Self-Regulatory Organizations; Bats EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change Related to the Exchange's Equity Options Platform To Adopt a Price Improvement Auction, the Bats Auction Mechanism, 69172-69181 [2016-24010]
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69172
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 193 / Wednesday, October 5, 2016 / 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 Number SR–
ISEGemini–2016–10 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.
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All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–ISEGemini–2016–10. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–
ISEGemini–2016–10 and should be
submitted on or before October 26,
2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.43
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–24003 Filed 10–4–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–78988; File No. SR–
BatsEDGX–2016–41]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Bats
EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing
of a Proposed Rule Change Related to
the Exchange’s Equity Options
Platform To Adopt a Price
Improvement Auction, the Bats
Auction Mechanism
September 29, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1, and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on
September 16, 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.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal for the
Exchange’s equity options platform
(‘‘EDGX Options’’) to adopt a price
improvement auction, the Bats Auction
Mechanism, as further discussed below.
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.
1 15
43 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
Overview
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to establish a price
improvement auction, the Bats Auction
Mechanism (‘‘BAM’’, ‘‘BAM Auction’’,
or ‘‘Auction’’) on the Exchange. BAM
includes functionality in which a
Member (an ‘‘Initiating Member’’) may
electronically submit for execution an
order it represents as agent on behalf of
a Priority Customer,3 broker dealer, or
any other person or entity (‘‘Agency
Order’’) against principal interest or
against any other order it represents as
agent (an ‘‘Initiating Order’’) provided it
submits the Agency Order for electronic
execution into the BAM Auction
pursuant to the proposed Rule. For
purposes of this filing and the proposed
Rule, the term ‘‘NBBO’’ shall mean the
national best bid or national best offer
at the particular point in time applicable
to the reference and the term ‘‘Initial
NBBO’’ shall mean the national best bid
or national best offer at the time an
Auction is initiated.
The Exchange believes that the BAM
Auction, as proposed herein, will
encourage participants on EDGX
Options to quote or display orders at the
NBBO with additional size and thereby
result in tighter and deeper markets,
resulting in more liquidity on EDGX
Options. Specifically, by offering all
EDGX Options participants (‘‘Users’’)
the ability to receive priority in the
proposed allocation during the BAM
Auction up to the size of their quote, an
EDGX User will be encouraged to
maintain quotes or orders with
additional size outside of the BAM
Auction at the best and most aggressive
prices. The Exchange believes that this
incentive may result in a narrowing of
quotes and thus further enhance EDGX’s
market quality. Within the BAM
Auction, EDGX believes that the rules
that are proposed will encourage EDGX
Users to compete vigorously to provide
the opportunity for price improvement
in a competitive auction process.
3 The term ‘‘Priority Customer’’ means any person
or entity that is not: (A) a broker or dealer in
securities; or (B) a Professional. The term ‘‘Priority
Customer Order’’ means an order for the account of
a Priority Customer. See Rule 16.1(a)(45). A
‘‘Professional’’ is any person or entity that: (A) is
not a broker or dealer in securities; and (B) places
more than 390 orders in listed options per day on
average during a calendar month for its own
beneficial account(s). All Professional orders shall
be appropriately marked by Options Members. See
Rule 16.1(a)(46).
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Auction Eligibility Requirements
All options traded on the Exchange
are eligible for BAM. Proposed Rule
21.19(a) describes the circumstances
under which an Initiating Member may
initiate an Auction. The Initiating
Member may initiate an Auction
provided the conditions which follow
are met: the Initiating Member must
stop the entire Agency Order as
principal or with a solicited order at a
price in an increment of $0.01 that is:
(A) If the Agency Order is for less than
50 option contracts and the difference
between the NBB and NBO is $0.01, the
Initiating Member must stop the entire
Agency Order at one minimum price
improvement increment, which
increment shall be determined by the
Exchange but may not be smaller than
$0.01; or (B) for any other Agency
Order, the Initiating Member must stop
the entire Agency Order at the better of
the NBBO or the Agency Order’s limit
price (if the order is a limit order).
Agency Orders that do not meet these
conditions will be rejected. Also,
Agency Orders submitted at or before
the opening of trading or when the
NBBO is crossed are not eligible to
initiate an Auction and will be rejected.
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Auction Process
Initiating and Pricing of Auctions
With respect to Agency Orders for less
than 50 contracts, only one such
Auction may be ongoing at any given
time in a series and Auctions in the
same series may not queue or overlap in
any manner. Auctions for Agency
Orders of 50 contracts or more will be
allowed to occur at the same time as
other Auctions in the same series.
Because multiple Auctions of Agency
Orders of 50 contracts or more will be
allowed to occur at the same time as
other Auctions, there will be no queuing
of Auctions for Agency orders of 50
contracts or more.
To initiate the Auction, the Initiating
Member must mark the Agency Order
for Auction processing, and specify
either: (i) A single price at which it
seeks to execute the Agency Order (a
‘‘single-price submission’’); or (ii) that it
is willing to automatically match as
principal or as agent on behalf of an
Initiating Order the price and size of all
BAM Auction notification responses
(‘‘BAM responses’’) and other trading
interest (‘‘auto-match’’) as follows: (a)
stopping the entire order at a single stop
price and auto-matching BAM responses
and other trading interest at all prices
that improve the stop price to a
specified price; or (b) stopping the
entire order at a single stop price and
auto-matching all BAM responses and
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other trading interest at all prices that
improve the stop price. For both singleprice submissions and auto-match, if the
EDGX BBO on the same side of the
market as the Agency Order represents
a Priority Customer on the book, the
stop price must be at least $0.01 better
than the booked order’s limit price.
Once the Initiating Member has
submitted an Agency Order for
processing as described herein, such
Agency Order may not be modified or
cancelled. Under no circumstances will
the Initiating Member receive an
allocation percentage, at the final price
point, of more than 50% of the initial
Agency Order in the event there is one
competing quote, order or BAM
response or 40% of the initial Agency
Order in the event there are multiple
competing quotes, orders or BAM
responses.4
Last Priority
When starting an Auction, the
Initiating Member may submit the
Initiating Order with a designation of
‘‘last priority’’ to other BAM
participants (‘‘Last Priority’’), which
will result in the Initiating Member
forfeiting priority and trade allocation
privileges to which it is otherwise
entitled pursuant to the proposed Rule.5
If Last Priority is specified, the Initiating
Order will only trade if there is not
enough interest available to fully
execute the Agency Order at prices
which are equal to or improve upon the
stop price. Last Priority will not be
applied if both the Initiating Order and
Agency Order are Priority Customer
Orders. Last Priority cannot be
designated on an Agency Order
specified as auto-match, and thus, is
only compatible with single-price
submissions. Finally, Last Priority
information will not be available to
other market participants and may not
be modified.
Auction Notification Messages
When the Exchange receives an
Agency Order for Auction processing,
an auction notification message
detailing the side, size, price, and
options series of the Agency Order will
be sent over the Exchange’s Multicast
PITCH Feed and Auction Feed.6 Agency
4 See
proposed Rule 21.19(b)(1)(A).
Chicago Board Options Exchange,
Incorporated’s (‘‘CBOE’’) has a process whereby
initiating participants may elect to receive last
priority in an allocation. See CBOE Rule
6.74A(b)(3)(J) (Automated Improvement Mechanism
(‘‘AIM’’)). See also Miami International Securities
Exchange, LLC (‘‘MIAX’’) Rule 5.15(A)(a)(2)(iii)(J);
NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc. (‘‘BX Options’’) Chapter VI,
Section 9(ii)(A)(1).
6 Both data feeds are currently provided free of
charge.
5 The
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Orders will not be included in the
Exchange’s disseminated best bid or
offer and will not be disseminated to
OPRA.
Auction Period
The Auction will last for a period of
time, as determined by the Exchange
and announced on the Exchange’s Web
site. The Auction period will be no less
than one hundred milliseconds and no
more than one second.7
According to filings made by
NASDAQ OMX PHLX LLC (‘‘PHLX’’)
and BX Options,8 PHLX staff previously
distributed a survey to all PHLX market
maker firms inquiring as to the
timeframe within which these market
participants respond to an auction with
a duration time ranging from less than
fifty (50) milliseconds to more than one
(1) second. According to the Filings, an
overwhelming number of the market
maker firms that responded to the
survey indicated that they were capable
of responding to auctions with a
duration time of at least 50
milliseconds.9 Based on the results of
the survey previously conducted by
PHLX, the commonality of participants
on the Exchange and other options
exchanges, including PHLX, and the
Exchange’s direct knowledge of its own
technology and customer base, the
Exchange believes that allowing for an
auction period of no less than one
hundred (100) milliseconds and no
more than one (1) second would provide
a meaningful opportunity for Members
to respond to the BAM Auction while at
the same time facilitating the prompt
execution of orders.10 The Exchange
believes that Members will have
sufficient time to ensure competition for
Agency Orders, and could provide
7 CBOE’s AIM auction is a duration of one
second. See CBOE Rule 6.74A(b)(1)(C).
8 See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No.
77557 (April 7, 2016), 81 FR 21935 (April 13, 2016)
(SR–Phlx–2016–40) (the ‘‘PHLX PIXL
Amendment’’); Securities Exchange Act Release No.
76301 (October 29, 2015), 80 FR 68347 (November
4, 2015) (SR–BX–2015–032) (the ‘‘BX Options Prism
Approval,’’ and together with the PHLX PIXL
Amendment, the ‘‘Filings’’).
9 Of the thirty five (35) PHLX market maker firms
that were surveyed, twenty (20) of these market
makers responded to the survey and of those
respondents 100% indicated that that their firm
could respond to auctions with a duration time of
at least 50 milliseconds. This survey was conducted
in May 2014. See id.
10 As of the date of this proposal, all Market
Makers on EDGX Options are also members of the
PHLX, and thus, rather than conduct an additional
survey of the same market participants when such
a survey was recently conducted, the Exchange is
proposing to adopt the same Auction time
parameters as have been approved based on that
study. See BX Options PRISM Approval, supra note
8.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 193 / Wednesday, October 5, 2016 / Notices
orders within the Auction additional
opportunities for price improvement.
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change could provide orders within
BAM an opportunity for price
improvement. Also, the shorter duration
of time for the auction reduces the
market risk for all Members executing
trades in BAM. Initiating Members are
required to guarantee an execution at
the NBBO or at a better price, and are
subject to market risk while their
Agency Order is exposed to other
Options Members. While other Members
are also subject to market risk, those
providing responses in BAM may cancel
or modify their orders while the
Initiating Member cannot. The Exchange
believes that the Initiating Member acts
in a critical role within the BAM
Auction. Their willingness to guarantee
the orders entered into BAM an
execution at the NBBO or a better price
is the keystone to an order gaining the
opportunity for price improvement. The
Exchange believes that allowing for an
auction period of no less than one
hundred milliseconds and no more than
one second will benefit Members
trading in BAM. EDGX believes it is in
these Members’ best interests to
minimize the auction time while
continuing to allow Members adequate
time to electronically respond. Both the
order being exposed and the responding
orders are subject to market risk during
the auction.
While some Members may wait to
respond until later in the auction,
presumably to minimize their market
risk, the Exchange believes that a
majority of BAM participants will
respond early in an Auction. BAM
Auctions are intended to provide all
market participants with sufficient time
to respond, compete, and provide price
improvement for orders while also
providing investors and other market
participants with timely executions,
thereby reducing their market risk. The
proposed rule to cap the Auction time
at one second will allow participants to
respond quickly at the most favorable
price while reducing the risk that the
market will move against the response.
EDGX believes that its Members
operate electronic systems that enable
them to react and respond to orders in
a meaningful way in fractions of a
second. EDGX believes that its Members
will be able to compete within 100
milliseconds and this is a sufficient
amount of time to respond to, compete
for, and provide price improvement for
orders, and will provide investors and
other market participants with more
timely executions, and reduce their
market risk.
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Auction Responses
As proposed, any person or entity
other than the Initiating Member may
submit responses to an Auction,
provided such responses are properly
marked specifying price, size, side of
the market and information identifying
the Auction to which the response is
targeted. BAM responses will not be
visible to Auction participants, and will
not be disseminated to OPRA. A BAM
response with a size greater than the
size of the Agency Order will be capped
at the size of the Agency Order (i.e., the
excess size will be ignored when
processing the Auction).
Multiple BAM responses from the
same User may be submitted during the
Auction. Multiple orders at a particular
price point submitted by a User in
response to an Auction or resting on the
EDGX Options Book will be aggregated
together and will be capped at the size
of the Agency Order (i.e., the excess size
will be ignored when processing the
Auction).
BAM responses may be modified or
cancelled during the Auction. BAM
responses on the same side of the
market as the Agency Order are
considered invalid and will be
immediately cancelled. BAM responses
cannot cross the price of the Initial
NBBO but will be executed, if possible,
at the most aggressive permissible price
within such Initial NBBO.
Finally, with respect to the impact of
this proposal on System 11 capacity,
EDGX has analyzed its capacity and
represents that it has the necessary
systems capacity to handle the potential
additional traffic associated with BAM
Auctions. Because neither BAM
notification messages nor responses will
be published to OPRA, the Exchange
does not expect any additional capacity
necessary with respect to OPRA and the
operation of BAM on the Exchange.
Additionally, in terms of overall
capacity, the Exchange represents that
its Systems will be able to sufficiently
maintain an audit trail for order and
trade information with the BAM
Auction.
Conclusion of an Auction
The BAM Auction would conclude at
the earliest of: the end of the Auction
period, upon receipt by the Exchange of
a Priority Customer order on the same
side of the market and at the stop price
of the Agency Order that is to be posted
to the EDGX Options Book, upon receipt
by the Exchange of an unrelated order
on the same side of the market as the
Agency Order that would cause the
11 The term ‘‘System’’ is defined in Rule
16.1(a)(59).
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Agency Order’s stop price to be outside
of the EDGX BBO, at the close of
trading, or any time there is a trading
halt on the Exchange in the affected
series.12
If the Auction concludes for any of
the reasons set forth above other than a
trading halt, then the Auction will be
processed pursuant to the order
allocation process set forth in proposed
Rule 21.19(d), which is described in
further detail below. In the event of a
trading halt on the Exchange in the
affected series, the Auction will be
cancelled without execution.
An unrelated market or marketable
limit order (against the EDGX BBO) on
the opposite side of the market from the
Agency Order received during the
Auction will not cause the Auction to
end early and will execute against
interest outside of the Auction.13 If
contracts remain from such unrelated
order at the time the Auction ends, they
will be considered for participation in
the order allocation process described
below. The Exchange notes that it also
proposes to make clear that all unrelated
orders submitted to the Exchange with
contracts remaining at the time the
Auction ends, including orders marked
as Post Only Orders pursuant to Rule
21.1(d)(8), will be considered for
participation as described below.14
Order Allocation
Allocations
At the conclusion of the Auction, the
Agency Order will be allocated at the
best price(s) as follows. First, Priority
Customer Orders would have time
priority at each price level. Next, the
Initiating Member would be allocated
after Priority Customer Orders.
If the Initiating Member selected the
single-price submission option of the
Auction, BAM executions will occur at
prices that improve the stop price, and
then at the stop price with up to 40%
of the initial Agency Order allocated to
the Initiating Member.15 However, if
only one other quote, order or BAM
response matches the stop price, then
the Initiating Member may be allocated
up to 50% of the initial Agency Order
when executed at such price. Remaining
contracts would be allocated, pursuant
to proposed sub-paragraphs (iii) and (iv)
to Rule 21.19(b)(4)(B), among remaining
quotes, orders and BAM responses at
the stop price. Thereafter, remaining
12 See
13 See
proposed Rule 21.19(b)(2).
proposed Rule 21.19(b)(3).
14 Id.
15 The Exchange notes that the International
Securities Exchange (‘‘ISE’’) bases the percentagebased allocations to an initiating member on the
initial or original size of an agency order before
other interest is executed. See ISE Rule 723(d)(3).
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contracts, if any, would be allocated to
the Initiating Member. The allocation
will account for Last Priority, if
applicable.
If the Initiating Member selected the
auto-match option of the Auction the
Initiating Member would be allocated an
equal number of contracts as the
aggregate size of all other quotes, orders
and BAM responses at each price point
until a price point is reached where the
balance of the order can be fully
executed, except that the Initiating
Member would be entitled to receive up
to 40% (multiple competing quotes,
orders or BAM responses) or 50% (one
competing quote, order or BAM
response) of the initial Agency Order at
the final price point (including
situations where the stop price is the
final price) after Priority Customer
interest has been satisfied but before
remaining interest. If there are other
quotes, orders and BAM responses at
the final price point the contracts will
be allocated to such interest pursuant to
proposed sub-paragraphs (iii) and (iv) to
Rule 21.19(b)(4)(B). Any remaining
contracts would be allocated to the
Initiating Member.
Next, for classes designated by the
Exchange as eligible for ‘‘Priority
Quote’’ status, Users with resting quotes
and orders that were at a price that is
equal to the Initial NBBO on the
opposite side of the market from the
Agency Order (‘‘Priority Quotes’’) would
have priority up to their size in the
Initial NBBO at each price level at or
better than such Initial NBBO after
Priority Customer and the Initiating
Member have received allocations.16
Priority Quotes and BAM responses will
be allocated pursuant to the algorithm
set forth in Rule 21.8(c).17 Priority
Quote status is only valid for the
duration of the particular Auction.
Finally, after Priority Customers, the
Initiating Member and Users with
Priority Quotes, if applicable, have
received allocations, all other interest
will be allocated pursuant to Rule
21.8(c).18
16 MIAX allocates executions resulting from
Public Customer interest and priority Market Maker
quotes ahead of other interest. MIAX’s system may
designate Market Maker quotes as either priority
quotes or non-priority quotes in accordance with
the provisions in MIAX Rule 517(b). Although not
limited to EDGX Market Makers, the Exchange is
prioritizing Priority Quote allocations in the
proposed EDGX BAM Auction in a similar manner,
ahead of other non-Priority Customer interest. See
also, BX Options Chapter VI, Section 9(ii)(E)(3).
17 See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(4)(B)(iii).
18 See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(4)(B)(iv).
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Additional Details
Any unexecuted BAM responses will
be cancelled.19 With respect to
‘‘Intermarket Sweep Orders’’ or ‘‘ISO’’
Orders,20 if an Auction is initiated for
an Agency Order designated as an ISO
Order, executions will be permitted at a
price inferior to the Initial NBBO.21
Specifically, a BAM ISO is the
transmission of two orders for crossing
without regard for better priced
Protected Bids or Protected Offers
because the Member transmitting the
BAM ISO to the Exchange has,
simultaneous with the routing of the
BAM ISO, routed one or more ISOs, as
necessary, to execute against the full
size of any Protected Bid or Protected
Offer that is superior to the Auction
price, including all interest in the
Exchange’s book priced better than the
proposed Auction price. The Exchange
will accept a BAM ISO provided the
order adheres to the Agency Order
acceptance requirements, but without
regard to the NBBO. The Exchange will
execute the BAM ISO in the same
manner as other Agency Orders, except
that it will not protect prices away.
Instead, order flow providers will bear
the responsibility to clear all better
priced interest away simultaneously
with submitting the BAM ISO Order.
There is no other impact to BAM
functionality. Specifically, liquidity
present at the end of the BAM Auction
will continue to be included in the BAM
Auction as it is with Agency Orders not
marked as ISOs. This order type is
offered by other options exchanges.22
The Exchange proposes to limit the
use of Match Trade Prevention (‘‘MTP’’)
functionality, set forth in Rule 21.1(g),
in the context of BAM responses to the
MTP Cancel Newest option. A BAM
response with any other MTP modifier
will be rejected.
Crossing and Agency Orders
In lieu of the procedures in proposed
paragraphs (a)–(b) to Rule 21.19, an
Initiating Member may enter an Agency
Order for the account of a Priority
Customer paired with an order for the
account of a Priority Customer and such
paired orders will be automatically
executed without an Auction
19 See
proposed Rule 21.19(b)(7).
Sweep Orders’’ or ‘‘ISO’’ are limit
orders that are designated as ISOs in the manner
prescribed by EDGX and are executed within the
System at one or multiple price levels without
regard to Protected Quotations of other Eligible
Exchanges as defined in Rule 27.1. ISOs are not
eligible for routing pursuant to Rule 21.9.
21 See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(7).
22 See PHLX Rules at 1080(n), which indicates
that PIXL ISO Orders are permissible. See also
CBOE Rule 6.53(q); BX Options Chapter VI, Section
9(ii)(K).
20 ‘‘Intermarket
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69175
(‘‘Customer-to-Customer Immediate
Cross’’), subject to the following
proposed conditions. A Customer-toCustomer Immediate Cross must be
priced at or between the EDGX BBO.
Further, a Customer-to-Customer
Immediate Cross will not be initiated
but will instead be cancelled if there is
a resting Priority Customer order on the
same side of the market and at the same
price as the Agency Order. Finally, a
Customer-to-Customer Immediate Cross
will not be initiated if there is a resting
Priority Customer order on the opposite
side of the market from, and at the same
price as, the Agency Order. Instead, the
Agency Order will be subject to the
Auction process set forth above, and the
resting Priority Customer order will
participate in such process.23
Regulatory Provisions
Bona Fide Transactions; Disrupting or
Manipulating Auctions
Under the proposed Rule, the Auction
may be used only where there is a
genuine intention to execute a bona fide
transaction.24 Also, under the proposed
Rule, a pattern or practice of submitting
orders or quotes for the purpose of
disrupting or manipulating BAM
Auctions would be deemed conduct
inconsistent with just and equitable
principles of trade and a violation of
Rule 3.1. It would also be deemed
conduct inconsistent with just and
equitable principles of trade and a
violation of Rule 3.1 to engage in a
pattern of conduct where the Initiating
Member breaks up an Agency Order into
separate orders for the purpose of
gaining a higher allocation percentage
than the Initiating Member would have
otherwise received in accordance with
the allocation procedures contained in
sub-paragraph (b)(4) of the proposed
Rule.25
Order Exposure
EDGX Rule 22.12 prevents an Options
Member from executing agency orders
to increase its economic gain from
trading against the order without first
giving other trading interests on the
Exchange an opportunity to either trade
with the agency order or to trade at the
execution price when the Options
Member was already bidding or offering
on the book. However, the Exchange
recognizes that it may be possible for an
Options Member to establish a
relationship with a Priority Customer or
other person to deny agency orders the
opportunity to interact on the Exchange
23 See
proposed Rule 21.19(c).
proposed Interpretation and Policy .01 of
Rule 21.19.
25 See proposed Interpretation and Policy .02 of
Rule 21.19.
24 See
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and to realize similar economic benefits
as it would achieve by executing agency
orders as principal. Under the proposed
Rule, it would be a violation of Rule
22.12 for an Options Member to
circumvent such rule by providing an
opportunity for (i) a Priority Customer
affiliated with the Options Member, or
(ii) a Priority Customer with whom the
Options Member has an arrangement
that allows the Options Member to
realize similar economic benefits from
the transaction as the Options Member
would achieve by executing agency
orders as principal, to regularly execute
against agency orders handled by the
firm immediately upon their entry as
BAM Priority Customer-to-Priority
Customer immediate crosses pursuant to
paragraph (c) of the proposed Rule.26 In
addition to the proposed Interpretation
and Policy described above, the
Exchange proposes to amend Rule 22.12
to add reference to BAM as an exception
to the general restriction on the
execution of orders as principal against
orders they represent as agent.
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Pilot Program Information to the
Commission
Subject to a Pilot expiring January 18,
2017, there will be no minimum size
requirement for orders to be eligible for
the Auction. During this Pilot Period,
the Exchange will submit certain data,
periodically as required by the
Commission, to provide supporting
evidence that, among other things, there
is meaningful competition for all size
orders and that there is an active and
liquid market functioning on the
Exchange outside of the Auction
mechanism. Any raw data which is
submitted to the Commission will be
provided on a confidential basis.27
The Exchange will provide the
following additional information on a
monthly basis:
(1) The number of contracts (of orders
of 50 contracts or greater) entered into
BAM Auctions;
(2) the number of contracts (of orders
of fewer than 50 contracts) entered into
BAM Auctions;
(3) the number of orders of 50
contracts or greater entered into BAM
Auctions; and
(4) the number of orders of fewer than
50 contracts entered into BAM
Auctions.
Implementation
If the Commission approves this
proposed rule change, the Exchange
26 See proposed Interpretation and Policy .03 to
Rule 21.19.
27 See proposed Interpretation and Policy .04 to
Rule 21.19.
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anticipates that it will deploy BAM
within 45 days of approval. Members
will be notified of the deployment date
through a Trade Desk Notice.
Examples of Agency Order Executions
Example No. 1
Summary: Initiating Member & Priority
Quote interest fully satisfies Agency Order;
all participants eligible for Priority Quote
status.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Member Firm 1 (non-Market
Maker) offering 30 contracts each
• Class is designated as eligible for Priority
Quotes
• Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped
at 1.02 is received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During Auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 30
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status);
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 20
contracts at 1.02; and
Æ Member Firm 1 responds to sell 30
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status).
• Auction ends:
Æ Initiating Member is allocated 40
contracts at 1.02 (40% carve out);
Æ Market Maker A and Member Firm 1
each trade 30 contracts since they
maintained Priority Quotes for 30
contracts; and
Æ Market Maker B’s response is cancelled
since there were no contracts open after
Priority Quotes were filled at that price.
Example No. 2
Summary: Initiating Member & Priority
Quote interest fully satisfies Agency Order
with Priority Quote interest exceeding
remainder; Pro-Rata Amongst Priority Quote
interest.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Class is designated as eligible for Priority
Quotes
• Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped
at 1.02 is received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 30
contracts at 1.02;
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 30
contracts at 1.02;
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at
1.01; and
Æ Market Maker D responds to sell 10
contracts at 1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since
it was the only interest offered at the best
price;
Æ Initiating Member is allocated 40
contracts at 1.02 (40% carve out);
Æ Market Maker A and Market Maker B
each trades 25 contracts (pro rata among
Priority Quotes).
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Æ Market Maker D’s response is cancelled
since there were no contracts open after
Priority Quotes were filled at that price.
Example No. 3
Summary: Market Makers improve upon
the price and receive both Priority Quote
status and non-Priority Quote status based on
their size at initial NBBO; Initiating Member
does not receive an allocation.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Class is designated as eligible for Priority
Quotes
• Agency Order to buy 90 contracts stopped
at 1.03 is received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at
1.01; and
Æ Market Maker D responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since
it was the only interest offered at the best
price;
Æ Market Maker A and Market Maker B
each trade 30 contracts at 1.02 since they
have priority up to their size at the
NBBO when the Auction started;
Æ Market Maker A, Market Maker B, and
Market Maker D then pro-rata split the
balance of 20 contracts at 1.02 based on
their remaining interest size with Market
Maker A being allocated 4 contracts
(=20/90*20), Market Maker B being
allocated 4 (=20/90*20) contracts, and
Market Maker D being allocated 11
contracts (=50/90*20);
Æ The residual 1 contract will be allocated
in time priority to Market Maker A;
Æ Initiating Member does not participate as
entirety of order was price improved.
Example No. 4
Summary: Initiating Member utilizes AutoMatch feature with specified price and
Market Makers with Priority Quotes
participate; Initiating Member & Priority
Quote interest fully satisfies Agency Order.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Class is designated as eligible for Priority
Quotes
• Agency Order to buy 90 contracts stopped
at 1.03 with Auto-Match feature to 1.02 is
received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
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Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at
1.01; and
Æ Market Maker D responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since
it was the only interest offered at the best
price; note that the Initiating Member
specified a limit of 1.02 so such
Initiating Member does not receive an
Auto-Match execution at 1.01;
Æ Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 36
contracts at 1.02 since it will be the final
price point and Auto-Match is enabled;
Æ Market Maker A and Market Maker B
each trades 22 contracts at 1.02 since
they have Priority Quote status ahead of
Market Maker D up to their size at the
NBBO when the Auction started; and
Æ Market Maker D’s response is cancelled.
Example No. 5
Summary: Initiating Member utilizes AutoMatch feature with specified price and
Market Makers with Priority Quote status and
non-Priority Quote status participate; Agency
Order exceeds size of Initiating Member
execution and Priority Quotes.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Class is designated as eligible for Priority
Quotes
• Agency Order to buy 150 contracts stopped
at 1.03 with Auto-Match feature to 1.02 is
received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at
1.01; and
Æ Market Maker D responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since
it was the only interest offered at the best
price; note that the Initiating Member
specified a limit of 1.02 so such
Initiating Member does not receive an
Auto-Match execution at 1.01;
Æ Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 60
contracts at 1.02 since it will be the final
price point;
Æ Market Maker A and Market Maker B
each trade 30 contracts at 1.02 since they
have Priority Quote status up to their
size at the NBBO when the Auction
started;
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Æ Market Maker A, Market Maker B, and
Market Maker D then pro-rata split the
balance with Market Maker A and
Market Maker B each trading 4
additional contracts at 1.02 (20/90*20)
and Market Maker D trading 11 contracts
at 1.02 (50/90*20);
Æ The residual 1 contract will be allocated
in time priority to Market Maker A.
Example No. 6
Summary: Initiating Member utilizes AutoMatch feature without specified price and
Market Makers with Priority Quote status and
non-Priority Quote status participate; Agency
Order exceeds size of Initiating Member
execution and Priority Quotes.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Class is designated as eligible for Priority
Quotes
• Agency Order to buy 150 contracts stopped
at 1.03 with Auto-Match feature is received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (Priority Quote status
for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at
1.01; and
Æ Market Maker D responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01;
Æ Initiating Member auto-matches and
trades 10 at 1.01;
Æ Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 60
contracts at 1.02 since it will be the final
price point;
Æ Market Maker A and Market Maker B
each trade 30 contracts at 1.02 since they
have Priority Quote status up to their
size at the NBBO when the Auction
started;
Æ Market Maker A, Market Maker B, and
Market Maker D then pro-rata split the
balance with Market Maker A and
Market Maker B each trading 2 contracts
at 1.02 (20/90*10) and Market Maker D
trading 6 contracts at 1.02 (50/90*10).
Example No. 7
Summary: All executions occurring at
initial NBBO price and Public Customer
order received.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• Class is designated as eligible for Priority
Quotes
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped
at 1.03 is received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
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69177
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 20 at
1.03; and
Æ Priority Customer offers 2 contracts at
1.03.
• Auction ends:
Æ Priority Customer trades 2 contracts at
1.03;
Æ Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 40
contracts at 1.03;
Æ Remaining allocation is pro-rata among
Priority Quote interest with Market
Maker A trading 29 contracts (30/60*58)
and Market Maker B trading 29 contracts
(30/60*58).
D Note that in this example the Priority
Quote interest from Market Maker A and
Market Maker B is from quotations
published on the Exchange’s order book
and not from BAM responses received
from such Market Makers.
Example No. 8
Summary: Initiating Member specifying
Auto-Match feature without specified price,
Market Maker with Priority Quotes has
multiple price levels of interest, and
executions occur at initial NBBO price.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Agency Order to buy 300 contracts stopped
at 1.03 with Auto-Match feature is received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 10
contracts at 1.02 (considered as Priority
Quote);
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 50
contracts at 1.02 (30 of the 50 contracts
are considered as Priority Quote);
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 5 at
1.01; and
Æ Market Maker D responds to sell 40
contracts at 1.02.
• Next, during auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds with 30
additional contracts at 1.03 (considered
as Priority Quote).
• Next, during auction:
Æ Market Maker A moves his quote
(maintain Priority Quote status) and
EDGX BBO becomes .95–1.02 for 10
contracts; and
Æ An order from Member Firm 1 arrives
offering 10 contracts at 1.02 such that the
EDGX BBO becomes .95–1.02 for 20
contracts.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker C trades 5 at 1.01;
Æ Initiating Member auto-matches and
trades 5 at 1.01;
Æ Next, interest is then allocated at 1.02 as
follows:
D Market Maker A response (Priority Quote
status) trades 10 contracts;
D Market Maker B response (Priority Quote
status) trades 30 contracts;
D Market Maker A quote trades 10
contracts at 1.02;
D Market Maker B response (non-Priority
Quote status) trades 20 contracts;
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D Market Maker D’s response (non-Priority
Quote status) trades 40 contracts at 1.02;
D Member Firm 1’s quote (non-Priority
Quote status) trades 10 contracts at 1.02.
Æ Next, the Initiating Member order
matches the full volume trading at 1.02
(because of Auto-Match feature) which is
120 contracts.
Æ The remaining 50 contracts are traded by
the Initiating Member at 1.03 since it
will be the final price point (40% carve
out; 0.4*300 = 75).
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Example No. 9
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing Last
Priority.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped
at 1.02 marked with Last Priority is
received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker C responds to sell 5 at
1.01;
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 5
contracts at 1.02;
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 40
contracts at 1.02; and
Æ Market Maker D responds to sell 20
contracts at 1.02.
• Next, during auction:
Æ Market Maker A moves his quote
(maintains Priority Quote status);
Æ EDGX BBO becomes .95–1.02 for 5
contracts; and
Æ NBBO becomes .97–1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker C trades 5 contracts at
1.01;
Æ Market Maker A response with Priority
Quote status executes 5 contracts at 1.02;
Æ Market Maker B response with Priority
Quote status executes 30 contracts;
Æ Market Maker A quote with Priority
Quote status executes 5 contracts;
Æ Non-Priority Quote interest at 1.02 then
executes with Market Maker B trading 10
contracts and Market Maker D trading 20
contracts. The Initiating Member then
executes the remaining 25 contracts at
1.02 since there is no other interest to
satisfy the Agency Order at a price equal
to or better than the stop price of 1.02.
Example No. 10
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing Last
Priority and no responders.
Assumptions:
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03(60) with Market
Maker A and Market Maker B offering 30
contracts each
• Agency Order to buy 20 contracts stopped
at 1.02 marked with Last Priority is
received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker C quotes .95–1.02 for 10
contracts and EDGX BBO becomes .95–
1.02 for 10 contracts; and
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Æ NBBO becomes .97–1.02.
• Next, during auction:
Æ Market Maker A moves his quote
(maintains Priority Quote status) and
joins the EDGX BBO at .95–1.02 for 10
contracts; and
Æ NBBO remains .97–1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Priority Quote interest trades first:
Market Maker A gets allocated 10
contracts of Agency Order.
Æ Non-Priority Quote interest trades next:
Market Maker C gets allocated 10
contracts.
Æ Neither the Initiating Member nor
Market Maker B receives any execution
in this example.
Example No. 11
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing an
ISO Order priced through NBBO.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.04
• Agency Order to buy 50 contracts stopped
at 1.04 marked with an ISO flag is received
BAM Process:
• Auction begins
• During auction:
Æ Market Maker A responds to sell 20 at
1.02; and
Æ Market Maker B responds to sell 20 at
1.02.
• Auction ends:
Æ Market Maker A gets allocated 20
contracts of Agency Order at 1.02.
Æ Market Maker B gets allocated 20
contracts of Agency Order at 1.02.
Æ The Initiating Member gets allocated the
remaining 10 contracts at 1.04.
Example No. 12
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing an
ISO Order priced through EDGX BBO.
Assumptions:
• NBBO = .97–1.03
• EDGX BBO = .95–1.03
• Agency Order to buy 50 contracts stopped
at 1.04 marked with an ISO flag is received
Agency Order is rejected.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the provisions of the Act,28 in general,
and with Section 6(b)(5) of the Act,29 in
particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in
regulating, clearing, settling, processing
information with respect to, and
facilitating transactions in securities, to
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest; and is not designed to
permit unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
28 15
29 15
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U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
Frm 00143
Fmt 4703
The Exchange believes that the
proposal will result in increased
liquidity available at improved prices,
with competitive final pricing out of the
Initiating Member’s complete control.
BAM should promote and foster
competition and provide more options
contracts with the opportunity for price
improvement. As a result of the
increased opportunities for price
improvement, the Exchange believes
that participants will use BAM to
increase the number of Priority
Customer Orders that are provided with
the opportunity to receive price
improvement over the NBBO.
The Exchange believes that the BAM
Auction will encourage participants on
EDGX Options to quote or display
orders at the NBBO with additional size
and thereby result in tighter and deeper
markets, resulting in more liquidity on
EDGX Options. Specifically, by offering
all Users the ability to receive priority
in the proposed allocation during the
BAM Auction up to the size of their
quote, an EDGX User will be encouraged
to maintain quotes or orders with
additional size outside of the BAM
Auction at the best and most aggressive
prices. The Exchange believes that this
incentive may result in a narrowing of
quotes and thus further enhance EDGX’s
market quality. Within the BAM
Auction, EDGX believes that the rules
that are proposed will encourage EDGX
Users to compete vigorously to provide
the opportunity for price improvement
in a competitive auction process.
As noted above, the Exchange has
proposed to allow BAM Auctions for 50
contracts or more to occur concurrently
with other BAM Auctions. Although
Auctions for larger Agency Orders will
be allowed to overlap, the Exchange
does not believe that this raises any
issues that are not addressed through
the proposal as described above. For
example, although overlapping, each
Auction will be started in a sequence
and with a time that will determine its
processing. Thus, even if there are two
Auctions that commence and conclude,
at nearly the same time, each Auction
will have a distinct conclusion at which
time the Auction will be allocated. In
turn, when the first Auction concludes,
unrelated orders that then exist will be
considered for participation in the
Auction.30 If unrelated orders are fully
executed in such Auction, then there
will be no unrelated orders for
consideration when the subsequent
Auction is processed (unless new
unrelated order interest has arrived). If
instead there is remaining unrelated
order interest after the first Auction has
30 See
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been allocated, then such unrelated
order interest will be considered for
allocation when the subsequent Auction
is processed. As another example, each
BAM response is required to specifically
identify the Auction for which it is
targeted 31 and if not fully executed will
be cancelled back at the conclusion of
the Auction.32 Thus, BAM responses
will be specifically considered only in
the specified Auction.
The Exchange does not believe that
allowing multiple auctions to overlap
for Agency Orders of 50 contracts or
more presents any unique issues that
differ from functionality already in
place on other exchanges. The Exchange
notes that other options exchanges offer
auctions for orders 50 contracts or
greater (generally referred to as
‘‘facilitation auctions’’) that are
permitted to overlap.33 In contrast,
similar to the Exchange’s proposal,
other options exchanges do prevent
simultaneous auctions to occur for
orders less than 50 contracts (generally
referred to as ‘‘price improvement
auctions’’).34 Instead of proposing two
separate auction processes that are
functionally the same with only minor
differences, such as the restriction on
overlapping or queuing auctions—
which is present in other options
exchanges’ price improvement auctions
but not in their facilitation auctions—
the Exchange is proposing to have a
single process that recognizes these
specific nuances to avoid introducing
new policy issues regarding such topics.
Further, the new functionality may
lead to an increase in Exchange volume
and should allow the Exchange to better
compete against other markets that
already offer an electronic solicitation
mechanism, while providing an
opportunity for price improvement for
agency orders. The Exchange believes
that its proposal will allow the
Exchange to better compete for solicited
transactions, while providing an
opportunity for price improvement for
agency orders and assuring that Priority
Customers on the book are protected.
The new solicitation mechanism should
promote and foster competition and
provide more options contracts with the
opportunity for price improvement,
which should benefit market
participants, investors, and traders. The
Exchange has proposed a range between
no less than one hundred milliseconds
proposed Rule 21.19(b)(1)(E).
proposed Rule 21.19(b)(5).
33 See, e.g., ISE Rule 716(d), which governs ISE’s
facilitation mechanism and does not restrict such
auctions to one auction at a time. See also Boston
Options Exchange (‘‘BOX’’) Rule 7270.
34 See ISE Rule 723, Interpretation and Policy .04.
See also BOX IM–7150–3.
and no more than one second for the
duration of the BAM Auction; therefore
the proposed rule change will provide
investors with more timely execution of
their options orders than a mechanism
that has a one second auction, while
ensuring that there is an adequate
exposure of orders in EDGX BAM. The
Exchange preliminary expects to use a
default of 100 milliseconds for all
symbols. The time will be announced to
Members and available on the
Exchange’s Web site. The proposed
auction response time of no less than
one hundred milliseconds and no more
than one second should allow investors
the opportunity to receive price
improvement through BAM while
reducing market risk. The Exchange
believes a briefer time period reduces
the market risk for the Initiating
Member, versus an auction with a one
second period, as well as for any
Member providing orders in response to
a broadcast. As such, EDGX believes the
proposed rule change would help
perfect the mechanism for a free and
open national market system, and
generally help protect investors’ and the
public interest. The Exchange believes
the proposed rule change is not unfairly
discriminatory because the BAM
duration would be the same for all
Members and symbols. All Members
will have an equal opportunity to
respond with their best prices during
the BAM Auction. Since the Exchange
considers all interest present in the
System, and not solely BAM responses,
for execution against the Agency Order,
those participants who are not explicit
responders to the Auction will expect
executions via BAM as well.
With respect to trading halts, as
described herein, in the case of a trading
halt on the Exchange in the affected
series, the Auction will be cancelled
without execution. Cancelling Auctions
without execution in this circumstance
is consistent with Exchange handling of
trading halts in the context of
continuous trading on EDGX Options
and promotes just and equitable
principles of trade and, in general,
protects investors and the public
interest.35
The Exchange further believes that the
proposal is consistent with the
requirements of Section 11(a) of the
Act 36 and Rule 11a2–2(T) 37 thereunder.
Section 11(a) prohibits a member of a
national securities exchange from
31 See
32 See
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35 The Exchange notes that trading on the
Exchange in any option contract will be halted
whenever trading in the underlying security has
been paused or halted by the primary listing market
and other circumstances. See Rule 20.3.
36 15 U.S.C. 78k(a)(1).
37 17 CFR 240.11a2–2(T).
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69179
effecting transactions on the exchange
for its own account, the account of an
associated person, or an account in
which it or an associated person
exercises investment discretion, unless
an exception applies (collectively
‘‘Covered Accounts’’). Rule 11a2–2(T)
under the Act,38 known as the effect
versus execute’’ rule, provides exchange
members with an exemption from the
Section 11(a)(1) prohibition. Rule 11a2–
2(T) permits an exchange member,
subject to certain conditions, to effect
transactions for Covered Accounts by
arranging for an unaffiliated member to
execute transactions on the exchange.39
To comply with Rule 11a2–2(T)’s
conditions, a member: (i) Must transmit
the order from off the exchange floor;
(ii) may not participate in the execution
of the transaction once it has been
transmitted to the member performing
the execution; 40 (iii) may not be
affiliated with the executing member;
and (iv) with respect to an account over
which the member has investment
discretion, neither the member nor its
associated person may retain any
compensation in connection with
effecting the transaction except as
provided in the Rule. For the reasons set
forth below, the Exchange believes that
Exchange Members entering orders into
BAM would satisfy the requirements of
Rule 11a2–2(T).
The Exchange does not operate a
physical trading floor, rather the
Exchange operates an electronic market.
Rule 11a2–2(T)’s first condition is that
orders for Covered Accounts be
transmitted from off the exchange floor.
In the context of automated trading
systems, the Commission has found that
the off-floor transmission requirement is
met if a Covered Account order is
transmitted from a remote location
directly to an exchange’s floor by
electronic means.41 EDGX represents
38 CFR
240.11a2–2(T).
enacting this provision, Congress was
concerned about members benefiting in their
principal transactions from special ‘‘time and
place’’ advantages associated with floor trading—
such as the ability to ‘‘execute decisions faster than
public investors.’’ The Commission, however, has
adopted a number of exceptions to the general
statutory prohibition for situations in which the
principal transactions contribute to the fairness and
orderliness of exchange markets or do not reflect
any time and place trading advantages. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 14563 (March
14, 1978), 43 FR 11542 (March 17, 1978); Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 14713 (April 28, 1978),
43 FR 18557 (May 1, 1978); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 15533 (January 29, 1979), 44 FR 6093
(Jan. 31, 1979). The 1978 and 1979 Releases cite the
House Report at 54–57.
40 The member may, however, participate in
clearing and settling the transaction.
41 See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
61419 (January 26, 2010), 75 FR 5157 (February 1,
39 In
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asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
that the System and the proposed BAM
Auction receive all orders electronically
through remote terminals or computerto-computer interfaces. The Exchange
represents that orders for Covered
Accounts from Members will be
transmitted from a remote location
directly to the proposed BAM
mechanisms by electronic means.
The second condition of Rule 11a2–
2(T) requires that neither a member nor
an associated person participate in the
execution of its order once the order is
transmitted to the floor for execution.
The Exchange represents that, upon
submission to the BAM Auction, an
order will be executed automatically
pursuant to the rules set forth for BAM.
In particular, execution of an order sent
to the mechanism depends not on the
Initiating Member entering the order,
but rather on what other orders are
present and the priority of those orders.
Thus, at no time following the
submission of an order is a Member able
to acquire control or influence over the
result or timing of order execution.42
Once the Agency Order has been
transmitted, the Exchange Initiating
Member that transmitted the order will
not participate in the execution of the
Agency Order. Initiating Members
submitting Agency Orders will
relinquish control to modify their
Agency Orders upon transmission to the
Exchange’s System. Further, no
Member, including the Initiating
Member, will see a BAM response
submitted into BAM and therefore and
will not be able to influence or guide the
execution of their Agency Orders.
Finally, the Last Priority feature will not
permit a Member to have any control
over an order. The election to Last
Priority an order is available prior to the
submission of the order and therefore
could not be utilized to gain influence
or guide the execution of the Agency
Order. The information provided with
respect to the Last Priority feature by the
Initiating Member will not be broadcast
2010) (SR–BATS–2009–031) (approving BATS
options trading); 59154 (December 23, 2008), 73 FR
80468 (December 31, 2008) (SRBSE–2008–48)
(approving equity securities listing and trading on
BSE); 57478 (March 12, 2008), 73 FR 14521 (March
18, 2008) (SR–NASDAQ–2007–004 and SR–
NASDAQ–2007–080) (approving NOM options
trading); 53128 (January 13, 2006), 71 FR 3550
(January 23, 2006) (File No. 10–131) (approving The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC); 44983 (October 25,
2001), 66 FR 55225 (November 1, 2001) (SR–PCX–
00–25) (approving Archipelago Exchange); 29237
(May 24, 1991), 56 FR 24853 (May 31, 1991) (SR–
NYSE–90–52 and SR–NYSE–90–53) (approving
NYSE’s Off-Hours Trading Facility); and 15533
(January 29, 1979), 44 FR 6084 (January 31, 1979)
(‘‘1979 Release’’).
42 The Exchange notes that a Member may not
cancel or modify an order after it has been
submitted into BAM.
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18:15 Oct 04, 2016
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and further, the information may not be
modified by the Initiating Member
during the auction.
Rule 11a2–2(T)’s third condition
requires that the order be executed by
an exchange member who is unaffiliated
with the member initiating the order.
The Commission has stated that the
requirement is satisfied when
automated exchange facilities, such as
the BAM Auction are used, as long as
the design of these systems ensures that
members do not possess any special or
unique trading advantages in handling
their orders after transmitting them to
the exchange.43 The Exchange
represents that the BAM Auction is
designed so that no Member has any
special or unique trading advantage in
the handling of its orders after
transmitting its orders to the
mechanism.
Rule 11a2–2(T)’s fourth condition
requires that, in the case of a transaction
effected for an account with respect to
which the initiating member or an
associated person thereof exercises
investment discretion, neither the
initiating member nor any associated
person thereof may retain any
compensation in connection with
effecting the transaction, unless the
person authorized to transact business
for the account has expressly provided
otherwise by written contract referring
to Section 11(a) of the Act and Rule
11a2–2(T) thereunder.44 The Exchange
recognizes that Members relying on
Rule 11a2–2(T) for transactions effected
through the BAM Auction must comply
with this condition of the Rule and the
43 In considering the operation of automated
execution systems operated by an exchange, the
Commission noted that, while there is not an
independent executing exchange member, the
execution of an order is automatic once it has been
transmitted into the system. Because the design of
these systems ensures that members do not possess
any special or unique trading advantages in
handling their orders after transmitting them to the
exchange, the Commission has stated that
executions obtained through these systems satisfy
the independent execution requirement of Rule
11a2–2(T). See 1979 Release.
44 See 17 CFR 240.11a2–2(T)(a)(2)(iv). In addition,
Rule 11a2–2(T)(d) requires a member or associated
person authorized by written contract to retain
compensation, in connection with effecting
transactions for Covered Accounts over which such
member or associated persons thereof exercises
investment discretion, to furnish at least annually
to the person authorized to transact business for the
account a statement setting forth the total amount
of compensation retained by the member in
connection with effecting transactions for the
account during the period covered by the statement
which amount must be exclusive of all amounts
paid to others during that period for services
rendered to effect such transactions. See also 1978
(stating ‘‘[t]he contractual and disclosure
requirements are designed to assure that accounts
electing to permit transaction-related compensation
do so only after deciding that such arrangements are
suitable to their interests’’).
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Exchange will enforce this requirement
pursuant to its obligations under
Section 6(b)(1) of the Act to enforce
compliance with federal securities laws.
The Exchange believes that the instant
proposal is consistent with Rule 11a2–
2(T), and that therefore the exception
should apply in this case.
The Exchange also believes that the
proposed rule changes would further
the objectives of the Act to protect
investors by promoting the intermarket
price protection goals of the Options
Intermarket Linkage Plan.45 The
Exchange believes its proposal would
help ensure inter-market competition
across all exchanges and facilitate
compliance with best execution
practices. The Exchange believes that
these objectives are consistent with the
Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to the Exchange
and, in particular, the requirements of
Section 11A of the Act.
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
competition among the options
exchanges is vigorous and this proposal
is intended to afford the EDGX Options
market the opportunity to compete for
order flow by offering an auction
mechanism on EDGX similar to that of
other exchanges.
With respect to intra-market
competition, the Auction will be
available to all EDGX Options Members.
Moreover, as explained above, the
proposal should encourage EDGX
Options Members to compete amongst
each other by responding with their best
price and size for a particular auction.
With respect to overall market quality,
the Exchange believes that the BAM
Auction, as proposed herein, will
encourage will encourage participants
on EDGX Options to quote or display
orders at the NBBO with additional size
and thereby result in tighter and deeper
markets, resulting in more liquidity on
EDGX Options. Specifically, by offering
all Users the ability to receive priority
in the proposed allocation during the
BAM Auction up to the size of their
quote, an EDGX User will be encouraged
to maintain quotes or orders with
additional size outside of the BAM
Auction at the best and most aggressive
prices. The Exchange believes that this
incentive may result in a narrowing of
quotes and thus further enhance EDGX’s
45 See Rule 27.3 regarding Locked and Crossed
Markets.
E:\FR\FM\05OCN1.SGM
05OCN1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 193 / Wednesday, October 5, 2016 / Notices
market quality. Within the BAM
Auction, EDGX believes that the rules
that are proposed will encourage EDGX
Users to compete vigorously to provide
the opportunity for price improvement
in a competitive auction process.
The Exchange’s proposal is a
competitive response to similar
provisions in the price improvement
auction rules of other options
exchanges.46 The Exchange believes this
proposed rule change is necessary to
permit fair competition among the
options exchanges and to establish more
uniform price improvement auction
rules on the various options exchanges.
The Exchange anticipates that this
auction proposal will create new
opportunities for EDGX to attract new
business and compete on equal footing
with those options exchanges with
auctions and for this reason the
proposal does not create an undue
burden on inter-market competition.
Rather, the Exchange believes that the
proposed rule would bolster intermarket competition by promoting fair
competition among individual markets,
while at the same time assuring that
market participants receive the benefits
of markets that are linked together,
through facilities and rules, in a unified
system, which promotes interaction
among the orders of buyers and sellers.
The Exchange believes its proposal
would help ensure inter-market
competition across all exchanges and
facilitate compliance with best
execution practices. In addition, the
Exchange believes that the proposed
rule change would help promote fair
and orderly markets by helping ensure
compliance with Options Order
Protection and Locked and Crossed
Market Rules.47 Thus, the Exchange
does not believe the proposal creates
any significant impact on competition.
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
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
46 Today, the following options markets offer
auctions: CBOE, ISE, BOX, MIAX, PHLX and BX
Options. See CBOE Rule 6.74A, ISE Rule 723, BOX
Rule 7150, MIAX Rule 5.15, PHLX Rule 1080(n),
and BX Options Chapter VI, Section 9.
47 See Chapter XXVII of the Exchange’s Rules.
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18:15 Oct 04, 2016
Jkt 241001
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 proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
BatsEDGX–2016–41 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–BatsEDGX–2016–41. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–
BatsEDGX–2016–41 and should be
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Sfmt 4703
69181
submitted on or before October 26,
2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.48
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–24010 Filed 10–4–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
[License No. 09/09–0479]
Avante Mezzanine Partners SBIC II,
L.P.; Notice Seeking Exemption Under
Section 312 of the Small Business
Investment Act, Conflicts of Interest
Notice is hereby given that Avante
Mezzanine Partners SBIC II, L.P., 11150
Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 1470,
Los Angeles, CA 90025, a Federal
Licensee under the Small Business
Investment Act of 1958, as amended
(‘‘the Act’’), in connection with the
financing of a small concern, has sought
an exemption under Section 312 of the
Act and Section 107.730, Financings
which constitute Conflicts of Interest of
the Small Business Administration
(‘‘SBA’’) Rules and Regulations (13 CFR
107.730). Avante Mezzanine Partners
SBIC II, L.P. proposes to provide debt
and equity financings to Global ID
Group, Inc., 500 N. 4th Street, Suite 204,
Fairfield, Iowa 52556.
The financing is brought within the
purview of § 107.730(a) of the
Regulations because Avante Mezzanine
Partners SBIC, L.P (‘‘Avante’’) and
Avante Mezzanine Partners SBIC II, L.P.
are Associates. Avante owns more than
ten percent of Global ID Group, Inc. and
therefore this transaction is considered
Financing an Associate requiring prior
SBA approval. This transaction will also
discharge an obligation of Avante.
Notice is hereby given that any
interested person may submit written
comments on this transaction within
fifteen days of the date of this
publication to the Associate
Administrator, Office of Investment and
Innovation, U.S. Small Business
Administration, 409 Third Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20416.
Mark L. Walsh,
Associate Administrator for Office of
Investment and Innovation.
[FR Doc. 2016–24035 Filed 10–4–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
48 17
E:\FR\FM\05OCN1.SGM
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
05OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 193 (Wednesday, October 5, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 69172-69181]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-24010]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-78988; File No. SR-BatsEDGX-2016-41]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Bats EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice
of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change Related to the Exchange's Equity
Options Platform To Adopt a Price Improvement Auction, the Bats Auction
Mechanism
September 29, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'') \1\, and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given
that on September 16, 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\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 for the Exchange's equity options
platform (``EDGX Options'') to adopt a price improvement auction, the
Bats Auction Mechanism, as further discussed below.
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
Overview
The purpose of the proposed rule change is to establish a price
improvement auction, the Bats Auction Mechanism (``BAM'', ``BAM
Auction'', or ``Auction'') on the Exchange. BAM includes functionality
in which a Member (an ``Initiating Member'') may electronically submit
for execution an order it represents as agent on behalf of a Priority
Customer,\3\ broker dealer, or any other person or entity (``Agency
Order'') against principal interest or against any other order it
represents as agent (an ``Initiating Order'') provided it submits the
Agency Order for electronic execution into the BAM Auction pursuant to
the proposed Rule. For purposes of this filing and the proposed Rule,
the term ``NBBO'' shall mean the national best bid or national best
offer at the particular point in time applicable to the reference and
the term ``Initial NBBO'' shall mean the national best bid or national
best offer at the time an Auction is initiated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The term ``Priority Customer'' means any person or entity
that is not: (A) a broker or dealer in securities; or (B) a
Professional. The term ``Priority Customer Order'' means an order
for the account of a Priority Customer. See Rule 16.1(a)(45). A
``Professional'' is any person or entity that: (A) is not a broker
or dealer in securities; and (B) places more than 390 orders in
listed options per day on average during a calendar month for its
own beneficial account(s). All Professional orders shall be
appropriately marked by Options Members. See Rule 16.1(a)(46).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that the BAM Auction, as proposed herein,
will encourage participants on EDGX Options to quote or display orders
at the NBBO with additional size and thereby result in tighter and
deeper markets, resulting in more liquidity on EDGX Options.
Specifically, by offering all EDGX Options participants (``Users'') the
ability to receive priority in the proposed allocation during the BAM
Auction up to the size of their quote, an EDGX User will be encouraged
to maintain quotes or orders with additional size outside of the BAM
Auction at the best and most aggressive prices. The Exchange believes
that this incentive may result in a narrowing of quotes and thus
further enhance EDGX's market quality. Within the BAM Auction, EDGX
believes that the rules that are proposed will encourage EDGX Users to
compete vigorously to provide the opportunity for price improvement in
a competitive auction process.
[[Page 69173]]
Auction Eligibility Requirements
All options traded on the Exchange are eligible for BAM. Proposed
Rule 21.19(a) describes the circumstances under which an Initiating
Member may initiate an Auction. The Initiating Member may initiate an
Auction provided the conditions which follow are met: the Initiating
Member must stop the entire Agency Order as principal or with a
solicited order at a price in an increment of $0.01 that is: (A) If the
Agency Order is for less than 50 option contracts and the difference
between the NBB and NBO is $0.01, the Initiating Member must stop the
entire Agency Order at one minimum price improvement increment, which
increment shall be determined by the Exchange but may not be smaller
than $0.01; or (B) for any other Agency Order, the Initiating Member
must stop the entire Agency Order at the better of the NBBO or the
Agency Order's limit price (if the order is a limit order). Agency
Orders that do not meet these conditions will be rejected. Also, Agency
Orders submitted at or before the opening of trading or when the NBBO
is crossed are not eligible to initiate an Auction and will be
rejected.
Auction Process
Initiating and Pricing of Auctions
With respect to Agency Orders for less than 50 contracts, only one
such Auction may be ongoing at any given time in a series and Auctions
in the same series may not queue or overlap in any manner. Auctions for
Agency Orders of 50 contracts or more will be allowed to occur at the
same time as other Auctions in the same series. Because multiple
Auctions of Agency Orders of 50 contracts or more will be allowed to
occur at the same time as other Auctions, there will be no queuing of
Auctions for Agency orders of 50 contracts or more.
To initiate the Auction, the Initiating Member must mark the Agency
Order for Auction processing, and specify either: (i) A single price at
which it seeks to execute the Agency Order (a ``single-price
submission''); or (ii) that it is willing to automatically match as
principal or as agent on behalf of an Initiating Order the price and
size of all BAM Auction notification responses (``BAM responses'') and
other trading interest (``auto-match'') as follows: (a) stopping the
entire order at a single stop price and auto-matching BAM responses and
other trading interest at all prices that improve the stop price to a
specified price; or (b) stopping the entire order at a single stop
price and auto-matching all BAM responses and other trading interest at
all prices that improve the stop price. For both single-price
submissions and auto-match, if the EDGX BBO on the same side of the
market as the Agency Order represents a Priority Customer on the book,
the stop price must be at least $0.01 better than the booked order's
limit price. Once the Initiating Member has submitted an Agency Order
for processing as described herein, such Agency Order may not be
modified or cancelled. Under no circumstances will the Initiating
Member receive an allocation percentage, at the final price point, of
more than 50% of the initial Agency Order in the event there is one
competing quote, order or BAM response or 40% of the initial Agency
Order in the event there are multiple competing quotes, orders or BAM
responses.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(1)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Last Priority
When starting an Auction, the Initiating Member may submit the
Initiating Order with a designation of ``last priority'' to other BAM
participants (``Last Priority''), which will result in the Initiating
Member forfeiting priority and trade allocation privileges to which it
is otherwise entitled pursuant to the proposed Rule.\5\ If Last
Priority is specified, the Initiating Order will only trade if there is
not enough interest available to fully execute the Agency Order at
prices which are equal to or improve upon the stop price. Last Priority
will not be applied if both the Initiating Order and Agency Order are
Priority Customer Orders. Last Priority cannot be designated on an
Agency Order specified as auto-match, and thus, is only compatible with
single-price submissions. Finally, Last Priority information will not
be available to other market participants and may not be modified.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The Chicago Board Options Exchange, Incorporated's
(``CBOE'') has a process whereby initiating participants may elect
to receive last priority in an allocation. See CBOE Rule
6.74A(b)(3)(J) (Automated Improvement Mechanism (``AIM'')). See also
Miami International Securities Exchange, LLC (``MIAX'') Rule
5.15(A)(a)(2)(iii)(J); NASDAQ OMX BX, Inc. (``BX Options'') Chapter
VI, Section 9(ii)(A)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Auction Notification Messages
When the Exchange receives an Agency Order for Auction processing,
an auction notification message detailing the side, size, price, and
options series of the Agency Order will be sent over the Exchange's
Multicast PITCH Feed and Auction Feed.\6\ Agency Orders will not be
included in the Exchange's disseminated best bid or offer and will not
be disseminated to OPRA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Both data feeds are currently provided free of charge.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Auction Period
The Auction will last for a period of time, as determined by the
Exchange and announced on the Exchange's Web site. The Auction period
will be no less than one hundred milliseconds and no more than one
second.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ CBOE's AIM auction is a duration of one second. See CBOE
Rule 6.74A(b)(1)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to filings made by NASDAQ OMX PHLX LLC (``PHLX'') and BX
Options,\8\ PHLX staff previously distributed a survey to all PHLX
market maker firms inquiring as to the timeframe within which these
market participants respond to an auction with a duration time ranging
from less than fifty (50) milliseconds to more than one (1) second.
According to the Filings, an overwhelming number of the market maker
firms that responded to the survey indicated that they were capable of
responding to auctions with a duration time of at least 50
milliseconds.\9\ Based on the results of the survey previously
conducted by PHLX, the commonality of participants on the Exchange and
other options exchanges, including PHLX, and the Exchange's direct
knowledge of its own technology and customer base, the Exchange
believes that allowing for an auction period of no less than one
hundred (100) milliseconds and no more than one (1) second would
provide a meaningful opportunity for Members to respond to the BAM
Auction while at the same time facilitating the prompt execution of
orders.\10\ The Exchange believes that Members will have sufficient
time to ensure competition for Agency Orders, and could provide
[[Page 69174]]
orders within the Auction additional opportunities for price
improvement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 77557 (April
7, 2016), 81 FR 21935 (April 13, 2016) (SR-Phlx-2016-40) (the ``PHLX
PIXL Amendment''); Securities Exchange Act Release No. 76301
(October 29, 2015), 80 FR 68347 (November 4, 2015) (SR-BX-2015-032)
(the ``BX Options Prism Approval,'' and together with the PHLX PIXL
Amendment, the ``Filings'').
\9\ Of the thirty five (35) PHLX market maker firms that were
surveyed, twenty (20) of these market makers responded to the survey
and of those respondents 100% indicated that that their firm could
respond to auctions with a duration time of at least 50
milliseconds. This survey was conducted in May 2014. See id.
\10\ As of the date of this proposal, all Market Makers on EDGX
Options are also members of the PHLX, and thus, rather than conduct
an additional survey of the same market participants when such a
survey was recently conducted, the Exchange is proposing to adopt
the same Auction time parameters as have been approved based on that
study. See BX Options PRISM Approval, supra note 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change could provide orders
within BAM an opportunity for price improvement. Also, the shorter
duration of time for the auction reduces the market risk for all
Members executing trades in BAM. Initiating Members are required to
guarantee an execution at the NBBO or at a better price, and are
subject to market risk while their Agency Order is exposed to other
Options Members. While other Members are also subject to market risk,
those providing responses in BAM may cancel or modify their orders
while the Initiating Member cannot. The Exchange believes that the
Initiating Member acts in a critical role within the BAM Auction. Their
willingness to guarantee the orders entered into BAM an execution at
the NBBO or a better price is the keystone to an order gaining the
opportunity for price improvement. The Exchange believes that allowing
for an auction period of no less than one hundred milliseconds and no
more than one second will benefit Members trading in BAM. EDGX believes
it is in these Members' best interests to minimize the auction time
while continuing to allow Members adequate time to electronically
respond. Both the order being exposed and the responding orders are
subject to market risk during the auction.
While some Members may wait to respond until later in the auction,
presumably to minimize their market risk, the Exchange believes that a
majority of BAM participants will respond early in an Auction. BAM
Auctions are intended to provide all market participants with
sufficient time to respond, compete, and provide price improvement for
orders while also providing investors and other market participants
with timely executions, thereby reducing their market risk. The
proposed rule to cap the Auction time at one second will allow
participants to respond quickly at the most favorable price while
reducing the risk that the market will move against the response.
EDGX believes that its Members operate electronic systems that
enable them to react and respond to orders in a meaningful way in
fractions of a second. EDGX believes that its Members will be able to
compete within 100 milliseconds and this is a sufficient amount of time
to respond to, compete for, and provide price improvement for orders,
and will provide investors and other market participants with more
timely executions, and reduce their market risk.
Auction Responses
As proposed, any person or entity other than the Initiating Member
may submit responses to an Auction, provided such responses are
properly marked specifying price, size, side of the market and
information identifying the Auction to which the response is targeted.
BAM responses will not be visible to Auction participants, and will not
be disseminated to OPRA. A BAM response with a size greater than the
size of the Agency Order will be capped at the size of the Agency Order
(i.e., the excess size will be ignored when processing the Auction).
Multiple BAM responses from the same User may be submitted during
the Auction. Multiple orders at a particular price point submitted by a
User in response to an Auction or resting on the EDGX Options Book will
be aggregated together and will be capped at the size of the Agency
Order (i.e., the excess size will be ignored when processing the
Auction).
BAM responses may be modified or cancelled during the Auction. BAM
responses on the same side of the market as the Agency Order are
considered invalid and will be immediately cancelled. BAM responses
cannot cross the price of the Initial NBBO but will be executed, if
possible, at the most aggressive permissible price within such Initial
NBBO.
Finally, with respect to the impact of this proposal on System \11\
capacity, EDGX has analyzed its capacity and represents that it has the
necessary systems capacity to handle the potential additional traffic
associated with BAM Auctions. Because neither BAM notification messages
nor responses will be published to OPRA, the Exchange does not expect
any additional capacity necessary with respect to OPRA and the
operation of BAM on the Exchange. Additionally, in terms of overall
capacity, the Exchange represents that its Systems will be able to
sufficiently maintain an audit trail for order and trade information
with the BAM Auction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ The term ``System'' is defined in Rule 16.1(a)(59).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conclusion of an Auction
The BAM Auction would conclude at the earliest of: the end of the
Auction period, upon receipt by the Exchange of a Priority Customer
order on the same side of the market and at the stop price of the
Agency Order that is to be posted to the EDGX Options Book, upon
receipt by the Exchange of an unrelated order on the same side of the
market as the Agency Order that would cause the Agency Order's stop
price to be outside of the EDGX BBO, at the close of trading, or any
time there is a trading halt on the Exchange in the affected
series.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the Auction concludes for any of the reasons set forth above
other than a trading halt, then the Auction will be processed pursuant
to the order allocation process set forth in proposed Rule 21.19(d),
which is described in further detail below. In the event of a trading
halt on the Exchange in the affected series, the Auction will be
cancelled without execution.
An unrelated market or marketable limit order (against the EDGX
BBO) on the opposite side of the market from the Agency Order received
during the Auction will not cause the Auction to end early and will
execute against interest outside of the Auction.\13\ If contracts
remain from such unrelated order at the time the Auction ends, they
will be considered for participation in the order allocation process
described below. The Exchange notes that it also proposes to make clear
that all unrelated orders submitted to the Exchange with contracts
remaining at the time the Auction ends, including orders marked as Post
Only Orders pursuant to Rule 21.1(d)(8), will be considered for
participation as described below.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(3).
\14\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Allocation
Allocations
At the conclusion of the Auction, the Agency Order will be
allocated at the best price(s) as follows. First, Priority Customer
Orders would have time priority at each price level. Next, the
Initiating Member would be allocated after Priority Customer Orders.
If the Initiating Member selected the single-price submission
option of the Auction, BAM executions will occur at prices that improve
the stop price, and then at the stop price with up to 40% of the
initial Agency Order allocated to the Initiating Member.\15\ However,
if only one other quote, order or BAM response matches the stop price,
then the Initiating Member may be allocated up to 50% of the initial
Agency Order when executed at such price. Remaining contracts would be
allocated, pursuant to proposed sub-paragraphs (iii) and (iv) to Rule
21.19(b)(4)(B), among remaining quotes, orders and BAM responses at the
stop price. Thereafter, remaining
[[Page 69175]]
contracts, if any, would be allocated to the Initiating Member. The
allocation will account for Last Priority, if applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ The Exchange notes that the International Securities
Exchange (``ISE'') bases the percentage-based allocations to an
initiating member on the initial or original size of an agency order
before other interest is executed. See ISE Rule 723(d)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the Initiating Member selected the auto-match option of the
Auction the Initiating Member would be allocated an equal number of
contracts as the aggregate size of all other quotes, orders and BAM
responses at each price point until a price point is reached where the
balance of the order can be fully executed, except that the Initiating
Member would be entitled to receive up to 40% (multiple competing
quotes, orders or BAM responses) or 50% (one competing quote, order or
BAM response) of the initial Agency Order at the final price point
(including situations where the stop price is the final price) after
Priority Customer interest has been satisfied but before remaining
interest. If there are other quotes, orders and BAM responses at the
final price point the contracts will be allocated to such interest
pursuant to proposed sub-paragraphs (iii) and (iv) to Rule
21.19(b)(4)(B). Any remaining contracts would be allocated to the
Initiating Member.
Next, for classes designated by the Exchange as eligible for
``Priority Quote'' status, Users with resting quotes and orders that
were at a price that is equal to the Initial NBBO on the opposite side
of the market from the Agency Order (``Priority Quotes'') would have
priority up to their size in the Initial NBBO at each price level at or
better than such Initial NBBO after Priority Customer and the
Initiating Member have received allocations.\16\ Priority Quotes and
BAM responses will be allocated pursuant to the algorithm set forth in
Rule 21.8(c).\17\ Priority Quote status is only valid for the duration
of the particular Auction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ MIAX allocates executions resulting from Public Customer
interest and priority Market Maker quotes ahead of other interest.
MIAX's system may designate Market Maker quotes as either priority
quotes or non-priority quotes in accordance with the provisions in
MIAX Rule 517(b). Although not limited to EDGX Market Makers, the
Exchange is prioritizing Priority Quote allocations in the proposed
EDGX BAM Auction in a similar manner, ahead of other non-Priority
Customer interest. See also, BX Options Chapter VI, Section
9(ii)(E)(3).
\17\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(4)(B)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, after Priority Customers, the Initiating Member and Users
with Priority Quotes, if applicable, have received allocations, all
other interest will be allocated pursuant to Rule 21.8(c).\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(4)(B)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Details
Any unexecuted BAM responses will be cancelled.\19\ With respect to
``Intermarket Sweep Orders'' or ``ISO'' Orders,\20\ if an Auction is
initiated for an Agency Order designated as an ISO Order, executions
will be permitted at a price inferior to the Initial NBBO.\21\
Specifically, a BAM ISO is the transmission of two orders for crossing
without regard for better priced Protected Bids or Protected Offers
because the Member transmitting the BAM ISO to the Exchange has,
simultaneous with the routing of the BAM ISO, routed one or more ISOs,
as necessary, to execute against the full size of any Protected Bid or
Protected Offer that is superior to the Auction price, including all
interest in the Exchange's book priced better than the proposed Auction
price. The Exchange will accept a BAM ISO provided the order adheres to
the Agency Order acceptance requirements, but without regard to the
NBBO. The Exchange will execute the BAM ISO in the same manner as other
Agency Orders, except that it will not protect prices away. Instead,
order flow providers will bear the responsibility to clear all better
priced interest away simultaneously with submitting the BAM ISO Order.
There is no other impact to BAM functionality. Specifically, liquidity
present at the end of the BAM Auction will continue to be included in
the BAM Auction as it is with Agency Orders not marked as ISOs. This
order type is offered by other options exchanges.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(7).
\20\ ``Intermarket Sweep Orders'' or ``ISO'' are limit orders
that are designated as ISOs in the manner prescribed by EDGX and are
executed within the System at one or multiple price levels without
regard to Protected Quotations of other Eligible Exchanges as
defined in Rule 27.1. ISOs are not eligible for routing pursuant to
Rule 21.9.
\21\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(7).
\22\ See PHLX Rules at 1080(n), which indicates that PIXL ISO
Orders are permissible. See also CBOE Rule 6.53(q); BX Options
Chapter VI, Section 9(ii)(K).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to limit the use of Match Trade Prevention
(``MTP'') functionality, set forth in Rule 21.1(g), in the context of
BAM responses to the MTP Cancel Newest option. A BAM response with any
other MTP modifier will be rejected.
Crossing and Agency Orders
In lieu of the procedures in proposed paragraphs (a)-(b) to Rule
21.19, an Initiating Member may enter an Agency Order for the account
of a Priority Customer paired with an order for the account of a
Priority Customer and such paired orders will be automatically executed
without an Auction (``Customer-to-Customer Immediate Cross''), subject
to the following proposed conditions. A Customer-to-Customer Immediate
Cross must be priced at or between the EDGX BBO. Further, a Customer-
to-Customer Immediate Cross will not be initiated but will instead be
cancelled if there is a resting Priority Customer order on the same
side of the market and at the same price as the Agency Order. Finally,
a Customer-to-Customer Immediate Cross will not be initiated if there
is a resting Priority Customer order on the opposite side of the market
from, and at the same price as, the Agency Order. Instead, the Agency
Order will be subject to the Auction process set forth above, and the
resting Priority Customer order will participate in such process.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See proposed Rule 21.19(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulatory Provisions
Bona Fide Transactions; Disrupting or Manipulating Auctions
Under the proposed Rule, the Auction may be used only where there
is a genuine intention to execute a bona fide transaction.\24\ Also,
under the proposed Rule, a pattern or practice of submitting orders or
quotes for the purpose of disrupting or manipulating BAM Auctions would
be deemed conduct inconsistent with just and equitable principles of
trade and a violation of Rule 3.1. It would also be deemed conduct
inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade and a
violation of Rule 3.1 to engage in a pattern of conduct where the
Initiating Member breaks up an Agency Order into separate orders for
the purpose of gaining a higher allocation percentage than the
Initiating Member would have otherwise received in accordance with the
allocation procedures contained in sub-paragraph (b)(4) of the proposed
Rule.\25\
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\24\ See proposed Interpretation and Policy .01 of Rule 21.19.
\25\ See proposed Interpretation and Policy .02 of Rule 21.19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Exposure
EDGX Rule 22.12 prevents an Options Member from executing agency
orders to increase its economic gain from trading against the order
without first giving other trading interests on the Exchange an
opportunity to either trade with the agency order or to trade at the
execution price when the Options Member was already bidding or offering
on the book. However, the Exchange recognizes that it may be possible
for an Options Member to establish a relationship with a Priority
Customer or other person to deny agency orders the opportunity to
interact on the Exchange
[[Page 69176]]
and to realize similar economic benefits as it would achieve by
executing agency orders as principal. Under the proposed Rule, it would
be a violation of Rule 22.12 for an Options Member to circumvent such
rule by providing an opportunity for (i) a Priority Customer affiliated
with the Options Member, or (ii) a Priority Customer with whom the
Options Member has an arrangement that allows the Options Member to
realize similar economic benefits from the transaction as the Options
Member would achieve by executing agency orders as principal, to
regularly execute against agency orders handled by the firm immediately
upon their entry as BAM Priority Customer-to-Priority Customer
immediate crosses pursuant to paragraph (c) of the proposed Rule.\26\
In addition to the proposed Interpretation and Policy described above,
the Exchange proposes to amend Rule 22.12 to add reference to BAM as an
exception to the general restriction on the execution of orders as
principal against orders they represent as agent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See proposed Interpretation and Policy .03 to Rule 21.19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pilot Program Information to the Commission
Subject to a Pilot expiring January 18, 2017, there will be no
minimum size requirement for orders to be eligible for the Auction.
During this Pilot Period, the Exchange will submit certain data,
periodically as required by the Commission, to provide supporting
evidence that, among other things, there is meaningful competition for
all size orders and that there is an active and liquid market
functioning on the Exchange outside of the Auction mechanism. Any raw
data which is submitted to the Commission will be provided on a
confidential basis.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See proposed Interpretation and Policy .04 to Rule 21.19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange will provide the following additional information on a
monthly basis:
(1) The number of contracts (of orders of 50 contracts or greater)
entered into BAM Auctions;
(2) the number of contracts (of orders of fewer than 50 contracts)
entered into BAM Auctions;
(3) the number of orders of 50 contracts or greater entered into
BAM Auctions; and
(4) the number of orders of fewer than 50 contracts entered into
BAM Auctions.
Implementation
If the Commission approves this proposed rule change, the Exchange
anticipates that it will deploy BAM within 45 days of approval. Members
will be notified of the deployment date through a Trade Desk Notice.
Examples of Agency Order Executions
Example No. 1
Summary: Initiating Member & Priority Quote interest fully
satisfies Agency Order; all participants eligible for Priority Quote
status.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Member Firm
1 (non-Market Maker) offering 30 contracts each
Class is designated as eligible for Priority Quotes
Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped at 1.02 is
received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During Auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 30 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status);
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 20 contracts at 1.02; and
[cir] Member Firm 1 responds to sell 30 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status).
Auction ends:
[cir] Initiating Member is allocated 40 contracts at 1.02 (40%
carve out);
[cir] Market Maker A and Member Firm 1 each trade 30 contracts
since they maintained Priority Quotes for 30 contracts; and
[cir] Market Maker B's response is cancelled since there were no
contracts open after Priority Quotes were filled at that price.
Example No. 2
Summary: Initiating Member & Priority Quote interest fully
satisfies Agency Order with Priority Quote interest exceeding
remainder; Pro-Rata Amongst Priority Quote interest.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Class is designated as eligible for Priority Quotes
Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped at 1.02 is
received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 30 contracts at 1.02;
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 30 contracts at 1.02;
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at 1.01; and
[cir] Market Maker D responds to sell 10 contracts at 1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since it was the only
interest offered at the best price;
[cir] Initiating Member is allocated 40 contracts at 1.02 (40%
carve out);
[cir] Market Maker A and Market Maker B each trades 25 contracts
(pro rata among Priority Quotes).
[cir] Market Maker D's response is cancelled since there were no
contracts open after Priority Quotes were filled at that price.
Example No. 3
Summary: Market Makers improve upon the price and receive both
Priority Quote status and non-Priority Quote status based on their
size at initial NBBO; Initiating Member does not receive an
allocation.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Class is designated as eligible for Priority Quotes
Agency Order to buy 90 contracts stopped at 1.03 is
received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at 1.01; and
[cir] Market Maker D responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since it was the only
interest offered at the best price;
[cir] Market Maker A and Market Maker B each trade 30 contracts
at 1.02 since they have priority up to their size at the NBBO when
the Auction started;
[cir] Market Maker A, Market Maker B, and Market Maker D then
pro-rata split the balance of 20 contracts at 1.02 based on their
remaining interest size with Market Maker A being allocated 4
contracts (=20/90*20), Market Maker B being allocated 4 (=20/90*20)
contracts, and Market Maker D being allocated 11 contracts (=50/
90*20);
[cir] The residual 1 contract will be allocated in time priority
to Market Maker A;
[cir] Initiating Member does not participate as entirety of
order was price improved.
Example No. 4
Summary: Initiating Member utilizes Auto-Match feature with
specified price and Market Makers with Priority Quotes participate;
Initiating Member & Priority Quote interest fully satisfies Agency
Order.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Class is designated as eligible for Priority Quotes
Agency Order to buy 90 contracts stopped at 1.03 with Auto-
Match feature to 1.02 is received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[[Page 69177]]
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at 1.01; and
[cir] Market Maker D responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since it was the only
interest offered at the best price; note that the Initiating Member
specified a limit of 1.02 so such Initiating Member does not receive
an Auto-Match execution at 1.01;
[cir] Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 36 contracts at 1.02
since it will be the final price point and Auto-Match is enabled;
[cir] Market Maker A and Market Maker B each trades 22 contracts
at 1.02 since they have Priority Quote status ahead of Market Maker
D up to their size at the NBBO when the Auction started; and
[cir] Market Maker D's response is cancelled.
Example No. 5
Summary: Initiating Member utilizes Auto-Match feature with
specified price and Market Makers with Priority Quote status and
non-Priority Quote status participate; Agency Order exceeds size of
Initiating Member execution and Priority Quotes.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Class is designated as eligible for Priority Quotes
Agency Order to buy 150 contracts stopped at 1.03 with
Auto-Match feature to 1.02 is received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at 1.01; and
[cir] Market Maker D responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01 since it was the only
interest offered at the best price; note that the Initiating Member
specified a limit of 1.02 so such Initiating Member does not receive
an Auto-Match execution at 1.01;
[cir] Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 60 contracts at 1.02
since it will be the final price point;
[cir] Market Maker A and Market Maker B each trade 30 contracts
at 1.02 since they have Priority Quote status up to their size at
the NBBO when the Auction started;
[cir] Market Maker A, Market Maker B, and Market Maker D then
pro-rata split the balance with Market Maker A and Market Maker B
each trading 4 additional contracts at 1.02 (20/90*20) and Market
Maker D trading 11 contracts at 1.02 (50/90*20);
[cir] The residual 1 contract will be allocated in time priority
to Market Maker A.
Example No. 6
Summary: Initiating Member utilizes Auto-Match feature without
specified price and Market Makers with Priority Quote status and
non-Priority Quote status participate; Agency Order exceeds size of
Initiating Member execution and Priority Quotes.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Class is designated as eligible for Priority Quotes
Agency Order to buy 150 contracts stopped at 1.03 with
Auto-Match feature is received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02
(Priority Quote status for 30 contracts and non-Priority Quote
status for 20 contracts);
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 10 at 1.01; and
[cir] Market Maker D responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker C trades 10 at 1.01;
[cir] Initiating Member auto-matches and trades 10 at 1.01;
[cir] Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 60 contracts at 1.02
since it will be the final price point;
[cir] Market Maker A and Market Maker B each trade 30 contracts
at 1.02 since they have Priority Quote status up to their size at
the NBBO when the Auction started;
[cir] Market Maker A, Market Maker B, and Market Maker D then
pro-rata split the balance with Market Maker A and Market Maker B
each trading 2 contracts at 1.02 (20/90*10) and Market Maker D
trading 6 contracts at 1.02 (50/90*10).
Example No. 7
Summary: All executions occurring at initial NBBO price and
Public Customer order received.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
Class is designated as eligible for Priority Quotes
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped at 1.03 is
received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 20 at 1.03; and
[cir] Priority Customer offers 2 contracts at 1.03.
Auction ends:
[cir] Priority Customer trades 2 contracts at 1.03;
[cir] Initiating Member is allocated 40% or 40 contracts at
1.03;
[cir] Remaining allocation is pro-rata among Priority Quote
interest with Market Maker A trading 29 contracts (30/60*58) and
Market Maker B trading 29 contracts (30/60*58).
[ssquf] Note that in this example the Priority Quote interest
from Market Maker A and Market Maker B is from quotations published
on the Exchange's order book and not from BAM responses received
from such Market Makers.
Example No. 8
Summary: Initiating Member specifying Auto-Match feature without
specified price, Market Maker with Priority Quotes has multiple
price levels of interest, and executions occur at initial NBBO
price.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Agency Order to buy 300 contracts stopped at 1.03 with
Auto-Match feature is received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 10 contracts at 1.02
(considered as Priority Quote);
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 50 contracts at 1.02 (30
of the 50 contracts are considered as Priority Quote);
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 5 at 1.01; and
[cir] Market Maker D responds to sell 40 contracts at 1.02.
Next, during auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds with 30 additional contracts at
1.03 (considered as Priority Quote).
Next, during auction:
[cir] Market Maker A moves his quote (maintain Priority Quote
status) and EDGX BBO becomes .95-1.02 for 10 contracts; and
[cir] An order from Member Firm 1 arrives offering 10 contracts
at 1.02 such that the EDGX BBO becomes .95-1.02 for 20 contracts.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker C trades 5 at 1.01;
[cir] Initiating Member auto-matches and trades 5 at 1.01;
[cir] Next, interest is then allocated at 1.02 as follows:
[ssquf] Market Maker A response (Priority Quote status) trades
10 contracts;
[ssquf] Market Maker B response (Priority Quote status) trades
30 contracts;
[ssquf] Market Maker A quote trades 10 contracts at 1.02;
[ssquf] Market Maker B response (non-Priority Quote status)
trades 20 contracts;
[[Page 69178]]
[ssquf] Market Maker D's response (non-Priority Quote status)
trades 40 contracts at 1.02;
[ssquf] Member Firm 1's quote (non-Priority Quote status) trades
10 contracts at 1.02.
[cir] Next, the Initiating Member order matches the full volume
trading at 1.02 (because of Auto-Match feature) which is 120
contracts.
[cir] The remaining 50 contracts are traded by the Initiating
Member at 1.03 since it will be the final price point (40% carve
out; 0.4*300 = 75).
Example No. 9
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing Last Priority.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Agency Order to buy 100 contracts stopped at 1.02 marked
with Last Priority is received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker C responds to sell 5 at 1.01;
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 5 contracts at 1.02;
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 40 contracts at 1.02; and
[cir] Market Maker D responds to sell 20 contracts at 1.02.
Next, during auction:
[cir] Market Maker A moves his quote (maintains Priority Quote
status);
[cir] EDGX BBO becomes .95-1.02 for 5 contracts; and
[cir] NBBO becomes .97-1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker C trades 5 contracts at 1.01;
[cir] Market Maker A response with Priority Quote status
executes 5 contracts at 1.02;
[cir] Market Maker B response with Priority Quote status
executes 30 contracts;
[cir] Market Maker A quote with Priority Quote status executes 5
contracts;
[cir] Non-Priority Quote interest at 1.02 then executes with
Market Maker B trading 10 contracts and Market Maker D trading 20
contracts. The Initiating Member then executes the remaining 25
contracts at 1.02 since there is no other interest to satisfy the
Agency Order at a price equal to or better than the stop price of
1.02.
Example No. 10
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing Last Priority and no
responders.
Assumptions:
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03(60) with Market Maker A and Market
Maker B offering 30 contracts each
Agency Order to buy 20 contracts stopped at 1.02 marked
with Last Priority is received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker C quotes .95-1.02 for 10 contracts and EDGX
BBO becomes .95-1.02 for 10 contracts; and
[cir] NBBO becomes .97-1.02.
Next, during auction:
[cir] Market Maker A moves his quote (maintains Priority Quote
status) and joins the EDGX BBO at .95-1.02 for 10 contracts; and
[cir] NBBO remains .97-1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Priority Quote interest trades first: Market Maker A gets
allocated 10 contracts of Agency Order.
[cir] Non-Priority Quote interest trades next: Market Maker C
gets allocated 10 contracts.
[cir] Neither the Initiating Member nor Market Maker B receives
any execution in this example.
Example No. 11
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing an ISO Order priced through
NBBO.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.04
Agency Order to buy 50 contracts stopped at 1.04 marked
with an ISO flag is received
BAM Process:
Auction begins
During auction:
[cir] Market Maker A responds to sell 20 at 1.02; and
[cir] Market Maker B responds to sell 20 at 1.02.
Auction ends:
[cir] Market Maker A gets allocated 20 contracts of Agency Order
at 1.02.
[cir] Market Maker B gets allocated 20 contracts of Agency Order
at 1.02.
[cir] The Initiating Member gets allocated the remaining 10
contracts at 1.04.
Example No. 12
Summary: Initiating Member utilizing an ISO Order priced through
EDGX BBO.
Assumptions:
NBBO = .97-1.03
EDGX BBO = .95-1.03
Agency Order to buy 50 contracts stopped at 1.04 marked
with an ISO flag is received
Agency Order is rejected.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the proposed rule change is consistent
with the provisions of the Act,\28\ in general, and with Section
6(b)(5) of the Act,\29\ in particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing,
settling, processing information with respect to, and facilitating
transactions in securities, to remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system, and,
in general, to protect investors and the public interest; and is not
designed to permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers,
brokers, or dealers.
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\28\ 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
\29\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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The Exchange believes that the proposal will result in increased
liquidity available at improved prices, with competitive final pricing
out of the Initiating Member's complete control. BAM should promote and
foster competition and provide more options contracts with the
opportunity for price improvement. As a result of the increased
opportunities for price improvement, the Exchange believes that
participants will use BAM to increase the number of Priority Customer
Orders that are provided with the opportunity to receive price
improvement over the NBBO.
The Exchange believes that the BAM Auction will encourage
participants on EDGX Options to quote or display orders at the NBBO
with additional size and thereby result in tighter and deeper markets,
resulting in more liquidity on EDGX Options. Specifically, by offering
all Users the ability to receive priority in the proposed allocation
during the BAM Auction up to the size of their quote, an EDGX User will
be encouraged to maintain quotes or orders with additional size outside
of the BAM Auction at the best and most aggressive prices. The Exchange
believes that this incentive may result in a narrowing of quotes and
thus further enhance EDGX's market quality. Within the BAM Auction,
EDGX believes that the rules that are proposed will encourage EDGX
Users to compete vigorously to provide the opportunity for price
improvement in a competitive auction process.
As noted above, the Exchange has proposed to allow BAM Auctions for
50 contracts or more to occur concurrently with other BAM Auctions.
Although Auctions for larger Agency Orders will be allowed to overlap,
the Exchange does not believe that this raises any issues that are not
addressed through the proposal as described above. For example,
although overlapping, each Auction will be started in a sequence and
with a time that will determine its processing. Thus, even if there are
two Auctions that commence and conclude, at nearly the same time, each
Auction will have a distinct conclusion at which time the Auction will
be allocated. In turn, when the first Auction concludes, unrelated
orders that then exist will be considered for participation in the
Auction.\30\ If unrelated orders are fully executed in such Auction,
then there will be no unrelated orders for consideration when the
subsequent Auction is processed (unless new unrelated order interest
has arrived). If instead there is remaining unrelated order interest
after the first Auction has
[[Page 69179]]
been allocated, then such unrelated order interest will be considered
for allocation when the subsequent Auction is processed. As another
example, each BAM response is required to specifically identify the
Auction for which it is targeted \31\ and if not fully executed will be
cancelled back at the conclusion of the Auction.\32\ Thus, BAM
responses will be specifically considered only in the specified
Auction.
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\30\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(3).
\31\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(1)(E).
\32\ See proposed Rule 21.19(b)(5).
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The Exchange does not believe that allowing multiple auctions to
overlap for Agency Orders of 50 contracts or more presents any unique
issues that differ from functionality already in place on other
exchanges. The Exchange notes that other options exchanges offer
auctions for orders 50 contracts or greater (generally referred to as
``facilitation auctions'') that are permitted to overlap.\33\ In
contrast, similar to the Exchange's proposal, other options exchanges
do prevent simultaneous auctions to occur for orders less than 50
contracts (generally referred to as ``price improvement
auctions'').\34\ Instead of proposing two separate auction processes
that are functionally the same with only minor differences, such as the
restriction on overlapping or queuing auctions--which is present in
other options exchanges' price improvement auctions but not in their
facilitation auctions--the Exchange is proposing to have a single
process that recognizes these specific nuances to avoid introducing new
policy issues regarding such topics.
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\33\ See, e.g., ISE Rule 716(d), which governs ISE's
facilitation mechanism and does not restrict such auctions to one
auction at a time. See also Boston Options Exchange (``BOX'') Rule
7270.
\34\ See ISE Rule 723, Interpretation and Policy .04. See also
BOX IM-7150-3.
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Further, the new functionality may lead to an increase in Exchange
volume and should allow the Exchange to better compete against other
markets that already offer an electronic solicitation mechanism, while
providing an opportunity for price improvement for agency orders. The
Exchange believes that its proposal will allow the Exchange to better
compete for solicited transactions, while providing an opportunity for
price improvement for agency orders and assuring that Priority
Customers on the book are protected. The new solicitation mechanism
should promote and foster competition and provide more options
contracts with the opportunity for price improvement, which should
benefit market participants, investors, and traders. The Exchange has
proposed a range between no less than one hundred milliseconds and no
more than one second for the duration of the BAM Auction; therefore the
proposed rule change will provide investors with more timely execution
of their options orders than a mechanism that has a one second auction,
while ensuring that there is an adequate exposure of orders in EDGX
BAM. The Exchange preliminary expects to use a default of 100
milliseconds for all symbols. The time will be announced to Members and
available on the Exchange's Web site. The proposed auction response
time of no less than one hundred milliseconds and no more than one
second should allow investors the opportunity to receive price
improvement through BAM while reducing market risk. The Exchange
believes a briefer time period reduces the market risk for the
Initiating Member, versus an auction with a one second period, as well
as for any Member providing orders in response to a broadcast. As such,
EDGX believes the proposed rule change would help perfect the mechanism
for a free and open national market system, and generally help protect
investors' and the public interest. The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change is not unfairly discriminatory because the BAM duration
would be the same for all Members and symbols. All Members will have an
equal opportunity to respond with their best prices during the BAM
Auction. Since the Exchange considers all interest present in the
System, and not solely BAM responses, for execution against the Agency
Order, those participants who are not explicit responders to the
Auction will expect executions via BAM as well.
With respect to trading halts, as described herein, in the case of
a trading halt on the Exchange in the affected series, the Auction will
be cancelled without execution. Cancelling Auctions without execution
in this circumstance is consistent with Exchange handling of trading
halts in the context of continuous trading on EDGX Options and promotes
just and equitable principles of trade and, in general, protects
investors and the public interest.\35\
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\35\ The Exchange notes that trading on the Exchange in any
option contract will be halted whenever trading in the underlying
security has been paused or halted by the primary listing market and
other circumstances. See Rule 20.3.
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The Exchange further believes that the proposal is consistent with
the requirements of Section 11(a) of the Act \36\ and Rule 11a2-2(T)
\37\ thereunder. Section 11(a) prohibits a member of a national
securities exchange from effecting transactions on the exchange for its
own account, the account of an associated person, or an account in
which it or an associated person exercises investment discretion,
unless an exception applies (collectively ``Covered Accounts''). Rule
11a2-2(T) under the Act,\38\ known as the effect versus execute'' rule,
provides exchange members with an exemption from the Section 11(a)(1)
prohibition. Rule 11a2-2(T) permits an exchange member, subject to
certain conditions, to effect transactions for Covered Accounts by
arranging for an unaffiliated member to execute transactions on the
exchange.\39\ To comply with Rule 11a2-2(T)'s conditions, a member: (i)
Must transmit the order from off the exchange floor; (ii) may not
participate in the execution of the transaction once it has been
transmitted to the member performing the execution; \40\ (iii) may not
be affiliated with the executing member; and (iv) with respect to an
account over which the member has investment discretion, neither the
member nor its associated person may retain any compensation in
connection with effecting the transaction except as provided in the
Rule. For the reasons set forth below, the Exchange believes that
Exchange Members entering orders into BAM would satisfy the
requirements of Rule 11a2-2(T).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 15 U.S.C. 78k(a)(1).
\37\ 17 CFR 240.11a2-2(T).
\38\ CFR 240.11a2-2(T).
\39\ In enacting this provision, Congress was concerned about
members benefiting in their principal transactions from special
``time and place'' advantages associated with floor trading--such as
the ability to ``execute decisions faster than public investors.''
The Commission, however, has adopted a number of exceptions to the
general statutory prohibition for situations in which the principal
transactions contribute to the fairness and orderliness of exchange
markets or do not reflect any time and place trading advantages. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 14563 (March 14, 1978), 43 FR
11542 (March 17, 1978); Securities Exchange Act Release No. 14713
(April 28, 1978), 43 FR 18557 (May 1, 1978); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 15533 (January 29, 1979), 44 FR 6093 (Jan. 31, 1979).
The 1978 and 1979 Releases cite the House Report at 54-57.
\40\ The member may, however, participate in clearing and
settling the transaction.
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The Exchange does not operate a physical trading floor, rather the
Exchange operates an electronic market. Rule 11a2-2(T)'s first
condition is that orders for Covered Accounts be transmitted from off
the exchange floor. In the context of automated trading systems, the
Commission has found that the off-floor transmission requirement is met
if a Covered Account order is transmitted from a remote location
directly to an exchange's floor by electronic means.\41\ EDGX
represents
[[Page 69180]]
that the System and the proposed BAM Auction receive all orders
electronically through remote terminals or computer-to-computer
interfaces. The Exchange represents that orders for Covered Accounts
from Members will be transmitted from a remote location directly to the
proposed BAM mechanisms by electronic means.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 61419
(January 26, 2010), 75 FR 5157 (February 1, 2010) (SR-BATS-2009-031)
(approving BATS options trading); 59154 (December 23, 2008), 73 FR
80468 (December 31, 2008) (SRBSE-2008-48) (approving equity
securities listing and trading on BSE); 57478 (March 12, 2008), 73
FR 14521 (March 18, 2008) (SR-NASDAQ-2007-004 and SR-NASDAQ-2007-
080) (approving NOM options trading); 53128 (January 13, 2006), 71
FR 3550 (January 23, 2006) (File No. 10-131) (approving The Nasdaq
Stock Market LLC); 44983 (October 25, 2001), 66 FR 55225 (November
1, 2001) (SR-PCX-00-25) (approving Archipelago Exchange); 29237 (May
24, 1991), 56 FR 24853 (May 31, 1991) (SR-NYSE-90-52 and SR-NYSE-90-
53) (approving NYSE's Off-Hours Trading Facility); and 15533
(January 29, 1979), 44 FR 6084 (January 31, 1979) (``1979
Release'').
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The second condition of Rule 11a2-2(T) requires that neither a
member nor an associated person participate in the execution of its
order once the order is transmitted to the floor for execution. The
Exchange represents that, upon submission to the BAM Auction, an order
will be executed automatically pursuant to the rules set forth for BAM.
In particular, execution of an order sent to the mechanism depends not
on the Initiating Member entering the order, but rather on what other
orders are present and the priority of those orders. Thus, at no time
following the submission of an order is a Member able to acquire
control or influence over the result or timing of order execution.\42\
Once the Agency Order has been transmitted, the Exchange Initiating
Member that transmitted the order will not participate in the execution
of the Agency Order. Initiating Members submitting Agency Orders will
relinquish control to modify their Agency Orders upon transmission to
the Exchange's System. Further, no Member, including the Initiating
Member, will see a BAM response submitted into BAM and therefore and
will not be able to influence or guide the execution of their Agency
Orders. Finally, the Last Priority feature will not permit a Member to
have any control over an order. The election to Last Priority an order
is available prior to the submission of the order and therefore could
not be utilized to gain influence or guide the execution of the Agency
Order. The information provided with respect to the Last Priority
feature by the Initiating Member will not be broadcast and further, the
information may not be modified by the Initiating Member during the
auction.
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\42\ The Exchange notes that a Member may not cancel or modify
an order after it has been submitted into BAM.
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Rule 11a2-2(T)'s third condition requires that the order be
executed by an exchange member who is unaffiliated with the member
initiating the order. The Commission has stated that the requirement is
satisfied when automated exchange facilities, such as the BAM Auction
are used, as long as the design of these systems ensures that members
do not possess any special or unique trading advantages in handling
their orders after transmitting them to the exchange.\43\ The Exchange
represents that the BAM Auction is designed so that no Member has any
special or unique trading advantage in the handling of its orders after
transmitting its orders to the mechanism.
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\43\ In considering the operation of automated execution systems
operated by an exchange, the Commission noted that, while there is
not an independent executing exchange member, the execution of an
order is automatic once it has been transmitted into the system.
Because the design of these systems ensures that members do not
possess any special or unique trading advantages in handling their
orders after transmitting them to the exchange, the Commission has
stated that executions obtained through these systems satisfy the
independent execution requirement of Rule 11a2-2(T). See 1979
Release.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 11a2-2(T)'s fourth condition requires that, in the case of a
transaction effected for an account with respect to which the
initiating member or an associated person thereof exercises investment
discretion, neither the initiating member nor any associated person
thereof may retain any compensation in connection with effecting the
transaction, unless the person authorized to transact business for the
account has expressly provided otherwise by written contract referring
to Section 11(a) of the Act and Rule 11a2-2(T) thereunder.\44\ The
Exchange recognizes that Members relying on Rule 11a2-2(T) for
transactions effected through the BAM Auction must comply with this
condition of the Rule and the Exchange will enforce this requirement
pursuant to its obligations under Section 6(b)(1) of the Act to enforce
compliance with federal securities laws.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See 17 CFR 240.11a2-2(T)(a)(2)(iv). In addition, Rule 11a2-
2(T)(d) requires a member or associated person authorized by written
contract to retain compensation, in connection with effecting
transactions for Covered Accounts over which such member or
associated persons thereof exercises investment discretion, to
furnish at least annually to the person authorized to transact
business for the account a statement setting forth the total amount
of compensation retained by the member in connection with effecting
transactions for the account during the period covered by the
statement which amount must be exclusive of all amounts paid to
others during that period for services rendered to effect such
transactions. See also 1978 (stating ``[t]he contractual and
disclosure requirements are designed to assure that accounts
electing to permit transaction-related compensation do so only after
deciding that such arrangements are suitable to their interests'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that the instant proposal is consistent with
Rule 11a2-2(T), and that therefore the exception should apply in this
case.
The Exchange also believes that the proposed rule changes would
further the objectives of the Act to protect investors by promoting the
intermarket price protection goals of the Options Intermarket Linkage
Plan.\45\ The Exchange believes its proposal would help ensure inter-
market competition across all exchanges and facilitate compliance with
best execution practices. The Exchange believes that these objectives
are consistent with the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to the Exchange and, in particular, the requirements of
Section 11A of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See Rule 27.3 regarding Locked and Crossed Markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 competition
among the options exchanges is vigorous and this proposal is intended
to afford the EDGX Options market the opportunity to compete for order
flow by offering an auction mechanism on EDGX similar to that of other
exchanges.
With respect to intra-market competition, the Auction will be
available to all EDGX Options Members. Moreover, as explained above,
the proposal should encourage EDGX Options Members to compete amongst
each other by responding with their best price and size for a
particular auction. With respect to overall market quality, the
Exchange believes that the BAM Auction, as proposed herein, will
encourage will encourage participants on EDGX Options to quote or
display orders at the NBBO with additional size and thereby result in
tighter and deeper markets, resulting in more liquidity on EDGX
Options. Specifically, by offering all Users the ability to receive
priority in the proposed allocation during the BAM Auction up to the
size of their quote, an EDGX User will be encouraged to maintain quotes
or orders with additional size outside of the BAM Auction at the best
and most aggressive prices. The Exchange believes that this incentive
may result in a narrowing of quotes and thus further enhance EDGX's
[[Page 69181]]
market quality. Within the BAM Auction, EDGX believes that the rules
that are proposed will encourage EDGX Users to compete vigorously to
provide the opportunity for price improvement in a competitive auction
process.
The Exchange's proposal is a competitive response to similar
provisions in the price improvement auction rules of other options
exchanges.\46\ The Exchange believes this proposed rule change is
necessary to permit fair competition among the options exchanges and to
establish more uniform price improvement auction rules on the various
options exchanges. The Exchange anticipates that this auction proposal
will create new opportunities for EDGX to attract new business and
compete on equal footing with those options exchanges with auctions and
for this reason the proposal does not create an undue burden on inter-
market competition. Rather, the Exchange believes that the proposed
rule would bolster inter-market competition by promoting fair
competition among individual markets, while at the same time assuring
that market participants receive the benefits of markets that are
linked together, through facilities and rules, in a unified system,
which promotes interaction among the orders of buyers and sellers. The
Exchange believes its proposal would help ensure inter-market
competition across all exchanges and facilitate compliance with best
execution practices. In addition, the Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change would help promote fair and orderly markets by
helping ensure compliance with Options Order Protection and Locked and
Crossed Market Rules.\47\ Thus, the Exchange does not believe the
proposal creates any significant impact on competition.
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\46\ Today, the following options markets offer auctions: CBOE,
ISE, BOX, MIAX, PHLX and BX Options. See CBOE Rule 6.74A, ISE Rule
723, BOX Rule 7150, MIAX Rule 5.15, PHLX Rule 1080(n), and BX
Options Chapter VI, Section 9.
\47\ See Chapter XXVII of the Exchange's Rules.
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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 proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please
include File Number SR-BatsEDGX-2016-41 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Brent J. Fields,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-BatsEDGX-2016-41. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other
than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available
for inspection and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All
comments received will be posted without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File Number SR-BatsEDGX-2016-41 and should
be submitted on or before October 26, 2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\48\
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\48\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-24010 Filed 10-4-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P