Self-Regulatory Organizations; Investors Exchange LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Adopt an IEX Enhanced Market Maker (“IEMM”) Program, 6059-6069 [2018-02720]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The proposed rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)
of the Act 11 and Rule 19b–4(f)(3) 12
thereunder in that the proposed rule
change is concerned solely with the
administration of the Exchange.
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may suspend
such rule change if it appears to the
Commission that such action is
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, for the protection of investors,
or otherwise in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. If the Commission
takes such action, the Commission shall
institute proceedings under Section
19(b)(2)(B) 13 of the Act to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NYSENAT–2018–03 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSENAT–2018–03. 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 website (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 website 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.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSENAT–2018–03, and
should be submitted on or before March
5, 2018.
Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’),4 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,5 Investors Exchange LLC
(‘‘IEX’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) is filing with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) proposed changes to
adopt an IEX Enhanced Market Maker
(‘‘IEMM’’) program under Exchange
Rule 11.170 (Market Quality Incentive
Programs) (currently reserved), which is
designed to enable Members 6 to qualify
for transaction fee 7 reductions for
providing meaningful and consistent
support to market quality and price
discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the national best bid
(‘‘NBB’’) and/or the national best offer
(‘‘NBO’’) (collectively, the ‘‘NBBO’’).
The text of the proposed rule change
is available at the Exchange’s website at
www.iextrading.com, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.14
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
[FR Doc. 2018–02719 Filed 2–9–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–82636; File No. SR–IEX–
2018–02]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Investors Exchange LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change To Adopt an
IEX Enhanced Market Maker (‘‘IEMM’’)
Program
February 6, 2018.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
Pursuant to the provisions of Section
19(b)(1) under the Securities Exchange
In an effort to incentivize Members to
submit displayed orders to the
Exchange, the Exchange currently
1 15
Jkt 244001
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 15 U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
12 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(3).
13 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization 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 statement may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The self-regulatory organization has
prepared summaries, set forth in
Sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) 2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that, on February
1, 2018, the Investors Exchange LLC
(‘‘IEX’’ or the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(the ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II and III
below, which Items have been prepared
by the self-regulatory organization. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
14 17
11 15
6059
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
The Exchange is proposing to adopt
an IEX Enhanced Market Maker
(‘‘IEMM’’) program under Exchange
Rule 11.170 (Market Quality Incentive
Programs) (currently reserved), which is
designed to enable Members to qualify
for transaction fee reductions for
providing meaningful and consistent
support to market quality and price
discovery by extensive quoting at and/
or near the NBBO.
Background
4 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
6 See IEX Rule 1.160(s).
7 See IEX Rules 15.110(a) and (c) (‘‘Fee
Schedule’’). See also the Investors Exchange Fee
Schedule, available on the Exchange public
website.
5 17
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
6060
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
charges a relatively low fee of $0.0003
to Members for executions on IEX that
provide or take resting interest with
displayed priority 8 (i.e., an order or
portion of a reserve order that is booked
and ranked with display priority on the
Order Book either as the IEX best bid or
best offer (‘‘BBO’’), or at a less
aggressive price).9
Furthermore, the Exchange currently
charges $0.0009 per share (or 0.30% of
the total dollar value of the transaction
for securities priced below $1.00) to
Members for executions on IEX that
provide or take resting interest with
non-displayed priority (i.e., an order or
portion of a reserve order that is booked
and ranked with non-display priority on
the Order Book either at the NBBO
midpoint or at a less aggressive price).10
The Exchange does not charge any fee
to Members for executions on IEX when
the adding and removing order
originated from the same Exchange
Member.11
In addition to the pricing model
above, and in contrast to its competitors,
8 This pricing is referred to by the Exchange as
‘‘Displayed Match Fee’’ with a Fee Code of ‘L’
provided by the Exchange on execution reports. See
the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule, available on
the Exchange public website.
9 The Displayed Match Fee is less than the
Exchange’s Non-Displayed Match Fee and
substantially lower than the fee to add displayed
liquidity on an exchange with a ‘‘taker-maker’’ fee
structure (i.e., that charges liquidity providers) and
to take displayed liquidity on an exchange with a
‘‘maker-taker’’ fee structure (i.e., that charges
liquidity takers). For example, the New York Stock
Exchange (‘‘NYSE’’) trading fee schedule on its
public website reflects fees to ‘‘take’’ liquidity
ranging from $0.0024–$0.0030 depending on the
type of market participant, order and execution.
Additionally, NYSE fees to ‘‘add’’ liquidity range
from $0.0018–$0.0030 per share for shares executed
in continuous trading. The Nasdaq Stock Market
(‘‘Nasdaq’’) trading fee schedule on its public
website reflects fees to ‘‘remove’’ liquidity ranging
from $0.0025–$0.0030 per share for shares executed
in continuous trading at or above $1.00 or 0.30%
of total dollar volume for shares executed below
$1.00. Additionally, Nasdaq fees for ‘‘adding’’
liquidity range from $0.0001–$0.00305 per share for
shares executed in continuous trading. The Cboe
BZX Exchange (‘‘Cboe BZX’’) trading fee schedule
on its public website reflects fees for ‘‘removing’’
liquidity ranging from $0.0025–$0.0030, for shares
executed in continuous trading at or above $1.00 or
0.30% of total dollar volume for shares executed
below $1.00. Additionally, Cboe BZX fees for
‘‘adding’’ liquidity ranging from $0.0020–$0.0045
per share for shares executed in continuous trading.
10 This pricing is referred to by the Exchange as
‘‘Non-Displayed Match Fee’’ with a Fee Code of ‘I’
provided by the Exchange on execution reports. See
the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule, available on
the Exchange public website.
11 This pricing is referred to by the Exchange as
‘‘Internalization Fee’’ with a Fee Code of ‘S’
provided by the Exchange on execution reports.
Orders from different market participant identifiers
of the same broker dealer, with the same Central
Registration Depository registration number, are
treated as originating from the same Exchange
Member. See the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule,
available on the Exchange public website.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
IEX has chosen to lower the cost barrier
for Member firms to trade on the
Exchange by not charging fees for
membership, connectivity, or market
data.12 Moreover, IEX has made a
conscious choice to not pay rebates to
brokers in exchange for order flow, and
instead has focused on earning order
flow from market participants by
designing a market that provides greater
execution quality. The Exchange
believes that, as a result of these
priorities, it has created quantitatively
superior trading outcomes for Members
that choose to efficiently access the
Exchange, as measured by various
market quality metrics including
effective spread, and opportunity for
price improvement.13 However, the
Exchange believes that the financial
incentives for brokers to route displayed
orders to venues that pay rebates for
such order flow has caused a
stratification of displayed liquidity
across the U.S. equities markets based
on exchange pricing models.
Specifically, maker-taker exchanges 14
dominate the U.S. equities trading
landscape in market share, and
displayed market share specifically.15
To compete with incumbent makertaker exchanges for order flow without
directly paying Members for such
orders, the Exchange is proposing to
offer an alternative fee-based incentive
to Members that engage in trading
activity that further improves market
quality and price discovery on the
Exchange. Importantly, the Exchange is
not proposing to offer a rebate,16 in that
the Exchange is not paying one side of
each transaction (i.e., the maker or
taker). In fact, the Exchange is not
making any direct payments to IEMMs,
because, as discussed below, the
proposed fee reductions will not be
greater than the fees charged for
executions on the Exchange (i.e., no
single execution would result in a net
credit from the Exchange to the
Member). Moreover, the proposed fee
reductions would not be provided based
on a direct one-to-one relationship with
a Member’s displayed liquidity
providing executions, but instead are
available to reduce the per-share cost of
a Members displayed and non-displayed
executions on the Exchange in return for
meaningful and consistent support to
market quality and price discovery by
extensive quoting at and/or near the
NBBO in IEX-listed securities.
12 See the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule,
available on the Exchange public website.
13 See e.g., IEX’s recent white paper that utilized
publicly available quote and trade data to compare
market quality across U.S. stock exchanges, which
empirically found, inter alia, that on average IEX
has the lowest effective spread, and the greatest
opportunity for price improvement amongst all
exchanges. A Comparison of Execution Quality
across U.S. Stock Exchanges, Elaine Wah, Stan
Feldman, Francis Chung, Allison Bishop, and
Daniel Aisen, Investors Exchange (2017). Effective
spread is commonly defined by market structure
academics and market participants as twice the
absolute difference between the trade price and
prevailing NBBO midpoint at the time of a trade,
and is generally meant to measure the cost paid
when an incoming order executes against a resting
order, and unlike quoted spread captures other
features of a market center, such as hidden and
midpoint liquidity as well as market depth. Price
improvement is in reference to the situation where
an aggressive order is filled at a price strictly better
than the inside quote (i.e., in the case of an
aggressive buy (sell) order, receiving a fill at a price
lower (higher) than the NBO (NBB)).
14 In the maker-taker pricing model, the liquidity
provider (i.e., maker) receives a rebate when its
order eventually executes, and the taker that trades
against the resting order pays an access fee to the
exchange.
15 See IEX’s recent white paper that utilized
publicly available quote and trade data to compare
market quality across U.S. stock exchanges, which
found that time at the inside (i.e., when an
exchange is on either the NBB or the NBO, or both)
appears to be strongly correlated with rebates for
liquidity provision, as the exchanges at the inside
more often are not only the largest but also those
that employ a maker-taker pricing model. A
Comparison of Execution Quality across U.S. Stock
Exchanges, Elaine Wah, Stan Feldman, Francis
Chung, Allison Bishop, and Daniel Aisen, Investors
Exchange (2017).
As proposed, a Member qualifying for
designation as an IEMM reflects a
commitment to provide meaningful and
consistent support to market quality and
price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed
securities for a significant portion of the
day. The IEMM Program is designed to
attract liquidity provision from both
traditional market making firms, as well
as from other market participants that
are willing and able to act in a market
making capacity and commit capital to
support liquidity at and/or near the
NBBO. In return for their contributions,
such Members qualify for a lower pershare rate charged for both displayed
and non-displayed executions subject to
either the Displayed Match Fee or NonDisplayed Match Fee on the Exchange
in securities priced at or above $1.00.
The IEMM Program is designed to
deepen IEX’s liquidity pool at prices at
and/or near the NBBO, which may
narrow the bid-ask spread, dampen the
market impact of shocks from liquidity
demand, and support the quality of
PO 00000
Frm 00086
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
IEMM Program
16 See the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets’
October 20, 2015 memorandum to the SEC’s Market
Structure Advisory Committee at 2, which states
‘‘. . . the maker-taker fee model is a pricing
structure in which a market generally pays its
members a per share rebate to provide ( i.e.,
‘‘make’’) liquidity in securities and assesses on
them a fee to remove (i.e., ‘‘take’’) liquidity.’’
(emphasis added).
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
price discovery on IEX to the benefit of
long term investors, and issuers.
The proposed IEMM Program
provides two tiers, each of which would
significantly contribute to market
quality by providing liquidity at or near
the NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a
significant portion of the day. Members
are eligible to qualify as an IEMM under
one or both IEMM Tiers. Specifically, as
proposed, any IEX Member that registers
as an IEX Market Maker pursuant to
Rule 11.150 in all securities listed on
IEX (except pursuant to Supplementary
Material .01, as discussed below),17 and
satisfies the quoting criteria for one or
more of the following tiers in each
security listed on IEX over the course of
the month that the security is listed on
IEX,18 may be designated as an IEMM:
• Inside Tier IEMM:
Æ One or more of its MPIDs has a
displayed order entered in a principal
capacity of at least one round lot resting
on the Exchange at the NBB and/or the
NBO for an average of at least 20% of
Regular Market Hours (the ‘‘NBBO
Quoting Percentage’’); 19 and/or
• Depth Tier IEMM:
Æ One or more of its MPIDs has a
displayed order entered in a principal
capacity of at least one round lot resting
on the Exchange at the greater of 1
minimum price variation (‘‘MPV’’) or
0.03% (i.e., 3 basis points) away from
the NBBO (or more aggressive) for an
average of at least 75% of Regular
Market Hours (the ‘‘Depth Quoting
Percentage’’).20
The Exchange proposes to calculate
the NBBO Quoting Percentage by
determining the average percent of time
the Member is at the NBB or the NBO,
or both the NBB and NBO, in each IEXlisted security during Regular Market
Hours over the course of the month. On
a monthly basis, IEX would determine
whether a Member satisfied the NBBO
Quoting Percentage for each IEX-listed
security by calculating the following:
• The ‘‘NBB Quoting Time’’ is
calculated by determining the aggregate
amount of time that one or more of a
Member’s MPIDs has a displayed order
entered in a principal capacity of at
least one round lot in each IEX-listed
security resting at the NBB during
Regular Market Hours of each trading
day for a calendar month that such
security is listed on IEX;
• The ‘‘NBO Quoting Time’’ is
calculated by determining the aggregate
amount of time that one or more of a
Member’s MPIDs has a displayed order
17 See
proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(B).
proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(C).
19 See proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(A)(i).
20 See proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(A)(ii).
18 See
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
entered in a principal capacity of at
least one round lot in each IEX-listed
security resting at the NBO during
Regular Market Hours of each trading
day for a calendar month that such
security is listed on IEX; and
• The ‘‘NBBO Quoting Percentage’’ is
calculated for each IEX-listed security
by adding the security’s NBB Quoting
Time to the NBO Quoting Time and
dividing the resulting sum by two (2),
and then dividing the resulting quotient
by the total amount of time during the
Regular Market Session that the IEXlisted security was listed on IEX and not
subject to a halt or pause in trading
pursuant to IEX Rule 11.280 over the
course of the calendar month.
The Exchange proposes to calculate
the Depth Quoting Percentage by
determining the average percent of time
the Member is at the defined percentage
away from the NBBO (or more
aggressive) in each IEX-listed security
during Regular Market Hours over the
course of the month. On a monthly
basis, IEX would determine whether the
Member satisfied the Depth Quoting
Percentage for each IEX-listed security
by calculating the following:
• The ‘‘Bid Depth Quoting Time’’ is
calculated by determining the aggregate
amount of time that one or more of a
Member’s MPIDs has a displayed order
entered in a principal capacity of at
least one round lot in each IEX-listed
security resting at the greater of 1 MPV
or 0.03% away from the NBB (or more
aggressive) during Regular Market Hours
of each trading day for a calendar month
that such security is listed on IEX;
• The ‘‘Offer Depth Quoting Time’’ is
calculated by determining the aggregate
amount of time that one or more of a
Member’s MPIDs has a displayed order
entered in a principal capacity of at
least one round lot in each IEX-listed
security resting at the greater of 1 MPV
or 0.03% away from the NBO during
Regular Market Hours of each trading
day of a calendar month that such
security is listed on IEX; and
• The ‘‘Depth Quoting Percentage’’ is
calculated for each IEX-listed security
by adding the security’s Bid Depth
Quoting Time to the Offer Depth
Quoting Time and dividing the resulting
sum by two (2), and then dividing the
resulting quotient by the total amount of
time during the Regular Market Session
that the IEX-listed security was listed on
IEX and not subject to a halt or pause
in trading pursuant to IEX Rule 11.280
over the course of the calendar month.21
21 The Exchange notes that the proposed NBBO
Quoting Percentage calculation and the proposed
Depth Quoting Percentage calculation are
substantially similar to the calculations used by the
PO 00000
Frm 00087
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6061
Proposed Supplemental Material .01
provides a limited exception to the
requirement that a Member must be a
registered IEX Market Maker pursuant to
Rule 11.150 in all securities listed on
IEX. Specifically, a Member that is not
a registered IEX Market Maker pursuant
to Rule 11.150 in all securities listed on
IEX (as required by subparagraph
(a)(1)(B)) may still be designated as an
IEMM if (i) a Member does not act as a
market maker in one or more IEX-listed
securities on any other national
securities exchange, and (ii) the Market
Maker provides documentation,
satisfactory to IEX Regulation,
substantiating that such Member is
unable to act as a market maker in one
or more particular securities listed on
IEX (a) in order to comply with
specified legal or regulatory
requirements, or (b) operational
restrictions not exceeding 90 calendar
days from the date the security first lists
on the Exchange. The documentation
must specify the length of time such
legal, regulatory requirement(s), or
operational restriction is anticipated to
persist. The proposed exception is
designed to provide Members flexibility
to address any legal or regulatory
requirements, or temporary operational
restrictions associated with their
registration and acting as a Market
Maker in a security listed on IEX,
without eliminating the financial
incentives that such Member may
otherwise qualify for under the IEMM
Program as a result of their quoting
activity in other listed securities.22
For example, if a Member was to
come into possession of material nonpublic information regarding an IEXlisted security, and on advice of counsel
suspended all trading in the security
until the conflict was remediated, and
but for the suspension of trading in the
IEX-listed security, one or more of the
Member’s MPIDs order activity would
have qualified the Member for
designation as an IEMM under one or
more of the proposed IEMM Tiers, such
Member could request a legal exemption
under Supplemental Material .01 by
providing documentation, satisfactory to
New York Stock Exchange LLC (‘‘NYSE’’) for
purposes of calculating the quoting requirements of
Supplemental Liquidity Providers pursuant to
NYSE Rule 107B(g) (Calculation of Quoting
Requirement).
22 The Exchange notes that the proposed
exception in Supplemental Material .01 would be
inapplicable for the first IEX-listed security
(whether the security is transferring from another
primary listing market to IEX, or conducting an
initial public offering on IEX), because a Member
could not have otherwise qualified to be designated
as an IEMM without having been a registered
Market Maker in all other IEX-listed securities since
there would be no other IEX-listed securities.
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
6062
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
IEX Regulation, substantiating that it is
unable to act as a market maker in the
IEX-listed security (e.g., producing a
letter from counsel advising to suspend
trading).
Proposed Supplemental Material .02
provides that if a Member satisfies the
requirement of registering as a Market
Maker pursuant to Rule 11.150 in all
securities listed on IEX after the first
trading day of the calendar month, and
remains registered for the remainder of
the month, such Member is eligible for
designation as an IEMM if the Member
otherwise satisfies the applicable
quoting requirements for the entire
month to qualify for designation under
one or more of the proposed IEMM
Tiers. Proposed Supplemental Material
.02 is designed to provide Members
clarity regarding their eligibility for
designation as an IEMM when their
order activity over the course of a month
satisfies the requirements of one of the
applicable IEMM Tiers, but the Member
is not a registered Market Maker in all
securities listed on IEX as of the first
trading day of the calendar month. The
Exchange believes allowing Members to
qualify for designation as an IEMM
under these circumstances is
appropriate and reasonable, because it
avoids disparate treatment of Members
that were not registered Market Makers
as of the start of a calendar month, but
otherwise provided meaningful and
consistent support to market quality and
price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed
securities for a significant portion of the
day in compliance with the IEMM
criteria.
For example, Member ABCD satisfied
the quoting requirements of the Inside
Tier and the Depth Tier for all securities
listed on IEX for each day of the 20
trading days during the month of
September 2017, thereby satisfying the
quoting requirements of the Inside Tier
and the Depth Tier on average, per day,
over the course of the month.
Furthermore, Member ABCD did not
satisfy the requirement of being
registered in all securities listed on IEX
until September 8, 2017 (5 trading days
after the first trading day of the month),
and remained registered in all securities
listed on IEX for the remainder of the
month. In this case, Member ABCD’s
order activity provided meaningful and
consistent support to market quality and
price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed
securities for a significant portion of
each trading day, and would therefore
be eligible for designation as an Inside
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
Tier and Depth Tier IEMM.23 The
Exchange notes that Members that
attempt to abuse Supplemental Material
.02 by registering as a market maker in
all securities listed on IEX at the end of
a calendar month, only to terminate
registration at the beginning of the
following calendar month, would be
subject to the 20 business day reregistration penalty under Rule
11.153(a) (Voluntary Termination of
Registration), and therefore such
Member is unlikely to be able to repeat
this abusive pattern for the following
trading month.24
Proposed Supplemental Material .03
provides that for purposes of
determining the percentage of time
during the Regular Market Session that
a Member satisfied the NBBO Quoting
Percentage and Depth Quoting
Percentage pursuant to subparagraph
(a)(1)(A), the Exchange excludes the
aggregate amount of time that a security
is subject to a halt or pause in trading
pursuant to IEX Rule 11.280. Proposed
Supplemental Material .03 is designed
to provide Members additional clarity
regarding the Exchange’s calculation for
determining whether the order activity
satisfied the applicable NBBO Quoting
Percentage and Depth Quoting
Percentage by accounting for scenarios
where continuous trading is halted or
paused pursuant to Rule 11.280, and
therefore the IEMM would be unable to
enter orders to meet satisfy [sic] the
applicable requirements. The Exchange
believes that not accounting for
scenarios where continuous trading is
halted or paused would be
unreasonable, and inconsistent with the
quoting requirements set forth in the
proposed IEMM Tiers, because it would
make the effective IEMM Tier quoting
requirements variable, requiring
additional order activity to satisfy the
applicable quoting requirements for
securities that are subject to a trading
halt or pause. The Exchange notes that
accounting for scenarios where
continuous trading is halted or paused
23 The Exchange notes that this illustrative
example contemplates Member ABCD satisfying the
quoting requirements of the Inside Tier and Depth
Tier on each trading day over the course of the
month; however, it is possible that a Member may
begin entering orders to satisfy the IEMM quoting
requirements on or after the date the Member
satisfies the requirement of being a registered
Market Maker in all securities listed on IEX. In such
case, the Member would need to exceed the quoting
obligations for the Inside Tier and the Depth Tier
on one or more trading days to satisfy the daily
average requirement of proposed Rule
11.170(a)(1)(C).
24 Furthermore, the Exchange monitors Market
Maker security registrations and terminations to
identify anomalous patterns of security registrations
and terminations, and would therefore identify this
abusive pattern in a timely manner.
PO 00000
Frm 00088
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
is also consistent with Rule 11.151(a)(2)
regarding the obligations of registered
Market Makers, which states in relevant
part that Market Makers quoting
obligations are suspended during a
trading halt or pause.
For Members that qualify under one
of the IEMM Tiers as defined above, IEX
will reduce the fee charged per share
executed on such Members’:
• Non-displayed executions subject to
the Non-Displayed Match Fee in
securities priced at or above $1.00 by
the amount that corresponds with the
tier(s) under which the Member
qualifies as an IEMM, subject to any
applicable Depth Tier aggregate monthly
savings cap, as set forth below (the
‘‘Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount’’);
and
• Displayed executions subject to the
Displayed Match Fee in securities
priced at or above $1.00 by the amount
that corresponds with the tier(s) under
which the Member qualifies as an
IEMM, subject to any applicable Depth
Tier aggregate monthly savings cap, as
set forth below (the ‘‘Displayed Match
Fee Discount’’); 25
As proposed, for Inside Tier IEMMs,
the Displayed Match Fee Discount and
the Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount
results in a $0.0001 discount for each
execution subject to the Displayed
Match Fee and the Non-Displayed
Match Fee, respectively, with no cap on
aggregate monthly saving.26 Moreover,
Depth Tier IEMMs will receive a
$0.0001 discount for each execution
subject to the Displayed Match Fee and
the Non-Displayed Match Fee, up to
$20,000.00 in aggregate savings per
month.27
If a Member qualifies under both the
Inside Tier and the Depth Tier, any
earned Non-Displayed Match Fee
Discount and Displayed Match Fee
Discount will be aggregated and applied
to such Members’ non-displayed
executions and displayed executions
subject to the Displayed Match Fee or
Non-Displayed Match Fee in securities
priced at or above $1.00, respectively,
subject to the applicable Depth Tier
aggregate monthly savings cap described
25 See
proposed Rule 11.170(a)(3).
example, if one or more of Member ABCD’s
MPIDs satisfied the obligations of the Insider Tier,
all of Member ABCD’s executions that are subject
to the Non-Displayed Match Fee would be charged
$0.0008, rather than $0.0009, and executions
subject to the Displayed Match Fee would be
charged $0.0002, rather than $0.0003.
27 For example, if one or more of Member ABCD’s
MPIDs satisfied the obligations of the Depth Tier,
all of Member ABCD’s executions that are subject
to the Non-Displayed Match Fee would be charged
$0.0008, rather than $0.0009, and executions
subject to the Displayed Match Fee would be
charged $0.0002, rather than $0.0003, up to
$20,000.00 in aggregate savings per month.
26 For
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
above. Therefore, if a Member qualifies
under both the Inside Tier and the
Depth Tier, such Member will earn a
combined $0.0002 discount across the
Displayed Match Fee Discount and the
Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount,
subject to the Depth Tier aggregate
monthly savings cap, after which the
balance of such Member’s executions
will continue to receive the $0.0001
Displayed Match Fee Discount and the
Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount
with no cap on aggregate monthly
savings.28 The Exchange notes that
executions subject to the Crumbling
Quote Remove Fee 29 are not eligible for
6063
the Displayed Match Fee Discount or
the Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount.
The Exchange further notes that the
Displayed Match Fee Discount and NonDisplayed Match Fee Discount are not
applicable to executions subject to the
Internalization Fee.
IEMM tier
Quoting requirements
Non-displayed match fee discount
Inside Tier ....
Displayed order resting at either the NBB
or the NBO, or both the NBB and
NBO, for 20% of the time during Regular Market Hours.
Displayed order resting at the greater of
1 MPV or 0.03% away from the NBBO
(or more aggressive) for 75% of the
time during Regular Market Hours.
$0.0001 ....................................................
$0.0001.
$0.0001 (up to $20,000.00 in aggregate
savings, per month inclusive of Displayed Match Fee Discount savings).
$0.0001 (up to $20,000.00 in aggregate
savings, per month inclusive of NonDisplayed Match Fee Discount savings).
Depth Tier ....
Displayed match fee discount
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
The proposed Displayed Match Fee
Discount and Non-Displayed Match Fee
Discount was developed after informal
discussions with a variety of IEX
Members, including traditional
electronic market making firms, as well
as other Members that have expressed
interest in serving in a market maker
capacity that are willing and able to
commit capital to support extensive
price discovery at and/or near the
NBBO. The Exchange believes that, as a
general matter, the practice of making
markets refers to trading strategies that
display bids to purchase and offers to
sell a security in relatively equal
proportion, with an expectation of profit
by capturing the delta between the two
prices (i.e., market makers try to capture
the spread while avoiding the
accumulation of a long or short
position). However, the potential profits
derived by market makers from
capturing the spread is constrained by,
among other things, the high likelihood
of being adversely selected or ‘‘runover’’ in fast-moving markets (i.e., the
likelihood of buying (selling) a security
shortly before the price moves down
(up)). In order to incentivize market
makers to display quotations despite the
potential for adverse selection, other
national securities exchanges offer a
variety of pricing incentives that are
centered on rebates.30
The Exchange has several reasons for
proposing to offer a discount on
displayed and non-displayed trading, in
contrast to a rebate for displayed
trading. First, as noted above, the
Exchange has made a conscious choice
not to pay exchange rebates to brokers
in exchange for order flow, and instead
has focused on earning order flow from
market participants by designing a
market that provides greater execution
quality.
The Exchange has designed the IEMM
Program as an alternative financial
incentive for Members to display
aggressively priced orders on the
Exchange, avoiding the potential
conflicts of interest inherent in the
maker-taker pricing model. The
Exchange believes that rebates paid for
displayed liquidity, which are typically
retained by the broker (in the case of
agency orders), have the potential to
distort broker order routing decisions at
the expense of their investor clients. A
similar conflict would exist if brokers
acting as agent displayed customer
order flow on IEX to qualify for
designation as an IEMM in order to reap
the benefits of the proposed Displayed
Match Fee Discount and Non-Display
Match Fee Discount without necessarily
passing those decreased costs on to their
investor clients.31 However, this conflict
only exists for market participants that
represent customers as agent. Therefore,
the Exchange has designed the IEMM
Program to structurally eliminate this
conflict by only considering a Member’s
principal orders when determining if
28 For example, if one or more of Member ABCD’s
MPIDs satisfied the obligations of the Inside Tier
and the Depth Tier, all of Member ABCD’s
executions that are subject to the Non-Displayed
Match Fee would be charged $0.0007, rather than
$0.0009, and executions that are subject to the
Displayed Match Fee would be charged $0.0001,
rather than $0.0003, up to $20,000 in aggregate
savings from the Depth Tier Displayed Match Fee
Discount, and then the balance of Member ABCD’s
executions subject to the Non-Displayed Match Fee
and Displayed Match Fee would be charged $0.0008
(rather than $0.0009), and $0.0002 (rather than
$0.0003), respectively, with no cap on aggregate
monthly savings.
29 See Fee Code Q (Crumbling Quote Remove Fee
Indicator), along with the footnote appurtenant
thereto in the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule,
available on the Exchange public website, which
together describe the applicable fee for executions
that take liquidity during periods of quote
instability as defined in Rule 11.190(g) that exceed
the CQRF Threshold, which is equal to is equal to
5% of the sum of a Member’s total monthly
executions on IEX if at least 1,000,000 shares during
the calendar month, measured on an MPID basis.
See also Securities and Exchange Act Release No.
81484 (August 25, 2017) 82 FR 41446 (August 31,
2017) (SR–IEX–2017–27).
30 As described by Larry Harris of the U.S.C.
Marshall School of Business in a 2013 paper
regarding the maker-taker pricing model and its
effects on market quotations, the first system to
introduce the maker-taker scheme was Island ECN
in 1997, which encouraged brokers to post customer
limit orders in their systems that ultimately
generated revenues for these brokers when these
customer orders executed, and encouraged
proprietary traders to make markets in their trading
systems. Because takers paid the high access fee
when trading with these orders, brokers and
proprietary traders typically routed their taking
orders first to traditional-fee exchanges (and off
exchange-dealers) when the same prices were
available at these other trading venues. The
standing orders at maker-taker exchanges thus
usually were the last orders to trade at their prices.
Although this consequence was disadvantageous to
the customers, in the absence of regulatory criticism
of this obvious agency problem, the brokers
continued to route customer orders to the ECNs to
obtain the liquidity rebates. To remain competitive,
all US equity exchanges ultimately adopted the
maker-taker pricing model. See Larry Harris,
‘‘Maker-Taker Pricing Effects on Market
Quotations’’ at 5 (Nov. 14, 2013).
31 See the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets’
October 20, 2015 memorandum to the SEC’s Market
Structure Advisory Committee at 17–18, which
states in support that ‘‘the maker-taker pricing
model presents a potential conflict of interest
between brokers and their customers that results
from the way in which fees and rebates are
assessed. Broker-dealers that are members of an
exchange pay fees to and receive rebates from the
exchange for each transaction they execute on it,
but broker-dealers typically do not pass back those
fees and rebates to their customers. Accordingly, if
a broker-dealer can earn a rebate for routing its
customer’s order to a certain venue—and keep that
rebate for itself—the broker-dealer may have an
incentive to route to the venue with the highest
rebate, rather than diligently search out the venue
likely to deliver the best execution of its customer’s
order. A similar conflict may exist for taker fees, as
broker-dealers may seek to minimize their trading
costs by routing to the execution venue with the
lowest fees. Maker-taker fees, therefore, result in a
potential misalignment between the broker’s own
interests and its obligation to seek the best
execution for its customer’s order.’’
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
PO 00000
Frm 00089
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
6064
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
such Member’s order activity satisfied
one or more IEMM Tiers.
In addition, the Exchange believes
paying rebates to liquidity providers has
a measurable impact on execution
quality. For example, IEX’s recent white
paper (that utilized publicly available
quote and trade data to compare market
quality across U.S. stock exchanges)
empirically found that on maker-taker
exchanges (which dominate the U.S.
equities trading landscape in market
share) resting orders (i.e., the maker) on
average experience greater adverse
selection, less market stability around
executions, significantly longer queues
at the inside, and a lower probability of
execution.32 Accordingly, the Exchange
believes the proposed IEMM Program
offers an alternative financial incentive
that avoids paying rebates for liquidity
providing orders, and instead offers
reduced transaction fees by way of the
Displayed Match Fee Discount and the
Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount that
is designed to avoid the adverse impact
to execution quality that the Exchange
believes flow from the existing makertaker pricing models, while still
incentivizing Members to make
displayed markets on the Exchange.
Furthermore, the Exchange believes
rebates have the circular effect of
perpetuating the modern-day exchange
practice of charging ever increasing
prices for low latency connectivity and
depth of book market data that is
required for firms to compete for
priority at the NBBO.33 Independent
32 See A Comparison of Execution Quality across
U.S. Stock Exchanges, Elaine Wah, Stan Feldman,
Francis Chung, Allison Bishop, and Daniel Aisen,
Investors Exchange (2017), which studied four
dimensions of market quality—liquidity, execution
costs, price discovery, and market stability—and
within each category, examined the structural
mechanics responsible for observed disparities in
execution quality.
33 For example, according to a recent report
published by Healthy Markets on U.S. equity
market data, a market participant that wanted to
purchase the fastest connections with the most
relevant trading information for Cboe BZX
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘Cboe BZX’’), Cboe BYX Exchange,
Inc., Cboe EDGA Exchange, Inc., Cboe EDGX
Exchange, Inc., the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
(‘‘Nasdaq’’), Nasdaq PHLX LLC, Nasdaq BX, Inc.,
NYSE, NYSE American LLC, and NYSE Arca, Inc.,
has seen its costs rise from $72,150 per month on
June 1, 2012 to $182,775 per month on June 1, 2017.
See US Equity Market Data—How Conflicts of
Interest Overwhelm an Outdated Regulatory Model
& Market Participants, Healthy Markets (November
16, 2017). See also a comment letter on Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 78556 (August 11, 2016)
81 FR 54877 (August 17, 2016) (SR–NYSE–2016–
45) from David L. Cavicke, Chief Legal Officer, on
behalf of Wolverine Trading LLC, Wolverine
Execution Services LLC, and Wolverine Trading
Technologies LLC, opposing NYSE’s proposal to
increase fees for, among other things, connectivity
and data feeds, noting that based on an analysis of
their fee over an 8 year period, NYSE’s market data
and connectivity costs have increased by over
700%, for a total of at least $123,750 per month.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
research has indicated that queue
position (which is largely a function of
relative speed), impacts execution
quality. Specifically, being at the top of
the queue has the potential to increase
the chance of capturing the spread,
reduces the likelihood of adverse
selection, and reduces the time an order
is providing a directional signal to the
market (which can increase the risk of
adverse selection).34 Furthermore, being
at the top of the queue also provides
more certainty regarding the collection
of exchange rebates for providing
liquidity. However, because exchanges
that pay rebates to members to add
liquidity have the longest queues,35
competing for queue position on makertaker exchanges requires members to
pay high fees for low latency
connectivity and depth of book market
data, because understanding the relative
order of displayed quotes on an
exchanges order book and having the
ability to be the first order at a price
level is critical for successfully
establishing queue position. As a result,
market makers are forced to pay to
compete based on speed, in addition to
competing on price to provide liquidity
to the markets.
Secondly, Members that participate as
market makers necessarily interact with
the Exchange using displayed orders,
but do not interact with the Exchange
using displayed orders exclusively. In
fact, many firms that participate as
market makers use non-displayed orders
as a part of their market making
strategies to optimize returns on their
displayed market making activities (e.g.,
a firm making a market in security XYZ
that receives an execution at the NBB
may offset that position by placing a
non-displayed Discretionary Peg order
to sell on IEX, which is protected from
trading at the midpoint of the NBBO
when IEX perceives the market to be
unstable, pursuant to Rule 11.190(g)).
For instance, during the fourth quarter
of 2017, just over seventy-percent (70%)
of the volume traded on IEX by
Members that are currently registered
market makers on the Exchange was
subject to the Non-Displayed Match
Fee.36 Accordingly, the Exchange is
34 See KCG Market Insights, The Need For Speed:
Its Important, Even for VWAP Strategies, Phil
Mackintosh.
35 See A Comparison of Execution Quality across
U.S. Stock Exchanges, Elaine Wah, Stan Feldman,
Francis Chung, Allison Bishop, and Daniel Aisen,
Investors Exchange (2017) at 21.
36 The Exchange notes that because the proposed
Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount is applied
evenly across all of a Member’s non-displayed
executions that receive the Non-Displayed Match
Fee, the benefits flow congruently across the
various trading desks and clients (as applicable) at
the Member firm.
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
proposing to offer both a Displayed
Match Fee Discount, as well as a NonDisplayed Match Fee Discount. The
proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount
is designed to provide IEMM’s relief
from the fees incurred as a result of their
increased displayed order activity. The
proposed Non-Displayed Match Fee
Discount is designed to incentivize
Members by reducing the firms largest
expense of trading on the Exchange (i.e.,
non-displayed executions). Lastly, based
on informal discussions with Members
that have expressed interest in the
proposed IEMM Program, the Exchange
believes that reducing the overall costs
of trading on the Exchange for Members
designated as IEMM’s will provide a
sufficient financial incentive to provide
meaningful and consistent support to
market quality and price discovery by
extensive quoting at and/or near the
NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a
significant portion of the day.
The Exchange currently does not
operate a listing market, but is preparing
to launch a listings business for
corporate issuers in 2018. Upon launch
of the listing business, the Exchange
expects to face intense competition from
NYSE and Nasdaq, which the Exchange
believes essentially operate as a duopoly
in the U.S. listing market. Therefore, the
Exchange has designed the proposed
IEMM Program in part to address the
significant competitive challenges it
will face in establishing itself as a
competitive listings market.
Specifically, requiring IEMMs to be a
registered IEX Market Makers in each
security listed on IEX, and to qualify as
an IEMM under one of the tiers
described above in all securities listed
on IEX (subject to the limited
exception), is designed to attract issuers
to list on the Exchange by providing
enhanced liquidity incentives to market
participants for IEX-listed securities that
accrue to the benefit of issuers listed on
IEX as well as market participants
generally.
Pursuant to Rule 11.151, IEX
registered Market Makers are required to
comply with the two-sided quote and
pricing obligations. This requirement is
substantially identical to the
requirements applicable to NYSE and
Nasdaq market makers.37 Based on
informal discussions with various
market participants, including some that
act as registered market makers on other
exchanges, the Exchange understands
that the obligation for registered market
makers to comply with the two-sided
quote and pricing obligations is
perceived to be a systemically
burdensome obligation that presents
37 See
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
NYSE Rule 107B(d), and Nasdaq Rule 4600.
12FEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
regulatory risk.38 Even firms with highly
sophisticated trading technology and
robust technology controls face
unintended system outages and
disruptions characteristic of complex
systems, which may ultimately result in
some ‘‘gap’’ in the market maker’s
required continuous quotations. In
response to informal feedback from
potential market makers, the Exchange
recently proposed and the Commission
approved a Market Maker Peg Order
designed to simplify market maker
compliance with IEX Rule 11.151.39
However, notwithstanding the
availability of the Market Maker Peg
Order functionality, a market maker
remains responsible for entering,
monitoring, and resubmitting, as
applicable, quotations that meet the
requirements of Rule 11.151. The
Exchange believes that incentives for
Members to act as Market Makers
generally, as well as to maintain tighter
markets than required by IEX Rule
11.151, would enhance displayed
liquidity in IEX-listed securities.
Accordingly, the Exchange has designed
the IEMM Program to address both
goals, and believes the proposed IEMM
Program will serve as an incentivize for
Members to take on the obligations and
attendant risks of registering as an IEX
Market Maker, and to make tighter
markets by providing the proposed
alternative fee incentives to IEX Market
Makers that also qualify as an IEMM.
Lastly, the Exchange is proposing to
make non-substantive changes to the
Exchange’s Fee Schedule to replace and
re-organize the asterisked footnotes with
numbered footnotes, and make minor
changes to capitalization for defined
terms. This change is designed to make
the Exchange’s Fee Schedule clearer,
and ensure that footnotes are listed in
chronological order.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
2. Statutory Basis
IEX believes that the proposed rule
change is consistent with the provisions
of Section 6(b) 40 of the Act in general,
and furthers the objectives of Sections
6(b)(4) 41 of the Act, in particular, in that
it is designed to provide for the
equitable allocation of reasonable dues,
fees and other charges among its
Members and other persons using its
facilities. Additionally, IEX believes that
38 See, e.g., NYSE Regulation v. IMC Financial
Markets, Proceeding No. 2016–07–01311 (May 4,
2017); NYSE Regulation v. Virtu Financial BD LLC,
Proceeding No. 2016–07–01267 (December 20,
2016).
39 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81482
(August 25, 2017), 82 FR 41452 (August 31, 2017)
(SR–IEX–2017–22).
40 15 U.S.C. 78f.
41 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
the proposed fees are consistent with
the objectives of Section 6(b)(5) 42 of the
Act in particular in that they are
designed to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to remove
impediments to a free and open market
and national market system, and in
general to protect investors and the
public interest; and are not designed to
permit unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
The proposed IEMM Program takes a
narrowly tailored approach, designed to
encourage Market Makers to provide
meaningful and consistent support to
market quality and price discovery by
extensive quoting at and/or near the
NBBO in IEX-listed securities, which
benefits all market participants by
deepening the Exchange’s liquidity pool
in such securities. IEX believes that to
the extent Market Makers enter more
aggressively priced displayed orders on
the Exchange in response to the
alternative fee based incentives, there
will be increased liquidity on IEX,
thereby contributing to public price
discovery, consistent with the goal of
enhancing market quality. Additionally,
the Exchange believes that price
discovery would be enhanced by
potentially drawing more natural
trading interest to the public markets,
which would deepen liquidity and
dampen the impact of shocks from
liquidity demand. Further, to the extent
price discovery is enhanced and more
orders are drawn to the public markets,
orders executed on IEX rather than
being internalized on broker-operated
platforms or executed on other
alternative trading venues will have the
benefit of exchange transparency,
regulation, and oversight.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount
and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount,
which were developed after extensive
informal discussions with various
Members, are reasonable because they
are designed to incentivize the entry of
aggressively priced displayed orders by
reducing the firms’ largest expense of
trading on the Exchange (i.e., nondisplayed executions),43 as well as
accounting for the increased costs for
displayed execution associated a
Members increased displayed order
activity. As noted in the Purpose
42 15
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
discussed in the Purpose Section above,
Members that participate as market makers
necessarily interact with the Exchange using
display orders, but do not interact with the
Exchange using displayed orders exclusively. For
instance, during the third quarter of 2017, just over
seventy-percent (70%) of the volume traded on IEX
by Members that are currently registered market
makers on the Exchange was subject to the NonDisplayed Match Fee.
43 As
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6065
section, based on informal discussions
with Members that have expressed
interest in the proposed IEMM Program,
the Exchange believes that reducing the
overall cost of trading on the Exchange
for Members designated as IEMM’s will
provide a sufficient financial incentive
to provide meaningful and consistent
support to market quality and price
discovery by extensive quoting at and/
or near the NBBO in IEX-listed
securities for a significant portion of the
day.
The Exchange believes that applying
a benefit to all of an IEMM’s executions
at or above $1.00 that are subject to the
Displayed Match Fee and NonDisplayed Match Fee is reasonable, and
consistent with an equitable allocation
of fees, because, as noted above in the
Purpose section, the proposed
Displayed Match Fee Discount and NonDisplayed Match Fee Discount are
applied evenly across all of a Member’s
displayed and non-displayed executions
above $1.00 that receive the Displayed
Match Fee and Non-Displayed Match
Fee, thus the benefits flow congruently
across the various trading desks and
clients (as applicable) at the Member
firm. Moreover, the Exchange believes
that decisions on whether to act as a
Market Maker on IEX are generally
made at the firm level, and therefore
providing a financial incentive to all of
a Members’ displayed and nondisplayed trading on IEX is designed to
incentivize Members to act as Market
Makers on IEX. Furthermore, the
Exchange believes that applying a
benefit to all of an IEMM’s executions
that are subject to the Displayed Match
Fee and Non-Displayed Match Fee is
reasonable in that it is designed in part
to compete with the per share rebates
that other exchanges currently pay for
adding liquidity, which the Exchange
believes have a significant impact on
order routing decisions, without directly
paying Members for order flow. Instead,
the Exchange has severed the direct oneto-one relationship between the
financial incentive and a Members
displayed liquidity providing
executions, by instead offering a pershare reduction in the cost of a Members
displayed and non-displayed executions
on the Exchange in return for
meaningful and consistent support to
market quality and price discovery by
extensive quoting at and/or near the
NBBO in IEX-listed securities. What is
more, the Exchange believes that the
applying a benefit to all of an IEMM’s
executions at or above $1.00 that are
subject to the Displayed Match Fee and
Non-Displayed Match Fee is reasonable
in that it is also designed in part to
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
6066
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
address the significant competitive
challenges the Exchange will face in
launching a listings business by
providing a sufficient benefit to
Members that will act as a market maker
in IEX-listed securities.
Furthermore, the Exchange believes
that only a considering a Member’s
principal orders when determining if
such Member’s order activity satisfied
one or more IEMM Tiers is reasonable
and not unfairly discriminatory, because
it is designed to avoid the potential
conflicts of interest inherent in the
maker-taker pricing model. As
discussed in the Purpose section, the
Exchange believes that rebates paid for
displayed liquidity, which are typically
retained by the broker (in the case of
agency orders), have the potential to
distort broker order routing decisions at
the expense of their investor clients. A
similar conflict would exist if brokers
acting as agent displayed customer
order flow on IEX to qualify for
designation as an IEMM in order to reap
the benefits of the proposed NonDisplay Match Fee Discount and
Display Match Fee Discount without
necessarily passing those decreased
costs on to their investor clients.44
However, this potential conflict only
exists for market participants that
represent customers as agent. Therefore,
the Exchange believes that only a
considering a Member’s principal orders
when determining if such Member’s
order activity satisfied one or more
IEMM Tiers is reasonable and not
unfairly discriminatory.
Furthermore, while some Members
may face unique financial and
operational challenges that could pose
practical limitations on their trading
strategies, the Exchange notes that all
Members are eligible to enter displayed
orders in a principal capacity on the
Exchange to the extent they are willing
44 See the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets’
October 20, 2015 memorandum to the SEC’s Market
Structure Advisory Committee at 17–18, which
states in support that ‘‘the maker-taker pricing
model presents a potential conflict of interest
between brokers and their customers that results
from the way in which fees and rebates are
assessed. Broker-dealers that are members of an
exchange pay fees to and receive rebates from the
exchange for each transaction they execute on it,
but broker-dealers typically do not pass back those
fees and rebates to their customers. Accordingly, if
a broker-dealer can earn a rebate for routing its
customer’s order to a certain venue—and keep that
rebate for itself—the broker-dealer may have an
incentive to route to the venue with the highest
rebate, rather than diligently search out the venue
likely to deliver the best execution of its customer’s
order. A similar conflict may exist for taker fees, as
broker-dealers may seek to minimize their trading
costs by routing to the execution venue with the
lowest fees. Maker-taker fees, therefore, result in a
potential misalignment between the broker’s own
interests and its obligation to seek the best
execution for its customer’s order.’’
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
and able to commit capital to support
price discovery at and/or near the
NBBO. Accordingly, the Exchange
believes it is reasonable and not unfairly
discriminatory to only consider a
Member’s principal orders when
determining if such Member’s order
activity satisfied one or more IEMM
Tier.
Furthermore, the Exchange believes
the exception from the requirement to
be registered as a Market Maker in all
IEX-listed securities as set forth in
proposed Supplemental Material .01 is
reasonable in that it provides Members
flexibility to address any legal or
regulatory requirements, or temporary
operational restrictions associated with
acting as a Market Maker in a security
that is listed on IEX, without
eliminating the financial incentives that
such Member may otherwise qualify for
under the IEMM Program as a result of
their quoting activity in all other listed
securities. The Exchange believes it is
fair and equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory to provide the limited
exception to qualifying Market Makers
because the exception provides
narrowly tailored relief. IEX and other
national securities exchange’s rules
already provide excused withdrawal
relief from compliance with market
maker quoting obligations based on
legal or regulatory requirements, in
recognition that there are circumstances
in which it would be violative of legal
and regulatory requirements for a firm
to trade in a particular security.45 As
discussed above, these requirements
could include, for example,
participation in an offering of a security,
or the possession of material nonpublic
information. Similarly, IEX and other
national securities exchange’s rule
provide excused withdrawal relief from
compliance with market maker quoting
obligations based on systemic
equipment problems, in recognition of
the technical complexities inherent in
automated market making. The
Exchange believes that the same
considerations are applicable to
participation in the IEMM Program, and
it would be inappropriate to preclude a
Market Maker from eligibility for the
IEMM incentives based on bona fide
legal or regulatory requirements or
temporary operational restrictions.
Thus, the Exchange does not believe
that the limited exception raises any
new or novel issues. Further, the
exception will be granted to all Market
Makers on a fair and equitable basis, if
the Market Maker provides
documentation satisfactory to IEX
45 See IEX Rule 11.152. See also NYSE Rule
107B(d), and Nasdaq Rule 4600.
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Regulation that substantiates the reasons
for the requested exception.
The Exchange believes that proposed
Supplemental Material .02 is reasonable
in that it is designed to provide
Members clarity regarding their
eligibility for designation as an IEMM
when their order activity over the
course of a month satisfies the
requirements of one of the applicable
IEMM Tiers, but the Member is not a
registered Market Maker in all securities
listed on IEX as of the first trading day
of the calendar month. Furthermore,
Exchange believes allowing Members to
qualify for designation as an IEMM
under these circumstances is
appropriate and reasonable, because it
avoids disparate treatment of Members
that were not registered Market Makers
as of the start of a calendar month, but
otherwise provided meaningful and
consistent support to market quality and
price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed
securities for a significant portion of the
day.
Moreover, the Exchange believes that
proposed Supplemental Material .03 is
reasonable in that it is designed to
provide Members additional clarity
regarding the Exchange’s calculation for
determining whether the order activity
satisfied the applicable NBBO Quoting
Percentage and Depth Quoting
Percentage by accounting for scenarios
where continuous trading is halted or
paused pursuant to Rule 11.280, and
therefore the IEMM would be unable to
enter orders to meet satisfy [sic] the
applicable requirements. The Exchange
believes that not accounting for
scenarios where continuous trading is
halted or paused would be
unreasonable, and inconsistent with the
quoting requirements set forth in the
proposed IEMM Tiers, because it would
make the effective IEMM Tier quoting
requirements variable, requiring
additional order activity to satisfy the
applicable quoting requirements for
securities that are subject to a trading
halt or pause. Furthermore, the
Exchange notes that accounting for
scenarios where continuous trading is
halted or paused is also consistent with
Rule 11.151(a)(2) regarding the
obligations of registered Market Makers,
which states in relevant part that Market
Makers quoting obligations are
suspended during a trading halt or
pause.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount
and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount
for Members that qualify for designation
as an IEMM is reasonable, in that IEX
will continue to charge relatively low
fees for all executed shares, and is in the
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
range, or lower than, the fees many
other exchanges charge for removing
(i.e., taking) liquidity on maker-taker
venues,46 and consistent with Rule
610(c) of Regulation NMS.47
Furthermore, the Exchange believes that
the proposed IEMM Program is
consistent with the Act’s requirement
that the Exchange provide for an
equitable allocation of fees, because
Members that qualify for designation as
an IEMM will provide benefits to all
market participants by promoting price
discovery and increasing the depth of
liquidity available at and/or near the
inside market. Such Members also
benefit IEX by enhancing its
competitiveness as a market center that
attracts actionable orders. Accordingly,
IEX believes that it is consistent with an
equitable allocation of fees to offer the
proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount
and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount
on a Member’s displayed and nondisplayed executions at or above $1.00
in recognition of these benefits to the
Exchange and its Members.
Moreover, the Exchange believes that
not placing a cap on the aggregate
monthly savings from the Displayed
Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed
Match Fee Discount for Inside Tier
IEMMs, and imposing the proposed cap
on the aggregate monthly savings from
the Displayed Match Fee Discount and
Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount for
the Depth Tier IEMMs is reasonable and
consistent with an equitable allocation
of fees, because such cap is designed to
maintain congruity between the benefits
provided by IEMMs to the Exchange and
the broader market, and the financial
incentives provided by the Exchange in
return. Market Makers that qualify
under the Inside Tier will provide
enhanced price discovery and liquidity
at the NBBO. Comparatively, while each
proposed tier provides substantial
benefits to the market, Market Makers
that meet only the Depth Tier would
provide depth of liquidity at prices near
the NBBO, without necessarily
providing enhanced price discovery and
liquidity at the NBBO. Additionally, the
46 For example, the NYSE trading fee schedule on
its public website reflects fees to ‘‘take’’ liquidity
ranging from $0.0024–$0.00275 depending on the
type of market participant, order, and execution.
The Nasdaq trading fee schedule on its public
website reflects fees to ‘‘remove’’ liquidity ranging
from $0.0030 per share for shares executed at or
above $1.00 or 0.30% of total dollar volume for
shares executed below $1.00. Cboe BZX trading fee
schedule on its public website reflects fees for
‘‘removing’’ liquidity ranging from $0.0030 for
shares executed at or above $1.00 or 0.30% of total
dollar volume for shares executed below $1.00,
subject to certain limited exceptions for orders
trading in the opening, IPO or halt auctions in Cboe
BZX-listed securities.
47 17 CFR 242.610(c)(1).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
risk associated with a potential adverse
execution for a Depth Tier IEMM is not
as material as an Inside Tier IEMM.
Thus, the Exchange believes the
proposed IEMM Tiers and their
corresponding fee incentives and caps
are commensurate with the level of
liquidity that the Member provides to
the Exchange and its Members, and the
risk associated with providing such
liquidity, and are consistent with the
Act. The Exchange notes that all
Members are free to abstain from or
discontinue participation in the
proposed IEMM Program if the
proposed fee reductions do not provide
a sufficient incentive considering such
Member’s trading activity. Accordingly,
the Exchange believes the proposed
IEMM Tiers and their corresponding fee
incentives and caps are reasonable and
consistent with an equitable allocation
of fees, and not unreasonably
discriminatory.
The Exchange further believes it is
appropriate not to consider executions
subject to the Crumbling Quote Remove
Fee as eligible for the Displayed Match
Fee Discount or Non-Displayed Match
Fee Discount. A Member’s executions
that are subject to the Crumbling Quote
Remove Fee are necessarily a part of a
trading strategy that the Exchange
believes evidences a form of predatory
latency arbitrage that leverages low
latency proprietary market data feeds
and connectivity along with predictive
models to chase short-term price
momentum and successfully target
resting orders at unstable prices.
Furthermore, if the Exchange were to
apply the Displayed Match Fee Discount
and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount
to executions that are subject to the
Crumbling Quote Remove Fee, it would
frustrate its fundamental purpose of
disincentivizing predatory trading
strategies to further incentivize
additional resting liquidity, including
displayed liquidity, on IEX. Thus, a
Member that is able to simultaneously
meet an IEMM Tier while also executing
orders that are subject to the Crumbling
Quote Remove Fee, should not be
afforded the benefit of the Displayed
Match Fee Discount or Non-Displayed
Match Fee Discount on such executions.
The Exchange further believes it is
appropriate not to consider executions
subject to the Internalization Fee as
eligible for the Displayed Match Fee
Discount or Non-Displayed Match Fee
Discount. A Member’s executions that
are subject to the Internalization Fee are
provided at no cost to the Member. If
the Exchange were to apply the
Displayed Match Fee Discount and NonDisplayed Match Fee Discount to
executions that are subject to the
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6067
Internalization Fee, it would provide a
net credit to the Member (i.e., pay a
rebate). As described above, the
Exchange has made a conscious choice
to not pay rebates to brokers in
exchange for order flow, and instead has
focused on earning order flow from
market participants by designing a
market that provides greater execution
quality.48 Thus, the Exchange proposes
to not further discount an execution
which is already provided free of
charge.
The Exchange notes that other market
centers offer a diverse range of fee based
incentives to their members for trading
activity that they believe improves
market quality.49 Similarly, the
Exchange believes the proposed IEMM
Program is designed to further improve
market quality on the Exchange and
across the broader market. While the
Exchange believes the proposed IEMM
Program is distinguishable from the fee
based incentives offered by other market
centers in so far as the Exchange is not
proposing to offer a rebate, the
underlying goals and policy
considerations are substantially similar.
Thus, the Exchange believes the
proposed IEMM Program does not pose
any new or novel concepts not already
considered by the Commission in
connection with the current fee based
market quality incentive programs
offered by other market centers.
The Exchange further believes that the
IEMM Program is reasonable and
consistent with an equitable allocation
of fees, and not unfairly discriminatory,
because the IEMM Program is available
to all market participants that qualify for
designation as an IEMM, regardless of
the size of the firm or its trading
volumes. The Exchange notes that all
Members that satisfy the applicable
requirements are eligible for designation
as an IEMM on a fair and equal basis.
Moreover, the Exchange believes that
the proposed IEMM Tiers that Members
may qualify under for designation as an
48 See
supra note 15.
e.g., Nasdaq Rule 7014 (Market Quality
Incentive Programs), which includes a variety of
programs that offer fee based incentives to Nasdaq
members that meet certain trading requirements.
For example, the Nasdaq Qualified Market Maker
(‘‘QMM’’) Program allows Nasdaq members to
qualify as a QMM if they are registered Nasdaq
market makers, quote at the NBBO for a specified
period of time in a specified number of securities,
and are not assessed any ‘‘Excess Order Fee’’ under
Nasdaq Rule 7018. In order to incentivize members
to qualify as QMM’s, Nasdaq offers a series of
rebates per share executed, which vary depending
on the QMM’s percentage of consolidated volume
in the applicable security and which market center
the security is listed on. Moreover, Nasdaq offers
qualified QMM’s a reduced fee for removing
liquidity on Nasdaq, which varies depending on
what market the security is listed on. See Nasdaq
Rule 7014(d)–(e).
49 See,
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
6068
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
IEMM are consistent with an equitable
allocation of fees, because, as discussed
in the purpose section above, the
proposed fee reductions and the
corresponding caps for Depth Tier
IEMM’s are commensurate with the
level of liquidity that the Member
provides to the Exchange and its
Members.
In conclusion, for the reasons
discussed above, the Exchange believes
that the proposed IEMM Program is
consistent with Sections 6(b)(4) and
6(b)(5) of the Act in that it does not
permit unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers,
and is designed 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.
Lastly, the Exchange believes that the
proposed non-substantive changes to
the Exchange’s Fee Schedule to replace
and re-organize the asterisked footnotes
with numbered footnotes, and make
minor changes to capitalization for
defined terms is reasonable, and
consistent with the protection of
investors and the public interest, in that
it is designed to make the Exchange’s
Fee Schedule clearer, and ensure that
footnotes are listed in chronological
order.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
IEX does not believe that the
proposed rule change will result in any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. The
Exchange does not believe that the
proposed rule change will impose any
burden on intermarket competition that
is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
To the contrary, the Exchange believes
that the proposed IEMM Program and
corresponding fee reductions will
increase competition and draw
additional volume to the Exchange.
Furthermore, in order to compete with
incumbent maker-taker exchanges for
order flow without directly paying
Members for such orders with rebates,
the Exchange is proposing to offer an
alternative fee-based incentive to
Members that engage in trading activity
that enhances market quality and price
discovery on the Exchange. Importantly,
the Exchange operates in a highly
competitive market in which market
participants can readily favor competing
venues if fee schedules at other venues
are viewed as more favorable.
Consequently, the Exchange believes
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
that the degree to which IEX fees could
impose any burden on competition is
extremely limited, and does not believe
that such fees would burden
competition of Members or competing
venues in a manner that is not necessary
or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act.
Moreover, as noted above, upon
launch of the listing business for
corporate issuers in 2018, the Exchange
expects to face intense competition from
NYSE and Nasdaq, which the Exchange
believes essentially operate as a duopoly
in the U.S. listing market. Therefore, the
Exchange has designed the proposed
IEMM Program in part to address the
significant competitive challenges it
will face in establishing itself as a
competitive listings market.
Specifically, requiring IEMMs to be a
registered IEX Market Maker in each
security listed on IEX, and to qualify as
an IEMM under one of the tiers
described above in all securities listed
on IEX, is designed to enhance
execution quality in such securities,
which the Exchange believes will also
encourage issuers to choose to list on
IEX. Thus, the Exchange does not
believe that the proposed rule change
will impose any burden on intermarket
competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. To the contrary, the
proposed rule change may serve as a
catalyst for increasing intermarket
competition in the highly-concentrated
U.S. listings market, which the
Exchange believes currently operates as
a duopoly dominated by NYSE and
Nasdaq.
Furthermore, the Exchange does not
believe that the proposed rule change
will impose any burden on intramarket
competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act because while some
Members may face unique financial and
operational challenges that could pose
practical limitations on their trading
strategies, the proposed fee incentives
are available to all Members that choose
to register as a market maker and adjust
their trading activity to qualify for
designation as an IEMM. Further, as
noted above, the proposed fee
reductions are designed to encourage
Members to add liquidity at prices that
benefit all IEX Members, and thus will
not impose any burden on intramarket
competition that is not appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
PO 00000
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
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) 50 of the Act.
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) 51 of the Act to
determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
IEX–2018–02 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–IEX–2018–02. 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 website (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
50 15
51 15
Frm 00094
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
12FEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 29 / Monday, February 12, 2018 / Notices
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 website 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.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–IEX–2018–02, and should
be submitted on or before March 5,
2018.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.52
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–02720 Filed 2–9–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
[Release No. 34–82644; File No. SR–ISE–
2018–10]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Nasdaq
ISE, LLC; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change To Amend the
Exchange’s Schedule of Fees To
Modify Complex Order Fees and
Rebates
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
February 6, 2018.
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 January
30, 2018, Nasdaq ISE, LLC (‘‘ISE’’ or
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the Exchange. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
52 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
19:23 Feb 09, 2018
The Exchange proposes to amend the
Exchange’s Schedule of Fees.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://ise.cchwallstreet.com/, at the
principal office of the Exchange, and at
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
VerDate Sep<11>2014
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
Jkt 244001
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to amend the Exchange’s
Schedule of Fees to modify certain
complex order fees and rebates in
Section II, and to make a number of
non-substantive changes to update
certain section headings. Each change is
described below.3
Priority Customer Complex Order
Rebate for Select Symbols
Currently as set forth in Section II of
the Schedule of Fees, the Exchange
provides rebates to Priority Customer 4
complex orders that trade with NonPriority Customer 5 complex orders in
the complex order book or trade with
quotes and orders on the regular order
3 The Exchange initially filed the proposed
pricing changes on January 2, 2018 (SR–ISE–2018–
02). On January 11, 2018, the Exchange withdrew
that filing and submitted SR–ISE–2018–05. On
January 22, 2018, the Exchange withdrew SR–ISE–
2018–05 and submitted SR–ISE–2018–08. On
January 30, 2018, the Exchange withdrew SR–ISE–
2018–08 and submitted this filing.
4 A ‘‘Priority Customer’’ is a person or entity that
is not a broker/dealer in securities, and does not
place more than 390 orders in listed options per day
on average during a calendar month for its own
beneficial account(s), as defined in ISE Rule
100(a)(37A).
5 Non-Priority Customer includes Market Maker,
Non-Nasdaq GEMX Market Maker, Firm
Proprietary, Broker-Dealer, and Professional
Customer.
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6069
book. Rebates are tiered based on a
member’s average daily volume
(‘‘ADV’’) executed during a given month
as follows: 0 to 14,999 contracts (‘‘Tier
1’’), 15,000 to 44,999 contracts (‘‘Tier
2’’), 45,000 to 59,999 contracts (‘‘Tier
3’’), 60,000 to 74,999 contracts (‘‘Tier
4’’), 75,000 to 99,999 contracts (‘‘Tier
5’’), 100,000 to 124,999 contracts (‘‘Tier
6’’), 125,000 to 224,999 contracts (‘‘Tier
7’’), and 225,000 or more contracts
(‘‘Tier 8’’). In Select Symbols,6 the
rebate is $0.26 per contract for Tier 1,
$0.30 per contract for Tier 2, $0.36 per
contract for Tier 3, $0.41 per contract for
Tier 4, $0.42 per contract for Tier 5,
$0.44 per contract for Tier 6, $0.46 per
contract for Tier 7, and $0.49 per
contract for Tier 8. The Exchange now
proposes to increase the rebate amounts
to $0.45 in Tier 6 and $0.50 in Tier 8.
Non-Priority Customer Complex Order
Taker Fee for Select Symbols
Currently, the Exchange charges a
complex order taker fee for Select
Symbols that is $0.47 per contract for
Market Maker 7 orders (or $0.44 per
contract for Market Makers with total
affiliated Priority Customer Complex
ADV of 150,000 or more contracts),8 and
$0.48 per contract for Non-Nasdaq ISE
Market Maker,9 Firm Proprietary 10/
Broker-Dealer,11 and Professional
Customer 12 orders. Priority Customer
orders are not charged a complex order
taker fee for Select Symbols. The
Exchange now proposes to increase the
complex order taker fee to $0.50 per
contract for Non-Priority Customer
orders in Select Symbols. As proposed,
Market Makers with total affiliated
Priority Customer Complex ADV of
6 ‘‘Select Symbols’’ are options overlying all
symbols listed on ISE that are in the Penny Pilot
Program.
7 The term ‘‘Market Makers’’ refers to
‘‘Competitive Market Makers’’ and ‘‘Primary Market
Makers’’ collectively.
8 Nasdaq ISE Market Makers making or taking
liquidity receive a discount of $0.02 when trading
against Priority Customer orders preferenced to
them in the Complex Order Book in equity options
that are able to be listed and traded on more than
one options exchange. This discount does not apply
to FX Options Symbols or to option classes
designated by the Exchange to receive a guaranteed
allocation pursuant to Nasdaq ISE Rule
722(b)(3)(i)(B).
9 A ‘‘Non-Nasdaq ISE Market Maker’’ is a market
maker as defined in Section 3(a)(38) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,
registered in the same options class on another
options exchange.
10 A ‘‘Firm Proprietary’’ order is an order
submitted by a member for its own proprietary
account.
11 A ‘‘Broker-Dealer’’ order is an order submitted
by a member for a broker-dealer account that is not
its own proprietary account.
12 A ‘‘Professional Customer’’ is a person or entity
that is not a broker/dealer and is not a Priority
Customer.
E:\FR\FM\12FEN1.SGM
12FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 29 (Monday, February 12, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 6059-6069]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-02720]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-82636; File No. SR-IEX-2018-02]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Investors Exchange LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Adopt an
IEX Enhanced Market Maker (``IEMM'') Program
February 6, 2018.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) \1\ of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (the ``Act'') \2\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\3\ notice is hereby
given that, on February 1, 2018, the Investors Exchange LLC (``IEX'' or
the ``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I,
II and III below, which Items have been prepared by the self-regulatory
organization. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 15 U.S.C. 78a.
\3\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
Pursuant to the provisions of Section 19(b)(1) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act''),\4\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\5\
Investors Exchange LLC (``IEX'' or ``Exchange'') is filing with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') proposed changes to
adopt an IEX Enhanced Market Maker (``IEMM'') program under Exchange
Rule 11.170 (Market Quality Incentive Programs) (currently reserved),
which is designed to enable Members \6\ to qualify for transaction fee
\7\ reductions for providing meaningful and consistent support to
market quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at and/or near
the national best bid (``NBB'') and/or the national best offer
(``NBO'') (collectively, the ``NBBO'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\5\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\6\ See IEX Rule 1.160(s).
\7\ See IEX Rules 15.110(a) and (c) (``Fee Schedule''). See also
the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule, available on the Exchange
public website.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The text of the proposed rule change is available at the Exchange's
website at www.iextrading.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 self-regulatory organization
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 statement may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below. The self-regulatory organization
has prepared summaries, set forth in Sections A, B, and C below, of the
most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange is proposing to adopt an IEX Enhanced Market Maker
(``IEMM'') program under Exchange Rule 11.170 (Market Quality Incentive
Programs) (currently reserved), which is designed to enable Members to
qualify for transaction fee reductions for providing meaningful and
consistent support to market quality and price discovery by extensive
quoting at and/or near the NBBO.
Background
In an effort to incentivize Members to submit displayed orders to
the Exchange, the Exchange currently
[[Page 6060]]
charges a relatively low fee of $0.0003 to Members for executions on
IEX that provide or take resting interest with displayed priority \8\
(i.e., an order or portion of a reserve order that is booked and ranked
with display priority on the Order Book either as the IEX best bid or
best offer (``BBO''), or at a less aggressive price).\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ This pricing is referred to by the Exchange as ``Displayed
Match Fee'' with a Fee Code of `L' provided by the Exchange on
execution reports. See the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule,
available on the Exchange public website.
\9\ The Displayed Match Fee is less than the Exchange's Non-
Displayed Match Fee and substantially lower than the fee to add
displayed liquidity on an exchange with a ``taker-maker'' fee
structure (i.e., that charges liquidity providers) and to take
displayed liquidity on an exchange with a ``maker-taker'' fee
structure (i.e., that charges liquidity takers). For example, the
New York Stock Exchange (``NYSE'') trading fee schedule on its
public website reflects fees to ``take'' liquidity ranging from
$0.0024-$0.0030 depending on the type of market participant, order
and execution. Additionally, NYSE fees to ``add'' liquidity range
from $0.0018-$0.0030 per share for shares executed in continuous
trading. The Nasdaq Stock Market (``Nasdaq'') trading fee schedule
on its public website reflects fees to ``remove'' liquidity ranging
from $0.0025-$0.0030 per share for shares executed in continuous
trading at or above $1.00 or 0.30% of total dollar volume for shares
executed below $1.00. Additionally, Nasdaq fees for ``adding''
liquidity range from $0.0001-$0.00305 per share for shares executed
in continuous trading. The Cboe BZX Exchange (``Cboe BZX'') trading
fee schedule on its public website reflects fees for ``removing''
liquidity ranging from $0.0025-$0.0030, for shares executed in
continuous trading at or above $1.00 or 0.30% of total dollar volume
for shares executed below $1.00. Additionally, Cboe BZX fees for
``adding'' liquidity ranging from $0.0020-$0.0045 per share for
shares executed in continuous trading.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, the Exchange currently charges $0.0009 per share (or
0.30% of the total dollar value of the transaction for securities
priced below $1.00) to Members for executions on IEX that provide or
take resting interest with non-displayed priority (i.e., an order or
portion of a reserve order that is booked and ranked with non-display
priority on the Order Book either at the NBBO midpoint or at a less
aggressive price).\10\ The Exchange does not charge any fee to Members
for executions on IEX when the adding and removing order originated
from the same Exchange Member.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ This pricing is referred to by the Exchange as ``Non-
Displayed Match Fee'' with a Fee Code of `I' provided by the
Exchange on execution reports. See the Investors Exchange Fee
Schedule, available on the Exchange public website.
\11\ This pricing is referred to by the Exchange as
``Internalization Fee'' with a Fee Code of `S' provided by the
Exchange on execution reports. Orders from different market
participant identifiers of the same broker dealer, with the same
Central Registration Depository registration number, are treated as
originating from the same Exchange Member. See the Investors
Exchange Fee Schedule, available on the Exchange public website.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the pricing model above, and in contrast to its
competitors, IEX has chosen to lower the cost barrier for Member firms
to trade on the Exchange by not charging fees for membership,
connectivity, or market data.\12\ Moreover, IEX has made a conscious
choice to not pay rebates to brokers in exchange for order flow, and
instead has focused on earning order flow from market participants by
designing a market that provides greater execution quality. The
Exchange believes that, as a result of these priorities, it has created
quantitatively superior trading outcomes for Members that choose to
efficiently access the Exchange, as measured by various market quality
metrics including effective spread, and opportunity for price
improvement.\13\ However, the Exchange believes that the financial
incentives for brokers to route displayed orders to venues that pay
rebates for such order flow has caused a stratification of displayed
liquidity across the U.S. equities markets based on exchange pricing
models. Specifically, maker-taker exchanges \14\ dominate the U.S.
equities trading landscape in market share, and displayed market share
specifically.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See the Investors Exchange Fee Schedule, available on the
Exchange public website.
\13\ See e.g., IEX's recent white paper that utilized publicly
available quote and trade data to compare market quality across U.S.
stock exchanges, which empirically found, inter alia, that on
average IEX has the lowest effective spread, and the greatest
opportunity for price improvement amongst all exchanges. A
Comparison of Execution Quality across U.S. Stock Exchanges, Elaine
Wah, Stan Feldman, Francis Chung, Allison Bishop, and Daniel Aisen,
Investors Exchange (2017). Effective spread is commonly defined by
market structure academics and market participants as twice the
absolute difference between the trade price and prevailing NBBO
midpoint at the time of a trade, and is generally meant to measure
the cost paid when an incoming order executes against a resting
order, and unlike quoted spread captures other features of a market
center, such as hidden and midpoint liquidity as well as market
depth. Price improvement is in reference to the situation where an
aggressive order is filled at a price strictly better than the
inside quote (i.e., in the case of an aggressive buy (sell) order,
receiving a fill at a price lower (higher) than the NBO (NBB)).
\14\ In the maker-taker pricing model, the liquidity provider
(i.e., maker) receives a rebate when its order eventually executes,
and the taker that trades against the resting order pays an access
fee to the exchange.
\15\ See IEX's recent white paper that utilized publicly
available quote and trade data to compare market quality across U.S.
stock exchanges, which found that time at the inside (i.e., when an
exchange is on either the NBB or the NBO, or both) appears to be
strongly correlated with rebates for liquidity provision, as the
exchanges at the inside more often are not only the largest but also
those that employ a maker-taker pricing model. A Comparison of
Execution Quality across U.S. Stock Exchanges, Elaine Wah, Stan
Feldman, Francis Chung, Allison Bishop, and Daniel Aisen, Investors
Exchange (2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To compete with incumbent maker-taker exchanges for order flow
without directly paying Members for such orders, the Exchange is
proposing to offer an alternative fee-based incentive to Members that
engage in trading activity that further improves market quality and
price discovery on the Exchange. Importantly, the Exchange is not
proposing to offer a rebate,\16\ in that the Exchange is not paying one
side of each transaction (i.e., the maker or taker). In fact, the
Exchange is not making any direct payments to IEMMs, because, as
discussed below, the proposed fee reductions will not be greater than
the fees charged for executions on the Exchange (i.e., no single
execution would result in a net credit from the Exchange to the
Member). Moreover, the proposed fee reductions would not be provided
based on a direct one-to-one relationship with a Member's displayed
liquidity providing executions, but instead are available to reduce the
per-share cost of a Members displayed and non-displayed executions on
the Exchange in return for meaningful and consistent support to market
quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at and/or near the
NBBO in IEX-listed securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See the SEC's Division of Trading and Markets' October 20,
2015 memorandum to the SEC's Market Structure Advisory Committee at
2, which states ``. . . the maker-taker fee model is a pricing
structure in which a market generally pays its members a per share
rebate to provide ( i.e., ``make'') liquidity in securities and
assesses on them a fee to remove (i.e., ``take'') liquidity.''
(emphasis added).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IEMM Program
As proposed, a Member qualifying for designation as an IEMM
reflects a commitment to provide meaningful and consistent support to
market quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at and/or near
the NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a significant portion of the day.
The IEMM Program is designed to attract liquidity provision from both
traditional market making firms, as well as from other market
participants that are willing and able to act in a market making
capacity and commit capital to support liquidity at and/or near the
NBBO. In return for their contributions, such Members qualify for a
lower per-share rate charged for both displayed and non-displayed
executions subject to either the Displayed Match Fee or Non-Displayed
Match Fee on the Exchange in securities priced at or above $1.00. The
IEMM Program is designed to deepen IEX's liquidity pool at prices at
and/or near the NBBO, which may narrow the bid-ask spread, dampen the
market impact of shocks from liquidity demand, and support the quality
of
[[Page 6061]]
price discovery on IEX to the benefit of long term investors, and
issuers.
The proposed IEMM Program provides two tiers, each of which would
significantly contribute to market quality by providing liquidity at or
near the NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a significant portion of the
day. Members are eligible to qualify as an IEMM under one or both IEMM
Tiers. Specifically, as proposed, any IEX Member that registers as an
IEX Market Maker pursuant to Rule 11.150 in all securities listed on
IEX (except pursuant to Supplementary Material .01, as discussed
below),\17\ and satisfies the quoting criteria for one or more of the
following tiers in each security listed on IEX over the course of the
month that the security is listed on IEX,\18\ may be designated as an
IEMM:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(B).
\18\ See proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Inside Tier IEMM:
[cir] One or more of its MPIDs has a displayed order entered in a
principal capacity of at least one round lot resting on the Exchange at
the NBB and/or the NBO for an average of at least 20% of Regular Market
Hours (the ``NBBO Quoting Percentage''); \19\ and/or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(A)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Depth Tier IEMM:
[cir] One or more of its MPIDs has a displayed order entered in a
principal capacity of at least one round lot resting on the Exchange at
the greater of 1 minimum price variation (``MPV'') or 0.03% (i.e., 3
basis points) away from the NBBO (or more aggressive) for an average of
at least 75% of Regular Market Hours (the ``Depth Quoting
Percentage'').\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to calculate the NBBO Quoting Percentage by
determining the average percent of time the Member is at the NBB or the
NBO, or both the NBB and NBO, in each IEX-listed security during
Regular Market Hours over the course of the month. On a monthly basis,
IEX would determine whether a Member satisfied the NBBO Quoting
Percentage for each IEX-listed security by calculating the following:
The ``NBB Quoting Time'' is calculated by determining the
aggregate amount of time that one or more of a Member's MPIDs has a
displayed order entered in a principal capacity of at least one round
lot in each IEX-listed security resting at the NBB during Regular
Market Hours of each trading day for a calendar month that such
security is listed on IEX;
The ``NBO Quoting Time'' is calculated by determining the
aggregate amount of time that one or more of a Member's MPIDs has a
displayed order entered in a principal capacity of at least one round
lot in each IEX-listed security resting at the NBO during Regular
Market Hours of each trading day for a calendar month that such
security is listed on IEX; and
The ``NBBO Quoting Percentage'' is calculated for each
IEX-listed security by adding the security's NBB Quoting Time to the
NBO Quoting Time and dividing the resulting sum by two (2), and then
dividing the resulting quotient by the total amount of time during the
Regular Market Session that the IEX-listed security was listed on IEX
and not subject to a halt or pause in trading pursuant to IEX Rule
11.280 over the course of the calendar month.
The Exchange proposes to calculate the Depth Quoting Percentage by
determining the average percent of time the Member is at the defined
percentage away from the NBBO (or more aggressive) in each IEX-listed
security during Regular Market Hours over the course of the month. On a
monthly basis, IEX would determine whether the Member satisfied the
Depth Quoting Percentage for each IEX-listed security by calculating
the following:
The ``Bid Depth Quoting Time'' is calculated by
determining the aggregate amount of time that one or more of a Member's
MPIDs has a displayed order entered in a principal capacity of at least
one round lot in each IEX-listed security resting at the greater of 1
MPV or 0.03% away from the NBB (or more aggressive) during Regular
Market Hours of each trading day for a calendar month that such
security is listed on IEX;
The ``Offer Depth Quoting Time'' is calculated by
determining the aggregate amount of time that one or more of a Member's
MPIDs has a displayed order entered in a principal capacity of at least
one round lot in each IEX-listed security resting at the greater of 1
MPV or 0.03% away from the NBO during Regular Market Hours of each
trading day of a calendar month that such security is listed on IEX;
and
The ``Depth Quoting Percentage'' is calculated for each
IEX-listed security by adding the security's Bid Depth Quoting Time to
the Offer Depth Quoting Time and dividing the resulting sum by two (2),
and then dividing the resulting quotient by the total amount of time
during the Regular Market Session that the IEX-listed security was
listed on IEX and not subject to a halt or pause in trading pursuant to
IEX Rule 11.280 over the course of the calendar month.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ The Exchange notes that the proposed NBBO Quoting
Percentage calculation and the proposed Depth Quoting Percentage
calculation are substantially similar to the calculations used by
the New York Stock Exchange LLC (``NYSE'') for purposes of
calculating the quoting requirements of Supplemental Liquidity
Providers pursuant to NYSE Rule 107B(g) (Calculation of Quoting
Requirement).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Supplemental Material .01 provides a limited exception to
the requirement that a Member must be a registered IEX Market Maker
pursuant to Rule 11.150 in all securities listed on IEX. Specifically,
a Member that is not a registered IEX Market Maker pursuant to Rule
11.150 in all securities listed on IEX (as required by subparagraph
(a)(1)(B)) may still be designated as an IEMM if (i) a Member does not
act as a market maker in one or more IEX-listed securities on any other
national securities exchange, and (ii) the Market Maker provides
documentation, satisfactory to IEX Regulation, substantiating that such
Member is unable to act as a market maker in one or more particular
securities listed on IEX (a) in order to comply with specified legal or
regulatory requirements, or (b) operational restrictions not exceeding
90 calendar days from the date the security first lists on the
Exchange. The documentation must specify the length of time such legal,
regulatory requirement(s), or operational restriction is anticipated to
persist. The proposed exception is designed to provide Members
flexibility to address any legal or regulatory requirements, or
temporary operational restrictions associated with their registration
and acting as a Market Maker in a security listed on IEX, without
eliminating the financial incentives that such Member may otherwise
qualify for under the IEMM Program as a result of their quoting
activity in other listed securities.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The Exchange notes that the proposed exception in
Supplemental Material .01 would be inapplicable for the first IEX-
listed security (whether the security is transferring from another
primary listing market to IEX, or conducting an initial public
offering on IEX), because a Member could not have otherwise
qualified to be designated as an IEMM without having been a
registered Market Maker in all other IEX-listed securities since
there would be no other IEX-listed securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For example, if a Member was to come into possession of material
non-public information regarding an IEX-listed security, and on advice
of counsel suspended all trading in the security until the conflict was
remediated, and but for the suspension of trading in the IEX-listed
security, one or more of the Member's MPIDs order activity would have
qualified the Member for designation as an IEMM under one or more of
the proposed IEMM Tiers, such Member could request a legal exemption
under Supplemental Material .01 by providing documentation,
satisfactory to
[[Page 6062]]
IEX Regulation, substantiating that it is unable to act as a market
maker in the IEX-listed security (e.g., producing a letter from counsel
advising to suspend trading).
Proposed Supplemental Material .02 provides that if a Member
satisfies the requirement of registering as a Market Maker pursuant to
Rule 11.150 in all securities listed on IEX after the first trading day
of the calendar month, and remains registered for the remainder of the
month, such Member is eligible for designation as an IEMM if the Member
otherwise satisfies the applicable quoting requirements for the entire
month to qualify for designation under one or more of the proposed IEMM
Tiers. Proposed Supplemental Material .02 is designed to provide
Members clarity regarding their eligibility for designation as an IEMM
when their order activity over the course of a month satisfies the
requirements of one of the applicable IEMM Tiers, but the Member is not
a registered Market Maker in all securities listed on IEX as of the
first trading day of the calendar month. The Exchange believes allowing
Members to qualify for designation as an IEMM under these circumstances
is appropriate and reasonable, because it avoids disparate treatment of
Members that were not registered Market Makers as of the start of a
calendar month, but otherwise provided meaningful and consistent
support to market quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a significant portion
of the day in compliance with the IEMM criteria.
For example, Member ABCD satisfied the quoting requirements of the
Inside Tier and the Depth Tier for all securities listed on IEX for
each day of the 20 trading days during the month of September 2017,
thereby satisfying the quoting requirements of the Inside Tier and the
Depth Tier on average, per day, over the course of the month.
Furthermore, Member ABCD did not satisfy the requirement of being
registered in all securities listed on IEX until September 8, 2017 (5
trading days after the first trading day of the month), and remained
registered in all securities listed on IEX for the remainder of the
month. In this case, Member ABCD's order activity provided meaningful
and consistent support to market quality and price discovery by
extensive quoting at and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed securities for
a significant portion of each trading day, and would therefore be
eligible for designation as an Inside Tier and Depth Tier IEMM.\23\ The
Exchange notes that Members that attempt to abuse Supplemental Material
.02 by registering as a market maker in all securities listed on IEX at
the end of a calendar month, only to terminate registration at the
beginning of the following calendar month, would be subject to the 20
business day re-registration penalty under Rule 11.153(a) (Voluntary
Termination of Registration), and therefore such Member is unlikely to
be able to repeat this abusive pattern for the following trading
month.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ The Exchange notes that this illustrative example
contemplates Member ABCD satisfying the quoting requirements of the
Inside Tier and Depth Tier on each trading day over the course of
the month; however, it is possible that a Member may begin entering
orders to satisfy the IEMM quoting requirements on or after the date
the Member satisfies the requirement of being a registered Market
Maker in all securities listed on IEX. In such case, the Member
would need to exceed the quoting obligations for the Inside Tier and
the Depth Tier on one or more trading days to satisfy the daily
average requirement of proposed Rule 11.170(a)(1)(C).
\24\ Furthermore, the Exchange monitors Market Maker security
registrations and terminations to identify anomalous patterns of
security registrations and terminations, and would therefore
identify this abusive pattern in a timely manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Supplemental Material .03 provides that for purposes of
determining the percentage of time during the Regular Market Session
that a Member satisfied the NBBO Quoting Percentage and Depth Quoting
Percentage pursuant to subparagraph (a)(1)(A), the Exchange excludes
the aggregate amount of time that a security is subject to a halt or
pause in trading pursuant to IEX Rule 11.280. Proposed Supplemental
Material .03 is designed to provide Members additional clarity
regarding the Exchange's calculation for determining whether the order
activity satisfied the applicable NBBO Quoting Percentage and Depth
Quoting Percentage by accounting for scenarios where continuous trading
is halted or paused pursuant to Rule 11.280, and therefore the IEMM
would be unable to enter orders to meet satisfy [sic] the applicable
requirements. The Exchange believes that not accounting for scenarios
where continuous trading is halted or paused would be unreasonable, and
inconsistent with the quoting requirements set forth in the proposed
IEMM Tiers, because it would make the effective IEMM Tier quoting
requirements variable, requiring additional order activity to satisfy
the applicable quoting requirements for securities that are subject to
a trading halt or pause. The Exchange notes that accounting for
scenarios where continuous trading is halted or paused is also
consistent with Rule 11.151(a)(2) regarding the obligations of
registered Market Makers, which states in relevant part that Market
Makers quoting obligations are suspended during a trading halt or
pause.
For Members that qualify under one of the IEMM Tiers as defined
above, IEX will reduce the fee charged per share executed on such
Members':
Non-displayed executions subject to the Non-Displayed
Match Fee in securities priced at or above $1.00 by the amount that
corresponds with the tier(s) under which the Member qualifies as an
IEMM, subject to any applicable Depth Tier aggregate monthly savings
cap, as set forth below (the ``Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount''); and
Displayed executions subject to the Displayed Match Fee in
securities priced at or above $1.00 by the amount that corresponds with
the tier(s) under which the Member qualifies as an IEMM, subject to any
applicable Depth Tier aggregate monthly savings cap, as set forth below
(the ``Displayed Match Fee Discount''); \25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See proposed Rule 11.170(a)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As proposed, for Inside Tier IEMMs, the Displayed Match Fee
Discount and the Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount results in a $0.0001
discount for each execution subject to the Displayed Match Fee and the
Non-Displayed Match Fee, respectively, with no cap on aggregate monthly
saving.\26\ Moreover, Depth Tier IEMMs will receive a $0.0001 discount
for each execution subject to the Displayed Match Fee and the Non-
Displayed Match Fee, up to $20,000.00 in aggregate savings per
month.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ For example, if one or more of Member ABCD's MPIDs
satisfied the obligations of the Insider Tier, all of Member ABCD's
executions that are subject to the Non-Displayed Match Fee would be
charged $0.0008, rather than $0.0009, and executions subject to the
Displayed Match Fee would be charged $0.0002, rather than $0.0003.
\27\ For example, if one or more of Member ABCD's MPIDs
satisfied the obligations of the Depth Tier, all of Member ABCD's
executions that are subject to the Non-Displayed Match Fee would be
charged $0.0008, rather than $0.0009, and executions subject to the
Displayed Match Fee would be charged $0.0002, rather than $0.0003,
up to $20,000.00 in aggregate savings per month.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If a Member qualifies under both the Inside Tier and the Depth
Tier, any earned Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount and Displayed Match
Fee Discount will be aggregated and applied to such Members' non-
displayed executions and displayed executions subject to the Displayed
Match Fee or Non-Displayed Match Fee in securities priced at or above
$1.00, respectively, subject to the applicable Depth Tier aggregate
monthly savings cap described
[[Page 6063]]
above. Therefore, if a Member qualifies under both the Inside Tier and
the Depth Tier, such Member will earn a combined $0.0002 discount
across the Displayed Match Fee Discount and the Non-Displayed Match Fee
Discount, subject to the Depth Tier aggregate monthly savings cap,
after which the balance of such Member's executions will continue to
receive the $0.0001 Displayed Match Fee Discount and the Non-Displayed
Match Fee Discount with no cap on aggregate monthly savings.\28\ The
Exchange notes that executions subject to the Crumbling Quote Remove
Fee \29\ are not eligible for the Displayed Match Fee Discount or the
Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount. The Exchange further notes that the
Displayed Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount are
not applicable to executions subject to the Internalization Fee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ For example, if one or more of Member ABCD's MPIDs
satisfied the obligations of the Inside Tier and the Depth Tier, all
of Member ABCD's executions that are subject to the Non-Displayed
Match Fee would be charged $0.0007, rather than $0.0009, and
executions that are subject to the Displayed Match Fee would be
charged $0.0001, rather than $0.0003, up to $20,000 in aggregate
savings from the Depth Tier Displayed Match Fee Discount, and then
the balance of Member ABCD's executions subject to the Non-Displayed
Match Fee and Displayed Match Fee would be charged $0.0008 (rather
than $0.0009), and $0.0002 (rather than $0.0003), respectively, with
no cap on aggregate monthly savings.
\29\ See Fee Code Q (Crumbling Quote Remove Fee Indicator),
along with the footnote appurtenant thereto in the Investors
Exchange Fee Schedule, available on the Exchange public website,
which together describe the applicable fee for executions that take
liquidity during periods of quote instability as defined in Rule
11.190(g) that exceed the CQRF Threshold, which is equal to is equal
to 5% of the sum of a Member's total monthly executions on IEX if at
least 1,000,000 shares during the calendar month, measured on an
MPID basis. See also Securities and Exchange Act Release No. 81484
(August 25, 2017) 82 FR 41446 (August 31, 2017) (SR-IEX-2017-27).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-displayed match fee Displayed match fee
IEMM tier Quoting requirements discount discount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Inside Tier............. Displayed order resting at $0.0001.................... $0.0001.
either the NBB or the NBO,
or both the NBB and NBO,
for 20% of the time during
Regular Market Hours.
Depth Tier.............. Displayed order resting at $0.0001 (up to $20,000.00 $0.0001 (up to $20,000.00
the greater of 1 MPV or in aggregate savings, per in aggregate savings, per
0.03% away from the NBBO month inclusive of month inclusive of Non-
(or more aggressive) for Displayed Match Fee Displayed Match Fee
75% of the time during Discount savings). Discount savings).
Regular Market Hours.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed Match
Fee Discount was developed after informal discussions with a variety of
IEX Members, including traditional electronic market making firms, as
well as other Members that have expressed interest in serving in a
market maker capacity that are willing and able to commit capital to
support extensive price discovery at and/or near the NBBO. The Exchange
believes that, as a general matter, the practice of making markets
refers to trading strategies that display bids to purchase and offers
to sell a security in relatively equal proportion, with an expectation
of profit by capturing the delta between the two prices (i.e., market
makers try to capture the spread while avoiding the accumulation of a
long or short position). However, the potential profits derived by
market makers from capturing the spread is constrained by, among other
things, the high likelihood of being adversely selected or ``run-over''
in fast-moving markets (i.e., the likelihood of buying (selling) a
security shortly before the price moves down (up)). In order to
incentivize market makers to display quotations despite the potential
for adverse selection, other national securities exchanges offer a
variety of pricing incentives that are centered on rebates.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ As described by Larry Harris of the U.S.C. Marshall School
of Business in a 2013 paper regarding the maker-taker pricing model
and its effects on market quotations, the first system to introduce
the maker-taker scheme was Island ECN in 1997, which encouraged
brokers to post customer limit orders in their systems that
ultimately generated revenues for these brokers when these customer
orders executed, and encouraged proprietary traders to make markets
in their trading systems. Because takers paid the high access fee
when trading with these orders, brokers and proprietary traders
typically routed their taking orders first to traditional-fee
exchanges (and off exchange-dealers) when the same prices were
available at these other trading venues. The standing orders at
maker-taker exchanges thus usually were the last orders to trade at
their prices. Although this consequence was disadvantageous to the
customers, in the absence of regulatory criticism of this obvious
agency problem, the brokers continued to route customer orders to
the ECNs to obtain the liquidity rebates. To remain competitive, all
US equity exchanges ultimately adopted the maker-taker pricing
model. See Larry Harris, ``Maker-Taker Pricing Effects on Market
Quotations'' at 5 (Nov. 14, 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange has several reasons for proposing to offer a discount
on displayed and non-displayed trading, in contrast to a rebate for
displayed trading. First, as noted above, the Exchange has made a
conscious choice not to pay exchange rebates to brokers in exchange for
order flow, and instead has focused on earning order flow from market
participants by designing a market that provides greater execution
quality.
The Exchange has designed the IEMM Program as an alternative
financial incentive for Members to display aggressively priced orders
on the Exchange, avoiding the potential conflicts of interest inherent
in the maker-taker pricing model. The Exchange believes that rebates
paid for displayed liquidity, which are typically retained by the
broker (in the case of agency orders), have the potential to distort
broker order routing decisions at the expense of their investor
clients. A similar conflict would exist if brokers acting as agent
displayed customer order flow on IEX to qualify for designation as an
IEMM in order to reap the benefits of the proposed Displayed Match Fee
Discount and Non-Display Match Fee Discount without necessarily passing
those decreased costs on to their investor clients.\31\ However, this
conflict only exists for market participants that represent customers
as agent. Therefore, the Exchange has designed the IEMM Program to
structurally eliminate this conflict by only considering a Member's
principal orders when determining if
[[Page 6064]]
such Member's order activity satisfied one or more IEMM Tiers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See the SEC's Division of Trading and Markets' October 20,
2015 memorandum to the SEC's Market Structure Advisory Committee at
17-18, which states in support that ``the maker-taker pricing model
presents a potential conflict of interest between brokers and their
customers that results from the way in which fees and rebates are
assessed. Broker-dealers that are members of an exchange pay fees to
and receive rebates from the exchange for each transaction they
execute on it, but broker-dealers typically do not pass back those
fees and rebates to their customers. Accordingly, if a broker-dealer
can earn a rebate for routing its customer's order to a certain
venue--and keep that rebate for itself--the broker-dealer may have
an incentive to route to the venue with the highest rebate, rather
than diligently search out the venue likely to deliver the best
execution of its customer's order. A similar conflict may exist for
taker fees, as broker-dealers may seek to minimize their trading
costs by routing to the execution venue with the lowest fees. Maker-
taker fees, therefore, result in a potential misalignment between
the broker's own interests and its obligation to seek the best
execution for its customer's order.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the Exchange believes paying rebates to liquidity
providers has a measurable impact on execution quality. For example,
IEX's recent white paper (that utilized publicly available quote and
trade data to compare market quality across U.S. stock exchanges)
empirically found that on maker-taker exchanges (which dominate the
U.S. equities trading landscape in market share) resting orders (i.e.,
the maker) on average experience greater adverse selection, less market
stability around executions, significantly longer queues at the inside,
and a lower probability of execution.\32\ Accordingly, the Exchange
believes the proposed IEMM Program offers an alternative financial
incentive that avoids paying rebates for liquidity providing orders,
and instead offers reduced transaction fees by way of the Displayed
Match Fee Discount and the Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount that is
designed to avoid the adverse impact to execution quality that the
Exchange believes flow from the existing maker-taker pricing models,
while still incentivizing Members to make displayed markets on the
Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See A Comparison of Execution Quality across U.S. Stock
Exchanges, Elaine Wah, Stan Feldman, Francis Chung, Allison Bishop,
and Daniel Aisen, Investors Exchange (2017), which studied four
dimensions of market quality--liquidity, execution costs, price
discovery, and market stability--and within each category, examined
the structural mechanics responsible for observed disparities in
execution quality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, the Exchange believes rebates have the circular effect
of perpetuating the modern-day exchange practice of charging ever
increasing prices for low latency connectivity and depth of book market
data that is required for firms to compete for priority at the
NBBO.\33\ Independent research has indicated that queue position (which
is largely a function of relative speed), impacts execution quality.
Specifically, being at the top of the queue has the potential to
increase the chance of capturing the spread, reduces the likelihood of
adverse selection, and reduces the time an order is providing a
directional signal to the market (which can increase the risk of
adverse selection).\34\ Furthermore, being at the top of the queue also
provides more certainty regarding the collection of exchange rebates
for providing liquidity. However, because exchanges that pay rebates to
members to add liquidity have the longest queues,\35\ competing for
queue position on maker-taker exchanges requires members to pay high
fees for low latency connectivity and depth of book market data,
because understanding the relative order of displayed quotes on an
exchanges order book and having the ability to be the first order at a
price level is critical for successfully establishing queue position.
As a result, market makers are forced to pay to compete based on speed,
in addition to competing on price to provide liquidity to the markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ For example, according to a recent report published by
Healthy Markets on U.S. equity market data, a market participant
that wanted to purchase the fastest connections with the most
relevant trading information for Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc. (``Cboe
BZX''), Cboe BYX Exchange, Inc., Cboe EDGA Exchange, Inc., Cboe EDGX
Exchange, Inc., the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq''), Nasdaq
PHLX LLC, Nasdaq BX, Inc., NYSE, NYSE American LLC, and NYSE Arca,
Inc., has seen its costs rise from $72,150 per month on June 1, 2012
to $182,775 per month on June 1, 2017. See US Equity Market Data--
How Conflicts of Interest Overwhelm an Outdated Regulatory Model &
Market Participants, Healthy Markets (November 16, 2017). See also a
comment letter on Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78556 (August
11, 2016) 81 FR 54877 (August 17, 2016) (SR-NYSE-2016-45) from David
L. Cavicke, Chief Legal Officer, on behalf of Wolverine Trading LLC,
Wolverine Execution Services LLC, and Wolverine Trading Technologies
LLC, opposing NYSE's proposal to increase fees for, among other
things, connectivity and data feeds, noting that based on an
analysis of their fee over an 8 year period, NYSE's market data and
connectivity costs have increased by over 700%, for a total of at
least $123,750 per month.
\34\ See KCG Market Insights, The Need For Speed: Its Important,
Even for VWAP Strategies, Phil Mackintosh.
\35\ See A Comparison of Execution Quality across U.S. Stock
Exchanges, Elaine Wah, Stan Feldman, Francis Chung, Allison Bishop,
and Daniel Aisen, Investors Exchange (2017) at 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Secondly, Members that participate as market makers necessarily
interact with the Exchange using displayed orders, but do not interact
with the Exchange using displayed orders exclusively. In fact, many
firms that participate as market makers use non-displayed orders as a
part of their market making strategies to optimize returns on their
displayed market making activities (e.g., a firm making a market in
security XYZ that receives an execution at the NBB may offset that
position by placing a non-displayed Discretionary Peg order to sell on
IEX, which is protected from trading at the midpoint of the NBBO when
IEX perceives the market to be unstable, pursuant to Rule 11.190(g)).
For instance, during the fourth quarter of 2017, just over seventy-
percent (70%) of the volume traded on IEX by Members that are currently
registered market makers on the Exchange was subject to the Non-
Displayed Match Fee.\36\ Accordingly, the Exchange is proposing to
offer both a Displayed Match Fee Discount, as well as a Non-Displayed
Match Fee Discount. The proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount is
designed to provide IEMM's relief from the fees incurred as a result of
their increased displayed order activity. The proposed Non-Displayed
Match Fee Discount is designed to incentivize Members by reducing the
firms largest expense of trading on the Exchange (i.e., non-displayed
executions). Lastly, based on informal discussions with Members that
have expressed interest in the proposed IEMM Program, the Exchange
believes that reducing the overall costs of trading on the Exchange for
Members designated as IEMM's will provide a sufficient financial
incentive to provide meaningful and consistent support to market
quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at and/or near the
NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a significant portion of the day.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ The Exchange notes that because the proposed Non-Displayed
Match Fee Discount is applied evenly across all of a Member's non-
displayed executions that receive the Non-Displayed Match Fee, the
benefits flow congruently across the various trading desks and
clients (as applicable) at the Member firm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange currently does not operate a listing market, but is
preparing to launch a listings business for corporate issuers in 2018.
Upon launch of the listing business, the Exchange expects to face
intense competition from NYSE and Nasdaq, which the Exchange believes
essentially operate as a duopoly in the U.S. listing market. Therefore,
the Exchange has designed the proposed IEMM Program in part to address
the significant competitive challenges it will face in establishing
itself as a competitive listings market. Specifically, requiring IEMMs
to be a registered IEX Market Makers in each security listed on IEX,
and to qualify as an IEMM under one of the tiers described above in all
securities listed on IEX (subject to the limited exception), is
designed to attract issuers to list on the Exchange by providing
enhanced liquidity incentives to market participants for IEX-listed
securities that accrue to the benefit of issuers listed on IEX as well
as market participants generally.
Pursuant to Rule 11.151, IEX registered Market Makers are required
to comply with the two-sided quote and pricing obligations. This
requirement is substantially identical to the requirements applicable
to NYSE and Nasdaq market makers.\37\ Based on informal discussions
with various market participants, including some that act as registered
market makers on other exchanges, the Exchange understands that the
obligation for registered market makers to comply with the two-sided
quote and pricing obligations is perceived to be a systemically
burdensome obligation that presents
[[Page 6065]]
regulatory risk.\38\ Even firms with highly sophisticated trading
technology and robust technology controls face unintended system
outages and disruptions characteristic of complex systems, which may
ultimately result in some ``gap'' in the market maker's required
continuous quotations. In response to informal feedback from potential
market makers, the Exchange recently proposed and the Commission
approved a Market Maker Peg Order designed to simplify market maker
compliance with IEX Rule 11.151.\39\ However, notwithstanding the
availability of the Market Maker Peg Order functionality, a market
maker remains responsible for entering, monitoring, and resubmitting,
as applicable, quotations that meet the requirements of Rule 11.151.
The Exchange believes that incentives for Members to act as Market
Makers generally, as well as to maintain tighter markets than required
by IEX Rule 11.151, would enhance displayed liquidity in IEX-listed
securities. Accordingly, the Exchange has designed the IEMM Program to
address both goals, and believes the proposed IEMM Program will serve
as an incentivize for Members to take on the obligations and attendant
risks of registering as an IEX Market Maker, and to make tighter
markets by providing the proposed alternative fee incentives to IEX
Market Makers that also qualify as an IEMM.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See NYSE Rule 107B(d), and Nasdaq Rule 4600.
\38\ See, e.g., NYSE Regulation v. IMC Financial Markets,
Proceeding No. 2016-07-01311 (May 4, 2017); NYSE Regulation v. Virtu
Financial BD LLC, Proceeding No. 2016-07-01267 (December 20, 2016).
\39\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81482 (August 25,
2017), 82 FR 41452 (August 31, 2017) (SR-IEX-2017-22).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lastly, the Exchange is proposing to make non-substantive changes
to the Exchange's Fee Schedule to replace and re-organize the
asterisked footnotes with numbered footnotes, and make minor changes to
capitalization for defined terms. This change is designed to make the
Exchange's Fee Schedule clearer, and ensure that footnotes are listed
in chronological order.
2. Statutory Basis
IEX believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with the
provisions of Section 6(b) \40\ of the Act in general, and furthers the
objectives of Sections 6(b)(4) \41\ of the Act, in particular, in that
it is designed to provide for the equitable allocation of reasonable
dues, fees and other charges among its Members and other persons using
its facilities. Additionally, IEX believes that the proposed fees are
consistent with the objectives of Section 6(b)(5) \42\ of the Act in
particular in that they are designed to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to remove impediments to a free and open market
and national market system, and in general to protect investors and the
public interest; and are not designed to permit unfair discrimination
between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ 15 U.S.C. 78f.
\41\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
\42\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed IEMM Program takes a narrowly tailored approach,
designed to encourage Market Makers to provide meaningful and
consistent support to market quality and price discovery by extensive
quoting at and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed securities, which
benefits all market participants by deepening the Exchange's liquidity
pool in such securities. IEX believes that to the extent Market Makers
enter more aggressively priced displayed orders on the Exchange in
response to the alternative fee based incentives, there will be
increased liquidity on IEX, thereby contributing to public price
discovery, consistent with the goal of enhancing market quality.
Additionally, the Exchange believes that price discovery would be
enhanced by potentially drawing more natural trading interest to the
public markets, which would deepen liquidity and dampen the impact of
shocks from liquidity demand. Further, to the extent price discovery is
enhanced and more orders are drawn to the public markets, orders
executed on IEX rather than being internalized on broker-operated
platforms or executed on other alternative trading venues will have the
benefit of exchange transparency, regulation, and oversight.
The Exchange believes that the proposed Displayed Match Fee
Discount and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount, which were developed
after extensive informal discussions with various Members, are
reasonable because they are designed to incentivize the entry of
aggressively priced displayed orders by reducing the firms' largest
expense of trading on the Exchange (i.e., non-displayed
executions),\43\ as well as accounting for the increased costs for
displayed execution associated a Members increased displayed order
activity. As noted in the Purpose section, based on informal
discussions with Members that have expressed interest in the proposed
IEMM Program, the Exchange believes that reducing the overall cost of
trading on the Exchange for Members designated as IEMM's will provide a
sufficient financial incentive to provide meaningful and consistent
support to market quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a significant portion
of the day.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ As discussed in the Purpose Section above, Members that
participate as market makers necessarily interact with the Exchange
using display orders, but do not interact with the Exchange using
displayed orders exclusively. For instance, during the third quarter
of 2017, just over seventy-percent (70%) of the volume traded on IEX
by Members that are currently registered market makers on the
Exchange was subject to the Non-Displayed Match Fee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that applying a benefit to all of an IEMM's
executions at or above $1.00 that are subject to the Displayed Match
Fee and Non-Displayed Match Fee is reasonable, and consistent with an
equitable allocation of fees, because, as noted above in the Purpose
section, the proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed
Match Fee Discount are applied evenly across all of a Member's
displayed and non-displayed executions above $1.00 that receive the
Displayed Match Fee and Non-Displayed Match Fee, thus the benefits flow
congruently across the various trading desks and clients (as
applicable) at the Member firm. Moreover, the Exchange believes that
decisions on whether to act as a Market Maker on IEX are generally made
at the firm level, and therefore providing a financial incentive to all
of a Members' displayed and non-displayed trading on IEX is designed to
incentivize Members to act as Market Makers on IEX. Furthermore, the
Exchange believes that applying a benefit to all of an IEMM's
executions that are subject to the Displayed Match Fee and Non-
Displayed Match Fee is reasonable in that it is designed in part to
compete with the per share rebates that other exchanges currently pay
for adding liquidity, which the Exchange believes have a significant
impact on order routing decisions, without directly paying Members for
order flow. Instead, the Exchange has severed the direct one-to-one
relationship between the financial incentive and a Members displayed
liquidity providing executions, by instead offering a per-share
reduction in the cost of a Members displayed and non-displayed
executions on the Exchange in return for meaningful and consistent
support to market quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed securities. What is more, the
Exchange believes that the applying a benefit to all of an IEMM's
executions at or above $1.00 that are subject to the Displayed Match
Fee and Non-Displayed Match Fee is reasonable in that it is also
designed in part to
[[Page 6066]]
address the significant competitive challenges the Exchange will face
in launching a listings business by providing a sufficient benefit to
Members that will act as a market maker in IEX-listed securities.
Furthermore, the Exchange believes that only a considering a
Member's principal orders when determining if such Member's order
activity satisfied one or more IEMM Tiers is reasonable and not
unfairly discriminatory, because it is designed to avoid the potential
conflicts of interest inherent in the maker-taker pricing model. As
discussed in the Purpose section, the Exchange believes that rebates
paid for displayed liquidity, which are typically retained by the
broker (in the case of agency orders), have the potential to distort
broker order routing decisions at the expense of their investor
clients. A similar conflict would exist if brokers acting as agent
displayed customer order flow on IEX to qualify for designation as an
IEMM in order to reap the benefits of the proposed Non-Display Match
Fee Discount and Display Match Fee Discount without necessarily passing
those decreased costs on to their investor clients.\44\ However, this
potential conflict only exists for market participants that represent
customers as agent. Therefore, the Exchange believes that only a
considering a Member's principal orders when determining if such
Member's order activity satisfied one or more IEMM Tiers is reasonable
and not unfairly discriminatory.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See the SEC's Division of Trading and Markets' October 20,
2015 memorandum to the SEC's Market Structure Advisory Committee at
17-18, which states in support that ``the maker-taker pricing model
presents a potential conflict of interest between brokers and their
customers that results from the way in which fees and rebates are
assessed. Broker-dealers that are members of an exchange pay fees to
and receive rebates from the exchange for each transaction they
execute on it, but broker-dealers typically do not pass back those
fees and rebates to their customers. Accordingly, if a broker-dealer
can earn a rebate for routing its customer's order to a certain
venue--and keep that rebate for itself--the broker-dealer may have
an incentive to route to the venue with the highest rebate, rather
than diligently search out the venue likely to deliver the best
execution of its customer's order. A similar conflict may exist for
taker fees, as broker-dealers may seek to minimize their trading
costs by routing to the execution venue with the lowest fees. Maker-
taker fees, therefore, result in a potential misalignment between
the broker's own interests and its obligation to seek the best
execution for its customer's order.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, while some Members may face unique financial and
operational challenges that could pose practical limitations on their
trading strategies, the Exchange notes that all Members are eligible to
enter displayed orders in a principal capacity on the Exchange to the
extent they are willing and able to commit capital to support price
discovery at and/or near the NBBO. Accordingly, the Exchange believes
it is reasonable and not unfairly discriminatory to only consider a
Member's principal orders when determining if such Member's order
activity satisfied one or more IEMM Tier.
Furthermore, the Exchange believes the exception from the
requirement to be registered as a Market Maker in all IEX-listed
securities as set forth in proposed Supplemental Material .01 is
reasonable in that it provides Members flexibility to address any legal
or regulatory requirements, or temporary operational restrictions
associated with acting as a Market Maker in a security that is listed
on IEX, without eliminating the financial incentives that such Member
may otherwise qualify for under the IEMM Program as a result of their
quoting activity in all other listed securities. The Exchange believes
it is fair and equitable and not unfairly discriminatory to provide the
limited exception to qualifying Market Makers because the exception
provides narrowly tailored relief. IEX and other national securities
exchange's rules already provide excused withdrawal relief from
compliance with market maker quoting obligations based on legal or
regulatory requirements, in recognition that there are circumstances in
which it would be violative of legal and regulatory requirements for a
firm to trade in a particular security.\45\ As discussed above, these
requirements could include, for example, participation in an offering
of a security, or the possession of material nonpublic information.
Similarly, IEX and other national securities exchange's rule provide
excused withdrawal relief from compliance with market maker quoting
obligations based on systemic equipment problems, in recognition of the
technical complexities inherent in automated market making. The
Exchange believes that the same considerations are applicable to
participation in the IEMM Program, and it would be inappropriate to
preclude a Market Maker from eligibility for the IEMM incentives based
on bona fide legal or regulatory requirements or temporary operational
restrictions. Thus, the Exchange does not believe that the limited
exception raises any new or novel issues. Further, the exception will
be granted to all Market Makers on a fair and equitable basis, if the
Market Maker provides documentation satisfactory to IEX Regulation that
substantiates the reasons for the requested exception.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See IEX Rule 11.152. See also NYSE Rule 107B(d), and Nasdaq
Rule 4600.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that proposed Supplemental Material .02 is
reasonable in that it is designed to provide Members clarity regarding
their eligibility for designation as an IEMM when their order activity
over the course of a month satisfies the requirements of one of the
applicable IEMM Tiers, but the Member is not a registered Market Maker
in all securities listed on IEX as of the first trading day of the
calendar month. Furthermore, Exchange believes allowing Members to
qualify for designation as an IEMM under these circumstances is
appropriate and reasonable, because it avoids disparate treatment of
Members that were not registered Market Makers as of the start of a
calendar month, but otherwise provided meaningful and consistent
support to market quality and price discovery by extensive quoting at
and/or near the NBBO in IEX-listed securities for a significant portion
of the day.
Moreover, the Exchange believes that proposed Supplemental Material
.03 is reasonable in that it is designed to provide Members additional
clarity regarding the Exchange's calculation for determining whether
the order activity satisfied the applicable NBBO Quoting Percentage and
Depth Quoting Percentage by accounting for scenarios where continuous
trading is halted or paused pursuant to Rule 11.280, and therefore the
IEMM would be unable to enter orders to meet satisfy [sic] the
applicable requirements. The Exchange believes that not accounting for
scenarios where continuous trading is halted or paused would be
unreasonable, and inconsistent with the quoting requirements set forth
in the proposed IEMM Tiers, because it would make the effective IEMM
Tier quoting requirements variable, requiring additional order activity
to satisfy the applicable quoting requirements for securities that are
subject to a trading halt or pause. Furthermore, the Exchange notes
that accounting for scenarios where continuous trading is halted or
paused is also consistent with Rule 11.151(a)(2) regarding the
obligations of registered Market Makers, which states in relevant part
that Market Makers quoting obligations are suspended during a trading
halt or pause.
The Exchange believes that the proposed Displayed Match Fee
Discount and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount for Members that qualify
for designation as an IEMM is reasonable, in that IEX will continue to
charge relatively low fees for all executed shares, and is in the
[[Page 6067]]
range, or lower than, the fees many other exchanges charge for removing
(i.e., taking) liquidity on maker-taker venues,\46\ and consistent with
Rule 610(c) of Regulation NMS.\47\ Furthermore, the Exchange believes
that the proposed IEMM Program is consistent with the Act's requirement
that the Exchange provide for an equitable allocation of fees, because
Members that qualify for designation as an IEMM will provide benefits
to all market participants by promoting price discovery and increasing
the depth of liquidity available at and/or near the inside market. Such
Members also benefit IEX by enhancing its competitiveness as a market
center that attracts actionable orders. Accordingly, IEX believes that
it is consistent with an equitable allocation of fees to offer the
proposed Displayed Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed Match Fee
Discount on a Member's displayed and non-displayed executions at or
above $1.00 in recognition of these benefits to the Exchange and its
Members.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ For example, the NYSE trading fee schedule on its public
website reflects fees to ``take'' liquidity ranging from $0.0024-
$0.00275 depending on the type of market participant, order, and
execution. The Nasdaq trading fee schedule on its public website
reflects fees to ``remove'' liquidity ranging from $0.0030 per share
for shares executed at or above $1.00 or 0.30% of total dollar
volume for shares executed below $1.00. Cboe BZX trading fee
schedule on its public website reflects fees for ``removing''
liquidity ranging from $0.0030 for shares executed at or above $1.00
or 0.30% of total dollar volume for shares executed below $1.00,
subject to certain limited exceptions for orders trading in the
opening, IPO or halt auctions in Cboe BZX-listed securities.
\47\ 17 CFR 242.610(c)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, the Exchange believes that not placing a cap on the
aggregate monthly savings from the Displayed Match Fee Discount and
Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount for Inside Tier IEMMs, and imposing
the proposed cap on the aggregate monthly savings from the Displayed
Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount for the Depth
Tier IEMMs is reasonable and consistent with an equitable allocation of
fees, because such cap is designed to maintain congruity between the
benefits provided by IEMMs to the Exchange and the broader market, and
the financial incentives provided by the Exchange in return. Market
Makers that qualify under the Inside Tier will provide enhanced price
discovery and liquidity at the NBBO. Comparatively, while each proposed
tier provides substantial benefits to the market, Market Makers that
meet only the Depth Tier would provide depth of liquidity at prices
near the NBBO, without necessarily providing enhanced price discovery
and liquidity at the NBBO. Additionally, the risk associated with a
potential adverse execution for a Depth Tier IEMM is not as material as
an Inside Tier IEMM. Thus, the Exchange believes the proposed IEMM
Tiers and their corresponding fee incentives and caps are commensurate
with the level of liquidity that the Member provides to the Exchange
and its Members, and the risk associated with providing such liquidity,
and are consistent with the Act. The Exchange notes that all Members
are free to abstain from or discontinue participation in the proposed
IEMM Program if the proposed fee reductions do not provide a sufficient
incentive considering such Member's trading activity. Accordingly, the
Exchange believes the proposed IEMM Tiers and their corresponding fee
incentives and caps are reasonable and consistent with an equitable
allocation of fees, and not unreasonably discriminatory.
The Exchange further believes it is appropriate not to consider
executions subject to the Crumbling Quote Remove Fee as eligible for
the Displayed Match Fee Discount or Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount. A
Member's executions that are subject to the Crumbling Quote Remove Fee
are necessarily a part of a trading strategy that the Exchange believes
evidences a form of predatory latency arbitrage that leverages low
latency proprietary market data feeds and connectivity along with
predictive models to chase short-term price momentum and successfully
target resting orders at unstable prices. Furthermore, if the Exchange
were to apply the Displayed Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed Match
Fee Discount to executions that are subject to the Crumbling Quote
Remove Fee, it would frustrate its fundamental purpose of
disincentivizing predatory trading strategies to further incentivize
additional resting liquidity, including displayed liquidity, on IEX.
Thus, a Member that is able to simultaneously meet an IEMM Tier while
also executing orders that are subject to the Crumbling Quote Remove
Fee, should not be afforded the benefit of the Displayed Match Fee
Discount or Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount on such executions.
The Exchange further believes it is appropriate not to consider
executions subject to the Internalization Fee as eligible for the
Displayed Match Fee Discount or Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount. A
Member's executions that are subject to the Internalization Fee are
provided at no cost to the Member. If the Exchange were to apply the
Displayed Match Fee Discount and Non-Displayed Match Fee Discount to
executions that are subject to the Internalization Fee, it would
provide a net credit to the Member (i.e., pay a rebate). As described
above, the Exchange has made a conscious choice to not pay rebates to
brokers in exchange for order flow, and instead has focused on earning
order flow from market participants by designing a market that provides
greater execution quality.\48\ Thus, the Exchange proposes to not
further discount an execution which is already provided free of charge.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ See supra note 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange notes that other market centers offer a diverse range
of fee based incentives to their members for trading activity that they
believe improves market quality.\49\ Similarly, the Exchange believes
the proposed IEMM Program is designed to further improve market quality
on the Exchange and across the broader market. While the Exchange
believes the proposed IEMM Program is distinguishable from the fee
based incentives offered by other market centers in so far as the
Exchange is not proposing to offer a rebate, the underlying goals and
policy considerations are substantially similar. Thus, the Exchange
believes the proposed IEMM Program does not pose any new or novel
concepts not already considered by the Commission in connection with
the current fee based market quality incentive programs offered by
other market centers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ See, e.g., Nasdaq Rule 7014 (Market Quality Incentive
Programs), which includes a variety of programs that offer fee based
incentives to Nasdaq members that meet certain trading requirements.
For example, the Nasdaq Qualified Market Maker (``QMM'') Program
allows Nasdaq members to qualify as a QMM if they are registered
Nasdaq market makers, quote at the NBBO for a specified period of
time in a specified number of securities, and are not assessed any
``Excess Order Fee'' under Nasdaq Rule 7018. In order to incentivize
members to qualify as QMM's, Nasdaq offers a series of rebates per
share executed, which vary depending on the QMM's percentage of
consolidated volume in the applicable security and which market
center the security is listed on. Moreover, Nasdaq offers qualified
QMM's a reduced fee for removing liquidity on Nasdaq, which varies
depending on what market the security is listed on. See Nasdaq Rule
7014(d)-(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange further believes that the IEMM Program is reasonable
and consistent with an equitable allocation of fees, and not unfairly
discriminatory, because the IEMM Program is available to all market
participants that qualify for designation as an IEMM, regardless of the
size of the firm or its trading volumes. The Exchange notes that all
Members that satisfy the applicable requirements are eligible for
designation as an IEMM on a fair and equal basis. Moreover, the
Exchange believes that the proposed IEMM Tiers that Members may qualify
under for designation as an
[[Page 6068]]
IEMM are consistent with an equitable allocation of fees, because, as
discussed in the purpose section above, the proposed fee reductions and
the corresponding caps for Depth Tier IEMM's are commensurate with the
level of liquidity that the Member provides to the Exchange and its
Members.
In conclusion, for the reasons discussed above, the Exchange
believes that the proposed IEMM Program is consistent with Sections
6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5) of the Act in that it does not permit unfair
discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers, and is
designed 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.
Lastly, the Exchange believes that the proposed non-substantive
changes to the Exchange's Fee Schedule to replace and re-organize the
asterisked footnotes with numbered footnotes, and make minor changes to
capitalization for defined terms is reasonable, and consistent with the
protection of investors and the public interest, in that it is designed
to make the Exchange's Fee Schedule clearer, and ensure that footnotes
are listed in chronological order.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
IEX does not believe that the proposed rule change will result in
any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The Exchange does not believe
that the proposed rule change will impose any burden on intermarket
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. To the contrary, the Exchange believes that the
proposed IEMM Program and corresponding fee reductions will increase
competition and draw additional volume to the Exchange. Furthermore, in
order to compete with incumbent maker-taker exchanges for order flow
without directly paying Members for such orders with rebates, the
Exchange is proposing to offer an alternative fee-based incentive to
Members that engage in trading activity that enhances market quality
and price discovery on the Exchange. Importantly, the Exchange operates
in a highly competitive market in which market participants can readily
favor competing venues if fee schedules at other venues are viewed as
more favorable. Consequently, the Exchange believes that the degree to
which IEX fees could impose any burden on competition is extremely
limited, and does not believe that such fees would burden competition
of Members or competing venues in a manner that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
Moreover, as noted above, upon launch of the listing business for
corporate issuers in 2018, the Exchange expects to face intense
competition from NYSE and Nasdaq, which the Exchange believes
essentially operate as a duopoly in the U.S. listing market. Therefore,
the Exchange has designed the proposed IEMM Program in part to address
the significant competitive challenges it will face in establishing
itself as a competitive listings market. Specifically, requiring IEMMs
to be a registered IEX Market Maker in each security listed on IEX, and
to qualify as an IEMM under one of the tiers described above in all
securities listed on IEX, is designed to enhance execution quality in
such securities, which the Exchange believes will also encourage
issuers to choose to list on IEX. Thus, the Exchange does not believe
that the proposed rule change will impose any burden on intermarket
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. To the contrary, the proposed rule change may
serve as a catalyst for increasing intermarket competition in the
highly-concentrated U.S. listings market, which the Exchange believes
currently operates as a duopoly dominated by NYSE and Nasdaq.
Furthermore, the Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule
change will impose any burden on intramarket competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act
because while some Members may face unique financial and operational
challenges that could pose practical limitations on their trading
strategies, the proposed fee incentives are available to all Members
that choose to register as a market maker and adjust their trading
activity to qualify for designation as an IEMM. Further, as noted
above, the proposed fee reductions are designed to encourage Members to
add liquidity at prices that benefit all IEX Members, and thus will not
impose any burden on intramarket competition that is not appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
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
The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) \50\ of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. If the Commission
takes such action, the Commission shall institute proceedings under
Section 19(b)(2)(B) \51\ of the Act to determine whether the proposed
rule change should be approved or disapproved.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-IEX-2018-02 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-IEX-2018-02. 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 website (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
[[Page 6069]]
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 website 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. Persons submitting comments are cautioned that we do
not redact or edit personal identifying information from comment
submissions. You should submit only information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number SR-IEX-
2018-02, and should be submitted on or before March 5, 2018.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-02720 Filed 2-9-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P