Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC; Notice of Filing of Amendment No. 1 and Order Granting Accelerated Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1, To Adopt New Equity Trading Rules To Trade Securities Pursuant to Unlisted Trading Privileges, Including Orders and Modifiers, Order Ranking and Display, and Order Execution and Routing on Pillar, the Exchange's New Trading Technology Platform, 13553-13574 [2018-06339]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 61 / Thursday, March 29, 2018 / Notices
to 90 days as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or as to which the
self-regulatory organization consents,
the Commission shall approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule change should be
approved or disapproved. The 45th day
after publication of the notice for this
proposed rule change is March 25, 2018.
The Commission is extending this 45day time period.
The Commission finds that it is
appropriate to designate a longer period
within which to take action on the
proposed rule change so that the
Commission has sufficient time to
consider the proposed rule change.
Accordingly, the Commission, pursuant
to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,5
designates May 9, 2018, as the date by
which the Commission should approve
or disapprove or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change (File Number SR–
CBOE–2018–008).
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.6
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–06296 Filed 3–28–18; 8:45 am]
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–82945; File No. SR–NYSE–
2017–36]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New
York Stock Exchange LLC; Notice of
Filing of Amendment No. 1 and Order
Granting Accelerated Approval of a
Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1, To Adopt New
Equity Trading Rules To Trade
Securities Pursuant to Unlisted
Trading Privileges, Including Orders
and Modifiers, Order Ranking and
Display, and Order Execution and
Routing on Pillar, the Exchange’s New
Trading Technology Platform
March 26, 2018.
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I. Introduction
On July 28, 2017, New York Stock
Exchange LLC (‘‘NYSE’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’)
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’), pursuant
to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
6 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(31).
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1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 NYSE Rules define ‘‘UTP Security’’ as a security
that is listed on a national securities exchange other
than the Exchange and that trades on the Exchange
pursuant to unlisted trading privileges. See NYSE
Rule 1.1(ii).
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81310
(Aug. 3, 2017), 82 FR 37257 (Aug. 9, 2017).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81641
(Sept. 18, 2017), 82 FR 44483 (Sept. 22, 2017).
6 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82028
(Nov. 7, 2017), 82 FR 52757 (Nov. 14, 2017) (‘‘Order
Instituting Proceedings’’).
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82613
(Feb. 1, 2018), 83 FR 5499 (Feb. 7, 2018).
9 See Letter from Joanne Moffic-Silver, Executive
Vice President, General Counsel, and Corporate
Secretary, Cboe Global Markets, Inc., to Brent J.
Fields, Secretary, Commission (Feb. 1, 2018) (‘‘Cboe
Letter’’).
10 In Amendment No. 1, among other changes, the
Exchange proposes to: (i) Respond to the
Commission’s concerns in the Order Instituting
Proceedings relating to offering a separate parity
allocation for floor brokers by (a) setting forth
additional requirements for floor broker orders to be
eligible for a separate parity allocation, (b)
proposing to permit floor brokers to engage in floorbased point-of-sale trading and crossing
transactions in UTP Securities, and (c) providing
additional justification for providing floor brokers
with parity; (ii) amend the definition of Aggressing
Order to include that a resting order may become
an Aggressing Order if its working price change, the
best protected bid or offer (‘‘PBBO’’) or the national
best bid or offer (‘‘NBBO’’) is updated, there are
changes to other orders on the Exchange Book, or
when processing inbound messages; (iii) amend the
rules relating to the Mid-Point Liquidity (‘‘MPL’’)
Order and the Minimum Trade Size (‘‘MTS’’)
2 17
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
5 Id.
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4 thereunder,2 a proposed rule
change to adopt new equity trading
rules to allow the Exchange to trade
securities pursuant to unlisted trading
privileges (‘‘UTP Securities’’) 3 on Pillar,
the Exchange’s new trading technology
platform. The proposed rule change was
published for comment in the Federal
Register on August 9, 2017.4 On
September 18, 2017, the Commission
designated a longer period within which
to approve the proposed rule change,
disapprove the proposed rule change, or
institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.5 On November
7, 2017, the Commission instituted
proceedings under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of
the Act 6 to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule change.7 On February 1, 2018, the
Commission designated a longer period
for Commission action on the
proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule change.8 The Commission received
one comment letter on the proposal.9
On February 23, 2018, the Exchange
filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed
rule change, which replaces and
supersedes the proposed rule change in
its entirety.10 The Commission is
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13553
publishing notice of the filing of
Amendment No. 1 to interested persons,
and is approving the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No.
1, on an accelerated basis.
II. Exchange’s Description of the
Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1
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 those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item V below.
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
On January 29, 2015, the Exchange
announced the implementation of Pillar,
which is an integrated trading
technology platform designed to use a
single specification for connecting to the
equities and options markets operated
by the Exchange and its affiliates, NYSE
Arca, Inc. (‘‘NYSE Arca’’) and NYSE
American LLC (‘‘NYSE American’’).11
NYSE Arca’s cash equities market was
the first trading system to migrate to
Pillar.12 NYSE American’s cash equities
Modifier to reflect those of NYSE Arca and NYSE
American and proposes additional rules setting
forth how orders with an MTS Modifier would
trade in a parity allocation model; (iv) change the
list of rules that are not applicable to Pillar; (v)
amend proposed NYSE Rules 7.37 and 7.46 to refer
to an order with an MTS as an order with an ‘‘MTS
Modifier;’’ (vi) change cross-references to NYSE
Arca’s rules to reflect the merger of NYSE Arca and
NYSE Arca Equities, and (vii) reflect the renaming
of NYSE MKT to NYSE American. Amendment No.
1 is available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/srnyse-2017-36/nyse201736-3137940-161948.pdf).
11 See Trader Update dated January 29, 2015,
available here: www.nyse.com/pillar.
12 In connection with the NYSE Arca
implementation of Pillar, NYSE Arca filed four rule
proposals relating to Pillar. See Securities Exchange
Act Release Nos. 74951 (May 13, 2015), 80 FR
28721 (May 19, 2015) (Notice) and 75494 (July 20,
2015), 80 FR 44170 (July 24, 2015) (SR–NYSEArca–
2015–38) (Approval Order of NYSE Arca Pillar I
Filing, adopting rules for Trading Sessions, Order
Ranking and Display, and Order Execution);
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 75497 (July
21, 2015), 80 FR 45022 (July 28, 2015) (Notice) and
76267 (October 26, 2015), 80 FR 66951 (October 30,
2015) (SR–NYSEArca–2015–56) (Approval Order of
NYSE Arca Pillar II Filing, adopting rules for Orders
and Modifiers and the Retail Liquidity Program);
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 75467 (July
16, 2015), 80 FR 43515 (July 22, 2015) (Notice) and
76198 (October 20, 2015), 80 FR 65274 (October 26,
2015) (SR–NYSEArca–2015–58) (Approval Order of
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market transitioned to Pillar on July 24,
2017.13
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Overview
The NYSE serves a unique role in the
U.S. market as the only cash equities
exchange that still has an active Trading
Floor.14 Member organizations that
operate a Floor broker business play a
vital role in that model, through
participation in auctions and point-ofsale trading with other members on the
Floor. Under Exchange rules, member
organizations that operate a Floor broker
business are eligible for parity
allocations for liquidity-providing
orders that are entered on the Floor.15
Because Floor brokers operate an
agency-only business, such parity
NYSE Arca Pillar III Filing, adopting rules for
Trading Halts, Short Sales, Limit Up-Limit Down,
and Odd Lots and Mixed Lots); and Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 76085 (October 6, 2015),
80 FR 61513 (October 13, 2015) (Notice) and 76869
(January 11, 2016), 81 FR 2276 (January 15, 2016)
(Approval Order of NYSE Arca Pillar IV Filing,
adopting rules for Auctions). NYSE Arca Equities,
Inc., which was a wholly-owned corporation of
NYSE Arca, has been merged with and into NYSE
Arca and as a result, certain former NYSE Arca
Equities rules are now the rules of NYSE Arca using
the same rule number but with an additional suffix
of ‘‘-E’’ added to each rule. See Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 81419 (August 17, 2017), 82 FR
40044 (August 23, 2017) (SR–NYSEArca–2017–40)
(Approval Order).
13 In connection with the NYSE American
implementation of Pillar, NYSE American filed
several rule changes. See Securities Exchange Act
Release Nos. 79242 (November 4, 2016), 81 FR
79081 (November 10, 2016) (SR–NYSEMKT–2016–
97) (Notice and Filing of Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change of framework rules); 81038
(June 28, 2017), 82 FR 31118 (July 5, 2017) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2016–103) (Approval Order) (the ‘‘ETP
Listing Rules Filing’’); 80590 (May 4, 2017), 82 FR
21843 (May 10, 2017) (Approval Order) (NYSE
MKT rules governing automated trading); 80577
(May 2, 2017), 82 FR 21446 (May 8, 2017) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2017–04) (Approval Order) (NYSE MKT
rules governing market makers); 80700 (May 16,
2017), 82 FR 23381 (May 22, 2017) (SR–NYSEMKT–
2017–05) (Approval Order) (NYSE MKT rules
governing delay mechanism). NYSE American was
previously known as NYSE MKT LLC. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 80748 (May
23, 2017), 82 FR 24764, 24765 (SR–NYSEMKT–
2017–20) (Notice of filing and immediate
effectiveness of proposed rule change to change the
name of NYSE MKT to NYSE American).
14 The term ‘‘Floor’’ means the trading Floor of
the Exchange and the premises immediately
adjacent thereto, such as the various entrances and
lobbies of the 11 Wall Street, 18 New Street, 8
Broad Street, 12 Broad Street and 18 Broad Street
Buildings, and also means the telephone facilities
available in these locations. See Rule 6. The term
‘‘Trading Floor’’ means the restricted-access
physical areas designated by the Exchange for the
trading of securities, commonly known as the
‘‘Main Room’’ and the ‘‘Buttonwood Room,’’ but
does not include (i) the areas in the ‘‘Buttonwood
Room’’ designated by the Exchange where NYSE
American-listed options are traded, which, for the
purposes of the Exchange’s Rules, shall be referred
to as the ‘‘NYSE American Options Trading Floor’’
or (ii) the physical area within fully enclosed
telephone booths located in 18 Broad Street at the
Southeast wall of the Trading Floor. See Rule 6A.
15 See NYSE Rules 70 and 72.
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allocations always accrue to their
customers. All other national securities
exchanges use a price-time allocation
methodology. On an exchange with
price-time allocation, the order resting
on the book that arrived first will be
executed in full before other orders at
that same price are executed. In this
way, a price-time allocation creates
incentives for market participants to
invest in technology and use the fastest
telecommunication lines. While the
Exchange does not contend there is
anything wrong with price-time
allocation, it believes that a parity
allocation model serves as a choice to
investors that are not driven by speed
and that value the service an agency
Floor broker can provide in managing
order flow. The Exchange currently
offers this choice for trading in its listed
securities and is proposing to offer
investors that same choice in other NMS
securities.
Currently, the Exchange only trades
securities listed on the Exchange. With
Pillar, the Exchange proposes to expand
its offering and introduce trading of
UTP Securities.16 Because trading in
UTP Securities on the Exchange is
designed to complement and be an
extension of the current trading services
it offers, customer orders in both
Exchange-listed securities and UTP
Securities entered by Floor brokers
while on the Floor would have
consistent allocation behavior.
Accordingly, the Exchange proposes
that trading in UTP Securities would be
subject to a parity allocation model that
is similar to the existing allocation
model for Exchange-listed securities,
with modifications described below.
Unlike the trading of listed securities
on the Exchange, the Exchange would
not conduct any auctions in UTP
Securities.17 Even though DMMs would
not be assigned to UTP Securities, the
Exchange proposes to offer point-of-sale
trading of UTP Securities for Floor
brokers on the Trading Floor for
crossing transactions. Accordingly,
member organizations that operate Floor
broker operations would be able to
16 The term ‘‘UTP Security’’ means a security that
is listed on a national securities exchange other
than the Exchange and that trades on the Exchange
pursuant to unlisted trading privileges. See Rule
1.1(ii). The Exchange has authority to extend
unlisted trading privileges to any security that is an
NMS Stock that is listed on another national
securities exchange or with respect to which
unlisted trading privileges may otherwise be
extended in accordance with Section 12(f) of the
Act. See Rule 5.1(a)(1).
17 The Exchange will continue to trade NYSElisted securities on its current trading platform
without any changes. The Exchange will transition
trading in NYSE-listed securities to Pillar at a
separate date, which will be the subject of separate
proposed rule changes.
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represent their customers’ orders in UTP
Securities under both current rules
relating to manual transactions on the
Trading Floor and proposed rules
relating to trading on the Pillar trading
platform. As with listed securities,
member organizations approved as
Supplemental Liquidity Providers
would be eligible to be assigned UTP
Securities.18
Member organizations trading UTP
Securities would continue to be
required to comply with Section 11(a)(1)
of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78k(a)(1), and any
applicable exceptions thereto as are
currently applicable to trading on the
Exchange. As described below, trading
by Floor brokers on the Trading Floor at
the point of sale for UTP Securities, also
referred to as ‘‘manual trading’’ or
‘‘manual transactions,’’ would continue
to be subject to current rules relating to
such trading. In addition, all trading by
Floor brokers in UTP Securities
(whether manual or electronic
transactions) on the Exchange would
continue to be subject to rules that are
unique to Floor brokers, including Rules
95 (Discretionary Transactions), 122
(Orders with More than One Broker),
123 (Record of Orders), and paragraphs
(d)–(j) of Rule 134 and related
Supplementary Material (requirement
for Floor brokers to maintain an error
account).
With the exception of specified pointof-sale trading for Floor brokers, trading
in UTP Securities would be subject to
the Pillar Platform Rules, as set forth in
Rules 1P–13P.19 With this proposed rule
change, the Exchange proposes changes
to Rule 7P Equities Trading that would
govern such trading in UTP Securities.
The proposed rules are based in part on
the rules of NYSE Arca and NYSE
American, with the following
substantive differences:
• Consistent with the Exchange’s
current allocation model, trading in
UTP Securities on the Exchange would
be a parity allocation model with a
setter priority allocation for the
participant that sets the BBO.20
• The Exchange would not offer a
Retail Liquidity Program and related
order types (Retail Orders and Retail
Price Improvement Orders) for UTP
Securities.
18 See Rule 107B, which the Exchange is
proposing to amend, see infra.
19 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
76803 (December 30, 2015), 81 FR 536 (January 6,
2016) (SR–NYSE–2015–67) (Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change)
(‘‘Framework Filing’’); and 80214 (March 10, 2017),
82 FR 14050 (March 16, 2017) (SR–NYSE–2016–44)
(Approval Order) (‘‘ETP Listing Rules Filing’’). See
also SR–NYSE–2017–35.
20 The term ‘‘BBO’’ means the best bid or offer on
the Exchange. See Rule 1.1(h).
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• The Exchange would not conduct
auctions in UTP Securities.
• The Exchange would offer two
trading sessions, with the Early Trading
Session beginning at 7:00 a.m. Eastern
Time.
• The Exchange is not proposing to
offer the full suite of order instructions
and modifiers that are available on
NYSE Arca and NYSE American.
Subject to rule approvals, the
Exchange will announce the
implementation of trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading system
by Trader Update, which the Exchange
anticipates will be in the second quarter
of 2018.
Applicability of Current Rules on
Trading UTP Securities on Pillar
Once trading in UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform begins, specified
current Exchange trading rules would
not be applicable for trading UTP
Securities. As described in more detail
below, for each current rule that would
not be applicable for trading on the
Pillar trading platform, the Exchange
proposes to state in a preamble to such
rule that ‘‘this rule is not applicable to
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar
trading platform.’’ Current Exchange
rules governing equities trading that do
not have this preamble will govern
Exchange operations on Pillar.21
The Exchange proposes that current
rules governing Floor-based crossing
transactions would be applicable to
trading in UTP Securities. As with
crossing transactions for Exchangelisted securities, any such cross
transactions must meet the requirements
of current Rule 76. However, unlike
trading in Exchange-listed securities,
because UTP Securities would not be
assigned to a trading post with a DMM,
the trading crowd for such trading, i.e.,
the point of sale, would be a physical
location on the Trading Floor
designated by the Exchange and staffed
by an Exchange employee.
Because the Exchange proposes to
provide for Floor crossing transactions
in UTP Securities, Rules 74, 75, and 76,
which relate to crossing transactions on
the Floor and ancillary Floor-based
requirements, would be applicable to
trading UTP Securities. At this time, the
Exchange would not make available for
UTP Securities the cross function
described in Supplementary Material
.10 to Rule 76. Accordingly, the
Exchange proposes to add a preamble to
21 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81225
(July 27, 2017), 82 FR 36033 (August 2, 2017) (SR–
NYSE–2017–35) (Notice of filing to amend certain
Exchange rules to add a preamble that such rules
would not be applicable to trading UTP Securities
on the Pillar trading platform).
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Rule 76 that would provide that
Supplementary Material .10 to that Rule
would not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
The Exchange also proposes to amend
the existing preambles to Rules 128A,
128B, 130, 131, 132, and 135 22 to reflect
that crossing transactions pursuant to
Rule 76 would be subject to existing
Exchange rules relating to publication of
Floor-based transactions, corrections to
the Tape, and clearing. The amended
preambles to these rules would provide
that ‘‘except for manual transactions
pursuant to Rule 76,’’ such rules would
not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
Finally, the Exchange proposes to
amend the preamble to Rule 134, which
currently provides that such rule is not
applicable to trading UTP Securities on
the Pillar trading platform. Rule 134(a)–
(c) relates to clearing of Floor-based
transactions, and would be applicable to
any manual transactions pursuant to
Rule 76 in UTP Securities. Rule 134(d)–
(j) separately requires a Floor broker to
maintain an error account. Because
Floor brokers would continue to be
subject to Section 11(a)(1) of the Act for
all trading in UTP Securities, the
Exchange proposes that current Rules
134(d)–(j) would be applicable to all
Floor broker trading of UTP Securities
on the Exchange. To effect these two
changes, the Exchange proposes that the
preamble to Rule 134 would be
amended to provide that: ‘‘Except for
manual transactions pursuant to Rule
76, paragraphs (a)–(c) of this Rule are
not applicable to trading UTP Securities
on the Pillar trading platform.’’
Proposed Rule Changes
As noted above, with the exception of
crossing transactions pursuant to Rule
76 and related rules, the Exchange
proposes rules that would be applicable
to trading UTP Securities on Pillar that
are based on the rules of NYSE Arca and
NYSE American. As a global matter, the
Exchange proposes non-substantive
differences as compared to the NYSE
Arca rules to use the terms ‘‘Exchange’’
instead of the terms ‘‘NYSE Arca
Marketplace’’ or ‘‘NYSE Arca’’ and to
use the terms ‘‘mean’’ or ‘‘have
meaning’’ instead of the terms ‘‘shall
mean’’ or ‘‘shall have the meaning.’’ In
addition, the Exchange will use the term
‘‘member organization,’’ which is
defined in Rule 2, instead of the terms
‘‘ETP Holder’’ or ‘‘User.’’ 23
22 See
id.
23 Because
these non-substantive differences
would be applied throughout the proposed rules,
the Exchange will not note these differences
separately for each proposed rule.
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13555
As previously established in the
Framework Filing, Section 1 of Rule 7P
sets forth the General Provisions relating
to trading on the Pillar trading platform
and Section 3 of Rule 7P sets forth
Exchange Trading on the Pillar trading
platform. In this filing, the Exchange
proposes new Rules 7.10, 7.11, and 7.16
and to amend Rule 7.18 for Section 1 of
Rule 7P and new Rules 7.31, 7.34, 7.36,
7.37, and 7.38 for Section 3 of Rule 7P.
In addition, the Exchange proposes new
Section 5 of Rule 7P to establish rules
for the Plan to Implement a Tick Size
Pilot Program, and proposes new Rule
7.46 in that section.
Below, the Exchange first describes
proposed Rules 7.36 and 7.37, as these
rules would establish the Exchange’s
Pillar rules governing order ranking and
display and order execution and
routing. Next, the Exchange describes
proposed Rule 7.31, which would
establish the orders and modifiers
available for trading UTP Securities on
Pillar. Finally, the Exchange describes
proposed Rules 7.10, 7.11, 7.16, 7.34,
7.38, and 7.46 and amendments to Rule
7.18.
Proposed Rule 7.36
Proposed Rule 7.36 (Order Ranking
and Display) would establish how
orders in UTP Securities would be
ranked and displayed on the Pillar
trading platform. As described above,
the Exchange proposes to extend its
current allocation model to trading UTP
Securities on Pillar, including the
concept of ‘‘setter interest,’’ which the
Exchange would define in proposed
Rule 7.36 as ‘‘Setter Priority.’’ Except for
the addition of Setter Priority, the
Exchange proposes to use Pillar
functionality for determining how
orders would be ranked and displayed.
Accordingly, proposed Rule 7.36 is
based in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.36–
E and NYSE American Rule 7.36E, with
substantive differences as described
below.
Proposed Rule 7.36(a)–(g)
Proposed Rules 7.36(a)–(g) would
establish rules defining terms that
would be used in Rule 7P—Equities
Trading and that describe the display
and ranking of orders on the Exchange,
including ranking based on price,
priority category, and time. The
proposed rule text is based on NYSE
Arca Rule 7.36–E(a)–(g) and NYSE
American Rule 7.36E(a)–(g) with the
following substantive differences:
• Proposed Rule 7.36(a)(5) would add
a definition of the term ‘‘Participant,’’
which is based on how the term
‘‘individual participant’’ is defined in
current Rule 72(c)(ii), with non-
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substantive differences. The Exchange
proposes that the term ‘‘Participant’’
would mean for purposes of parity
allocation, a Floor broker trading license
(each, a ‘‘Floor Broker Participant’’) or
orders collectively represented in the
Exchange Book that have not been
entered by a Floor Broker Participant
(‘‘Book Participant’’).24 The Exchange
proposes to use the term ‘‘Floor broker
trading license’’ rather than ‘‘each single
Floor broker’’ because pursuant to Rule
300 a trading license is required to effect
transactions on the Floor of the
Exchange or any facility thereof and a
member organization designates natural
persons to effect transactions on the
Floor on its behalf. Accordingly,
reference to a ‘‘Floor broker trading
license’’ makes clear that the Floor
broker participant is at the trading
license level, rather than at the member
organization level. The Exchange also
proposes to use the term ‘‘Exchange
Book,’’ which is a defined term, rather
than referring more generally to
‘‘Exchange systems.’’
As described in greater detail below,
the Exchange proposes that its existing
parity allocation model would be
available for all securities that trade on
the Exchange. Because there would not
be a DMM assigned to any UTP
Securities, orders represented by
individual Floor Brokers and the Book
Participant would be eligible for a parity
allocation for UTP Securities.
Because trading in UTP Securities is
intended to be an extension of the
Exchange’s current Floor-based trading
model, the Exchange proposes that
Floor Broker Participant allocations for
UTP Securities would be available only
to Floor brokers that also engage in a
Floor broker business in Exchange-listed
securities. As further proposed, an order
entered by a Floor broker would be
eligible to be included in the Floor
Broker Participant only if: (A) Such
order is entered by a Floor broker while
on the Trading Floor, which is an
existing requirement; 25 and (B) such
24 As defined in Rule 1.1(a), the term ‘‘Exchange
Book’’ refers to the Exchange’s electronic file of
orders, which contains all orders entered on the
Exchange. Accordingly, all orders entered by Floor
brokers in UTP Securities are included in the
Exchange Book. The Exchange proposes to use the
term ‘‘Book Participant’’ as continuity from its
current rules, which refer to the Book Participant.
See Rule 72(c)(ii).
25 Rule 70(a)(i) requires a Floor broker to be in the
‘‘Crowd’’ in order to enter e-Quotes, which are
eligible for a parity allocation. Rule 70.30 defines
the term ‘‘Crowd’’ as the rooms on the Exchange
Floor that contain active posts/panels where Floor
brokers are able to conduct business and a Floor
broker is considered to be in the Crowd if he or she
is physically present in one of these room. Rule 6A
defines the term ‘‘Trading Floor’’ to mean the
restricted-access physical areas designated by the
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order is not entered for the account of
the member organization, the account of
an associated person, or an account with
respect to which the member, member
organization, or an associated person
exercises investment discretion, unless
such order is entered pursuant to Rule
134(d)–(j), i.e., the order is entered via
the Floor broker’s error account.
• Proposed Rule 7.36(a)(6) would add
the definition of ‘‘Aggressing Order’’ to
mean a buy (sell) order that is or
becomes marketable against sell (buy)
interest on the Exchange Book and that
a resting order may become an
Aggressing Order if its working price
changes, if the PBBO or NBBO is
updated, because of changes to other
orders on the Exchange Book, or when
processing inbound messages.26 This
proposed term would be used in
proposed Rule 7.37, described below.
• Because all displayed Limit Orders
would be displayed on an anonymous
basis, the Exchange does not propose to
include text based on the first clause of
NYSE Arca Rule 7.36–E(b)(2) in
proposed Rule 7.36(b)(2).
• Proposed Rule 7.36(c) regarding
ranking would not include reference to
price-time priority, as the Exchange’s
allocation model would not always be a
price-time priority allocation, as
described below. As further described
below, the Exchange would rank orders
consistent with proposed Rule 7.36(c).
• Proposed Rule 7.36(e) would
establish three priority categories:
Priority 1—Market Orders, Priority 2—
Display Orders, and Priority 3—NonDisplay Orders. The Exchange would
not offer any additional priority
categories for trading of UTP Securities.
In addition to these substantive
differences, the Exchange proposes a
non-substantive clarifying difference for
proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B) to add
‘‘[o]ther than as provided for in Rule
7.38(b)(2),’’ to make clear that the way
in which a working time is assigned to
an order that is partially routed to an
Away Market and returns to the
Exchange is addressed in both proposed
Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B) and proposed Rule
7.38(b)(2). The Exchange also proposes
non-substantive differences to proposed
Rule 7.36(f)(2) and (3) to streamline the
rule text.
Exchange for the trading of securities, commonly
known as the ‘‘Main Room’’ and the ‘‘Buttonwood
Room.’’ The terms ‘‘Crowd’’ and ‘‘Trading Floor’’
therefore refer to the same physical location.
26 NYSE Arca and NYSE American have recently
amended their rules to add this definition of
‘‘Aggressing Order.’’ See Securities Exchange Act
Release Nos. 82447 (January 5, 2018), 83 FR 1442
(January 11, 2018) (SR–NYSEAmer–2017–40) and
82504 (January 16, 2018), 83 FR 3038 (January 22,
2018) (SR–NYSEArca–2018–02) [sic].
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Proposed Rule 7.36(h)—Setter Priority
Proposed Rule 7.36(h) would
establish how Setter Priority would be
assigned to an order and is based in part
on current Rules 72(a) and (b). Rule
72(a)(ii) provides that when a bid or
offer, including pegging interest is
established as the only displayable bid
or offer made at a particular price and
such bid or offer is the only displayable
interest when such price is or becomes
the Exchange BBO (the ‘‘setting
interest’’), such setting interest is
entitled to priority for allocation of
executions at that price as described in
Rule 72. The rule further provides that:
• Odd-lot orders, including
aggregated odd-lot orders that are
displayable, are not eligible to be setting
interest. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(A))
• If, at the time displayable interest of
a round lot or greater becomes the
Exchange BBO, there is other
displayable interest of a round lot or
greater, including aggregated odd-lot
orders that are equal to or greater than
a round lot, at the price that becomes
the Exchange BBO, no interest is
considered to be a setting interest, and,
therefore, there is no priority
established. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(B))
• If, at the time displayable interest of
a round lot or greater becomes the
Exchange BBO, there is other
displayable interest the sum of which is
less than a round lot, at the price that
becomes the Exchange BBO, the
displayable interest of a round lot or
greater will be considered the only
displayable bid or offer at that price
point and is therefore established as the
setting interest entitled to priority for
allocation of executions at that price as
described in this rule. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(C))
• If executions decrement the setting
interest to an odd-lot size, a round lot
or partial round lot order that joins such
remaining odd-lot size order is not
eligible to be the setting interest. (Rule
72(a)(ii)(D))
• If, as a result of cancellation,
interest is or becomes the single
displayable interest of a round lot or
greater at the Exchange BBO, it becomes
the setting interest. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(E))
• Only the portion of setting interest
that is or has been published in the
Exchange BBO is entitled to priority
allocation of an execution. That portion
of setting interest that is designated as
reserve interest and therefore not
displayed at the Exchange BBO (or not
displayable if it becomes the Exchange
BBO) is not eligible for priority
allocation of an execution irrespective
of the price of such reserve interest or
the time it is accepted into Exchange
systems. However, if, following an
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execution of part or all of setting
interest, such setting interest is
replenished from any reserve interest,
the replenished volume of such setting
interest shall be entitled to priority if
the setting interest is still the only
interest at the Exchange BBO. (Rule
72(a)(ii)(F))
• If interest becomes the Exchange
BBO, it will be considered the setting
interest even if pegging interest, Limit
Orders designated ALO, or sell short
orders during a Short Sale Period under
Rule 440B(e) are re-priced and
displayed at the same price as such
interest, and it will retain its priority
even if subsequently joined at that price
by re-priced interest. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(G))
Rule 72(b)(i) provides that once
priority is established by setting
interest, such setting interest retains that
priority for any execution at that price
when that price is at the Exchange BBO
and if executions decrement the setting
interest to an odd-lot size, such
remaining portion of the setting interest
retains its priority for any execution at
that price when that price is the
Exchange BBO. Rule 72(b)(ii) further
provides that for any execution of
setting interest that occurs when the
price of the setting interest is not the
Exchange BBO, the setting interest does
not have priority and is executed on
parity. Finally, Rule 73(b)(ii) provides
that priority of setting interest will not
be retained after the close of trading on
the Exchange or following the
resumption of trading in a security after
a trading halt in such security has been
invoked pursuant to Rule 123D or
following the resumption of trading
after a trading halt invoked pursuant to
the provisions of Rule 80B. In addition,
priority of the setting interest is not
retained on any portion of the priority
interest that is routed to an away market
and is returned unexecuted unless such
priority interest is greater than a round
lot and the only other interest at the
price point is odd-lot orders, the sum of
which is less than a round lot.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h) would use
Pillar terminology to establish ‘‘Setter
Priority,’’ which would function
similarly to setting interest under Rule
72. The Exchange proposes the
following substantive differences to how
Setter Priority would be assigned and
retained on Pillar:
• To be eligible for Setter Priority, an
order would have to establish not only
the BBO, but also either join an Away
Market NBBO or establish the NBBO.
The Exchange believes that requiring an
order to either join or establish an
NBBO before it is eligible for Setter
Priority would encourage the display of
aggressive liquidity on the Exchange.
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• A resting order would not be
eligible to be assigned Setter Priority
simply because it is the only interest at
that price when it becomes the BBO
(either because of a cancellation of other
interest at that price or because a resting
order that is priced worse than the BBO
becomes the BBO). The Exchange
believes that the benefit of Setter
Priority should be for orders that are
aggressively seeking to improve the
BBO, rather than for passive orders that
become the BBO.
• The replenished portion of a
Reserve Order would not be eligible for
Setter Priority. The Exchange believes
that Setter Priority should be assigned to
interest willing to be displayed, and
because the reserve interest would not
be displayed on arrival, it would not be
eligible for Setter Priority.
• Orders that are routed and returned
unexecuted would be eligible for Setter
Priority consistent with the proposed
rules regarding the working time
assigned to the returned quantity of an
order. As described in greater detail
below, if such orders meet the
requirements to be eligible for Setter
Priority, e.g., establish the BBO and
either join or establish the NBBO, they
would be evaluated for Setter Priority.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h) would provide
that Setter Priority would be assigned to
an order ranked Priority 2—Display
Orders with a display quantity of at
least a round lot if such order (i)
establishes a new BBO and (ii) either
establishes a new NBBO or joins an
Away Market NBBO. The rule would
further provide that only one order is
eligible for Setter Priority at each price.
This proposed rule text is based in part
on Rule 72(a)(ii), 72(a)(ii)(A),
72(a)(ii)(B), 72(a)(ii)(C), subject to the
substantive differences described
above.27
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(1) would set
forth when an order would be evaluated
for Setter Priority. As noted above, the
Exchange proposes a substantive
difference from current Rule 72(a)(ii) in
that a resting order would not be eligible
to be assigned Setter Priority simply
because it is the only interest at that
price when it becomes the BBO.
• Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(1)(A) would
provide that an order would be
evaluated for Setter Priority on arrival,
which would include when any portion
of an order that has routed returns
unexecuted and is added to the
27 Because of the proposed substantive
differences, the Exchange is not proposing rules
based on current Rules 72(a)(ii)(D) and (E). In
addition, when an order is considered displayed on
Pillar would be addressed in proposed Rule
7.36(b)(1). Accordingly, the Exchange is not
proposing rule text based on Rule 72(a)(i).
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13557
Exchange Book. Pursuant to proposed
Rule 7.37(a)(1), described below, an
order that is routed on arrival to an
Away Market would not be assigned a
working time. Proposed Rule 7.36(f)
provides that an order would not be
assigned a working time until it is
placed on the Exchange Book. As such,
an order that has returned after routing
would be processed similarly to a newly
arriving order. Therefore, the Exchange
believes that an order should be
evaluated for Setter Priority when it
returns from an Away Market
unexecuted in the same way as
evaluating an order for Setter Priority on
arrival.
When evaluating Setter Priority for an
order that has returned from an Away
Market unexecuted, the Exchange
would assess whether such order meets
the requirements of proposed Rule
7.36(h), which is based in part on the
second sentence of Rule 72(b)(iii). The
Exchange proposes that for Pillar, an
order that was routed to an Away
Market and returned unexecuted would
be evaluated for Setter Priority based on
how a working time would be assigned
to the returned quantity of the routed
order, as described in proposed Rules
7.16(f)(5)(H), 7.36(f)(1)(A) and (B), and
7.38(b)(2).
Æ Proposed Rule 7.16(f)(5)(H)
provides that if a Short Sale Price Test,
as defined in that rule, is triggered after
an order has routed, any returned
quantity of the order and the order it
joins on the Exchange Book would be
adjusted to a Permitted Price.28 In such
case, the returned quantity and the
resting quantity that would be re-priced
to a Permitted Price would be a single
order and the Exchange would evaluate
such order for Setter Priority. If such
order would set a new BO and either
join or establish a new NBO, it would
be assigned Setter Priority. For example,
if the Exchange receives a sell short
order of 200 shares ranked Priority 2—
Display Orders, routes 100 shares (‘‘A’’)
of such order and adds 100 shares (‘‘B’’)
of such order to the Exchange Book, ‘‘B’’
would be displayed at the price of the
sell short order. If an Away Market NBB
locks the price of ‘‘B’’ and then a Short
Sale Price Test is triggered, ‘‘B’’ would
remain displayed at the price of the
NBB.29 If subsequently, ‘‘A’’ returns
unexecuted, pursuant to proposed Rule
28 Pursuant to proposed Rule 7.16(f)(5)(A),
described below, during a Short Sale Period, as
defined in that rule, short sale orders with a
working price and/or a display price equal to or
lower than the NBB will have the working price
and/or display price adjusted one minimum price
increment above the current NBB, which is the
‘‘Permitted Price.’’
29 See proposed Rule 7.16(f)(6).
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7.16(f)(5)(H), ‘‘A’’ and ‘‘B’’ would be
considered a single order and would be
re-priced to a Permitted Price, at which
point the order would be evaluated for
Setter Priority.
Æ Proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(A)
provides that an order that is fully
routed to an Away Market would not be
assigned a working time unless and
until any unexecuted portion of the
order returns to the Exchange Book. As
proposed, if the Exchange routes an
entire order and a portion returns
unexecuted, the Exchange would
evaluate the returned quantity for Setter
Priority as if it were a newly arriving
order. For example, if less than a round
lot returns unexecuted, the returned
quantity would not be eligible for Setter
Priority. If at least a round lot returns
unexecuted, establishes a new BBO, and
either joins or establishes the NBBO, it
would be eligible for Setter Priority.
Æ Proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B)
provides that (except as provided for in
proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2)), if an order is
partially routed to an Away Market on
arrival, the portion that is not routed
would be assigned a working time and
any portion of the order returning
unexecuted would be assigned the same
working time as any remaining portion
of the original order resting on the
Exchange Book and would be
considered the same order as the resting
order. In such case, if the resting portion
of the order has Setter Priority, the
returned portion would also have Setter
Priority.
For example, if the Exchange receives
a 200 share order ranked Priority 2—
Display Orders, routes 100 shares (‘‘C’’)
of such order and adds 100 shares (‘‘D’’)
of such order to the Exchange Book,
which establishes the BBO and joined
the NBBO, ‘‘D’’ would be assigned
Setter Priority. If ‘‘D’’ is partially
executed and decremented to 50 shares
and another order ‘‘E’’ for 100 shares
joins ‘‘D’’ at its price, pursuant to
proposed Rules 7.36(h)(2)(A) and (B),
described below, ‘‘D’’ would retain
Setter Priority. If ‘‘C’’ returns
unexecuted, it would join the working
time of ‘‘D’’ pursuant to proposed Rule
7.36(f)(1)(B), ‘‘C’’ and ‘‘D’’ would be
considered a single order, and ‘‘C’’
would therefore also receive Setter
Priority.
Æ Proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2) provides
that for an order that is partially routed
to an Away Market on arrival, if any
returned quantity of such order joins
resting odd-lot quantity of the original
order and the returned and resting
quantity, either alone or together with
other odd-lot orders, would be
displayed as a new BBO, both the
returned and resting quantity would be
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assigned a new working time. In such
case, the returned quantity and the
resting odd-lot quantity together would
be a single order and would be
evaluated for Setter Priority.
For example, if the Exchange receives
an order for 100 shares, routes 50 shares
(‘‘E’’) of such order and the remaining
50 shares (‘‘F’’) of such order are added
to the Exchange Book, pursuant to
proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B), ‘‘F’’ would
be assigned a working time when it is
added to the Exchange Book. If ‘‘E’’
returns unexecuted, and ‘‘E’’ and ‘‘F’’
together would establish a new BBO at
that price, pursuant to proposed Rule
7.38(b)(2), ‘‘F’’ would be assigned a new
working time to join the working time
of ‘‘E,’’ and ‘‘E’’ and ‘‘F’’ would be
considered a single order. If the
returned quantity together with the
resting quantity establishes the BBO
pursuant to proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2),
the order would be eligible to be
evaluated for Setter Priority.
• Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(1)(B) would
provide that an order would be
evaluated for Setter Priority when it
becomes eligible to trade for the first
time upon transitioning to a new trading
session. When an order becomes eligible
to trade upon a trading session
transition, it is treated as if it were a
newly arriving order. Accordingly, the
Exchange believes it would be
consistent with its proposal to evaluate
arriving orders for Setter Priority to also
evaluate orders that become eligible to
trade upon a trading session transition
for Setter Priority. For example,
pursuant to proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1),
described below, the Exchange would
accept Primary Pegged Orders during
the Early Trading Session, however,
such orders would not be eligible to
trade until the Core Trading Session
begins. In such case, a Primary Pegged
Order would be evaluated for Setter
Priority when it becomes eligible to
trade in the Core Trading Session.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2) would
establish when an order retains its
Setter Priority, as follows:
• If it is decremented to any size
because it has either traded or been
partially cancelled (proposed Rule
7.36(h)(2)(A)). This proposed rule is
based on Rule 72(b)(i), with nonsubstantive differences to use Pillar
terminology.
• if it is joined at that price by a
resting order that is re-priced and
assigned a display price equal to the
display price of the order with Setter
Priority (proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2)(B)).
This proposed rule is based on Rule
72(a)(ii)(G), with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
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• if the BBO or NBBO changes
(proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2)(C)). This
proposed rule, together with proposed
Rule 7.37(b)(1)(B), described below, is
based on Rule 72(b)(ii), with nonsubstantive differences to use Pillar
terminology. Specifically, once an order
has been assigned Setter Priority, it has
that status so long as it is on the
Exchange Book, subject to proposed
Rule 7.36(h)(3), described below,
regardless of the BBO or NBBO.
However, as described in proposed Rule
7.37(b)(1)(B), it would only be eligible
for a Setter Priority allocation if it is
executed when it is the BBO.
• if the order marking changes from
(A) sell to sell short, (B) sell to sell short
exempt, (C) sell short to sell, (D) sell
short to sell short exempt, (E) sell short
exempt to sell, and (F) sell short exempt
to sell short (proposed Rule
7.36(h)(2)(D)). This proposed rule text is
consistent with proposed Rule 7.36(f)(4)
because if an order retains its working
time, the Exchange believes it should
also retain its Setter Priority status.
• when transitioning from one trading
session to another (proposed Rule
7.36(h)(2)(E)). This text would be new
because, with Pillar, the Exchange
would be introducing an Early Trading
Session. The Exchange believes that if
an order entered during the Early
Trading Session is assigned Setter
Priority, it should retain that status in
the Core Trading Session.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(3) would
establish when an order would lose
Setter Priority, as follows:
• If trading in the security is halted,
suspended, or paused (proposed Rule
7.36(h)(3)(A)). This proposed rule is
based on the first sentence of current
Rule 72(b)(iii), with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology. In
addition, because all orders expire at the
end of the trading day, the Exchange
believes that the current rule text
providing that setting interest would not
be retained after the close of trading on
the Exchange would not be necessary
for Pillar.
• if such order is assigned a new
display price (proposed Rule
7.36(h)(3)(B)). The Exchange believes
that if an order has Setter Priority at a
price, and then is assigned a new
display price, it should not retain the
Setter Priority status that was associated
with its original display price.
• if such order is less than a round lot
and is assigned a new working time
pursuant to proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2). As
discussed above, pursuant to proposed
Rule 7.38(b)(2) the resting odd-lot
portion of an order would be assigned
a new working time if the returned
quantity of that order, together with the
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resting portion, would establish a new
BBO. In such case, if the resting
quantity had Setter Priority status, it
would lose that status, and would be reevaluated for Setter Priority at its new
working time.
For example, if the Exchange receives
an order for 200 shares ranked Priority
2—Display Orders, routes 100 shares
(‘‘G’’) of such order, and the remaining
100 shares (‘‘H’’) of such order are
added to the Exchange Book and
assigned Setter Priority, ‘‘H’’ would
retain Setter Priority even if it is
partially executed and the remaining
portion of ‘‘H’’ is less than a round lot.
If ‘‘G’’ returns unexecuted and ‘‘G’’ and
‘‘H’’ together would establish a new
BBO at that price, pursuant to proposed
Rule 7.38(b)(2), ‘‘H’’ would be assigned
a new working time to join the working
time of ‘‘G,’’ and ‘‘G’’ and ‘‘H’’ would be
considered a single order. When ‘‘H’’ is
assigned a new working time, it would
lose its Setter Priority status. Even
though ‘‘G’’ and ‘‘H’’ would establish
the BBO, if that order does not also join
or establish an NBBO, it would not be
assigned Setter Priority. In this scenario,
‘‘H’’ would have lost its Setter Priority.
The Exchange believes it is appropriate
to re-evaluate such order for Setter
Priority because it is being assigned a
new working time together with the
returned quantity of the order.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(4) would
establish when Setter Priority is not
available, as follows:
• For any portion of an order that is
ranked Priority 3—Non-Display Orders
(proposed Rule 7.36(h)(4)(A)). This
proposed rule text is based on the
second sentence of Rule 72(a)(ii)(F),
with non-substantive differences to use
Pillar terminology.
• when the reserve quantity
replenishes the display quantity of a
Reserve Order (proposed Rule
7.36(h)(4)(B)). This proposed rule text
would be new and would be a
substantive difference, described above,
as compared to the third sentence of
Rule 72(a)(ii)(F).
Because proposed Rule 7.36 would
address the display and working time of
orders and Setter Priority, the Exchange
proposes that Rules 72(a), (b), and
(c)(xii) would not be applicable to
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar
trading platform.
Proposed Rule 7.37
Proposed Rule 7.37 (Order Execution
and Routing) would establish rules
governing order execution and routing
on the Pillar trading platform. As
described above, the Exchange proposes
to retain its parity allocation model,
which the Exchange would set forth in
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proposed Rule 7.37(b). Except for the
addition of parity allocation, the
Exchange proposes to use Pillar
functionality for determining how
orders would be executed and routed.
Accordingly, the proposed rule is based
in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.37–E and
NYSE American Rule 7.37E, with
substantive differences as described
below.
that are designated to route to the
primary listing market. Similarly, the
Exchange would not include rule text
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.37–
E(b)(7)(C) and NYSE American Rule
7.37E(b)(7)(C).
• The Exchange proposes a nonsubstantive difference to update the
chart in proposed Rule 7.37(e) to reflect
the amended names of market centers.
Proposed Rules 7.37(a), (c)–(g)
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)—Allocation
Proposed Rule 7.37(b) would set forth
how an Aggressing Order would be
allocated against contra-side orders and
is based in part on current Rule 72(c).
The Exchange proposes that its existing
parity allocation model, modified as
described below, would be applicable to
UTP Securities. Like the Exchange’s
existing parity allocation model for
NYSE-listed securities, the proposed
parity allocation model for UTP
Securities would provide customers
with choices. The Exchange’s parity
allocation model provides customers
that do not have latency sensitive
strategies or who value intermediation
by a trusted agent with an alternative to
the price-time priority model offered by
other exchanges: Such customers can
use a Floor broker and be allocated
trades based on parity, as described
below. Those customers with latency
sensitive strategies or who prefer unintermediated access can choose to send
orders electronically and would be
allocated trades as part of the Book
Participant. Irrespective of whether the
customer chooses to use a Floor broker
or enter their interest electronically via
the Book Participant, a customer
assigned Setter Priority by setting the
BBO would receive the first 15% of an
allocation.
While there would be no DMMs
assigned to UTP Securities, as noted
above, the Exchange would require that
for an order to be eligible to be included
in the Floor Broker Participant, such
order must be entered by a Floor broker
while on the Trading Floor and only if
such Floor broker also engages in a
Floor broker business in Exchange-listed
securities. In addition, to be eligible to
be included in the Floor Broker
Participant, orders must be entered on
an agency basis (unless trading out of
the Floor broker’s error account
pursuant to Rule 134). As a result, in
contrast to off-Floor agency brokerdealers, Floor brokers would not be
permitted to trade for their own
accounts while on the Trading Floor,
including principal trading on behalf of
customers. The result of any allocation
to an individual Floor broker would
therefore always accrue to the customer.
In addition, when trading UTP
Proposed Rules 7.37(a) and
paragraphs (c)–(d) would establish rules
regarding order execution, routing, use
of data feeds, locking or crossing
quotations in NMS Stocks, and
exceptions to the Order Protection Rule.
The proposed rule text is based on
NYSE Arca Rule 7.37–E(a)–(f) and NYSE
American Rule 7.37E(a)–(f) with the
following substantive differences: 30
• Proposed Rule 7.37(a) would use
the proposed new term ‘‘Aggressing
Order’’ rather than the term ‘‘incoming
marketable order’’ to refer to orders that
would be matched for execution. In
addition, because the Exchange would
not use a price-time priority allocation
for all orders, the Exchange proposes to
specify that orders would be matched
for execution as provided for in
proposed Rule 7.37(b).
• As discussed below, the Exchange
would not offer all order types that are
available on NYSE Arca and NYSE
American. Accordingly, proposed Rule
7.37(a)(4) would not include a reference
to Inside Limit Orders.
• Similar to NYSE American, because
the Exchange would not be taking in
data feeds from broker-dealers or
routing to Away Markets that are not
displaying protected quotations, the
Exchange proposes that proposed Rule
7.37 would not include rule text from
paragraph (b)(3) of NYSE Arca Rule
7.37–E, which specifies that an ETP
Holder can opt out of routing to Away
Markets that are not displaying a
protected quotation, i.e., broker dealers,
or paragraph (d)(1) of NYSE Arca Rule
7.37–E, which specifies that NYSE Arca
receives data feeds directly from broker
dealers.
• As discussed in greater detail
below, because the Exchange would not
offer all orders available on NYSE Arca
and NYSE American, including orders
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E(f) that
are orders with specific routing
instructions, the Exchange proposes that
proposed Rules 7.37(c)(5) and (c)(7)(B)
would not include reference to orders
30 Because proposed Rule 7.37(b) would establish
parity allocation, proposed Rule 7.37(c)–(g) would
be based on NYSE Arca Rules 7.37–E(b)–(f) and
NYSE American Rules 7.37E(b)–(f).
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Securities, Floor brokers would
continue to be subject to current rules
that are applicable only to Floor brokers,
including Rules 95, 122, 123, and
paragraphs (d)–(j) of Rule 134.
The Exchange proposes to use Pillar
terminology to describe allocations and
proposes the following substantive
differences to how allocations are
processed under Rule 72(c):
• Mid-point Liquidity Orders
(‘‘MPL’’) with a Minimum Trade Size
(‘‘MTS’’), which are not currently
available on the Exchange, would be
allocated based on MTS size (smallest to
largest) and time.
• The Exchange would maintain
separate allocation wheels on each side
of the market for displayed and nondisplayed orders at each price.
Currently, the Exchange maintains a
single allocation wheel for each
security.31
• An allocation to a Floor Broker
Participant would be allocated to orders
represented by that Floor Broker on
parity.
• If resting orders on one side of the
Exchange Book are repriced such that
they become marketable against orders
on the other side of the Exchange Book,
they would trade as Aggressing Orders
based on their ranking pursuant to
proposed Rule 7.36(c).
• If resting orders on both side of the
Exchange Book are repriced such that
they become marketable against each
other, e.g., a crossed PBBO becomes
uncrossed and orders priced based on
the PBBO are repriced, the Exchange
would determine which order is the
Aggressing Order based on its ranking
pursuant to Rule 7.36(c).
• Because there would not be any
DMMs assigned to UTP Securities, the
proposed rule would not reference
DMM allocations.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1) would set
forth that at each price, an Aggressing
Order would be allocated against contraside orders as follows:
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(A) would
provide that orders ranked Priority 1—
Market Orders would trade first based
on time. This proposed rule is based on
the first sentence of Rule 72(c)(i) with
non-substantive differences to use Pillar
terminology.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(B) would
provide that next, an order with Setter
Priority that has a display price and
working price equal to the BBO would
receive 15% of the remaining quantity
of the Aggressing Order, rounded up to
the next round lot size or the remaining
displayed quantity of the order with
Setter Priority, whichever is lower. The
31 See
Rule 72(c)(viii)(A).
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rule would further provide that an order
with Setter Priority is eligible for
allocation under proposed Rule
7.37(b)(1)(B) if the BBO is no longer the
same as the NBBO. This proposed rule
text is based on Rules 72(b)(ii) and
72(c)(iii) with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
Although the Exchange is using
different rule text, the quantity of an
Aggressing Order that would be
allocated to an order with Setter Priority
would be the same under both current
rules and the proposed Pillar rule.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(C) would
provide that next, orders ranked Priority
2—Displayed Orders would be allocated
on parity by Participant and that any
remaining quantity of an order with
Setter Priority would be eligible to
participate in this parity allocation,
consistent with the allocation wheel
position of the Participant that entered
the order with Setter Priority. This
proposed rule text is based on Rules
72(c)(i), (iv), (vi), and (ix) with nonsubstantive differences to use Pillar
terminology.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(D) would
provide that next, orders ranked Priority
3—Non-Display Orders, other than MPL
Orders with an MTS, would be allocated
on parity by Participant. This proposed
rule text is based on Rules 72(c)(i), (iv),
(vi), and (ix) with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology and
a substantive difference not to include
MPL Orders with an MTS in the parity
allocation of resting non-displayed
orders.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(E) would
provide that MPL Orders with an MTS
would be allocated based on MTS size
(smallest to largest) and time. Because
MPL Orders with an MTS would be a
new offering on the Exchange, this
proposed rule text is new. With an MTS
instruction, an [sic] member
organization is instructing the Exchange
that it does not want an execution of its
order if the MTS cannot be met.
Accordingly, an MPL Order with an
MTS is willing to be skipped if such
instruction cannot be met. The
Exchange proposes to separate MPL
Orders with an MTS from the parity
allocation of Priority 3—Non-Display
Orders because with a parity allocation,
an MTS instruction would not be
guaranteed. In order to honor the MTS
instruction of the resting MPL Order,
the Exchange proposes to allocate these
orders after all other Priority 3—NonDisplay Orders have been allocated on
parity. The Exchange believes that this
proposed allocation priority would be
consistent with the MTS instruction in
that such orders are willing to be
skipped in order to have the MTS met.
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Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2) would
establish the allocation wheel for parity
allocations. The proposed rule would be
new for Pillar and would establish that
at each price on each side of the market,
the Exchange would maintain an
‘‘allocation wheel’’ of Participants with
orders ranked Priority 2—Display
Orders and a separate allocation wheel
of Participants with orders ranked
Priority 3—Non-Display Orders. The
rule further describes how the position
of an order on an allocation wheel
would be determined, as follows:
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(A) would
provide that the Participant that enters
the first order in a priority category at
a price would establish the first position
on the applicable allocation wheel for
that price. The rule would further
provide that if an allocation wheel no
longer has any orders at a price, the next
Participant to enter an order at that
price would establish a new allocation
wheel. This proposed rule is based in
part on the first sentence of Rule
72(c)(viii)(A), with both non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology and
substantive differences because the
Exchange would maintain separate
allocation wheels at each price point,
rather than a single allocation wheel for
a security. Accordingly, an allocation
wheel at a price point could be reestablished throughout the trading day.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(B) would
provide that additional Participants
would be added to an allocation wheel
based on time of entry of the first order
entered by a Participant. This proposed
rule is based in part on the second
sentence of Rule 72(c)(viii)(A) with nonsubstantive differences to use Pillar
terminology.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(C) would
provide that once a Participant has
established a position on an allocation
wheel at a price, any additional orders
from that Participant at the same price
would join that position on an
allocation wheel. This proposed rule
uses Pillar terminology to describe
current functionality.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(D) would
provide that if an order receives a new
working time or is cancelled and
replaced at the same working price, a
Participant that entered such order
would be moved to the last position on
an allocation wheel if, that Participant
has no other orders at that price. This
proposed rule is based in part on the
last sentence of Rule 72(c)(viii)(A) with
non-substantive differences to use Pillar
terminology.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(E) would
provide that a Participant would be
removed from an allocation wheel if (i)
all orders from that Participant at that
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price are executed or cancelled in full,
(ii) the working price of an order
changes and that Participant has no
other orders at that price, or (iii) the
priority category of the order changes
and that Participant has no other orders
at that price. This proposed rule would
be new functionality associated with the
substantive difference of having
separate allocation wheels at each price
point.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(F) would
provide that if multiple orders are
assigned new working prices at the
same time, the Participants representing
those orders would be added to an
allocation wheel at the new working
price in time sequence relative to one
another. This proposed rule would be
new functionality associated with the
substantive difference of having
separate allocation wheels at each price
point.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(3) would set
forth the parity pointer associated with
the allocation wheel. As proposed, if
there is more than one Participant on an
allocation wheel, the Exchange would
maintain a ‘‘pointer’’ that would
identify which Participant would be
next to be evaluated for a parity
allocation and that the Participant with
the pointer would be considered the
first position. This proposed rule is
based in part on the Parity Example 1
described in Rule 72(c)(viii)(A) and Rule
72(c)(viii)(B), with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
The rule would further provide that the
Setter Priority allocation described in
proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(B) would not
move the pointer, which is based on the
second sentence of Rule 72(c)(iv) with
non-substantive differences to use Pillar
terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4) would set
forth how an Aggressing Order would be
allocated on parity. As proposed, an
Aggressing Order would be allocated by
round lots. The Participant with the
pointer would be allocated a round lot
and then the pointer would advance to
the next Participant. The pointer would
continue to advance on an allocation
wheel until the Aggressing Order is
fully allocated or all Participants in that
priority category are exhausted. This
proposed rule is based on Rule
72(c)(viii), sub-paragraphs (A)–(C) of
that Rule, and Parity Examples 1
through 4, with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
Rather than include examples in the
proposed rule, the Exchange believes
that the Pillar terminology streamlines
the description of parity allocations in
a manner that obviates the need for
examples, as follows:
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• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(A) would
provide that not all Participants on an
allocation wheel would be guaranteed to
receive an allocation. The size of an
allocation to a Participant would be
based on which Participant had the
pointer at the beginning of the
allocation, the size of the Aggressing
Order, the number of Participants in the
allocation, and the size of the orders
entered by Participants. The Exchange
believes that this proposed rule makes
clear that while the parity allocation
seeks to evenly allocate an Aggressing
Order, an even allocation may not be
feasible and would be dependent on
multiple variables.
For example, if there are three
Participants on an allocation wheel,
‘‘A,’’ ‘‘B,’’ and ‘‘C,’’ each representing
200 shares and ‘‘A’’ has the pointer, an
Aggressing Order of 450 shares would
be allocated as follows: ‘‘A’’ would be
allocated 100 shares, ‘‘B’’ would be
allocated 100 shares, ‘‘C’’ would be
allocated 100 shares, ‘‘A’’ would be
allocated 100 shares, and ‘‘B’’ would be
allocated 50 shares. In this example, an
uneven allocation would result because
the Aggressing Order cannot be evenly
divided by round lots among the
Participants and the allocation sizes
would be dependent on which
Participant has the pointer at the
beginning of the allocation.
Accordingly, ‘‘A’’ would be allocated a
total of 200 shares, ‘‘B’’ would be
allocated a total of 150 shares, and ‘‘C’’
would be allocated a total of 100 shares.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(B) would
provide that if the last Participant to
receive an allocation is allocated an odd
lot, the pointer would stay with that
Participant. The Exchange proposes that
the pointer would advance only after a
round-lot allocation. If the last
allocation is an odd-lot, the pointer
would stay with that Participant. For
example, continuing with the example
above where ‘‘B’’ received an allocation
of 150 shares because the last allocation
was 50 shares, the pointer would remain
with ‘‘B’’ for the next allocation at that
price. By contrast, if the last Participant
receives a round-lot allocation of an
Aggressing Order, the pointer would
advance to the next Participant for the
next allocation at that price.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(C) would
provide that if the Aggressing Order is
an odd lot, the Participant with the
pointer would be allocated the full
quantity of the order, unless that
Participant does not have an order that
could satisfy the Aggressing Order in
full, in which case, the pointer would
move to the next Participant on an
allocation wheel. This proposed rule
uses Pillar terminology to describe how
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13561
an odd-lot sized Aggressing Order
would be allocated.
• Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(D) would
provide that a Participant that has an
order or orders equaling less than a
round lot would be eligible for a parity
allocation up to the size of the order(s)
represented by that Participant. This
proposed rule is based in part on Rule
72(c)(viii)(B) with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(5) would
provide that an allocation to the Book
Participant would be allocated to orders
that comprise the Book Participant by
working time. This proposed rule is
based on the second sentence of Rule
72(c)(ii) with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(6) would
provide that an allocation to a Floor
Broker Participant, which would be
defined as a ‘‘Floor Broker Allocation,’’
would be allocated to orders with
unique working times that comprise the
Floor Broker Participant, which would
be defined as ‘‘Floor Broker Orders,’’ on
parity. In other words, any allocation to
an individual Floor Broker Participant
at a price would be further allocated
among multiple orders that may be
represented by that Floor broker. The
proposed reference to ‘‘unique working
times’’ would refer to orders that have
multiple working times. For example,
pursuant to proposed Rule 7.31(d)(1)(B),
each time a Reserve Order is
replenished from reserve interest, a new
working time would be assigned to the
replenished quantity of the Reserve
Order, while the reserve interest would
retain the working time of original order
entry. As a result, the display quantity
of a Reserve Order may be represented
by multiple orders with unique working
times representing each replenishment.
For purposes of the Floor Broker
Allocation, each quantity with a unique
working time would be considered a
separate order.
As further proposed, the parity
allocation within a Floor Broker
Allocation would be processed as
described in proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)–
(4) with the Floor Broker Allocation
processed as the ‘‘Aggressing Order’’
and each Floor Broker Order processed
as a ‘‘Participant.’’ Because a Floor
Broker Participant may represent
multiple orders, the Exchange believes
that allocating the Floor Broker
Allocation on parity would be
consistent with the Exchange’s
allocation model, which provides for a
parity allocation to Floor brokers. For
example, if an Aggressing Order is
allocated 200 shares to Floor Broker
Participant ‘‘X,’’ which would be the
Floor Broker Allocation, and ‘‘X’’
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represents three Floor Broker Orders,
‘‘A,’’ ‘‘B,’’ and ‘‘C’’ for 100 shares each
at a price and the parity pointer is on
‘‘B,’’ pursuant to proposed Rule
7.37(b)(6), the Floor Broker Allocation
would be allocated 100 shares to ‘‘B’’
and 100 shares to ‘‘C’’ and ‘‘A’’ would
not receive an allocation.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(8) would
provide that if resting orders on one side
of the market are repriced and become
marketable against contra-side orders on
the Exchange Book, the Exchange would
rank the re-priced orders as described in
proposed Rule 7.36(c) and trade them as
Aggressing Orders consistent with their
ranking.32 This proposed functionality
would be new for Pillar.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(9) would
provide that if resting orders on both
sides of the market are repriced and
become marketable against one another,
the Exchange would rank the orders on
each side of the market as described in
Rule 7.36(c) and trade them as follows:
• The best-ranked order would
establish the price at which the
marketable orders will trade, provided
that if the marketable orders include
MPL orders, orders would trade at the
midpoint of the PBBO (proposed Rule
7.37(b)(9)(A)).
• The next best-ranked order would
trade as the Aggressing Order with
contra-side orders at that price pursuant
to proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1) (proposed
Rule 7.37(b)(9)(B)).
• When an Aggressing Order is fully
executed, the next-best ranked order
would trade as the Aggressing Order
with contra-side orders at that price
pursuant to proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)
(proposed Rule 7.37(b)(9)(C)).
• Orders on both sides of the market
would continue to trade as the
Aggressing Order until all marketable
orders are executed (proposed Rule
7.37(b)(9)(D)).
Because proposed Rule 7.37 would
address order execution and routing,
including parity allocations, locking and
crossing, and the Order Protection Rule,
the Exchange proposes that Rules 15A,
19, 72(c), 1000, 1001, 1002, and 1004
would not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading
platform.33
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Proposed Rule 7.31
Proposed Rule 7.31 (Orders and
Modifiers) would establish the orders
32 The Exchange proposes to designated [sic]
proposed Rule 7.37(b)(7) as ‘‘Reserved.’’
33 Rule 72(d) would also not be applicable to
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading
platform, accordingly the Exchange would
designate the entirety of Rule 72 as not applicable
to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading
platform.
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and modifiers that would be available
on the Exchange for trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
The Exchange proposes to offer a subset
of the orders and modifiers that are
available on NYSE Arca and NYSE
American, with specified substantive
differences, as described below.
• Proposed Rule 7.31(a) would
establish the Exchange’s proposed
Primary Order Types. The Exchange
would offer Market Orders, which
would be described in proposed Rule
7.31(a)(1), and Limit Orders, which
would be described in proposed Rule
7.31(a)(2). These proposed rules are
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E(a)(1)
and (2) with one substantive difference.
Because the Exchange would not be
conducting auctions for UTP Securities
and because, as described below, with
the exception of Primary Pegged Orders,
Limit Orders entered before the Core
Trading Session would be deemed
designated for both the Early Trading
Session and the Core Trading Session,
the Exchange proposes not to include
the following text in proposed Rule
7.31(a)(2)(B): ‘‘A Limit Order entered
before the Core Trading Session that is
designated for the Core Trading Session
only will become subject to Limit Order
Price Protection after the Core Open
Auction.’’ Instead, the Exchange
proposes to provide that a Limit Order
entered before the Core Trading Session
that becomes eligible to trade in the
Core Trading Session would become
subject to the Limit Order Price
Protection when the Core Trading
Session begins. Accordingly, Primary
Pegged Orders entered before the Core
Trading Session begins would not be
subject to Limit Order Price Protection
until the Core Trading Session begins.
• Proposed Rule 7.31(b) would
establish the proposed time-in-force
modifiers available for UTP Securities
on the Pillar trading platform. The
Exchange would offer both Day and
Immediate-or-Cancel (‘‘IOC’’) time-inforce modifiers. The rule text is based
on NYSE American Rule 7.31E(b)
without any substantive differences.
• Proposed Rule 7.31(c) would
establish the Exchange’s Auction-Only
Orders. Because the Exchange would
not be conducting auctions in UTP
Securities, the Exchange would route all
Auction-Only Orders in UTP Securities
to the primary listing market, as
described in greater detail below in
proposed Rule 7.34. To reflect this
functionality, proposed Rule 7.31(c)
would provide that an Auction-Only
Order is a Limit or Market Order that is
only to be routed pursuant to Rule 7.34.
Proposed Rules 7.31(c)(1)–(4) would
define Limit-on-Open Orders (‘‘LOO
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Order’’), Market-on-Open Order (‘‘MOO
Order’’), Limit-on-Close Order (‘‘LOC
Order’’), and Market-on-Close (‘‘MOC
Order’’). The proposed rule text is based
on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E(c)(1)–(4) and
NYSE American Rule 7.31E(c)(1)–(4),
with the substantive difference not to
include rule text relating to how
Auction-Only Orders would function
during a Trading Halt Auction, as the
Exchange would not be conducting any
auctions in UTP Securities. Because the
Exchange would not have defined terms
for auctions in the Pillar rules, the
Exchange proposes an additional nonsubstantive difference to use the term
‘‘an opening or re-opening auction’’
instead of ‘‘the Core Open Auction or a
Trading Halt Auction’’ and the term ‘‘a
closing auction’’ instead of ‘‘the Closing
Auction.’’
• Proposed Rule 7.31(d) would
describe orders with a conditional or
undisplayed price and/or size. Proposed
Rule 7.31(d) is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(d) and NYSE American
Rule 7.31E(d) without any differences.
• Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(1) would
establish Reserve Orders, which would
be a Limit Order with a quantity of the
size displayed and with a reserve
quantity (‘‘reserve interest’’) that is not
displayed. Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(1) and
subparagraphs (A)–(C) to that rule are
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E(d)(1)
and its sub-paragraphs (A)–(C) without
any substantive differences. As
described below, the Exchange proposes
to describe Limit Orders that do not
route as a ‘‘Limit Non-Routable Order.’’
• Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(2) would
establish Limit Non-Displayed Orders,
which would be a Limit Order that is
not displayed and does not route. This
proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(d)(2), with one substantive
difference: The Exchange would not be
offering the ability for a Limit NonDisplayed Order to be designated with
a Non-Display Remove Modifier and
therefore would not be proposing rule
text based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–
E(d)(2)(B).
• Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(3) would
establish MPL Orders, which would be
a Limit Order that is not displayed and
does not route, with a working price at
the midpoint of the PBBO. Proposed
Rule 7.31(d)(3) is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(d)(3) and NYSE American
Rule 7.31E(d)(3) with one substantive
difference: Because the Exchange would
not be conducting auctions in UTP
Securities, the Exchange does not
propose to include rule text that MPL
Orders do not participate in any
auctions.
Proposed Rules 7.31(d)(3)(A)–(F),
which further describe MPL Orders, are
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based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–
E(d)(3)(A)–(F) with two substantive
differences. First, the Exchange would
not offer the optional functionality for
an incoming Limit Order to be
designated with a ‘‘No Midpoint
Execution’’ modifier. Second, the
Exchange would not offer for MPL
Orders to be designated with a NonDisplay Remove Modifier. Because the
Exchange would not offer the NonDisplay Remove Modifier for MPL
Orders, the Exchange is not proposing
rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.31–E(d)(3)(G). Proposed Rule 7.31(e)
would establish orders with instructions
not to route and is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(e) and NYSE American
Rule 7.31E(e) without any differences.34
• Proposed Rule 7.31(e)(1) would
establish the Limit Non-Routable Order,
which is a Limit Order that does not
route. Proposed Rule 7.31(e)(1) and its
sub-paragraphs (A)–(B) is based on
NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E(e)(1) and its
sub-paragraphs (A)–(B) and NYSE
American Rule 7.31E(1) and its subparagraphs (A)–(B) without any
substantive differences. Because the
Exchange would not offer Non-Display
Remove Modifiers for Limit NonRoutable Orders, the Exchange is not
proposing rule text based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(e)(1)(C).
• Proposed Rule 7.31(e)(2) and subparagraphs (B)–(D) would establish the
ALO Order, which is a Limit NonRoutable Order that, except as specified
in the proposed rule, would not remove
liquidity from the Exchange Book. The
proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(e)(2) and its sub-paragraphs
(B)–(D) with two substantive
differences. First, because the Exchange
would not have auctions in UTP
Securities, the Exchange does not
propose rule text based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(e)(2)(A), and would
designate this sub-paragraph as
‘‘Reserved.’’ Second, because the
Exchange would not offer the NonDisplay Remove Modifier for Limit NonRoutable Orders or Limit Non-Display
Orders, the Exchange does not propose
rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.31–E(e)(2)(B)(iv)(b).
• Proposed Rule 7.31(e)(3) and subparagraphs (A)–(D) would establish
Intermarket Sweep Orders (‘‘ISO’’),
which would be a Limit Order that does
not route and meets the requirements of
Rule 600(b)(3) of Regulation NMS and
could be designated IOC or Day. The
proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(e)(3) and its sub-paragraphs
(A)–(D) and its sub-paragraphs (A)–(D)
with two substantive differences. First,
because Exchange Floor brokers do not
have the ability to enter orders directly
on Away Markets, the Exchange does
not currently offer the ability for Floor
brokers to enter ISOs.35 The Exchange
similarly proposes that Floor brokers
would not be able to enter ISOs for
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar
trading platform and therefore would
specify that ISOs are not available to
Floor brokers. Second, because NonDisplay Remove Modifiers would not be
available, the Exchange is not proposing
rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.31–E(e)(3)(D)(iii)(b).
• Because the Exchange would not
offer Primary Only Orders or Cross
Orders, the Exchange proposes that
Rules 7.31(f) and (g) would be
designated as ‘‘Reserved.’’
• Proposed Rule 7.31(h) would
establish Pegged Orders, which would
be a Limit Order that does not route
with a working price that is pegged to
a dynamic reference price. Proposed
Rule 7.31(h) is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31–E(h) with one substantive
difference. Consistent with the
Exchange’s current rules, Pegged Orders
would be available only to Floor
brokers.36
Proposed Rule 7.31(h)(2) and subparagraphs (A) and (B) would establish
Primary Pegged Orders, which would be
a Pegged Order to buy (sell) with a
working price that is pegged to the PBB
(PBO), must include a minimum of one
round lot of displayed, and with no
offset allowed. This proposed rule text
is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–
E(h)(2) and sub-paragraphs (A) and (B)
with one substantive difference.
Because the Exchange would not
conduct auctions in UTP Securities, the
Exchange does not propose to include
rule text that a Primary Pegged Order
would be eligible to participate in
auctions at the limit price of the order.
Proposed Rule 7.31(h)(4) and subparagraphs (A) and (B) would establish
a Non-Displayed Primary Pegged Order,
which would be a Pegged Order to buy
(sell) with a working price that is
pegged to the PBB (PBO), with no offset
allowed, that is not displayed. This rule
text is based on NYSE American Rule
7.31E(h)(2), which describes a Primary
Pegged Order that is not displayed.
Similar to the rules of NYSE American,
the proposed Non-Displayed Primary
Pegged Order would be rejected on
35 See
Rule 70(a)(i).
Rule 13(f)(1)(A)(i), which describes Pegging
Interest as being available for e-Quotes and dQuotes, which is functionality available only to
Floor brokers.
36 See
34 Proposed Rule 7.31 includes behavior relating
to MPL Orders that were recently adopted on NYSE
Arca and NYSE American. See supra note 19.
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13563
arrival, or cancelled when resting, if
there is no PBBO against which to peg.
In addition, Non-Displayed Primary
Pegged Orders would be ranked Priority
3—Non-Display Orders and if the PBBO
is locked or crossed, both an arriving
and resting Non-Displayd [sic] Primary
Pegged Order would wait for a PBBO
that is not locked or crossed before the
working price is adjusted and the order
becomes eligible to trade.
Because the Exchange would not offer
Market Pegged Order or Discretionary
Pegged Orders, the Exchange proposes
that paragraphs (h)(1) and (h)(3) of
proposed Rule 7.31 would be designated
as ‘‘Reserved.’’
• Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2) would
establish Self Trade Prevention
Modifiers (‘‘STP’’) on the Exchange. As
proposed, any incoming order to buy
(sell) designated with an STP modifier
would be prevented from trading with a
resting order to sell (buy) also
designated with an STP modifier and
from the same Client ID, as designated
by the member organization, and the
STP modifier on the incoming order
would control the interaction between
two orders marked with STP modifiers.
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(A) would
establish STP Cancel Newest (‘‘STPN’’)
and proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(B) would
establish STP Cancel Oldest (‘‘STPO’’).
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2) and
subparagraphs (A) and (B) are based in
part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E(i)(2)
and its sub-paragraphs (A) and (B) and
NYSE American Rule 7.31E(i)(2) and its
sub-paragraphs (A) and (B), with
substantive differences to specify how
STP modifiers would function
consistent with the Exchange’s
proposed allocation model.
Specifically, because, as described
above, resting orders are allocated either
on parity or time based on the priority
category of an order, the Exchange
proposes to specify in proposed Rule
7.31(i)(2) that the Exchange would
evaluate the interaction between two
orders marked with STP modifiers from
the same Client ID consistent with the
allocation logic applicable to the
priority category of the resting order.
The proposed rule would further
provide that if resting orders in a
priority category do not have an STP
modifier from the same Client ID, the
incoming order designated with an STP
modifier would trade with resting
orders in that priority category before
being evaluated for STP with resting
orders in the next priority category.
For STPN, proposed Rule
7.31(i)(2)(A)(i) would provide that if a
resting order with an STP modifier from
the same Client ID is in a priority
category that allocates orders on price-
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time priority, the incoming order
marked with the STPN modifier would
be cancelled back to the originating
member organization and the resting
order marked with one of the STP
modifiers would remain on the
Exchange Book. This proposed rule is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–
E(i)(2)(A) and NYSE American Rule
7.31E(i)(2)(A), with non-substantive
differences to specify that this order
processing would be applicable for
orders that are allocated in price-time
priority.
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(A)(ii) would
be new and would address how STPN
would function for resting orders in a
priority category that allocates orders on
parity. As proposed, if a resting order
with an STP modifier from the same
Client ID is in a priority category that
allocates orders on parity and would
have been considered for an allocation,
none of the resting orders eligible for a
parity allocation in that priority
category would receive an allocation
and the incoming order marked with the
STPN modifier would be cancelled
back.37 The Exchange believes that if a
member organization designates an
order with an STPN modifier, that
member organization has instructed the
Exchange to cancel the incoming order
rather than trade with a resting order
with an STP modifier from the same
Client ID. Because in a parity allocation,
resting orders are allocated based on
their position on an allocation wheel, as
described above, it would be consistent
with the incoming order’s instruction to
cancel the incoming order if any of the
resting orders eligible to participate in
the parity allocation has an STP
modifier from the same Client ID.
For STPO, proposed Rule
7.31(i)(2)(B)(i) would provide that if a
resting order with an STP modifier from
the same Client ID is in a priority
category that allocates orders on pricetime priority, the resting order marked
with the STP modifier would be
cancelled back to the originating
member organization and the incoming
order marked with the STPO modifier
would remain on the Exchange Book.
This proposed rule is based on NYSE
Arca Rule 7.31–E(i)(2)(B) and NYSE
American Rule 7.31E(i)(2)(B), with nonsubstantive differences to specify that
this order processing would be
applicable for orders that are allocated
in price-time priority.
37 As described above, if there were resting
Market Orders against which the incoming order
was marketable, because Market Orders are in a
different priority category, the incoming order
would trade with the resting Market Orders before
being assessed for STP with resting orders in a
parity priority category.
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Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(B)(ii) would
be new and would address how STPO
would function for resting orders in a
priority category that allocates orders on
parity. As proposed, if a resting order
with an STP modifier from the same
Client ID is in a priority category that
allocates orders on parity, all resting
orders with the STP modifier with the
same Client ID in that priority category
that would have been considered for an
allocation would not be eligible for a
parity allocation and would be
cancelled. The rule would further
provide that an incoming order marked
with the STPO modifier would be
eligible to trade on parity with orders in
that priority category that do not have
a matching STP modifier and that
resting orders in that priority category
with an STP modifier from the same
Client ID that would not have been
eligible for a parity allocation would
remain on the Exchange Book. The
Exchange believes that this proposed
processing of STPO would allow for the
incoming order to continue to trade
with resting orders that do not have an
STP modifier from the same client ID,
while at the same time processing the
instruction that resting orders with an
STP from the same Client ID would be
cancelled if there were a potential for an
execution between the two orders.
• Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3) would
describe the Minimum Trade Size
(‘‘MTS’’) Modifier, which is based in
part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E(i)(3).38
The Exchange proposes a substantive
difference in that the MTS Modifier
would be available only for Limit IOC
and MPL Orders. Subject to this
difference, proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(A)–
(E) and (G) is based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.31–E(i)(3)(A)–(F).
The Exchange proposes an additional
substantive difference to address how a
resting order with an MTS that becomes
an Aggressing Order would trade under
the parity allocation model. As
described in proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(B),
on arrival, an order to buy (sell) with an
MTS Modifier would trade with sell
(buy) orders in the Exchange Book that
in the aggregate meet such order’s MTS.
In other words, the MTS of an
Aggressing Order on arrival can be met
by one or more resting orders. Because
more than one resting order can trade
with an arriving order with an MTS,
such allocation can be made consistent
with the Exchange’s parity allocation
model without any changes.39
38 See
supra note 19.
example, if the midpoint of the PBBO is
10.00 and at 10.00, the Exchange has a sell order
‘‘A’’ ranked Priority 3—Non-Displayed for 100
shares from the Book Participant and a sell order
39 For
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By contrast, proposed Rule
7.31(i)(3)(E) would provide that a
resting order to buy (sell) with an MTS
Modifier that becomes an Aggressing
Order would trade with individual sell
(buy) orders that each meet the MTS.
Because a resting order that becomes an
Aggressing Order, which could only be
an MPL Order, would need to be able
to trade with individual contra-side
orders that each meet the MTS, the
Exchange proposes to address how such
requirement would operate with the
Exchange’s proposed allocation model.
Specifically, proposed Rule
7.31(i)(3)(F)(i) would provide that when
such Aggressing Order is trading with
sell (buy) orders in a priority category
that allocates orders on price-time
priority, if a sell (buy) order does not
meet the MTS, the MPL Order with the
MTS Modifier would not trade and
would be ranked on the Exchange Book.
Accordingly, for orders that trade in a
price-time priority category, the MPL
Order with an MTS Modifier would stop
trading if a contra-side order does not
meet the MTS. This proposal is
consistent with how a resting order that
becomes an Aggressing Order would
trade on NYSE Arca, which has a pricetime priority allocation model.
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(F)(ii) would
set forth how a resting MPL Order to
buy (sell) with an MTS that becomes an
Aggressing Order would trade with sell
(buy) orders in a priority category that
allocates orders on parity. Because in a
parity allocation model, more than one
resting order may participate in an
allocation, the Exchange proposes that a
resting order to buy (sell) with an MTS
that becomes an Aggressing Order
would not trade with any contra-side
orders if at least one sell (buy) order that
would have been considered for
allocation does not meet the MTS. As
proposed, in such case, the resting order
with the MTS Modifier would be ranked
on the Exchange Book.40 The Exchange
‘‘B’’ ranked Priority 3—Non-Displayed for 100
shares from the Floor Broker Participant, if the
Exchange receives a buy MPL Order with a limit
price of 10.00 and an MTS of 200 shares, the MTS
could be met by the resting orders in the aggregate,
and the arriving buy order would trade with both
‘‘A’’ and ‘‘B.’’
40 For example, the midpoint of the PBBO is 10.01
and at 10.00, the Exchange has a sell order ‘‘A’’
ranked Priority 3—Non-Displayed for 100 shares
from the Book Participant and a sell order ‘‘B’’
ranked Priority 3—Non-Displayed for 200 shares
from the Floor Broker Participant and a buy MPL
Order with a limit price of 10.00 and an MTS of
200 shares. If the midpoint changes to 10.00, the
resting buy MPL Order would become an
Aggressing Order. In this scenario, both ‘‘A’’ and
‘‘B’’ would be eligible for an allocation, but because
‘‘A’’ cannot individually meet the MTS of the buy
MPL Order, the MPL Order would not trade with
either ‘‘A’’ or ‘‘B’’ and the buy MPL Order would
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believes that if a member organization
designates an MPL Order with an MTS
Modifier, that member organization has
instructed the Exchange not to trade that
order with contra-side orders that are
smaller in size than the MTS. Because
in a parity allocation, resting orders are
allocated based on their position on an
allocation wheel, as described above, it
would be consistent with the incoming
order’s instruction not to trade at all
rather than to trade with even one order
in the parity allocation that that does
not meet the MTS.
• Proposed Commentary .01 and .02
to Rule 7.31 is based on Commentary
.01 and .02 to NYSE Arca Rule 7.31–E
without any substantive differences.
Because proposed Rule 7.31 would
govern orders and modifiers, including
orders entered by Floor brokers, the
Exchange proposes that Rules 13
(Orders and Modifiers) and 70
(Execution of Floor broker interest)
would not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
In addition, references to Trading
Collars in Rule 1000(c) would not be
applicable to trading UTP Securities on
the Pillar Trading platform.41
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Proposed Rule 7.10
Proposed Rule 7.10 (Clearly
Erroneous Executions) would set forth
the Exchange’s rules governing clearly
erroneous executions. The proposed
rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.10–
E and NYSE American Rule 7.10E with
substantive differences not to refer to a
Late Trading Session or Cross Orders.
The Exchange proposes rule text based
on NYSE Arca rather than current Rule
128 (Clearly Erroneous Executions)
because the NYSE Arca and NYSE
American version of the rule uses the
same terminology that the Exchange is
proposing for the Pillar trading
platform, e.g., references to Early and
Core Trading Sessions. Accordingly, the
Exchange proposes that Rule 128
(Clearly Erroneous Executions) would
not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading
platform.42 Because the Exchange
would not be conducting auctions in
UTP Securities, proposed Rule 7.10(a)
would not include the last sentence of
NYSE Arca Rule 7.10–E(a), which
be ranked on the Exchange Book as provided for in
proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(F)(ii).
41 As described in greater detail above in
connection with proposed Rule 7.37, the Exchange
proposes that the entirety of Rule 1000 would not
be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar
trading platform.
42 The Exchange proposes that because there is
not a prior version of proposed Rule 7.10, if the
Limit Up-Limit Down Plan is not approved, the
prior version of sections (c), (e)(2), (f) and (g) of
Rule 128 would be in effect.
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provides that ‘‘[e]xecutions as a result of
a Trading Halt Auction are not eligible
for a request to review as clearly
erroneous under paragraph (b) of this
Rule.’’
Proposed Rule 7.11
Proposed Rule 7.11 (Limit Up-Limit
Down Plan and Trading Pauses in
Individual Securities Due to
Extraordinary Market Volatility) would
establish how the Exchange would
comply with the Regulation NMS Plan
to Address Extraordinary Market
Volatility (‘‘LULD Plan’’).43 The
proposed rule is based on NYSE
American Rule 7.11E with the following
substantive differences. First, as
proposed, the Exchange would not offer
the optional functionality for a member
organization to instruct the Exchange to
cancel a Limit Order that cannot be
traded or routed at prices at or within
the Price bands, rather than the default
processing of re-pricing a Limit Order to
the Price Bands, as described in
proposed Rule 7.11(a)(5)(B)(i).44
Accordingly, the Exchange would not
include text relating to this instruction,
as described in NYSE American Rules
7.11E(a)(5)(B)(i), 7.11E(a)(5)(C), or
7.11E(a)(5)(F). Second, because the
Exchange would not be offering orders
that include specific routing
instructions, Q Orders, or Limit IOC
Cross Orders, the Exchange would not
include text that references these order
types, as described in NYSE American
Rule 7.11E(a)(5)(B)(iii), 7.11E(a)(5)(D),
7.11E(a)(5)(E), and 7.11E(a)(6). The
Exchange proposes to designate
proposed Rules 7.11(a)(5)(D) and
7.11(a)(5)(E) as ‘‘Reserved.’’
Finally, because proposed Rule 7.11
would govern trading in UTP Securities
and the Exchange would not conduct
auctions for such securities, the
Exchange does not propose rule text
from NYSE American Rule 7.11E(b) that
describes how the Exchange would reopen trading in a security. The
Exchange proposes that Rule 7.11(b)(1)
would be based on rule text from NYSE
American Rule 7.11E(b)(1).
Because the proposed rule covers the
same subject matter as Rule 80C, the
Exchange proposes that Rule 80C would
not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
43 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 80455
(April 13, 2017), 81 FR 24908 (April 27, 2016) (File
No. 4–631) (Order approving 12th Amendment to
the LULD Plan).
44 The Exchange will offer this optional
functionality when it implements Pillar phase II
communication protocols.
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13565
Proposed Rule 7.16
Proposed Rule 7.16 (Short Sales)
would establish requirements relating to
short sales. The proposed rule is based
on NYSE Arca Rule 7.16–E and NYSE
American Rule 7.16E with two
substantive differences. First, because
the proposed rule would not be
applicable to any securities that are
listed on the Exchange, the Exchange
would not be evaluating whether the
short sale price test restrictions of Rule
201 of Regulation SHO have been
triggered. Accordingly, the Exchange
does not propose rule text based on
NYSE Arca Rule 7.16–E(f)(3) or NYSE
American Rule 7.16E(f)(3) and would
designate that sub-paragraph as
‘‘Reserved.’’ For similar reasons, the
Exchange proposes not to include rule
text based on NYSE Arca Rules 7.16–
E(f)(4)(A) and (B) or NYSE American
Rule 7.16E(f)(4)(A) and (B).
Second, because the Exchange would
not be offering Tracking Orders, Cross
Orders, or the Proactive if Locked/
Crossed Modifier, the Exchange does
not propose rule text based on NYSE
Arca Rule 7.16–E(f)(5)(D), (G), or (I) or
NYSE American Rule 7.16E(f)(5)(D), (G),
or (I). The Exchange proposes to
designate proposed Rules 7.16(f)(5)(D)
and (G) as ‘‘Reserved.’’
Because the proposed rule covers the
same subject matter as Rule 440B (Short
Sales), the Exchange proposes that Rule
440B would not be applicable to trading
UTP Securities on the Pillar trading
platform.
Proposed Rule 7.18
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rule 7.18 (Halts) to establish how the
Exchange would process orders during
a halt in a UTP Security and when it
would halt trading in a UTP Exchange
Traded Product.45 Proposed Rule
7.18(b) would provide that the Exchange
would not conduct a Trading Halt
Auction in a UTP Security and would
process new and existing orders in a
UTP Security during a UTP Regulatory
Halt 46 as described in proposed Rule
45 The term ‘‘UTP Exchange Traded Product’’ is
defined in Rule 1.1(bbb) to mean an Exchange
Traded Product that trades on the Exchange
pursuant to unlisted trading privileges. The terms
‘‘Exchange Traded Product’’ and ‘‘UTP Exchange
Traded Product’’ on the Exchange have the same
meaning as the NYSE Arca terms ‘‘Derivatives
Securities Product’’ and ‘‘UTP Derivative Securities
Product,’’ which are defined in NYSE Arca Rule
1.1(k). The Exchange proposes a non-substantive
difference in proposed Rule 7.18 as compared to
NYSE Arca Rule 7.18–E to use the Exchangedefined terms.
46 The term ‘‘UTP Regulatory Halt’’ is defined in
Rule 1.1(kk) to mean a trade suspension, halt, or
pause called by the UTP Listing Market in a UTP
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7.18(b)(1)–(6). The proposed rule text is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.18–E(b) and
its sub-paragraphs (1)—(6) and NYSE
American Rule 7.18E(b) and its subparagraphs (1)–(6) with one substantive
difference. Because the Exchange would
not be offering ‘‘Primary Only’’ orders,
proposed Rule 7.18(b)(5) would not
reference such order types.
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rule 7.18(d)(1)(A) to specify that if a
UTP Exchange Traded Product begins
trading on the Exchange in the Early
Trading Session and subsequently a
temporary interruption occurs in the
calculation or wide dissemination of the
Intraday Indicative Value (‘‘IIV’’) or the
value of the underlying index, as
applicable, to such UTP Exchange
Traded Product, by a major market data
vendor, the Exchange may continue to
trade the UTP Exchange Traded Product
for the remainder of the Early Trading
Session. This proposed rule text is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.18–
E(d)(1)(A) and NYSE American Rule
7.18E(d)(1)(A) without any substantive
differences. The Exchange also proposes
to amend Rule 7.18(d)(1)(B) to change
the reference from ‘‘Exchange’s Normal
Trading Hours’’ to the term ‘‘Core
Trading Session,’’ which would be
defined in proposed Rule 7.34,
described below.
The Exchange also proposes to amend
Rule 7.18(a) to change the cross
reference from Rule 80C to Rule 7.11 as
proposed Rule 7.11 would govern how
the Exchange would comply with the
LULD Plan for trading UTP Securities.
Proposed Rule 7.34
Proposed Rule 7.34 would establish
trading sessions on the Exchange. The
Exchange proposes that on the Pillar
trading platform, it would have Early
and Core Trading Sessions.
Accordingly, proposed Rule 7.34 is
based in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34–
E and NYSE American Rule 7.34E, with
the following substantive differences.
First, similar to NYSE American, the
Exchange proposes that the Early
Trading Session would begin at 7:00
a.m. Eastern Time. Similar to NYSE
Arca and NYSE American, the Exchange
would begin accepting orders 30
minutes before the Early Trading
Session begins, which means order
entry acceptance would begin at 6:30
a.m. Eastern Time. These differences
would be reflected in proposed Rule
7.34(a)(1).
Second, proposed Rule 7.34(b) would
be new and is not based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.34–E(b) or NYSE American Rule
Security that requires all market centers to halt
trading in that security.
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7.34E(b). Rather than require member
organizations to include a designation
for which trading session the order
would be in effect, the Exchange
proposes to specify in Rule 7.34(b) and
(c) which trading sessions an order
would be deemed designated. Proposed
Rule 7.34(b)(1) would provide that
unless otherwise specified in Rule
7.34(c), an order entered before or
during the Early or Core Trading
Session would be deemed designated
for the Early Trading Session and the
Core Trading Session. Proposed Rule
7.34(b)(2) would provide that an order
without a time-in-force designation
would be deemed designated with a day
time-in-force modifier.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c) would specify
which orders would be permitted in
each session. Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)
would provide that unless otherwise
specified in paragraphs (c)(1)(A)–(C),
orders and modifiers defined in Rule
7.31 would be eligible to participate in
the Early Trading Session. This
proposed rule text is based on NYSE
Arca Rule 7.34–E(c)(1) and NYSE
American Rule 7.34E(c)(1) with a
substantive difference not to refer to
orders ‘‘designated’’ for the Early
Trading Session. In addition, because
the Exchange would not be offering a
Retail Liquidity Program, the Exchange
would not reference Rule 7.44.
• Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(A) would
provide that Pegged Orders would not
be eligible to participate in the Early
Trading Session. This rule text is based
in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34–
E(c)(1)(A) and NYSE American Rule
7.34E(c)(1)(A) in the Pegged Orders
would not be eligible to participate in
the Early Trading Session. The
Exchange proposes a substantive
difference from the NYSE Arca and
NYSE American rules because proposed
Rule 7.34(c)(1)(A) would not refer to
Market Orders. Market Orders entered
during the Early Trading Session would
be addressed in proposed Rule
7.34(c)(1)(C), described below. The
proposed rule would further provide
that Non-Displayed Primary Pegged
Orders entered before the Core Trading
Session would be rejected and Primary
Pegged Orders entered before the Core
Trading Session would be accepted but
would not be eligible to trade until the
Core Trading Session begins. This rule
text is based in part on both NYSE Arca
Rule 7.34–E(c)(1)(A) and NYSE
American Rule 7.34E(c)(1)(A), but uses
terminology consistent with the
Exchange’s proposed order types.
• Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(B) would
provide that Limit Orders designated
IOC would be rejected if entered before
the Early Trading Session begins. This
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proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.34–E(c)(1)(B) and NYSE
American Rule 7.34E(c)(1)(B) with two
substantive differences. First, because
the Exchange would not be conducting
auctions, the Exchange proposes to
specify that the rejection period would
begin ‘‘before the Early Trading Session
begins’’ rather than state ‘‘before the
Early Open Auction concludes.’’
Second, the Exchange would not refer to
Cross Orders, which would not be
offered on the Exchange.
• Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(C) would
provide that Market Orders and
Auction-Only Orders in UTP Securities
entered before the Core Trading Session
begins would be routed to the primary
listing market on arrival and any order
routed directly to the primary listing
market on arrival would be cancelled if
that market is not accepting orders. This
proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.34–E(c)(1)(D) and NYSE
American Rule 7.34E(c)(1)(D) with a
non-substantive difference to specify
that such orders would be routed until
the Core Trading Session begins.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(2) would
provide that unless otherwise specified
in Rule 7.34(c)(2)(A)–(B), all orders and
modifiers defined in Rule 7.31 would be
eligible to participate in the Core
Trading Session. This proposed rule text
is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34–
E(c)(2) and NYSE American Rule
7.34E(c)(2) with a substantive difference
not to refer to orders ‘‘designated’’ for
the Core Trading Session. In addition,
because the Exchange would not be
offering a Retail Liquidity Program, the
Exchange would not reference Rule
7.44.
• Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(2)(A) would
provide that Market Orders in UTP
Securities would be routed to the
primary listing market until the first
opening print of any size on the primary
listing market or 10:00 a.m. Eastern
Time, whichever is earlier. This
proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.34–E(c)(2)(A) and NYSE
American Rule 7.34E(c)(2)(A) with a
non-substantive difference to use the
term ‘‘UTP Securities’’ instead of
referencing orders that ‘‘are not eligible
for the Core Open Auction.’’
• Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(2)(B) would
provide that Auction-Only Orders in
UTP Securities would be accepted and
routed directly to the primary listing
market. This proposed rule is based on
NYSE Arca Rule 7.34–E(c)(2)(B) and
NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(2)(B)
with a non-substantive difference to use
the term ‘‘UTP Securities’’ instead of
referencing orders that ‘‘are not eligible
for an auction on the Exchange.’’
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Proposed Rule 7.34(d) would
establish requirements for member
organizations to provide customer
disclosure when accepting orders for
execution in the Early Trading Session.
The proposed rule is based on NYSE
Arca Rule 7.34–E(d) and NYSE
American Rule 7.34E(d) without any
substantive differences.
Proposed Rule 7.34(e) would provide
that trades on the Exchange executed
and reported outside of the Core
Trading Session would be designated as
.T trades. This proposed rule is based on
NYSE Arca Rule 7.34–E(e) and NYSE
American Rule 7.34E(e) without any
substantive differences.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Proposed Rule 7.38
Proposed Rule 7.38 (Odd and Mixed
Lot) would establish requirements
relating to odd lot and mixed lot trading
on the Exchange. The proposed rule is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.38–E and
NYSE American Rule 7.38E with one
substantive difference. Because orders
ranked Priority 2—Display Orders,
including odd-lot sized orders, are on an
allocation wheel at their display price,
the Exchange proposes that if the
display price of an odd-lot order to buy
(sell) is above (below) its working price
(i.e., the PBBO, which is the price at
which the odd-lot order is eligible to
trade, has crossed the display price of
that odd-lot order), the odd-lot order
would be ranked and allocated based on
its display price. In such case, the order
would execute at its working price, but
if there is more than one odd-lot order
at the different display price, they
would be allocated on parity.
For example, if at 10.02, the Exchange
has an order ‘‘A’’ to buy 50 shares
ranked Priority 2—Display Orders, and
at 10.01, the Exchange has an order ‘‘B’’
to buy 10 shares ranked Priority 2
–Display Orders, an order ‘‘C’’ to buy 10
shares ranked Priority 2—Display
Orders, and an order ‘‘D’’ to buy 10
shares ranked Priority 2 –Display
Orders, and the parity pointer is on
order ‘‘C,’’ if the Away Market PBO
becomes 10.00, which crosses the
display price of ‘‘A,’’ ‘‘B,’’ ‘‘C,’’ and ‘‘D,’’
those orders would trade at 10.00. If the
Exchange were to receive a Market
Order to sell 70 shares, it would trade
at 10.00 and be allocated 50 shares to
‘‘A,’’ 10 shares to ‘‘C,’’ and 10 shares to
‘‘D.’’ ‘‘B’’ would not receive an
allocation based on its position on the
allocation wheel.
The Exchange proposes that Rule 61
(Recognized Quotations) would not be
applicable to trading UTP Securities on
the Pillar trading platform.
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Proposed Rule 7.46
Section 5 of Rule 7P would establish
requirements relating to the Plan to
Implement a Tick Size Pilot Program.
Proposed Rule 7.46 (Tick Size Pilot
Plan) would specify such requirements.
The proposed rule is based on NYSE
American Rule 7.46E with the following
substantive differences for proposed
Rule 7.46(f). First, because the Exchange
would not offer Market Pegged Orders,
the Exchange proposes that paragraph
(f)(3) of the Rule would be designated as
‘‘Reserved.’’ Second, the Exchange
proposes to set forth the priority of
resting orders both for ranking and for
allocation. For Pilot Securities in Test
Group Three, proposed Rule
7.46(f)(5)(A) would govern ranking
instead of proposed Rule 7.36(e),
described above, as follows:
• Priority 2—Display Orders. Nonmarketable Limit Orders with a
displayed working price would have
first priority.
• Protected Quotations of Away
Markets. Protected quotations of Away
Markets would have second priority.
• Priority 1—Market Orders.
Unexecuted Market Orders would have
third priority.
• Priority 3—Non-Display Orders.
Non-marketable Limit Orders for which
the working price is not displayed,
including reserve interest of Reserve
Orders, would have fourth priority.
For Pilot Securities in Test Group
Three, proposed Rule 7.46(f)(5)(B)
would set forth how an Aggressing
Order would be allocated against contraside orders, instead of proposed Rule
7.37(b)(1), described above, as follows:
• First, an order with Setter Priority
that has a display price and working
price equal to the BBO would receive
15% of the remaining quantity of the
Aggressing Order, rounded up to the
next round lot size or the remaining
displayed quantity of the order with
Setter Priority, whichever is lower. An
order with Setter Priority would be
eligible for Setter Priority allocation if
the BBO is no longer the same as the
NBBO.
• Next, orders ranked Priority 2—
Displayed Orders would be allocated on
parity by Participant. The remaining
quantity of the order with Setting
Priority would be eligible to participate
in this parity allocation, consistent with
the allocation wheel position of the
Participant that entered the order with
Setter Priority.
• Next, subject to proposed Rule
7.46(f)(5)(F) (describing orders with
instructions not to route), the Exchange
would route the Aggressing Order to
protected quotations of Away Markets.
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13567
• Next, orders ranked Priority 1—
Market Orders would trade based on
time.
• Next, orders ranked Priority 3—
Non-Display Orders, other than MPL
Orders with an MTS, would be allocated
on parity by Participant.
• Next, MPL Orders with an MTS
would be allocated based on MTS size
(smallest to largest) and time.
Third, the Exchange would not
include rule text based on NYSE
American Rule 7.46E(f)(G), relating to
Limit IOC Cross Orders, which would
not be offered on the Exchange. Finally,
proposed Rules 7.46(f)(5)(F)(i)(a) and (b)
are based on NYSE Arca Rules 7.46–
E(f)(5)(F)(i)(a) and (b) and not the NYSE
American version of the rule because
NYSE American does not offer Day ISO
orders.
The Exchange proposes that Rule 67
(Tick Size Pilot Plan) would not be
applicable to trading UTP Securities on
the Pillar trading platform.
Amendments to Rule 103B and 107B
As described above, the Exchange
would not assign UTP Securities to
DMMs. Accordingly, the Exchange
proposes to amend Rule 103B(I)
(Security Allocation and Reallocation)
to specify that UTP Securities would not
be allocated to a DMM unit.
In addition, because UTP Securities
would be eligible to be assigned to
Supplemental Liquidity Providers, the
Exchange proposes to amend Rule 107B
(Supplemental Liquidity Providers) to
replace the term ‘‘NYSE-listed
securities’’ with the term ‘‘NYSE-traded
securities,’’ which would include UTP
Securities.
Current Rules That Would Not Be
Applicable To Trading UTP Securities
on Pillar
As described in more detail above, in
connection with the proposed rules to
support trading of UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform, the Exchange
has identified current Exchange rules
that would not be applicable because
they would be superseded by a
proposed rule. The Exchange has
identified additional current rules that
would not be applicable to trading on
Pillar. These rules do not have a
counterpart in the proposed Pillar rules,
described above, but would be obsolete
when trading UTP Securities on Pillar.
The main category of rules that would
not be applicable to trading on the Pillar
trading platform are those rules that are
specific to auctions and Floor-based
point-of-sale trading other than crossing
transactions pursuant to Rule 76. For
this reason, the Exchange proposes that
the following Floor-specific rules would
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not be applicable to trading on the Pillar
trading platform:
• Rule 15 (Pre-Opening Indication
and Opening Order Imbalance
Information).
• Rule 77 (Prohibited Dealings and
Activities).
• Rule 79A (Miscellaneous
Requirements on Stock Market
Procedures).
• Rule 108 (Limitation on Members’
Bids and Offers).
• Rule 111 (Reports of Executions).
• Rule 115A (Orders at Opening).
• Rule 116 (‘Stop’ Constitutes
Guarantee).
• Rule 123A (Miscellaneous
Requirements).
• Rule 123B (Exchange Automated
Order Routing System).
• Rule 123C (The Closing
Procedures).
• Rule 123D (Openings and Halts in
Trading)
• Rule 127 (Block Crosses Outside the
Prevailing NYSE Quotation).
In addition, as noted above, the
Exchange would not offer a Retail
Liquidity Program when it trades on the
Pillar trading platform. Proposed rules
that are based on NYSE Arca rules that
include a cross reference to NYSE Arca
Rule 7.44–E would not include that rule
reference. The Exchange also proposes
that Rule 107C would not be applicable
to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar
trading platform.
*
*
*
*
*
As discussed above, because of the
technology changes associated with the
migration to the Pillar trading platform,
the Exchange will announce by Trader
Update when the Pillar rules for trading
UTP Securities will become operative.
2. Statutory Basis
The proposed rule change is
consistent with Section 6(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),47 in general, and furthers the
objectives of Section 6(b)(5),48 in
particular, because it is designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, to foster
cooperation and coordination with
persons engaged in facilitating
transactions in securities, to remove
impediments to, and perfect the
mechanism of, a free and open market
and a national market system and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest. The Exchange believes
that the proposed rules to support Pillar
on the Exchange would remove
impediments to and perfect the
47 15
48 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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mechanism of a free and open market
because they provide for rules to
support the Exchange’s introduction of
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar
trading platform.
Generally, the Exchange believes that
the proposed rules would remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system because
they would support the Exchange’s
introduction of trading UTP Securities
in a manner that would use Pillar
terminology to describe how the
Exchange’s current Floor-based parity
allocation model with Setter Priority
would operate, with specified
substantive differences from current
rules, and introduce Pillar rules for the
Exchange that are based on the rules of
its affiliated markets, NYSE Arca and
NYSE American.
With respect to how UTP Securities
would be ranked, displayed, executed,
and routed on Pillar, the Exchange
believes that proposed Rules 7.36(a)–(g)
and proposed Rules 7.37(a) and (c)–(g)
would remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system because these rules would use
Pillar terminology that is based on the
approved rules of NYSE Arca and NYSE
American. The Exchange believes that
proposed Rule 7.36(h), which would
establish Setter Priority, would remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system because
the proposed rule is based on current
Rule 72(a), with substantive differences
designed to encourage the display of
aggressively-priced orders by requiring
that an order not only establish the
BBO, but also establish or join the
NBBO to be eligible for Setter Priority.
The Exchange similarly believes that
proposed Rule 7.37(b), which would use
Pillar terminology to describe how an
Aggressing Order would be allocated,
would remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system because it is based on current
Rule 72(b) and (c). The Exchange
believes that the proposed substantive
difference to maintain separate
allocation wheels for displayed and
non-displayed orders at each price
would promote just and equitable
principles of trade because it would
allow for Exchange member
organizations to establish their position
on an allocation wheel at each price
point, rather than rely on their position
on a single allocation wheel that would
be applicable to trades at multiple price
points.
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The Exchange believes that extending
its parity allocation model to UTP
Securities, including extending parity
allocation for orders entered by Floor
brokers, is not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers or dealers. First,
although the Exchange would not have
DMMs assigned to UTP Securities, the
Exchange proposes to maintain Floor
trading for UTP Securities. Similar to
trading in Exchange-listed securities,
Floor brokers, would be able to effect
crossing transactions in UTP Securities
on the Floor, but with Exchange
employees rather than DMMs staffing
where such trading would occur.
Second, to be eligible to be included
in the Floor Broker Participant, and thus
be eligible for a parity allocation, the
Floor broker that entered the order must
be engaged in a Floor broker business in
Exchange-listed securities. The
Exchange believes that this requirement
provides a nexus between Exchange
Floor trading in Exchange-listed
securities and the extension of that
model to trading in UTP Securities.
Third, because member organizations
operating as Floor brokers would be
trading on the floor of an exchange, they
would be subject to restrictions on
trading for their own account set forth
in Section 11(a)(1) of the Act and rules
thereunder. Moreover, the Exchange
proposes to specify in proposed Rule
7.36 that for an order to be eligible to
be included in the Floor Broker
Participant, it cannot be for the account
of the Floor broker or any associated
persons (unless entered via an error
account pursuant to Rule 134).
Because Floor brokers trading in UTP
Securities would not be permitted to
trade for their own accounts, they
would not be permitted to engage in the
type of customer-based principal trading
activities of a member organization that
enters orders from off the Floor of the
Exchange. Therefore, an allocation to an
individual Floor broker under the
Exchange’s proposed allocation model
would always accrue to the customer of
that Floor broker (or customers if
multiple orders are represented by a
Floor broker). Conversely, because a
member organization operating a Floor
broker may trade on behalf of customers
only, it would never receive a Floor
broker parity allocation for proprietary
trading. As such, the Exchange does not
consider the proposed parity allocation
model for UTP Securities as a Floor
broker ‘‘benefit,’’ but rather as an
allocation model choice for customers.
This choice remains relevant in
today’s more electronic market. As
broker-dealers and institutional
investors have reduced the number of
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natural persons on their own off-Floor
trading desks, Floor brokers have come
to serve as an extension of the more
thinly staffed trading desks of other
broker-dealers or institutional investors,
but at a variable cost. This is an
important function that the Floor
brokers play as an agency broker
without conflicts and fills a void for
firms that have chosen to allocate
resources away from trading desks. In
addition to this role, Floor brokers
provide services for more illiquid
securities, which upstairs trading desks
may not be staffed to manage.
Importantly, when providing such
agency trading services, a Floor broker
is unconflicted because he or she is not
trading for his own account and does
not sell research to customers. Floor
brokers therefore can focus on price
discovery and volume discovery on
behalf of their customers, while at the
same time managing their customers’
order flow to ensure that it does not
impact pricing on the market (e.g.,
executing large positions on behalf of a
customer). As discussed above, when
managing such customer order flow,
Floor brokers trading in UTP Securities
would continue to be subject to
Exchange rules that are unique to Floor
brokers, including Rules 95, 122, 123,
and paragraphs (d)–(j) of Rule 134.
Fourth, any member organization can
choose to have a Floor broker operation
and thus have direct access to Floor
broker parity allocations on behalf of its
customers. The Exchange does not
charge member organizations for the use
of booth space on the Floor, and
therefore there would be minimal to no
extra cost for a member organization to
have a Floor business. Indeed, a smaller
firm that moves its entire operation to
the NYSE Floor could have reduced
costs as compared to a firm that needs
to pay for office space. Because there is
fair access to any member organization
to engage in a Floor broker operation,
the differences between how an order is
allocated to a Floor Broker Participant
and Book Participant would not unfairly
discriminate among Exchange member
organizations.
Finally, customers relying on agency
broker-dealers to represent their orders
on the Exchange can choose whether to
use a Floor broker or a member
organization that only uses off-exchange
order entry methods.49 In some cases,
customers choose to use a member
organization that offers both order entry
methods. But the different allocation
49 Floor
broker customers are generally other
broker-dealers or institutional investors. Retail
investors generally do not interact directly with
either Floor brokers or the trade desks of member
organizations that route orders to the Exchange.
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models are available to all customers
that use a member organization to enter
orders on the Exchange; having such
choice would not unfairly discriminate
among customers.
The Exchange also believes that its
proposal to make its existing parity
allocation model, as modified for the
Pillar trading platform, available for
UTP Securities would remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
because it would extend the Exchange’s
choice-based allocation model to all
securities that would trade on the
Exchange in a manner that is consistent
with its Trading Floor model. For
market participants other than DMMs,
the Exchange does not believe that there
is an inherent benefit of one method of
allocation on the Exchange over
another. Market participants that are
latency sensitive—whether for
proprietary or agency-based trading—
may choose to use the off-exchange
order entry method because of the
relative speed of that order entry path as
compared to Floor broker order entry
and availability of Setter Priority
allocation. By contrast, market
participants that are not as latency
sensitive or are seeking an unconflicted
agent to manage their order flow and
potentially negotiate a large crossing
transaction may choose to use a Floor
broker.
The Exchange believes that intra-day
trading volume entered by Floor brokers
in NYSE-listed securities, which are
subject to the Exchange’s existing parity
allocation model, demonstrates how
customers have already exercised this
choice. In October 2017, orders from
Floor brokers represented
approximately 5.5% of the intra-day
liquidity-providing volume on the
Exchange in NYSE-listed securities (the
parity allocation model is only
applicable to provide volume).50 The
Exchange believes that this volume
demonstrates that there is still a value
to the end customer—who has a
choice—to use a Floor broker. As
discussed above, Floor brokers can be
distinguished from off-Floor agency
member organizations because they
operate a pure agency business and do
not trade for their own accounts. There
are customers that value that conflictfree model. In addition, Floor brokers
distinguish themselves by providing
high-touch service to their customers.
Floor brokers that attract liquidity50 Over 75% of Floor broker traded volume in
NYSE-listed securities is for auctions. However,
because the Exchange would not be conducting
auctions in UTP Securities, the relative benefits of
a parity allocation to a Floor broker in an auction
would not be applicable.
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13569
providing orders promote the display of
liquidity on the Exchange.
That volume of Floor broker intra-day
trading also demonstrates that
customers have similarly exercised their
choice not to use Floor brokers. If there
were an inherent benefit to the Floor
broker parity allocation that
distinguishes it as superior to the Book
Participant allocation, it would likely
follow that there would be greater
proportion of intra-day order flow
directed to Floor brokers in NYSE-listed
securities. But that is not the case. In
sum, the current NYSE-listed intra-day
Floor broker provide volume
demonstrates that using a Floor broker
has value to certain customers, but also
demonstrates that the parity allocation
to a Floor broker is not the only
component of a customer’s decision
about how to send its orders to the
Exchange. With this filing, the Exchange
proposes to extend that choice to UTP
Securities, thereby benefiting the
ultimate customer of the Floor broker.
The Exchange further believes that its
proposed parity allocation model for
UTP Securities would remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system because it
`
is a competitive offering vis-a-vis other
exchange competitors, which offer
variations on a price-time priority
models, and over-the-counter trading.
The Exchange is currently the only
registered exchange that does not trade
non-Exchange listed securities on a UTP
basis. Additionally, the Exchange
currently is the only registered exchange
that makes available Floor-based trading
for cash equity securities. The Exchange
proposes to extend the availability of
this feature by maintaining Floor-based
crossing transactions when it launches
trading in UTP Securities. The Exchange
believes that trading UTP Securities is a
natural extension of its current offering
of trading Exchange-listed securities,
which also trade on a parity allocation
model. The Exchange believes it would
promote competition to offer this
allocation model for all securities that
would trade on the Exchange, thereby
providing an alternative allocation
model for UTP Securities. Conversely,
Floor brokers on the Exchange would be
able to expand the services they provide
to customers by being able to manage
order flow in UTP Securities in addition
to Exchange-listed securities. The
Exchange also believes that this
proposed allocation model would
promote intra-market competition by
offering a menu of choices to market
participants of how their orders in UTP
Securities would be allocated on the
Exchange.
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While the parity allocation model is a
competitive offering, its origins are
derived from the Floor-based trading
model of the Exchange. Accordingly, the
Exchange believes that it would remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system to provide
for Floor-based crossing transactions
and to extend existing requirements
relating to Floor brokers for orders in
UTP Securities that seek to be eligible
to be included in the Floor Broker
Participant. First, as noted above, the
Floor broker must trade on an agencyonly basis and would continue to be
subject to rules that are unique to a
Floor broker, including requirements
specified in Rules 95, 122, 123, and
134(d)–(j). Second, consistent with
current Rule 70 requirements, for orders
in UTP Securities to be eligible to be
included in the Floor Broker
Participant, such orders must be entered
by a Floor broker while on the Trading
Floor.
In addition, because the parity
allocation model is based on the history
of the Exchange as a Floor-based model,
the Exchange believes that for orders in
UTP Securities to be eligible to be
included in the Floor Broker
Participant, the Floor broker
representing such orders must also be
engaged in a Floor broker business in
Exchange-listed securities. Trading in
UTP Securities on the Trading Floor is
designed to complement a Floor
broker’s existing role in representing
orders in Exchange-listed securities
because it would enable such Floor
brokers to trade additional securities on
behalf of their customers. For example,
a Floor broker would be better
positioned to process baskets of
securities that include Tape A, B, and C
securities and enter all such orders on
the Exchange. By offering the parity
allocation model for UTP Securities, a
Floor broker would not need to
segregate its orders in UTP Securities
into different trading strategies than
what would be offered for Exchangelisted securities. Because Floor broker
trading in UTP Securities is designed to
function in tandem with trading in
Exchange-listed securities, the Exchange
believes that it would remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system to require
such nexus because it would ensure that
member organizations would not seek to
conduct a stand-alone Floor broker
business in only UTP Securities.
The Exchange believes that proposed
Rules 7.10, 7.11, 7.16, 7.18, 7.31, 7.34,
7.38, and 7.46 would remove
impediments to and perfect the
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mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system because
they are based on the rules of NYSE
Arca and NYSE American. The
proposed substantive differences to the
Exchange’s rules would be because the
Exchange would not be offering the full
suite of orders and modifiers available
on NYSE Arca and NYSE American. In
addition, the Exchange proposes
substantive differences to these rules
consistent with the Exchange’s
proposed parity allocation model. The
Exchange believes that the proposed
substantive differences for these rules
would remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system because they would provide
transparency of which orders, modifiers
and instructions would be available on
the Exchange when it begins trading
UTP Securities on the Pillar trading
platform, and how the Pillar rules
would function with a parity allocation
model.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed substantive differences to Rule
7.34 to offer Early and Core Trading
Sessions, but not a Late Trading
Session, would remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system because it is consistent with the
Exchange’s current hours, described in
Rule 51, that the Exchange is not open
for business after 4:00 p.m. Eastern
Time. The Exchange further believes
that adding a trading session before 9:30
a.m. Eastern Time would provide
additional time for Exchange member
organizations to trade UTP Securities on
the Exchange consistent with the
trading hours of other exchanges,
including NYSE American, which also
will begin trading at 7:00 a.m. Eastern
Time.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed amendments to Rules 103B
and 107B would remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free
and open market and a national market
system because they would provide
transparency that the Exchange would
not be assigning UTP Securities to
DMMs and that member organizations
would be eligible to register as a
Supplemental Liquidity Providers in
UTP Securities. The Exchange further
believes that not assigning DMMs to
UTP Securities is consistent with just
and equitable principles of trade
because the Exchange would not be
conducting auctions in UTP Securities
and therefore the Exchange would not
need DMMs assigned to such securities
to facilitate auctions. Not having DMMs
registered in UTP Securities is also
consistent with how NYSE Arca and
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NYSE American function on Pillar, in
that neither lead market makers (on
NYSE Arca) nor electronic designated
market makers (on NYSE American) are
assigned securities not listed on those
exchanges. The Exchange further
believes that it would remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system for
member organizations to be eligible to
register as Supplemental Liquidity
Providers in UTP Securities as this
would provide an incentive for
displayed liquidity in UTP Securities.
The Exchange further believes that it
would remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system to specify which current rules
would not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
The Exchange believes that the
following legend, which would be
added to existing rules, ‘‘This Rule is
not applicable to trading UTP Securities
on the Pillar trading platform,’’ would
promote transparency regarding which
rules would govern trading UTP
Securities on the Exchange on Pillar.
The Exchange has proposed to add this
legend to rules that would be
superseded by proposed rules or rules
that would not be applicable because
they relate to auctions or Floor-based
point-of-sale trading.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. The
proposed change is designed to propose
rules to support trading of UTP
Securities on the Exchange’s new Pillar
trading platform. The Exchange operates
in a highly competitive environment in
which its unaffiliated exchange
competitors operate multiple affiliated
exchanges that operate under common
rules. By adding trading of UTP
Securities on the Exchange, the
Exchange believes that it will be able to
compete on a more level playing field
with its exchange competitors that
similarly trade all NMS Stocks. In
addition, by basing certain rules on
those of NYSE Arca and NYSE
American, the Exchange will provide its
members with consistency across
affiliated exchanges, thereby enabling
the Exchange to compete with
unaffiliated exchange competitors that
similarly operate multiple exchanges on
the same trading platforms.
More specifically, the Exchange does
not believe that the proposal to extend
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the Exchange’s existing parity allocation
model, as modified for Pillar, to UTP
Securities would impose a burden on
competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. To the contrary, the
Exchange believes that the proposal
would promote inter-market
competition by providing market
participants with the choice of a parity
allocation model together with Floor
crossing transactions for trading UTP
Securities, which is not available on any
other exchange. For the Exchange’s
listed securities, its competitive offering
includes not only its parity allocation
model, but also its auctions. Designed as
a complement to existing Floor broker
operations in Exchange-listed securities
and consistent with the Exchange’s
current trading model, the Floor Broker
Participant parity allocation for UTP
Securities would be available only to
Floor brokers that engage in Floor
trading of Exchange-listed securities,
and such Floor brokers would be
eligible to engage in manual
transactions under Rule 76 for UTP
Securities. In addition, to be eligible for
a parity allocation, Floor brokers must
enter such orders on the Trading Floor
and could only trade on an agency basis.
Moreover, any trading in UTP Securities
by Floor brokers would be subject to
existing rules that apply only to Floor
brokers, such as Rules 95, 122, 123, and
134(d)–(j).
The Exchange further believes that the
proposal would promote intra-market
competition because it would provide a
choice to customers of how their orders
in UTP Securities would be allocated on
the Exchange. For certain customers,
entering orders via the Book Participant
may serve their trading strategies. For
other customers, using a Floor broker for
intra-day trading may serve their trading
strategies. Importantly, the results of a
Floor broker allocation would always
accrue to the customer, and whether to
use a Floor broker is the customer’s
choice. Accordingly, this proposed
market structure is not about providing
a ‘‘benefit’’ to a Floor broker, but rather
providing customers with a choice of
how an order would be allocated.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
III. Summary of Comments Received
The Commission received one
comment letter, which opposes NYSE’s
proposal to provide floor brokers with
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parity allocation and the exclusive use
of certain order types (i.e., pegged
orders).51 The commenter asserts that
providing floor brokers with preferential
treatment in a fully electronic trading
environment, the market for UTP
Securities, unfairly discriminates
against market participants who do not
submit orders through a Floor Broker.52
According to the commenter, parity
provides floor brokers with a distinct
unfair competitive advantage over other
market participants, such as customers
and broker-dealers.53
The commenter states that floor
brokers do not have the restrictions of
time priority when they receive parity
and can ‘‘skip the line.’’ 54 According to
the commentor, floor brokers can insert
themselves into the parity wheel and
buy and sell during price disparities to
liquidate or acquire positions at
beneficial prices.55 The commentor
asserts that this would disadvantage
customers and broker-dealers, even
though, like the floor brokers, they add
liquidity to the market.56 The
commenter further assert that this
would also disadvantages other
members and their orders, including
orders routed from other trading centers,
which are aggregated into one
participant and receive one slot on the
parity wheel.57
According to the commenter, many
entities cannot, as a practical matter,
take advantage of the floor brokers’
parity allocations, and that those that
can use the services of floor brokers may
route more orders through them to get
the advantage of parity.58 The
commenter believes that floor brokers
could take advantage of this by charging
higher transaction fees to customers.59
The commenter asserts that orders
submitted by the floor broker do not
represent manual interest, but are the
byproduct of the floor broker reselling
algorithms or other electronic access to
their privileged position on the parity
wheel.60
The commenter also states that
providing floor brokers with the
exclusive use of pegged orders provides
them an unjustified competitive
advantage over customers and brokerdealers when trading securities
electronically.61 The commenter
51 See
Cboe Letter, supra note 9.
id. at 1–2.
53 Id. at 2.
54 Id.
55 Id.
56 Id.
57 Id.
58 Id.
59 Id.
60 Id. at 2–3.
61 Id. at 3.
52 See
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13571
explains that pegged orders
automatically repriced to a new price
level and that, therefore, pegged orders
have a time advantage over all other
orders that seek to be entered at the
revised price.62
IV. Discussion and Commission
Findings
After careful review, the Commission
finds that the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No. 1, is
consistent with the requirements of the
Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to a national
securities exchange.63 In particular, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section
6(b)(5) of the Act 64—which requires,
among other things, that the rules of a
national securities exchange be
designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in
facilitating transactions in securities, to
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest, and that the rules not be
designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers—and with
Section 6(b)(8) of the Act,65 which
requires that the rules of a national
securities exchange not impose any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. The
Commission further finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 12(f) of the Act,66 which permits
a national securities exchange to trade
securities it does not list, pursuant to
unlisted trading privileges, as long as
the securities are listed on another
national securities exchange.
The Exchange proposes to trade, for
the first time, securities that it does not
list, and it proposes to do so using a
new technology platform—the Pillar
platform that has been deployed to date
on the Exchange’s affiliated exchanges
NYSE Arca and NYSE American. The
proposed rules for UTP trading would
govern clearly erroneous executions,
limit-up-limit-down plan compliance,
short sales, trading halts, orders and
62 Id.
63 In approving this proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No. 1, the Commission
has considered the proposed rule’s impact on
efficiency, competition, and capital formation. See
15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
64 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
65 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
66 15 U.S.C. 78l(f).
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modifiers, order ranking and display,
order execution and routing, odd and
mixed lots trading, and tick-size pilot
plan compliance, and the proposal
would also designate the current
Exchange rules that are not applicable to
UTP Securities.
Trading of UTP Securities on the
Exchange would differ in two
significant respects from trading in
NYSE-listed securities.67 First, the
Exchange would not conduct auctions
in UTP Securities. And second, the
Exchange would not assign UTP
securities to DMMs, which have
affirmative obligations to support a fair
and orderly market, and to facilitate
auctions, in their assigned securities.68
The Commission believes that these
distinctions between NYSE-listed
securities and UTP Securities are
consistent with UTP trading of
securities generally, and that these
distinctions are consistent with the
requirements of the Act.
The Commission also notes that,
while the proposed trading rules are
similar in most respects to previously
approved rules of NYSE Arca and NYSE
American—which also use the Pillar
trading platform 69—they differ in
certain material ways. Most notably, the
Exchange will extend its current parity
allocation model to the execution of
trades in UTP Securities, rather than
using the strict price-time priority
allocation of NYSE Arca and NYSE
American, and this parity allocation
model would allow each floor broker’s
orders to trade on parity with orders on
the Exchange book. Only floor brokers
engaged in a floor-broker business for
NYSE-listed securities would be eligible
for parity allocation. Additionally,
Exchange floor brokers would only be
able to enter orders for parity allocation
while physically on the floor of the
Exchange, and they could not engage in
proprietary trading using parity
allocation. Finally, there would also be
a floor-based point of sale, supervised
by Exchange employees, where floor
brokers would be able cross trades in
UTP securities.
When instituting proceedings to
determine whether the Exchange’s
proposal was consistent with Section
67 NYSE represents that it will continue to trade
NYSE-listed securities on its current trading
platform. The Exchange intends to migrate trading
in NYSE-listed securities to Pillar at a later date.
See supra note 17.
68 See NYSE Rule 104(a) (stating that ‘‘DMMs
registered in one or more securities trading on the
Exchange must engage in a course of dealings for
their own account to assist in the maintenance of
a fair and orderly market insofar as reasonably
practicable.’’).
69 See supra notes 12 and 13.
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6(b)(5) and Section 6(b)(8) of the Act,70
the Commission specifically requested
comments concerning the role of floor
brokers in trading UTP Securities on the
Exchange; 71 on the benefits and costs of
floor-broker activities with respect to
trading of UTP Securities; 72 and on
whether providing floor brokers with
parity allocation in UTP Securities, or
providing floor brokers with exclusive
use of certain order instructions, would
unfairly discriminate or impose an
unfair burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate.73 The one
comment letter received opposes the
proposal, arguing that parity allocation
in a fully electronic market would
provide floor brokers, by allowing them
to ‘‘skip the line,’’ with an unfair
`
advantage vis-a-vis other market
participants that also add liquidity to
the market, and that floor brokers might
take advantage of their preferential
treatment on the parity wheel by
charging higher transaction fees. The
commenter also argues that the
exclusive use of pegged orders by floor
brokers would similarly provide them
with an unfair competitive advantage.
The Commission notes that, in
Amendment No. 1 to its proposal, the
Exchange has responded to the
questions raised by the Commission,
and the concerns expressed by the
commenter, by modifying its proposal to
require that floor brokers be engaged in
a floor-broker business in NYSE-listed
securities in order to be eligible for
parity allocation in UTP Securities; to
expressly require that orders in UTP
Securities be entered from the Exchange
floor in order to be eligible for parity 74;
and to provide for a floor-based point of
sale for crossing transactions.75
Additionally, the Exchange has added
substantial further explaination of the
role that floor brokers play as agency
brokers on behalf of their customers.
The Exchange argues that the parity
allocation model for UTP Securities is
based on the historically floor-based
model of the Exchange and that trading
in UTP Securities is designed to
complement the floor broker’s existing
role in NYSE-listed securities, which
includes both parity allocation and the
use of pegging orders. The Exchange
argues that the proposed parity
allocation model in UTP Securities
would benefit competition by providing
70 See Order Instituting Proceedings, supra note 7,
at 52761.
71 Id.
72 Id.
73 Id.
74 See Proposed NYSE Rule 7.36(a)(5).
75 As explained above, NYSE proposes to permit
floor brokers to enter into crossing transactions
pursuant to NYSE Rule 76.
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market participants with a choice as to
how their orders are executed, asserting
that market participants who do not
wish to invest in speed-related
technology, who have a thinly staff
trading desk, or who would like to
execute a large crossing transaction
could utilize the services of a floor
broker. According to the Exchange,
trading UTP Securities using a parity
model would also benefit competition
by providing an alternative trading
model for trading those securities. The
Exchange asserts that floor brokers serve
an important role as an agency broker
without conflicts, especially for illiquid
securities. The Exchange also notes that
any member organization can choose to
become a floor broker and that the
Exchange does not charge member
organizations for the use of space on the
trading floor.
The Commission believes that the
changes to the proposal in Amendment
No. 1 have sufficiently addressed the
Commission’s and the commenter’s
concerns regarding the proposal’s
consistency with the Act. The proposal,
as amended, represents a measured
extension of the Exchange’s existing
market model (including the potential
for floor-based trading added by
Amendment No. 1) to trading in UTP
Securities, while ensuring that the
ability of floor brokers to obtain parity
allocation is limited to those floor
brokers who are engaged in a bona fide
agency business while physically on the
trading floor of the Exchange, with the
benefit of parity allocations flowing to
the customers of the floor brokers. Floor
brokers, as agency-only market
participants, would not be able to use
either parity allocations or pegging
orders to liquidate or acquire their own
proprietary positions. Finally, with
respect to concerns regarding
competition, the Exchange has
representated that, in October 2017,
floor-broker orders receiving parity
executions (all of which are liquidityproviding orders) represented only
about 5.5% of the intraday liquidityproviding volume on the Exchange in
NYSE-listed securities.76 Given that
parity allocation and the exclusive use
of pegging orders do not appear to have
burdened competition in NYSE-listed
securities, the Commission does not
have a reason to believe that permitting
the Exchange to trade UTP Securities
with a similar intraday role for floor
brokers will provide those floor brokers
with an unfair competitive advantage.
The Commission also finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 12(f) of the Act. Section 12(a) of
76 See
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the Act 77 generally prohibits trading on
an exchange of any security that is not
registered (listed) on that exchange.
Section 12(f) of the Act,78 however,
allows a national securities exchange to
extend unlisted trading privileges—i.e.,
to allow trading in a security that is not
listed and registered on that exchange—
to securities that are registered on
another national securities exchange.
When an exchange extends unlisted
trading privileges to a security, the
exchange allows its members to trade
the security as if the security were listed
on that exchange.79
The UTP Act of 1994 80 substantially
amended Section 12(f) of the Act. Before
1994, national securities exchanges had
to apply to the Commission for approval
before extending unlisted trading
privileges to a particular security. The
UTP Act removed the application,
notice, and Commission approval
process from Section 12(f) of the Act,
except in cases of Commission
suspension of unlisted trading
privileges in a particular security on an
exchange. Accordingly, under Section
12(f) of the Act, exchanges may
immediately extend unlisted trading
privileges to a security listed on another
exchange. Pursuant to Rule 12f–5 under
the Act,81 a national securities exchange
shall not extend unlisted trading
privileges to any security, unless the
national securities exchange has in
effect a rule or rules providing for
transactions in the class or type of
security to which the exchange extends
unlisted trading privileges.
The proposal would establish
Exchange rules providing for
transactions on securities that are listed
on other national securities exchanges.
As a national securities exchange, the
Exchange is permitted under Section
12(f) of the Act 82 to extend unlisted
trading privileges to securities listed
and registered on other national
securities exchanges, subject to Rule
12f–5 under the Act. The Commission
notes that the Exchange’s current rules
would allow the Exchange to extend
unlisted trading privileges to any
security that is an NMS Stock listed on
another national securities exchange.83
77 15
U.S.C. 78l(a).
U.S.C. 78l(f).
79 Over-the-counter (‘‘OTC’’) dealers are not
subject to the Section 12(a) registration requirement
because they do not transact business on an
exchange.
80 Pub. L. 103–389, 108 Stat. 4081 (1994).
81 17 CFR 240.12f–5.
82 15 U.S.C. 78l.
83 See NYSE Rule 5.1 (‘‘Notwithstanding the
requirements for listing set forth in these Rules, the
Exchange may extend unlisted trading privileges
(‘‘UTP’’) to any security that is an NMS Stock (as
defined in Rule 600 of Regulation NMS under the
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78 15
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The proposed rules provide for
transactions in the class or type of
security to which the Exchange intends
to extend unlisted trading privileges.
Together with the existing Exchange
rules for trading on Pillar—NYSE Rules
1P to 13P—the Exchange would have
rules providing for transactions in the
class or type of security to which the
exchange proposes to extend unlisted
trading privileges, and, therefore, the
proposal is consistent with Section 12(f)
of the Act.
Because the proposal, as amended, is
consistent with Sections 6(b)(5), 6(b)(8),
and 12(f) of the Act, the Commission
finds good cause, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Act,84 to approve the
proposed rule change on an accelerated
basis.
V. Solicitation of Comments on
Amendment No. 1
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning whether
Amendment No. 1 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–
NYSE–2017–36 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–NYSE–2017–36. 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
Act) that is listed on another national securities
exchange or with respect to which unlisted trading
privileges may otherwise be extended in accordance
with Section 12(f) of the Act. Any such security will
be subject to all Exchange trading rules applicable
to securities trading on the Pillar trading platform,
unless otherwise noted.’’).
84 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
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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 comment 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–NYSE–2017–36, and
should be submitted on or before April
19, 2018.
VI. Accelerated Approval of the
Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1
The Commission finds good cause to
approve the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No. 1, prior to
the thirtieth day after the date of
publication of Amendment No. 1 in the
Federal Register. In Amendment No. 1,
among other changes, the Exchange: (i)
Responds to the Commission’s concerns
in the Order Instituting Proceedings
relating to the extension of parity to
floor brokers in UTP Securities by (a)
proposing additional requirements for
floor broker orders to be eligible for
parity, (b) proposing to permit floor
brokers to engage in floor-based pointof-sale trading and crossing transactions
in UTP Securities, and (c) providing
additional justification for providing
floor brokers with parity in UTP
Securities; (ii) amends the definition of
Aggressing Order to include that a
resting order may become an Aggressing
Order if its working price change, the
PBBO or NBBO is updated, when there
are changes to other orders on the
Exchange Book, or when processing
inbound messages; (iii) amends the
rules relating to the MPL Order and
MTS Modifier to reflect those of NYSE
Arca and NYSE American and sets forth
additional rules relating setting forth
how orders with an MTS Modifier
would trade in a parity-based model;
(iv) makes changes to the list of rules
that are not applicable for parity; (v)
makes changes to proposed NYSE Rules
7.37 and 7.46 to refer to an order with
an MTS as an order with an ‘‘MTS
Modifier’’; (vi) changes cross-references
to NYSE Arca’s rules to reflect the
merger of NYSE Arca and NYSE Arca
Equities, and (vii) makes changes to
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reflect the renaming of NYSE MKT to
NYSE American.
As discussed above, Amendment No.1
addresses the Commission’s concerns
and the comment letter received. The
definitions of Aggressing Order, the
MPL Order, and the MTS Modifier are
similar to the rules of NYSE Arca,
which have been approved by the
Commission previously, with adaptions
for the Exchange’s parity allocation
model. The remaining changes are nonsubstantive. Accordingly, the
Commission finds good cause, pursuant
to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,85 to
approve the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No. 1, on an
accelerated basis.
VII. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,86 that the
proposed rule change (SR–NYSE–2017–
36), as modified by Amendment No. 1,
be, and hereby is, approved on an
accelerated basis.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.87
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–06339 Filed 3–28–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–82943; File No. SR–
CboeEDGX–2018–008]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of a
Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Paragraph (h) of Exchange Rule 11.6
Describing the Operation of Orders
With a Minimum Execution Quantity
Instruction
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
March 23, 2018.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on March 16,
2018, Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘EDGX’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III below, which Items have been
prepared by the Exchange. The
Exchange has designated this proposal
as a ‘‘non-controversial’’ proposed rule
85 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange filed a proposal to
amend paragraph (h) of Exchange Rule
11.6 describing the operation of orders
with a Minimum Execution Quantity 5
instruction.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available at the Exchange’s website at
www.markets.cboe.com, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in Sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant parts of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend
paragraph (h) of Exchange Rule 11.6
describing the operation of orders with
a Minimum Execution Quantity
instruction by removing language that
provided for the re-pricing of incoming
orders with a Minimum Execution
Quantity instruction to avoid an
internally crossed book. As a result of
this change, the Exchange proposes to
specify within the rule when an order
with a Minimum Execution Quantity
instruction would not be eligible to
trade to prevent executions from
occurring that may be inconsistent with
intra-market price priority or that would
3 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6)(iii).
5 See Exchange Rule 11.6(h) for a complete
description of the operation of the Minimum
Execution Quantity order instruction.
86 Id.
4 17
87 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
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change pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)
of the Act 3 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6)(iii)
thereunder,4 which renders it effective
upon filing with the Commission. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
19:09 Mar 28, 2018
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cause a Non-Displayed 6 order to trade
ahead of a Displayed 7 order.
In sum, a Minimum Execution
Quantity is a non-displayed order that
enables a User 8 to specify a minimum
share amount at which the order will
execute.9 An order with a Minimum
Execution Quantity will not execute
unless the volume of contra-side
liquidity available to execute against the
order meets or exceeds the designated
minimum size. By default, an order with
a Minimum Execution Quantity
instruction will execute upon entry
against a single order or multiple
aggregated orders simultaneously. The
Exchange recently amended the
operation of the Minimum Execution
Quantity instruction to permit a User to
alternatively specify the order not
execute against multiple aggregated
orders simultaneously and that the
minimum quantity condition be
satisfied by each individual order
resting on the EDGX Book.10
The Exchange also recently amended
the operation of the Minimum
Execution Quantity instruction to reprice incoming orders with the
Minimum Execution Quantity
instruction where that order may cross
an order posted on the EDGX Book.11
Specifically, where there is insufficient
size to satisfy an incoming order’s
minimum quantity condition and that
incoming order, if posted at its limit
price, would cross an order(s), whether
displayed or non-displayed, resting on
the EDGX Book, the order with the
minimum quantity condition would be
re-priced to and ranked at the Locking
Price.12 This functionality has not yet
been implemented 13 and the Exchange
6 See also Exchange Rule 11.6(c)(2) for a
definition of the Non-Displayed instruction.
7 See Exchange Rule 11.6(c)(1) for a definition of
the Displayed instruction.
8 The term ‘‘User’’ is defined as ‘‘any Member or
Sponsored Participant who is authorized to obtain
access to the System pursuant to Rule 11.3.’’ See
Exchange Rule 1.5(ee).
9 A Minimum Execution Quantity instruction
may only be added to an order with a NonDisplayed instruction or a Time-in-Force of
Immediate-or-Cancel. See Exchange Rule 11.6(h).
10 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81457
(August 22, 2017), 82 FR 40812 (August 28, 2017)
(SR–BatsEDGX–2017–34). This functionality is
pending deployment and the implementation date
will be announced via a trading notice.
11 Id.
12 ‘‘Locking Price’’ is defined as ‘‘[t]he price at
which an order to buy (sell), that if displayed by
the System on the EDGX Book, either upon entry
into the System, or upon return to the System after
being routed away, would be a Locking Quotation.’’
See Exchange Rule 11.6(f).
13 See supra note 10. Exchange Rule 11.6(h) does
not require re-pricing where the order with a
Minimum Execution Quantity is resting on the
EDGX Book. As such, an internally crossed book
may occur where the incoming order is of
insufficient size to satisfy the resting order’s
E:\FR\FM\29MRN1.SGM
29MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 61 (Thursday, March 29, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 13553-13574]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-06339]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-82945; File No. SR-NYSE-2017-36]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC;
Notice of Filing of Amendment No. 1 and Order Granting Accelerated
Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1, To
Adopt New Equity Trading Rules To Trade Securities Pursuant to Unlisted
Trading Privileges, Including Orders and Modifiers, Order Ranking and
Display, and Order Execution and Routing on Pillar, the Exchange's New
Trading Technology Platform
March 26, 2018.
I. Introduction
On July 28, 2017, New York Stock Exchange LLC (``NYSE'' or
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ a
proposed rule change to adopt new equity trading rules to allow the
Exchange to trade securities pursuant to unlisted trading privileges
(``UTP Securities'') \3\ on Pillar, the Exchange's new trading
technology platform. The proposed rule change was published for comment
in the Federal Register on August 9, 2017.\4\ On September 18, 2017,
the Commission designated a longer period within which to approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule change should be
disapproved.\5\ On November 7, 2017, the Commission instituted
proceedings under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act \6\ to determine
whether to approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\7\ On
February 1, 2018, the Commission designated a longer period for
Commission action on the proceedings to determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule change.\8\ The Commission received one
comment letter on the proposal.\9\ On February 23, 2018, the Exchange
filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change, which replaces and
supersedes the proposed rule change in its entirety.\10\ The Commission
is publishing notice of the filing of Amendment No. 1 to interested
persons, and is approving the proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, on an accelerated basis.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ NYSE Rules define ``UTP Security'' as a security that is
listed on a national securities exchange other than the Exchange and
that trades on the Exchange pursuant to unlisted trading privileges.
See NYSE Rule 1.1(ii).
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81310 (Aug. 3,
2017), 82 FR 37257 (Aug. 9, 2017).
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81641 (Sept. 18,
2017), 82 FR 44483 (Sept. 22, 2017).
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82028 (Nov. 7,
2017), 82 FR 52757 (Nov. 14, 2017) (``Order Instituting
Proceedings'').
\8\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82613 (Feb. 1,
2018), 83 FR 5499 (Feb. 7, 2018).
\9\ See Letter from Joanne Moffic-Silver, Executive Vice
President, General Counsel, and Corporate Secretary, Cboe Global
Markets, Inc., to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission (Feb. 1,
2018) (``Cboe Letter'').
\10\ In Amendment No. 1, among other changes, the Exchange
proposes to: (i) Respond to the Commission's concerns in the Order
Instituting Proceedings relating to offering a separate parity
allocation for floor brokers by (a) setting forth additional
requirements for floor broker orders to be eligible for a separate
parity allocation, (b) proposing to permit floor brokers to engage
in floor-based point-of-sale trading and crossing transactions in
UTP Securities, and (c) providing additional justification for
providing floor brokers with parity; (ii) amend the definition of
Aggressing Order to include that a resting order may become an
Aggressing Order if its working price change, the best protected bid
or offer (``PBBO'') or the national best bid or offer (``NBBO'') is
updated, there are changes to other orders on the Exchange Book, or
when processing inbound messages; (iii) amend the rules relating to
the Mid-Point Liquidity (``MPL'') Order and the Minimum Trade Size
(``MTS'') Modifier to reflect those of NYSE Arca and NYSE American
and proposes additional rules setting forth how orders with an MTS
Modifier would trade in a parity allocation model; (iv) change the
list of rules that are not applicable to Pillar; (v) amend proposed
NYSE Rules 7.37 and 7.46 to refer to an order with an MTS as an
order with an ``MTS Modifier;'' (vi) change cross-references to NYSE
Arca's rules to reflect the merger of NYSE Arca and NYSE Arca
Equities, and (vii) reflect the renaming of NYSE MKT to NYSE
American. Amendment No. 1 is available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nyse-2017-36/nyse201736-3137940-161948.pdf).
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II. Exchange's Description of the Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1
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 those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item V below. The Exchange has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant parts of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
On January 29, 2015, the Exchange announced the implementation of
Pillar, which is an integrated trading technology platform designed to
use a single specification for connecting to the equities and options
markets operated by the Exchange and its affiliates, NYSE Arca, Inc.
(``NYSE Arca'') and NYSE American LLC (``NYSE American'').\11\ NYSE
Arca's cash equities market was the first trading system to migrate to
Pillar.\12\ NYSE American's cash equities
[[Page 13554]]
market transitioned to Pillar on July 24, 2017.\13\
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\11\ See Trader Update dated January 29, 2015, available here:
www.nyse.com/pillar.
\12\ In connection with the NYSE Arca implementation of Pillar,
NYSE Arca filed four rule proposals relating to Pillar. See
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 74951 (May 13, 2015), 80 FR
28721 (May 19, 2015) (Notice) and 75494 (July 20, 2015), 80 FR 44170
(July 24, 2015) (SR-NYSEArca-2015-38) (Approval Order of NYSE Arca
Pillar I Filing, adopting rules for Trading Sessions, Order Ranking
and Display, and Order Execution); Securities Exchange Act Release
Nos. 75497 (July 21, 2015), 80 FR 45022 (July 28, 2015) (Notice) and
76267 (October 26, 2015), 80 FR 66951 (October 30, 2015) (SR-
NYSEArca-2015-56) (Approval Order of NYSE Arca Pillar II Filing,
adopting rules for Orders and Modifiers and the Retail Liquidity
Program); Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 75467 (July 16,
2015), 80 FR 43515 (July 22, 2015) (Notice) and 76198 (October 20,
2015), 80 FR 65274 (October 26, 2015) (SR-NYSEArca-2015-58)
(Approval Order of NYSE Arca Pillar III Filing, adopting rules for
Trading Halts, Short Sales, Limit Up-Limit Down, and Odd Lots and
Mixed Lots); and Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 76085 (October
6, 2015), 80 FR 61513 (October 13, 2015) (Notice) and 76869 (January
11, 2016), 81 FR 2276 (January 15, 2016) (Approval Order of NYSE
Arca Pillar IV Filing, adopting rules for Auctions). NYSE Arca
Equities, Inc., which was a wholly-owned corporation of NYSE Arca,
has been merged with and into NYSE Arca and as a result, certain
former NYSE Arca Equities rules are now the rules of NYSE Arca using
the same rule number but with an additional suffix of ``-E'' added
to each rule. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81419 (August
17, 2017), 82 FR 40044 (August 23, 2017) (SR-NYSEArca-2017-40)
(Approval Order).
\13\ In connection with the NYSE American implementation of
Pillar, NYSE American filed several rule changes. See Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 79242 (November 4, 2016), 81 FR 79081
(November 10, 2016) (SR-NYSEMKT-2016-97) (Notice and Filing of
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change of framework rules);
81038 (June 28, 2017), 82 FR 31118 (July 5, 2017) (SR-NYSEMKT-2016-
103) (Approval Order) (the ``ETP Listing Rules Filing''); 80590 (May
4, 2017), 82 FR 21843 (May 10, 2017) (Approval Order) (NYSE MKT
rules governing automated trading); 80577 (May 2, 2017), 82 FR 21446
(May 8, 2017) (SR-NYSEMKT-2017-04) (Approval Order) (NYSE MKT rules
governing market makers); 80700 (May 16, 2017), 82 FR 23381 (May 22,
2017) (SR-NYSEMKT-2017-05) (Approval Order) (NYSE MKT rules
governing delay mechanism). NYSE American was previously known as
NYSE MKT LLC. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 80748 (May 23,
2017), 82 FR 24764, 24765 (SR-NYSEMKT-2017-20) (Notice of filing and
immediate effectiveness of proposed rule change to change the name
of NYSE MKT to NYSE American).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Overview
The NYSE serves a unique role in the U.S. market as the only cash
equities exchange that still has an active Trading Floor.\14\ Member
organizations that operate a Floor broker business play a vital role in
that model, through participation in auctions and point-of-sale trading
with other members on the Floor. Under Exchange rules, member
organizations that operate a Floor broker business are eligible for
parity allocations for liquidity-providing orders that are entered on
the Floor.\15\ Because Floor brokers operate an agency-only business,
such parity allocations always accrue to their customers. All other
national securities exchanges use a price-time allocation methodology.
On an exchange with price-time allocation, the order resting on the
book that arrived first will be executed in full before other orders at
that same price are executed. In this way, a price-time allocation
creates incentives for market participants to invest in technology and
use the fastest telecommunication lines. While the Exchange does not
contend there is anything wrong with price-time allocation, it believes
that a parity allocation model serves as a choice to investors that are
not driven by speed and that value the service an agency Floor broker
can provide in managing order flow. The Exchange currently offers this
choice for trading in its listed securities and is proposing to offer
investors that same choice in other NMS securities.
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\14\ The term ``Floor'' means the trading Floor of the Exchange
and the premises immediately adjacent thereto, such as the various
entrances and lobbies of the 11 Wall Street, 18 New Street, 8 Broad
Street, 12 Broad Street and 18 Broad Street Buildings, and also
means the telephone facilities available in these locations. See
Rule 6. The term ``Trading Floor'' means the restricted-access
physical areas designated by the Exchange for the trading of
securities, commonly known as the ``Main Room'' and the ``Buttonwood
Room,'' but does not include (i) the areas in the ``Buttonwood
Room'' designated by the Exchange where NYSE American-listed options
are traded, which, for the purposes of the Exchange's Rules, shall
be referred to as the ``NYSE American Options Trading Floor'' or
(ii) the physical area within fully enclosed telephone booths
located in 18 Broad Street at the Southeast wall of the Trading
Floor. See Rule 6A.
\15\ See NYSE Rules 70 and 72.
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Currently, the Exchange only trades securities listed on the
Exchange. With Pillar, the Exchange proposes to expand its offering and
introduce trading of UTP Securities.\16\ Because trading in UTP
Securities on the Exchange is designed to complement and be an
extension of the current trading services it offers, customer orders in
both Exchange-listed securities and UTP Securities entered by Floor
brokers while on the Floor would have consistent allocation behavior.
Accordingly, the Exchange proposes that trading in UTP Securities would
be subject to a parity allocation model that is similar to the existing
allocation model for Exchange-listed securities, with modifications
described below.
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\16\ The term ``UTP Security'' means a security that is listed
on a national securities exchange other than the Exchange and that
trades on the Exchange pursuant to unlisted trading privileges. See
Rule 1.1(ii). The Exchange has authority to extend unlisted trading
privileges to any security that is an NMS Stock that is listed on
another national securities exchange or with respect to which
unlisted trading privileges may otherwise be extended in accordance
with Section 12(f) of the Act. See Rule 5.1(a)(1).
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Unlike the trading of listed securities on the Exchange, the
Exchange would not conduct any auctions in UTP Securities.\17\ Even
though DMMs would not be assigned to UTP Securities, the Exchange
proposes to offer point-of-sale trading of UTP Securities for Floor
brokers on the Trading Floor for crossing transactions. Accordingly,
member organizations that operate Floor broker operations would be able
to represent their customers' orders in UTP Securities under both
current rules relating to manual transactions on the Trading Floor and
proposed rules relating to trading on the Pillar trading platform. As
with listed securities, member organizations approved as Supplemental
Liquidity Providers would be eligible to be assigned UTP
Securities.\18\
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\17\ The Exchange will continue to trade NYSE-listed securities
on its current trading platform without any changes. The Exchange
will transition trading in NYSE-listed securities to Pillar at a
separate date, which will be the subject of separate proposed rule
changes.
\18\ See Rule 107B, which the Exchange is proposing to amend,
see infra.
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Member organizations trading UTP Securities would continue to be
required to comply with Section 11(a)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C.
78k(a)(1), and any applicable exceptions thereto as are currently
applicable to trading on the Exchange. As described below, trading by
Floor brokers on the Trading Floor at the point of sale for UTP
Securities, also referred to as ``manual trading'' or ``manual
transactions,'' would continue to be subject to current rules relating
to such trading. In addition, all trading by Floor brokers in UTP
Securities (whether manual or electronic transactions) on the Exchange
would continue to be subject to rules that are unique to Floor brokers,
including Rules 95 (Discretionary Transactions), 122 (Orders with More
than One Broker), 123 (Record of Orders), and paragraphs (d)-(j) of
Rule 134 and related Supplementary Material (requirement for Floor
brokers to maintain an error account).
With the exception of specified point-of-sale trading for Floor
brokers, trading in UTP Securities would be subject to the Pillar
Platform Rules, as set forth in Rules 1P-13P.\19\ With this proposed
rule change, the Exchange proposes changes to Rule 7P Equities Trading
that would govern such trading in UTP Securities. The proposed rules
are based in part on the rules of NYSE Arca and NYSE American, with the
following substantive differences:
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\19\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 76803 (December
30, 2015), 81 FR 536 (January 6, 2016) (SR-NYSE-2015-67) (Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change)
(``Framework Filing''); and 80214 (March 10, 2017), 82 FR 14050
(March 16, 2017) (SR-NYSE-2016-44) (Approval Order) (``ETP Listing
Rules Filing''). See also SR-NYSE-2017-35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the Exchange's current allocation model,
trading in UTP Securities on the Exchange would be a parity allocation
model with a setter priority allocation for the participant that sets
the BBO.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ The term ``BBO'' means the best bid or offer on the
Exchange. See Rule 1.1(h).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange would not offer a Retail Liquidity Program
and related order types (Retail Orders and Retail Price Improvement
Orders) for UTP Securities.
[[Page 13555]]
The Exchange would not conduct auctions in UTP Securities.
The Exchange would offer two trading sessions, with the
Early Trading Session beginning at 7:00 a.m. Eastern Time.
The Exchange is not proposing to offer the full suite of
order instructions and modifiers that are available on NYSE Arca and
NYSE American.
Subject to rule approvals, the Exchange will announce the
implementation of trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading system
by Trader Update, which the Exchange anticipates will be in the second
quarter of 2018.
Applicability of Current Rules on Trading UTP Securities on Pillar
Once trading in UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform
begins, specified current Exchange trading rules would not be
applicable for trading UTP Securities. As described in more detail
below, for each current rule that would not be applicable for trading
on the Pillar trading platform, the Exchange proposes to state in a
preamble to such rule that ``this rule is not applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.'' Current Exchange rules
governing equities trading that do not have this preamble will govern
Exchange operations on Pillar.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81225 (July 27,
2017), 82 FR 36033 (August 2, 2017) (SR-NYSE-2017-35) (Notice of
filing to amend certain Exchange rules to add a preamble that such
rules would not be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes that current rules governing Floor-based
crossing transactions would be applicable to trading in UTP Securities.
As with crossing transactions for Exchange-listed securities, any such
cross transactions must meet the requirements of current Rule 76.
However, unlike trading in Exchange-listed securities, because UTP
Securities would not be assigned to a trading post with a DMM, the
trading crowd for such trading, i.e., the point of sale, would be a
physical location on the Trading Floor designated by the Exchange and
staffed by an Exchange employee.
Because the Exchange proposes to provide for Floor crossing
transactions in UTP Securities, Rules 74, 75, and 76, which relate to
crossing transactions on the Floor and ancillary Floor-based
requirements, would be applicable to trading UTP Securities. At this
time, the Exchange would not make available for UTP Securities the
cross function described in Supplementary Material .10 to Rule 76.
Accordingly, the Exchange proposes to add a preamble to Rule 76 that
would provide that Supplementary Material .10 to that Rule would not be
applicable to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
The Exchange also proposes to amend the existing preambles to Rules
128A, 128B, 130, 131, 132, and 135 \22\ to reflect that crossing
transactions pursuant to Rule 76 would be subject to existing Exchange
rules relating to publication of Floor-based transactions, corrections
to the Tape, and clearing. The amended preambles to these rules would
provide that ``except for manual transactions pursuant to Rule 76,''
such rules would not be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See id.
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Finally, the Exchange proposes to amend the preamble to Rule 134,
which currently provides that such rule is not applicable to trading
UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform. Rule 134(a)-(c) relates
to clearing of Floor-based transactions, and would be applicable to any
manual transactions pursuant to Rule 76 in UTP Securities. Rule 134(d)-
(j) separately requires a Floor broker to maintain an error account.
Because Floor brokers would continue to be subject to Section 11(a)(1)
of the Act for all trading in UTP Securities, the Exchange proposes
that current Rules 134(d)-(j) would be applicable to all Floor broker
trading of UTP Securities on the Exchange. To effect these two changes,
the Exchange proposes that the preamble to Rule 134 would be amended to
provide that: ``Except for manual transactions pursuant to Rule 76,
paragraphs (a)-(c) of this Rule are not applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.''
Proposed Rule Changes
As noted above, with the exception of crossing transactions
pursuant to Rule 76 and related rules, the Exchange proposes rules that
would be applicable to trading UTP Securities on Pillar that are based
on the rules of NYSE Arca and NYSE American. As a global matter, the
Exchange proposes non-substantive differences as compared to the NYSE
Arca rules to use the terms ``Exchange'' instead of the terms ``NYSE
Arca Marketplace'' or ``NYSE Arca'' and to use the terms ``mean'' or
``have meaning'' instead of the terms ``shall mean'' or ``shall have
the meaning.'' In addition, the Exchange will use the term ``member
organization,'' which is defined in Rule 2, instead of the terms ``ETP
Holder'' or ``User.'' \23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ Because these non-substantive differences would be applied
throughout the proposed rules, the Exchange will not note these
differences separately for each proposed rule.
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As previously established in the Framework Filing, Section 1 of
Rule 7P sets forth the General Provisions relating to trading on the
Pillar trading platform and Section 3 of Rule 7P sets forth Exchange
Trading on the Pillar trading platform. In this filing, the Exchange
proposes new Rules 7.10, 7.11, and 7.16 and to amend Rule 7.18 for
Section 1 of Rule 7P and new Rules 7.31, 7.34, 7.36, 7.37, and 7.38 for
Section 3 of Rule 7P. In addition, the Exchange proposes new Section 5
of Rule 7P to establish rules for the Plan to Implement a Tick Size
Pilot Program, and proposes new Rule 7.46 in that section.
Below, the Exchange first describes proposed Rules 7.36 and 7.37,
as these rules would establish the Exchange's Pillar rules governing
order ranking and display and order execution and routing. Next, the
Exchange describes proposed Rule 7.31, which would establish the orders
and modifiers available for trading UTP Securities on Pillar. Finally,
the Exchange describes proposed Rules 7.10, 7.11, 7.16, 7.34, 7.38, and
7.46 and amendments to Rule 7.18.
Proposed Rule 7.36
Proposed Rule 7.36 (Order Ranking and Display) would establish how
orders in UTP Securities would be ranked and displayed on the Pillar
trading platform. As described above, the Exchange proposes to extend
its current allocation model to trading UTP Securities on Pillar,
including the concept of ``setter interest,'' which the Exchange would
define in proposed Rule 7.36 as ``Setter Priority.'' Except for the
addition of Setter Priority, the Exchange proposes to use Pillar
functionality for determining how orders would be ranked and displayed.
Accordingly, proposed Rule 7.36 is based in part on NYSE Arca Rule
7.36-E and NYSE American Rule 7.36E, with substantive differences as
described below.
Proposed Rule 7.36(a)-(g)
Proposed Rules 7.36(a)-(g) would establish rules defining terms
that would be used in Rule 7P--Equities Trading and that describe the
display and ranking of orders on the Exchange, including ranking based
on price, priority category, and time. The proposed rule text is based
on NYSE Arca Rule 7.36-E(a)-(g) and NYSE American Rule 7.36E(a)-(g)
with the following substantive differences:
Proposed Rule 7.36(a)(5) would add a definition of the
term ``Participant,'' which is based on how the term ``individual
participant'' is defined in current Rule 72(c)(ii), with non-
[[Page 13556]]
substantive differences. The Exchange proposes that the term
``Participant'' would mean for purposes of parity allocation, a Floor
broker trading license (each, a ``Floor Broker Participant'') or orders
collectively represented in the Exchange Book that have not been
entered by a Floor Broker Participant (``Book Participant'').\24\ The
Exchange proposes to use the term ``Floor broker trading license''
rather than ``each single Floor broker'' because pursuant to Rule 300 a
trading license is required to effect transactions on the Floor of the
Exchange or any facility thereof and a member organization designates
natural persons to effect transactions on the Floor on its behalf.
Accordingly, reference to a ``Floor broker trading license'' makes
clear that the Floor broker participant is at the trading license
level, rather than at the member organization level. The Exchange also
proposes to use the term ``Exchange Book,'' which is a defined term,
rather than referring more generally to ``Exchange systems.''
As described in greater detail below, the Exchange proposes that
its existing parity allocation model would be available for all
securities that trade on the Exchange. Because there would not be a DMM
assigned to any UTP Securities, orders represented by individual Floor
Brokers and the Book Participant would be eligible for a parity
allocation for UTP Securities.
Because trading in UTP Securities is intended to be an extension of
the Exchange's current Floor-based trading model, the Exchange proposes
that Floor Broker Participant allocations for UTP Securities would be
available only to Floor brokers that also engage in a Floor broker
business in Exchange-listed securities. As further proposed, an order
entered by a Floor broker would be eligible to be included in the Floor
Broker Participant only if: (A) Such order is entered by a Floor broker
while on the Trading Floor, which is an existing requirement; \25\ and
(B) such order is not entered for the account of the member
organization, the account of an associated person, or an account with
respect to which the member, member organization, or an associated
person exercises investment discretion, unless such order is entered
pursuant to Rule 134(d)-(j), i.e., the order is entered via the Floor
broker's error account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ As defined in Rule 1.1(a), the term ``Exchange Book''
refers to the Exchange's electronic file of orders, which contains
all orders entered on the Exchange. Accordingly, all orders entered
by Floor brokers in UTP Securities are included in the Exchange
Book. The Exchange proposes to use the term ``Book Participant'' as
continuity from its current rules, which refer to the Book
Participant. See Rule 72(c)(ii).
\25\ Rule 70(a)(i) requires a Floor broker to be in the
``Crowd'' in order to enter e-Quotes, which are eligible for a
parity allocation. Rule 70.30 defines the term ``Crowd'' as the
rooms on the Exchange Floor that contain active posts/panels where
Floor brokers are able to conduct business and a Floor broker is
considered to be in the Crowd if he or she is physically present in
one of these room. Rule 6A defines the term ``Trading Floor'' to
mean the restricted-access physical areas designated by the Exchange
for the trading of securities, commonly known as the ``Main Room''
and the ``Buttonwood Room.'' The terms ``Crowd'' and ``Trading
Floor'' therefore refer to the same physical location.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.36(a)(6) would add the definition of
``Aggressing Order'' to mean a buy (sell) order that is or becomes
marketable against sell (buy) interest on the Exchange Book and that a
resting order may become an Aggressing Order if its working price
changes, if the PBBO or NBBO is updated, because of changes to other
orders on the Exchange Book, or when processing inbound messages.\26\
This proposed term would be used in proposed Rule 7.37, described
below.
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\26\ NYSE Arca and NYSE American have recently amended their
rules to add this definition of ``Aggressing Order.'' See Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 82447 (January 5, 2018), 83 FR 1442
(January 11, 2018) (SR-NYSEAmer-2017-40) and 82504 (January 16,
2018), 83 FR 3038 (January 22, 2018) (SR-NYSEArca-2018-02) [sic].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because all displayed Limit Orders would be displayed on
an anonymous basis, the Exchange does not propose to include text based
on the first clause of NYSE Arca Rule 7.36-E(b)(2) in proposed Rule
7.36(b)(2).
Proposed Rule 7.36(c) regarding ranking would not include
reference to price-time priority, as the Exchange's allocation model
would not always be a price-time priority allocation, as described
below. As further described below, the Exchange would rank orders
consistent with proposed Rule 7.36(c).
Proposed Rule 7.36(e) would establish three priority
categories: Priority 1--Market Orders, Priority 2--Display Orders, and
Priority 3--Non-Display Orders. The Exchange would not offer any
additional priority categories for trading of UTP Securities.
In addition to these substantive differences, the Exchange proposes
a non-substantive clarifying difference for proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B)
to add ``[o]ther than as provided for in Rule 7.38(b)(2),'' to make
clear that the way in which a working time is assigned to an order that
is partially routed to an Away Market and returns to the Exchange is
addressed in both proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B) and proposed Rule
7.38(b)(2). The Exchange also proposes non-substantive differences to
proposed Rule 7.36(f)(2) and (3) to streamline the rule text.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)--Setter Priority
Proposed Rule 7.36(h) would establish how Setter Priority would be
assigned to an order and is based in part on current Rules 72(a) and
(b). Rule 72(a)(ii) provides that when a bid or offer, including
pegging interest is established as the only displayable bid or offer
made at a particular price and such bid or offer is the only
displayable interest when such price is or becomes the Exchange BBO
(the ``setting interest''), such setting interest is entitled to
priority for allocation of executions at that price as described in
Rule 72. The rule further provides that:
Odd-lot orders, including aggregated odd-lot orders that
are displayable, are not eligible to be setting interest. (Rule
72(a)(ii)(A))
If, at the time displayable interest of a round lot or
greater becomes the Exchange BBO, there is other displayable interest
of a round lot or greater, including aggregated odd-lot orders that are
equal to or greater than a round lot, at the price that becomes the
Exchange BBO, no interest is considered to be a setting interest, and,
therefore, there is no priority established. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(B))
If, at the time displayable interest of a round lot or
greater becomes the Exchange BBO, there is other displayable interest
the sum of which is less than a round lot, at the price that becomes
the Exchange BBO, the displayable interest of a round lot or greater
will be considered the only displayable bid or offer at that price
point and is therefore established as the setting interest entitled to
priority for allocation of executions at that price as described in
this rule. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(C))
If executions decrement the setting interest to an odd-lot
size, a round lot or partial round lot order that joins such remaining
odd-lot size order is not eligible to be the setting interest. (Rule
72(a)(ii)(D))
If, as a result of cancellation, interest is or becomes
the single displayable interest of a round lot or greater at the
Exchange BBO, it becomes the setting interest. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(E))
Only the portion of setting interest that is or has been
published in the Exchange BBO is entitled to priority allocation of an
execution. That portion of setting interest that is designated as
reserve interest and therefore not displayed at the Exchange BBO (or
not displayable if it becomes the Exchange BBO) is not eligible for
priority allocation of an execution irrespective of the price of such
reserve interest or the time it is accepted into Exchange systems.
However, if, following an
[[Page 13557]]
execution of part or all of setting interest, such setting interest is
replenished from any reserve interest, the replenished volume of such
setting interest shall be entitled to priority if the setting interest
is still the only interest at the Exchange BBO. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(F))
If interest becomes the Exchange BBO, it will be
considered the setting interest even if pegging interest, Limit Orders
designated ALO, or sell short orders during a Short Sale Period under
Rule 440B(e) are re-priced and displayed at the same price as such
interest, and it will retain its priority even if subsequently joined
at that price by re-priced interest. (Rule 72(a)(ii)(G))
Rule 72(b)(i) provides that once priority is established by setting
interest, such setting interest retains that priority for any execution
at that price when that price is at the Exchange BBO and if executions
decrement the setting interest to an odd-lot size, such remaining
portion of the setting interest retains its priority for any execution
at that price when that price is the Exchange BBO. Rule 72(b)(ii)
further provides that for any execution of setting interest that occurs
when the price of the setting interest is not the Exchange BBO, the
setting interest does not have priority and is executed on parity.
Finally, Rule 73(b)(ii) provides that priority of setting interest will
not be retained after the close of trading on the Exchange or following
the resumption of trading in a security after a trading halt in such
security has been invoked pursuant to Rule 123D or following the
resumption of trading after a trading halt invoked pursuant to the
provisions of Rule 80B. In addition, priority of the setting interest
is not retained on any portion of the priority interest that is routed
to an away market and is returned unexecuted unless such priority
interest is greater than a round lot and the only other interest at the
price point is odd-lot orders, the sum of which is less than a round
lot.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h) would use Pillar terminology to establish
``Setter Priority,'' which would function similarly to setting interest
under Rule 72. The Exchange proposes the following substantive
differences to how Setter Priority would be assigned and retained on
Pillar:
To be eligible for Setter Priority, an order would have to
establish not only the BBO, but also either join an Away Market NBBO or
establish the NBBO. The Exchange believes that requiring an order to
either join or establish an NBBO before it is eligible for Setter
Priority would encourage the display of aggressive liquidity on the
Exchange.
A resting order would not be eligible to be assigned
Setter Priority simply because it is the only interest at that price
when it becomes the BBO (either because of a cancellation of other
interest at that price or because a resting order that is priced worse
than the BBO becomes the BBO). The Exchange believes that the benefit
of Setter Priority should be for orders that are aggressively seeking
to improve the BBO, rather than for passive orders that become the BBO.
The replenished portion of a Reserve Order would not be
eligible for Setter Priority. The Exchange believes that Setter
Priority should be assigned to interest willing to be displayed, and
because the reserve interest would not be displayed on arrival, it
would not be eligible for Setter Priority.
Orders that are routed and returned unexecuted would be
eligible for Setter Priority consistent with the proposed rules
regarding the working time assigned to the returned quantity of an
order. As described in greater detail below, if such orders meet the
requirements to be eligible for Setter Priority, e.g., establish the
BBO and either join or establish the NBBO, they would be evaluated for
Setter Priority.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h) would provide that Setter Priority would be
assigned to an order ranked Priority 2--Display Orders with a display
quantity of at least a round lot if such order (i) establishes a new
BBO and (ii) either establishes a new NBBO or joins an Away Market
NBBO. The rule would further provide that only one order is eligible
for Setter Priority at each price. This proposed rule text is based in
part on Rule 72(a)(ii), 72(a)(ii)(A), 72(a)(ii)(B), 72(a)(ii)(C),
subject to the substantive differences described above.\27\
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\27\ Because of the proposed substantive differences, the
Exchange is not proposing rules based on current Rules 72(a)(ii)(D)
and (E). In addition, when an order is considered displayed on
Pillar would be addressed in proposed Rule 7.36(b)(1). Accordingly,
the Exchange is not proposing rule text based on Rule 72(a)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(1) would set forth when an order would be
evaluated for Setter Priority. As noted above, the Exchange proposes a
substantive difference from current Rule 72(a)(ii) in that a resting
order would not be eligible to be assigned Setter Priority simply
because it is the only interest at that price when it becomes the BBO.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(1)(A) would provide that an order
would be evaluated for Setter Priority on arrival, which would include
when any portion of an order that has routed returns unexecuted and is
added to the Exchange Book. Pursuant to proposed Rule 7.37(a)(1),
described below, an order that is routed on arrival to an Away Market
would not be assigned a working time. Proposed Rule 7.36(f) provides
that an order would not be assigned a working time until it is placed
on the Exchange Book. As such, an order that has returned after routing
would be processed similarly to a newly arriving order. Therefore, the
Exchange believes that an order should be evaluated for Setter Priority
when it returns from an Away Market unexecuted in the same way as
evaluating an order for Setter Priority on arrival.
When evaluating Setter Priority for an order that has returned from
an Away Market unexecuted, the Exchange would assess whether such order
meets the requirements of proposed Rule 7.36(h), which is based in part
on the second sentence of Rule 72(b)(iii). The Exchange proposes that
for Pillar, an order that was routed to an Away Market and returned
unexecuted would be evaluated for Setter Priority based on how a
working time would be assigned to the returned quantity of the routed
order, as described in proposed Rules 7.16(f)(5)(H), 7.36(f)(1)(A) and
(B), and 7.38(b)(2).
[cir] Proposed Rule 7.16(f)(5)(H) provides that if a Short Sale
Price Test, as defined in that rule, is triggered after an order has
routed, any returned quantity of the order and the order it joins on
the Exchange Book would be adjusted to a Permitted Price.\28\ In such
case, the returned quantity and the resting quantity that would be re-
priced to a Permitted Price would be a single order and the Exchange
would evaluate such order for Setter Priority. If such order would set
a new BO and either join or establish a new NBO, it would be assigned
Setter Priority. For example, if the Exchange receives a sell short
order of 200 shares ranked Priority 2--Display Orders, routes 100
shares (``A'') of such order and adds 100 shares (``B'') of such order
to the Exchange Book, ``B'' would be displayed at the price of the sell
short order. If an Away Market NBB locks the price of ``B'' and then a
Short Sale Price Test is triggered, ``B'' would remain displayed at the
price of the NBB.\29\ If subsequently, ``A'' returns unexecuted,
pursuant to proposed Rule
[[Page 13558]]
7.16(f)(5)(H), ``A'' and ``B'' would be considered a single order and
would be re-priced to a Permitted Price, at which point the order would
be evaluated for Setter Priority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Pursuant to proposed Rule 7.16(f)(5)(A), described below,
during a Short Sale Period, as defined in that rule, short sale
orders with a working price and/or a display price equal to or lower
than the NBB will have the working price and/or display price
adjusted one minimum price increment above the current NBB, which is
the ``Permitted Price.''
\29\ See proposed Rule 7.16(f)(6).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[cir] Proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(A) provides that an order that is
fully routed to an Away Market would not be assigned a working time
unless and until any unexecuted portion of the order returns to the
Exchange Book. As proposed, if the Exchange routes an entire order and
a portion returns unexecuted, the Exchange would evaluate the returned
quantity for Setter Priority as if it were a newly arriving order. For
example, if less than a round lot returns unexecuted, the returned
quantity would not be eligible for Setter Priority. If at least a round
lot returns unexecuted, establishes a new BBO, and either joins or
establishes the NBBO, it would be eligible for Setter Priority.
[cir] Proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B) provides that (except as provided
for in proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2)), if an order is partially routed to an
Away Market on arrival, the portion that is not routed would be
assigned a working time and any portion of the order returning
unexecuted would be assigned the same working time as any remaining
portion of the original order resting on the Exchange Book and would be
considered the same order as the resting order. In such case, if the
resting portion of the order has Setter Priority, the returned portion
would also have Setter Priority.
For example, if the Exchange receives a 200 share order ranked
Priority 2--Display Orders, routes 100 shares (``C'') of such order and
adds 100 shares (``D'') of such order to the Exchange Book, which
establishes the BBO and joined the NBBO, ``D'' would be assigned Setter
Priority. If ``D'' is partially executed and decremented to 50 shares
and another order ``E'' for 100 shares joins ``D'' at its price,
pursuant to proposed Rules 7.36(h)(2)(A) and (B), described below,
``D'' would retain Setter Priority. If ``C'' returns unexecuted, it
would join the working time of ``D'' pursuant to proposed Rule
7.36(f)(1)(B), ``C'' and ``D'' would be considered a single order, and
``C'' would therefore also receive Setter Priority.
[cir] Proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2) provides that for an order that is
partially routed to an Away Market on arrival, if any returned quantity
of such order joins resting odd-lot quantity of the original order and
the returned and resting quantity, either alone or together with other
odd-lot orders, would be displayed as a new BBO, both the returned and
resting quantity would be assigned a new working time. In such case,
the returned quantity and the resting odd-lot quantity together would
be a single order and would be evaluated for Setter Priority.
For example, if the Exchange receives an order for 100 shares,
routes 50 shares (``E'') of such order and the remaining 50 shares
(``F'') of such order are added to the Exchange Book, pursuant to
proposed Rule 7.36(f)(1)(B), ``F'' would be assigned a working time
when it is added to the Exchange Book. If ``E'' returns unexecuted, and
``E'' and ``F'' together would establish a new BBO at that price,
pursuant to proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2), ``F'' would be assigned a new
working time to join the working time of ``E,'' and ``E'' and ``F''
would be considered a single order. If the returned quantity together
with the resting quantity establishes the BBO pursuant to proposed Rule
7.38(b)(2), the order would be eligible to be evaluated for Setter
Priority.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(1)(B) would provide that an order
would be evaluated for Setter Priority when it becomes eligible to
trade for the first time upon transitioning to a new trading session.
When an order becomes eligible to trade upon a trading session
transition, it is treated as if it were a newly arriving order.
Accordingly, the Exchange believes it would be consistent with its
proposal to evaluate arriving orders for Setter Priority to also
evaluate orders that become eligible to trade upon a trading session
transition for Setter Priority. For example, pursuant to proposed Rule
7.34(c)(1), described below, the Exchange would accept Primary Pegged
Orders during the Early Trading Session, however, such orders would not
be eligible to trade until the Core Trading Session begins. In such
case, a Primary Pegged Order would be evaluated for Setter Priority
when it becomes eligible to trade in the Core Trading Session.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2) would establish when an order retains its
Setter Priority, as follows:
If it is decremented to any size because it has either
traded or been partially cancelled (proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2)(A)). This
proposed rule is based on Rule 72(b)(i), with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
if it is joined at that price by a resting order that is
re-priced and assigned a display price equal to the display price of
the order with Setter Priority (proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2)(B)). This
proposed rule is based on Rule 72(a)(ii)(G), with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
if the BBO or NBBO changes (proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2)(C)).
This proposed rule, together with proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(B),
described below, is based on Rule 72(b)(ii), with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology. Specifically, once an order has
been assigned Setter Priority, it has that status so long as it is on
the Exchange Book, subject to proposed Rule 7.36(h)(3), described
below, regardless of the BBO or NBBO. However, as described in proposed
Rule 7.37(b)(1)(B), it would only be eligible for a Setter Priority
allocation if it is executed when it is the BBO.
if the order marking changes from (A) sell to sell short,
(B) sell to sell short exempt, (C) sell short to sell, (D) sell short
to sell short exempt, (E) sell short exempt to sell, and (F) sell short
exempt to sell short (proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2)(D)). This proposed rule
text is consistent with proposed Rule 7.36(f)(4) because if an order
retains its working time, the Exchange believes it should also retain
its Setter Priority status.
when transitioning from one trading session to another
(proposed Rule 7.36(h)(2)(E)). This text would be new because, with
Pillar, the Exchange would be introducing an Early Trading Session. The
Exchange believes that if an order entered during the Early Trading
Session is assigned Setter Priority, it should retain that status in
the Core Trading Session.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(3) would establish when an order would lose
Setter Priority, as follows:
If trading in the security is halted, suspended, or paused
(proposed Rule 7.36(h)(3)(A)). This proposed rule is based on the first
sentence of current Rule 72(b)(iii), with non-substantive differences
to use Pillar terminology. In addition, because all orders expire at
the end of the trading day, the Exchange believes that the current rule
text providing that setting interest would not be retained after the
close of trading on the Exchange would not be necessary for Pillar.
if such order is assigned a new display price (proposed
Rule 7.36(h)(3)(B)). The Exchange believes that if an order has Setter
Priority at a price, and then is assigned a new display price, it
should not retain the Setter Priority status that was associated with
its original display price.
if such order is less than a round lot and is assigned a
new working time pursuant to proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2). As discussed
above, pursuant to proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2) the resting odd-lot portion
of an order would be assigned a new working time if the returned
quantity of that order, together with the
[[Page 13559]]
resting portion, would establish a new BBO. In such case, if the
resting quantity had Setter Priority status, it would lose that status,
and would be re-evaluated for Setter Priority at its new working time.
For example, if the Exchange receives an order for 200 shares
ranked Priority 2--Display Orders, routes 100 shares (``G'') of such
order, and the remaining 100 shares (``H'') of such order are added to
the Exchange Book and assigned Setter Priority, ``H'' would retain
Setter Priority even if it is partially executed and the remaining
portion of ``H'' is less than a round lot. If ``G'' returns unexecuted
and ``G'' and ``H'' together would establish a new BBO at that price,
pursuant to proposed Rule 7.38(b)(2), ``H'' would be assigned a new
working time to join the working time of ``G,'' and ``G'' and ``H''
would be considered a single order. When ``H'' is assigned a new
working time, it would lose its Setter Priority status. Even though
``G'' and ``H'' would establish the BBO, if that order does not also
join or establish an NBBO, it would not be assigned Setter Priority. In
this scenario, ``H'' would have lost its Setter Priority. The Exchange
believes it is appropriate to re-evaluate such order for Setter
Priority because it is being assigned a new working time together with
the returned quantity of the order.
Proposed Rule 7.36(h)(4) would establish when Setter Priority is
not available, as follows:
For any portion of an order that is ranked Priority 3--
Non-Display Orders (proposed Rule 7.36(h)(4)(A)). This proposed rule
text is based on the second sentence of Rule 72(a)(ii)(F), with non-
substantive differences to use Pillar terminology.
when the reserve quantity replenishes the display quantity
of a Reserve Order (proposed Rule 7.36(h)(4)(B)). This proposed rule
text would be new and would be a substantive difference, described
above, as compared to the third sentence of Rule 72(a)(ii)(F).
Because proposed Rule 7.36 would address the display and working
time of orders and Setter Priority, the Exchange proposes that Rules
72(a), (b), and (c)(xii) would not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
Proposed Rule 7.37
Proposed Rule 7.37 (Order Execution and Routing) would establish
rules governing order execution and routing on the Pillar trading
platform. As described above, the Exchange proposes to retain its
parity allocation model, which the Exchange would set forth in proposed
Rule 7.37(b). Except for the addition of parity allocation, the
Exchange proposes to use Pillar functionality for determining how
orders would be executed and routed. Accordingly, the proposed rule is
based in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.37-E and NYSE American Rule 7.37E,
with substantive differences as described below.
Proposed Rules 7.37(a), (c)-(g)
Proposed Rules 7.37(a) and paragraphs (c)-(d) would establish rules
regarding order execution, routing, use of data feeds, locking or
crossing quotations in NMS Stocks, and exceptions to the Order
Protection Rule. The proposed rule text is based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.37-E(a)-(f) and NYSE American Rule 7.37E(a)-(f) with the following
substantive differences: \30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Because proposed Rule 7.37(b) would establish parity
allocation, proposed Rule 7.37(c)-(g) would be based on NYSE Arca
Rules 7.37-E(b)-(f) and NYSE American Rules 7.37E(b)-(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.37(a) would use the proposed new term
``Aggressing Order'' rather than the term ``incoming marketable order''
to refer to orders that would be matched for execution. In addition,
because the Exchange would not use a price-time priority allocation for
all orders, the Exchange proposes to specify that orders would be
matched for execution as provided for in proposed Rule 7.37(b).
As discussed below, the Exchange would not offer all order
types that are available on NYSE Arca and NYSE American. Accordingly,
proposed Rule 7.37(a)(4) would not include a reference to Inside Limit
Orders.
Similar to NYSE American, because the Exchange would not
be taking in data feeds from broker-dealers or routing to Away Markets
that are not displaying protected quotations, the Exchange proposes
that proposed Rule 7.37 would not include rule text from paragraph
(b)(3) of NYSE Arca Rule 7.37-E, which specifies that an ETP Holder can
opt out of routing to Away Markets that are not displaying a protected
quotation, i.e., broker dealers, or paragraph (d)(1) of NYSE Arca Rule
7.37-E, which specifies that NYSE Arca receives data feeds directly
from broker dealers.
As discussed in greater detail below, because the Exchange
would not offer all orders available on NYSE Arca and NYSE American,
including orders based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(f) that are orders with
specific routing instructions, the Exchange proposes that proposed
Rules 7.37(c)(5) and (c)(7)(B) would not include reference to orders
that are designated to route to the primary listing market. Similarly,
the Exchange would not include rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.37-
E(b)(7)(C) and NYSE American Rule 7.37E(b)(7)(C).
The Exchange proposes a non-substantive difference to
update the chart in proposed Rule 7.37(e) to reflect the amended names
of market centers.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)--Allocation
Proposed Rule 7.37(b) would set forth how an Aggressing Order would
be allocated against contra-side orders and is based in part on current
Rule 72(c). The Exchange proposes that its existing parity allocation
model, modified as described below, would be applicable to UTP
Securities. Like the Exchange's existing parity allocation model for
NYSE-listed securities, the proposed parity allocation model for UTP
Securities would provide customers with choices. The Exchange's parity
allocation model provides customers that do not have latency sensitive
strategies or who value intermediation by a trusted agent with an
alternative to the price-time priority model offered by other
exchanges: Such customers can use a Floor broker and be allocated
trades based on parity, as described below. Those customers with
latency sensitive strategies or who prefer un-intermediated access can
choose to send orders electronically and would be allocated trades as
part of the Book Participant. Irrespective of whether the customer
chooses to use a Floor broker or enter their interest electronically
via the Book Participant, a customer assigned Setter Priority by
setting the BBO would receive the first 15% of an allocation.
While there would be no DMMs assigned to UTP Securities, as noted
above, the Exchange would require that for an order to be eligible to
be included in the Floor Broker Participant, such order must be entered
by a Floor broker while on the Trading Floor and only if such Floor
broker also engages in a Floor broker business in Exchange-listed
securities. In addition, to be eligible to be included in the Floor
Broker Participant, orders must be entered on an agency basis (unless
trading out of the Floor broker's error account pursuant to Rule 134).
As a result, in contrast to off-Floor agency broker-dealers, Floor
brokers would not be permitted to trade for their own accounts while on
the Trading Floor, including principal trading on behalf of customers.
The result of any allocation to an individual Floor broker would
therefore always accrue to the customer. In addition, when trading UTP
[[Page 13560]]
Securities, Floor brokers would continue to be subject to current rules
that are applicable only to Floor brokers, including Rules 95, 122,
123, and paragraphs (d)-(j) of Rule 134.
The Exchange proposes to use Pillar terminology to describe
allocations and proposes the following substantive differences to how
allocations are processed under Rule 72(c):
Mid-point Liquidity Orders (``MPL'') with a Minimum Trade
Size (``MTS''), which are not currently available on the Exchange,
would be allocated based on MTS size (smallest to largest) and time.
The Exchange would maintain separate allocation wheels on
each side of the market for displayed and non-displayed orders at each
price. Currently, the Exchange maintains a single allocation wheel for
each security.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See Rule 72(c)(viii)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An allocation to a Floor Broker Participant would be
allocated to orders represented by that Floor Broker on parity.
If resting orders on one side of the Exchange Book are
repriced such that they become marketable against orders on the other
side of the Exchange Book, they would trade as Aggressing Orders based
on their ranking pursuant to proposed Rule 7.36(c).
If resting orders on both side of the Exchange Book are
repriced such that they become marketable against each other, e.g., a
crossed PBBO becomes uncrossed and orders priced based on the PBBO are
repriced, the Exchange would determine which order is the Aggressing
Order based on its ranking pursuant to Rule 7.36(c).
Because there would not be any DMMs assigned to UTP
Securities, the proposed rule would not reference DMM allocations.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1) would set forth that at each price, an
Aggressing Order would be allocated against contra-side orders as
follows:
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(A) would provide that orders
ranked Priority 1--Market Orders would trade first based on time. This
proposed rule is based on the first sentence of Rule 72(c)(i) with non-
substantive differences to use Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(B) would provide that next, an
order with Setter Priority that has a display price and working price
equal to the BBO would receive 15% of the remaining quantity of the
Aggressing Order, rounded up to the next round lot size or the
remaining displayed quantity of the order with Setter Priority,
whichever is lower. The rule would further provide that an order with
Setter Priority is eligible for allocation under proposed Rule
7.37(b)(1)(B) if the BBO is no longer the same as the NBBO. This
proposed rule text is based on Rules 72(b)(ii) and 72(c)(iii) with non-
substantive differences to use Pillar terminology. Although the
Exchange is using different rule text, the quantity of an Aggressing
Order that would be allocated to an order with Setter Priority would be
the same under both current rules and the proposed Pillar rule.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(C) would provide that next,
orders ranked Priority 2--Displayed Orders would be allocated on parity
by Participant and that any remaining quantity of an order with Setter
Priority would be eligible to participate in this parity allocation,
consistent with the allocation wheel position of the Participant that
entered the order with Setter Priority. This proposed rule text is
based on Rules 72(c)(i), (iv), (vi), and (ix) with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(D) would provide that next,
orders ranked Priority 3--Non-Display Orders, other than MPL Orders
with an MTS, would be allocated on parity by Participant. This proposed
rule text is based on Rules 72(c)(i), (iv), (vi), and (ix) with non-
substantive differences to use Pillar terminology and a substantive
difference not to include MPL Orders with an MTS in the parity
allocation of resting non-displayed orders.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1)(E) would provide that MPL Orders
with an MTS would be allocated based on MTS size (smallest to largest)
and time. Because MPL Orders with an MTS would be a new offering on the
Exchange, this proposed rule text is new. With an MTS instruction, an
[sic] member organization is instructing the Exchange that it does not
want an execution of its order if the MTS cannot be met. Accordingly,
an MPL Order with an MTS is willing to be skipped if such instruction
cannot be met. The Exchange proposes to separate MPL Orders with an MTS
from the parity allocation of Priority 3--Non-Display Orders because
with a parity allocation, an MTS instruction would not be guaranteed.
In order to honor the MTS instruction of the resting MPL Order, the
Exchange proposes to allocate these orders after all other Priority 3--
Non-Display Orders have been allocated on parity. The Exchange believes
that this proposed allocation priority would be consistent with the MTS
instruction in that such orders are willing to be skipped in order to
have the MTS met.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2) would establish the allocation wheel for
parity allocations. The proposed rule would be new for Pillar and would
establish that at each price on each side of the market, the Exchange
would maintain an ``allocation wheel'' of Participants with orders
ranked Priority 2--Display Orders and a separate allocation wheel of
Participants with orders ranked Priority 3--Non-Display Orders. The
rule further describes how the position of an order on an allocation
wheel would be determined, as follows:
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(A) would provide that the
Participant that enters the first order in a priority category at a
price would establish the first position on the applicable allocation
wheel for that price. The rule would further provide that if an
allocation wheel no longer has any orders at a price, the next
Participant to enter an order at that price would establish a new
allocation wheel. This proposed rule is based in part on the first
sentence of Rule 72(c)(viii)(A), with both non-substantive differences
to use Pillar terminology and substantive differences because the
Exchange would maintain separate allocation wheels at each price point,
rather than a single allocation wheel for a security. Accordingly, an
allocation wheel at a price point could be re-established throughout
the trading day.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(B) would provide that additional
Participants would be added to an allocation wheel based on time of
entry of the first order entered by a Participant. This proposed rule
is based in part on the second sentence of Rule 72(c)(viii)(A) with
non-substantive differences to use Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(C) would provide that once a
Participant has established a position on an allocation wheel at a
price, any additional orders from that Participant at the same price
would join that position on an allocation wheel. This proposed rule
uses Pillar terminology to describe current functionality.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(D) would provide that if an order
receives a new working time or is cancelled and replaced at the same
working price, a Participant that entered such order would be moved to
the last position on an allocation wheel if, that Participant has no
other orders at that price. This proposed rule is based in part on the
last sentence of Rule 72(c)(viii)(A) with non-substantive differences
to use Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(E) would provide that a
Participant would be removed from an allocation wheel if (i) all orders
from that Participant at that
[[Page 13561]]
price are executed or cancelled in full, (ii) the working price of an
order changes and that Participant has no other orders at that price,
or (iii) the priority category of the order changes and that
Participant has no other orders at that price. This proposed rule would
be new functionality associated with the substantive difference of
having separate allocation wheels at each price point.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)(F) would provide that if multiple
orders are assigned new working prices at the same time, the
Participants representing those orders would be added to an allocation
wheel at the new working price in time sequence relative to one
another. This proposed rule would be new functionality associated with
the substantive difference of having separate allocation wheels at each
price point.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(3) would set forth the parity pointer
associated with the allocation wheel. As proposed, if there is more
than one Participant on an allocation wheel, the Exchange would
maintain a ``pointer'' that would identify which Participant would be
next to be evaluated for a parity allocation and that the Participant
with the pointer would be considered the first position. This proposed
rule is based in part on the Parity Example 1 described in Rule
72(c)(viii)(A) and Rule 72(c)(viii)(B), with non-substantive
differences to use Pillar terminology. The rule would further provide
that the Setter Priority allocation described in proposed Rule
7.37(b)(1)(B) would not move the pointer, which is based on the second
sentence of Rule 72(c)(iv) with non-substantive differences to use
Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4) would set forth how an Aggressing Order
would be allocated on parity. As proposed, an Aggressing Order would be
allocated by round lots. The Participant with the pointer would be
allocated a round lot and then the pointer would advance to the next
Participant. The pointer would continue to advance on an allocation
wheel until the Aggressing Order is fully allocated or all Participants
in that priority category are exhausted. This proposed rule is based on
Rule 72(c)(viii), sub-paragraphs (A)-(C) of that Rule, and Parity
Examples 1 through 4, with non-substantive differences to use Pillar
terminology. Rather than include examples in the proposed rule, the
Exchange believes that the Pillar terminology streamlines the
description of parity allocations in a manner that obviates the need
for examples, as follows:
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(A) would provide that not all
Participants on an allocation wheel would be guaranteed to receive an
allocation. The size of an allocation to a Participant would be based
on which Participant had the pointer at the beginning of the
allocation, the size of the Aggressing Order, the number of
Participants in the allocation, and the size of the orders entered by
Participants. The Exchange believes that this proposed rule makes clear
that while the parity allocation seeks to evenly allocate an Aggressing
Order, an even allocation may not be feasible and would be dependent on
multiple variables.
For example, if there are three Participants on an allocation
wheel, ``A,'' ``B,'' and ``C,'' each representing 200 shares and ``A''
has the pointer, an Aggressing Order of 450 shares would be allocated
as follows: ``A'' would be allocated 100 shares, ``B'' would be
allocated 100 shares, ``C'' would be allocated 100 shares, ``A'' would
be allocated 100 shares, and ``B'' would be allocated 50 shares. In
this example, an uneven allocation would result because the Aggressing
Order cannot be evenly divided by round lots among the Participants and
the allocation sizes would be dependent on which Participant has the
pointer at the beginning of the allocation. Accordingly, ``A'' would be
allocated a total of 200 shares, ``B'' would be allocated a total of
150 shares, and ``C'' would be allocated a total of 100 shares.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(B) would provide that if the last
Participant to receive an allocation is allocated an odd lot, the
pointer would stay with that Participant. The Exchange proposes that
the pointer would advance only after a round-lot allocation. If the
last allocation is an odd-lot, the pointer would stay with that
Participant. For example, continuing with the example above where ``B''
received an allocation of 150 shares because the last allocation was 50
shares, the pointer would remain with ``B'' for the next allocation at
that price. By contrast, if the last Participant receives a round-lot
allocation of an Aggressing Order, the pointer would advance to the
next Participant for the next allocation at that price.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(C) would provide that if the
Aggressing Order is an odd lot, the Participant with the pointer would
be allocated the full quantity of the order, unless that Participant
does not have an order that could satisfy the Aggressing Order in full,
in which case, the pointer would move to the next Participant on an
allocation wheel. This proposed rule uses Pillar terminology to
describe how an odd-lot sized Aggressing Order would be allocated.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(4)(D) would provide that a
Participant that has an order or orders equaling less than a round lot
would be eligible for a parity allocation up to the size of the
order(s) represented by that Participant. This proposed rule is based
in part on Rule 72(c)(viii)(B) with non-substantive differences to use
Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(5) would provide that an allocation to the
Book Participant would be allocated to orders that comprise the Book
Participant by working time. This proposed rule is based on the second
sentence of Rule 72(c)(ii) with non-substantive differences to use
Pillar terminology.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(6) would provide that an allocation to a
Floor Broker Participant, which would be defined as a ``Floor Broker
Allocation,'' would be allocated to orders with unique working times
that comprise the Floor Broker Participant, which would be defined as
``Floor Broker Orders,'' on parity. In other words, any allocation to
an individual Floor Broker Participant at a price would be further
allocated among multiple orders that may be represented by that Floor
broker. The proposed reference to ``unique working times'' would refer
to orders that have multiple working times. For example, pursuant to
proposed Rule 7.31(d)(1)(B), each time a Reserve Order is replenished
from reserve interest, a new working time would be assigned to the
replenished quantity of the Reserve Order, while the reserve interest
would retain the working time of original order entry. As a result, the
display quantity of a Reserve Order may be represented by multiple
orders with unique working times representing each replenishment. For
purposes of the Floor Broker Allocation, each quantity with a unique
working time would be considered a separate order.
As further proposed, the parity allocation within a Floor Broker
Allocation would be processed as described in proposed Rule 7.37(b)(2)-
(4) with the Floor Broker Allocation processed as the ``Aggressing
Order'' and each Floor Broker Order processed as a ``Participant.''
Because a Floor Broker Participant may represent multiple orders, the
Exchange believes that allocating the Floor Broker Allocation on parity
would be consistent with the Exchange's allocation model, which
provides for a parity allocation to Floor brokers. For example, if an
Aggressing Order is allocated 200 shares to Floor Broker Participant
``X,'' which would be the Floor Broker Allocation, and ``X''
[[Page 13562]]
represents three Floor Broker Orders, ``A,'' ``B,'' and ``C'' for 100
shares each at a price and the parity pointer is on ``B,'' pursuant to
proposed Rule 7.37(b)(6), the Floor Broker Allocation would be
allocated 100 shares to ``B'' and 100 shares to ``C'' and ``A'' would
not receive an allocation.
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(8) would provide that if resting orders on
one side of the market are repriced and become marketable against
contra-side orders on the Exchange Book, the Exchange would rank the
re-priced orders as described in proposed Rule 7.36(c) and trade them
as Aggressing Orders consistent with their ranking.\32\ This proposed
functionality would be new for Pillar.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ The Exchange proposes to designated [sic] proposed Rule
7.37(b)(7) as ``Reserved.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.37(b)(9) would provide that if resting orders on
both sides of the market are repriced and become marketable against one
another, the Exchange would rank the orders on each side of the market
as described in Rule 7.36(c) and trade them as follows:
The best-ranked order would establish the price at which
the marketable orders will trade, provided that if the marketable
orders include MPL orders, orders would trade at the midpoint of the
PBBO (proposed Rule 7.37(b)(9)(A)).
The next best-ranked order would trade as the Aggressing
Order with contra-side orders at that price pursuant to proposed Rule
7.37(b)(1) (proposed Rule 7.37(b)(9)(B)).
When an Aggressing Order is fully executed, the next-best
ranked order would trade as the Aggressing Order with contra-side
orders at that price pursuant to proposed Rule 7.37(b)(1) (proposed
Rule 7.37(b)(9)(C)).
Orders on both sides of the market would continue to trade
as the Aggressing Order until all marketable orders are executed
(proposed Rule 7.37(b)(9)(D)).
Because proposed Rule 7.37 would address order execution and
routing, including parity allocations, locking and crossing, and the
Order Protection Rule, the Exchange proposes that Rules 15A, 19, 72(c),
1000, 1001, 1002, and 1004 would not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Rule 72(d) would also not be applicable to trading UTP
Securities on the Pillar trading platform, accordingly the Exchange
would designate the entirety of Rule 72 as not applicable to trading
UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.31
Proposed Rule 7.31 (Orders and Modifiers) would establish the
orders and modifiers that would be available on the Exchange for
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform. The Exchange
proposes to offer a subset of the orders and modifiers that are
available on NYSE Arca and NYSE American, with specified substantive
differences, as described below.
Proposed Rule 7.31(a) would establish the Exchange's
proposed Primary Order Types. The Exchange would offer Market Orders,
which would be described in proposed Rule 7.31(a)(1), and Limit Orders,
which would be described in proposed Rule 7.31(a)(2). These proposed
rules are based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(a)(1) and (2) with one
substantive difference. Because the Exchange would not be conducting
auctions for UTP Securities and because, as described below, with the
exception of Primary Pegged Orders, Limit Orders entered before the
Core Trading Session would be deemed designated for both the Early
Trading Session and the Core Trading Session, the Exchange proposes not
to include the following text in proposed Rule 7.31(a)(2)(B): ``A Limit
Order entered before the Core Trading Session that is designated for
the Core Trading Session only will become subject to Limit Order Price
Protection after the Core Open Auction.'' Instead, the Exchange
proposes to provide that a Limit Order entered before the Core Trading
Session that becomes eligible to trade in the Core Trading Session
would become subject to the Limit Order Price Protection when the Core
Trading Session begins. Accordingly, Primary Pegged Orders entered
before the Core Trading Session begins would not be subject to Limit
Order Price Protection until the Core Trading Session begins.
Proposed Rule 7.31(b) would establish the proposed time-
in-force modifiers available for UTP Securities on the Pillar trading
platform. The Exchange would offer both Day and Immediate-or-Cancel
(``IOC'') time-in-force modifiers. The rule text is based on NYSE
American Rule 7.31E(b) without any substantive differences.
Proposed Rule 7.31(c) would establish the Exchange's
Auction-Only Orders. Because the Exchange would not be conducting
auctions in UTP Securities, the Exchange would route all Auction-Only
Orders in UTP Securities to the primary listing market, as described in
greater detail below in proposed Rule 7.34. To reflect this
functionality, proposed Rule 7.31(c) would provide that an Auction-Only
Order is a Limit or Market Order that is only to be routed pursuant to
Rule 7.34. Proposed Rules 7.31(c)(1)-(4) would define Limit-on-Open
Orders (``LOO Order''), Market-on-Open Order (``MOO Order''), Limit-on-
Close Order (``LOC Order''), and Market-on-Close (``MOC Order''). The
proposed rule text is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(c)(1)-(4) and NYSE
American Rule 7.31E(c)(1)-(4), with the substantive difference not to
include rule text relating to how Auction-Only Orders would function
during a Trading Halt Auction, as the Exchange would not be conducting
any auctions in UTP Securities. Because the Exchange would not have
defined terms for auctions in the Pillar rules, the Exchange proposes
an additional non-substantive difference to use the term ``an opening
or re-opening auction'' instead of ``the Core Open Auction or a Trading
Halt Auction'' and the term ``a closing auction'' instead of ``the
Closing Auction.''
Proposed Rule 7.31(d) would describe orders with a
conditional or undisplayed price and/or size. Proposed Rule 7.31(d) is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(d) and NYSE American Rule 7.31E(d)
without any differences.
Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(1) would establish Reserve Orders,
which would be a Limit Order with a quantity of the size displayed and
with a reserve quantity (``reserve interest'') that is not displayed.
Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(1) and subparagraphs (A)-(C) to that rule are
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(d)(1) and its sub-paragraphs (A)-(C)
without any substantive differences. As described below, the Exchange
proposes to describe Limit Orders that do not route as a ``Limit Non-
Routable Order.''
Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(2) would establish Limit Non-
Displayed Orders, which would be a Limit Order that is not displayed
and does not route. This proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-
E(d)(2), with one substantive difference: The Exchange would not be
offering the ability for a Limit Non-Displayed Order to be designated
with a Non-Display Remove Modifier and therefore would not be proposing
rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(d)(2)(B).
Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(3) would establish MPL Orders, which
would be a Limit Order that is not displayed and does not route, with a
working price at the midpoint of the PBBO. Proposed Rule 7.31(d)(3) is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(d)(3) and NYSE American Rule 7.31E(d)(3)
with one substantive difference: Because the Exchange would not be
conducting auctions in UTP Securities, the Exchange does not propose to
include rule text that MPL Orders do not participate in any auctions.
Proposed Rules 7.31(d)(3)(A)-(F), which further describe MPL
Orders, are
[[Page 13563]]
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(d)(3)(A)-(F) with two substantive
differences. First, the Exchange would not offer the optional
functionality for an incoming Limit Order to be designated with a ``No
Midpoint Execution'' modifier. Second, the Exchange would not offer for
MPL Orders to be designated with a Non-Display Remove Modifier. Because
the Exchange would not offer the Non-Display Remove Modifier for MPL
Orders, the Exchange is not proposing rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.31-E(d)(3)(G). Proposed Rule 7.31(e) would establish orders with
instructions not to route and is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(e) and
NYSE American Rule 7.31E(e) without any differences.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Proposed Rule 7.31 includes behavior relating to MPL Orders
that were recently adopted on NYSE Arca and NYSE American. See supra
note 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.31(e)(1) would establish the Limit Non-
Routable Order, which is a Limit Order that does not route. Proposed
Rule 7.31(e)(1) and its sub-paragraphs (A)-(B) is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31-E(e)(1) and its sub-paragraphs (A)-(B) and NYSE American Rule
7.31E(1) and its sub-paragraphs (A)-(B) without any substantive
differences. Because the Exchange would not offer Non-Display Remove
Modifiers for Limit Non-Routable Orders, the Exchange is not proposing
rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(e)(1)(C).
Proposed Rule 7.31(e)(2) and sub-paragraphs (B)-(D) would
establish the ALO Order, which is a Limit Non-Routable Order that,
except as specified in the proposed rule, would not remove liquidity
from the Exchange Book. The proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.31-E(e)(2) and its sub-paragraphs (B)-(D) with two substantive
differences. First, because the Exchange would not have auctions in UTP
Securities, the Exchange does not propose rule text based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.31-E(e)(2)(A), and would designate this sub-paragraph as
``Reserved.'' Second, because the Exchange would not offer the Non-
Display Remove Modifier for Limit Non-Routable Orders or Limit Non-
Display Orders, the Exchange does not propose rule text based on NYSE
Arca Rule 7.31-E(e)(2)(B)(iv)(b).
Proposed Rule 7.31(e)(3) and sub-paragraphs (A)-(D) would
establish Intermarket Sweep Orders (``ISO''), which would be a Limit
Order that does not route and meets the requirements of Rule 600(b)(3)
of Regulation NMS and could be designated IOC or Day. The proposed rule
is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(e)(3) and its sub-paragraphs (A)-(D)
and its sub-paragraphs (A)-(D) with two substantive differences. First,
because Exchange Floor brokers do not have the ability to enter orders
directly on Away Markets, the Exchange does not currently offer the
ability for Floor brokers to enter ISOs.\35\ The Exchange similarly
proposes that Floor brokers would not be able to enter ISOs for trading
UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform and therefore would
specify that ISOs are not available to Floor brokers. Second, because
Non-Display Remove Modifiers would not be available, the Exchange is
not proposing rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-
E(e)(3)(D)(iii)(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See Rule 70(a)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the Exchange would not offer Primary Only Orders
or Cross Orders, the Exchange proposes that Rules 7.31(f) and (g) would
be designated as ``Reserved.''
Proposed Rule 7.31(h) would establish Pegged Orders, which
would be a Limit Order that does not route with a working price that is
pegged to a dynamic reference price. Proposed Rule 7.31(h) is based on
NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(h) with one substantive difference. Consistent
with the Exchange's current rules, Pegged Orders would be available
only to Floor brokers.\36\
Proposed Rule 7.31(h)(2) and sub-paragraphs (A) and (B) would
establish Primary Pegged Orders, which would be a Pegged Order to buy
(sell) with a working price that is pegged to the PBB (PBO), must
include a minimum of one round lot of displayed, and with no offset
allowed. This proposed rule text is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-
E(h)(2) and sub-paragraphs (A) and (B) with one substantive difference.
Because the Exchange would not conduct auctions in UTP Securities, the
Exchange does not propose to include rule text that a Primary Pegged
Order would be eligible to participate in auctions at the limit price
of the order.
Proposed Rule 7.31(h)(4) and sub-paragraphs (A) and (B) would
establish a Non-Displayed Primary Pegged Order, which would be a Pegged
Order to buy (sell) with a working price that is pegged to the PBB
(PBO), with no offset allowed, that is not displayed. This rule text is
based on NYSE American Rule 7.31E(h)(2), which describes a Primary
Pegged Order that is not displayed. Similar to the rules of NYSE
American, the proposed Non-Displayed Primary Pegged Order would be
rejected on arrival, or cancelled when resting, if there is no PBBO
against which to peg. In addition, Non-Displayed Primary Pegged Orders
would be ranked Priority 3--Non-Display Orders and if the PBBO is
locked or crossed, both an arriving and resting Non-Displayd [sic]
Primary Pegged Order would wait for a PBBO that is not locked or
crossed before the working price is adjusted and the order becomes
eligible to trade.
Because the Exchange would not offer Market Pegged Order or
Discretionary Pegged Orders, the Exchange proposes that paragraphs
(h)(1) and (h)(3) of proposed Rule 7.31 would be designated as
``Reserved.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See Rule 13(f)(1)(A)(i), which describes Pegging Interest
as being available for e-Quotes and d-Quotes, which is functionality
available only to Floor brokers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2) would establish Self Trade
Prevention Modifiers (``STP'') on the Exchange. As proposed, any
incoming order to buy (sell) designated with an STP modifier would be
prevented from trading with a resting order to sell (buy) also
designated with an STP modifier and from the same Client ID, as
designated by the member organization, and the STP modifier on the
incoming order would control the interaction between two orders marked
with STP modifiers. Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(A) would establish STP
Cancel Newest (``STPN'') and proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(B) would
establish STP Cancel Oldest (``STPO''). Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2) and
subparagraphs (A) and (B) are based in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-
E(i)(2) and its sub-paragraphs (A) and (B) and NYSE American Rule
7.31E(i)(2) and its sub-paragraphs (A) and (B), with substantive
differences to specify how STP modifiers would function consistent with
the Exchange's proposed allocation model.
Specifically, because, as described above, resting orders are
allocated either on parity or time based on the priority category of an
order, the Exchange proposes to specify in proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)
that the Exchange would evaluate the interaction between two orders
marked with STP modifiers from the same Client ID consistent with the
allocation logic applicable to the priority category of the resting
order. The proposed rule would further provide that if resting orders
in a priority category do not have an STP modifier from the same Client
ID, the incoming order designated with an STP modifier would trade with
resting orders in that priority category before being evaluated for STP
with resting orders in the next priority category.
For STPN, proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(A)(i) would provide that if a
resting order with an STP modifier from the same Client ID is in a
priority category that allocates orders on price-
[[Page 13564]]
time priority, the incoming order marked with the STPN modifier would
be cancelled back to the originating member organization and the
resting order marked with one of the STP modifiers would remain on the
Exchange Book. This proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-
E(i)(2)(A) and NYSE American Rule 7.31E(i)(2)(A), with non-substantive
differences to specify that this order processing would be applicable
for orders that are allocated in price-time priority.
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(A)(ii) would be new and would address how
STPN would function for resting orders in a priority category that
allocates orders on parity. As proposed, if a resting order with an STP
modifier from the same Client ID is in a priority category that
allocates orders on parity and would have been considered for an
allocation, none of the resting orders eligible for a parity allocation
in that priority category would receive an allocation and the incoming
order marked with the STPN modifier would be cancelled back.\37\ The
Exchange believes that if a member organization designates an order
with an STPN modifier, that member organization has instructed the
Exchange to cancel the incoming order rather than trade with a resting
order with an STP modifier from the same Client ID. Because in a parity
allocation, resting orders are allocated based on their position on an
allocation wheel, as described above, it would be consistent with the
incoming order's instruction to cancel the incoming order if any of the
resting orders eligible to participate in the parity allocation has an
STP modifier from the same Client ID.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ As described above, if there were resting Market Orders
against which the incoming order was marketable, because Market
Orders are in a different priority category, the incoming order
would trade with the resting Market Orders before being assessed for
STP with resting orders in a parity priority category.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For STPO, proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(B)(i) would provide that if a
resting order with an STP modifier from the same Client ID is in a
priority category that allocates orders on price-time priority, the
resting order marked with the STP modifier would be cancelled back to
the originating member organization and the incoming order marked with
the STPO modifier would remain on the Exchange Book. This proposed rule
is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(i)(2)(B) and NYSE American Rule
7.31E(i)(2)(B), with non-substantive differences to specify that this
order processing would be applicable for orders that are allocated in
price-time priority.
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(2)(B)(ii) would be new and would address how
STPO would function for resting orders in a priority category that
allocates orders on parity. As proposed, if a resting order with an STP
modifier from the same Client ID is in a priority category that
allocates orders on parity, all resting orders with the STP modifier
with the same Client ID in that priority category that would have been
considered for an allocation would not be eligible for a parity
allocation and would be cancelled. The rule would further provide that
an incoming order marked with the STPO modifier would be eligible to
trade on parity with orders in that priority category that do not have
a matching STP modifier and that resting orders in that priority
category with an STP modifier from the same Client ID that would not
have been eligible for a parity allocation would remain on the Exchange
Book. The Exchange believes that this proposed processing of STPO would
allow for the incoming order to continue to trade with resting orders
that do not have an STP modifier from the same client ID, while at the
same time processing the instruction that resting orders with an STP
from the same Client ID would be cancelled if there were a potential
for an execution between the two orders.
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3) would describe the Minimum Trade
Size (``MTS'') Modifier, which is based in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-
E(i)(3).\38\ The Exchange proposes a substantive difference in that the
MTS Modifier would be available only for Limit IOC and MPL Orders.
Subject to this difference, proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(A)-(E) and (G) is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E(i)(3)(A)-(F).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ See supra note 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes an additional substantive difference to
address how a resting order with an MTS that becomes an Aggressing
Order would trade under the parity allocation model. As described in
proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(B), on arrival, an order to buy (sell) with an
MTS Modifier would trade with sell (buy) orders in the Exchange Book
that in the aggregate meet such order's MTS. In other words, the MTS of
an Aggressing Order on arrival can be met by one or more resting
orders. Because more than one resting order can trade with an arriving
order with an MTS, such allocation can be made consistent with the
Exchange's parity allocation model without any changes.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ For example, if the midpoint of the PBBO is 10.00 and at
10.00, the Exchange has a sell order ``A'' ranked Priority 3--Non-
Displayed for 100 shares from the Book Participant and a sell order
``B'' ranked Priority 3--Non-Displayed for 100 shares from the Floor
Broker Participant, if the Exchange receives a buy MPL Order with a
limit price of 10.00 and an MTS of 200 shares, the MTS could be met
by the resting orders in the aggregate, and the arriving buy order
would trade with both ``A'' and ``B.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By contrast, proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(E) would provide that a
resting order to buy (sell) with an MTS Modifier that becomes an
Aggressing Order would trade with individual sell (buy) orders that
each meet the MTS. Because a resting order that becomes an Aggressing
Order, which could only be an MPL Order, would need to be able to trade
with individual contra-side orders that each meet the MTS, the Exchange
proposes to address how such requirement would operate with the
Exchange's proposed allocation model. Specifically, proposed Rule
7.31(i)(3)(F)(i) would provide that when such Aggressing Order is
trading with sell (buy) orders in a priority category that allocates
orders on price-time priority, if a sell (buy) order does not meet the
MTS, the MPL Order with the MTS Modifier would not trade and would be
ranked on the Exchange Book.
Accordingly, for orders that trade in a price-time priority
category, the MPL Order with an MTS Modifier would stop trading if a
contra-side order does not meet the MTS. This proposal is consistent
with how a resting order that becomes an Aggressing Order would trade
on NYSE Arca, which has a price-time priority allocation model.
Proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(F)(ii) would set forth how a resting MPL
Order to buy (sell) with an MTS that becomes an Aggressing Order would
trade with sell (buy) orders in a priority category that allocates
orders on parity. Because in a parity allocation model, more than one
resting order may participate in an allocation, the Exchange proposes
that a resting order to buy (sell) with an MTS that becomes an
Aggressing Order would not trade with any contra-side orders if at
least one sell (buy) order that would have been considered for
allocation does not meet the MTS. As proposed, in such case, the
resting order with the MTS Modifier would be ranked on the Exchange
Book.\40\ The Exchange
[[Page 13565]]
believes that if a member organization designates an MPL Order with an
MTS Modifier, that member organization has instructed the Exchange not
to trade that order with contra-side orders that are smaller in size
than the MTS. Because in a parity allocation, resting orders are
allocated based on their position on an allocation wheel, as described
above, it would be consistent with the incoming order's instruction not
to trade at all rather than to trade with even one order in the parity
allocation that that does not meet the MTS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ For example, the midpoint of the PBBO is 10.01 and at
10.00, the Exchange has a sell order ``A'' ranked Priority 3--Non-
Displayed for 100 shares from the Book Participant and a sell order
``B'' ranked Priority 3--Non-Displayed for 200 shares from the Floor
Broker Participant and a buy MPL Order with a limit price of 10.00
and an MTS of 200 shares. If the midpoint changes to 10.00, the
resting buy MPL Order would become an Aggressing Order. In this
scenario, both ``A'' and ``B'' would be eligible for an allocation,
but because ``A'' cannot individually meet the MTS of the buy MPL
Order, the MPL Order would not trade with either ``A'' or ``B'' and
the buy MPL Order would be ranked on the Exchange Book as provided
for in proposed Rule 7.31(i)(3)(F)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Commentary .01 and .02 to Rule 7.31 is based on
Commentary .01 and .02 to NYSE Arca Rule 7.31-E without any substantive
differences.
Because proposed Rule 7.31 would govern orders and modifiers,
including orders entered by Floor brokers, the Exchange proposes that
Rules 13 (Orders and Modifiers) and 70 (Execution of Floor broker
interest) would not be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform. In addition, references to Trading Collars in
Rule 1000(c) would not be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the
Pillar Trading platform.\41\
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\41\ As described in greater detail above in connection with
proposed Rule 7.37, the Exchange proposes that the entirety of Rule
1000 would not be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar
trading platform.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 7.10
Proposed Rule 7.10 (Clearly Erroneous Executions) would set forth
the Exchange's rules governing clearly erroneous executions. The
proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.10-E and NYSE American Rule
7.10E with substantive differences not to refer to a Late Trading
Session or Cross Orders. The Exchange proposes rule text based on NYSE
Arca rather than current Rule 128 (Clearly Erroneous Executions)
because the NYSE Arca and NYSE American version of the rule uses the
same terminology that the Exchange is proposing for the Pillar trading
platform, e.g., references to Early and Core Trading Sessions.
Accordingly, the Exchange proposes that Rule 128 (Clearly Erroneous
Executions) would not be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform.\42\ Because the Exchange would not be
conducting auctions in UTP Securities, proposed Rule 7.10(a) would not
include the last sentence of NYSE Arca Rule 7.10-E(a), which provides
that ``[e]xecutions as a result of a Trading Halt Auction are not
eligible for a request to review as clearly erroneous under paragraph
(b) of this Rule.''
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\42\ The Exchange proposes that because there is not a prior
version of proposed Rule 7.10, if the Limit Up-Limit Down Plan is
not approved, the prior version of sections (c), (e)(2), (f) and (g)
of Rule 128 would be in effect.
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Proposed Rule 7.11
Proposed Rule 7.11 (Limit Up-Limit Down Plan and Trading Pauses in
Individual Securities Due to Extraordinary Market Volatility) would
establish how the Exchange would comply with the Regulation NMS Plan to
Address Extraordinary Market Volatility (``LULD Plan'').\43\ The
proposed rule is based on NYSE American Rule 7.11E with the following
substantive differences. First, as proposed, the Exchange would not
offer the optional functionality for a member organization to instruct
the Exchange to cancel a Limit Order that cannot be traded or routed at
prices at or within the Price bands, rather than the default processing
of re-pricing a Limit Order to the Price Bands, as described in
proposed Rule 7.11(a)(5)(B)(i).\44\ Accordingly, the Exchange would not
include text relating to this instruction, as described in NYSE
American Rules 7.11E(a)(5)(B)(i), 7.11E(a)(5)(C), or 7.11E(a)(5)(F).
Second, because the Exchange would not be offering orders that include
specific routing instructions, Q Orders, or Limit IOC Cross Orders, the
Exchange would not include text that references these order types, as
described in NYSE American Rule 7.11E(a)(5)(B)(iii), 7.11E(a)(5)(D),
7.11E(a)(5)(E), and 7.11E(a)(6). The Exchange proposes to designate
proposed Rules 7.11(a)(5)(D) and 7.11(a)(5)(E) as ``Reserved.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 80455 (April 13,
2017), 81 FR 24908 (April 27, 2016) (File No. 4-631) (Order
approving 12th Amendment to the LULD Plan).
\44\ The Exchange will offer this optional functionality when it
implements Pillar phase II communication protocols.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, because proposed Rule 7.11 would govern trading in UTP
Securities and the Exchange would not conduct auctions for such
securities, the Exchange does not propose rule text from NYSE American
Rule 7.11E(b) that describes how the Exchange would re-open trading in
a security. The Exchange proposes that Rule 7.11(b)(1) would be based
on rule text from NYSE American Rule 7.11E(b)(1).
Because the proposed rule covers the same subject matter as Rule
80C, the Exchange proposes that Rule 80C would not be applicable to
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
Proposed Rule 7.16
Proposed Rule 7.16 (Short Sales) would establish requirements
relating to short sales. The proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.16-E and NYSE American Rule 7.16E with two substantive differences.
First, because the proposed rule would not be applicable to any
securities that are listed on the Exchange, the Exchange would not be
evaluating whether the short sale price test restrictions of Rule 201
of Regulation SHO have been triggered. Accordingly, the Exchange does
not propose rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.16-E(f)(3) or NYSE
American Rule 7.16E(f)(3) and would designate that sub-paragraph as
``Reserved.'' For similar reasons, the Exchange proposes not to include
rule text based on NYSE Arca Rules 7.16-E(f)(4)(A) and (B) or NYSE
American Rule 7.16E(f)(4)(A) and (B).
Second, because the Exchange would not be offering Tracking Orders,
Cross Orders, or the Proactive if Locked/Crossed Modifier, the Exchange
does not propose rule text based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.16-E(f)(5)(D),
(G), or (I) or NYSE American Rule 7.16E(f)(5)(D), (G), or (I). The
Exchange proposes to designate proposed Rules 7.16(f)(5)(D) and (G) as
``Reserved.''
Because the proposed rule covers the same subject matter as Rule
440B (Short Sales), the Exchange proposes that Rule 440B would not be
applicable to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
Proposed Rule 7.18
The Exchange proposes to amend Rule 7.18 (Halts) to establish how
the Exchange would process orders during a halt in a UTP Security and
when it would halt trading in a UTP Exchange Traded Product.\45\
Proposed Rule 7.18(b) would provide that the Exchange would not conduct
a Trading Halt Auction in a UTP Security and would process new and
existing orders in a UTP Security during a UTP Regulatory Halt \46\ as
described in proposed Rule
[[Page 13566]]
7.18(b)(1)-(6). The proposed rule text is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.18-
E(b) and its sub-paragraphs (1)--(6) and NYSE American Rule 7.18E(b)
and its sub-paragraphs (1)-(6) with one substantive difference. Because
the Exchange would not be offering ``Primary Only'' orders, proposed
Rule 7.18(b)(5) would not reference such order types.
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\45\ The term ``UTP Exchange Traded Product'' is defined in Rule
1.1(bbb) to mean an Exchange Traded Product that trades on the
Exchange pursuant to unlisted trading privileges. The terms
``Exchange Traded Product'' and ``UTP Exchange Traded Product'' on
the Exchange have the same meaning as the NYSE Arca terms
``Derivatives Securities Product'' and ``UTP Derivative Securities
Product,'' which are defined in NYSE Arca Rule 1.1(k). The Exchange
proposes a non-substantive difference in proposed Rule 7.18 as
compared to NYSE Arca Rule 7.18-E to use the Exchange-defined terms.
\46\ The term ``UTP Regulatory Halt'' is defined in Rule 1.1(kk)
to mean a trade suspension, halt, or pause called by the UTP Listing
Market in a UTP Security that requires all market centers to halt
trading in that security.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to amend Rule 7.18(d)(1)(A) to specify that
if a UTP Exchange Traded Product begins trading on the Exchange in the
Early Trading Session and subsequently a temporary interruption occurs
in the calculation or wide dissemination of the Intraday Indicative
Value (``IIV'') or the value of the underlying index, as applicable, to
such UTP Exchange Traded Product, by a major market data vendor, the
Exchange may continue to trade the UTP Exchange Traded Product for the
remainder of the Early Trading Session. This proposed rule text is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.18-E(d)(1)(A) and NYSE American Rule
7.18E(d)(1)(A) without any substantive differences. The Exchange also
proposes to amend Rule 7.18(d)(1)(B) to change the reference from
``Exchange's Normal Trading Hours'' to the term ``Core Trading
Session,'' which would be defined in proposed Rule 7.34, described
below.
The Exchange also proposes to amend Rule 7.18(a) to change the
cross reference from Rule 80C to Rule 7.11 as proposed Rule 7.11 would
govern how the Exchange would comply with the LULD Plan for trading UTP
Securities.
Proposed Rule 7.34
Proposed Rule 7.34 would establish trading sessions on the
Exchange. The Exchange proposes that on the Pillar trading platform, it
would have Early and Core Trading Sessions. Accordingly, proposed Rule
7.34 is based in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-E and NYSE American Rule
7.34E, with the following substantive differences. First, similar to
NYSE American, the Exchange proposes that the Early Trading Session
would begin at 7:00 a.m. Eastern Time. Similar to NYSE Arca and NYSE
American, the Exchange would begin accepting orders 30 minutes before
the Early Trading Session begins, which means order entry acceptance
would begin at 6:30 a.m. Eastern Time. These differences would be
reflected in proposed Rule 7.34(a)(1).
Second, proposed Rule 7.34(b) would be new and is not based on NYSE
Arca Rule 7.34-E(b) or NYSE American Rule 7.34E(b). Rather than require
member organizations to include a designation for which trading session
the order would be in effect, the Exchange proposes to specify in Rule
7.34(b) and (c) which trading sessions an order would be deemed
designated. Proposed Rule 7.34(b)(1) would provide that unless
otherwise specified in Rule 7.34(c), an order entered before or during
the Early or Core Trading Session would be deemed designated for the
Early Trading Session and the Core Trading Session. Proposed Rule
7.34(b)(2) would provide that an order without a time-in-force
designation would be deemed designated with a day time-in-force
modifier.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c) would specify which orders would be permitted
in each session. Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1) would provide that unless
otherwise specified in paragraphs (c)(1)(A)-(C), orders and modifiers
defined in Rule 7.31 would be eligible to participate in the Early
Trading Session. This proposed rule text is based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.34-E(c)(1) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(1) with a substantive
difference not to refer to orders ``designated'' for the Early Trading
Session. In addition, because the Exchange would not be offering a
Retail Liquidity Program, the Exchange would not reference Rule 7.44.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(A) would provide that Pegged
Orders would not be eligible to participate in the Early Trading
Session. This rule text is based in part on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-
E(c)(1)(A) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(1)(A) in the Pegged Orders
would not be eligible to participate in the Early Trading Session. The
Exchange proposes a substantive difference from the NYSE Arca and NYSE
American rules because proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(A) would not refer to
Market Orders. Market Orders entered during the Early Trading Session
would be addressed in proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(C), described below. The
proposed rule would further provide that Non-Displayed Primary Pegged
Orders entered before the Core Trading Session would be rejected and
Primary Pegged Orders entered before the Core Trading Session would be
accepted but would not be eligible to trade until the Core Trading
Session begins. This rule text is based in part on both NYSE Arca Rule
7.34-E(c)(1)(A) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(1)(A), but uses
terminology consistent with the Exchange's proposed order types.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(B) would provide that Limit
Orders designated IOC would be rejected if entered before the Early
Trading Session begins. This proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.34-E(c)(1)(B) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(1)(B) with two
substantive differences. First, because the Exchange would not be
conducting auctions, the Exchange proposes to specify that the
rejection period would begin ``before the Early Trading Session
begins'' rather than state ``before the Early Open Auction concludes.''
Second, the Exchange would not refer to Cross Orders, which would not
be offered on the Exchange.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(1)(C) would provide that Market
Orders and Auction-Only Orders in UTP Securities entered before the
Core Trading Session begins would be routed to the primary listing
market on arrival and any order routed directly to the primary listing
market on arrival would be cancelled if that market is not accepting
orders. This proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-E(c)(1)(D)
and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(1)(D) with a non-substantive difference
to specify that such orders would be routed until the Core Trading
Session begins.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(2) would provide that unless otherwise
specified in Rule 7.34(c)(2)(A)-(B), all orders and modifiers defined
in Rule 7.31 would be eligible to participate in the Core Trading
Session. This proposed rule text is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-
E(c)(2) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(2) with a substantive
difference not to refer to orders ``designated'' for the Core Trading
Session. In addition, because the Exchange would not be offering a
Retail Liquidity Program, the Exchange would not reference Rule 7.44.
Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(2)(A) would provide that Market
Orders in UTP Securities would be routed to the primary listing market
until the first opening print of any size on the primary listing market
or 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time, whichever is earlier. This proposed rule is
based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-E(c)(2)(A) and NYSE American Rule
7.34E(c)(2)(A) with a non-substantive difference to use the term ``UTP
Securities'' instead of referencing orders that ``are not eligible for
the Core Open Auction.''
Proposed Rule 7.34(c)(2)(B) would provide that Auction-
Only Orders in UTP Securities would be accepted and routed directly to
the primary listing market. This proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca
Rule 7.34-E(c)(2)(B) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(c)(2)(B) with a non-
substantive difference to use the term ``UTP Securities'' instead of
referencing orders that ``are not eligible for an auction on the
Exchange.''
[[Page 13567]]
Proposed Rule 7.34(d) would establish requirements for member
organizations to provide customer disclosure when accepting orders for
execution in the Early Trading Session. The proposed rule is based on
NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-E(d) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(d) without any
substantive differences.
Proposed Rule 7.34(e) would provide that trades on the Exchange
executed and reported outside of the Core Trading Session would be
designated as .T trades. This proposed rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule
7.34-E(e) and NYSE American Rule 7.34E(e) without any substantive
differences.
Proposed Rule 7.38
Proposed Rule 7.38 (Odd and Mixed Lot) would establish requirements
relating to odd lot and mixed lot trading on the Exchange. The proposed
rule is based on NYSE Arca Rule 7.38-E and NYSE American Rule 7.38E
with one substantive difference. Because orders ranked Priority 2--
Display Orders, including odd-lot sized orders, are on an allocation
wheel at their display price, the Exchange proposes that if the display
price of an odd-lot order to buy (sell) is above (below) its working
price (i.e., the PBBO, which is the price at which the odd-lot order is
eligible to trade, has crossed the display price of that odd-lot
order), the odd-lot order would be ranked and allocated based on its
display price. In such case, the order would execute at its working
price, but if there is more than one odd-lot order at the different
display price, they would be allocated on parity.
For example, if at 10.02, the Exchange has an order ``A'' to buy 50
shares ranked Priority 2--Display Orders, and at 10.01, the Exchange
has an order ``B'' to buy 10 shares ranked Priority 2 -Display Orders,
an order ``C'' to buy 10 shares ranked Priority 2--Display Orders, and
an order ``D'' to buy 10 shares ranked Priority 2 -Display Orders, and
the parity pointer is on order ``C,'' if the Away Market PBO becomes
10.00, which crosses the display price of ``A,'' ``B,'' ``C,'' and
``D,'' those orders would trade at 10.00. If the Exchange were to
receive a Market Order to sell 70 shares, it would trade at 10.00 and
be allocated 50 shares to ``A,'' 10 shares to ``C,'' and 10 shares to
``D.'' ``B'' would not receive an allocation based on its position on
the allocation wheel.
The Exchange proposes that Rule 61 (Recognized Quotations) would
not be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading
platform.
Proposed Rule 7.46
Section 5 of Rule 7P would establish requirements relating to the
Plan to Implement a Tick Size Pilot Program. Proposed Rule 7.46 (Tick
Size Pilot Plan) would specify such requirements. The proposed rule is
based on NYSE American Rule 7.46E with the following substantive
differences for proposed Rule 7.46(f). First, because the Exchange
would not offer Market Pegged Orders, the Exchange proposes that
paragraph (f)(3) of the Rule would be designated as ``Reserved.''
Second, the Exchange proposes to set forth the priority of resting
orders both for ranking and for allocation. For Pilot Securities in
Test Group Three, proposed Rule 7.46(f)(5)(A) would govern ranking
instead of proposed Rule 7.36(e), described above, as follows:
Priority 2--Display Orders. Non-marketable Limit Orders
with a displayed working price would have first priority.
Protected Quotations of Away Markets. Protected quotations
of Away Markets would have second priority.
Priority 1--Market Orders. Unexecuted Market Orders would
have third priority.
Priority 3--Non-Display Orders. Non-marketable Limit
Orders for which the working price is not displayed, including reserve
interest of Reserve Orders, would have fourth priority.
For Pilot Securities in Test Group Three, proposed Rule
7.46(f)(5)(B) would set forth how an Aggressing Order would be
allocated against contra-side orders, instead of proposed Rule
7.37(b)(1), described above, as follows:
First, an order with Setter Priority that has a display
price and working price equal to the BBO would receive 15% of the
remaining quantity of the Aggressing Order, rounded up to the next
round lot size or the remaining displayed quantity of the order with
Setter Priority, whichever is lower. An order with Setter Priority
would be eligible for Setter Priority allocation if the BBO is no
longer the same as the NBBO.
Next, orders ranked Priority 2--Displayed Orders would be
allocated on parity by Participant. The remaining quantity of the order
with Setting Priority would be eligible to participate in this parity
allocation, consistent with the allocation wheel position of the
Participant that entered the order with Setter Priority.
Next, subject to proposed Rule 7.46(f)(5)(F) (describing
orders with instructions not to route), the Exchange would route the
Aggressing Order to protected quotations of Away Markets.
Next, orders ranked Priority 1--Market Orders would trade
based on time.
Next, orders ranked Priority 3--Non-Display Orders, other
than MPL Orders with an MTS, would be allocated on parity by
Participant.
Next, MPL Orders with an MTS would be allocated based on
MTS size (smallest to largest) and time.
Third, the Exchange would not include rule text based on NYSE
American Rule 7.46E(f)(G), relating to Limit IOC Cross Orders, which
would not be offered on the Exchange. Finally, proposed Rules
7.46(f)(5)(F)(i)(a) and (b) are based on NYSE Arca Rules 7.46-
E(f)(5)(F)(i)(a) and (b) and not the NYSE American version of the rule
because NYSE American does not offer Day ISO orders.
The Exchange proposes that Rule 67 (Tick Size Pilot Plan) would not
be applicable to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
Amendments to Rule 103B and 107B
As described above, the Exchange would not assign UTP Securities to
DMMs. Accordingly, the Exchange proposes to amend Rule 103B(I)
(Security Allocation and Reallocation) to specify that UTP Securities
would not be allocated to a DMM unit.
In addition, because UTP Securities would be eligible to be
assigned to Supplemental Liquidity Providers, the Exchange proposes to
amend Rule 107B (Supplemental Liquidity Providers) to replace the term
``NYSE-listed securities'' with the term ``NYSE-traded securities,''
which would include UTP Securities.
Current Rules That Would Not Be Applicable To Trading UTP Securities on
Pillar
As described in more detail above, in connection with the proposed
rules to support trading of UTP Securities on the Pillar trading
platform, the Exchange has identified current Exchange rules that would
not be applicable because they would be superseded by a proposed rule.
The Exchange has identified additional current rules that would not be
applicable to trading on Pillar. These rules do not have a counterpart
in the proposed Pillar rules, described above, but would be obsolete
when trading UTP Securities on Pillar.
The main category of rules that would not be applicable to trading
on the Pillar trading platform are those rules that are specific to
auctions and Floor-based point-of-sale trading other than crossing
transactions pursuant to Rule 76. For this reason, the Exchange
proposes that the following Floor-specific rules would
[[Page 13568]]
not be applicable to trading on the Pillar trading platform:
Rule 15 (Pre-Opening Indication and Opening Order
Imbalance Information).
Rule 77 (Prohibited Dealings and Activities).
Rule 79A (Miscellaneous Requirements on Stock Market
Procedures).
Rule 108 (Limitation on Members' Bids and Offers).
Rule 111 (Reports of Executions).
Rule 115A (Orders at Opening).
Rule 116 (`Stop' Constitutes Guarantee).
Rule 123A (Miscellaneous Requirements).
Rule 123B (Exchange Automated Order Routing System).
Rule 123C (The Closing Procedures).
Rule 123D (Openings and Halts in Trading)
Rule 127 (Block Crosses Outside the Prevailing NYSE
Quotation).
In addition, as noted above, the Exchange would not offer a Retail
Liquidity Program when it trades on the Pillar trading platform.
Proposed rules that are based on NYSE Arca rules that include a cross
reference to NYSE Arca Rule 7.44-E would not include that rule
reference. The Exchange also proposes that Rule 107C would not be
applicable to trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
* * * * *
As discussed above, because of the technology changes associated
with the migration to the Pillar trading platform, the Exchange will
announce by Trader Update when the Pillar rules for trading UTP
Securities will become operative.
2. Statutory Basis
The proposed rule change is consistent with Section 6(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Act''),\47\ in general, and
furthers the objectives of Section 6(b)(5),\48\ in particular, because
it is designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster
cooperation and coordination with persons engaged in facilitating
transactions in securities, to remove impediments to, and perfect the
mechanism of, a free and open market and a national market system and,
in general, to protect investors and the public interest. The Exchange
believes that the proposed rules to support Pillar on the Exchange
would remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market because they provide for rules to support the Exchange's
introduction of trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform.
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\47\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\48\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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Generally, the Exchange believes that the proposed rules would
remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open
market and a national market system because they would support the
Exchange's introduction of trading UTP Securities in a manner that
would use Pillar terminology to describe how the Exchange's current
Floor-based parity allocation model with Setter Priority would operate,
with specified substantive differences from current rules, and
introduce Pillar rules for the Exchange that are based on the rules of
its affiliated markets, NYSE Arca and NYSE American.
With respect to how UTP Securities would be ranked, displayed,
executed, and routed on Pillar, the Exchange believes that proposed
Rules 7.36(a)-(g) and proposed Rules 7.37(a) and (c)-(g) would remove
impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and
a national market system because these rules would use Pillar
terminology that is based on the approved rules of NYSE Arca and NYSE
American. The Exchange believes that proposed Rule 7.36(h), which would
establish Setter Priority, would remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system
because the proposed rule is based on current Rule 72(a), with
substantive differences designed to encourage the display of
aggressively-priced orders by requiring that an order not only
establish the BBO, but also establish or join the NBBO to be eligible
for Setter Priority.
The Exchange similarly believes that proposed Rule 7.37(b), which
would use Pillar terminology to describe how an Aggressing Order would
be allocated, would remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of
a free and open market and a national market system because it is based
on current Rule 72(b) and (c). The Exchange believes that the proposed
substantive difference to maintain separate allocation wheels for
displayed and non-displayed orders at each price would promote just and
equitable principles of trade because it would allow for Exchange
member organizations to establish their position on an allocation wheel
at each price point, rather than rely on their position on a single
allocation wheel that would be applicable to trades at multiple price
points.
The Exchange believes that extending its parity allocation model to
UTP Securities, including extending parity allocation for orders
entered by Floor brokers, is not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers or dealers. First,
although the Exchange would not have DMMs assigned to UTP Securities,
the Exchange proposes to maintain Floor trading for UTP Securities.
Similar to trading in Exchange-listed securities, Floor brokers, would
be able to effect crossing transactions in UTP Securities on the Floor,
but with Exchange employees rather than DMMs staffing where such
trading would occur.
Second, to be eligible to be included in the Floor Broker
Participant, and thus be eligible for a parity allocation, the Floor
broker that entered the order must be engaged in a Floor broker
business in Exchange-listed securities. The Exchange believes that this
requirement provides a nexus between Exchange Floor trading in
Exchange-listed securities and the extension of that model to trading
in UTP Securities.
Third, because member organizations operating as Floor brokers
would be trading on the floor of an exchange, they would be subject to
restrictions on trading for their own account set forth in Section
11(a)(1) of the Act and rules thereunder. Moreover, the Exchange
proposes to specify in proposed Rule 7.36 that for an order to be
eligible to be included in the Floor Broker Participant, it cannot be
for the account of the Floor broker or any associated persons (unless
entered via an error account pursuant to Rule 134).
Because Floor brokers trading in UTP Securities would not be
permitted to trade for their own accounts, they would not be permitted
to engage in the type of customer-based principal trading activities of
a member organization that enters orders from off the Floor of the
Exchange. Therefore, an allocation to an individual Floor broker under
the Exchange's proposed allocation model would always accrue to the
customer of that Floor broker (or customers if multiple orders are
represented by a Floor broker). Conversely, because a member
organization operating a Floor broker may trade on behalf of customers
only, it would never receive a Floor broker parity allocation for
proprietary trading. As such, the Exchange does not consider the
proposed parity allocation model for UTP Securities as a Floor broker
``benefit,'' but rather as an allocation model choice for customers.
This choice remains relevant in today's more electronic market. As
broker-dealers and institutional investors have reduced the number of
[[Page 13569]]
natural persons on their own off-Floor trading desks, Floor brokers
have come to serve as an extension of the more thinly staffed trading
desks of other broker-dealers or institutional investors, but at a
variable cost. This is an important function that the Floor brokers
play as an agency broker without conflicts and fills a void for firms
that have chosen to allocate resources away from trading desks. In
addition to this role, Floor brokers provide services for more illiquid
securities, which upstairs trading desks may not be staffed to manage.
Importantly, when providing such agency trading services, a Floor
broker is unconflicted because he or she is not trading for his own
account and does not sell research to customers. Floor brokers
therefore can focus on price discovery and volume discovery on behalf
of their customers, while at the same time managing their customers'
order flow to ensure that it does not impact pricing on the market
(e.g., executing large positions on behalf of a customer). As discussed
above, when managing such customer order flow, Floor brokers trading in
UTP Securities would continue to be subject to Exchange rules that are
unique to Floor brokers, including Rules 95, 122, 123, and paragraphs
(d)-(j) of Rule 134.
Fourth, any member organization can choose to have a Floor broker
operation and thus have direct access to Floor broker parity
allocations on behalf of its customers. The Exchange does not charge
member organizations for the use of booth space on the Floor, and
therefore there would be minimal to no extra cost for a member
organization to have a Floor business. Indeed, a smaller firm that
moves its entire operation to the NYSE Floor could have reduced costs
as compared to a firm that needs to pay for office space. Because there
is fair access to any member organization to engage in a Floor broker
operation, the differences between how an order is allocated to a Floor
Broker Participant and Book Participant would not unfairly discriminate
among Exchange member organizations.
Finally, customers relying on agency broker-dealers to represent
their orders on the Exchange can choose whether to use a Floor broker
or a member organization that only uses off-exchange order entry
methods.\49\ In some cases, customers choose to use a member
organization that offers both order entry methods. But the different
allocation models are available to all customers that use a member
organization to enter orders on the Exchange; having such choice would
not unfairly discriminate among customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Floor broker customers are generally other broker-dealers
or institutional investors. Retail investors generally do not
interact directly with either Floor brokers or the trade desks of
member organizations that route orders to the Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also believes that its proposal to make its existing
parity allocation model, as modified for the Pillar trading platform,
available for UTP Securities would remove impediments to and perfect
the mechanism of a free and open market because it would extend the
Exchange's choice-based allocation model to all securities that would
trade on the Exchange in a manner that is consistent with its Trading
Floor model. For market participants other than DMMs, the Exchange does
not believe that there is an inherent benefit of one method of
allocation on the Exchange over another. Market participants that are
latency sensitive--whether for proprietary or agency-based trading--may
choose to use the off-exchange order entry method because of the
relative speed of that order entry path as compared to Floor broker
order entry and availability of Setter Priority allocation. By
contrast, market participants that are not as latency sensitive or are
seeking an unconflicted agent to manage their order flow and
potentially negotiate a large crossing transaction may choose to use a
Floor broker.
The Exchange believes that intra-day trading volume entered by
Floor brokers in NYSE-listed securities, which are subject to the
Exchange's existing parity allocation model, demonstrates how customers
have already exercised this choice. In October 2017, orders from Floor
brokers represented approximately 5.5% of the intra-day liquidity-
providing volume on the Exchange in NYSE-listed securities (the parity
allocation model is only applicable to provide volume).\50\ The
Exchange believes that this volume demonstrates that there is still a
value to the end customer--who has a choice--to use a Floor broker. As
discussed above, Floor brokers can be distinguished from off-Floor
agency member organizations because they operate a pure agency business
and do not trade for their own accounts. There are customers that value
that conflict-free model. In addition, Floor brokers distinguish
themselves by providing high-touch service to their customers. Floor
brokers that attract liquidity-providing orders promote the display of
liquidity on the Exchange.
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\50\ Over 75% of Floor broker traded volume in NYSE-listed
securities is for auctions. However, because the Exchange would not
be conducting auctions in UTP Securities, the relative benefits of a
parity allocation to a Floor broker in an auction would not be
applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
That volume of Floor broker intra-day trading also demonstrates
that customers have similarly exercised their choice not to use Floor
brokers. If there were an inherent benefit to the Floor broker parity
allocation that distinguishes it as superior to the Book Participant
allocation, it would likely follow that there would be greater
proportion of intra-day order flow directed to Floor brokers in NYSE-
listed securities. But that is not the case. In sum, the current NYSE-
listed intra-day Floor broker provide volume demonstrates that using a
Floor broker has value to certain customers, but also demonstrates that
the parity allocation to a Floor broker is not the only component of a
customer's decision about how to send its orders to the Exchange. With
this filing, the Exchange proposes to extend that choice to UTP
Securities, thereby benefiting the ultimate customer of the Floor
broker.
The Exchange further believes that its proposed parity allocation
model for UTP Securities would remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system
because it is a competitive offering vis-[agrave]-vis other exchange
competitors, which offer variations on a price-time priority models,
and over-the-counter trading. The Exchange is currently the only
registered exchange that does not trade non-Exchange listed securities
on a UTP basis. Additionally, the Exchange currently is the only
registered exchange that makes available Floor-based trading for cash
equity securities. The Exchange proposes to extend the availability of
this feature by maintaining Floor-based crossing transactions when it
launches trading in UTP Securities. The Exchange believes that trading
UTP Securities is a natural extension of its current offering of
trading Exchange-listed securities, which also trade on a parity
allocation model. The Exchange believes it would promote competition to
offer this allocation model for all securities that would trade on the
Exchange, thereby providing an alternative allocation model for UTP
Securities. Conversely, Floor brokers on the Exchange would be able to
expand the services they provide to customers by being able to manage
order flow in UTP Securities in addition to Exchange-listed securities.
The Exchange also believes that this proposed allocation model would
promote intra-market competition by offering a menu of choices to
market participants of how their orders in UTP Securities would be
allocated on the Exchange.
[[Page 13570]]
While the parity allocation model is a competitive offering, its
origins are derived from the Floor-based trading model of the Exchange.
Accordingly, the Exchange believes that it would remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system to provide for Floor-based crossing transactions and to
extend existing requirements relating to Floor brokers for orders in
UTP Securities that seek to be eligible to be included in the Floor
Broker Participant. First, as noted above, the Floor broker must trade
on an agency-only basis and would continue to be subject to rules that
are unique to a Floor broker, including requirements specified in Rules
95, 122, 123, and 134(d)-(j). Second, consistent with current Rule 70
requirements, for orders in UTP Securities to be eligible to be
included in the Floor Broker Participant, such orders must be entered
by a Floor broker while on the Trading Floor.
In addition, because the parity allocation model is based on the
history of the Exchange as a Floor-based model, the Exchange believes
that for orders in UTP Securities to be eligible to be included in the
Floor Broker Participant, the Floor broker representing such orders
must also be engaged in a Floor broker business in Exchange-listed
securities. Trading in UTP Securities on the Trading Floor is designed
to complement a Floor broker's existing role in representing orders in
Exchange-listed securities because it would enable such Floor brokers
to trade additional securities on behalf of their customers. For
example, a Floor broker would be better positioned to process baskets
of securities that include Tape A, B, and C securities and enter all
such orders on the Exchange. By offering the parity allocation model
for UTP Securities, a Floor broker would not need to segregate its
orders in UTP Securities into different trading strategies than what
would be offered for Exchange-listed securities. Because Floor broker
trading in UTP Securities is designed to function in tandem with
trading in Exchange-listed securities, the Exchange believes that it
would remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market system to require such nexus because
it would ensure that member organizations would not seek to conduct a
stand-alone Floor broker business in only UTP Securities.
The Exchange believes that proposed Rules 7.10, 7.11, 7.16, 7.18,
7.31, 7.34, 7.38, and 7.46 would remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system
because they are based on the rules of NYSE Arca and NYSE American. The
proposed substantive differences to the Exchange's rules would be
because the Exchange would not be offering the full suite of orders and
modifiers available on NYSE Arca and NYSE American. In addition, the
Exchange proposes substantive differences to these rules consistent
with the Exchange's proposed parity allocation model. The Exchange
believes that the proposed substantive differences for these rules
would remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market system because they would provide
transparency of which orders, modifiers and instructions would be
available on the Exchange when it begins trading UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform, and how the Pillar rules would function with a
parity allocation model.
The Exchange believes that the proposed substantive differences to
Rule 7.34 to offer Early and Core Trading Sessions, but not a Late
Trading Session, would remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism
of a free and open market and a national market system because it is
consistent with the Exchange's current hours, described in Rule 51,
that the Exchange is not open for business after 4:00 p.m. Eastern
Time. The Exchange further believes that adding a trading session
before 9:30 a.m. Eastern Time would provide additional time for
Exchange member organizations to trade UTP Securities on the Exchange
consistent with the trading hours of other exchanges, including NYSE
American, which also will begin trading at 7:00 a.m. Eastern Time.
The Exchange believes that the proposed amendments to Rules 103B
and 107B would remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a
free and open market and a national market system because they would
provide transparency that the Exchange would not be assigning UTP
Securities to DMMs and that member organizations would be eligible to
register as a Supplemental Liquidity Providers in UTP Securities. The
Exchange further believes that not assigning DMMs to UTP Securities is
consistent with just and equitable principles of trade because the
Exchange would not be conducting auctions in UTP Securities and
therefore the Exchange would not need DMMs assigned to such securities
to facilitate auctions. Not having DMMs registered in UTP Securities is
also consistent with how NYSE Arca and NYSE American function on
Pillar, in that neither lead market makers (on NYSE Arca) nor
electronic designated market makers (on NYSE American) are assigned
securities not listed on those exchanges. The Exchange further believes
that it would remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free
and open market and a national market system for member organizations
to be eligible to register as Supplemental Liquidity Providers in UTP
Securities as this would provide an incentive for displayed liquidity
in UTP Securities.
The Exchange further believes that it would remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system to specify which current rules would not be applicable to
trading UTP Securities on the Pillar trading platform. The Exchange
believes that the following legend, which would be added to existing
rules, ``This Rule is not applicable to trading UTP Securities on the
Pillar trading platform,'' would promote transparency regarding which
rules would govern trading UTP Securities on the Exchange on Pillar.
The Exchange has proposed to add this legend to rules that would be
superseded by proposed rules or rules that would not be applicable
because they relate to auctions or Floor-based point-of-sale trading.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The proposed change is
designed to propose rules to support trading of UTP Securities on the
Exchange's new Pillar trading platform. The Exchange operates in a
highly competitive environment in which its unaffiliated exchange
competitors operate multiple affiliated exchanges that operate under
common rules. By adding trading of UTP Securities on the Exchange, the
Exchange believes that it will be able to compete on a more level
playing field with its exchange competitors that similarly trade all
NMS Stocks. In addition, by basing certain rules on those of NYSE Arca
and NYSE American, the Exchange will provide its members with
consistency across affiliated exchanges, thereby enabling the Exchange
to compete with unaffiliated exchange competitors that similarly
operate multiple exchanges on the same trading platforms.
More specifically, the Exchange does not believe that the proposal
to extend
[[Page 13571]]
the Exchange's existing parity allocation model, as modified for
Pillar, to UTP Securities would impose a burden on competition that is
not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
To the contrary, the Exchange believes that the proposal would promote
inter-market competition by providing market participants with the
choice of a parity allocation model together with Floor crossing
transactions for trading UTP Securities, which is not available on any
other exchange. For the Exchange's listed securities, its competitive
offering includes not only its parity allocation model, but also its
auctions. Designed as a complement to existing Floor broker operations
in Exchange-listed securities and consistent with the Exchange's
current trading model, the Floor Broker Participant parity allocation
for UTP Securities would be available only to Floor brokers that engage
in Floor trading of Exchange-listed securities, and such Floor brokers
would be eligible to engage in manual transactions under Rule 76 for
UTP Securities. In addition, to be eligible for a parity allocation,
Floor brokers must enter such orders on the Trading Floor and could
only trade on an agency basis. Moreover, any trading in UTP Securities
by Floor brokers would be subject to existing rules that apply only to
Floor brokers, such as Rules 95, 122, 123, and 134(d)-(j).
The Exchange further believes that the proposal would promote
intra-market competition because it would provide a choice to customers
of how their orders in UTP Securities would be allocated on the
Exchange. For certain customers, entering orders via the Book
Participant may serve their trading strategies. For other customers,
using a Floor broker for intra-day trading may serve their trading
strategies. Importantly, the results of a Floor broker allocation would
always accrue to the customer, and whether to use a Floor broker is the
customer's choice. Accordingly, this proposed market structure is not
about providing a ``benefit'' to a Floor broker, but rather providing
customers with a choice of how an order would be allocated.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited or received with respect to the
proposed rule change.
III. Summary of Comments Received
The Commission received one comment letter, which opposes NYSE's
proposal to provide floor brokers with parity allocation and the
exclusive use of certain order types (i.e., pegged orders).\51\ The
commenter asserts that providing floor brokers with preferential
treatment in a fully electronic trading environment, the market for UTP
Securities, unfairly discriminates against market participants who do
not submit orders through a Floor Broker.\52\ According to the
commenter, parity provides floor brokers with a distinct unfair
competitive advantage over other market participants, such as customers
and broker-dealers.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ See Cboe Letter, supra note 9.
\52\ See id. at 1-2.
\53\ Id. at 2.
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The commenter states that floor brokers do not have the
restrictions of time priority when they receive parity and can ``skip
the line.'' \54\ According to the commentor, floor brokers can insert
themselves into the parity wheel and buy and sell during price
disparities to liquidate or acquire positions at beneficial prices.\55\
The commentor asserts that this would disadvantage customers and
broker-dealers, even though, like the floor brokers, they add liquidity
to the market.\56\ The commenter further assert that this would also
disadvantages other members and their orders, including orders routed
from other trading centers, which are aggregated into one participant
and receive one slot on the parity wheel.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Id.
\55\ Id.
\56\ Id.
\57\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the commenter, many entities cannot, as a practical
matter, take advantage of the floor brokers' parity allocations, and
that those that can use the services of floor brokers may route more
orders through them to get the advantage of parity.\58\ The commenter
believes that floor brokers could take advantage of this by charging
higher transaction fees to customers.\59\ The commenter asserts that
orders submitted by the floor broker do not represent manual interest,
but are the byproduct of the floor broker reselling algorithms or other
electronic access to their privileged position on the parity wheel.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Id.
\59\ Id.
\60\ Id. at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter also states that providing floor brokers with the
exclusive use of pegged orders provides them an unjustified competitive
advantage over customers and broker-dealers when trading securities
electronically.\61\ The commenter explains that pegged orders
automatically repriced to a new price level and that, therefore, pegged
orders have a time advantage over all other orders that seek to be
entered at the revised price.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Id. at 3.
\62\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Discussion and Commission Findings
After careful review, the Commission finds that the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No. 1, is consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to a national securities exchange.\63\ In particular, the
Commission finds that the proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act \64\--which requires, among other things,
that the rules of a national securities exchange be designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation and coordination
with persons engaged in facilitating transactions in securities, to
remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open
market and a national market system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest, and that the rules not be designed
to permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or
dealers--and with Section 6(b)(8) of the Act,\65\ which requires that
the rules of a national securities exchange not impose any burden on
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. The Commission further finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section 12(f) of the Act,\66\ which
permits a national securities exchange to trade securities it does not
list, pursuant to unlisted trading privileges, as long as the
securities are listed on another national securities exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ In approving this proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, the Commission has considered the proposed rule's
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital formation. See 15
U.S.C. 78c(f).
\64\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\65\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
\66\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to trade, for the first time, securities that
it does not list, and it proposes to do so using a new technology
platform--the Pillar platform that has been deployed to date on the
Exchange's affiliated exchanges NYSE Arca and NYSE American. The
proposed rules for UTP trading would govern clearly erroneous
executions, limit-up-limit-down plan compliance, short sales, trading
halts, orders and
[[Page 13572]]
modifiers, order ranking and display, order execution and routing, odd
and mixed lots trading, and tick-size pilot plan compliance, and the
proposal would also designate the current Exchange rules that are not
applicable to UTP Securities.
Trading of UTP Securities on the Exchange would differ in two
significant respects from trading in NYSE-listed securities.\67\ First,
the Exchange would not conduct auctions in UTP Securities. And second,
the Exchange would not assign UTP securities to DMMs, which have
affirmative obligations to support a fair and orderly market, and to
facilitate auctions, in their assigned securities.\68\ The Commission
believes that these distinctions between NYSE-listed securities and UTP
Securities are consistent with UTP trading of securities generally, and
that these distinctions are consistent with the requirements of the
Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ NYSE represents that it will continue to trade NYSE-listed
securities on its current trading platform. The Exchange intends to
migrate trading in NYSE-listed securities to Pillar at a later date.
See supra note 17.
\68\ See NYSE Rule 104(a) (stating that ``DMMs registered in one
or more securities trading on the Exchange must engage in a course
of dealings for their own account to assist in the maintenance of a
fair and orderly market insofar as reasonably practicable.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also notes that, while the proposed trading rules
are similar in most respects to previously approved rules of NYSE Arca
and NYSE American--which also use the Pillar trading platform \69\--
they differ in certain material ways. Most notably, the Exchange will
extend its current parity allocation model to the execution of trades
in UTP Securities, rather than using the strict price-time priority
allocation of NYSE Arca and NYSE American, and this parity allocation
model would allow each floor broker's orders to trade on parity with
orders on the Exchange book. Only floor brokers engaged in a floor-
broker business for NYSE-listed securities would be eligible for parity
allocation. Additionally, Exchange floor brokers would only be able to
enter orders for parity allocation while physically on the floor of the
Exchange, and they could not engage in proprietary trading using parity
allocation. Finally, there would also be a floor-based point of sale,
supervised by Exchange employees, where floor brokers would be able
cross trades in UTP securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ See supra notes 12 and 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When instituting proceedings to determine whether the Exchange's
proposal was consistent with Section 6(b)(5) and Section 6(b)(8) of the
Act,\70\ the Commission specifically requested comments concerning the
role of floor brokers in trading UTP Securities on the Exchange; \71\
on the benefits and costs of floor-broker activities with respect to
trading of UTP Securities; \72\ and on whether providing floor brokers
with parity allocation in UTP Securities, or providing floor brokers
with exclusive use of certain order instructions, would unfairly
discriminate or impose an unfair burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate.\73\ The one comment letter received opposes
the proposal, arguing that parity allocation in a fully electronic
market would provide floor brokers, by allowing them to ``skip the
line,'' with an unfair advantage vis-[agrave]-vis other market
participants that also add liquidity to the market, and that floor
brokers might take advantage of their preferential treatment on the
parity wheel by charging higher transaction fees. The commenter also
argues that the exclusive use of pegged orders by floor brokers would
similarly provide them with an unfair competitive advantage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ See Order Instituting Proceedings, supra note 7, at 52761.
\71\ Id.
\72\ Id.
\73\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission notes that, in Amendment No. 1 to its proposal, the
Exchange has responded to the questions raised by the Commission, and
the concerns expressed by the commenter, by modifying its proposal to
require that floor brokers be engaged in a floor-broker business in
NYSE-listed securities in order to be eligible for parity allocation in
UTP Securities; to expressly require that orders in UTP Securities be
entered from the Exchange floor in order to be eligible for parity
\74\; and to provide for a floor-based point of sale for crossing
transactions.\75\ Additionally, the Exchange has added substantial
further explaination of the role that floor brokers play as agency
brokers on behalf of their customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ See Proposed NYSE Rule 7.36(a)(5).
\75\ As explained above, NYSE proposes to permit floor brokers
to enter into crossing transactions pursuant to NYSE Rule 76.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange argues that the parity allocation model for UTP
Securities is based on the historically floor-based model of the
Exchange and that trading in UTP Securities is designed to complement
the floor broker's existing role in NYSE-listed securities, which
includes both parity allocation and the use of pegging orders. The
Exchange argues that the proposed parity allocation model in UTP
Securities would benefit competition by providing market participants
with a choice as to how their orders are executed, asserting that
market participants who do not wish to invest in speed-related
technology, who have a thinly staff trading desk, or who would like to
execute a large crossing transaction could utilize the services of a
floor broker. According to the Exchange, trading UTP Securities using a
parity model would also benefit competition by providing an alternative
trading model for trading those securities. The Exchange asserts that
floor brokers serve an important role as an agency broker without
conflicts, especially for illiquid securities. The Exchange also notes
that any member organization can choose to become a floor broker and
that the Exchange does not charge member organizations for the use of
space on the trading floor.
The Commission believes that the changes to the proposal in
Amendment No. 1 have sufficiently addressed the Commission's and the
commenter's concerns regarding the proposal's consistency with the Act.
The proposal, as amended, represents a measured extension of the
Exchange's existing market model (including the potential for floor-
based trading added by Amendment No. 1) to trading in UTP Securities,
while ensuring that the ability of floor brokers to obtain parity
allocation is limited to those floor brokers who are engaged in a bona
fide agency business while physically on the trading floor of the
Exchange, with the benefit of parity allocations flowing to the
customers of the floor brokers. Floor brokers, as agency-only market
participants, would not be able to use either parity allocations or
pegging orders to liquidate or acquire their own proprietary positions.
Finally, with respect to concerns regarding competition, the Exchange
has representated that, in October 2017, floor-broker orders receiving
parity executions (all of which are liquidity-providing orders)
represented only about 5.5% of the intraday liquidity-providing volume
on the Exchange in NYSE-listed securities.\76\ Given that parity
allocation and the exclusive use of pegging orders do not appear to
have burdened competition in NYSE-listed securities, the Commission
does not have a reason to believe that permitting the Exchange to trade
UTP Securities with a similar intraday role for floor brokers will
provide those floor brokers with an unfair competitive advantage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ See supra note 50 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also finds that the proposed rule change is
consistent with Section 12(f) of the Act. Section 12(a) of
[[Page 13573]]
the Act \77\ generally prohibits trading on an exchange of any security
that is not registered (listed) on that exchange. Section 12(f) of the
Act,\78\ however, allows a national securities exchange to extend
unlisted trading privileges--i.e., to allow trading in a security that
is not listed and registered on that exchange--to securities that are
registered on another national securities exchange. When an exchange
extends unlisted trading privileges to a security, the exchange allows
its members to trade the security as if the security were listed on
that exchange.\79\
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\77\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(a).
\78\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(f).
\79\ Over-the-counter (``OTC'') dealers are not subject to the
Section 12(a) registration requirement because they do not transact
business on an exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The UTP Act of 1994 \80\ substantially amended Section 12(f) of the
Act. Before 1994, national securities exchanges had to apply to the
Commission for approval before extending unlisted trading privileges to
a particular security. The UTP Act removed the application, notice, and
Commission approval process from Section 12(f) of the Act, except in
cases of Commission suspension of unlisted trading privileges in a
particular security on an exchange. Accordingly, under Section 12(f) of
the Act, exchanges may immediately extend unlisted trading privileges
to a security listed on another exchange. Pursuant to Rule 12f-5 under
the Act,\81\ a national securities exchange shall not extend unlisted
trading privileges to any security, unless the national securities
exchange has in effect a rule or rules providing for transactions in
the class or type of security to which the exchange extends unlisted
trading privileges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ Pub. L. 103-389, 108 Stat. 4081 (1994).
\81\ 17 CFR 240.12f-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal would establish Exchange rules providing for
transactions on securities that are listed on other national securities
exchanges. As a national securities exchange, the Exchange is permitted
under Section 12(f) of the Act \82\ to extend unlisted trading
privileges to securities listed and registered on other national
securities exchanges, subject to Rule 12f-5 under the Act. The
Commission notes that the Exchange's current rules would allow the
Exchange to extend unlisted trading privileges to any security that is
an NMS Stock listed on another national securities exchange.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ 15 U.S.C. 78l.
\83\ See NYSE Rule 5.1 (``Notwithstanding the requirements for
listing set forth in these Rules, the Exchange may extend unlisted
trading privileges (``UTP'') to any security that is an NMS Stock
(as defined in Rule 600 of Regulation NMS under the Act) that is
listed on another national securities exchange or with respect to
which unlisted trading privileges may otherwise be extended in
accordance with Section 12(f) of the Act. Any such security will be
subject to all Exchange trading rules applicable to securities
trading on the Pillar trading platform, unless otherwise noted.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rules provide for transactions in the class or type of
security to which the Exchange intends to extend unlisted trading
privileges. Together with the existing Exchange rules for trading on
Pillar--NYSE Rules 1P to 13P--the Exchange would have rules providing
for transactions in the class or type of security to which the exchange
proposes to extend unlisted trading privileges, and, therefore, the
proposal is consistent with Section 12(f) of the Act.
Because the proposal, as amended, is consistent with Sections
6(b)(5), 6(b)(8), and 12(f) of the Act, the Commission finds good
cause, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,\84\ to approve the
proposed rule change on an accelerated basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Solicitation of Comments on Amendment No. 1
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning whether Amendment No. 1 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-NYSE-2017-36 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-NYSE-2017-36. 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 comment 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-NYSE-2017-36, and should be submitted on
or before April 19, 2018.
VI. Accelerated Approval of the Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1
The Commission finds good cause to approve the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No. 1, prior to the thirtieth day
after the date of publication of Amendment No. 1 in the Federal
Register. In Amendment No. 1, among other changes, the Exchange: (i)
Responds to the Commission's concerns in the Order Instituting
Proceedings relating to the extension of parity to floor brokers in UTP
Securities by (a) proposing additional requirements for floor broker
orders to be eligible for parity, (b) proposing to permit floor brokers
to engage in floor-based point-of-sale trading and crossing
transactions in UTP Securities, and (c) providing additional
justification for providing floor brokers with parity in UTP
Securities; (ii) amends the definition of Aggressing Order to include
that a resting order may become an Aggressing Order if its working
price change, the PBBO or NBBO is updated, when there are changes to
other orders on the Exchange Book, or when processing inbound messages;
(iii) amends the rules relating to the MPL Order and MTS Modifier to
reflect those of NYSE Arca and NYSE American and sets forth additional
rules relating setting forth how orders with an MTS Modifier would
trade in a parity-based model; (iv) makes changes to the list of rules
that are not applicable for parity; (v) makes changes to proposed NYSE
Rules 7.37 and 7.46 to refer to an order with an MTS as an order with
an ``MTS Modifier''; (vi) changes cross-references to NYSE Arca's rules
to reflect the merger of NYSE Arca and NYSE Arca Equities, and (vii)
makes changes to
[[Page 13574]]
reflect the renaming of NYSE MKT to NYSE American.
As discussed above, Amendment No.1 addresses the Commission's
concerns and the comment letter received. The definitions of Aggressing
Order, the MPL Order, and the MTS Modifier are similar to the rules of
NYSE Arca, which have been approved by the Commission previously, with
adaptions for the Exchange's parity allocation model. The remaining
changes are non-substantive. Accordingly, the Commission finds good
cause, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,\85\ to approve the
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1, on an accelerated
basis.
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\85\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
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VII. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,\86\ that the proposed rule change (SR-NYSE-2017-36), as modified
by Amendment No. 1, be, and hereby is, approved on an accelerated
basis.
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\86\ Id.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\87\
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\87\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-06339 Filed 3-28-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P