Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC; NYSE MKT LLC; Order Disapproving Proposed Rule Changes Amending Exchange Rule 104 To Delete Subsection (g)(i)(A)(III), Which Prohibits Designated Market Makers From Engaging in Transactions, During the Last Ten Minutes of Trading Before the Close, That Establish a New High (Low) Price for the Day on the Exchange in an Assigned Security in Which the DMM Has a Long (Short) Position, 33534-33537 [2017-15195]
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33534
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 138 / Thursday, July 20, 2017 / Notices
asabaliauskas on DSKBBXCHB2PROD with NOTICES
comments were submitted to File No.
SR–FINRA–2017–013.9 On June 22,
2017, each of NASDAQ, BX, ISE, and
Phlx filed a technical amendment to its
proposed rule change.10
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 11 provides
that, within 45 days of the publication
of notice of the filing of a proposed rule
change, or within such longer period up
to 90 days as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or as to which the
self-regulatory organization consents,
the Commission shall either approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule change should be
disapproved. The 45th day for the
proposed rule changes published on
June 1, 2017, is July 16, 2017. The 45th
day for the proposed rule changes
published on June 2, 2017, is July 17,
2017. The 45th day for the proposed
rule changes published on June 5, 2017,
is July 20, 2017.
The Commission is extending the 45day time period for Commission action
on each of the proposed rule changes.
The Commission finds that it is
appropriate to designate a longer period
within which to take action on the
proposed rule changes so that it has
sufficient time to consider the
comments received and any response to
the comments that the self-regulatory
organizations might provide.
Accordingly, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I) of the Act 12 and for the
reasons stated above, the Commission
designates August 30, 2017, as the date
by which the Commission shall approve
or disapprove, or institute proceedings
to determine whether to disapprove, the
proposed rule changes (File Nos. SR–
BatsBZX–2017–37; SR–BatsEDGX–
2017–23; SR–BOX–2017–17; SR–C2–
2017–018; SR–CBOE–2017–041; SR–
FINRA–2017–013; SR–ISE–2017–46;
SR–IEX–2017–18; SR–MIAX–2017–20;
SR–PEARL–2017–23; SR–NASDAQ–
2017–055; SR–BX–2017–027; SR–
PHLX–2017–43; SR–NYSE–2017–23;
9 See letters from William H. Herbert, Managing
Director, Financial Information Forum, dated June
22, 2017; Manisha Kimmel, Chief Regulatory
Officer, Wealth Management, Thomson Reuters,
dated June 22, 2017; Marc R. Bryant, Senior Vice
President, Deputy General Counsel, Fidelity
Investments, dated June 22, 2017; and Ellen Greene,
Managing Director and Theodore R. Lazo, Managing
Director and Associate General Counsel, SIFMA,
dated June 23, 2017.
10 These amendments modified Section 2 of the
Form 19b–4 submitted by each of NASDAQ, BX,
ISE, and Phlx to state that on June 1, 2017, the
exchange obtained the necessary approval from its
Board of Directors for the proposed rule change.
11 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
12 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I).
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SR–NYSEArca–2017–57; SR–
NYSEArca–2017–59; SR–NYSEMKT–
2017–29; SR–NYSEMKT–2017–30).
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.13
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2017–15190 Filed 7–19–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–81150; File Nos. SR–NYSE–
2016–71 and SR–NYSEMKT 2016–99]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New
York Stock Exchange LLC; NYSE MKT
LLC; Order Disapproving Proposed
Rule Changes Amending Exchange
Rule 104 To Delete Subsection
(g)(i)(A)(III), Which Prohibits
Designated Market Makers From
Engaging in Transactions, During the
Last Ten Minutes of Trading Before the
Close, That Establish a New High
(Low) Price for the Day on the
Exchange in an Assigned Security in
Which the DMM Has a Long (Short)
Position
July 1, 2017.
I. Introduction
On October 27, 2016, New York Stock
Exchange LLC (‘‘NYSE’’) and NYSE
MKT LLC (‘‘NYSE MKT’’) (each an
‘‘Exchange,’’ and collectively the
‘‘Exchanges’’) each filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4 thereunder,2 a proposed rule
change amending its respective Rule
104 to delete subsection (g)(i)(A)(III)—
‘‘Prohibited Transactions.’’ 3 Exchange
Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(III) prohibits
Designated Market Makers (‘‘DMMs’’)
from engaging in a transaction that
establishes, during the last ten minutes
of trading before the close, a new high
(low) price for the day on the Exchange
in an assigned security in which the
DMM has a long (short) position
(‘‘Prohibited Transactions Rule’’). The
CFR 200.30–3(a)(31).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 This order refers to both NYSE Rule 104 and
NYSE MKT Rule 104—Equities as ‘‘Exchange Rule
104.’’ NYSE MKT Rule 104—Equities is based on
and, in relevant part, substantively identical to
NYSE Rule 104. See Securities Exchange Act
Release Nos. 58705 (Oct. 1, 2008), 73 FR 58995
(Oct. 8. 2008) (SR–Amex–2008–63) and 59022 (Nov.
26, 2008), 73 FR 73683 (Dec. 3, 2008) (amending
NYSE MKT equity rules to conform to NYSE New
Market Model Pilot rules).
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1 15
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proposed rule changes were published
for comment in the Federal Register on
November 17, 2016.4
On December 20, 2016, the
Commission extended to February 15,
2017, the time period in which to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule changes or to institute proceedings
to determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposals.5 On February
15, 2017, the Commission instituted
proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule changes.6 The Commission then
received a comment letter, as well as a
combined response letter from NYSE
and NYSE MKT.7 On April 28, 2017, the
Commission designated a longer period
for Commission action on proceedings
to determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule changes.8
This order disapproves the proposed
rule changes.
II. Description of the Proposals
Currently, under Exchange Rule
104(g)(i)(A)(III), a DMM with a long
(short) position in an assigned security
cannot, during the last ten minutes
before the close of trading, make a
purchase (sale) in that security that
results in a new high (low) price on the
Exchange for the day.9 The Prohibited
Transactions Rule provides two
exceptions that permit a DMM to: (1)
Match another market’s better bid or
offer price; or (2) bring the price of a
security into parity with an underlying
or related security or asset.10 The
Exchanges propose to remove the
Prohibited Transactions Rule from their
rulebooks.
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 79284
(Nov. 10, 2016), 81 FR 81222 (Nov. 17, 2016)
(‘‘NYSE Notice’’) and 79283 (Nov. 10, 2016), 81 FR
81210 (Nov. 17, 2016) (‘‘NYSE MKT Notice’’).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 79612
(Dec. 20, 2016), 81 FR 95205 (Dec. 27, 2016) and
79611 (Dec. 20, 2016), 81 FR 95205 (Dec. 27, 2016).
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 80044
(Feb. 15, 2017), 82 FR 11388 (Feb. 22, 2017) (‘‘NYSE
Order Instituting Proceedings’’) and 80043 (Feb. 15,
2017), 82 FR 11379 (Feb. 22, 2017) (‘‘NYSE MKT
Order Instituting Proceedings’’) (collectively, the
‘‘Orders Instituting Proceedings’’).
7 See Letter from Stephen John Berger, Managing
Director, Government and Regulatory Policy,
Citadel Securities, to Brent J. Fields, Secretary,
Commission (Mar. 15, 2017) (‘‘Citadel Letter’’);
Letter from Elizabeth K. King, General Counsel and
Corporate Secretary, NYSE, to Brent J. Fields,
Secretary, Commission (Mar. 16, 2017) (‘‘NYSE
Letter’’). The Citadel Letter addressed only the
NYSE proposal, which is substantively identical to
the NYSE MKT proposal. The NYSE Letter was
submitted on behalf of both NYSE and NYSE MKT.
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 80552
(Apr. 28, 2017), 82 FR 20927 (May 4, 2017) and
80550 (Apr. 28, 2017), 82 FR 20926 (May 4, 2017).
9 See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(III).
10 See id.; see also Exchange Rule
104(g)(i)(A)(II)(2)(i).
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The Exchanges assert that, in light of
developments in the equity markets and
in their trading model, the Prohibited
Transactions Rule has lost its original
purpose and utility.11 Specifically, the
Exchanges assert that in today’s
electronic marketplace—where DMMs
have replaced specialists and control of
pricing decisions has moved away from
market participants on the Exchange
trading floor—the Prohibited
Transactions Rule is no longer
necessary.12 According to the
Exchanges, eliminating the Prohibited
Transactions Rule would not eliminate
other existing safeguards that prevent
DMMs from inappropriately influencing
or manipulating the close.13
The Exchanges assert that the
rationale behind the Prohibited
Transactions Rule—preventing
specialists from setting the price of a
security on the Exchange in the final ten
minutes of trading—was to prevent a
specialist from inappropriately
influencing the price of a security at the
close to advantage the specialist’s
proprietary position.14 According to the
Exchanges, in today’s fragmented
marketplace, a new high (low) price for
a security on one of the Exchanges in
the last ten minutes of trading does not
have a significant effect on the market
price for that security, because a new
high (low) price on one of the
Exchanges may not be the new high
(low) market-wide price for a security—
prices may be higher (lower) in away
markets, where the majority of intra-day
trading in Exchange-listed securities
takes place—and because any advantage
to a DMM from establishing a new high
or low on the Exchange during the last
ten minutes can rapidly evaporate
following trades in away markets.15 The
Exchanges assert that, because DMMs
do not have the ability to direct or
influence trading or to control intra-day
prices that specialists had before the
implementation of Regulation NMS, the
Prohibited Transactions Rule is
anachronistic.16
asabaliauskas on DSKBBXCHB2PROD with NOTICES
III. Summary of Comment Letter and
the Exchanges’ Response
The Commission received one
comment letter in support of the NYSE
proposal and a combined response letter
11 See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81223;
NYSE MKT Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81211.
12 See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81222;
NYSE MKT Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81212.
13 See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at
81222–23; NYSE MKT Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR
at 81212.
14 See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81223;
NYSE MKT Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81211.
15 See id.
16 See id.
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from NYSE and NYSE MKT.17 The
commenter asserts that the Prohibited
Transactions Rule is no longer
necessary. First, the commenter states
that, when the Prohibited Transactions
Rule was originally adopted, structural
advantages enjoyed by NYSE
specialists—including a dominant
position in NYSE-listed securities and
an advance look at incoming orders—
warranted imposing prescriptive
limitations on their trading activities,
particularly at certain critical pricing
points during the day, such as the preclosing period.18 The commenter states
that, because DMMs no longer have
these same structural advantages, and
because DMMs do not have the
dominant position that NYSE specialists
once had in the trading of NYSE-listed
securities, DMMs should be able to
engage in the sorts of transactions
barred under the Prohibited
Transactions Rule.19
Second, the commenter states that the
Prohibited Transactions Rule is
unnecessary because existing NYSE and
Commission rules ‘‘prohibit all market
participants, including DMMs, from
engaging in market manipulation,
including around the close.’’ 20 Finally,
the commenter states that the Prohibited
Transactions Rule is ‘‘artificial’’ and
creates an ‘‘uneven playing field’’ in the
current market structure because it only
prohibits trading activity on a single
exchange.21 According to the
commenter, this restriction affects a
DMM’s ability to provide competitive
quotations during the last ten minutes of
trading, thereby hindering price
discovery, reducing liquidity at NYSE,
and causing trading activity to migrate
to venues where participants are not
subject to the same artificial
restriction.22
According to NYSE and NYSE MKT,
in today’s electronic marketplace, where
increased automation of trading has
decentralized control of pricing
decisions away from the DMM and from
other market participants on the
33535
Exchanges’ trading floor, retaining the
Prohibited Transactions Rule is no
longer necessary.23 NYSE and NYSE
MKT believe that the Prohibited
Transactions Rule is anachronistic
because DMMs do not have the same
ability to direct or influence trading or
control intra-day prices that specialists
had before Regulation NMS.24 Further,
NYSE and NYSE MKT assert that the
proposal does not alter the existing
balance of DMM benefits and
obligations because, despite the
elimination of the Prohibited
Transactions Rule, remaining DMM
obligations would be sufficient to
safeguard against the possibility that
DMMs may act to inappropriately
influence prices or manipulate the
close.25 Finally, NYSE and NYSE MKT
state that the Exchanges would use their
existing suite of trading surveillances to
assess whether a particular transaction
was effectuated to manipulate a
security’s price going into the close to
benefit the DMM’s position.26
IV. Discussion and Commission
Findings
Under Section 19(b)(2)(C) of the
Exchange Act,27 the Commission shall
approve a proposed rule change by a
self-regulatory organization if the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
requirements of the Exchange Act and
the applicable rules and regulations
thereunder.28 The Commission shall
disapprove a proposed rule change if it
does not make such a finding.29 The
Commission’s Rules of Practice, under
Rule 700(b)(3), state that the ‘‘burden to
demonstrate that a proposed rule change
is consistent with the Exchange Act and
the rules and regulations issued
thereunder . . . is on the self-regulatory
organization that proposed the rule
change’’ and that a ‘‘mere assertion that
the proposed rule change is consistent
with those requirements . . . is not
sufficient.’’ 30
23 See
supra note 7. While Citadel submitted its
letter solely to the NYSE proposal, the Commission
will consider the comment letter to be applicable
to the NYSE MKT proposal, as both proposals are
substantively identical.
18 See Citadel Letter, supra note 7, at 1–3.
19 See id. The commenter states that, for example,
in February 2017, NYSE market share for NYSElisted stocks was approximately 24% including
auctions and 19% excluding auctions. See id. at 2.
The commenter further states that, during the same
month, a stock in which NYSE is the primary
exchange and the DMM is the commenter, NYSE
market share during the last ten minutes was
approximately 27% on a share-weighted basis. See
id.
20 Id. at 3.
21 See id. at 3–4.
22 See id.
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17 See
Frm 00060
Fmt 4703
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NYSE Letter, supra note 7, at 3.
id.
25 See id. at 3–6. The Exchanges state that these
obligations include the obligations: (1) Not to
destabilize the market when buying or selling to
increase a position or reaching across the market;
(2) to facilitate the close; (3) to effect transactions
in a reasonable and orderly manner; and (4) to
refrain from causing or exacerbating excessive price
movements. See id.
26 See id. at 5.
27 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C).
28 See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C)(i).
29 See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C)(ii).
30 17 CFR 201.700(b)(3). The description of a
proposed rule change, its purpose and operation, its
effect, and a legal analysis of its consistency with
applicable requirements must all be sufficiently
detailed and specific to support an affirmative
24 See
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asabaliauskas on DSKBBXCHB2PROD with NOTICES
After careful consideration of the
proposals, and for the reasons discussed
below, the Commission does not believe
that the proposed rule changes are
consistent with the requirements of the
Exchange Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to a
national securities exchange.31
Specifically, the Commission does not
find that the proposals are consistent
with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange
Act, which, among other things,
requires that the rules of a national
securities exchange not be designed to
permit unfair discrimination and that
those rules be designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest.32
The Exchanges propose to eliminate
the Prohibited Transactions Rule—a
negative obligation imposed on DMMs
to restrict aggressive trading
immediately before the close—and the
Commission analyzes the proposed rule
changes in the context of the unique
role played by DMMs on the Exchanges.
Because the Exchanges’ proposal would
alter the balance of the benefits and
obligations of DMMs, and in light of the
special responsibilities that DMMs have
for the closing auction on the
Exchanges, the Commission sought
comment in the Orders Instituting
Proceedings on these topics.
Specifically, the Commission asked for
public comment on whether each
Exchange’s proposal ‘‘would maintain
an appropriate balance between the
benefits and obligations of being a DMM
on the Exchange and whether the
obligations of DMMs under remaining
Exchange rules are reasonably designed
to prevent DMMs from inappropriately
influencing or manipulating the close in
light of DMMs’ special responsibility for
closing auctions under Exchange
rules.’’ 33
Commission finding. See id. Any failure of a selfregulatory organization to provide the information
elicited by Form 19b–4 may result in the
Commission not having a sufficient basis to make
an affirmative finding that a proposed rule change
is consistent with the Exchange Act and the rules
and regulations issued thereunder that are
applicable to the self-regulatory organization. See
id.
31 In disapproving the proposed rule changes, the
Commission has considered the proposed rules’
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
32 See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
33 NYSE Order Instituting Proceedings, supra
note 6, 82 FR at 11389; NYSE MKT Order
Instituting Proceedings, supra note 6, 82 FR at
11380.
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The Prohibited Transactions Rule was
originally adopted by NYSE in 2006 as
NYSE moved to its ‘‘hybrid market’’
model,34 and NYSE retained Prohibited
Transactions Rule in 2008, when it
adopted its New Market Model, which
replaced the specialists on its floor with
DMMs.35 NYSE MKT subsequently
adopted the NYSE’s New Market Model,
including the Prohibited Transactions
Rule, pursuant to its merger with the
NYSE.36
Exchange Rule 104 sets forth the
obligations of DMMs on each Exchange,
which include the affirmative obligation
to engage in a course of dealings for
their own account to assist in the
maintenance of a fair and orderly
market in securities for which they have
been assigned responsibility as the
DMM, to maintain quotes in their
assigned securities at the inside market
a specified percentage of time, and to
facilitate certain transactions in their
assigned securities, most notably the
opening and closing auctions.37 Under
Exchange rules, DMMs have significant
responsibilities to ‘‘facilitate the close of
trading’’ in their assigned securities.38
The closing price for a security on its
listing exchange is widely used as a
reference price (e.g., by mutual funds
calculating their net asset value), and
the listing exchange tends to have a
dominant market share at the close.39
Supporting these general obligations,
Exchange Rules 104(g) and 104(h)
regulate specific types of DMM
transactions: Neutral Transactions, NonConditional Transactions, Conditional
Transactions, and Prohibited
Transactions.40 DMMs may engage in
34 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 54860
(Dec. 1, 2006), 71 FR 71221 (Dec. 8, 2006) (SR–
NYSE–2006–76) (order approving amendments to
Rule 104 that included Prohibited Transactions in
Supplementary Material .10 of Rule 104).
35 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 58845
(Oct. 24, 2008), 73 FR 64379 (Oct. 29, 2008) (SR–
NYSE–2008–46) (order approving New Market
Model pilot program).
36 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 75952
(Sept. 18, 2015), 80 FR 57645, 57646 & n.6 (Sept.
24, 2015) (describing filings by which NYSE MKT
adopted NYSE equity trading rules).
37 See Exchange Rule 104.
38 See Exchange Rule 104; NYSE Rule 123C;
NYSE MKT Rule 123C—Equities.
39 See, e.g., NYSE Opening and Closing Auctions
Fact Sheet (stating that NYSE has a 100% market
share in the closing auction for Tape A securities),
https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/markets/
nyse/NYSE_Opening_and_Closing_Auctions_Fact_
Sheet.pdf.
40 See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(I)–(III) (defining
Neutral Transactions, Non-Conditional
Transactions, and Prohibited Transactions);
Exchange Rule 104(h)(i) (defining Conditional
Transaction). A Neutral Transaction is a purchase
or sale by which a DMM liquidates or decreases a
position and may be made without regard to price,
but the DMM’s ‘‘obligation to maintain a fair and
orderly market may require re-entry on the opposite
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Conditional Transactions throughout
the trading day—generally, crossing the
market to take liquidity by buying
(selling) at an increasing (decreasing)
price—if those transactions are followed
by ‘‘appropriate’’ re-entry on the
opposite side of the market
‘‘commensurate with the size of the
DMM’s transaction.’’ 41 During the last
ten minutes of the day, however, DMMs
are subject to the Prohibited
Transactions Rule at issue here—a
bright-line rule against aggressively
taking liquidity and moving prices on
the exchange immediately before the
closing auction.42
In return for their obligations and
responsibilities, DMMs have significant
priority and informational advantages in
trading on the Exchanges, both during
continuous trading and during the
closing auction. During continuous
trading, DMMs trade on parity with the
entire order book and with floor brokers,
which ‘‘provides DMMs with a
substantial advantage over off-Floor
orders’’ sent to the NYSE order book.43
Moreover, during the trading day,
including the ten minutes before the
close, DMMs have unique access to
aggregated information about closing
auction interest at each price level, and,
during the auction itself, DMMs are
side of the market trend . . . in accordance with the
immediate and anticipated needs of the market.’’
See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(I). A NonConditional Transaction is a DMM’s bid or
purchase and offer or sale that establishes or
increases a position, other than a transaction that
reaches across the market to trade with the
Exchange best bid or offer, and may be made
without regard to price in order to match another
market’s better bid or offer price; to bring the price
of a security into parity with an underlying or
related security or asset; to add size to an
independently established bid or offer on the
Exchange; to purchase at the published bid price on
the Exchange; to sell at the published offer price on
the Exchange; to purchase or sell at a price between
the Exchange BBO; or to purchase below the
published bid or sell above the published offer on
the Exchange. See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(II).
Following a Non-Conditional Transaction, a DMM’s
obligation to maintain a fair and orderly market
‘‘may require re-entry on the opposite side of the
market trend . . . commensurate with the size of
the Non-Conditional Transactions and the
immediate and anticipated needs of the market.’’ Id.
41 See Exchange Rule 104(h)(i)–(iv). According to
their rules, the Exchanges periodically issue
guidelines, called ‘‘price participation points’’ that
‘‘identify the price at or before which a DMM is
expended to re-enter the market after effecting a
Conditional Transaction.’’ See Exchange Rule
104(h)(iii)(A).
42 See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(III).
43 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 58845
(Oct. 24, 2008), 73 FR 64379, 64389 (Oct. 29, 2008)
(Order approving SR–NYSE–2008–46). See also
NYSE Rule 72(c)(ii) and NYSE MKT Rule 72(c)(ii)—
Equities (stating that, for the purpose of share
allocation in an execution, each single floor broker,
the DMM, and orders on the Exchange book shall
constitute individual participants and that the
orders on the Exchange book shall constitute a
single participant).
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 138 / Thursday, July 20, 2017 / Notices
aware of interest represented by floor
brokers, which is not publicly
disseminated.44 When offsetting an
imbalance during the closing auction,
DMM interest trades at parity with limit
orders on the Exchange order book, and
DMM interest takes priority over limiton-close orders with a price equal to the
closing price and over closing-offset
orders.45 In approving the entire set of
advantages given to DMMs in 2008
through the New Market Model, the
Commission specifically assessed
‘‘whether the rewards granted to DMMs
. . . are commensurate with their
obligations’’ and found that the
proposed New Market Model pilot
reflected ‘‘an appropriate balance of
DMM obligations against the benefits
provided to DMMs.’’ 46
In proposing to remove the Prohibited
Transactions Rule, however, NYSE and
NYSE MKT have failed to adequately
explain or justify how the proposed
alteration to the balance of benefits and
obligations of a DMM previously
approved by the Commission is
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Exchange Act, or how allowing DMMs
to aggressively take liquidity in the last
ten minutes of trading is both consistent
with a DMM’s obligation to maintain a
fair and orderly market in its assigned
securities and designed to prevent
fraudulent or manipulative acts and
practices regarding the closing auction,
for which a DMM has crucial
responsibilities.
The Exchanges and Citadel in their
comment letters argue that changes in
market structure such as the inability of
DMMs, compared to specialists, to ‘‘set
prices’’ in their assigned securities, and
the movement of trading volume in
NYSE-listed securities away from the
NYSE, support the elimination of the
Prohibited Transactions Rule. But, as
noted above, the Prohibited
Transactions Rule was included in the
New Market Model rule filing that
established the role of DMMs, and the
market-share statistics offered by
Citadel—which purportedly establish
the relatively weak pricing power of a
DMM 47—fail to acknowledge that the
Exchanges have a dominant market
share in the closing auction,48 and that
a DMM has discretion and informational
advantages that place the DMM in a
unique position to choose its own level
44 See Exchange Rule 104(j); see also NYSE Rule
123C and NYSE MKT Rule 123C—Equities.
45 See NYSE Rule 123C(7)(b); NYSE MKT Rule
123C(7)(b)—Equities.
46 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 58845
(Oct. 24, 2008), 73 FR 64379, 64388–89 (Oct. 29,
2008) (SR–NYSE–2008–46).
47 See Citadel Letter, supra note 7, at 2.
48 See supra note 39 and accompanying text.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:50 Jul 19, 2017
Jkt 241001
of participation in the auction and to
influence the closing price.49
Additionally, the argument by Citadel
that the current prohibition creates an
uneven playing field, and that it limits
DMMs’ ‘‘ability to provide competitive
quotations,’’ 50 fails to address that
DMMs have unique privileges on NYSE
and NYSE MKT and that the proposed
rule change is not limited to
circumstances in which DMMs would
be allowed to quote competitively and
provide liquidity, but would also allow
them to aggressively take liquidity.
Additionally, while NYSE and NYSE
MKT have argued that the proposal is
consistent with the Exchange Act
because remaining exchange rules
address the possibility of disruptive or
improper DMM trading during the last
ten minutes of the day, the Commission
does not believe that NYSE and NYSE
MKT have met their burden to
demonstrate that these other rules—
which require the exercise of judgment
as to what is ‘‘reasonable,’’ ‘‘excessive,’’
‘‘appropriate,’’ or ‘‘commensurate’’ 51—
are adequate substitutes for a clear,
meaningful, and enforceable bright-line
rule that limits aggressive DMM trading
at a particularly sensitive and important
time of the trading day and that
addresses the risk of destabilizing or
even manipulative activity.
Additionally, the Commission believes
that NYSE and NYSE MKT have merely
asserted that, but not explained how,
existing surveillances can act as an
adequate substitute for this bright-line
rule.
Thus, because the Exchanges’
arguments in favor of the proposed rule
changes do not adequately address
significant issues raised by the
proposals, the Commission does not
find that the proposed rule changes are
consistent with the requirements of the
Exchange Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to a
national securities exchange and, in
particular, with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Exchange Act.
V. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered that, pursuant
to Section 19(b)(2) of the Exchange
Act,52 the proposed rule changes (SR–
NYSE–2016–71 and SR–NYSEMKT–
2016–99) be, and hereby are,
disapproved.
supra notes 42–44 and accompanying text.
Letter, supra note 7, at 2–3.
51 See supra notes 25 & 40 and accompanying
text.
52 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
PO 00000
49 See
50 Citadel
Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33537
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.53
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2017–15195 Filed 7–19–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Delegation of Authority: 437]
Delegation of Authority to the Director
of the Office of U.S. Foreign
Assistance Resources To Concur in
Assistance Programs
By virtue of the authority vested in
the Secretary of State, including section
1 of the State Department Basic
Authorities Act (22 U.S.C. 2651a) and
10 U.S.C. 333, I hereby delegate to the
Director the Office of U.S. Foreign
Assistance Resources, to the extent
authorized by law, the authority to
concur in programs authorized by
section 333 of title 10 of the U.S. Code.
Notwithstanding this delegation of
authority, any function or authority
delegated herein may be exercised by
the Secretary or a Deputy Secretary. Any
reference in this delegation of authority
to any statute or delegation of authority
shall be deemed to be a reference to
such statute or delegation of authority as
amended from time to time.
This delegation of authority shall be
published in the Federal Register.
Dated: May 1, 2017.
Rex W. Tillerson,
Secretary of State.
[FR Doc. 2017–15226 Filed 7–19–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–10–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice: 10062]
Notice of Determinations; Culturally
Significant Objects Imported for
Exhibition Determinations: ‘‘Delirious:
Art at the Limits of Reason, 1950–
1980’’ Exhibition
Notice is hereby given of the
following determinations: Pursuant to
the authority vested in me by the Act of
October 19, 1965 (79 Stat. 985; 22 U.S.C.
2459), E.O. 12047 of March 27, 1978, the
Foreign Affairs Reform and
Restructuring Act of 1998 (112 Stat.
2681, et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 6501 note, et
seq.), Delegation of Authority No. 234 of
October 1, 1999, Delegation of Authority
No. 236–3 of August 28, 2000 (and, as
appropriate, Delegation of Authority No.
53 17
E:\FR\FM\20JYN1.SGM
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
20JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 138 (Thursday, July 20, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 33534-33537]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-15195]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-81150; File Nos. SR-NYSE-2016-71 and SR-NYSEMKT 2016-
99]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC; NYSE
MKT LLC; Order Disapproving Proposed Rule Changes Amending Exchange
Rule 104 To Delete Subsection (g)(i)(A)(III), Which Prohibits
Designated Market Makers From Engaging in Transactions, During the Last
Ten Minutes of Trading Before the Close, That Establish a New High
(Low) Price for the Day on the Exchange in an Assigned Security in
Which the DMM Has a Long (Short) Position
July 1, 2017.
I. Introduction
On October 27, 2016, New York Stock Exchange LLC (``NYSE'') and
NYSE MKT LLC (``NYSE MKT'') (each an ``Exchange,'' and collectively the
``Exchanges'') each filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission'') pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4
thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule change amending its respective Rule 104
to delete subsection (g)(i)(A)(III)--``Prohibited Transactions.'' \3\
Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(III) prohibits Designated Market Makers
(``DMMs'') from engaging in a transaction that establishes, during the
last ten minutes of trading before the close, a new high (low) price
for the day on the Exchange in an assigned security in which the DMM
has a long (short) position (``Prohibited Transactions Rule''). The
proposed rule changes were published for comment in the Federal
Register on November 17, 2016.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ This order refers to both NYSE Rule 104 and NYSE MKT Rule
104--Equities as ``Exchange Rule 104.'' NYSE MKT Rule 104--Equities
is based on and, in relevant part, substantively identical to NYSE
Rule 104. See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 58705 (Oct. 1,
2008), 73 FR 58995 (Oct. 8. 2008) (SR-Amex-2008-63) and 59022 (Nov.
26, 2008), 73 FR 73683 (Dec. 3, 2008) (amending NYSE MKT equity
rules to conform to NYSE New Market Model Pilot rules).
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 79284 (Nov. 10,
2016), 81 FR 81222 (Nov. 17, 2016) (``NYSE Notice'') and 79283 (Nov.
10, 2016), 81 FR 81210 (Nov. 17, 2016) (``NYSE MKT Notice'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On December 20, 2016, the Commission extended to February 15, 2017,
the time period in which to approve or disapprove the proposed rule
changes or to institute proceedings to determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposals.\5\ On February 15, 2017, the Commission
instituted proceedings to determine whether to approve or disapprove
the proposed rule changes.\6\ The Commission then received a comment
letter, as well as a combined response letter from NYSE and NYSE
MKT.\7\ On April 28, 2017, the Commission designated a longer period
for Commission action on proceedings to determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule changes.\8\ This order disapproves the
proposed rule changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 79612 (Dec. 20,
2016), 81 FR 95205 (Dec. 27, 2016) and 79611 (Dec. 20, 2016), 81 FR
95205 (Dec. 27, 2016).
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 80044 (Feb. 15,
2017), 82 FR 11388 (Feb. 22, 2017) (``NYSE Order Instituting
Proceedings'') and 80043 (Feb. 15, 2017), 82 FR 11379 (Feb. 22,
2017) (``NYSE MKT Order Instituting Proceedings'') (collectively,
the ``Orders Instituting Proceedings'').
\7\ See Letter from Stephen John Berger, Managing Director,
Government and Regulatory Policy, Citadel Securities, to Brent J.
Fields, Secretary, Commission (Mar. 15, 2017) (``Citadel Letter'');
Letter from Elizabeth K. King, General Counsel and Corporate
Secretary, NYSE, to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission (Mar. 16,
2017) (``NYSE Letter''). The Citadel Letter addressed only the NYSE
proposal, which is substantively identical to the NYSE MKT proposal.
The NYSE Letter was submitted on behalf of both NYSE and NYSE MKT.
\8\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 80552 (Apr. 28,
2017), 82 FR 20927 (May 4, 2017) and 80550 (Apr. 28, 2017), 82 FR
20926 (May 4, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Description of the Proposals
Currently, under Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(III), a DMM with a long
(short) position in an assigned security cannot, during the last ten
minutes before the close of trading, make a purchase (sale) in that
security that results in a new high (low) price on the Exchange for the
day.\9\ The Prohibited Transactions Rule provides two exceptions that
permit a DMM to: (1) Match another market's better bid or offer price;
or (2) bring the price of a security into parity with an underlying or
related security or asset.\10\ The Exchanges propose to remove the
Prohibited Transactions Rule from their rulebooks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(III).
\10\ See id.; see also Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(II)(2)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 33535]]
The Exchanges assert that, in light of developments in the equity
markets and in their trading model, the Prohibited Transactions Rule
has lost its original purpose and utility.\11\ Specifically, the
Exchanges assert that in today's electronic marketplace--where DMMs
have replaced specialists and control of pricing decisions has moved
away from market participants on the Exchange trading floor--the
Prohibited Transactions Rule is no longer necessary.\12\ According to
the Exchanges, eliminating the Prohibited Transactions Rule would not
eliminate other existing safeguards that prevent DMMs from
inappropriately influencing or manipulating the close.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81223; NYSE MKT
Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81211.
\12\ See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81222; NYSE MKT
Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81212.
\13\ See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81222-23; NYSE MKT
Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81212.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchanges assert that the rationale behind the Prohibited
Transactions Rule--preventing specialists from setting the price of a
security on the Exchange in the final ten minutes of trading--was to
prevent a specialist from inappropriately influencing the price of a
security at the close to advantage the specialist's proprietary
position.\14\ According to the Exchanges, in today's fragmented
marketplace, a new high (low) price for a security on one of the
Exchanges in the last ten minutes of trading does not have a
significant effect on the market price for that security, because a new
high (low) price on one of the Exchanges may not be the new high (low)
market-wide price for a security--prices may be higher (lower) in away
markets, where the majority of intra-day trading in Exchange-listed
securities takes place--and because any advantage to a DMM from
establishing a new high or low on the Exchange during the last ten
minutes can rapidly evaporate following trades in away markets.\15\ The
Exchanges assert that, because DMMs do not have the ability to direct
or influence trading or to control intra-day prices that specialists
had before the implementation of Regulation NMS, the Prohibited
Transactions Rule is anachronistic.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See NYSE Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81223; NYSE MKT
Notice, supra note 4, 81 FR at 81211.
\15\ See id.
\16\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Summary of Comment Letter and the Exchanges' Response
The Commission received one comment letter in support of the NYSE
proposal and a combined response letter from NYSE and NYSE MKT.\17\ The
commenter asserts that the Prohibited Transactions Rule is no longer
necessary. First, the commenter states that, when the Prohibited
Transactions Rule was originally adopted, structural advantages enjoyed
by NYSE specialists--including a dominant position in NYSE-listed
securities and an advance look at incoming orders--warranted imposing
prescriptive limitations on their trading activities, particularly at
certain critical pricing points during the day, such as the pre-closing
period.\18\ The commenter states that, because DMMs no longer have
these same structural advantages, and because DMMs do not have the
dominant position that NYSE specialists once had in the trading of
NYSE-listed securities, DMMs should be able to engage in the sorts of
transactions barred under the Prohibited Transactions Rule.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See supra note 7. While Citadel submitted its letter solely
to the NYSE proposal, the Commission will consider the comment
letter to be applicable to the NYSE MKT proposal, as both proposals
are substantively identical.
\18\ See Citadel Letter, supra note 7, at 1-3.
\19\ See id. The commenter states that, for example, in February
2017, NYSE market share for NYSE-listed stocks was approximately 24%
including auctions and 19% excluding auctions. See id. at 2. The
commenter further states that, during the same month, a stock in
which NYSE is the primary exchange and the DMM is the commenter,
NYSE market share during the last ten minutes was approximately 27%
on a share-weighted basis. See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the commenter states that the Prohibited Transactions Rule
is unnecessary because existing NYSE and Commission rules ``prohibit
all market participants, including DMMs, from engaging in market
manipulation, including around the close.'' \20\ Finally, the commenter
states that the Prohibited Transactions Rule is ``artificial'' and
creates an ``uneven playing field'' in the current market structure
because it only prohibits trading activity on a single exchange.\21\
According to the commenter, this restriction affects a DMM's ability to
provide competitive quotations during the last ten minutes of trading,
thereby hindering price discovery, reducing liquidity at NYSE, and
causing trading activity to migrate to venues where participants are
not subject to the same artificial restriction.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Id. at 3.
\21\ See id. at 3-4.
\22\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to NYSE and NYSE MKT, in today's electronic marketplace,
where increased automation of trading has decentralized control of
pricing decisions away from the DMM and from other market participants
on the Exchanges' trading floor, retaining the Prohibited Transactions
Rule is no longer necessary.\23\ NYSE and NYSE MKT believe that the
Prohibited Transactions Rule is anachronistic because DMMs do not have
the same ability to direct or influence trading or control intra-day
prices that specialists had before Regulation NMS.\24\ Further, NYSE
and NYSE MKT assert that the proposal does not alter the existing
balance of DMM benefits and obligations because, despite the
elimination of the Prohibited Transactions Rule, remaining DMM
obligations would be sufficient to safeguard against the possibility
that DMMs may act to inappropriately influence prices or manipulate the
close.\25\ Finally, NYSE and NYSE MKT state that the Exchanges would
use their existing suite of trading surveillances to assess whether a
particular transaction was effectuated to manipulate a security's price
going into the close to benefit the DMM's position.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See NYSE Letter, supra note 7, at 3.
\24\ See id.
\25\ See id. at 3-6. The Exchanges state that these obligations
include the obligations: (1) Not to destabilize the market when
buying or selling to increase a position or reaching across the
market; (2) to facilitate the close; (3) to effect transactions in a
reasonable and orderly manner; and (4) to refrain from causing or
exacerbating excessive price movements. See id.
\26\ See id. at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Discussion and Commission Findings
Under Section 19(b)(2)(C) of the Exchange Act,\27\ the Commission
shall approve a proposed rule change by a self-regulatory organization
if the Commission finds that the proposed rule change is consistent
with the requirements of the Exchange Act and the applicable rules and
regulations thereunder.\28\ The Commission shall disapprove a proposed
rule change if it does not make such a finding.\29\ The Commission's
Rules of Practice, under Rule 700(b)(3), state that the ``burden to
demonstrate that a proposed rule change is consistent with the Exchange
Act and the rules and regulations issued thereunder . . . is on the
self-regulatory organization that proposed the rule change'' and that a
``mere assertion that the proposed rule change is consistent with those
requirements . . . is not sufficient.'' \30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C).
\28\ See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C)(i).
\29\ See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C)(ii).
\30\ 17 CFR 201.700(b)(3). The description of a proposed rule
change, its purpose and operation, its effect, and a legal analysis
of its consistency with applicable requirements must all be
sufficiently detailed and specific to support an affirmative
Commission finding. See id. Any failure of a self-regulatory
organization to provide the information elicited by Form 19b-4 may
result in the Commission not having a sufficient basis to make an
affirmative finding that a proposed rule change is consistent with
the Exchange Act and the rules and regulations issued thereunder
that are applicable to the self-regulatory organization. See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 33536]]
After careful consideration of the proposals, and for the reasons
discussed below, the Commission does not believe that the proposed rule
changes are consistent with the requirements of the Exchange Act and
the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national
securities exchange.\31\ Specifically, the Commission does not find
that the proposals are consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange
Act, which, among other things, requires that the rules of a national
securities exchange not be designed to permit unfair discrimination and
that those rules be designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and equitable principles of trade,
to remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open
market and a national market system and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ In disapproving the proposed rule changes, the Commission
has considered the proposed rules' impact on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\32\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchanges propose to eliminate the Prohibited Transactions
Rule--a negative obligation imposed on DMMs to restrict aggressive
trading immediately before the close--and the Commission analyzes the
proposed rule changes in the context of the unique role played by DMMs
on the Exchanges. Because the Exchanges' proposal would alter the
balance of the benefits and obligations of DMMs, and in light of the
special responsibilities that DMMs have for the closing auction on the
Exchanges, the Commission sought comment in the Orders Instituting
Proceedings on these topics. Specifically, the Commission asked for
public comment on whether each Exchange's proposal ``would maintain an
appropriate balance between the benefits and obligations of being a DMM
on the Exchange and whether the obligations of DMMs under remaining
Exchange rules are reasonably designed to prevent DMMs from
inappropriately influencing or manipulating the close in light of DMMs'
special responsibility for closing auctions under Exchange rules.''
\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ NYSE Order Instituting Proceedings, supra note 6, 82 FR at
11389; NYSE MKT Order Instituting Proceedings, supra note 6, 82 FR
at 11380.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Prohibited Transactions Rule was originally adopted by NYSE in
2006 as NYSE moved to its ``hybrid market'' model,\34\ and NYSE
retained Prohibited Transactions Rule in 2008, when it adopted its New
Market Model, which replaced the specialists on its floor with
DMMs.\35\ NYSE MKT subsequently adopted the NYSE's New Market Model,
including the Prohibited Transactions Rule, pursuant to its merger with
the NYSE.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 54860 (Dec. 1,
2006), 71 FR 71221 (Dec. 8, 2006) (SR-NYSE-2006-76) (order approving
amendments to Rule 104 that included Prohibited Transactions in
Supplementary Material .10 of Rule 104).
\35\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 58845 (Oct. 24,
2008), 73 FR 64379 (Oct. 29, 2008) (SR-NYSE-2008-46) (order
approving New Market Model pilot program).
\36\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 75952 (Sept. 18,
2015), 80 FR 57645, 57646 & n.6 (Sept. 24, 2015) (describing filings
by which NYSE MKT adopted NYSE equity trading rules).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exchange Rule 104 sets forth the obligations of DMMs on each
Exchange, which include the affirmative obligation to engage in a
course of dealings for their own account to assist in the maintenance
of a fair and orderly market in securities for which they have been
assigned responsibility as the DMM, to maintain quotes in their
assigned securities at the inside market a specified percentage of
time, and to facilitate certain transactions in their assigned
securities, most notably the opening and closing auctions.\37\ Under
Exchange rules, DMMs have significant responsibilities to ``facilitate
the close of trading'' in their assigned securities.\38\ The closing
price for a security on its listing exchange is widely used as a
reference price (e.g., by mutual funds calculating their net asset
value), and the listing exchange tends to have a dominant market share
at the close.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See Exchange Rule 104.
\38\ See Exchange Rule 104; NYSE Rule 123C; NYSE MKT Rule 123C--
Equities.
\39\ See, e.g., NYSE Opening and Closing Auctions Fact Sheet
(stating that NYSE has a 100% market share in the closing auction
for Tape A securities), https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/markets/nyse/NYSE_Opening_and_Closing_Auctions_Fact_Sheet.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supporting these general obligations, Exchange Rules 104(g) and
104(h) regulate specific types of DMM transactions: Neutral
Transactions, Non-Conditional Transactions, Conditional Transactions,
and Prohibited Transactions.\40\ DMMs may engage in Conditional
Transactions throughout the trading day--generally, crossing the market
to take liquidity by buying (selling) at an increasing (decreasing)
price--if those transactions are followed by ``appropriate'' re-entry
on the opposite side of the market ``commensurate with the size of the
DMM's transaction.'' \41\ During the last ten minutes of the day,
however, DMMs are subject to the Prohibited Transactions Rule at issue
here--a bright-line rule against aggressively taking liquidity and
moving prices on the exchange immediately before the closing
auction.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(I)-(III) (defining Neutral
Transactions, Non-Conditional Transactions, and Prohibited
Transactions); Exchange Rule 104(h)(i) (defining Conditional
Transaction). A Neutral Transaction is a purchase or sale by which a
DMM liquidates or decreases a position and may be made without
regard to price, but the DMM's ``obligation to maintain a fair and
orderly market may require re-entry on the opposite side of the
market trend . . . in accordance with the immediate and anticipated
needs of the market.'' See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(I). A Non-
Conditional Transaction is a DMM's bid or purchase and offer or sale
that establishes or increases a position, other than a transaction
that reaches across the market to trade with the Exchange best bid
or offer, and may be made without regard to price in order to match
another market's better bid or offer price; to bring the price of a
security into parity with an underlying or related security or
asset; to add size to an independently established bid or offer on
the Exchange; to purchase at the published bid price on the
Exchange; to sell at the published offer price on the Exchange; to
purchase or sell at a price between the Exchange BBO; or to purchase
below the published bid or sell above the published offer on the
Exchange. See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(II). Following a Non-
Conditional Transaction, a DMM's obligation to maintain a fair and
orderly market ``may require re-entry on the opposite side of the
market trend . . . commensurate with the size of the Non-Conditional
Transactions and the immediate and anticipated needs of the
market.'' Id.
\41\ See Exchange Rule 104(h)(i)-(iv). According to their rules,
the Exchanges periodically issue guidelines, called ``price
participation points'' that ``identify the price at or before which
a DMM is expended to re-enter the market after effecting a
Conditional Transaction.'' See Exchange Rule 104(h)(iii)(A).
\42\ See Exchange Rule 104(g)(i)(A)(III).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In return for their obligations and responsibilities, DMMs have
significant priority and informational advantages in trading on the
Exchanges, both during continuous trading and during the closing
auction. During continuous trading, DMMs trade on parity with the
entire order book and with floor brokers, which ``provides DMMs with a
substantial advantage over off-Floor orders'' sent to the NYSE order
book.\43\ Moreover, during the trading day, including the ten minutes
before the close, DMMs have unique access to aggregated information
about closing auction interest at each price level, and, during the
auction itself, DMMs are
[[Page 33537]]
aware of interest represented by floor brokers, which is not publicly
disseminated.\44\ When offsetting an imbalance during the closing
auction, DMM interest trades at parity with limit orders on the
Exchange order book, and DMM interest takes priority over limit-on-
close orders with a price equal to the closing price and over closing-
offset orders.\45\ In approving the entire set of advantages given to
DMMs in 2008 through the New Market Model, the Commission specifically
assessed ``whether the rewards granted to DMMs . . . are commensurate
with their obligations'' and found that the proposed New Market Model
pilot reflected ``an appropriate balance of DMM obligations against the
benefits provided to DMMs.'' \46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 58845 (Oct. 24,
2008), 73 FR 64379, 64389 (Oct. 29, 2008) (Order approving SR-NYSE-
2008-46). See also NYSE Rule 72(c)(ii) and NYSE MKT Rule 72(c)(ii)--
Equities (stating that, for the purpose of share allocation in an
execution, each single floor broker, the DMM, and orders on the
Exchange book shall constitute individual participants and that the
orders on the Exchange book shall constitute a single participant).
\44\ See Exchange Rule 104(j); see also NYSE Rule 123C and NYSE
MKT Rule 123C--Equities.
\45\ See NYSE Rule 123C(7)(b); NYSE MKT Rule 123C(7)(b)--
Equities.
\46\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 58845 (Oct. 24, 2008),
73 FR 64379, 64388-89 (Oct. 29, 2008) (SR-NYSE-2008-46).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In proposing to remove the Prohibited Transactions Rule, however,
NYSE and NYSE MKT have failed to adequately explain or justify how the
proposed alteration to the balance of benefits and obligations of a DMM
previously approved by the Commission is consistent with Section
6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act, or how allowing DMMs to aggressively take
liquidity in the last ten minutes of trading is both consistent with a
DMM's obligation to maintain a fair and orderly market in its assigned
securities and designed to prevent fraudulent or manipulative acts and
practices regarding the closing auction, for which a DMM has crucial
responsibilities.
The Exchanges and Citadel in their comment letters argue that
changes in market structure such as the inability of DMMs, compared to
specialists, to ``set prices'' in their assigned securities, and the
movement of trading volume in NYSE-listed securities away from the
NYSE, support the elimination of the Prohibited Transactions Rule. But,
as noted above, the Prohibited Transactions Rule was included in the
New Market Model rule filing that established the role of DMMs, and the
market-share statistics offered by Citadel--which purportedly establish
the relatively weak pricing power of a DMM \47\--fail to acknowledge
that the Exchanges have a dominant market share in the closing
auction,\48\ and that a DMM has discretion and informational advantages
that place the DMM in a unique position to choose its own level of
participation in the auction and to influence the closing price.\49\
Additionally, the argument by Citadel that the current prohibition
creates an uneven playing field, and that it limits DMMs' ``ability to
provide competitive quotations,'' \50\ fails to address that DMMs have
unique privileges on NYSE and NYSE MKT and that the proposed rule
change is not limited to circumstances in which DMMs would be allowed
to quote competitively and provide liquidity, but would also allow them
to aggressively take liquidity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ See Citadel Letter, supra note 7, at 2.
\48\ See supra note 39 and accompanying text.
\49\ See supra notes 42-44 and accompanying text.
\50\ Citadel Letter, supra note 7, at 2-3.
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Additionally, while NYSE and NYSE MKT have argued that the proposal
is consistent with the Exchange Act because remaining exchange rules
address the possibility of disruptive or improper DMM trading during
the last ten minutes of the day, the Commission does not believe that
NYSE and NYSE MKT have met their burden to demonstrate that these other
rules--which require the exercise of judgment as to what is
``reasonable,'' ``excessive,'' ``appropriate,'' or ``commensurate''
\51\--are adequate substitutes for a clear, meaningful, and enforceable
bright-line rule that limits aggressive DMM trading at a particularly
sensitive and important time of the trading day and that addresses the
risk of destabilizing or even manipulative activity. Additionally, the
Commission believes that NYSE and NYSE MKT have merely asserted that,
but not explained how, existing surveillances can act as an adequate
substitute for this bright-line rule.
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\51\ See supra notes 25 & 40 and accompanying text.
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Thus, because the Exchanges' arguments in favor of the proposed
rule changes do not adequately address significant issues raised by the
proposals, the Commission does not find that the proposed rule changes
are consistent with the requirements of the Exchange Act and the rules
and regulations thereunder applicable to a national securities exchange
and, in particular, with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act.
V. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered that, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Exchange Act,\52\ the proposed rule changes (SR-NYSE-2016-71 and SR-
NYSEMKT-2016-99) be, and hereby are, disapproved.
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\52\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\53\
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\53\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2017-15195 Filed 7-19-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P