Self-Regulatory Organizations; Bats BYX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend Exchange Rule 11.27 To Describe Changes to System Functionality Necessary To Implement the Regulation NMS Plan To Implement a Tick Size Pilot Program, 47198-47205 [2016-17092]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 139 / Wednesday, July 20, 2016 / Notices
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act 21 to
determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
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 No. SR–
NYSEMKT–2016–69 on the subject line.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with NOTICES
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File No.
SR–NYSEMKT–2016–69. 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 No. SR–NYSEMKT–
21 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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2016–69, and should be submitted on or
before August 10, 2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.22
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–17095 Filed 7–19–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–78333; File No. SR–
BatsBYX–2016–17]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Bats
BYX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of
a Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Exchange Rule 11.27 To Describe
Changes to System Functionality
Necessary To Implement the
Regulation NMS Plan To Implement a
Tick Size Pilot Program
July 14, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on 29 June,
2016, Bats BYX Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘BYX’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘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.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal to
adopt paragraph (c) to Exchange Rule
11.27 to describe changes to System 3
functionality necessary to implement
the Regulation NMS Plan to Implement
a Tick Size Pilot Program (‘‘Plan’’ or
‘‘Pilot’’).4 In determining the scope of
the proposed changes to implement the
Pilot,5 the Exchange carefully weighed
the impact on the Pilot, System
complexity, and the usage of such order
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 The term ‘‘System’’ is defined as the ‘‘electronic
communications and trading facility designated by
the Board through which securities orders of Users
are consolidated for ranking, execution and, when
applicable, routing away.’’ See Exchange Rule
1.5(aa).
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 74892
(May 6, 2015), 80 FR 27513 (May 13, 2015)
(‘‘Approval Order’’).
5 Unless otherwise specified, capitalized terms
used in this rule filing are defined as set forth in
the Plan.
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22 17
1 15
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types in Pilot Securities. The Exchange
also proposes to amend paragraph (a) of
Rule 11.27 to specify that orders entered
into the Exchange’s Retail Price
Improvement (‘‘RPI’’) Program qualify
for certain exceptions to the Plan.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available at the Exchange’s Web site
at www.batstrading.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 parts of such
statements.
(A) Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
Background
On August 25, 2014, NYSE Group,
Inc., on behalf of the Exchange, Bats
BZX Exchange, Inc. (‘‘BZX’’), Chicago
Stock Exchange, Inc., Bats EDGA
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘EDGA’’), Bats EDGX
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘EDGX’’), Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(‘‘FINRA’’), NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc.,
NASDAQ OMX PHLX LLC, the Nasdaq
Stock Market LLC, New York Stock
Exchange LLC (‘‘NYSE’’), NYSE MKT
LLC, and NYSE Arca, Inc. (collectively
‘‘Participants’’), filed with the
Commission, pursuant to Section 11A of
the Act 6 and Rule 608 of Regulation
NMS thereunder, the Plan to implement
a tick size pilot program.7 The
Participants filed the Plan to comply
with an order issued by the Commission
on June 24, 2014.8 The Plan was
published for comment in the Federal
Register on November 7, 2014, and
approved by the Commission, as
modified, on May 6, 2015.9
6 15
U.S.C. 78k–1.
Letter from Brendon J. Weiss, Vice
President, Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., to
Secretary, Commission, dated August 25, 2014.
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72460
(June 24, 2014), 79 FR 36840 (June 30, 2014).
9 See Approval Order, supra note 4.
7 See
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The Plan is designed to allow the
Commission, market participants, and
the public to study and assess the
impact of increment conventions on the
liquidity and trading of the common
stocks of small-capitalization
companies. Each Participant is required
to comply, and to enforce compliance
by its member organizations, as
applicable, with the provisions of the
Plan.
The Pilot will include stocks of
companies with $3 billion or less in
market capitalization, an average daily
trading volume of one million shares or
less, and a volume weighted average
price of at least $2.00 for every trading
day. The Pilot will consist of a Control
Group of approximately 1400 Pilot
Securities and three Test Groups with
400 Pilot Securities in each Test Group
selected by a stratified sampling.10
During the Pilot, Pilot Securities in the
Control Group will be quoted and
traded at the currently permissible
increments. Pilot Securities in the first
Test Group (‘‘Test Group One’’) will be
quoted in $0.05 minimum increments
but will continue to trade at any price
increment that is currently permitted.11
Pilot Securities in the second Test
Group (‘‘Test Group Two’’) will be
quoted in $0.05 minimum increments
and will trade at $0.05 minimum
increments subject to a midpoint
exception, a retail investor order
exception, and a negotiated trade
exception.12 Pilot Securities in the third
Test Group (‘‘Test Group Three’’) will be
subject to the same restrictions as Test
Group Two and also will be subject to
the ‘‘Trade-at’’ requirement to prevent
price matching by a market participant
that is not displaying at a price of a
Trading Center’s 13 ‘‘Best Protected Bid’’
or ‘‘Best Protected Offer,’’ unless an
enumerated exception applies.14 The
same exceptions provided under Test
Group Two will also be available under
the Trade-at Prohibition, with an
additional exception for Block Size
orders and exceptions that mirror those
under Rule 611 of Regulation NMS.15
10 See Section V of the Plan for identification of
Pilot Securities, including criteria for selection and
grouping.
11 See Section VI(B) of the Plan.
12 See Section VI(C) of the Plan.
13 The Plan incorporates the definition of
‘‘Trading Center’’ from Rule 600(b)(78) of
Regulation NMS. Regulation NMS defines a Trading
Center as ‘‘a national securities exchange or
national securities association that operates an SRO
trading facility, an alternative trading system, an
exchange market maker, an OTC market maker, or
any other broker or dealer that executes orders
internally by trading as principal or crossing orders
as agent.’’
14 See Section VI(D) of the Plan.
15 17 CFR 242.611.
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The Plan requires the Exchange to
establish, maintain, and enforce written
policies and procedures that are
reasonably designed to comply with
applicable quoting and trading
requirements specified in the Plan.
Accordingly, the Exchange adopted
paragraph (a) of Rule 11.27 to require
Members 16 to comply with the quoting
and trading provisions of the Plan.17
The Exchange also adopted paragraph
(b) of Rule 11.27 to require Members to
comply with the data collection
provisions under Appendix B and C of
the Plan.18
reduce risk in the System by eliminating
unnecessary complexity based on
infrequent current usage of certain order
types in Pilot Securities and/or their
limited ability to execute under the
Trade-at Prohibition. Therefore, the
Exchange firmly believes that these
changes will have little or no impact on
the operation and data collection
elements of the Plan. The Exchange
further believes that the proposed rule
changes are reasonably designed to
comply with applicable quoting and
trading requirements specified in the
Plan.
Proposed System Changes
RPI Program
In November 2012, the Commission
approved the RPI Program on a pilot
basis.19 The Program is designed to
attract retail order flow to the Exchange,
and allow such order flow to receive
potential price improvement. Under the
Program, all Exchange Users 20 are
permitted to provide potential price
improvement for Retail Orders 21 in the
form of non-displayed interest that is
better than the national best bid that is
a Protected Quotation or the national
best offer that is a Protected
Quotation.22
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(4) sets forth
the applicable limitations for securities
in Test Group One. Consistent with the
language of the Plan, Rule 11.27(a)(4)
provides that no Member may display,
rank, or accept from any person any
displayable or non-displayable bids or
The Exchange proposes to amend
paragraph (a) of Rule 11.27 to specify
that orders entered into the Exchange’s
RPI Program qualify for certain
exceptions to the Plan. The Exchange
also proposes to adopt paragraph (c) of
Exchange Rule 11.27 to describe
changes to System functionality
necessary to implement the Plan.
Paragraph (c) of Rule 11.27 would set
forth the Exchange’s specific procedures
for handling, executing, re-pricing and
displaying of certain order types and
order type instructions applicable to
Pilot Securities. Unless otherwise
indicated, paragraph (c) of Rule 11.27
would apply to order types and order
type instructions in Pilot Securities in
Test Groups One, Two, and Three and
not to Pilot Securities included in the
Control Group. The proposed changes
include select and discrete amendments
to the operation of: (i) BYX Market
Orders; (ii) Market Pegged Orders; (iii)
Mid-Point Peg Orders; (iii) Discretionary
Orders; (iv) Non-Displayed Orders; (v)
Market Maker Peg Orders; (vi)
Supplemental Peg Orders; and (vii)
orders subject to the Display-Price
Sliding process.
In determining the scope of these
proposed changes to implement the
Plan, the Exchange carefully weighed
the impact on the Pilot, System
complexity, and the usage of such order
types in Pilot Securities. These
proposed changes are designed to
directly comply with the Plan and to
assist the Exchange in meeting its
regulatory obligations pursuant to the
Plan. As discussed below, certain of
these changes are also intended to
16 The term ‘‘Member’’ is defined as ‘‘any
registered broker or dealer that has been admitted
to membership in the Exchange.’’ See Exchange
Rule 1.5(n).
17 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 77793
(May 10, 2016), 81 FR 30366 (May 16, 2016) (SR–
BatsBYX–2016–07).
18 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 77418
(March 22, 2016), 81 FR 17213 (March 28, 2016)
(SR–BatsBYX–2016–01).
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19 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68303
(November 27, 2012), 77 FR 71652 (December 3,
2012) (‘‘RPI Approval Order’’) (SR–BYX–2012–019).
20 A ‘‘User’’ is defined as any member or
sponsored participant of the Exchange who is
authorized to obtain access to the System pursuant
to Rule 11.3. See Exchange Rule 1.5(cc).
21 A ‘‘Retail Order’’ is defined in Exchange Rule
11.24(a)(2) as an agency order that originates from
a natural person and is submitted to the Exchange
by a RMO, provided that no change is made to the
terms of the order with respect to price or side of
market and the order does not originate from a
trading algorithm or any computerized
methodology. The definition of Retail Order is also
substantially similar to the definition of Retail
Investor Order under the Plan. See Section I(DD) of
the Plan.
22 The term Protected Quotation is defined in
Exchange Rule 1.5(t) and has the same meaning as
is set forth in Regulation NMS Rule 600(b)(58). The
terms Protected NBB and Protected NBO are
defined in Exchange Rule 1.5(s). The Protected NBB
is the best-priced protected bid and the Protected
NBO is the best-priced protected offer. Generally,
the Protected NBB and Protected NBO and the
national best bid (‘‘NBB’’) and national best offer
(‘‘NBO’’, together with the NBB, the ‘‘NBBO’’) will
be the same. However, a market center is not
required to route to the NBB or NBO if that market
center is subject to an exception under Regulation
NMS Rule 611(b)(1) or if such NBB or NBO is
otherwise not available for an automatic execution.
In such case, the Protected NBB or Protected NBO
would be the best-priced protected bid or offer to
which a market center must route interest pursuant
to Regulation NMS Rule 611.
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offers, orders, or indications of interest
in any Pilot Security in Test Group One
in increments other than $0.05. Pilot
Securities in Test Group One may
continue to trade at any price increment
that is currently permitted by the
applicable Participant, SEC and
Exchange rules.23 Exchange Rule
11.27(a)(5) sets forth the applicable
quoting and trading requirements for
securities in Test Group Two. This
provision states that no Member may
display, rank, or accept from any person
any displayable or non-displayable bids
or offers, orders, or indications of
interest in any Pilot Security in Test
Group Two in increments other than
$0.05. In Test Groups One and Two,
however, orders entered in a
Participant-operated retail liquidity
program may be ranked and accepted in
increments of less than $0.05. Therefore,
the Exchange proposes to amend Rule
11.27(a)(4) and (5) to also specify that
the RPI Program qualifies as a
Participant-operated liquidity program
under the Plan and that orders entered
into the RPI Program may be ranked and
accepted in increments of less than
$0.05 in Test Groups One and Two.
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(5) also sets
forth the applicable trading restrictions
for Test Group Two securities. Absent
any of the exceptions listed in the Rule,
no Member may execute orders in any
Pilot Security in Test Group Two in
price increments other than $0.05.
Consistent with the language of the
Plan, the Rule provides that Pilot
Securities in Test Group Two may trade
in increments of less than $0.05 where
a Retail Investor Order is provided with
price improvement that is at least
$0.005 better than the best protected bid
and best protected offer (‘‘PBBO’’).24
The Exchange proposes to amend Rule
11.27(a)(5) to specify that Retail Orders
entered into the Exchange’s RPI Program
qualify as Retail Investor Orders and
may be provided with price
23 The Exchange proposes to amend the last
sentence of Rule 11.27(a)(4) to specify that the
current permissible price increments are set forth
under Exchange Rule 11.11, Price Variations.
24 Regulation NMS defines a protected bid or
protected offer as a quotation in an NMS stock that
(1) is displayed by an automated trading center; (2)
is disseminated pursuant to an effective national
market system plan; and (3) is an automated
quotation that is the best bid or best offer of a
national securities exchange, the best bid or best
offer of The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc., or the best
bid or best offer of a national securities association
other than the best bid or best offer of The Nasdaq
Stock Market, Inc. See 17 CFR 242.600(57). In the
Approval Order, the Commission noted that the
protected quotation standard encompasses the
aggregate of the most aggressively priced displayed
liquidity on all Trading Centers, whereas the NBBO
standard is limited to the single best order in the
market. See Approval Order, supra note 4.
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improvement that is at least $0.005
better than the PBBO.
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6) sets forth
the applicable quoting and trading
restrictions for Pilot Securities in Test
Group Three. The rule provides that no
Member may display, rank, or accept
from any person any displayable or nondisplayable bids or offers, orders, or
indications of interest in any Pilot
Security in Test Group Three in
increments other than $0.05. However,
orders entered in a Participant-operated
retail liquidity program may be ranked
and accepted in increments of less than
$0.05. As proposed for Rules 11.27(a)(4)
and (5) above, the Exchange similarly
proposes to amend Rule 11.27(a)(6) to
also specify that the RPI Program
qualifies as a Participant-operated
liquidity program under the Plan and
that orders entered into the RPI Program
may be ranked and accepted in
increments of less than $0.05.
The rule also states that, absent any of
the applicable exceptions, no Member
that operates a Trading Center may
execute orders in any Pilot Security in
Test Group Three in price increments
other than $0.05. Exchange Rule
11.27(a)(6)(C) sets forth the exceptions
pursuant to which Pilot Securities in
Test Group Three may trade in
increments of less than $0.05. One
exception is that Retail Investor Orders
may be provided with price
improvement that is at least $0.005
better than the PBBO. As proposed for
Rule 11.27(a)(5) above, the Exchange
similarly proposes to amend Rule
11.27(a)(6) to specify that Retail Orders
entered into the Exchange’s RPI Program
qualify as Retail Investor Orders and
may be provided with price
improvement that is at least $0.005
better than the PBBO.
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) sets
forth the Trade-at Prohibition, which is
the prohibition against executions by a
Member that operates a Trading Center
of a sell order for a Pilot Security in Test
Group Three at the price of a Protected
Bid or the execution of a buy order for
a Pilot Security in Test Group Three at
the price of a Protected Offer during
Regular Trading Hours,25 absent any of
the exceptions set forth in Rule
11.27(a)(6)(D). Consistent with the Plan,
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) excepts an
order that is a Retail Investor Order that
is executed with at least $0.005 price
improvement from the Trade-at
Prohibition. The Exchange proposes to
amend Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) to specify
that Retail Orders entered into the
25 The term ‘‘Regular Trading Hours’’ is defined
as ‘‘the time between 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.
Eastern Time.’’ See Exchange Rule 1.5(w).
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Exchange’s RPI Program qualify as
Retail Investor Orders and may be
provided with price improvement that
is at least $0.005 better than the PBBO.
BYX Market Orders
A BYX Market Order is an order to
buy or sell a stated amount of a security
that is to be executed at the NBBO when
the order reaches the Exchange. BYX
Market Orders shall not trade through
Protected Quotations.26 Any portion of
a BYX Market Order that would execute
at a price more than $0.50 or 5 percent
worse than the NBBO at the time the
order initially reaches the Exchange,
whichever is greater, will be
cancelled.27 In order to comply with the
minimum quoting increments set forth
in the Plan, the Exchange proposes to
state under proposed Rule 11.27(c)(1)
that for purposes of determining
whether a BYX Market Order’s
execution price is more than 5 percent
worse than the NBBO under Rule
11.9(a)(2), the execution price for a buy
(sell) order will be rounded down (up)
to the nearest $0.05 increment.
Market Pegged Orders
The Exchange proposes to amend the
operation of Market Pegged Orders to
reduce risk in its System by eliminating
unnecessary complexity based on
infrequent current usage in Pilot
Securities and their limited ability to
execute under the Trade-at Prohibition
in Test Group Three. A Pegged Order is
a limit order that after entry into the
System, the price of the order is
automatically adjusted by the System in
response to changes in the NBBO. A
Pegged Order will peg to the NBB or
NBO or a certain amount away from the
NBB or NBO.28 A Market Pegged Order
is pegged to the contra-side NBBO.29 A
User entering a Market Pegged Order
can specify that such order’s price will
offset the inside quote on the contraside of the market by an amount (the
‘‘Offset Amount’’) set by the User.
Market Pegged Orders are not eligible to
be displayed on the Exchange.
In Test Groups One and Two, the
Exchange proposes to modify the
behavior of Market Pegged Order when
it is locked by an incoming BYX Post
Only Order 30 or Partial Post Only at
Limit Order 31 that does not remove
liquidity pursuant to Rule 11.9(c)(6) or
Rule 11.9(c)(7),32 respectively. In such
26 See
Exchange Rule 11.9(a)(2).
27 Id.
28 See
Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(8).
Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(8)(B).
30 See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(6).
31 See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(7).
32 A BYX Post Only Order will remove contraside liquidity from the BYX Book if the order is an
29 See
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case, the Market Pegged Order would be
converted to an executable order and
will remove liquidity against such
incoming order.33 In no case would a
Market Pegged Order execute against an
incoming BYX Post Only Order or
Partial Post Only at Limit Order if an
order with higher priority is on the BYX
Book.34 Specifically, if an order other
than a Market Pegged Order maintains
higher priority than one or more Market
Pegged Orders, the Market Pegged
Order(s) with lower priority will not be
converted, as described above, and the
incoming BYX Post Only Order or
Partial Post Only at Limit Order will be
posted or cancelled in accordance with
Rule 11.9(c)(6) or Rule 11.9(c)(7).
The Exchange notes that Market
Pegged Orders are aggressive by nature
and believes executing the order in such
circumstance is appropriate. The
Exchange also notes that the proposed
behavior for Market Pegged Orders in
Test Groups One and Two is identical
to the operation of orders with the
Super Aggressive Routing instruction
under Exchange Rule 11.13(b)(4)(C).
When an order with a Super Aggressive
instruction is locked by an incoming
BYX Post Only Order or Partial Post
Only at Limit Order that does not
remove liquidity pursuant to Rule
11.9(c)(6) or Rule 11.9(c)(7),
respectively, the order is converted to
an executable order and will remove
liquidity against such incoming order.
In addition, like as proposed above, in
no case would an order with a Super
Aggressive instruction execute against
an incoming BYX Post Only Order or
Partial Post Only at Limit Order if an
order with higher priority is on the BYX
Book. The Exchange believes this
change is reasonable and appropriate
due to the limited usage of Market
Pegged Orders in Pilot Securities, to
order to buy or sell a security priced below $1.00
or if the value of such execution when removing
liquidity equals or exceeds the value of such
execution if the order instead posted to the BYX
Book and subsequently provided liquidity,
including the applicable fees charged or rebates
provided. See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(6). A Partial
Post Only at Limit Order will remove liquidity from
the BYX Book up to the full size of the order if, at
the time of receipt, it can be executed at prices
better than its limit price. See Exchange Rule
11.9(c)(7).
33 The Exchange notes that a BYX Post Only will,
in most cases, remove liquidity from the BYX Book
because under its current taker-maker pricing
structure, the remover of liquidity is provided a
rebate while the provider of liquidity is charged a
fee. Therefore, in most cases, value of the execution
to remove liquidity will equal or exceed the value
of such execution once posted to the BYX Book,
including the applicable fees charged or rebates
received.
34 The term ‘‘BYX Book’’ is defined as the
‘‘System’s electronic file of orders.’’ See Exchange
Rule 1.5(e).
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avoid unnecessary additional System
complexity, and to ensure the Market
Pegged Order may execute in such
circumstance.
The Exchange also proposes to not
accept Market Pegged Orders in Test
Group Three based on limited current
usage, additional System complexity,
and their limited ability to execute
under the Trade-at Prohibition. The
Exchange believes that their de minimis
usage and limited ability to execute due
to the Trade-at Prohibition does not
justify the complexity that would be
created by supporting Market Pegged
Orders in Test Group Three. A vast
majority of Market Pegged Orders are
entered into the System with a zero
Offset and, therefore, create a locked
market with the contra-side NBBO.
Under the Trade-at Prohibition, a
Market Pegged Order would not be
eligible for execution at the locking
price, including when a Trade-at
Intermarket Sweep Order (‘‘ISO’’) 35 is
entered, because of non-cleared contraside Protected Quotations. For example,
assume the NBBO is $10.00 (NYSE) ×
$10.05 (Nasdaq) in a Test Group 3
security. A Market Pegged Order to buy
at $10.10 with a zero Offset is entered
on the Exchange. The order would be
ranked and hidden on the BYX Book at
$10.05. A Trade-at ISO to sell at $10.05
is then entered. In this example, no
execution occurs on BYX because
Nasdaq is displaying an order to sell at
$10.05. The Trade-at ISO instruction
only indicates that all of the better and
equal priced buy orders have been
cleared. It does not indicate that the
seller has cleared any Protected Offers.
Therefore, the Exchange proposes to not
accept Market Pegged Orders in Test
Group Three in an effort to reduce
unnecessary System complexity, avoid
an internally locked book, and due to
the limited execution opportunities for
Market Pegged Orders due to the Tradeat Prohibition.
Mid-Point Peg Orders
A Mid-Point Peg Order is an order
whose price is automatically adjusted
35 A Trade-at ISO is a Limit Order for a Pilot
Security that meets the following requirements: (i)
when routed to a Trading Center, the limit order is
identified as a Trade-at Intermarket Sweep Order;
and (ii) simultaneously with the routing of the limit
order identified as a Trade-at Intermarket Sweep
Order, one or more additional limit orders, as
necessary, are routed to execute against the full size
of any protected bid, in the case of a limit order to
sell, or the full displayed size of any protected offer,
in the case of a limit order to buy, for the Pilot
Security with a price that is better than or equal to
the limit price of the limit order identified as a
Trade-at Intermarket Sweep Order. See Exchange
Rule 11.27(a)(7)(A)(i). These additional routed
orders also must be marked as Trade-at Intermarket
Sweep Orders. Id.
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47201
by the System in response to changes in
the NBBO to be pegged to the midpoint
of the NBBO, or, alternatively, pegged to
the less aggressive of the midpoint of
the NBBO or one minimum price
variation 36 inside the same side of the
NBBO as the order.37 The Plan and
current Exchange rules permit the
acceptance of orders priced to execute at
the midpoint of the NBBO to be ranked
and accepted in increments of less than
$0.05.38 Consistent with previous
guidance issued by the Participants,39
the Exchange proposes to amend the
operation of Mid-Point Peg Orders to
explicitly state that Mid-Point Peg
Orders in Pilot Securities may not be
entered in increments other than $0.05.
The System will execute a Mid-Point
Peg Order: (i) In $0.05 increments
priced better than the midpoint of the
NBBO; or (ii) at the midpoint of the
NBBO, regardless of whether the
midpoint of the NBBO is in an
increment of $0.05. In order to comply
with the minimum quoting and trading
increments of the Plan and reduce
unnecessary System complexity, a MidPoint Peg Order will not be permitted to
alternatively peg to one minimum price
variation inside the same side of the
NBBO as the order in Pilot Securities.
The Exchange believes that the current
de minimis usage of the alternative
pegging functionality in Pilot Securities
does not justify the complexity and risk
that would be created by reprogramming the System to support this
functionality under the Plan.
Discretionary Orders
The Exchange proposes to not accept
Discretionary Orders in all Test Groups,
including the Control Group, to reduce
risk in the System by eliminating
unnecessary complexity based on
infrequent current usage in Pilot
Securities. In sum, a Discretionary
Order is a Limit Order with a displayed
or non-displayed ranked price and size
and an additional non-displayed
‘‘discretionary price’’.40 The
discretionary price is a non-displayed
upward offset at which a User is willing
to buy, if necessary, or a non-displayed
downward offset at which a User is
willing to sell, if necessary. The System
changes necessary for a Discretionary
Order to comply with the Plan become
increasingly complex because both the
36 See
Exchange Rule 11.11.
Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(9).
38 See Sections VI(B), (C), and (D) of the Plan. See
also Exchange Rules 11.27(a)(4), (a)(5), and (a)(6).
39 See e.g., Question 42 of the Tick Size Pilot
Program Trading and Quoting FAQs available at
https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/TSPPTrading-and-Quoting-FAQs.pdf
40 See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(10).
37 See
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mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with NOTICES
displayed price and discretionary price
must comply with the Plan’s minimum
quoting and trading increments as well
as the Trade-at restriction in Test Group
Three. In addition, Users do not
currently set discretionary prices less
than $0.05 away from the order’s
displayed price and the Exchange does
not anticipate Users doing so under the
Plan. To date, Discretionary Orders are
rarely entered in Pilot Securities and the
Exchange anticipates their usage to
further decrease due to the Plan’s
minimum quoting increments. The
Exchange believes that the current
extremely limited usage of Discretionary
Orders in Pilot Securities does not
justify the additional System complexity
that would be created by supporting
Discretionary Orders. As a result of
these factors the Exchange proposes to
not accept Discretionary Orders in all
Test Groups and the Control Group.
Non-Displayed Orders
The Exchange proposes to re-price to
the midpoint of the NBBO NonDisplayed Orders in Test Group Three
that are priced in a permissible
increment better than the midpoint of
the NBBO. A Non-Displayed Order is a
Market or Limit Order that is not
displayed on the Exchange.41 Exchange
Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) incorporates the
Trade-at Prohibition in the Exchange’s
rules. The Trade-at Prohibition prevents
the execution of a sell order for a Pilot
Security in Test Group Three at the
price of a Protected Bid or the execution
of a buy order for a Pilot Security in
Test Group Three at the price of a
Protected Offer during Regular Trading
Hours, unless an exception applies. A
Trading Center that is displaying a
quotation, via either a processor or an
SRO quotation feed, that is a Protected
Bid or Protected Offer is permitted to
execute orders at that level, but only up
to the amount of its displayed size.
Unless an exception applies, a NonDisplayed Order that is able to execute
at the price of the Protected Quotation
would not be able to do so in Test
Group Three due to the Trade-at
Prohibition and the Exchange’s priority
rule.42 Furthermore, such aggressively
priced orders would not be able to post
to the BYX Book at the contra-side
Protected Quotation, and re-pricing the
order to the midpoint of the NBBO
would increase execution opportunities
under normal market conditions.
However, orders that are priced to
execute at the midpoint of the NBBO are
41 See
Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(11).
Exchange Rule 11.12(a)(2), displayed
Limit Orders have priority over Non-Displayed
Limit Orders.
42 Under
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exempt from the Trade-at Prohibition.
Therefore, to increase the execution
opportunities for Non-Displayed Orders
in Test Group Three, the Exchange
proposes to re-price to the midpoint of
the NBBO Non-Displayed Orders that
are priced in a permissible increment
better than the midpoint of the NBBO.
Market Maker Peg Orders
A Market Maker Peg Order is a Limit
Order that is automatically priced by the
System at the Designated Percentage (as
defined in Exchange Rule 11.8) away
from the then current NBB and NBO, or
if no NBB or NBO, at the Designated
Percentage away from the last reported
sale from the responsible single plan
processor in order to comply with the
quotation requirements for Market
Makers set forth in Exchange Rule
11.8(d).43 Should the above pricing
result in a Market Maker Peg Order
being priced at an increment other than
$0.05, the Exchange proposes to round
an order to buy (sell) up (down) to the
nearest $0.05 increment in order to
comply with the minimum quoting
increments of the Plan.
Supplemental Peg Orders
The Exchange proposes to not accept
Supplemental Peg Orders in Test Group
Three in order to reduce risk in the
System by eliminating unnecessary
complexity based on infrequent current
usage in Pilot Securities and their
limited ability to execute under the
Trade-at Prohibition. A Supplemental
Peg Order is a non-displayed Limit
Order that posts to the BYX Book, and
thereafter is eligible for execution at the
NBB for buy orders and NBO for sell
orders against routable orders that are
equal to or less than the aggregate size
of the Supplemental Peg Order interest
available at that price.44 In sum,
Supplemental Peg Orders are only
executable at the NBBO against an order
that is in the process of being routed
away. In such case, the Exchange is not
displaying a Protected Quotation and,
therefore, the Supplemental Peg Order
would be unable to execute in Test
Group Three due to the Trade-at
Prohibition.45 Therefore, the Exchange
Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(16).
Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(19).
45 The Exchange notes that the likelihood of a
Supplemental Peg Order qualifying for an exception
to the Trade-at Prohibition is small. For example,
Supplemental Peg Orders are only executable
against orders that are to be routed away and would
not be eligible to execute against an incoming ISO
or Trade-at ISO. Also, the Exchange would not be
displaying a Protected Quotation. In addition, the
Exchange does not frequently receive orders of
Block Size and, in order to qualify for the Block
exception, the contra-side Block Order must be
routable and the Supplemental Peg Order be of
Block Size.
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43 See
44 See
Frm 00048
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
proposes to not accept Supplemental
Peg Orders in Test Group Three.
Display-Price Sliding
Under the Display-Price Sliding
process, an order eligible for display by
the Exchange that, at the time of entry,
would create a violation of Rule 610(d)
of Regulation NMS by locking or
crossing a Protected Quotation of an
external market, will be ranked at the
locking price in the BYX Book and
displayed by the System at one
minimum price variation (i.e., $0.05)
below the current NBO (for bids) or one
minimum price variation above the
current NBB (for offers).46 The ranked
and displayed prices of an order subject
to the Display-Price Sliding process may
be adjusted once or multiple times
depending upon the instructions of a
User and changes to the prevailing
NBBO.47
As described above, Exchange Rule
11.27(a)(6)(D) sets forth the Trade-at
Prohibition, which is the prohibition
against executions by a Member that
operates a Trading Center of a sell order
for a Pilot Security in Test Group Three
at the price of a Protected Bid or the
execution of a buy order for a Pilot
Security in Test Group Three at the
price of a Protected Offer during Regular
Trading Hours, unless an exception
applies. Orders that are priced to
execute at the midpoint of the NBBO are
exempt from the Trade-at Prohibition.
Therefore, to increase the execution
opportunities and qualify for the midpoint exception to the Trade-at
Prohibition, the Exchange proposes to
rank orders in Test Group Three that are
subject to the Display-Price Sliding
process at the midpoint of the NBBO in
the BYX Book and display such orders
one minimum price variation below the
current NBO (for bids) or one minimum
price variation above the current NBB
(for offers).
The Exchange also proposes to cancel
orders subject to Display-Price Sliding
in Test Group Three that are only to be
adjusted once and not multiple times in
the event the NBBO widens and a
contra-side Non-Displayed Order is
resting on the BYX Book at the price to
which the order subject to Display-Price
Sliding would be adjusted. Due to the
increased minimum quoting increments
under the Plan, the Exchange is unable
to safely re-price an order subject to
single Display-Price Sliding in Test
Group Three to the original locking
price in such circumstances and doing
so would add additional System
complexity and risk. As discussed
46 See
47 See
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above, the Exchange proposes to rank
orders in Test Group Three subject to
the Display-Price Sliding process at the
midpoint of the NBBO. In the event the
NBBO changes such that an order
subject to Display-Price Sliding would
not lock or cross a Protected Quotation
of an external market, the order will
receive a new timestamp, and will be
displayed at the order’s limit price.48
Due to technological limitations arising
from the increased minimum quoting
increments under the Plan, however, the
Exchange is unable to safely re-program
its System to re-price such order to the
original locking price when the NBBO
widens and a contra-side Non-Displayed
Order is resting on the BYX Book at the
price to which the order subject to
Display-Price Sliding would be
adjusted. Therefore, the Exchange
proposes to cancel orders subject to the
single Display-Price Sliding process in
such circumstances. Users who prefer
an execution in such a scenario may
elect to use the multiple Display-Price
Sliding process.
Ministerial Change
Currently, both Interpretation and
Policy .03 to Rule 11.27(a) and
Interpretation and Policy .11 to Rule
11.27(b) state that Rule 11.27 shall be in
effect during a pilot period to coincide
with the pilot period for the Plan
(including any extensions to the pilot
period for the Plan). The Exchange
proposes to include this language at the
beginning of Rule 11.27 and, therefore,
proposes to delete both Interpretation
and Policy .03 to Rule 11.27(a) and
Interpretation and Policy .11 to Rule
11.27(b) as those provisions would be
redundant and unnecessary.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with NOTICES
Implementation Date
If the Commission approves the
proposed rule change, the proposed rule
change will be effective upon
Commission approval and shall become
operative upon the commencement of
the Pilot Period.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)
of the Act 49 in general, and furthers the
objectives of Section 6(b)(5) of the Act 50
in particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in
facilitating transactions in securities, to
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
48 Id.
49 15
50 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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and a national market system and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest. The Plan requires the
Exchange to establish, maintain, and
enforce written policies and procedures
that are reasonably designed to comply
with applicable quoting and trading
requirements specified in the Plan. The
proposed rule change is designed to
comply with the Plan, reduce
complexity and enhance System
resiliency while not adversely affecting
the data collected under the Plan.
Therefore, the Exchange believes that
the proposed rule changes are
reasonably designed to comply with
applicable quoting and trading
requirements specified in the Plan and,
as discussed further below, other
applicable regulations.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed changes regarding its Retail
Price Improvement Program, BYX
Market Orders, Mid-Point Peg Orders,
Market Maker Peg Orders, and DisplayPrice Sliding are consistent with the Act
because they are intended to modify the
Exchange’s System to comply with the
provisions of the Plan, and are designed
to assist the Exchange in meeting its
regulatory obligations pursuant to the
Plan. In approving the Plan, the SEC
noted that the Pilot was an appropriate,
data-driven test that was designed to
evaluate the impact of a wider tick size
on trading, liquidity, and the market
quality of securities of smaller
capitalization companies, and was
therefore in furtherance of the purposes
of the Act. To the extent that these
proposals are intended to comply with
the Plan, the Exchange believes that
these proposals are in furtherance of the
objectives of the Plan, as identified by
the Commission, and is therefore
consistent with the Act.
The Exchange also believes that its
proposed changes to Market Pegged
Orders, Discretionary Orders, NonDisplayed Orders, Supplemental Peg
Orders, and Display-Price Sliding are
also consistent with the Act because
they are intended to eliminate
unnecessary System complexity and
risk based on the de minimis current
usage of such order types and
instructions in Pilot Securities and/or
their limited ability to execute under the
Plan’s minimum trading and quoting
increments or Trade-at Prohibition.51
For example, during March 2016, the
alternative pegging functionality of MidCommission has also expressed concern
regarding potential market instability caused by
technological risks. See e.g., Chair Mary Jo White,
Commission, Enhancing Our Equity Market
Structure (June 5, 2014) available at https://
www.sec.gov/News/Speech/Detail/Speech/
1370542004312#.VD2HW610w6Y.
PO 00000
51 The
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47203
Point Peg Orders, Market Pegged Orders,
Non-Displayed Orders, and
Supplemental Peg Orders accounted for
0.01%, 0.02%, 0.92%, and 0.01%,
respectively, of volume in eligible Pilot
Securities on the Exchange, BZX, EDGA
and EDGX combined. Notably,
Discretionary Orders accounted for
0.00% of volume in eligible Pilot
Securities on the Exchange, BZX, EDGA
and EDGX combined. The Commission
adopted Regulation Systems
Compliance and Integrity (‘‘Regulation
SCI’’) in November 2014 to strengthen
the technology infrastructure of the U.S.
securities markets.52 Regulation SCI is
designed to reduce the occurrence of
systems issues, improve resiliency when
systems problems do occur, and
enhance the Commission’s oversight
and enforcement of securities market
technology infrastructure.
Regulation SCI required the Exchange
to establish written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
ensure that their systems have levels of
capacity, integrity, resiliency,
availability, and security adequate to
maintain their operational capability
and promote the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets, and that they
operate in a manner that complies with
the Exchange Act. Each of these
proposed changes are intended to
reduce complexity and risk in the
System to ensure the Exchange’s
technology remains robust and resilient.
In determining the scope of the
proposed changes, the Exchange
carefully weighed the impact on the
Pilot, System complexity, and the usage
of such order types in Pilot Securities.53
The potential complexity results from
code changes for a majority of the
Exchange’s order types, which requires
the implementation and testing of a
separate branch of code for each Test
Group. For example, the Exchange
currently utilizes one branch of code for
which to implement and test changes.
Development work for the Tick Pilot
results in the creation of four additional
branches of code that are to be
developed and tested (e.g., Control
Group + three Test Groups). The
Exchange determined that the changes
proposed herein are necessary to ensure
continued System resiliency in
accordance with the requirements of
Regulation SCI. Therefore, the Exchange
believes the proposed rule change
52 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73639
(November 19, 2014), 79 FR 72251 (December 5,
2014) (‘‘Regulation SCI Approval Order’’).
53 But for the Plan, the Exchange notes that it
would not have proposed to amend the operation
of Market Pegged Orders, Discretionary Orders,
Non-Displayed Orders, Supplemental Peg Orders,
and Display-Price Sliding as described herein.
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promotes just and equitable principles
of trade, removes impediments to and
perfects the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest.
In addition, each of these proposed
changes would have a de minimis to
zero impact on the data reported
pursuant to the Plan. As evidenced
above, Market Pegged Orders,
Discretionary Orders, the alternative
pegging functionality of Mid-Point Peg
Orders, and Supplemental Peg Orders
are infrequently used in Pilot Securities
or the execution of such orders would
be scarce due to the Plan’s minimum
trading and quoting requirement and
Trade-at Prohibition. The limited usage
and execution scenarios do not justify
the additional system complexity which
would be created by modifying the
System to support such order types in
order to comply with the Plan.
Therefore, the Exchange believes each
proposed change is a reasonable means
to ensure that the System’s integrity,
resiliency, and availability continues to
promote the maintenance of fair and
orderly markets. Due to the additional
complexity, limited usage and execution
opportunities, the Exchange believes it
is not unfairly discriminatory to apply
the changes proposed herein to only
Pilot Securities as such changes are
necessary to reduce complexity and
ensure continued System resiliency in
accordance with the requirements of
Regulation SCI. The Exchange also
believes the proposed changes to NonDisplayed Orders, and orders subject to
the Display-Price Sliding process in Test
Group Three are consistent with the Act
because they are designed to increase
the execution opportunities for such
order types in compliance with the midpoint exception to the Trade-at
Prohibition. The Exchange also believes
the proposed change to Market Pegged
Orders in Test Groups One and Two is
consistent with the Act because it is
identical to the operation of the Super
Aggressive instruction under Exchange
Rule 11.13(b)(4)(C). The Exchange notes
that Market Pegged Orders are
aggressive by nature and believes
executing the order in such
circumstance is reasonable and
appropriate.
The Exchange also believes it is
reasonable and appropriate to cancel an
order subject to the single Display-Price
Sliding process in Test Group Three in
the event that the NBBO widens and a
contra-side Non-Displayed Order is
resting on the BYX Book at the price to
which the order subject to Display-Price
Sliding would be adjusted. Due to
technological limitations and the Plan’s
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increased minimum quoting increments,
the Exchange is unable to safely reprogram its System to re-price such
orders to the original locking price in
such circumstances. The Exchange also
anticipates that the scenario under
which it proposes to cancel the DisplayPrice Sliding order will be infrequent in
Tick Pilot Securities. Users who prefer
an execution in such a scenario may
elect to use the multiple Display-Price
Sliding process. Therefore, the
Exchange believes it is consistent with
the Act to set forth this scenario in its
rules so that Users will understand how
the System operates and how their
orders would be handled in this discrete
scenario.
Lastly, the Exchange believes the
ministerial changes to Rule 11.27 are
also consistent with the Act as they
would: (i) Clarify a provision under
paragraph (a)(4); and (ii) remove
redundant provisions from the rule.
(B) Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will result in
any burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. The
Exchange notes that the proposed rule
change is designed to assist the
Exchange in meeting its regulatory
obligations pursuant to the Plan, reduce
System complexity and enhance
resiliency. The Exchange also notes that
the proposed rule change will apply
equally to all Members that trade Pilot
Securities.
(C) Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants or Others
Written comments were neither
solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the Exchange consents,
the Commission will: (a) By order
approve or disapprove such proposed
rule change, or (b) institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposal is
consistent with the Act. In particular,
the Commission seeks comment on the
issue described below.
In the Approval Order, the
Commission stressed the importance of
testing the impact of wider tick sizes on
the trading and liquidity of the
securities of small capitalization
companies, and doing so in a way that
produces robust results that inform
future policy decisions.54 The
Commission acknowledged the
complexity of the Pilot and the costs
that its implementation would create for
market participants, but concluded that
the benefits of the empirical data that
would be produced by the Pilot
warranted incurring those costs.55 As a
result, the Plan requires that each
Participant, including the Exchange,
adopt rules that are necessary for
compliance with the provisions of the
Plan.56
While the Exchange states that the
proposed rule change describes the
system changes necessary to implement
the Pilot, the Commission notes that the
scope of the proposed changes extends
beyond those required for compliance
with the Plan, and would eliminate
certain order types for Pilot Securities
during the Pilot Period, or modify their
operation in ways not required by the
Plan. For example, the Exchange
proposes not to accept Market Pegged
Orders, Discretionary Orders, and
Supplemental Peg Orders, and certain
types of Mid-Point Peg Orders, in some
or all Test Groups of Pilot Securities for
the duration of the Pilot Period.57 These
proposals appear designed to permit the
Exchange to avoid the costs of
modifying these order types to comply
with the Plan. The Exchange notes that
these order types are infrequently used
in Pilot Securities, and takes the
position that ‘‘[t]he limited usage and
execution scenarios do not justify the
additional system complexity which
would be created by modifying the
System to support such order types in
order to comply with the Plan.’’ 58 At
the same time, the Exchange also does
not appear prepared to propose to
eliminate these order types indefinitely.
By contrast, the Exchange proposes to
modify, in ways not required by the
54 See Approval Order, supra note 4, at 80 FR
27515.
55 Id at 27516.
56 See Sections II(B) of the Plan. See also Section
IV of the Plan.
57 The Exchange also proposes to cancel certain
orders subject to the Display-Price Sliding process
in certain Pilot Securities for the duration of the
Pilot Period.
58 See supra Item II.A.2.
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Plan, the operation of Market Pegged
Orders and Non-Displayed Orders, and
certain orders subject to the DisplayPrice Sliding process, in some or all
Test Groups of Pilot Securities, and to
incur the associated system change
costs, in order to increase the
‘‘execution opportunities’’ for these
order types for the duration of the Pilot
Period.59
The Commission is concerned that
proposed rule changes, other than those
necessary for compliance with Plan, that
are targeted at Pilot Securities, that have
a disparate impact on different Test
Groups and the Control Group, and that
are to apply temporarily only for the
Pilot Period, could bias the results of the
Pilot and undermine the value of the
data generated in informing future
policy decisions. Accordingly, the
Commission is concerned that the
proposed rule change may not be
consistent with Act, including Section
6(b)(5) thereof and Rule 608 of
Regulation NMS, or with the Plan.
Comments may be submitted by any
of the following methods:
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with NOTICES
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–
BatsBYX–2016–17 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.
All submissions should refer to File No.
SR–BatsBYX–2016–17. 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
59 See
supra Item II.A.1–2.
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47205
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such
filing will also 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 No. SR–BatsBYX–
2016–17 and should be submitted on or
before August 10, 2016.
the Regulation NMS Plan to Implement
a Tick Size Pilot Program (‘‘Plan’’ or
‘‘Pilot’’).4 In determining the scope of
the proposed changes to implement the
Pilot,5 the Exchange carefully weighed
the impact on the Pilot, System
complexity, and the usage of such order
types in Pilot Securities.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available at the Exchange’s Web site
at www.batstrading.com, at the
principal office of the Exchange, and at
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.60
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
[FR Doc. 2016–17092 Filed 7–19–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–78331; File No. SR–
BatsEDGX–2016–26]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Bats
EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing
of a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt
Paragraph (c) to Exchange Rule 11.22
To Describe Changes to System
Functionality Necessary To Implement
the Regulation NMS Plan To Implement
a Tick Size Pilot Program
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 parts of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
July 14, 2016.
1. Purpose
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on June 29,
2016, Bats EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘EDGX’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III 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.
Background
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal to
adopt paragraph (c) to Exchange Rule
11.22 to describe changes to System 3
functionality necessary to implement
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 The term ‘‘System’’ is defined as the ‘‘electronic
communications and trading facility designated by
the Board through which securities orders of Users
are consolidated for ranking, execution and, when
applicable, routing away.’’ See Exchange Rule
1.5(cc).
PO 00000
60 17
Frm 00051
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
On August 25, 2014, NYSE Group,
Inc., on behalf of the Exchange, Bats
BYX Exchange, Inc. (‘‘BYX’’), Chicago
Stock Exchange, Inc., Bats BZX
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘BZX’’), Bats EDGA
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘EDGA’’), Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(‘‘FINRA’’), NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc.,
NASDAQ OMX PHLX LLC, the Nasdaq
Stock Market LLC, New York Stock
Exchange LLC (‘‘NYSE’’), NYSE MKT
LLC, and NYSE Arca, Inc. (collectively
‘‘Participants’’), filed with the
Commission, pursuant to Section 11A of
the Act 6 and Rule 608 of Regulation
NMS thereunder, the Plan to implement
a tick size pilot program.7 The
Participants filed the Plan to comply
with an order issued by the Commission
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 74892
(May 6, 2015), 80 FR 27513 (May 13, 2015)
(‘‘Approval Order’’).
5 Unless otherwise specified, capitalized terms
used in this rule filing are defined as set forth in
the Plan.
6 15 U.S.C. 78k–1.
7 See Letter from Brendon J. Weiss, Vice
President, Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., to
Secretary, Commission, dated August 25, 2014.
E:\FR\FM\20JYN1.SGM
20JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 139 (Wednesday, July 20, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 47198-47205]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-17092]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-78333; File No. SR-BatsBYX-2016-17]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Bats BYX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of
Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend Exchange Rule 11.27 To
Describe Changes to System Functionality Necessary To Implement the
Regulation NMS Plan To Implement a Tick Size Pilot Program
July 14, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(the ``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given
that on 29 June, 2016, Bats BYX Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or
``BYX'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``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 Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal to adopt paragraph (c) to Exchange
Rule 11.27 to describe changes to System \3\ functionality necessary to
implement the Regulation NMS Plan to Implement a Tick Size Pilot
Program (``Plan'' or ``Pilot'').\4\ In determining the scope of the
proposed changes to implement the Pilot,\5\ the Exchange carefully
weighed the impact on the Pilot, System complexity, and the usage of
such order types in Pilot Securities. The Exchange also proposes to
amend paragraph (a) of Rule 11.27 to specify that orders entered into
the Exchange's Retail Price Improvement (``RPI'') Program qualify for
certain exceptions to the Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The term ``System'' is defined as the ``electronic
communications and trading facility designated by the Board through
which securities orders of Users are consolidated for ranking,
execution and, when applicable, routing away.'' See Exchange Rule
1.5(aa).
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 74892 (May 6, 2015),
80 FR 27513 (May 13, 2015) (``Approval Order'').
\5\ Unless otherwise specified, capitalized terms used in this
rule filing are defined as set forth in the Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The text of the proposed rule change is available at the Exchange's
Web site at www.batstrading.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 parts of such
statements.
(A) Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
Background
On August 25, 2014, NYSE Group, Inc., on behalf of the Exchange,
Bats BZX Exchange, Inc. (``BZX''), Chicago Stock Exchange, Inc., Bats
EDGA Exchange, Inc. (``EDGA''), Bats EDGX Exchange, Inc. (``EDGX''),
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (``FINRA''), NASDAQ OMX
BX, Inc., NASDAQ OMX PHLX LLC, the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC, New York
Stock Exchange LLC (``NYSE''), NYSE MKT LLC, and NYSE Arca, Inc.
(collectively ``Participants''), filed with the Commission, pursuant to
Section 11A of the Act \6\ and Rule 608 of Regulation NMS thereunder,
the Plan to implement a tick size pilot program.\7\ The Participants
filed the Plan to comply with an order issued by the Commission on June
24, 2014.\8\ The Plan was published for comment in the Federal Register
on November 7, 2014, and approved by the Commission, as modified, on
May 6, 2015.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 78k-1.
\7\ See Letter from Brendon J. Weiss, Vice President,
Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., to Secretary, Commission, dated
August 25, 2014.
\8\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72460 (June 24,
2014), 79 FR 36840 (June 30, 2014).
\9\ See Approval Order, supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 47199]]
The Plan is designed to allow the Commission, market participants,
and the public to study and assess the impact of increment conventions
on the liquidity and trading of the common stocks of small-
capitalization companies. Each Participant is required to comply, and
to enforce compliance by its member organizations, as applicable, with
the provisions of the Plan.
The Pilot will include stocks of companies with $3 billion or less
in market capitalization, an average daily trading volume of one
million shares or less, and a volume weighted average price of at least
$2.00 for every trading day. The Pilot will consist of a Control Group
of approximately 1400 Pilot Securities and three Test Groups with 400
Pilot Securities in each Test Group selected by a stratified
sampling.\10\ During the Pilot, Pilot Securities in the Control Group
will be quoted and traded at the currently permissible increments.
Pilot Securities in the first Test Group (``Test Group One'') will be
quoted in $0.05 minimum increments but will continue to trade at any
price increment that is currently permitted.\11\ Pilot Securities in
the second Test Group (``Test Group Two'') will be quoted in $0.05
minimum increments and will trade at $0.05 minimum increments subject
to a midpoint exception, a retail investor order exception, and a
negotiated trade exception.\12\ Pilot Securities in the third Test
Group (``Test Group Three'') will be subject to the same restrictions
as Test Group Two and also will be subject to the ``Trade-at''
requirement to prevent price matching by a market participant that is
not displaying at a price of a Trading Center's \13\ ``Best Protected
Bid'' or ``Best Protected Offer,'' unless an enumerated exception
applies.\14\ The same exceptions provided under Test Group Two will
also be available under the Trade-at Prohibition, with an additional
exception for Block Size orders and exceptions that mirror those under
Rule 611 of Regulation NMS.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See Section V of the Plan for identification of Pilot
Securities, including criteria for selection and grouping.
\11\ See Section VI(B) of the Plan.
\12\ See Section VI(C) of the Plan.
\13\ The Plan incorporates the definition of ``Trading Center''
from Rule 600(b)(78) of Regulation NMS. Regulation NMS defines a
Trading Center as ``a national securities exchange or national
securities association that operates an SRO trading facility, an
alternative trading system, an exchange market maker, an OTC market
maker, or any other broker or dealer that executes orders internally
by trading as principal or crossing orders as agent.''
\14\ See Section VI(D) of the Plan.
\15\ 17 CFR 242.611.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Plan requires the Exchange to establish, maintain, and enforce
written policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to comply
with applicable quoting and trading requirements specified in the Plan.
Accordingly, the Exchange adopted paragraph (a) of Rule 11.27 to
require Members \16\ to comply with the quoting and trading provisions
of the Plan.\17\ The Exchange also adopted paragraph (b) of Rule 11.27
to require Members to comply with the data collection provisions under
Appendix B and C of the Plan.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The term ``Member'' is defined as ``any registered broker
or dealer that has been admitted to membership in the Exchange.''
See Exchange Rule 1.5(n).
\17\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 77793 (May 10,
2016), 81 FR 30366 (May 16, 2016) (SR-BatsBYX-2016-07).
\18\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 77418 (March 22,
2016), 81 FR 17213 (March 28, 2016) (SR-BatsBYX-2016-01).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed System Changes
The Exchange proposes to amend paragraph (a) of Rule 11.27 to
specify that orders entered into the Exchange's RPI Program qualify for
certain exceptions to the Plan. The Exchange also proposes to adopt
paragraph (c) of Exchange Rule 11.27 to describe changes to System
functionality necessary to implement the Plan. Paragraph (c) of Rule
11.27 would set forth the Exchange's specific procedures for handling,
executing, re-pricing and displaying of certain order types and order
type instructions applicable to Pilot Securities. Unless otherwise
indicated, paragraph (c) of Rule 11.27 would apply to order types and
order type instructions in Pilot Securities in Test Groups One, Two,
and Three and not to Pilot Securities included in the Control Group.
The proposed changes include select and discrete amendments to the
operation of: (i) BYX Market Orders; (ii) Market Pegged Orders; (iii)
Mid-Point Peg Orders; (iii) Discretionary Orders; (iv) Non-Displayed
Orders; (v) Market Maker Peg Orders; (vi) Supplemental Peg Orders; and
(vii) orders subject to the Display-Price Sliding process.
In determining the scope of these proposed changes to implement the
Plan, the Exchange carefully weighed the impact on the Pilot, System
complexity, and the usage of such order types in Pilot Securities.
These proposed changes are designed to directly comply with the Plan
and to assist the Exchange in meeting its regulatory obligations
pursuant to the Plan. As discussed below, certain of these changes are
also intended to reduce risk in the System by eliminating unnecessary
complexity based on infrequent current usage of certain order types in
Pilot Securities and/or their limited ability to execute under the
Trade-at Prohibition. Therefore, the Exchange firmly believes that
these changes will have little or no impact on the operation and data
collection elements of the Plan. The Exchange further believes that the
proposed rule changes are reasonably designed to comply with applicable
quoting and trading requirements specified in the Plan.
RPI Program
In November 2012, the Commission approved the RPI Program on a
pilot basis.\19\ The Program is designed to attract retail order flow
to the Exchange, and allow such order flow to receive potential price
improvement. Under the Program, all Exchange Users \20\ are permitted
to provide potential price improvement for Retail Orders \21\ in the
form of non-displayed interest that is better than the national best
bid that is a Protected Quotation or the national best offer that is a
Protected Quotation.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68303 (November 27,
2012), 77 FR 71652 (December 3, 2012) (``RPI Approval Order'') (SR-
BYX-2012-019).
\20\ A ``User'' is defined as any member or sponsored
participant of the Exchange who is authorized to obtain access to
the System pursuant to Rule 11.3. See Exchange Rule 1.5(cc).
\21\ A ``Retail Order'' is defined in Exchange Rule 11.24(a)(2)
as an agency order that originates from a natural person and is
submitted to the Exchange by a RMO, provided that no change is made
to the terms of the order with respect to price or side of market
and the order does not originate from a trading algorithm or any
computerized methodology. The definition of Retail Order is also
substantially similar to the definition of Retail Investor Order
under the Plan. See Section I(DD) of the Plan.
\22\ The term Protected Quotation is defined in Exchange Rule
1.5(t) and has the same meaning as is set forth in Regulation NMS
Rule 600(b)(58). The terms Protected NBB and Protected NBO are
defined in Exchange Rule 1.5(s). The Protected NBB is the best-
priced protected bid and the Protected NBO is the best-priced
protected offer. Generally, the Protected NBB and Protected NBO and
the national best bid (``NBB'') and national best offer (``NBO'',
together with the NBB, the ``NBBO'') will be the same. However, a
market center is not required to route to the NBB or NBO if that
market center is subject to an exception under Regulation NMS Rule
611(b)(1) or if such NBB or NBO is otherwise not available for an
automatic execution. In such case, the Protected NBB or Protected
NBO would be the best-priced protected bid or offer to which a
market center must route interest pursuant to Regulation NMS Rule
611.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(4) sets forth the applicable limitations for
securities in Test Group One. Consistent with the language of the Plan,
Rule 11.27(a)(4) provides that no Member may display, rank, or accept
from any person any displayable or non-displayable bids or
[[Page 47200]]
offers, orders, or indications of interest in any Pilot Security in
Test Group One in increments other than $0.05. Pilot Securities in Test
Group One may continue to trade at any price increment that is
currently permitted by the applicable Participant, SEC and Exchange
rules.\23\ Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(5) sets forth the applicable quoting
and trading requirements for securities in Test Group Two. This
provision states that no Member may display, rank, or accept from any
person any displayable or non-displayable bids or offers, orders, or
indications of interest in any Pilot Security in Test Group Two in
increments other than $0.05. In Test Groups One and Two, however,
orders entered in a Participant-operated retail liquidity program may
be ranked and accepted in increments of less than $0.05. Therefore, the
Exchange proposes to amend Rule 11.27(a)(4) and (5) to also specify
that the RPI Program qualifies as a Participant-operated liquidity
program under the Plan and that orders entered into the RPI Program may
be ranked and accepted in increments of less than $0.05 in Test Groups
One and Two.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ The Exchange proposes to amend the last sentence of Rule
11.27(a)(4) to specify that the current permissible price increments
are set forth under Exchange Rule 11.11, Price Variations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(5) also sets forth the applicable trading
restrictions for Test Group Two securities. Absent any of the
exceptions listed in the Rule, no Member may execute orders in any
Pilot Security in Test Group Two in price increments other than $0.05.
Consistent with the language of the Plan, the Rule provides that Pilot
Securities in Test Group Two may trade in increments of less than $0.05
where a Retail Investor Order is provided with price improvement that
is at least $0.005 better than the best protected bid and best
protected offer (``PBBO'').\24\ The Exchange proposes to amend Rule
11.27(a)(5) to specify that Retail Orders entered into the Exchange's
RPI Program qualify as Retail Investor Orders and may be provided with
price improvement that is at least $0.005 better than the PBBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Regulation NMS defines a protected bid or protected offer
as a quotation in an NMS stock that (1) is displayed by an automated
trading center; (2) is disseminated pursuant to an effective
national market system plan; and (3) is an automated quotation that
is the best bid or best offer of a national securities exchange, the
best bid or best offer of The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc., or the best
bid or best offer of a national securities association other than
the best bid or best offer of The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. See 17
CFR 242.600(57). In the Approval Order, the Commission noted that
the protected quotation standard encompasses the aggregate of the
most aggressively priced displayed liquidity on all Trading Centers,
whereas the NBBO standard is limited to the single best order in the
market. See Approval Order, supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6) sets forth the applicable quoting and
trading restrictions for Pilot Securities in Test Group Three. The rule
provides that no Member may display, rank, or accept from any person
any displayable or non-displayable bids or offers, orders, or
indications of interest in any Pilot Security in Test Group Three in
increments other than $0.05. However, orders entered in a Participant-
operated retail liquidity program may be ranked and accepted in
increments of less than $0.05. As proposed for Rules 11.27(a)(4) and
(5) above, the Exchange similarly proposes to amend Rule 11.27(a)(6) to
also specify that the RPI Program qualifies as a Participant-operated
liquidity program under the Plan and that orders entered into the RPI
Program may be ranked and accepted in increments of less than $0.05.
The rule also states that, absent any of the applicable exceptions,
no Member that operates a Trading Center may execute orders in any
Pilot Security in Test Group Three in price increments other than
$0.05. Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6)(C) sets forth the exceptions pursuant
to which Pilot Securities in Test Group Three may trade in increments
of less than $0.05. One exception is that Retail Investor Orders may be
provided with price improvement that is at least $0.005 better than the
PBBO. As proposed for Rule 11.27(a)(5) above, the Exchange similarly
proposes to amend Rule 11.27(a)(6) to specify that Retail Orders
entered into the Exchange's RPI Program qualify as Retail Investor
Orders and may be provided with price improvement that is at least
$0.005 better than the PBBO.
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) sets forth the Trade-at Prohibition,
which is the prohibition against executions by a Member that operates a
Trading Center of a sell order for a Pilot Security in Test Group Three
at the price of a Protected Bid or the execution of a buy order for a
Pilot Security in Test Group Three at the price of a Protected Offer
during Regular Trading Hours,\25\ absent any of the exceptions set
forth in Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D). Consistent with the Plan, Exchange Rule
11.27(a)(6)(D) excepts an order that is a Retail Investor Order that is
executed with at least $0.005 price improvement from the Trade-at
Prohibition. The Exchange proposes to amend Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) to
specify that Retail Orders entered into the Exchange's RPI Program
qualify as Retail Investor Orders and may be provided with price
improvement that is at least $0.005 better than the PBBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ The term ``Regular Trading Hours'' is defined as ``the time
between 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time.'' See Exchange Rule
1.5(w).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
BYX Market Orders
A BYX Market Order is an order to buy or sell a stated amount of a
security that is to be executed at the NBBO when the order reaches the
Exchange. BYX Market Orders shall not trade through Protected
Quotations.\26\ Any portion of a BYX Market Order that would execute at
a price more than $0.50 or 5 percent worse than the NBBO at the time
the order initially reaches the Exchange, whichever is greater, will be
cancelled.\27\ In order to comply with the minimum quoting increments
set forth in the Plan, the Exchange proposes to state under proposed
Rule 11.27(c)(1) that for purposes of determining whether a BYX Market
Order's execution price is more than 5 percent worse than the NBBO
under Rule 11.9(a)(2), the execution price for a buy (sell) order will
be rounded down (up) to the nearest $0.05 increment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(a)(2).
\27\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market Pegged Orders
The Exchange proposes to amend the operation of Market Pegged
Orders to reduce risk in its System by eliminating unnecessary
complexity based on infrequent current usage in Pilot Securities and
their limited ability to execute under the Trade-at Prohibition in Test
Group Three. A Pegged Order is a limit order that after entry into the
System, the price of the order is automatically adjusted by the System
in response to changes in the NBBO. A Pegged Order will peg to the NBB
or NBO or a certain amount away from the NBB or NBO.\28\ A Market
Pegged Order is pegged to the contra-side NBBO.\29\ A User entering a
Market Pegged Order can specify that such order's price will offset the
inside quote on the contra-side of the market by an amount (the
``Offset Amount'') set by the User. Market Pegged Orders are not
eligible to be displayed on the Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(8).
\29\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(8)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Test Groups One and Two, the Exchange proposes to modify the
behavior of Market Pegged Order when it is locked by an incoming BYX
Post Only Order \30\ or Partial Post Only at Limit Order \31\ that does
not remove liquidity pursuant to Rule 11.9(c)(6) or Rule
11.9(c)(7),\32\ respectively. In such
[[Page 47201]]
case, the Market Pegged Order would be converted to an executable order
and will remove liquidity against such incoming order.\33\ In no case
would a Market Pegged Order execute against an incoming BYX Post Only
Order or Partial Post Only at Limit Order if an order with higher
priority is on the BYX Book.\34\ Specifically, if an order other than a
Market Pegged Order maintains higher priority than one or more Market
Pegged Orders, the Market Pegged Order(s) with lower priority will not
be converted, as described above, and the incoming BYX Post Only Order
or Partial Post Only at Limit Order will be posted or cancelled in
accordance with Rule 11.9(c)(6) or Rule 11.9(c)(7).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(6).
\31\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(7).
\32\ A BYX Post Only Order will remove contra-side liquidity
from the BYX Book if the order is an order to buy or sell a security
priced below $1.00 or if the value of such execution when removing
liquidity equals or exceeds the value of such execution if the order
instead posted to the BYX Book and subsequently provided liquidity,
including the applicable fees charged or rebates provided. See
Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(6). A Partial Post Only at Limit Order will
remove liquidity from the BYX Book up to the full size of the order
if, at the time of receipt, it can be executed at prices better than
its limit price. See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(7).
\33\ The Exchange notes that a BYX Post Only will, in most
cases, remove liquidity from the BYX Book because under its current
taker-maker pricing structure, the remover of liquidity is provided
a rebate while the provider of liquidity is charged a fee.
Therefore, in most cases, value of the execution to remove liquidity
will equal or exceed the value of such execution once posted to the
BYX Book, including the applicable fees charged or rebates received.
\34\ The term ``BYX Book'' is defined as the ``System's
electronic file of orders.'' See Exchange Rule 1.5(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange notes that Market Pegged Orders are aggressive by
nature and believes executing the order in such circumstance is
appropriate. The Exchange also notes that the proposed behavior for
Market Pegged Orders in Test Groups One and Two is identical to the
operation of orders with the Super Aggressive Routing instruction under
Exchange Rule 11.13(b)(4)(C). When an order with a Super Aggressive
instruction is locked by an incoming BYX Post Only Order or Partial
Post Only at Limit Order that does not remove liquidity pursuant to
Rule 11.9(c)(6) or Rule 11.9(c)(7), respectively, the order is
converted to an executable order and will remove liquidity against such
incoming order. In addition, like as proposed above, in no case would
an order with a Super Aggressive instruction execute against an
incoming BYX Post Only Order or Partial Post Only at Limit Order if an
order with higher priority is on the BYX Book. The Exchange believes
this change is reasonable and appropriate due to the limited usage of
Market Pegged Orders in Pilot Securities, to avoid unnecessary
additional System complexity, and to ensure the Market Pegged Order may
execute in such circumstance.
The Exchange also proposes to not accept Market Pegged Orders in
Test Group Three based on limited current usage, additional System
complexity, and their limited ability to execute under the Trade-at
Prohibition. The Exchange believes that their de minimis usage and
limited ability to execute due to the Trade-at Prohibition does not
justify the complexity that would be created by supporting Market
Pegged Orders in Test Group Three. A vast majority of Market Pegged
Orders are entered into the System with a zero Offset and, therefore,
create a locked market with the contra-side NBBO. Under the Trade-at
Prohibition, a Market Pegged Order would not be eligible for execution
at the locking price, including when a Trade-at Intermarket Sweep Order
(``ISO'') \35\ is entered, because of non-cleared contra-side Protected
Quotations. For example, assume the NBBO is $10.00 (NYSE) x $10.05
(Nasdaq) in a Test Group 3 security. A Market Pegged Order to buy at
$10.10 with a zero Offset is entered on the Exchange. The order would
be ranked and hidden on the BYX Book at $10.05. A Trade-at ISO to sell
at $10.05 is then entered. In this example, no execution occurs on BYX
because Nasdaq is displaying an order to sell at $10.05. The Trade-at
ISO instruction only indicates that all of the better and equal priced
buy orders have been cleared. It does not indicate that the seller has
cleared any Protected Offers. Therefore, the Exchange proposes to not
accept Market Pegged Orders in Test Group Three in an effort to reduce
unnecessary System complexity, avoid an internally locked book, and due
to the limited execution opportunities for Market Pegged Orders due to
the Trade-at Prohibition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ A Trade-at ISO is a Limit Order for a Pilot Security that
meets the following requirements: (i) when routed to a Trading
Center, the limit order is identified as a Trade-at Intermarket
Sweep Order; and (ii) simultaneously with the routing of the limit
order identified as a Trade-at Intermarket Sweep Order, one or more
additional limit orders, as necessary, are routed to execute against
the full size of any protected bid, in the case of a limit order to
sell, or the full displayed size of any protected offer, in the case
of a limit order to buy, for the Pilot Security with a price that is
better than or equal to the limit price of the limit order
identified as a Trade-at Intermarket Sweep Order. See Exchange Rule
11.27(a)(7)(A)(i). These additional routed orders also must be
marked as Trade-at Intermarket Sweep Orders. Id.
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Mid-Point Peg Orders
A Mid-Point Peg Order is an order whose price is automatically
adjusted by the System in response to changes in the NBBO to be pegged
to the midpoint of the NBBO, or, alternatively, pegged to the less
aggressive of the midpoint of the NBBO or one minimum price variation
\36\ inside the same side of the NBBO as the order.\37\ The Plan and
current Exchange rules permit the acceptance of orders priced to
execute at the midpoint of the NBBO to be ranked and accepted in
increments of less than $0.05.\38\ Consistent with previous guidance
issued by the Participants,\39\ the Exchange proposes to amend the
operation of Mid-Point Peg Orders to explicitly state that Mid-Point
Peg Orders in Pilot Securities may not be entered in increments other
than $0.05. The System will execute a Mid-Point Peg Order: (i) In $0.05
increments priced better than the midpoint of the NBBO; or (ii) at the
midpoint of the NBBO, regardless of whether the midpoint of the NBBO is
in an increment of $0.05. In order to comply with the minimum quoting
and trading increments of the Plan and reduce unnecessary System
complexity, a Mid-Point Peg Order will not be permitted to
alternatively peg to one minimum price variation inside the same side
of the NBBO as the order in Pilot Securities. The Exchange believes
that the current de minimis usage of the alternative pegging
functionality in Pilot Securities does not justify the complexity and
risk that would be created by re-programming the System to support this
functionality under the Plan.
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\36\ See Exchange Rule 11.11.
\37\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(9).
\38\ See Sections VI(B), (C), and (D) of the Plan. See also
Exchange Rules 11.27(a)(4), (a)(5), and (a)(6).
\39\ See e.g., Question 42 of the Tick Size Pilot Program
Trading and Quoting FAQs available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/TSPP-Trading-and-Quoting-FAQs.pdf
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Discretionary Orders
The Exchange proposes to not accept Discretionary Orders in all
Test Groups, including the Control Group, to reduce risk in the System
by eliminating unnecessary complexity based on infrequent current usage
in Pilot Securities. In sum, a Discretionary Order is a Limit Order
with a displayed or non-displayed ranked price and size and an
additional non-displayed ``discretionary price''.\40\ The discretionary
price is a non-displayed upward offset at which a User is willing to
buy, if necessary, or a non-displayed downward offset at which a User
is willing to sell, if necessary. The System changes necessary for a
Discretionary Order to comply with the Plan become increasingly complex
because both the
[[Page 47202]]
displayed price and discretionary price must comply with the Plan's
minimum quoting and trading increments as well as the Trade-at
restriction in Test Group Three. In addition, Users do not currently
set discretionary prices less than $0.05 away from the order's
displayed price and the Exchange does not anticipate Users doing so
under the Plan. To date, Discretionary Orders are rarely entered in
Pilot Securities and the Exchange anticipates their usage to further
decrease due to the Plan's minimum quoting increments. The Exchange
believes that the current extremely limited usage of Discretionary
Orders in Pilot Securities does not justify the additional System
complexity that would be created by supporting Discretionary Orders. As
a result of these factors the Exchange proposes to not accept
Discretionary Orders in all Test Groups and the Control Group.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(10).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-Displayed Orders
The Exchange proposes to re-price to the midpoint of the NBBO Non-
Displayed Orders in Test Group Three that are priced in a permissible
increment better than the midpoint of the NBBO. A Non-Displayed Order
is a Market or Limit Order that is not displayed on the Exchange.\41\
Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) incorporates the Trade-at Prohibition in
the Exchange's rules. The Trade-at Prohibition prevents the execution
of a sell order for a Pilot Security in Test Group Three at the price
of a Protected Bid or the execution of a buy order for a Pilot Security
in Test Group Three at the price of a Protected Offer during Regular
Trading Hours, unless an exception applies. A Trading Center that is
displaying a quotation, via either a processor or an SRO quotation
feed, that is a Protected Bid or Protected Offer is permitted to
execute orders at that level, but only up to the amount of its
displayed size. Unless an exception applies, a Non-Displayed Order that
is able to execute at the price of the Protected Quotation would not be
able to do so in Test Group Three due to the Trade-at Prohibition and
the Exchange's priority rule.\42\ Furthermore, such aggressively priced
orders would not be able to post to the BYX Book at the contra-side
Protected Quotation, and re-pricing the order to the midpoint of the
NBBO would increase execution opportunities under normal market
conditions. However, orders that are priced to execute at the midpoint
of the NBBO are exempt from the Trade-at Prohibition. Therefore, to
increase the execution opportunities for Non-Displayed Orders in Test
Group Three, the Exchange proposes to re-price to the midpoint of the
NBBO Non-Displayed Orders that are priced in a permissible increment
better than the midpoint of the NBBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(11).
\42\ Under Exchange Rule 11.12(a)(2), displayed Limit Orders
have priority over Non-Displayed Limit Orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market Maker Peg Orders
A Market Maker Peg Order is a Limit Order that is automatically
priced by the System at the Designated Percentage (as defined in
Exchange Rule 11.8) away from the then current NBB and NBO, or if no
NBB or NBO, at the Designated Percentage away from the last reported
sale from the responsible single plan processor in order to comply with
the quotation requirements for Market Makers set forth in Exchange Rule
11.8(d).\43\ Should the above pricing result in a Market Maker Peg
Order being priced at an increment other than $0.05, the Exchange
proposes to round an order to buy (sell) up (down) to the nearest $0.05
increment in order to comply with the minimum quoting increments of the
Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(16).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supplemental Peg Orders
The Exchange proposes to not accept Supplemental Peg Orders in Test
Group Three in order to reduce risk in the System by eliminating
unnecessary complexity based on infrequent current usage in Pilot
Securities and their limited ability to execute under the Trade-at
Prohibition. A Supplemental Peg Order is a non-displayed Limit Order
that posts to the BYX Book, and thereafter is eligible for execution at
the NBB for buy orders and NBO for sell orders against routable orders
that are equal to or less than the aggregate size of the Supplemental
Peg Order interest available at that price.\44\ In sum, Supplemental
Peg Orders are only executable at the NBBO against an order that is in
the process of being routed away. In such case, the Exchange is not
displaying a Protected Quotation and, therefore, the Supplemental Peg
Order would be unable to execute in Test Group Three due to the Trade-
at Prohibition.\45\ Therefore, the Exchange proposes to not accept
Supplemental Peg Orders in Test Group Three.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(c)(19).
\45\ The Exchange notes that the likelihood of a Supplemental
Peg Order qualifying for an exception to the Trade-at Prohibition is
small. For example, Supplemental Peg Orders are only executable
against orders that are to be routed away and would not be eligible
to execute against an incoming ISO or Trade-at ISO. Also, the
Exchange would not be displaying a Protected Quotation. In addition,
the Exchange does not frequently receive orders of Block Size and,
in order to qualify for the Block exception, the contra-side Block
Order must be routable and the Supplemental Peg Order be of Block
Size.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Display-Price Sliding
Under the Display-Price Sliding process, an order eligible for
display by the Exchange that, at the time of entry, would create a
violation of Rule 610(d) of Regulation NMS by locking or crossing a
Protected Quotation of an external market, will be ranked at the
locking price in the BYX Book and displayed by the System at one
minimum price variation (i.e., $0.05) below the current NBO (for bids)
or one minimum price variation above the current NBB (for offers).\46\
The ranked and displayed prices of an order subject to the Display-
Price Sliding process may be adjusted once or multiple times depending
upon the instructions of a User and changes to the prevailing NBBO.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(g)(1)(A).
\47\ See Exchange Rule 11.9(g)(1)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described above, Exchange Rule 11.27(a)(6)(D) sets forth the
Trade-at Prohibition, which is the prohibition against executions by a
Member that operates a Trading Center of a sell order for a Pilot
Security in Test Group Three at the price of a Protected Bid or the
execution of a buy order for a Pilot Security in Test Group Three at
the price of a Protected Offer during Regular Trading Hours, unless an
exception applies. Orders that are priced to execute at the midpoint of
the NBBO are exempt from the Trade-at Prohibition. Therefore, to
increase the execution opportunities and qualify for the mid-point
exception to the Trade-at Prohibition, the Exchange proposes to rank
orders in Test Group Three that are subject to the Display-Price
Sliding process at the midpoint of the NBBO in the BYX Book and display
such orders one minimum price variation below the current NBO (for
bids) or one minimum price variation above the current NBB (for
offers).
The Exchange also proposes to cancel orders subject to Display-
Price Sliding in Test Group Three that are only to be adjusted once and
not multiple times in the event the NBBO widens and a contra-side Non-
Displayed Order is resting on the BYX Book at the price to which the
order subject to Display-Price Sliding would be adjusted. Due to the
increased minimum quoting increments under the Plan, the Exchange is
unable to safely re-price an order subject to single Display-Price
Sliding in Test Group Three to the original locking price in such
circumstances and doing so would add additional System complexity and
risk. As discussed
[[Page 47203]]
above, the Exchange proposes to rank orders in Test Group Three subject
to the Display-Price Sliding process at the midpoint of the NBBO. In
the event the NBBO changes such that an order subject to Display-Price
Sliding would not lock or cross a Protected Quotation of an external
market, the order will receive a new timestamp, and will be displayed
at the order's limit price.\48\ Due to technological limitations
arising from the increased minimum quoting increments under the Plan,
however, the Exchange is unable to safely re-program its System to re-
price such order to the original locking price when the NBBO widens and
a contra-side Non-Displayed Order is resting on the BYX Book at the
price to which the order subject to Display-Price Sliding would be
adjusted. Therefore, the Exchange proposes to cancel orders subject to
the single Display-Price Sliding process in such circumstances. Users
who prefer an execution in such a scenario may elect to use the
multiple Display-Price Sliding process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ministerial Change
Currently, both Interpretation and Policy .03 to Rule 11.27(a) and
Interpretation and Policy .11 to Rule 11.27(b) state that Rule 11.27
shall be in effect during a pilot period to coincide with the pilot
period for the Plan (including any extensions to the pilot period for
the Plan). The Exchange proposes to include this language at the
beginning of Rule 11.27 and, therefore, proposes to delete both
Interpretation and Policy .03 to Rule 11.27(a) and Interpretation and
Policy .11 to Rule 11.27(b) as those provisions would be redundant and
unnecessary.
Implementation Date
If the Commission approves the proposed rule change, the proposed
rule change will be effective upon Commission approval and shall become
operative upon the commencement of the Pilot Period.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with Section
6(b) of the Act \49\ in general, and furthers the objectives of Section
6(b)(5) of the Act \50\ in particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged in facilitating transactions in
securities, to remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a
free and open market and a national market system and, in general, to
protect investors and the public interest. The Plan requires the
Exchange to establish, maintain, and enforce written policies and
procedures that are reasonably designed to comply with applicable
quoting and trading requirements specified in the Plan. The proposed
rule change is designed to comply with the Plan, reduce complexity and
enhance System resiliency while not adversely affecting the data
collected under the Plan. Therefore, the Exchange believes that the
proposed rule changes are reasonably designed to comply with applicable
quoting and trading requirements specified in the Plan and, as
discussed further below, other applicable regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\50\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that the proposed changes regarding its
Retail Price Improvement Program, BYX Market Orders, Mid-Point Peg
Orders, Market Maker Peg Orders, and Display-Price Sliding are
consistent with the Act because they are intended to modify the
Exchange's System to comply with the provisions of the Plan, and are
designed to assist the Exchange in meeting its regulatory obligations
pursuant to the Plan. In approving the Plan, the SEC noted that the
Pilot was an appropriate, data-driven test that was designed to
evaluate the impact of a wider tick size on trading, liquidity, and the
market quality of securities of smaller capitalization companies, and
was therefore in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. To the extent
that these proposals are intended to comply with the Plan, the Exchange
believes that these proposals are in furtherance of the objectives of
the Plan, as identified by the Commission, and is therefore consistent
with the Act.
The Exchange also believes that its proposed changes to Market
Pegged Orders, Discretionary Orders, Non-Displayed Orders, Supplemental
Peg Orders, and Display-Price Sliding are also consistent with the Act
because they are intended to eliminate unnecessary System complexity
and risk based on the de minimis current usage of such order types and
instructions in Pilot Securities and/or their limited ability to
execute under the Plan's minimum trading and quoting increments or
Trade-at Prohibition.\51\ For example, during March 2016, the
alternative pegging functionality of Mid-Point Peg Orders, Market
Pegged Orders, Non-Displayed Orders, and Supplemental Peg Orders
accounted for 0.01%, 0.02%, 0.92%, and 0.01%, respectively, of volume
in eligible Pilot Securities on the Exchange, BZX, EDGA and EDGX
combined. Notably, Discretionary Orders accounted for 0.00% of volume
in eligible Pilot Securities on the Exchange, BZX, EDGA and EDGX
combined. The Commission adopted Regulation Systems Compliance and
Integrity (``Regulation SCI'') in November 2014 to strengthen the
technology infrastructure of the U.S. securities markets.\52\
Regulation SCI is designed to reduce the occurrence of systems issues,
improve resiliency when systems problems do occur, and enhance the
Commission's oversight and enforcement of securities market technology
infrastructure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ The Commission has also expressed concern regarding
potential market instability caused by technological risks. See
e.g., Chair Mary Jo White, Commission, Enhancing Our Equity Market
Structure (June 5, 2014) available at https://www.sec.gov/News/Speech/Detail/Speech/1370542004312#.VD2HW610w6Y.
\52\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73639 (November 19,
2014), 79 FR 72251 (December 5, 2014) (``Regulation SCI Approval
Order'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulation SCI required the Exchange to establish written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to ensure that their systems have
levels of capacity, integrity, resiliency, availability, and security
adequate to maintain their operational capability and promote the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets, and that they operate in a
manner that complies with the Exchange Act. Each of these proposed
changes are intended to reduce complexity and risk in the System to
ensure the Exchange's technology remains robust and resilient. In
determining the scope of the proposed changes, the Exchange carefully
weighed the impact on the Pilot, System complexity, and the usage of
such order types in Pilot Securities.\53\ The potential complexity
results from code changes for a majority of the Exchange's order types,
which requires the implementation and testing of a separate branch of
code for each Test Group. For example, the Exchange currently utilizes
one branch of code for which to implement and test changes. Development
work for the Tick Pilot results in the creation of four additional
branches of code that are to be developed and tested (e.g., Control
Group + three Test Groups). The Exchange determined that the changes
proposed herein are necessary to ensure continued System resiliency in
accordance with the requirements of Regulation SCI. Therefore, the
Exchange believes the proposed rule change
[[Page 47204]]
promotes just and equitable principles of trade, removes impediments to
and perfects the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system and, in general, to protect investors and the public
interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ But for the Plan, the Exchange notes that it would not have
proposed to amend the operation of Market Pegged Orders,
Discretionary Orders, Non-Displayed Orders, Supplemental Peg Orders,
and Display-Price Sliding as described herein.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, each of these proposed changes would have a de minimis
to zero impact on the data reported pursuant to the Plan. As evidenced
above, Market Pegged Orders, Discretionary Orders, the alternative
pegging functionality of Mid-Point Peg Orders, and Supplemental Peg
Orders are infrequently used in Pilot Securities or the execution of
such orders would be scarce due to the Plan's minimum trading and
quoting requirement and Trade-at Prohibition. The limited usage and
execution scenarios do not justify the additional system complexity
which would be created by modifying the System to support such order
types in order to comply with the Plan. Therefore, the Exchange
believes each proposed change is a reasonable means to ensure that the
System's integrity, resiliency, and availability continues to promote
the maintenance of fair and orderly markets. Due to the additional
complexity, limited usage and execution opportunities, the Exchange
believes it is not unfairly discriminatory to apply the changes
proposed herein to only Pilot Securities as such changes are necessary
to reduce complexity and ensure continued System resiliency in
accordance with the requirements of Regulation SCI. The Exchange also
believes the proposed changes to Non-Displayed Orders, and orders
subject to the Display-Price Sliding process in Test Group Three are
consistent with the Act because they are designed to increase the
execution opportunities for such order types in compliance with the
mid-point exception to the Trade-at Prohibition. The Exchange also
believes the proposed change to Market Pegged Orders in Test Groups One
and Two is consistent with the Act because it is identical to the
operation of the Super Aggressive instruction under Exchange Rule
11.13(b)(4)(C). The Exchange notes that Market Pegged Orders are
aggressive by nature and believes executing the order in such
circumstance is reasonable and appropriate.
The Exchange also believes it is reasonable and appropriate to
cancel an order subject to the single Display-Price Sliding process in
Test Group Three in the event that the NBBO widens and a contra-side
Non-Displayed Order is resting on the BYX Book at the price to which
the order subject to Display-Price Sliding would be adjusted. Due to
technological limitations and the Plan's increased minimum quoting
increments, the Exchange is unable to safely re-program its System to
re-price such orders to the original locking price in such
circumstances. The Exchange also anticipates that the scenario under
which it proposes to cancel the Display-Price Sliding order will be
infrequent in Tick Pilot Securities. Users who prefer an execution in
such a scenario may elect to use the multiple Display-Price Sliding
process. Therefore, the Exchange believes it is consistent with the Act
to set forth this scenario in its rules so that Users will understand
how the System operates and how their orders would be handled in this
discrete scenario.
Lastly, the Exchange believes the ministerial changes to Rule 11.27
are also consistent with the Act as they would: (i) Clarify a provision
under paragraph (a)(4); and (ii) remove redundant provisions from the
rule.
(B) Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
result in any burden on competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The Exchange
notes that the proposed rule change is designed to assist the Exchange
in meeting its regulatory obligations pursuant to the Plan, reduce
System complexity and enhance resiliency. The Exchange also notes that
the proposed rule change will apply equally to all Members that trade
Pilot Securities.
(C) Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From Members, Participants or Others
Written comments were neither solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the Exchange consents, the Commission will: (a) By order approve
or disapprove such proposed rule change, or (b) institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposal is
consistent with the Act. In particular, the Commission seeks comment on
the issue described below.
In the Approval Order, the Commission stressed the importance of
testing the impact of wider tick sizes on the trading and liquidity of
the securities of small capitalization companies, and doing so in a way
that produces robust results that inform future policy decisions.\54\
The Commission acknowledged the complexity of the Pilot and the costs
that its implementation would create for market participants, but
concluded that the benefits of the empirical data that would be
produced by the Pilot warranted incurring those costs.\55\ As a result,
the Plan requires that each Participant, including the Exchange, adopt
rules that are necessary for compliance with the provisions of the
Plan.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See Approval Order, supra note 4, at 80 FR 27515.
\55\ Id at 27516.
\56\ See Sections II(B) of the Plan. See also Section IV of the
Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the Exchange states that the proposed rule change describes
the system changes necessary to implement the Pilot, the Commission
notes that the scope of the proposed changes extends beyond those
required for compliance with the Plan, and would eliminate certain
order types for Pilot Securities during the Pilot Period, or modify
their operation in ways not required by the Plan. For example, the
Exchange proposes not to accept Market Pegged Orders, Discretionary
Orders, and Supplemental Peg Orders, and certain types of Mid-Point Peg
Orders, in some or all Test Groups of Pilot Securities for the duration
of the Pilot Period.\57\ These proposals appear designed to permit the
Exchange to avoid the costs of modifying these order types to comply
with the Plan. The Exchange notes that these order types are
infrequently used in Pilot Securities, and takes the position that
``[t]he limited usage and execution scenarios do not justify the
additional system complexity which would be created by modifying the
System to support such order types in order to comply with the Plan.''
\58\ At the same time, the Exchange also does not appear prepared to
propose to eliminate these order types indefinitely. By contrast, the
Exchange proposes to modify, in ways not required by the
[[Page 47205]]
Plan, the operation of Market Pegged Orders and Non-Displayed Orders,
and certain orders subject to the Display-Price Sliding process, in
some or all Test Groups of Pilot Securities, and to incur the
associated system change costs, in order to increase the ``execution
opportunities'' for these order types for the duration of the Pilot
Period.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ The Exchange also proposes to cancel certain orders subject
to the Display-Price Sliding process in certain Pilot Securities for
the duration of the Pilot Period.
\58\ See supra Item II.A.2.
\59\ See supra Item II.A.1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is concerned that proposed rule changes, other than
those necessary for compliance with Plan, that are targeted at Pilot
Securities, that have a disparate impact on different Test Groups and
the Control Group, and that are to apply temporarily only for the Pilot
Period, could bias the results of the Pilot and undermine the value of
the data generated in informing future policy decisions. Accordingly,
the Commission is concerned that the proposed rule change may not be
consistent with Act, including Section 6(b)(5) thereof and Rule 608 of
Regulation NMS, or with the Plan.
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 No. SR-BatsBYX-2016-17 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.
All submissions should refer to File No. SR-BatsBYX-2016-17. 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 will also 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 No. SR-BatsBYX-2016-17 and should be
submitted on or before August 10, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\60\
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-17092 Filed 7-19-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P