basis. That is, a recipient of the market
data is required to pay a fee for Category
3 Non-Display Use on each ‘‘platform’’
that is used for internally matching buy
and sell orders.16 The OPRA Plan
amendment adopted fees for Category 3
Non-Display Use that are also on a ‘‘per
platform’’ basis. Tracking the CTA/CQ
Plan and Nasdaq/UTP Plan definitions,
the OPRA Plan amendment defined the
term ‘‘Platform’’ as follows: ‘‘A
‘‘Platform’’ is a platform for internally
matching buy and sell orders. Matching
buy and sell orders includes matching
customer orders on a data recipient’s
own behalf and/or on behalf of its
clients. The term ‘Platform’ includes,
but is not restricted to, exchanges,
alternative trading systems (ATSs),
broker crossing networks, broker
crossing systems not filed as ATSs, dark
pools, multilateral trading facilities, and
systematic internalization systems.’’
As is the case with respect to the
CTA/CQ Non-Display Use fees and the
Nasdaq/UTP Non-Display Use fees, an
OPRA data recipient may use OPRA
data for one, two or all three categories
and therefore be subject to non-display
fees for one, two or all three categories.
For example, if a broker-dealer uses
OPRA data to run compliance programs
for the firm (Category 1), to conduct
investment analysis on behalf of its
customers (Category 2), and to operate
an ATS that matches buy and sell orders
(Category 3), then the firm would be
required to pay OPRA non-display use
fees in respect of all three categories.
B. Non-Display Use Reporting
Requirements
In order to minimize the
administrative burden associated with
their Non-Display Use fees, the CTA/CQ
Plan Participants and the Nasdaq/UTP
Plan Operating Committee do not
impose monthly reporting requirements
in respect of their Non-Display Use fees,
and instead require each recipient of a
real-time data feed to make an initial
declaration with respect to its NonDisplay Use of their respective datasets,
a declaration with respect to any
changes in its Non-Display Use of their
respective datasets, and an annual
declaration of its non-display use.17
OPRA included a note in its Fee
Schedule to state that it will require
reporting on the same basis. OPRA will
audit data feed recipients’ Non-Display
Use of market data in accordance with
the terms of its applicable agreements
and ordinary auditing practices, and
16 See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plans); see
supra note 9, at 60525 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
17 See supra note 8, at 60539 (CTA/CQ Plans); see
supra note 9, at 60526 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
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will charge Non-Display Use fees in
instances in which it determines that
Non-Display Use has not been
accurately declared.
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C. Fees for Non-Display Use
The OPRA Plan amendment adopted
fees for Non-Display Use as follows: A
monthly fee of $2,000/Enterprise for
Category 1 Non-Display Use; a monthly
fee of $2,000/Enterprise for Category 2
Non-Display Use; and a monthly fee of
$2,000/Platform for Category 3 NonDisplay Use.
By way of comparison: The CTA/CQ
Plan Participants have established
separate monthly Non-Display Fees for
Network A of $2,000 for last sale prices
plus $2,000 for quotation information in
each of the three categories of use, and
Non-Display Fees for Network B of
$1,000 for last sale prices plus $1,000
for quotation information in each of the
three categories of use; 18 and the
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee
has established a monthly fee for the
data disseminated pursuant to the
Nasdaq/UTP Plan of $3,500 for each of
the three categories of use.19
Prior to the OPRA Plan amendment,
59 OPRA data feed recipients were
paying OPRA’s ‘‘Non-Display
Application Fee,’’ which, as described
above, was applicable only to any
‘‘application used for purposes of
generating orders and/or quotations on
an automated basis.’’ 20 Because the
definition of ‘‘Non-Display Use’’ is
broader than OPRA’s prior definition of
the term ‘‘Non-Display Application,’’
OPRA expects the number of data feed
recipients that will be subject to
Category 1 Non-Display fees to be
greater than the number of data feed
recipients paying the prior Non-Display
Application Fee; OPRA’s best estimate
is that approximately double the
number of data feed recipients currently
paying OPRA’s Non-Display
Application Fee—approximately 120
data feed recipients—will be subject to
Category 1 Non-Display fees. Further,
OPRA’s best estimate is that
approximately half of those data feed
recipients—approximately 60 data feed
recipients—will also be subject to
‘‘Category 2’’ Non-Display fees. If these
estimates are accurate, then the new fee
structure would generate approximately
$4,300,000 in annualized revenue to
18 See
supra note 8, at 60538.
supra note 9, at 60526.
20 Of the 59 OPRA data feed recipients, seven
were paying the $7500/month ‘‘Enterprise’’ rate.
The new fees represent a fee reduction for these
data feed recipients, and for a few OPRA data feed
recipients that are reporting five or more NonDisplay Applications. For the remaining data feed
recipients, the new fees represent a fee increase.
19 See
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OPRA, representing an increase of
approximately $3,200,000 over the
annualized revenues that OPRA
previously received from the NonDisplay Application Fee.21
If OPRA’s estimate of its annualized
revenue from its revised Non-Display
fees is accurate, the additional
annualized revenue will represent
approximately a 4.7% increase in
OPRA’s total revenues for the year 2014.
In terms of a perspective over a longer
term, the additional annualized revenue
will also represent approximately a
4.7% increase in OPRA’s total revenues
for the year 2008, approximately a 0.6%
increase per year for each year since
2008.
Looking at the additional annualized
revenue in another way, the estimated
increase in revenue will represent less
than two years of revenue lost by OPRA
due to decreases in the number of
Devices/User IDs that are subject to
OPRA’s Professional Subscriber DeviceBased Fees.22 When OPRA
implemented its ‘‘Non-Display
Application’’ fee in 2012, it stated that
it believed that the use of Non-Display
Applications by active trading firms was
resulting, and would continue to result,
in a significant reduction in the number
of devices and user IDs that are reported
to it,23 and OPRA anticipated that the
Non-Display Application fees would
substantially offset the reduction in
revenue from Professional Subscriber
Device-Based Fees. OPRA believes that
it has indeed been the case that NonDisplay Use of OPRA data by active
trading firms is a major reason for the
reductions in the number of devices and
user IDs that are reported to OPRA, and
OPRA anticipates that the trend of
reductions in the number of Devices/
UserIDs will continue as it has for the
past eight years. It has not been the case
21 OPRA is not estimating any ‘‘net’’ revenue
derived from ‘‘Category 3’’ Non-Display Fees (for
non-display use in connection with providing a
two-sided trading platform). The OPRA Participant
Exchanges are subject to Category 3 Non-Display
Fees, but this revenue does not represent net
revenue available to OPRA and its Participant
Exchanges for collecting, consolidating, processing
and disseminating OPRA data. Other than the
OPRA Participant Exchanges, OPRA is aware of
only one other two-sided trading platform that may
be subject to ‘‘Category 3’’ fees. That platform
would generate $24,000 in annualized Category 3
Non-Display Fees, a number that does not
meaningfully change OPRA’s estimates of total
revenue and increased revenue resulting from the
proposed Non-Display fee structure.
22 The average number of Devices/User IDs in
2013 was 151,400. As noted above (see footnote 7),
OPRA projects an average of 136,600 devices/User
IDs in 2015, representing a decrease of 14,800
Devices/User IDs and a decrease in OPRA’s 2015
revenues (at a monthly rate of $28.50 per device/
User ID) of approximately $5,000,000.
23 See supra note 8, at 60538.
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that the Non-Display Application fees
have substantially offset the reduction
in revenue resulting from the continuing
reductions in the number of devices and
user IDs that are reported to OPRA.
OPRA anticipates that the ‘‘Non-Display
Use’’ fees will offset future decreases in
its revenues from Professional
Subscriber Device-Based Fees to a
greater extent than have OPRA’s NonDisplay Application fees.
The text of the amendment to the
OPRA Plan is available at OPRA, the
Commission’s Public Reference Room,
on OPRA’s Web site at https://
opradata.com, and on the Commission’s
Web site at www.sec.gov.
II. Implementation of the OPRA Plan
Amendment
Pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Rule
608 of Regulation NMS under the Act,
OPRA designated this amendment as
establishing or changing fees or other
charges collected on behalf of all of the
OPRA participants in connection with
access to or use of OPRA facilities.
OPRA put the revised Non-Display
Application Fees into effect as of
January 1, 2016.
III. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the OPRA Plan
amendment is consistent with the Act.24
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 rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
No. SR–OPRA–2015–01 on the subject
line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
24 Pursuant to Rule 608(b)(3)(iii) of Regulation
NMS, the Commission may summarily abrogate an
immediately effective NMS Plan amendment within
sixty days of its filing and require refiling and
approval of the amendment if it appears to the
Commission that such action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection
of investors, or the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets, to remove impediments to, and perfect the
mechanisms of, a national market system, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. See 17 CFR
242.608(b)(3)(iii). The abrogation period for the
OPRA Plan amendment has expired. Interested
persons may nevertheless submit written comments
on the OPRA Plan amendment.
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All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–OPRA–2015–01. 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 OPRA Plan
amendment that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the OPRA
Plan amendment 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 OPRA. 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–OPRA–
2015–01 and should be submitted on or
before May 9, 2016.
(the ‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘ISE’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(the ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change, as described in Items I, II, and
III 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.
By the Commission.
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–08815 Filed 4–15–16; 8:45 am]
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
1. Purpose
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–77593; File No. SR–ISE–
2016–09]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
International Securities Exchange,
LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of Proposed Rule
Change To Amend the Schedule of
Fees
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
April 12, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’ or ‘‘Exchange Act’’),1 and Rule
19b–4 thereunder, 2 notice is hereby
given that on April 1, 2016, the
International Securities Exchange, LLC
1 15
2 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:54 Apr 15, 2016
Jkt 238001
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
ISE proposes to amend the Schedule
of Fees as described in more detail
below. The text of the proposed rule
change is available on the Exchange’s
Internet Web site at https://www.ise.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
self-regulatory organization has
prepared summaries, set forth in
Sections A, B and C below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
The purpose of this proposed rule
change is to amend the Schedule of Fees
to modify the Regular Order Fee for
Responses to Crossing Orders in Select 3
and Non-Select Symbols and Fee for
Non-Select Symbols.
The Exchange proposes the following
two fee changes. First, the Exchange
proposes to change the Fee for
Responses to Crossing Orders in Select
and Non-Select Symbols for all
members from $0.47 per contract to
$0.50 per contract. Next, the Exchange
proposes to change the Fees in NonSelect Symbols charged to Non-ISE
Market Maker (‘‘FarMM’’),4 Firm
3 ‘‘Select Symbols’’ are options overlying all
symbols listed on the ISE that are in the Penny Pilot
Program.
4 A Non-ISE Mercury Market Maker, or Far Away
Market Maker (‘‘FARMM’’), is a market maker as
defined in Section 3(a)(38) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (‘‘Exchange
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
22673
Proprietary 5/Broker-Dealer,6 and
Professional Customer 7 from $0.50 per
contract to $0.72 per contract.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the provisions of Section 6 of the Act,8
in general, and Section 6(b)(4) of the
Act,9 in particular, in that it is designed
to provide for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees, and other charges
among its members and other persons
using its facilities.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed fee increases are reasonable
and equitable as the proposed fees are
set at levels that the Exchange believes
will continue to be attractive to market
participants that trade on ISE. Moreover,
the proposed fees are competitive with
fees charged by other options exchanges
and remain attractive to members for
this reason. For example, ISE’s proposed
Fee for Responses to Crossing Orders in
Select Symbols is the same as ISE
Mercury’s Fee for Responses to Crossing
Orders (excluding Market Makers) in
Penny Symbols.10 Further, ISE’s
proposed Fee for Responses to Crossing
Orders in Non-Select Symbols is less
than ISE Mercury’s Fee for Responses to
Crossing Orders (excluding Market
Makers) in Non-Penny Symbols.11
Additionally, the Regular Order NonSelect Symbol Fee of $0.72 is less than
the Electronic, Non-Penny Classes fee of
$0.75 charged by the Chicago Board
Options Exchange.12
The Exchange also notes that the
proposed Fees for Responses to Crossing
Orders are not unfairly discriminatory
because they apply equally to all
members. Additionally, the Exchange
further notes that for the Non-Select
Symbol Fee, Priority Customers will
continue to be charged no fee, while
other market participants will continue
to pay a fee. The Exchange does not
believe that this is unfairly
discriminatory as a Priority Customer is
by definition not a broker or dealer in
Act’’), registered in the same options class on
another options exchange.
5 A Firm Proprietary order is an order submitted
by a member for its own proprietary account.
6 A Broker-Dealer order is an order submitted by
a member for a non-member broker-dealer account.
7 A Professional Customer is a person who is not
a broker/dealer and is not a Priority Customer.
8 15 U.S.C. 78f.
9 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
10 See ISE Mercury Fee Schedule, Regular Order
Fees and Rebates, Table 2 at https://www.ise.com/
assets/mercury/documents/OptionsExchange/legal/
fee/Mercury_Fee_Schedule.pdf.
11 Id.
12 See CBOE Fee Schedule, Equity Options Rate
Table, Transaction Fee Per Contract at https://www.
cboe.com/publish/feeschedule/CBOEFee
Schedule.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\18APN1.SGM
18APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 74 (Monday, April 18, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 22670-22673]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-08815]
[[Page 22670]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-77584; File No. SR-OPRA-2015-01]
Options Price Reporting Authority; Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of Proposed Amendment to the Plan for Reporting of
Consolidated Options Last Sale Reports and Quotation Information To
Amend Certain Provisions of the OPRA's Fee Schedule
April 12, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 11A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'' \1\ and Rule 608 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that on
September 22, 2015, the Options Price Reporting Authority (``OPRA'')
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') an
amendment to the Plan for Reporting of Consolidated Options Last Sale
Reports and Quotation Information (``OPRA Plan'').\3\ Effective January
1, 2016, the amendment revised the structure and the amount of OPRA's
fees for ``Non-Display'' use of OPRA data. The Commission is publishing
this notice to provide interested persons an opportunity to submit
written comments on the OPRA Plan amendment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78k-1.
\2\ 17 CFR 242.608.
\3\ The OPRA Plan is a national market system plan approved by
the Commission pursuant to Section 11A of the Act and Rule 608
thereunder (Formerly Rule 11Aa3-2). See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 17638 (March 18, 1981), 22 S.E.C. Docket 484 (March 31,
1981). The full text of the OPRA Plain is available at https://www.opradata.com. The OPRA Plan provides for the collection and
dissemination of last sale and quotation information on options that
are traded on the participant exchanges. The fourteen participants
to the OPRA Plan are BATS Exchange, Inc., BOX Options Exchange, LLC,
Chicago Board Options Exchange, Incorporated, C2 Options Exchange,
Incorporated, EDGX Exchange, Inc., International Securities
Exchange, LLC, ISE Gemini, LLC, ISE Mercury, LLC, Miami
International Securities Exchange, LLC, NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc., NASDAQ
OMX PHLX LLC, The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC, NYSE MKT LLC, and NYSE
Arca, Inc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Description and Purpose of the Plan Amendment
The purpose of the amendment is to amend the OPRA Fee Schedule to
revise the structure and the amounts of OPRA fees for ``Non-Display''
use of OPRA Data. ``Non-Display'' use of OPRA data is use of the OPRA
data for a purpose other than the display of the data to natural
persons or in support of the display of the data or the internal or
external redistribution of the data.
OPRA first implemented ``Non-Display Application Fees'' in 2012.\4\
At that time, OPRA defined the term ``Non-Display Application''
essentially as an application used for purposes of generating orders
and/or quotations on an automated basis including any application that
is used for ``black box'' trading, automated trading, algorithmic
trading and/or program trading.'' \5\ OPRA adopted those fees in
response to two long-term trends in the use of OPRA market data. The
first trend was the increasingly common use of OPRA market data for use
in ``Non-Display Applications.'' The second trend was the decline,
which has persisted over many years, in the number of devices and User
IDs \6\ displaying OPRA data and subject to OPRA's Professional
Subscriber Device-Based Fees. OPRA noted in its 2012 filing that, in
2004, an average of 223,000 devices and User IDs were reported to OPRA
in each month of the year, and that, in 2011, an average of 164,000
devices and User IDs were reported to OPRA in each month of the
year.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67648 (August 14,
2012), 77 FR 49837 (August 17, 2012) (SR-OPRA-2012-04).
\5\ The complete definition of the term ``Non-Display
Application'' in File No. SR-OPRA-2012-04 is as follows: ``A `Non-
Display Application' is an application used by a Professional
Subscriber that: (i) Is capable of accessing OPRA market data, (ii)
does not display the data in a form for direct use by a human being
and (iii) is used for purposes of generating orders and/or
quotations on an automated basis for purposes other than complying
with the Rules of one or more of the OPRA Participant Exchanges. The
term includes any application that is used for ``black box''
trading, automated trading, algorithmic trading and/or program
trading. The term does not include any application that is used only
to generate two-sided continuous quotations, in fulfillment of the
obligation to act in a market-making capacity pursuant to the Rules
of one or more of the OPRA Participant Exchanges, of a Professional
Subscriber that has been designated by such Exchange or Exchanges to
act as a dealer/specialist for all purposes under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 and the Rules and Regulations thereunder. The
term also does not include an application that is used solely to
perform surveillance, risk management or portfolio management
functions in support of a firm's trading operations.''
\6\ OPRA permits Professional Subscribers to count ``User IDs''
that are capable of receiving OPRA information as a surrogate for
counting devices, and to pay fees based on the number of User IDs
using the ``Professional Subscriber Device-Based Fees'' in OPRA's
Fee Schedule. See OPRA's ``Policies with respect to Device-Based
Fees,'' available on the OPRA Web site, www.opradata.com.
\7\ See supra note 4, at n.9. The decline in the number of
devices and User IDs displaying OPRA data and subject to OPRA's
Professional Subscriber Device-Based Fees has continued: In 2014 an
average of 148,400 devices and User IDs were reported to OPRA as
receiving OPRA data in each month of the year, and OPRA projects
that in 2015 an average of 136,600 devices and User IDs will be
reported to OPRA as receiving OPRA data in each month of the year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2014, the Consolidated Tape Association (``CTA'') Plan and
Consolidated Quotation (``CQ'') Plan participants (collectively, the
``CTA/CQ Plan Participants'') proposed to amend the CTA Plan and the CQ
Plan (collectively the ``CTA/CQ Plans'') to implement fees for Non-
Display use of the market data disseminated pursuant to the CTA/CQ
Plans.\8\ At the same time, the operating committee (the ``Nasdaq/UTP
Plan Operating Committee'') of the Joint Self-Regulatory Organization
Plan Governing the Collection, Consolidation, and Dissemination of
Quotation and Transaction Information for Nasdaq-Listed Securities
Traded on Exchanges on an Unlisted Trading Privilege Basis (the
``Nasdaq/UTP Plan'') proposed to amend the Nasdaq/UTP Plan to implement
fees for Non-Display use of the market data disseminated pursuant to
the Nasdaq/UTP Plan.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73278 (October 1,
2014), 79 FR 60536 (October 7, 2014) (SR-CTA/CQ-2014-03).
\9\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73279 (October 1,
2014), 79 FR 60522 (October 7, 2014) (File No. S7-24-89).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The OPRA Plan amendment comprehensively revised the structure of
OPRA's Non-Display fees so that OPRA's fee structure parallels the Non-
Display fee structures implemented by the CTA/CQ Plan Participants and
the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee. In addition, the OPRA Plan
amendment revised the amounts of OPRA's Non-Display fees.
A. Description of the Concepts Underlying the CTA/CQ Plan and Nasdaq/
UTP Plan Non-Display Fees; Comparison to the Current OPRA Structure;
Revised OPRA Structure
1. Definition of ``Non-Display Use''
The CTA/CQ Plan Participants have defined the term ``Non-Display
Use,'' with respect to the market data disseminated pursuant to the
CTA/CQ Plans as referring to ``accessing, processing or consuming real-
time Network A or Network B quotation information or last sale price
information, whether delivered via direct and/or redistributor data
feeds, for a purpose other than in support of a data recipient's
display or further internal or external redistribution.'' \10\ The
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee has implemented a parallel
definition of the term: ``Non-Display use refers to accessing,
processing or consuming data, whether received via direct and/or
redistributor Data Feeds, for a purpose other than solely facilitating
the delivery of the data to
[[Page 22671]]
the Data Feed Recipient's display or for the purpose of further
internally or externally redistributing the data.'' \11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See supra note 8, at 60538.
\11\ See supra note 9, at 60525.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These definitions are broader than OPRA's prior definition of the
term ``Non-Display Application'' which, as noted above, encompassed
only ``applications . . . used for purposes of generating orders and/or
quotations on an automated basis. . . .'' For example, the CTA/CQ Plan
and Nasdaq/UTP definitions specifically include within their
definitions of the term ``Non-Display Use'' use of their respective
datasets for price referencing for smart order routing, operations
control programs, investment analysis, order verification, surveillance
programs, risk management, compliance and portfolio valuation
purposes.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plan); and see supra
note 9, at 60526 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The OPRA Plan amendment replaced the definition of ``Non-Display
Application'' with a definition of the term ``Non-Display Use'' that
parallels the definitions implemented by the CTA/CQ Plan Participants
and the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee. Specifically, the OPRA
Plan amendment defined the term ``Non-Display Use'' as follows:
Non-Display Use refers to the accessing, processing or consuming
by an OPRA data feed recipient (either an OPRA vendor or an OPRA
professional subscriber) of OPRA market data received on a current
basis, whether delivered via data feed directly from OPRA's
processor and/or indirect data feed from an OPRA vendor, for a
purpose other than in support of the data feed recipient's display
or further internal or external redistribution. Non-Display Use
includes, without limitation, trading (such as in a ``black box'' or
a trading engine that performs automated trading, algorithmic
trading or program trading, or generates arbitrage or program
trading orders); automated order or quote generation and/or order
pegging; price referencing for algorithmic trading; operations
control programs; investment analysis; order verification;
surveillance programs; risk management; compliance; and portfolio
valuation.
2. Three Categories of Non-Display Use and Fee Basis for Non-Display
Use in Each Category
The CTA/CQ Plan Participants and the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating
Committee have each established three ``categories'' of Non-Display
Use. Using the nomenclature established by the CTA/CQ Plan
Participants, the three categories are as follows:
Category 1 applies when a data recipient makes non-display uses
of real time market data on its own behalf.
Category 2 applies when a data recipient makes non-display uses
of real time market data on behalf of its clients.
Category 3 applies when a data recipient makes non-display uses
of real time market data for the purpose of internally matching buy
and sell orders within the data feed recipient. Category 3 includes
matching buy and sell orders on a data recipient's own behalf and/or
on behalf of its clients. Category 3 includes, but is not restricted
to, use in trading platform(s), such as exchanges, alternative
trading systems (``ATSs''), broker crossing networks, broker
crossing systems not filed as ATSs, dark pools, multilateral trading
facilities, and systematic internalization systems.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plan). The Nasdaq/UTP
Plan Operating Committee has established the same three categories,
identical in substance, but using a somewhat different vocabulary:
the Nasdaq/UTP Plan refers to its fee for its counterpart to CTA/CQ
Category 1 as the ``Non-Display fee for Internal Use''; for its
counterpart to CTA/CQ Category 2 as the ``Non-Display Fee for
External Use''; and for its counterpart to CTA/CQ Category 3 as the
``Non-Display Fee for Electronic Trading Systems.'' See supra note
9, at 60525. To the extent that the nomenclatures used by the CTA/CQ
Plan Participants and the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee are
different, OPRA's amendment tracks the CTA/CQ nomenclature.
The OPRA Plan amendment adopted the three categories of Non-Display
Use that have been implemented by the CTA/CQ Plans and the Nasdaq/UTP
Plan.
For the first two of these categories of Non-Display Use
(``Category 1'' and ``Category 2'' in the CTA/CQ nomenclature), the
CTA/CQ Plan Participants and the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee
have established fees on an ``Enterprise'' basis, so that a recipient
of the market data pays only one ``Category 1'' fee if it makes any
Non-Display Use of the market data in Category 1, and only one
``Category 2'' fee if it makes any Non-Display Use of the market data
in Category 2.\14\ The OPRA Plan amendment adopted fees for Category 1
Non-Display Use and Category 2 Non-Display Use that are also on an
``Enterprise'' basis.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plans); see supra note
9, at 60525-26 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
\15\ OPRA included a footnote in its revised Fee Schedule to
state that the wholly-owned subsidiaries of a data feed recipient
are within the definition of the term ``Enterprise'' as applied to
the data feed recipient. This is consistent with the way in which
OPRA addresses questions relating to affiliate relationships
generally, as is stated in Section 1 (``Contracting on behalf of
Affiliates'') of OPRA's ``Policies with respect to Device-Based
Fees'', available on OPRA's Web site, www.opradata.com.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the third of these categories of Non-Display Use (``Category
3'' in the CTA/CQ nomenclature), the CTA/CQ Plan Participants and the
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee have established fees on a ``per
platform'' basis. That is, a recipient of the market data is required
to pay a fee for Category 3 Non-Display Use on each ``platform'' that
is used for internally matching buy and sell orders.\16\ The OPRA Plan
amendment adopted fees for Category 3 Non-Display Use that are also on
a ``per platform'' basis. Tracking the CTA/CQ Plan and Nasdaq/UTP Plan
definitions, the OPRA Plan amendment defined the term ``Platform'' as
follows: ``A ``Platform'' is a platform for internally matching buy and
sell orders. Matching buy and sell orders includes matching customer
orders on a data recipient's own behalf and/or on behalf of its
clients. The term `Platform' includes, but is not restricted to,
exchanges, alternative trading systems (ATSs), broker crossing
networks, broker crossing systems not filed as ATSs, dark pools,
multilateral trading facilities, and systematic internalization
systems.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See supra note 8, at 60538 (CTA/CQ Plans); see supra note
9, at 60525 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As is the case with respect to the CTA/CQ Non-Display Use fees and
the Nasdaq/UTP Non-Display Use fees, an OPRA data recipient may use
OPRA data for one, two or all three categories and therefore be subject
to non-display fees for one, two or all three categories. For example,
if a broker-dealer uses OPRA data to run compliance programs for the
firm (Category 1), to conduct investment analysis on behalf of its
customers (Category 2), and to operate an ATS that matches buy and sell
orders (Category 3), then the firm would be required to pay OPRA non-
display use fees in respect of all three categories.
B. Non-Display Use Reporting Requirements
In order to minimize the administrative burden associated with
their Non-Display Use fees, the CTA/CQ Plan Participants and the
Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating Committee do not impose monthly reporting
requirements in respect of their Non-Display Use fees, and instead
require each recipient of a real-time data feed to make an initial
declaration with respect to its Non-Display Use of their respective
datasets, a declaration with respect to any changes in its Non-Display
Use of their respective datasets, and an annual declaration of its non-
display use.\17\ OPRA included a note in its Fee Schedule to state that
it will require reporting on the same basis. OPRA will audit data feed
recipients' Non-Display Use of market data in accordance with the terms
of its applicable agreements and ordinary auditing practices, and
[[Page 22672]]
will charge Non-Display Use fees in instances in which it determines
that Non-Display Use has not been accurately declared.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See supra note 8, at 60539 (CTA/CQ Plans); see supra note
9, at 60526 (Nasdaq/UTP Plan).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Fees for Non-Display Use
The OPRA Plan amendment adopted fees for Non-Display Use as
follows: A monthly fee of $2,000/Enterprise for Category 1 Non-Display
Use; a monthly fee of $2,000/Enterprise for Category 2 Non-Display Use;
and a monthly fee of $2,000/Platform for Category 3 Non-Display Use.
By way of comparison: The CTA/CQ Plan Participants have established
separate monthly Non-Display Fees for Network A of $2,000 for last sale
prices plus $2,000 for quotation information in each of the three
categories of use, and Non-Display Fees for Network B of $1,000 for
last sale prices plus $1,000 for quotation information in each of the
three categories of use; \18\ and the Nasdaq/UTP Plan Operating
Committee has established a monthly fee for the data disseminated
pursuant to the Nasdaq/UTP Plan of $3,500 for each of the three
categories of use.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See supra note 8, at 60538.
\19\ See supra note 9, at 60526.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior to the OPRA Plan amendment, 59 OPRA data feed recipients were
paying OPRA's ``Non-Display Application Fee,'' which, as described
above, was applicable only to any ``application used for purposes of
generating orders and/or quotations on an automated basis.'' \20\
Because the definition of ``Non-Display Use'' is broader than OPRA's
prior definition of the term ``Non-Display Application,'' OPRA expects
the number of data feed recipients that will be subject to Category 1
Non-Display fees to be greater than the number of data feed recipients
paying the prior Non-Display Application Fee; OPRA's best estimate is
that approximately double the number of data feed recipients currently
paying OPRA's Non-Display Application Fee--approximately 120 data feed
recipients--will be subject to Category 1 Non-Display fees. Further,
OPRA's best estimate is that approximately half of those data feed
recipients--approximately 60 data feed recipients--will also be subject
to ``Category 2'' Non-Display fees. If these estimates are accurate,
then the new fee structure would generate approximately $4,300,000 in
annualized revenue to OPRA, representing an increase of approximately
$3,200,000 over the annualized revenues that OPRA previously received
from the Non-Display Application Fee.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Of the 59 OPRA data feed recipients, seven were paying the
$7500/month ``Enterprise'' rate. The new fees represent a fee
reduction for these data feed recipients, and for a few OPRA data
feed recipients that are reporting five or more Non-Display
Applications. For the remaining data feed recipients, the new fees
represent a fee increase.
\21\ OPRA is not estimating any ``net'' revenue derived from
``Category 3'' Non-Display Fees (for non-display use in connection
with providing a two-sided trading platform). The OPRA Participant
Exchanges are subject to Category 3 Non-Display Fees, but this
revenue does not represent net revenue available to OPRA and its
Participant Exchanges for collecting, consolidating, processing and
disseminating OPRA data. Other than the OPRA Participant Exchanges,
OPRA is aware of only one other two-sided trading platform that may
be subject to ``Category 3'' fees. That platform would generate
$24,000 in annualized Category 3 Non-Display Fees, a number that
does not meaningfully change OPRA's estimates of total revenue and
increased revenue resulting from the proposed Non-Display fee
structure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If OPRA's estimate of its annualized revenue from its revised Non-
Display fees is accurate, the additional annualized revenue will
represent approximately a 4.7% increase in OPRA's total revenues for
the year 2014. In terms of a perspective over a longer term, the
additional annualized revenue will also represent approximately a 4.7%
increase in OPRA's total revenues for the year 2008, approximately a
0.6% increase per year for each year since 2008.
Looking at the additional annualized revenue in another way, the
estimated increase in revenue will represent less than two years of
revenue lost by OPRA due to decreases in the number of Devices/User IDs
that are subject to OPRA's Professional Subscriber Device-Based
Fees.\22\ When OPRA implemented its ``Non-Display Application'' fee in
2012, it stated that it believed that the use of Non-Display
Applications by active trading firms was resulting, and would continue
to result, in a significant reduction in the number of devices and user
IDs that are reported to it,\23\ and OPRA anticipated that the Non-
Display Application fees would substantially offset the reduction in
revenue from Professional Subscriber Device-Based Fees. OPRA believes
that it has indeed been the case that Non-Display Use of OPRA data by
active trading firms is a major reason for the reductions in the number
of devices and user IDs that are reported to OPRA, and OPRA anticipates
that the trend of reductions in the number of Devices/UserIDs will
continue as it has for the past eight years. It has not been the case
that the Non-Display Application fees have substantially offset the
reduction in revenue resulting from the continuing reductions in the
number of devices and user IDs that are reported to OPRA. OPRA
anticipates that the ``Non-Display Use'' fees will offset future
decreases in its revenues from Professional Subscriber Device-Based
Fees to a greater extent than have OPRA's Non-Display Application fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The average number of Devices/User IDs in 2013 was 151,400.
As noted above (see footnote 7), OPRA projects an average of 136,600
devices/User IDs in 2015, representing a decrease of 14,800 Devices/
User IDs and a decrease in OPRA's 2015 revenues (at a monthly rate
of $28.50 per device/User ID) of approximately $5,000,000.
\23\ See supra note 8, at 60538.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The text of the amendment to the OPRA Plan is available at OPRA,
the Commission's Public Reference Room, on OPRA's Web site at https://opradata.com, and on the Commission's Web site at www.sec.gov.
II. Implementation of the OPRA Plan Amendment
Pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Rule 608 of Regulation NMS under
the Act, OPRA designated this amendment as establishing or changing
fees or other charges collected on behalf of all of the OPRA
participants in connection with access to or use of OPRA facilities.
OPRA put the revised Non-Display Application Fees into effect as of
January 1, 2016.
III. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the OPRA Plan
amendment is consistent with the Act.\24\ Comments may be submitted by
any of the following methods:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Pursuant to Rule 608(b)(3)(iii) of Regulation NMS, the
Commission may summarily abrogate an immediately effective NMS Plan
amendment within sixty days of its filing and require refiling and
approval of the amendment if it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, for the
protection of investors, or the maintenance of fair and orderly
markets, to remove impediments to, and perfect the mechanisms of, a
national market system, or otherwise in furtherance of the purposes
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. See 17 CFR
242.608(b)(3)(iii). The abrogation period for the OPRA Plan
amendment has expired. Interested persons may nevertheless submit
written comments on the OPRA Plan amendment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 No. SR-OPRA-2015-01 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
[[Page 22673]]
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-OPRA-2015-01. 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 OPRA Plan amendment that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the OPRA Plan amendment 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 OPRA. 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-OPRA-2015-01 and should be
submitted on or before May 9, 2016.
By the Commission.
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-08815 Filed 4-15-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P