Disclosure of Order Handling Information, 58338-58429 [2018-24423]
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58338
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 223 / Monday, November 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
17 CFR Parts 240 and 242
[Release No. 34–84528; File No. S7–14–16]
RIN 3235–AL67
Disclosure of Order Handling
Information
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘SEC’’)
is adopting amendments to Regulation
National Market System (‘‘Regulation
NMS’’) under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’) to require
additional disclosures by broker-dealers
to customers regarding the handling of
their orders. The Commission is adding
a new disclosure requirement which
requires a broker-dealer, upon request of
its customer, to provide specific
disclosures related to the routing and
execution of the customer’s NMS stock
orders submitted on a not held basis for
the prior six months, subject to two de
minimis exceptions. The Commission
also is amending the current order
routing disclosures that broker-dealers
must make publicly available on a
quarterly basis to pertain to NMS stock
orders submitted on a held basis, and
the Commission is making targeted
enhancements to these public
disclosures. In connection with these
new requirements, the Commission is
amending Regulation NMS to include
certain newly defined and redefined
terms that are used in the amendments.
The Commission also is amending
Regulation NMS to require that the
public order execution report be kept
publicly available for a period of three
years. Finally, the Commission is
adopting conforming amendments and
updating cross-references as a result of
the rule amendments being adopted in
this rule.
DATES: Effective date: January 18, 2019.
Compliance date: May 20, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Theodore S. Venuti, Assistant Director,
at (202) 551–5658, Steve Kuan, Special
Counsel, at (202) 551–5624, Sarah
Albertson, Special Counsel, at (202)
551–5647, Michael Bradley, Special
Counsel, at (202) 551–5594, Amir Katz,
Special Counsel, at (202) 551–7653,
Emerald Greywoode, Special Counsel, at
(202) 551–7965, or Andrew Sherman,
Special Counsel, at (202) 551–7255,
Division of Trading and Markets,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549.
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SUMMARY:
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The
Commission is adopting: (1)
Amendments to 17 CFR 242.600 and
242.606 (respectively, ‘‘Rule 600’’ and
‘‘Rule 606’’ of Regulation NMS) under
the Exchange Act to require additional
disclosures by broker-dealers to
customers about the routing of their
orders; (2) amendments to 17 CFR
242.605 (‘‘Rule 605’’ of Regulation
NMS) to require that the public order
execution reports be kept publicly
available for a period of three years; and
(3) conforming changes and updated
cross-references in 17 CFR 240.3a51–
1(a) (‘‘Rule 3a51–1(a) under the
Exchange Act’’), 17 CFR 240.13h–1(a)(5)
(‘‘Rule 13h–1(a)(5) of Regulation 13D–
G’’), 17 CFR 242.105(b)(1) (‘‘Rule
105(b)(1) of Regulation M’’), 17 CFR
242.201(a) and 242.204(g) (‘‘Rules 201(a)
and 204(g) of Regulation SHO’’), 17 CFR
242.600(b), 242.602(a)(5) and 242.611(c)
(‘‘Rules 600(b), 602(a)(5), and 611(c) of
Regulation NMS’’), and 17 CFR
242.1000 (‘‘Rule 1000 of Regulation
SCI’’).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Overview of Adopted Rule Amendments
III. Amendments to Rule 600, Rule 605, and
Rule 606
A. Customer-Specific Order Handling
Reports
1. Applicability of Customer-Specific
Disclosures in Rule 606(b)
2. Definition of Actionable Indication of
Interest
3. Scope of Broker-Dealer’s Obligation
Under Rule 606(b)(3)
4. Timing and Frequency Requirements for
Customer-Specific Order Handling
Report
5. Format of Customer-Specific Order
Handling Reports
6. Rule 606(b)(3) Report Content
7. Rule 606(c) Quarterly Aggregated Public
Report of Rule 606(b)(3) Information
B. Public Order Routing Report Under Rule
606(a)
1. Orders Covered By Rule 606(a) Public
Disclosures
2. Marketable Limit Orders and NonMarketable Limit Orders
3. Payment for Order Flow Disclosures—
Rules 606(a)(1)(iii) and (iv)
4. Format of Public Order Routing Report
5. Division of Rule 606(a) Report’s Section
on NMS Stocks by S&P 500 Index and
Other NMS Stocks
6. Calendar Month Breakdown
7. Execution Metrics
C. Amendment to Disclosure of Order
Execution Information
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Summary of Collection of Information
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under
Rule 606(b)(3)
2. Amendment to Current Public and
Customer-Specific Disclosures
3. Amendment to Current Disclosures
Under Rule 605
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B. Use of Information
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under
Rule 606(b)(3)
2. Amendment to Current Public and
Customer-Specific Disclosures
3. Amendment to Current Disclosures
Under Rule 605
C. Respondents
1. Initial Estimate
2. Estimate for Adopted Rule
[Amendments to 605 and 606]
D. Total Initial and Annual Reporting and
Recordkeeping Burdens
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under
Rule 606(b)(3)
2. Proposed Public Aggregated Report on
Orders Subject to the Customer-Specific
Disclosures Under Rule 606(b) Not
Adopted
3. Proposed Requirement to Document
Methodologies for Categorizing Order
Routing Strategies Not Adopted
4. Amendment to Current Public and
Customer-Specific Disclosures
5. Revisions to Compliance Manuals
6. Amendment to Disclosures Under Rule
605
E. Collection of Information Is Mandatory
F. Confidentiality of Responses to
Collection of Information
G. Retention Period for Recordkeeping
Requirements
V. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
B. Baseline
1. Current $200,000 Threshold
2. Current Reporting for NMS Stock Orders
of $200,000 and Above
3. Publication Period for Reports Required
by Rules 605 and 606
4. Available Information on Conflicts of
Interest
5. Available Information on Execution
Quality
6. Format of Current Reports
7. Quality of Broker-Dealer Routing
Practices for Not Held NMS Stock Orders
8. Use of Actionable IOIs
9. Competition, Efficiency, and Capital
Formation
C. Costs and Benefits
1. Customer-Specific Order Handling
Disclosures
2. Public Order Handling Report
3. Disclosure of Order Execution
Information
4. Structured Format of Reports
5. Other Definitions in Adopted
Amendments to Rule 600
D. Alternatives Considered
1. Alternative Scope for the CustomerSpecific Reports
2. Scope of Broker-Dealer’s Obligation
Under Rule 606(b)(3)
3. Public Availability of Aggregated Rule
606(b)(3) Order Handling Information
4. Automatic Provision of CustomerSpecific Not Held Order Handling Report
(Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
5. Submission to the Commission of Not
Held NMS Stock Order Handling Reports
(Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
6. Categories of NMS Stocks for Rule 606(a)
7. Disclosure of Additional Information
About Not Held NMS Stock Order
Routing and Execution
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8. Order Handling Reports at the Stock
Level (Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
9. Alternative to Three-Year Posting Period
(Adopted Amendments to Rules
605(a)(2) and 606(a)(1))
E. Economic Effects and Effects on
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
1. Effects of Adopting Amendments on
Efficiency and Competition
2. Effects of Adopting Amendments on
Capital Formation
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
VII. Statutory Authority and Text of the
Proposed Rule Amendments
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I. Introduction
In July 2016, the Commission
proposed to amend Rules 600 and 606
under Regulation NMS to require
additional disclosures by broker-dealers
to customers about the handling of their
orders, to amend Rules 605 and 607 for
consistency with the proposed
amendments to Rule 606, and to amend
other rules to update cross references as
appropriate.1 As discussed below, after
careful review and consideration of the
comments received, the Commission is
adopting these amendments with
certain modifications.
Transparency has long been a
hallmark of the U.S. securities markets,
and the Commission continuously
strives to ensure that investors are
provided with timely and accurate
information needed to make informed
investment decisions. In recent years,
the Commission and its staff have
undertaken a number of reviews of
market structure and market events, and
much of this effort has aimed to
enhance transparency for investors.2
The amendments being adopted today
to Rule 606 of Regulation NMS
represent the Commission’s continued
commitment to enhance transparency
for investors.
Rule 606 encourages competition by
enhancing the transparency of brokerdealer order handling and routing
practices.3 Rule 606(a) requires broker1 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78309,
81 FR 49432 (July 27, 2016) (‘‘Proposing Release’’
or ‘‘Proposal’’).
2 The Commission recently adopted amendments
to Regulation ATS that enhance the operational
transparency of alternative trading systems
(‘‘ATSs’’) that transact in National Market System
(‘‘NMS’’) stocks (‘‘NMS Stock ATSs’’). See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83663 (July 18,
2018), 83 FR 38768 (August 7, 2018) (‘‘ATS–N
Adopting Release’’). In addition, the Commission
has proposed a Transaction Fee Pilot for NMS
stocks to help inform the Commission, market
participants and the public about the effects, if any,
that transaction-based fees and rebates may have on
order routing behavior, execution quality, and
market quality. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 82873 (March 14, 2018), 83 FR 13008 (March
26, 2018) (‘‘Transaction Fee Pilot Proposing
Release’’).
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358
(January 14, 2010), 75 FR 3594, 3602 (January 21,
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dealers to provide a publicly available
quarterly report of information
regarding routing of non-directed
orders.4 Rule 606(b) requires brokerdealers to provide customers, upon
request, certain information about the
routing of their orders. Prior to the
amendments being adopted today, the
Rule 606(a) requirements applied to
smaller dollar-value orders more typical
of retail investors but did not apply to
large dollar-value orders more typical of
institutional investors.5 As discussed in
detail in the Proposing Release, equity
market structure, as well as order
handling and routing practices, have
changed significantly since Rule 606
was adopted in 2000, presenting a need
to update the rule such that it provides
transparency into broker-dealer order
handling and routing practices that
continues to be useful in today’s
automated and vastly more complex
national market system.6
As the Commission noted when it
originally adopted Rule 606, in a
fragmented market ‘‘the order routing
decision is critically important’’ and
‘‘must be well-informed and fully
subject to competitive forces,’’ 7 and,
further, the public disclosure of order
routing practices ‘‘could provide more
vigorous competition on . . . order
routing performance.’’ 8 By updating the
Rule 606 disclosure regime, the rule as
amended will provide disclosures more
relevant to today’s marketplace that
encourage broker-dealers to provide
effective and competitive order
handling and routing services, and that
improve the ability of their customers to
2010) (‘‘Concept Release on Equity Market
Structure’’).
4 A ‘‘non-directed order’’ means any customer
order other than a directed order. See 17 CFR
242.600(b)(48). A ‘‘directed order’’ means a
customer order that the customer specifically
instructed the broker-dealer to route to a particular
venue for execution. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(19). As
discussed below, these definitions are being revised
in connection with the amendments to Rule 606 so
that they no longer only apply to ‘‘customer
orders,’’ but otherwise are remaining the same. See
infra Section III.A.1.b.vii.
5 The Commission limited the scope of Rule
606(a) to smaller dollar-value orders by defining a
‘‘customer order’’ to which the rule applied as an
order to buy or sell an NMS security that is not for
the account of a broker-dealer, but not any order for
a quantity of a security having a market value of at
least $50,000 for an NMS security that is an option
contract and a market value of at least $200,000 for
any other NMS security. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(18).
6 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49433–
44 for a detailed description of the history and the
market developments leading to the Proposal.
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 43590
(November 17, 2000), 65 FR 75414, 75415
(December 1, 2000) (‘‘Rule 606 Predecessor
Adopting Release’’). For clarity, when this release
references ‘‘Predecessor Rule 606,’’ it is referring to
the version of the rule adopted in the Rule 606
Predecessor Adopting Release.
8 See id. at 75417.
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determine the quality of such brokerdealer services.9
II. Overview of Adopted Rule
Amendments
To facilitate enhanced transparency
regarding broker-dealers’ handling and
routing of orders in NMS stock, the
Commission proposed to amend Rules
600(b) and 606 such that all orders of
any dollar value in NMS stock 10
submitted by a customer to a brokerdealer would be covered by order
handling and routing disclosure rules.
Under the proposed amendments, new
Rule 606(b)(3) would require brokerdealers to make detailed, customerspecific order handling disclosures for
NMS stock orders available to
institutional customers in particular,
who previously were not entitled to
disclosures under the rule for their
order flow, or were entitled to
disclosures that have become
inadequate in today’s highly automated
and more complex market.11 The
Commission also proposed to require a
broker-dealer to make publicly available
a report that aggregates the information
required for the detailed customerspecific order handling reports for all
NMS stock orders that it receives across
all of its customers.12 Further, the
Commission proposed updating Rule
606(a) to provide retail customers in
particular with certain enhanced
disclosures regarding a broker-dealer’s
order routing practices.13
The Commission received comments
on the Proposal.14 The commenters,
many of which also commented on Rule
606 in connection with the Concept
Release on Equity Market Structure,
overwhelmingly supported updating the
disclosures required by Rule 606. Most
also expressed support for, or offered
constructive critiques of, specific
components of the Proposal, and several
suggested alternatives to specific
provisions of the Proposal, but all
comments received recognized a need
for enhanced transparency and
9 If any of the provisions of these rules, or the
application thereof to any person or circumstance,
is held to be invalid, such invalidity shall not affect
other provisions or application of such provisions
to other persons or circumstances that can be given
effect without the invalid provision or application.
10 ‘‘NMS stock’’ and ‘‘NMS security’’ are defined
in Rule 600 of Regulation NMS. See 17 CFR
242.600(b)(46)–(47).
11 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3); see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49447.
12 See proposed Rule 606(c); see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49447.
13 See proposed Rule 606(a); see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49462.
14 Comments received on the Proposal are
available on the Commission’s website, available at
https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-14-16/
s71416.htm.
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supported the goals of the Proposal.15 In
addition, the Equity Market Structure
Advisory Committee (‘‘EMSAC’’)
provided recommendations with respect
to Rules 605 and 606 on November 29,
2016, to provide meaningful execution
quality and order handling disclosures
from a retail and an institutional
perspective.16
After careful review and
consideration of the comment letters
and upon further consideration by the
Commission concerning how to further
the goal of more useful and effective
disclosure of order handling
information under Regulation NMS, the
Commission is adopting the proposed
amendments to Rules 600 and 606 (and
the other corresponding proposed
amendments) with certain
modifications.17
Specifically, the Commission is
amending Rule 606(b) of Regulation
NMS 18 to require a broker-dealer, upon
request of a customer that places,
directly or indirectly, one or more
orders in NMS stock that are submitted
on a ‘‘not held’’ basis with the brokerdealer,19 to provide customer-specific
disclosures, for the prior six months,
broken down by calendar month,
regarding: (1) Its internal handling of
such orders; (2) its routing of such
orders to various trading centers; 20 (3)
the execution of such orders; and (4) the
extent to which such orders provided
liquidity or removed liquidity, and the
average transaction rebates received or
fees paid by the broker-dealer.21
Generally, the information is available
upon request by customers who
15 See, e.g., Letter from John A. McCarthy, General
Counsel, KCG Holdings, Inc., dated October 31,
2016 (‘‘KCG Letter’’) at 1; Letter from Joseph
Kinahan, Managing Director, Client Advocacy and
Market Structure, TD Ameritrade, Inc., dated
October 18, 2016 (‘‘Ameritrade Letter’’) at 1; Letter
from Tyler Gellasch, Executive Director, Healthy
Markets Association, dated September 26, 2016
(‘‘HMA Letter’’) at 3–4; Letter from Micah
Hauptman, Financial Services Council, Consumer
Federation of America, dated September 26, 2016
(‘‘CFA Letter’’); Letter from Stuart J. Kaswell,
Executive Vice President and Managing Director,
General Counsel, Managed Funds Association,
dated September 23, 2016 (‘‘MFA Letter’’) at 1.
16 See EMSAC Recommendations Regarding
Modifying Rule 605 and Rule 606 (‘‘EMSAC Rule
606 Recommendations’’), November 29, 2016,
available at https://www.sec.gov/spotlight/emsac/
emsac-recommendations-rules-605-606.pdf.
17 The amendments to Rule 606 would not limit
any other obligations that broker-dealers may have
under applicable federal securities laws, rules, or
regulations, including the anti-fraud provisions of
the federal securities laws.
18 17 CFR 242.606(b).
19 Typically, a ‘‘not held’’ order provides the
broker-dealer with price and time discretion in
handling the order, whereas a broker-dealer must
attempt to execute a ‘‘held’’ order immediately.
20 A ‘‘trading center’’ is defined in Rule 600 of
Regulation NMS. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(78).
21 See Rule 606(b)(3).
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submitted ‘‘not held’’ NMS stock orders
through the broker-dealer, and is
required to be provided for each venue
and divided into separate sections for
directed orders and non-directed
orders.22 This new disclosure
requirement is subject to two de
minimis exceptions.23 A ‘‘not held’’
NMS stock order that is subject to either
de minimis exception is covered by the
existing customer-specific disclosures in
Rule 606(b)(1), as is any ‘‘held’’ NMS
stock order submitted by a customer to
any broker-dealer.24 For the reasons
explained below, the Commission is not
adopting the proposed requirement that
the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures be
divided into passive, neutral, and
aggressive order routing strategies.
In connection with the new disclosure
requirement, the Commission is
amending Rule 600(b) of Regulation
NMS 25 to include definitions of the
terms ‘‘actionable indication of
interest,’’ ‘‘orders providing liquidity,’’
and ‘‘orders removing liquidity,’’ and to
revise the existing definitions of the
terms ‘‘directed order’’ and ‘‘nondirected order.’’ 26 The Commission is
not adopting the proposed defined term
‘‘institutional order’’ in Rule 600(b) and
therefore also is not adopting the
proposed $200,000 market value
threshold for orders to qualify for the
new customer-specific disclosures in
Rule 606(b)(3).27
As discussed in Section III.A.7, infra,
the Commission is not adopting the
proposed amendment to Rule 606 of
Regulation NMS to require a brokerdealer to make publicly available, on an
aggregate basis, the order handling
information required under Rule
606(b)(3).28
22 See
id.
Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5).
24 See Rule 606(b)(1). As discussed below, while
the amendments to Rule 606(b)(1) modify the orders
that are covered by Rule 606(b)(1), the required
disclosures under Rule 606(b)(1) are not changing.
See infra Section III.A.1.b.vi.
25 17 CFR 242.600(b).
26 The newly defined terms are being
incorporated into Rule 600(b) in alphabetical order,
in keeping with Rule 600(b)’s existing alphabetical
organization of the terms defined therein, and the
numbered provisions for existing defined terms in
Rule 600(b) are being adjusted accordingly. For ease
of reference however, throughout this release,
citations to pre-existing defined terms in Rule
600(b) are to their pre-existing numbered
provisions, unless otherwise indicated.
27 See Rule 606(b)(3); see also infra Section
III.A.1.b.ii. Relatedly, the Commission also is not
amending Rule 600(b) to rename the term
‘‘customer order’’ as ‘‘retail order,’’ as was
proposed.
28 See proposed Rule 606(c). Because the
Commission is not adopting proposed Rule 606(c),
pre-existing Rule 606(c), which addresses
‘‘Exemptions’’ from the rule and which the
Commission proposed to renumber as Rule 606(d)
23 See
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The Commission is amending Rule
606(a) of Regulation NMS such that the
aggregated order routing disclosures that
broker-dealers must make publicly
available on a quarterly basis pertain to
orders of any dollar value in NMS stock
that are submitted on a ‘‘held’’ basis.
Further, the Commission is making
targeted enhancements to these public
disclosures to: (1) Require limit order
information to be split into marketable
and non-marketable categories
(relatedly, the Commission is adopting a
definition of the term ‘‘non-marketable
limit order’’ under Rule 600(b)); 29 (2)
require more detailed disclosure of the
net aggregate amount of any payments
received from or paid to certain trading
centers; (3) require broker-dealers to
describe any terms of payment for order
flow arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships with certain venues that
may influence their order routing
decisions; and (4) require that brokerdealers keep the order routing reports
posted on a website that is free and
readily accessible to the public for a
period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the website.30 In
addition to what was proposed, the
Commission is replacing the Rule 606(a)
requirement to group order routing
information for NMS stocks by listing
market with a requirement to group
such information by stocks included in
the S&P 500 Index as of the first day of
the quarter and other NMS stocks.
Finally, consistent with the
amendments to Rule 606(a), the
Commission is amending Rule 605 to
require market centers 31 to keep
execution reports required by the rule
posted on a website that is free and
readily accessible to the public for a
period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the website. The
Commission also is adopting
under the Proposal, is not being renumbered as
such and remains unchanged as Rule 606(c).
29 A ‘‘marketable limit order’’ is any buy order
with a limit price equal to or greater than the
national best offer at the time of order receipt, or
any sell order with a limit price equal to or less than
the national best bid at the time of order receipt.
17 CFR 242.600(b)(39). ‘‘National best bid and
national best offer’’ is defined in Rule 600 of
Regulation NMS. 17 CFR 242.600(b)(42). The
Commission is adopting new Rule 600(b)(54) to
define ‘‘non-marketable limit order’’ to mean ‘‘any
limit order other than a marketable limit order,’’ as
discussed in more detail below. See infra Section
III.B.2.
30 See Rule 606(a); see also Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49462. ‘‘Payment for order flow’’
has the meaning provided in 17 CFR 240.10b–10.
See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(54). A ‘‘profit-sharing
relationship’’ is defined in Rule 600 of Regulation
NMS. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(56).
31 A ‘‘market center’’ means any exchange market
maker, OTC market maker, alternative trading
system, national securities exchange, or national
securities association. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(38).
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amendments to other rules to update
cross-references in connection with the
other rule amendments being adopted
today.32
Consistent with the Proposal, the
Commission continues to believe that
generally requiring more detailed,
standardized, baseline order handling
information to be made available to
customers upon request for orders in
NMS stocks should enable those
customers—and particularly
institutional customers—to more
effectively assess how their brokerdealers are carrying out their best
execution obligations and the impact of
their broker-dealers’ order routing
decisions on the quality of their
executions, including the risks of
information leakage and potential
conflicts of interest.33 In addition, the
Commission believes that these more
detailed customer-specific disclosures
will further encourage broker-dealers to
minimize information leakage,34 as well
as better enable customers to verify that
their broker-dealers are following their
order handling instructions. Unlike the
Proposal and in response to
commenters’ feedback, the Commission
believes that the applicability of these
new order routing disclosures should be
based on order type (‘‘not held’’ orders
in NMS stocks) rather than the dollar
value of an order.
Similar to the Proposal, the
Commission believes that simplifying
and enhancing the current publicly
available disclosures, particularly with
respect to financial inducements from
trading centers, should assist customers
in evaluating better the order routing
services of their broker-dealers and how
well they manage potential conflicts of
interest.35 Unlike the Proposal and in
response to commenters’ feedback, the
Commission believes that this goal
would be targeted more effectively by
having these disclosures apply to
‘‘held’’ orders in NMS stocks rather than
those under $200,000.
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III. Amendments to Rule 600, Rule 605,
and Rule 606
Section III discusses in detail the
adopted rule amendments. Subsection A
addresses the customer-specific order
handling disclosures required by new
Rule 606(b)(3) and amended Rule
32 The Commission is adopting amendments to:
Rule 3a51–1(a) under the Exchange Act; Rule 13h–
1(a)(5) of Regulation 13D–G; Rule 105(b)(1) of
Regulation M; Rules 201(a) and 204(g) of Regulation
SHO; Rules 600(b), 602(a)(5), and 611(c) of
Regulation NMS; and Rule 1000 of Regulation SCI.
33 See infra Section III.A; see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49434.
34 See id.
35 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49434.
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606(b)(1). This section also discusses a
part of the Proposal we are not adopting:
Proposed Rule 606(c)’s requirement that
broker-dealers make publicly available
an aggregated report of the Rule
606(b)(3) customer-specific order
handling information across all of their
customers. Subsection B addresses the
enhanced public report required under
amended Rule 606(a). The newly
defined and re-defined terms that the
Commission is adopting in Rule 600 in
connection with the amendments to
Rule 606 are discussed where relevant
in subsections A and B. The adopted
amendment to Rule 605 is discussed in
subsection C.
The staff will review these
amendments, including in particular the
de minimis exceptions described in
Section III.A.1.b.iv below, not later than
one year after the compliance date of the
amendments, and report to the
Commission.
A. Customer-Specific Order Handling
Reports
1. Applicability of Customer-Specific
Disclosures in Rule 606(b)
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to
delineate the types of orders that would
trigger a broker-dealer’s obligation to
provide a customer with the order
handling disclosures required by new
Rule 606(b)(3) by amending Rule 600(b)
to include a definition of ‘‘institutional
order.’’ 36 Specifically, the Commission
proposed to define an ‘‘institutional
order’’ as an order to buy or sell a
quantity of an NMS stock having a
market value of at least $200,000,
provided that such order is not for the
account of a broker-dealer.37 As
proposed, Rule 606(b)(3) would apply
only to such ‘‘institutional orders.’’
The Commission’s proposed
definition of ‘‘institutional order’’
dovetailed with the current definition of
‘‘customer order,’’ 38 such that all orders
in NMS stocks routed by broker-dealers
for their customers, regardless of order
dollar value, would be covered by order
routing disclosure rules.39 The
Commission’s proposed definition
maintained a dollar-value threshold
analysis to identify the ‘‘institutional
orders’’ for which the Rule 606(b)(3)
36 See
proposed Rule 600(b)(31).
id. The proposed definition of institutional
order applied only to orders for NMS stocks and,
therefore, did not include orders in NMS securities
that are options contracts.
38 See supra note 5.
39 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49445.
Relatedly, the Commission proposed to rename
term ‘‘customer order’’ in Rule 600(b) as ‘‘retail
order.’’ See infra Section III.B.1.
37 See
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58341
disclosures would be available and
distinguish them from ‘‘retail orders’’
that were too small to meet the dollarvalue threshold in the definition and for
which other disclosures would be
available.40
The Commission solicited comment
on alternatives to a dollar-value
threshold approach. For example, the
Commission asked commenters among
other things: (1) Whether dollar value is
the proper criterion for defining an
institutional order, and (2) whether
there are other order characteristics the
Commission should consider to
distinguish between retail and
institutional orders, in addition to, or
instead of, a dollar-value threshold.41
The Commission also asked whether
commenters believe a de minimis
exemption from customer-specific
reporting under proposed Rule 606(b)(3)
is appropriate. Specifically, the
Commission asked if commenters
believe that the rule should include a de
minimis exemption for broker-dealers
that receive, in the aggregate, less than
a certain threshold number or dollar
value of institutional orders.42 The
Commission also asked if the rule
should be applicable, with respect to
disclosures to any particular customer,
only if a broker-dealer receives greater
than a certain threshold number or
dollar value of institutional orders from
that customer.43
The Commission received comments
on the proposed dollar-value threshold
as well as comments in response to its
questions regarding a potential de
minimis exemption from Rule 606(b)(3)
and, after further consideration, is
modifying its approach.
b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
i. Comments Regarding Dollar-Value
Threshold
The Commission received significant
comment on the proposed definition of
‘‘institutional order’’ that criticized the
proposed $200,000 threshold as an
ineffective proxy for institutional
trading interest.44 Many commenters
40 See id. The Commission preliminarily believed
that this would be an effective method of focusing
the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures on orders from
institutional customers. See Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49444–45 for additional detail on
the Proposal.
41 See id. at 49445.
42 See id. at 49449.
43 See id.
44 See, e.g., Letter from Theodore R. Lazo,
Managing Director and Associate General Counsel,
The Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association, dated October 17, 2016 (‘‘SIFMA
Letter’’) at 2–3; Letter from Mary Lou Von Kaenel,
Managing Director, Financial Information Forum,
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expressed concern that defining
institutional order using the proposed
$200,000 threshold would be both overinclusive by including orders from retail
investors with a market value over
$200,000 and under-inclusive by
excluding orders from institutional
customers with a market value less than
$200,000, and result in the
misclassification of a large number of
orders.45 Two commenters stated that
they receive retail investor orders that
exceed $200,000 in market value.46
Several commenters stated that, for
reasons such as obtaining a better price,
achieving faster execution, avoiding
potential information leakage, avoiding
market effect, or the advancement in the
sophistication of institutional trading
systems, many institutional customers,
before submitting their order flow to
their broker-dealers, internally divide
their order flow into smaller ‘‘child’’
orders that may not meet the proposed
$200,000 dollar-value threshold.47
Multiple commenters offered their own
analyses of internal and external data
indicating that a large percentage of
dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘FIF Letter’’) at 2–3;
Letter from Mary Lou Von Kaenel, Managing
Director, Financial Information Forum, dated
November 7, 2016 (‘‘FIF Addendum’’) at 2; Letter
from David W. Blass, General Counsel, Investment
Company Institute, dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘ICI
Letter’’) at 3–7; Letter from John Russell, Chairman
of the Board, and James Toes, President and Chief
Executive Officer, Security Traders Association,
dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘STA Letter’’) at 4; HMA
Letter at 5–6; Letter from Tyler Gellasch, Executive
Director, and Chris Nagy, Director, Healthy Markets
Association dated January 6, 2017 (‘‘HMA Letter
II’’) at 2; CFA Letter at 6–7; Letter from Dennis M.
Kelleher, President and Chief Executive Officer,
Stephen W. Hall, Legal Director and Securities
Specialist, and Lev Bagramian, Senior Securities
Policy Advisor, Better Markets, Inc., dated
September 26, 2016 (‘‘Better Markets Letter’’) at 5;
MFA Letter at 3.
45 See, e.g., Letter from Robert J. McCarthy,
Director of Regulatory Policy, Wells Fargo Advisors,
LLC, dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘Wells Fargo
Letter’’); Letter from David M. Weisberger,
Managing Director, IHS Markit, dated September
26, 2016 (‘‘Markit Letter’’); Letter from Jeff Brown,
Senior Vice President, Legislative and Regulatory
Affairs, Charles Schwab & Co. Inc., dated September
26, 2016 (‘‘Schwab Letter’’).
46 See Schwab Letter at 3; Letter from Marc R.
Bryant, Senior Vice President and Deputy General
Counsel, Fidelity Investments, dated September 26,
2016 (‘‘Fidelity Letter’’) at 2–3.
47 See Markit Letter at 6–7; Letter from Greg
Babyak, Head, Global Regulatory and Policy Group,
Bloomberg LP, and Gary Stone, Market Structure
Strategy, Bloomberg Tradebook and Bloomberg LP,
dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘Bloomberg Letter’’) at
11; Letter from Erin K. Preston, Chief Compliance
Officer and Associate General Counsel, Dash
Financial LLC, dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘Dash
Letter’’) at 3; Letter from Richard Foster, Senior
Vice President and Senior Counsel for Regulatory
and Legal Affairs, Financial Services Roundtable,
dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘FSR Letter’’) at 3–4;
MFA Letter at 3; FIF Letter at 3; FIF Addendum at
2; Letter from Nathaniel N. Evarts, State Street
Global Advisors, dated September 26, 2016 (‘‘SSGA
Letter’’) at 1.
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orders from institutional customers
would fall below the $200,000
threshold.48 One of these commenters
stated that the proposed definition of
institutional order could exclude
disproportionately more orders of
smaller funds, orders in less liquid
stocks that fall below the $200,000
threshold, and larger orders that are
broken up into smaller child orders by
institutional customers.49
One commenter expressed concern
that the dollar-value threshold would
exclude the majority of orders from
institutions from the enhanced
institutional order handling disclosure
requirements, diminishing the value of
the disclosure and forcing institutional
investors to continue individual
negotiations to obtain order handling
information.50 Another commenter
stated that excluding an unknown
portion of a large institution’s orders
(and perhaps all of a smaller
institution’s orders) from heightened
scrutiny may create opportunities for
abuse and evasion, and that investors
may therefore seek to deliberately avoid
identifying their orders as institutional
orders.51 Another commenter stated that
different securities trade differently
based on available liquidity and their
capacity to move the market.52 The
commenter stated that the proposed
definition may force customers to
choose between placing orders above
the threshold to receive disclosures but
at the risk of higher market impact costs
or staying below the threshold to protect
order information but sacrificing their
right to disclosures.53
As illustrated by these comments,
there was broad opposition to the
$200,000 dollar-value threshold in the
proposed definition of institutional
order. The Commission is not adopting
the proposed definition. Rather than
attempt to capture within a definition of
‘‘institutional order’’ the orders that
account for most institutional order
dollar volume, the comments indicate
that market participants would prefer a
different approach to order handling
48 See Markit Letter at 6–7; Letter from Matt D.
Lyons, Global Trading Manager, The Capital Group
of Companies, Timothy J. Stark, Market and
Transactional Research, The Capital Group of
Companies, and Michael J. Triessl, Senior Vice
President and Senior Counsel, Capital Research and
Management Company, dated September 30, 2016
(‘‘Capital Group Letter’’) at 2; Bloomberg Letter at
11–12.
49 See Letter from Adam C. Cooper, Senior
Managing Director and Chief Legal Officer, Citadel
Securities, dated October 13, 2016 (‘‘Citadel Letter’’)
at 2.
50 See ICI Letter at 3.
51 See HMA Letter at 6.
52 See CFA Letter at 7.
53 See id.
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disclosures.54 In light of these
comments, the Commission believes
that a modified approach to delineating
the orders covered by new Rule
606(b)(3) would be more consistent with
the expectations of market participants.
ii. Commenter Recommendations
Regarding a Modified Approach
Many commenters urged the
Commission to replace the proposed
dollar-value threshold with a different
approach for identifying the orders
covered by the new customer-specific
order routing disclosures.55 They
generally supported two different
approaches: A number of commenters
suggested that the applicability of the
new order routing disclosures be based
on order type (‘‘held’’ versus ‘‘not held’’
orders); 56 and a number of other
commenters suggested that their
applicability be based on the
characteristics (e.g., type or regulatory
status) of the entity placing the order.57
Commenters who supported an order
type-based approach suggested that the
not held order type classification would
be an effective proxy for identifying
orders typical of institutional investors
for which the existing customer-specific
disclosures are inapplicable or
inadequate because institutional
investor orders are generally not held to
the market.58 Commenters attributed
54 See, e.g., ICI Letter at 3, 6–7 (noting that
adopting a definition of institutional order that
would apply to all orders, regardless of size, that
an institutional customer submits to its brokerdealer would best enable the Commission to
accomplish the objective of providing information
necessary for institutional investors to understand
broker-dealers’ order routing decisions); Letter from
Amy B.R. Lancellotta, Managing Director,
Independent Directors Council, dated September
26, 2016 (‘‘IDC Letter’’) at 2 (supporting ICI’s
recommendation); Capital Group Letter at 2–3;
HMA Letter II (agreeing with Capital Group, and
noting that covering all institutional orders is one
of the most important aspects of the rule).
55 See, e.g., MFA Letter at 3–4; CFA Letter at
6–8; FIF Letter at 2–3, 14–15; ICI Letter at 3, 6–7;
STA Letter at 3–4; SIFMA Letter at 1–3; FIF
Addendum at 2; Healthy Markets Letter at 2; Jon
Schneider, Chairman of the Board, and James Toes,
President and Chief Executive Officer, Security
Traders Association, dated April 11, 2017 (‘‘STA
Letter II’’) at 2.
56 See, e.g., SIFMA Letter at 3; Bloomberg Letter
at 12; Citadel Letter at 2–3; FIF Letter at 2–3, 14–
15; FIF Addendum at 2; STA Letter II at 2. See also
EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations, supra note 16.
57 See SSGA Letter at 1; ICI Letter at 3, 6–7; IDC
Letter at 2; MFA Letter at 3; Fidelity Letter at 3; CFA
Letter at 8; Better Markets Letter at 5.
58 See Ameritrade Letter at 2; Letter from Richie
Prager, Senior Managing Director, Head of Trading,
Liquidity and Investments Platform, Hubert De
Jesus, Managing Director, Co-Head of Market
Structure and Electronic Trading, Supurna VedBrat,
Managing Director, Co-Head of Market Structure
and Electronic Trading, and Joanne Medero,
Managing Director, Government Relations and
Public Policy, BlackRock, Inc., dated September 26,
2016 (‘‘BlackRock Letter’’) at 2; Citadel Letter at
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this to the fact that a broker-dealer has
time and price discretion in executing a
not held order, and institutional
investors in particular rely on such
discretion for reasons such as
minimizing price impact, whereas a
broker-dealer must attempt to execute a
held order immediately, which typically
better suits retail investors who seek
immediate executions and rely less on
broker-dealer order handling
discretion.59 As one commenter put it,
the Rule 606(b) disclosure requirements
should be based on whether the brokerdealer has discretion when handling the
client’s order and, as a general matter,
broker-dealers have no discretion in
handling retail investor held orders but
do have discretion in handling
institutional investor not held orders.60
One commenter also stated that the
held/not held approach would provide
a targeted, deterministic solution to the
issues presented by the proposed order
dollar-value-based distinction between
retail and institutional orders, and
would alleviate the need to identify
certain orders as institutional and others
as retail for purposes of order routing
disclosure.61
Several commenters also stated that
basing the Rule 606(b) disclosure
requirements on whether an order is
held or not held would be
straightforward and minimally
burdensome because: Broker-dealers
and other market participants are very
familiar with these order type
classifications; classifying orders as held
or not held would be consistent with
current industry practice; and the terms
held and not held are common terms of
usage in the securities markets.62 One of
these commenters stated that brokerdealers already must mark orders that
they execute as held or not held,63 and
another commenter stated that the held/
not held order classifications are
commonly recognized in the FIX
Protocol.64 Two commenters pointed
out that the held and not held order
classifications are already utilized in the
Group Letter at 2–3; KCG Letter at 4; FIF Letter at
2–3; FIF Addendum at 2; STA Letter II at 2. One
commenter noted its belief that the vast majority of
orders entered by institutional customers are with
not-held instructions and the vast majority of orders
entered by retail investors are with held
instructions. See STA Letter at 4.
59 See Wells Fargo Letter at 5; Markit Letter at 3
n.7; Capital Group Letter at 3; Schwab Letter at 3;
Ameritrade Letter at 2 n.2; KCG Letter at 4; FIF
Addendum at 2.
60 See SIFMA Letter at 3; see also Capital Group
Letter at 2; KCG Letter at 4.
61 See FIF Letter at 2–3, 14–15.
62 See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3,
7–8; KCG Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2–3;
SIFMA Letter at 3.
63 See Capital Group Letter at 3.
64 See Citadel Letter at 3.
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Commission’s definition of ‘‘covered
order’’ in Rule 600(b)(15).65 One of these
commenters stated that not held orders
are generally distinguished from held
orders in regulations and firms’
monitoring processes, and specifically
noted that broker-dealers already
characterize orders on a held or not held
basis to comply with Rule 605’s covered
order requirement, OATS technical
specifications, and other rules such as
FINRA Rule 5320.66
Two commenters objected to the held
or not held analysis and stated that the
applicability of the new customerspecific disclosures should not be based
on order type because the held/not held
classification is within the control of the
order sender.67 One commenter stated
that the held/not held order type-based
distinction is an imprecise proxy for the
status of the underlying customer,
would not cover all institutional orders,
and that the distinction may leave out
many smaller investment advisers that
currently trade through or have some
portion of assets under management
through ‘‘retail’’ channels.68 This
commenter also stated that the
distinction would allow for potential
gaming, and that amidst rising concerns
with broker-dealers’ conflicts of
interests, some institutional investors
have increasingly come to use held
orders.69 Another commenter, however,
understood that some not held orders
may come from retail customers, and
that institutional clients may send
broker-dealers a small amount of held
orders, but nevertheless supported
scoping the disclosures by the held and
not held order classifications.70
Some commenters suggested that the
applicability of the customer-specific
disclosures should be based on the type
of the entity placing the order.71 One
commenter argued that this approach
would be preferable to an approach
based on order type classification
because broker-dealers already must
know whether their customers are
institutional investors.72 Another
commenter stated that orders should not
be classified according to the unique
65 See SIFMA Letter at 3 and n. 4; Market Letter
at 3 and n. 8.
66 See Markit Letter at 3–4, 7.
67 See HMA Letter at 7; Dash Letter at 4.
68 See HMA Letter II at 2–3.
69 See id.
70 See SIFMA Letter at 3; see also Markit Letter
at 7–8; Schwab Letter at 3; Letter from Manisha
Kimmel, Chief Regulatory Officer, Wealth
Management, Thomson Reuters, dated September
26, 2016 (‘‘Thomson Reuters Letter’’) at 1; Citadel
Letter at 3.
71 See, e.g., ICI Letter at 6–7; MFA Letter at 3;
Fidelity Letter at 3; STA Letter at 4; CFA Letter at
8.
72 See HMA Letter II at 2.
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58343
order handling typical of an entity, as
that characteristic may change over
time, whereas the entity type itself
remains constant.73
Most of the commenters that
supported an entity-centric approach
suggested that the Commission rely on
FINRA Rule 4512(c), which defines the
term ‘‘institutional account’’ for
purposes of that rule, as a source for
such an approach.74 Two commenters
also suggested as a source FINRA Rule
2210(a)(4), which defines the term
‘‘institutional investor’’ for purposes of
that rule, and also incorporates the
definition of ‘‘institutional account’’
from FINRA Rule 4512(c).75 One
commenter stated that, because all
broker-dealers that handle customer
orders for equity securities are FINRA
members, they should be accustomed to
using the standards supplied in FINRA’s
rules.76
Some commenters offered additional
considerations or recommendations
regarding how an entity-based approach
should be crafted. For example, one
commenter suggested that the new
customer-specific disclosures should
apply to any order attributed to any
entity that is a ‘‘large trader’’ under
Section 13(h) of the Exchange Act.77
Another commenter stated that
institutional and retail investors should
be defined according to whether the
investor is an entity or individual.78
In addition to the foregoing
commenter recommendations, a few
commenters suggested that there should
be no distinction between retail and
institutional customers for purposes of
the new Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
reports and that all orders should be
73 See
Better Markets Letter at 5.
ICI Letter at 6–7 n.19; MFA Letter at 3–4;
Fidelity Letter at 3; STA Letter at 4; CFA Letter at
8; Bloomberg Letter at 13; see also FIF Letter at 3.
75 See MFA Letter at 3–4; ICI Letter at 6–7 n.19.
76 See ICI Letter at 6–7 and n.19; see also CFA
Letter at 8.
77 See SSGA Letter at 1; see also 15 U.S.C.
78m(h). Another commenter expressed concern that
a large trader-based definition of institutional order
would result in considerable overlap among retail
customers that also are large traders under Rule
13h–1. See STA Letter at 4. This is one of several
examples of commenters critiquing or supporting
the views expressed by other commenters regarding
the definition of institutional order. See, e.g., IDC
Letter at 2 (supporting ICI Letter’s recommendations
on how to expand the definition of ‘‘institutional’’
order); STA Letter at 4 (supporting remarks made
in FIF Letter); Citadel Letter at 3 (noting support for
similar proposal from Blackrock Letter and ICI
Letter); Ameritrade Letter at 2 (noting commenter
support for defining institutional orders by the type
of order submitted); HMA Letter II at 2–3 (noting
broad commenter support for not defining
institutional orders by dollar size).
78 See Better Markets Letter at 5.
74 See
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covered by the Rule 606(b)(3) reports,79
or that retail and institutional customers
should receive the same disclosures.80
One commenter stated that the goal with
respect to both retail investor and large
institutional orders should be best
execution.81
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iii. The Commission’s Adopted
Approach
The Commission is not adopting a
definition of ‘‘institutional order’’ or an
order dollar value-based approach to
delineate the applicability of new Rule
606(b)(3).82 Generally, the amendments
to Rule 606(b) are designed to apply
required order handling disclosures to
any NMS stock order regardless of its
dollar value and to require more
detailed disclosures regarding how
broker-dealers exercise discretion when
handling and routing customers’ NMS
stock orders in today’s electronic
markets. These disclosures are designed
to provide transparency to customers for
whom the existing customer-specific
disclosures under Rule 606(b) are
inapplicable or have become
inadequate. Upon further consideration
and in light of the views expressed by
commenters, the Commission believes
that these goals can best be
accomplished if the detailed, customerspecific, order handling disclosures set
forth in Rule 606(b)(3) generally apply
to orders of any dollar value for NMS
stock that customers submit to their
broker-dealers on a ‘‘not held’’ basis.
Accordingly, under Rule 606(b)(3), a
broker-dealer must provide the
disclosures set forth therein, upon
customer request, to any customer that
places, directly or indirectly, one or
more orders in NMS stock that are
submitted on a not held basis with the
broker-dealer, subject to two de minimis
exceptions discussed below.83
79 See HMA Letter at 5; Dash Letter at 3; HMA
Letter II at 1–2; Letter from Abraham Kohen,
President, AK Financial Engineering Consultants,
LLC, dated September 28, 2016 (‘‘Kohen Letter’’).
80 See, e.g., Better Markets Letter at 5–7.
81 See HMA Letter at 5.
82 Relatedly, as discussed below, the Commission
is not renaming the term ‘‘customer order’’ as
‘‘retail order’’ in Rule 600(b). See infra Section
III.B.1.
83 See infra Section III.A.1.b.iv; see also Rule
606(b)(3). Consistent with what was proposed, Rule
606(b)(3) applies only to orders for NMS stocks and
does not include orders in NMS securities that are
options contracts. Some commenters supported this
approach. See STA Letter II at 2–3; FIF Letter at 12.
Other commenters recommended that options be
included in the amended order handling
disclosures being adopted today. See Dash Letter at
1–2; HMA Letter at 12; Markit Letter at 14. The
Commission continues to believe that, as noted in
the Proposing Release, due to differences in the
current market structure for NMS securities that are
options contracts—in particular the lack of an overthe-counter market in listed options—the same
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We believe that basing the
applicability of this requirement on
whether orders are held or not held
serves the purposes of the disclosures.
A broker-dealer must attempt to execute
a held order immediately; a not held
order instead provides the broker-dealer
with price and time discretion in
handling the order. As a result, the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures apply to NMS
stock orders for which customers have
provided their broker-dealers with price
and time order handling discretion, and
do not apply to orders that the brokerdealer must attempt to execute
immediately. The Commission believes
that since the disclosures are designed
to provide greater transparency into a
broker-dealer’s exercise of order
handling discretion, they should be
provided for orders for which brokerdealers actually exercise such
discretion. Focusing the customerspecific report in this way will better
enable customers to understand their
broker-dealers’ order routing decisions
and the extent to which those decisions
may be affected by conflicts of interest
or create information leakage.
Customers also will be better able to
assess their broker-dealers’ skill and
effectiveness in handling their orders
and achieving satisfactory executions.
Importantly, as noted by multiple
commenters, broker-dealers and other
market participants are familiar with the
held and not held order type
classifications, classifying orders as held
or not held would be consistent with
current industry practice, and the terms
‘‘held’’ and ‘‘not held’’ are common
terms of usage in the securities
markets.84 Indeed, broker-dealers
already utilize the ‘‘held’’ and ‘‘not
held’’ order classifications to comply
with FINRA OATS technical
specifications,85 and existing
Commission rules, such as the
definition of ‘‘covered order’’ in Rule
600(b), rely on market participants’
ability to distinguish between ‘‘held’’
and ‘‘not held’’ orders. As such, the
Commission is not adding definitions of
these terms to Rule 600(b). The
Commission intends for broker-dealers
to rely on their current methods for
classifying orders as ‘‘held’’ or ‘‘not
market structure complexities that exist for NMS
stocks do not exist at this time for NMS securities
that are options contracts to a degree that warrants
the more detailed order handling disclosures
proposed herein. See Proposing Release, supra note
1, at 49444 n.101.
84 See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3,
7–8; KCG Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2–3;
SIFMA Letter at 3.
85 See FINRA OATS Reporting Technical
Specifications, September 12, 2016, at pp. 4–2 to
4–3, available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/
files/TechSpec_9122016.pdf.
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Sfmt 4700
held’’ for purposes of complying with
Rule 606. By leveraging the established
not held order classification, Rule
606(b)(3)’s applicability should be easily
understood by market participants and
the implementation burdens brokerdealers encounter in order to comply
with Rule 606(b)(3) should be lessened
to the extent that their order handling
and routing systems are already
configured for not held order
classifications.
Further, under the Commission’s
adopted approach, any customer is
entitled to receive the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures for their not held NMS stock
orders, subject to two de minimis
exceptions. The Commission is not
adopting definitions of ‘‘institutional
order’’ or ‘‘retail order,’’ and the
adopted amendments make no such
distinction, based on dollar value of the
order or otherwise. In this regard, the
Commission’s adopted approach is
consistent with comments that stated
that no such distinction is necessary.
Under final Rule 606(b)(3), customers
may request the disclosures for any not
held NMS stock orders that they submit
(subject to the de minimis exceptions,
discussed below), including not held
NMS stock orders for less than $200,000
in market value, which would have
been defined as ‘‘retail orders’’ and not
subject to the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
under the Proposal. The Commission
believes it is appropriate to make the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures available for
all not held NMS stock orders (subject
to the de minimis exceptions) so
customers have information sufficient to
evaluate the broker-dealers that are
exercising order handling and routing
discretion.
The Commission believes that it is
appropriate for broker-dealers to
provide the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to
those customers for whom the existing
customer-specific order routing
disclosures in Rule 606(b) are
inapplicable or inadequate. Specifically,
the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures are
particularly suited to customers that
submit not held NMS stock orders
because the disclosures set forth
detailed order handling information that
is useful in evaluating how brokerdealers exercise the discretion attendant
to not held orders and, in the process,
carry out their best execution
obligations and manage the potential for
information leakage and conflicts of
interest. Moreover, many of the
commenters that criticized the
Commission’s proposed definition of
institutional order suggested that all or
nearly all of an institutional customer’s
orders should be covered by the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures regardless of order
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dollar value. Some of these commenters
supported accomplishing this via an
entity-based approach to Rule
606(b)(3)’s applicability,86 which the
Commission has not chosen to adopt for
reasons set forth below, and some of
these commenters supported the
adopted approach.87 By using the not
held order distinction rather than the
proposed $200,000 threshold, Rule
606(b)(3) as adopted will cover more
order flow than would have been
covered under the Proposal.88 In
addition, by using the not held order
distinction, Rule 606(b)(3) as adopted
will likely result in more Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures for order flow that is
typically characteristic of institutional
customers—not retail customers—and
will likely cover all or nearly all of the
institutional order flow.
While some commenters suggested
that the new customer-specific
disclosures in Rule 606(b)(3) should be
available to all orders without any
limitation based on entity type or order
classification or otherwise, the
Commission believes that it is
appropriate to differentiate between not
held orders and held orders for
purposes of order handling information
disclosure because broker-dealers
generally handle not held orders
differently from held orders due to the
discretion they are afforded with not
held orders but not with held orders.89
As a result, the information pertinent to
understanding broker-dealers’ order
handling practices for not held orders is
not the same as for held orders.
Indeed, in recent years, routing and
execution practices for not held orders
have become more automated,
dispersed, and complex.90 In today’s
electronic markets, broker-dealers’
commonly handle such orders by using
sophisticated institutional order
execution algorithms and smart order
routing systems that decide the timing,
pricing, and quantity of orders routed to
a number of various trading centers, and
that may divide a large ‘‘parent’’ order
into many smaller ‘‘child’’ orders, and
route the child orders over time to
different trading centers in accordance
with a particular strategy.91 The order
handling disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) are designed to take this into
account and provide relevant
disclosures that, in the Commission’s
view, will enable customers to better
86 See
supra note 58.
supra note 56.
88 See infra Section V.C.1.a.i.3.
89 See, e.g., Schwab Letter at 3.
90 See supra Section I; see also Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49436.
91 See id.
87 See
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assess their broker-dealers’ order
execution quality and order handling
ability overall and methods for
complying with best execution
obligations, as well as, more
specifically, the degree to which their
broker-dealers’ order routing practices
may involve information leakage or the
potential for conflicts of interest.
By contrast, the Commission’s
concern regarding how broker-dealers
handle held orders is less about the
difficulties posed by more automated,
dispersed and complex order routing
and execution practices. Rather, the
Commission believes that enhanced
disclosures for held orders should
provide customers with more detailed
information including with respect to
the financial inducements that trading
centers may provide to broker-dealers to
attract immediately executable trading
interest, as opposed to the different
information geared towards not held
NMS stock orders that is set forth in
Rule 606(b)(3). As noted above and
discussed below, the quarterly public
disclosures required under Rule 606(a)
are indeed being enhanced to provide
more detail regarding financial
inducements to broker-dealers, and the
Commission believes that these
disclosures are more appropriately
tailored to the characteristics of held
order flow and the needs of customers
that use held orders.92
Also, the Commission does not
disagree with one commenter’s
statement that best execution should be
the goal for orders from both
institutional customers and retail
investors, and that both types of
investors deserve to know how their
orders are routed and executed.93 Best
execution is the broker-dealer’s legal
obligation for all orders, whether from
retail or institutional customers.94
While meeting their best execution
obligations, broker-dealers frequently
may choose to handle orders in a variety
of different ways and choose among a
host of available order routing
destinations. Because the choices
broker-dealers make in this regard are
informed by the type of order at hand,
for the reasons stated above, the
Commission believes that separate
disclosures for not held orders and held
orders are the better way to help
customers understand how their broker92 As noted supra and infra, the Commission is
also is amending Rule 606(a) such that it applies to
held orders of any size in NMS stock.
93 See HMA Letter at 5.
94 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808
(June 9, 2005), 70 FR 37496, 37538 (June 29, 2005)
(‘‘Regulation NMS Adopting Release’’). FINRA has
codified a duty of best execution into its rules. See
FINRA Rule 5310.
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dealers are handling and routing their
orders and how well their brokerdealers are performing these functions.
While this commenter also stated that
the Proposal’s reforms for retail
customers are inadequate, for the
reasons stated above, as well as in
Section III.B infra, the Commission
disagrees.
As noted above, other commenters
suggested basing Rule 606(b)(3)’s
applicability on the characteristics of
the customer that submits the order to
the broker-dealer. This entity-centric
approach suggested by commenters
would require the Commission to set
forth the types of customers that may
request the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
for their NMS stock orders, but would
not entail any differentiation in the
types of orders covered by Rule
606(b)(3). As a result, NMS stock orders
from qualifying customers that are
submitted on a held basis would be
covered by the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures. This is a sub-optimal
outcome. Broker-dealers must attempt to
execute held orders immediately and
are afforded no discretion in handling
them; therefore, applying the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures to held orders
would not provide insight into how a
broker-dealer exercises order handling
and routing discretion. Moreover,
including a customer’s held orders in
the Rule 606(b)(3) report could
obfuscate the reports’ depiction of the
discretion actually exercised by the
broker-dealer with respect to not held
orders and undermine the very purpose
of these disclosures.
An entity-based approach also would
require the Commission to prescribe
institutional status criteria that
customers must fit in order to be
entitled to receive the disclosures. A
risk with such an approach is that the
criteria could be over-inclusive or
under-inclusive. The Commission is
particularly concerned about potential
under-inclusiveness because customers
that do not fit the criteria would not be
entitled to receive the disclosures. To
mitigate this risk, the Commission, as
suggested by commenters, could
leverage certain existing rules that
already set forth institutional status
criteria. For example, several
commenters suggested as sources the
definitions of ‘‘institutional account’’
and ‘‘institutional investor’’ in FINRA
Rules 2210(a)(4) and 4512(c),
respectively.95 But these definitions
serve a purpose for the noted FINRA
rules that is different from the purpose
similar prescribed criteria would serve
95 See
supra notes 74 and 75 and accompanying
text.
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for the purpose of Rule 606(b)(3). Under
FINRA Rule 4512, a broker-dealer is not
required to obtain for ‘‘institutional
accounts’’ certain additional
information that it is required to obtain
for accounts that are not ‘‘institutional
accounts.’’ 96 Likewise, under FINRA
Rule 2210(a)(4), a broker-dealer is
subject to less prescriptive review
requirements for ‘‘institutional
communications’’ that are solely to
‘‘institutional investors’’ than it is
subject to for other, ‘‘retail
communications.’’ 97 Under both of
these FINRA rules, exclusion from the
defined ‘‘institutional’’ criteria triggers a
more stringent due diligence or review
obligation for the broker-dealer. The
opposite would be true under an entitycentric approach to Rule 606(b)—if the
institutional status criteria adopted by
the Commission were not met, the
market participant would be excluded
from the more detailed disclosure
regime.98
This categorical exclusion of some
customer types from Rule 606(b)(3)’s
purview is avoided under the
Commission’s adopted approach. By
basing the application of Rule 606(b)(3)
on the held and not held order
classifications, no customer is
categorically excluded from receiving
the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures. The
Commission acknowledges that some
commenters stated that an entity-centric
approach to Rule 606(b)(3)’s coverage
based on the noted FINRA rules would
coincide with familiar industry
standards regarding the types of market
participants that are considered to be
96 See
FINRA Rule 4512(a)(2).
FINRA Rule 2210.
98 One commenter suggested that the ‘‘large
trader’’ designation under Section 13(h) of the
Exchange Act serve as the source for the
Commission’s institutional status criteria (see SSGA
Letter at 1, supra note 77). This approach would,
however, include held orders from large traders
within the required disclosures. Moreover, to
qualify as a large trader under Rule 13h–1, a person
must meet daily or monthly aggregate share volume
or market value thresholds for transactions in NMS
securities. See 17 CFR 242013h–1. Therefore, such
an approach would exclude orders from an
institutional customer that does not meet the
designated thresholds. In addition, because the
large trader definition is based on transactions in
NMS securities, it takes into account transactions in
option contracts that are NMS securities whereas
the Commission’s amendments to Rule 606(b) apply
only to orders for NMS stock. Another commenter
stated that institutional and retail investors should
be defined according to whether the investor is an
entity or individual (see Better Markets Letter at 5,
supra note 78). This approach similarly would
include held orders within the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures. Further, certain natural persons may
take on the characteristics of institutions in their
trading behavior and utilize not held orders to a
significant degree, but they would be categorically
excluded from receiving the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures for such orders under an approach
based on an individual versus entity distinction.
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‘‘institutional.’’ 99 But adapting the
FINRA rules for the Commission’s
purposes in Rule 606(b) would present
challenges. For example, private funds
such as hedge funds may not be covered
by the ‘‘institutional’’ definitions in
FINRA Rules 2210 or 4512,100 yet in the
Proposing Release the Commission
noted, by way of example, that ‘‘[a]n
institutional customer includes . . .
hedge funds,’’ among others.101 If the
Commission relied solely on the FINRA
rules, contrary to the Commission’s
contemplation in the Proposing Release,
hedge funds may not be defined as
‘‘institutional’’ for Rule 606(b) purposes
and would not be entitled to the more
detailed Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures. Of
course, the Commission could modify
the criteria used in the FINRA rules to
better suit its purposes here, but even
then there would still be a risk of underinclusiveness in the adapted criteria.
There also could be new types of market
participants that evolve and that trade
in an institutional manner, but if they
were not covered by the Commission’s
prescribed institutional status criteria,
they would not be entitled to receive the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures under the
rule.
Moreover, as noted above,
commenters also highlighted the
industry familiarity with the not held
order classification.102 And, unlike the
‘‘institutional’’ definitions in the
referenced FINRA rules, which apply in
contexts completely different from
broker-dealer order handling, the not
held order classification is already used
by broker-dealers specifically for order
handling purposes, among other things.
For example, FINRA Rule 7440 requires
broker-dealers to record certain
information, including any ‘‘special
99 See HMA Letter II at 2; CFA Letter at 8; STA
Letter at 4.
100 FINRA Rule 4512(c)(3) contains a catch-all
provision that includes within the definition of
‘‘institutional account’’ the account of any person
with at least $50 million in total assets. An entity
that is not otherwise expressly covered by FINRA
Rule 4512(c)(1) or (2), such as a hedge fund for
example, is not covered by the definition if it has
total assets of less than $50 million. As such, if the
Commission were to rely on the FINRA rules as
suggested by some commenters, smaller entities
with less than $50 million in total assets may be
excluded from Rule 606(b)(3) even though they may
have less bargaining power than their larger
competitors and therefore may benefit most from
required, standardized order routing disclosures.
There also could be disparate results—for example,
a registered investment company with less than $50
million in assets would be covered because it is
expressly identified in the rule, while a hedge fund
with less than $50 million in assets would not be
covered.
101 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49433,
n.1.
102 See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3, 7–
8; KCG Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2–3;
SIFMA Letter at 3.
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handling requests,’’ when an order is
received, originated, or transmitted.103
FINRA’s OATS Reporting Technical
Specifications state that, when a FINRA
member originates or receives an order
and then subsequently transmits that
order to another desk or department
within the firm, the member is required
to record and report to OATS, among
other things, ‘‘special handling
instructions that are communicated by
the receiving department to a desk or
other department, such as ‘Not
Held.’ ’’ 104
Basing the applicability of Rule
606(b)(3) on customers’ not held NMS
stock orders is, in the Commission’s
view, the most tailored approach to
aligning the orders covered by Rule
606(b)(3) with the Commission’s intent
for the rule to provide more detailed
disclosure and enhanced transparency
regarding how broker-dealers handle
NMS stock orders, and to provide such
transparency to customers for whose
NMS stock orders the current disclosure
regime is inapplicable or inadequate.
This approach also is likely to avoid the
problems inherent in an entity-centric
approach. Further, many commenters,
as well as EMSAC, supported basing
Rule 606(b)(3)’s application on the not
held order classification. Accordingly,
under Rule 606(b)(3), a broker-dealer
must provide the disclosures set forth
therein, upon customer request, to any
customer that places, directly or
indirectly, one or more orders in NMS
stock that are submitted on a not held
basis with the broker-dealer, subject to
the de minimis exceptions discussed
below.
iv. De Minimis Exceptions
The Commission is adopting in new
Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5) two de
minimis exceptions from Rule
606(b)(3)’s requirements, either of
which excepts a broker-dealer from the
Rule 606(b)(3) requirements. One of the
exceptions focuses on the broker-dealer
firm and the other focuses on the
individual customer. Specifically, a
broker-dealer is not obligated to provide
the Rule 606(b)(3) report: (i) To any
customer if not held NMS stock orders
constitute less than 5% of the total
shares of NMS stock orders that the
broker-dealer receives from its
customers over the prior six months,105
103 See
FINRA Rule 7440(b)(15) and (c)(1)(G).
FINRA OATS Reporting Technical
Specifications, September 12, 2016, at pp. 4–2 to 4–
3, available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/
files/TechSpec_9122016.pdf.
105 See Rule 606(b)(4). Under the rule, the first
time a broker-dealer meets or exceeds the 5%
threshold, it has a grace period of up to three
calendar months to provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
104 See
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or (ii) to a particular customer if that
customer trades through the brokerdealer, on average each month for the
prior six months, less than $1,000,000 of
notional value of not held orders in
NMS stock.106 These de minimis
exceptions are designed such that the
Rule 606(b)(3) requirements apply when
a broker-dealer’s order flow consists
primarily of not held orders for NMS
stock and when a customer’s trading
profile is such that it relies heavily on
the discretion of the broker-dealer and
so would sufficiently benefit from the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures.
The Commission received several
comments in response to its questions
regarding a potential de minimis
exception from customer-specific
reporting under proposed Rule
606(b)(3). Multiple commenters
supported an exception from Rule
606(b)(3) reporting for broker-dealers
that have either a de minimis level of
institutional customers or a de minimis
amount of institutional trading activity
as measured by executed shares as a
percentage of all executed shares.107
These commenters also supported
disclosure based on whether an order is
held or not held and generally discussed
the reasoning for a de minimis
exception in that context.108
Commenters also suggested that firms
that receive less than 5% of orders from
institutions should be exempt from
requirements to provide disclosures for
institutional orders, both at the
individual investor level and in the
aggregate.109 One commenter stated that
the de minimis threshold should be set
at 5% of not held orders received.110
Two commenters noted that there
currently is a 5% threshold in Rule
606(a) in connection with the rule’s
requirement that broker-dealers disclose
the identity of any venue to which 5%
or more of non-directed orders were
routed for execution.111 One of these
report. There is no such grace period for
compliance after the first time the threshold is met
or exceeded. See id.
106 See Rule 606(b)(5). As discussed below,
however, when either de minimis exception
applies, the broker-dealer still must provide, if
requested, the Rule 606(b)(1) customer-specific
disclosures for not held NMS stock orders that it
receives from customers. See infra Section
III.A.1.b.vi.
107 See, e.g., FIF Letter at 5, 10; STA Letter at 6;
Citadel Letter at 3.
108 See, e.g., FIF Letter at 5, 10; STA Letter II at
2; Citadel Letter at 3; Thomson Reuters Letter at 1;
Ameritrade Letter at 2.
109 See STA Letter II at 2; Ameritrade Letter at 2;
Wells Fargo Letter at 5. See also Letter from Jeff
Brown, Senior Vice President, Legislative and
Regulatory Affairs, Charles Schwab & Co. Inc.,
dated October 30, 2018 (‘‘Schwab Letter II’’).
110 See Schwab Letter II at 2.
111 See Ameritrade Letter at 2; Wells Fargo Letter
at 5.
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commenters stated that the purpose of a
de minimis exception is to provide
relief so that reporting obligations for a
given entity more closely match its
actual core business and targeted
customer profile.112
Some commenters stated that the
costs incurred by retail broker-dealers to
create systems to generate the Rule
606(b)(3) reports would exceed any
benefits.113 One of these commenters
stated that the Rule 606(b)(3) statistics
are not relevant to retail-oriented
brokers’ customer base and would
provide them no added benefit, and that
requiring retail broker-dealers to
generate the statistics would be an
onerous task with significant added
expense.114 Two commenters
recommended an exemption from Rule
606(b)(3) reporting for firms with a de
minimis amount of not held order flow
in light of the fact that retail customers
occasionally submit not held orders.115
One commenter believed that, if brokerdealers with a de minimis amount of not
held orders are exempted, the majority
of the exemptions would be for retail
brokers.116
Other commenters did not support a
de minimis exception even if a brokerdealer has limited institutional
customer order flow, so that
institutional customers can compare
order routing among all brokerdealers.117 One commenter stated that,
if a small broker-dealer is able to
effectively manage orders from
institutional customers in the current
complex market environment, it should
be able to provide customers with
information on their order routing
practices.118
The Commission believes that a de
minimis exception from Rule 606(b)(3)
reporting, as set forth in Rule 606(b)(4),
presents advantages for certain brokerdealers. Broker-dealers handle different
types of order flow, and not all brokerdealers handle a significant amount of
112 See Wells Fargo Letter at 5. See also Letter
from Stephen John Berger, Managing Director,
Government and Regulatory Policy, Citadel
Securities, dated October 23, 2018 (‘‘Citadel Letter
II’’) at 1–2 (noting that the 5% threshold suggested
by other commenters should ensure that smaller
broker dealers are not adversely affected by the new
disclosure requirement, and noting that a threshold
based on a percentage of orders or shares received
could potentially be set lower than a threshold
based on a percentage of executed shares).
113 See Ameritrade Letter at 2; Citadel Letter at 3;
FIF Letter at 5, 10.
114 See FIF Letter at 5. See also Markit Letter at
17.
115 See Thomson Reuters Letter at 1; Schwab
Letter at 3.
116 See STA Letter at 8–9.
117 See, e.g., Bloomberg Letter at 15; MFA Letter
at 4–5. See also Markit Letter at 28.
118 See Capital Group Letter at 4.
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not held NMS stock order flow. Indeed,
some broker-dealers focus mainly on
servicing customers that use held orders
in NMS stock, and as such, typically do
not handle not held order flow in NMS
stock. The Commission believes that it
is appropriate to relieve broker-dealers
with minimal or zero not held order
flow from the obligation to incur the
costs associated with having the
capability to provide the new Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures for not held NMS
stock orders. The Commission does not
believe that it would be appropriate to
require every broker-dealer, regardless
of its customer base and core business,
to be compelled to incur the costs
required to create the systems and
processes necessary to generate the Rule
606(b)(3) reports. The Commission does
not intend to introduce a wholesale
change in order handling and routing
disclosure requirements such that
broker-dealers whose order flow
consists almost entirely of held orders
must also become prepared to provide
disclosures that focus on trading activity
characteristics of not held orders.
In the Commission’s view, the
potential benefits of the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures for customers of such
broker-dealers do not justify the costs to
such broker-dealers of developing the
necessary systems and mechanisms for
providing the disclosures. There would
be no expected benefits of Rule
606(b)(3) in circumstances where a
broker-dealer does not currently handle
any not held NMS stock order flow.
Nevertheless, absent a de minimis
exception, such a broker-dealer could
feel compelled to incur the costs and
burdens associated with being able to
provide the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
in order to ensure compliance with the
rule should it receive not held orders in
the future. The Commission believes
that it is appropriate to relieve any such
broker-dealers of these potential costs
and unnecessary burdens.
Likewise, there would be only limited
benefits of Rule 606(b)(3) in
circumstances where broker-dealers
handle a minimal amount of not held
orders, and the Commission does not
believe that such benefits would justify
the costs to broker-dealers in these
circumstances. While some commenters
opposed a de minimis exemption on
grounds that institutional customers
should be able to compare orders across
all broker-dealers and that brokerdealers capable of handling institutional
customer orders should be able to
provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
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information,119 the Commission
believes that these comments rest on an
unlikely premise that it is broker-dealers
that handle primarily institutional
customer orders that would be excepted
under Rule 606(b)(4). To the contrary,
consistent with other commenters’
views,120 the Commission expects the
de minimis exceptions to be relevant
mainly in the context of broker-dealers
that handle almost entirely held orders
from customers but may occasionally
handle not held orders from customers.
Indeed, commenters noted that a small
percentage of retail customers may
submit not held orders, whether for
purposes of working an order in illiquid
securities or for other purposes. In these
circumstances, the Commission believes
that broker-dealers that focus on
servicing such customers should not be
required to incur the costs or burdens
associated with building the systems
and other capabilities necessary to
provide the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
when they are likely to handle not held
orders only occasionally and separate
from their core business of handling
held orders.121
Accordingly, the firm-level de
minimis exception to Rule 606(b)(3), as
expressed in Rule 606(b)(4), focuses on
the broker-dealer’s overall order flow
across all of its customers. The
Commission believes that the scope of
this exception will appropriately cover
most broker-dealers that handle almost
entirely held order flow. A broker-dealer
that handles not held NMS stock order
flow that is less than 5% of the total
shares of NMS stock orders in a six
calendar month period that it receives
from its customers most likely does not
make, as a matter of course, the routing
decisions for which Rule 606(b)(3) is
designed to provide enhanced
transparency. 95% or more of such a
broker-dealer’s NMS stock order flow
would be held orders. The Commission
does not believe that it is appropriate to
require such a broker-dealer to expend
the effort and incur the expense
necessary to be able to provide
disclosures that are primarily aimed at
order handling that is rarely, if ever,
employed by the broker-dealer.
The Commission is adopting a firmlevel de minimis exception that is based
on the ‘‘percentage of shares of not held
orders in NMS stocks the broker or
dealer received from its customers’’
(emphasis added) rather than the
percentage of not held orders in NMS
119 See
MFA Letter at 4–5; Capital Group Letter
at 4.
120 See,
e.g., Ameritrade Letter at 2; Citadel Letter
stocks or other measures suggested by
commenters.122 The purpose of the firmlevel de minimis exception is to except
from the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosure
requirements those broker-dealers that
receive zero or minimal not held NMS
stock order flow from their customers
and whose core business does not
involve handling or routing such order
flow. The Commission believes that the
percentage of shares of not held orders
is an appropriate measure for the
calculation of the firm-level de minimis
exception because it more accurately
reflects the nature of a broker-dealer’s
business activities than other suggested
approaches.
The other methods that commenters
suggested for calculating a firm-level de
minimis threshold—e.g., based on the
percentage of not held orders (not
shares) in NMS stocks—are in the
Commission’s view less accurate indicia
of the broker-dealers to whom this
aspect of Rule 606 is intended to apply
and therefore would result in a less
tailored exception. For example, the use
of a ‘‘per order’’ threshold for the firmwide de minimis exception would result
in the equal treatment for purposes of a
firm’s de minimis calculation of, on the
one hand, a single order for 10 shares
of Corporation X, and on the other hand,
a single order for 100,000 shares of
Corporation X. The Commission
believes that in this example, the two
orders should not be afforded equal
treatment and that the order for 100,000
shares is more indicative of the brokerdealer’s business and thus should be
given greater weight than the order for
10 shares.
Indeed, in the aforementioned
example, the broker-dealer would likely
need to apply more discretion when
executing the order for 100,000 shares
(to minimize potential information
leakage and price impact) than for an
order for 10 shares. As discussed above,
the new Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures are
intended to provide customers with
detailed information concerning how
broker-dealers exercise discretion,
particularly for larger orders (including
those broken up into several smaller
child orders). Thus, if the firm-level de
minimis threshold were calculated in a
manner that did not account for shares
received, there would be greater risk
that a broker-dealer exercising
discretion in handling larger orders,
potentially as a meaningful portion of
its business, would not be subject to the
new Rule 606(b)(3) disclosure
requirement.
As noted below, Commission
supplemental staff analysis found that
at 3.
121 See
Wells Fargo Letter at 5.
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among 342 broker-dealers that receive
not held orders from customers, about
8% (28 broker-dealers) would receive a
de minimis exception from Rule
606(b)(3) requirements pursuant to Rule
606(b)(4).123 23 of the 28 broker-dealers
that would be eligible for the de
minimis exception receive not held
orders less than 2.5% of the total shares
of their orders in the sample and five of
the 28 broker-dealers receive not held
orders greater or equal to 2.5% and less
than 5% of the total shares of their
orders in the sample.124 Thus, the 5%
threshold in Rule 606(b)(4) creates a
narrow exception from Rule 606(b)(3)
among broker-dealers that receive not
held orders from customers and would
allow for a reasonably small increase in
not held order flow as a percentage of
total order flow before one of these
broker-dealers would be subject to the
requirements of Rule 606(b)(3). Those
broker-dealers covered by the exception
likely handle not held NMS stock order
flow only occasionally and separate
from their core business, and therefore,
in the Commission’s view, should not
be subject to the requirements of Rule
606(b)(3). In addition, some commenters
that supported a firm-level de minimis
exception specifically suggested that the
threshold be set at the 5% level.125
Accordingly, the Commission believes
that the 5% threshold for the firm-level
de minimis exception is reasonable
given the goals of the rule.
A broker-dealer is covered by the
firm-level de minimis exception as long
as its customer not held NMS stock
order flow continues to be less than the
5% firm-level threshold. A brokerdealer is no longer excepted from the
purview of Rule 606(b)(3) once and as
long as it meets or surpasses the firmlevel threshold of the de minimis
exception. Specifically, when a brokerdealer has equaled or exceeded the firmlevel threshold, it must comply with
Rule 606(b)(3) for at least six calendar
months (‘‘Compliance Period’’)
regardless of the volume of not held
NMS stock orders the broker-dealer
receives from its customers during the
Compliance Period.126 Therefore,
during the Compliance Period, the
broker-dealer must provide the Rule
606(b)(3) report to a customer for any of
the customer’s not held NMS stock
orders submitted to the broker-dealer
during the Compliance Period (subject
to the customer-level de minimis
exception set forth in Rule 606(b)(5)).
The Compliance Period begins the first
123 See
infra Section V.C.1.a.ii.
id.
125 See supra note 109.
126 See Rule 606(b)(4).
124 See
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calendar day of the next calendar month
immediately following the end of the six
calendar month period for which the
broker-dealer equaled or exceeded the
firm-level threshold, unless it is the first
time the broker-dealer has equaled or
exceeded the threshold.127 The first
time a broker-dealer equals or exceeds
the firm-level threshold, there is a grace
period of three calendar months before
the Compliance Period begins and the
broker-dealer must comply with Rule
606(b)(3) requirements.128 The customer
is not entitled to receive Rule 606(b)(3)
reports for orders handled during the
grace period, as the grace period is not
part of the Compliance Period. After the
three calendar month grace period,
beginning the first calendar day of the
fourth calendar month after the end of
the six calendar month period for which
the broker-dealer equaled or exceeded
the firm-level threshold, the brokerdealer must provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
report prospectively for not held NMS
stock orders submitted by customers
from that date through the next six
calendar months.
The Commission believes that the
limited three-month grace period is
appropriate because it will allow a firm
time to come into compliance with the
Rule 606(b)(3) requirements when its
not held NMS stock order flow crosses
the Rule 606(b)(4) firm-level de minimis
threshold for the first time. The grace
period affords a broker-dealer time to
develop the systems and processes and
organize the resources necessary to
generate the Rule 606(b)(3) reports. At
the same time, should such a brokerdealer subsequently fall below the de
minimis threshold, the Commission
believes that no such grace period for
Rule 606(b)(3) is necessary if and when
that broker-dealer’s not held NMS stock
order flow again meets or crosses the
firm-level de minimis threshold such
that the broker-dealer is again subject to
the Rule 606(b)(3) requirements. The
broker-dealer should already have
developed the necessary systems and
processes for providing the Rule
606(b)(3) report in connection with its
subjection to Rule 606(b)(3).129
127 See
id.
id.
129 A broker-dealer whose not held NMS stock
order flow from its customers equals or exceeds the
five percent threshold must be able to provide the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports to its customers beginning on
the compliance date for these rule amendments. As
such, broker-dealers will need to determine
whether their customer not held NMS stock order
flow equaled or exceeded the 5% threshold for the
six calendar month period that ends in the calendar
month that includes the effective date of these rule
amendments. Since the compliance date for these
rule amendments is 180 days after publication in
the Federal Register, and since the effective date is
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128 See
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Rule 606(b)(4) requires compliance
with Rule 606(b)(3) for ‘‘at least’’ six
calendar months for a broker-dealer that
equals or exceeds the firm-level de
minimis threshold. The Commission
believes that it is appropriate to require
a minimum Compliance Period of six
calendar months in order to coincide
with the six-month timeframe of Rule
606(b)(3). Customers of a broker-dealer
that is or becomes subject to Rule
606(b)(3) therefore will be able to
request a Rule 606(b)(3) report that
contains at least one full time period of
disclosures contemplated by Rule
606(b)(3).130 There is no maximum
period of time that a broker-dealer may
be subject to Rule 606(b)(3)—a brokerdealer that consistently receives not
held NMS stock orders from its
customers at a rate that equals or
exceeds the 5% threshold will be
required to comply with Rule 606(b)(3)
month after month. Rule 606(b)(4) is
designed to require broker-dealer
compliance with Rule 606(b)(3) for as
long as the broker-dealer’s not held
NMS stock order flow from its
customers equals or exceeds the 5%
threshold, subject to the minimum
Compliance Period of six calendar
months.
Rule 606(b)(4) also is designed to
enable a broker-dealer that is subject to
Rule 606(b)(3) for six calendar months
(or longer) subsequently to avail itself of
the firm-level de minimis exception if
its not held NMS stock order flow no
longer equals or exceeds the 5%
threshold. Specifically, under Rule
606(b)(4), if, at any time after the end of
the Compliance Period, the brokerdealer’s not held NMS stock order flow
falls below the 5% threshold for the
prior six calendar months, the brokerdealer is not required to comply with
Rule 606(b)(3), except with respect to
orders received during the Compliance
60 days after Federal Register publication, brokerdealers that equaled or exceeded the 5% threshold
during the six calendar month period ending in the
calendar month that includes the effective date will
have nearly four months between the effective date
and compliance date to prepare to provide the Rule
606(b)(3) reports.
130 As noted above, a broker-dealer is not required
to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) report for orders
received when the broker-dealer was not subject to
Rule 606(b)(3). So, for example, a broker-dealer that
is subject to Rule 606(b)(3) as of June 1 would be
required to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) information
for not held NMS stock orders received from a
customer on June 1 through at least November 30
of that calendar year (subject to the customer-level
de minimis exception and a three-month grace
period if first time the firm is required to provide
a report pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3)). A customer
could request a Rule 606(b)(3) report prior to the
end of that period, but the report would only be
required to include disclosures as of June 1 (if there
is no three-month grace period).
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58349
Period.131 Thus, after the broker-dealer’s
initial Compliance Period, Rule
606(b)(4) provides for a rolling monthto-month assessment of whether the
broker-dealer must continue to comply
with Rule 606(b)(3) or may avail itself
of the Rule 606(b)(4) de minimis
exception.
For example, suppose a broker-dealer
has equaled or exceeded the firm-level
threshold and therefore must comply
with Rule 606(b)(3) for a six calendar
month period that begins on January 1
and ends on June 30 (assuming this
Compliance Period started after a threemonth grace period, if this was the first
time the broker-dealer has had to
comply with Rule 606(b)(3)). If, in the
beginning of July, the broker-dealer
determines that its not held NMS stock
order flow equaled or exceeded the
threshold for January 1 through June 30,
the broker-dealer must continue to
comply with Rule 606(b)(3) for July. If,
on the other hand, the broker-dealer
determines that its not held NMS stock
order flow was below the 5% threshold
for January 1 through June, the brokerdealer would not be required to comply
with Rule 606(b)(3) for July 1 through
July 31. In the beginning of August, the
broker-dealer would determine if it is
subject to Rule 606(b)(3) based on its
order flow for the prior six calendar
month period, which this time would be
the period from February 1 through July
31. If the broker-dealer met the
threshold for that six calendar month
period, and had also met it for the
period January 1 through June 30 such
that it was required to comply with Rule
606(b)(3) for July, the broker-dealer
would be required to continue
complying with Rule 606(b)(3) through
August. If the broker-dealer met the
threshold for the February 1 through
July 31 period but had not met it for the
January 1 through June 30 period and
was not required to comply with Rule
606(b)(3) for July, the broker-dealer
would start a new Compliance Period
that would run from August 1 through
January 31 of the following calendar
year. In this scenario, the broker-dealer
would be required to provide Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures for not held NMS
stock orders received from a customer
during the prior six calendar months,
except for any such orders that the
broker-dealer received during July when
the broker-dealer was not required to
provide reports pursuant to Rule
606(b)(3).
Table A below contains an example of
a broker-dealer firm that meets or
exceeds the 5% de minimis threshold
131 See Rule 606(b)(4). An example is set forth in
the paragraph below.
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for the first time and enters a six-month
Compliance Period after a three-month
grace period. Table A below also reflects
that, after the initial six-month
Compliance Period, the broker-dealer’s
required compliance with Rule 606(b)(3)
continues on a rolling month-to-month
basis. Table B below contains an
example where there is no grace period
and a previously compliant broker-
dealer firm begins a new Compliance
Period after an intervening period of not
meeting the 5% threshold.
TABLE A—FIRM EQUALS OR EXCEEDS 5% THRESHOLD FOR THE FIRST TIME
Event
Period examined for qualifying threshold
Obligation
Firm determines in Jan. 2020 that it equaled/
exceeded threshold for first time; grace period begins.
On Apr. 1, 2020, grace period ends and sixmonth Compliance Period begins.
July 1–Dec. 31, 2019 .......................................
Prepare to collect and report required data for
Compliance Period beginning Apr. 1, 2020.
Reporting is mandatory during Compliance
Period regardless of whether threshold is
equaled or exceeded in prior six calendar
months.
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
Begin collection of required data for orders received during Compliance Period.
May 2020 ............................................................
June 2020 ...........................................................
Initial Compliance Period ends on Sept. 30,
2020.
..........................................................................
On Oct. 1, firm determines that it equaled/exceed threshold; Compliance Period extends
through Oct. 31, 2020.
On Nov. 1, firm determines that it equaled/exceed threshold; Compliance Period extends
through Nov. 30, 2020.
Continue assessing, on a rolling basis, whether
equal/exceed threshold for prior six month
period.
Apr. 1 to Sept. 30, 2020 ..................................
Provide reports for Apr. 1 to Apr. 30, 2020
Provide reports for Apr. 1 to May 31, 2020
(continue adding prior month’s data to report each successive month of the Compliance Period).
Provide reports for full Compliance Period,
Apr. 1 to Sept. 30, 2020 (Sept. data not required to be provided before 7th business
day of Oct.).
Provide reports for May 1 to Oct. 31, 2020.
May 1 to Oct. 31, 2020 ....................................
Provide reports for June 1 to Nov. 30, 2020.
Prior six calendar months, on a rolling basis ..
Provide reports for prior six month period as
long as threshold continues to be met.
TABLE B—PREVIOUSLY COMPLIANT FIRM EQUALS OR EXCEEDS 5% THRESHOLD AFTER INTERVENING PERIOD OF NOT
MEETING THRESHOLD
Event
Period examined for qualifying threshold
Obligation
Firm determines in Jan. 2020 that it equaled/
exceeded 5% threshold (not for the first
time); six-month Compliance Period begins
Jan. 1, 2020.
Six-month Compliance Period ends on June 30,
2020.
July 1 to Dec. 31, 2019 ...................................
Begin collection of required data for orders received during Compliance Period.
Reporting is mandatory during Compliance
Period regardless of whether threshold is
equaled or exceeded in prior six calendar
months.
Jan. 1 to June 30, 2020 ...................................
Provide reports for full Compliance Period,
Jan. 1 to June 30, 2020 (June data not required to be provided before 7th business
day of July).
Firm not required to collect or report data for
July 2020 but must continue to provide reports for prior Compliance Period, Jan. 1 to
June 30, 2020.
Begin collection of required data for orders received during new Compliance Period,
Aug.–Jan. 31, 2021; provide reports for portion of prior six months that is covered by a
Compliance Period, i.e., Feb. 1 to June 30,
2020 (July 2020 not within Compliance Period).
Provide reports for Apr. 1 to June 30, 2020;
Aug. 1 to Sept. 30, 2020.
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Firm determines in July 2020 that it did not
equal/exceed threshold; Compliance Period
not extended.
Firm determines in Aug. 2020 that it equaled/
exceeded threshold; new Compliance Period
begins.
Feb. 1 to July 31, 2020 ....................................
Oct. 2020 ............................................................
Reporting is mandatory during Compliance
Period regardless of whether threshold is
equaled or exceeded in prior six calendar
months.
..........................................................................
Six-month Compliance Period ends on Jan. 31,
2021.
The other de minimis exception to
Rule 606(b)(3) focuses on each
customer’s order flow.132 Whereas the
132 See
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Provide reports for Aug. 1, 2020 to Jan. 31,
2021 (Jan. 2021 data not required to be
provided before 7th business day of Feb.
2021).
firm-level de minimis exception is
designed to relieve mainly brokerdealers that do not regularly handle not
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held orders of the Rule 606(b)(3)
obligations, the customer-level
exception is designed to relieve brokerdealers from the obligation to provide
the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to
particular customers that do not trade
NMS stocks in a manner that generally
relies on a broker-dealer’s use of
discretion over order routing and
handling.
The Commission expects that the
benefits of the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures will accrue mainly for
customers that trade regularly with
significant levels of not held NMS stock
order flow. The new customer-specific
order handling disclosures are intended
to provide such customers with insight
into how their brokers exercise order
handling discretion over a period of
time. In order to accurately reflect a
broker’s order handling behavior, the
customer-specific disclosures must
contain ample order data. The
Commission believes that $1,000,000 of
notional value traded on average each
month for the prior six months is a level
of order flow that would allow for
meaningful order handling disclosures.
A Rule 606(b)(3) report covering a
customer’s prior six months of trading
activity would include at least $6
million worth of the customer’s trades.
The Commission believes that such a
sample of trading activity would be
large enough to not be misleadingly
colored by one-off or infrequent routing
choices by the broker-dealer or order
handling requests by the customer.
Therefore, such a sample size would
provide the customer with an accurate
and reliable depiction of how its brokerdealer generally handles its not held
NMS stock order flow.
The Commission also believes that the
customer-level de minimis threshold is
set at a sufficiently low level such that
the exception captures customers that
do not trade regularly or in significant
quantity and who would not therefore
realize the benefits of the rule. Based on
the Commission’s experience and
understanding of the frequency and
quantities in which various market
participants tend to trade, the
Commission believes that this threshold
is a relatively low one for more active
traders, including customers that have
an interest in evaluating their brokerdealers’ order handling services, but
high enough such that the exception
will capture customers that trade
infrequently or in small quantities and
for whom the detailed Rule 606(b)(3)
report would not be warranted or
meaningful. Indeed, customers that
trade on average each month for the
prior six months less than $1,000,000 of
notional value of not held orders
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through the broker-dealer are not likely
to require the more complex order
handling tools offered by the brokerdealer that would warrant or make
meaningful a detailed review of the
broker-dealer’s order handling
decisions. Even if a customer is
sufficiently sophisticated to utilize not
held orders and analyze the Rule
606(b)(3) information, unless the
customer submits not held orders to a
degree that generates a meaningful
sample of order handling and routing
data, the Rule 606(b)(3) report will not
provide a reliable basis for assessing the
broker-dealer’s activity.
In addition, as discussed below,133
part of the reason why the Rule
606(b)(3) information is provided in the
aggregate for all orders sent to each
venue, and not on an order-by-order
basis, is to protect broker-dealers from
potentially disclosing sensitive or
proprietary information regarding their
order handling techniques. If the rule
allowed customers to request the
disclosures for discrete not held orders
or a de minimis level of not held order
flow, there would be heightened risk
that customers could gain insight into
the broker-dealer’s order handling
techniques by perhaps reverse
engineering how the broker-dealer
handled a particular order. A brokerdealer’s internal process for determining
how to handle and route individual
orders—such as, for example, the
specific routing destinations chosen and
the timing for sending child orders—is
typically highly sensitive and
proprietary information that brokerdealers guard closely. By requiring the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures only for nonde minimis levels of not held trading
activity, the customer-level de minimis
exception helps ensure that the
aggregated information provided under
Rule 606(b)(3) reflects a robust amount
of trading activity from which a
customer is unable to glean this
sensitive or proprietary information.
While broker-dealers may, by rule, be
excepted from Rule 606(b)(3) due to the
firm-level de minimis exception, or
excepted from providing the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures to certain
customers due to the customer-level de
minimis exception, the Commission
notes that some broker-dealers, for
business reasons, may choose to provide
the new customer-specific order
handling disclosures to their customers
regardless of the de minimis exceptions
and that customers below the customerlevel de minimis threshold could move
their order flow to such firms.
133 See
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58351
v. Orders for the Account of a BrokerDealer
As noted above, the Commission’s
proposed definition of institutional
order explicitly excluded orders for the
account of a broker-dealer, and such
orders were not covered by proposed
Rule 606(b)(3). Consistent with what
was proposed, Rule 606(b)(3), as
adopted, does not apply to orders from
broker-dealers. Some commenters
argued that orders for the account of a
broker-dealer should be included in the
order handling reports required under
Rule 606 and, therefore, such orders
should not be excluded from the
proposed definition of institutional
order in Rule 600(b).134 The
Commission understands these
comments to pertain to the proper scope
of a broker-dealer’s reporting obligations
under Rule 606(b)(3), and as such they
are discussed in detail in Section III.A.3,
infra. As discussed in Section III.A.3,
infra, the Commission continues to
believe that the scope of a brokerdealer’s obligation under Rule 606(b)(3)
properly does not extend to orders
placed by a broker-dealer.
vi. Rule 606(b)(1)
To incorporate new Rule 606(b)(3)
into the existing regulatory structure,
the Commission must make
corresponding revisions to Rule
606(b)(1), which is the pre-existing
customer-specific order routing
disclosure rule. Prior to today, Rule
606(b)(1) did not differentiate between
NMS stock orders from customers
submitted on a held or not held basis.
As a result, absent amendment to Rule
606(b)(1), not held orders in NMS stock
that are covered by Rule 606(b)(3) also
would be covered by Rule 606(b)(1).
This is not the Commission’s intent. As
discussed above, the Commission is
requiring Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to
be available for not held NMS stock
orders, subject to two de minimis
exceptions. For held NMS stock orders,
or for instances when a de minimis
exception would except a broker-dealer
from providing Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures, the existing disclosure
requirements of Rule 606(b)(1) would
apply.
The Commission is amending Rule
606(b)(1) to require a broker-dealer,
upon customer request, to provide the
disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(1)
for orders in NMS stock that are
submitted on a held basis, and for
orders in NMS stock that are submitted
on a not held basis and for which the
134 See Markit Letter at 3 n.6, 18; Dash Letter at
1, 4–5; FIF Letter at 2, 8, 16–17; SIFMA Letter at
1, 3.
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broker-dealer is not required to provide
the customer a report under Rule
606(b)(3).135 As a result, any NMS stock
order from a customer triggers Rule
606(b) order handling disclosure
requirements. This is consistent with
the Commission’s stated intent in the
Proposal for all orders in NMS stock
routed by broker-dealers for their
customers to be encompassed by order
routing disclosure rules regardless of
order size.136
Because there is no dollar-value
threshold in Rule 606(b) as adopted,
there are two categories of NMS stock
orders that would have been covered by
Rule 606(b)(3) under the Proposal but
instead are covered by Rule 606(b)(1)
under the adopted approach. First, a
customer’s held NMS stock order that
has a market value of at least $200,000
will be covered by the Rule 606(b)(1)
disclosures (and, as discussed below,
the Rule 606(a) public disclosures)
whereas, under the Proposal, such an
order would have been covered by the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures.137 As
discussed above,138 because brokerdealers must attempt to execute held
NMS stock orders immediately and have
no price or time routing discretion with
such orders, the Commission does not
believe that the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures are appropriate for such
orders, even if they are for $200,000 or
more. Indeed, as explained supra and
infra,139 the Commission’s concerns
with respect to broker-dealer handling
of held NMS stock orders relate mainly
to financial inducements to attract held
order flow from broker-dealers, and
those concerns persist regardless of the
size of the held order. Held NMS stock
orders of any dollar value should
therefore be covered by disclosures
designed to provide more transparency
into such financial inducements and the
potential conflicts of interest faced by
broker-dealers which, as discussed
infra, is what the enhancements to Rule
135 See Rule 606(b)(1). Rule 606(b)(1) also requires
a broker-dealer to provide the disclosures for orders
(whether held or not held) in NMS securities that
are option contracts. As explained above (see supra
note 83), the Commission is not altering Rule
606(b)’s application to orders for NMS securities
that are option contracts, and so the adopted
amendments to Rule 606(b)(1) continue the rule’s
prior application to option contract orders.
136 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49445.
137 Conversely, a customer’s not held order in
NMS stock that has a market value less than
$200,000 will be covered by the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures whereas, under the Proposal, such an
order would have been covered by the Rule
606(b)(1) disclosures (and the Rule 606(a) public
disclosures). The Commission believes this is the
proper result for the reasons set forth supra in
Section III.A.1.b.
138 See supra Section III.A.1.b.iii.
139 See id.; see also infra Section III.B.1.b.
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606(a) in particular are designed to
achieve.140
Second, compared to the Proposal, a
not held NMS stock order for at least
$200,000 that is from a customer that
does not meet the customer-level de
minimis threshold or that the customer
submits to a broker-dealer that qualifies
for the firm-level de minimis exception
will be covered by Rule 606(b)(1)
whereas, under the Proposal, any not
held NMS stock order for at least
$200,000 would have been covered by
Rule 606(b)(3). The Commission
believes that it is the appropriate result
for Rule 606(b)(3) not to apply to such
an order and for Rule 606(b)(1) to apply
instead. As discussed above,141 the firmlevel de minimis exception in Rule
606(b)(4) targets broker-dealers that
mainly handle customer held orders but
may occasionally handle a not held
order from one of their customers. The
Commission believes that such a brokerdealer should be entitled to the relief
from Rule 606(b)(3) provided by the
firm-level de minimis exception if it
receives a large not held NMS stock
order, including one that is for $200,000
or more, yet still does not receive
aggregate not held NMS stock order flow
that exceeds the firm-level de minimis
threshold.
The Commission believes that, in
most cases, a customer that trades in
NMS stock order dollar values of
$200,000 or more and is sufficiently
sophisticated to utilize not held orders,
will also be sufficiently sophisticated to
submit such orders to broker-dealers
that are not excepted from Rule
606(b)(3) by the firm-level de minimis
exception, should the customer desire
the Rule 606(b)(3) information (and
meet or surpass the customer-level de
minimis threshold). In addition, as
discussed above, the customer-level de
minimis exception targets customers
whose trading activity is not substantial
enough to provide a sample of data that
would accurately and reliably reflect a
broker-dealer’s order handling behavior
and make the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
meaningful. Thus, should a customer
that submits a not held NMS stock order
for $200,000 or more not meet the
customer-level de minimis threshold (a
scenario that the Commission believes is
unlikely to occur in most cases), the
Commission believes that Rule 606(b)(1)
is the appropriate recourse for the
customer regardless of the dollar value
of any of the customer’s individual
orders. If requested, the Rule 606(b)(1)
disclosures provide the customer with
information as to the venues to which
140 See
141 See
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its orders were routed, whether the
orders were directed or non-directed,
and the time of any transactions that
resulted from the orders. The
Commission believes that these
disclosures provide information that is
more meaningful in light of the overall
extent to which the customer trades,
and are sufficient to provide a basis for
the customer to engage in further
discussions with its broker-dealer
regarding the broker-dealer’s order
handling practices.
vii. Definitions of ‘‘Directed Order’’ and
‘‘Non-Directed Order’’
The Commission is adopting revised
definitions of the terms ‘‘directed
order’’ 142 and ‘‘non-directed order’’ 143
under Rule 600(b). These terms are used
throughout Rule 606. They are
referenced in Rule 606(a) and Rule
606(b)(1) and, as discussed infra,144 are
referenced in new Rule 606(b)(3).
Therefore, these terms are being defined
compatibly with Rule 606 as amended,
which as adopted does not distinguish
between NMS stock orders based on
order dollar value.
Specifically, Rule 600(b) prior to these
amendments defines the terms directed
order and non-directed order in
reference to a ‘‘customer order,’’ and the
term ‘‘customer order’’ includes a
$200,000 dollar value threshold for
NMS stock orders that the Commission
is not incorporating into Rule 606 as
amended. Thus, the Commission is
removing the reference to ‘‘customer
order’’ from the definitions of ‘‘directed
order’’ and ‘‘non-directed order’’ to
eliminate the $200,000 dollar-value
threshold for NMS stock orders
incorporated into those terms.
Accordingly, as amended, the term
‘‘directed order’’ means an order from a
customer that the customer specifically
instructed the broker-dealer to route to
a particular venue for execution, and the
term ‘‘non-directed order’’ means any
order from a customer other than a
directed order.145 By eliminating the
term ‘‘customer order’’ and instead
referring to ‘‘an order from a customer,’’
these amended definitions do not
incorporate the dollar value limitations
in the definition of the term ‘‘customer
order.’’
Otherwise, however, the amended
definitions of ‘‘directed order’’ and
142 A directed order is a customer order that the
customer specifically instructed the broker-dealer to
route to a particular venue for execution. See 17
CFR 242.600(b)(19).
143 A non-directed order is any customer order
other than a directed order. See 17 CFR
242.600(b)(48).
144 See Section III.A.5.b.
145 See Rules 600(b)(20) and 600(b)(49).
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‘‘non-directed order’’ are consistent
with the pre-existing definitions. While
the amended definitions eliminate the
previously existing order dollar value
limitation in the cross-referenced term
‘‘customer order,’’ they maintain the
pre-existing definitions’ exclusion of
orders from a broker-dealer. In this
regard, the Commission notes that the
amended definitions of ‘‘directed order’’
and ‘‘non-directed order’’ continue to
incorporate the term ‘‘customer,’’ which
is defined in Rule 600(b) as any person
that is not a broker-dealer.146 Thus, the
defined terms ‘‘directed order’’ and
‘‘non-directed order,’’ as amended,
apply only to orders that are from a
person that is not a broker-dealer.
2. Definition of Actionable Indication of
Interest
a. Proposal
To further facilitate the updated order
handling disclosure regime, the
Commission proposed to amend Rule
600 to include a definition of
‘‘actionable indication of interest.’’ 147
Specifically, the Commission proposed
that, under proposed Rule 600(b)(1) of
Regulation NMS, an actionable IOI be
defined as ‘‘any indication of interest
that explicitly or implicitly conveys all
of the following information with
respect to any order available at the
venue sending the indication of interest:
(1) Symbol; (2) side (buy or sell); (3) a
price that is equal to or better than the
national best bid for buy orders and the
national best offer for sell orders; and (4)
a size that is at least equal to one round
lot.’’ 148
b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the definition of actionable
indication of interest under Rule
600(b)(1) of Regulation NMS.149
Accordingly, under final Rule 600(b)(1),
17 CFR 242.600(b)(16).
proposed Rule 600(b)(1). As the
Commission indicated in 2009, an actionable IOI is
a privately transmitted message by certain trading
centers, such as an ATS or an internalizing brokerdealer, to selected market participants to attract
immediately executable order flow to such trading
centers, and functions in some respects similarly to
a displayed order or a quotation. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 60997 (November 13,
2009), 74 FR 61208, 61210 (November 23, 2009)
(‘‘Regulation of Non-Public Trading Interest
Proposing Release’’).
148 See proposed Rule 600(b)(1). See also
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49445–49447 for
additional detail on the Commission’s proposal. As
noted in the Proposing Release, this definition is
based on and substantively similar to the
Commission’s description of actionable IOIs in the
Regulation of Non-Public Trading Proposing
Release in 2009. See Regulation of Non-Public
Trading Interest Proposing Release, supra note 147.
149 See Rule 600(b)(1).
actionable IOI means any indication of
interest that explicitly or implicitly
conveys all of the following information
with respect to any order available at
the venue sending the indication of
interest: (1) Symbol; (2) side (buy or
sell); (3) a price that is equal to or better
than the national best bid for buy orders
and the national best offer for sell
orders; and (4) a size that is at least
equal to one round lot.
By defining actionable IOIs in this
manner, the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling reporting requirements
mandate that a broker-dealer disclose its
activity communicating to external
liquidity providers for them to send an
order to the broker-dealer in response to
a not held NMS stock order of a
customer of the broker-dealer. The
Commission continues to believe that
including these disclosures relating to
actionable IOI activity in the Rule
606(b)(3) order handling reports would
better enable customers to understand
and evaluate how broker-dealers handle
their orders, in particular with respect
to the potential for information leakage
stemming from broker-dealers’ use of
actionable IOIs. The Commission also
continues to believe that the definition
of actionable IOI is appropriately
designed to capture trading interest that
is the functional equivalent to an order
or quotation.
Commenters generally supported the
creation of a definition of actionable IOI
in Rule 600(b), but some commenters
expressed concerns about and suggested
revisions to the Commission’s proposed
definition.150 One of the main concerns
was that it was not sufficiently clear
from the Proposal what it means for an
IOI to be ‘‘actionable.’’ 151 In this regard,
some commenters suggested that the
proposed definition could be read to
capture conditional orders or IOIs that
require additional negotiation or
‘‘firming up’’ to be executable by the
broker-dealer,152 and several
146 See
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150 See, e.g., Fidelity Letter at 3–4; FIF Letter at
7; Bloomberg Letter at 13–15; SIFMA Letter at 6.
151 See, e.g., FSR Letter at 2, 6–7; Bloomberg
Letter at 13–14; FIF Letter at 7; HMA Letter at 10.
One of these commenters stated that broker-dealer
order routers respond to IOIs but do not send them,
and that the inclusion of IOIs in the Proposal
appeared out of context with order routing
transparency. See Bloomberg Letter at 13. This is
not consistent with the Commission’s
understanding, which, as noted in the Proposing
Release, is that broker-dealers may send an
actionable IOI to select external liquidity providers
to communicate to send orders to the broker-dealer
to trade with the order that is represented by the
actionable IOI at the broker-dealer. See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49453; see also Section
III.A.6.a, infra.
152 See FSR Letter at 2, 6–7; Fidelity Letter at 4;
Letter from Timothy J. Mahoney, Chief Executive
Officer, BIDS Trading L.P., dated October 7, 2016
(‘‘BIDS Letter’’).
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commenters asserted that such
conditional trading interest is
distinguishable from an actionable IOI
and therefore should be excluded from
the definition of actionable IOI and the
disclosures required by Rule 606.153
As stated above and in the Proposing
Release, for an IOI to be actionable it
must convey (explicitly or implicitly)
information sufficient to attract
immediately executable orders to the
venue sending the indication of
interest.154 In addition, Rule 3b–16
defines an order as any firm indication
of a willingness to buy or sell a security,
as either principal or agent, including
any bid or offer quotation, market order,
limit order, or other priced order.155
When the Commission adopted Rule
3b–16 in connection with the adoption
of Regulation ATS, the Commission
stated:
Whether or not an indication of interest is
‘firm’ will depend on what actually takes
place between the buyer and seller. . . . At
a minimum, an indication of interest will be
considered firm if it can be executed without
further agreement of the person entering the
indication. Even if the person must give its
subsequent assent to an execution, however,
the indication will still be considered firm if
this subsequent agreement is always, or
almost always, granted so that the agreement
is largely a formality. For instance,
indications of interest where there is a clear
prevailing presumption that a trade will take
place at the indicated price, based on
understandings or past dealings, will be
viewed as orders.156
The Commission believes that this
language is instructive here in light of
the Commission’s intention for the
definition of actionable IOIs to apply to
IOIs that are the functional equivalent of
orders or quotations, i.e., firm
representations of trading interest.
Specifically, the Commission intends
that the actionable IOI definition would
include, at a minimum, an IOI that
represents an order that can be executed
against by the IOI recipient without
153 See Markit Letter at 4, 12–13; Bloomberg
Letter at 14; BIDS Letter; SIFMA Letter at 6; EMSAC
Rule 606 Recommendations, supra note 16, at 3.
One commenter stated that, absent clarification, the
Proposing Release’s definition of actionable IOIs
would be inconsistent with the Commission’s
published understanding of conditional orders in
the ATS–N Proposing Release. See BIDS Letter at
4. The clarification, set forth below, of the
difference between actionable IOIs versus IOIs or
conditional orders that require additional
agreement of the broker-dealer responsible for the
IOI or conditional order before an execution can
take place is consistent with what is stated in the
ATS–N Adopting Release. See ATS–N Adopting
Release, supra note 2, at 38847–38848.
154 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49446.
155 See 17 CFR 240.3b–16.
156 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
40760 (December 8, 1998), 63 FR 70844, 70850
(December 22, 1998).
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further agreement of the broker-dealer
that communicated the IOI. Moreover,
indications of interest where the
agreement of the parties to the terms of
a trade is presumed from the facts or
circumstances, such as past dealings or
a course of conduct between the parties,
may also be considered actionable IOIs.
Indeed, in the context of dark pools, the
Commission has previously noted that
IOIs may communicate information
explicitly or implicitly, such as through
a course of conduct, based on which the
recipient of the IOI can reasonably
conclude that sending a contra-side
marketable order responding to the IOI
will result in an execution if the trading
interest has not already been executed
against or cancelled.157 The
Commission believes that, generally, it
would consider an IOI from a brokerdealer to be actionable if it fits this
description, i.e., if the IOI recipient can
reasonably conclude that sending a
contra-side marketable order to the
broker-dealer will result in an execution
against trading interest represented by
the IOI that has not already been
executed against or cancelled.
So-called ‘‘conditional’’ orders
referenced by several commenters
would not, therefore, constitute
actionable IOIs if they require additional
agreement by the broker-dealer
responsible for the conditional order
before an execution can occur, unless
facts or circumstances suggest that the
broker-dealer’s agreement can be
presumed. The Commission believes
that IOIs that do not enable the IOI
recipient to send a marketable order to
the IOI sender that is executable against
the interest represented by the IOI
without further agreement by the IOI
sender may not function equivalently to
orders or quotations and therefore do
not represent the sort of order handling
activity that the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling reports are meant to capture.
Moreover, as noted in the Proposal,
actionable IOIs have the capacity to
communicate information about the
existence of a large parent order, and as
such their usage, like other components
of broker-dealers’ order handling and
routing practices, creates the potential
for information leakage.158 The
Commission believes that disclosing in
the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
reports information regarding a brokerdealer’s use of actionable IOIs could
help enable its customers to assess the
degree to which the trading interest they
route to the broker-dealer is subject to
potential information leakage. By
157 See
Regulation of Non-Public Trading Interest
Proposing Release, supra note 147, at 61211.
158 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49446.
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contrast, the Commission does not
believe that this same utility would
exist if non-actionable IOIs (those that
are not executable without further
agreement) were to be included in the
customer-specific order handling
reports, as the Commission does not
understand such non-actionable IOIs to
present the same risk of information
leakage as actionable IOIs.
In addition, the Commission
continues to believe that the four
elements contained in the definition of
actionable IOI (symbol, side, price, and
size) are all necessary pieces of
information for an external liquidity
provider to respond with an order that
is immediately executable against
trading interest of a customer of the
broker-dealer responsible for the IOI.
The Commission emphasizes that these
pieces of information may be implicitly
conveyed, such as via a course of
dealing between the IOI sender and the
recipient. For example, given that Rule
611 of Regulation NMS generally
prevents trading centers from executing
orders at prices inferior to the NBBO, if
a broker-dealer sends an IOI
communicating an interest to buy a
specific NMS stock, the IOI recipient
reasonably can assume that the
associated price is the NBBO or
better.159 Moreover, the IOI recipient
may have responded previously with
orders to the IOI sender and repeatedly
received executions at the NBBO or
better with a size of at least one round
lot.160 In this example, the IOI
communicated by the broker-dealer
would be actionable, with explicit
conveyance of the symbol and side
elements and implicit conveyance of the
price and size elements. Indeed, the
Commission understands that IOIs are
frequently conveyed with explicit side
and symbol terms and implicit price
and size terms, and can be executed
against by the IOI recipient without
further agreement of the IOI sender.
One commenter stated that, for the
purpose of routing brokers determining
whether to send an order to a nondisplayed venue, an IOI should have, at
a minimum, a symbol.161 Another
commenter stated that, at a minimum,
symbol and side (buy or sell) must be
included with an IOI in order for it to
be an actionable IOI, and that size or
price do not need to be explicitly
included.162 While these comments may
suggest that an IOI could still be
159 See Regulation of Non-Public Trading Interest
Proposing Release, supra note 147, at 61211.
160 See id.
161 See Markit Letter at 15.
162 See Letter from Elizabeth K. King, General
Counsel and Corporate Secretary, NYSE Group,
dated October 31, 2016 (‘‘NYSE Letter’’) at 2.
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actionable with less than the four noted
elements in the definition, the
Commission believes that, without the
inclusion of all four elements (symbol,
side, price, and size) explicitly or
implicitly with the IOI, the IOI recipient
could require additional information
before executing against the IOI and the
IOI therefore may not be actionable. To
the extent these comments suggest that
one or more of the four noted elements
of an actionable IOI may be implicitly
conveyed, as noted above, the
Commission agrees. One commenter
stated that the Commission has captured
all the necessary elements for the
actionable IOI definition, but that the
definitions of two of the elements—
quantity and price—should be
expanded to include relative measures
in addition to absolute measures.163 The
Commission notes in response that if
each of the four elements is
communicated—explicitly or
implicitly—such that the IOI recipient
can respond to the IOI with an order
that is executable against trading
interest represented by the IOI without
further agreement by the IOI sender
(taking into account the relevant facts
and circumstances, including any
course of dealing between the parties),
that communication would constitute
an actionable IOI under the definition in
Rule 600(b)(1).
The Commission does not believe that
it is necessary for purposes of the
definition of actionable IOI to draw a
distinction between IOIs that are
communicated manually (such as via
the telephone, for example) versus IOIs
that are communicated electronically.
Some commenters drew such a
distinction, and suggested that only IOIs
that are communicated and accessible
electronically should constitute
actionable IOIs under Rule 600(b)(1).164
The Commission believes that whether
an IOI is actionable should not turn on
the level of automation involved in the
communication of the IOI. Once an IOI
is communicated by a broker-dealer to
the IOI recipient, regardless of whether
the communication is manual (such as
via telephone) or electronic, if that IOI
recipient can respond to the IOI with an
order that is executable against the
trading interest represented by the IOI
without further agreement by the
broker-dealer responsible for the IOI,
then the IOI should be considered an
actionable IOI under Rule 600(b)(1). An
actionable IOI has the potential to leak
information as to the existence of an
163 See
Capital Group Letter at 3–4.
Bloomberg Letter at 13–15; FIF Letter at
7; FIF Addendum at 4 n.7; Fidelity Letter at 4;
SIFMA Letter at 6.
164 See
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order regardless of whether the
actionable IOI is transmitted
electronically or manually. Thus, order
handling statistics regarding both
electronic and manual actionable IOIs
could be valuable to customers in
evaluating the order routing practices of
their broker-dealers and the degree to
which those practices may leak
information regarding their not held
NMS stock orders.
One commenter urged the
Commission to follow the commenter’s
characterization of how IOIs were
described in the Regulation of NonPublic Trading Interest Proposing
Release by targeting IOIs sent by venues
such as ATSs, and to consider whether
other market participants that send IOIs,
such as exchanges, should be included
within the scope of the rule.165 The
purpose of the Regulation of Non-Public
Trading Interest Proposing Release,
however, was different from the
Commission’s purposes here in
adopting the definition of actionable IOI
for the new customer-specific order
handling reports. There, due to the
Commission’s concern about potentially
deleterious effects of dark pools’
transmission to selected market
participants, and not the public broadly
via the consolidated quotation data, of
valuable pricing information in the form
of actionable IOIs that function similarly
to quotations, the Commission proposed
to amend the Exchange Act quoting
requirements in Rule 602 of Regulation
NMS and Rule 301(b)(3) of Regulation
ATS to apply expressly to actionable
IOIs.166 Here, by contrast, the
Commission’s purpose is to require
broker-dealers to provide order handling
and routing information that is
sufficient for their customers to
understand the methods their brokerdealers use to carry out their best
execution obligations and assess the
potential impact of information leakage
and conflicts of interest, not to provide
public access to comprehensive pricing
information or encourage the public
display of quotations. The Commission
believes that the definition of actionable
IOI being adopted today is appropriately
tailored to serve the purpose of this
rulemaking, and that the concerns it
expressed in the Regulation of NonPublic Trading Proposing Release are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
For similar reasons, the Commission
is not excluding from the definition of
actionable IOI in Rule 600(b)(1) an IOI
165 See Bloomberg Letter at 13–15; see also
Regulation of Non-Public Trading Interest
Proposing Release, supra note 147.
166 See Regulation of Non-Public Trading
Proposing Release, supra note 147, at 61211–12.
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for a quantity of NMS stock having a
market value of at least $200,000 that is
communicated only to those who are
reasonably believed to represent current
contra-side trading interest of at least
$200,000, as suggested by one
commenter.167 The Commission
likewise is not requiring broker-dealers
to disclose in the publicly available
reports the percentage of orders that
were exposed through so-called ‘‘sizediscovery IOIs,’’ as suggested by another
commenter.168 These commenters noted
that the Regulation of Non-Public
Trading Proposing Release proposed to
exclude such ‘‘size-discovery IOIs’’ from
the rule amendments proposed
therein,169 but the Commission again
notes that the purpose of the
Commission’s actions here is different
from what it was in the Regulation of
Non-Public Trading Proposing Release.
There, the Commission recognized that
the benefits of certain size-discovery
mechanisms could be undermined if
their narrowly tailored IOIs for large
size were required to be included in the
public quotation data.170 Here, by
contrast, the Commission is not
requiring that actionable IOIs be
included in public quotation data, and
thus the Commission does not believe
that the same concern is implicated.
Finally, in response to commenters
who requested clarification as to
whether rules, regulations, and
guidance applicable to quotes or orders
would be applicable to actionable IOIs
under the final rule,171 the Commission
is defining actionable IOIs at this time
for purposes of the Rule 606
amendments also being adopted today.
The Commission is not expanding the
scope of existing rules, regulations, or
guidance related to orders or quotations,
other than Rule 606 and guidance
related thereto, with regard to actionable
IOIs.
3. Scope of Broker-Dealer’s Obligation
Under Rule 606(b)(3)
a. Broker-Dealer Required To Provide
Report on Its Order Handling To
Customer Placing Order With the
Broker-Dealer
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed in Rule
606(b)(3) that every broker-dealer shall,
on request of a customer that places,
directly or indirectly, an institutional
order with the broker-dealer, disclose to
such customer a report on its handling
167 See
Bloomberg Letter at 14–15.
NYSE Letter at 1–2.
169 See Bloomberg Letter at 14; NYSE Letter at 2.
170 See id. at 61213.
171 See Fidelity Letter at 4; SIFMA Letter at 6.
168 See
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of institutional orders for that
customer.172 The Commission noted in
the Proposal that, pursuant to this rule
language, a broker-dealer would be
required to provide the order handling
report to the customer placing the
institutional order with the brokerdealer, even if the customer is acting on
behalf of others and is not the ultimate
beneficiary of any resulting
transactions.173 Thus, the broker-dealer
would not be required to provide the
order handling report to the underlying
clients of that customer.
The Commission also noted that the
proposed report would cover instances
where an institutional order is handled
either directly by the broker-dealer or
indirectly through systems provided by
the broker-dealer.174 By way of example,
the Commission stated that an
institutional order would have been
placed with a broker-dealer if a brokerdealer receives an institutional order
directly from a customer and works to
execute the order itself, as well as if a
broker-dealer receives an institutional
order indirectly from a customer, where
the customer self-directs its institutional
order by entering it into a routing
system or execution algorithm provided
by the broker-dealer.175
Further, the Commission did not
propose to change the existing
definition of customer in Rule 600(b),
which states that ‘‘customer’’ means any
person that is not a broker-dealer.176 In
utilizing this defined term, proposed
Rule 606(b)(3) therefore required a
broker-dealer to provide the customerspecific institutional order handling
report only to a non-broker-dealer.177
ii. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
Notwithstanding that Rule 606(b)(3) is
modified from what was proposed such
that the adopted rule covers not held
NMS stock orders of any dollar value
(subject to the two de minimis
exceptions), the person or entity to
which the broker-dealer must provide
the Rule 606(b)(3) report is the same as
under the Proposal. Specifically, under
Rule 606(b)(3), every broker-dealer
must, on request of a customer that
places, directly or indirectly, one or
more orders in NMS stock that are
submitted on a not held basis with the
broker-dealer, disclose to such customer
a report on its handling of such orders
172 See
proposed Rule 606(b)(3).
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49448.
174 See id. at 49447.
175 See id.
176 See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(16).
177 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49447–
48 for additional detail on the Commission’s
proposal.
173 See
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for that customer. In other words, the
broker-dealer must provide the Rule
606(b)(3) report to the customer that
places with the broker-dealer the orders
covered by Rule 606(b)(3), even if the
customer is acting on behalf of others
and is not the ultimate beneficiary of
any resulting transactions. In addition,
broker-dealers remain excluded from
the definition of ‘‘customer’’ in Rule
600(b), and that exclusion is maintained
for purposes of Rule 606(b)(3), which
cross-references the defined term
‘‘customer.’’ As a result, under Rule
606(b)(3) as adopted, a broker-dealer is
required to provide the report only to
non-broker-dealers.
For the same reasons as stated in the
Proposal, the Commission continues to
believe that a broker-dealer should be
required to provide the customerspecific order handling report to the
customer that places the order with the
broker-dealer, even if that customer may
be acting on behalf of others and is not
the ultimate beneficiary of any resulting
transactions, such as when an
investment adviser, as the customer of
a broker-dealer, places an order with the
broker-dealer that represents the trading
interest of clients of the investment
adviser.178 Multiple commenters
supported this delineation of Rule
606(b)(3)’s scope.179 In addition, the
Rule 606(b)(3) report requirement covers
instances where an order is handled
either directly by the broker-dealer or
indirectly through systems provided by
the broker-dealer. The Commission
continues to believe that requiring the
reports to be provided to the customer
that places the order with the brokerdealer—whether the customer is the
account holder or an investment adviser
or other fiduciary—is appropriate
because it would require the brokerdealer to provide detailed information
to the person that is responsible for
making the routing and execution
decisions for such order and for
assuring the effectiveness of those
functions. Despite one commenter’s
assertion that an investment adviser’s
underlying client also should be entitled
to receive the Rule 606(b)(3) report from
the adviser’s broker-dealer,180 the
Commission does not believe it is
appropriate to require a broker-dealer to
create individualized order handling
reports for and make its execution data
178 As
discussed infra in this section, a brokerdealer is required to report to the customer that
places the order with the broker-dealer so long as
the customer is not itself a broker-dealer.
179 See Markit Letter at 16, 18; Bloomberg Letter
at 16; Capital Group Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 7–8,
16; EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations, supra note
16, at 3.
180 See Better Markets Letter at 7–8.
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available to an end user with whom the
broker-dealer may have no direct
relationship.
One commenter stated that an
account-level report should not be
required because accounts often are
assigned after the order is entered via an
allocation process that is different from
the system that handles routing, and
thus it would be costly.181 This
commenter also stated it would require
brokers, when using a third party to
generate the reports, to transmit client
account numbers, which are more
sensitive and confidential than the
name of the institutional manager.182
This commenter also stated, however,
that reporting information in the
aggregate should prevent any secret
routing strategies from being
divulged.183 In addition, another
commenter stated it did not believe that
customers will able to reverse engineer
the way a smart order router works or
discern any other proprietary
information about the broker’s
technology or order handling techniques
from the proposed disclosure
information.184
Consistent with these comments, the
Commission continues to believe that,
because the Rule 606(b)(3) customerspecific order handling disclosures will
aggregate information to be disclosed to
a specific customer across all of the
customer’s not held NMS stock orders,
the risk that such disclosures would
reveal sensitive, proprietary information
about broker-dealers’ order handling
techniques should be minimal. The
customer-level de minimis exception
from Rule 606(b)(3) also is relevant in
this regard, as it should help ensure that
there is a significant level of trading
activity reflected in the aggregated
information provided to the customer
under Rule 606(b)(3), and not
information regarding just one or a few
orders from which the customer may be
able to discern aspects of the brokerdealer’s sensitive or proprietary order
handling techniques. A broker-dealer’s
sensitivity lies with its methods for
determining how, where, and when to
route a specific, individual order. By
providing information for all of the
customer’s orders in the aggregate, the
report conceals a broker-dealer’s
proprietary determinations with respect
to any specific, individual order. Even
if the report reflected that the brokerdealer sent a small number of orders to
a particular venue, the report would not
reveal why the broker-dealer chose that
181 See
Markit Letter at 16, 19–20.
id.
183 See id. at 19.
184 See Capital Group Letter at 5.
182 See
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Sfmt 4700
particular venue, when the brokerdealer routed the orders to that venue,
what market signals informed the
broker-dealer’s choices as to venue and
timing, or what type of routing strategy
the broker-dealer utilized. As to one
commenter’s assertion that accountlevel disclosure would require brokerdealers that use third-parties to generate
the Rule 606(b)(3) report to disclose
sensitive client account numbers to
such third-parties, the Commission is
not adopting any requirement that the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures be provided
at the client account level, and thus
nothing in Rule 606(b)(3) compels a
broker-dealer to disclose client account
numbers to third-parties.
The Commission further notes that,
because it is not altering the brokerdealer exclusion from the definition of
customer, and because Rule 606(b)(3)
utilizes this defined term, the rule does
not require a broker-dealer to report to
another broker-dealer. This is consistent
with what was proposed and with the
order routing disclosure regime that has
existed under Rules 606(a) and
606(b)(1).185
Some commenters argued that the
broker-dealer exclusion should be
eliminated because a broker-dealer
should be required, under Rule
606(b)(3), to report to the customer that
places the order with the broker-dealer
even if that customer is itself a brokerdealer.186 Two commenters stated that,
absent a modification to the Proposal,
the Rule 606 report received by the endcustomer of a broker-dealer that utilizes
another broker-dealer’s technology for
execution would reflect only that the
customer’s orders were sent by its
broker-dealer to the other executing
broker-dealer, and lack the level of
detail that is necessary for the customer
to assess execution quality.187 Another
commenter suggested that the Rule 606
reports exclude only those orders
received from other broker-dealers and
foreign banks acting as broker-dealers
and routing to U.S. execution venues
that were directed by such brokerdealers and foreign banks acting as
broker-dealers to a particular execution
venue.188
On the other hand, one commenter
asserted that, in a ‘‘white-labeling’’ or
leveraged outsourced technology
185 The Commission did not propose to modify
the definition of ‘‘customer’’ in Rule 600(b)(16),
which defines ‘‘customer to mean any person that
is not a broker or dealer.’’ See Rule 600(b)(16).
186 See Markit Letter at 3 n.6, 18; Dash Letter at
1, 4–5; FIF Letter at 2, 8, 16–17; SIFMA Letter at
1, 3.
187 See Dash Letter at 5; FIF Letter at 8 n. 9, 16–
17.
188 See Markit Letter at 3 n.6.
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arrangement, where a broker that
receives an order from an institutional
customer outsources another broker’s
smart order routing or algorithmic
trading technology, the broker that
received the order should be evaluating
the effectiveness of the outsourced
technology and should fulfill the
obligation of being able to provide
clients’ reports on request.189 Another
commenter asserted that the Proposal is
unclear as to whether a broker-dealer
that provides algorithmic trading
services would be required to provide
an order handling report to a brokerdealer that utilizes those algorithmic
trading services in the course of
executing orders on behalf of
institutional customers.190
In response to these comments, as an
initial matter, it is worth highlighting
that Rule 606(b)(3) requires a brokerdealer, upon request of a customer that
places not held NMS stocks order with
the broker-dealer, to disclose to such
customer a report with respect to its—
i.e., the broker-dealer’s—handling of
such orders for that customer. As such,
Rule 606(b)(3) is designed to require a
broker-dealer to disclose the
information required by Rule 606(b)(3)
to the extent of its involvement in
routing and executing its customers’
orders. If the broker-dealer exercises
discretion with regard to how an order
is routed and ultimately executed, such
as (but not limited to) by determining
particular venue destinations for an
order, choosing among different trading
algorithms, adjusting or customizing
algorithm parameters, or performing
other similar tasks involving its own
judgment as to how and where to route
and execute orders, the broker-dealer is
required to provide the information
required by Rule 606(b)(3) with regard
to the customer’s order flow with the
broker-dealer as well as the order
routing and execution information set
forth in subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through
(iv) of the rule. If, by contrast, the
broker-dealer simply forwards its
customers’ orders on to another brokerdealer and that second broker-dealer
exercises all discretion in determining
where and how to route and execute the
orders, then the first broker-dealer is not
required to provide disclosures under
Rule 606(b)(3) beyond those relevant to
its activity in forwarding orders to the
executing broker. In either case, the
broker-dealer reports the required
information under Rule 606(b)(3) with
respect to its order handling for a
customer.
189 See
190 See
Bloomberg Letter at 16.
STA Letter at 4–5; STA Letter II at 1.
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This language from the rule informs
the scope of a broker-dealer’s obligation
in the types of scenarios that
commenters raised. As noted by some
commenters, broker-dealers sometimes
license or outsource technology
offerings, such as trading algorithms,
from third-parties, including other
broker-dealers, to use for routing and
executing orders. In these so-called
‘‘white-labeling’’ scenarios, the brokerdealer typically exercises discretion in
determining what trading algorithm or
other technology offering to utilize on
behalf of its customer, as well as how to
handle the customer’s orders using that
technology. For example, the brokerdealer may be able to adjust
discretionary parameters that determine
the aggressiveness of a particular
algorithm,191 otherwise determine
where or how an order is routed and
executed using the algorithm or other
technology, or determine when the
algorithm is turned ‘‘on’’ or ‘‘off.’’ In
this type of scenario, it is the brokerdealer utilizing the trading algorithm or
other technology offering—and not the
third-party provider of such algorithm
or other technology—that handles the
customer’s order and that is obligated to
provide the information required by
Rule 606(b)(3). The broker-dealer’s
obligation in this scenario extends to the
routing and execution of child orders
that, for example, the trading algorithm
may have placed after being ‘‘turned
on’’ by the broker-dealer.192
The Commission understands that
broker-dealers typically have access or
rights to the execution data for trades
made using algorithms or other
technology that they license or
outsource. As such, the Commission
believes that most broker-dealers should
be well-positioned to provide the Rule
606(b)(3) information to their customers
for orders (or child orders thereof) that
they routed or executed using a trading
algorithm or other type of technology
offering. Ultimately, however, when
relying on third-party technology in this
manner, broker-dealers will need to
ensure that they can provide the
information required by Rule 606(b)(3),
should it be requested by a customer.
Further, consistent with the exclusion of
broker-dealers from the definition of
customer, broker-dealers are required to
report the Rule 606(b)(3) information
only to non-broker-dealers.
In another type of arrangement raised
by commenters, one broker-dealer,
sometimes referred to as an introducing
broker-dealer, will route an order on
behalf of its customer to another broker-
PO 00000
e.g., Markit Letter at 20; FIF Letter at 6.
infra Section III.A.3.b.
dealer, sometimes referred to as an
executing broker-dealer, and the
executing broker-dealer will carry out
the further routing and ultimate
execution of the order, perhaps utilizing
trading algorithms or other technology.
In this type of scenario, the executing
broker-dealer’s customer is the
introducing broker-dealer because it is
the introducing broker-dealer that
places the order with the executing
broker-dealer. Since, as discussed
above, a broker-dealer is required to
report only to the customer that places
the order with the broker-dealer, in the
introducing-broker-dealer/executingbroker-dealer arrangement, the
executing broker-dealer is not required
to report the Rule 606(b)(3) information
to the introducing broker-dealer’s
customer. Moreover, Rule 606(b)(3) does
not require the executing broker-dealer
to report to the introducing brokerdealer in light of the broker-dealer
exclusion from the definition of
customer.
As noted above, some commenters
argued that a different result would be
appropriate under the rule; specifically,
they argued that broker-dealers should
be required to provide the Rule
606(b)(3) reports for broker-dealer
orders.193 The Commission intends,
however, for Rule 606(b)(3) to be
focused on the relationship between a
customer (that is not a broker-dealer)
and its broker-dealer, and the
information that the customer receives
from its broker-dealer with respect to
how the broker-dealer handles the
customer’s not held NMS stock orders.
Rule 606(b)(3) is designed to provide a
customer with access to baseline
information that would enable the
customer to assess the nature and
quality of services provided by its
broker-dealer with respect to such
orders, as many customers may not have
the sophistication or leverage necessary
to receive adequate information in the
absence of a rule. The Commission does
not believe that broker-dealer to brokerdealer relationships carry the same level
of risk of an imbalance of information or
sophistication on one side of the
relationship as compared to customer to
broker-dealer relationships. Therefore,
the Commission has determined not to
depart from the current practice under
Rule 606 by including broker-dealer
orders in Rule 606(b)(3).
For similar reasons, the Commission
believes it is appropriate for the Rule
606(b)(3) requirements not to extend to
orders handled by exchange-affiliated
routing brokers, which are also
excluded from Rule 606(b)(3)’s coverage
191 See,
192 See
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193 See
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scenario, Rule 606(b)(3) would not
require the broker-dealer to provide the
information on order executions
required by subparagraphs (b)(3)(ii)
through (iv) in its report to its customer.
Because Rule 606(b)(3) requires a
broker-dealer to provide the required
information only with respect to ‘‘its’’
order handling, an introducing brokerdealer’s obligation under Rule 606(b)(3)
does not extend to the order handling
activities of another broker-dealer.
Nevertheless, the Commission
believes that competitive forces in the
market may enable a customer whose
orders are routed by its broker-dealer to
another broker-dealer to receive detailed
order execution information, such as
that required by Rule 606(b)(3)(ii)
through (iv), for such orders. Customers
could choose not to send not held NMS
stock orders to broker-dealers that are
unable to provide detailed order
execution information, the prospect of
which could cause such broker-dealers
to request the information from their
executing broker-dealers that, in turn,
may risk losing broker-dealers as
customers unless they provide the
information. Even if this type of
information sharing does not occur, a
customer will still be entitled to receive
information from its broker-dealer under
Rule 606(b)(3) that illustrates how the
broker-dealer is handling the customer’s
orders. With that information, the
customer should be in a better position
to determine whether its broker-dealer
is adequately serving its investing and
trading needs, as well as whether it
would be better served by utilizing the
services of a broker-dealer that is able to
provide the full suite of detailed order
handling information set forth in Rule
606(b)(3).
by virtue of the broker-dealer exclusion
from the definition of customer. Three
commenters suggested that requiring the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures for orders
handled by exchange-affiliated routing
brokers would provide market
participants with a more complete
picture as to how their orders are
handled.194 But since only brokerdealers can be members of an exchange,
by the time an order reaches an
exchange-affiliated routing broker, it
first has traveled from the end customer
to a broker-dealer, from a broker-dealer
to the exchange (or perhaps from an end
customer through a broker-dealer’s
systems via a market access arrangement
and onto an exchange), and then from
the exchange to the exchange’s affiliated
routing broker. Like an executing
broker-dealer, an exchange-affiliated
routing broker has no direct relationship
with the customer that sent the order in
the first place. Thus, the Commission
does not believe that it would be
appropriate to require an exchangeaffiliated routing broker to provide the
Rule 606(b)(3) information to the
customer from whom the order
originated. As noted above, the
Commission’s goal is for Rule 606(b)(3)
to provide non-broker-dealer customers
with access to baseline information that
would enable them to assess the
discretion exercised by their brokerdealers and the nature and quality of
services provided by their brokerdealers with respect to their not held
NMS stock orders. The Commission
believes that this goal will still be
achieved without including orders
routed by exchange-affiliated routing
brokers.
A broker-dealer is still required to
provide the Rule 606(b)(3) report to its
customer, upon request, with respect to
its handling of orders for that customer
(assuming the customer is not a brokerdealer) even if the broker-dealer’s
handling of the customer’s orders
amounts mainly to routing them to
another broker-dealer (including
perhaps one affiliated with an exchange)
for further routing. In such a situation,
the report is required to include the
information regarding the customer’s
order flow with the introducing brokerdealer required by Rule 606(b)(3), as
well as the information on order routing
required by subparagraph (b)(3)(i) of the
rule, as this information pertains to the
introducing broker-dealer’s order
handling even if that order handling
amounts mainly to routing to an
executing broker-dealer. But, in this
ii. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is adopting this
requirement as proposed. Any child
orders derived from an order that is
covered by Rule 606(b)(3) are also
covered by the rule. Accordingly, Rule
194 See SIFMA Letter at 4; Markit Letter at 24; FIF
Letter at 2, 8; EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations,
supra note 16.
195 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49448 for additional detail
on the Commission’s proposal.
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b. Smaller Orders Derived From the
Order Submitted to the Broker-Dealer
(i.e., Child Orders)
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed that, for
purposes of the customer-specific order
handling report required under
proposed Rule 606(b)(3), the handling of
an institutional order would include the
handling of all smaller orders derived
from the institutional order.195
PO 00000
Frm 00022
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606(b)(3) states that, for purposes of the
customer-specific order handling report
required under the rule, the handling of
an NMS stock order submitted by a
customer to a broker-dealer on a not
held basis includes the handling of all
child orders derived from that order.196
Thus, the broker-dealer is required to
include any such child orders in the
Rule 606(b)(3) customer-specific order
handling report. For example, if a
broker-dealer splits a customer’s not
held NMS stock parent order into
several child orders to be executed
across different venues, the rule adopted
today would require that the brokerdealer provide the required information
regarding the execution of those child
orders in the customer’s Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling report.
The Commission believes that such a
result is consistent with the views of
commenters. No commenter suggested
that the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
report should not include child orders
that were derived from a customer’s
parent order. To the contrary, several
commenters suggested that it is essential
that the broker-dealer order handling
disclosures include the handling of all
smaller (child) orders derived from the
parent order.197 In addition, several
commenters noted that institutional
investors often break up orders in a
security across several broker-dealers, so
that the aggregate may exceed $200,000
where the individual child orders do
not.198 The Commission believes that
the rule adopted today addresses
commenters’ concerns regarding child
orders by requiring the routing of any
customer’s not held NMS stock order
and any child order derived therefrom,
regardless of size or monetary value, to
be included in the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling report (subject to the two de
minimis exceptions) while at the same
time achieving the Commission’s stated
goals.
4. Timing and Frequency Requirements
for Customer-Specific Order Handling
Report
a. Proposal
Proposed Rule 606(b)(3) required a
broker-dealer to provide the customerspecific order handling report to the
customer within seven business days of
receiving the customer’s request, and
required that the report contain
information on the broker-dealer’s
196 See
Rule 606(b)(3).
e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; FSR Letter
at 4; SSGA Letter at 1; Citadel Letter at 2;
Bloomberg Letter at 11; Dash Letter at 3; HMA
Letter at 5–6; FIF Letter at 3–4, 17; FIF Addendum
at 2.
198 See, e.g., Citadel Letter at 2; Bloomberg Letter
at 11; Dash Letter at 3.
197 See,
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handling of orders for that customer for
the prior six months, broken down by
calendar month.199 To allow time for
broker-dealers to develop the ability to
produce such reports, the Commission
stated that it would not require brokerdealers to produce Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling reports containing information
to cover months before broker-dealers
are required to comply with Rule
606(b)(3), if adopted.200
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b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is adopting as
proposed Rule 606(b)(3)’s requirement
that a broker-dealer provide the
customer-specific order handling report
to the customer within seven business
days of receiving the customer’s request,
and that the report contain information
on the broker-dealer’s handling of
orders for that customer for the prior six
months, broken down by calendar
month.201 The Commission received
varied comments supporting certain
aspects of the rule as proposed and
other commenters suggesting different
approaches. These comments and the
Commission’s responses on various
aspects of the rule are discussed below.
Seven Business Days for BrokerDealer to Respond to Customer Request.
Two commenters believed that seven
business days is a reasonable amount of
time for a broker-dealer to respond to a
customer’s request to produce a
monthly report.202 One of those
commenters also posited that, if the
reports prove important to clients, they
will likely be produced in shorter timeframes due to competitive forces.203
Another commenter stated that 20 days
to respond to a customer data request
would be appropriate until generating
portions of the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
and responding to customer requests is
automated, and that upon automation
and implementation of the program, the
proposed seven days may be a
reasonable period of time to respond.204
Another commenter stated that seven
business days may not be enough time
to respond to a customer request,
particularly since broker-dealers do not
know how many customers will request
the reports, and suggested that the
seven-business day limit be removed.205
Another commenter stated that seven
199 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49447–50 for additional
detail on the Commission’s proposal.
200 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49448.
201 See Rule 606(b)(3).
202 See Capital Group Letter at 4; Markit Letter at
17.
203 See Markit Letter at 17.
204 See Bloomberg Letter at 15.
205 See Fidelity Letter at 4–5.
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Jkt 247001
days is not achievable if the customer
request is made within the first half of
the month because broker-dealers
typically do not receive the rebate/fee
information from an execution venue
until the end of the first or second week
of the month, and suggested that
customer-level reports should not be
required to be ready until the month
following receipt of the fee/rebate
information.206 One commenter stated
that, given that some broker-dealers
offer fee pass-through arrangements
(known as Cost-Plus), the commenter
believed that the capabilities are in the
industry to track net execution fee or
rebate information.207
The Commission continues to believe,
at this juncture, that it is appropriate to
require a broker-dealer to provide the
Rule 606(b)(3) report to a customer
within seven business days of the
customer’s request. While Rule 606(b)(1)
does not set forth a time limit for brokerdealers to respond to a customer’s
request for a report, the Rule 606(b)(1)
disclosures are not as detailed as the
disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(3).
Furthermore, customers that submit not
held NMS stock orders face a greater
risk of information leakage than
customers that submit held NMS stock
orders. As a result, the Commission
believes that requiring broker-dealers to
respond within seven business days is
designed to ensure that customers
receive the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures in
a manner that is timely enough to
enable them to assess the risk of
information leakage from how their
orders are routed while still providing
the broker-dealer with adequate time to
prepare the report.
The Commission acknowledges, as
noted in the Proposal, that brokerdealers will need to configure their
systems to capture the information
necessary to produce the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports and, therefore, may not have the
ability to produce historical reports
about the routing of orders and
executions that occurred before such
systems are updated.208 The
Commission also notes that many
broker-dealers’ systems may already
compile some of the order routing
statistics required to be included in the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports, thus mitigating to
a degree the burden incurred by many
broker-dealers in updating their systems
and processes to be able to provide Rule
206 See
FIF Letter at 17–18.
HMA Letter at 11.
208 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49448.
Broker-dealers are required to provide the Rule
606(b)(3) reports for dates going forward from the
compliance date of this rulemaking and are not
required to provide the reports for dates prior to the
compliance date.
207 See
PO 00000
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58359
606(b)(3) reports to customers within
seven business days. Further, the
Commission has provided time between
the effected date and the compliance
date during which broker-dealers will
be able to update their systems as
necessary. Once such system updates
are completed, the Commission expects
broker-dealers to be able to generate the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports in a largely
automated fashion. As such, the
Commission believes that the seven
business day turnaround time will not
be difficult for most broker-dealers to
meet, and a longer time period for
broker-dealers to respond is not
necessary especially in light of the
expected high level of automation for
generating these reports.
Even though one commenter
expressed concern that a seven business
day response window would not be
achievable because broker-dealers
typically do not receive rebate/fee
information from execution venues until
the end of the first or second week of
the following month, the Commission
continues to believe that the seven
business day timeframe is important in
requiring that all customers receive their
order handling information in a
timeframe that will allow them to act in
a timely fashion in response to the
information contained in the report.
Relatedly, the Commission notes that
the six-month period covered by Rule
606(b)(3) is a six calendar month
period.209 Because there is no limit on
the number of times that a customer
may make a request for information
under Rule 606(b)(3), the customer
could subsequently make another
request for information under Rule
606(b)(3) once the broker-dealer has
obtained the fee/rebate information for
the immediately preceding month.210
Therefore, the Commission is not
altering the seven business day time
period for broker-dealers to respond to
a customer request for the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures.
209 Thus, for example, if a customer requests a
Rule 606(b)(3) report during the month of July, the
customer would be entitled (subject to the de
minimis exceptions) to a report that covers the not
held NMS stock orders it submitted to the brokerdealer during January through June, unless the
broker-dealer does not yet have fee and rebate
information for the month of June at the time of the
customer’s request, in which case the report would
be required to cover the not held NMS stock orders
that the customer submitted to the broker-dealer
during December of the prior calendar year through
May of the current calendar year.
210 In this scenario, the broker-dealer would be
required to provide a Rule 606(b)(3) report covering
the immediately preceding month if the customer’s
trading activity for the six month period including
the immediately preceding month meets the
customer-level de minimis threshold.
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Frequency of Responses to Requests
for Rule 606(b)(3) Report. Two
commenters believed that Rule 606(b)(3)
does not need to specify the number of
times that a broker-dealer is required to
respond to a customer request for a
report on order handling.211 One of
these commenters stated that the
competitive dynamics of customer
service in the free market should control
and that, if the frequency of requests
becomes a problem, the Commission
can address this at a later date.212 One
commenter stated that broker-dealers
should be required to provide the
proposed data on a weekly basis if
requested by the customer, and that the
timeframe for providing aggregated data
should be no longer than monthly.213
Proposed Rule 606(b)(3) did not
specify the number of times a brokerdealer is required to respond to a
customer request for a report on order
handling, and the Commission is not
adopting any such specification in final
Rule 606(b)(3). Consistent with the
Commission’s guidance in the
Proposing Release, Rule 606(b)(3) does
not limit the number of times that a
customer may place a request for an
order handling report and does not
preclude a customer from making a
standing request to its broker-dealer,
whereby the customer would
automatically receive a recurring report
on a periodic basis without the need to
make repeated requests.214 Rule
606(b)(3) also does not require the
broker-dealer to provide order handling
information that is duplicative of
information that the broker-dealer
previously provided the customer
pursuant to a prior request under the
rule.215 For example, if a broker-dealer
provides a report to a customer for the
prior six months, and that customer
requests an additional report the
following month, the broker-dealer
would only need to provide a report for
the latest month, subject to the
customer-level de minimis threshold
being met for the six month period that
includes the latest month.
Six-Month Period Covered by the
Report. One commenter stated that six
months is a reasonable timeframe for
broker-dealers to make historical data
available for the Rule 606(b)(3) report,
and suggested that historical data be
retained at the broker-dealer for two
years to fill any gaps in data collection
211 See
Bloomberg Letter at 16; Markit Letter at
from counterparties.216 Another
commenter suggested that the report
cover the previous quarter, not six
months.217 The Commission continues
to believe that it is appropriate to
require the Rule 606(b)(3) report to
provide order handling data for a sixmonth period because it would provide
customers with historical data to
evaluate their broker-dealers’ order
routing practices to gauge the risk of
information leakage and the potential
for conflicts of interest. The
Commission believes that a six-month
period is reasonable to judge the
performance of an execution venue, and
the time period is long enough to offset
any potential market moving event that
may distort the data.218 In addition,
while one commenter requested a
record retention period of two years for
the Rule 606(b)(3) data, the Commission
believes that such a retention period is
unwarranted because the purpose of the
Rule 606(b)(3) report is to provide
customers with baseline information on
a current or near-current basis that
better enables them to understand how
a broker-dealer is exercising discretion
when routing their NMS stock orders.
The purpose of the Rule 606(b)(3) report
is not to enable a historical perspective
on how broker-dealers routed orders.
Moreover, broker-dealer order routing
practices may be altered frequently, in
connection with, among other things, an
ever-evolving equity market structure,
and so how a broker-dealer routed NMS
stock orders more than six months prior
to a request for a Rule 606(b)(3) report
may not be consistent with the brokerdealer’s more current routing practices.
At the same time, if a Rule 606(b)(3)
report is requested by a broker-dealer’s
customer, the broker-dealer is required
to provide all of the information set
forth in the rule, as applicable. As noted
above, a broker-dealer is required to
fulfill the customer’s request with the
most recent six months-worth of
complete order handling information
that the broker-dealer has already
obtained at the time of the customer’s
request, subject to the de minimis
exception.
Report Data Broken Down by
Calendar Month. One commenter stated
that broker-dealers should be required
to provide the proposed data on a
weekly basis if requested by the
customer, and that this frequency of
data would be most useful to firms,
particularly if data is provided in
eXtensible Markup Language (‘‘XML’’)
18.
212 See
Bloomberg Letter at 16.
Capital Group Letter at 5.
214 See id. at 49448.
215 See id.
216 See
Capital Group Letter at 4–5.
Markit Letter at 16.
218 See Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting Release,
supra note 7, at 75430 n.81.
213 See
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format.219 This commenter also stated
that the time frame for providing the
data should be no longer than monthly.
This commenter asserted that the
Commission correctly noted in the
Proposal that changes in fee structures
at trading centers may affect a brokerdealer’s routing decisions and that these
fee changes mostly take place at the
beginning of the month. According to
this commenter, broker-dealers typically
adjust mid-month to fee structure
changes in order to meet targeted
volume tiers that may have changed and
having monthly data will enable a
customer to monitor for such changes in
order routing behavior.220
The Commission continues to believe
that it is appropriate for the data in the
Rule 606(b)(3) report to be broken down
by calendar month. Consistent with this
calendar month breakdown, as noted
above, the six month period covered by
the Rule 606(b)(3) report is a six
calendar month period. Grouping the
report data by calendar month should
enable customers to assess how changes
in fee structures at trading centers,
which typically occur on a monthly
basis, may affect a broker-dealer’s
routing decisions. Further, the
Commission continues to believe that
requiring the report data to be grouped
by calendar month will help enable
customers to assess how a brokerdealer’s order handling practices may
change in response to other internal or
external factors. Grouping the data by
calendar month allows a small
aggregation of data, since it is possible
that certain trading days may not yield
any data points. Therefore, allowing
grouping by calendar month may enable
customers to evaluate the performance
of their broker-dealers based on more
meaningful data, and enable customers
and broker-dealers to further discuss in
a more meaningful manner how orders
are routed and executed. The
Commission does not believe that the
rule should require a finer time period,
such as weekly, as suggested by one
commenter. The adopted rule does not
limit what a customer may request from
its broker-dealer, and in certain
situations, a customer may request and
receive weekly reports from its brokerdealer. The Commission believes that to
require by rule a weekly report could
increase compliance costs that may not
be commensurate with the expected
benefits. As such, the Commission does
not believe that it is necessary to change
the calendar month time period.
Annual Notice of Availability of Rule
606(b)(3) Report. Rule 606(b)(2) requires
217 See
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220 See
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broker-dealers to notify customers in
writing at least annually of the
availability on request of the
information specified in Rule 606(b)(1),
and the Commission solicited comment
as to whether the Commission should
include a similar requirement for the
new Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures. Four
commenters stated that broker-dealers
should not be required to provide an
annual notice of the availability of the
Rule 606(b)(3) report to institutional
customers,221 as institutional customers
that do not request the report are
unlikely to need it.222 One commenter
stated that institutional customers are
sophisticated market participants who
can best judge the type of information
they need.223 Accordingly, the
Commission is not adopting an annual
notification requirement with respect to
the Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
Automatic Report to Customers. In the
Proposing Release, the Commission
noted that it considered an alternative to
proposed Rule 606(b)(3) that would not
require that customers request
customer-specific standardized reports
on order handling, but would instead
require broker-dealers to provide them
to customers automatically even in the
absence of a customer request. The
Commission also raised the notion of
whether broker-dealers should be
required to provide an internet portal
where customers can view or download
the reports.224
One commenter supported the
Commission’s proposed approach and
stated that some institutional customers
may request firm-specific customized
reports and may not need the additional
information in the order handling
report.225 Another commenter did not
believe that the Commission should
mandate delivery of the Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling reports via internet
portal.226 Another commenter suggested
that the process of sending reports to the
customer should be automated such that
it is emailed to the customer, either with
a trade confirmation or on a periodic
basis.227 Two commenters stated that
broker-dealers could make customer’s
data available via the internet for
broker-dealers with customer-specific
portals.228 Another commenter stated
that customer specific information
should be sent periodically to investors,
221 See FIF Letter at 17; Fidelity Letter at 5;
Bloomberg Letter at 15; Markit Letter at 17.
222 See Bloomberg Letter at 15; Fidelity Letter at
4.
223 See Fidelity Letter at 4.
224 See Proposing Release, at 49501–02.
225 See Fidelity Letter at 4.
226 See Markit Letter at 18.
227 See Kohen Letter.
228 See Capital Group Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 18.
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rather than on an ad hoc user-requested
basis.229
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the aspect of Rule 606(b)(3)
that requires a broker-dealer to provide
the order handling report upon
customer request, and is not adopting
any requirement regarding automatic
provision of the report in the absence of
a customer request or via an internet
portal. Commenters that did support
such automated delivery mechanisms
did not provide a persuasive rationale
for the Commission at this time to
impose the likely cost to broker-dealers
of developing such mechanisms. Not all
customers may feel the need to request
Rule 606(b)(3) reports from their brokerdealer, and as such it would not be a
productive use of resources for brokerdealers automatically to provide reports
to such customers. Moreover, under the
adopted rule, a customer that wishes to
receive the report can request it from the
customer’s broker-dealer. Mandating an
automatic push to all customers would
not be efficient, and could provide
additional costs to broker-dealers. The
Commission believes that the adopted
rule strikes an appropriate balance
between broker-dealers and customers,
and does not believe that the rule
should require the disclosure of order
information when it is not requested by
the customer. Likewise, customers that
do request Rule 606(b)(3) reports may
not desire to receive them via an
internet portal, rendering the provision
of internet portal access to such
customers unnecessary.
5. Format of Customer-Specific Order
Handling Reports
a. Breakdown by Order Routing Strategy
Category at Each Venue
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed to require
that the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
report be categorized by order routing
strategy category for institutional orders
for each venue.230 The Commission
proposed that order routing strategies be
categorized into three general strategy
categories for purposes of the Rule
606(b)(3) report: (1) A ‘‘passive order
routing strategy,’’ which emphasizes the
minimization of price impact over the
speed of execution of the entire
institutional order; (2) a ‘‘neutral order
routing strategy,’’ which is relatively
neutral between the minimization of
price impact and speed of execution of
the entire order; and (3) an ‘‘aggressive
order routing strategy,’’ which
emphasizes speed of execution of the
229 See
230 See
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entire order over the minimization of
price impact.231
ii. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is not adopting the
proposed requirement that the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures be categorized by
order routing strategy for each venue to
which the broker-dealer routed the
customer’s orders. The Commission
received a significant amount of
comment on this proposed requirement,
nearly all of which expressed concern
about, and none of which supported, the
requirement as proposed. Commenters
generally believed that the proposed
categorization of the Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling information for each
venue by passive, neutral, or aggressive
routing strategies category would be
unnecessarily subjective and
complex.232 Several commenters stated
that broker-dealers may categorize
similar routing strategies differently,
which could limit the utility and
comparability of the reports.233 Multiple
commenters stated that the proposed
strategies could be impacted by
investor-specific customization.234 In
addition, several commenters stated that
the proposed routing strategy
categorization would be unworkable in
light of the fact that trading algorithms
may use multi-layered methodologies
that would fit into more than one of the
proposed categories,235 and can be
dynamic and adjust to market
conditions in real-time.236 Commenters
also asserted, broadly, that the proposed
order routing strategy breakdown would
be of little to no value to institutional
investors.237
231 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(v). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49450–52 for additional
detail on the Commission’s proposal.
232 See, e.g., SIFMA Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 4,
15–16; FIF Addendum at 3; ICI Letter at 8; MFA
Letter at 5; STA Letter at 5, 7–8; STA Letter II at
1; EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations, supra note
16, at 3, 5.
233 See, e.g., SIFMA Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 4,
15–16; FIF Addendum at 3; MFA Letter at 5; Dash
Letter at 6. One of these commenters agreed with
the Commission’s proposal to require broker-dealers
to document their assignment of institutional orders
to a particular routing strategy category, and
suggested that the documentation be publicly
available. See Dash Letter at 6–7.
234 See SIFMA Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 4; KCG
Letter at 5–6; Markit Letter at 20.
235 See FIF Letter at 4, 15.
236 See ICI Letter at 8; Capital Group Letter at 6;
FIF Letter at 4, 15; MFA Letter at 5.
237 See Markit Letter at 20–22; STA Letter at 5;
Fidelity Letter at 5, KCG Letter at 6. The
Commission also received comment that suggested
alternative methods to characterize order routing
strategies or proposed breaking down the venue
data by categories other than routing strategy,
which the Commission is not adopting. See, e.g.,
MFA Letter at 5; Dash Letter at 6; HMA Letter at
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The Commission acknowledged in the
Proposing Release that the proposed
order routing strategy categorization had
limitations similar to many of those
raised by commenters, including the
potential for inconsistency in how
broker-dealers categorize an order
routing strategy and reduced
comparability of order handling reports
across broker-dealers, mixed routing
strategies that could reasonably fit into
more than one category, and customers
that provide specific or market
condition-dependent order handling
instructions to their broker-dealers that
affect how a broker-dealer handles an
institutional order.238 The Commission
preliminarily believed that such
limitations would occur mainly at the
margins, and that grouping order
routing strategies into the three
proposed categories would still allow
for meaningful comparison of order
handling practices across brokerdealers, and would allow customers to
better evaluate a broker-dealer’s order
handling practices for orders that are
handled using similar strategies.239 In
addition, a breakdown by routing
strategy within each venue category was
suggested by a group of commenters
who submitted to the Commission, in
advance of the Proposal, a proposed
template for the customer-specific
institutional order handling report.240
The comments received on this topic
indicate, however, that interested
market participants widely believe that
the proposed order routing strategy
categorization would not provide a
sufficient benefit that justifies adopting
the categorization notwithstanding its
limitations. Commenters appear to
believe that these limitations are more
pervasive and potentially more
deleterious to the quality and usefulness
of the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
reports than the Commission
preliminarily believed. Indeed, the
Commission acknowledges that several
commenters believed that the proposed
order routing strategy categorization
would not provide information to
customers that is useful for assessing
their broker-dealers’ order handling
10; HMA Letter II at 4; Better Markets Letter at 5;
SIFMA Letter at 4–5; FIF Letter at 4; FIF Addendum
at 3; ICI Letter at 8.
238 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49451.
239 See id.
240 See Letter to Mary Jo White, Chair,
Commission, from Dorothy M. Donohue, Deputy
General Counsel, Investment Company Institute,
Stuart J. Kaswell, Executive Vice President &
Managing Director, General Counsel, Managed
Funds Association, and Randy Snook, Executive
Vice President, Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association, dated October 23, 2014
(‘‘Associations Letter’’), available at https://
www.sec.gov/comments/s7–02–10/s70210–428.pdf.
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performance and, in fact, could impair
the utility and comparability of the Rule
606(b)(3) order handling reports.
Accordingly, the Commission is
persuaded not to include in final Rule
606(b)(3) the proposed order routing
strategy categorization and therefore has
not included proposed subparagraph
(b)(3)(v) in the adopted rule.241 Final
Rule 606(b)(3) requires that the
customer-specific order handling report
categorize the data specified in
subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv) for
each venue to which the broker-dealer
routed orders covered by the rule for the
customer, without further categorization
within each venue category.
As discussed infra,242 the
Commission believes that the order
handling data points specified in
subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv) of
the rule, separated according to each
venue to which the broker-dealer routed
orders for the customer, will provide the
customer with sufficient information to
evaluate its broker-dealer’s routing
performance and compare it to that of
other broker-dealers. This data would
also allow a customer to ascertain at a
high level what type of routing
strategies a broker-dealer may have
utilized for the customer’s not held
NMS stock order flow. For example, as
discussed infra,243 subparagraphs
(b)(3)(iii) and (iv) of Rule 606(b) require
broker-dealers to disclose specific
information regarding orders that
provided liquidity and orders that
removed liquidity, respectively. Orders
that provided liquidity may reasonably
be associated with routing strategies that
operate more passively, while orders
that remove liquidity may be associated
with routing strategies that operate more
aggressively. Even if such associations
cannot be made reliably, however, the
Commission believes that Rule 606(b)(3)
is more likely to provide appropriate
and useful order handling information,
and information that is more uniform
across broker-dealers and therefore more
likely to facilitate comparisons across
broker-dealers, by requiring that the
information specified in subparagraphs
241 The Commission has not identified an
appropriate alternative. The Commission believes
that the commenters’ suggestions such as
categorizations based on ‘‘scheduled’’ versus ‘‘nonscheduled’’ distinctions, broker-dealers’ intent,
order types, or the state of the market, would all
face similar issues as the originally proposed
categorization because, as expressed in the
comment letters, order routing strategies are
difficult to place into well-defined categories due to
the complex nature of today’s order execution
algorithms and smart order routing systems. The
Commission believes that requiring categorization
of order routing strategies could lead to inaccurate
and potentially misleading disclosures.
242 See infra Section III.A.6.
243 See id.
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(b)(3)(i) through (iv) be separated for
each venue to which the broker-dealer
routed orders for the customer without
further categorization within each venue
category. The requirements of Rule
606(b)(3) provide a standardized
baseline of customer-specific order
handling disclosures, and customers
remain free to negotiate for additional
disclosures or categorizations, such as
categorizations by routing strategy, with
their broker-dealers if they so desire.
b. Segregation of Directed Orders and
Non-Directed Orders
i. Proposal
The Commission did not propose to
require that the Rule 606(b)(3) customerspecific order handling report
differentiate between orders that the
customer directed the broker-dealer to
route to a particular venue versus orders
that the customer did not so direct.
ii. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
Several commenters suggested that
directed orders and non-directed orders
be segregated in the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling reports. As noted above,
several commenters asserted that the
disclosures in the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
would be most useful to customers if
they are focused on orders for which the
broker-dealer exercised discretion in
handling.244 In addition, commenters
suggested that directed orders be clearly
segregated in the reports from orders
that were routed according to the
broker-dealer’s default routing behavior,
otherwise the broker-dealer’s normal
routing behavior could be
misrepresented.245 One commenter
requested that directed orders be
included, but as a separate category, in
Rule 606 reports in order to expand the
universe of covered orders.246
The Commission is modifying Rule
606(b)(3) to require that the customerspecific order handling report for not
held NMS stock orders be divided into
separate sections for the customer’s
directed orders and non-directed orders,
with each section containing the
disclosures regarding the customer’s
order flow with the broker-dealer
specified in Rule 606(b)(3), as well as
the disclosures for each venue to which
the broker-dealer routed orders
specified in Rules 606(b)(3)(i)–(iv). The
two types of orders are fundamentally
different in that, with directed orders,
244 See supra Section III.A.1.b.ii. See also
Bloomberg Letter at; Markit Letter at 8; STA Letter
at 6.
245 See FIF Letter at 5; Better Markets Letter at 5–
6.
246 See HMA Letter at 3.
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the customer directs the broker-dealer to
route its orders to a particular venue,
whereas the broker-dealer exercises
discretion in determining where to route
and execute the customer’s non-directed
orders. Segregating directed not held
orders from non-directed not held
orders in the customer-specific report
would provide a customer with one
report that reflects all of its not held
NMS stock orders handled by the
broker-dealer while separately
providing disclosures for orders for
which the broker-dealer exercises venue
routing discretion.
By providing the order handling
information separately for non-directed
not held orders, the Rule 606(b)(3)
report will provide a customer with a
more precise reflection of how and
where its broker-dealer is routing the
customer’s not held NMS stock orders
pursuant to the discretion afforded to
the broker-dealer. A primary utility of
the Rule 606(b)(3) reports is to enable
customers to better understand how
their broker-dealers exercise discretion
in handling their not held orders, and
this will be more easily achieved if the
reported disclosures for directed and
non-directed orders are separate.
Otherwise, with directed not held
orders and non-directed not held orders
commingled in the report, a customer
may not be able to accurately
differentiate routing behavior for which
its broker-dealer exercised discretion in
determining where to route an order
from routing behavior where the
customer itself directed the routing
destination. Separating the Rule
606(b)(3) order handling disclosures for
non-directed not held orders from those
for directed not held orders should help
customers evaluate their broker-dealers
order handling performance and how
their broker-dealers are achieving best
execution for their non-directed not
held orders while managing the
potential impact of information leakage
and conflicts of interest.
In addition, the Commission believes
that customers will benefit from being
able to analyze Rule 606(b)(3) routing
disclosures that are specific to their
directed not held orders for NMS stock.
As discussed below, the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports require the broker-dealer to
disclose, among other things,
information on order execution.247 This
information would be relevant to a
customer assessing its broker-dealer’s
execution of its directed not held orders,
including a customer interested in
validating that its broker-dealer is
routing its directed not held orders
247 See
infra Section III.A.6.
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consistent with the customer’s
instructions.
renderer published on the Commission’s
website.253
c. XML Format and Standardization
ii. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed to require
that the customer-specific order
handling report required under
proposed Rule 606(b)(3) be made
available using an XML schema and
associated PDF renderer published on
the Commission’s website.248 To
provide a standardized presentation for
the report, the Commission also
proposed a chart form for the report’s
required disclosures of information
regarding orders that a broker-dealer
executes internally or routes to other
venues.249 Specifically, the Commission
proposed to require that each report
contain rows that would be categorized
by venue and by order routing strategy
category for each venue,250 with certain
columns of information for each of the
required rows.251 Thus, as proposed,
each report would have been formatted
so that a customer would be readily able
to observe its order activity at a
particular venue, as further subdivided
by order routing strategy category for
that venue.252
The Commission also proposed new
format requirements for the existing
customer-specific order handling
disclosures in Rule 606(b)(1).
Specifically, the Commission proposed
to require that the customer-specific
order routing report required by Rule
606(b)(1) be made available using an
XML schema and associated PDF
248 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). The
Commission’s schema is a set of custom XML tags
and XML restrictions designed by the Commission
to reflect the proposed disclosures in Rule 606.
XML enables data to be defined, or ‘‘tagged,’’ using
standard definitions. The tags establish a consistent
structure of identity and context. This consistent
structure can be automatically recognized and
processed by a variety of software applications such
as databases, financial reporting systems, and
spreadsheets, and then made immediately available
to the end-user to search, aggregate, compare, and
analyze. In addition, the XML schema could be
easily updated to reflect any changes to the open
standard. XML and PDF are ‘‘open standards,’’
which is a term that is generally applied to
technological specifications that are widely
available to the public, royalty-free, at no cost.
249 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
The Commission also noted that, for purposes of the
Rule 606(b)(3) order handling report, a venue would
be any trading center to which an order is routed
or where an order is executed. See Rule 600(b)(78);
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
250 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3); see also
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
251 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv);
see also Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
252 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
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The Commission is adopting as
proposed the requirement that the
customer-specific order handling report
required under Rule 606(b)(3) be made
available using an XML schema and
associated PDF renderer published on
the Commission’s website.254
The Commission received several
comments on the proposed reporting
format,255 with a number of commenters
supporting a machine-readable or
standardized format 256 or XML in
particular,257 and other commenters
criticizing the proposed use of XML and
a PDF renderer and suggesting different
formats such as JavaScript Object
Notation (‘‘JSON’’), comma-separated
values (‘‘CSV’’), spreadsheet, or flat
text.258
The Commission believes that while
XML predates JSON as a standard, XML
has proven to be a flexible standard that
continues to be incorporated into
common desktop applications and is the
basis for a variety of financial reporting
languages in a way that JSON is not.
Moreover, if the Commission did not
specify a particular format and instead
left it to the discretion of the filer, users
of the data would lose their ability to
compare the data easily and easily
ensure their consistency between filers.
XML’s Schema is a widely used, stable
metadata standard which is better suited
for validation than JSON. Validations
help ensure data consistency and
comparability, which enhances overall
data quality for both broker-dealers and
customers. Market participants have the
necessary tools and experience with
analyzing a variety of financial data in
the XML format. The use of XML has
been adopted in a number of recent
Commission rulemakings 259 and the
253 See proposed Rule 606(b)(1). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49448–51 for additional
detail on the Commission’s proposal.
254 See Rule 606(b)(3).
255 See Capital Group Letter at 4; Kohen Letter;
HMA Letter at 12; Better Markets Letter at 2; FIF
Letter at 17; Markit Letter at 17; CFA Letter at 11;
FIA Letter at 2; Thomson Reuters Letter at 2.
256 See, e.g., HMA Letter at 12; Markit Letter at
17.
257 See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; Better
Markets Letter at 2; FIF Letter at 17; FIA Letter at
2.
258 See HMA Letter at 12; Markit Letter at 17;
Kohen Letter.
259 See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
79095, 81 FR 81870 (November 18, 2016) (adopting
Investment Company Reporting Modernization);
74246, 80 FR 14437 (March 19, 2015) (adopting
Security-Based Swap Data Repository Registration,
Duties, and Core Principles); 72982 (September 4,
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Proposal to use an XML format here was
supported by a number of
commenters.260
As for the suggestions to adopt a CSV,
spreadsheet file, or flat-text file format,
the Commission does not believe that
these formats would be as suitable as
XML, since the hierarchical nature of
the disclosures required by the
amendments being adopted today
would require more than a single set of
uniformly structured rows, and these
formats would not support representing
such disclosures easily. Moreover,
neither of those formats can incorporate
robust validations to address issues
such as completeness, required
relationships, and correct formatting. If
used, a CSV, spreadsheet, or flat text file
format would likely have data quality
issues of consistency and comparability
that would make the data less usable
and require repeated corrections by the
broker-dealers. Accordingly, the
Commission is adopting as proposed the
requirement that the customer-specific
order handling report be made available
using an XML schema to be published
on the Commission’s website.
While one commenter criticized the
use of the PDF renderer, that commenter
criticized its use because PDF files
cannot be processed and analyzed.261
The Commission notes, however, that
the rule, as amended, requires that the
data be provided ‘‘using the most recent
versions of the XML schema and the
associated PDF renderer’’ (emphasis
added). The PDF file and underlying
data in an XML format both will be
required. The requirement to use the
Commission’s XML schema is designed
to ensure that the data is provided in an
XML format that is structured and
machine-readable, so that the data can
be more easily processed and analyzed.
As a result, all data that would appear
in a PDF file would be required to have
a corresponding file provided in XML
that has been used to generate the PDF
file using the renderer. The Commission
received no other comments opposing
the Proposal to require that the reports
be provided in a human-readable format
through the use of a PDF renderer, and
one commenter supported requiring a
human-readable format.262 The
Commission continues to believe that
the reports should be provided in a
human-readable format for those
customers that prefer only to review
2014), 79 FR 57183 (September 24, 2014) (adopting
Asset-Backed Securities Disclosure and
Registration).
260 See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; Better
Markets Letter at 2; FIF Letter at 17; CFA Letter at
11.
261 See Kohen Letter.
262 See Markit Letter at 28.
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individual reports and not necessarily
aggregate or conduct large-scale data
analysis on the data. The Commission
believes that by requiring use of the
associated PDF renderer published on
the Commission’s website, the XML
data would be instantly presentable in
a human-readable PDF format and
consistently presented across reports.
Accordingly, the Commission is
adopting as proposed the requirements
that the customer-specific order
handling report be made available using
an XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission’s
website.
One commenter suggested that the
Commission should add headers to rows
and columns in the customer-specific
report that explains what each category
of information means,263 and another
commenter stated that the fields in the
report should be explicitly defined.264
For purposes here, the Commission
assumes that the latter comment
pertains to defining the terms used in
Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv). No
commenters stated that any of the
undefined terms in proposed Rule
606(b)(3)(i) through (iv) were unclear or
inconsistent or would otherwise impede
comparability, and the Commission
believes that adding headers and
definitions may result in unnecessary
confusion and complexity. Accordingly,
the Commission is not adopting
definitional headers for the customerspecific reports and is not adopting
definitions for the terms used in
proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv).
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the chart form for the required
disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(3)(i)
through (iv).265
The Commission also is adopting as
proposed the requirement that the
customer-specific order handling report
required under Rule 606(b)(1) be made
available using an XML schema and
associated PDF renderer published on
the Commission’s website.266 The
Commission believes that providing the
customer-specific Rule 606(b)(1) reports
in the proposed XML/PDF format will
promote the consistency and
comparability of the reports. The
Commission received two comments
specifically questioning the need for
providing such reports in the proposed
XML/PDF format, stating that customers
rarely request these reports, and stating
their view that the cost of implementing
the proposed format would outweigh
263 See
CFA Letter at 10–11.
FIF Letter at 17.
265 See Rule 606(b)(3).
266 See Rule 606(b)(1).
264 See
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the benefits.267 As discussed above, the
Commission is amending the categories
of orders to which the existing
disclosure requirements of Rule
606(b)(1) apply to include orders in
NMS stock that are submitted on a not
held basis and for which the brokerdealer is not required to provide the
customer a report under Rule
606(b)(3).268 The Commission believes
that customers that submit orders on a
not held basis that are not entitled to
receive the disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) may still analyze and compare
the data they receive under Rule
606(b)(1) and engage in informed
discussions with their broker-dealers
about the broker-dealer’s order handling
practices. The use of the XML/PDF
format will enable those customers to
more easily analyze and compare the
individualized data provided.
6. Rule 606(b)(3) Report Content
a. Information on the Customer’s Order
Flow With the Reporting Broker-Dealer
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed that the
Rule 606(b)(3) order handling report
include information on the order flow
sent by the customer to the brokerdealer. Specifically, the Commission
proposed to require disclosure of: (1)
Total number of shares of orders sent to
the broker-dealer by the customer
during the reporting period; (2) total
number of shares executed by the
broker-dealer as principal for its own
account; (3) total number of orders
exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable IOI; and (4) venue or venues
to which orders were exposed by the
broker-dealer through an actionable
IOI.269
ii. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is adopting, with
certain modifications, the requirement
that the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
report include information on the
customer’s not held NMS stock order
flow with the broker-dealer. The
Commission believes that this
information would be useful for
customers to evaluate their not held
order flow with a particular brokerdealer during the reporting period, the
broker-dealer’s methods for achieving
best execution for such order flow, and
the potential for conflicts of interests
and information leakage associated with
267 See Thomson Reuters Letter at 2; FIF Letter at
9, 12.
268 See supra Section III.A.1.b.vi.
269 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49452–54 for additional
detail on the Commission’s proposal.
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such methods. Specifically, the
Commission is adopting as proposed the
requirement that the Rule 606(b)(3)
report disclose the total number of
shares of not held NMS stock orders
sent to the broker-dealer by the
customer during the reporting period, as
well as the requirement that the Rule
606(b)(3) report disclose the total
number of shares executed by the
broker-dealer as principal for its own
account.270 One commenter expressed
support for these requirements.271 The
Commission continues to believe that
the information would be useful to
customers in understanding how much
of their not held order flow was handled
by a particular broker-dealer during the
reporting period, which should help
customers make comparisons across
broker-dealers, as well as how often a
particular broker-dealer trades against
the customers’ not held orders, which is
relevant information to customers
assessing their broker-dealers’
compliance with best execution
obligations and potential conflicts of
interest that their broker-dealers face
when trading as principal.
The Commission also is adopting the
requirement that the Rule 606(b)(3)
report disclose the total number of not
held NMS stock orders exposed by the
broker-dealer through actionable IOIs.
One commenter expressed support for
this requirement.272 The Commission
continues to believe that that identifying
the total number of not held NMS stock
orders exposed by a broker-dealer
though actionable IOIs should give
customers a more complete view of how
their broker-dealers handle their not
held orders and allow them to better
evaluate how their broker-dealer
manages information leakage.
The Commission is adopting, with
modifications discussed below, the
requirement that broker-dealers disclose
the venue(s) to which not held NMS
stock orders were exposed by the
broker-dealer through an actionable IOI.
The Commission continues to believe
that disclosure of the specific venue(s)
to which a broker-dealer exposed such
an order by an actionable IOI would be
useful for the customer to further assess
the extent, if any, of information leakage
of their not held orders and potential
conflicts of interest facing their brokerdealers. Specifically, the Commission
believes that such information will
enable customers to assess whether their
broker-dealers are exposing their not
held orders to select market participants
with which the broker-dealer has
270 See
Rule 606(b)(3).
Markit Letter at 22.
272 See id. at 23.
271 See
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affiliations or business relationships, or
from which the broker-dealer receives
other incentives. In addition, the
Commission believes that disclosure of
this information will provide the
customer with a more complete
understanding of the broker-dealer’s
order handling activities for purposes of
assessing the broker-dealer’s execution
quality generally.
Commenters generally supported
requiring a broker-dealer to identify the
venue(s) that were sent actionable
IOIs.273 One commenter expressed
broad support for requiring a brokerdealer to identify for customers the total
number of orders exposed, and the
venue(s) to which orders were exposed,
through actionable IOIs.274 This
commenter also stated that the venue
information is necessary for an
institution to evaluate the exposure of
its orders through actionable IOIs for
information leakage and conflicts of
interest.275
Some commenters suggested that the
Commission should clarify that the
reference in proposed Rule 606(b)(3) to
the venue(s) to which not held NMS
stock orders were exposed by the
broker-dealer through an actionable IOI
does not include IOIs that a brokerdealer may send to its institutional
customers.276 They stated that including
broker-dealers’ institutional customers
as ‘‘venues’’ under the rule would be
problematic from a competitive
perspective, as broker-dealers would be
required to disclose their customer lists,
and many customers likely would not
want their identities to be disclosed.277
Some of these commenters suggested
that, to effectuate the suggested
clarification, the Commission should
require disclosure of actionable IOI
information only with respect to
actionable IOIs sent to ‘‘market centers’’
as defined in Rule 600(b)(38), which
would not include broker-dealers’
customers.278
The Commission’s reference to
‘‘venues’’ for purposes of Rule 606(b)(3)
is meant to refer to external liquidity
providers to which the broker-dealer
may send actionable IOIs. To provide
the clarity requested by commenters, the
Commission intends in this context for
273 See HMA Letter at 10; NYSE Letter at 1–2;
Markit Letter at 4, 11–12; FIF Letter at 7; Fidelity
Letter at 4; STA Letter II at 3.
274 See NYSE Letter at 1.
275 See id. at 2.
276 See Markit Letter at 4, 11–12; FIF Letter at 7;
Fidelity Letter at 4; STA Letter II at 3.
277 See Market Letter at 12; FIF Letter at 7;
Fidelity Letter at 4; STA Letter II at 3.
278 17 CFR 242.600(b)(38). See FIF Letter at 7; FIF
Addendum at 4 n.7; Fidelity Letter at 4; STA Letter
II at 3.
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58365
these external liquidity providers
generally to include market participants
that operate a business of providing
liquidity by buying and selling
securities for their own account and
seek to profit from the spread between
such trades, and that may reasonably be
assumed by a broker-dealer to be willing
to take the opposite side of a trade in
connection with that business. The
Commission believes that this category
of market participants likely would
include market centers as defined in
Rule 600(b)(38), but may not be limited
to such market centers. For example, as
noted above, for purposes of Rule
606(b)(3), the Commission believes that
the venues referenced by Rule 606(b)(3)
generally would include an external
liquidity provider that trades
proprietarily. Rule 600(b)(38) defines
market centers to include OTC market
makers, among other things. In this
context, an external liquidity provider
that trades proprietarily, and to which a
broker-dealer sends an actionable IOI,
may be an OTC market maker and thus
a market center under Rule 600(b)(38).
But even if such an external liquidity
provider is not an OTC market maker
and does not qualify as a market center
under Rule 600(b)(38), the Commission
generally would consider a venue to be
covered by Rule 606(b)(3) if it operates
a business of providing liquidity by
buying and selling securities for its own
account and seeks to profit from the
spread from such trades, and may
reasonably be assumed by a brokerdealer to be willing to take the opposite
side of a trade in connection with that
business.
The Commission has considered
commenters’ concerns regarding the
potential disclosure of customer
identities if customers to which brokerdealers send actionable IOIs are
‘‘venues’’ under the rule. The
Commission believes that it is
appropriate to protect the
confidentiality of broker-dealer
customer information, which can be
proprietary. At the same time, the
Commission believes that it is important
for a customer to receive detailed,
standardized disclosures from its
broker-dealer that enable the customer
to better evaluate the broker-dealer’s
handling of its not held NMS stock
orders. If a broker-dealer exposes a
customer’s not held NMS stock order to
one or more of its other customers via
an actionable IOI, the customer should
be entitled to that information as it may
inform its assessment of its brokerdealer’s performance in handling its
orders. Accordingly, the Commission is
adopting a modification to Rule
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606(b)(3) that requires broker-dealers to
disclose the fact that actionable IOIs
were sent to other customers, but not
the identity of such customers. The
Commission believes that this approach
strikes an appropriate balance between
protecting the identities of brokerdealers’ customers and sufficient and
meaningful disclosure to customers of
the venues to which broker-dealers
expose their not held NMS stock orders
through actionable IOIs. Thus, in
pertinent part, final Rule 606(b)(3)
requires that the broker-dealer’s
customer-specific order handling report
include the venue(s) to which not held
NMS stock orders were exposed by the
broker-dealer through an actionable IOI
provided that, where applicable, a
broker-dealer must disclose that it
exposed a customer’s order through an
actionable IOI to other customers but
need not disclose the identity of such
customers.279 In other words, where a
broker-dealer exposes a customer’s not
held NMS stock order through an
actionable IOI to a venue that is a
person or entity that may place an order,
such as another of the broker-dealer’s
customers, the broker-dealer’s
disclosure in the Rule 606(b)(3) report
with respect to this exposure may be
aggregated and anonymized, and simply
state that the customer’s order was
exposed to other customers of the
broker-dealer via an actionable IOI.
One commenter suggested that IOIs
should be reported separately from
orders.280 This commenter stated that
the execution quality and routing
characteristics of IOIs are fundamentally
different from normal parent and child
orders, and must be reported separately
for investors to properly analyze how
orders are being handled; otherwise,
according to this commenter, the IOIs
could generate potentially misleading
information.281 Consistent with this
comment and what was proposed,
actionable IOIs are required to be
reported separately under Rule
606(b)(3). Specifically, with respect to
the order flow sent by the customer to
the broker-dealer, Rule 606(b)(3)
requires disclosure of, among other
things: The total number of not held
NMS stock orders exposed by the
broker-dealer through an actionable IOI
and the venue or venues to which such
orders were exposed by the brokerdealer through an actionable IOI. These
are the only disclosures for actionable
IOIs under Rule 606(b)(3), and each
such disclosure must be set forth
separately in the Rule 606(b)(3) report.
Rule 606(b)(3).
HMA Letter at 10.
281 See id.
The other Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
pertain to customers’ not held NMS
stock orders (and any child orders
derived therefrom). They are distinct
from the actionable IOI disclosures, and
they generally should not include
actionable IOIs in the reported
information.
Finally, one commenter stated that
Rule 606 should require disclosure of
routing statistics in response to IOIs
received by smart order routers.282
According to this commenter, many
smart order routers accept IOIs and use
them to make routing decisions, while
few smart order routers send IOIs. This
commenter suggested that the
amendments to Rule 606 should require
disclosure of routing statistics in
response to IOIs received by SORs
including the fill rates on orders sent to
external liquidity providers or other
venues, categorized by the receipt of a
contra-side IOI or not.283
As the commenter acknowledged,
Rule 606(b)(3) focuses on requiring the
disclosure of IOIs sent by routing
broker-dealers on behalf of orders
received from their customers, not of
IOIs received by broker-dealers.284 The
Commission, at this time, intends to
maintain the focus of the rule’s
disclosure requirement for actionable
IOIs on IOIs sent by the broker-dealer.
The required disclosures are intended to
be a baseline from which customers can,
if they so choose, negotiate with their
broker-dealers for further data. The
Commission believes that such a
baseline is provided, with respect to
actionable IOIs, through requiring
disclosure of the actionable IOIs sent by
a broker-dealer on behalf of an order
received from its customer. The
Commission also believes that this
information would provide an adequate
basis for customers to assess the extent,
if any, of information leakage of their
orders and potential conflicts of interest
facing their broker-dealers, as well as
enable such customers to assess whether
their broker-dealers are exposing their
orders to select market participants with
which the broker-dealer has affiliations
or business relationships, or from which
the broker-dealer receives other
incentives. The Commission does not
believe, at this juncture, that also
including disclosures related to IOIs
received by broker-dealers would
provide significantly more useful
information to customers in making
those assessments with respect to their
broker-dealers.
279 See
282 See
280 See
283 See
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id. at 23.
284 See id. at 12.
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Accordingly, Rule 606(b)(3) requires,
with respect to the not held NMS stock
order flow sent by the customer to the
broker-dealer, the total number of shares
of orders sent to the broker-dealer by the
customer during the relevant period; the
total number of shares executed by the
broker-dealer as principal for its own
account; the total number of orders
exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable indication of interest; and the
venue or venues to which orders were
exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable indication of interest,
provided that the identity of such venue
or venues may be anonymized if the
venue is a person or entity that may
place an order with the broker-dealer.285
b. Information For Each Venue to Which
the Broker-Dealer Routed Orders For the
Customer
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed that the
customer-specific order handling report
required under proposed Rule 606(b)(3)
include specific columns of information
for each venue to which the brokerdealer routed orders for the customer, in
the aggregate and broken down by
passive, medium, and aggressive order
routing strategies.286 The proposed rule
identified four categories of such
information: Information on order
routing, information on order execution,
information on orders that provided
liquidity, and information on orders that
removed liquidity.287
Information on Order Routing. With
respect to information on order routing,
the Commission proposed to require,
within each venue and order routing
strategy category, disclosure of: (1) Total
shares routed; (2) total shares routed
marked immediate or cancel; 288 (3) total
shares routed that were further routable;
and (4) average order size routed.289
Information on Order Execution. With
respect to information on order
execution, the Commission proposed to
require disclosure of: (1) Total shares
executed; (2) fill rate; 290 (3) average fill
size; 291 (4) average net execution fee or
285 See
Rule 606(b)(3).
proposed Rule 606(b)(3). As discussed
above, the Commission is not adopting the
proposed order routing strategy categorization. See
supra Section III.A.5.a.
287 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv).
See also Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49453–
58 for additional detail on the Commission’s
proposal.
288 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49453.
289 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i). See also
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49453–54.
290 Fill rate would be calculated by the shares
executed divided by the shares routed.
291 Average fill size would be the average size, by
number of shares, of each order executed on the
venue.
286 See
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rebate; 292 (5) total number of shares
executed at the midpoint; 293 (6)
percentage of shares executed at the
midpoint; (7) total number of shares
executed that were priced on the side of
the spread more favorable to the order;
(8) percentage of total shares executed
that were priced on the side of the
spread more favorable to the order; (9)
total number of shares executed that
were priced on the side of the spread
less favorable to the order; and (10)
percentage of total shares executed that
were priced on the side of the spread
less favorable to the order.294
Information on Orders that Provided
Liquidity. In addition to the order
routing and execution data described
above, the Commission proposed to
require disclosure of information on
orders that provided liquidity.295
Specifically, the Commission proposed
to require disclosure of: (1) Total
number of shares executed of orders
providing liquidity; (2) percentage of
shares executed of orders providing
liquidity; (3) average time between order
entry and execution or cancellation for
orders providing liquidity (in
milliseconds); and (4) the average net
execution rebate or fee for shares of
orders providing liquidity (cents per 100
shares, specified to four decimal
places).296 In connection with this new
proposed requirement, the Commission
proposed to define the term ‘‘orders
providing liquidity’’ to mean ‘‘orders
that were executed against after resting
at a trading center.’’ 297
Information on Orders that Removed
Liquidity. Similar to orders that
provided liquidity, the Commission
proposed to require the disclosure of
information on orders that removed
liquidity.298 Specifically, the
Commission proposed to require
disclosure of: (1) Total number of shares
executed of orders removing liquidity;
(2) percentage of shares executed of
orders removing liquidity; and (3)
average net execution fee or rebate for
shares of orders removing liquidity
(cents per 100 shares, specified to four
decimal places).299 Relatedly, the
292 The fee and rebate would be measured in
cents per 100 shares, specified to four decimal
places.
293 The midpoint would be the price halfway
between the national best bid and national best
offer.
294 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(ii). See also
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49454–55.
295 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(iii).
296 See id. See also Proposing Release, supra note
1, at 49456.
297 See proposed Rule 600(b)(58).
298 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(iv).
299 See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(iv)(A) through
(C). See also Proposing Release, supra note 1, at
49458.
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Commission also proposed to define the
term ‘‘orders removing liquidity’’ as
‘‘orders that executed against resting
trading interest at a trading center.’’ 300
ii. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the requirement that the Rule
606(b)(3) customer-specific order
handling report include specific
columns of information for each venue
to which the broker-dealer routed orders
for the customer,301 and is adopting as
proposed the specific pieces of
information set forth in Rules
606(b)(3)(i) through (iv) that are
required to be included in the
reports.302 Specifically, the Commission
is adopting as proposed the required
data points for information on order
routing specified in Rule 606(b)(3)(i), for
information on order execution
specified in Rule 606(b)(3)(ii), for
information on orders that provided
liquidity specified in Rule 606(b)(3)(iii),
and for information on orders that
removed liquidity specified in Rule
606(b)(iv).303 The Commission also is
adopting as proposed the definitions of
the terms ‘‘orders providing liquidity’’
and ‘‘orders removing liquidity.’’
Commenters broadly supported the
Proposal to require broker-dealers to
provide more detailed order handling
information to their customers upon
request, and expressed varied views on
what specific or additional metrics
would be most useful and should be
included in the report. Some
commenters suggested requiring
additional execution quality-related
metrics in Rule 606(b)(3),304 such as: A
spread capture metric that measures the
execution price relative to the NBBO or
displayed quote,305 information
concerning the realized spread and the
effective spread and quoted spread
300 See
proposed Rule 600(b)(56).
Rule 606(b)(3). As discussed above, the
Commission is making two modifications to the
format of the Rule 606(b)(3). First, the Commission
is not adopting the proposed order routing strategy
categorization. See supra Section III.A.5.a. Second,
the Commission is requiring that the Rule 606(b)(3)
report be divided into two separate sections—one
for directed orders and the other for non-directed
orders. See Section III.A.5.b. The Commission also
is revising the Rule 600(b) definitions of the terms
‘‘directed order’’ and ‘‘non-directed order.’’ See id.;
see also supra Section III.A.1.b.vii.
302 See Rule 606(b)(3).
303 See id.
304 See, e.g., HMA Letter at 4, 11; ICI Letter at 9–
10; Markit Letter at 8–10, 24–26, Appendix A.
305 See, e.g., HMA Letter at 11; ICI Letter at 9;
BlackRock Letter at 2. https://fif.com/images/
Retail_Execution_Quality_Statistics/FIF_Rule_605606_WG_-_Retail_Execution_Quality_Stats_
Wholesaler_Template.pdf).
301 See
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58367
percentages,306 price improvement
statistics,307 average time between order
entry and execution or cancellation for
orders that remove liquidity,308 and
median order size routed and median
fill size.309 Other comments related to
fee and rebate disclosures. Specifically,
some commenters suggested revising the
data points in Rule 606(b)(3) by
requiring an estimate of execution fees
and rebate information.310 One
commenter asserted that the fee and
rebate disclosures in proposed Rule
606(b)(3)(iv) lack actionable data, and
recommended a completely revised
version of the Rule 606(b)(3) report.311
Another commenter, by contrast,
supported disclosure of the net
execution fee or rebate and believed that
broker-dealers have the capability to
track this information.312 Another
commenter suggested that brokerdealers should disclose to institutional
(and retail) customers the nature of
payment for order flow and profitsharing relationships, including
whether or not they pass any of the
rebates or order-flow payments to their
customers, as well as additional
information that the commenter asserted
is designed to help investors understand
the state of the market at the time of
execution and whether the broker-dealer
was using a venue in which there is a
conflict of interest or economic routing
inducement.313 One commenter
believed that the Proposal does not
address the economic pressures or
transaction-based costs incurred by the
broker-dealer prior to receiving the
order, particularly in light of brokerdealer use of order management systems
(‘‘OMSs’’) and fees associated with
OMSs and connectivity, and suggested
306 See, e.g., BlackRock Letter at 2; Markit Letter
at 24.
307 See, e.g., ICI Letter at 9; Markit Letter at 24.
308 See, e.g., FSR Letter at 6; ICI Letter at 10.
309 See Capital Group Letter at 6.
310 See Fidelity Letter at 5; Markit Letter at 16 and
n.37, 25. One of these commenters also sought
clarity as to what fee a broker should use if a broker
executes a trade on its own ATS. See Fidelity Letter
at 5. Rules 606(b)(3(ii) through (iv) requires the
broker-dealer to disclose the average net execution
fees or rebates. Thus, the Commission believes that
a broker generally would need to disclose this
information to the extent relevant to execution of
a trade on its own ATS. If the broker incurs no fee
or rebate for such an execution, then that is what
should be disclosed.
311 See Markit Letter at 8–10, Appendix A.
312 See HMA Letter at 11.
313 See Better Markets Letter at 7–8. This
commenter also stated that, while broker-dealers are
under ‘‘best execution’’ obligations, venues they
route their orders to (which may themselves reroute to other venues) are not subject to the same
obligations, and that the Commission should
harmonize the duties of care. See id. The
Commission notes that harmonization of duties of
best execution and care across venues and brokerdealers is outside the scope of this rulemaking.
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that broker-dealers be required to
disclose such fees to their customers.314
Finally, some commenters suggested
requiring execution venues to provide
standard liquidity indicators to brokerdealers,315 and one commenter broadly
recommended that the Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling disclosures build off the
FIX Trading Community’s FIX
Execution Venue Reporting
Recommended Best Practices in order to
achieve standardization and objectivity
in the disclosures.316
While commenters suggested different
order handling metrics that could be
useful to customers and provide more
in-depth insight into how broker-dealers
handle not held NMS stock orders, the
Commission’s intent in establishing the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures is not to
require broker-dealers to provide every
specific piece of data that may be
available for an order and potentially
valuable to certain customers. Rather,
the Commission’s intent is to provide a
baseline of standardized order handling
information that (subject to two de
minimis exceptions) all customers that
submit not held NMS stock orders to
broker-dealers are entitled to receive
from their broker-dealers and that
customers can use to evaluate their
broker-dealers’ order handling
performance. Rules 606(b)(3)(i) through
(iv) require broker-dealers to provide
detailed information regarding order
routing, order execution, orders that
provided liquidity, and orders that
removed liquidity. Each of those four
categories of information is further
divided into several subcategories of
specific pieces of data that must be
disclosed. The Commission continues to
believe that these data points are
sufficient to provide the Commission’s
intended baseline, standardized set of
information that customers can use to
evaluate how their broker-dealers
314 See Bloomberg Letter at 2–7. This commenter
also contended that the Proposal is predicated on
positions regarding depth of book data and a brokerdealer’s duty of best execution that are odds with
an Initial Decision in a Commission Administrative
Proceeding, and that the Commission should
address the fees charged by exchanges for their
market data products. See id. at 2–3, 7–11. The
Commission separately has issued an order dated
October 16, 2018. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 84432 (October 16, 2018), available at
https://www.sec.gov/litigation/opinions/2018/3484432.pdf.
315 See Fidelity Letter at 5; Thomson Reuters
Letter at 2.
316 See KCG Letter at 6–7; see also EMSAC Rule
606 Recommendations, supra note 16, at 3. As the
KCG Letter acknowledged, however, these FIX
recommended best practices focus on institutional
execution information and not order routing data.
See id. at 7. As such, the Commission does not
believe that they would be an appropriate basis for
the order handling disclosures that are the focus of
the Commission’s amendments to Rule 606(b)(3).
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handle their orders and, in particular,
assess how their broker-dealers comply
with best execution obligations and
manage the potential for information
leakage and conflicts of interest.
The Commission does not believe that
it is necessary for the achievement of
this goal to require, at this time, that the
Rule 606(b)(3) order handling report
include the additional order handling
statistics suggested by commenters.
There is a large spectrum of types of
customers, and commenters suggested a
wide range of order handling statistics.
While certain additional data metrics
may be more useful to certain types of
market participants, the Commission
does not view any particular data
element suggested by commenters as
likely to significantly enhance the
degree to which the Rule 606(b)(3)
report provides a standardized baseline
of order handling information that is
broadly useful to all customers that
submit orders to their broker-dealers.
Moreover, incorporating additional
metrics into the Rule 606(b)(3) report
may increase the complexity of the
report and the associated costs, and the
Commission believes at this time that
such costs and complexity would not be
justified by the expected benefits to
customers in evaluating the order
handling performance of their brokerdealers. As summarized above,
commenters suggested revised or
additional disclosures related to
execution quality and fee/rebate
information.317 While incorporating the
suggested execution quality and fee/
rebate disclosures into the Rule
606(b)(3) reports may add extra utility to
the reports for certain customers, in
adopting Rule 606(b)(3) the Commission
must balance the cost of compliance
against the usefulness of the information
that is required to be disclosed under
the rule. Requiring broker-dealers to
make mandatory disclosures imposes a
cost on broker-dealers, and each
additional required data item
potentially raises that compliance cost,
as well as potentially increases the
complexity of the report. Incorporating
commenters’ suggested disclosures into
the Rule 606(b)(3) reports would,
therefore, likely raise compliance costs
and add to the complexity of the report.
As but one example, requiring the
broker-dealer to disclose the displayed
317 As is also summarized above, some
commenters suggested requiring execution venues
to provide standard liquidity indicators to brokerdealers. See supra note 315. The rule amendments
being adopted today enhance the order handling
information that broker-dealers must provide to
their customers, and do not address standardization
of the information that execution venues provide to
broker-dealers. As such, these comments are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
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quote at the time when the broker-dealer
routed an order to an exchange could
increase reporting complexity and costs
in calculating the displayed quote and
the synchronization of clocks between a
broker-dealer and the venue.
In light of the fact that the
Commission believes that the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures are sufficient to
provide a baseline, standardized set of
information that customers can use to
evaluate how their broker-dealers
handle their orders, the Commission
believes that the compliance costs and
added complexity associated with
commenters’ suggested additional
disclosures would not be justified by the
marginal utility that these disclosures
may add to the report beyond that
which is provided by the disclosures.
Specifically, the additional metrics
related to fees and rebates and economic
incentives suggested by commenters
could provide customers with
additional information on how venue
fees and rebates impact how their
broker-dealers’ handle their orders,
particularly in light of the potential for
conflicts of interest caused by fees and
rebates; however, the Commission
believes that the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures already contain sufficient
fee and rebate information for customers
to adequately evaluate their brokerdealers’ potential conflict of interest.
Thus, any added value in the report
created by the suggested fee and rebate
information would, in the Commission’s
view, not justify the additional
complexity, as well as the additional
costs, associated with including the
information. Likewise, the additional
execution quality metrics suggested by
commenters could provide customers
with more information regarding how
their broker-dealers achieve best
execution and attempt to prevent
information leakage, but the
Commission believes that the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures, as proposed,
already provide a sufficient basis for
customers to evaluate their brokerdealers’ performance in this regard.
Thus, any added value in the report
created by the suggested execution
quality disclosures would not, in the
Commission’s view, be justified by the
additional costs and complexity
associated with including the
information.
The Commission believes that
adopting the Rule 606(b)(3) report
content as proposed will help minimize
the reporting complexity and costs,
while creating a report that is
universally useful across the spectrum
of customer types, some of which may
be more sophisticated than others in
their ability to digest the reported
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information. The Commission did not
receive comments suggesting that the
order handling statistics set forth in
Rule 606(b)(3) as proposed would be too
difficult or complex for broker-dealers
to generate or for institutional customers
in particular to use.
This determination is not an
indication that the Commission has
formed a decision on the validity or
usefulness of the various different order
handling metrics that commenters
suggested. Rather, in light of the fact
that, as noted above, the Commission
believes that Rule 606(b)(3), as
proposed, is reasonably designed to
provide a standardized baseline of order
handling disclosures that (subject to two
de minimis exceptions) all customers
that submit not held NMS stock orders
to their broker-dealers are entitled to
receive, the Commission has determined
to adopt Rule 606(b)(3) as proposed.
As stated elsewhere herein, customers
remain free to negotiate with their
broker-dealers for additional disclosures
regarding broker-dealers’ handling of
their orders, and broker-dealers of
course remain free to compete by
providing more detailed information
than is required under Rule 606(b)(3).
As a result of the rules being adopted
today, customers that choose to
negotiate with their broker-dealers for
additional disclosures will be doing so
from a more standardized baseline of
enhanced order routing disclosures, and
in the case of customers that previously
did not receive detailed order handling
disclosures from their broker-dealers,
from a strengthened and more informed
negotiating position. In light of the
Commission’s belief that the disclosures
required by Rule 606(b)(3), as proposed
and as adopted, are reasonably designed
to provide such a standardized baseline
of order handling information for
customers to use to assess their brokerdealers’ order handling performance,
the Commission believes, at this
juncture, that the disclosure of
additional order handling statistics
would be best left to competitive forces
in the market and should not be
mandated by Commission rule.
Accordingly, the Commission is
adopting as proposed the requirement
that certain order routing information be
disclosed within the proposed venue
segmentation in the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling report. Specifically, Rule
606(b)(3) requires that the order
handling information specified in
subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv) of
the rule be provided for each venue to
which the broker-dealer routed orders
for the customer.318 In addition, Rules
318 See
Rule 606(b)(3).
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606(b)(3)(i) through (iv) specify the
same required information on order
routing, order execution, orders that
provided liquidity, and orders that
removed liquidity as was proposed.
Further, Rule 606(b) is being amended
to define the term ‘‘orders providing
liquidity’’ to mean orders that were
executed against after resting at a
trading center,319 and the term ‘‘orders
removing liquidity’’ to mean orders that
executed against resting trading interest
at a trading center.320 The Commission
received no comments regarding these
defined terms, and is adopting them as
proposed.
7. Rule 606(c) Quarterly Aggregated
Public Report of Rule 606(b)(3)
Information
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to require
a broker-dealer that receives orders
covered by Rule 606(b)(3) to make
publicly available 321 a report that
aggregates the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling information for all such orders
that it receives.322 As proposed, brokerdealers would be required to make the
report publicly available for each
calendar quarter, broken down by
calendar month, within one month after
the end of the quarter.323 The
Commission proposed that this public
aggregated order handling report be
mandatory for all of the orders subject
to Rule 606(b)(3) that a broker-dealer
handles within a calendar quarter
regardless of whether any of its
customers request customer-specific
order handling reports pursuant to Rule
606(b)(3).324
In addition, similar to the customerspecific order handling reports required
under proposed Rule 606(b),325 the
Commission proposed to require that
the public aggregated order handling
report be made available using an XML
schema and associated PDF renderer
published on the Commission’s
website.326 Further, the Commission
proposed to require that broker-dealers
keep such public aggregated order
handling reports posted on a website
that is free and readily accessible to the
public for a period of three years from
319 See
Rule 600(b)(54).
Rule 600(b)(55).
321 ‘‘Make publicly available’’ is defined in Rule
600 of Regulation NMS. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(36).
322 See proposed Rule 606(c).
323 See id.
324 See id.; see also Proposing Release, supra note
1, at 49459.
325 See supra Section III.A.3.
326 See proposed Rule 606(c).
320 See
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58369
the initial date of posting on the
website.327
b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is not adopting
proposed Rule 606(c), and thus the
Commission is not adopting the
proposed requirement that brokerdealers publicly report, on a quarterly
basis, aggregated Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling information. As a result, under
the rule amendments being adopted
today, for not held orders in NMS stock,
broker-dealers are required only to
provide the customer-specific order
handling reports required by Rule
606(b)(3) (or Rule 606(b)(1), as
applicable),328 and there is no public
reporting component of the information
set forth in Rule 606(b)(3).
Multiple commenters stated that
directed orders should be excluded from
the proposed Rule 606(c) public
aggregated reports, or alternatively, that
directed orders should be reported
separately.329 Commenters asserted that
including a customer’s directed orders
in the public aggregated report could
cause the report to be misleading
because routing behavior that was
directed by the customer pursuant to a
directed order would be misrepresented
in the report as routing behavior
determined by the broker-dealer itself
pursuant to its independent routing
logic.330 One commenter stated that
even a directed versus non-directed
order distinction in the public report
would be insufficient because
institutional clients provide instructions
on orders without explicitly directing an
order to a venue, such as by directing
a large portion of their order flow to
high-rebate venues or directing their
brokers to avoid routing to a specific
327 See id. See Proposing Release, supra note 1,
at 49458–59 for additional detail on the
Commission’s proposal.
328 See supra Sections III.A.1.b.iv–v.
329 See SIFMA Letter at 2, 5; FIF Letter at 5;
Fidelity Letter at 6; STA Letter at 5–6; STA Letter
II at 2; EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations, supra
note 16, at 3. One commenter suggested that orders
from individuals should be reported separately in
the quarterly public reports under proposed Rule
606(c), but that suggestion was premised on the
commenter’s view that the proposal to define
‘‘institutional order’’ based on dollar amount would
result in large orders from retail customers being
considered institutional orders. See ICI Letter at 10.
Similarly, another commenter stated that the
quarterly public reports under proposed Rule 606(c)
should exclude retail block-sized orders. See
Fidelity Letter at 6. As discussed above, the
Commission is adopting Rule 606(b) disclosure
requirements based on whether an order is held or
not held and is not adopting proposed Rule 606(c).
As a result, retail block-sized orders will not be
included in quarterly public reports unless these
orders are subject to Rule 606(a)(1).
330 See SIFMA Letter at 5; FIF Letter at 5; Fidelity
Letter at 6; ICI Letter at 3.
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venue or type of venue, and instead the
commenter suggested a more nuanced
distinction in the report between orders
that solely reflect the broker-dealer’s
routing decisions and orders that are
subject to specific client routing
instructions.331 One commenter stated
that the proposed Rule 606(c) aggregated
order handling report would not serve
its intended use and that a modified
version should be available only to
institutional customers upon request.332
This commenter expressed concern that
the public aggregated report would be
easy for market analysts to misinterpret,
creating confusion in the market, and
that it could present potential
competitive concerns for broker-dealers,
such as with respect to the
confidentiality of their business
operations and book of business.333
Some commenters believed that public
disclosure of aggregated order handling
information could be useful to market
participants.334
In light of the comments submitted
and after further consideration, the
Commission is not adopting Rule 606(c)
or any requirement that a broker-dealer
make publicly available an aggregated
report with respect to its handling of
customers’ not held NMS stock
orders.335 The Commission believes,
upon further consideration, that the
proposed quarterly public reports of
aggregated Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling information would be of
limited utility. As discussed in greater
detail below, the Commission believes
that the proposed reports would not
allow for fair ‘‘apples-to-apples’’
comparisons, and instead could
generate misleading impressions of
broker-dealer order handling practices.
As a result, the aggregated Rule
606(b)(3) information in the proposed
public report may not allow for
meaningful insight into the quality of
broker-dealers’ order routing
performance or comparisons of order
handling performance across brokerdealers, and is unlikely to provide the
same benefits as the aggregated Rule
606(a) public disclosures for held orders
in NMS stock because of the disparate
nature and trading behavior of
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331 See
SIFMA Letter at 5.
Fidelity Letter at 6.
333 See Fidelity Letter at 6 and n.14.
334 See HMA Letter at 4; CFA Letter at 9; Markit
Letter at 27; Better Markets Letter at 3–6.
335 The Commission also received comment that
provided suggestions and modifications to
proposed Rule 606(c), which the Commission is not
adopting. See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4–5;
Fidelity Letter at 6; Citadel Letter at 1; FIF Letter
at 13; Markit Letter at 27, 29.
332 See
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customers that use not held orders in
NMS stock.336
As noted above, broker-dealers may
have different types of customers that
utilize not held orders in NMS stock.
For example, one broker-dealer may
serve as a broker-dealer for only
quantitative trading firms, while another
broker-dealer may serve only
investment advisers. Each customer has
a unique set of circumstances, goals,
and order flow that dictates how a
broker-dealer handles that customer’s
orders. For example, the trading
objectives of a quantitative firm
primarily trading principally are
different from the trading objectives of
another type of customer, such as a
diversified mutual fund. In light of this,
the Commission believes that there
would be limited ability to understand
the quality of broker-dealers’ routing
performance or meaningfully compare
broker-dealer order handling
performance based on the aggregated
information for not held NMS stock
orders in the proposed public reports
without requiring additional disclosures
regarding customers and potentially
sensitive proprietary information.
Indeed, broker-dealers’ order routing
behavior differs based on the customers
they serve, and understanding the
quality of their routing performance
would likely require an understanding
of the investment or trading needs of
their underlying customers, which
would not be obtainable from the
aggregated information in the public
reports. Moreover, some customers give
complete discretion to a broker-dealer in
handling their orders while other
customers may place limits on or
provide instructions regarding how a
broker-dealer can handle their orders. In
fact, orders from certain customers
frequently limit broker-dealer discretion
in some manner. For example, costsensitive customers may place
restrictions on the venues a brokerdealer may use to execute their orders,
which could have a significant impact
on how the broker-dealer routes those
orders and the resulting execution
metrics. In particular, some customers
choose cost-plus fee arrangements and
specify a desire to maximize rebates or
low pricing venues to the extent
practicable. Or, customers may instruct
broker-dealers to use certain algorithms
or strategies that preference certain
routing options or behavior. A taking
algorithm acts differently than a posting
336 For similar reasons, the Commission is not
requiring broker-dealers to disclose additional
information or a more detailed order handling
report as part of regular public reporting as was
suggested by some commenters. See, e.g., Better
Markets Letter at 3–6.
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algorithm, and there may also be routing
strategies or configurations available
with both taking and posting algorithms.
Further, the Commission believes based
on its experience that quantitative firms,
for example, represent a large segment
of the institutional marketplace and a
significant portion of them use largely
passive trading strategies, which can
result in a demand for advantageous
pricing arrangements, including costplus arrangements with their brokerdealers. This, in turn, can result in
selecting rebate maximization strategies.
Such strategies are often meaningfully
different than the posting strategies used
by long-only mutual funds, for example.
The Commission believes based on its
experience that aggregating the order
handling information of cost-sensitive
customers or customers that have
specified certain algorithms or trading
strategies for the broker-dealer to utilize
with customers that have given the
broker-dealer complete routing
discretion creates dilutive effects in the
aggregated information that wash out
the routing nuances that are relevant to
each type of customer and important to
understanding a broker-dealer’s routing
decisions when granted full discretion.
The proposed aggregated public
disclosures for not held NMS stock
orders could therefore be unclear, and
potentially misleading, due to the
nature or requests of a broker-dealer’s
specific customers. A report may reflect
apparently substandard order handling
practices even though the broker-dealer
is performing competently or is
satisfying specific customer requests.
Even a customer interested in
comparing the performance of its
specific orders to other orders handled
by its own broker-dealer would likely be
unable to meaningfully analyze the
aggregate order handling report because
the customer likely would not know the
nature of, practices and requests of the
broker-dealer’s other customers. Due to
the limited utility of the public reports
as proposed, the Commission further
believes that the burden of compiling
and publishing aggregate order handling
information for not held NMS stock
orders does not at this time justify the
expected benefits.
In addition, the Commission
recognizes that broker-dealers have
proprietary methods for order handling,
and is cognizant of the sensitive nature
of such business practices and
intellectual property. The Commission
believes that quarterly public
disclosures as proposed may risk the
exposure of sensitive proprietary
information on the broker-dealers’ order
handling techniques. The Commission
noted in the Proposing Release that it
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believed that any such risk would be
minimal, but in combination with the
potentially limited utility of the public
reports as proposed, the Commission
believes it is not appropriate to impose
any such risk, no matter how small. In
addition, the risk may be more
pronounced for certain segments of
customers than it is for others. In
particular, new or small broker-dealers
with only a few customers may end up
disclosing confidential order routing
information if such information is
required to be included in public
reports. This could significantly
disadvantage new or small brokerdealers.
Furthermore, the Commission
believes that not held order handling is
not analogous to held order handling
and that the benefits that accrue from
the public disclosure of aggregated held
order handling reports are not likely to
accrue from the public disclosure of
aggregated not held order handling
reports. Currently, Rule 606(a) requires
public aggregated reporting of certain
order handling information.337 As noted
in the Proposing Release, some market
participants have stated that the public
disclosure of meaningful data in Rule
606 reports can assist broker-dealers in
evaluating their own performance
relative to other firms.338 The
Commission also has previously noted
its belief that these public aggregated
disclosures spur competition among
broker-dealers to provide enhanced
order routing services and better
execution quality.339
The Commission does not believe the
same benefits would accrue to
customers that utilize not held orders
due to the fundamental differences
between held order flow and not held
order flow. Held orders are typically
non-directed orders with no specific
order handling instructions for the
broker-dealer. Moreover, held order
flow generally is handled similarly by
broker-dealers—held orders are
generally small orders that are
internalized or sent to OTC market
makers if marketable or fully executed
on a single trading center if not
marketable.340 By contrast, not held
order flow is diverse and fundamentally
different from held order flow in that
customers may provide specific order
handling instructions to their broker337 See
Rule 606(a).
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49461.
339 See id.
340 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49460.
Internalization is the process in which a brokerdealer fills an order to buy a security from its own
inventory, or fills an order to sell by taking a
security into its inventory. See Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49439 n. 64.
338 See
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dealers or limit the order handling
discretion of their broker-dealers in
some manner. As discussed above,
broker-dealers’ handling of customer not
held orders is impacted by specific
customer needs such as cost sensitivity,
the preferencing or disfavoring of
specific market venues, or other
requests that limit broker-dealer
discretion. The disparate behavior of
customers when using not held orders
limits the ability of both customers and
broker-dealers to utilize the aggregated
Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
information in the public reports to
better understand broker-dealers’
routing behavior or perform meaningful
comparisons of order routing
performance across broker-dealers.
B. Public Order Routing Report Under
Rule 606(a)
Prior to today, Rule 606(a) required,
among other things, that broker-dealers
that route customer orders—which do
not include orders for NMS stock above
$200,000 in market value or orders for
options contracts above $50,000 in
value 341—provide a quarterly public
report of certain information regarding
non-directed orders in NMS securities
that is organized by listing market and
that sets forth material aspects of their
relationships with the ten venues to
which they routed the largest number of
total non-directed orders and with any
venue to which they routed 5% or more
of such orders (collectively, ‘‘Specified
Venues’’).342 In the Commission’s view,
customers have benefited from the Rule
606(a) reporting requirements for
customer orders, as the Rule 606(a)
reports spurred competition among
broker-dealers to provide enhanced
order routing services and better
execution quality, which in turn
motivated trading centers to deliver
more efficient and innovative execution
services as they competed for order
flow.
But as noted above and detailed in the
Proposing Release, changes to market
structure and order routing practices
have led the Commission to analyze the
current requirements for public order
routing disclosure under Rule 606(a).343
The U.S. equity markets have evolved in
recent years to become more automated,
dispersed, and complex, and the
resulting competition among trading
centers has intensified practices to
attract order flow, including order flow
from retail customers. As a result of this
market evolution, the utility of the Rule
341 See
Rule 600(b)(18).
342 See Rule 606(a).
343 See supra Section I; see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49461.
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58371
606(a) public reports and the degree to
which they help achieve the rule’s
intended benefits may be diminished. It
is, therefore, important for the
Commission to enhance the Rule 606(a)
public order handling reports in a
manner designed to update them
consistent with market developments.
Accordingly, the Commission believes
that it is appropriate to make limited
updates to the Rule 606(a) requirements
regarding broker-dealers’ public
disclosure of their order routing
practices, and in conjunction with Rule
606(b)(3)’s applicability to NMS stock
orders of any size that are submitted on
a not held basis, amend Rule 606(a)
such that it applies to NMS stock orders
of any size that are submitted on a held
basis. Commenters were broadly
supportive of enhanced Rule 606(a)
order routing disclosures.344 The
Commission believes that the
amendments being adopted today to
Rule 606(a), discussed in detail below,
should enhance broker-dealers’ public
order handling disclosures by bringing
them more up-to-date with current
market and order routing practices, and
by focusing them on the types of NMS
stock orders for which the public
disclosures are most relevant and would
be most useful. As a result, customers—
and retail investors in particular—that
submit orders to their broker-dealers
should be better able to assess the
quality of order handling services
provided by their broker-dealers and
whether their broker-dealers are
effectively managing potential conflicts
of interest.
1. Orders Covered By Rule 606(a) Public
Disclosures
a. Proposal
As discussed above,345 the proposed
definition of ‘‘institutional order’’
dovetailed with the current definition of
‘‘customer order.’’ This would allow the
Commission to maintain Rule
606(a)(1)’s applicability to orders in
NMS stocks with a market value less
than $200,000 and NMS securities that
are options contracts, and propose
enhancements to the existing disclosure
requirements under Rule 606(a)(1) for
such orders, without altering the
substance of the current definition of
‘‘customer order’’ in Rule 600(b).
However, the Commission proposed to
rename the current ‘‘customer order’’
definition as ‘‘retail order’’ without
changing the substance of the definition
344 See, e.g., KCG Letter at 1–3; Ameritrade Letter
at 3; SIFMA Letter at 1; Better Markets Letter at 1,
8–9; HMA Letter at 3; FSR Letter at 1; Citadel Letter
at 1; and CFA Letter at 1.
345 See supra Sections III.A.1.a.
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itself, such that an order for NMS stock
would be categorized as either an
‘‘institutional order’’ or a ‘‘retail order’’
under Rule 600(b) and for the purposes
of Rule 606 depending on its dollar
value, and an order for an NMS security
that is an option contract for less than
$50,000 in market value would be
categorized as a ‘‘retail order.’’ 346
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b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
As discussed above,347 the
Commission is not adopting a definition
of ‘‘institutional order’’ or an order
dollar value-based approach to delineate
the NMS stock orders covered by new
Rule 606(b)(3). Consequently, the
Commission is not renaming the term
‘‘customer order’’ as ‘‘retail order’’ in
Rule 600(b), and the Commission is
amending Rule 606(a)(1) without any
order dollar value limitation on the
rule’s coverage of NMS stock orders.348
As amended, Rule 606(a)(1) applies to
NMS stock orders of any size that are
submitted on a held basis. Rule
606(a)(1) also continues to apply to any
order (whether held or not held) for an
NMS security that is an option contract
with a market value less than $50,000,
as the Commission did not propose, and
is not adopting, any modifications to
Rule 606’s coverage of option orders.349
Specifically, Rule 606(a)(1), as
amended, states that every broker-dealer
must make publicly available for each
calendar quarter a report on its routing
of non-directed orders in NMS stocks
that are submitted on a held basis and
in non-directed orders that are customer
orders in NMS securities that are option
contracts during that quarter broker
down by calendar month. As noted
above,350 the Commission is adopting a
modified definition of the term ‘‘nondirected order’’ that no longer includes
a dollar-value limitation on NMS stock
orders,351 but continues to exclude
orders from a broker-dealer. Because
Rule 606(a)(1) explicitly references
‘‘non-directed orders’’ in NMS stock, the
346 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49434,
49465–66 for additional detail on the Commission’s
proposal.
347 See supra Section III.A.1.b.
348 Moreover, in light of the fact that the
Commission is not adopting the proposed
amendment to rename ‘‘customer order’’ as ‘‘retail
order’’ in Rule 600(b), and instead is maintaining
‘‘customer order’’ as currently defined, there is no
longer any need, as proposed, to revise existing
cross-references to ‘‘customer order’’ in Rules
600(b)(19), 600(b)(23), 600(b)(48), 605, 606, and
607. See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49466.
349 See supra notes 37 and 135.
350 See supra Section III.A.1.b.vii.
351 Consistent with the modifications discussed in
Section III.A.1.b.vii, supra, Rule 606(a)(1)(i) also is
revised to no longer refer to the defined term
‘‘customer order.’’
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rule no longer covers only NMS stock
orders with a market value less than
$200,000; rather, the rule now applies to
NMS stock orders of any size that are
submitted on a held basis. With respect
to orders for NMS securities that are
option contracts, however, Rule
606(a)(1) explicitly references ‘‘nondirected orders’’ that are ‘‘customer
orders.’’ By virtue of this reference to
‘‘customer orders,’’ Rule 606(a)(1)
continues to apply to an order for an
NMS security that is an option contract
only if the order has a market value less
than $50,000. In both cases—held orders
for NMS stock and orders for NMS
securities that are option contracts—
Rule 606(a)(1) applies only if the order
is not from a broker-dealer.
Rule 606(a)(1)’s application to held
NMS stock orders of any size works in
unison with the customer-specific
disclosures contained in Rule 606(b)(1)
and Rule 606(b)(3) to ensure that all
NMS stock orders are covered by order
handling disclosure rules and to avoid
overlap between such rules.352 If Rule
606(a)(1)’s coverage were not amended
in conjunction with Rules 606(b)(1) and
(3), there would be overlap between the
these rules—e.g., Rule 606(a)(1) would
apply to NMS stock orders of less than
$200,000 in market value, and Rule
606(b)(3) also would apply to such
orders to the extent that they were not
held. As discussed above, numerous
commenters criticized the proposed
order dollar value-based distinction
between the orders covered by Rule
606(a)(1) versus Rule 606(b)(3), and the
Commission believes that it would be
more appropriate to differentiate the
NMS stock orders covered by each rule
according to whether an order is held or
not held.
For the same reasons as discussed
above,353 the Commission believes that
this method of differentiation is
appropriate because broker-dealers
generally handle not held orders
differently from held orders due to the
discretion they are afforded with not
held orders but not with held orders. As
a result, the information pertinent to
understanding broker-dealers’ order
handling practices for not held orders is
not the same as for held orders. Unlike
with not held orders, the Commission’s
concern regarding how broker-dealers
handle held orders is less about the
difficulties posed by more automated,
dispersed and complex order routing
and execution practices. Rather, the
Commission’s main concern with held
NMS stock orders is the impact of
intensified competition for customer
352 See
353 See
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id.
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order flow—particularly retail investor
order flow—that has arisen concomitant
with the rise in the number of trading
centers and the introduction of new fee
models for execution services.354
Financial inducements to attract order
flow from broker-dealers that handle
retail investor orders have become more
prevalent and for some broker-dealers
such inducements may be a significant
source of revenue.355 These financial
inducements create new, and in many
cases significant, potential conflicts of
interest for broker-dealers with respect
to how they handle held orders from
customers—and retail customers in
particular. The Commission believes
that enhanced public disclosures should
focus on providing more detailed
information regarding these financial
inducements, as opposed to the
different information geared towards not
held orders from customers that is set
forth in Rule 606(b)(3).
In practice, the coverage of Rule
606(a)(1) as amended is likely to be
largely similar to the rule’s coverage
under its pre-existing application to
NMS stock orders of less than $200,000
in market value. The Commission
expects that the majority of customer
(i.e., non-broker-dealer) NMS stock
orders having a market value of at least
$200,000 will be not held orders and
therefore not be covered under Rule
606(a)(1).356 Retail investors’ orders are
typically submitted on a held basis and
are typically smaller in size.357 So the
smaller NMS stock orders that were
covered by the pre-existing rule likely
also were held orders and therefore will
be covered by Rule 606(a)(1) as
amended. The difference is that, under
the rule as amended, any non-brokerdealer NMS stock orders that are for at
least $200,000 in value and submitted
on a held basis will now be covered by
Rule 606(a)(1) and thus subject to public
aggregated required order routing
disclosures for the first time.
Under the Proposal, a non-brokerdealer NMS stock order with a market
value of at least $200,000 would have
been defined as an institutional order—
regardless of whether it was a held or
354 See supra Section I; see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49434.
355 See id.
356 See supra Section III.A.1.b.vi (citing Eric
Kelley and Paul Tetlock, How Wise Are Crowds?
Insights from Retail Orders and Stock Returns, 68
Journal of Finance 1229–1265 (2013) and Brad M.
Barber and Terrence Odean, Trading Is Hazardous
to Your Wealth: The Common Stock Investment
Performance of Individual Investors, 55 Journal of
Finance 773 (2000)).
357 Accordingly, the Commission believes that the
number of higher value held orders for NMS stock
that will be included in the Rule 606(a)(1) public
reporting regime will be limited.
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not held order—and subject to the new
customer-specific disclosures set forth
in proposed Rule 606(b)(3) and the new
public aggregated order handling report
set forth in proposed Rule 606(c). The
adopted approach to NMS stock order
handling disclosure is based on whether
an NMS stock order is submitted on a
held or not held basis. In addition to
being appropriate for non-broker-dealer
NMS stock held orders with a market
value of less than $200,000, the
Commission believes that the Rule
606(a)(1) public disclosures are
appropriate for non-broker-dealer NMS
stock held orders with a market value of
$200,000 or more because, regardless of
the order’s dollar value or the nature of
the customer that submitted the order,
broker-dealers must attempt to execute
held orders immediately. Thus, the
Commission’s concerns noted above for
held NMS stock orders are implicated
regardless of the order’s dollar value or
the nature of the customer that
submitted the order. The Rule 606(a)(1)
public disclosures are designed to
address these concerns in particular by
focusing on providing enhanced
transparency for financial inducements
faced by broker-dealers when
determining where to route held NMS
stock order flow. Moreover, to the extent
that it is a retail customer that submits
a larger held NMS stock order for
$200,000 or more, commenters appeared
to agree that such orders would be
appropriately covered by Rule
606(a)(1).358 The Commission believes
that this enhancement over the current
reporting regime will benefit customers
that submit held NMS stock orders,
including large-sized ones. They will be
better able to assess the nature and
quality of the order handling services
being provided by their broker-dealers,
including the potential for broker-dealer
conflicts of interest. They will also
benefit to the extent that broker-dealers
are spurred to compete further by
providing enhanced order routing
services and better execution quality,
which in turn could motivate trading
centers to deliver more efficient and
innovative execution services as they
compete for order flow.
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2. Marketable Limit Orders and NonMarketable Limit Orders
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to amend
Rule 606(a)(1)(i) and (ii) to require the
public order routing report to split limit
orders and separately disclose them as
358 See, e.g., Fidelity Letter at 2–3; Wells Fargo
Letter at 5; KCG Letter at 4; Thomson Reuters Letter
at 1; FSR Letter at 3–4; Citadel Letter at 2–3;
Ameritrade Letter at 2.
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marketable and non-marketable.359 In
connection with this new requirement,
the Commission also proposed to amend
Rule 600(b) of Regulation NMS to
include a definition of the term ‘‘nonmarketable limit order,’’ which the
Commission proposed to define to mean
any limit order other than a marketable
limit order.360
b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the amendments to Rule
606(a)(1)(i) and (ii) to require the
disclosure of order routing information
for marketable limit orders separately
from non-marketable limit orders.361
The Commission also is adopting as
proposed the definition of the term
‘‘non-marketable limit order’’ to mean
any limit order other than a marketable
limit order.362 While one commenter
believed that the separation is unlikely
to be valuable to retail customers and
that the separation will not promote
additional competition amongst brokerdealers,363 most commenters who
addressed this issue supported
distinguishing between non-marketable
and marketable limit orders in the Rule
606(a) disclosures and believed that this
separation would provide customers
with valuable and more useful
information.364
As noted in the Proposing Release,365
historically, trading centers have offered
payment for order flow or other
financial inducements to broker-dealers
based upon whether their order flow is
marketable or non-marketable. As a
result, whether an order is marketable or
non-marketable will often determine
where the broker-dealer routes the
order. Certain broker-dealers route a
large portion of marketable investor
orders to OTC market makers with
whom they have payment for order flow
or other arrangements.366 Nonmarketable investor orders, on the other
hand, are more frequently routed to
exchanges with a ‘‘maker-taker’’ fee
schedule, to capture a rebate when the
non-marketable order is executed.367
359 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49462.
proposed Rule 600(b)(51). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49462 for additional detail
on the Commission’s proposal.
361 See Rule 606(a)(1)(i)–(ii). As noted above, the
Commission also has revised Rule 606(a)(1)(i) to
remove the reference to the term ‘‘customer order.’’
See supra note 351.
362 See Rule 600(b)(50).
363 See FIF Letter at 9.
364 See, e.g., EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations,
supra note 16, at 3; CFA Letter at 4–5, 9; Fidelity
Letter at 8–9; Ameritrade Letter at 3.
365 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49440.
366 See id.
367 See id.
360 See
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58373
In light of the different incentives
broker-dealers encounter when handling
marketable limit orders versus nonmarketable limit orders, and the
resulting differences in how and where
broker-dealers route marketable limit
orders versus non-marketable limit
orders, the Commission believes that
requiring that the Rule 606(a) reports
disclose order routing information
separately for marketable limit orders
and non-marketable limit orders will
significantly enhance their utility. The
Commission continues to believe that
classifying limit orders into marketable
and non-marketable categories will
provide greater transparency into
broker-dealers’ different routing
practices for these two categories of
limit orders, which will allow
customers and other market participants
to more fully assess broker-dealers’
routing decisions for each type of order
and the potential impact on execution
quality, including whether brokerdealers are effectively managing their
potential conflicts of interest. Providing
greater public transparency as to brokerdealers’ distinct routing practices for
marketable limit orders and nonmarketable limit orders also may
increase competition among brokerdealers and minimize the potential
conflicts of interest between maximizing
revenue and the duty of best
execution.368
3. Payment for Order Flow
Disclosures—Rules 606(a)(1)(iii) and (iv)
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to amend
Rule 606(a)(1) to require more detailed
disclosures regarding a broker-dealer’s
relationships with the venues to which
it routes orders.369 Specifically, the
Commission proposed to amend Rule
606(a)(1) to include in a new Rule
606(a)(1)(iii) a requirement that, for each
Specified Venue, the broker-dealer must
report the net aggregate amount of any
payment for order flow received,
payment from any profit-sharing
relationship received, transaction fees
paid, and transaction rebates received,
both as a total dollar amount and on a
per share basis, for each of the following
non-directed order types: (1) Market
orders; (2) marketable limit orders; (3)
368 See Transaction Fee Pilot Proposing Release,
supra note 2, at 13310; see also Robert Battalio,
Shane A. Corwin, and Robert Jennings, Can Brokers
Have it All? On the Relation between Make-Take
Fees and Limit Order Execution Quality, 71 Journal
of Finance 2193, 2195 (2016) (‘‘Battalio, Corwin,
and Jennings Paper’’) (finding that fill rates for
displayed limit orders are lower on exchanges with
higher take fees).
369 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49463.
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non-marketable limit orders; and (4)
other orders.370
The Commission also proposed to
amend the existing payment for order
flow disclosures and re-locate them to
new Rule 606(a)(1)(iv), which would
require that the discussion of the
material aspects of the broker-dealer’s
relationship with a Specified Venue
include any terms, written or oral, of
payment for order flow arrangements or
profit-sharing relationships that may
influence a broker-dealer’s order routing
decision including among other things:
(1) Incentives for equaling or exceeding
an agreed upon order flow volume
threshold, such as additional payments
or a higher rate of payment; (2)
disincentives for failing to meet an
agreed upon minimum order flow
threshold, such as lower payments or
the requirement to pay a fee; (3) volumebased tiered payment schedules; and (4)
agreements regarding the minimum
amount of order flow that the brokerdealer would send to a venue.371
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b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
i. Rule 606(a)(1)(iii)
The Commission is adopting Rule
606(a)(1)(iii) as proposed, and therefore
is requiring that, for each Specified
Venue, the broker-dealer report the net
aggregate amount of any payment for
order flow received, payment from any
profit-sharing relationship received,
transaction fees paid, and transaction
rebates received, both as a total dollar
amount and on a per share basis, for
each of the following non-directed order
types: (1) Market orders; (2) marketable
limit orders; (3) non-marketable limit
orders; and (4) other orders.372 Since
these requirements are part of Rule
606(a)(1), they apply to a non-directed
NMS stock order of any size that is
submitted on a held basis as well as a
non-directed order (whether held or not
held) for an NMS security that is an
option contract with a market value less
than $50,000.373 The Commission
continues to believe that identifying
specific information regarding payments
or rebates received by the broker-dealer
and fees paid by the broker-dealer for
each category of order type by Specified
Venue will provide customers and
investors broadly with useful
information to more completely
evaluate the order handling services
370 See
proposed Rule 606(a)(1)(iii).
proposed Rule 606(a)(1)(iv). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49462–63 for additional
detail on the Commission’s proposal.
372 See Rule 606(a)(1)(iii).
373 See Rule 606(a)(1); see also supra Section
III.B.1.b.
371 See
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provided by broker-dealers. Specifically,
the Commission continues to believe
that disclosure of the information
required by Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) will allow
customers to better understand a brokerdealer’s management of conflicts of
interest when routing orders to a
particular Specified Venue.
One commenter supported requiring
the disclosure of the net aggregate
amount of any payment for order flow
or rebates received from or transaction
fees paid to each venue based on order
type on a dollar amount and per share
basis.374 Two other commenters stated
that an aggregate measure would not be
meaningful and would vary based on
the amount of order flow handled by the
broker.375 One of these commenters
suggested that a combination of average
payment for order flow with a
description of the terms of any payment
for order flow and any profit sharing
arrangements would be more
meaningful,376 and the other commenter
argued that a more meaningful
disclosure is the amount of payment
received on a per share/contract
basis.377
The Commission agrees with
commenters that the disclosure of
payment for order flow on a per share
basis will provide meaningful
information to customers regarding the
importance of a specific venue to their
broker-dealer. The disclosure of the
aggregate amount of payment for order
flow to a broker-dealer from a specific
venue will give customers an even
greater understanding of the overall
importance of a specific venue to their
broker-dealer. The additional cost to a
broker of providing this payment for
order flow information in aggregate
form, if that broker-dealer is already
providing this information on a per
share basis, will be minimal. The
Commission believes that an aggregate
measure of a broker-dealer’s financial
arrangements with Specified Venues
will provide additional information to
investors and customers regarding the
incentives and disincentives
underpinning a broker-dealer’s routing
strategy for customer orders. In turn,
this should help give investors and
customers a more complete
understanding and comprehensive view
374 See
CFA Letter at 9.
Schwab Letter at 2; Ameritrade Letter at
3–4. One of these commenters noted that the
Commission previously considered and rejected
imposing a requirement for brokers to disclose the
aggregate amount of payment for order flow from
each venue. See Ameritrade Letter at 3–4 (citing
Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting Release, supra note
7, at 75427).
376 See Schwab Letter at 2.
377 See Ameritrade Letter at 3–4.
375 See
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of the potential conflicts of interest
faced by a broker-dealer when routing
orders and how the broker-dealer
manages those conflicts. The aggregate
measure will, by its nature, vary with
the amount of the order flow handled by
the broker-dealer, but the Commission
does not believe that this renders the
measure meaningless. To the contrary,
an aggregate measure will provide
customers and investors with
transparency beyond that available prior
to these amendments regarding the
volume of orders that a broker-dealer
handles subject to payment for order
flow, profit sharing, or other
arrangements. This could be useful
information to investors and customers
trying to assess what size or type of
broker-dealer would best suit their
investment needs and goals.
Moreover, the Commission adopted
Predecessor Rule 606 primarily to
address the serious problems that can
arise from market fragmentation.378 As
noted above,379 since Predecessor Rule
606 was adopted in 2000, the equity
markets have become significantly more
fragmented, dispersed, and complex,
particularly in light of the onset of
electronic, automated trading. In
addition, financial inducements to
attract order flow from broker-dealers
that handle retail investor orders have
become more prevalent and for some
broker-dealers such inducements may
be a significant source of revenue.380
The Commission understands that most
broker-dealers that handle a significant
amount of retail investor orders receive
payment for order flow in connection
with the routing of such orders or are
affiliated with an OTC market maker
that executes the orders.381 Thus, while
one commenter pointed out that the
Commission declined to require an
aggregate measure of a broker-dealer’s
payment for order flow in Predecessor
Rule 606(a)(1),382 the Commission
believes that the market landscape has
changed significantly since the adoption
of Predecessor Rule 606 such that an
aggregate measure is now warranted.
With increased market fragmentation
and pervasive payment for order flow
and other financial arrangements
between broker-dealers and execution
venues, the Commission believes that its
prior concerns expressed in the Rule
606 Predecessor Adopting Release about
requiring an aggregate measure—
378 See Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting Release,
supra note 7, at 75415.
379 See supra Section I; see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49436.
380 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49441.
381 See id.
382 See supra note 375.
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namely, potential difficulty, subjectivity
and costliness in generating the measure
due to variance in payment for order
flow arrangements, and a potentially
inaccurate portrayal of the relative
financial incentives created by payment
for order flow arrangements versus
profit sharing arrangements 383—today
are outweighed by the need to provide
investors and customers with a more
complete understanding of the degree to
which broker-dealers are bound to such
arrangements.
Additional commenters suggested
other changes or limitations to proposed
Rule 606(a)(1)(iii).384 Specifically, one
commenter suggested removing fee and
payment information from Rule
606(a)(1)(iii) and instead providing it in
a narrative section of the report, which
would include the net fees paid and net
payments received in cents per share for
each execution destination.385 One
commenter suggested a more ‘‘general
disclosure’’ that is more easily digestible
around net payment for order flow, as
the commenter did not believe that the
proposed disclosures would contribute
favorably to transparency for retail
customers due to the voluminous
amounts of information that they would
produce according to the commenter.386
Another commenter suggested that
payment for order flow be characterized
as ‘‘negotiated volume tiers,’’ ‘‘standard
volume tiers,’’ and ‘‘value based’’ to
represent arrangements that are
negotiated with the venue that reflect
the perceived value of the order flow to
that venue.387
As noted above, prior to today’s rule
amendments, Rule 606(a)(1) required a
broker-dealer to provide a discussion of
the material aspects of its relationship
with a Specified Venue, including a
description of any arrangement for
payment for order flow or any profitsharing relationship. The Commission
believes that the disclosures set forth in
Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) as adopted are
reasonably designed to provide an
additional level of quantification and
detail regarding a broker-dealer’s
relationship with Specified Venues that
383 See Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting Release,
supra note 7, at 75427.
384 See, e.g., FIF Letter at 3, 5 and 11; FIF
Addendum at 5; STA Letter at 3; Markit Letter at
31.
385 See FIF Letter at 3, 5 and 11; FIF Addendum
at 5.
386 See STA Letter at 3. This commenter also
suggested a twelve month period of time to review
the new rule and determine whether or not there
are sufficient benefits, as measured by the levels of
retail inquiries, compared to costs of maintaining
the reporting regime. See id. Order flow payment
information will be contained in quarterly public
reports under Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) and not produced
based on customer inquiry.
387 See Markit Letter at 31.
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would help customers better assess the
degree to which a broker-dealer faces
conflicts of interests in connection with
its customer order routing decisions,
and how the broker-dealer manages
those conflicts of interest. At the same
time, the Commission does not believe
that the information required by Rule
606(a)(1)(iii) would be overly
complicated or burdensome for
customers—and retail customers in
particular—to consume. For example,
Rule 606(a)(1) currently requires, in
general, disclosure of any amounts per
share or per order that the broker-dealer
receives pursuant to any payment for
order flow arrangement, any transaction
rebates, and the extent to which the
broker-dealer would share in profits
derived from the execution of nondirected orders under any profit sharing
relationship with a Specified Venue.
While some commenters suggested
that the rule require different methods
of quantification or that the brokerdealer disclose different metrics related
to its financial arrangements with
Specific Venues, at this juncture, the
Commission believes that the required
disclosures set forth in Rule
606(a)(1)(iii) are reasonably designed to
provide a significant enhancement in
the usefulness of the information that
customers receive from broker-dealers’
with respect to order routing, and
should help provide customers with a
more complete understanding of the
conflicts of interest faced by brokerdealers and how those conflicts are
managed.
ii. Rule 606(a)(1)(iv)
The Commission also is adopting Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) as proposed, and therefore
is requiring that the broker-dealer report
the material aspects of its relationship
with each Specified Venue, including a
description of any arrangement for
payment for order flow and any profitsharing relationship and a description of
any terms of such arrangements, written
or oral, that may influence a broker’s or
dealer’s routing decision including,
among other things, incentives for
meeting or disincentives for not meeting
an agreed upon order flow threshold,
volume-based tiered payment
schedules, and minimum order flow
agreements.388 The Commission has
acknowledged that payment for order
flow arrangements are intensively factbased in nature and may vary across
broker-dealers.389 At the same time, in
light of market structure changes since
the Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting
Release, among other things, the
388 See
389 See
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Rule 606(a)(1)(iv).
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49464.
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58375
Commission continues to believe that
disclosure of any terms, written or oral,
that may influence a broker-dealer’s
order routing decision would be useful
for customers to assess the potential
conflicts of interest facing brokerdealers when implementing their order
routing decisions and would provide
more complete information for
customers to better understand and
evaluate a broker-dealer’s order routing
decision.390
The Commission is requiring that a
broker-dealer disclose any incentives
that a Specified Venue provides to the
broker-dealer for equaling or exceeding
a volume threshold by offering
additional payments or a higher rate of
payment, or conversely, any
disincentives that a Specified Venue
provides to the broker-dealer for failing
to meet an agreed upon minimum order
flow threshold, such as a lower payment
or charging a fee.391 The Commission
understands that such arrangements
may vary among venues, as well as for
each broker-dealer sending orders to
those venues, and some venues provide
higher rebates for meeting or exceeding
order flow quotas or charge financial
penalties for failing to meet order flow
quotas.392 The Commission believes that
such incentives and disincentives
influence a broker-dealer’s decision to
either meet or route additional order
flow to exceed the threshold, and
should be disclosed to inform customers
of their broker-dealer’s potential
conflicts of interest. The broker-dealer
must describe any such incentives or
disincentives in its report, such as (but
not limited to) any payment amounts or
rates that are based on target order
volume flow thresholds, as these are
terms of the broker-dealer’s relationship
with the Specified Venue that may
influence its routing decision; it is not
sufficient for the broker-dealer just to
disclose the fact that an incentive or
disincentive exists.
Further, the Commission is requiring
broker-dealers to disclose any volumebased tiered payment schedules with a
Specified Venue.393 Venues that offer
these payment schedules typically offer
incrementally higher rebates or lower
fees to broker-dealers for additional
order flow volume.394 The Commission
believes that these payment schedules
can encourage a broker-dealer to route
additional order flow to such venue in
390 See
id. at 49463–64.
Rule 606(a)(1)(iv)(A) through (B).
392 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49463–
64.
393 See Rule 606(a)(1)(iv)(C).
394 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49463–
64.
391 See
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an effort to reap a financial benefit and
should be disclosed.
Additionally, the Commission is
requiring broker-dealers to disclose
agreements regarding the minimum
amount of order flow that a brokerdealer would be required to send to a
Specified Venue.395 These types of
agreements typically specify that a
broker-dealer must send a minimum
number of orders or shares to a venue
during a particular time period.396 The
Commission believes that such
disclosures would help customers
evaluate whether their broker-dealers
face conflicts of interest when
determining where to route their orders.
Finally, the Commission
acknowledges that as market structure
evolves, new types of arrangements not
specifically listed may arise. The four
arrangements referenced in Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) are not an exhaustive list of
terms of payment for order flow
arrangements or profit-sharing
relationships that may influence a
broker-dealer’s order routing decision
that are required to be disclosed. Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) requires a discussion of the
material aspects of the broker-dealer’s
relationship with each Specified Venue,
including a description of any terms of
such payment for order flow or profitsharing arrangements that may
influence a broker-dealer’s order routing
decision for the orders covered by Rule
606(a)(1),397 which orders, as discussed
above, include any non-directed NMS
stock order of any size that is submitted
on a held basis as well as any nondirected order (whether held or not
held) for an NMS security that is an
option contract with a market value less
than $50,000.398
As described above, because certain
terms of payment for order flow
395 See
396 See
Rule 606(a)(1)(iv)(D).
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49463–
64.
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397 For
example, if a broker-dealer receives a
discount on executions in other securities or some
other advantage for directing order flow in a
specific security to a Specified Venue, or if a
broker-dealer receives equity rights in a Specified
Venue in exchange for directing order flow there,
then all terms of that arrangement must be
disclosed including any securities covered by the
arrangement with any and all terms of the
arrangement specific to each security. If a brokerdealer receives variable payments or discounts
based on order types and the amount of such orders
sent to a Specified Venue, e.g., marketable orders,
non-marketable orders, or auction orders, then all
terms of that arrangement must be disclosed. In
addition, because such arrangements would
influence a broker-dealer’s order routing decision,
the amended rule requires disclosure of the details
of any arrangement between a broker-dealer and a
Specified Venue where the level of execution
quality is negotiated for an increase or decrease in
payment for order flow.
398 See Rule 606(a)(1); see also supra Section
III.B.1.b.
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arrangements or profit-sharing
relationships may encourage brokerdealers to direct their orders to a
specific venue in order to achieve an
economic benefit or avoid an economic
loss, potential conflicts of interest may
arise. The Commission believes that
disclosure of such information will be
useful for customers to assess the extent
to which a broker-dealer’s payment for
order flow arrangements and profitsharing relationships may potentially
affect or distort the way in which their
orders are routed. The Commission
further believes that providing
customers a comprehensive description
of such quantifiable terms of a brokerdealer’s relationship with a Specified
Venue will allow them to fully
appreciate the nature and extent of
potential conflicts of interest facing
their broker-dealers and assist them in
evaluating the broker-dealers’
management of such potential conflicts
of interest.
Some commenters supported the
disclosure of any agreement that may
influence a broker-dealer’s routing
decisions, including oral agreements or
arrangements.399 One commenter
explicitly supported the disclosure of
payment for order-flow and profitsharing arrangements between brokerdealers and specified venues, including
whether or not the broker-dealer passes
on any of the rebates or order-flow
payments to the same customers whose
orders generated such payments.400 One
commenter suggested further requiring
broker-dealers to describe in more
meaningful terms any payment for order
flow arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships with certain venues that
may influence their order routing
decisions.401 This commenter supported
the proposed enhanced disclosures but
expressed concern that they only
require broker-dealers to provide a
discussion of the material aspects of
their relationship with the top venues to
which they route.402 One commenter,
however, believed that the proposed
description of terms for payment for
order flow arrangements would result in
the disclosure of a large and
unnecessary amount of information.403
399 See,
e.g., HMA Letter at 11; Markit Letter at
31.
400 See
Better Markets Letter at 4–6.
CFA Letter at 9.
402 See CFA Letter at 5.
403 See Fidelity Letter at 9. The commenter
requested clarity regarding whether this
requirement means that broker-dealers must
duplicate exchange’s rule filings containing volume
tiered pricing. See id. The Commission does not
believe that such filings must be ‘‘duplicated’’ in an
order routing report. However, the terms of
payments from an exchange must be included in
401 See
PO 00000
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Another commenter believed that
enhanced disclosures may result more
in confusion than clarity and that the
information contained in the current
disclosures is generally adequate.404
Rule 606(a)(1) requires a discussion of
the material aspects of a broker-dealer’s
relationship with a Specified Venue
regarding payment for order-flow or
profit-sharing. The expansion contained
in new Rule 606(a)(1)(iv) is intended to
capture all such arrangements with
Specified Venues as all such
arrangements—whether written or
oral—may be relevant to the customer.
The Commission acknowledges that
some commenters supported additional
disclosure in Rule 606(a)(1)(iv), while
two commenters—representing the
brokers who will be providing this
information as opposed to retail
customers themselves—believed that
Rule 606(a)(i)(iv), as proposed, would
disclose too much information to retail
customers. The Commission believes
that Rule 606(a)(1)(iv) strikes an
appropriate balance by, on one hand,
providing customers with disclosures
that will better enable them to assess
their broker-dealers’ payment for order
flow arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships, and the potential for
resulting conflicts of interest, while on
the other hand providing information
that will not be overly voluminous or
difficult to comprehend. The
Commission believes the information
contained in the reports should be
straightforward to customers familiar
with the operation of the markets, and
will thus generally conform to EMSAC’s
recommendations regarding clarity and
comprehension of the reports. To the
extent a customer does not understand
these disclosures, the Commission
expects that the customer would ask its
broker-dealer for greater explanation of
the arrangement.
4. Format of Public Order Routing
Report
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to require
that the publicly available quarterly
order routing report required by Rule
606(a)(1) be made available using an
XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission’s
website.405 The Commission also
proposed to amend Rule 606(a)(1) to
require every broker-dealer to keep the
Rule 606(a)(1) reports posted on a
website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of
the discussion of the arrangement of terms with the
Specified Venue.
404 See FIF Letter at 11.
405 See proposed Rule 606(a)(1).
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believes that it is appropriate to adopt
the amendment to Rule 606(a)(1) to
require that the quarterly public order
routing report be made available using
an XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission’s
website.412
three years from the initial date of
posting on the website.406 These
proposed requirements were based on
considerations similar to those
supporting the parallel format and
website retention proposals for order
routing reports under proposed Rule
606(c).407
ii. Retention of Rule 606(a)(1) Reports
b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
i. XML/PDF Format
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the requirement that the
public order handling reports required
under Rule 606(a)(1) be made available
using an XML schema and associated
PDF renderer published on the
Commission’s website. Of the comments
received on the proposed reporting
format, most supported a machinereadable or standardized format 408 or
XML in particular.409 The use of XML
has been adopted in a number of recent
Commission rulemakings 410 and the
Proposal to use an XML format here was
supported by most commenters.411 The
Commission believes that it is
appropriate, and would be useful to the
broadest segment of market participants,
to adopt the requirement that the
customer-specific and publicly available
quarterly customer order routing reports
be made available using an XML schema
to be published on the Commission’s
website.
The Commission continues to believe
that providing the Rule 606(a)(1)
quarterly public reports in the proposed
format will promote consistency and
comparability of the reports. In contrast
to commenters’ views noted above, the
Commission believes that providing
these reports in the commonly used
PDF/XML format will create benefits of
consistency and comparability of the
reports for customers that justify the
costs. Accordingly, the Commission
406 See
id.
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49465–
66 for additional detail on the Commission’s
proposal.
408 See, e.g., HMA Letter at 12; Markit Letter at
17.
409 See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; Better
Markets Letter at 2; CFA Letter at 11; FIA Letter at
2.
410 See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
79095, 81 FR 81870 (November 18, 2016) (adopting
Investment Company Reporting Modernization);
74246, 80 FR 14437 (March 19, 2015) (adopting
Security-Based Swap Data Repository Registration,
Duties, and Core Principles); 72982 (September 4,
2014), 79 FR 57183 (September 24, 2014) (adopting
Asset-Backed Securities Disclosure and
Registration).
411 See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; Better
Markets Letter at 2; FIF Letter at 17; CFA Letter at
11; FIA Letter at 2. For a detailed discussion of
comments relating to the XML format, see supra
Section III.A.5.c.ii.
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407 See
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The Commission is adopting as
proposed the amendment to Rule
606(a)(1) to require every broker-dealer
to keep the reports required by Rule
606(a)(1) posted on a website that is free
and readily accessible to the public for
a period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the website.413 The
Commission received comments
addressing the proposed retention
period of three years,414 with one
commenter supporting it,415 and other
commenters calling for different
retention periods.416 The Commission
believes that it is appropriate to require
that the publicly available quarterly
order routing reports under Rule
606(a)(1) be maintained for a period of
three years from the date of initial
posting in light of the consistency of
this requirement with the requirement
under Rule 17a–4(b) that broker-dealers
preserve certain documents for a period
of not less than three years.417 While
one commenter noted that Rule 17a–4(b)
only requires that the documents be
preserved in an ‘‘easily accessible
place’’ for the first two years,418 the
Commission believes that due to the
public nature of the reports, the utility
and purpose of the reports, and the low
burden of maintaining data on a website
for an additional year, the reports
should be retained on a public website
for the full three years as proposed.
Accordingly, the Commission is
adopting as proposed the requirement
that the Rule 606(a)(1) publicly
available quarterly order handling
report be kept posted on a website that
is free and readily accessible to the
public for a period of three years from
the initial date of posting on the
website.
412 As discussed above, several commenters
suggested alternatives to the general use of an XML
schema and associated PDF renderer for the report,
and other commenters called generally for the
inclusion of standardized headers for the report.
See supra Section III.A.5.c. The Commission is
adopting the proposed use of the XML schema and
associated PDF renderer without header
information for the same reasons detailed above.
413 See Rule 606(a)(1).
414 See Citadel Letter at 1; FIF Letter at 13; Markit
Letter at 29.
415 See Citadel Letter at 1.
416 See FIF Letter at 13; Markit Letter at 29.
417 See 17 CFR 242.17a–4(b).
418 See FIF Letter at 13.
PO 00000
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58377
In a related issue, in question 116 of
the Proposing Release, the Commission
asked whether it should require brokerdealers to make publicly available the
prior three years’ worth of quarterly
reports from the effective date of the
rule.419 One commenter opposed this
suggestion, commenting that it would be
an extremely large undertaking, and
noting that circumstances may have
changed over the last two to three years
that would make comparison of the data
difficult and possibly misleading.420
The Commission believes that it should
not adopt a requirement to make
publicly available the prior three years’
worth of publicly available quarterly
order routing reports from the effective
date of the rule, as this requirement may
be too burdensome and result in data
that is not easily comparable across
broker-dealers. Nevertheless, while
broker-dealers are not required by rule
to post on their website past Rule
606(a)(1) reports that were created prior
to the amended rule’s effectiveness, the
Commission believes that making
historical Rule 606(a) data available to
customers and the public could be
useful to customers or market
participants seeking to analyze past
routing behavior of broker-dealers. As
such, the Commission notes that brokerdealers are neither prevented nor
discouraged from voluntarily and
publicly disclosing such historical data.
The Commission believes that some
broker-dealers may engage in such
voluntary disclosure in an effort to
compete more effectively for order flow
by providing even greater transparency
than what is required under the rule.
The Commission also received
comments addressing whether brokerdealers should be required to make the
reports available on their own websites
or on a centralized website.421 Three
commenters supported centralizing
reporting, specifically recommending
that either FINRA or the Commission
host the data.422 One commenter stated
that it did not necessarily think that the
Commission or FINRA should be forced
to cover the expense of maintaining a
centralized website as long as the data
can be found publicly.423
One of the chief goals of the rule
amendments being adopted today is to
enable customers to more readily and
meaningfully assess broker-dealers’
order handling practices. The
419 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49466.
FIF Letter at 13.
421 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49461,
49466; HMA Letter at 4; FIA Letter at 1; FIF Letter
at 13; CFA Letter at 11; HMA II Letter at 4, 7–8.
422 See HMA Letter at 4, 7–8; FIF Letter at 13;
CFA Letter at 11.
423 See Markit Letter at 29.
420 See
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Commission acknowledges that locating
each broker-dealer’s Rule 606(a)(1)
report in a centralized repository could
help facilitate that goal. At the same
time, there are potentially significant
cost and time delays associated with
developing a centralized repository and
the related mechanisms for allowing
individual broker-dealers to upload and
manage their reports in a safe and
secure manner. The Commission
believes that the obstacles associated
with developing a centralized repository
pose a greater risk of hindering
customers’ ability to assess brokerdealer order routing performance than is
posed by the necessity of accessing each
broker-dealer’s Rule 606(a) report on the
particular broker-dealer’s website in the
absence of a centralized repository.
Accordingly, the Commission is not
adopting an additional requirement that
the Rule 606(a) quarterly public order
handling reports be maintained in a
centralized public repository.
5. Division of Rule 606(a) Report’s
Section on NMS Stocks by S&P 500
Index and Other NMS Stocks
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to amend
Rule 606(a)(1) to remove the
requirement that Rule 606(a)(1) reports
be divided into three separate sections
for securities listed on the NYSE,
securities that are qualified for inclusion
in NASDAQ, and securities listed on the
American Stock Exchange or any other
national securities exchange.424 By
proposing to remove this requirement,
the Commission intended to require
broker-dealers to disclose the required
order routing information for NMS
stocks as a group rather than divided by
listing market.
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b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
The Commission is adopting as
proposed the amendment to remove the
requirement that Rule 606(a)(1) reports
be divided into three separate sections
for securities listed on the NYSE,
securities that are qualified for inclusion
in NASDAQ, and securities listed on the
American Stock Exchange or any other
national securities exchange. The
Commission notes that the language is
stale, as NASDAQ is now registered as
a national securities exchange and the
American Stock Exchange is now
known as NYSE American LLC.425
424 See proposed Rule 606(a)(1). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49465 for additional detail
on the Commission’s proposal.
425 See Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting Release,
supra note 7. In October 2008, the American Stock
Exchange LLC was renamed ‘‘NYSE Alternext US
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Further, the Commission continues to
believe that separating the Rule 606(a)
order routing reports by primary listing
market is not particularly useful to
customers for the reasons noted in the
Proposal.426 When the Commission
adopted what became Rule 606 (then
Rule 11Ac1–6) in 2000, the primary
listing markets looked and operated
very differently than they do today. For
example, NYSE and the American Stock
Exchange were primarily manual
markets with limited electronic trading,
while NASDAQ was a quote-driven
dealer market and not yet a national
securities exchange. Today, with the
adoption of Regulation NMS and
considerable advancements in
computerized trading technology, the
trading landscape is highly automated,
dominated by electronic trading, and
more widely dispersed across different
trading venues. As a result, the primary
listing markets no longer factor as
prominently as they once did in the
execution of the securities that they list.
In addition, the commenters who
addressed the issue supported the
removal of the division of the Rule
606(a) reports by listing market.427
Accordingly, the Commission believes
that the division of the Rule 606(a)
reports by listing market is no longer
warranted or appropriate, as such
division is no longer particularly useful
to customers interested in analyzing
their broker-dealers’ routing
practices.428
The Commission requested comment
in the Proposing Release regarding
whether the Rule 606(a) public order
routing reports should instead be
categorized according to whether a
particular security is included in the
Standards & Poor’s 500 (‘‘S&P 500’’)
index.429 Multiple commenters believed
LLC.’’ See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
58673 (September 29, 2008), 73 FR 57707 (October
3, 2008) (SR–Amex–2008–62). In March 2009,
NYSE Alternext US LLC was renamed ‘‘NYSE
Amex LLC.’’ See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 59575 (March 13, 2009), 74 FR 11803 (March
19, 2009) (SR–NYSEALTR–2009–24). In May 2012,
NYSE Amex LLC was renamed ‘‘NYSE MKT LLC.’’
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67037
(May 21, 2012), 77 FR 31415 (May 25, 2012) (SR–
NYSEAmex–2012–32). In March 2017, NYSE MKT
LLC was renamed ‘‘NYSE American LLC.’’ See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 80283 (March
21, 2017), 82 FR 15244 (March 27, 2017) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2017–14).
426 For example, from February 2005 to February
2014, NYSE’s market share in its listed securities
declined from 78.9% to 20.1%. See Memorandum
from the SEC Division of Trading and Markets to
the SEC Market Structure Advisory Committee
(April 30, 2015), available at https://www.sec.gov/
spotlight/emsac/memo-rule-611-regulationnms.pdf.
427 See Markit Letter at 32; Fidelity Letter at 9; FIF
Letter at 12.
428 See FIF Letter at 3.
429 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49466.
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that categorization by S&P 500 index
would be useful,430 while one
commenter believed that segmenting by
S&P 500 stocks and other stocks may be
too complex.431 One commenter stated
that subscription to the S&P 500 index
would present a cost to broker-dealers
and the commenter would only
recommend such S&P 500 index
categorization if broker-dealers would
not incur an additional cost.432 In
addition, the EMSAC recommended,
among other things, that Rule 606
reports be divided by securities
included in the S&P 500 Index and
other NMS stocks.433
While the Commission believes that
the handling of NMS stocks no longer
varies materially based on their primary
listing market, the Commission believes
that the handling of NMS stocks may
vary based on their market
capitalization value and trading volume.
Thus, customers that place held orders
in NMS stock could benefit from a
delineation based on S&P 500 index in
the Rule 606(a)(1) report. Inclusion in
the S&P 500 is based on a variety of
factors that may be of utility to
customers when reviewing their
disclosures, including that S&P 500
constituents must be U.S. companies
and must meet market capitalization,
public float, financial viability,
liquidity, and price requirements.434 As
a result, the Commission is requiring
that the Rule 606(a)(1) report be
categorized by whether the security is
included S&P 500 index as of the first
day of the quarter or is another NMS
stock.435 The Commission also notes
that the list of securities included in the
S&P 500 index is readily available on
the internet on many free websites, and
thus there should be minimal cost to
broker-dealers to remain abreast of the
composition of the index.436 The
430 See Markit Letter at 32; Fidelity Letter at 9;
Schwab Letter at 3.
431 See FIF Letter at 12.
432 See Markit Letter at 32.
433 See EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations,
supra note 16.
434 See S&P 500 Fact Sheet, available at https://
us.spindices.com/indices/equity/sp-500.
435 See Rule 606(a)(1). The Commission
understands that securities may move in and out of
the S&P 500 during a quarter, but that such
movement is not common. The Commission further
believes requiring the reporting based on the
composition as of the first day of the quarter will
be easily administrable and will allow brokerdealers to know what securities they will need to
track throughout the quarter for inclusion in this
reporting category.
436 The Commission further notes that changes to
the composition of the S&P 500 are publicly
announced. See, e.g., Press Release, S&P Dow Jones
Indices, Huntington Ingalls Industries Set to Join
S&P 500; Scientific Games to Join S&P MidCap 400
and Ultra Clean Holdings to Join S&P SmallCap 600
(December 28, 2017), available at https://
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Commission further notes that many
data dissemination services obtain this
information from the S&P and
redistribute this information as part of
data packages consumed by brokerdealers as a part of the broker-dealers
normal course of business.437 Thus, the
Commission believes that there will be
few or no additional data costs to
broker-dealers resulting from this
requirement. The Commission believes
that this amendment would help further
modernize the Rule 606(a)(1) report and
provide customers that place held NMS
stock orders—and retail investors in
particular—with more relevant
information about how their orders are
routed.
6. Calendar Month Breakdown
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to amend
Rule 606(a)(1) to require that the public
order routing reports required by the
rule be broken down by calendar
month.438 Rule 606(a)(1) currently
requires that broker-dealers make order
routing reports publicly available for
each calendar quarter, and that such
reports contain aggregate quarterly
information on order routing.
b. Final Rule and Response to
Comments
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The Commission is adopting as
proposed the amendment to Rule
606(a)(1) to require that the publicly
available quarterly order routing reports
be broken down by calendar month.439
Several commenters supported the
proposed break-down by calendar
month or proposed requiring that the
reports be made available on a monthly
basis.440 Another commenter believed
that a quarterly breakdown is adequate,
and that monthly reports would not add
value but rather could confuse
investors.441
The Commission believes that
disclosing the information contained in
the Rule 606(a)(1) reports by calendar
month will allow customers to better
us.spindices.com/documents/index-news-andannouncements/20171228-spdji-bard-huntingtongames-ultra-press-release.pdf.
437 The Commission understands that brokerdealers have access to the constituent list for the
S&P 500 through data feeds available from widely
used data dissemination services, such as
Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, and Morningstar.
The Commission understands that most brokerdealers already pay for data feeds that contain this
composition information.
438 See proposed Rule 606(a)(1). See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49465 for additional detail
on the Commission’s proposal.
439 See Rule 606(a)(1).
440 See, e.g., Markit Letter at 29; Fidelity Letter at
9.
441 See FIF Letter at 13.
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assess whether their broker-dealers’
routing decisions are affected by
changes in fee structures and the extent
such changes affect execution quality. In
particular, a calendar-month breakdown
will provide customers and market
participants generally with greater
insight into any month-to-month
changes in routing behavior by brokerdealers in response to monthly changes
in trading center fee structures.442 As
indicated by the support expressed by
commenters for a calendar-month
breakdown, the Commission believes
that such insight could be valuable to
customers attempting to assess the
quality of broker-dealer order routing
services and the extent to which brokerdealers engage in rebate-seeking or feeavoiding behavior when routing
customer orders. The Commission does
not believe that presenting the
information as a monthly breakdown
would be more confusing than the
current presentation of the information
in the aggregate for the entire quarter
covered by the report.
7. Execution Metrics
As discussed above, the Commission
is adopting targeted, limited
enhancements to the public order
routing disclosures required under
Rules 606(a)(1) that are designed to shed
additional light on broker-dealers’
routing practices and the extent to
which broker-dealers encounter and
manage potential conflicts of interest
stemming from payment-for-order flow
arrangements, profit-sharing
relationships, trading venue fees and
rebates, or other factors. As the
Commission previously noted,
commenters were broadly supportive of
these enhanced order routing
disclosures.443 However, the EMSAC
and several commenters suggested
further enhancements to these
disclosures—many specifically to
include more or different execution
quality statistics.444
As noted above, the Commission
purposely did not propose significant
enhancements or modifications to the
442 The Commission understands that trading
centers generally bill in monthly increments and
modify their fee structures to reflect such monthly
billing. See Proposing Release, supra note 1 at
49465, and see, e.g., Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 83025 (April 10, 2018), 83 FR 16410
(April 16, 2018) (SR–NASDAQ–2018–25).
443 See, e.g., KCG Letter at 1–3; STA Letter I at
2–4; Ameritrade Letter at 3; Better Markets Letter
at 1, 8–9; HMA Letter at 2–4; FSR Letter at 1;
Citadel Letter at 1; CFA Letter at 1.
444 See EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations,
supra note 16, at 3Markit Letter at 8–10, 25, 30;
Fidelity Letter at 6-; Better Markets Letter at 3–8;
Angel Letter at 3–7CFA Letter at 10; Schwab Letter
at 2; HMA Letter at 7, 10–12; Ameritrade Letter at
3.
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58379
Rule 606(a) public reports and did not
include enhanced requirements
regarding execution statistics. Rather,
the Commission proposed targeted,
limited enhancements in Rule 606(a)
that focus on financial inducements
connected to broker-dealers’ order
routing. The Commission believes that
these enhancements are appropriately
designed to enable customers—and
retail customers in particular—to better
assess their broker-dealers’ order routing
performance and, in particular,
potential conflicts of interest that their
broker-dealers face when routing their
orders and how their broker-dealers
manage those potential conflicts.
Accordingly, the Commission
continues to believe that the limited
modifications to Rule 606(a) as
proposed are reasonably designed to
further the goal of enhancing
transparency regarding broker-dealers’
order routing practices and customers’
ability to assess the quality of those
practices. The Commission does not
believe that it is necessary for the
achievement of this goal to require, at
this time, that the Rule 606(a) public
order handling reports include the
additional, specific execution quality
statistics suggested by some
commenters. The additional disclosures
suggested by the commenters would
raise compliance costs and add to the
complexity of the report. In adopting the
amendments to the report, the
Commission is seeking a balance
between updating the current reports to
provide useful additional information to
customers and the cost of compliance by
broker-dealers. The Commission
believes that the required disclosures,
including the new disclosures adopted
today, contain sufficient information for
customers to make an informed decision
to evaluate their broker-dealers’ order
routing performance. In order to reach
this balance between cost and benefit,
the Commission is not adopting the
additional disclosures recommended by
commenters at this time.
The Commission notes, as stated
above, that this determination is not an
indication that the Commission has
formed a decision on the validity or
usefulness of the various different
execution quality statistics that
commenters suggested. Rather, in light
of the Commission’s belief that Rule
606(a), as proposed, provides an
appropriate level of insight into the
widespread financial arrangements
between broker-dealers and execution
venues that may affect broker-dealers’
order routing decisions, the Commission
believes that it is an appropriate and a
balanced approach at this juncture to
adopt Rule 606(a) as proposed. The
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Commission believes that adopting the
Rule 606(a) report content as proposed
will help minimize the reporting
complexity and costs, and help create a
report that is more universally useful
across the spectrum of customers.
C. Amendment to Disclosure of Order
Execution Information
The Commission proposed to amend
Rule 605(a)(2) to require market centers
to keep reports required pursuant to
Rule 605(a)(1) posted on a website that
is free and readily accessible to the
public for a period of three years from
the initial date of posting on the
website.445 One commenter supported
the Proposal,446 while another
commenter suggested a two-year time
period and further suggested that
comparing what it characterized as
‘‘out-of-date’’ information may lead to
misleading analysis due to
circumstances changing over time.447
The Commission is adopting, without
any change, the proposed amendment to
Rule 605(a)(2) to require market centers
to keep reports required pursuant to
Rule 605(a)(1) posted on a website that
is free and readily accessible to the
public for a period of three years from
the initial date of posting on the
website.448 While one commenter
suggested a two-year posting period
instead of a three-year period, the threeyear period is consistent with the
identical posting requirement for the
Rule 606(a)(1) reports that the
Commission is adopting today and, for
the same reasons as expressed with
regard to the Rule 606(a) report, the
Commission believes that the three-year
posting requirement is appropriate. In
particular, the Commission notes, again,
that a three-year retention period is
consistent with the requirement under
Rule 17a–4(b) that broker-dealers
preserve certain documents for a period
of not less than three years.449
Furthermore, while all historical reports
would be ‘‘out-of-date’’ information, the
Commission believes that the reports
will be useful and not lead to
misleading analyses because the
Commission expects customers and the
public to use the historical information
to compare information from the same
time period. The public information
also will provide a historical record of
a market center’s order execution
information. As also noted above, even
though market centers are not required
by rule to post on their website past
445 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49466.
446 See Citadel Letter.
447 See FIF Letter.
448 See Rule 605(a)(2).
449 See 17 CFR 242.17a–4(b)
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Rule 605(a) reports that were created
prior to the amended rule’s
effectiveness, the Commission believes
that making historical data available to
customers and the public could be
useful to customers or market
participants seeking to analyze such
data, and market centers are neither
prevented nor discouraged from
voluntarily and publicly disclosing such
historical data.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions that the
Commission is adopting today contain
‘‘collection of information
requirements’’ within the meaning of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’).450 The Commission published
a notice requesting comment on the
collection of information requirements
in the Proposing Release 451 and
submitted relevant information to the
Office of Management and Budget for
review in accordance with the PRA.452
The current collection of information for
Rule 606 entitled ‘‘Disclosure of order
routing information’’ is being modified
in a way that creates new collection of
information burden estimates and
modifies existing collection of
information burden estimates. The
existing collection of information for
Rule 605 entitled ‘‘Disclosure of order
execution information’’ is being
modified in a manner that does not alter
the collection of information burden
estimate. Compliance with these
collections of information requirements
is mandatory. An agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information unless the agency displays
a currently valid control number.
The hours and costs associated with
complying with the rule amendments
being adopted today constitute reporting
and cost burdens imposed by the
collection of information for Rule 606.
As described in more detail below,
certain estimates have been modified, as
necessary, to conform to the adopted
amendments and to reflect the most
recent data available to the Commission.
The Commission requested comment
on the collection of information
requirements in the Proposing Release.
As noted above, the Commission
received comment on the Proposing
Release. Views of commenters relevant
to the Commission’s analysis of
burdens, costs, and benefits of the rule
amendments being adopted today are
discussed below.
450 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49477.
452 44 U.S.C. 3507; 5 CFR 1320.11.
451 See
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A. Summary of Collection of
Information
The amendments to Rule 606, as
adopted, contain ‘‘collection of
information requirements’’ within the
meaning of the PRA for broker-dealers
that receive and handle certain orders in
NMS stocks. As detailed in Section III,
supra, in adopting the amendments, the
Commission has made certain changes
to the amendments as originally
proposed.
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under
Rule 606(b)(3)
Rule 606(b)(3) of Regulation NMS, as
adopted, requires a broker-dealer, on
request of a customer that places with
the broker-dealer, directly or indirectly,
NMS stock orders of any size that are
submitted on a not held basis (subject to
two de minimis exceptions) to
electronically disclose to such customer
within seven business days of receiving
the request, a report on the brokerdealer’s handling of such orders for that
customer for the prior six months,
broken down by calendar month. The
report would contain certain
information on the customer’s order
flow with the reporting broker-dealer as
well as certain columns of information
on orders handled by the broker-dealer,
as described below, categorized by
venue and separated by directed and
non-directed orders.453
2. Amendment to Current Public and
Customer-Specific Disclosures
Rule 606(a) of Regulation NMS, as
amended: (1) Breaks down the existing
limit order disclosures into separate
categories of marketable limit orders
and non-marketable limit orders; 454 (2)
requires certain disclosures for each
Specified Venue; 455 (3) requires certain
disclosures by broker-dealers relating to
terms of payment for order flow
arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships; 456 (4) requires that such
reports be broken down by calendar
month; 457 (5) requires that such reports
be kept posted on a website that is free
and readily accessible to the public for
a period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the website; 458 and
(6) replaces the requirement that the
Rule 606(a)(1) report be divided into
three separate categories by listing
market with a requirement that the
report be divided into two categories:
Securities included in the S&P 500
453 See
supra Sections III.A.6.a.ii, III.A.6.b.ii.
supra Section III.B.2.
455 See supra Section III.B.3.
456 See id.
457 See supra Section III.B.6.
458 See supra Section III.B.4.
454 See
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Index as of the first day of the quarter;
and other NMS stocks.459 These
disclosures are available for nondirected orders in NMS stocks
submitted on a held basis having any
market value. For orders in NMS
securities that are option contracts,
these disclosures are available whether
the order is submitted on a held or not
held basis, but only for customer orders,
i.e., orders having a market value of less
than $50,000.460
Rule 606(b)(1), as amended, does not
modify any of the current customerspecific disclosure requirements but
only requires those disclosures for
certain categories of orders. Brokerdealers must now provide the
information only for: (i) Orders in NMS
stocks that are submitted on a held
basis; (ii) orders in NMS stocks that are
submitted on a not held basis and are
exempt from the disclosure
requirements of Rule 606(b)(3); or (iii)
orders in NMS securities that are option
contracts.
The amendments would require
reports produced pursuant to Rules
606(a) and 606(b)(1) to be formatted in
the most recent versions of the XML
schema and the associated PDF renderer
as published on the Commission’s
website.
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3. Amendment to Current Disclosures
Under Rule 605
Rule 605(a)(2), as amended, requires
market centers to keep reports required
pursuant to the Rule 605(a)(1) posted on
a website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of
three years from the initial date of
posting on the website.
B. Use of Information
The order handling disclosures
required under the adopted
amendments to Rule 606 will provide
more detailed information to customers
that will enable them to evaluate how
their orders were handled by their
broker-dealers, assess potential conflicts
of interest facing their broker-dealers in
providing order handling services, and
have the ability to engage in informed
discussions with their broker-dealers
about the broker-dealer’s order handling
practices. The adopted order handling
disclosures can inform future decisions
on whether to retain a broker-dealer’s
services or engage the services of a new
broker-dealer. In addition, brokerdealers may use the public disclosures
to compete on the basis of order routing
services, and academics and others may
use the public disclosures pursuant to
459 See
460 See
supra Section III.B.5.
supra Section III.B.1.
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Rules 605 and 606 to review and
analyze broker-dealer routing practices
and trading center order executions.
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under
Rule 606(b)(3)
Rule 606(b)(3), as adopted, provides
detailed order routing and execution
information to a customer regarding its
specific NMS stock orders of any size
that are submitted on a not held basis
(subject to two de minimis exceptions)
during the reporting period. Generally,
the five groups of information contained
in the order handling report will enable
customers to understand where and
how their not held NMS stock orders
were routed or exposed, as well as
where their orders were executed during
the reporting period. Customers may use
the information contained in the order
handling report to assess any
considerations a broker-dealer may have
faced when routing its not held NMS
stock orders to various venues and
whether those considerations may have
affected how a broker-dealer handled its
orders, as well as to assess whether a
broker-dealer’s order routing practices
may have led to risks of information
leakage.461
The requirement that broker-dealers
produce one report for directed orders
and one report for non-directed orders
will provide a customer with a more
precise reflection of how and where its
broker-dealer is routing the customer’s
not held NMS stock orders pursuant to
the discretion it is afforded.462 As noted
above, customers may use the order
handling disclosures to inform future
decisions on whether to retain a brokerdealer’s services or engage the services
of a new broker-dealer.
2. Amendment to Current Public and
Customer-Specific Disclosures
Rule 606(a), as amended, requires
broker-dealers to break down the limit
order disclosure in the public order
routing reports into separate categories
of marketable limit orders and nonmarketable limit orders.463 The adopted
requirement of Rule 606(a) that a brokerdealer disclose the net aggregate amount
of any payment for order flow received,
payment from any profit-sharing
relationship received, transaction fees
paid, and transaction rebates received,
both as a total dollar amount an on a per
share basis, for specified non-directed
order types for each Specified Venue,
may allow customers to determine how
broker-dealers route different types of
461 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49468.
supra Section III.A.5.b.
463 The Commission discussed the general use of
this collection in the Proposing Release. See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49468–69.
462 See
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58381
orders relative to any economic benefit
or consequence to the broker-dealer.
The requirement in adopted Rule
606(a)(1) that the quarterly reports be
broken down by calendar month may
allow customers to determine whether
and how their broker-dealers’ routing
decisions changed in response to
changing fee and rebate structures in the
marketplace, which often change at the
beginning of a calendar month. The
adopted requirement that such reports
be kept posted on a website for three
years may allow customers and others,
such as researchers, to analyze historical
routing behavior of particular brokerdealers. The adopted requirement that
broker-dealers categorize the quarterly
public Rule 606(a)(1) disclosure by
securities included in the S&P 500
Index and other NMS stocks should
provide customers and the public with
more detailed information on securities
that have more similar liquidity and
trading characteristics, and should
provide a clearer way for customers to
review order routing information for
securities included in the S&P 500
Index, which attract significant trading
interest.464 In addition, the adopted
requirement for broker-dealers to
describe any terms of payment for order
flow arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships with a Specified Venue
that may influence their order routing
decisions, including information
relating to specific incentives or volume
minimums, may allow customers to
understand how their broker-dealers
route their orders and whether and how
such routing is influenced by payment
for order flow and/or a profit-sharing
relationship.
As noted above, the amendments to
Rule 606(b)(1) do not create new data
collection obligations but require the
disclosures for certain categories of
orders.
3. Amendment to Current Disclosures
Under Rule 605
The adopted requirement that reports
required under Rule 605 be kept posted
on a website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of
three years from the initial date of
posting on the website may allow
customers and others to analyze
historical order execution quality at
various market centers, such as
researchers that could provide analysis
to better inform investors. The three
years of data may be useful to those
seeking to analyze how execution
quality has changed over time, in
addition to changes in response to
regulatory or other developments.
464 See
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C. Respondents
The respondents to the amendments
being adopted today are broker-dealers
that handle held orders and not held
orders received from customers and
market centers that create reports
pursuant to Rule 605.
1. Initial Estimate
In the proposing release the
Commission estimated, as of December
2015, that there were approximately
4,156 total registered broker-dealers. Of
these, the Commission estimated that
266 were broker-dealers that route retail
orders. The Commission estimated that
200 broker-dealers were involved in the
practice of routing institutional orders,
all of whom also routed retail orders.
The Commission estimated that there
were 380 market centers to which Rule
605 applies.465
2. Estimate for Adopted Rule
[Amendments to 605 and 606]
The Commission estimates that of the
approximately 4,024 total registered
broker-dealers,466 292 are broker-dealers
that handle orders in NMS stocks on a
held basis that would be subject to the
public disclosure requirements of Rule
606(a) or the current customer-specific
disclosure requirements of Rule
606(b)(1).467 The Commission estimates
that 200 broker-dealers would be subject
to the new customer-specific disclosure
requirements of Rule 606(b)(3) and not
meet the requirements for a firm-level
de minimis exception under Rule
606(b)(4), i.e., broker-dealers that are
involved in the practice of routing NMS
stock orders of any size that are
submitted on a not held basis, where
such order flow constitutes greater than
5% of their total NMS stock order
flow.468 The Commission estimates that
465 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49469.
Commission is basing its estimate on data
compiled from responses to Form BD.
467 The Commission estimates that both clearing
and introducing brokers handle such orders.
468 For the purposes of estimating burden under
the PRA, the Commission believes that all brokerdealers that handle or route orders in NMS stocks
will have a mix of customers that are and are not
subject to the customer-level de minimis exception
described in Rule 606(b)(5). See supra Section
III.A.1.b.iv. Accordingly, the Commission estimates
that all 200 broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific disclosures
required by Rule 606(b)(3) and all 292 brokerdealers that route orders subject to the public
disclosures required by Rule 606(a) and the existing
customer-specific disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(1) will have to modify their systems to
comply with those respective rules. If a brokerdealer handles orders subject to the new customerspecific disclosure requirements of Rule 606(b)(3)
but qualifies for both de minimis exceptions
required by Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5), then it is not
a respondent to the collection of information
required by Rule 606(b)(3) but would still be
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there are 381 market centers to which
Rule 605 applies.469
D. Total Initial and Annual Reporting
and Recordkeeping Burdens
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under
Rule 606(b)(3)
a. Initial Reporting and Recordkeeping
Burden
i. Baseline Burden
Of the 200 broker-dealers involved in
routing orders subject to the customerspecific disclosures described in Rule
606(b)(3), the Commission initially
estimated that 25 broker-dealers that
handle orders do not currently have
systems that obtain all of the
information required by the proposed
amendments.470 The Commission
estimated that these 25 broker-dealers
would be able to perform the required
enhancements in-house, but could also
use a third-party service provider.471
Based on discussions with industry
sources, the Commission preliminarily
estimated that the average one-time,
initial burden for broker-dealers that
handle orders subject to the customerspecific disclosures described in Rule
606(b)(3) that do not currently create
and retain the proposed order handling
information to program systems inhouse to implement the requirements of
the proposed Rule would be 200 hours
and $60,420 per broker-dealer.472 The
Commission preliminarily estimated the
average one-time, initial burden for
broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific
disclosures described in Rule 606(b)(3)
that do not currently create and retain
the proposed order handling
information to engage a third-party to
program the broker-dealers’ systems to
implement the requirements of the
proposed amendments to be 50 hours 473
and $35,000.474 The Commission
preliminarily estimated that of the 25
broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific
counted among the respondents to the collection of
information required by Rule 606(b)(1).
469 The Commission derived this estimate based
on the following: 214 OTC market makers (not
including market makers claiming an exemption
from the reporting requirements of the Rule), plus
21 exchanges, 1 securities association, 104
exchange market makers, and 41 ATSs.
470 This estimate was based on discussions with
various industry participants. See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49470.
471 See id.
472 See id. The Commission derived its
preliminary monetized burden estimates based on
per hour labor figures from SIFMA’s Management
& Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry
2013.
473 The monetized hourly burden was estimated
at $15,125 per broker-dealer. See id.
474 See id.
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disclosures described in Rule 606(b)(3)
that do not currently have systems in
place to capture the information
required by the rule, 10 such brokerdealers would perform the necessary
programming upgrades in-house, and 15
would engage a third-party to perform
the programming upgrades.
Additionally, of the 25 broker-dealers
that handle orders subject to the
customer-specific disclosures described
in Rule 606(b)(3) that do not currently
have systems in place to capture the
information required by the proposed
rule, the Commission estimated that 10
such broker-dealers would need to
purchase hardware and software
upgrades to fulfill the requirements of
the proposed rule at an average cost of
$15,000 per broker-dealer, and that the
remaining 15 broker-dealers have
adequate hardware and software to
capture the information proposed by the
rule. Therefore, the total initial burden
for broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3)
that do not currently capture order
handling information required by the
proposed rule to program their systems
to produce a report to comply with the
proposed rule change was estimated as
2,750 hours 475 and $675,000.476
The Commission preliminarily
estimated the average burden for a
broker-dealer that already captures
information required by the proposed
rule to format its systems to produce a
report to comply with the proposed rule
would be 40 hours.477 The Commission
estimated that 125 broker-dealers would
format systems to produce the reports
in-house. A broker-dealer that handles
such orders that uses a third-party
service provider to produce reports
using such order handling information
would need to need to work with the
vendor to ensure the proper data is
captured in the reports. The
Commission estimated 50 broker-dealers
that handle such orders would use a
third-party vendor to ensure data
required by the rule is captured in the
reports. The Commission estimated the
average burden for a broker-dealer that
uses a third-party service provider to
work with such service provider to
ensure proper reports are produced
475 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $831,075. See id.
476 ($35,000 per broker-dealer that will engage a
third-party × 15 such broker-dealers) + ($15,000 per
broker-dealer that will need to purchase hardware
and software upgrades × 10 such broker-dealers) =
$675,000. See id.
477 The monetized hourly burden was estimated
at $12,084 per broker-dealer. See id.
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would be 20 hours 478 and $5,000.479
The Commission preliminarily believed
that broker-dealers whose systems
currently capture and retain information
required by the rule would not need to
purchase hardware or software
upgrades. Thus, the total burden for
broker-dealers that currently obtain the
required data but need to format their
systems, or work with their data
provider, to prepare a report to comply
with the proposed rule was estimated as
6,000 hours 480 and $250,000.481
Therefore, the estimated total initial
burden for all broker-dealers to comply
with Rule 606(b)(3) was estimated at
8,750 hours 482 and $925,000.483
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ii. Burden of Adopted Rule
The Commission is revising its initial
burden and cost estimates associated
with producing the customer-specific
reports on order handling required by
Rule 606(b)(3) 484 in response to
comments received. One commenter
criticizes the Commission’s estimate of
costs involved in producing the data for
the reports, which it characterizes as ‘‘8
hours,’’ and provides its own estimate of
240 hours per broker-dealer to produce
the data for the reports. The commenter
does not make clear whether this
comment addresses the new customerspecific order handling disclosures
required by Rule 606(b)(3) or the
amendments to the public order routing
disclosures required by Rule 606(a)(1).
The commenter also states that ‘‘[i]n
order to produce the data for the public
reports, brokers will all have to modify
their OMS system or have their OMS
vendor make changes’’ (emphasis
added).485
To the extent these comments are
addressed to the initial hourly burden
for broker-dealers to produce the
customer-specific order handling
disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3),486 the Commission
478 The monetized hourly burden was estimated
at $5,726 per broker-dealer. See id.
479 See id.
480 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $1,796,800. See id.
481 $5,000 per broker-dealer that works with a
third-party vendor to ensure proper reports are
produced × 50 such broker-dealers = $250,000. See
id.
482 The total initial monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $2,627,875. See Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49471.
483 See id.
484 Rule 606(b)(3), as proposed, applied to brokerdealers that handle ‘‘institutional orders,’’ as
defined in the Proposing Release. Rule 606(b)(3), as
adopted, applies to NMS stock orders of any size
that are submitted on a not held basis (subject to
the two de minimis exceptions).
485 See Markit Letter at 33.
486 To the extent that these comments are
addressed to the burden for the amended
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understands them to raise two areas of
criticism: The hourly burden estimate
for producing the data for the reports
and the monetized value of that burden.
With respect to the hourly burden, the
Commission estimated 200 hours—not 8
hours—for a broker-dealer that handles
orders subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3) to
update its systems in-house to capture
the information and format the reports
required by the rule.487 However, upon
consideration of the comments, and in
particular the statements that the
implementation would require ‘‘at least
[ ] four weeks of developer time,’’ 488
and result in a ‘‘total cost of 240 hours
per broker,’’ 489 the Commission is
revising its initial hourly burden
estimate for a broker-dealer that handles
orders subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3) to
both update its data capture systems inhouse and format the report required by
the rule to 260 hours.490 The
Commission continues to estimate that
the initial burden for broker-dealers that
handle orders subject to the customerspecific disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) to engage a third-party to
implement the requirements of the rule
to be 50 hours 491 and $35,000.492
The commenter also implicitly
criticizes the Commission’s estimate
that only 25 of the 200 total brokerdealers that handle orders subject to the
customer-specific disclosures required
by Rule 606(b)(3) would need to update
disclosures described by Rule 606(a)(1), the
Commission addresses them below. See infra
Section IV.D.4.a.ii.
487 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49470.
488 See Markit Letter at 33. The Commission is
revising its initial estimate of 100 Sr. Programmer
hours to 160 Sr. Programmer hours = 40-hour work
week × 4 (‘‘four weeks of developer time’’).
489 See id.
490 The Commission estimates the monetized
burden for this requirement to be $84,100. (Sr.
Programmer for 160 hours at $324 per hour) + (Sr.
Database Administrator for 40 hours at $334 per
hour) + (Sr. Business Analyst for 40 hours at $269
per hour) + (Attorney for 20 hours at $407 per hour)
= 260 hours and $84,100. The Commission derived
this estimate based on per hour figures from
SIFMA’s Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2013 adjusted for inflation
based on Bureau of Labor Statistics data on CPI–U
between January 2013 and December 2017 (a factor
of 1.0705). For example, the 2017 inflation-adjusted
effective hourly wage rate for attorneys is estimated
at $407 ($380 × 1.0705).
491 See supra note 473. The Commission is
updating the monetized hourly burden estimate to
$16,200 to reflect the latest available labor earnings
data. (Sr. Business Analyst for 15 hours at $269 per
hour) + (Compliance Manager for 20 hours at $303
per hour) + (Attorney for 15 hours at $407 per hour)
= 50 hours and $16,200. The Commission derived
this estimate based on per hour figures from
SIFMA’s Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December
2017 values. See supra note 490.
492 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49470.
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58383
their data capture systems by stating
that ‘‘brokers will all have to modify
their OMS system or have their OMS
vendor make changes’’ (emphasis
added).493 Upon consideration of this
comment, the Commission is revising its
previous estimate that there are some
broker-dealers that already capture
order handling information required by
the rule 494 and instead estimating that
all 200 broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3)
will need to update their systems to
capture the information required by the
rule.
The Commission continues to believe
that some broker-dealers will implement
the changes in-house, while others will
engage a third party vendor, which is
supported by the commenter’s statement
that broker-dealers will have to ‘‘modify
their OMS system or have their OMS
vendor make changes.’’ 495 The
Commission believes that it is
reasonable to estimate that one third of
the 200 broker-dealers that handle
orders subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3)—
67 broker-dealers—will implement the
changes in-house, while the remaining
number—133 broker-dealers—will
engage a third-party vendor to do so.496
The Commission continues to estimate
that the broker-dealers that will
implement the changes in-house will
also need to purchase hardware and
software upgrades at a cost of $15,000
to fulfill the requirements of the rule.497
The Commission is estimating the
total initial burden for broker-dealers
that will program their systems in-house
to capture the data and produce a report
to comply with the rule as 17,420
493 See
Markit Letter at 33.
Commission preliminarily believed that
many broker-dealers that handle orders subject to
the customer-specific disclosures described in
proposed Rule 606(b)(3) already create and retain
the order handling information required by Rule
606(b)(3). Accordingly, the Commission provided
two burden estimates, one for broker-dealers that
handle orders whose systems do not currently
support creating and retaining the information
required by Rule 606(b)(3) that would upgrade their
systems either in-house or via a third-party service
provider, and another for broker-dealers that handle
orders whose systems currently do create and retain
such information, including those that use a thirdparty service provider whose systems currently
obtain such information. See Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49469–70.
495 See id.
496 The Commission’s initial estimate in the
Proposing Release of 65 broker-dealers that would
implement these changes in-house and 135 broker
that would engage a third-party vendor was
intended to reflect a ratio of one-third and twothirds of the total 200 broker-dealers with reporting
obligations under Rule 606(b)(3).
497 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49470.
494 The
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hours 498 and $1,005,000.499 The
Commission is estimating the total
initial burden for broker-dealers that
will engage a third-party vendor to
program their systems to capture the
data and produce a report to comply
with the rule as 6,650 hours 500 and
$4,655,000.501
The commenter states that the
Commission did not include an estimate
for ‘‘monitoring systems for ensuring
that strategy definitions are reasonably
defined.’’ 502 While the Commission
estimated an annual, ongoing burden for
a broker-dealer to maintain the
assignment of its order routing
strategies,503 the Commission is not
adopting the proposed requirement to
segment order handling information by
order routing strategy.504
The commenter also suggests that the
Commission’s estimate for producing
the order handling disclosures ‘‘does
not include the complexities of the IOI
reporting.’’ 505 The Commission
considered all the proposed data
elements for the order handling
disclosure, including those related to
actionable IOIs, in estimating the initial
burden of complying with the rule. The
Commission also considered that, as
discussed in Section III.A.2, an
actionable IOI is the functional
equivalent of an order or quotation, and
that actionable IOIs do not include
conditional orders in estimating the
burden of complying with the rule.
Moreover, as noted above, because
actionable IOIs convey similar
information as an order, the
Commission believed, and continues to
believe, that including actionable IOIs
in the order routing reports would not
add much complexity to the reporting
practices. The commenter does not
address how the inclusion of actionable
IOIs in Rule 606(b)(3) would affect the
calculation of the cost. Specifically, as
498 17,420 hours = 260 hours × 67 broker-dealers
that handle such orders and would perform the
necessary programming upgrades in-house. The
monetized hourly burden is $5,634,700 = $84,100
× 67 such broker-dealers. See supra note 490.
499 $15,000 per broker-dealer that will need to
purchase hardware and software upgrades × 67
such broker-dealers) = $1,005,000. See supra note
496.
500 6,650 hours = 50 hours × 133 broker-dealers
that handle such orders and would engage a thirdparty vendor to perform the necessary programming
upgrades. The monetized hourly burden is
$2,154,600 = $16,200 × 133 such broker-dealers. See
supra note 491.
501 $35,000 per broker-dealer that will need to
engage a third-party vendor × 133 such brokerdealers) = $4,655,000. See supra note 492.
502 See Markit Letter at 34.
503 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49473–
74.
504 See supra Section III.A.5.a.ii.
505 See Markit Letter at 34.
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noted above, the Commission is
adopting a modification to Rule
606(b)(3) that requires broker-dealers to
disclose the fact that actionable IOIs
were sent to customers but not the
identity of such customers. Compared to
proposed Rule 606(b)(3), Rule 606(b)(3)
as adopted could reduce the potential
initial paperwork burden for brokerdealers, because they do not have to
disclose the identity of customers
receiving actionable IOIs. The
Commission’s revised estimate includes
and fully reflects consideration of all
modifications from the proposed rule
text to Rule 606(b)(3) as adopted.
The revised initial burden estimate
takes into account the requirement that
the disclosures apply to NMS stock
orders of any size that are submitted on
a not held basis (subject to two de
minimis exceptions) instead of to
‘‘institutional orders’’ as defined by a
dollar-value threshold in the Proposing
Release.506 A broker-dealer would have
to program its systems to filter their
order data by a condition—either a
dollar-value threshold or a held/notheld indicator (subject to the two de
minimis exceptions)—and the work of
filtering data by a condition generally is
expected to carry the same burden,
independent of the filtering condition.
The Commission also believes that
this initial hourly burden estimate
remains unchanged by the adoption
today of a requirement that the
customer-specific order handling
disclosures described by Rule 606(b)(3)
be segmented by directed and nondirected orders.507 The Commission
believes that the systems of all 200
broker-dealers involved in the practice
of routing orders subject to the
customer-specific disclosures required
by Rule 606(b)(3) already capture data
related to whether an order is directed
or not directed, so this requirement
imposes no additional burden
associated with data capture. With
respect to formatting the report, the
Commission believes that the work of
segmenting data by a condition
generally carries the same burden,
independent of the segmenting
condition. Since the burden of
segmenting the data by order routing
strategy, a requirement which is being
eliminated, is similar to the burden of
the new requirement to segment the
data by directed and non-directed
orders, the net burden remains
unchanged. Accordingly, the adoption
of this requirement does not change the
initial hourly burden estimate for
506 See
507 See
PO 00000
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supra Section III.A.5.b.
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
capturing the required data or
formatting the reports.
Further, this initial hourly burden
estimate is unchanged by the
Commission’s decision today not to
adopt proposed requirements to
categorize order routing information by
order routing strategy,508 since the
burden of categorizing and capturing
that information was separately
estimated in the Proposing Release.509
Therefore, the total initial burden for
all 200 broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific order
handling disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) to implement a system that
captures the data required by the rule
and format that data into a report is
estimated to be 24,070 hours and
$5,660,000.510
b. Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping
Burden
i. Baseline Burden
The Commission preliminarily
estimated that 135 of the 200 brokerdealers that handle orders subject to the
customer-specific disclosures required
by Rule 606(b)(3) would respond to
customer requests in-house.511 The
Commission estimated that an average
response to a Rule 606(b)(3) request for
a broker-dealer that responds to such
requests in-house would take
approximately 2 hours per response.512
The Commission estimated that an
average broker-dealer will receive
approximately 200 requests annually.513
Therefore, on average, a broker-dealer
that responds to 606(b)(3) requests inhouse would incur an estimated annual
burden of 400 hours to prepare,
disseminate, and retain responses to
customers required by Rule 606(b)(3).514
The Commission preliminarily
estimated that 135 broker-dealers that
handle orders subject to the customerspecific disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) that would respond to requests
508 See
509 See
supra Section III.A.5.a.ii.
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49467–
68.
510 See supra notes 498 and 500 (17,420 hours +
6,650 hours = 24,070 hours). The total estimated
initial monetized hourly burden is $7,789,300
($5,634,700 + $2,154,600). The total cost burden of
$5,660,000 = $4,655,000 + $1,005,000. See supra
notes 499 and 501. The commenter asserts without
further elaboration that ‘‘the total cost for the
industry would be over $16 million.’’ See Markit
Letter at 34. To the extent that the commenter is
referring to Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures, for all the
reasons discussed above, the Commission believes
that it has reasonably estimated the total industry
cost as $13,449,300 ($7,789,300 monetized hourly
burden + $5,660,000 cost burden).
511 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49471.
512 See id.
513 This estimate was based on discussions with
various industry participants. See id.
514 See id.
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in-house, and that the total annual
burden for such broker-dealers to
comply with the customer response
requirement in proposed Rule 606(b)(3)
would be 54,000.515
The Commission preliminarily
estimated that 65 broker-dealers that
handle orders subject to the customerspecific disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) would use a third-party
service provider to respond to requests.
For these broker-dealers, the
Commission preliminarily estimated an
annual burden of 1 hour and $100 per
response.516 With an estimated 200
requests pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3) per
year, the Commission preliminarily
estimated that on average, the annual
burden for a broker-dealer that uses a
third-party service provider to respond
to requests pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3)
would be 200 hours and $20,000.517
With an estimated 65 broker-dealers that
handle such orders that would respond
to Rule 606(b)(3) requests using a thirdparty-service provider, the Commission
preliminarily estimated the total annual
burden for such 65 broker-dealers
would be 13,000 hours 518 and
$1,300,000.519
Therefore, the Commission
preliminarily estimated the total annual
burden for all 200 broker-dealers that
handle orders subject to the customerspecific disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) to comply with the customer
response requirement in proposed Rule
606(b)(3) would be 67,000 hours 520 and
$1,300,000.521
515 2 hours per response × 200 responses annually
per broker-dealer that handles such orders who will
respond to requests in-house × 135 such brokerdealers = 54,000 hours. See id.
516 See id. This burden estimate relates solely to
the work a broker-dealer or its third-party data
provider would perform to run an individual report
on such orders for a particular customer and is
therefore not affected by the following changes from
the rule as proposed, which relate to capturing the
required data and formatting a report template: (1)
The application of Rule 606(b)(3) to NMS stock
orders of any size that are submitted on a not held
basis, subject to two de minimis exceptions, instead
of to ‘‘institutional orders’’ as defined by a dollarvalue threshold in the Proposing Release.; (2) the
adopted requirement to segment the Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling disclosures by directed and nondirected orders; and (3) the elimination of the
proposed requirement to segment the Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling disclosures by order routing
strategy.
517 See id.
518 1 hour per response × 200 responses annually
per broker-dealer that will use a third-party service
provider × 65 such broker-dealers = 13,000 hours.
See id.
519 $100 per request × 200 requests annually × 65
broker-dealers that will use a third-party service
provider = $1,300,000. See id.
520 See supra notes 515 and 518.
521 See supra notes 519.
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ii. Burden of Adopted Rule
The Commission estimates the total
annual burden for the 200 brokerdealers that handle orders subject to the
customer-specific disclosures required
by Rule 606(b)(3) to comply with Rule
606(b)(3) to be 67,000 hours and
$1,300,000, as it did in the Proposing
Release, but is updating the monetized
hourly burdens to reflect the latest
available labor earnings data.
The Commission believes that for the
135 broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3)
that would respond in-house to
customer requests pursuant to Rule
606(b)(3), as adopted, the annual hourly
burden to comply would be 54,000
hours.522 The Commission believes that
for the 65 broker-dealers that handle
such orders and would use a third-party
service provider to respond to requests
pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3), as adopted,
the total annual burden to comply
would be 13,000 hours 523 and
$1,300,000.524
Therefore, the Commission estimates
the total annual burden for all 200
broker-dealers that handle orders
subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3) to
comply with the customer response
requirement of Rule 606(b)(3), as
adopted, to be 67,000 hours 525 and
$1,300,000.526
522 See supra note 515. The Commission is
updating the monetized hourly burden estimate to
reflect the latest available labor earnings data. The
monetized hourly burden for the 125 broker-dealers
that handle such orders and would respond inhouse to customer requests under Rule 606(b)(3) is
$10,989,000: (Programmer Analyst for 1 hour at
$236 per hour) + (Jr. Business Analyst for 1 hour
at $171 per hour) = $407 × 125 such broker-dealers
× 200 requests annually. The Commission derived
this estimate based on per hour figures from
SIFMA’s Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December
2017 values. See supra note 490.
523 See supra note 518. The Commission is
updating the monetized hourly burden estimate to
reflect the latest available labor earnings data. The
monetized hourly burden for the 65 broker-dealers
that handle such orders and would engage a thirdparty to respond to customer requests under Rule
606(b)(3) is $3,939,000: (Compliance Manager for 1
hour at $303 per hour) = $303 × 65 such brokerdealers × 200 requests annually. The Commission
derived this estimate based on per hour figures from
SIFMA’s Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December
2017 values. See supra note 490.
524 See supra note 519.
525 See supra notes 522 and 523 (54,000 hours +
13,000 hours = 67,000 hours). The total estimated
annual monetized hourly burden is $14,928,000
($10,989,000 + $3,939,000).
526 See supra note 521.
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58385
2. Proposed Public Aggregated Report
on Orders Subject to the CustomerSpecific Disclosures Under Rule 606(b)
Not Adopted
As discussed above, the Commission
is not adopting the proposed
requirement that broker-dealers that
handle orders subject to the customerspecific disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) issue a quarterly public
aggregated disclosure on order
handling.527 The Commission
preliminarily estimated an initial and
annual burden created by this proposed
requirement,528 but as this requirement
is not being adopted, there is no longer
an associated cost and hourly burden.
3. Proposed Requirement To Document
Methodologies for Categorizing Order
Routing Strategies Not Adopted
As discussed above, the Commission
is not adopting the proposed
requirement that broker-dealers break
down information in the disclosures
required by Rule 606(b) by order routing
strategies.529 The Commission
preliminarily estimated an initial and
annual burden created by this proposed
requirement,530 but as this requirement
is not being adopted, there is no longer
an associated cost and hourly burden.
4. Amendment to Current Public and
Customer-Specific Disclosures
a. Initial Reporting and Recordkeeping
Burden
i. Baseline Burden
The Commission preliminarily
estimated that there are 266 brokerdealers to which the proposed
disclosures in Rule 606(a)(1) and (b)(1)
would apply.531 The Commission
estimated that the initial burden for a
broker-dealer that routes orders subject
to the disclosures required by Rule
606(a)(1) whose systems do not
currently capture all of the information
required by the rule to update its
systems to capture the information
required by proposed Rule 606(a) and
format that information into a report to
comply with the rule would be 76
hours 532 and the total initial burden for
527 See
528 See
supra Section III.A.7.b.
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49471–
72.
529 See
530 See
supra Section III.A.5.a.ii.
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49472–
74.
531 See
id.
monetized hourly burden was estimated
at $22,648 per broker-dealer. See id. Due to an
arithmetic error, the individual hourly burden for
each broker-dealer was originally calculated as 80
hours instead of 76 hours, leading to a total burden
calculation of 2,000 hours (80 hours × 25 brokerdealers) instead of 1,900 hours (76 hours × 25
532 The
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the 25 broker-dealers that the
Commission estimated do not currently
capture information required by the
proposed rule that would perform the
necessary system updates in-house
would be 1,900 hours.533
The Commission estimated that the
initial burden for a broker-dealer that
routes orders subject to the disclosures
required by Rule 606(a)(1) to engage a
third-party to program the necessary
system updates to comply with
proposed Rule would be 20 hours and
$10,000 534 and estimated the total
initial burden for the 25 broker-dealers
that the Commission estimated do not
currently capture information required
by the proposed rule that would engage
a third-party service provider to perform
the necessary system updates to both
capture the required data and create the
reports would be 500 hours 535 and
$250,000.536 The Commission noted
that this estimate contemplated the
impact of making the reports available
using the most recent versions of the
XML schema and the associated PDF
renderer, as published on the
Commission’s website, as required by
both proposed Rule 606(a) and
606(b)(1), and that the total initial
burden estimate for all 50 broker-dealers
that the Commission estimated would
need to update their systems and create
a new report would be 2,400 hours 537
and $250,000.538
For the remaining 216 broker-dealers
that the Commission estimated already
capture the data required by the
proposed modifications to Rule
606(a)(1), the Commission estimated
that 108 of such broker-dealers already
engage a third-party service provider to
provide reports pursuant to existing
Rule 606(a)(1) and such broker-dealers
would continue to use third-party
service providers to format reports to
comply with proposed Rule 606(a)(1).539
The Commission estimated that the
remaining 108 broker-dealers that
already capture information required by
the proposed rule would prepare and
format a report to comply with the
proposed rule in-house.540 The
broker-dealers). The monetized hourly burden was
correctly calculated using a 76-hour figure.
533 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $831,075. See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49474.
534 See id.
535 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $149,625. See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49474–75.
536 See id.
537 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $715,825. See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49475.
538 See id.
539 See id.
540 See id.
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Commission estimated that for a brokerdealer that already captures such data,
the burden to format that data into its
existing reports on its own would be 20
hours.541 Therefore, the Commission
estimated the total initial burden for
broker-dealers to format already
captured data into a report in-house to
comply with proposed Rule 606(a)(1) to
be 2,160.542
The Commission estimated that the
initial burden for the 108 broker-dealers
that engage a third-party service
provider to format reports to comply
with proposed Rule 606(a)(1) would be
8 hours 543 and $2,000 544 and that the
estimated total initial burden for these
broker-dealers to comply with proposed
Rule 606(a) would be 864 545 hours and
$216,000.546 Thus, the Commission
estimated that the burden for the 216
broker-dealers for whom the
Commission estimated already capture
the data required by proposed Rule
606(a) to format their reports to
incorporate such data would be 3,024
hours 547 and $216,000.548 These
estimates included the impact of making
the reports available using the most
recent versions of the XML schema and
the associated PDF renderer as
published on the Commission’s website,
as required by both proposed Rule
606(a) and 606(b)(1).549
Finally, the Commission estimated
that the initial burden for a brokerdealer that routes orders subject to the
disclosures required by Rule 606(a)(1) to
review, assess, and disclose its payment
for order flow arrangements and profitsharing relationships would be 10 hours
and that all 266 broker-dealers that
route such orders would describe such
agreements and arrangements
themselves.550 Therefore, the
Commission estimated the total initial
burden for all broker-dealers that route
such orders to review, assess, and
disclose their payment for order flow
arrangements and profit-sharing
541 The monetized hourly burden was estimated
at $4,975 per broker-dealer. See id.
542 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $537,300. See id.
543 The monetized hourly burden was estimated
at $2,555 per broker-dealer. See id.
544 See id.
545 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $275,940. See id.
546 See id.
547 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $813,240. See id.
548 See id.
549 See id.
550 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49475–
76.
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relationships to be 2,660 hours 551 and
$466,000.552
Therefore, the Commission estimated
that the total initial burden to comply
with the proposed modifications to Rule
606(a)(1) for all 266 broker-dealers
would be 8,084 hours and
$2,408,730.553
ii. Burden of Amended Rule
As discussed above, based on more
recent data on respondents,554 the
Commission now estimates that 292
broker-dealers are engaged in the
practice of routing orders subject to the
disclosures required by Rule 606(a)(1).
Additionally, the Commission is
revising its burden and cost estimates
associated with the initial burdens of
producing the reports on such order
routing. As discussed above,555 a
commenter criticized the Commission’s
estimate of both the hourly burden and
the monetized burden associated with
producing the disclosures, but did not
explicitly state to which category of
disclosures—Rule 606(a)(1) or Rule
606(b)(3)—the comments applied.556
The Commission is revising its burden
estimates for disclosures required under
Rule 606(a)(1) and Rule 606(b)(3)
primarily to reflect that all brokerdealers, rather than the fractional
number the Commission estimated in
the Proposal,557 will have to modify
their systems to comply with the
rule.558
The commenter acknowledges that
broker-dealers may either update their
systems in-house or engage a third-party
vendor to make the changes.559 The
Commission believes that it is
reasonable to estimate that one third of
the 292 broker-dealers that route orders
subject to the disclosures required by
Rule 606(a)(1)—97 broker-dealers—will
implement the changes in-house, while
the remaining number—195 brokerdealers—will engage a third-party
vendor to do so.560
551 The total monetized hourly burden was
estimated at $839,230. See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49476.
552 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49475.
553 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49474–
76.
554 See supra Section IV.C.2.
555 See supra Section IV.D.1.a.ii.
556 See Markit Letter at 33.
557 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49474–
75.
558 See Markit Letter at 33 (‘‘[i]n order to produce
the data for the public reports, brokers will all have
to modify their OMS system or have their OMS
vendor make changes’’ (emphasis added)).
559 See Markit Letter at 33 (broker-dealers will
have to ‘‘modify their OMS system or have their
OMS vendor make changes’’).
560 As discussed above, the Commission is
revising its burden estimates for Rule 606(a)(1) to
reflect that all broker-dealers that route orders
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The commenter criticizes the
Commission’s hourly burden estimate
for producing the Rule 606(a)(1)
disclosures as too low and suggests an
estimate of 240 hours to produce the
reports.561 Additionally, the commenter
suggests that the Commission’s estimate
may not have considered the costs
associated specifically with
implementation of systems to allow
marketability of orders to be
determined 562 to comply with the
requirement that the Rule 606(a)(1)
disclosures segment reporting on limit
orders into marketable and nonmarketable.563
Upon consideration of the comments,
and in particular the statement that the
implementation would require ‘‘at least
[ ] four weeks of developer time,’’ 564
and result in a ‘‘total cost of 240 hours
per broker,’’ 565 the Commission is
revising its initial hourly burden
estimate for a broker-dealer that routes
orders subject to the requirements of
Rule 606(a)(1) to both update its data
capture systems in-house and format the
report required by the rule to 240
hours.566 The Commission believes the
subject to the rule, rather than the fractional
number the Commission estimated in the proposal,
will have to modify their systems to comply with
the rule. When the Commission estimated in the
proposal this fractional number of broker-dealers, it
estimated that half this number would implement
the requirements of the rule in-house and the other
half would engage a third-party service provider to
do so. See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at
49474–75. Now that the Commission is estimating
all 292 broker-dealers will have to modify their
systems to comply with the rule, rather than a
fractional amount, it believes that, consistent with
the proportions relating to Rule 606(b)(3) system
implementation discussed above, one-third of
broker-dealers will implement the changes in-house
and two-thirds will engage a third-party service
provider, because in-house implementation costs
are generally higher than outsourcing, and a
proportion of broker-dealers greater than one-half
will want to realize the cost savings. See supra note
496. Accordingly, the Commission is revising the
proportion of in-house and third-party system
implementation relating to Rule 606(a)(1) to onethird and two-thirds of all 292 broker-dealers,
respectively, consistent with its estimates for Rule
606(b)(3) system implementation.
561 See Markit Letter at 33.
562 See Markit Letter at 33–34.
563 See supra Section III.B.2.
564 See Markit Letter at 33. The Commission is
revising its initial estimate of 20 Sr. Programmer
hours to 160 Sr. Programmer hours = 40-hour work
week × 4 (‘‘four weeks of developer time’’).
565 See id.
566 The Commission estimates the monetized
burden for this requirement to be $76,800. (Sr.
Programmer for 160 hours at $324 per hour) + (Sr.
Database Administrator for 20 hours at $334 per
hour) + (Sr. Business Analyst for 20 hours at $269
per hour) + (Attorney for 4 hours at $407 per hour)
+ (Sr. Operations Manager for 20 hours at $358 per
hour) + (Systems Analyst for 16 hours at $257 per
hour) = 240 hours and $76,800. The Commission
derived this estimate based on per hour figures from
SIFMA’s Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December
2017 values. See supra note 490.
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initial hourly burden for broker-dealers
that route such orders to engage a thirdparty to implement the requirements of
the rule to be 20 hours 567 but is revising
the associated costs to $32,000 to reflect
the complexities associated with
implementing the marketability
requirement raised by the commenter.
The Commission is estimating the
total initial burden for broker-dealers
that will program their systems in-house
to capture the data and produce a report
to comply with the rule as 23,280
hours.568 The Commission is estimating
the total initial burden for brokerdealers that will engage a third-party
vendor to program their systems to
capture the data and produce a report to
comply with the rule as 3,900 hours 569
and $6,240,000.570
Therefore, the Commission estimates
that the total initial burden for all 292
broker-dealers to comply with Rule
606(a)(1), as amended, and format their
reports to incorporate such data 571 is
27,180 hours and $6,240,000.572
567 See supra note 534. The Commission is
updating the monetized hourly burden estimate to
$6,410 to reflect the latest available labor earnings
data. (Sr. Business Analyst for 5 hours at $269 per
hour) + (Compliance Manager for 10 hours at $303
per hour) + (Attorney for 5 hours at $407 per hour)
= 20 hours and $6,410. The Commission derived
this estimate based on per hour figures from
SIFMA’s Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December
2017 values. See supra note 490.
568 23,280 hours = 240 hours × 97 broker-dealers
that route such orders and would perform the
necessary programming upgrades in-house. The
monetized hourly burden is $7,449,600 = $76,800
× 97 such broker-dealers. See supra note 566.
569 3,900 hours = 20 hours × 195 broker-dealers
that route such orders and would engage a thirdparty vendor to perform the necessary programming
upgrades. The monetized hourly burden is
$1,249,950 = $6,410 × 195 such broker-dealers. See
supra note 567.
570 $32,000 per broker-dealer that will need to
engage a third-party vendor × 195 such brokerdealers) = $6,240,000.
571 As discussed above, the Commission is
adopting a new requirement to divide the reports
required by Rule 606(a) by two categories: ‘‘S&P 500
Index’’ and ‘‘Other NMS Stocks.’’ See supra Section
III.B.5. The Commission believes that broker-dealer
systems already capture information on the
securities listed in the S&P 500 Index, so this
requirement imposes no additional burden
associated with data capture. With respect to
formatting the report, the Commission believes that
the work of segmenting data by a condition or
removing such segmentation generally carries the
same burden, independent of the segmenting
condition. Since the Commission believes that the
burden of removing segmentation by listing market,
a requirement which is being eliminated, is similar
to the burden of the new requirement to segment
the data by S&P 500 membership, the net burden
remains unchanged. Therefore, this requirement
does not change the initial or ongoing hourly
burden as estimated in the proposing release.
572 See supra notes 568, 569, and 570 (23,280
hours + 3,900 hours = 27,180 hours). The total
estimated initial monetized hourly burden is
$8,699,550 ($7,449,600 + $1,249,950). The
commenter asserts without further elaboration that
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58387
The Commission includes in this
estimate the initial burden of making
the reports available using the most
recent versions of the XML schema and
the associated PDF renderer as
published on the Commission’s website,
as required by Rule 606(a) and (b)(1), as
amended.
Finally, the Commission estimates
that the initial burden for a brokerdealer that routes orders subject to the
disclosures described by Rule 606(a)(1)
to review, assess, and disclose its
payment for order flow arrangements
and profit-sharing relationships to be 10
hours 573 and is updating the monetized
burden estimate to $3,380 to reflect the
latest available labor earnings data.574
The Commission believes that all
broker-dealers that route such orders
would describe such agreements and
arrangements themselves.575 To reflect
the latest available respondent numbers,
the Commission estimates the total
initial burden for all 292 broker-dealers
that route such orders to review, assess,
and disclose its payment for order flow
arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships to be 2,920 hours.576
As discussed above, Rule 606(b)(1), as
amended, does not modify any of the
current customer-specific disclosure
requirements but modifies the categories
of orders to which the disclosure
applies. Prior to these amendments,
Rule 606(b)(1) applied to all customer
orders, i.e., orders not from the account
of a broker-dealer that are NMS stock
orders having a market value of less
than $200,000 and orders having a
market value of at least $50,000 for an
NMS security that is an option contract.
However, broker-dealers must now
modify their systems to provide the
disclosures for the following types of
orders not from a broker-dealer,
‘‘the total cost for the industry would be over $16
million.’’ See Markit Letter at 34. To the extent that
the commenter is referring to Rule 606(a) and
606(b)(1) disclosures, for all the reasons discussed
above, the Commission believes that it has
reasonably estimated the total industry cost as
$14,939,550 ($8,699,550 monetized hourly burden
+ $6,240,000 cost burden).
573 See supra note 550.
574 The Commission derived this estimate based
on per hour figures from SIFMA’s Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry
2013: (Sr. Business Analyst at $269 per hour for 5
hours) + (Attorney at $407 per hour for 5 hours) =
10 hours and $3,380. The Commission derived this
estimate based on per hour figures from SIFMA’s
Management & Professional Earnings in the
Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December 2017
values. See supra note 490.
575 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49475–
76.
576 10 hours per broker-dealer that routes such
orders × 292 such broker-dealers = 2,920 hours. The
Commission estimates the monetized burden for
this requirement to be $986,960 ($3,380 per brokerdealer that routes such orders × 292 such brokerdealers). See id.
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regardless of market value: (i) Orders in
NMS stocks that are submitted on a held
basis; (ii) orders in NMS stocks that are
submitted on a not held basis and are
exempt from the disclosure
requirements of Rule 606(b)(3); or (iii)
orders in NMS securities that are option
contracts.
The Commission believes that it is
reasonable to estimate that one third of
the 292 broker-dealers that route orders
subject to the disclosures required by
Rule 606(b)(1)—97 broker-dealers—will
implement these changes in-house,
while the remaining number—195
broker-dealers—will engage a thirdparty vendor to do so.577 The
Commission estimates the initial burden
for a broker-dealer that will program its
systems in-house to comply with Rule
606(b)(1) as 24 hours.578 The
Commission estimates the initial burden
for a broker-dealer that will engage a
third-party vendor to program its
systems to comply with the rule as 3
hours 579 and $5,000.580
Therefore Commission estimates the
total initial burden for all 292 brokerdealers to program their systems to
comply with Rule 606(b)(1) as 2,913
hours 581 and $975,000.582
577 See
supra note 560.
Commission estimates the monetized
burden for this requirement to be $6,826.
(Programmer for 16 hours at $265 per hour) + (Sr.
Database Administrator for 2 hours at $334 per
hour) + (Sr. Business Analyst for 2 hours at $269
per hour) + (Attorney for 1 hour at $407 per hour)
+ (Sr. Operations Manager for 2 hours at $358 per
hour) + (Systems Analyst for 1 hour at $257 per
hour) = 24 hours and $6,826. The Commission
derived this estimate based on per hour figures from
SIFMA’s Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December
2017 values. See supra note 490.
579 The Commission estimates the monetized
burden for this requirement to be $979. (Sr.
Business Analyst for 1 hour at $269 per hour) +
(Compliance Manager for 1 hour at $303 per hour)
+ (Attorney for 1 hour at $407 per hour) = 3 hours
and $979. The Commission derived this estimate
based on per hour figures from SIFMA’s
Management & Professional Earnings in the
Securities Industry 2013 adjusted to December 2017
values. See supra note 490.
580 The Commission estimates that a third-party
service provider would charge an average of $5,000
to upgrade a broker-dealer’s systems to comply with
proposed Rule 606(b)(1).
581 2,913 hours = (24 hours × 97 broker-dealers
that route such orders and would perform the
necessary programming upgrades in-house) + (3
hours × 195 broker-dealers that would engage a
third-party to perform the upgrades). The
monetized hourly burden is $853,027 = ($6,826 ×
97 broker-dealers that would perform the upgrades
in-house) + ($979 × 195 broker-dealers that would
engage a third-party to perform the upgrades). See
supra notes 578 and 579.
582 $5,000 per broker-dealer that will need to
engage a third-party vendor × 195 such brokerdealers) = $975,000. See supra note 580.
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578 The
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b. Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping
Burden
i. Baseline Burden
The Commission preliminarily
believed that broker-dealers would need
to monitor payment for order flow and
profit-sharing relationships and
potential SRO rule changes that could
impact their order routing decisions and
incorporate any new information into
their reports. Thus, the Commission
estimated the average annual burden for
a broker-dealer to comply with the
proposed amendments to Rule
606(a)(1)(i) through (iii) would be 10
hours and the total annual burden for all
broker-dealers to comply with the
proposed amendments would be 2,660
hours.583
Finally, the Commission estimated
that the average annual burden for a
broker-dealer that handles retail orders
to describe and update any terms of
payment for order flow arrangements
and profit-sharing relationships with a
Specified Venue that may influence
their order routing decisions, as
required by proposed Rule 606(a)(1)(iv),
would be 15 hours.584 With 266 brokerdealers involved in retail order routing
practices that would be required to
comply with the rule, the Commission
estimated the total annual burden for
complying with proposed Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) would be 3,990 hours.585
ii. Burden of Amended Rule
The Commission continues to believe
that the annual burden to produce a
quarterly report will remain the same
under Rule 606(a), as amended, as
under the previous rule but that all
broker-dealers that route retail orders
will need to monitor payment for order
flow and profit-sharing relationships
and potential SRO rule changes that
could impact their order routing
decisions and incorporate any new
information into their reports. The
Commission continues to estimate the
average annual burden for a brokerdealer to comply with the amendments
to Rule 606(a)(1)(i) through (iii), as
amended, to be 10 hours 586 and is
updating the monetized burden estimate
to $3,380 to reflect the latest available
labor earnings data.587 To reflect the
latest available respondent numbers, the
583 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49476.
id.
585 See id.
586 See supra note 583.
587 The Commission derived this estimate based
on per hour figures from SIFMA’s Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry
2013 adjusted to December 2017 values, see supra
note 490: (Sr. Business Analyst at $269 per hour for
5 hours) + (Attorney at $407 per hour for 5 hours)
= 10 hours and $3,380.
584 See
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Commission estimates the total annual
burden for all 292 broker-dealers
required to perform this monitoring to
be 2,920 hours.588
The Commission continues to
estimate the average annual burden for
a broker-dealer required to describe and
update any terms of payment for order
flow arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships with a Specified Venue
that may influence their order routing
decisions, as required by Rule
606(a)(1)(iv), as amended to be 15
hours 589 and is updating the monetized
burden estimate to $3,745 to reflect the
latest available labor earnings data.590
To reflect the latest available respondent
numbers, the Commission estimates the
total annual burden for all 292 brokerdealers required to comply with Rule
606(a)(1)(iv), as amended, to be 4,380
hours.591
5. Revisions to Compliance Manuals
As discussed above, the amendments
being adopted today add several defined
terms to Rule 600 of Regulation NMS
which will impose an initial burden on
market centers and the broker-dealers to
review and update compliance manuals
and written supervisory procedures and
update citation references to any such
defined term. Although the Commission
did not include an initial estimate for
this burden in the Proposing Release,
the Commission is now revising its PRA
estimate to include this burden. Based
on its familiarity with these types of
materials and the likelihood that these
materials are maintained in an
electronic form that facilitates search
and replace, the Commission estimates
that each of the 381 market centers and
4,024 broker-dealers would make these
updates in house at a one-time burden
of 2 hours for each respondent.592
588 10 hours per broker-dealer that routes such
orders × 292 such broker-dealers = 2,920 hours. The
Commission estimates the monetized burden for
this requirement to be $986,960 ($3,380 per brokerdealer that routes such orders × 292 such brokerdealers). See id.
589 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49476.
590 The Commission derived this estimate based
on per hour figures from SIFMA’s Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry
2013, see supra note 490: (Jr. Business Analyst at
$171 per hour for 10 hours) + (Attorney at $407 per
hour for 5 hours) = 15 hours and $3,745.
591 15 hours annually per broker-dealer that
routes such orders × 292 such broker-dealers =
4,380 hours. The Commission estimates the total
monetized burden for this requirement to be
$1,093,540. ($3,745 annually per broker-dealer that
routes such orders × 292 such broker-dealers). See
id.
592 The Commission estimates the monetized
burden for this requirement to be $426. (Paralegal
for 2 hours at $213 per hour) = 2 hours and $426.
The Commission derived this estimate based on per
hour figures from SIFMA’s Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry
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Therefore the Commission estimates the
total initial cost to be 8,810 hours.593
There is no annual burden associated
with this requirement.
6. Amendment to Disclosures Under
Rule 605
The amendment to Rule 605 being
adopted today requires that such reports
be kept posted on a website that is free
and readily accessible to the public for
a period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the website. Because
reports were already required to be
posted to a website pursuant to Rule 605
prior to today’s amendments, and the
proposed amendment merely prescribes
a minimum period of time for which
such reports shall remain posted, the
Commission preliminarily estimated the
proposed amendment to Rule 605
would not impose an additional
burden.594 The Commission continues
to believe that this amendment will not
impose an additional collection burden.
E. Collection of Information Is
Mandatory
All of the collections of information
are mandatory.
F. Confidentiality of Responses to
Collection of Information
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To the extent that the Commission
receives confidential information
pursuant to the collection of
information, such information will be
kept confidential, subject to the
provisions of applicable law.595 Any
information required to be disclosed
publicly by the amended Rules would
not be confidential.
The quarterly order routing reports
prepared and disseminated by brokerdealers pursuant to Rules 606(a), as
amended, would be available to the
public. The individual responses by
broker-dealers to customer requests for
order routing information required by
Rules 606(b)(1) and (b)(3), as amended,
would be made available the customer.
The Commission, SROs, and other
regulatory authorities could obtain
copies of these reports as appropriate.
2013 adjusted to December 2017 values. See supra
note 490.
593 2 hours × (381 market centers + 4,024 brokerdealers) = 8,810 hours. The Commission estimates
the total monetized burden for this requirement to
be $1,876,530. ($426 per market center or brokerdealer that routes such orders × (381 market centers
+ 4,024 broker-dealers)). See id.
594 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49476.
595 See, e.g., 5 U.S.C. 552 et seq.; 15 U.S.C. 78x
(governing the public availability of information
obtained by the Commission).
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G. Retention Period for Recordkeeping
Requirements
Pursuant to Rule 606(a), as amended,
broker-dealers shall be required to keep
quarterly order routing reports posted
on a website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of
three years from the initial date of
posting on the website.
For Rule 606(b), as adopted, brokerdealers shall be required to preserve all
communications required under these
proposed amendments pursuant to Rule
17a–4, as applicable.596
Pursuant to the proposed
amendments to Rule 605, as amended,
market centers shall be required to keep
order execution reports posted on a
website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of
three years from the initial date of
posting on the website.
V. Economic Analysis
The Commission is sensitive to the
economic consequences and effects,
including costs and benefits, of its rules.
The following economic analysis
identifies and considers the costs and
benefits—including the effects on
efficiency, competition, and capital
formation—that may result from the
amendments to Rules 600, 605, and
606.597 These costs and benefits are
discussed below and have informed the
policy choices described throughout
this release.
A. Introduction
Among the primary economic
considerations for the adopted
amendments to Rule 600, Rule 605, and
Rule 606 are transparency for customers
placing not held NMS stock orders,
transparency for customers placing held
NMS stock orders, and enhanced access
to order handling reports.598
The Commission believes that
requiring customer-specific order
handling disclosures for orders
submitted on a not held basis, as will be
required by adopted Rule 606(b)(3), will
provide information to customers to
enable them to assess broker-dealers’
order handling decisions and to
incentivize broker-dealers to better
manage any potential conflicts of
596 17 CFR 240.17a–4. Registered brokers and
dealers are already subject to existing recordkeeping
and retention requirements under Rule 17a–4.
597 The Commission also is adopting amendments
to Rule 3a51–1(a) under the Exchange Act; Rule
13h–1(a)(5) of Regulation 13D–G; Rule 105(b)(1) of
Regulation M; Rules 201(a) and 204(g) of Regulation
SHO; Rules 600(b), 602(a)(5), and 611(c) of
Regulation NMS; and Rule 1000 of Regulation SCI,
to update cross-references as a result of the
amendments being adopted today, which would not
result in costs or benefits.
598 See supra Section II.
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58389
interest the broker-dealers may face,
provide customers with higher-quality
routing services, and promote
competition.
The Commission is also amending
Rule 606(b)(1) to require a broker-dealer,
upon customer request, to provide
disclosures for orders in NMS stock that
are submitted on a held basis, and for
orders in NMS stock that are submitted
on a not held basis and for which the
broker-dealer is not required to provide
the customer a report under Rule
606(b)(3). The Commission believes that
amended Rule 606(b)(1) disclosures will
help ensure customers can assess the
order routing and execution quality
provided by their broker-dealers, which,
in turn, enables the customers to
evaluate and select broker-dealers,
promote competition among brokerdealers, and support overall market
efficiency.
The Commission also is amending
Rule 606(a) such that the public reports
include additional information that will
enhance transparency on the routing of
customer orders and enhance
competition among broker-dealers that
route such orders, to the benefit of
investors.
The Commission believes that the
requirement that the order routing
reports required by Rule 606(b) be
provided in a consistent, structured
format will be useful to customers as
such format will allow customers to
more easily analyze and compare data
across broker-dealers.
Finally, the Commission believes that
the amendments to Rules 605 and 606
of Regulation NMS to require that the
public order execution and order
routing reports be kept publicly
available for a period of 3 years will
allow the public to more efficiently
evaluate the services of broker-dealers
because it will be easier for the public
to access historic reports and analyze
the data over an extended time period.
The Commission believes that these
adopted amendments as a whole will
allow customers to better assess the held
NMS stock order routing and execution
quality offered by their broker-dealers.
As a result, the Commission believes
that these additional disclosures may
provide broker-dealers further
incentives to improve execution quality
for their customers and better manage
any potential for conflicts of interest the
broker-dealers may face. In addition, the
ability of customers to better assess
routing and execution quality could also
lead to increased competition among
broker-dealers with respect to execution
quality, which could, in turn, result in
broker-dealers providing even higher-
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quality order routing and execution
services.
The discussion below presents a
baseline of the current practices, a
consideration of the costs and benefits
of the adopted new requirements,
alternatives considered, and a
discussion of the potential effects of the
adopted amendments.
B. Baseline
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The baseline for considering the
economic impact of amending Rule 606
to require reporting for not held NMS
stock orders consists of: (1) Information
that customers currently receive from
their broker-dealers regarding how their
not held NMS stock orders are handled;
(2) the format in which such
information is currently provided to
customers; (3) conflicts of interest
broker-dealers currently face; (4) the
current use of actionable IOIs; and (5)
the ability to assess order routing and
execution quality currently provided by
different broker-dealers and execution
quality currently provided by different
trading centers.
The baseline for considering the
economic impact of amending Rule 606
for held NMS stock orders and of
amending Rule 605 consists of: (1)
Information that customers currently
receive under Rules 605 and 606 or
information that customers currently
receive from their broker-dealers that is
not required by Rules 605 and 606; (2)
the format in which information
required by Rule 606 for such orders is
provided to customers; (3) conflicts of
interest that broker-dealers currently
face; (4) how long reports required by
Rules 605 and 606 are available to the
public; and (5) the ability to assess order
routing and execution quality currently
provided by different broker-dealers and
execution quality currently provided by
different trading centers.
Finally, the baseline for considering
the economic impact of amending Rules
605 and 606 includes the current
competitive landscape in the markets
for brokerage services and for execution
services and any current limitations on
efficiency or capital formation relevant
to the adopted amendments. These
various baseline factors are discussed in
further detail below.
1. Current $200,000 Threshold
Currently, Rule 606 of Regulation
NMS requires public disclosure of a
broker-dealer’s order routing
information for non-directed orders in
NMS securities that are in amounts less
than (i) $200,000 for NMS stocks, and
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(ii) $50,000 for option contracts.599
While market participants have access
to publicly available order execution
quality statistics and order routing
information for these smaller orders,600
there is no public disclosure
requirement for larger orders.
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission analyzed how the $200,000
relates to orders from institutional
customers.601 With respect to orders
from institutions, Commission staff
reviewed a set of orders from
institutions and found that 83.2% of
orders studied were smaller than
$200,000 as discussed in the Proposing
Release.602 However, 92% of total dollar
volume from orders of institutions in
the data has a market value of at least
$200,000. As also discussed in the
Proposing Release, the percentage of
orders from institutions that have a
market value of $200,000 varies by
activity level of the stock, with a higher
proportion having a market value of
$200,000 in more active stocks.603
While approximately 20% of orders
from institutions in the group of most
active stocks have a market value of
$200,000, less than 3% of orders from
institutions in the group of least active
stocks have a market value of $200,000.
Several commenters also discussed
the relationship between the $200,000
threshold and institutional orders and
also found that most institutional orders
are for trade sizes smaller than
$200,000. One commenter stated that its
599 See 17 CFR 242.606. See also supra note 4 and
accompanying text.
600 Rule 605 requires a market center that trades
NMS stocks to make available to the public monthly
electronic execution reports that include uniform
statistical measures of execution quality. The
Commission staff exempted from the rule any order
with a size of 10,000 shares or greater. See Letter
to Darla C. Stuckey, Assistant Secretary, New York
Stock Exchange, Inc., from Annette L. Nazareth,
Director, Division, dated June 22, 2001.
601 See Proposing Release supra note 1, at 49483.
602 See id. Information on institutional equity
trading for the sample period of 2013–2014 is
obtained from Abel Noser Solutions, Ltd. According
to an academic study by Puckett and Yan (2011),
the dataset contains detailed equity trading
information for each Abel Noser client and includes
a representative set of institutional investors
including pension plan sponsors (e.g., CalPERS, the
Commonwealth of Virginia, and YMCA retirement
fund) and money managers (e.g., Massachusetts
Financial Services (MFS), Putnam Investments, and
Lazard Asset Management). The authors also
reported that the database contains a total of 840
different institutions during their sample period.
These clients accounted for at least 10% of the total
trading volume from 1999–2005, according to
Puckett and Yan (2011). The Commission assumes
for purposes of this analysis that these clients have
continued to account for at least this volume during
its sample period. See, e.g., Andy Puckett and
Xuemin (Sterling) Yan, The Interim Trading Skills
of Institutional Investors, 66 Journal of Finance 601
(April 2011).
603 See id.
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internal analysis of institutional trading
volume indicated that 14% of
institutional shares and 65% of
institutional orders in the month of
April 2016 were for less than $200,000,
and from a sampling of large retail
broker customer orders for 10 trading
days in April 2016, over 10% of shares
traded and over 20% of the value traded
were from orders larger than
$200,000.604 Another commenter stated
that approximately 35% of orders it
sends to broker-dealers are less than
$200,000.605 Another commenter stated
that for January through August 2016
96% of its orders were below the
$200,000 threshold.606
2. Current Reporting for NMS Stock
Orders of $200,000 and Above
Currently, as discussed in the
Proposing Release, broker-dealers may
voluntarily provide some information
on routing and execution quality of
NMS stock orders of $200,000 and
above to individual customers in
response to requests by these
customers.607 Customers may also use
third-party vendors for Transaction Cost
Analysis (‘‘TCA’’) to analyze the
execution prices of orders compared to
various benchmarks; however, TCA as
provided by third-party vendors may
not encompass an analysis of routing
decisions as third-party vendors, similar
to customers, do not have access to
order handling information necessary to
do so.
The Commission further understands
that reports that customers sending
orders of at least $200,000 in market
value currently receive upon request
from their broker-dealers may not
provide the consistent and standardized
information needed to fully assess or
compare the performance of their
broker-dealers.608 Moreover, customer
orders having a market value of at least
$200,000 are not subject to public
reporting, which creates more difficulty
to customers in comparing brokerdealers and assessing broker-dealers’
order routing practices.609
Even if a broker-dealer voluntarily
provides information about NMS stock
orders of $200,000 and above upon
request, it may not do so with respect
to all customers. Whether a given
customer receives a report and how
responsive the report is to the request
likely depends on the customer’s
604 See
Markit Letter at 6–7.
Capital Group Letter at 2.
606 See Bloomberg Letter at 11–12.
607 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49478–
79.
608 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49479
for explanation.
609 See id.
605 See
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current or potential business
relationship with the broker-dealer. A
broker-dealer may be more
accommodating towards customers that
send, or may send in the near future,
substantial order flow. This difference
in access to reports from broker-dealers,
and variations in the quality of reports
received, may result in a non-level
playing field with respect to order
handling information.
3. Publication Period for Reports
Required by Rules 605 and 606
While Rules 605 and 606 have not
specified the minimum length of time
that order execution reports and order
routing reports are publicly posted,
generally, when new reports are
available, some market centers and
broker-dealers will remove the previous
report from their website and replace it
with their most recent report,610 and
others may make reports available for a
longer period of time that varies.611 The
Commission understands that this may
make it difficult for the public to
compare the order routing decisions of
a broker-dealer or the execution quality
of market centers through time.
Alternatively, the public may rely on
third-party vendors who retrieve and
aggregate Rule 605 and 606 reports from
market centers and broker-dealers,
respectively, to get access to historical
data.
4. Available Information on Conflicts of
Interest
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As discussed in the Proposing
Release, Rule 606(a) requires that
broker-dealers provide for covered
orders, among other things, a
description of any arrangement for
610 See, e.g., Morgan Stanley Rules 605 and 606
Disclosures, available at https://
www.morganstanley.com/institutional-sales/sec_
rules_605_606; Wells Fargo Legal Disclosures,
available at https://www.wellsfargoadvisors.com/
disclosures/legal-disclosures.htm; Charles Schwab
Order Routing, available at https://
www.schwab.com/public/schwab/nn/legal_
compliance/important_notices/order_routing.html;
TD Ameritrade Disclosures, available at https://
www.tdameritrade.com/disclosure.page; Fidelity
Quarterly Reports, available at https://
capitalmarkets.fidelity.com/app/item/RD_13569_
21696.html.
611 See, e.g., UBS Order Routing Disclosure,
available at https://www.ubs.com/us/en/wealth/
misc/orderroutingdisclosure.html.
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payment for order flow 612 and any
profit-sharing relationships.613
Many commenters agreed with the
baseline that payment for order flow,
fees, and rebates could result in
conflicts of interest in institutional
order routing.614 One commenter
mentioned that investors cannot
properly assess the full extent of a
broker-dealer’s conflicts of interest and
the effect that conflicts have on routing
decisions absent more detailed
explanations of the conflict.615 For the
reasons discussed throughout this
release and in the Proposing Release,
the Commission believes that financial
incentives, such as rebates, have the
potential to affect how broker-dealers
route retail stock orders.616 Further, as
noted above, conflicts of interest may
affect institutional orders in ways
similar to effects on retail orders.
However, for the reasons discussed in
the Proposing Release, the ad hoc nature
of the order handling disclosures of
institutional orders may not be as
effective in providing institutions with
information they can use efficiently to
assess conflicts of interest, because the
ad hoc nature of the reports limits the
ability of institutions to make
comparisons about broker-dealers’
conflicts of interest.
5. Available Information on Execution
Quality
As described above and in the
Proposing Release, under the rules prior
to these amendments, broker-dealers
have not been required by regulation or
incentivized by marketplace practices to
provide customers standardized,
comparable reports about the handling
of their NMS stock orders of at least
$200,000 in market value and instead
customers may receive ad hoc reports
from broker-dealers upon request.617 As
a result, the Commission believes that
612 In addition, Rule 10b–10 under the Exchange
Act requires broker-dealers, when acting as agent
for the customer, to disclose on the confirmation of
a transaction whether payment for order flow was
received and, upon written request of the customer,
to furnish the source and nature of the
compensation received. See 17 CFR 240.10b–
10(a)(2)(i)(C). Accordingly, Rule 10b–10 provides
disclosure to a specific customer of whether
payment for order flow was received on a particular
transaction, while Rule 606 provides public
disclosure of any arrangement for payment for order
flow and any profit-sharing relationship by
requiring a description of such arrangements.
613 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49479–
80.
614 See, e.g., Ameritrade Letter at 1; Fidelity Letter
at 1; FSR Letter at 1; and MFA Letter at 1–2.
615 See CFA Letter at 5.
616 For a discussion of studies regarding potential
negative and positive effects of rebates, see
Transaction Fee Pilot Proposing Release, supra note
2.
617 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49480.
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58391
customers may not be able to compare
reliably the order handling performance
of their broker-dealers and to evaluate
the execution quality of their orders
among broker-dealers.
In contrast to the ad hoc nature of
reporting for NMS stock orders of at
least $200,000 in market value, Rule 606
has required quarterly public reports on
customer order routing and disclosure
of customer order routing information
upon request. However, the previously
existing public reports have not
required specific information on
payment for order flow received,
payment from any profit-sharing
relationship received, or transaction
rebates and access fees, and they have
not been required to separate limit
orders into marketable and nonmarketable limit orders. Moreover,
because Rule 605 reports only cover
held orders and previously existing
public reports do not distinguish held
orders from customer orders, the scope
of Rule 605 reports do not directly align
with the scope of Rule 606 reports,
which limits the ability of customers to
assess execution quality of their brokerdealers.
6. Format of Current Reports
As discussed above and in the
Proposing Release, broker-dealers
provide some information on routing
and execution quality of institutional
orders in response to requests from
institutional customers in a variety of
formats. The reports typically are not in
a structured format.618
7. Quality of Broker-Dealer Routing
Practices for Not Held NMS Stock
Orders
The Commission does not have data
to gauge the current level of quality of
broker-dealer routing practices for not
held NMS stock orders, as Rule 606
requires public disclosure of a brokerdealer’s order routing information for
non-directed orders in NMS securities
that are in amounts less than $200,000
for NMS stocks, and does not require
broker-dealers to separately report
routing of not held orders.619
8. Use of Actionable IOIs
To encourage additional order flow,
some broker-dealers use actionable IOIs
to communicate to external liquidity
providers that they have unexecuted
liquidity. As noted above and in the
Proposing Release, because actionable
618 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49480–
81.
619 As noted above, including in Section V.B.4,
Rule 606 provides information on the quality of
broker-dealer routing practices for customer orders;
see also Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49481.
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IOIs convey information similar to that
of an order, a response to an actionable
IOI may result in an execution at the
venue of the IOI sender.620 Accordingly,
a broker-dealer’s use of actionable IOIs
creates potential information leakage
similar to that of the routing of orders.
The Commission does not have data to
gauge the current level of use of
actionable IOIs by broker-dealers to
attract orders to execute against not held
NMS stock orders represented by such
actionable IOIs. In addition, Rule 606
for customer orders has not required the
inclusion of actionable IOIs in the
reports.
The Commission recognizes that,
although actionable IOIs and
conditional orders are similar, many
market participants distinguish
conditional orders from actionable IOIs
because conditional orders require
additional negotiation before a trade can
be executed.621 Further, according to
comments, conditional orders typically
are messages submitted by participants
in an anonymous, dark matching
platform to confidentially seek a
potential counterparty involving a oneto-one interaction, rather than a one-tomany interaction typical of an
actionable IOI.
9. Competition, Efficiency, and Capital
Formation
The adopted amendments are likely to
affect competition among broker-dealers
that route both not held and held NMS
stock orders. These broker-dealers
compete in a segment of the market for
broker-dealer services. The Commission
discussed market conditions for brokerdealer services in the Proposing Release,
including that the market is highly
competitive, with most business
concentrated among a small set of large
broker-dealers and thousands of small
broker-dealers competing.622
As of December 2016, there were
approximately 4,024 registered brokerdealers.623 Of these, the Commission
estimates that 292 broker-dealers route
orders in NMS stocks on a held basis
that would be subject to the public
disclosure requirements of Rule 606(a)
or the current customer-specific
disclosure requirements of Rule
606(b)(1).624 The Commission estimates
620 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49481.
e.g., BIDS Letter at 4–5; Bloomberg Letter
at 3–4; Capital Group Letter at 3; FIF Letter at 7;
FSR Letter at 7; Markit Letter at 11–12; SIFMA
Letter at 6.
622 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49481–
82; see also Securities Exchange Act Release No.
63241 (November 3, 2010), 75 FR 69791, 69822
(November 15, 2010) (Risk Management Controls
for Brokers or Dealers with Market Access).
623 See supra note 467.
624 See supra Section IV.D.4.a.ii.
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621 See,
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that 200 broker-dealers route
institutional orders, all of whom also
route retail orders, and that each brokerdealer that routes institutional orders
will receive an average of 200 requests
for reports pursuant to adopted Rule
606(b)(3) annually.625 All of these
broker-dealers compete for business
from retail and institutional customers.
The Commission also estimates that for
calendar year 2017, 6,111 unique filers
filed Form 13F on behalf of 6,580
institutional investment managers. The
Commission estimates the number of
customers to be approximately this
number of institutional investment
managers.626
Among other factors, broker-dealers
may compete for retail and institutional
customers by trying to offer them better
terms for trading, such as better
execution quality. The emergence of
discount brokerages has encouraged
full-service brokers to compete on price
and led to the unbundling of research
from execution services.627 In addition,
the fragmentation of NMS stock trading
into 13 registered exchanges, more than
40 ATSs, and over 200 OTC market
makers 628 has contributed to the need
for broker-dealers to focus on venue
selection in executing orders. Brokerdealers may also innovate to attract new
customers by, for example, offering
access to algorithms designed to match
trading or investment objectives.
However, as noted above, the
information on which broker-dealers
offer better terms of trade may be nonstandardized, may be presented
inconsistently over time, or may employ
complex calculations using undisclosed
methods.629 Further, the format of the
reports may limit the comparison of
reports across broker- dealers.630 As a
625 See
supra Section IV.C.2 and note 513.
Commission estimates the number of
customers that may place institutional orders as the
number of entire 13F filings submitted during the
calendar year 2017. In calendar year 2017, 6,580
unique managers filed 13F reports. The
Commission recognizes that not all of these
institutions necessarily trade NMS stocks. Further,
some customers that submit institutional orders
may not be 13F institutions. While this estimate
may not be precise, the Commission believes that
it approximates the number of customers that may
be affected by the adopted amendments.
627 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49436.
628 See supra Section I; see also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49481.
629 See generally supra Sections V.B.2, V.B.5, and
V.B.6.
630 See supra Section V.B.6. for a discussion of
current formats. Broker-dealers provide reports in a
variety of formats and a given broker-dealer may
use different structures and formats for different
customers. This makes it difficult to electronically
read reports into a system to compare multiple
broker-dealers and conduct statistical analysis
across broker-dealers. Differing formats also make it
difficult to electronically search across brokerdealers for various data points in the reports.
626 The
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result, customers may not be able to
efficiently identify which broker-dealers
provide better execution quality. This
may reduce the incentives for brokerdealers to compete by offering better
execution quality or to innovate on
execution quality. Without the incentive
to compete by offering better execution
quality, broker-dealers may route
customer orders in ways that do not
necessarily promote better execution
quality.631 Such inefficient routing
could have effects on the market for
trading services.
The market for trading services,
which is served by trading centers,
relies on competition among these
market centers to supply investors with
execution services at efficient prices.
These market centers, which compete
to, among other things, match traders
with counterparties, provide a
framework for price negotiation and
provide liquidity to those seeking to
trade. As discussed in Section IV.C., the
Commission estimates that there are 381
market centers to which Rule 605
applies.632
These market centers compete with
each other for order flow on a number
of dimensions, including execution
quality. Their primary customers are the
broker-dealers that route their own
orders or their customers’ orders for
execution at the trading center. One way
to attract order flow is to offer payment
for order flow. The Commission
understands that a large portion of retail
order flow is sent to internalizers who
pay for retail order flow. Trading centers
also may innovate to differentiate
themselves from other trading centers to
attract more order flow. For example,
several exchanges recently started pilots
in an attempt to attract more retail order
flow.633 Trading centers also may adjust
fees and rebates to incentivize brokerdealers to route more order flow to
them. To the extent that broker-dealers
route orders for reasons other than
execution quality, trading centers may
631 See supra Section V.B.4, regarding the
conflicts of interest broker-dealers have when
routing customer orders.
632 The 381 market centers estimated for purposes
of the PRA include approximately 214 OTC market
makers (not including market makers claiming an
exemption from the reporting requirements of the
Rule), plus 21 exchanges, 1 securities association,
104 exchange market makers, and 41 ATSs. See
supra note 469 and accompanying text.
633 See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No.
67347 (July 3, 2012), 77 FR 40673 (July 10, 2012)
for the NYSE and NYSEAMER pilots; Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 68303 (November 27,
2012), 77 FR 71652 (December 3, 2012) for the
CboeBZX pilot; Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 71176 (December 23, 2013), 78 FR 79524 (July
30, 2013) for the NYSE Arca pilot; and Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 73702 (November 28,
2014), 79 FR 72049 (December 4, 2014) for the BX
pilot.
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have less of an incentive to compete and
innovate on execution quality. This may
limit overall execution quality and
result in higher transaction costs for
customers than will exist with greater
competition on execution quality.
Transaction costs reflect the level of
efficiency in the trading process, with
higher transaction costs reflecting less
efficiency.634 Inefficiency in the trading
process creates friction, which limits the
ability for prices to fully reflect a stock’s
underlying value.635 Stoll (2000) defines
friction as follows: ‘‘[f]riction in
financial markets measures the
difficulty with which an asset is
traded.’’ 636 Stoll follows Demsetz
(1968) 637 to ‘‘view friction as the price
paid for immediacy.’’ Thus, higher
transaction costs imply higher friction
in the market. Friction makes it more
costly to trade and makes investing less
efficient. Further, friction limits the
ability of arbitrageurs or informed
customers to push prices to their
underlying values, and thus friction
makes prices less efficient.
These frictions may have an adverse
impact on capital formation. In
particular, an increase in transaction
costs may hinder customers’ trading
activity that would support efficient
adjustment of security prices and as a
result may limit prices’ ability to reflect
fundamental values. The resulting less
efficient prices result in some issuers
experiencing a cost of capital that is
higher than if their prices fully reflected
underlying values while some other
issuers might experience the opposite.
This, in turn, may limit efficient
allocation and capital formation. If an
issuer’s cost of capital is higher than in
perfectly efficient markets, its projects
would appear less profitable than they
otherwise would be. The opposite
would be true for an issuer with a cost
of capital lower than in perfectly
efficient markets. Thus, on average,
inefficiencies can result in funding
projects that generate less capital than
some unfunded projects would have.
C. Costs and Benefits
The Commission identified costs and
benefits associated with the
amendments to Rules 600, 605, and 606,
which are discussed below. The
Commission quantifies the costs where
possible and provides qualitative
discussion when quantifying costs and
benefits is infeasible. Many, but not all,
of the costs of the adopted amendments
634 See Hans R. Stoll, Friction, 55 Journal of
Finance 1479 (2000).
635 See id.
636 See id.
637 See Harold Demsetz, The Cost of Transacting,
82 Quarterly Journal of Economics 33 (1968).
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to Rules 600, 605, and 606 involve a
collection of information, and these
costs and burdens are discussed in the
Paperwork Reduction Act Section
above, with those estimates being used
in the economic analysis below.638
1. Customer-Specific Order Handling
Disclosures
a. Scope of Customer-Specific Order
Handling Disclosure in Rule 606(b)(1)
and 606(b)(3), and the De Minimis
Exceptions in Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5)
i. Benefits
1. Not Held Orders/Rule 606(b)(3)
The Commission believes that the
adopted approach to Rule 606(b)(3),639
based on the distinction between not
held and held orders, targets the Rule
606(b)(3) reports to the investors most
likely to benefit from them and to the
orders in which the reports would be
most meaningful. Because of the
discretion afforded in the handling of
not held orders, the complexity in
which not held orders are handled, and
the customer-specific nature of
instructions for handling not held
orders,640 the granular level of
information the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
provide for not held orders will be
beneficial. Commenters further
indicated that retail investor orders are
generally held and institutional investor
orders are generally not held.641 The
Commission also recognizes that brokerdealers have routing discretion on held
orders. However, not held orders allow
discretion on additional dimensions
such as timing and execution strategy.
In light of the comments received
suggesting the order type approach, the
Commission staff performed a
supplemental analysis of that approach.
To examine the usage of not held orders
by institutional customers, the staff
analyzed the percentage of not held
orders received from institutional and
individual accounts from the FINRA’s
OATS data.642 The staff studied orders
638 See
supra Section IV.
Section III.A.1.b.iii.
640 Not held NMS stock orders from customers
frequently limit broker-dealer discretion in some
manner.
641 See supra note 58.
642 The OATS data classifies institutional
accounts as defined in FINRA Rule 4512(c) and
individual accounts as an account that does not
meet the definition of FINRA Rule 4512(c) and is
not a proprietary account. In OATS data, ‘‘Account
Type’’ identifies the type of beneficial owner of the
account for which the order was received or
originated. From OATS data, the analysis used
orders originated from the following account types
only: Individual Customer (I)—An account that
does not meet the definition of FINRA Rule 4512(c)
and is also not a proprietary account; Institutional
Customer (A)—An institutional account as defined
in FINRA Rule 4512(c). The analysis also used
58393
submitted from customer accounts of
120 randomly selected NMS stocks
listed on NYSE during the sample
period of December 5, 2016, to
December 9, 2016, consisting of 40
large-cap stocks, 40 mid-cap stocks, and
40 small-cap stocks.643 Consistent with
the comments, the staff analysis
confirms that orders received from
institutional accounts are more likely to
be not held orders than orders received
from individual accounts. Specifically,
the staff analysis found that among the
orders received from the institutional
accounts, about 69% of total shares and
close to 39% of total number of orders
in the sample are not held orders,
whereas among the orders received from
the individual accounts, about 19% of
total shares and about 12% of total
number of orders in the sample are not
held orders. To the extent that
institutional investors are generally
more sophisticated and in a better
position to understand and, therefore,
benefit from the Rule 606(b)(3) reports,
this result suggests that targeting the not
held orders for these customer-specific
reports results in the reports being
available to those most likely to benefit
from them. Additionally, because
placing not held orders requires an
understanding of the price, time, and
other discretion embedded in not held
orders, those placing not held orders are
likely to be relatively sophisticated,
even if they are not institutions. Because
Rule 606(b)(3) reports will be very
detailed, these customers are likely to be
among those sophisticated enough to
value the information in Rule 606(b)(3)
reports and interpret the content of the
reports in ways unique to them.644
Consistent with commenters, the
Commission believes that the adopted
approach will facilitate identification of
orders by broker-dealers that is
consistent with many of the brokerdealers’ current practices, which in turn
could promote the accuracy of order
handling information of not held orders
and help ensure the benefits to
customers that receive the reports. As
639 See
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
indicators for order origination from the OATS data.
By FINRA definition, order origination identifies
whether the order was received from a customer of
the firm, originated by the firm, or whether the
order was received from another Broker/Dealer. By
FINRA definition, F—Order was received from a
customer or originated with the Firm; W—Received
from another Broker/Dealer. The analysis used
orders with the indicator F only.
643 For more details, see OATS Reporting
Technical Specifications, available at https://
www.finra.org/sites/default/files/TechSpec_
062718.pdf.
644 Some customers give complete discretion to a
broker-dealer in handling their orders while other
customers may place limits on or provide
instructions regarding how a broker-dealer can
handle their orders.
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noted by multiple commenters, brokerdealers and other market participants
are familiar with the held and not held
order type classifications, classifying
orders as held or not held would be
consistent with current industry
practice, and the terms held and not
held are common terms of usage in the
securities markets.645 Indeed, as pointed
out by commenters, broker-dealers
already must mark orders that they
execute as held or not held, these order
classifications are commonly recognized
in the FIX Protocol and utilized in
OATS technical specifications, the
Commission’s definition of ‘‘covered
order’’ in Rule 600(b)(15) already relies
on these order classifications, and
broker-dealers already characterize
orders on a held or not held basis to
comply with Rule 605’s covered order
requirement and other rules such as
FINRA’s Manning rule (FINRA Rule
5320).
The Commission is adopting Rules
606(b)(4) and Rule 606(b)(5) de minimis
exceptions from Rule 606(b)(3)’s
requirements, which except a brokerdealer from the Rule 606(b)(3)
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645 See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3, 7–
8; KCG Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2–3;
SIFMA Letter at 3.
17:24 Nov 16, 2018
Jkt 247001
646 See
supra Section II.A.1.b.iv and note 135.
STA Letter II at 2; Ameritrade Letter at 2;
Wells Fargo Letter at 5.
648 See, e.g., Wells Fargo Letter at 5; Citadel Letter
at 3; Citadel Letter II at 1–2 (noting that the 5%
threshold suggested by other commenters should
ensure that smaller broker dealers are not adversely
affected by the new disclosure requirement, and
noting that a threshold based on a percentage of
orders or shares received could potentially be set
lower than a threshold based on a percentage of
executed shares).
649 See, e.g., FIF Letter at 5, 10; STA Letter II at
2; Citadel Letter at 3; Thomson Reuters Letter at 1;
Ameritrade Letter at 2.
647 See
2. De Minimis Exceptions and Rule
606(b)(1)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
requirements at the firm level or the
customer level.646
With respect to the Rule 606(b)(4) de
minimis, commenters suggested that
firms that receive less than 5% of orders
from institutions should be exempt from
requirements to provide disclosures for
institutional orders, both at the
individual investor level and in the
aggregate,647 and that the de minimis
threshold should closely match a
broker-dealer’s core business and
targeted customer profile.648
Commenters that supported a de
minimis exception from Rule 606(b)(3)
also supported disclosure based on
whether an order is held or not held and
generally discussed the reasoning for a
de minimis exception in that context.649
To assess commenters’ suggestions of
a 5% de minimis threshold for Rule
606(b)(3) requirements, the staff
conducted a supplemental analysis,
PO 00000
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which found that among 342 brokerdealers that receive not held orders from
customers in the sample data, 28 brokerdealers would receive de minimis
exceptions from Rule 606(b)(3)’s
requirements.650 In addition, the
analysis found that among all 746
broker-dealers in the sample another
404 broker-dealers did not receive any
not held orders from customers and
would not be subject to Rule 606(b)(3).
Therefore, to the extent that each of
these broker-dealers avails itself of the
firm-level de minimis exception under
Rule 606(b)(4), customers sending not
held orders to these broker-dealers may
not receive Rule 606(b)(3) reports, and
also therefore, the benefits of increased
transparency of the customer-specific
order handling disclosure required by
Rule 606(b)(3).651 However, the
Commission believes that the amount of
not held orders that will be excluded
under the de minimis exception would
be minimal. Specifically, the staff
analyzed the broker-dealers that are
likely to receive the firm-level exception
and the amount of not held orders of
these broker-dealers.
650 See supra notes 642 and 643. In addition, 164
broker-dealers receive only not held orders.
651 One commenter stated that a de minimis
exception would be inconsistent with the objective
of providing a standardized report for all customers,
which was one of the Commission’s motivations for
Rule 606(b)(3). See Bloomberg Letter at 15–16.
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Figure 1 displays the distribution of
broker-dealers that receive not held
orders by the ratio of not held shares as
a fraction of total shares for each brokerdealer. As Figure 1 indicates, brokerdealers that would meet the firm-level
exception because they rarely receive
not held orders in relation to held
orders are concentrated below the 5%
threshold. Specifically, for 23 of the 28
broker-dealers that would meet the firmlevel exception, not held orders account
for less than 2.5% of each broker’s total
order receipts.653 Moreover, as shown in
Table 1 below, the supplemental staff
analysis found that less than 0.05% of
58395
total shares and less than 0.1% of total
not held shares in the sample would be
excluded from the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
by the firm-level de minimis exception,
indicating that the amount of not held
orders that will be excluded under that
exception would be minimal.
# of brokerdealers
Not held ratio
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0% (only held orders) ..............................
0%< nh ratio <5% ....................................
5%< = nh ratio <10% ...............................
10%< = nh ratio <15% .............................
15%< = nh ratio <20% .............................
20%< = nh ratio <25% .............................
# of brokerdealers
404
28
8
4
6
5
404
432
440
444
450
455
% of total not
held shares
(0%)
Cum. % of
total not held
shares
(0%)
% of total
shares
(0%)
Cum. % of
total shares
(0%)
........................
0.08
0.10
0.29
3.68
0.38
........................
0.08
0.18
0.47
4.16
4.54
........................
0.05
0.06
0.17
2.19
0.23
........................
0.05
0.11
0.28
2.47
2.70
Further, some firms, for business
reasons, may choose to provide the Rule
606(b)(3) order handling disclosures to
their customers, regardless of the de
minimis exceptions. Further, as
discussed in Section III.A.1.vi, broker-
dealers that qualify for the firm-level de
minimis exception still must provide, if
requested, the Rule 606(b)(1) reports for
652 ‘‘Not held ratio (nh ratio)’’ stands for the ratio
of not-held shares to the total shares for each
broker-dealer.
Note: The data is from FINRA’s OATS data,
consisting of 120 randomly selected NMS stocks
listed on NYSE during the sample period of
December 5, 2016 to December 9, 2016, consisting
of 40 large-cap stocks, 40 mid-cap stocks, and 40
small-cap stocks. Not held ratio is calculated by the
ratio of not held shares as a fraction of total shares
for each broker-dealer that receives non-zero not
held orders in the sample. The horizontal axis is
divided by increments of 0.25% of not held ratio.
653 See Section III.A.1.b.iv supra for a discussion
of why a 5% threshold is reasonable in light of the
cluster of firms below 2.5%.
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ER19NO18.000
TABLE 1—NUMBER OF BROKER-DEALERS AND VOLUME BY NOT HELD RATIO
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not held NMS stock orders that they
receive from customers, and therefore
customers will still receive the benefits
of the customer-specific reports required
by the adopted amendment to Rule
606(b)(1) discussed below.
The Commission also acknowledges
that adopted Rule 606(b)(5)’s customerlevel de minimis exception may limit
the benefits of Rule 606(b)(3) for some
types of customers because some orders
that would have been included in the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports would be
excluded under this de minimis
exception.654 Because, under the
customer-level de minimis exception, a
broker-dealer will not be obligated to
provide the new Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling disclosures to any customer
that trades on average each month for
the prior six months less than
$1,000,000 of notional value of not held
orders through the broker-dealer,
customers sending not held orders less
than this threshold will not receive the
benefit of Rule 606(b)(3) reports. The
Commission also considered that the
average and rolling nature of the
customer-level de minimis exception
may not capture certain customers that
exceed the threshold during certain
months and not others. As a result,
broker-dealers would be required to
provide such customers with the Rule
606(b)(3) reports for only some months.
However, the months for which the
customer might not receive the detailed
order handling information in the Rule
606(b)(3) reports are the ones in which
the customer was less active. For
example, customers could conceivably
receive reports eleven months out of the
year if they have one month of
significant trading volume during a
trading year. In this example, the one
month excluded from the report would
not be a significant part of their overall
activity. Moreover, some firms, for
business reasons, may choose to provide
the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
disclosures to their customers,
regardless of the customer-level de
minimis exception. Additionally, as
discussed above, broker-dealers still
must provide, if requested, the Rule
606(b)(1) disclosures for not held NMS
stock orders subject to the customerlevel de minimis exception that they
receive from customers, and therefore
customers could still receive the
benefits from the customer-specific
reports required by the adopted
amendment to Rule 606(b)(1). Further,
to the extent that customers receive
654 Because of the lack of data that would quantify
the costs that would result from the customer-level
de minimis exception, the Commission provides a
qualitative discussion.
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additional information on brokerdealers’ order handling practices and as
a result could assess and compare their
broker-dealers better, customers may
choose to send more not held orders in
order to receive Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
The Commission also analyzed how
the benefits of Rule 606(b)(1) compare to
the scope of rules prior to today’s
amendments. The Commission believes
that amended Rule 606(b)(1) reports are
targeting the appropriate orders
resulting in the reports being available
to those mostly likely to benefit from
them. Under the scope of public order
handling reports prior to the
amendments, customer orders with a
market value of less than $200,000 were
included in the public order routing
reports and broker-dealers would need
to prepare Rule 606(b)(1) reports of such
orders upon request. In addition, brokerdealers would need to prepare 606(b)(1)
reports for orders having a market value
of at least $200,000 upon requests under
the scope of previously existing
reporting requirements. The amended
Rule 606(b)(1) requires a broker-dealer,
upon customer request, to provide the
disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(1)
for orders in NMS stock that are
submitted on a held basis, and for
orders in NMS stock that are submitted
on a not held basis and for which the
broker-dealer is not required to provide
the customer a report under Rule
606(b)(3) pursuant to the de minimis
exceptions. As discussed in Section
III.A.1.b.vi., whereas the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures are designed primarily for
institutional customers, the Rule
606(b)(1) disclosures that cover held
NMS stock orders are more retail
customer-focused and thus better
aligned with the type of customer most
likely to submit held NMS stock orders.
The staff’s supplemental analysis found
that about 25% of shares and about 33%
of not held orders in the sample would
have received 606(b)(1) reports under
the requirements prior to today’s
amendments but will receive Rule
606(b)(3) reports. As discussed in
Section V.C.1.a.i,1., Rule 606(b)(3)
reports are more likely to benefit these
customers submitting not held orders
than Rule 606(b)(1) reports are. A staff’s
supplemental analysis also showed that
about close to 41% of total shares and
about 66% of total numbers of orders in
the sample would be eligible for the
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(1).
As discussed above, because customers
sending held orders may have a
different level of sophistication to
understand the benefits of the 606(b)(1)
reports and may have less of a need for
the detail and granularity in customer-
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
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specific reports, these customers may
not frequently request the Rule 606(b)(1)
reports. However, as broker-dealers are
required to provide Rule 606(b)(1)
reports on customers’ requests, Rule
606(b)(1) could provide an option to
these customers to request additional
information if they believe that they
would benefit from doing so. As a
result, the amended Rule 606(b)(1)
could keep the same benefits for such
customers by providing them the
opportunity to better compare and
monitor broker-dealers’ order routing
practices, which could promote better
execution quality of held orders and
competition among broker-dealers.
3. Comparison to the Proposal
The Commission also believes that the
benefits of the amended scope are
greater than the potential benefits of the
Proposal, which would have required
standardized customer-specific reports
on orders of at least $200,000.655 As
discussed below, the Commission
believes that the proposed scope,
reflected by the proposed definition of
institutional order, excluded many
institutional orders whereas the adopted
scope better targets those likely to
benefit from the standardized Rule
606(b)(3) customer-specific reports,
provides for more accurate
identification of the orders to be
included and includes a more
comprehensive set of orders in the Rule
606(b)(3) reports.
Relative to the proposed $200,000
threshold, the Commission believes that
using not held orders to trigger the Rule
606(b)(3) reports better targets the
standardized customer-specific reports
to the investors most likely to benefit
from them and to the orders in which
the reports would be more meaningful.
Further, the Commission believes that
some investors who are not institutions
could benefit from Rule 606(b)(3)
reports with respect to orders for which
they provide more discretion to their
broker-dealers and in which they may
provide some unique instructions. The
not held order type classification better
captures this kind of discretion than
does the $200,000 threshold.
While the proposed rule intended to
target institutional orders for inclusion
in the standardized customer-specific
reports required by Rule 606(b)(3), the
$200,000 threshold would have
excluded most institutional trading. As
discussed in the Proposing Release, in a
Commission staff analysis,
approximately 83.2% of the total
number of orders from institutions to
buy or sell a quantity of an NMS stock
655 See
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during the calendar year 2013 and 2014
had a market value less than $200,000,
and in the least active stocks, less than
3% of orders from institutions would
exceed the threshold.656 Consistent with
this staff analysis, multiple commenters
indicated that distinguishing retail
orders from institutional orders on the
basis of the dollar-value threshold
would exclude the majority of orders
from institutions from the institutional
order handling disclosure requirements
and include retail orders that fall over
the $200,000 threshold within the
definition of institutional order.657
Commenters also stated that because
institutional customers break up their
orders into smaller child orders, a
distinction based on dollar-value
threshold would result in inaccurate
order identification or duplicate
reporting of institutional customer
orders as both institutional and retail
orders.658
The Commission believes that the
adopted approach will create greater
benefits than the proposed $200,000
threshold because it provides more
accurate identification of the orders to
be included in the reports for customers.
In particular, to the extent that some
orders are unpriced and broker-dealers
would need to estimate the dollar price
of such orders to determine whether
they meet the $200,000 threshold, the
proposed rule could create
misspecification of orders because of
estimation error. If broker-dealers
incorrectly assign prices to unpriced
orders, orders that should have been
included in the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
would be excluded from those reports,
which could create inaccuracies as to
which orders would be covered by the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports. As a contrast, the
distinction based on not held and held
order identification will reduce the
inaccuracies of the order handling
disclosure because all orders, as
discussed above, are already marked as
not held or held and thus the
identification would require no
additional processing, which can
introduce errors. Moreover, as discussed
above, broker-dealers are already
familiar with the identification of orders
using the not held and held basis,
further facilitating the accuracy as to
which the intended orders will be
covered by the Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
656 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49483.
e.g., Capital Group Letter at 2; FIF Letter
at 3; FIF Addendum at 2; FSR Letter at 3; HMA
Letter at 5–6; ICI Letter at 3–7; KCG Letter at 5;
Markit Letter at 6–7.
658 See Bloomberg Letter at 11; Citadel Letter at
2; Dash Letter at 3; FIF Addendum at 2; FSR Letter
at 4; HMA Letter at 5–6; MFA Letter at 3; SIFMA
Letter at 2.
657 See,
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The Commission also believes that the
adopted approach will provide more
comprehensive 606(b)(3) reports for
customers than the proposed $200,000
threshold, thus providing greater
benefits to those customers and
potentially benefiting more customers.
A staff’s supplemental analysis found
that close to 60% of all shares and close
to 34% of the total number of orders in
the sample are not held orders and
therefore will receive Rule 606(b)(3)
reports under the adopted approach,
whereas about 45% of all shares and
just above 1% of total number of orders
in the sample data have a market value
of at least $200,000 and therefore would
have received Rule 606(b)(3) reports
under the proposed rule.659 The staff
analysis suggests that the adopted
approach will cover a greater universe
of orders in the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
relative to the proposed $200,000
threshold.
The Commission believes that the
adopted approach will provide benefits
to customers placing not held orders
having a market value of less than
$200,000 whereas the proposed rule
would not. The staff’s supplemental
analysis found that, among the sample
orders of less than $200,000, about 45%
of the total shares and about 33% of the
total number of orders in the analysis
were not held orders. These orders were
considered as ‘‘retail-sized orders’’ and
not entitled to the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures under the proposed rule.
Thus customers sending these orders
would not have been entitled the benefit
of receiving the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures. Under the adopted
approach, these orders will receive the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports. As a result,
customers sending not held orders of
less than $200,000 in market value will
receive the benefits of enhanced
transparency in their broker-dealers’
order handling disclosure required by
Rule 606(b)(3). The Commission
therefore believes that customers
placing not held orders of less than
$200,000 in market value will receive
greater benefits as a whole from the
Commission’s adopted approach as
compared to the proposed rule because
the adopted rule will require brokerdealers to provide detailed and uniform
information pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3)
for all not held orders regardless of
order dollar value.
The Commission acknowledges that
the benefits to customers that place held
orders with at least $200,000 in market
value could be lower under the adopted
rule than under the proposed rule.
Specifically, held orders having a
659 See
PO 00000
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58397
market value of at least $200,000 will
not be included in the standardized
customer-specific reports under adopted
Rule 606(b)(3), whereas they would
have been included under the Proposal.
The staff’s supplemental analysis found
that among orders having a market value
of at least $200,000, close to 23% of
total shares and about 36% of the total
number of orders in the sample will not
receive Rule 606(b)(3) reports under the
adopted rule, whereas these orders
would have been included in the
customer-specific reports under the
proposed $200,000 threshold. Thus,
some customers that send held orders of
a market value of at least $200,000 will
not benefit from the order handling
transparency under Rule 606(b)(3).
However, a customer could request the
disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(1)
for these orders, which would maintain
the status quo. Also, customers could
switch to sending not held orders from
held orders in order to receive the
benefits of the Rule 606(b)(3) reports,
which could result in a worse execution
quality for these orders, assuming
customers currently optimize their
decision on when to request that an
order be handled as not held. However,
the Commission recognizes that if the
benefits of including large held orders
in the standardized customer-specific
report under adopted Rule 606(b)(3)
outweigh the execution quality cost of
requesting not held handling of such
orders, the customer could submit such
orders as not held.
ii. Costs
As discussed in detail below, the
Commission recognizes that the scope of
orders eligible for the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports influences the compliance and
other costs of the adopted amendments.
First, broker-dealers will incur costs to
ensure the Rule 606(b)(3) reports cover
the required orders and to implement
the de minimis exceptions set forth in
Rule 606(b)(4) and Rule 606(b)(5). The
Commission believes the compliance
costs associated with identifying not
held orders are lower than the
compliance costs associated with the
proposed $200,000 threshold. In
addition, the Commission believes that
the two de minimis exceptions will
reduce the costs to broker-dealer of
producing the customer-specific reports
of Rule 606(b)(3), but acknowledges that
broker-dealers might incur costs in
producing the customer-specific reports
in Rule 606(b)(1) for the orders that, due
to the de minimis exceptions, are not
eligible for the customer-specific reports
of Rule 606(b)(3). Further, the
Commission acknowledges additional
costs that will originate from the
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uncertainty created by the de minimis
exceptions and from potential behavior
changes of broker-dealers and
customers. The Commission quantifies
the costs where possible and provides
qualitative discussion when quantifying
costs and benefits is not feasible. Many,
but not all, of the costs of the adopted
amendments to Rules 600, 605, and 606
involve a collection of information, and
these costs and burdens are discussed in
the Paperwork Reduction Act Section
above, with those estimates being used
in the economic analysis below.660
1. Compliance Costs
The requirement for customer-specific
order handling disclosure under Rule
606(b)(3) based on not held or held
orders will create compliance costs, as
broker-dealers will need to prepare the
customer-specific reports for not held
orders required by Rule 606(b)(3).661
The estimates of the related compliance
costs are encompassed in the cost
estimates discussed in Section
V.C.1.b.ii.3. The adopted approach will
create compliance costs for brokerdealers to implement a process to
identify not held orders for inclusion in
Rule 606(b)(3) reports and for the
processing time to screen order data for
not held orders when generating the
reports.662 However, the Commission
believes that the adopted approach is
targeted to moderate compliance
burdens. In particular, as discussed in
Section V.C.1.a.i, multiple commenters
stated that broker-dealers are already
familiar with the held and not held
order type classifications and orders are
already marked as held or not held.663
Therefore, classifying orders as held or
not held would not create other
additional implementation or ongoing
costs for broker-dealers.
The Commission also acknowledges
that the de minimis thresholds in
660 See
supra Section IV.
staff’s supplemental analysis found that
when all of the orders broker-dealers receive are on
a not held basis, about 46% of total shares are less
than $200,000. In addition, when the ratio of not
held orders that broker-dealers receive from
customers is 50% or less excluding broker-dealers
receiving a firm-level de minimis exception, about
14% of total shares of orders included in the
analysis have a market value of at least $200,000
and are not held orders. As a result, the analysis
suggests that the reporting costs could vary
depending on the amount of not held orders that
the broker-dealers receive.
662 The adopted approach will also create initial
compliance costs for market centers and the brokerdealers that will have to review and update
compliance manuals and written supervisory
procedures and update citation references to any
such defined term. The estimates of the related
compliance costs are encompassed in the cost
estimates discussed in Section IV.D.5.
663 See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3, 7–
8; KCG Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2–3;
SIFMA Letter at 3.
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661 The
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adopted Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5) will
also create compliance costs to the
extent a broker-dealer avails itself of one
or both of the exceptions. Specifically,
to apply the de minimis thresholds,
broker-dealers will need to create
systems to identify whether the amount
of not held orders broker-dealers receive
from customers would meet the
threshold of either the firm-level or the
customer-level de minimis exception.
Broker-dealers will also need to conduct
extra data processing to determine
whether they or any customers are
excepted and to screen out any excepted
orders when creating the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports.
The amended rule would also impose
additional compliance costs on brokerdealers from the requirement set forth in
Rule 606(b)(1) prior to today’s
amendments. As discussed above, Rule
606(b)(1), as amended, requires a
broker-dealer, upon customer request, to
provide the disclosures set forth in Rule
606(b)(1) for orders in NMS stock that
are submitted on a held basis, and for
orders in NMS stock that are submitted
on a not held basis and for which, under
the de minimis exceptions, the brokerdealer is not required to provide the
customer a report under Rule 606(b)(3).
As discussed above, Rule 606(b)(1), as
amended, does not modify any of the
customer-specific disclosure
requirements prior to today’s
amendments but rather modifies the
categories of orders to which the
disclosure applies. Under this
modification, Rule 606(b)(1) includes
held orders and not held orders subject
to the de minimis exceptions. Therefore,
broker-dealers that receive such orders
could incur costs to respond to
customer requests as required by Rule
606(b)(1). However, to the extent that
broker-dealers already have systems in
place to prepare the reports required by
the rule prior to these amendments, the
amended rule should not create
substantial new costs to these brokerdealers to create a new system to
prepare Rule 606(b)(1) reports.
Additionally, because broker-dealers
would need to prepare Rule 606(b)(1)
reports only when customers request
such reports, and, as discussed above, to
the extent that customers typically
placing held orders may not value
customer-specific reports required by
Rule 606(b)(1) and therefore would not
frequently request such reports, Rule
606(b)(1) would not impose significant
ongoing compliance costs to brokerdealers.
The Commission also analyzed how
the compliance costs of the adopted rule
compare to the anticipated compliance
costs of the proposed rule. Under the
PO 00000
Frm 00062
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Sfmt 4700
adopted approach, broker-dealers will
need to prepare Rule 606(b)(3) reports
for not held orders of any dollar value,
including not held orders with a market
value less than $200,000, and will need
to, upon request, prepare Rule 606(b)(1)
reports for held orders of any dollar
value and for not held orders covered by
the de minimis exceptions under Rule
606(b)(4) or 606(b)(5). As discussed in
Section V.C.1.a.i., the adopted rule will
include more orders in the Rule
606(b)(3) reports than under the
proposed rule. The staff’s supplemental
analysis also found that among the
orders of less than $200,000 in the
sample data, about 45% of the total
shares and about 33% of the total
number of orders are not-held.664 These
orders were considered ‘‘retail-sized
orders’’ under the proposed rule. Thus,
broker-dealers would have not been
required to prepare Rule 606(b)(3)
reports for these orders, but would have
been required to prepare public order
routing reports and Rule 606(b)(1)
reports upon request. The Commission
believes that the adopted approach
should moderate processing costs for
broker-dealers compared to the
proposed rule. To the extent that brokerdealers already have a system to
generate Rule 606(b)(1) reports pursuant
to the previously existing rule, brokerdealers would need to modify existing
systems to prepare Rule 606(b)(3)
reports without the need to create
entirely new systems to process
customer orders. Additionally, as
discussed above, broker-dealers that
receive an insignificant amount of not
held order flows will receive exceptions
in preparing for Rule 606(b)(3) reports
under Rule 606(b)(4) and 606(b)(5),
which could limit the scale of order
processing costs on certain brokerdealers to provide Rule 606(b)(3)
reports. The Commission also believes
that the adopted rule would impose
lower implementation and processing
costs on broker-dealers relative to the
Proposal. To the extent that some orders
are unpriced, under the proposed rule
broker-dealers would have needed to
estimate the current market price of
NMS stocks when the orders were
received to identify the value of the
orders for comparison to the $200,000
threshold in the Proposal. This would
require broker-dealers to create systems
to estimate the value of unpriced orders.
Under the adopted rule, however,
consistent with the Commission’s
analysis immediately above, brokerdealers would not incur such
664 See
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compliance costs because orders are
currently identified as held or not held.
2. Influence of De Minimis Exceptions
on Compliance Costs
The Commission believes that the two
de minimis exceptions to the adopted
rule will further limit the scale of
compliance costs on certain brokerdealers to provide Rule 606(b)(3)
reports. Specifically, the Commission
believes that adopted Rule 606(b)(4),
which provides for a firm-level de
minimis exception for broker-dealers,
will limit the costs to broker-dealers that
rarely handle not held NMS stock order
flow. Absent a firm-level de minimis
threshold, every broker-dealer that
handles not held orders, regardless of its
customer base and core business, would
be subjected to compliance costs to
create the systems and processes to
generate and deliver the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports. The supplemental staff analysis
found that among the 342 broker-dealers
that receive not held orders from
customers in the sample data, about 8%
(28 broker-dealers) would qualify for the
firm-level de minimis exception from
Rule 606(b)(3)’s requirements.
Accordingly, the firm-level de minimis
exception in Rule 606(b)(4) would result
in approximately 8% of broker-dealers
not incurring the compliance costs
associated with the standardized
customer-specific order handling
reports required by Rule 606(b)(3). As
discussed in Section V.C.1.a.i.2., the
number of orders that will be excluded
under the de minimis exception would
be minimal compared to the current
reporting requirement and to the
proposal. The minimal amount of not
held orders excluded under the firmlevel de minimis exception suggests that
there would be only limited benefits of
Rule 606(b)(3) in circumstances where
broker-dealers handle a minimal
amount of not held orders, and that the
resulting benefits of customer-specific
order handling disclosures required by
Rule 606(b)(3) may not be as great as
intended.
The Commission also believes that the
adopted approach of including a de
minimis exception at the customer-level
under the adopted Rule 606(b)(5) will
also limit the compliance costs of
broker-dealers associated with the new
customer-specific order handling
disclosures under Rule 606(b)(3). This
exception, therefore, could reduce
compliance costs for broker-dealers of
processing orders to produce and to
deliver Rule 606(b)(3) reports for
numerous customers that do not
actively place not held orders.
The Commission also believes that the
three-month grace period included in
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the firm-level de minimis exception
could further limit the scale of
compliance costs of broker-dealers. As
discussed in Section III.A.1.b.iv., Rule
606(b)(4) allows broker-dealers to have
a grace period of up to three calendar
months to provide the new customerspecific disclosures the first time a
broker-dealer meets or exceeds the 5%
de minimis threshold. The adoption of
the grace period will provide time for
broker-dealers to create the systems
necessary to prepare the 606(b)(3)
reports, which could allow the brokerdealers to manage their implementation
and ongoing compliance costs. In
addition, once the broker-dealers set up
the system to comply with the rule
during the grace period, the brokerdealers could use the system in the
future, which could help reduce the ongoing reporting costs in preparing
additional Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
The Commission acknowledges that
the two de minimis exceptions may
create uncertainty as to whether a
customer would have access to the Rule
606(b)(3) report and as to whether a
broker-dealer would be required to
produce Rule 606(b)(3) reports on
request. The staff’s supplemental
analysis found that a small number of
broker-dealers fell slightly outside the
5% de minimis threshold during a
recent sample period.665 Specifically,
eight broker-dealers receive not held
orders greater or equal to 5% and less
than 10% of the total shares of their
orders in the sample. These brokerdealers would not qualify for the firmlevel de minimis exception despite not
predominantly receiving not held
orders, and thus would not be excepted
from preparing Rule 606(b)(3) reports
for not held orders under the adopted
rule. Additionally, the staff analysis
found that five broker-dealers that meet
the de minimis exception receive not
held orders greater or equal to 2.5% and
less than 5% of the total shares of their
orders in the sample. These results
indicate that the threshold for the firmlevel de minimis exception could create
uncertainty for broker-dealers as to
whether they might receive enough not
held orders to qualify for the de minimis
exception and for how long they would
qualify for the de minimis exception.
However, the Commission believes that
the firm-level de minimis exception
under Rule 606(b)(4) could mitigate the
uncertainty that is discussed above. As
discussed in Section V.C.1.a.i.2., a
supplemental staff analysis found that
23 broker-dealers that meet the de
minimis exception receive not held
orders less than 2.5% of the total shares
665 See
PO 00000
supra notes 642 and 643.
Frm 00063
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58399
of their orders in the sample, and among
these broker-dealers the largest ratio of
not held orders as percentage of total
shares is less than 2.2%, which
indicates that there is less concern of
uncertainty regarding whether they
meet the firm-level de minimis
exception. Moreover, as discussed in
Section III.A.1.b.iv., Rule 606(b)(4)
requires that once a broker-dealer has
equaled or exceeded the firm-level
threshold based on its not held NMS
stock order flow during a given six
calendar month period, it must provide
reports pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3) for at
least the next six calendar months
regardless of the nature of its order flow
during the Compliance Period.
Additionally, as discussed in Section
III.A.1.b.iv., if, at any time after the end
of a Compliance Period, the brokerdealer’s not held NMS stock order flow
falls below the 5% threshold for the
prior six calendar months, the brokerdealer is not required to provide reports
pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3), except with
respect to orders received during the
Compliance Period. These features of
the firm-level de minimis exception
under Rule 606(b)(4) could mitigate the
uncertainty as to whether a brokerdealer would be required to produce
Rule 606(b)(3) reports on request for the
next six calendar months after the
calendar month the broker-dealer
exceeded this 5% threshold.
Further, as discussed above, the
Commission acknowledges that the
customer-level de minimis exception
under Rule 606(b)(5) may result in
certain customers with seasonality in
their trading volume exceeding the
threshold during certain months and not
during others. As discussed above, to
the extent that such customers receive
net benefits from receiving new
customer-specific reports under the
requirement of Rule 606(b)(3) and that
such customers have flexibility in their
trading activities,666 customers could be
willing to incur the costs to alter trading
behavior to receive the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports more frequently during the year.
Because customers’ trading activity can
be affected by future market conditions
or unexpected events in the financial
markets, it could be difficult for
customers to predict at the time they are
placing an order, whether that order
could be in the standardized customerspecific reports.
666 The Commission believes index funds time
their trades to minimize tracking error. These
institutions are concerned even about how when
they trade within a trading day affects their tracking
error. These institutions are unlikely to delay
trading by a month just to qualify to receive a report
for one additional inactive month.
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3. Other Costs
The Commission also acknowledges
that the firm-level de minimis exception
in adopted Rule 606(b)(4) could
incentivize broker-dealers to keep their
not held trading volume below the 5%
threshold. As discussed above, there are
a small number of broker-dealers with
not held orders slightly below or above
the 5% de minimis threshold.
Specifically, according to Table 1, for 8
broker-dealers, not held orders account
for between 5% and 10% of orders
received by that broker-dealer. To avoid
the compliance costs, broker-dealers
could discourage customers from using
not held orders so as not to exceed the
5% threshold and therefore not to be
subject to the obligations of providing
the new disclosures upon request.
Under this scenario, customers sending
not held orders to these broker-dealers
may not receive the benefit of the
disclosure of customer-specific order
handling practices required by Rule
606(b)(3) and could face additional
execution costs if they suboptimally
submit held orders relative to today.
However, the Commission notes that for
business reasons, some firms might
choose to provide the new customerspecific order handling disclosures to its
customers, regardless of the de minimis
exception, limiting the costs of such
incentives on investors. Further,
customers that value the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports could be willing to incur the
cost of switching to the broker-dealers
that do not receive or use the firm-level
exception in order to ensure receipt of
the customer-specific reports. As a
result, the threat of losing customers
could dampen the broker-dealers’
incentives to encourage their customers
to use held orders.
The Commission also acknowledges
that the customer-level de minimis
threshold under Rule 606(b)(5) could
result in changes in customers’
behavior, including an increase in not
held orders over held orders or a
consolidation of the customer’s not held
order flow with one broker-dealer in
order to exceed the customer-level
threshold to be entitled to receive such
reports, which could be less optimal for
customers relative to today. As
discussed above, a broker-dealer will
not be obligated to provide the new Rule
606(b)(3) order handling disclosures to
any customer that trades on average
each month for the prior six months less
than $1,000,000 of notional value of not
held orders through the broker-dealer.
Therefore, a customer that submits more
than $1,000,000 of notional value each
month, but not in not held orders or at
a single broker-dealer, could qualify for
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the Rule 606(b)(3) reports by instructing
brokers to handle more orders as not
held and/or by consolidating its order
submission with fewer broker-dealers.
However, some firms may choose to
provide the new customer-specific order
handling disclosures to its customers,
regardless of the de minimis exceptions
for business reasons, and the
expectation of these reports could
mitigate customers’ incentives.
b. Customer Requests for Information on
Customer-Specific Handling Under
Adopting Rule 606(b)(3)
i. Benefits
The required customer-specific order
handling disclosures being adopted
under Rule 606(b)(3) will provide
transparency about order routing and
execution quality for not held orders
placed by customers.667
1. Execution Quality Benefits
The Commission believes that Rule
606(b)(3) will benefit customers,
because broker-dealers will have an
additional incentive to improve their
order routing decisions for customers
submitting orders on a not held basis,
who could also use the reports required
by the amendments to Rule 606 to
compare routing and execution quality
among broker-dealers, which could lead
to better execution quality for not held
orders. As a result, Rule 606(b)(3), as
adopted, could lead to more transparent
order routing practices and execution
quality disclosures, which could
enhance competition in the market for
brokerage services. The disclosures in
Rule 606(b)(3) will provide customers
that submit not held orders, including
investment fund managers, standardized
information regarding their brokerdealers’ order routing practices and
execution quality. To the extent that the
reports required by Rule 606(b)(3)
increase the transparency of order
routing and execution quality for
customers’ not held orders, brokerdealers will be better able to compete
along the execution quality dimensions
provided in the reports, such as the fill
rate, percentage of shares executed at
the midpoint and priced at the near or
far side of the quote, and average time
between order entry and execution or
cancellation for orders posted to the
limit order book, in addition to
commissions and other considerations
on which they currently compete.
The Commission believes that
amended Rule 606(b)(3) could affect
competition between trading centers.
Broker-dealers routing more orders to
the trading centers that are more
667 See
PO 00000
supra at Section III.A.1.b.iii.
Frm 00064
Fmt 4701
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beneficial for their customers could
further promote competition between
trading centers and promote innovation
on execution quality. To illustrate, if
broker-dealers change their order
routing decisions to focus more on
execution quality and route fewer orders
to a given trading center, that trading
center will have an incentive to take
measures to attract and gain back order
flow by innovating on execution quality.
In addition to comparing broker-dealers
on the basis of the reports, the amended
Rule 606(b)(3) could facilitate and
inform customer dialogues with their
broker-dealers about the broker-dealers’
order routing practices to better match
the needs of the customers with the
order routing practices of the brokerdealers to whom they send orders. As a
result, as several commenters stated, the
information on execution quality could
better enable customers placing orders
on a not held basis to evaluate the
impact that routing decisions have on
the quality of their order executions and
could provide information regarding
broker-dealers’ potential conflicts of
interest.668 The Commission believes
that the amended Rule 606(b)(3) will
promote better order handling practices
among broker-dealers, therefore
potentially promoting competition
between trading centers and ultimately
incentivizing broker-dealers to improve
execution quality of not held orders.
2. Benefits of Enhanced, Standardized
Report
As adopted, Rule 606(b)(3) will
address the concerns that current
customer reports are not standardized.
As discussed in the Proposing
Release,669 some customers currently
request and receive reports about order
routing and execution quality of their
orders from their broker-dealers.
However, these reports are not
standardized and, as a result, it may be
difficult to compare broker-dealers on
the basis of those reports. In addition,
the availability, detail, and quality of
such reports likely differ across
customers, e.g., it might be the case that
customers placing a greater volume of
not held orders have easier access to
such reports compared to customers
with a smaller volume of not held
orders. Moreover, the information
provided by a broker-dealer may vary
over time without any standardized or
required content for the reports. As
adopted, Rule 606(b)(3) could address
668 See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 3 and 6; STA
Letter at 4; FSR Letter at 4–5; HMA Letter at 10; ICI
Letter at 9; Schwab Letter at 2; Markit Letter at 9–
10; Better Markets Letter at 5–8.
669 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49437.
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both of these concerns as the reports
will be standardized for all brokerdealers and all customers placing not
held orders (subject to two de minimis
exceptions) making comparisons easier
and analysis more useful. Furthermore,
every customer placing orders on a not
held basis will be able to receive reports
upon request from their broker-dealer.
The Commission believes that the
benefits of the reports required by Rule
606(b)(3) may be modest for some
customers that already receive reports
from their broker-dealers on the
handling of their not held orders,
depending on the information such
customers currently receive and how
standardized that information is across
broker-dealers. For example, the reports
that a particular customer already
receives may be more detailed and
tailored to that customer. The
Commission recognizes that some
current ad hoc reports also may provide
additional, more detailed, and/or more
tailored information than what Rule
606(b)(3) requires. Customers receiving
such enhanced reports may not benefit
significantly from the information
specified in Rule 606(b)(3).
Nevertheless, the Rule 606(b)(3)
requirement that the disclosures be
standardized may allow these customers
to more readily compare their brokerdealers, particularly if their brokerdealers currently provide disparate
responses to similar requests.
The Commission believes that Rule
606(b)(3) will enable customers to better
compare broker-dealers’ order handling
practices, which will allow customers to
more efficiently monitor, evaluate, and
select broker-dealers. Under Rule
606(b)(3), customers can obtain detailed
information on the broker-dealer
internalization rate and payment for
order flow received. Currently, brokerdealers may prefer to internalize
uninformed order flow.670 Under Rule
606(b)(3) a customer will have
information on whether its order flow is
being internalized and could use this
information in its relationships with its
broker-dealers. Similarly, a customer
will be able to monitor whether brokerdealers route orders to the trading center
offering highest rebate or lowest fees.671
Customers might be concerned if orders
routed to a high-rebate destination do
not execute or do so with a delay, as
670 See Hitesh Mittal, Are You Playing in a Toxic
Dark Pool? A Guide to Preventing Information
Leakage, 3 Journal of Trading 20 (Summer 2008).
671 A broker-dealer may take into account rebates
when setting its flat-rate commission by asking for
a lower commission. As long as the rebates are not
passed through to the customer, however, the
broker-dealer still has the incentive to maximize
rebate capture.
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information about the order may leak
into the market, thereby inducing price
impact. Rule 606(b)(3) could mitigate
such concerns.
As adopted, Rule 606(b)(3) requires
the inclusion of actionable IOIs in
customer-specific order handling
disclosures. As adopted, Rule 600(b)(1)
defines an actionable IOI as ‘‘any
indication of interest that explicitly or
implicitly conveys all of the following
information with respect to any order
available at the venue sending the
indication of interest: (1) Symbol; (2)
side (buy or sell); (3) a price that is
equal to or better than the national best
bid for buy orders and the national best
offer for sell orders; and (4) a size that
is at least equal to one round lot.’’ The
Commission believes that the inclusion
of actionable IOIs in the adopted
reporting requirements of broker-dealers
should provide customers a more
complete picture of how their not held
orders are handled. Since actionable
IOIs can convey information similar to
that of an order, a response to an
actionable IOI may result in an
execution at the venue of the IOI sender
and thus can represent a portion of the
liquidity available at a given price and
time. The Commission therefore
believes that actionable IOIs should be
included in the required disclosure of
how not held orders are handled. In
addition, because an actionable IOI can
convey information similar to that of an
order, the use of actionable IOIs may
contribute to information leakage in a
way similar to that of the use of
orders.672 Specifically, the Commission
believes that such information will
enable customers in assessing whether
their broker-dealers are exposing their
not held orders to the select market
participants with which the brokerdealer has affiliations or business
relationships or from which the brokerdealer receives other incentives. In
addition, the Commission believes that
disclosure of this information will
provide the customer with a more
complete understanding of the brokerdealer’s order handling activities for
purposes of assessing the broker-dealer’s
execution quality generally. Excluding
actionable IOIs, therefore, will not
provide a complete picture of order
routing and executions of a customer’s
not held orders and could provide
broker-dealers with an incentive to use
actionable IOIs instead of orders to
circumvent the adopted disclosure
requirements in Rule 606.
The Commission considered whether
adopting a definition of actionable IOI
in Rule 600(b)(1) may limit its potential
672 See
PO 00000
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49486.
Frm 00065
Fmt 4701
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58401
benefits. Specifically, the adopted
definition is substantively similar to the
description of actionable IOI in the
Regulation of Non-Public Trading
Interest Proposing Release. Comments
received on the Regulation of NonPublic Trading Interest Proposing
Release indicated that some commenters
were concerned that the discussion of
actionable IOIs in that release was too
stringent.673 If the definition of
actionable IOI is, in fact, too narrow,
then some IOIs will not be included in
the definition of actionable IOI and will
not be captured by the required reports
on handling of not held orders.
Consequently, it is possible that
customers placing orders on a not held
basis might find the reports to be less
informative on order handling than if
the definition of actionable IOIs was
broader. This suggests that defining
actionable IOIs too narrowly may limit
the benefits of the adopted amendments.
However, as discussed in Section
III.A.2., the Commission’s purpose here
is improving the usefulness of the order
handling and routing information
conveyed by broker-dealers to their
customers placing orders on a not held
basis, and thus the definition of
actionable IOI being adopted is
appropriately tailored to serve the
purpose of this rulemaking, minimizing
the concern of limiting the benefits of
the amendments.
Several commenters stated that the
proposed definition for actionable IOIs
is unclear, specifically as to whether the
definition of actionable IOI excludes
conditional orders.674 The inclusion of
conditional orders in the Rule 606(b)(3)
report could have benefits because
broker-dealers would include additional
information in the Rule 606(b)(3)
reports, which therefore could increase
the benefits resulting from increased
transparency. However, as discussed in
Section III.A.2., many market
participants distinguish conditional
orders from actionable IOIs, because
conditional orders are not firm
representations of trading interest and
may require additional negotiation
before a trade can be executed.
Therefore, the Commission
acknowledges that the inclusion of
conditional orders in the definition of
actionable IOI may cause confusion in
673 Comments on the Regulation of Non-Public
Trading Interest Proposing Release are available at
https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-27-09/
s72709.shtml. Comments on actionable IOIs can be
found in the following letters: https://www.sec.gov/
comments/s7-27-09/s72709-46.pdf and https://
www.sec.gov/comments/s7-27-09/s72709-48.pdf.
674 See BIDS Letter at 4–5; Bloomberg Letter at 3–
4; Capital Group Letter at 3; FIF Letter at 7; Markit
Letter at 11–12; NYSE Letter at 2; SIFMA Letter at
6.
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producing and consuming order
handling reports, which could limit the
benefits of Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
The Commission is adopting a
modification to Rule 606(b)(3) that
requires broker-dealers to disclose the
fact that actionable IOIs were sent to
customers placing not held orders but
not the identity of such customers. The
Commission believes that such
modification should help ensure that
customers receive detailed information
in their report, while protecting the
identity of institutions providing
liquidity. The Commission believes that
disclosing the specific venue or venues
to which a broker-dealer exposed a not
held order by an actionable IOI will be
useful for the customer to further assess
the extent of information leakage of
their orders and potential conflicts of
interest facing their broker-dealers.
Specifically, the Commission believes
that such information will enable
customers to assess whether their
broker-dealers are exposing their not
held orders to the select market
participants with which the brokerdealer has affiliations or business
relationships or from which the brokerdealer receives other incentives. In
addition, the Commission believes that
disclosure of this information will
provide the customer with a more
complete understanding of the brokerdealer’s order handling activities for
purposes of assessing the broker-dealer’s
execution quality generally. Under the
proposed Rule 606(b)(3), the
Commission believed that requiring
broker-dealers to identify the
institutions to which they routed
actionable IOIs would allow customers
to receive additional details in their
reports so that customers could better
compare their broker-dealers. Regarding
the requirement that broker-dealers
identify the institutions to which they
routed actionable IOIs, commenters
expressed concerns that such
identification may discourage
institutions from providing liquidity if
they do not wish their names to be
disclosed to protect their proprietary
information.675 The Commission
acknowledges that such identification
may discourage such institutions from
providing liquidity or induce brokerdealers to compromise the identity of
their customers placing not held orders,
which could reduce the benefits of
disclosing actionable IOIs in the
customer-specific reports. Thus, the
modification to Rule 606(b)(3), as
adopted, should help reduce the
potential for information leakage and
675 See STA Letter II at 3; FIF Letter at 7; Fidelity
Letter at 4; Markit Letter at 11.
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conflicts of interest between brokerdealers and their customers placing not
held orders without discouraging
institutions to provide liquidity.
The Commission also recognizes that,
relative to proposed Rule 606(b)(3), this
modification could result in customers
receiving fewer details in their reports.
While customers could have used such
details to better compare their brokerdealers, the Commission does not
believe that the identities of particular
customers placing not held orders
would significantly influence
customers’ decisions. Therefore, this
modification does not significantly
reduce benefits compared to the
Proposal.
3. Additional Benefits
An additional benefit of Rule
606(b)(3), and specifically the benefit of
having the standardized customerspecific order handling information
available upon request, is that
customers placing orders on a not held
basis could combine the order handling
information with existing TCA or
enhance their TCA. As noted above,
customers sending not held orders often
work with independent third-party
vendors to perform TCA as a means of
evaluating the cost and quality of
brokerage services. Customers sending
not held orders can also conduct their
own TCA in-house. TCA, whether
conducted in-house or by a third-party,
generally analyzes data on the parent
orders, but typically cannot analyze data
on the child orders because of the lack
of standardization of the current ad hoc
order handling information. As a
consequence, existing TCA typically
does not incorporate information on
how many child orders exist, a brokerdealer’s order routing strategy of not
held orders, or cost, routing, and
execution quality for individual child
orders. The disclosures required by
adopted Rule 606(b)(3) will close this
informational gap, so that customers
will have more information on how
broker-dealers handle and execute
parent and child not held orders.
With this additional information,
customers placing orders on a not held
basis or their third-party vendors could
combine the routing information with
execution information to conduct a
more thorough TCA than they can
currently. In particular, the information
in adopted Rule 606(b)(3) may be a
factor that can explain transaction cost
variations, and thus the reports from the
adopted amendments could be
combined with TCA to help explain
differences in transaction costs and in
performance as measured by TCA across
broker-dealers. For example, TCA often
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includes transaction cost measures such
as implementation shortfall, but
adopted Rule 606(b)(3) will not.676 With
TCA alone, a customer may observe
different implementation shortfalls
across broker-dealers. The adopted
amendments could allow the customers
or their third-party vendors to correlate
implementation shortfall with the
routing decisions of the broker-dealers.
This could assist the customers in
assessing the execution quality provided
by their broker-dealers. In summary, the
Commission believes that Rule 606(b)(3)
may complement and enhance all
customers’ evaluations of order
handling quality of not held orders,
including those of customers that use
TCA.
Rule 606(b)(3) also requires the
customer-specific order handling report
to be divided into separate sections for
the customer’s directed not held orders
and non-directed not held orders, with
each section containing the disclosures
regarding the customer’s order flow
with the broker-dealer specified in Rule
606(b)(3), as well as the disclosures for
each venue to which the broker-dealer
routed not held orders specified in
Rules 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv).
Commenters suggested that directed not
held orders be clearly segregated in the
reports because this distinction could
provide a more qualitative level of
transparency and provide a more
accurate description of broker-dealer’s
order routing practices, which could
enable customers to better compare and
monitor broker-dealers’ order routing
practices.677 Specifically, commenters
stated that to the extent that brokerdealers have more discretion on routing
non-directed orders, dividing reports
into directed and non-directed orders
could bring greater transparency to
customers placing not held orders. The
Commission believes that reporting
separate order handling statistics for the
directed and non-directed not held
orders will provide more valuable
information to customers than if the
statistics combined these orders. In
particular, this will allow customers to
specifically observe how the brokerdealers exercise routing discretion,
which should increase the benefits of
676 For example, Rule 606(b)(3) will not require
reports to contain any information on
implementation shortfall costs of parent orders,
which are a key focus for investors placing not held
orders. In general, the amendments, as adopted, are
not intended to replace TCA and, therefore, do not
include many metrics common to TCA. However,
the Commission recognizes that the ability to use
the adopting amendments to enhance TCA may
make TCA more valuable and increase the
incentives for customers to use TCA, either inhouse or through a third-party vendor.
677 See supra note 245.
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order disclosure by better informing
customers of potential leakage and
conflicts of interest. By providing the
order handling information separately
for non-directed not held orders, the
Rule 606(b)(3) report will provide a
customer with a more precise reflection
of how and where its broker-dealer is
routing the customer’s not held orders
pursuant to the discretion it is afforded.
Otherwise, with directed not held
orders and non-directed not held orders
commingled in the report, it would be
more difficult for a customer to
differentiate routing behavior for which
its broker-dealer exercised discretion
from routing behavior that the customer
itself directed. Therefore, the
Commission believes that customers
also will benefit from being able to
analyze Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
disclosures that are specific to their
directed orders.
The Rule 606(b)(3) reports also
require the broker-dealer to disclose,
among other things, information on not
held order execution.678 This
information will be relevant to a
customer assessing its broker-dealer’s
execution of its directed orders,
including a customer interested in
validating that its broker-dealer is
routing its directed not held orders
consistent with the customer’s
instructions. These enhanced
disclosures will better enable customers
to analyze not held order routing and
execution quality provided by brokerdealers, which will allow customers to
more efficiently monitor, evaluate, and
select broker-dealers. In addition,
customers and broker-dealers will be
able to evaluate execution quality of not
held orders on different trading centers
more efficiently. Therefore, the
Commission believes that customers
will benefit from the enhanced
transparency in Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
Finally, Rule 606(b)(1) and Rule
606(b)(3) will require reports to be made
available using an XML schema and
associated PDF renderer published on
the Commission’s website.679 The
benefits, as well as the costs associated
with this requirement, are discussed in
Section V.C.4.
ii. Costs
The required customer-specific order
handling disclosures being adopted
under Rule 606(b)(3) will require
broker-dealers to provide, upon request,
standardized reports on not held order
handling, which include more detailed
information on broker-dealers’ order
routing practices. These requirements
678 See
679 See
supra Section III.A.6.
supra Section III.A.5.c.
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will result in initial and ongoing
compliance and reporting costs to
broker-dealers. These costs are
quantified in Section V.C.1.b.ii.3.
Additionally, the customer-specific
order handling disclosure requirement
under Rule 606(b)(3) could alter the
information content of the report if
broker-dealers already provide more
information than is required by the
adopted amendment or broker-dealers
try to disguise order routing behavior to
avoid customers’ monitoring.
1. The Potential for Less Information
As discussed above, some customers
currently request reports about the
handling of their not held orders from
their broker-dealers and those reports
may be less or more detailed and
provide different, and potentially less or
potentially more, information than Rule
606(b)(3) will require. If broker-dealers
currently provide more detailed or
additional information to customers,
reporting requirements under Rule
606(b)(3) could impose a cost on such
customers if the broker-dealers stop
providing the more detailed or
additional information and instead
provide only the data required for
customer-specific order handling by
Rule 606(b)(3). The Commission
believes that this scenario is not very
likely because, following Rule
606(b)(3)’s implementation, customers
could still request additional
information or customized reports from
their broker-dealers and broker-dealers
are likely to satisfy such requests, to the
extent they currently do, to retain their
customers. As discussed above, the
willingness of broker-dealers to provide
such customized reports to customers
and the level of detail in such a report
might depend on the business
relationship between the broker-dealer
and the customer. Customers that send
or may send a large number of orders to
broker-dealers might be able to get
customized reports that they can more
easily compare than customers that send
fewer orders; and those reports might be
more detailed, compared to reports that
customers that send fewer orders
receive. While Rule 606(b)(3) reduces
this discrepancy, in that all customers
will be able to request the standardized
reports required by Rule 606(b)(3), the
Commission recognizes that, to the
extent large customers placing orders on
a not held basis are able to receive
customized reports that provide
information not contained in the
required reports, those large customers
placing not held orders will continue to
have an advantage over smaller
customers placing not held orders who
are not able to receive the same reports.
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2. Skewed Routing Practices
In addition, the greater transparency
provided as a result of Rule 606(b)(3)
might lead broker-dealers to change how
they handle not held orders. Given that
broker-dealers will be aware of the
metrics to be used a priori, they might
route not held orders in a manner that
promotes a positive reflection on their
respective services but that may be
suboptimal for their customers. Any
changes to broker-dealers’ order routing
decisions resulting from the
Commission’s adoption of Rule
606(b)(3) may be intended to benefit
customers placing not held orders, but
if broker-dealers and customers focus
exclusively on the metrics in the reports
required by Rule 606(b)(3), the order
routing decisions could also be viewed
as suboptimal for some customers.
For example, if a broker-dealer routes
not held orders so that the orders
execute at lower cost with a higher fill
rate, shorter duration, and more price
improvement than the broker-dealer’s
competitors, in order to achieve these
objectives she might route the majority
of non-marketable limit order shares to
the trading center offering the highest
rebate. A customer placing not held
orders that reviews the order handling
report might suspect that the brokerdealer acted in its self-interest by
selecting the highest rebate venue in
order to maximize rebates when, in fact,
the broker-dealer made the decision on
the basis of other variables, which might
not be completely reflected in the
amended reports. Under the
amendments to Rule 606, the brokerdealer may be concerned about the
perception of acting on a conflict of
interest, when the broker-dealer is in
fact acting in the customers’ interests.
As a result, a broker-dealer may be
incentivized to route fewer nonmarketable limit order shares to the
trading center offering the highest
rebate, even if this imposes additional
costs on the broker-dealer’s customers,
in an effort to ensure that a customer
does not misconstrue the intent behind
the broker-dealer’s routing decisions.
Such a potential outcome could reduce
the intensity of competition between
broker-dealers on the dimension of
execution quality.
3. Compliance Costs
The disclosure requirements of Rule
606(b)(3) will also impose compliance
costs, as the required disclosures could
entail some reprogramming by brokerdealers that execute or route orders
subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3).
A broker-dealer would have to program
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its systems to filter their order data by
a condition using a held or a not held
indicator, subject to two de minimis
exceptions. In addition to
reprogramming, receiving and
processing customer requests, as well as
preparing and transmitting the data to
customers on request, will impose costs.
The Commission estimates and
discusses compliance burdens and costs
for broker-dealers that routes orders
subject to the customer-specific
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3)
in Section IV.D.1.ii. The Commission
estimates total initial implementation
costs for all broker-dealers that route
orders subject to the customer-specific
order handling disclosures required by
Rule 606(b)(3) and that do not currently
retain order handling information
required by the adopted rule to program
systems to comply with the adopted
rule change is 24,070 hours, resulting in
a monetized total cost burden of
$7,789,300.680 In addition these brokerdealers would incur an additional cost
of $5,660,000 681 to engage the thirdparty service providers and to purchase
hardware and software upgrades.
The Commission estimates and
discusses compliance burdens and costs
for broker-dealers responding to a Rule
606(b)(3) request (for broker-dealers that
handle their own responses) in Section
IV.D.1.b. The total annual cost for all
200 broker-dealers that route orders
subject to the customer-specific order
handling disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) to comply with the customer
response requirement in Rule 606(b)(3)
is estimated to be 67,000 hours,
resulting in a cost of $14,928,000, plus
an additional fee of $1,300,000 to
compensate third-party service
providers for producing the reports.682
The Commission recognizes that the
hours and costs that it has estimated
could be lower if this report function is
outsourced to a third-party to the extent
that a third-party is specialized in
preparing the order handling reports
and has a system in place. In particular,
economies of scale could help lower the
costs incurred by third-parties relative
to the broker-dealers themselves, and,
therefore, the third parties could charge
some broker-dealers less to produce the
reports than the broker-dealers would
incur to produce the reports themselves.
As discussed in Section III.A.6, Rule
606(b)(3) requires the inclusion of
actionable IOIs in the reports on order
handling that broker-dealers will
provide to their customers. The
Commission expects that broker-dealers
supra note 510.
id.
682 See supra notes 525.
will incur costs from the inclusion of
actionable IOIs in the reports as a result
of having to process data and run
calculations related to actionable IOIs.
The estimated cost of including
actionable IOIs in the customer-specific
order handling reports required by Rule
606(b)(3) is included in the aggregate
costs described in the discussion above
and in greater detail in Section IV.D.1.
Additionally, as noted above, adopted
Rule 606(b)(3) requires segregated
reporting of directed not held orders
and non-directed not held orders. The
Commission expects that broker-dealers
will incur costs from separately
reporting directed and non-directed not
held orders as a result of having to
process additional data and run
additional calculations. The estimated
cost of separate reporting is included in
the aggregate costs described in the
discussion below and in greater detail in
Section IV.D.1.
As discussed above, Rule 606(b)(1), as
amended, does not modify any of the
current customer-specific disclosure
requirements but modifies the categories
of orders to which the disclosure
applies. Current Rule 606(b)(1) applies
to all customer orders, i.e., orders
having a market value of less than
$200,000. However, broker-dealers must
now modify their systems to provide the
disclosures for the following types of
orders, regardless of market value: (i)
Orders in NMS stocks that are submitted
on a held basis; (ii) orders in NMS
stocks that are submitted on a not held
basis and are excepted from the
disclosure requirements of Rule
606(b)(3); or (iii) orders in NMS
securities that are option contracts.
The Commission believes that it is
reasonable to estimate that one third of
the 292 broker-dealers that route orders
subject to the disclosures required by
Rule 606(b)(1)—97 broker-dealers—will
implement these changes in-house,
while the remaining number—195
broker-dealers—will engage a thirdparty vendor to do so.683 The
Commission estimates the initial burden
for a broker-dealer that will program its
systems in-house to comply with Rule
606(b)(1) as 24 hours.684 The
Commission estimates the initial burden
for a broker-dealer that will engage a
third-party vendor to program its
systems to comply with the rule as 3
hours and $979.685
Therefore Commission estimates the
total initial burden for all 292 brokerdealers to program their systems to
680 See
683 See
681 See
684 See
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supra note 560.
supra note 578.
685 See supra note 579.
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comply with Rule 606(b)(1) as 2,913
hours 686 and $975,000.687
4. Other Potential Costs
Further, as a result of adopting Rule
606(b)(3), broker-dealers that route not
held NMS stock orders will likely
reevaluate their best execution
methodologies to take into account the
availability of new statistics and other
information that may be relevant to their
decision making. This may impose a
cost only to the extent that brokerdealers choose to build the required
statistics into their best execution
methodologies. In addition, they may
choose to do so only if the benefits
justify the costs.
Another potential cost of adopted
Rule 606(b)(3) is that the reports could
be viewed as a replacement of TCA and
therefore have a negative impact on the
market for TCA. Specifying a minimum
length of time for making the Rule 606
reports publicly available may further
impose a cost on third-party vendors
that plan to aggregate the time series of
the reports. For example, suppose that
a customer chooses to no longer
purchase TCA once Rule 606(b)(3)
reports become available, because the
customer decides that the information
contained in the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
is sufficient. If fewer customers
purchase TCA, it will have a negative
impact on third-party providers of TCA
as well as third-party data vendors,
because of a reduction in the demand
for their services, for example. Further,
the quality of TCA provided by thirdparties may decrease because thirdparty providers of TCA might have
fewer resources for the development
and maintenance of their product
offerings and because fewer customers
would reduce the amount of data that
the third-party providers would use to
build their models.688 However, as
discussed in Section V.C.1.b.i, the
reports required by adopting Rule
606(b)(3) will provide information that
could be complementary to TCA. As
discussed above, in fact, adopted Rule
606(b)(3) could make TCA more useful
and provide incentives for customers to
use TCA. As a result, the Commission
believes that adopted Rule 606(b)(3) will
not replace TCA.
The Commission considered whether
the customer-specific order handling
686 See
supra note 581.
supra note 582.
688 As stated in the proposing release, the
Commission understands that customers of thirdparty TCA providers typically transmit their
execution data to their TCA providers. The thirdparty TCA providers in turn base their models on
the data they receive from all their customers.
Having more data to base models on is generally
beneficial and may result in better models.
687 See
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reports of adopted Rule 606(b)(3) could
impose costs on broker-dealers by
revealing sensitive, proprietary
information about broker-dealers’ order
handling techniques. Rule 606(b)(3)
does not require public disclosure, so
the Commission believes that there
would be minimal risk of information
leakage to the public. Moreover, as some
commenters stated, to the extent that the
customer-specific order handling
disclosures will aggregate information to
be disclosed across all of the customer’s
not held NMS stock orders, the
information leakage risk is low because
reverse engineering specific order
routing strategies from such aggregated
data would be extremely difficult.689
To the extent it is likely for customers
choose to make the disclosure public,
order routing practices of not held NMS
stock orders of the customers’ brokerdealers could become available
publicly, which other customers placing
not held NMS stock orders could use in
comparing their broker-dealers’ order
routing. To the extent that the order
routing reports could reveal sensitive,
proprietary information about brokerdealers’ order handling techniques, the
broker-dealers’ trading strategies could
be used by their competitors,
specifically, putting smaller brokerdealers at a competitive disadvantage
relative to larger broker-dealers, as the
majority of their trading strategies could
more easily be revealed to other market
participants. However, because the
customer-specific order handling
disclosure required by Rule 606(b)(3)
could reveal highly sensitive proprietary
information about the revealing
customers’ trading strategy, it is
unlikely that customers would make
their own reports public. In addition,
even if the customer did share its report,
the fact that the information in it is
aggregated obscures the broker-dealer’s
order handling decision for any
particular order. Therefore, the
Commission believes the risk that the
customer-specific order handling
disclosure required by Rule 606(b)(3)
would reveal sensitive, proprietary
information about broker-dealers’ order
handling techniques would be minimal.
2. Public Order Handling Report
Rule 606(a) requires each brokerdealer to make publicly available
quarterly reports on its routing of nondirected orders in NMS securities.690
689 See
Capital Group Letter at 5; Markit Letter at
19.
690 The Commission had proposed, but is not
adopting, a similar requirement for broker-dealers
to provide public quarterly reports broken down by
calendar month on the order routing and execution
quality of institutional orders by each broker-dealer.
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The Commission believes that the
amendments to Rule 606(a), as adopted,
will increase the level of transparency
about order routing and execution
quality for non-directed orders in NMS
stocks that are submitted on a held basis
through the enhanced disclosure of data
regarding order routing and
execution.691
The benefits and costs of each of these
amendments are discussed below.
Wherever possible, we quantify cost
estimates for a given amendment. For
the remaining amendments concerning
non-directed orders in NMS stocks that
are submitted on a held basis, we
provide total quantitative cost estimates
for these amendments in Section
V.C.2.f.
a. Orders Subject to Rule 606(a) Public
Disclosures
i. Benefits
As adopted, Rule 606(a) applies to
NMS stock orders of any size that are
submitted on a held basis. Rule 606(a)
also continues to apply to any order
(whether held or not held) for an NMS
security that is an option contract with
a market value less than $50,000, as the
Commission did not propose, and is not
adopting, any modifications to Rule
606’s coverage of option orders.692
Specifically, Rule 606(a)(1), as
amended, states that every broker-dealer
must make publicly available for each
calendar quarter a report on its routing
of non-directed orders in NMS stocks
that are submitted on a held basis and
in non-directed orders that are customer
orders in NMS securities that are option
contracts during that quarter broker
down by calendar month. As noted
above,693 the Commission is adopting a
modified definition of the term ‘‘nondirected order’’ that no longer includes
a dollar-value limitation on NMS stock
orders,694 but continues to exclude
orders from a broker-dealer.695
Under the scope of public order
handling reports prior to these
amendments, held orders with market
value of at least $200,000 were not
included in public order routing reports
and broker-dealers may voluntarily
provide some information on routing
and execution quality in response to
requests by these customers that submit
See infra Section V.D.3 for an analysis of the
proposed amendments for institutional orders that
the Commission is not adopting.
691 See supra Section III.C. and Adopted Rule
606(a)(1)(iv).
692 See supra notes 37 and 38.
693 See supra Section III.A.1.b.vii.
694 See Rule 600(b)(49). Consistent with this
modification, Rule 606(a)(1)(i) also is revised to no
longer refer to the defined term ‘‘customer order.’’
695 See supra Section III.A.1.b.
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such orders. Because the amended rule
requires public order routing reports for
held orders of all sizes, these orders will
be included in the public order routing
reports. In addition, pursuant to Rule
606(b)(1), customers sending held
orders of at least $200,000 in market
value will continue to receive the same
information from the pre-existing
customer-specific order routing
disclosure rule.
The staff’s supplemental analysis
found that more than 80% of shares and
more than 88% of orders received from
individual accounts 696 are held orders,
suggesting that the amended Rule 606(a)
would provide public order routing
disclosure for the types of orders that
retail investors are more likely to use,
which would make the public reports
more relevant to these investors. The
staff analysis also found that among the
orders of less than $200,000, about 55%
of total shares and about 67% of number
of the orders in the sample are held
orders. The analysis indicates that the
public order routing reports prior to
these amendments are likely to reflect
not held orders in addition to held
orders, and therefore, the amendments
would result in public order routing
reports better reflecting held orders but
lessen the relevance of the reports for
not held orders. The staff analysis also
showed that about 10% of total shares
and about 0.4% of total numbers of
orders in the sample are held orders
with a market value of at least $200,000.
These orders will receive public order
routing reports under the amendment in
addition to the disclosures required by
Rule 606(b)(1).
The Commission believes that,
compared to the scope of public order
handling reports prior to the
amendments, Rule 606(a)(1), as
amended, could make the public order
routing reports more informative and
therefore could improve the value of the
public order routing reports. To the
extent that broker-dealers generally
handle not held orders differently from
held orders, and to the extent that
typically institutional customers use not
held orders,697 the information
pertinent to understanding brokerdealers’ order handling practices for not
held orders is not the same as for held
orders. Moreover, as discussed above,
the staff analysis showed that orders
received from institutional accounts are
more likely to be not held orders than
orders received from individual
accounts, suggesting that the amended
public reports would target customers
distinct from institutional investors. As
696 See
697 See
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discussed in Section V.C.1.a.i,
commenters suggested that the held and
not held order type classifications
would be effective proxies for
distinguishing institutional investor
orders and retail investor orders because
retail investor orders are generally held
to the market and institutional investor
orders are generally not held to the
market.698 Moreover, as discussed in
Section V.C.1.a.i, because broker-dealers
have discretion on time and price for
not held orders and do not on held
orders, customers placing held orders
would have a different level of
sophistication than customers that
typically place not held orders. In
addition, to the extent that the
previously existing public order routing
reports were in aggregate forms and
therefore the customer could not
distinguish the order routing practices
of held orders from not held orders,
replacing public order routing reports
with customer-specific reports for not
held orders could provide different
scopes of benefits of order routing
disclosure to the customers. As
previously discussed, customers
sending not held orders may have a
different preference on order routing
and a different level of sophistication in
understanding the price, time, and other
discretion embedded in not held orders.
As a result, the amended rule may better
serve customers that do not require an
understanding of the price, time, and
other discretion embedded in not held
orders and therefore would allow these
customers to better understand the
reports and more efficiently monitor,
evaluate, and select broker-dealers.
Additionally, the amended 606(a) could
provide more effective order routing
reports for customers and inform
customers of different scopes of
disclosure that could address the extent
of discretion that the broker-dealers
exercise in order handling. Therefore,
the Commission believes that relative to
the baseline and the proposed definition
of retail orders, the amendment to Rule
606(a) could make the public order
routing reports more informative, and
may better target the information
needed by investors that typically use
held orders, thus making available more
useful public order routing reports to
customers and increasing the benefits
698 See Ameritrade Letter at 2; BlackRock Letter
at 2; Citadel Letter at 2–3; Markit Letter at 4;
Schwab Letter at 3; Capital Group Letter at 2–3;
KCG Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 2–3; FIF Addendum
at 2; STA Letter II at 2. One commenter noted its
belief that the vast majority of orders entered by
institutional customers are with not-held
instructions and the vast majority of orders entered
by retail investors have held instructions. See STA
Letter at 4.
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from improved public order routing
reports. With more targeted information,
the Commission believes that customers
will be able to better compare and
monitor broker-dealers’ order routing
practices, which will promote
competition among broker-dealers and
improve the benefits of public
information on order routing of held
orders.
The Commission believes that the
amended rule will enhance benefits for
customers sending held orders having a
market value of at least $200,000
relative to the baseline and the proposed
definition of retail orders. As discussed
above, to the extent that the majority of
orders from individual accounts are
held orders, customers sending held
orders of at least $200,000 will receive
information from public order routing
reports that better reflect held orders
under the amended rule. Because the
amended rule includes held orders of all
sizes, the public order routing reports
will include all relevant orders and
therefore customers could use the
reports to compare and monitor brokerdealers order routing practices. As a
result, customers sending held orders of
at least $200,000 could use the
information from the public order
routing reports in assessing brokerdealers’ order routing practices, which
could promote better execution quality
and competition among broker-dealers.
In addition, from the disclosures set
forth in Rule 606(b)(1), customers
sending held orders of at least $200,000
in market value will continue to receive
the same information from the preexisting customer-specific order routing
disclosure rule, in addition to the
information from the public order
routing reports.
ii. Costs
Amended Rule 606(a) will create
compliance costs, as broker-dealers will
need to distinguish held orders from all
customer orders they receive and
prepare public order routing reports
regarding these held orders and prepare
reports, subject to the de minimis
exceptions in Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5).
The related compliance costs are
discussed in Section V.C.2.f. The costs
related to Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5) are
discussed in Section V.C.1.a.ii.
The Commission believes that the
amended Rule 606(a) will result in
implementation costs but might not
create substantial ongoing costs for
broker-dealers. As discussed in detail in
Section V.C.1.a.i., broker-dealers’
familiarity with held and not held
orders would facilitate compliance with
and may contain potential compliance
costs imposed on broker-dealers because
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broker-dealer could use less processing
time to identify held orders as compared
to the proposed $200,000 threshold. The
staff’s supplemental analysis 699 found
that among the sample orders of less
than $200,000, about 55% of shares and
67% of number of orders are held
orders, suggesting that these brokerdealers would be already engaged in
public reporting of orders less than
$200,000 and therefore would not need
to develop entirely new systems for the
public reports for held orders. The staff
analysis also found that the total held
orders that are newly included in the
public order routing reports are about
10% of total shares and less than 0.5%
of total number of orders in the sample
of NMS stocks in the analysis,
suggesting that the implementation
costs would not be significant for
broker-dealers as a whole that newly
need to prepare public order routing
reports. Additionally, to the extent that
broker-dealers would have a system in
place to prepare the customer-specific
reports under the scope of public order
handling reports prior to these
amendments, broker-dealers would
need to modify their existing systems
rather than build an entirely new
system. Further, to the extent that
broker-dealers would not need to
identify the market value of orders, the
amended rule could require fewer
processing time for broker-dealers as
compared to the proposed $200,000
threshold. Therefore, the Commission
believes that the amended rule would
not impose significant compliance costs
to the broker-dealers as a whole to
prepare the public order routing reports
for held orders of all sizes.
The Commission also acknowledges
that the amended rule will create
additional compliance costs for brokerdealers that receive held orders of at
least $200,000. As discussed above,
under the amended rule, broker-dealers
would need to prepare for the reports,
subject to the de minimis exceptions in
Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5), for all held
orders, in addition to the public order
routing reports. As previously
discussed, the staff analysis showed that
close to 23% of total shares and about
36% of total numbers of orders that are
not included in the scope of public
order handling reports prior to these
amendments will be included under the
amended rule subject to the de minimis
exceptions set forth in Rules 606(b)(4)
and (b)(5). The staff analysis also
suggests that depending on the amount
of held orders relative to total orders
that broker-dealers receive, the
compliance costs would vary across
699 See
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supra notes 642 and 643.
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broker-dealers.700 Although brokerdealers will incur cost in switching
between pre-existing customer-specific
order routing reports and public order
routing reports, the Commission
believes that the amended rule may
limit certain costs. For example, as the
staff analysis found, when all of the
orders broker-dealers receive are on a
held basis, about 19% of total shares
have a market value of at least $200,000
and the rest of 81% of total shares of
orders in the sample data have a market
value less than $200,000.
The Commission believes that the
broker-dealers already have a system to
produce public order routing reports
and therefore may simply send the
received orders of at least $200,000 to
the system they use to generate public
order routing reports without a creating
a completely creating a new system to
capture held order with a market value
of at least $200,000. Furthermore, as
discussed in Section V.C.1.a.i., because
broker-dealers are already familiar with
held and not held distinction, and
broker-dealers already characterize on a
held or not held basis to comply with
Rule 605’s covered order requirement
and other rules such as FINRA Rule
5320, broker-dealers would not incur
additional costs in distinguishing held
orders from not held orders.
Additionally, as the staff analysis
indicates, to the extent that brokerdealers receiving orders of both at least
$200,000 and less than $200,000 value
would already have systems in place to
prepare for the reports required by the
previously existing, the amended rule
would not create substantial costs to
these broker-dealers that are subject to
reporting requirement of both amended
Rule 606(a) and 606(b)(1). Therefore, the
Commission believes that the amended
rule would not impose significant
compliance costs to the broker-dealers
that need to include held orders having
a market value at least $200,000 to the
public order routing reports.
The Commission also believes
amended Rule 606(a) would not impose
substantial costs on the customers
whose orders would have been included
in public order routing reports under
the baseline and the proposed definition
of retail orders but will not be included
in the reports under the amendment.
The staff’s supplemental analysis found
700 For example, based on the staff’s supplemental
analysis, when all of the orders broker-dealers
receive are on a held basis, about 19% of total
shares have a market value of at least $200,000. In
addition, when the ratio of not held orders that
broker-dealers receive from customers is greater
than 50% and less than 100%, less than 4% of total
shares of orders in the analysis are on a held basis
and have a market value of at least $200,000.
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that among the orders of less than
$200,000 in market value, about 45% of
total shares and about 33% of the total
number of orders in the sample of 120
NMS stocks will not be included in
aggregated public order routing reports
under the adoption, whereas these
orders would have been included in the
public routing reports under the
baseline and the proposed definition of
retail orders. Thus, customers that send
not held orders of less than $200,000 in
market value would not receive the
benefit from the enhanced order
handling transparency provided in the
public order routing reports under the
amended Rule 606(a). Instead, the
orders that were included in the public
routing reports under the baseline and
the proposed definition of retail orders
and are not included under the
amended rule are subject to Rule
606(b)(3) and therefore would be
included in the customer-specific
reports required by Rule 606(b)(3). As
discussed above, customers placing not
held orders likely have a different level
of sophistication in understanding the
price and time discretion embedded in
not held orders. Moreover, the enhanced
Rule 606(b)(3) reports will be very
detailed and of more value to those
likely to make special requests of their
broker-dealers, such as those who use
not held orders. As a result, under the
amendment, customers placing not held
orders of less than $200,000 in market
value would receive reports that target
their needs and sophistication.
Moreover, as discussed above, to the
extent that the amendment to Rule
606(a) could better target the public
order routing to the needs of investors
that typically use held orders, the
amended would not affect customers
typically placing not held orders.
Therefore, even though a customer’s not
held orders are not included in the
public routing reports, the customer
would receive Rule 606(b)(3) reports
and therefore would receive the benefit
of increased transparency from the
customer-specific order handling
disclosure required by Rule 606(b)(3).
b. Marketable Limit Orders and NonMarketable Limit Order
i. Benefits
The Commission believes that the
amendments to Rule 606(a) that require
broker-dealers to differentiate
marketable and non-marketable limit
orders will create an opportunity for
more detailed analysis.
In particular, the amendments could
allow the public, including customers
placing orders subject to Rule 606(a)(1),
to better understand the potential
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58407
conflicts of interest broker-dealers face
when routing such orders,701 which
could incentivize broker-dealers to
better manage these and other potential
conflicts of interest, which may result in
improved order routing decisions and
execution quality for orders.702 In
addition, if the amended disclosure
results in broker-dealers improving their
order routing for orders subject to Rule
606(a)(1), which, in turn, may change
which trading centers the broker-dealers
route such orders to, the amended
disclosure could further promote
competition among trading centers.703
In addition, adopting this new
disclosure may lead to innovation by
existing trading centers and may attract
new entrants and the formation of new
trading centers.704
ii. Costs
As adopted, the amendments to Rule
606(a) requiring broker-dealers to
differentiate between marketable and
non-marketable limit orders will impose
costs on broker-dealers. Specifically,
broker-dealers will incur new
compliance and reporting costs if they
do not currently break down marketable
and non-marketable limit orders and
will need to break out this information
in their internal systems. The estimates
for compliance costs are contained in
the estimates for the costs of producing
the reports discussed in Section V.C.2.f.
One commenter indicated that the
amendment will require broker-dealers
to obtain a searchable, historical store of
all NMS quotes to be integrated into the
reporting system, so that marketability
701 Academic research has identified indications
of such routing behavior for orders that retail
investors typically use. On examining the order
routing of 10 broker-dealers, the researchers find
that 4 of the broker-dealers sell market orders to
market makers and route limit orders to market
makers or exchanges offering the largest liquidity
rebates. In addition, their study indicates that a
negative relation exists between take fees and the
likelihood that a limit order fills and the speed and
realized spread of the associated fill. For more
details, see Battalio, Corwin, and Jennings Paper,
supra note 368. See also Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49492.
702 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49492
and Transaction Fee Pilot Proposing Release, supra
note 2, at 13310. Several commenters agreed that
the separation of marketable and non-marketable
limit orders in the Rule 606(a) disclosures could
provide customers with more useful information
they can use when assessing if and how well
broker-dealers manage the potential conflicts of
interest. See, e.g., CFA Letter at 4–5, 9; Fidelity
Letter at 8–9; Ameritrade Letter at 3.
703 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49492.
704 In particular, a trading center that loses order
flow to venues that offer better execution quality
will have the incentive to innovate to improve its
execution quality. Therefore, because the amended
disclosures may encourage broker-dealers to route
for better execution quality, they may lead to
innovation on trading centers.
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of orders can be determined.705 The
Commission believes that whether to
use a historical store of quotes depends
on how broker-dealers capture
marketable and non-marketable limit
orders as required by the public order
handling reports prior to today’s
amendments. Some broker-dealers
already have to break down marketable
and non-marketable for Rule 605
reports. To do so, some of these brokerdealers capture quotes in real-time and
some broker-dealers match orders up
with quotes later. Only the latter
approach requires setting up an
historical store of quotes for brokerdealers and broker-dealers likely will
select the system with lesser costs to
them. The Commission expects that any
broker-dealers that are not already
separating marketable and nonmarketable orders for Rule 605 reports,
will also likely manage costs by
selecting the system with lesser costs to
them and, therefore, would not
necessarily need to set up an historical
store of quotes. The Commission
estimated the costs associated
specifically with implementation of
systems to allow the marketability of
orders to be determined to comply with
the requirement that the Rule 606(a)(1).
The estimates for the costs of producing
the reports discussed in Section
IV.D.4.a.ii. contain the estimates for the
compliance costs that consider the two
most likely approaches discussed above.
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c. Net Payment for Order Flow and
Transaction Fees and Rebates by
Specific Venue
i. Benefits
As discussed above in Section
V.C.2.b.i., the information required by
Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) could also allow the
public, including customers placing
orders covered by Rule 606(a)(1), to
better understand the potential conflicts
of interest broker-dealers face when
routing such orders which could
incentivize broker-dealers to better
manage these and other potential
conflicts of interest, which may result in
improved order routing decisions and
execution quality for orders.706
Under Rule 606(a)(1)(iii), customers
and the public could use information on
net payment for order flow, payment
from any profit-sharing relationship
received, transaction fees paid, and
transaction rebates received per share
and in total to gauge whether payments
for order flow or maker-taker fees affect
the order routing decisions of broker705 See
Markit Letter at 33.
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49438–
40, for an example of routing decisions being
affected by conflicts of interest.
706 See
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dealers.707 Brokerage commissions,
which are known to the customer, may
depend on the rebates and take fees
collected or paid by broker-dealers.708
For example, broker-dealers that collect
more in rebates may pass this income on
to customers by charging lower
commissions. However, routing solely
to maximize rebates or minimize take
fees may result in lower execution
quality than other routing strategies.
Without the new disclosure
requirements, customers might take
only brokerage commissions into
account and might, therefore, suboptimally choose the lowest
commission broker-dealer, without
considering other relevant costs. Such
customers could, in fact, end up paying
higher net costs if the lower commission
broker-dealers do not obtain good
execution quality for the orders. The
information required by adopted Rule
606(a)(1)(iii), together with the other
adopted amendments to Rule 606(a),
will give customers additional
information to make decisions on the
basis of more than the brokerage
commissions.
In addition, as discussed in Section
V.C.2.b.i., if broker-dealers improve
their order routing for orders covered by
Rule 606(a)(1), which may result in
changes to which trading centers they
route such orders to, it could promote
competition between trading centers,
leading to innovation or new entrants to
the market. The trading centers may
change their fees or attempt otherwise to
attract such order flow, and the
quarterly public reports that are broken
down by calendar month will allow
them to see effects of any changes they
implement.
Commenters in general indicated that
information on any payment for order
flow, payment from any profit-sharing
relationship received, the transaction
fees paid, and transaction rebates in the
report as required by Rule 606(a)(1)
could allow customers to better assess
their broker-dealers’ order routing
practices and provide additional
incentives to broker-dealers to monitor
the potential conflicts of interest.709 As
discussed above and in the Proposing
Release, the Commission believes
requiring broker-dealers to modify or
provide additional information in the
707 See, e.g., Battalio, Corwin, and Jennings Paper,
supra note 368.
708 The Commission does not believe that fees
and rebates are the only determinants of brokerage
commissions.
709 See, e.g., Better Markets at 3–5, 7; FSR Letter
at 7; HMA Letter at 11; Schwab Letter at 2.
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order routing reports will enhance the
benefits of improved transparency.710
Some commenters raised concerns
that enhanced reporting requirements
under Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) will generate
extensive information and may
undermine the Commission’s
transparency goals. Specifically, some
commenters stated that the
Commission’s transparency goals may
be limited because the disclosure
presents too much information and
could create more confusion than
provide clarity to retail investors.711 In
addition, one commenter stated that the
additional information may not help
customers better evaluate broker-dealers
and may not promote competition
among broker-dealers unless investors
are educated on the interpretation of the
information on the reports.712 The
Commission continues to believe that
retail customers will benefit from the
increased transparency and information
being made available under the new
Rule 606(a)(1)(iii). The Commission
believes that to the extent a customer
does not understand these disclosures,
the customer could ask their brokerdealer for a better explanation of the
arrangement, which may help mitigate
some commenters’ concerns that
transparency goals may be limited
because of too much information.
Additionally, to the extent retail
investors would like more information
regarding these disclosures, they could
seek such information from all available
resources.
ii. Costs
Adopted Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) will
impose initial compliance costs on
broker-dealers in creating a new process
to complete the reports and increase
ongoing costs related to incorporating
additional information into the reports.
The estimates for the compliance costs
are contained in the estimates for the
costs of producing the reports discussed
in Section V.C.2.f.
In addition to compliance costs,
amended Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) could result
in costs to broker-dealers or investors,
depending on how broker-dealers and
investors adjust their behavior in
response to the increased transparency.
Increased transparency from adopted
Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) about the net
aggregate amount of any payment for
order flow, payment from any profitsharing relationship, transaction fees
paid, and transaction rebates received,
and subsequent scrutiny by customers—
710 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49442–
43.
711 See
712 See
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Fidelity Letter at 5; STA Letter at 3.
Harvan Letter.
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in particular retail customers, the
public, academics, regulators, and the
financial media, might lead brokerdealers to decrease the degree to which
they internalize orders and route orders
to high-rebate or low-fee exchanges to
avoid the perception of conflicts of
interest. Broker-dealers might do this if
they perceive that the potential costs
from increased public scrutiny resulting
from the enhanced disclosures to be
relatively high, compared to the benefit
from sending such orders to
internalizers or routing orders to highrebate and low-fee trading centers. If
this were to occur then these orders
might be more likely to be routed to
trading centers other than internalizers,
such as exchanges or alternative trading
systems,713 regardless of potential
execution quality differences such as
relatively less price improvement, or
they might be more likely to be routed
to other lower rebate or higher fee
venues, regardless of the potential
execution quality differences. In
addition, if broker-dealers were to
reduce the order flow sent to
internalizers who pay for it, the brokerdealers would receive less payment for
such order flow and might pass the lost
payments on to their customers by
raising brokerage commissions or other
fees. Similarly, if broker-dealers were to
route such orders to trading centers with
lower rebates and higher fees, they
might pass the reduction in rebate
revenue and increase in fee costs on to
their customers by raising brokerage
commissions or other fees.
Increased transparency Rule
606(a)(1)(iii) about net payment for
order flow and payments from profitsharing relationships, and subsequent
scrutiny by customers, the public,
academics, regulators, and the financial
media, might also lead broker-dealers to
alter their payment for order flow or
profit-sharing relationships or not enter
into such relationships. Broker-dealers
might do this if they perceive the
potential costs from increased public
scrutiny to be relatively high compared
to a broker-dealer’s benefit from such
relationships. This could lead to lower
payments received from such
relationships. The affected brokerdealers might offset these lower
revenues or higher costs by increasing
brokerage commissions or other fees for
customers.
713 A ‘‘trading center’’ is defined in Rule 600 of
Regulation NMS. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(78).
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d. Discussion of Arrangement Terms
With a Specified Venue
i. Benefits
The Commission believes that the
additional information provided by Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) will help ensure consistent,
accurate, and comprehensive disclosure
of terms of payment for order flow and
profit-sharing relationships that
influence broker-dealer order routing
decisions. This will make the public
reports required by amended Rule
606(a) more useful to customers and the
public, and the benefits of the
description required by Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) are similar to the benefits
of the disclosures of the net payment for
order flow and transaction fees and
rebates by Specified Venue required by
Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) and discussed in
Section V.C.2.c.i.
Consistent with the limit order
disclosure discussion above,714 the
disclosures required by Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) could allow the public,
including retail customers placing held
NMS stock orders, to better understand
the potential conflicts of interest brokerdealers face when routing such orders,
incentivize broker-dealers to improve
order routing, and promote competition
in the market.715
The Commission agrees with
comments that stated that the disclosure
of any agreement that may influence a
broker-dealer’s routing decisions could
be useful for customers to assess the
potential conflicts of interest facing
broker-dealers when implementing their
order routing decisions and the
enhanced disclosures provide more
complete information for customers to
better understand and evaluate a brokerdealer’s order routing decision.716
Therefore, the Commission believes that
the disclosure requirements in Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) could motivate brokerdealers to improve execution quality of
orders.
Some commenters indicated that
voluminous information may limit the
transparency benefits for customers
because it may not be easy to find or use
the information to assess and compare
broker-dealers.717 As discussed in
Section V.C.2.c.i., the Commission
believes that the requirements would
provide information that would not be
overly voluminous or difficult to
comprehend for customers, in particular
714 See
supra Section V.C.2.b.i.
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49438–
40, for an example of routing decisions being
affected by conflicts of interest.
716 See, e.g., Better Markets Letter at 4–6; CFA
Letter at 9; Fidelity Letter at 7; HMA Letter at 11;
Markit Letter at 31.
717 See, e.g., Fidelity Letter at 9; STA Letter at 3.
715 See
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58409
retail customers. Additionally, the
requirements in Rule 606(a)(1)(iv) are
already substantially improving
transparency compared to the reporting
practices prior to these amendments.
Therefore, the Commission believes that
the reporting requirement under the
adopted Rule 606(a)(1)(iv), as adopted,
will make the public reports required by
amended Rule 606(a) more useful to
customers and the public, and the
benefits of the description required by
Rule 606(a)(1)(iv) are similar to the
benefits of the disclosures by Rule
606(a)(1)(iii) that are discussed in
Section V.C.2.c.i.
ii. Costs
The Commission recognizes that the
amendments to Rule 606(a)(1)(iv) will
impose initial and ongoing compliance
costs on broker-dealers. As discussed in
Section IV.D.4.b.ii., the Commission
estimates the total initial paperwork
cost for complying with Rule
606(a)(1)(iv), as adopted, to be 2,920
hours, resulting in a cost of $986,960.718
In addition, as discussed in Section
IV.D.4.b.ii, the Commission estimates
the total annual paperwork cost for
complying with Rule 606(a)(1)(iv), as
adopted, to be 4,380 hours, resulting in
a cost of $1,093,540.719
More detailed disclosure about
payment for order flow arrangements
and profit-sharing relationships might
impose other costs to customers that
submit orders covered by Rule 606(a)(1)
if it leads broker-dealers to decrease the
amount of internalization used in the
execution of market and marketable
limit orders and to alter such
arrangements and relationships. Brokerdealers have a variety of choices for
order routing and execution, and the
venue that a broker-dealer chooses may
have a tangible effect on the execution
quality of an order. Broker-dealers face
conflicts of interest when routing
orders, such as affiliations with trading
centers, receipt of payment for order
flow or receipt of payment from any
profit-sharing relationship, and liquidity
rebates. Similar to the discussion in
Section V.C.2.c.ii., increased
transparency from adopted Rule
606(a)(1)(iv) about payment for order
flow arrangements and profit-sharing
relationships could lead to subsequent
scrutiny by customers and the public
might lead broker-dealers to decrease
the degree to which they internalize
orders and route orders to high-rebate or
low-fee exchanges to avoid the
perception of conflicts of interest. If
broker-dealers were to perceive the
718 See
719 See
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supra note 576.
supra note 591.
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potential costs from increased
transparency resulting from the
enhanced disclosures to be relatively
high compared to the benefit from
sending orders to internalizers, then
these orders might be more likely to be
routed to trading centers other than
internalizers, such as exchanges or
alternative trading systems, regardless of
potential execution quality differences
such as relatively less price
improvement, or they might be more
likely to be routed to other lower rebate
or higher fee venues, regardless of the
potential execution quality differences.
In addition, if broker-dealers were to
reduce the order flow sent to
internalizers who pay for it, the brokerdealers would receive less payment for
such order flow and might pass the lost
payments on to their customers by
raising brokerage commissions or other
fees. Similarly, if broker-dealers were to
route such orders to trading centers with
lower rebates and higher fees, they
might pass the reduction in rebate
revenue and increase in fee costs on to
their customers by raising brokerage
commissions or other fees.
e. Additional Amendments to Rule
606(a)(1) Disclosures
In addition to the amendments
discussed above, the Commission is
adopting other amendments to Rule
606(a)(1) reports.720 The benefits and
costs of these additional amendments
are discussed below.
i. Replacement of Division of Rule
606(a)(1) Reports by Listing Market
Division by S&P 500 Index and Other
NMS Stocks
1. Benefits
The Commission believes that S&P
500 inclusion is an important
determinant of execution quality and,
therefore, is important for order routing
strategies. In particular, a Commission
staff analysis finds that the amendment
to divide the Rule 606(a)(1) order
routing reports required by securities
included in the S&P 500 Index and
other NMS stocks could provide
customers with relevant information on
how their orders are routed. Because the
S&P 500 index is correlated with certain
liquidity and trading characteristics
(which are a determinant of execution
quality),721 the reports under the
amendment could more meaningfully
reflect how broker-dealer routing varies
with trading characteristics than do the
public order handling reports prior to
today’s amendments.722
Specifically, the Commission staff
analyzed execution quality as measured
by effective spreads from Rule 605
reports (‘‘Rule 605 data’’) for common
stocks with S&P 500 index inclusion
and on different market centers 723 to
determine whether the execution
quality of executing a market or a
marketable limit order for common
stock varies across market centers and
S&P 500 index inclusion.724 The staff’s
analysis controls for stock and order
characteristics.725 Accordingly, the
staff’s analysis considers whether
execution quality depends on S&P 500
index inclusion, and specifically which
market centers provide better execution,
as a means to assess the degree to which
the amendment provides useful
information.
While the staff’s analysis is not a
direct test of whether order routing
differs for stocks included in S&P 500
versus those not included in the S&P
500,726 it does directly measure one
important factor in whether such
routing information will be useful—
differences in execution quality.
Information on both execution quality
and routing allows customers (or
someone acting on behalf of customers)
to assess the extent to which their
broker-dealer routes customer orders to
the market centers that provide better
execution quality. If execution quality,
as measured by effective spreads, shows
that S&P 500 index inclusion matters for
which market centers offer better
execution quality, then including the
index information could enhance the
ability of customers to assess one of the
components of best execution. Hence,
the staff’s analysis provides some
indication of whether dividing the
reports by S&P 500 inclusion, as
required by the adopted amendment,
would provide customers and the public
with useful information regarding the
impact of routing decisions.727
TABLE 2—REGRESSION RESULTS FOR THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EXECUTION VENUE AND MEAN EFFECTIVE SPREAD
FOR COMMON STOCKS
Mean effective spread (bp)
Dependent variable
(1)
(2)
Jan. 2012–Aug. 2016
Oct. 2016–Sept. 2017
Intercept ...................................................................................................................................
Market Center
A .......................................................................................................................................
720 See
supra Sections III.B.4, 5 and 6.
500 stocks are in general larger and have
more trading volume than non-S&P 500 stocks.
Academic literature has shown that stocks with
larger size and greater trading volume have smaller
transaction costs than smaller stocks with lower
trading volume. For example, see Tarun Chordia,
Richard Roll, and Avanidhar Subrahmanyam,
Commonality in liquidity, 56 Journal of Financial
Economics 3–28 (2000); David Easley, Soeren
Hvidkjaer, and Maureen O’Hara, Is Information Risk
a Determinant of Asset Returns?, 57 Journal of
Finance, 2185–2221 (2002).
722 The Commission recognizes that dividing such
reports by three separate sections based on listing
markets would still produce information that is
useful to investors and, therefore, replacing the
division of Rule 606(a)(1) reports by listing venues
with a division by securities included in the S&P
500 Index and other NMS stocks could result in
costs. These costs are discussed in Section
V.C.2.e.i.2.
khammond on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES2
721 S&P
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723 The analysis uses historical data from market
centers as they existed during the indicated time
period. The Commission notes that the names of
some of the market centers have since changed.
724 The Commission purchased the Rule 605 data
from CoreOne Technologies, a provider of financial
data. The data used in this analysis spans from
January 1, 2012, through September 30, 2017. The
CRSP U.S. Stock Database from Wharton Research
Data Services contains daily and monthly market
and corporate action data for securities and is used
to estimate control variables.
725 Specifically, to capture the effect of stock and
order characteristics on execution quality, the
analysis uses a regression analysis that controls for
stock characteristics, such as dollar volume, market
capitalization, and mean variance of daily returns,
and order characteristics such as order type and
order size. The regression analysis also controls for
years to mitigate the effect of time variation on
execution quality. In addition, the Rule 605 data
weight the effective spread statistics equally by
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4700
*** 21.55
*** 20.28
*** 20.34
*** 17.84
stock. Therefore, these effective spreads appear
larger than if they were weighted by dollar volume
or by share volume. The purpose of the analysis is
to estimate the relative rankings of transaction costs
across exchanges; therefore, the use of equally
weighted effective spread has no impact on the
economic analysis in a qualitative manner.
726 The direct test would be whether order routing
differs for stocks included in S&P 500 versus those
not included in the S&P 500, which would require
quarterly reports for orders required by Rule 606(a).
However, the quarterly reports are not filed with the
Commission, and the staff was unable to obtain
aggregated 606 reports from a vendor. Therefore, the
Commission staff did not analyze 606 reports prior
to today’s amendments to see if routing differs by
listing exchange of the stock.
727 The staff used Alphabets in Table 2 and Table
3 for each market center so that the identity of
exchange is not revealed.
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TABLE 2—REGRESSION RESULTS FOR THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EXECUTION VENUE AND MEAN EFFECTIVE SPREAD
FOR COMMON STOCKS—Continued
Mean effective spread (bp)
Dependent variable
(1)
(2)
Jan. 2012–Aug. 2016
Oct. 2016–Sept. 2017
B .......................................................................................................................................
C .......................................................................................................................................
D .......................................................................................................................................
E .......................................................................................................................................
F ........................................................................................................................................
G .......................................................................................................................................
H .......................................................................................................................................
I .........................................................................................................................................
J ........................................................................................................................................
K .......................................................................................................................................
L ........................................................................................................................................
M .......................................................................................................................................
N .......................................................................................................................................
S&P500 Index ..........................................................................................................................
Interaction Terms
S&P500 Index * A ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * B ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * C ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * D ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * E ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * F .............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * G ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * H ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * I ..............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * J .............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * K ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * L .............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * M ............................................................................................................
S&P500 Index * N ............................................................................................................
Observations ............................................................................................................................
Adjusted R 2 .............................................................................................................................
*** 17.02
*** 24.34
*** 33.93
*** 15.43
*** 20.40
*** 26.28
*** 43.36
*** 19.38
*** 18.47
*** 86.64
*** 21.55
*** 5.89
***¥12.40
***¥20.95
***¥18.44
***¥25.47
***¥34.23
***¥10.50
***¥21.22
***¥27.18
***¥44.40
***¥20.90
***¥19.75
***¥84.79
***¥21.55
***¥6.95
29,141,050
5.06%
*** 18.45
*** 12.28
*** 8.69
*** 17.58
*** 22.79
*** 10.35
***¥16.07
*** 104.04
*** 13.78
** 0.89
*** 19.70
***¥18.96
***¥18.44
***¥17.72
***¥14.34
***¥4.32
***¥17.93
***¥23.26
***¥13.43
***17.74
***¥100.83
***¥13.34
*¥2.14
***¥18.54
3,963,474
6.29%
Note: Data is from the Rule 605 reports and CRSP and includes years from 2012 to 2017. The variable categories that are dropped are: Market orders, one trading venue, order size from 100–499 shares, and the 2012 calendar year (for the regression using data from January 2012
through August 2016). Note that the regression using data from October 2016 through September 2017 included quarter-fixed effects instead of
year-fixed effects. Also, note that for the regression from October 2016 through September 2017, the analysis did not include CBSX and NSX
data because these two exchanges stopped operating. The control variables are indicators for marketable limit order; order size for 500–1,999
shares, 2,000–4,999 shares, and ≥5,000 shares; and security specific variables including dollar volume, market capitalization, and daily return
variance. T-statistics are estimated from White standard errors. *** indicates significance of a 2-tailed test at the 1% level, ** at the 5% level, and
* at the 10% level. The Chi-square tests are used to test the null hypothesis that all of the exchange coefficients, with the exception of the intercept coefficient, are jointly zero. The pairwise F tests are used to test the null hypothesis that pairs of the exchange coefficients, with the exception of the intercept coefficient, are zero.
khammond on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES2
Table 2 presents the results of the
staff’s analysis of effective spreads for
common stocks traded on all existing
exchanges and off exchange, after
controlling for differences due to stock
and order characteristics. The
methodology in the staff analysis does
not allow the analysis to treat IEX as a
separate market center for the entire
period because IEX data became
available from September 2016, so the
analysis divides the analysis into two
subperiods.728 Column 1 reports the
728 The staff did several analyses because CBSX
data is available until January 2014 and NSX data
is available until May 2014. Staff conducted similar
analysis without these two exchanges and during
the time period that all the exchanges in the sample
were operating. These regression analyses change
the estimated coefficients in the regression analysis;
however it does not change the conclusion that
reporting divided by S&P 500 index and other NMS
securities, as in the adopted amendment, could
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result for the first sub-sample period,
and column 2 reports the result for the
second sub-sample periods. The market
center rows in the table report the basis
point difference between the average
effective spreads on that market center
and the average effective spreads on the
NYSE. The S&P 500 index rows in the
table report the basis point difference
between the average effective spreads on
S&P 500 stocks and the average effective
spreads on non-S&P 500 stocks. The
rows for interaction terms of each
market center and the S&P 500 index in
the table report the basis point
difference between the average effective
spreads of S&P 500 stocks on that
provide relevant information on execution quality
to customers and the public. The additional
analyses provide more robust analysis to support
the staff’s conclusion.
PO 00000
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market center and the average effective
spreads on the NYSE.
For illustration, the intercept in
Column 1 indicates that the average
effective spread for market order NMS
stocks that are executed on the NYSE is
21.55 basis points. The 20.34 estimate
for Exchange A indicates that the
effective spreads on Exchange A are
20.34 basis points greater than those on
the NYSE. The estimate –12.04 for S&P
500 index indicates that the effective
spreads for S&P 500 stocks are 12.04
basis points less than non-S&P 500
stocks. And, the estimate for the
interaction between Exchange A and the
S&P 500 index indicates that the
effective spreads for S&P 500 stocks
traded on Exchange A are 20.95 basis
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points lower than NYSE stocks on
average.729
The analysis of Table 2 suggests that
partitioning the Rule 606 reports by S&P
500 index inclusion will be useful.
Specifically, the structure of the
regressions in Table 2 allows for a
ranking of the exchanges by effective
spread to gauge whether the exchanges
that provide the better execution quality
in S&P 500 stocks are different than
those that provide the better execution
quality in other NMS stocks. If the
relative ranking of exchanges in S&P
500 stocks is similar to the relative
ranking in other NMS stocks, then
partitioning the order routing reports by
S&P 500 inclusion would not provide
information useful for considering the
impact of broker-dealer routing on
execution quality.
Upon examination, Table 2 shows
that the ranking of the market centers by
effective spreads is different depending
on stocks in that market center being
included in the S&P 500 index. For
example, the five market centers with
the best execution quality relative to the
NYSE traded stocks are Exchange M, E,
B, J, and I, in descending order.
However, in comparing S&P 500 stocks
that are traded in these five trading
centers, the ranking of the market
centers for S&P 500 stocks by effective
spreads changes. For S&P 500 stocks,
the five market centers that have the
best execution quality relative to the
NYSE traded stocks are stocks traded on
Exchange I, A, J, C, and M, in
descending order.730 This indicates that
there seem to be differences between
market centers in terms of effective
spreads for stocks, depending on
whether they are included in the S&P
500 index, which may inform customers
in assessing the execution quality their
broker-dealers provide.
Commenters suggested removing the
requirement that the report be divided
by listing market and separating reports
by S&P 500 and non-S&P 500 stocks
because the division based on the S&P
500 index could give retail customers
more meaningful data, as S&P 500
stocks have the largest market
capitalization and have significant retail
customer interest. Commenters
mentioned that S&P 500 stocks,
therefore, could have a different
correlated execution quality level than
lower volume issuances, providing
useful information to retail
customers.731 Therefore, the staff’s
analysis indicates that reporting divided
by the S&P 500 index and other NMS
securities, as in the adopted
amendment, could provide relevant
information about execution quality to
customers and the public.
2. Costs
The amendment to Rule 606(a)(1), as
adopted, will result in initial
compliance costs to prepare separate
disclosures and ongoing costs to adjust
reporting when the constituents of the
S&P 500 change. The Commission
acknowledges that the S&P 500 index is
a proprietary index, which is accessible
via a fee-based subscription. The
Commission also notes that the list of
S&P 500 index stocks is readily
available on the internet on many free
websites and thus obtaining the
constituents of the index should be at a
minimal cost to broker-dealers.
Moreover, as discussed in Section
III.B.5.b., many data dissemination
services obtain this information from
the S&P and redistribute this
information as part of data packages
consumed by broker-dealers as a part of
the broker-dealers normal course of
business. Thus, the Commission
believes that there will be few or no
additional data costs to broker-dealers
resulting from this requirement.
Additionally, on the basis of staff
analysis, not separating order routing
reports by primary listing market could
also reduce some informational value
relative to the public order handling
reports prior to today’s amendments. In
particular, the staff analysis indicates
that removal of primary listing
exchanges could reduce the value of the
606(a)(1) reports for monitoring
execution quality from broker-dealers,
because reporting by listing exchange
still provides information distinct from
the S&P 500 index.
TABLE 3—REGRESSION RESULTS FOR ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EXECUTION VENUE AND MEAN EFFECTIVE SPREAD FOR
COMMON STOCKS BY LISTING EXCHANGE
Dependent variable
Mean effective spread (bp)
Time Period ..............................................
Jan. 2012 through Aug. 2016
khammond on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES2
Listing Exchange ......................................
(1)
NYSE
Intercept ...................................................
Market Center:
A ........................................................
B ........................................................
C .......................................................
D .......................................................
E ........................................................
F ........................................................
G .......................................................
H .......................................................
I .........................................................
J ........................................................
K ........................................................
L ........................................................
M .......................................................
N .......................................................
S&P500 Index ..........................................
729 For perspective, a one-penny effective spread
on a $40 stock is 2.5 basis points. A 2.5 basis point
cost on a 100-share trade in a $40 stock would be
$1.00.
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(2)
NASDAQ
Oct. 2016 through Sept. 2017
(3)
AMEX
(4)
NYSE
(5)
NASDAQ
(6)
AMEX
*** 18.60
*** 84.35
*** 161.47
*** 21.56
*** 37.48
*** 122.29
***¥3.47
***¥5.94
***¥1.21
*** 1.91
¥0.33
***¥4.14
***¥3.84
*** 1.31
***¥2.60
***¥5.85
***¥28.39
***¥31.49
***¥22.82
***¥11.55
***¥33.79
***¥28.61
***¥21.70
***¥35.13
***¥39.39
***¥29.22
*** 17.93
*¥12.66
***¥34.00
***¥28.93
¥0.76
***¥38.77
***¥41.11
***¥8.26
***¥5.93
***¥8.80
*** 9.29
*** 9.40
*** 3.51
***¥21.38
***¥20.29
***¥18.16
***¥6.66
***¥6.77
***¥6.38
***¥11.02
¥0.56
*** 8.83
*** 14.40
**¥13.72
***¥20.01
***¥18.29
***¥24.29
***¥3.40
***¥18.52
**¥7.89
*** 5.08
***¥11.35
*** 11.52
***¥42.56
***¥19.06
***¥2.93
***¥2.56
***¥31.09
***¥30.22
***¥41.56
***¥27.01
***¥48.71
***¥12.86
***¥72.80
***¥33.85
***¥69.04
730 The analysis in Table 2 uses an indicator for
each market center, an indicator for being included
in the S&P 500 index, and an interaction term
between each market center and the S&P 500 index.
To obtain the rankings for execution quality for S&P
PO 00000
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***¥9.86
***¥11.74
***¥4.73
***¥18.44
***¥28.33
***¥39.14
***¥16.31
500 stocks, Commission staff summed the three
estimates and compared the relative magnitudes of
the summed estimates across market centers.
731 See, e.g., Schwab Letter at 3 and Fidelity
Letter at 9.
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58413
TABLE 3—REGRESSION RESULTS FOR ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EXECUTION VENUE AND MEAN EFFECTIVE SPREAD FOR
COMMON STOCKS BY LISTING EXCHANGE—Continued
Dependent variable
Interaction Terms:
S&P500 Index * A .............................
S&P500 Index * B .............................
S&P500 Index * C ............................
S&P500 Index * D ............................
S&P500 Index * E .............................
S&P500 Index * F .............................
S&P500 Index * G ............................
S&P500 Index * H ............................
S&P500 Index * I ..............................
S&P500 Index * J .............................
S&P500 Index * K .............................
S&P500 Index * L .............................
S&P500 Index * M ............................
S&P500 Index * N ............................
Observations ............................................
Adjusted R 2 .............................................
*** 2.73
*** 4.33
*** 0.50
***¥0.67
*** 4.34
*** 3.40
*** 2.99
***¥2.27
*** 2.27
*** 4.16
*** 29.10
*** 31.40
*** 22.69
*** 11.56
*** 44.30
*** 28.77
*** 21.97
*** 2.22
*** 2.15
*** 30.15
*** 30.29
*** 43.18
*** 28.53
*** 48.26
13,258,370
7.55%
15,015,886
3.35%
864,846
4.11%
*** 6.95
*** 6.21
*** 7.23
***¥4.94
***¥4.14
**¥1.43
*** 10.26
*** 6.02
*** 5.57
*** 9.09
*** 11.49
***¥4.43
***¥10.07
*** 5.06
*** 20.47
*** 12.26
0.59
*** 14.03
***¥5.78
2,085,181
4.26%
*** 9.07
*** 10.94
*** 5.58
1,776,195
11.43%
102,046
5.84%
Note: Data is from the Rule 605 reports and CRSP, and includes years from 2012 to 2017. The variable categories that are dropped are: Market orders, one trading venue, order size from 100–499 shares, and the 2012 calendar year (for the regression using data from January 2012
through August 2016). Note that the regression using data from October 2016 through September 2017 included quarter-fixed effects instead of
year-fixed effects. Also, note that for the regression using data from October 2016 through September 2017, the analysis did not include CBSX
and NSX because these two exchanges stopped operating. The control variables are indicators for marketable limit order; order size for 500–
1,999 shares, 2,000–4,999 shares, and ≥ 5,000 shares; and security specific variables including dollar volume, market capitalization, and daily
return variance. T-statistics are estimated from White standard errors. *** indicates significance of a 2-tailed test at the 1% level, ** at the 5%
level, and * at the 10% level. The Chi-square tests are used to test the null hypothesis that all of the exchange coefficients, with the exception of
the intercept coefficient, are jointly zero. The pairwise F tests are used to test the null hypothesis that pairs of the exchange coefficients, with the
exception of the intercept coefficient, are zero.
khammond on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES2
Similar to Table 2 in Section
V.C.2.d.i.1., the staff’s analysis focuses
on whether customers or others can use
the market-specific routing information
to assess the execution quality they get
from their broker-dealers. Specifically, if
the order routing decisions by brokerdealers differ by the exchanges where
stocks are listed, e.g., if broker-dealers
route orders differently for NYSE-listed
stocks compared to NASDAQ-listed
stocks, the removal of listing exchanges
from the reports will not provide this
information to customers and the
public.732 Such information can be
useful for customers and the public, as
long as order routing decisions
determine execution quality.
Specifically, Commission staff analyzed
execution quality as measured by
effective spreads from Rule 605 reports
for common stocks with different
primary listing exchanges, with
different market centers, and with S&P
500 index information to determine
whether the cost of executing a market
or a marketable limit order for common
732 The Commission notes that there are
differences in order routing decisions depending on
the primary listing exchange because of existing
rules, regulations, and practices. For example, the
NYSE does not trade NASDAQ- or NYSEAMERlisted stocks. As a result, orders for a NYSE-listed
stock can be routed to the NYSE, NASDAQ, and
other market centers, whereas orders for NASDAQlisted stocks can be routed to NASDAQ and other
market centers, but not to the NYSE. This level of
information will be lost when reporting by primary
listing exchanges is removed.
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stock varies across market centers and
primary listing exchanges, while also
accounting for the effects of the S&P 500
index inclusion.
In the Proposing release, the
Commission reported the results of a
staff analysis that found that reporting
order routing information by listing
exchange would provide useful
information and, therefore, removing
this partition would impose a cost on
investors. Because the Commission is
adopting a different partition than
proposed, specifically replacing a
listing-exchange partition with a
partition based on S&P 500 inclusion,
the Commission staff has revised its
analysis to examine whether a listingexchange partition would provide
useful information beyond that
information investors could learn from
S&P 500 inclusion. Specifically, the
analysis examines whether, after
accounting for S&P 500 inclusion,
listing exchange still affects the relative
rank of costs to trade on the various
market centers. Such a result would
indicate that an S&P 500 partition is not
a direct substitute for all of the
information captured by a listingexchange partition. The staff’s analysis
controls for stock and order
characteristics.733 Accordingly, the
staff’s analysis considers whether
execution quality depends on primary
listing exchanges in addition to S&P 500
733 See
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Frm 00077
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Sfmt 4700
index inclusion as a means to assess
whether the amendment might reduce
some of the usefulness of the reports.734
Table 3 presents the results of the
staff’s analysis of effective spreads for
common stocks listed on the NYSE,
NASDAQ, and AMEX. Columns 1
through 3 report the results for each of
these primary listing exchanges. The
market center rows in the table report
the basis point difference between the
average effective spreads on that market
center and the average effective spreads
on the primary listing exchange. The
S&P 500 index rows in the table report
the basis point difference between the
average effective spreads on stocks that
are included in the S&P 500 index and
the average effective spreads on each
listing exchange. The rows for
interaction terms of each market center
and S&P 500 index in the table report
the basis point difference between the
average effective spreads of S&P 500
stocks on that market center and the
average effective spreads on each listing
exchange.
As an illustrative example, the
intercept in Column 1 indicates that the
average effective spread for market
orders for NYSE-listed stocks that are
executed on the NYSE is 18.60 basis
points and the –3.47 estimate for
Exchange A indicates that the effective
734 See Section V.C.2.e.i.1, which discusses the
usefulness of using execution quality measures in
the analysis.
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khammond on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES2
spreads for NYSE-listed stocks traded
on Exchange A are 3.47 basis points
lower after controlling for differences
due to stock and order characteristics.
The –12.86 estimate for the S&P 500
index indicates that the effective
spreads for S&P 500 stocks are 12.86
basis points less than non-S&P 500
index stocks, and the 2.73 estimate for
the interaction between Exchange A and
the S&P 500 index indicate that the
effective spreads for S&P 500 stocks that
are traded on Exchange A are 2.73 basis
points higher.
Table 3 indicates that the average
effective spreads vary significantly by
the market center where the orders were
executed. Table 3 shows that most
market center effective spreads are
significantly different than those of the
listing exchange. For example, after
controlling for the effect of stock and
order characteristics and the effect of
the S&P 500 index inclusion, Column 1
shows that, for NYSE-listed stocks, the
average effective spread on Exchange A
is 3.47 basis points less than on the
NYSE itself, and the average effective
spread on NASDAQ is 1.31 basis points
higher than on the NYSE. Table 3 also
indicates that the average effective
spreads vary significantly by listing
exchange. For example, the staff’s
analysis suggests that NASDAQ-listed
stocks tend to have higher average
effective spreads than NYSE-listed
stocks because the intercept estimates
are much larger in Column 2 compared
to Column 1.735 Table 3 also shows that
AMEX-listed stocks tend to have even
higher average effective spreads than
NASDAQ-listed stocks by comparing
the results in Column 3 with those in
Column 2.
The results in the table suggest that
because the relative ranking of each
market center changes depending on the
listing exchange, the adopted
amendment to remove listing exchanges
from the report could reduce the
usefulness of Rule 606 reports. If the
ranking of the effective spreads on each
market center were the same across the
three primary listing exchanges, where
a stock is listed will have little or no
relationship to whether order routing
information informs on execution
quality. Such a result implies that
735 The Commission recognizes that the staff
analysis did not control for stock and order
characteristic differences across the columns, and
the staff did not estimate a matched-sample
comparison. These other analysis types would
facilitate a more fulsome comparison of effective
spreads in similar stocks by listing exchange than
the staff’s analysis in Table 3. However, because the
606 reports do not distinguish individual stocks,
the Commission believes that the staff analysis is
appropriate for assessing the costs of the adopting
amendments.
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removing listing exchanges from order
routing reports would not reduce the
amount of information in the reports.
However, upon examination, Table 3
shows that the ranking of the market
centers by effective spreads is different
depending on the primary listing
exchange even after considering the
effect of the S&P 500 index.
For example, the five market centers
that have the best execution quality
relative to the NYSE-listed stocks are
Exchange B, J, F, G, and A, in
descending order. However, for the
same NYSE-listed stocks, the ranking of
the market centers for S&P 500 stocks by
effective spreads changes. For S&P 500
stocks, the five market centers that have
the best execution quality relative to the
NYSE-listed stocks are Exchange J, B, H,
G, and L, in descending order.736
Similarly, the five market centers that
have the best execution quality relative
to the NASDAQ-listed stocks are
Exchange M, K, E, B, and I, in
descending order. However, for the
same NASDAQ-listed S&P 500 stocks,
the five market centers that have the
best execution quality relative to the
NASDAQ-listed stocks are Exchange B,
C, F, A, and L, in descending order. The
analysis indicates that there seem to be
differences among market centers in
terms of effective spreads for stocks
with different primary listings. The
Commission acknowledges that the
staff’s analysis presented in Table 3 may
not be a perfect test of assessing whether
the partition based on S&P 500 index
inclusion relative to the omission of
information of listing venues would
have more useful information in the
report. Instead, the staff analysis
assesses whether S&P 500 inclusion
encompasses all of the information in
the listing exchanges. Specifically, the
staff’s analysis shows that listing venues
contain information relevant to
execution quality, and therefore, brokerdealers’ order routing, after accounting
for the effects of S&P 500 index
inclusion.
On the basis of the staff’s analysis, the
Commission recognizes that replacing
the listing exchange partition with an
S&P 500 index partition, as in the
adopted amendment, could provide
additional information to customers and
the public, as discussed in Section
V.C.2.e.i.1. At the same time, the
736 The analysis in Table 3 includes an indicator
for each market center, an indicator for being
included in the S&P 500 index, and an interaction
term between each market center and S&P 500
index for each listing exchange. Therefore, in order
to obtain the rankings for execution quality for S&P
500 stocks, Commission staff calculated the sum of
the three estimates and compared the relative
magnitudes of the summed estimate across market
centers for each listing exchange.
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Commission also acknowledges that
eliminating the listing information from
the report required by Rule 606(a)(1), as
in the adopted amendment, could
reduce the information content of the
reports.
The Commission recognizes that
because the amendments change which
orders are covered by Rule 606(a)(1), the
analysis does not directly provide
evidence of the costs of eliminating the
listing information from the report, but
rather provides an indication of
potential costs. The public order
handling reports will cover a different
set of orders than are covered in the
Rule 605 data, and the Rule 605 data do
not have information to distinguish
orders covered by Rule 606(a)(1) from
orders covered by Rule 606(b)(3).
Therefore, Commission staff cannot
conduct a separate analysis for orders
covered by Rule 606(a)(1). The
Commission believes, however, that it
can reasonably assume that execution
quality for orders covered by Rule
606(a)(1) is sufficiently correlated with
the execution quality for orders covered
by Rule 606(b)(3) for the analysis to
provide informative results because
exchanges have few mechanisms that
would treat the orders differently.
ii. Other Amendments to Reporting
The Commission believes that the
amendments to Rule 606(a)(1) to require
quarterly public order routing reports to
be broken down by calendar month will
allow customers to better assess whether
their broker-dealers’ routing decisions
are affected by changes in fee structures
and the extent to which such changes
affect execution quality. Multiple
commenters stated that disclosing the
information contained in the public
routing reports by calendar month could
enable customers to better assess and
monitor broker-dealers’ routing
decisions.737 This adopted amendment
will, however, require an initial cost to
change the process for completing the
reports. The Commission believes this
cost to be small because broker-dealers
typically process data daily and
reporting the data broken down by
month will be a change only in the
aggregation of the data, from quarterly to
monthly.
In addition, the Commission is
adopting the requirement that the public
order routing report required by Rule
606(a)(1) and the customer-specific
order routing report required by Rule
606(b)(1) be made available using an
XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission’s
737 See,
e.g., Markit Letter at 29; Fidelity Letter at
9.
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website. The benefits and costs
associated with this requirement are
discussed in Section V.C.4. The
Commission believes that requiring both
the public and the customer-specific
order routing reports to be provided in
this format should be useful to
customers, as it will allow them to more
easily analyze and compare the data
provided in both types of reports across
broker-dealers, for the reasons discussed
above.738 The amendments to Rule
606(a)(1) and Rule 606(b)(1), as adopted,
will require an initial cost to change the
process for completing the reports.739
Finally, the Commission is amending
Rules 605(a)(2) and 606(a)(1), as
adopted, to require market centers and
broker-dealers to keep the reports
posted on a website that is free and
readily accessible to the public for a
period of three years from the initial
posting on the website. As commenters
stated,740 such analysis may lead to
increased transparency with regard to
execution quality and may lead brokerdealers to compete along this dimension
through routing decisions, resulting in a
higher probability of execution and
improved execution in terms of costs.
Under the adopted amendments to Rule
605(a)(2) and 606(a)(1), customers and
the public could examine the order
execution of a market center and brokerdealers’ order routing through time.
Regarding the requirement to make
the reports available for three years, the
Commission believes that, once the
report is posted, maintaining the reports
on the website will not pose any
additional burden on broker-dealers,
and thus any additional costs to
maintain the report on the website will
be negligible.741 In addition, the
adopted amendment could impede
third-party vendors that aggregate the
time series of 605 and 606 reports
because customers may find third-party
services less useful, particularly for the
three years that the reports are publicly
available. As a contrast, the customers
of third-party vendors could avoid costs
associated with third-party sources
because under the adopted amendment,
customers could directly access the
information for the three-year period.
f. Compliance Costs for Rule 606(a)(1)
Order Routing Reports
As discussed in more detail in Section
IV.D.4., the Commission estimates the
costs to comply with the amendments to
738 See
supra Section III.A.3.
benefits and costs associated with this
requirement more generally are discussed in
Section V.C.4.
740 See, e.g., Citadel Letter at 1; Markit Letter at
29.
741 See infra Section V.C.2.f.
739 The
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Rule 606(a) that require broker-dealers
to distinguish between marketable and
non-marketable limit orders and with
adopted Rule 606(a)(1)(iii) that requires
disclosure of net payment for order flow
and transaction fees and rebates by
Specified Venue are as follows.
As discussed in Section IV.D.4.ii., the
Commission estimates that the initial
hourly burden will be 240 hours 742 for
a broker-dealer that routes orders
subject to the disclosures required by
Rule 606(a)(1) to both update its data
capture systems and format the report
required by the rule, resulting in a
monetized cost burden of $76,800 per
broker-dealer.743 The Commission
estimates that the one-time, initial
burden for a broker-dealer that routes
orders subject to the disclosures
required by Rule 606(a)(1) and that does
not currently create the required order
handling information to engage a thirdparty to program its systems to
implement the requirements of the
amendments to Rule 606(a) will be 20
hours, resulting in an estimated
monetized cost burden of $6,410 per
broker-dealer.744 Also, as discussed in
Section IV.D.4.ii, the Commission
further estimates a fee of $32,000 per
broker-dealer to reflect the complexities
associated with requiring broker-dealers
to distinguish between marketable and
non-marketable limit orders.
The Commission estimates that all
292 broker-dealers that route orders
covered by Rule 606(a)(1) will need to
update their systems to capture the
information required by the rule. The
Commission believes that some brokerdealers will implement the changes inhouse, while others will engage a third
party vendor. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that it is
reasonable to estimate that one third of
the 292 broker-dealers that route such
orders—97 broker-dealers—will
implement the changes in-house, while
the remaining number—195 brokerdealers will engage a third-party vendor
to do so.745
The Commission estimates the initial
burden for broker-dealers that will
program their systems in-house to
capture the data and produce a report to
comply with the rule as 23,280 hours.746
The Commission estimates that the total
initial cost for broker-dealers that will
engage a third-party vendor to program
their systems to capture the data and
produce a report to comply with the
rule as 3,900 hours and $6,240,000.747
Therefore, the Commission estimates
that the total initial burden to comply
with Rule 606(a) for all 292 brokerdealers that the Commission estimates
route retail orders is 27,180 hours,
resulting in a monetized cost burden of
$8,699,550,748 plus an additional cost of
$6,240,000749 to third-party service
providers.
The Commission believes that once
the initial costs described above have
been incurred to allow a broker-dealer
to obtain the required information, the
cost to produce a quarterly report will
remain the same compared to a
quarterly report previously required
under Rule 606(a).750 However, brokerdealers will need to monitor payment
for order flow or profit-sharing
relationships and potential SRO rule
changes that could impact their order
routing decisions and incorporate any
new information into their reports.
Thus, the Commission estimates the
annual burden for a broker-dealer to
comply with the adopting amendments
to Rule 606(a)(1)(i) through (iii) to be 10
hours, resulting in a monetized cost
burden of $3,380.751 With 292 brokerdealers that route retail orders required
to comply with the adopting
amendments, the Commission estimates
the total annual burden to be 2,920
hours, resulting in a monetized cost
burden of $986,960.752
As discussed in Section IV.D.4.a.ii.,
because Rule 606(b)(1) prior to today’s
amendments applies to all customer
orders, broker-dealers must now modify
their systems to provide the disclosures
for the following types of orders,
regardless of market value: (i) Orders in
NMS stocks that are submitted on a held
basis; (ii) orders in NMS stocks that are
submitted on a not held basis and are
exempt from the disclosure
requirements of Rule 606(b)(3); or (iii)
orders in NMS securities that are option
contracts.
The Commission believes that it is
reasonable to estimate that one third of
the 292 broker-dealers that route orders
subject to the disclosures required by
Rule 606(b)(1)—97 broker-dealers—will
implement these changes in-house,
while the remaining number—195
broker-dealers—will engage a thirdparty vendor to do so.753 The
Commission estimates the initial burden
747 See
supra note 570.
supra notes 572.
749 See supra note 570.
750 See supra Section IV.D.4.b.
751 See supra note 574.
752 See supra note 576.
753 See supra note 560.
748 See
742 See
supra note 566.
id.
744 See supra note 567.
745 See supra note 560.
746 See supra note 568.
743 See
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for a broker-dealer that will program its
systems in-house to comply with Rule
606(b)(1) as 24 hours.754 The
Commission estimates the initial burden
for a broker-dealer that will engage a
third-party vendor to program its
systems to comply with the rule as 3
hours and $979.755
Therefore Commission estimates the
total initial burden for all 292 brokerdealers to program their systems to
comply with Rule 606(b)(1) as 2,913
hours 756 and $975,000.757
As discussed in Section IV.5., the
amendments being adopted today add
several defined terms to Rule 600 of
Regulation NMS which will impose an
initial burden on market centers and the
broker-dealers that will have to review
and update compliance manuals and
written supervisory procedures and
update citation references to any such
defined term. The Commission
estimates that it will take each of 381
market centers and 4,024 broker-dealers
two hours to make these updates in
house at a one-time burden of two hours
for each respondent.758 Therefore the
Commission estimates the total initial
cost to be 8,810 hours.759 As discussed
in Section IV.5, there is no annual
burden associated with this
requirement.
3. Disclosure of Order Execution
Information
The adopted amendment to Rule
605(a)(2) requires market centers to keep
reports required pursuant to Rule
605(a)(1) posted on a website that is free
and readily accessible to the public for
a period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the Website.
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a. Benefits
Similar to the analogous requirements
in Rules 606(a), as adopted, described
above, the Commission believes that
requiring the previous three years of
past order execution information to be
available to customers and the public
generally should be useful to those
seeking to analyze historical order
execution information at various market
centers. This will allow broker-dealers
to compare different market centers
more easily, market centers to compare
themselves to other market centers more
easily, and third-party vendors to
provide their services on the basis of the
data more easily. Several commenters
stated that the adopted amendment to
754 See
supra note 578.
supra note 579.
756 See supra note 581.
757 See supra note 582.
758 See supra note 592.
759 See supra note 593.
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b. Costs
As discussed in Section V.C.2.e.
above, the Commission believes that the
costs to market centers for making the
order execution reports readily
accessible to the public for a period of
three years from the date of initial
publication are negligible. In addition,
specifying a minimum length of time for
making the Rule 605 reports available
may make the data owned by third-party
vendors aggregating the time series of
605 reports less useful because, for three
years, the data will be publicly available
and more easily accessible.
4. Structured Format of Reports
The Commission is adopting the
requirement that the Rule 606(b)(1)
order routing and Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling reports be made available
using the Commission’s XML schema
and associated PDF renderer. The
Commission is also adopting the
requirement that the public order
handling reports required under Rule
606(a)(1) be made available using an
XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission’s
website. As discussed earlier, the
Commission believes that requiring the
reports to be made available in an XML
format will facilitate enhanced search
capabilities and statistical and
comparative analyses across brokerdealers and date ranges.761 In addition,
the associated PDF renderer will
provide users with an instantly humanreadable format for those who prefer to
review manually individual reports,
while still providing a uniform
presentation. Multiple commenters
stated that presenting the data in a
consistent, machine readable format
such as XML could make data analysis
easier and could enable customers to
make more informed decisions in
selecting broker-dealers.762
The Commission understands that
varying degrees of structuring have
varying costs. Most, if not all, brokerdealers already have experience
applying the XML format to their data.
For example, all FINRA members must
use FINRA’s Web EFT system, which
requires that all data be submitted in
760 See, e.g., Angel Letter at 3–5; Dash Letter at
2–3; FSR Letter at 1.
761 See supra Section III.A.5.
762 See FIF Letter at 17; CFA Letter at 11; FIA
Letter at 1; HMA Letter at 12; Markit Letter at 17,
28; and Better Markets Letter at 2.
755 See
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Rule 605(a)(2) could better enable
investors to evaluate the impact that
routing decisions have on the quality of
their order executions and provide
information regarding broker-dealers’
potential conflicts of interest.760
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XML.763 For the end users, with the data
in the reports structured in XML, they
could immediately download the
information directly into databases and
analyze it using various software. This
will enhance their ability to conduct
large-scale analysis and immediate
comparison of broker-dealers across
date ranges. Moreover, as an open
standard, XML is widely available to the
public at no cost.
The Commission also believes that if
the reports are provided in a structured
format, users could avoid costs
associated with third-party sources that
might otherwise extract and structure
the data and then charge for access to
that structured data. Users could also
avoid the additional time it would take
for them to manually review and
individually structure the data if they
wanted to conduct large-scale analysis,
comparison, or aggregation. The
Commission also acknowledges that the
required reporting in structured format
could hurt certain third-party vendors
that charge for access to structured data
of data reported in an unstructured
format, because customers may find that
third-party service is less useful for
them. However, without the need to
spend time in manually reviewing and
rekeying the unstructured information
for analysis, some third-party vendors
may be able to conduct more
comprehensive analysis in a more
timely fashion than they could have
offered previously.
The XML schema will also
incorporate certain validations to help
ensure consistent formatting among all
reports help to ensure data quality.
However, these validations will not be
designed to ensure the underlying
accuracy of the data.
The Commission considered
alternative formats to XML, such as CSV
and XBRL. The Commission does not
believe the CSV format is suitable,
because it does not lend itself to
validations. As a result, the data quality
of the reports will likely be diminished
as compared to XML, impairing
comparability, aggregation, and largescale analysis. While the XBRL format
enables users to capture the rich
complexity of financial information
presented in accordance with U.S.
Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles, XBRL is not necessary to
accurately capture the information for
the required reports. The Commission
believes the simpler characteristics of
the information in the required reports
are better suited for XML.
763 See https://www.finra.org/industry/web-crd/
web-eft-schema-documentation-and-schema-files.
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Two commenters raised concerns
regarding the need for providing such
reports in the XML/PDF format
specifically of the Rule 606(b)(1)
reports, stating that customers rarely
request these reports, and stating their
view that the cost of implementing the
proposed format would outweigh the
benefits.764 However, for the reasons
stated above, the Commission believes
providing these reports in XML has
benefits and would not impose
substantial costs to broker-dealers to
produce the XML/PDF format of the
reports. To the extent that brokerdealers would need to abide by the
requirement of Rule 606(b)(1) only
when customers request such reports,
and, as discussed in Section V.C.1.a.ii.,
to the extent that customers typically
placing held orders may not have a need
for additional customer-specific reports
required by Rule 606(b)(1) and therefore
would not frequently request such
reports, Rule 606(b)(1) would not
impose significant ongoing compliance
costs to broker-dealers to create the
XML/PDF format of the reports.
Moreover, as discussed in Section
V.C.1.a.i., although customers placing
held orders would rarely request reports
set forth in 606(b)(1), customers will
have an option to request additional
information if they choose to do so. As
a result, customers that request 606(b)(1)
reports would be able to better compare
and monitor broker-dealers’ order
handling practices, which could
promote better execution quality of held
orders and competition among brokerdealers. Therefore, the Commission
believes that the use of the XML/PDF
format will enable customers to more
easily analyze and compare the
individualized data provided.
5. Other Definitions in Adopted
Amendments to Rule 600
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a. Definition of Non-Marketable Limit
Order in Adopted Rule 600(b)(54)
The Commission believes that the
amendments to Rule 600(b)(54) will
help ensure consistent and correct
interpretation and application of the
adopting amendments to Rule 606(a)(1)
for retail orders. The Commission also
believes that there are no costs
associated with adopting Rule
600(b)(54), because it is a definition that
is widely used by market participants.
764 See Thomson Reuters Letter at 2; FIF Letter at
9, 12.
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b. Definitions of ‘‘Orders Providing
Liquidity’’ and ‘‘Orders Removing
Liquidity’’ in Adopted Rule 600(b)(58)
and (59)
The Commission believes that Rules
600(b)(58) and (59), as adopted, will
help ensure consistent and correct
interpretation and application of Rule
606(b)(3), as adopted, for institutional
orders. The Commission also believes
that there are no costs associated with
adopted Rules 600(b)(58) and (59)
because the Commission understands
that the two definitions are widely used
by market participants.
D. Alternatives Considered
1. Alternative Scope for the CustomerSpecific Reports
In addition to the alternative of
adopting the proposed $200,000
threshold in the definition of
‘‘institutional order,’’ as discussed
above, the Commission also considered
an alternative in which the Commission
would adopt a new entity-centric
definition of ‘‘institutional order’’ and
require order handling disclosure in
Rule 606(b)(3) for such ‘‘institutional’’
orders. Several commenters suggested
that the applicability of the customerspecific disclosures be based on the
entity placing the order.765 The entitycentric approach could be based on the
definition of ‘‘institutional order,’’ that
draws from FINRA Rules 2210(a)(4) and
4512(c) in defining an institutional
order.766
The definition of ‘‘institutional
investor’’ in FINRA Rule 2210(a)(4) and
the definition of ‘‘institutional account’’
in FINRA Rule 4512(c) are wellestablished existing definitions that are
familiar to most market participants and
apply to entities that the Commission
believes are broadly considered to be
institutional by market participants.
Therefore, broker-dealers’ familiarities
with FINRA definitions would facilitate
compliance with and might reduce
potential compliance costs for such a
definition for participants already
familiar with the FINRA rules. In
addition, commenters suggested that
funds are considered to be institutional
market participants and that their orders
should qualify as institutional orders,767
and one commenter specifically
characterized private funds as
traditional institutional investors.768
This is consistent with the
765 See ICI Letter at 6–7; MFA Letter at 3; Fidelity
Letter at 3; STA Letter at 4; CFA Letter at 8; SSGA
Letter at 1; CFA Letter at 8; Bloomberg Letter at 13.
766 See supra Section III.A.1.b.ii.
767 See ICI Letter at 6; IDC Letter at 1–2; Capital
Group Letter at 3; Ameritrade Letter at 1–2.
768 See Dash Letter at 3.
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Commission’s understanding, as
reflected by its statement in the
Proposing Release that a hedge fund—
a type of private fund—is an example of
a type of institutional customer,769 that
market participants are accustomed to
considering private funds to be
institutional investors.
The Commission recognizes that the
alternative definition, which is an
entity-based definition of an
institutional order, would capture most
orders submitted by institutional market
participants and is likely to reduce the
potential misclassification of
institutional orders as non-institutional
orders and vice versa. The Commission
also recognizes that the scope of FINRA
Rules 2210(a)(4) and 4512(c), as
incorporated into the definition of
institutional order in the alternative, is
generally tailored to cover the broad
range of institutions that would likely
benefit from the order handling
disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3),
while minimizing the potential
misclassification of institutional orders.
However, as explained below, the
Commission did not adopt this
alternative.
As discussed in Section III.A.1.b.ii.,
the entity-centric approach suggested by
commenters would require the
Commission to set forth the types of
customers that may request the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures for their NMS
stock orders, but would not entail any
differentiation in the types of orders
covered by Rule 606(b)(3). As result,
NMS stock orders from qualifying
customers that are submitted on a held
basis would be covered by the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures. This is a
suboptimal outcome that is avoided by
the adopted order type-based approach
to Rule 606(b)(3)’s applicability.
Including held orders within the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures would be
inconsistent with the purpose of the
disclosures to provide insight into how
a broker-dealer exercises order handling
and routing discretion because brokerdealers must attempt to execute held
orders immediately and are provided no
discretion in handling them. Moreover,
including a customer’s held orders in
the Rule 606(b)(3) report could
obfuscate the reports’ depiction of the
discretion actually exercised by the
broker-dealer. Order handling and
routing behavior dictated by the fact
that the customer submitted a held
order could be misunderstood in the
report as the product of broker-dealer
discretion.
769 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49433
n.1.
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The alternative approach also would
require the Commission to prescribe
institutional status criteria that
customers must fit in order to be
entitled to receive the disclosures. A
risk with such an approach is that the
criteria could be over-inclusive or
under-inclusive. The Commission is
particularly concerned about potential
under-inclusiveness because customers
that do not fit the criteria would not be
entitled to receive the disclosures.
Under FINRA Rule 4512, a broker-dealer
is not required to obtain for
‘‘institutional accounts’’ certain
additional information that it is required
to obtain for accounts that are not
‘‘institutional accounts.’’ 770 Likewise,
under FINRA Rule 2210(a)(4), a brokerdealer is subject to less prescriptive
review requirements for ‘‘institutional
communications’’ that are solely to
‘‘institutional investors’’ than it is
subject to for other, ‘‘retail
communications.’’ 771 Under both of
these FINRA rules, exclusion from the
defined ‘‘institutional’’ criteria triggers a
more stringent due diligence or review
obligation for the broker-dealer. The
opposite would be true under an entitycentric approach to Rule 606(b)—if the
institutional status criteria adopted by
the Commission were not met, the
market participant would be excluded
from the more detailed disclosure
regime.772
The alternative could create costs to
customers because of misclassification
of orders if broker-dealers are not able
to easily discern whether an order meets
the definition to be included in the
customer-specific reports. Specifically,
orders for NMS stock from persons that
have total assets under $50 million and
that are not a type of market participant
expressly covered by the adopted
definition would not be included in the
reports under the alternative. Brokerdealers would not be obligated to
provide these persons with the order
handling disclosures in the adopted
Rule 606(b)(3), because these persons do
not fall within the definition under this
alternative. Therefore, these persons
would not benefit from the increased
order handling transparency provided
for in new Rule 606(b)(3). These persons
instead would receive the order
handling disclosures made available by
amended Rule 606(b)(1).773
770 See
FINRA Rule 4512(a)(2).
FINRA Rule 2210.
772 See supra Section III.A.1.b.
773 Additionally, if an institutional order were
misclassified as a retail order, the order would be
subject to the Rule 606(a)(1) and Rule 606(b)(1)
order routing disclosure requirements, therefore
reducing the accuracy of public retail order routing
reports and reducing the benefits of increased
771 See
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Furthermore, the alternative could
create costs to retail investors due to
misclassification of orders if brokerdealers cannot easily discern whether
an order meets the definition of a retail
order. Such a misclassification would
exclude retail market participants that
should be included, or include an
institutional market participant that
should be excluded. Under this
scenario, the 606(a)(1) report could
contain less accurate information
regarding retail order routing, reducing
the benefit of increased transparency of
the public retail order report. Also,
because misclassified retail orders
would be subject to the requirements of
606(b)(3) reports under the adopted
rule, retail investors would not receive
the benefit of 606(a)(1) reports. As
discussed in Section V.C.1.a.i.1.,
information pertinent to understanding
broker-dealers’ order handling practices
for customers’ orders that retail
investors typically place is not the same
as for institutional market participants.
In addition, as discussed in Section
V.C.2.a.i., because the information
contained in 606(a)(1) reports could be
more relevant to retail orders than
606(b)(3) reports, misclassification of
orders would limit the benefits that
retail customers could receive from the
enhanced transparency of the retail
order routing reports.
2. Scope of Broker-Dealer’s Obligation
Under Rule 606(b)(3)
The Commission is adopting the Rule
606(b)(3) requirement that every brokerdealer must, on request of a customer
that places, directly or indirectly, one or
more orders in NMS stocks that are
submitted on a not held basis with the
broker-dealer, disclose to such customer
a report on its handling of institutional
orders for that customer, unless a de
minimis exception in Rules 606(b)(4) or
(b)(5) applies. In addition, the
Commission is maintaining the
exclusion of broker-dealers from the
current definition of ‘‘customer’’ and
that exclusion is maintained for
purposes of Rule 606(b)(3), which crossreferences the term ‘‘customer.’’
The Commission considered an
alternative that would apply the
disclosure requirements to brokerdealers that receive not held NMS stock
orders from other broker-dealers.
Compared to the adopted Rule 606(b)(3),
this alternative could enable customers
to receive more comprehensive order
handling data, which could improve
customers’ understanding of execution
details of their orders, such as payment
transparency of retail order routing disclosure that
are discussed in Section V.C.2.a.ii.
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for order flow, rebates, and access fees.
As some commenters stated, this
alternative could help customers make
more informed investment decisions.774
Thus, this alternative could benefit
customers by providing them with
additional information on their order
handling by broker-dealers, so that
customers could assess and monitor
their broker-dealers’ order routing
practices, which could promote
competition among broker-dealers.
However, this alternative could also
increase compliance and reporting costs
to broker-dealers. As one commenter
stated,775 to the extent that brokerdealers may outsource order routing
technology to other broker-dealers,
executing broker-dealers may be
required to create individual order
handling reports and make their
execution data available to customers
with whom they have no prior
relationship.
Additionally, the competition among
broker-dealers could provide incentives
for broker-dealers to provide orderhandling information to customers
regardless of the scope of the reporting
requirements. For instance, customers
could choose not to send orders on a not
held basis to introducing broker-dealers
that are unable to provide the
information, which could incentivize
introducing broker-dealers to request
the information from their executing
broker-dealers that, in turn, may risk
losing introducing broker-dealers as
customers unless they provide the
information. As one commenter stated,
such competitive market forces could
motivate broker-dealers to provide
additional information that could
address customers’ expectations.776
Moreover, customers could choose to
negotiate with broker-dealers for
additional disclosures, such as
introducing broker-dealers requesting
the information from their executing
broker-dealers. With the information,
customers could assess whether their
broker-dealer is adequately serving its
investing and trading expectations, as
well as whether they would be better
served by utilizing the services of a
broker-dealer that is able to provide the
full suite of detailed order handling
information set forth in Rule 606(b)(3).
3. Public Availability of Aggregated
Rule 606(b)(3) Order Handling
Information
Proposed Rule 606(c) required public
quarterly reports broken down by
774 See Dash Letter at 4–5; FIF Letter at 3, 7–8;
and SIFMA Letter at 3–4.
775 See Bloomberg Letter at 16.
776 See id.
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calendar month on the order routing
and execution quality of aggregated
institutional orders by each brokerdealer. Under the rule amendments for
not held NMS stock orders as adopted,
but not as proposed, broker-dealers are
required only to provide customerspecific order handling reports required
by Rule 606(b)(3), and none of the
information set forth in Rule 606(b)(3) is
required to be made public.
Prior to and after today’s
amendments, Rule 606 does not require
a broker-dealer to provide public reports
for not held NMS stock orders.777 While
an institutional customer or a customer
that submits NMS stock orders on a not
held basis can request individualized
reports from broker-dealers about the
handling of its orders, the lack of public
reports relating to such orders makes it
difficult for a customer to compare
handling of such orders by brokerdealers that the customer does not have
a business relationship with. Further,
for the broker-dealers that the customer
does send orders to, the customer is not
able to compare these broker-dealers
more generally based on all orders those
broker-dealers handle rather than only
the orders the customer sends to the
broker-dealers.778
The Commission considered the
proposed Rule 606(c) as an alternative
to this adopted rule. Specifically, this
alternative would require broker-dealers
to publicly report, on a quarterly basis,
aggregated Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling information. As discussed in
Section III.B., several commenters
provided critiques of or suggested
revisions to the proposed rule regarding
the proposed public aggregated order
handling reports.779 The Commission
has considered these comments and has
revised its analysis of the economic
effects of such public aggregated reports
since the Proposal.
777 Separately, there are no publicly available
reports about the handling of institutional or not
held NMS stock orders published by independent
researchers and analysts, academic researchers, the
public at large, or third-party vendors.
778 Prior to today’s amendments, a customer
placing not held NMS stock orders could only
compare broker-dealers on the basis of the orders
it had sent to the broker-dealers because only those
are contained in the ad hoc reports the brokerdealers provide upon request, and the customer
cannot compare how its broker-dealers handle the
orders it had sent compared to all of the not held
NMS stock orders the broker-dealers had received.
In addition, the ad hoc reports provided by the
broker-dealers upon request by a customer placing
not held NMS stock orders may be provided in
different formats and contain different and
potentially inconsistent information, which makes
the comparison of the order routing decisions and
execution quality of broker-dealers more difficult
and less useful.
779 See Fidelity at 6; Market Letter at 6.
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As discussed in the Proposing
Release, proposed Rule 606(c) would
provide the benefits of increasing the
transparency of order handling and
providing additional information to
customers beyond that provided by
customer-specific reports required by
amended Rule 606(b)(3). Customers
would be able to compare their brokerdealers not just based on the orders they
send to the broker-dealers, but also
based on all Rule 606(b)(3) orders
handled by the broker-dealers.780 The
aggregated reports would assist
customers in facilitating discussions
with their broker-dealers about the
broker-dealers’ handling of their orders.
The reports would also allow current
and prospective customers to compare
broker-dealers’ order handling and,
ultimately, to inform their choice of
broker-dealers. For example, the reports
could allow customers to compare the
execution services of their current
broker-dealers with other competitors,
who might route orders more often to
the venues offering better average
execution quality. Moreover, this
alternative could promote competition
as broker-dealers may seek to
differentiate their services and expertise
in an effort to retain current customers
and attract the business of prospective
customers. Further, the public
aggregated order handling reports could
improve the extent and quality of
information available for independent
research and analysis by academic
researchers, the public at large, or thirdparty venders, thereby furthering the
public monitoring of broker-dealers
conflicts of interest and enhancing the
benefits of increased transparency.
In light of the comments received and
after further consideration, the
Commission now believes that the
aggregated information in the proposed
public report would provide more
limited benefits than those described in
the Proposal. In particular, the reports
might not allow for meaningful insight
into the quality of broker-dealers’ order
routing performance or comparisons of
order handling performance across
broker-dealers. Moreover, the
aggregation required for the reports
would dilute the information necessary
to compare one customer to a brokerdealer’s customers more generally or to
compare across broker-dealers.781
Further, the Commission does not
believe that it could easily design the
aggregated reports to limit such dilution
without raising the risk of revealing
sensitive information of customers that
780 See
781 See
Fidelity at 6.
supra notes 337–339 and accompanying
text.
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submit not held NMS stock orders, in
particular the institutional customers
that typically submit such orders. Each
customer has a unique set of
circumstances, goals, and order flow
that dictates how a broker-dealer
handles that customer’s orders. For
example, if a broker-dealer were to
aggregate together the orders of both its
quantitative trading firm and mutual
fund clients in a single, aggregated
public report, the dilutive effect would
result in a washing out of the routing
nuances that are relevant to each type of
customer and that are important to
understanding a broker-dealer’s routing
decisions when granted full
discretion.782
In addition, not held NMS stock
orders from customers frequently limit
broker-dealer discretion in some
manner, which would reduce the value
of the reports in providing information
about the broker-dealer’s own decisions
in order handling. For broker-dealers
that do not typically have full discretion
on the handling of a not held NMS stock
order, an aggregated order handling
report could be more of an indication of
its client mix and the preferences of its
clients than about the broker-dealer’s
performance.
Even a customer comparing its own
individual report to the aggregate report
of its own broker-dealer might not be
able to realize the potential benefit of
making meaningful comparisons
without knowing the specific nature,
practices, and requests of the brokerdealer’s other customers. In theory, a
customer could ask its broker-dealers to
explain how the customer’s report fits
into the aggregate report, which could
allow the customer to make meaningful
comparisons and receive the benefits of
additional transparency. However, this
would result in additional costs to
broker-dealers and customers because
the broker-dealers would need to spend
their time and resources to provide
explanations to their customers
regarding how individual reports fit into
aggregated information. The greater
these costs to the customers, the less
likely they would be to use the reports.
Further, a broker-dealer may not be
willing to provide a lengthy explanation
of its public aggregated report to an
institutional or retail investor that is not
its customer, significantly limiting the
potential benefit to customers of
comparing their broker-dealers to
broker-dealers the customer does not
have a business relationship with. This
may also lead to public analyses and
782 If a broker-dealer were not required to
aggregate the orders, however, the report might
reveal the strategies of each type of customer.
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commentary regarding order routing
practices that are not informed by any
meaningful understanding of the
customer types and routing preferences
included in aggregate reports.
Even in the absence of public
aggregated reports, consultants and
providers of TCA for customers—
particularly institutional customers—
could perform aggregate analysis, but in
a much more meaningful and
productive way by aggregating the data
of customers that submit NMS stock
orders on a not held basis with like
trading characteristics. Consultants
could collect information with the
permission of such customers, aggregate
the data of customers with like trading
characteristics, and provide reports that
would be more readily and
meaningfully comparable across brokerdealers. Although using consultants
might provide comparable reports to
customers, it would result in monetary
costs to customers in paying for the
service of consultants.
In addition to viewing the benefits to
public aggregated reports in proposed
Rule 606(c) to be somewhat more
limited than those in the discussion in
the Proposing Release, the Commission
believes the aggregated reports would
have the potential to result in additional
costs for broker-dealers and their
customers. In particular, customers
could be confused to the extent that an
aggregated public report suggests
substandard order handling practices
even if a broker-dealer is performing
very competently. Broker-dealers would
be at a disadvantage if the reports did
not adequately summarize relevant
information about the quality of
customer service. Such a
misinterpretation of the aggregate report
could result in the customer suboptimally switching broker-dealers. For
example, a customer could use the
aggregated public reports to compare its
broker-dealer to other broker-dealers
and could switch to another brokerdealer. If the new broker-dealer is
performing worse than the previous
broker-dealer, the customer could get
worse order handling treatment. This
would also result in costs to the original
broker-dealer because of the loss of
customers.
Given the Commission’s
understanding of the limitations of the
benefits and the addition of costs per
the discussion of the public aggregated
reports in the Proposing Release, the
Commission believes that customers
could alter their behavior in recognition
of the limitations of the public report in
the long-run if not in the short-run. For
example, communications with brokerdealers in explaining how the
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customer’s data fits into the aggregate
report could facilitate the customer’s
learning process, which could help
customers potentially achieve some
positive benefits from the reports and
avoid responding in a manner that
results in worse order handling for
them. On the other hand, the customers
could also manage this cost by deciding
not to use the reports at all. Such a
response would also result in no
benefits from the report. In addition,
under this alternative, broker-dealers
would incur additional reporting costs
because they would need to prepare
public reports and disseminate the order
routing information to the public
regularly. As stated in the Proposing
Release,783 the Commission estimated
that the estimated total burden per year
for all broker-dealers that route
institutional orders to comply with the
reporting requirement under the
alternative would have been
approximately 5,920 hours, resulting in
a monetized cost burden of $1,046,640,
plus an additional third-party service
provider fee of $130,000.784
4. Automatic Provision of CustomerSpecific Not Held Order Handling
Report (Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
The Commission considered an
alternative to adopted Rule 606(b)(3)
that would not require that customers
request customer-specific standardized
reports on not held NMS stock order
handling, but would instead require
broker-dealers to provide them to
customers automatically, either by
sending the reports out or by providing
a portal where customers can view or
download the reports. This alternative
could reduce the cost to customers,
compared to both the baseline and the
amendment, of acquiring such order
handling reports, because customers
would not need to request the reports.
At the same time, this alternative may
not benefit customers compared to the
adopted amendment, as discussed in the
Proposing Release.785 In addition, as
783 See
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49491.
hours per broker-dealer that routes
institutional orders who will create the required
reports x 135 such broker-dealers + 8 hours per
broker-dealer that routes institutional orders who
will use a third-party service provider to create the
required reports itself × 65 such broker-dealers =
5,920 hours. The Commission estimates the total
monetized burden for this requirement to be
$1,046,640 ($6,840 per broker-dealer that will create
the reports itself × 135 such broker-dealers + $1,896
per broker-dealer that uses a third-party service
provider to create the required reports × 65 such
broker-dealers = $1,046,640). Also, $2,000 per
broker-dealer that will use a third-party service
provider to prepare its reports × 65 such brokerdealers = $130,000.
785 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49501–
02.
784 40
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one commenter stated,786 to the extent
that some institutional customers may
request firm-specific customized reports
and may not need the additional
information in the order handling
report, this alternative may not provide
additional benefits compared to the rule
as adopted.
With respect to the costs to brokerdealers, the alternative would impose
additional initial costs compared to the
baseline, as broker-dealers would be
required to automatically provide
reports to all customers, not just those
that request reports, and would have to
build infrastructure to generate these
reports. The Commission believes,
however, that these initial costs likely
would be minimal, because the
alternative would involve slight
modifications to the systems that
produce the required order handling
reports. Moreover, as discussed in the
Proposing Release, the effect of this
alternative on the costs to brokerdealers, compared to the cost of the rule
as adopted, is unclear.787
5. Submission to the Commission of Not
Held NMS Stock Order Handling
Reports (Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
The Commission considered an
alternative to adopted Rule 606(b)(3)
that would require these customerspecific order handling reports to be
submitted to the Commission. With
direct access to the reports under this
alternative, the Commission could
potentially use the reports, to
investigate best execution concerns,
assist in risk-based examination
decisions, and/or conduct market
analyses on order handling to promote
data-driven rulemaking, which could
benefit investors and the market in the
form of enhanced investor protection
and better informed rulemaking.788
While providing some benefits, this
alternative would also impose
additional costs to broker-dealers to
submit their reports to the Commission.
Further, the Commission believes that
acquiring the reports from each brokerdealer could impose burdens on
Commission resources, though the
magnitude of those burdens is
unknown. Receiving customer-specific
order handling reports could impose
further costs on the Commission, as the
Commission would need to take steps to
safeguard personally sensitive
information, though it might be able to
leverage its experience dealing with the
receipt of sensitive information in other
contexts to minimize those costs.
786 See
Fidelity Letter at 4–5.
id.
788 See Proposing Release supra note 1, at 49502.
787 See
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6. Categories of NMS Stocks for Rule
606(a)
The Commission considered an
alternative that would partition the
report required by Rule 606(a)(1) by
both listing markets and S&P 500 index
inclusion instead of by S&P 500 index
inclusion alone. As discussed in Section
V.C.2.e.i., the Commission staff’s
analysis indicates that partitioning by
listing exchange could provide
additional information to customers
beyond the information contained in
reporting by S&P 500 index inclusion.
Therefore, this additional partition
could allow customers to combine the
Rule 606(a)(1) reports with the Rule 605
reports to help investors better judge the
effect of broker-dealers’ routing
decisions on execution quality.
This alternative could result in
broker-dealers incurring additional
reporting and compliance costs relative
to the adopted rule, because brokerdealers would need to change the
reporting format to include both S&P
500 index inclusion and listing markets
information. Compared to the adopted
rule, the benefits of such order reports
could be limited to the extent that the
Rule 606(a)(1) order reports divided by
both listing markets and S&P 500 index
are less clear for customers and the
public to understand. As discussed in
Section V.C.2.e.i., staff analysis showed
that S&P 500 index and listing markets
have distinct information that is
correlated with execution quality. To
the extent that customers may not
understand the information content of
the order reports divided by both listing
markets and S&P 500 index, customers
would not be able to better assess the
order routing and execution quality
under this alternative, which, in turn,
could make it less efficient for the
customers to evaluate and select brokerdealers.
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7. Disclosure of Additional Information
About Not Held NMS Stock Order
Routing and Execution
The Commission considered requiring
additional measures to be included in
adopted Rule 606(b)(3) reports for
orders submitted on a not held basis. In
particular, the Commission considered
an alternative that would categorize
orders by routing strategy in the reports
and an alternative to report additional
execution quality statistics.
Currently, as such order handling
reports are not standardized and vary by
broker-dealer or by customer, the
Commission understands that some of
these reports group order routing
strategies by their aggressiveness, while
other reports do not. Rule 606(b)(3) does
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not require the order handling report to
be categorized by order routing strategy
for each venue to which the brokerdealer routed the customer’s orders
submitted on a not held basis.
The Commission considered the
proposed categorization as an
alternative to the adopted rule. Under
the alternative, order routing strategies
for such orders would be categorized
into three general strategy categories: (1)
A ‘‘passive order routing strategy,’’
which emphasizes the minimization of
price impact over the speed of execution
of the entire order; (2) a ‘‘neutral order
routing strategy,’’ which is relatively
neutral between the minimization of
price impact and speed of execution of
the entire order; and (3) an ‘‘aggressive
order routing strategy,’’ which
emphasizes speed of execution of the
entire order over the minimization of
price impact.
This alternative could facilitate
comparisons among broker-dealers by
customers placing not held NMS stock
orders because it would allow
customers to control for the fact that
broker-dealers may get different types of
order flow. For example, to satisfy
customer order instructions one brokerdealer may tend to use an aggressive
order routing strategy and another
broker-dealer may tend to use a passive
order routing strategy, and simply
comparing these two broker-dealers
without considering the order routing
strategy category may lead to incorrect
or misleading conclusions.
Customers preferring passive order
routing strategies may be willing to wait
longer for an execution but may want to
limit price impact. Customers preferring
aggressive order routing strategies,
however, may endure some price impact
to trade quickly. Therefore, a brokerdealer implementing a passive order
routing strategy may, compared to an
aggressive order routing strategy, tend to
route to a dark pool where execution
may be less certain, but likely at a better
price.789 Similarly, a broker-dealer
implementing passive order routing
strategies may be able to place orders
providing liquidity more often, thereby
capturing more rebates.790 As a result,
789 See, e.g., Albert J. Menkveld, Bart Zhou
Yueshen, and Haoxiang Zhu, Shades of Darkness:
A Pecking Order of Trading Venues, 124 Journal of
Financial Economics, (2017). The authors find that
there exists a pecking order of trading venues that
puts low-cost-low-immediacy venues on top and
high-cost-high-immediacy venues at the bottom.
This suggests that if an order is a passive order and
executed with passive order routing strategy, the
broker-dealer would prefer low-cost-low-immediacy
venues, which the paper identifies as dark pools
that execute at the midpoint.
790 Compared to an aggressive order routing
strategy, a passive order routing strategy may
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the routing statistics of a broker-dealer
that implements predominantly passive
order routing strategies should differ
from those of a broker-dealer that
implements predominantly aggressive
order routing strategies. Therefore,
including the categories of order routing
strategies in the order handling report
can facilitate an assessment of how well
a broker-dealer manages its conflicts of
interest and provides execution quality
that matches customer preferences
because it provides information on the
preferences communicated by that
broker-dealers’ customers.
The alternative to differentiate the
adopted disclosures into the three order
routing strategy categories could help
mitigate the possibility that the reports
could be interpreted incorrectly.
However, there could still be differences
among broker-dealers in how they
classify orders into the three strategy
categories, which could make straight
comparisons between broker-dealers
difficult.
This alternative could also create
unnecessary subjectivity, as brokerdealers may categorize similar routing
strategies differently, which could limit
the utility and comparability of the
reports. Moreover, as several
commenters stated,791 trading
algorithms these days may use multilayered methodologies that would fit
into more than one of the adopted
categories, which makes categorizing
orders into three types too simplistic to
adjust to changing market conditions or
to reflect complex routing strategies. For
these reasons, the Commission believes
dividing order routing strategies into a
fixed number of order routing categories
would not provide a useful basis for
comparison.
Moreover, this alternative could result
in higher implementation costs relative
to adopted Rule 606(b)(3), by requiring
differentiating order routing strategies
for not held NMS stock orders into three
types. The Commission believes that
broker-dealers would incur costs
associated with creating their
methodologies, assigning each order
routing strategy for such orders into one
of these three categories according to the
methodologies, and promptly updating
the assignments any time an existing
strategy is amended or a new strategy is
created.
reduce transaction costs and allow the capture of
rebates, but immediate execution is not certain. See
Lawrence Harris and Joel Hasbrouck, Market vs.
Limit Orders: The SuperDOT Evidence on Order
Submission Strategy, 31 Journal of Financial and
Quantitative Analysis 213, 230 (1996).
791 See, e.g., Better Markets Letter at 5; Capital
Group Letter at 5; Fidelity Letter at 5; FIF Letter at
4; ICI Letter at 8; Markit Letter at 2, 20–21; MFA
Letter at 4; KCG Letter at 6–7; SIFMA Letter at 4.
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Furthermore, as adopted, customers
remain able to negotiate with their
broker-dealers for additional disclosures
or categorizations that could address
their interests better, such as
categorizations by routing strategy. With
this information, institutional customers
could obtain information to evaluate
and monitor their broker-dealers
performance in order routing.
The Commission considered another
alternative that would require Rule
606(b)(3) reports to contain additional
execution quality measures, such as
realized spread and effective spread,
price improvement statistics, the
percentages of effective spreads and
quoted spread percentages, time to
execution, or implementation shortfall,
which represent varying dimensions of
execution quality. As several
commenters stated, adding these
statistics would increase the
information content and the usefulness
of the reports relative to Rule 606(b)(3),
and would provide execution quality
statistics that would reflect changes in
market structure.792 Additionally,
relative to the execution quality
measures under adopted Rule 606(b)(3),
this alternative would enable customers
to use different execution quality
statistics that are more informative for
their needs.
This alternative could result in higher
implementation costs relative to
adopted Rule 606(b)(3) by requiring
additional execution quality statistics in
the report. In addition, for some
execution quality metrics, the
computation costs would be larger than
for others. Furthermore, as raised by a
number of commenters,793 the volume
disclosures could overwhelm retail and
some institutional customers that would
therefore not benefit from additional
information on execution quality
statistics. To the extent that customers
are not familiar with certain execution
quality metrics, additional execution
quality measures more than required by
the adopted rule may not be useful to
investors to better compare brokerdealers and may not promote
competition among broker-dealers along
the execution quality dimensions
provided in the reports.
Furthermore, if customers wish to
obtain additional information on
execution quality, customers could
negotiate for additional execution
quality statistics with their brokerdealers that could address customers’
792 See, e.g., Angel Letter at 5; Better Markets
Letter at 5–8; Capital Group Letter at 6; FSR Letter
at 5–6; HMA Letter at 10; ICI Letter at 9; Markit
Letter at 9–10; and Schwab Letter at 2.
793 See, e.g., STA Letter at 3.
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interests better. By doing so, customers
could obtain relevant information to
evaluate their broker-dealers
performance in order routing.
8. Order Handling Reports at the Stock
Level (Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
The Commission considered requiring
the order handling information required
by Rule 606(b)(3) to be reported at the
individual stock level rather than
aggregated across stocks. This
alternative would enhance transparency
to customers relative to Rule 606(b)(3)
because the reports would be more
detailed as discussed in the Proposing
Release.794 Specifically, as one
commenter stated, reporting at the
individual stock level could provide
additional information that reflects
stock liquidity or market conditions that
may affect broker-dealers’ order routing
decisions, which could enable
customers to better assess their brokerdealers.795
Because the reports would be more
detailed, however, this alternative
would increase the costs of producing
the reports, as well as the costs of using
the reports relative to Rule 606(b)(3).
However, as discussed in the Proposing
Release, the Commission believes that
any potential increase in costs of
producing the reports would be
negligible.796
9. Alternative to Three-Year Posting
Period (Adopted Amendments to Rules
605(a)(2) and 606(a)(1))
The Commission considered requiring
broker-dealers and market centers to
make the reports required by Rule
605(a) and 606(a)(1) available for a
minimum length of time of less than
three years or more than three years. If
public reports are available for less than
three years, then historical data might
not be as readily available to customers
and the public who are seeking to
analyze past routing behavior of brokerdealers or past execution quality of
market centers, as it would be under the
adoption of a three-year posting period.
Customers and the public would either
have to download the data more often
or have to rely on third-party vendors
who download and aggregate the data.
Compared to the adopted three-year
posting period, this alternative would
reduce the execution quality of market
centers and the transparency of brokerdealer routing decisions for customers
placing orders covered by the reports
required by Rule 605(a) and 606(a)(1). A
794 See
E. Economic Effects and Effects on
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act
requires the Commission, when making
rules under the Exchange Act, to
consider the anti-competitive effects of
any rules it adopts.798 Specifically,
Exchange Act Section 23(a)(2) prohibits
the Commission from adopting any rule
that will impose a burden on
Proposing Release supra note 1, at 49503–
04.
795 See
Capital Group Letter at 5.
796 See Proposing Release supra note 1, at 49504.
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shorter minimum length of time would
reduce the costs broker-dealers incur
associated with posting reports relative
to a three-year posting period. However,
as discussed above, the Commission
believes these incremental costs to be
small and that the cost savings
associated with a shorter minimum
length of time would not justify the
costs of historical data potentially being
less readily available to customers and
the public.
If public reports are available for more
than three years, the historical data
would be even more readily available to
customers and the public who are
seeking to analyze past routing behavior
of broker-dealers or past execution
quality of market centers than it would
be under a three-year posting period.
Customers and the public would have to
download the data less frequently to
have access to historical data that is
older than three years. However, the
Commission believes that the additional
benefit of a minimum length of time of
more than three years would be small
because three years is a meaningful time
period considering the rapid changes in
financial markets and customers, and
the public would only need to
download data every three years to be
able to access historical data older than
three years. While some commenters
stated similar benefits of keeping public
reports for more than three years as
discussed above, commenters also
stated the out-of-date information may
lead to misleading analysis of past
routing behavior of broker-dealers or
past execution quality of market
centers.797 As a result, keeping public
records for an extended period
compared to the adopted rule would not
provide additional benefits to
customers. The Commission also
understands that maintaining public
reports for more than three years may
represent a burden and result in an
additional cost to broker-dealers.
However, as discussed above, the
Commission believes the additional cost
to be small.
Frm 00086
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797 See Citadel Letter at 1; FIF Letter at 13; Markit
Letter at 29.
798 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
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competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act.799
Furthermore, Section 3(f) of the
Exchange Act requires the Commission,
whenever it engages in rulemaking
where it is required to consider or
determine whether an action is
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, to consider, in addition to the
protection of investors, whether the
action will promote efficiency,
competition, and capital formation.800
We consider these effects below.
1. Effects of Adopting Amendments on
Efficiency and Competition
a. Amendments to Public Disclosures
for Orders Covered by Rule 606(a) and
606(b)(1)
The adopted amendments to Rule
606(a)(1) require broker-dealers that
route non-directed orders in NMS stocks
submitted on a held basis and nondirected orders that are customer orders
in NMS securities that are options
contracts to make public enhanced
aggregated reports regarding such orders
detailing order routing practices and
information regarding marketable and
non-marketable limit orders in addition
to information on payment for order
flow arrangements, payment from any
profit-sharing relationship received, and
transaction fees paid and rebates
received per share and in aggregate for
such orders. In addition, the adopted
amendments to Rules 606(a)(1) require
those reports to be made available using
an XML schema and associated PDF
renderer on the Commission’s website.
Finally, the adopted amendment to Rule
606(a)(1) requires the public reports to
be maintained on a website that is free
and readily accessible to the public for
a period of 3 years.801
As explained in detail below, the
Commission believes that the enhanced
disclosures for orders covered by Rule
799 See
id.
U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
801 Consistent with the adopted amendments to
Rule 606, the Commission is adopting amendments
to Rule 605(a)(2) to require market centers to keep
public execution reports required by the rule posted
on an website that is free and readily accessible to
the public for a period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the website. The Commission
believes that making past order execution
information available to customers and the public
generally will be useful to those seeking to analyze
historical order execution information from
different market centers. The adopted requirement
to keep public execution reports required by Rule
605 for a period of three years is expected to make
it easier, and thus more efficient, for the public to
collect historical data for analysis. The Commission
believes the adopted requirement could enhance
efficiency in the data collection process of those
seeking to retrieve and analyze historical order
execution information from different market
centers.
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800 15
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606(a)(1), which require broker-dealers
to describe any terms of payment for
order flow arrangements and profitsharing relationships with Specified
Venues that may influence their order
routing decisions for such orders,
should promote competition and
enhance efficiency.
First, per the discussion above, the
additional information required by the
amendments relative to the information
required by Rule 606(a)(1) will allow
customers to better assess the order
routing and execution quality provided
by their broker-dealers,802 which, in
turn, will enable the customers to more
efficiently evaluate and select brokerdealers.803 The adopted amendments to
Rule 606(a) will require broker-dealers,
for orders covered by Rule 606(a)(1), to
differentiate between marketable and
non-marketable limit orders and to
publicly report the net aggregate amount
of any payment for order flow, payment
from any profit-sharing relationship
received, the transaction fees paid, and
transaction rebates received, both as a
total dollar amount and on a per share
basis, for each of the following order
types: Market orders, marketable limit
orders, non-marketable limit orders, and
other orders. As discussed in Sections
V.C.2.b. through d., the Commission
believes that this will allow customers
and the public to better understand the
potential conflicts of interest brokerdealers may face when routing such
orders and to assess if and how well
broker-dealers manage these potential
conflicts of interest. This will enable
customers to make a more informed
decision as to which broker-dealers to
use for such orders. The Commission
believes that this will enhance the
competition for such order flow
between broker-dealers, which could
improve order routing services and
execution quality. Customers could use
additional information to evaluate and
retain the services of a broker-dealer or
to discontinue the use of such services,
and broker-dealers may use the
information required by the adopted
amendments to Rule 606(a) as a means
to evaluate and enhance their order
802 See
supra Section V.C.2.
adopted amendments to Rule 606(a)(1),
which will no longer require reports to be divided
into separate sections for stocks listed on different
exchanges, may be an exception to this. As
discussed below, to the extent that order routing
decisions may differ for stocks that are listed on
different exchanges, the reports that aggregate the
data as required by the adopted amendments to
Rule 606(a)(1) may provide less information to
retail customers and the public and therefore may
reduce the efficiency with which customers and the
public are able to evaluate and select broker-dealers
on the basis of the order routing and execution
quality they provide.
803 The
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58423
routing and execution services, to
compare their order routing and
execution services to those of other
firms, and to use such comparison in
selling their services to customers. As a
result, the Commission believes that
competition between broker-dealers
could provide better execution quality
for such orders.
In addition, if broker-dealers change
their routing behavior in response to the
public reports required by adopted
amendments to Rule 606(a)(1), the
Commission believes that competition
between trading centers might be
enhanced as trading centers could better
compete for such order flow, which
might result in better execution quality
for such orders and innovation by
existing or new trading centers. As
discussed in Section V.C.1.b.i.1., one
way a trading center can attract order
flow is through innovation, thereby
differentiating itself from other trading
centers.
Further, to the extent that the adopted
amendments to Rule 606(a) lead to
better execution quality provided by
broker-dealers and trading centers, the
Commission believes that the adopted
amendments will lead to lower
transaction costs for customers. Because
transaction costs can be viewed as a
measure for efficiency in the trading
process, lower transaction costs would
indicate enhanced efficiency in the
trading process. In addition, to the
extent that the adopted amendments to
Rule 606(a) make the trading process
more efficient by lowering trading costs,
the Commission believes the adopted
amendments will reduce market friction
and therefore have a positive effect on
the efficiency of prices.
As discussed above, however, the
adopted amendments to Rule 606(a)(1)
could result in costs that may have an
effect on efficiency and competition. For
example, the adopted amendments will
impose certain costs on broker-dealers
that currently route orders covered by
Rule 606(a)(1) as well as on brokerdealers that would like to start routing
such orders and will also have to
comply with the adopted amendments
to Rule 606(a)(1). To the extent that the
costs for a broker-dealer entering the
market for such orders are higher
following the amendments to Rule
606(a)(1), these higher costs could lead
to a higher barrier to entry and thereby
reduce competition. However, the
Commission believes that any difference
in costs under amended Rule 606(a)(1)
would be relatively small and, alone,
would not deter broker-dealers from
entering the market for routing such
orders.
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Under the adopted amendments to
Rule 606(a)(1), the broker-dealer may be
concerned about the perception of
acting on a conflict of interest. As a
result, a broker-dealer may be
incentivized to route fewer nonmarketable limit orders to the trading
center offering the highest rebate, even
if this negatively affects execution
quality, in an effort to ensure that a
customer does not misconstrue the
intent behind the broker-dealer’s routing
decisions. Such a potential outcome
could reduce to some degree the
intensity of competition between
broker-dealers on the dimension of
execution quality. However, the
Commission believes that such a
scenario is not likely as customers are
likely to review the 606(a)(1) reports in
conjunction with execution quality
statistics currently required pursuant to
Rule 605 and can discuss with their
broker-dealers the order routing and
execution quality the broker-dealer
provides.
b. Amendments to Disclosures for
Orders Covered by 606(b)(1)
The adopted amendments to Rule
606(b)(1) require a broker-dealer, upon
customer request, to provide the
disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(1)
for orders in NMS stock that are
submitted on a held basis, and for
orders in NMS stock that are submitted
on a not held basis and for which the
broker-dealer is not required to provide
the customer a report under Rule
606(b)(3). In addition, the adopted
amendments to 606(b)(1) require those
reports to be made available using an
XML schema and associated PDF
renderer on the Commission’s website.
The Commission believes that the
adopted amendments to Rule 606(b)(1),
which require broker-dealers to provide,
upon customer request, information
relating to orders not covered by Rule
606(b)(3), should promote competition
and enhance efficiency. As discussed in
Section III.A.1.b.vi., Rule 606(b)(1)
disclosures will allow customers to
better assess the order routing and
execution quality provided by their
broker-dealers, which, in turn, will
enable the customers to more efficiently
evaluate and select broker-dealers. If
requested, these disclosures provide the
customer with information as to the
venues to which its orders were routed,
whether the orders were directed or
non-directed, and the time of any
transactions that resulted from the
orders. Rule 606(b)(1) cover held NMS
stock orders and should provide
customers that submit NMS stock orders
on a held basis with disclosures
designed to provide more transparency
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into potential financial inducements
and potential conflicts of interest faced
by broker-dealers. The Commission
believes that these disclosures provide
information that is sufficient to provide
a basis for the customer to engage in
further discussions with its brokerdealer regarding the broker-dealer’s
order handling practices, should the
customer so choose. As a result, the
Commission believes that competition
between broker-dealers could provide
better execution quality for orders
covered by Rule 606(b)(1).
In addition, if broker-dealers change
their routing behavior in response the
customer-specific reports required by
the adopted amendment to Rule
606(b)(1), the Commission believes that
competition between trading centers
might be enhanced as trading centers
could better compete for such order
flow, which might result in better
execution quality for such orders and
innovation by existing or new trading
centers. As discussed in Section
V.C.1.b.i.1., one way a trading center
can attract order flow is through
innovation, thereby differentiating itself
from other trading centers.
The Commission also believes that the
adopted amendment to Rule 606(b)(1)
will provide additional benefits of better
execution quality and reduced
transaction costs, but acknowledges that
these benefits are attainable only when
customers request 606(b)(1) reports. To
the extent that customers actually
request Rule 606(b)(1) reports and the
adopted amendments to Rule 606(b)(1)
lead to better execution quality
provided by broker-dealers and trading
centers, the Commission believes that
the adopted amendments will lead to
lower transaction costs for customers.
Because transaction costs can be viewed
as a measure for efficiency in the trading
process, lower transaction costs would
indicate enhanced efficiency in the
trading process. In addition, to the
extent that the adopted amendments to
Rule 606(b)(1) make the trading process
more efficient by lowering trading costs,
the Commission believes the adopted
amendments will reduce market friction
and therefore have a positive effect on
the efficiency of prices.
As discussed above, however, the
adopted amendments to Rule 606(b)(1)
could result in costs that may have an
effect on efficiency and competition. For
example, the adopted amendments will
impose certain costs on broker-dealers
that currently route orders covered by
Rule 606(b)(1), as well as on brokerdealers that would like to start routing
such orders and will also have to
comply with the adopted amendments
to Rule 606(b)(1). To the extent that the
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
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costs for a broker-dealer entering the
market for such orders are higher
following the amendments to Rule
606(b)(1), these higher costs could lead
to a higher barrier to entry and thereby
reduce competition. However, the
Commission believes that any difference
in costs under amended Rule 606(b)(1)
would be relatively small and, alone,
would not deter broker-dealers from
entering the market for routing such
orders.
c. Adopted Rules for Disclosures for Not
Held NMS Stock Orders
For NMS stock orders submitted on a
not held basis, Rule 606(b)(3), as
adopted, will require broker-dealers that
route such orders to provide detailed
reports to customers that submit such
orders upon the request of the customer,
unless such broker-dealer is excepted
from this requirement as provided in
new Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5). In
addition, these rules will require reports
on such orders to be provided using an
XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission’s
website. As discussed below, the
Commission believes that these
disclosures of order routing decisions by
broker-dealers for such orders could
promote competition and enhance
efficiency.
First, the disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3) will inform customers as to the
order routing practices of and the
execution quality provided by a
particular broker-dealer, as described in
further detail above. As a result,
customers will be able to use that
information to compare the order
routing and execution quality of their
broker-dealers, on the basis of the orders
submitted to those broker-dealers as
reported in the customer-specific
reports required by Rule 606(b)(3).
These enhanced disclosures will
better enable customers to analyze order
routing and execution quality provided
by broker-dealers, which will allow
customers to more efficiently monitor,
evaluate, and select broker-dealers. In
addition, customers and broker-dealers
will be able to evaluate execution
quality of orders covered by Rule
606(b)(3) on different trading centers
more efficiently.804 Customers also will
be better informed as to the order
routing and execution quality they
received from a particular broker-dealer.
If a customer feels it received poor order
routing and execution quality from a
particular broker-dealer, the customer
could initiate a dialogue with the
broker-dealer for an explanation, which
may lead to better order routing
804 See
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decisions and execution quality by the
broker-dealer. The customer may also
decide to use different broker-dealers in
order to seek better order routing and
execution quality. This could enhance
competition between broker-dealers.
Further, the Commission believes that
Rule 606(b)(3), as adopted, might
enhance competition between trading
centers. First, if broker-dealers change
their routing decisions in response to
the reports required by Rule 606(b)(3),
trading centers will have an additional
incentive to compete for order flow
covered by Rule 606(b)(3). Second, the
reports required by Rule 606(b)(3) are
structured by trading center, so that the
execution quality at each trading center
would be clearly visible. This may lead
broker-dealers to change their routing
behavior, but also, more directly,
customers could compare the execution
quality of all trading centers, which may
again lead to enhanced competition
among trading centers. The Commission
believes that the enhanced competition
between trading centers could lead to
innovation by existing and new trading
centers, resulting in better execution
quality for customers placing orders
covered by Rule 606(b)(3). As discussed
in Sections V.C.2.b.i., V.C.2.c.i., and
V.C.2.d.i., if a trading center were to
lose order flow to other trading centers
because of lower execution quality, it
would have the incentive to innovate to
improve its execution quality.
To the extent that Rule 606(b)(3) leads
to broker-dealers and trading centers
providing better execution quality, the
Commission believes that the rule might
lead to lower transaction costs for orders
covered by Rule 606(b)(3). As discussed
above, lower transaction costs indicate
enhanced efficiency in the trading
process, and the Commission believes
that, as a result, the adopting rules will
reduce market friction and therefore
have a positive effect on the efficiency
of prices.
In addition, the Commission believes
that the requirement of standardized
customer-specific order handling
reports in Rule 606(b)(3) will enhance
efficiency for customers in processing
the information contained in the
reports, as compared to the ad hoc
reports customers may currently receive
from their broker-dealers.805 Because
the data will be presented in a
standardized format, customers will be
able to more efficiently aggregate,
805 See supra Section V.B.1. for a discussion of
the ad hoc reports and Section V.C.4. for a
discussion of the standardization and format for the
reports required by adopted Rules 606(b)(3).
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compare, and analyze the data than they
could before adoption of this rule.
In addition, as discussed above, the
Commission understands that not held
NMS stock orders are typically
submitted by institutional customers
and many broker-dealers that handle
institutional orders currently
voluntarily provide reports to
institutional customers upon request.
However, the Commission understands
that how willing a broker-dealer is to
provide such reports and the level of
detail in the reports might depend on
the size of an institutional customer. To
that extent, larger institutional
customers have an advantage over
smaller institutional customers. Rule
606(b)(3), as adopted, will provide
access to reports on order handling to
all customers, regardless of their size,
unless an exception in Rules 606(b)(4)
or (b)(5) applies.
The Commission notes that, even
without the adoption of Rule 606(b)(3),
institutional and other customers could
still request customized reports from
their broker-dealers and broker-dealers
would have an incentive to provide
such reports in order to attract order
flow. As is currently the case, brokerdealers might be more willing to
provide such customized reports to
larger institutional customers and the
customized reports might provide more
detailed information for larger
institutional customers. While the
Commission believes that Rule
606(b)(3), as adopted, mitigates the
advantage of larger institutional
customers in that respect, the
Commission believes that larger
institutional customers are likely to
continue to have an advantage over
smaller institutional customers to the
extent that they are able to obtain
customized reports more easily and that
those customized reports contain
information not contained in the reports
required by Rule 606(b)(3). The
Commission believes that by reducing
the informational advantage of larger
institutional customers over smaller
institutional customers, Rule 606(b)(3),
as adopted, will improve information
asymmetries between larger
institutional customers and smaller
investors will have more information
than before regarding broker-dealers’
routing behavior. Smaller institutional
customers will be able to evaluate and
select their broker-dealers with more
efficiency, thereby increasing the
efficiency of their investment process.
The Commission believes that this will
provide smaller institutional customers
with information to select the brokerdealers that promote better execution
quality, to the benefit of their investors.
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58425
As discussed above, however, Rule
606(b)(3) could result in certain costs to
broker-dealers that currently route
orders covered by Rule 606(b)(3), as
well as those who would like to start
routing such orders and thus will have
to comply with Rule 606(b)(3). These
costs could lead to a higher barrier to
entry and thereby reduce competition.
However, the Commission believes
that the costs associated with Rule
606(b)(3) are not large enough to
meaningfully affect the barriers to entry
and the level of competition due to
potential new entrants into the market
for such orders. In addition, the
Commission believes that any negative
effect on competition due to heightened
barriers to entry are justified by the
expected positive effect on competition
of the disclosures required by Rule
606(b)(3).
In addition, the adoption of Rule
606(b)(3) may cause broker-dealers to
change how they handle orders covered
by Rule 606(b)(3) because customers’
preferences could be skewed toward the
metrics as opposed to their true
objectives, which could skew brokerdealer incentives, potentially limiting
the efficiency and competition benefits
of the adopted amendments. First, given
that broker-dealers will be aware of the
metrics to be used a priori, they may
handle such orders in a manner that
promotes a positive reflection on their
respective services but that may be
suboptimal for customers.806 Second,
the order routing decisions that are
indeed optimal for customers could also
be viewed as suboptimal for the
customers as reflected in the reports
required by Rule 606(b)(3).
For example, suppose a broker-dealer
routes orders covered by Rule 606(b)(3)
so that the orders execute at lower cost
with a higher fill rate, shorter duration,
and more price improvement than the
broker-dealer’s competitors. However, it
could be the case that, in order to
achieve these objectives, the brokerdealer routes the majority of nonmarketable limit order shares to the
trading center offering the highest
rebate. A customer that reviews the
adopted order handling reports might
suspect that the broker-dealer acted in
its self-interest by selecting the highest
rebate venue in order to maximize
rebates when, in fact, the broker-dealer
made the decision on the basis of factors
806 The Commission believes that the set of
metrics provide customers with a more cost
effective view of broker-dealer order handling
practices, but recognizes a risk that the information
from the disclosures may not perfectly align routing
practices and execution quality.
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that might not be completely reflected
in the adopted reports.807
2. Effects of Adopting Amendments on
Capital Formation
The Commission believes that the
amendments to Rules 600, 605, and 606,
as adopted, might have positive effects
on capital formation, but predicting the
magnitude of such effects is difficult, as
the effects likely will be indirect rather
than a direct result of the adopted
amendments.
As discussed, the Commission
believes the adopted amendments to
Rules 600, 605, and 606 will enhance
competition among broker-dealers and
trading centers resulting in better
execution quality for customers that
place both held or not held NMS stock
orders and, to the extent that better
execution quality will lead to lower
friction in the trading process, the
adopted amendments will increase
market efficiency in both the trading
process and asset pricing. This could
lead to more efficient asset allocation
because better execution quality and
greater market efficiency lead to more
efficient investment decisions by
customers that place orders with brokerdealers.808 For example, lower
transaction costs could allow investors
to rebalance their portfolios more
frequently and more efficiently and at
more efficient prices that better reflect
the true underlying value. More efficient
asset allocation could have a positive
impact on capital formation as capital is
allocated to firms with the most
profitable projects, which ultimately
will allow these firms to raise capital
more easily.809
Another potential effect on capital
formation could derive from the relation
between and liquidity and cost of
capital. In particular, the less liquid an
asset is, e.g., the higher transaction costs
are to buy or sell it, the higher the rate
of return customers could demand as
compensation.810 For example, lower
transaction costs for stocks could result
in lower required rates of return for
stocks. This in turn could lead to lower
cost of capital for the firms, which could
have a positive impact on capital
formation because it will allow firms to
raise capital at more favorable
807 See
id.
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808 Efficient
investment allows capital to be
allocated to firms with the most profitable projects,
which ultimately will allow these firms to raise
capital more easily. On the other hand, less efficient
investment could result in funding being available
for unprofitable projects, which erode capital.
809 See supra Section V.B.9. for a discussion of
how asset allocation can relate to capital formation.
810 See Yakov Amihud and Haim Mendelson,
Asset Pricing and the Bid-Ask Spread, 17 Journal
of Financial Economics 223 (1986).
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costs and burdens, of the amendments
in Section IV (Paperwork Reduction
Act) and Section V (Economic Analysis)
and above. Based on the Commission’s
analysis of existing information relating
to broker-dealers that would be subject
to the amendments to Rule 606, the
Commission believes that such brokerdealers do not fall within the definition
of ‘‘small entity,’’ as defined above.818
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
Further, the amendments to Rule 605 to
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
require reports to remain posted on a
(‘‘RFA’’) 811 requires Federal agencies, in website for a specified period of time
promulgating rules, to consider the
will not have a significant impact on
impact of those rules on small entities.
any small entities affected by the Rule
Section 603(a) 812 of the Administrative
because the market centers to which
Procedure Act,813 as amended by the
Rule 605 applies do not fall within the
RFA, generally requires the Commission definition of ‘‘small entity,’’ as defined
to undertake a regulatory flexibility
above.819 The Commission received no
analysis of all proposed rules, or
comments regarding its initial
proposed rule amendments, to
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis.820 For
determine the impact of such
the foregoing reasons, the Commission
rulemaking on ‘‘small entities.’’ 814
certifies that the amendments to Rules
Section 605(b) of the RFA states that
600, 605, and 606 will not have a
this requirement shall not apply to any
significant economic impact on a
proposed rule or proposed rule
substantial number of small entities for
amendment, which if adopted, would
the purposes of the RFA.
not have significant economic impact on
VII. Statutory Authority and Text of the
a substantial number of small entities.
Proposed Rule Amendments
For purposes of Commission
rulemaking in connection with the
Pursuant to the Exchange Act, and
RFA 815 as it relates to broker-dealers, a
particularly Sections 3(b), 5, 6, 11A, 15,
small entity includes a broker-dealer
17, and 23(a) thereof, 15 U.S.C. 78c, 78e,
that: (1) Had total capital (net worth
78f, 78k–1, 78o, 78q, and 78w(a), the
plus subordinated liabilities) of less
Commission is amending Sections
than $500,000 on the date in the prior
240.3a51–1, 240.13h–1, 242.105,
fiscal year as of which its audited
242.201, 242.204, 242.600, 242.602,
financial statements were prepared
242.605, 242.606, 242.611, and 242.1000
pursuant to Rule 17a–5(d) under the
of chapter II of title 17 of the Code of
Exchange Act,816 or, if not required to
Federal Regulations in the manner set
file such statements, a broker-dealer
forth below.
with total capital (net worth plus
List of Subjects
subordinated liabilities) of less than
$500,000 on the last day of the
17 CFR Part 240
preceding fiscal year (or in the time that
Brokers, Dealers, Registration,
it has been in business, if shorter); and
Securities.
(2) is not affiliated with any person
17 CFR Part 242
(other than a natural person) that is not
a small business or small
Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping
organization.817
requirements, Securities.
The amendments to Rule 606 are
For the reasons stated in the
discussed in detail in Sections II and III preamble, the Commission is amending
above. We discuss the economic impact, title 17, chapter II of the Code of Federal
including the estimated compliance
Regulations as follows:
conditions. As noted above, the
amendments might improve execution
quality for some investors, which is akin
to an improvement in liquidity and
lower transaction costs. If these
improvements are significant enough,
issuers could experience a lower cost of
capital, resulting in a positive impact on
capital formation.
811 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
U.S.C. 603(a).
813 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
814 Although Section 601(b) of the RFA defines
the term ‘‘small entity,’’ the statute permits agencies
to formulate their own definitions. The Commission
has adopted definitions for the term ‘‘small entity’’
for purposes of Commission rulemaking in
accordance with the RFA. Those definitions, as
relevant to this proposed rulemaking, are set forth
in Rule 0–10, 17 CFR 240.0–10. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 18452 (January 28, 1982),
47 FR 5215 (February 4, 1982) (File No. S7–879).
815 See id.
816 17 CFR 240.17a–5(d).
817 See 17 CFR 240.0–10(c).
812 5
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PART 240—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
1. The authority citation for part 240
continues to read in part as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j,
77s, 77z–2, 77z–3, 77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn,
77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78c–3, 78c–5, 78d, 78e, 78f,
818 The Commission considered FOCUS Report
data in making this determination.
819 See supra Section IV.D.5.
820 See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 59508.
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78g, 78i, 78j, 78j–1, 78k, 78k–1, 78l, 78m,
78n, 78n–1, 78o, 78o–4, 78o–10, 78p, 78q,
78q–1, 78s, 78u–5, 78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm,
80a–20, 80a–23, 80a–29, 80a–37, 80b–3, 80b–
4, 80b–11, 7201 et seq., and 8302; 7 U.S.C.
2(c)(2)(E); 12 U.S.C. 5221(e)(3); 18 U.S.C.
1350; Pub. L. 111–203, 939A, 124 Stat. 1887,
(2010); and secs. 503 and 602, Pub. L. 112–
106, 126 Stat. 326 (2012), unless otherwise
noted.
[Amended]
§ 242.602
PART 242—REGULATIONS M, SHO,
ATS, AC, NMS AND SBSR AND
CUSTOMER MARGIN REQUIREMENTS
FOR SECURITY FUTURES
7. In § 242.204, paragraph (g)(2) is
amended by removing the text ‘‘Rule
600(b)(64) of Regulation NMS (17 CFR
242.600(b)(64))’’ and adding in its place
‘‘§ 600(b)(68) of Regulation NMS (17
CFR 242.600(b)(68))’’.
■ 8. Section 242.600 is amended by:
■ a. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(52)
through (83) as paragraphs (b)(56)
through (87);
■ b. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(49)
through (51) as paragraphs (b)(51)
through (53);
■ c. Adding new paragraphs (b)(50),
(54), and (55);
■ d. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(1)
through (48) as paragraphs (b)(2)
through (b)(49);
■ e. Adding new paragraph (b)(1).
■ f. Amending newly redesignated
paragraph (b)(5)(i) by removing the text
‘‘paragraph (b)(3)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘paragraph (b)(4)’’; and
■ g. Revising newly redesignated
paragraphs (b)(20) and (49).
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
4. The authority citation for part 242
continues to read as follows:
§ 242.600 NMS security designation and
definitions.
*
*
*
§ 240.3a51–1
*
*
[Amended]
2. In § 240.3a51–1, paragraph (a)
introductory text is amended by
removing the text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(47)’’
and adding in its place
‘‘§ 242.600(b)(48)’’.
■
§ 240.13h–1
[Amended]
3. In § 240.13h–1, paragraph (a)(5) is
amended by removing the text ‘‘Section
242.600(b)(46)’’ and adding in its place
‘‘§ 242.600(b)(47)’’.
■
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77g, 77q(a), 77s(a),
78b, 78c, 78g(c)(2), 78i(a), 78j, 78k–1(c), 78l,
78m, 78n, 78o(b), 78o(c), 78o(g), 78q(a),
78q(b), 78q(h), 78w(a), 78dd–1, 78mm, 80a–
23, 80a–29, and 80a–37.
§ 242.105
[Amended]
5. Section 242.105 is amended:
a. In paragraph (b)(1)(i)(C) by
removing the text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(22)’’
and adding in its place
‘‘§ 242.600(b)(23)’’.
■ b. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii) by removing
the text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(64)’’ and adding
in its place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(68)’’.
■
■
§ 242.201
[Amended]
6. Section 242.201 is amended:
a. In paragraph (a)(1) by removing the
text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(47)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(48)’’.
■ b. In paragraph (a)(2) by removing the
text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(22)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(23)’’.
■ c. In paragraph (a)(4) by removing the
text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(42)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(43)’’.
■ d. In paragraph (a)(5) by removing the
text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(49)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(51)’’.
■ e. In paragraph (a)(6) by removing the
text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(55)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(59)’’.
■ f. In paragraph (a)(7) by removing the
text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(64)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(68)’’.
■ g. In paragraph (a)(9) by removing the
text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(78)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(82)’’.
■
■
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§ 242.204
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■
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Actionable indication of interest
means any indication of interest that
explicitly or implicitly conveys all of
the following information with respect
to any order available at the venue
sending the indication of interest:
(i) Symbol;
(ii) Side (buy or sell);
(iii) A price that is equal to or better
than the national best bid for buy orders
and the national best offer for sell
orders; and
(iv) A size that is at least equal to one
round lot.
*
*
*
*
*
(20) Directed order means an order
from a customer that the customer
specifically instructed the broker or
dealer to route to a particular venue for
execution.
*
*
*
*
*
(49) Non-directed order means any
order from a customer other than a
directed order.
*
*
*
*
*
(50) Non-marketable limit order
means any limit order other than a
marketable limit order.
*
*
*
*
*
(54) Orders providing liquidity means
orders that were executed against after
resting at a trading center.
(55) Orders removing liquidity means
orders that executed against resting
trading interest at a trading center.
*
*
*
*
*
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58427
[Amended]
9. Section 242.602 is amended:
a. In paragraph (a)(5)(i) by removing
the text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(73)’’ and adding
in its place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(77)’’; and
■ b. In paragraph (a)(5)(ii) by removing
the text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(73)’’ and adding
in its place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(77)’’.
■ 10. Section 242.605 is amended by
removing the preliminary note, adding
introductory text, and adding a sentence
at the end of paragraph (a)(2).
The additions read as follows:
■
■
§ 242.605 Disclosure of order execution
information.
This section requires market centers
to make available standardized, monthly
reports of statistical information
concerning their order executions. This
information is presented in accordance
with uniform standards that are based
on broad assumptions about order
execution and routing practices. The
information will provide a starting point
to promote visibility and competition on
the part of market centers and brokerdealers, particularly on the factors of
execution price and speed. The
disclosures required by this section do
not encompass all of the factors that
may be important to investors in
evaluating the order routing services of
a broker-dealer. In addition, any
particular market center’s statistics will
encompass varying types of orders
routed by different broker-dealers on
behalf of customers with a wide range
of objectives. Accordingly, the statistical
information required by this section
alone does not create a reliable basis to
address whether any particular brokerdealer failed to obtain the most
favorable terms reasonably available
under the circumstances for customer
orders.
(a) * * *
(2) * * * Every market center shall
keep such reports posted on an internet
website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of
three years from the initial date of
posting on the internet website.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Section 242.606 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a) and (b) to read
as follows:
§ 242.606 Disclosure of order routing
information.
(a) Quarterly report on order routing.
(1) Every broker or dealer shall make
publicly available for each calendar
quarter a report on its routing of nondirected orders in NMS stocks that are
submitted on a held basis and of nondirected orders that are customer orders
in NMS securities that are option
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contracts during that quarter broken
down by calendar month and keep such
report posted on an internet website that
is free and readily accessible to the
public for a period of three years from
the initial date of posting on the internet
website. Such report shall include a
section for NMS stocks—separated by
securities that are included in the S&P
500 Index as of the first day of that
quarter and other NMS stocks—and a
separate section for NMS securities that
are option contracts. Such report shall
be made available using the most recent
versions of the XML schema and the
associated PDF renderer as published on
the Commission’s website for all reports
required by this section. Each section in
a report shall include the following
information:
(i) The percentage of total orders for
the section that were non-directed
orders, and the percentages of total nondirected orders for the section that were
market orders, marketable limit orders,
non-marketable limit orders, and other
orders;
(ii) The identity of the ten venues to
which the largest number of total nondirected orders for the section were
routed for execution and of any venue
to which five percent or more of nondirected orders were routed for
execution, the percentage of total nondirected orders for the section routed to
the venue, and the percentages of total
non-directed market orders, total nondirected marketable limit orders, total
non-directed non-marketable limit
orders, and total non-directed other
orders for the section that were routed
to the venue;
(iii) For each venue identified
pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this
section, the net aggregate amount of any
payment for order flow received,
payment from any profit-sharing
relationship received, transaction fees
paid, and transaction rebates received,
both as a total dollar amount and per
share, for each of the following nondirected order types:
(A) Market orders;
(B) Marketable limit orders;
(C) Non-marketable limit orders; and
(D) Other orders.
(iv) A discussion of the material
aspects of the broker’s or dealer’s
relationship with each venue identified
pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this
section, including a description of any
arrangement for payment for order flow
and any profit-sharing relationship and
a description of any terms of such
arrangements, written or oral, that may
influence a broker’s or dealer’s order
routing decision including, among other
things:
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(A) Incentives for equaling or
exceeding an agreed upon order flow
volume threshold, such as additional
payments or a higher rate of payment;
(B) Disincentives for failing to meet an
agreed upon minimum order flow
threshold, such as lower payments or
the requirement to pay a fee;
(C) Volume-based tiered payment
schedules; and
(D) Agreements regarding the
minimum amount of order flow that the
broker-dealer would send to a venue.
(2) A broker or dealer shall make the
report required by paragraph (a)(1) of
this section publicly available within
one month after the end of the quarter
addressed in the report.
(b) Customer requests for information
on order routing. (1) Every broker or
dealer shall, on request of a customer,
disclose to its customer, for:
(i) Orders in NMS stocks that are
submitted on a held basis;
(ii) Orders in NMS stocks that are
submitted on a not held basis and the
broker or dealer is not required to
provide the customer a report under
paragraph (b)(3) of this section; and
(iii) Orders in NMS securities that are
option contracts, the identity of the
venue to which the customer’s orders
were routed for execution in the six
months prior to the request, whether the
orders were directed orders or nondirected orders, and the time of the
transactions, if any, that resulted from
such orders. Such disclosure shall be
made available using the most recent
versions of the XML schema and the
associated PDF renderer as published on
the Commission’s website for all reports
required by this section.
(2) A broker or dealer shall notify
customers in writing at least annually of
the availability on request of the
information specified in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section.
(3) Except as provided for in
paragraphs (b)(4) and (5) of this section,
every broker or dealer shall, on request
of a customer that places, directly or
indirectly, one or more orders in NMS
stocks that are submitted on a not held
basis with the broker or dealer, disclose
to such customer within seven business
days of receiving the request, a report on
its handling of such orders for that
customer for the prior six months by
calendar month. Such report shall be
made available using the most recent
versions of the XML schema and the
associated PDF renderer as published on
the Commission’s website for all reports
required by this section. For purposes of
such report, the handling of a NMS
stock order submitted by a customer to
a broker-dealer on a not held basis
includes the handling of all child orders
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derived from that order. Such report
shall be divided into two sections: One
for directed orders and one for nondirected orders. Each section of such
report shall include, with respect to
such order flow sent by the customer to
the broker or dealer, the total number of
shares sent to the broker or dealer by the
customer during the relevant period; the
total number of shares executed by the
broker or dealer as principal for its own
account; the total number of orders
exposed by the broker or dealer through
an actionable indication of interest; and
the venue or venues to which orders
were exposed by the broker or dealer
through an actionable indication of
interest, provided that, where
applicable, a broker or dealer must
disclose that it exposed a customer’s
order through an actionable indication
of interest to other customers but need
not disclose the identity of such
customers. Each section of such report
also shall include the following
columns of information for each venue
to which the broker or dealer routed
such orders for the customer, in the
aggregate:
(i) Information on Order Routing.
(A) Total shares routed;
(B) Total shares routed marked
immediate or cancel;
(C) Total shares routed that were
further routable; and
(D) Average order size routed.
(ii) Information on Order Execution.
(A) Total shares executed;
(B) Fill rate (shares executed divided
by the shares routed);
(C) Average fill size;
(D) Average net execution fee or
rebate (cents per 100 shares, specified to
four decimal places);
(E) Total number of shares executed at
the midpoint;
(F) Percentage of shares executed at
the midpoint;
(G) Total number of shares executed
that were priced on the side of the
spread more favorable to the order;
(H) Percentage of total shares
executed that were priced at the side of
the spread more favorable to the order;
(I) Total number of shares executed
that were priced on the side of the
spread less favorable to the order; and
(J) Percentage of total shares executed
that were priced on the side of the
spread less favorable to the order.
(iii) Information on Orders that
Provided Liquidity. (A) Total number of
shares executed of orders providing
liquidity;
(B) Percentage of shares executed of
orders providing liquidity;
(C) Average time between order entry
and execution or cancellation, for orders
providing liquidity (in milliseconds);
and
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(D) Average net execution rebate or
fee for shares of orders providing
liquidity (cents per 100 shares, specified
to four decimal places).
(iv) Information on Orders that
Removed Liquidity. (A) Total number of
shares executed of orders removing
liquidity;
(B) Percentage of shares executed of
orders removing liquidity; and
(C) Average net execution fee or
rebate for shares of orders removing
liquidity (cents per 100 shares, specified
to four decimal places).
(4) Except as provided below, no
broker or dealer shall be required to
provide reports pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3) of this section if the percentage of
shares of not held orders in NMS stocks
the broker or dealer received from its
customers over the prior six calendar
months was less than five percent of the
total shares in NMS stocks the broker or
dealer received from its customers
during that time (the ‘‘five percent
threshold’’ for purposes of this
paragraph). A broker or dealer that
equals or exceeds this five percent
threshold shall be required (subject to
paragraph (b)(5) of this section) to
provide reports pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3) of this section for at least six
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Jkt 247001
calendar months (‘‘Compliance Period’’)
regardless of the percentage of shares of
not held orders in NMS stocks the
broker or dealer receives from its
customers during the Compliance
Period. The Compliance Period shall
begin the first calendar day of the next
calendar month after the broker or
dealer equaled or exceeded the five
percent threshold, unless it is the first
time the broker or dealer has equaled or
exceeded the five percent threshold, in
which case the Compliance Period shall
begin the first calendar day four
calendar months later. A broker or
dealer shall not be required to provide
reports pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of
this section for orders that the broker or
dealer did not receive during a
Compliance Period. If, at any time after
the end of a Compliance Period, the
percentage of shares of not held orders
in NMS stocks the broker or dealer
received from its customers was less
than five percent of the total shares in
NMS stocks the broker or dealer
received from its customers over the
prior six calendar months, the broker or
dealer shall not be required to provide
reports pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, except for orders that the
broker or dealer received during the
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58429
portion of a Compliance Period that
remains covered by paragraph (b)(3) of
this section.
(5) No broker or dealer shall be
subject to the requirements of paragraph
(b)(3) of this section with respect to a
customer that traded on average each
month for the prior six months less than
$1,000,000 of notional value of not held
orders in NMS stocks through the broker
or dealer.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 242.611
[Amended]
12. In § 242.611, paragraph (c) is
amended by removing the text
‘‘§ 242.600(b)(30)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(31)’’.
■
§ 242.1000
[Amended]
13. In § 242.1000 the definition of
Plan processor is amended by removing
the text ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(55)’’ and adding
in its place ‘‘§ 242.600(b)(59)’’.
■
By the Commission.
Dated: November 2, 2018.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–24423 Filed 11–16–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 223 (Monday, November 19, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 58338-58429]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-24423]
[[Page 58337]]
Vol. 83
Monday,
No. 223
November 19, 2018
Part II
Securities and Exchange Commission
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
17 CFR Parts 240 and 242
Disclosure of Order Handling Information; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 223 / Monday, November 19, 2018 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 58338]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 240 and 242
[Release No. 34-84528; File No. S7-14-16]
RIN 3235-AL67
Disclosure of Order Handling Information
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'' or
``SEC'') is adopting amendments to Regulation National Market System
(``Regulation NMS'') under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Exchange Act'') to require additional disclosures by broker-dealers
to customers regarding the handling of their orders. The Commission is
adding a new disclosure requirement which requires a broker-dealer,
upon request of its customer, to provide specific disclosures related
to the routing and execution of the customer's NMS stock orders
submitted on a not held basis for the prior six months, subject to two
de minimis exceptions. The Commission also is amending the current
order routing disclosures that broker-dealers must make publicly
available on a quarterly basis to pertain to NMS stock orders submitted
on a held basis, and the Commission is making targeted enhancements to
these public disclosures. In connection with these new requirements,
the Commission is amending Regulation NMS to include certain newly
defined and redefined terms that are used in the amendments. The
Commission also is amending Regulation NMS to require that the public
order execution report be kept publicly available for a period of three
years. Finally, the Commission is adopting conforming amendments and
updating cross-references as a result of the rule amendments being
adopted in this rule.
DATES: Effective date: January 18, 2019.
Compliance date: May 20, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Theodore S. Venuti, Assistant
Director, at (202) 551-5658, Steve Kuan, Special Counsel, at (202) 551-
5624, Sarah Albertson, Special Counsel, at (202) 551-5647, Michael
Bradley, Special Counsel, at (202) 551-5594, Amir Katz, Special
Counsel, at (202) 551-7653, Emerald Greywoode, Special Counsel, at
(202) 551-7965, or Andrew Sherman, Special Counsel, at (202) 551-7255,
Division of Trading and Markets, Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is adopting: (1) Amendments
to 17 CFR 242.600 and 242.606 (respectively, ``Rule 600'' and ``Rule
606'' of Regulation NMS) under the Exchange Act to require additional
disclosures by broker-dealers to customers about the routing of their
orders; (2) amendments to 17 CFR 242.605 (``Rule 605'' of Regulation
NMS) to require that the public order execution reports be kept
publicly available for a period of three years; and (3) conforming
changes and updated cross-references in 17 CFR 240.3a51-1(a) (``Rule
3a51-1(a) under the Exchange Act''), 17 CFR 240.13h-1(a)(5) (``Rule
13h-1(a)(5) of Regulation 13D-G''), 17 CFR 242.105(b)(1) (``Rule
105(b)(1) of Regulation M''), 17 CFR 242.201(a) and 242.204(g) (``Rules
201(a) and 204(g) of Regulation SHO''), 17 CFR 242.600(b),
242.602(a)(5) and 242.611(c) (``Rules 600(b), 602(a)(5), and 611(c) of
Regulation NMS''), and 17 CFR 242.1000 (``Rule 1000 of Regulation
SCI'').
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Overview of Adopted Rule Amendments
III. Amendments to Rule 600, Rule 605, and Rule 606
A. Customer-Specific Order Handling Reports
1. Applicability of Customer-Specific Disclosures in Rule 606(b)
2. Definition of Actionable Indication of Interest
3. Scope of Broker-Dealer's Obligation Under Rule 606(b)(3)
4. Timing and Frequency Requirements for Customer-Specific Order
Handling Report
5. Format of Customer-Specific Order Handling Reports
6. Rule 606(b)(3) Report Content
7. Rule 606(c) Quarterly Aggregated Public Report of Rule
606(b)(3) Information
B. Public Order Routing Report Under Rule 606(a)
1. Orders Covered By Rule 606(a) Public Disclosures
2. Marketable Limit Orders and Non-Marketable Limit Orders
3. Payment for Order Flow Disclosures--Rules 606(a)(1)(iii) and
(iv)
4. Format of Public Order Routing Report
5. Division of Rule 606(a) Report's Section on NMS Stocks by S&P
500 Index and Other NMS Stocks
6. Calendar Month Breakdown
7. Execution Metrics
C. Amendment to Disclosure of Order Execution Information
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Summary of Collection of Information
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under Rule 606(b)(3)
2. Amendment to Current Public and Customer-Specific Disclosures
3. Amendment to Current Disclosures Under Rule 605
B. Use of Information
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under Rule 606(b)(3)
2. Amendment to Current Public and Customer-Specific Disclosures
3. Amendment to Current Disclosures Under Rule 605
C. Respondents
1. Initial Estimate
2. Estimate for Adopted Rule [Amendments to 605 and 606]
D. Total Initial and Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Burdens
1. Customer-Specific Disclosures Under Rule 606(b)(3)
2. Proposed Public Aggregated Report on Orders Subject to the
Customer-Specific Disclosures Under Rule 606(b) Not Adopted
3. Proposed Requirement to Document Methodologies for
Categorizing Order Routing Strategies Not Adopted
4. Amendment to Current Public and Customer-Specific Disclosures
5. Revisions to Compliance Manuals
6. Amendment to Disclosures Under Rule 605
E. Collection of Information Is Mandatory
F. Confidentiality of Responses to Collection of Information
G. Retention Period for Recordkeeping Requirements
V. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
B. Baseline
1. Current $200,000 Threshold
2. Current Reporting for NMS Stock Orders of $200,000 and Above
3. Publication Period for Reports Required by Rules 605 and 606
4. Available Information on Conflicts of Interest
5. Available Information on Execution Quality
6. Format of Current Reports
7. Quality of Broker-Dealer Routing Practices for Not Held NMS
Stock Orders
8. Use of Actionable IOIs
9. Competition, Efficiency, and Capital Formation
C. Costs and Benefits
1. Customer-Specific Order Handling Disclosures
2. Public Order Handling Report
3. Disclosure of Order Execution Information
4. Structured Format of Reports
5. Other Definitions in Adopted Amendments to Rule 600
D. Alternatives Considered
1. Alternative Scope for the Customer-Specific Reports
2. Scope of Broker-Dealer's Obligation Under Rule 606(b)(3)
3. Public Availability of Aggregated Rule 606(b)(3) Order
Handling Information
4. Automatic Provision of Customer-Specific Not Held Order
Handling Report (Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
5. Submission to the Commission of Not Held NMS Stock Order
Handling Reports (Adopted Rule 606(b)(3))
6. Categories of NMS Stocks for Rule 606(a)
7. Disclosure of Additional Information About Not Held NMS Stock
Order Routing and Execution
[[Page 58339]]
8. Order Handling Reports at the Stock Level (Adopted Rule
606(b)(3))
9. Alternative to Three-Year Posting Period (Adopted Amendments
to Rules 605(a)(2) and 606(a)(1))
E. Economic Effects and Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and
Capital Formation
1. Effects of Adopting Amendments on Efficiency and Competition
2. Effects of Adopting Amendments on Capital Formation
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
VII. Statutory Authority and Text of the Proposed Rule Amendments
I. Introduction
In July 2016, the Commission proposed to amend Rules 600 and 606
under Regulation NMS to require additional disclosures by broker-
dealers to customers about the handling of their orders, to amend Rules
605 and 607 for consistency with the proposed amendments to Rule 606,
and to amend other rules to update cross references as appropriate.\1\
As discussed below, after careful review and consideration of the
comments received, the Commission is adopting these amendments with
certain modifications.
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\1\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78309, 81 FR 49432
(July 27, 2016) (``Proposing Release'' or ``Proposal'').
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Transparency has long been a hallmark of the U.S. securities
markets, and the Commission continuously strives to ensure that
investors are provided with timely and accurate information needed to
make informed investment decisions. In recent years, the Commission and
its staff have undertaken a number of reviews of market structure and
market events, and much of this effort has aimed to enhance
transparency for investors.\2\ The amendments being adopted today to
Rule 606 of Regulation NMS represent the Commission's continued
commitment to enhance transparency for investors.
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\2\ The Commission recently adopted amendments to Regulation ATS
that enhance the operational transparency of alternative trading
systems (``ATSs'') that transact in National Market System (``NMS'')
stocks (``NMS Stock ATSs''). See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
83663 (July 18, 2018), 83 FR 38768 (August 7, 2018) (``ATS-N
Adopting Release''). In addition, the Commission has proposed a
Transaction Fee Pilot for NMS stocks to help inform the Commission,
market participants and the public about the effects, if any, that
transaction-based fees and rebates may have on order routing
behavior, execution quality, and market quality. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 82873 (March 14, 2018), 83 FR 13008 (March
26, 2018) (``Transaction Fee Pilot Proposing Release'').
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Rule 606 encourages competition by enhancing the transparency of
broker-dealer order handling and routing practices.\3\ Rule 606(a)
requires broker-dealers to provide a publicly available quarterly
report of information regarding routing of non-directed orders.\4\ Rule
606(b) requires broker-dealers to provide customers, upon request,
certain information about the routing of their orders. Prior to the
amendments being adopted today, the Rule 606(a) requirements applied to
smaller dollar-value orders more typical of retail investors but did
not apply to large dollar-value orders more typical of institutional
investors.\5\ As discussed in detail in the Proposing Release, equity
market structure, as well as order handling and routing practices, have
changed significantly since Rule 606 was adopted in 2000, presenting a
need to update the rule such that it provides transparency into broker-
dealer order handling and routing practices that continues to be useful
in today's automated and vastly more complex national market system.\6\
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\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358 (January 14,
2010), 75 FR 3594, 3602 (January 21, 2010) (``Concept Release on
Equity Market Structure'').
\4\ A ``non-directed order'' means any customer order other than
a directed order. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(48). A ``directed order''
means a customer order that the customer specifically instructed the
broker-dealer to route to a particular venue for execution. See 17
CFR 242.600(b)(19). As discussed below, these definitions are being
revised in connection with the amendments to Rule 606 so that they
no longer only apply to ``customer orders,'' but otherwise are
remaining the same. See infra Section III.A.1.b.vii.
\5\ The Commission limited the scope of Rule 606(a) to smaller
dollar-value orders by defining a ``customer order'' to which the
rule applied as an order to buy or sell an NMS security that is not
for the account of a broker-dealer, but not any order for a quantity
of a security having a market value of at least $50,000 for an NMS
security that is an option contract and a market value of at least
$200,000 for any other NMS security. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(18).
\6\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49433-44 for a
detailed description of the history and the market developments
leading to the Proposal.
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As the Commission noted when it originally adopted Rule 606, in a
fragmented market ``the order routing decision is critically
important'' and ``must be well-informed and fully subject to
competitive forces,'' \7\ and, further, the public disclosure of order
routing practices ``could provide more vigorous competition on . . .
order routing performance.'' \8\ By updating the Rule 606 disclosure
regime, the rule as amended will provide disclosures more relevant to
today's marketplace that encourage broker-dealers to provide effective
and competitive order handling and routing services, and that improve
the ability of their customers to determine the quality of such broker-
dealer services.\9\
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\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 43590 (November 17,
2000), 65 FR 75414, 75415 (December 1, 2000) (``Rule 606 Predecessor
Adopting Release''). For clarity, when this release references
``Predecessor Rule 606,'' it is referring to the version of the rule
adopted in the Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting Release.
\8\ See id. at 75417.
\9\ If any of the provisions of these rules, or the application
thereof to any person or circumstance, is held to be invalid, such
invalidity shall not affect other provisions or application of such
provisions to other persons or circumstances that can be given
effect without the invalid provision or application.
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II. Overview of Adopted Rule Amendments
To facilitate enhanced transparency regarding broker-dealers'
handling and routing of orders in NMS stock, the Commission proposed to
amend Rules 600(b) and 606 such that all orders of any dollar value in
NMS stock \10\ submitted by a customer to a broker-dealer would be
covered by order handling and routing disclosure rules. Under the
proposed amendments, new Rule 606(b)(3) would require broker-dealers to
make detailed, customer-specific order handling disclosures for NMS
stock orders available to institutional customers in particular, who
previously were not entitled to disclosures under the rule for their
order flow, or were entitled to disclosures that have become inadequate
in today's highly automated and more complex market.\11\ The Commission
also proposed to require a broker-dealer to make publicly available a
report that aggregates the information required for the detailed
customer-specific order handling reports for all NMS stock orders that
it receives across all of its customers.\12\ Further, the Commission
proposed updating Rule 606(a) to provide retail customers in particular
with certain enhanced disclosures regarding a broker-dealer's order
routing practices.\13\
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\10\ ``NMS stock'' and ``NMS security'' are defined in Rule 600
of Regulation NMS. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(46)-(47).
\11\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3); see also Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49447.
\12\ See proposed Rule 606(c); see also Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49447.
\13\ See proposed Rule 606(a); see also Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49462.
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The Commission received comments on the Proposal.\14\ The
commenters, many of which also commented on Rule 606 in connection with
the Concept Release on Equity Market Structure, overwhelmingly
supported updating the disclosures required by Rule 606. Most also
expressed support for, or offered constructive critiques of, specific
components of the Proposal, and several suggested alternatives to
specific provisions of the Proposal, but all comments received
recognized a need for enhanced transparency and
[[Page 58340]]
supported the goals of the Proposal.\15\ In addition, the Equity Market
Structure Advisory Committee (``EMSAC'') provided recommendations with
respect to Rules 605 and 606 on November 29, 2016, to provide
meaningful execution quality and order handling disclosures from a
retail and an institutional perspective.\16\
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\14\ Comments received on the Proposal are available on the
Commission's website, available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-14-16/s71416.htm.
\15\ See, e.g., Letter from John A. McCarthy, General Counsel,
KCG Holdings, Inc., dated October 31, 2016 (``KCG Letter'') at 1;
Letter from Joseph Kinahan, Managing Director, Client Advocacy and
Market Structure, TD Ameritrade, Inc., dated October 18, 2016
(``Ameritrade Letter'') at 1; Letter from Tyler Gellasch, Executive
Director, Healthy Markets Association, dated September 26, 2016
(``HMA Letter'') at 3-4; Letter from Micah Hauptman, Financial
Services Council, Consumer Federation of America, dated September
26, 2016 (``CFA Letter''); Letter from Stuart J. Kaswell, Executive
Vice President and Managing Director, General Counsel, Managed Funds
Association, dated September 23, 2016 (``MFA Letter'') at 1.
\16\ See EMSAC Recommendations Regarding Modifying Rule 605 and
Rule 606 (``EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations''), November 29, 2016,
available at https://www.sec.gov/spotlight/emsac/emsac-recommendations-rules-605-606.pdf.
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After careful review and consideration of the comment letters and
upon further consideration by the Commission concerning how to further
the goal of more useful and effective disclosure of order handling
information under Regulation NMS, the Commission is adopting the
proposed amendments to Rules 600 and 606 (and the other corresponding
proposed amendments) with certain modifications.\17\
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\17\ The amendments to Rule 606 would not limit any other
obligations that broker-dealers may have under applicable federal
securities laws, rules, or regulations, including the anti-fraud
provisions of the federal securities laws.
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Specifically, the Commission is amending Rule 606(b) of Regulation
NMS \18\ to require a broker-dealer, upon request of a customer that
places, directly or indirectly, one or more orders in NMS stock that
are submitted on a ``not held'' basis with the broker-dealer,\19\ to
provide customer-specific disclosures, for the prior six months, broken
down by calendar month, regarding: (1) Its internal handling of such
orders; (2) its routing of such orders to various trading centers; \20\
(3) the execution of such orders; and (4) the extent to which such
orders provided liquidity or removed liquidity, and the average
transaction rebates received or fees paid by the broker-dealer.\21\
Generally, the information is available upon request by customers who
submitted ``not held'' NMS stock orders through the broker-dealer, and
is required to be provided for each venue and divided into separate
sections for directed orders and non-directed orders.\22\ This new
disclosure requirement is subject to two de minimis exceptions.\23\ A
``not held'' NMS stock order that is subject to either de minimis
exception is covered by the existing customer-specific disclosures in
Rule 606(b)(1), as is any ``held'' NMS stock order submitted by a
customer to any broker-dealer.\24\ For the reasons explained below, the
Commission is not adopting the proposed requirement that the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures be divided into passive, neutral, and aggressive
order routing strategies.
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\18\ 17 CFR 242.606(b).
\19\ Typically, a ``not held'' order provides the broker-dealer
with price and time discretion in handling the order, whereas a
broker-dealer must attempt to execute a ``held'' order immediately.
\20\ A ``trading center'' is defined in Rule 600 of Regulation
NMS. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(78).
\21\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
\22\ See id.
\23\ See Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5).
\24\ See Rule 606(b)(1). As discussed below, while the
amendments to Rule 606(b)(1) modify the orders that are covered by
Rule 606(b)(1), the required disclosures under Rule 606(b)(1) are
not changing. See infra Section III.A.1.b.vi.
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In connection with the new disclosure requirement, the Commission
is amending Rule 600(b) of Regulation NMS \25\ to include definitions
of the terms ``actionable indication of interest,'' ``orders providing
liquidity,'' and ``orders removing liquidity,'' and to revise the
existing definitions of the terms ``directed order'' and ``non-directed
order.'' \26\ The Commission is not adopting the proposed defined term
``institutional order'' in Rule 600(b) and therefore also is not
adopting the proposed $200,000 market value threshold for orders to
qualify for the new customer-specific disclosures in Rule
606(b)(3).\27\
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\25\ 17 CFR 242.600(b).
\26\ The newly defined terms are being incorporated into Rule
600(b) in alphabetical order, in keeping with Rule 600(b)'s existing
alphabetical organization of the terms defined therein, and the
numbered provisions for existing defined terms in Rule 600(b) are
being adjusted accordingly. For ease of reference however,
throughout this release, citations to pre-existing defined terms in
Rule 600(b) are to their pre-existing numbered provisions, unless
otherwise indicated.
\27\ See Rule 606(b)(3); see also infra Section III.A.1.b.ii.
Relatedly, the Commission also is not amending Rule 600(b) to rename
the term ``customer order'' as ``retail order,'' as was proposed.
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As discussed in Section III.A.7, infra, the Commission is not
adopting the proposed amendment to Rule 606 of Regulation NMS to
require a broker-dealer to make publicly available, on an aggregate
basis, the order handling information required under Rule
606(b)(3).\28\
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\28\ See proposed Rule 606(c). Because the Commission is not
adopting proposed Rule 606(c), pre-existing Rule 606(c), which
addresses ``Exemptions'' from the rule and which the Commission
proposed to renumber as Rule 606(d) under the Proposal, is not being
renumbered as such and remains unchanged as Rule 606(c).
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The Commission is amending Rule 606(a) of Regulation NMS such that
the aggregated order routing disclosures that broker-dealers must make
publicly available on a quarterly basis pertain to orders of any dollar
value in NMS stock that are submitted on a ``held'' basis. Further, the
Commission is making targeted enhancements to these public disclosures
to: (1) Require limit order information to be split into marketable and
non-marketable categories (relatedly, the Commission is adopting a
definition of the term ``non-marketable limit order'' under Rule
600(b)); \29\ (2) require more detailed disclosure of the net aggregate
amount of any payments received from or paid to certain trading
centers; (3) require broker-dealers to describe any terms of payment
for order flow arrangements and profit-sharing relationships with
certain venues that may influence their order routing decisions; and
(4) require that broker-dealers keep the order routing reports posted
on a website that is free and readily accessible to the public for a
period of three years from the initial date of posting on the
website.\30\ In addition to what was proposed, the Commission is
replacing the Rule 606(a) requirement to group order routing
information for NMS stocks by listing market with a requirement to
group such information by stocks included in the S&P 500 Index as of
the first day of the quarter and other NMS stocks.
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\29\ A ``marketable limit order'' is any buy order with a limit
price equal to or greater than the national best offer at the time
of order receipt, or any sell order with a limit price equal to or
less than the national best bid at the time of order receipt. 17 CFR
242.600(b)(39). ``National best bid and national best offer'' is
defined in Rule 600 of Regulation NMS. 17 CFR 242.600(b)(42). The
Commission is adopting new Rule 600(b)(54) to define ``non-
marketable limit order'' to mean ``any limit order other than a
marketable limit order,'' as discussed in more detail below. See
infra Section III.B.2.
\30\ See Rule 606(a); see also Proposing Release, supra note 1,
at 49462. ``Payment for order flow'' has the meaning provided in 17
CFR 240.10b-10. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(54). A ``profit-sharing
relationship'' is defined in Rule 600 of Regulation NMS. See 17 CFR
242.600(b)(56).
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Finally, consistent with the amendments to Rule 606(a), the
Commission is amending Rule 605 to require market centers \31\ to keep
execution reports required by the rule posted on a website that is free
and readily accessible to the public for a period of three years from
the initial date of posting on the website. The Commission also is
adopting
[[Page 58341]]
amendments to other rules to update cross-references in connection with
the other rule amendments being adopted today.\32\
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\31\ A ``market center'' means any exchange market maker, OTC
market maker, alternative trading system, national securities
exchange, or national securities association. See 17 CFR
242.600(b)(38).
\32\ The Commission is adopting amendments to: Rule 3a51-1(a)
under the Exchange Act; Rule 13h-1(a)(5) of Regulation 13D-G; Rule
105(b)(1) of Regulation M; Rules 201(a) and 204(g) of Regulation
SHO; Rules 600(b), 602(a)(5), and 611(c) of Regulation NMS; and Rule
1000 of Regulation SCI.
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Consistent with the Proposal, the Commission continues to believe
that generally requiring more detailed, standardized, baseline order
handling information to be made available to customers upon request for
orders in NMS stocks should enable those customers--and particularly
institutional customers--to more effectively assess how their broker-
dealers are carrying out their best execution obligations and the
impact of their broker-dealers' order routing decisions on the quality
of their executions, including the risks of information leakage and
potential conflicts of interest.\33\ In addition, the Commission
believes that these more detailed customer-specific disclosures will
further encourage broker-dealers to minimize information leakage,\34\
as well as better enable customers to verify that their broker-dealers
are following their order handling instructions. Unlike the Proposal
and in response to commenters' feedback, the Commission believes that
the applicability of these new order routing disclosures should be
based on order type (``not held'' orders in NMS stocks) rather than the
dollar value of an order.
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\33\ See infra Section III.A; see also Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49434.
\34\ See id.
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Similar to the Proposal, the Commission believes that simplifying
and enhancing the current publicly available disclosures, particularly
with respect to financial inducements from trading centers, should
assist customers in evaluating better the order routing services of
their broker-dealers and how well they manage potential conflicts of
interest.\35\ Unlike the Proposal and in response to commenters'
feedback, the Commission believes that this goal would be targeted more
effectively by having these disclosures apply to ``held'' orders in NMS
stocks rather than those under $200,000.
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\35\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49434.
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III. Amendments to Rule 600, Rule 605, and Rule 606
Section III discusses in detail the adopted rule amendments.
Subsection A addresses the customer-specific order handling disclosures
required by new Rule 606(b)(3) and amended Rule 606(b)(1). This section
also discusses a part of the Proposal we are not adopting: Proposed
Rule 606(c)'s requirement that broker-dealers make publicly available
an aggregated report of the Rule 606(b)(3) customer-specific order
handling information across all of their customers. Subsection B
addresses the enhanced public report required under amended Rule
606(a). The newly defined and re-defined terms that the Commission is
adopting in Rule 600 in connection with the amendments to Rule 606 are
discussed where relevant in subsections A and B. The adopted amendment
to Rule 605 is discussed in subsection C.
The staff will review these amendments, including in particular the
de minimis exceptions described in Section III.A.1.b.iv below, not
later than one year after the compliance date of the amendments, and
report to the Commission.
A. Customer-Specific Order Handling Reports
1. Applicability of Customer-Specific Disclosures in Rule 606(b)
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to delineate the types of orders that would
trigger a broker-dealer's obligation to provide a customer with the
order handling disclosures required by new Rule 606(b)(3) by amending
Rule 600(b) to include a definition of ``institutional order.'' \36\
Specifically, the Commission proposed to define an ``institutional
order'' as an order to buy or sell a quantity of an NMS stock having a
market value of at least $200,000, provided that such order is not for
the account of a broker-dealer.\37\ As proposed, Rule 606(b)(3) would
apply only to such ``institutional orders.''
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\36\ See proposed Rule 600(b)(31).
\37\ See id. The proposed definition of institutional order
applied only to orders for NMS stocks and, therefore, did not
include orders in NMS securities that are options contracts.
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The Commission's proposed definition of ``institutional order''
dovetailed with the current definition of ``customer order,'' \38\ such
that all orders in NMS stocks routed by broker-dealers for their
customers, regardless of order dollar value, would be covered by order
routing disclosure rules.\39\ The Commission's proposed definition
maintained a dollar-value threshold analysis to identify the
``institutional orders'' for which the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures would
be available and distinguish them from ``retail orders'' that were too
small to meet the dollar-value threshold in the definition and for
which other disclosures would be available.\40\
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\38\ See supra note 5.
\39\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49445. Relatedly,
the Commission proposed to rename term ``customer order'' in Rule
600(b) as ``retail order.'' See infra Section III.B.1.
\40\ See id. The Commission preliminarily believed that this
would be an effective method of focusing the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures on orders from institutional customers. See Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49444-45 for additional detail on the
Proposal.
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The Commission solicited comment on alternatives to a dollar-value
threshold approach. For example, the Commission asked commenters among
other things: (1) Whether dollar value is the proper criterion for
defining an institutional order, and (2) whether there are other order
characteristics the Commission should consider to distinguish between
retail and institutional orders, in addition to, or instead of, a
dollar-value threshold.\41\
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\41\ See id. at 49445.
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The Commission also asked whether commenters believe a de minimis
exemption from customer-specific reporting under proposed Rule
606(b)(3) is appropriate. Specifically, the Commission asked if
commenters believe that the rule should include a de minimis exemption
for broker-dealers that receive, in the aggregate, less than a certain
threshold number or dollar value of institutional orders.\42\ The
Commission also asked if the rule should be applicable, with respect to
disclosures to any particular customer, only if a broker-dealer
receives greater than a certain threshold number or dollar value of
institutional orders from that customer.\43\
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\42\ See id. at 49449.
\43\ See id.
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The Commission received comments on the proposed dollar-value
threshold as well as comments in response to its questions regarding a
potential de minimis exemption from Rule 606(b)(3) and, after further
consideration, is modifying its approach.
b. Final Rule and Response to Comments
i. Comments Regarding Dollar-Value Threshold
The Commission received significant comment on the proposed
definition of ``institutional order'' that criticized the proposed
$200,000 threshold as an ineffective proxy for institutional trading
interest.\44\ Many commenters
[[Page 58342]]
expressed concern that defining institutional order using the proposed
$200,000 threshold would be both over-inclusive by including orders
from retail investors with a market value over $200,000 and under-
inclusive by excluding orders from institutional customers with a
market value less than $200,000, and result in the misclassification of
a large number of orders.\45\ Two commenters stated that they receive
retail investor orders that exceed $200,000 in market value.\46\
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\44\ See, e.g., Letter from Theodore R. Lazo, Managing Director
and Associate General Counsel, The Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association, dated October 17, 2016 (``SIFMA Letter'') at 2-
3; Letter from Mary Lou Von Kaenel, Managing Director, Financial
Information Forum, dated September 26, 2016 (``FIF Letter'') at 2-3;
Letter from Mary Lou Von Kaenel, Managing Director, Financial
Information Forum, dated November 7, 2016 (``FIF Addendum'') at 2;
Letter from David W. Blass, General Counsel, Investment Company
Institute, dated September 26, 2016 (``ICI Letter'') at 3-7; Letter
from John Russell, Chairman of the Board, and James Toes, President
and Chief Executive Officer, Security Traders Association, dated
September 26, 2016 (``STA Letter'') at 4; HMA Letter at 5-6; Letter
from Tyler Gellasch, Executive Director, and Chris Nagy, Director,
Healthy Markets Association dated January 6, 2017 (``HMA Letter
II'') at 2; CFA Letter at 6-7; Letter from Dennis M. Kelleher,
President and Chief Executive Officer, Stephen W. Hall, Legal
Director and Securities Specialist, and Lev Bagramian, Senior
Securities Policy Advisor, Better Markets, Inc., dated September 26,
2016 (``Better Markets Letter'') at 5; MFA Letter at 3.
\45\ See, e.g., Letter from Robert J. McCarthy, Director of
Regulatory Policy, Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, dated September 26,
2016 (``Wells Fargo Letter''); Letter from David M. Weisberger,
Managing Director, IHS Markit, dated September 26, 2016 (``Markit
Letter''); Letter from Jeff Brown, Senior Vice President,
Legislative and Regulatory Affairs, Charles Schwab & Co. Inc., dated
September 26, 2016 (``Schwab Letter'').
\46\ See Schwab Letter at 3; Letter from Marc R. Bryant, Senior
Vice President and Deputy General Counsel, Fidelity Investments,
dated September 26, 2016 (``Fidelity Letter'') at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters stated that, for reasons such as obtaining a
better price, achieving faster execution, avoiding potential
information leakage, avoiding market effect, or the advancement in the
sophistication of institutional trading systems, many institutional
customers, before submitting their order flow to their broker-dealers,
internally divide their order flow into smaller ``child'' orders that
may not meet the proposed $200,000 dollar-value threshold.\47\ Multiple
commenters offered their own analyses of internal and external data
indicating that a large percentage of orders from institutional
customers would fall below the $200,000 threshold.\48\ One of these
commenters stated that the proposed definition of institutional order
could exclude disproportionately more orders of smaller funds, orders
in less liquid stocks that fall below the $200,000 threshold, and
larger orders that are broken up into smaller child orders by
institutional customers.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ See Markit Letter at 6-7; Letter from Greg Babyak, Head,
Global Regulatory and Policy Group, Bloomberg LP, and Gary Stone,
Market Structure Strategy, Bloomberg Tradebook and Bloomberg LP,
dated September 26, 2016 (``Bloomberg Letter'') at 11; Letter from
Erin K. Preston, Chief Compliance Officer and Associate General
Counsel, Dash Financial LLC, dated September 26, 2016 (``Dash
Letter'') at 3; Letter from Richard Foster, Senior Vice President
and Senior Counsel for Regulatory and Legal Affairs, Financial
Services Roundtable, dated September 26, 2016 (``FSR Letter'') at 3-
4; MFA Letter at 3; FIF Letter at 3; FIF Addendum at 2; Letter from
Nathaniel N. Evarts, State Street Global Advisors, dated September
26, 2016 (``SSGA Letter'') at 1.
\48\ See Markit Letter at 6-7; Letter from Matt D. Lyons, Global
Trading Manager, The Capital Group of Companies, Timothy J. Stark,
Market and Transactional Research, The Capital Group of Companies,
and Michael J. Triessl, Senior Vice President and Senior Counsel,
Capital Research and Management Company, dated September 30, 2016
(``Capital Group Letter'') at 2; Bloomberg Letter at 11-12.
\49\ See Letter from Adam C. Cooper, Senior Managing Director
and Chief Legal Officer, Citadel Securities, dated October 13, 2016
(``Citadel Letter'') at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter expressed concern that the dollar-value threshold
would exclude the majority of orders from institutions from the
enhanced institutional order handling disclosure requirements,
diminishing the value of the disclosure and forcing institutional
investors to continue individual negotiations to obtain order handling
information.\50\ Another commenter stated that excluding an unknown
portion of a large institution's orders (and perhaps all of a smaller
institution's orders) from heightened scrutiny may create opportunities
for abuse and evasion, and that investors may therefore seek to
deliberately avoid identifying their orders as institutional
orders.\51\ Another commenter stated that different securities trade
differently based on available liquidity and their capacity to move the
market.\52\ The commenter stated that the proposed definition may force
customers to choose between placing orders above the threshold to
receive disclosures but at the risk of higher market impact costs or
staying below the threshold to protect order information but
sacrificing their right to disclosures.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ See ICI Letter at 3.
\51\ See HMA Letter at 6.
\52\ See CFA Letter at 7.
\53\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As illustrated by these comments, there was broad opposition to the
$200,000 dollar-value threshold in the proposed definition of
institutional order. The Commission is not adopting the proposed
definition. Rather than attempt to capture within a definition of
``institutional order'' the orders that account for most institutional
order dollar volume, the comments indicate that market participants
would prefer a different approach to order handling disclosures.\54\ In
light of these comments, the Commission believes that a modified
approach to delineating the orders covered by new Rule 606(b)(3) would
be more consistent with the expectations of market participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See, e.g., ICI Letter at 3, 6-7 (noting that adopting a
definition of institutional order that would apply to all orders,
regardless of size, that an institutional customer submits to its
broker-dealer would best enable the Commission to accomplish the
objective of providing information necessary for institutional
investors to understand broker-dealers' order routing decisions);
Letter from Amy B.R. Lancellotta, Managing Director, Independent
Directors Council, dated September 26, 2016 (``IDC Letter'') at 2
(supporting ICI's recommendation); Capital Group Letter at 2-3; HMA
Letter II (agreeing with Capital Group, and noting that covering all
institutional orders is one of the most important aspects of the
rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Commenter Recommendations Regarding a Modified Approach
Many commenters urged the Commission to replace the proposed
dollar-value threshold with a different approach for identifying the
orders covered by the new customer-specific order routing
disclosures.\55\ They generally supported two different approaches: A
number of commenters suggested that the applicability of the new order
routing disclosures be based on order type (``held'' versus ``not
held'' orders); \56\ and a number of other commenters suggested that
their applicability be based on the characteristics (e.g., type or
regulatory status) of the entity placing the order.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ See, e.g., MFA Letter at 3-4; CFA Letter at 6-8; FIF Letter
at 2-3, 14-15; ICI Letter at 3, 6-7; STA Letter at 3-4; SIFMA Letter
at 1-3; FIF Addendum at 2; Healthy Markets Letter at 2; Jon
Schneider, Chairman of the Board, and James Toes, President and
Chief Executive Officer, Security Traders Association, dated April
11, 2017 (``STA Letter II'') at 2.
\56\ See, e.g., SIFMA Letter at 3; Bloomberg Letter at 12;
Citadel Letter at 2-3; FIF Letter at 2-3, 14-15; FIF Addendum at 2;
STA Letter II at 2. See also EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations, supra
note 16.
\57\ See SSGA Letter at 1; ICI Letter at 3, 6-7; IDC Letter at
2; MFA Letter at 3; Fidelity Letter at 3; CFA Letter at 8; Better
Markets Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters who supported an order type-based approach suggested
that the not held order type classification would be an effective proxy
for identifying orders typical of institutional investors for which the
existing customer-specific disclosures are inapplicable or inadequate
because institutional investor orders are generally not held to the
market.\58\ Commenters attributed
[[Page 58343]]
this to the fact that a broker-dealer has time and price discretion in
executing a not held order, and institutional investors in particular
rely on such discretion for reasons such as minimizing price impact,
whereas a broker-dealer must attempt to execute a held order
immediately, which typically better suits retail investors who seek
immediate executions and rely less on broker-dealer order handling
discretion.\59\ As one commenter put it, the Rule 606(b) disclosure
requirements should be based on whether the broker-dealer has
discretion when handling the client's order and, as a general matter,
broker-dealers have no discretion in handling retail investor held
orders but do have discretion in handling institutional investor not
held orders.\60\ One commenter also stated that the held/not held
approach would provide a targeted, deterministic solution to the issues
presented by the proposed order dollar-value-based distinction between
retail and institutional orders, and would alleviate the need to
identify certain orders as institutional and others as retail for
purposes of order routing disclosure.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ See Ameritrade Letter at 2; Letter from Richie Prager,
Senior Managing Director, Head of Trading, Liquidity and Investments
Platform, Hubert De Jesus, Managing Director, Co-Head of Market
Structure and Electronic Trading, Supurna VedBrat, Managing
Director, Co-Head of Market Structure and Electronic Trading, and
Joanne Medero, Managing Director, Government Relations and Public
Policy, BlackRock, Inc., dated September 26, 2016 (``BlackRock
Letter'') at 2; Citadel Letter at 2-3; Markit Letter at 4; Schwab
Letter at 3; Capital Group Letter at 2-3; KCG Letter at 4; FIF
Letter at 2-3; FIF Addendum at 2; STA Letter II at 2. One commenter
noted its belief that the vast majority of orders entered by
institutional customers are with not-held instructions and the vast
majority of orders entered by retail investors are with held
instructions. See STA Letter at 4.
\59\ See Wells Fargo Letter at 5; Markit Letter at 3 n.7;
Capital Group Letter at 3; Schwab Letter at 3; Ameritrade Letter at
2 n.2; KCG Letter at 4; FIF Addendum at 2.
\60\ See SIFMA Letter at 3; see also Capital Group Letter at 2;
KCG Letter at 4.
\61\ See FIF Letter at 2-3, 14-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters also stated that basing the Rule 606(b)
disclosure requirements on whether an order is held or not held would
be straightforward and minimally burdensome because: Broker-dealers and
other market participants are very familiar with these order type
classifications; classifying orders as held or not held would be
consistent with current industry practice; and the terms held and not
held are common terms of usage in the securities markets.\62\ One of
these commenters stated that broker-dealers already must mark orders
that they execute as held or not held,\63\ and another commenter stated
that the held/not held order classifications are commonly recognized in
the FIX Protocol.\64\ Two commenters pointed out that the held and not
held order classifications are already utilized in the Commission's
definition of ``covered order'' in Rule 600(b)(15).\65\ One of these
commenters stated that not held orders are generally distinguished from
held orders in regulations and firms' monitoring processes, and
specifically noted that broker-dealers already characterize orders on a
held or not held basis to comply with Rule 605's covered order
requirement, OATS technical specifications, and other rules such as
FINRA Rule 5320.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3, 7-8; KCG
Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2-3; SIFMA Letter at 3.
\63\ See Capital Group Letter at 3.
\64\ See Citadel Letter at 3.
\65\ See SIFMA Letter at 3 and n. 4; Market Letter at 3 and n.
8.
\66\ See Markit Letter at 3-4, 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two commenters objected to the held or not held analysis and stated
that the applicability of the new customer-specific disclosures should
not be based on order type because the held/not held classification is
within the control of the order sender.\67\ One commenter stated that
the held/not held order type-based distinction is an imprecise proxy
for the status of the underlying customer, would not cover all
institutional orders, and that the distinction may leave out many
smaller investment advisers that currently trade through or have some
portion of assets under management through ``retail'' channels.\68\
This commenter also stated that the distinction would allow for
potential gaming, and that amidst rising concerns with broker-dealers'
conflicts of interests, some institutional investors have increasingly
come to use held orders.\69\ Another commenter, however, understood
that some not held orders may come from retail customers, and that
institutional clients may send broker-dealers a small amount of held
orders, but nevertheless supported scoping the disclosures by the held
and not held order classifications.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ See HMA Letter at 7; Dash Letter at 4.
\68\ See HMA Letter II at 2-3.
\69\ See id.
\70\ See SIFMA Letter at 3; see also Markit Letter at 7-8;
Schwab Letter at 3; Letter from Manisha Kimmel, Chief Regulatory
Officer, Wealth Management, Thomson Reuters, dated September 26,
2016 (``Thomson Reuters Letter'') at 1; Citadel Letter at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters suggested that the applicability of the customer-
specific disclosures should be based on the type of the entity placing
the order.\71\ One commenter argued that this approach would be
preferable to an approach based on order type classification because
broker-dealers already must know whether their customers are
institutional investors.\72\ Another commenter stated that orders
should not be classified according to the unique order handling typical
of an entity, as that characteristic may change over time, whereas the
entity type itself remains constant.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ See, e.g., ICI Letter at 6-7; MFA Letter at 3; Fidelity
Letter at 3; STA Letter at 4; CFA Letter at 8.
\72\ See HMA Letter II at 2.
\73\ See Better Markets Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most of the commenters that supported an entity-centric approach
suggested that the Commission rely on FINRA Rule 4512(c), which defines
the term ``institutional account'' for purposes of that rule, as a
source for such an approach.\74\ Two commenters also suggested as a
source FINRA Rule 2210(a)(4), which defines the term ``institutional
investor'' for purposes of that rule, and also incorporates the
definition of ``institutional account'' from FINRA Rule 4512(c).\75\
One commenter stated that, because all broker-dealers that handle
customer orders for equity securities are FINRA members, they should be
accustomed to using the standards supplied in FINRA's rules.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ See ICI Letter at 6-7 n.19; MFA Letter at 3-4; Fidelity
Letter at 3; STA Letter at 4; CFA Letter at 8; Bloomberg Letter at
13; see also FIF Letter at 3.
\75\ See MFA Letter at 3-4; ICI Letter at 6-7 n.19.
\76\ See ICI Letter at 6-7 and n.19; see also CFA Letter at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters offered additional considerations or
recommendations regarding how an entity-based approach should be
crafted. For example, one commenter suggested that the new customer-
specific disclosures should apply to any order attributed to any entity
that is a ``large trader'' under Section 13(h) of the Exchange Act.\77\
Another commenter stated that institutional and retail investors should
be defined according to whether the investor is an entity or
individual.\78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ See SSGA Letter at 1; see also 15 U.S.C. 78m(h). Another
commenter expressed concern that a large trader-based definition of
institutional order would result in considerable overlap among
retail customers that also are large traders under Rule 13h-1. See
STA Letter at 4. This is one of several examples of commenters
critiquing or supporting the views expressed by other commenters
regarding the definition of institutional order. See, e.g., IDC
Letter at 2 (supporting ICI Letter's recommendations on how to
expand the definition of ``institutional'' order); STA Letter at 4
(supporting remarks made in FIF Letter); Citadel Letter at 3 (noting
support for similar proposal from Blackrock Letter and ICI Letter);
Ameritrade Letter at 2 (noting commenter support for defining
institutional orders by the type of order submitted); HMA Letter II
at 2-3 (noting broad commenter support for not defining
institutional orders by dollar size).
\78\ See Better Markets Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the foregoing commenter recommendations, a few
commenters suggested that there should be no distinction between retail
and institutional customers for purposes of the new Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling reports and that all orders should be
[[Page 58344]]
covered by the Rule 606(b)(3) reports,\79\ or that retail and
institutional customers should receive the same disclosures.\80\ One
commenter stated that the goal with respect to both retail investor and
large institutional orders should be best execution.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ See HMA Letter at 5; Dash Letter at 3; HMA Letter II at 1-
2; Letter from Abraham Kohen, President, AK Financial Engineering
Consultants, LLC, dated September 28, 2016 (``Kohen Letter'').
\80\ See, e.g., Better Markets Letter at 5-7.
\81\ See HMA Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. The Commission's Adopted Approach
The Commission is not adopting a definition of ``institutional
order'' or an order dollar value-based approach to delineate the
applicability of new Rule 606(b)(3).\82\ Generally, the amendments to
Rule 606(b) are designed to apply required order handling disclosures
to any NMS stock order regardless of its dollar value and to require
more detailed disclosures regarding how broker-dealers exercise
discretion when handling and routing customers' NMS stock orders in
today's electronic markets. These disclosures are designed to provide
transparency to customers for whom the existing customer-specific
disclosures under Rule 606(b) are inapplicable or have become
inadequate. Upon further consideration and in light of the views
expressed by commenters, the Commission believes that these goals can
best be accomplished if the detailed, customer-specific, order handling
disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(3) generally apply to orders of
any dollar value for NMS stock that customers submit to their broker-
dealers on a ``not held'' basis. Accordingly, under Rule 606(b)(3), a
broker-dealer must provide the disclosures set forth therein, upon
customer request, to any customer that places, directly or indirectly,
one or more orders in NMS stock that are submitted on a not held basis
with the broker-dealer, subject to two de minimis exceptions discussed
below.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Relatedly, as discussed below, the Commission is not
renaming the term ``customer order'' as ``retail order'' in Rule
600(b). See infra Section III.B.1.
\83\ See infra Section III.A.1.b.iv; see also Rule 606(b)(3).
Consistent with what was proposed, Rule 606(b)(3) applies only to
orders for NMS stocks and does not include orders in NMS securities
that are options contracts. Some commenters supported this approach.
See STA Letter II at 2-3; FIF Letter at 12. Other commenters
recommended that options be included in the amended order handling
disclosures being adopted today. See Dash Letter at 1-2; HMA Letter
at 12; Markit Letter at 14. The Commission continues to believe
that, as noted in the Proposing Release, due to differences in the
current market structure for NMS securities that are options
contracts--in particular the lack of an over-the-counter market in
listed options--the same market structure complexities that exist
for NMS stocks do not exist at this time for NMS securities that are
options contracts to a degree that warrants the more detailed order
handling disclosures proposed herein. See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49444 n.101.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe that basing the applicability of this requirement on
whether orders are held or not held serves the purposes of the
disclosures. A broker-dealer must attempt to execute a held order
immediately; a not held order instead provides the broker-dealer with
price and time discretion in handling the order. As a result, the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures apply to NMS stock orders for which customers
have provided their broker-dealers with price and time order handling
discretion, and do not apply to orders that the broker-dealer must
attempt to execute immediately. The Commission believes that since the
disclosures are designed to provide greater transparency into a broker-
dealer's exercise of order handling discretion, they should be provided
for orders for which broker-dealers actually exercise such discretion.
Focusing the customer-specific report in this way will better enable
customers to understand their broker-dealers' order routing decisions
and the extent to which those decisions may be affected by conflicts of
interest or create information leakage. Customers also will be better
able to assess their broker-dealers' skill and effectiveness in
handling their orders and achieving satisfactory executions.
Importantly, as noted by multiple commenters, broker-dealers and
other market participants are familiar with the held and not held order
type classifications, classifying orders as held or not held would be
consistent with current industry practice, and the terms ``held'' and
``not held'' are common terms of usage in the securities markets.\84\
Indeed, broker-dealers already utilize the ``held'' and ``not held''
order classifications to comply with FINRA OATS technical
specifications,\85\ and existing Commission rules, such as the
definition of ``covered order'' in Rule 600(b), rely on market
participants' ability to distinguish between ``held'' and ``not held''
orders. As such, the Commission is not adding definitions of these
terms to Rule 600(b). The Commission intends for broker-dealers to rely
on their current methods for classifying orders as ``held'' or ``not
held'' for purposes of complying with Rule 606. By leveraging the
established not held order classification, Rule 606(b)(3)'s
applicability should be easily understood by market participants and
the implementation burdens broker-dealers encounter in order to comply
with Rule 606(b)(3) should be lessened to the extent that their order
handling and routing systems are already configured for not held order
classifications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3, 7-8; KCG
Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2-3; SIFMA Letter at 3.
\85\ See FINRA OATS Reporting Technical Specifications,
September 12, 2016, at pp. 4-2 to 4-3, available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/TechSpec_9122016.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, under the Commission's adopted approach, any customer is
entitled to receive the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures for their not held
NMS stock orders, subject to two de minimis exceptions. The Commission
is not adopting definitions of ``institutional order'' or ``retail
order,'' and the adopted amendments make no such distinction, based on
dollar value of the order or otherwise. In this regard, the
Commission's adopted approach is consistent with comments that stated
that no such distinction is necessary. Under final Rule 606(b)(3),
customers may request the disclosures for any not held NMS stock orders
that they submit (subject to the de minimis exceptions, discussed
below), including not held NMS stock orders for less than $200,000 in
market value, which would have been defined as ``retail orders'' and
not subject to the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures under the Proposal. The
Commission believes it is appropriate to make the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures available for all not held NMS stock orders (subject to the
de minimis exceptions) so customers have information sufficient to
evaluate the broker-dealers that are exercising order handling and
routing discretion.
The Commission believes that it is appropriate for broker-dealers
to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to those customers for whom
the existing customer-specific order routing disclosures in Rule 606(b)
are inapplicable or inadequate. Specifically, the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures are particularly suited to customers that submit not held
NMS stock orders because the disclosures set forth detailed order
handling information that is useful in evaluating how broker-dealers
exercise the discretion attendant to not held orders and, in the
process, carry out their best execution obligations and manage the
potential for information leakage and conflicts of interest. Moreover,
many of the commenters that criticized the Commission's proposed
definition of institutional order suggested that all or nearly all of
an institutional customer's orders should be covered by the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures regardless of order
[[Page 58345]]
dollar value. Some of these commenters supported accomplishing this via
an entity-based approach to Rule 606(b)(3)'s applicability,\86\ which
the Commission has not chosen to adopt for reasons set forth below, and
some of these commenters supported the adopted approach.\87\ By using
the not held order distinction rather than the proposed $200,000
threshold, Rule 606(b)(3) as adopted will cover more order flow than
would have been covered under the Proposal.\88\ In addition, by using
the not held order distinction, Rule 606(b)(3) as adopted will likely
result in more Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures for order flow that is
typically characteristic of institutional customers--not retail
customers--and will likely cover all or nearly all of the institutional
order flow.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ See supra note 58.
\87\ See supra note 56.
\88\ See infra Section V.C.1.a.i.3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While some commenters suggested that the new customer-specific
disclosures in Rule 606(b)(3) should be available to all orders without
any limitation based on entity type or order classification or
otherwise, the Commission believes that it is appropriate to
differentiate between not held orders and held orders for purposes of
order handling information disclosure because broker-dealers generally
handle not held orders differently from held orders due to the
discretion they are afforded with not held orders but not with held
orders.\89\ As a result, the information pertinent to understanding
broker-dealers' order handling practices for not held orders is not the
same as for held orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ See, e.g., Schwab Letter at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indeed, in recent years, routing and execution practices for not
held orders have become more automated, dispersed, and complex.\90\ In
today's electronic markets, broker-dealers' commonly handle such orders
by using sophisticated institutional order execution algorithms and
smart order routing systems that decide the timing, pricing, and
quantity of orders routed to a number of various trading centers, and
that may divide a large ``parent'' order into many smaller ``child''
orders, and route the child orders over time to different trading
centers in accordance with a particular strategy.\91\ The order
handling disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3) are designed to take
this into account and provide relevant disclosures that, in the
Commission's view, will enable customers to better assess their broker-
dealers' order execution quality and order handling ability overall and
methods for complying with best execution obligations, as well as, more
specifically, the degree to which their broker-dealers' order routing
practices may involve information leakage or the potential for
conflicts of interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ See supra Section I; see also Proposing Release, supra note
1, at 49436.
\91\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By contrast, the Commission's concern regarding how broker-dealers
handle held orders is less about the difficulties posed by more
automated, dispersed and complex order routing and execution practices.
Rather, the Commission believes that enhanced disclosures for held
orders should provide customers with more detailed information
including with respect to the financial inducements that trading
centers may provide to broker-dealers to attract immediately executable
trading interest, as opposed to the different information geared
towards not held NMS stock orders that is set forth in Rule 606(b)(3).
As noted above and discussed below, the quarterly public disclosures
required under Rule 606(a) are indeed being enhanced to provide more
detail regarding financial inducements to broker-dealers, and the
Commission believes that these disclosures are more appropriately
tailored to the characteristics of held order flow and the needs of
customers that use held orders.\92\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ As noted supra and infra, the Commission is also is
amending Rule 606(a) such that it applies to held orders of any size
in NMS stock.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also, the Commission does not disagree with one commenter's
statement that best execution should be the goal for orders from both
institutional customers and retail investors, and that both types of
investors deserve to know how their orders are routed and executed.\93\
Best execution is the broker-dealer's legal obligation for all orders,
whether from retail or institutional customers.\94\ While meeting their
best execution obligations, broker-dealers frequently may choose to
handle orders in a variety of different ways and choose among a host of
available order routing destinations. Because the choices broker-
dealers make in this regard are informed by the type of order at hand,
for the reasons stated above, the Commission believes that separate
disclosures for not held orders and held orders are the better way to
help customers understand how their broker-dealers are handling and
routing their orders and how well their broker-dealers are performing
these functions. While this commenter also stated that the Proposal's
reforms for retail customers are inadequate, for the reasons stated
above, as well as in Section III.B infra, the Commission disagrees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ See HMA Letter at 5.
\94\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9,
2005), 70 FR 37496, 37538 (June 29, 2005) (``Regulation NMS Adopting
Release''). FINRA has codified a duty of best execution into its
rules. See FINRA Rule 5310.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, other commenters suggested basing Rule 606(b)(3)'s
applicability on the characteristics of the customer that submits the
order to the broker-dealer. This entity-centric approach suggested by
commenters would require the Commission to set forth the types of
customers that may request the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures for their NMS
stock orders, but would not entail any differentiation in the types of
orders covered by Rule 606(b)(3). As a result, NMS stock orders from
qualifying customers that are submitted on a held basis would be
covered by the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures. This is a sub-optimal
outcome. Broker-dealers must attempt to execute held orders immediately
and are afforded no discretion in handling them; therefore, applying
the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to held orders would not provide insight
into how a broker-dealer exercises order handling and routing
discretion. Moreover, including a customer's held orders in the Rule
606(b)(3) report could obfuscate the reports' depiction of the
discretion actually exercised by the broker-dealer with respect to not
held orders and undermine the very purpose of these disclosures.
An entity-based approach also would require the Commission to
prescribe institutional status criteria that customers must fit in
order to be entitled to receive the disclosures. A risk with such an
approach is that the criteria could be over-inclusive or under-
inclusive. The Commission is particularly concerned about potential
under-inclusiveness because customers that do not fit the criteria
would not be entitled to receive the disclosures. To mitigate this
risk, the Commission, as suggested by commenters, could leverage
certain existing rules that already set forth institutional status
criteria. For example, several commenters suggested as sources the
definitions of ``institutional account'' and ``institutional investor''
in FINRA Rules 2210(a)(4) and 4512(c), respectively.\95\ But these
definitions serve a purpose for the noted FINRA rules that is different
from the purpose similar prescribed criteria would serve
[[Page 58346]]
for the purpose of Rule 606(b)(3). Under FINRA Rule 4512, a broker-
dealer is not required to obtain for ``institutional accounts'' certain
additional information that it is required to obtain for accounts that
are not ``institutional accounts.'' \96\ Likewise, under FINRA Rule
2210(a)(4), a broker-dealer is subject to less prescriptive review
requirements for ``institutional communications'' that are solely to
``institutional investors'' than it is subject to for other, ``retail
communications.'' \97\ Under both of these FINRA rules, exclusion from
the defined ``institutional'' criteria triggers a more stringent due
diligence or review obligation for the broker-dealer. The opposite
would be true under an entity-centric approach to Rule 606(b)--if the
institutional status criteria adopted by the Commission were not met,
the market participant would be excluded from the more detailed
disclosure regime.\98\
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\95\ See supra notes 74 and 75 and accompanying text.
\96\ See FINRA Rule 4512(a)(2).
\97\ See FINRA Rule 2210.
\98\ One commenter suggested that the ``large trader''
designation under Section 13(h) of the Exchange Act serve as the
source for the Commission's institutional status criteria (see SSGA
Letter at 1, supra note 77). This approach would, however, include
held orders from large traders within the required disclosures.
Moreover, to qualify as a large trader under Rule 13h-1, a person
must meet daily or monthly aggregate share volume or market value
thresholds for transactions in NMS securities. See 17 CFR 242013h-1.
Therefore, such an approach would exclude orders from an
institutional customer that does not meet the designated thresholds.
In addition, because the large trader definition is based on
transactions in NMS securities, it takes into account transactions
in option contracts that are NMS securities whereas the Commission's
amendments to Rule 606(b) apply only to orders for NMS stock.
Another commenter stated that institutional and retail investors
should be defined according to whether the investor is an entity or
individual (see Better Markets Letter at 5, supra note 78). This
approach similarly would include held orders within the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures. Further, certain natural persons may take on
the characteristics of institutions in their trading behavior and
utilize not held orders to a significant degree, but they would be
categorically excluded from receiving the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
for such orders under an approach based on an individual versus
entity distinction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This categorical exclusion of some customer types from Rule
606(b)(3)'s purview is avoided under the Commission's adopted approach.
By basing the application of Rule 606(b)(3) on the held and not held
order classifications, no customer is categorically excluded from
receiving the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures. The Commission acknowledges
that some commenters stated that an entity-centric approach to Rule
606(b)(3)'s coverage based on the noted FINRA rules would coincide with
familiar industry standards regarding the types of market participants
that are considered to be ``institutional.'' \99\ But adapting the
FINRA rules for the Commission's purposes in Rule 606(b) would present
challenges. For example, private funds such as hedge funds may not be
covered by the ``institutional'' definitions in FINRA Rules 2210 or
4512,\100\ yet in the Proposing Release the Commission noted, by way of
example, that ``[a]n institutional customer includes . . . hedge
funds,'' among others.\101\ If the Commission relied solely on the
FINRA rules, contrary to the Commission's contemplation in the
Proposing Release, hedge funds may not be defined as ``institutional''
for Rule 606(b) purposes and would not be entitled to the more detailed
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures. Of course, the Commission could modify the
criteria used in the FINRA rules to better suit its purposes here, but
even then there would still be a risk of under-inclusiveness in the
adapted criteria. There also could be new types of market participants
that evolve and that trade in an institutional manner, but if they were
not covered by the Commission's prescribed institutional status
criteria, they would not be entitled to receive the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures under the rule.
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\99\ See HMA Letter II at 2; CFA Letter at 8; STA Letter at 4.
\100\ FINRA Rule 4512(c)(3) contains a catch-all provision that
includes within the definition of ``institutional account'' the
account of any person with at least $50 million in total assets. An
entity that is not otherwise expressly covered by FINRA Rule
4512(c)(1) or (2), such as a hedge fund for example, is not covered
by the definition if it has total assets of less than $50 million.
As such, if the Commission were to rely on the FINRA rules as
suggested by some commenters, smaller entities with less than $50
million in total assets may be excluded from Rule 606(b)(3) even
though they may have less bargaining power than their larger
competitors and therefore may benefit most from required,
standardized order routing disclosures. There also could be
disparate results--for example, a registered investment company with
less than $50 million in assets would be covered because it is
expressly identified in the rule, while a hedge fund with less than
$50 million in assets would not be covered.
\101\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49433, n.1.
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Moreover, as noted above, commenters also highlighted the industry
familiarity with the not held order classification.\102\ And, unlike
the ``institutional'' definitions in the referenced FINRA rules, which
apply in contexts completely different from broker-dealer order
handling, the not held order classification is already used by broker-
dealers specifically for order handling purposes, among other things.
For example, FINRA Rule 7440 requires broker-dealers to record certain
information, including any ``special handling requests,'' when an order
is received, originated, or transmitted.\103\ FINRA's OATS Reporting
Technical Specifications state that, when a FINRA member originates or
receives an order and then subsequently transmits that order to another
desk or department within the firm, the member is required to record
and report to OATS, among other things, ``special handling instructions
that are communicated by the receiving department to a desk or other
department, such as `Not Held.' '' \104\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ See Citadel Letter at 3; Markit Letter at 3, 7-8; KCG
Letter at 4; Capital Group Letter at 2-3; SIFMA Letter at 3.
\103\ See FINRA Rule 7440(b)(15) and (c)(1)(G).
\104\ See FINRA OATS Reporting Technical Specifications,
September 12, 2016, at pp. 4-2 to 4-3, available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/TechSpec_9122016.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Basing the applicability of Rule 606(b)(3) on customers' not held
NMS stock orders is, in the Commission's view, the most tailored
approach to aligning the orders covered by Rule 606(b)(3) with the
Commission's intent for the rule to provide more detailed disclosure
and enhanced transparency regarding how broker-dealers handle NMS stock
orders, and to provide such transparency to customers for whose NMS
stock orders the current disclosure regime is inapplicable or
inadequate. This approach also is likely to avoid the problems inherent
in an entity-centric approach. Further, many commenters, as well as
EMSAC, supported basing Rule 606(b)(3)'s application on the not held
order classification. Accordingly, under Rule 606(b)(3), a broker-
dealer must provide the disclosures set forth therein, upon customer
request, to any customer that places, directly or indirectly, one or
more orders in NMS stock that are submitted on a not held basis with
the broker-dealer, subject to the de minimis exceptions discussed
below.
iv. De Minimis Exceptions
The Commission is adopting in new Rules 606(b)(4) and (b)(5) two de
minimis exceptions from Rule 606(b)(3)'s requirements, either of which
excepts a broker-dealer from the Rule 606(b)(3) requirements. One of
the exceptions focuses on the broker-dealer firm and the other focuses
on the individual customer. Specifically, a broker-dealer is not
obligated to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) report: (i) To any customer if
not held NMS stock orders constitute less than 5% of the total shares
of NMS stock orders that the broker-dealer receives from its customers
over the prior six months,\105\
[[Page 58347]]
or (ii) to a particular customer if that customer trades through the
broker-dealer, on average each month for the prior six months, less
than $1,000,000 of notional value of not held orders in NMS stock.\106\
These de minimis exceptions are designed such that the Rule 606(b)(3)
requirements apply when a broker-dealer's order flow consists primarily
of not held orders for NMS stock and when a customer's trading profile
is such that it relies heavily on the discretion of the broker-dealer
and so would sufficiently benefit from the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ See Rule 606(b)(4). Under the rule, the first time a
broker-dealer meets or exceeds the 5% threshold, it has a grace
period of up to three calendar months to provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
report. There is no such grace period for compliance after the first
time the threshold is met or exceeded. See id.
\106\ See Rule 606(b)(5). As discussed below, however, when
either de minimis exception applies, the broker-dealer still must
provide, if requested, the Rule 606(b)(1) customer-specific
disclosures for not held NMS stock orders that it receives from
customers. See infra Section III.A.1.b.vi.
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The Commission received several comments in response to its
questions regarding a potential de minimis exception from customer-
specific reporting under proposed Rule 606(b)(3). Multiple commenters
supported an exception from Rule 606(b)(3) reporting for broker-dealers
that have either a de minimis level of institutional customers or a de
minimis amount of institutional trading activity as measured by
executed shares as a percentage of all executed shares.\107\ These
commenters also supported disclosure based on whether an order is held
or not held and generally discussed the reasoning for a de minimis
exception in that context.\108\ Commenters also suggested that firms
that receive less than 5% of orders from institutions should be exempt
from requirements to provide disclosures for institutional orders, both
at the individual investor level and in the aggregate.\109\ One
commenter stated that the de minimis threshold should be set at 5% of
not held orders received.\110\ Two commenters noted that there
currently is a 5% threshold in Rule 606(a) in connection with the
rule's requirement that broker-dealers disclose the identity of any
venue to which 5% or more of non-directed orders were routed for
execution.\111\ One of these commenters stated that the purpose of a de
minimis exception is to provide relief so that reporting obligations
for a given entity more closely match its actual core business and
targeted customer profile.\112\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ See, e.g., FIF Letter at 5, 10; STA Letter at 6; Citadel
Letter at 3.
\108\ See, e.g., FIF Letter at 5, 10; STA Letter II at 2;
Citadel Letter at 3; Thomson Reuters Letter at 1; Ameritrade Letter
at 2.
\109\ See STA Letter II at 2; Ameritrade Letter at 2; Wells
Fargo Letter at 5. See also Letter from Jeff Brown, Senior Vice
President, Legislative and Regulatory Affairs, Charles Schwab & Co.
Inc., dated October 30, 2018 (``Schwab Letter II'').
\110\ See Schwab Letter II at 2.
\111\ See Ameritrade Letter at 2; Wells Fargo Letter at 5.
\112\ See Wells Fargo Letter at 5. See also Letter from Stephen
John Berger, Managing Director, Government and Regulatory Policy,
Citadel Securities, dated October 23, 2018 (``Citadel Letter II'')
at 1-2 (noting that the 5% threshold suggested by other commenters
should ensure that smaller broker dealers are not adversely affected
by the new disclosure requirement, and noting that a threshold based
on a percentage of orders or shares received could potentially be
set lower than a threshold based on a percentage of executed
shares).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters stated that the costs incurred by retail broker-
dealers to create systems to generate the Rule 606(b)(3) reports would
exceed any benefits.\113\ One of these commenters stated that the Rule
606(b)(3) statistics are not relevant to retail-oriented brokers'
customer base and would provide them no added benefit, and that
requiring retail broker-dealers to generate the statistics would be an
onerous task with significant added expense.\114\ Two commenters
recommended an exemption from Rule 606(b)(3) reporting for firms with a
de minimis amount of not held order flow in light of the fact that
retail customers occasionally submit not held orders.\115\ One
commenter believed that, if broker-dealers with a de minimis amount of
not held orders are exempted, the majority of the exemptions would be
for retail brokers.\116\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ See Ameritrade Letter at 2; Citadel Letter at 3; FIF
Letter at 5, 10.
\114\ See FIF Letter at 5. See also Markit Letter at 17.
\115\ See Thomson Reuters Letter at 1; Schwab Letter at 3.
\116\ See STA Letter at 8-9.
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Other commenters did not support a de minimis exception even if a
broker-dealer has limited institutional customer order flow, so that
institutional customers can compare order routing among all broker-
dealers.\117\ One commenter stated that, if a small broker-dealer is
able to effectively manage orders from institutional customers in the
current complex market environment, it should be able to provide
customers with information on their order routing practices.\118\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\117\ See, e.g., Bloomberg Letter at 15; MFA Letter at 4-5. See
also Markit Letter at 28.
\118\ See Capital Group Letter at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that a de minimis exception from Rule
606(b)(3) reporting, as set forth in Rule 606(b)(4), presents
advantages for certain broker-dealers. Broker-dealers handle different
types of order flow, and not all broker-dealers handle a significant
amount of not held NMS stock order flow. Indeed, some broker-dealers
focus mainly on servicing customers that use held orders in NMS stock,
and as such, typically do not handle not held order flow in NMS stock.
The Commission believes that it is appropriate to relieve broker-
dealers with minimal or zero not held order flow from the obligation to
incur the costs associated with having the capability to provide the
new Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures for not held NMS stock orders. The
Commission does not believe that it would be appropriate to require
every broker-dealer, regardless of its customer base and core business,
to be compelled to incur the costs required to create the systems and
processes necessary to generate the Rule 606(b)(3) reports. The
Commission does not intend to introduce a wholesale change in order
handling and routing disclosure requirements such that broker-dealers
whose order flow consists almost entirely of held orders must also
become prepared to provide disclosures that focus on trading activity
characteristics of not held orders.
In the Commission's view, the potential benefits of the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures for customers of such broker-dealers do not
justify the costs to such broker-dealers of developing the necessary
systems and mechanisms for providing the disclosures. There would be no
expected benefits of Rule 606(b)(3) in circumstances where a broker-
dealer does not currently handle any not held NMS stock order flow.
Nevertheless, absent a de minimis exception, such a broker-dealer could
feel compelled to incur the costs and burdens associated with being
able to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures in order to ensure
compliance with the rule should it receive not held orders in the
future. The Commission believes that it is appropriate to relieve any
such broker-dealers of these potential costs and unnecessary burdens.
Likewise, there would be only limited benefits of Rule 606(b)(3) in
circumstances where broker-dealers handle a minimal amount of not held
orders, and the Commission does not believe that such benefits would
justify the costs to broker-dealers in these circumstances. While some
commenters opposed a de minimis exemption on grounds that institutional
customers should be able to compare orders across all broker-dealers
and that broker-dealers capable of handling institutional customer
orders should be able to provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
[[Page 58348]]
information,\119\ the Commission believes that these comments rest on
an unlikely premise that it is broker-dealers that handle primarily
institutional customer orders that would be excepted under Rule
606(b)(4). To the contrary, consistent with other commenters'
views,\120\ the Commission expects the de minimis exceptions to be
relevant mainly in the context of broker-dealers that handle almost
entirely held orders from customers but may occasionally handle not
held orders from customers. Indeed, commenters noted that a small
percentage of retail customers may submit not held orders, whether for
purposes of working an order in illiquid securities or for other
purposes. In these circumstances, the Commission believes that broker-
dealers that focus on servicing such customers should not be required
to incur the costs or burdens associated with building the systems and
other capabilities necessary to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures
when they are likely to handle not held orders only occasionally and
separate from their core business of handling held orders.\121\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ See MFA Letter at 4-5; Capital Group Letter at 4.
\120\ See, e.g., Ameritrade Letter at 2; Citadel Letter at 3.
\121\ See Wells Fargo Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, the firm-level de minimis exception to Rule 606(b)(3),
as expressed in Rule 606(b)(4), focuses on the broker-dealer's overall
order flow across all of its customers. The Commission believes that
the scope of this exception will appropriately cover most broker-
dealers that handle almost entirely held order flow. A broker-dealer
that handles not held NMS stock order flow that is less than 5% of the
total shares of NMS stock orders in a six calendar month period that it
receives from its customers most likely does not make, as a matter of
course, the routing decisions for which Rule 606(b)(3) is designed to
provide enhanced transparency. 95% or more of such a broker-dealer's
NMS stock order flow would be held orders. The Commission does not
believe that it is appropriate to require such a broker-dealer to
expend the effort and incur the expense necessary to be able to provide
disclosures that are primarily aimed at order handling that is rarely,
if ever, employed by the broker-dealer.
The Commission is adopting a firm-level de minimis exception that
is based on the ``percentage of shares of not held orders in NMS stocks
the broker or dealer received from its customers'' (emphasis added)
rather than the percentage of not held orders in NMS stocks or other
measures suggested by commenters.\122\ The purpose of the firm-level de
minimis exception is to except from the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosure
requirements those broker-dealers that receive zero or minimal not held
NMS stock order flow from their customers and whose core business does
not involve handling or routing such order flow. The Commission
believes that the percentage of shares of not held orders is an
appropriate measure for the calculation of the firm-level de minimis
exception because it more accurately reflects the nature of a broker-
dealer's business activities than other suggested approaches.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ See, e.g., Schwab Letter II at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The other methods that commenters suggested for calculating a firm-
level de minimis threshold--e.g., based on the percentage of not held
orders (not shares) in NMS stocks--are in the Commission's view less
accurate indicia of the broker-dealers to whom this aspect of Rule 606
is intended to apply and therefore would result in a less tailored
exception. For example, the use of a ``per order'' threshold for the
firm-wide de minimis exception would result in the equal treatment for
purposes of a firm's de minimis calculation of, on the one hand, a
single order for 10 shares of Corporation X, and on the other hand, a
single order for 100,000 shares of Corporation X. The Commission
believes that in this example, the two orders should not be afforded
equal treatment and that the order for 100,000 shares is more
indicative of the broker-dealer's business and thus should be given
greater weight than the order for 10 shares.
Indeed, in the aforementioned example, the broker-dealer would
likely need to apply more discretion when executing the order for
100,000 shares (to minimize potential information leakage and price
impact) than for an order for 10 shares. As discussed above, the new
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures are intended to provide customers with
detailed information concerning how broker-dealers exercise discretion,
particularly for larger orders (including those broken up into several
smaller child orders). Thus, if the firm-level de minimis threshold
were calculated in a manner that did not account for shares received,
there would be greater risk that a broker-dealer exercising discretion
in handling larger orders, potentially as a meaningful portion of its
business, would not be subject to the new Rule 606(b)(3) disclosure
requirement.
As noted below, Commission supplemental staff analysis found that
among 342 broker-dealers that receive not held orders from customers,
about 8% (28 broker-dealers) would receive a de minimis exception from
Rule 606(b)(3) requirements pursuant to Rule 606(b)(4).\123\ 23 of the
28 broker-dealers that would be eligible for the de minimis exception
receive not held orders less than 2.5% of the total shares of their
orders in the sample and five of the 28 broker-dealers receive not held
orders greater or equal to 2.5% and less than 5% of the total shares of
their orders in the sample.\124\ Thus, the 5% threshold in Rule
606(b)(4) creates a narrow exception from Rule 606(b)(3) among broker-
dealers that receive not held orders from customers and would allow for
a reasonably small increase in not held order flow as a percentage of
total order flow before one of these broker-dealers would be subject to
the requirements of Rule 606(b)(3). Those broker-dealers covered by the
exception likely handle not held NMS stock order flow only occasionally
and separate from their core business, and therefore, in the
Commission's view, should not be subject to the requirements of Rule
606(b)(3). In addition, some commenters that supported a firm-level de
minimis exception specifically suggested that the threshold be set at
the 5% level.\125\ Accordingly, the Commission believes that the 5%
threshold for the firm-level de minimis exception is reasonable given
the goals of the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ See infra Section V.C.1.a.ii.
\124\ See id.
\125\ See supra note 109.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A broker-dealer is covered by the firm-level de minimis exception
as long as its customer not held NMS stock order flow continues to be
less than the 5% firm-level threshold. A broker-dealer is no longer
excepted from the purview of Rule 606(b)(3) once and as long as it
meets or surpasses the firm-level threshold of the de minimis
exception. Specifically, when a broker-dealer has equaled or exceeded
the firm-level threshold, it must comply with Rule 606(b)(3) for at
least six calendar months (``Compliance Period'') regardless of the
volume of not held NMS stock orders the broker-dealer receives from its
customers during the Compliance Period.\126\ Therefore, during the
Compliance Period, the broker-dealer must provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
report to a customer for any of the customer's not held NMS stock
orders submitted to the broker-dealer during the Compliance Period
(subject to the customer-level de minimis exception set forth in Rule
606(b)(5)). The Compliance Period begins the first
[[Page 58349]]
calendar day of the next calendar month immediately following the end
of the six calendar month period for which the broker-dealer equaled or
exceeded the firm-level threshold, unless it is the first time the
broker-dealer has equaled or exceeded the threshold.\127\ The first
time a broker-dealer equals or exceeds the firm-level threshold, there
is a grace period of three calendar months before the Compliance Period
begins and the broker-dealer must comply with Rule 606(b)(3)
requirements.\128\ The customer is not entitled to receive Rule
606(b)(3) reports for orders handled during the grace period, as the
grace period is not part of the Compliance Period. After the three
calendar month grace period, beginning the first calendar day of the
fourth calendar month after the end of the six calendar month period
for which the broker-dealer equaled or exceeded the firm-level
threshold, the broker-dealer must provide the Rule 606(b)(3) report
prospectively for not held NMS stock orders submitted by customers from
that date through the next six calendar months.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\126\ See Rule 606(b)(4).
\127\ See id.
\128\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that the limited three-month grace period
is appropriate because it will allow a firm time to come into
compliance with the Rule 606(b)(3) requirements when its not held NMS
stock order flow crosses the Rule 606(b)(4) firm-level de minimis
threshold for the first time. The grace period affords a broker-dealer
time to develop the systems and processes and organize the resources
necessary to generate the Rule 606(b)(3) reports. At the same time,
should such a broker-dealer subsequently fall below the de minimis
threshold, the Commission believes that no such grace period for Rule
606(b)(3) is necessary if and when that broker-dealer's not held NMS
stock order flow again meets or crosses the firm-level de minimis
threshold such that the broker-dealer is again subject to the Rule
606(b)(3) requirements. The broker-dealer should already have developed
the necessary systems and processes for providing the Rule 606(b)(3)
report in connection with its subjection to Rule 606(b)(3).\129\
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\129\ A broker-dealer whose not held NMS stock order flow from
its customers equals or exceeds the five percent threshold must be
able to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) reports to its customers
beginning on the compliance date for these rule amendments. As such,
broker-dealers will need to determine whether their customer not
held NMS stock order flow equaled or exceeded the 5% threshold for
the six calendar month period that ends in the calendar month that
includes the effective date of these rule amendments. Since the
compliance date for these rule amendments is 180 days after
publication in the Federal Register, and since the effective date is
60 days after Federal Register publication, broker-dealers that
equaled or exceeded the 5% threshold during the six calendar month
period ending in the calendar month that includes the effective date
will have nearly four months between the effective date and
compliance date to prepare to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 606(b)(4) requires compliance with Rule 606(b)(3) for ``at
least'' six calendar months for a broker-dealer that equals or exceeds
the firm-level de minimis threshold. The Commission believes that it is
appropriate to require a minimum Compliance Period of six calendar
months in order to coincide with the six-month timeframe of Rule
606(b)(3). Customers of a broker-dealer that is or becomes subject to
Rule 606(b)(3) therefore will be able to request a Rule 606(b)(3)
report that contains at least one full time period of disclosures
contemplated by Rule 606(b)(3).\130\ There is no maximum period of time
that a broker-dealer may be subject to Rule 606(b)(3)--a broker-dealer
that consistently receives not held NMS stock orders from its customers
at a rate that equals or exceeds the 5% threshold will be required to
comply with Rule 606(b)(3) month after month. Rule 606(b)(4) is
designed to require broker-dealer compliance with Rule 606(b)(3) for as
long as the broker-dealer's not held NMS stock order flow from its
customers equals or exceeds the 5% threshold, subject to the minimum
Compliance Period of six calendar months.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\130\ As noted above, a broker-dealer is not required to provide
the Rule 606(b)(3) report for orders received when the broker-dealer
was not subject to Rule 606(b)(3). So, for example, a broker-dealer
that is subject to Rule 606(b)(3) as of June 1 would be required to
provide the Rule 606(b)(3) information for not held NMS stock orders
received from a customer on June 1 through at least November 30 of
that calendar year (subject to the customer-level de minimis
exception and a three-month grace period if first time the firm is
required to provide a report pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3)). A customer
could request a Rule 606(b)(3) report prior to the end of that
period, but the report would only be required to include disclosures
as of June 1 (if there is no three-month grace period).
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Rule 606(b)(4) also is designed to enable a broker-dealer that is
subject to Rule 606(b)(3) for six calendar months (or longer)
subsequently to avail itself of the firm-level de minimis exception if
its not held NMS stock order flow no longer equals or exceeds the 5%
threshold. Specifically, under Rule 606(b)(4), if, at any time after
the end of the Compliance Period, the broker-dealer's not held NMS
stock order flow falls below the 5% threshold for the prior six
calendar months, the broker-dealer is not required to comply with Rule
606(b)(3), except with respect to orders received during the Compliance
Period.\131\ Thus, after the broker-dealer's initial Compliance Period,
Rule 606(b)(4) provides for a rolling month-to-month assessment of
whether the broker-dealer must continue to comply with Rule 606(b)(3)
or may avail itself of the Rule 606(b)(4) de minimis exception.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\131\ See Rule 606(b)(4). An example is set forth in the
paragraph below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For example, suppose a broker-dealer has equaled or exceeded the
firm-level threshold and therefore must comply with Rule 606(b)(3) for
a six calendar month period that begins on January 1 and ends on June
30 (assuming this Compliance Period started after a three-month grace
period, if this was the first time the broker-dealer has had to comply
with Rule 606(b)(3)). If, in the beginning of July, the broker-dealer
determines that its not held NMS stock order flow equaled or exceeded
the threshold for January 1 through June 30, the broker-dealer must
continue to comply with Rule 606(b)(3) for July. If, on the other hand,
the broker-dealer determines that its not held NMS stock order flow was
below the 5% threshold for January 1 through June, the broker-dealer
would not be required to comply with Rule 606(b)(3) for July 1 through
July 31. In the beginning of August, the broker-dealer would determine
if it is subject to Rule 606(b)(3) based on its order flow for the
prior six calendar month period, which this time would be the period
from February 1 through July 31. If the broker-dealer met the threshold
for that six calendar month period, and had also met it for the period
January 1 through June 30 such that it was required to comply with Rule
606(b)(3) for July, the broker-dealer would be required to continue
complying with Rule 606(b)(3) through August. If the broker-dealer met
the threshold for the February 1 through July 31 period but had not met
it for the January 1 through June 30 period and was not required to
comply with Rule 606(b)(3) for July, the broker-dealer would start a
new Compliance Period that would run from August 1 through January 31
of the following calendar year. In this scenario, the broker-dealer
would be required to provide Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures for not held
NMS stock orders received from a customer during the prior six calendar
months, except for any such orders that the broker-dealer received
during July when the broker-dealer was not required to provide reports
pursuant to Rule 606(b)(3).
Table A below contains an example of a broker-dealer firm that
meets or exceeds the 5% de minimis threshold
[[Page 58350]]
for the first time and enters a six-month Compliance Period after a
three-month grace period. Table A below also reflects that, after the
initial six-month Compliance Period, the broker-dealer's required
compliance with Rule 606(b)(3) continues on a rolling month-to-month
basis. Table B below contains an example where there is no grace period
and a previously compliant broker-dealer firm begins a new Compliance
Period after an intervening period of not meeting the 5% threshold.
Table A--Firm Equals or Exceeds 5% Threshold for the First Time
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Period examined for
Event qualifying threshold Obligation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Firm determines in Jan. 2020 July 1-Dec. 31, 2019 Prepare to collect
that it equaled/exceeded and report required
threshold for first time; data for Compliance
grace period begins. Period beginning
Apr. 1, 2020.
On Apr. 1, 2020, grace Reporting is Begin collection of
period ends and six-month mandatory during required data for
Compliance Period begins. Compliance Period orders received
regardless of during Compliance
whether threshold Period.
is equaled or
exceeded in prior
six calendar months.
May 2020.................... .................... Provide reports for
Apr. 1 to Apr. 30,
2020
June 2020................... .................... Provide reports for
Apr. 1 to May 31,
2020 (continue
adding prior
month's data to
report each
successive month of
the Compliance
Period).
Initial Compliance Period .................... Provide reports for
ends on Sept. 30, 2020. full Compliance
Period, Apr. 1 to
Sept. 30, 2020
(Sept. data not
required to be
provided before 7th
business day of
Oct.).
On Oct. 1, firm determines Apr. 1 to Sept. 30, Provide reports for
that it equaled/exceed 2020. May 1 to Oct. 31,
threshold; Compliance 2020.
Period extends through Oct.
31, 2020.
On Nov. 1, firm determines May 1 to Oct. 31, Provide reports for
that it equaled/exceed 2020. June 1 to Nov. 30,
threshold; Compliance 2020.
Period extends through Nov.
30, 2020.
Continue assessing, on a Prior six calendar Provide reports for
rolling basis, whether months, on a prior six month
equal/exceed threshold for rolling basis. period as long as
prior six month period. threshold continues
to be met.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table B--Previously Compliant Firm Equals or Exceeds 5% Threshold After
Intervening Period of not Meeting Threshold
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Period examined for
Event qualifying threshold Obligation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Firm determines in Jan. 2020 July 1 to Dec. 31, Begin collection of
that it equaled/exceeded 5% 2019. required data for
threshold (not for the orders received
first time); six-month during Compliance
Compliance Period begins Period.
Jan. 1, 2020.
Six-month Compliance Period Reporting is Provide reports for
ends on June 30, 2020. mandatory during full Compliance
Compliance Period Period, Jan. 1 to
regardless of June 30, 2020 (June
whether threshold data not required
is equaled or to be provided
exceeded in prior before 7th business
six calendar months. day of July).
Firm determines in July 2020 Jan. 1 to June 30, Firm not required to
that it did not equal/ 2020. collect or report
exceed threshold; data for July 2020
Compliance Period not but must continue
extended. to provide reports
for prior
Compliance Period,
Jan. 1 to June 30,
2020.
Firm determines in Aug. 2020 Feb. 1 to July 31, Begin collection of
that it equaled/exceeded 2020. required data for
threshold; new Compliance orders received
Period begins. during new
Compliance Period,
Aug.-Jan. 31, 2021;
provide reports for
portion of prior
six months that is
covered by a
Compliance Period,
i.e., Feb. 1 to
June 30, 2020 (July
2020 not within
Compliance Period).
Oct. 2020................... Reporting is Provide reports for
mandatory during Apr. 1 to June 30,
Compliance Period 2020; Aug. 1 to
regardless of Sept. 30, 2020.
whether threshold
is equaled or
exceeded in prior
six calendar months.
Six-month Compliance Period .................... Provide reports for
ends on Jan. 31, 2021. Aug. 1, 2020 to
Jan. 31, 2021 (Jan.
2021 data not
required to be
provided before 7th
business day of
Feb. 2021).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The other de minimis exception to Rule 606(b)(3) focuses on each
customer's order flow.\132\ Whereas the firm-level de minimis exception
is designed to relieve mainly broker-dealers that do not regularly
handle not
[[Page 58351]]
held orders of the Rule 606(b)(3) obligations, the customer-level
exception is designed to relieve broker-dealers from the obligation to
provide the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to particular customers that do
not trade NMS stocks in a manner that generally relies on a broker-
dealer's use of discretion over order routing and handling.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\132\ See Rule 606(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission expects that the benefits of the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures will accrue mainly for customers that trade regularly with
significant levels of not held NMS stock order flow. The new customer-
specific order handling disclosures are intended to provide such
customers with insight into how their brokers exercise order handling
discretion over a period of time. In order to accurately reflect a
broker's order handling behavior, the customer-specific disclosures
must contain ample order data. The Commission believes that $1,000,000
of notional value traded on average each month for the prior six months
is a level of order flow that would allow for meaningful order handling
disclosures. A Rule 606(b)(3) report covering a customer's prior six
months of trading activity would include at least $6 million worth of
the customer's trades. The Commission believes that such a sample of
trading activity would be large enough to not be misleadingly colored
by one-off or infrequent routing choices by the broker-dealer or order
handling requests by the customer. Therefore, such a sample size would
provide the customer with an accurate and reliable depiction of how its
broker-dealer generally handles its not held NMS stock order flow.
The Commission also believes that the customer-level de minimis
threshold is set at a sufficiently low level such that the exception
captures customers that do not trade regularly or in significant
quantity and who would not therefore realize the benefits of the rule.
Based on the Commission's experience and understanding of the frequency
and quantities in which various market participants tend to trade, the
Commission believes that this threshold is a relatively low one for
more active traders, including customers that have an interest in
evaluating their broker-dealers' order handling services, but high
enough such that the exception will capture customers that trade
infrequently or in small quantities and for whom the detailed Rule
606(b)(3) report would not be warranted or meaningful. Indeed,
customers that trade on average each month for the prior six months
less than $1,000,000 of notional value of not held orders through the
broker-dealer are not likely to require the more complex order handling
tools offered by the broker-dealer that would warrant or make
meaningful a detailed review of the broker-dealer's order handling
decisions. Even if a customer is sufficiently sophisticated to utilize
not held orders and analyze the Rule 606(b)(3) information, unless the
customer submits not held orders to a degree that generates a
meaningful sample of order handling and routing data, the Rule
606(b)(3) report will not provide a reliable basis for assessing the
broker-dealer's activity.
In addition, as discussed below,\133\ part of the reason why the
Rule 606(b)(3) information is provided in the aggregate for all orders
sent to each venue, and not on an order-by-order basis, is to protect
broker-dealers from potentially disclosing sensitive or proprietary
information regarding their order handling techniques. If the rule
allowed customers to request the disclosures for discrete not held
orders or a de minimis level of not held order flow, there would be
heightened risk that customers could gain insight into the broker-
dealer's order handling techniques by perhaps reverse engineering how
the broker-dealer handled a particular order. A broker-dealer's
internal process for determining how to handle and route individual
orders--such as, for example, the specific routing destinations chosen
and the timing for sending child orders--is typically highly sensitive
and proprietary information that broker-dealers guard closely. By
requiring the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures only for non-de minimis levels
of not held trading activity, the customer-level de minimis exception
helps ensure that the aggregated information provided under Rule
606(b)(3) reflects a robust amount of trading activity from which a
customer is unable to glean this sensitive or proprietary information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\133\ See infra Section III.A.6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While broker-dealers may, by rule, be excepted from Rule 606(b)(3)
due to the firm-level de minimis exception, or excepted from providing
the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to certain customers due to the
customer-level de minimis exception, the Commission notes that some
broker-dealers, for business reasons, may choose to provide the new
customer-specific order handling disclosures to their customers
regardless of the de minimis exceptions and that customers below the
customer-level de minimis threshold could move their order flow to such
firms.
v. Orders for the Account of a Broker-Dealer
As noted above, the Commission's proposed definition of
institutional order explicitly excluded orders for the account of a
broker-dealer, and such orders were not covered by proposed Rule
606(b)(3). Consistent with what was proposed, Rule 606(b)(3), as
adopted, does not apply to orders from broker-dealers. Some commenters
argued that orders for the account of a broker-dealer should be
included in the order handling reports required under Rule 606 and,
therefore, such orders should not be excluded from the proposed
definition of institutional order in Rule 600(b).\134\ The Commission
understands these comments to pertain to the proper scope of a broker-
dealer's reporting obligations under Rule 606(b)(3), and as such they
are discussed in detail in Section III.A.3, infra. As discussed in
Section III.A.3, infra, the Commission continues to believe that the
scope of a broker-dealer's obligation under Rule 606(b)(3) properly
does not extend to orders placed by a broker-dealer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\134\ See Markit Letter at 3 n.6, 18; Dash Letter at 1, 4-5; FIF
Letter at 2, 8, 16-17; SIFMA Letter at 1, 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
vi. Rule 606(b)(1)
To incorporate new Rule 606(b)(3) into the existing regulatory
structure, the Commission must make corresponding revisions to Rule
606(b)(1), which is the pre-existing customer-specific order routing
disclosure rule. Prior to today, Rule 606(b)(1) did not differentiate
between NMS stock orders from customers submitted on a held or not held
basis. As a result, absent amendment to Rule 606(b)(1), not held orders
in NMS stock that are covered by Rule 606(b)(3) also would be covered
by Rule 606(b)(1). This is not the Commission's intent. As discussed
above, the Commission is requiring Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures to be
available for not held NMS stock orders, subject to two de minimis
exceptions. For held NMS stock orders, or for instances when a de
minimis exception would except a broker-dealer from providing Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures, the existing disclosure requirements of Rule
606(b)(1) would apply.
The Commission is amending Rule 606(b)(1) to require a broker-
dealer, upon customer request, to provide the disclosures set forth in
Rule 606(b)(1) for orders in NMS stock that are submitted on a held
basis, and for orders in NMS stock that are submitted on a not held
basis and for which the
[[Page 58352]]
broker-dealer is not required to provide the customer a report under
Rule 606(b)(3).\135\ As a result, any NMS stock order from a customer
triggers Rule 606(b) order handling disclosure requirements. This is
consistent with the Commission's stated intent in the Proposal for all
orders in NMS stock routed by broker-dealers for their customers to be
encompassed by order routing disclosure rules regardless of order
size.\136\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\135\ See Rule 606(b)(1). Rule 606(b)(1) also requires a broker-
dealer to provide the disclosures for orders (whether held or not
held) in NMS securities that are option contracts. As explained
above (see supra note 83), the Commission is not altering Rule
606(b)'s application to orders for NMS securities that are option
contracts, and so the adopted amendments to Rule 606(b)(1) continue
the rule's prior application to option contract orders.
\136\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49445.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because there is no dollar-value threshold in Rule 606(b) as
adopted, there are two categories of NMS stock orders that would have
been covered by Rule 606(b)(3) under the Proposal but instead are
covered by Rule 606(b)(1) under the adopted approach. First, a
customer's held NMS stock order that has a market value of at least
$200,000 will be covered by the Rule 606(b)(1) disclosures (and, as
discussed below, the Rule 606(a) public disclosures) whereas, under the
Proposal, such an order would have been covered by the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures.\137\ As discussed above,\138\ because broker-dealers must
attempt to execute held NMS stock orders immediately and have no price
or time routing discretion with such orders, the Commission does not
believe that the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures are appropriate for such
orders, even if they are for $200,000 or more. Indeed, as explained
supra and infra,\139\ the Commission's concerns with respect to broker-
dealer handling of held NMS stock orders relate mainly to financial
inducements to attract held order flow from broker-dealers, and those
concerns persist regardless of the size of the held order. Held NMS
stock orders of any dollar value should therefore be covered by
disclosures designed to provide more transparency into such financial
inducements and the potential conflicts of interest faced by broker-
dealers which, as discussed infra, is what the enhancements to Rule
606(a) in particular are designed to achieve.\140\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\137\ Conversely, a customer's not held order in NMS stock that
has a market value less than $200,000 will be covered by the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures whereas, under the Proposal, such an order
would have been covered by the Rule 606(b)(1) disclosures (and the
Rule 606(a) public disclosures). The Commission believes this is the
proper result for the reasons set forth supra in Section III.A.1.b.
\138\ See supra Section III.A.1.b.iii.
\139\ See id.; see also infra Section III.B.1.b.
\140\ See infra Section III.B.1.b.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, compared to the Proposal, a not held NMS stock order for at
least $200,000 that is from a customer that does not meet the customer-
level de minimis threshold or that the customer submits to a broker-
dealer that qualifies for the firm-level de minimis exception will be
covered by Rule 606(b)(1) whereas, under the Proposal, any not held NMS
stock order for at least $200,000 would have been covered by Rule
606(b)(3). The Commission believes that it is the appropriate result
for Rule 606(b)(3) not to apply to such an order and for Rule 606(b)(1)
to apply instead. As discussed above,\141\ the firm-level de minimis
exception in Rule 606(b)(4) targets broker-dealers that mainly handle
customer held orders but may occasionally handle a not held order from
one of their customers. The Commission believes that such a broker-
dealer should be entitled to the relief from Rule 606(b)(3) provided by
the firm-level de minimis exception if it receives a large not held NMS
stock order, including one that is for $200,000 or more, yet still does
not receive aggregate not held NMS stock order flow that exceeds the
firm-level de minimis threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ See infra Section III.A.1.b.iv.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that, in most cases, a customer that trades
in NMS stock order dollar values of $200,000 or more and is
sufficiently sophisticated to utilize not held orders, will also be
sufficiently sophisticated to submit such orders to broker-dealers that
are not excepted from Rule 606(b)(3) by the firm-level de minimis
exception, should the customer desire the Rule 606(b)(3) information
(and meet or surpass the customer-level de minimis threshold). In
addition, as discussed above, the customer-level de minimis exception
targets customers whose trading activity is not substantial enough to
provide a sample of data that would accurately and reliably reflect a
broker-dealer's order handling behavior and make the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures meaningful. Thus, should a customer that submits a not held
NMS stock order for $200,000 or more not meet the customer-level de
minimis threshold (a scenario that the Commission believes is unlikely
to occur in most cases), the Commission believes that Rule 606(b)(1) is
the appropriate recourse for the customer regardless of the dollar
value of any of the customer's individual orders. If requested, the
Rule 606(b)(1) disclosures provide the customer with information as to
the venues to which its orders were routed, whether the orders were
directed or non-directed, and the time of any transactions that
resulted from the orders. The Commission believes that these
disclosures provide information that is more meaningful in light of the
overall extent to which the customer trades, and are sufficient to
provide a basis for the customer to engage in further discussions with
its broker-dealer regarding the broker-dealer's order handling
practices.
vii. Definitions of ``Directed Order'' and ``Non-Directed Order''
The Commission is adopting revised definitions of the terms
``directed order'' \142\ and ``non-directed order'' \143\ under Rule
600(b). These terms are used throughout Rule 606. They are referenced
in Rule 606(a) and Rule 606(b)(1) and, as discussed infra,\144\ are
referenced in new Rule 606(b)(3). Therefore, these terms are being
defined compatibly with Rule 606 as amended, which as adopted does not
distinguish between NMS stock orders based on order dollar value.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\142\ A directed order is a customer order that the customer
specifically instructed the broker-dealer to route to a particular
venue for execution. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(19).
\143\ A non-directed order is any customer order other than a
directed order. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(48).
\144\ See Section III.A.5.b.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, Rule 600(b) prior to these amendments defines the
terms directed order and non-directed order in reference to a
``customer order,'' and the term ``customer order'' includes a $200,000
dollar value threshold for NMS stock orders that the Commission is not
incorporating into Rule 606 as amended. Thus, the Commission is
removing the reference to ``customer order'' from the definitions of
``directed order'' and ``non-directed order'' to eliminate the $200,000
dollar-value threshold for NMS stock orders incorporated into those
terms. Accordingly, as amended, the term ``directed order'' means an
order from a customer that the customer specifically instructed the
broker-dealer to route to a particular venue for execution, and the
term ``non-directed order'' means any order from a customer other than
a directed order.\145\ By eliminating the term ``customer order'' and
instead referring to ``an order from a customer,'' these amended
definitions do not incorporate the dollar value limitations in the
definition of the term ``customer order.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\145\ See Rules 600(b)(20) and 600(b)(49).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Otherwise, however, the amended definitions of ``directed order''
and
[[Page 58353]]
``non-directed order'' are consistent with the pre-existing
definitions. While the amended definitions eliminate the previously
existing order dollar value limitation in the cross-referenced term
``customer order,'' they maintain the pre-existing definitions'
exclusion of orders from a broker-dealer. In this regard, the
Commission notes that the amended definitions of ``directed order'' and
``non-directed order'' continue to incorporate the term ``customer,''
which is defined in Rule 600(b) as any person that is not a broker-
dealer.\146\ Thus, the defined terms ``directed order'' and ``non-
directed order,'' as amended, apply only to orders that are from a
person that is not a broker-dealer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\146\ See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(16).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Definition of Actionable Indication of Interest
a. Proposal
To further facilitate the updated order handling disclosure regime,
the Commission proposed to amend Rule 600 to include a definition of
``actionable indication of interest.'' \147\ Specifically, the
Commission proposed that, under proposed Rule 600(b)(1) of Regulation
NMS, an actionable IOI be defined as ``any indication of interest that
explicitly or implicitly conveys all of the following information with
respect to any order available at the venue sending the indication of
interest: (1) Symbol; (2) side (buy or sell); (3) a price that is equal
to or better than the national best bid for buy orders and the national
best offer for sell orders; and (4) a size that is at least equal to
one round lot.'' \148\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\147\ See proposed Rule 600(b)(1). As the Commission indicated
in 2009, an actionable IOI is a privately transmitted message by
certain trading centers, such as an ATS or an internalizing broker-
dealer, to selected market participants to attract immediately
executable order flow to such trading centers, and functions in some
respects similarly to a displayed order or a quotation. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 60997 (November 13, 2009), 74 FR
61208, 61210 (November 23, 2009) (``Regulation of Non-Public Trading
Interest Proposing Release'').
\148\ See proposed Rule 600(b)(1). See also Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49445-49447 for additional detail on the
Commission's proposal. As noted in the Proposing Release, this
definition is based on and substantively similar to the Commission's
description of actionable IOIs in the Regulation of Non-Public
Trading Proposing Release in 2009. See Regulation of Non-Public
Trading Interest Proposing Release, supra note 147.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is adopting as proposed the definition of actionable
indication of interest under Rule 600(b)(1) of Regulation NMS.\149\
Accordingly, under final Rule 600(b)(1), actionable IOI means any
indication of interest that explicitly or implicitly conveys all of the
following information with respect to any order available at the venue
sending the indication of interest: (1) Symbol; (2) side (buy or sell);
(3) a price that is equal to or better than the national best bid for
buy orders and the national best offer for sell orders; and (4) a size
that is at least equal to one round lot.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\149\ See Rule 600(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By defining actionable IOIs in this manner, the Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling reporting requirements mandate that a broker-dealer
disclose its activity communicating to external liquidity providers for
them to send an order to the broker-dealer in response to a not held
NMS stock order of a customer of the broker-dealer. The Commission
continues to believe that including these disclosures relating to
actionable IOI activity in the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling reports
would better enable customers to understand and evaluate how broker-
dealers handle their orders, in particular with respect to the
potential for information leakage stemming from broker-dealers' use of
actionable IOIs. The Commission also continues to believe that the
definition of actionable IOI is appropriately designed to capture
trading interest that is the functional equivalent to an order or
quotation.
Commenters generally supported the creation of a definition of
actionable IOI in Rule 600(b), but some commenters expressed concerns
about and suggested revisions to the Commission's proposed
definition.\150\ One of the main concerns was that it was not
sufficiently clear from the Proposal what it means for an IOI to be
``actionable.'' \151\ In this regard, some commenters suggested that
the proposed definition could be read to capture conditional orders or
IOIs that require additional negotiation or ``firming up'' to be
executable by the broker-dealer,\152\ and several commenters asserted
that such conditional trading interest is distinguishable from an
actionable IOI and therefore should be excluded from the definition of
actionable IOI and the disclosures required by Rule 606.\153\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\150\ See, e.g., Fidelity Letter at 3-4; FIF Letter at 7;
Bloomberg Letter at 13-15; SIFMA Letter at 6.
\151\ See, e.g., FSR Letter at 2, 6-7; Bloomberg Letter at 13-
14; FIF Letter at 7; HMA Letter at 10. One of these commenters
stated that broker-dealer order routers respond to IOIs but do not
send them, and that the inclusion of IOIs in the Proposal appeared
out of context with order routing transparency. See Bloomberg Letter
at 13. This is not consistent with the Commission's understanding,
which, as noted in the Proposing Release, is that broker-dealers may
send an actionable IOI to select external liquidity providers to
communicate to send orders to the broker-dealer to trade with the
order that is represented by the actionable IOI at the broker-
dealer. See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49453; see also
Section III.A.6.a, infra.
\152\ See FSR Letter at 2, 6-7; Fidelity Letter at 4; Letter
from Timothy J. Mahoney, Chief Executive Officer, BIDS Trading L.P.,
dated October 7, 2016 (``BIDS Letter'').
\153\ See Markit Letter at 4, 12-13; Bloomberg Letter at 14;
BIDS Letter; SIFMA Letter at 6; EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations,
supra note 16, at 3. One commenter stated that, absent
clarification, the Proposing Release's definition of actionable IOIs
would be inconsistent with the Commission's published understanding
of conditional orders in the ATS-N Proposing Release. See BIDS
Letter at 4. The clarification, set forth below, of the difference
between actionable IOIs versus IOIs or conditional orders that
require additional agreement of the broker-dealer responsible for
the IOI or conditional order before an execution can take place is
consistent with what is stated in the ATS-N Adopting Release. See
ATS-N Adopting Release, supra note 2, at 38847-38848.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated above and in the Proposing Release, for an IOI to be
actionable it must convey (explicitly or implicitly) information
sufficient to attract immediately executable orders to the venue
sending the indication of interest.\154\ In addition, Rule 3b-16
defines an order as any firm indication of a willingness to buy or sell
a security, as either principal or agent, including any bid or offer
quotation, market order, limit order, or other priced order.\155\ When
the Commission adopted Rule 3b-16 in connection with the adoption of
Regulation ATS, the Commission stated:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\154\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49446.
\155\ See 17 CFR 240.3b-16.
Whether or not an indication of interest is `firm' will depend
on what actually takes place between the buyer and seller. . . . At
a minimum, an indication of interest will be considered firm if it
can be executed without further agreement of the person entering the
indication. Even if the person must give its subsequent assent to an
execution, however, the indication will still be considered firm if
this subsequent agreement is always, or almost always, granted so
that the agreement is largely a formality. For instance, indications
of interest where there is a clear prevailing presumption that a
trade will take place at the indicated price, based on
understandings or past dealings, will be viewed as orders.\156\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\156\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 40760 (December 8,
1998), 63 FR 70844, 70850 (December 22, 1998).
The Commission believes that this language is instructive here in
light of the Commission's intention for the definition of actionable
IOIs to apply to IOIs that are the functional equivalent of orders or
quotations, i.e., firm representations of trading interest.
Specifically, the Commission intends that the actionable IOI definition
would include, at a minimum, an IOI that represents an order that can
be executed against by the IOI recipient without
[[Page 58354]]
further agreement of the broker-dealer that communicated the IOI.
Moreover, indications of interest where the agreement of the parties to
the terms of a trade is presumed from the facts or circumstances, such
as past dealings or a course of conduct between the parties, may also
be considered actionable IOIs. Indeed, in the context of dark pools,
the Commission has previously noted that IOIs may communicate
information explicitly or implicitly, such as through a course of
conduct, based on which the recipient of the IOI can reasonably
conclude that sending a contra-side marketable order responding to the
IOI will result in an execution if the trading interest has not already
been executed against or cancelled.\157\ The Commission believes that,
generally, it would consider an IOI from a broker-dealer to be
actionable if it fits this description, i.e., if the IOI recipient can
reasonably conclude that sending a contra-side marketable order to the
broker-dealer will result in an execution against trading interest
represented by the IOI that has not already been executed against or
cancelled.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\157\ See Regulation of Non-Public Trading Interest Proposing
Release, supra note 147, at 61211.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
So-called ``conditional'' orders referenced by several commenters
would not, therefore, constitute actionable IOIs if they require
additional agreement by the broker-dealer responsible for the
conditional order before an execution can occur, unless facts or
circumstances suggest that the broker-dealer's agreement can be
presumed. The Commission believes that IOIs that do not enable the IOI
recipient to send a marketable order to the IOI sender that is
executable against the interest represented by the IOI without further
agreement by the IOI sender may not function equivalently to orders or
quotations and therefore do not represent the sort of order handling
activity that the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling reports are meant to
capture.
Moreover, as noted in the Proposal, actionable IOIs have the
capacity to communicate information about the existence of a large
parent order, and as such their usage, like other components of broker-
dealers' order handling and routing practices, creates the potential
for information leakage.\158\ The Commission believes that disclosing
in the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling reports information regarding a
broker-dealer's use of actionable IOIs could help enable its customers
to assess the degree to which the trading interest they route to the
broker-dealer is subject to potential information leakage. By contrast,
the Commission does not believe that this same utility would exist if
non-actionable IOIs (those that are not executable without further
agreement) were to be included in the customer-specific order handling
reports, as the Commission does not understand such non-actionable IOIs
to present the same risk of information leakage as actionable IOIs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\158\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49446.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the Commission continues to believe that the four
elements contained in the definition of actionable IOI (symbol, side,
price, and size) are all necessary pieces of information for an
external liquidity provider to respond with an order that is
immediately executable against trading interest of a customer of the
broker-dealer responsible for the IOI. The Commission emphasizes that
these pieces of information may be implicitly conveyed, such as via a
course of dealing between the IOI sender and the recipient. For
example, given that Rule 611 of Regulation NMS generally prevents
trading centers from executing orders at prices inferior to the NBBO,
if a broker-dealer sends an IOI communicating an interest to buy a
specific NMS stock, the IOI recipient reasonably can assume that the
associated price is the NBBO or better.\159\ Moreover, the IOI
recipient may have responded previously with orders to the IOI sender
and repeatedly received executions at the NBBO or better with a size of
at least one round lot.\160\ In this example, the IOI communicated by
the broker-dealer would be actionable, with explicit conveyance of the
symbol and side elements and implicit conveyance of the price and size
elements. Indeed, the Commission understands that IOIs are frequently
conveyed with explicit side and symbol terms and implicit price and
size terms, and can be executed against by the IOI recipient without
further agreement of the IOI sender.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\159\ See Regulation of Non-Public Trading Interest Proposing
Release, supra note 147, at 61211.
\160\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter stated that, for the purpose of routing brokers
determining whether to send an order to a non-displayed venue, an IOI
should have, at a minimum, a symbol.\161\ Another commenter stated
that, at a minimum, symbol and side (buy or sell) must be included with
an IOI in order for it to be an actionable IOI, and that size or price
do not need to be explicitly included.\162\ While these comments may
suggest that an IOI could still be actionable with less than the four
noted elements in the definition, the Commission believes that, without
the inclusion of all four elements (symbol, side, price, and size)
explicitly or implicitly with the IOI, the IOI recipient could require
additional information before executing against the IOI and the IOI
therefore may not be actionable. To the extent these comments suggest
that one or more of the four noted elements of an actionable IOI may be
implicitly conveyed, as noted above, the Commission agrees. One
commenter stated that the Commission has captured all the necessary
elements for the actionable IOI definition, but that the definitions of
two of the elements--quantity and price--should be expanded to include
relative measures in addition to absolute measures.\163\ The Commission
notes in response that if each of the four elements is communicated--
explicitly or implicitly--such that the IOI recipient can respond to
the IOI with an order that is executable against trading interest
represented by the IOI without further agreement by the IOI sender
(taking into account the relevant facts and circumstances, including
any course of dealing between the parties), that communication would
constitute an actionable IOI under the definition in Rule 600(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\161\ See Markit Letter at 15.
\162\ See Letter from Elizabeth K. King, General Counsel and
Corporate Secretary, NYSE Group, dated October 31, 2016 (``NYSE
Letter'') at 2.
\163\ See Capital Group Letter at 3-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission does not believe that it is necessary for purposes
of the definition of actionable IOI to draw a distinction between IOIs
that are communicated manually (such as via the telephone, for example)
versus IOIs that are communicated electronically. Some commenters drew
such a distinction, and suggested that only IOIs that are communicated
and accessible electronically should constitute actionable IOIs under
Rule 600(b)(1).\164\ The Commission believes that whether an IOI is
actionable should not turn on the level of automation involved in the
communication of the IOI. Once an IOI is communicated by a broker-
dealer to the IOI recipient, regardless of whether the communication is
manual (such as via telephone) or electronic, if that IOI recipient can
respond to the IOI with an order that is executable against the trading
interest represented by the IOI without further agreement by the
broker-dealer responsible for the IOI, then the IOI should be
considered an actionable IOI under Rule 600(b)(1). An actionable IOI
has the potential to leak information as to the existence of an
[[Page 58355]]
order regardless of whether the actionable IOI is transmitted
electronically or manually. Thus, order handling statistics regarding
both electronic and manual actionable IOIs could be valuable to
customers in evaluating the order routing practices of their broker-
dealers and the degree to which those practices may leak information
regarding their not held NMS stock orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\164\ See Bloomberg Letter at 13-15; FIF Letter at 7; FIF
Addendum at 4 n.7; Fidelity Letter at 4; SIFMA Letter at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter urged the Commission to follow the commenter's
characterization of how IOIs were described in the Regulation of Non-
Public Trading Interest Proposing Release by targeting IOIs sent by
venues such as ATSs, and to consider whether other market participants
that send IOIs, such as exchanges, should be included within the scope
of the rule.\165\ The purpose of the Regulation of Non-Public Trading
Interest Proposing Release, however, was different from the
Commission's purposes here in adopting the definition of actionable IOI
for the new customer-specific order handling reports. There, due to the
Commission's concern about potentially deleterious effects of dark
pools' transmission to selected market participants, and not the public
broadly via the consolidated quotation data, of valuable pricing
information in the form of actionable IOIs that function similarly to
quotations, the Commission proposed to amend the Exchange Act quoting
requirements in Rule 602 of Regulation NMS and Rule 301(b)(3) of
Regulation ATS to apply expressly to actionable IOIs.\166\ Here, by
contrast, the Commission's purpose is to require broker-dealers to
provide order handling and routing information that is sufficient for
their customers to understand the methods their broker-dealers use to
carry out their best execution obligations and assess the potential
impact of information leakage and conflicts of interest, not to provide
public access to comprehensive pricing information or encourage the
public display of quotations. The Commission believes that the
definition of actionable IOI being adopted today is appropriately
tailored to serve the purpose of this rulemaking, and that the concerns
it expressed in the Regulation of Non-Public Trading Proposing Release
are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\165\ See Bloomberg Letter at 13-15; see also Regulation of Non-
Public Trading Interest Proposing Release, supra note 147.
\166\ See Regulation of Non-Public Trading Proposing Release,
supra note 147, at 61211-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For similar reasons, the Commission is not excluding from the
definition of actionable IOI in Rule 600(b)(1) an IOI for a quantity of
NMS stock having a market value of at least $200,000 that is
communicated only to those who are reasonably believed to represent
current contra-side trading interest of at least $200,000, as suggested
by one commenter.\167\ The Commission likewise is not requiring broker-
dealers to disclose in the publicly available reports the percentage of
orders that were exposed through so-called ``size-discovery IOIs,'' as
suggested by another commenter.\168\ These commenters noted that the
Regulation of Non-Public Trading Proposing Release proposed to exclude
such ``size-discovery IOIs'' from the rule amendments proposed
therein,\169\ but the Commission again notes that the purpose of the
Commission's actions here is different from what it was in the
Regulation of Non-Public Trading Proposing Release. There, the
Commission recognized that the benefits of certain size-discovery
mechanisms could be undermined if their narrowly tailored IOIs for
large size were required to be included in the public quotation
data.\170\ Here, by contrast, the Commission is not requiring that
actionable IOIs be included in public quotation data, and thus the
Commission does not believe that the same concern is implicated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\167\ See Bloomberg Letter at 14-15.
\168\ See NYSE Letter at 1-2.
\169\ See Bloomberg Letter at 14; NYSE Letter at 2.
\170\ See id. at 61213.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, in response to commenters who requested clarification as
to whether rules, regulations, and guidance applicable to quotes or
orders would be applicable to actionable IOIs under the final
rule,\171\ the Commission is defining actionable IOIs at this time for
purposes of the Rule 606 amendments also being adopted today. The
Commission is not expanding the scope of existing rules, regulations,
or guidance related to orders or quotations, other than Rule 606 and
guidance related thereto, with regard to actionable IOIs.
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\171\ See Fidelity Letter at 4; SIFMA Letter at 6.
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3. Scope of Broker-Dealer's Obligation Under Rule 606(b)(3)
a. Broker-Dealer Required To Provide Report on Its Order Handling To
Customer Placing Order With the Broker-Dealer
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed in Rule 606(b)(3) that every broker-dealer
shall, on request of a customer that places, directly or indirectly, an
institutional order with the broker-dealer, disclose to such customer a
report on its handling of institutional orders for that customer.\172\
The Commission noted in the Proposal that, pursuant to this rule
language, a broker-dealer would be required to provide the order
handling report to the customer placing the institutional order with
the broker-dealer, even if the customer is acting on behalf of others
and is not the ultimate beneficiary of any resulting transactions.\173\
Thus, the broker-dealer would not be required to provide the order
handling report to the underlying clients of that customer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\172\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3).
\173\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49448.
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The Commission also noted that the proposed report would cover
instances where an institutional order is handled either directly by
the broker-dealer or indirectly through systems provided by the broker-
dealer.\174\ By way of example, the Commission stated that an
institutional order would have been placed with a broker-dealer if a
broker-dealer receives an institutional order directly from a customer
and works to execute the order itself, as well as if a broker-dealer
receives an institutional order indirectly from a customer, where the
customer self-directs its institutional order by entering it into a
routing system or execution algorithm provided by the broker-
dealer.\175\
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\174\ See id. at 49447.
\175\ See id.
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Further, the Commission did not propose to change the existing
definition of customer in Rule 600(b), which states that ``customer''
means any person that is not a broker-dealer.\176\ In utilizing this
defined term, proposed Rule 606(b)(3) therefore required a broker-
dealer to provide the customer-specific institutional order handling
report only to a non-broker-dealer.\177\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\176\ See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(16).
\177\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49447-48 for
additional detail on the Commission's proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Final Rule and Response to Comments
Notwithstanding that Rule 606(b)(3) is modified from what was
proposed such that the adopted rule covers not held NMS stock orders of
any dollar value (subject to the two de minimis exceptions), the person
or entity to which the broker-dealer must provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
report is the same as under the Proposal. Specifically, under Rule
606(b)(3), every broker-dealer must, on request of a customer that
places, directly or indirectly, one or more orders in NMS stock that
are submitted on a not held basis with the broker-dealer, disclose to
such customer a report on its handling of such orders
[[Page 58356]]
for that customer. In other words, the broker-dealer must provide the
Rule 606(b)(3) report to the customer that places with the broker-
dealer the orders covered by Rule 606(b)(3), even if the customer is
acting on behalf of others and is not the ultimate beneficiary of any
resulting transactions. In addition, broker-dealers remain excluded
from the definition of ``customer'' in Rule 600(b), and that exclusion
is maintained for purposes of Rule 606(b)(3), which cross-references
the defined term ``customer.'' As a result, under Rule 606(b)(3) as
adopted, a broker-dealer is required to provide the report only to non-
broker-dealers.
For the same reasons as stated in the Proposal, the Commission
continues to believe that a broker-dealer should be required to provide
the customer-specific order handling report to the customer that places
the order with the broker-dealer, even if that customer may be acting
on behalf of others and is not the ultimate beneficiary of any
resulting transactions, such as when an investment adviser, as the
customer of a broker-dealer, places an order with the broker-dealer
that represents the trading interest of clients of the investment
adviser.\178\ Multiple commenters supported this delineation of Rule
606(b)(3)'s scope.\179\ In addition, the Rule 606(b)(3) report
requirement covers instances where an order is handled either directly
by the broker-dealer or indirectly through systems provided by the
broker-dealer. The Commission continues to believe that requiring the
reports to be provided to the customer that places the order with the
broker-dealer--whether the customer is the account holder or an
investment adviser or other fiduciary--is appropriate because it would
require the broker-dealer to provide detailed information to the person
that is responsible for making the routing and execution decisions for
such order and for assuring the effectiveness of those functions.
Despite one commenter's assertion that an investment adviser's
underlying client also should be entitled to receive the Rule 606(b)(3)
report from the adviser's broker-dealer,\180\ the Commission does not
believe it is appropriate to require a broker-dealer to create
individualized order handling reports for and make its execution data
available to an end user with whom the broker-dealer may have no direct
relationship.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\178\ As discussed infra in this section, a broker-dealer is
required to report to the customer that places the order with the
broker-dealer so long as the customer is not itself a broker-dealer.
\179\ See Markit Letter at 16, 18; Bloomberg Letter at 16;
Capital Group Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 7-8, 16; EMSAC Rule 606
Recommendations, supra note 16, at 3.
\180\ See Better Markets Letter at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter stated that an account-level report should not be
required because accounts often are assigned after the order is entered
via an allocation process that is different from the system that
handles routing, and thus it would be costly.\181\ This commenter also
stated it would require brokers, when using a third party to generate
the reports, to transmit client account numbers, which are more
sensitive and confidential than the name of the institutional
manager.\182\ This commenter also stated, however, that reporting
information in the aggregate should prevent any secret routing
strategies from being divulged.\183\ In addition, another commenter
stated it did not believe that customers will able to reverse engineer
the way a smart order router works or discern any other proprietary
information about the broker's technology or order handling techniques
from the proposed disclosure information.\184\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\181\ See Markit Letter at 16, 19-20.
\182\ See id.
\183\ See id. at 19.
\184\ See Capital Group Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with these comments, the Commission continues to believe
that, because the Rule 606(b)(3) customer-specific order handling
disclosures will aggregate information to be disclosed to a specific
customer across all of the customer's not held NMS stock orders, the
risk that such disclosures would reveal sensitive, proprietary
information about broker-dealers' order handling techniques should be
minimal. The customer-level de minimis exception from Rule 606(b)(3)
also is relevant in this regard, as it should help ensure that there is
a significant level of trading activity reflected in the aggregated
information provided to the customer under Rule 606(b)(3), and not
information regarding just one or a few orders from which the customer
may be able to discern aspects of the broker-dealer's sensitive or
proprietary order handling techniques. A broker-dealer's sensitivity
lies with its methods for determining how, where, and when to route a
specific, individual order. By providing information for all of the
customer's orders in the aggregate, the report conceals a broker-
dealer's proprietary determinations with respect to any specific,
individual order. Even if the report reflected that the broker-dealer
sent a small number of orders to a particular venue, the report would
not reveal why the broker-dealer chose that particular venue, when the
broker-dealer routed the orders to that venue, what market signals
informed the broker-dealer's choices as to venue and timing, or what
type of routing strategy the broker-dealer utilized. As to one
commenter's assertion that account-level disclosure would require
broker-dealers that use third-parties to generate the Rule 606(b)(3)
report to disclose sensitive client account numbers to such third-
parties, the Commission is not adopting any requirement that the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures be provided at the client account level, and thus
nothing in Rule 606(b)(3) compels a broker-dealer to disclose client
account numbers to third-parties.
The Commission further notes that, because it is not altering the
broker-dealer exclusion from the definition of customer, and because
Rule 606(b)(3) utilizes this defined term, the rule does not require a
broker-dealer to report to another broker-dealer. This is consistent
with what was proposed and with the order routing disclosure regime
that has existed under Rules 606(a) and 606(b)(1).\185\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\185\ The Commission did not propose to modify the definition of
``customer'' in Rule 600(b)(16), which defines ``customer to mean
any person that is not a broker or dealer.'' See Rule 600(b)(16).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters argued that the broker-dealer exclusion should be
eliminated because a broker-dealer should be required, under Rule
606(b)(3), to report to the customer that places the order with the
broker-dealer even if that customer is itself a broker-dealer.\186\ Two
commenters stated that, absent a modification to the Proposal, the Rule
606 report received by the end-customer of a broker-dealer that
utilizes another broker-dealer's technology for execution would reflect
only that the customer's orders were sent by its broker-dealer to the
other executing broker-dealer, and lack the level of detail that is
necessary for the customer to assess execution quality.\187\ Another
commenter suggested that the Rule 606 reports exclude only those orders
received from other broker-dealers and foreign banks acting as broker-
dealers and routing to U.S. execution venues that were directed by such
broker-dealers and foreign banks acting as broker-dealers to a
particular execution venue.\188\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\186\ See Markit Letter at 3 n.6, 18; Dash Letter at 1, 4-5; FIF
Letter at 2, 8, 16-17; SIFMA Letter at 1, 3.
\187\ See Dash Letter at 5; FIF Letter at 8 n. 9, 16-17.
\188\ See Markit Letter at 3 n.6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On the other hand, one commenter asserted that, in a ``white-
labeling'' or leveraged outsourced technology
[[Page 58357]]
arrangement, where a broker that receives an order from an
institutional customer outsources another broker's smart order routing
or algorithmic trading technology, the broker that received the order
should be evaluating the effectiveness of the outsourced technology and
should fulfill the obligation of being able to provide clients' reports
on request.\189\ Another commenter asserted that the Proposal is
unclear as to whether a broker-dealer that provides algorithmic trading
services would be required to provide an order handling report to a
broker-dealer that utilizes those algorithmic trading services in the
course of executing orders on behalf of institutional customers.\190\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\189\ See Bloomberg Letter at 16.
\190\ See STA Letter at 4-5; STA Letter II at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to these comments, as an initial matter, it is worth
highlighting that Rule 606(b)(3) requires a broker-dealer, upon request
of a customer that places not held NMS stocks order with the broker-
dealer, to disclose to such customer a report with respect to its--
i.e., the broker-dealer's--handling of such orders for that customer.
As such, Rule 606(b)(3) is designed to require a broker-dealer to
disclose the information required by Rule 606(b)(3) to the extent of
its involvement in routing and executing its customers' orders. If the
broker-dealer exercises discretion with regard to how an order is
routed and ultimately executed, such as (but not limited to) by
determining particular venue destinations for an order, choosing among
different trading algorithms, adjusting or customizing algorithm
parameters, or performing other similar tasks involving its own
judgment as to how and where to route and execute orders, the broker-
dealer is required to provide the information required by Rule
606(b)(3) with regard to the customer's order flow with the broker-
dealer as well as the order routing and execution information set forth
in subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv) of the rule. If, by contrast,
the broker-dealer simply forwards its customers' orders on to another
broker-dealer and that second broker-dealer exercises all discretion in
determining where and how to route and execute the orders, then the
first broker-dealer is not required to provide disclosures under Rule
606(b)(3) beyond those relevant to its activity in forwarding orders to
the executing broker. In either case, the broker-dealer reports the
required information under Rule 606(b)(3) with respect to its order
handling for a customer.
This language from the rule informs the scope of a broker-dealer's
obligation in the types of scenarios that commenters raised. As noted
by some commenters, broker-dealers sometimes license or outsource
technology offerings, such as trading algorithms, from third-parties,
including other broker-dealers, to use for routing and executing
orders. In these so-called ``white-labeling'' scenarios, the broker-
dealer typically exercises discretion in determining what trading
algorithm or other technology offering to utilize on behalf of its
customer, as well as how to handle the customer's orders using that
technology. For example, the broker-dealer may be able to adjust
discretionary parameters that determine the aggressiveness of a
particular algorithm,\191\ otherwise determine where or how an order is
routed and executed using the algorithm or other technology, or
determine when the algorithm is turned ``on'' or ``off.'' In this type
of scenario, it is the broker-dealer utilizing the trading algorithm or
other technology offering--and not the third-party provider of such
algorithm or other technology--that handles the customer's order and
that is obligated to provide the information required by Rule
606(b)(3). The broker-dealer's obligation in this scenario extends to
the routing and execution of child orders that, for example, the
trading algorithm may have placed after being ``turned on'' by the
broker-dealer.\192\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\191\ See, e.g., Markit Letter at 20; FIF Letter at 6.
\192\ See infra Section III.A.3.b.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission understands that broker-dealers typically have
access or rights to the execution data for trades made using algorithms
or other technology that they license or outsource. As such, the
Commission believes that most broker-dealers should be well-positioned
to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) information to their customers for orders
(or child orders thereof) that they routed or executed using a trading
algorithm or other type of technology offering. Ultimately, however,
when relying on third-party technology in this manner, broker-dealers
will need to ensure that they can provide the information required by
Rule 606(b)(3), should it be requested by a customer. Further,
consistent with the exclusion of broker-dealers from the definition of
customer, broker-dealers are required to report the Rule 606(b)(3)
information only to non-broker-dealers.
In another type of arrangement raised by commenters, one broker-
dealer, sometimes referred to as an introducing broker-dealer, will
route an order on behalf of its customer to another broker-dealer,
sometimes referred to as an executing broker-dealer, and the executing
broker-dealer will carry out the further routing and ultimate execution
of the order, perhaps utilizing trading algorithms or other technology.
In this type of scenario, the executing broker-dealer's customer is the
introducing broker-dealer because it is the introducing broker-dealer
that places the order with the executing broker-dealer. Since, as
discussed above, a broker-dealer is required to report only to the
customer that places the order with the broker-dealer, in the
introducing-broker-dealer/executing-broker-dealer arrangement, the
executing broker-dealer is not required to report the Rule 606(b)(3)
information to the introducing broker-dealer's customer. Moreover, Rule
606(b)(3) does not require the executing broker-dealer to report to the
introducing broker-dealer in light of the broker-dealer exclusion from
the definition of customer.
As noted above, some commenters argued that a different result
would be appropriate under the rule; specifically, they argued that
broker-dealers should be required to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) reports
for broker-dealer orders.\193\ The Commission intends, however, for
Rule 606(b)(3) to be focused on the relationship between a customer
(that is not a broker-dealer) and its broker-dealer, and the
information that the customer receives from its broker-dealer with
respect to how the broker-dealer handles the customer's not held NMS
stock orders. Rule 606(b)(3) is designed to provide a customer with
access to baseline information that would enable the customer to assess
the nature and quality of services provided by its broker-dealer with
respect to such orders, as many customers may not have the
sophistication or leverage necessary to receive adequate information in
the absence of a rule. The Commission does not believe that broker-
dealer to broker-dealer relationships carry the same level of risk of
an imbalance of information or sophistication on one side of the
relationship as compared to customer to broker-dealer relationships.
Therefore, the Commission has determined not to depart from the current
practice under Rule 606 by including broker-dealer orders in Rule
606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\193\ See supra note 186.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For similar reasons, the Commission believes it is appropriate for
the Rule 606(b)(3) requirements not to extend to orders handled by
exchange-affiliated routing brokers, which are also excluded from Rule
606(b)(3)'s coverage
[[Page 58358]]
by virtue of the broker-dealer exclusion from the definition of
customer. Three commenters suggested that requiring the Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures for orders handled by exchange-affiliated routing brokers
would provide market participants with a more complete picture as to
how their orders are handled.\194\ But since only broker-dealers can be
members of an exchange, by the time an order reaches an exchange-
affiliated routing broker, it first has traveled from the end customer
to a broker-dealer, from a broker-dealer to the exchange (or perhaps
from an end customer through a broker-dealer's systems via a market
access arrangement and onto an exchange), and then from the exchange to
the exchange's affiliated routing broker. Like an executing broker-
dealer, an exchange-affiliated routing broker has no direct
relationship with the customer that sent the order in the first place.
Thus, the Commission does not believe that it would be appropriate to
require an exchange-affiliated routing broker to provide the Rule
606(b)(3) information to the customer from whom the order originated.
As noted above, the Commission's goal is for Rule 606(b)(3) to provide
non-broker-dealer customers with access to baseline information that
would enable them to assess the discretion exercised by their broker-
dealers and the nature and quality of services provided by their
broker-dealers with respect to their not held NMS stock orders. The
Commission believes that this goal will still be achieved without
including orders routed by exchange-affiliated routing brokers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\194\ See SIFMA Letter at 4; Markit Letter at 24; FIF Letter at
2, 8; EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations, supra note 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A broker-dealer is still required to provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
report to its customer, upon request, with respect to its handling of
orders for that customer (assuming the customer is not a broker-dealer)
even if the broker-dealer's handling of the customer's orders amounts
mainly to routing them to another broker-dealer (including perhaps one
affiliated with an exchange) for further routing. In such a situation,
the report is required to include the information regarding the
customer's order flow with the introducing broker-dealer required by
Rule 606(b)(3), as well as the information on order routing required by
subparagraph (b)(3)(i) of the rule, as this information pertains to the
introducing broker-dealer's order handling even if that order handling
amounts mainly to routing to an executing broker-dealer. But, in this
scenario, Rule 606(b)(3) would not require the broker-dealer to provide
the information on order executions required by subparagraphs
(b)(3)(ii) through (iv) in its report to its customer. Because Rule
606(b)(3) requires a broker-dealer to provide the required information
only with respect to ``its'' order handling, an introducing broker-
dealer's obligation under Rule 606(b)(3) does not extend to the order
handling activities of another broker-dealer.
Nevertheless, the Commission believes that competitive forces in
the market may enable a customer whose orders are routed by its broker-
dealer to another broker-dealer to receive detailed order execution
information, such as that required by Rule 606(b)(3)(ii) through (iv),
for such orders. Customers could choose not to send not held NMS stock
orders to broker-dealers that are unable to provide detailed order
execution information, the prospect of which could cause such broker-
dealers to request the information from their executing broker-dealers
that, in turn, may risk losing broker-dealers as customers unless they
provide the information. Even if this type of information sharing does
not occur, a customer will still be entitled to receive information
from its broker-dealer under Rule 606(b)(3) that illustrates how the
broker-dealer is handling the customer's orders. With that information,
the customer should be in a better position to determine whether its
broker-dealer is adequately serving its investing and trading needs, as
well as whether it would be better served by utilizing the services of
a broker-dealer that is able to provide the full suite of detailed
order handling information set forth in Rule 606(b)(3).
b. Smaller Orders Derived From the Order Submitted to the Broker-Dealer
(i.e., Child Orders)
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed that, for purposes of the customer-specific
order handling report required under proposed Rule 606(b)(3), the
handling of an institutional order would include the handling of all
smaller orders derived from the institutional order.\195\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\195\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49448 for additional detail on the Commission's proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is adopting this requirement as proposed. Any child
orders derived from an order that is covered by Rule 606(b)(3) are also
covered by the rule. Accordingly, Rule 606(b)(3) states that, for
purposes of the customer-specific order handling report required under
the rule, the handling of an NMS stock order submitted by a customer to
a broker-dealer on a not held basis includes the handling of all child
orders derived from that order.\196\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\196\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thus, the broker-dealer is required to include any such child
orders in the Rule 606(b)(3) customer-specific order handling report.
For example, if a broker-dealer splits a customer's not held NMS stock
parent order into several child orders to be executed across different
venues, the rule adopted today would require that the broker-dealer
provide the required information regarding the execution of those child
orders in the customer's Rule 606(b)(3) order handling report.
The Commission believes that such a result is consistent with the
views of commenters. No commenter suggested that the Rule 606(b)(3)
order handling report should not include child orders that were derived
from a customer's parent order. To the contrary, several commenters
suggested that it is essential that the broker-dealer order handling
disclosures include the handling of all smaller (child) orders derived
from the parent order.\197\ In addition, several commenters noted that
institutional investors often break up orders in a security across
several broker-dealers, so that the aggregate may exceed $200,000 where
the individual child orders do not.\198\ The Commission believes that
the rule adopted today addresses commenters' concerns regarding child
orders by requiring the routing of any customer's not held NMS stock
order and any child order derived therefrom, regardless of size or
monetary value, to be included in the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
report (subject to the two de minimis exceptions) while at the same
time achieving the Commission's stated goals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\197\ See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; FSR Letter at 4;
SSGA Letter at 1; Citadel Letter at 2; Bloomberg Letter at 11; Dash
Letter at 3; HMA Letter at 5-6; FIF Letter at 3-4, 17; FIF Addendum
at 2.
\198\ See, e.g., Citadel Letter at 2; Bloomberg Letter at 11;
Dash Letter at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Timing and Frequency Requirements for Customer-Specific Order
Handling Report
a. Proposal
Proposed Rule 606(b)(3) required a broker-dealer to provide the
customer-specific order handling report to the customer within seven
business days of receiving the customer's request, and required that
the report contain information on the broker-dealer's
[[Page 58359]]
handling of orders for that customer for the prior six months, broken
down by calendar month.\199\ To allow time for broker-dealers to
develop the ability to produce such reports, the Commission stated that
it would not require broker-dealers to produce Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling reports containing information to cover months before broker-
dealers are required to comply with Rule 606(b)(3), if adopted.\200\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\199\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49447-50 for additional detail on the Commission's
proposal.
\200\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49448.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is adopting as proposed Rule 606(b)(3)'s requirement
that a broker-dealer provide the customer-specific order handling
report to the customer within seven business days of receiving the
customer's request, and that the report contain information on the
broker-dealer's handling of orders for that customer for the prior six
months, broken down by calendar month.\201\ The Commission received
varied comments supporting certain aspects of the rule as proposed and
other commenters suggesting different approaches. These comments and
the Commission's responses on various aspects of the rule are discussed
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\201\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Seven Business Days for Broker-Dealer to Respond to Customer
Request. Two commenters believed that seven business days is a
reasonable amount of time for a broker-dealer to respond to a
customer's request to produce a monthly report.\202\ One of those
commenters also posited that, if the reports prove important to
clients, they will likely be produced in shorter time-frames due to
competitive forces.\203\ Another commenter stated that 20 days to
respond to a customer data request would be appropriate until
generating portions of the Rule 606(b)(3) reports and responding to
customer requests is automated, and that upon automation and
implementation of the program, the proposed seven days may be a
reasonable period of time to respond.\204\ Another commenter stated
that seven business days may not be enough time to respond to a
customer request, particularly since broker-dealers do not know how
many customers will request the reports, and suggested that the seven-
business day limit be removed.\205\ Another commenter stated that seven
days is not achievable if the customer request is made within the first
half of the month because broker-dealers typically do not receive the
rebate/fee information from an execution venue until the end of the
first or second week of the month, and suggested that customer-level
reports should not be required to be ready until the month following
receipt of the fee/rebate information.\206\ One commenter stated that,
given that some broker-dealers offer fee pass-through arrangements
(known as Cost-Plus), the commenter believed that the capabilities are
in the industry to track net execution fee or rebate information.\207\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\202\ See Capital Group Letter at 4; Markit Letter at 17.
\203\ See Markit Letter at 17.
\204\ See Bloomberg Letter at 15.
\205\ See Fidelity Letter at 4-5.
\206\ See FIF Letter at 17-18.
\207\ See HMA Letter at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission continues to believe, at this juncture, that it is
appropriate to require a broker-dealer to provide the Rule 606(b)(3)
report to a customer within seven business days of the customer's
request. While Rule 606(b)(1) does not set forth a time limit for
broker-dealers to respond to a customer's request for a report, the
Rule 606(b)(1) disclosures are not as detailed as the disclosures set
forth in Rule 606(b)(3). Furthermore, customers that submit not held
NMS stock orders face a greater risk of information leakage than
customers that submit held NMS stock orders. As a result, the
Commission believes that requiring broker-dealers to respond within
seven business days is designed to ensure that customers receive the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures in a manner that is timely enough to enable
them to assess the risk of information leakage from how their orders
are routed while still providing the broker-dealer with adequate time
to prepare the report.
The Commission acknowledges, as noted in the Proposal, that broker-
dealers will need to configure their systems to capture the information
necessary to produce the Rule 606(b)(3) reports and, therefore, may not
have the ability to produce historical reports about the routing of
orders and executions that occurred before such systems are
updated.\208\ The Commission also notes that many broker-dealers'
systems may already compile some of the order routing statistics
required to be included in the Rule 606(b)(3) reports, thus mitigating
to a degree the burden incurred by many broker-dealers in updating
their systems and processes to be able to provide Rule 606(b)(3)
reports to customers within seven business days. Further, the
Commission has provided time between the effected date and the
compliance date during which broker-dealers will be able to update
their systems as necessary. Once such system updates are completed, the
Commission expects broker-dealers to be able to generate the Rule
606(b)(3) reports in a largely automated fashion. As such, the
Commission believes that the seven business day turnaround time will
not be difficult for most broker-dealers to meet, and a longer time
period for broker-dealers to respond is not necessary especially in
light of the expected high level of automation for generating these
reports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\208\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49448. Broker-
dealers are required to provide the Rule 606(b)(3) reports for dates
going forward from the compliance date of this rulemaking and are
not required to provide the reports for dates prior to the
compliance date.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Even though one commenter expressed concern that a seven business
day response window would not be achievable because broker-dealers
typically do not receive rebate/fee information from execution venues
until the end of the first or second week of the following month, the
Commission continues to believe that the seven business day timeframe
is important in requiring that all customers receive their order
handling information in a timeframe that will allow them to act in a
timely fashion in response to the information contained in the report.
Relatedly, the Commission notes that the six-month period covered by
Rule 606(b)(3) is a six calendar month period.\209\ Because there is no
limit on the number of times that a customer may make a request for
information under Rule 606(b)(3), the customer could subsequently make
another request for information under Rule 606(b)(3) once the broker-
dealer has obtained the fee/rebate information for the immediately
preceding month.\210\ Therefore, the Commission is not altering the
seven business day time period for broker-dealers to respond to a
customer request for the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\209\ Thus, for example, if a customer requests a Rule 606(b)(3)
report during the month of July, the customer would be entitled
(subject to the de minimis exceptions) to a report that covers the
not held NMS stock orders it submitted to the broker-dealer during
January through June, unless the broker-dealer does not yet have fee
and rebate information for the month of June at the time of the
customer's request, in which case the report would be required to
cover the not held NMS stock orders that the customer submitted to
the broker-dealer during December of the prior calendar year through
May of the current calendar year.
\210\ In this scenario, the broker-dealer would be required to
provide a Rule 606(b)(3) report covering the immediately preceding
month if the customer's trading activity for the six month period
including the immediately preceding month meets the customer-level
de minimis threshold.
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[[Page 58360]]
Frequency of Responses to Requests for Rule 606(b)(3) Report. Two
commenters believed that Rule 606(b)(3) does not need to specify the
number of times that a broker-dealer is required to respond to a
customer request for a report on order handling.\211\ One of these
commenters stated that the competitive dynamics of customer service in
the free market should control and that, if the frequency of requests
becomes a problem, the Commission can address this at a later
date.\212\ One commenter stated that broker-dealers should be required
to provide the proposed data on a weekly basis if requested by the
customer, and that the timeframe for providing aggregated data should
be no longer than monthly.\213\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\211\ See Bloomberg Letter at 16; Markit Letter at 18.
\212\ See Bloomberg Letter at 16.
\213\ See Capital Group Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 606(b)(3) did not specify the number of times a
broker-dealer is required to respond to a customer request for a report
on order handling, and the Commission is not adopting any such
specification in final Rule 606(b)(3). Consistent with the Commission's
guidance in the Proposing Release, Rule 606(b)(3) does not limit the
number of times that a customer may place a request for an order
handling report and does not preclude a customer from making a standing
request to its broker-dealer, whereby the customer would automatically
receive a recurring report on a periodic basis without the need to make
repeated requests.\214\ Rule 606(b)(3) also does not require the
broker-dealer to provide order handling information that is duplicative
of information that the broker-dealer previously provided the customer
pursuant to a prior request under the rule.\215\ For example, if a
broker-dealer provides a report to a customer for the prior six months,
and that customer requests an additional report the following month,
the broker-dealer would only need to provide a report for the latest
month, subject to the customer-level de minimis threshold being met for
the six month period that includes the latest month.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\214\ See id. at 49448.
\215\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Six-Month Period Covered by the Report. One commenter stated that
six months is a reasonable timeframe for broker-dealers to make
historical data available for the Rule 606(b)(3) report, and suggested
that historical data be retained at the broker-dealer for two years to
fill any gaps in data collection from counterparties.\216\ Another
commenter suggested that the report cover the previous quarter, not six
months.\217\ The Commission continues to believe that it is appropriate
to require the Rule 606(b)(3) report to provide order handling data for
a six-month period because it would provide customers with historical
data to evaluate their broker-dealers' order routing practices to gauge
the risk of information leakage and the potential for conflicts of
interest. The Commission believes that a six-month period is reasonable
to judge the performance of an execution venue, and the time period is
long enough to offset any potential market moving event that may
distort the data.\218\ In addition, while one commenter requested a
record retention period of two years for the Rule 606(b)(3) data, the
Commission believes that such a retention period is unwarranted because
the purpose of the Rule 606(b)(3) report is to provide customers with
baseline information on a current or near-current basis that better
enables them to understand how a broker-dealer is exercising discretion
when routing their NMS stock orders. The purpose of the Rule 606(b)(3)
report is not to enable a historical perspective on how broker-dealers
routed orders. Moreover, broker-dealer order routing practices may be
altered frequently, in connection with, among other things, an ever-
evolving equity market structure, and so how a broker-dealer routed NMS
stock orders more than six months prior to a request for a Rule
606(b)(3) report may not be consistent with the broker-dealer's more
current routing practices. At the same time, if a Rule 606(b)(3) report
is requested by a broker-dealer's customer, the broker-dealer is
required to provide all of the information set forth in the rule, as
applicable. As noted above, a broker-dealer is required to fulfill the
customer's request with the most recent six months-worth of complete
order handling information that the broker-dealer has already obtained
at the time of the customer's request, subject to the de minimis
exception.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\216\ See Capital Group Letter at 4-5.
\217\ See Markit Letter at 16.
\218\ See Rule 606 Predecessor Adopting Release, supra note 7,
at 75430 n.81.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Report Data Broken Down by Calendar Month. One commenter stated
that broker-dealers should be required to provide the proposed data on
a weekly basis if requested by the customer, and that this frequency of
data would be most useful to firms, particularly if data is provided in
eXtensible Markup Language (``XML'') format.\219\ This commenter also
stated that the time frame for providing the data should be no longer
than monthly. This commenter asserted that the Commission correctly
noted in the Proposal that changes in fee structures at trading centers
may affect a broker-dealer's routing decisions and that these fee
changes mostly take place at the beginning of the month. According to
this commenter, broker-dealers typically adjust mid-month to fee
structure changes in order to meet targeted volume tiers that may have
changed and having monthly data will enable a customer to monitor for
such changes in order routing behavior.\220\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\219\ See Capital Group Letter at 5.
\220\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission continues to believe that it is appropriate for the
data in the Rule 606(b)(3) report to be broken down by calendar month.
Consistent with this calendar month breakdown, as noted above, the six
month period covered by the Rule 606(b)(3) report is a six calendar
month period. Grouping the report data by calendar month should enable
customers to assess how changes in fee structures at trading centers,
which typically occur on a monthly basis, may affect a broker-dealer's
routing decisions. Further, the Commission continues to believe that
requiring the report data to be grouped by calendar month will help
enable customers to assess how a broker-dealer's order handling
practices may change in response to other internal or external factors.
Grouping the data by calendar month allows a small aggregation of data,
since it is possible that certain trading days may not yield any data
points. Therefore, allowing grouping by calendar month may enable
customers to evaluate the performance of their broker-dealers based on
more meaningful data, and enable customers and broker-dealers to
further discuss in a more meaningful manner how orders are routed and
executed. The Commission does not believe that the rule should require
a finer time period, such as weekly, as suggested by one commenter. The
adopted rule does not limit what a customer may request from its
broker-dealer, and in certain situations, a customer may request and
receive weekly reports from its broker-dealer. The Commission believes
that to require by rule a weekly report could increase compliance costs
that may not be commensurate with the expected benefits. As such, the
Commission does not believe that it is necessary to change the calendar
month time period.
Annual Notice of Availability of Rule 606(b)(3) Report. Rule
606(b)(2) requires
[[Page 58361]]
broker-dealers to notify customers in writing at least annually of the
availability on request of the information specified in Rule 606(b)(1),
and the Commission solicited comment as to whether the Commission
should include a similar requirement for the new Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures. Four commenters stated that broker-dealers should not be
required to provide an annual notice of the availability of the Rule
606(b)(3) report to institutional customers,\221\ as institutional
customers that do not request the report are unlikely to need it.\222\
One commenter stated that institutional customers are sophisticated
market participants who can best judge the type of information they
need.\223\ Accordingly, the Commission is not adopting an annual
notification requirement with respect to the Rule 606(b)(3) reports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\221\ See FIF Letter at 17; Fidelity Letter at 5; Bloomberg
Letter at 15; Markit Letter at 17.
\222\ See Bloomberg Letter at 15; Fidelity Letter at 4.
\223\ See Fidelity Letter at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Automatic Report to Customers. In the Proposing Release, the
Commission noted that it considered an alternative to proposed Rule
606(b)(3) that would not require that customers request customer-
specific standardized reports on order handling, but would instead
require broker-dealers to provide them to customers automatically even
in the absence of a customer request. The Commission also raised the
notion of whether broker-dealers should be required to provide an
internet portal where customers can view or download the reports.\224\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\224\ See Proposing Release, at 49501-02.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter supported the Commission's proposed approach and
stated that some institutional customers may request firm-specific
customized reports and may not need the additional information in the
order handling report.\225\ Another commenter did not believe that the
Commission should mandate delivery of the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
reports via internet portal.\226\ Another commenter suggested that the
process of sending reports to the customer should be automated such
that it is emailed to the customer, either with a trade confirmation or
on a periodic basis.\227\ Two commenters stated that broker-dealers
could make customer's data available via the internet for broker-
dealers with customer-specific portals.\228\ Another commenter stated
that customer specific information should be sent periodically to
investors, rather than on an ad hoc user-requested basis.\229\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\225\ See Fidelity Letter at 4.
\226\ See Markit Letter at 18.
\227\ See Kohen Letter.
\228\ See Capital Group Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 18.
\229\ See HMA Letter at 8-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is adopting as proposed the aspect of Rule 606(b)(3)
that requires a broker-dealer to provide the order handling report upon
customer request, and is not adopting any requirement regarding
automatic provision of the report in the absence of a customer request
or via an internet portal. Commenters that did support such automated
delivery mechanisms did not provide a persuasive rationale for the
Commission at this time to impose the likely cost to broker-dealers of
developing such mechanisms. Not all customers may feel the need to
request Rule 606(b)(3) reports from their broker-dealer, and as such it
would not be a productive use of resources for broker-dealers
automatically to provide reports to such customers. Moreover, under the
adopted rule, a customer that wishes to receive the report can request
it from the customer's broker-dealer. Mandating an automatic push to
all customers would not be efficient, and could provide additional
costs to broker-dealers. The Commission believes that the adopted rule
strikes an appropriate balance between broker-dealers and customers,
and does not believe that the rule should require the disclosure of
order information when it is not requested by the customer. Likewise,
customers that do request Rule 606(b)(3) reports may not desire to
receive them via an internet portal, rendering the provision of
internet portal access to such customers unnecessary.
5. Format of Customer-Specific Order Handling Reports
a. Breakdown by Order Routing Strategy Category at Each Venue
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed to require that the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling report be categorized by order routing strategy category for
institutional orders for each venue.\230\ The Commission proposed that
order routing strategies be categorized into three general strategy
categories for purposes of the Rule 606(b)(3) report: (1) A ``passive
order routing strategy,'' which emphasizes the minimization of price
impact over the speed of execution of the entire institutional order;
(2) a ``neutral order routing strategy,'' which is relatively neutral
between the minimization of price impact and speed of execution of the
entire order; and (3) an ``aggressive order routing strategy,'' which
emphasizes speed of execution of the entire order over the minimization
of price impact.\231\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\230\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3).
\231\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(v). See Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49450-52 for additional detail on the Commission's
proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is not adopting the proposed requirement that the
Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures be categorized by order routing strategy for
each venue to which the broker-dealer routed the customer's orders. The
Commission received a significant amount of comment on this proposed
requirement, nearly all of which expressed concern about, and none of
which supported, the requirement as proposed. Commenters generally
believed that the proposed categorization of the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling information for each venue by passive, neutral, or aggressive
routing strategies category would be unnecessarily subjective and
complex.\232\ Several commenters stated that broker-dealers may
categorize similar routing strategies differently, which could limit
the utility and comparability of the reports.\233\ Multiple commenters
stated that the proposed strategies could be impacted by investor-
specific customization.\234\ In addition, several commenters stated
that the proposed routing strategy categorization would be unworkable
in light of the fact that trading algorithms may use multi-layered
methodologies that would fit into more than one of the proposed
categories,\235\ and can be dynamic and adjust to market conditions in
real-time.\236\ Commenters also asserted, broadly, that the proposed
order routing strategy breakdown would be of little to no value to
institutional investors.\237\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\232\ See, e.g., SIFMA Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 4, 15-16; FIF
Addendum at 3; ICI Letter at 8; MFA Letter at 5; STA Letter at 5, 7-
8; STA Letter II at 1; EMSAC Rule 606 Recommendations, supra note
16, at 3, 5.
\233\ See, e.g., SIFMA Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 4, 15-16; FIF
Addendum at 3; MFA Letter at 5; Dash Letter at 6. One of these
commenters agreed with the Commission's proposal to require broker-
dealers to document their assignment of institutional orders to a
particular routing strategy category, and suggested that the
documentation be publicly available. See Dash Letter at 6-7.
\234\ See SIFMA Letter at 4; FIF Letter at 4; KCG Letter at 5-6;
Markit Letter at 20.
\235\ See FIF Letter at 4, 15.
\236\ See ICI Letter at 8; Capital Group Letter at 6; FIF Letter
at 4, 15; MFA Letter at 5.
\237\ See Markit Letter at 20-22; STA Letter at 5; Fidelity
Letter at 5, KCG Letter at 6. The Commission also received comment
that suggested alternative methods to characterize order routing
strategies or proposed breaking down the venue data by categories
other than routing strategy, which the Commission is not adopting.
See, e.g., MFA Letter at 5; Dash Letter at 6; HMA Letter at 10; HMA
Letter II at 4; Better Markets Letter at 5; SIFMA Letter at 4-5; FIF
Letter at 4; FIF Addendum at 3; ICI Letter at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 58362]]
The Commission acknowledged in the Proposing Release that the
proposed order routing strategy categorization had limitations similar
to many of those raised by commenters, including the potential for
inconsistency in how broker-dealers categorize an order routing
strategy and reduced comparability of order handling reports across
broker-dealers, mixed routing strategies that could reasonably fit into
more than one category, and customers that provide specific or market
condition-dependent order handling instructions to their broker-dealers
that affect how a broker-dealer handles an institutional order.\238\
The Commission preliminarily believed that such limitations would occur
mainly at the margins, and that grouping order routing strategies into
the three proposed categories would still allow for meaningful
comparison of order handling practices across broker-dealers, and would
allow customers to better evaluate a broker-dealer's order handling
practices for orders that are handled using similar strategies.\239\ In
addition, a breakdown by routing strategy within each venue category
was suggested by a group of commenters who submitted to the Commission,
in advance of the Proposal, a proposed template for the customer-
specific institutional order handling report.\240\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\238\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49451.
\239\ See id.
\240\ See Letter to Mary Jo White, Chair, Commission, from
Dorothy M. Donohue, Deputy General Counsel, Investment Company
Institute, Stuart J. Kaswell, Executive Vice President & Managing
Director, General Counsel, Managed Funds Association, and Randy
Snook, Executive Vice President, Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association, dated October 23, 2014 (``Associations
Letter''), available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-02-10/s70210-428.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The comments received on this topic indicate, however, that
interested market participants widely believe that the proposed order
routing strategy categorization would not provide a sufficient benefit
that justifies adopting the categorization notwithstanding its
limitations. Commenters appear to believe that these limitations are
more pervasive and potentially more deleterious to the quality and
usefulness of the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling reports than the
Commission preliminarily believed. Indeed, the Commission acknowledges
that several commenters believed that the proposed order routing
strategy categorization would not provide information to customers that
is useful for assessing their broker-dealers' order handling
performance and, in fact, could impair the utility and comparability of
the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling reports. Accordingly, the Commission
is persuaded not to include in final Rule 606(b)(3) the proposed order
routing strategy categorization and therefore has not included proposed
subparagraph (b)(3)(v) in the adopted rule.\241\ Final Rule 606(b)(3)
requires that the customer-specific order handling report categorize
the data specified in subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv) for each
venue to which the broker-dealer routed orders covered by the rule for
the customer, without further categorization within each venue
category.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\241\ The Commission has not identified an appropriate
alternative. The Commission believes that the commenters'
suggestions such as categorizations based on ``scheduled'' versus
``non-scheduled'' distinctions, broker-dealers' intent, order types,
or the state of the market, would all face similar issues as the
originally proposed categorization because, as expressed in the
comment letters, order routing strategies are difficult to place
into well-defined categories due to the complex nature of today's
order execution algorithms and smart order routing systems. The
Commission believes that requiring categorization of order routing
strategies could lead to inaccurate and potentially misleading
disclosures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed infra,\242\ the Commission believes that the order
handling data points specified in subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv)
of the rule, separated according to each venue to which the broker-
dealer routed orders for the customer, will provide the customer with
sufficient information to evaluate its broker-dealer's routing
performance and compare it to that of other broker-dealers. This data
would also allow a customer to ascertain at a high level what type of
routing strategies a broker-dealer may have utilized for the customer's
not held NMS stock order flow. For example, as discussed infra,\243\
subparagraphs (b)(3)(iii) and (iv) of Rule 606(b) require broker-
dealers to disclose specific information regarding orders that provided
liquidity and orders that removed liquidity, respectively. Orders that
provided liquidity may reasonably be associated with routing strategies
that operate more passively, while orders that remove liquidity may be
associated with routing strategies that operate more aggressively. Even
if such associations cannot be made reliably, however, the Commission
believes that Rule 606(b)(3) is more likely to provide appropriate and
useful order handling information, and information that is more uniform
across broker-dealers and therefore more likely to facilitate
comparisons across broker-dealers, by requiring that the information
specified in subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv) be separated for each
venue to which the broker-dealer routed orders for the customer without
further categorization within each venue category. The requirements of
Rule 606(b)(3) provide a standardized baseline of customer-specific
order handling disclosures, and customers remain free to negotiate for
additional disclosures or categorizations, such as categorizations by
routing strategy, with their broker-dealers if they so desire.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\242\ See infra Section III.A.6.
\243\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Segregation of Directed Orders and Non-Directed Orders
i. Proposal
The Commission did not propose to require that the Rule 606(b)(3)
customer-specific order handling report differentiate between orders
that the customer directed the broker-dealer to route to a particular
venue versus orders that the customer did not so direct.
ii. Final Rule and Response to Comments
Several commenters suggested that directed orders and non-directed
orders be segregated in the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling reports. As
noted above, several commenters asserted that the disclosures in the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports would be most useful to customers if they are
focused on orders for which the broker-dealer exercised discretion in
handling.\244\ In addition, commenters suggested that directed orders
be clearly segregated in the reports from orders that were routed
according to the broker-dealer's default routing behavior, otherwise
the broker-dealer's normal routing behavior could be
misrepresented.\245\ One commenter requested that directed orders be
included, but as a separate category, in Rule 606 reports in order to
expand the universe of covered orders.\246\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\244\ See supra Section III.A.1.b.ii. See also Bloomberg Letter
at; Markit Letter at 8; STA Letter at 6.
\245\ See FIF Letter at 5; Better Markets Letter at 5-6.
\246\ See HMA Letter at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is modifying Rule 606(b)(3) to require that the
customer-specific order handling report for not held NMS stock orders
be divided into separate sections for the customer's directed orders
and non-directed orders, with each section containing the disclosures
regarding the customer's order flow with the broker-dealer specified in
Rule 606(b)(3), as well as the disclosures for each venue to which the
broker-dealer routed orders specified in Rules 606(b)(3)(i)-(iv). The
two types of orders are fundamentally different in that, with directed
orders,
[[Page 58363]]
the customer directs the broker-dealer to route its orders to a
particular venue, whereas the broker-dealer exercises discretion in
determining where to route and execute the customer's non-directed
orders. Segregating directed not held orders from non-directed not held
orders in the customer-specific report would provide a customer with
one report that reflects all of its not held NMS stock orders handled
by the broker-dealer while separately providing disclosures for orders
for which the broker-dealer exercises venue routing discretion.
By providing the order handling information separately for non-
directed not held orders, the Rule 606(b)(3) report will provide a
customer with a more precise reflection of how and where its broker-
dealer is routing the customer's not held NMS stock orders pursuant to
the discretion afforded to the broker-dealer. A primary utility of the
Rule 606(b)(3) reports is to enable customers to better understand how
their broker-dealers exercise discretion in handling their not held
orders, and this will be more easily achieved if the reported
disclosures for directed and non-directed orders are separate.
Otherwise, with directed not held orders and non-directed not held
orders commingled in the report, a customer may not be able to
accurately differentiate routing behavior for which its broker-dealer
exercised discretion in determining where to route an order from
routing behavior where the customer itself directed the routing
destination. Separating the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling disclosures
for non-directed not held orders from those for directed not held
orders should help customers evaluate their broker-dealers order
handling performance and how their broker-dealers are achieving best
execution for their non-directed not held orders while managing the
potential impact of information leakage and conflicts of interest.
In addition, the Commission believes that customers will benefit
from being able to analyze Rule 606(b)(3) routing disclosures that are
specific to their directed not held orders for NMS stock. As discussed
below, the Rule 606(b)(3) reports require the broker-dealer to
disclose, among other things, information on order execution.\247\ This
information would be relevant to a customer assessing its broker-
dealer's execution of its directed not held orders, including a
customer interested in validating that its broker-dealer is routing its
directed not held orders consistent with the customer's instructions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\247\ See infra Section III.A.6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. XML Format and Standardization
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed to require that the customer-specific order
handling report required under proposed Rule 606(b)(3) be made
available using an XML schema and associated PDF renderer published on
the Commission's website.\248\ To provide a standardized presentation
for the report, the Commission also proposed a chart form for the
report's required disclosures of information regarding orders that a
broker-dealer executes internally or routes to other venues.\249\
Specifically, the Commission proposed to require that each report
contain rows that would be categorized by venue and by order routing
strategy category for each venue,\250\ with certain columns of
information for each of the required rows.\251\ Thus, as proposed, each
report would have been formatted so that a customer would be readily
able to observe its order activity at a particular venue, as further
subdivided by order routing strategy category for that venue.\252\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\248\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). The Commission's schema is a
set of custom XML tags and XML restrictions designed by the
Commission to reflect the proposed disclosures in Rule 606. XML
enables data to be defined, or ``tagged,'' using standard
definitions. The tags establish a consistent structure of identity
and context. This consistent structure can be automatically
recognized and processed by a variety of software applications such
as databases, financial reporting systems, and spreadsheets, and
then made immediately available to the end-user to search,
aggregate, compare, and analyze. In addition, the XML schema could
be easily updated to reflect any changes to the open standard. XML
and PDF are ``open standards,'' which is a term that is generally
applied to technological specifications that are widely available to
the public, royalty-free, at no cost.
\249\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450. The
Commission also noted that, for purposes of the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling report, a venue would be any trading center to which an
order is routed or where an order is executed. See Rule 600(b)(78);
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
\250\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3); see also Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49450.
\251\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv); see also
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
\252\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49450.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also proposed new format requirements for the
existing customer-specific order handling disclosures in Rule
606(b)(1). Specifically, the Commission proposed to require that the
customer-specific order routing report required by Rule 606(b)(1) be
made available using an XML schema and associated PDF renderer
published on the Commission's website.\253\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\253\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(1). See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49448-51 for additional detail on the Commission's
proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is adopting as proposed the requirement that the
customer-specific order handling report required under Rule 606(b)(3)
be made available using an XML schema and associated PDF renderer
published on the Commission's website.\254\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\254\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission received several comments on the proposed reporting
format,\255\ with a number of commenters supporting a machine-readable
or standardized format \256\ or XML in particular,\257\ and other
commenters criticizing the proposed use of XML and a PDF renderer and
suggesting different formats such as JavaScript Object Notation
(``JSON''), comma-separated values (``CSV''), spreadsheet, or flat
text.\258\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\255\ See Capital Group Letter at 4; Kohen Letter; HMA Letter at
12; Better Markets Letter at 2; FIF Letter at 17; Markit Letter at
17; CFA Letter at 11; FIA Letter at 2; Thomson Reuters Letter at 2.
\256\ See, e.g., HMA Letter at 12; Markit Letter at 17.
\257\ See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; Better Markets
Letter at 2; FIF Letter at 17; FIA Letter at 2.
\258\ See HMA Letter at 12; Markit Letter at 17; Kohen Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that while XML predates JSON as a standard,
XML has proven to be a flexible standard that continues to be
incorporated into common desktop applications and is the basis for a
variety of financial reporting languages in a way that JSON is not.
Moreover, if the Commission did not specify a particular format and
instead left it to the discretion of the filer, users of the data would
lose their ability to compare the data easily and easily ensure their
consistency between filers. XML's Schema is a widely used, stable
metadata standard which is better suited for validation than JSON.
Validations help ensure data consistency and comparability, which
enhances overall data quality for both broker-dealers and customers.
Market participants have the necessary tools and experience with
analyzing a variety of financial data in the XML format. The use of XML
has been adopted in a number of recent Commission rulemakings \259\ and
the
[[Page 58364]]
Proposal to use an XML format here was supported by a number of
commenters.\260\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\259\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 79095, 81
FR 81870 (November 18, 2016) (adopting Investment Company Reporting
Modernization); 74246, 80 FR 14437 (March 19, 2015) (adopting
Security-Based Swap Data Repository Registration, Duties, and Core
Principles); 72982 (September 4, 2014), 79 FR 57183 (September 24,
2014) (adopting Asset-Backed Securities Disclosure and
Registration).
\260\ See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4; Better Markets
Letter at 2; FIF Letter at 17; CFA Letter at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As for the suggestions to adopt a CSV, spreadsheet file, or flat-
text file format, the Commission does not believe that these formats
would be as suitable as XML, since the hierarchical nature of the
disclosures required by the amendments being adopted today would
require more than a single set of uniformly structured rows, and these
formats would not support representing such disclosures easily.
Moreover, neither of those formats can incorporate robust validations
to address issues such as completeness, required relationships, and
correct formatting. If used, a CSV, spreadsheet, or flat text file
format would likely have data quality issues of consistency and
comparability that would make the data less usable and require repeated
corrections by the broker-dealers. Accordingly, the Commission is
adopting as proposed the requirement that the customer-specific order
handling report be made available using an XML schema to be published
on the Commission's website.
While one commenter criticized the use of the PDF renderer, that
commenter criticized its use because PDF files cannot be processed and
analyzed.\261\ The Commission notes, however, that the rule, as
amended, requires that the data be provided ``using the most recent
versions of the XML schema and the associated PDF renderer'' (emphasis
added). The PDF file and underlying data in an XML format both will be
required. The requirement to use the Commission's XML schema is
designed to ensure that the data is provided in an XML format that is
structured and machine-readable, so that the data can be more easily
processed and analyzed. As a result, all data that would appear in a
PDF file would be required to have a corresponding file provided in XML
that has been used to generate the PDF file using the renderer. The
Commission received no other comments opposing the Proposal to require
that the reports be provided in a human-readable format through the use
of a PDF renderer, and one commenter supported requiring a human-
readable format.\262\ The Commission continues to believe that the
reports should be provided in a human-readable format for those
customers that prefer only to review individual reports and not
necessarily aggregate or conduct large-scale data analysis on the data.
The Commission believes that by requiring use of the associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission's website, the XML data would be
instantly presentable in a human-readable PDF format and consistently
presented across reports. Accordingly, the Commission is adopting as
proposed the requirements that the customer-specific order handling
report be made available using an XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission's website.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\261\ See Kohen Letter.
\262\ See Markit Letter at 28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter suggested that the Commission should add headers to
rows and columns in the customer-specific report that explains what
each category of information means,\263\ and another commenter stated
that the fields in the report should be explicitly defined.\264\ For
purposes here, the Commission assumes that the latter comment pertains
to defining the terms used in Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv). No
commenters stated that any of the undefined terms in proposed Rule
606(b)(3)(i) through (iv) were unclear or inconsistent or would
otherwise impede comparability, and the Commission believes that adding
headers and definitions may result in unnecessary confusion and
complexity. Accordingly, the Commission is not adopting definitional
headers for the customer-specific reports and is not adopting
definitions for the terms used in proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through
(iv). The Commission is adopting as proposed the chart form for the
required disclosures set forth in Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv).\265\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\263\ See CFA Letter at 10-11.
\264\ See FIF Letter at 17.
\265\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also is adopting as proposed the requirement that
the customer-specific order handling report required under Rule
606(b)(1) be made available using an XML schema and associated PDF
renderer published on the Commission's website.\266\ The Commission
believes that providing the customer-specific Rule 606(b)(1) reports in
the proposed XML/PDF format will promote the consistency and
comparability of the reports. The Commission received two comments
specifically questioning the need for providing such reports in the
proposed XML/PDF format, stating that customers rarely request these
reports, and stating their view that the cost of implementing the
proposed format would outweigh the benefits.\267\ As discussed above,
the Commission is amending the categories of orders to which the
existing disclosure requirements of Rule 606(b)(1) apply to include
orders in NMS stock that are submitted on a not held basis and for
which the broker-dealer is not required to provide the customer a
report under Rule 606(b)(3).\268\ The Commission believes that
customers that submit orders on a not held basis that are not entitled
to receive the disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3) may still analyze
and compare the data they receive under Rule 606(b)(1) and engage in
informed discussions with their broker-dealers about the broker-
dealer's order handling practices. The use of the XML/PDF format will
enable those customers to more easily analyze and compare the
individualized data provided.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\266\ See Rule 606(b)(1).
\267\ See Thomson Reuters Letter at 2; FIF Letter at 9, 12.
\268\ See supra Section III.A.1.b.vi.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Rule 606(b)(3) Report Content
a. Information on the Customer's Order Flow With the Reporting Broker-
Dealer
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed that the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
report include information on the order flow sent by the customer to
the broker-dealer. Specifically, the Commission proposed to require
disclosure of: (1) Total number of shares of orders sent to the broker-
dealer by the customer during the reporting period; (2) total number of
shares executed by the broker-dealer as principal for its own account;
(3) total number of orders exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable IOI; and (4) venue or venues to which orders were exposed by
the broker-dealer through an actionable IOI.\269\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\269\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49452-54 for additional detail on the Commission's
proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is adopting, with certain modifications, the
requirement that the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling report include
information on the customer's not held NMS stock order flow with the
broker-dealer. The Commission believes that this information would be
useful for customers to evaluate their not held order flow with a
particular broker-dealer during the reporting period, the broker-
dealer's methods for achieving best execution for such order flow, and
the potential for conflicts of interests and information leakage
associated with
[[Page 58365]]
such methods. Specifically, the Commission is adopting as proposed the
requirement that the Rule 606(b)(3) report disclose the total number of
shares of not held NMS stock orders sent to the broker-dealer by the
customer during the reporting period, as well as the requirement that
the Rule 606(b)(3) report disclose the total number of shares executed
by the broker-dealer as principal for its own account.\270\ One
commenter expressed support for these requirements.\271\ The Commission
continues to believe that the information would be useful to customers
in understanding how much of their not held order flow was handled by a
particular broker-dealer during the reporting period, which should help
customers make comparisons across broker-dealers, as well as how often
a particular broker-dealer trades against the customers' not held
orders, which is relevant information to customers assessing their
broker-dealers' compliance with best execution obligations and
potential conflicts of interest that their broker-dealers face when
trading as principal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\270\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
\271\ See Markit Letter at 22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also is adopting the requirement that the Rule
606(b)(3) report disclose the total number of not held NMS stock orders
exposed by the broker-dealer through actionable IOIs. One commenter
expressed support for this requirement.\272\ The Commission continues
to believe that that identifying the total number of not held NMS stock
orders exposed by a broker-dealer though actionable IOIs should give
customers a more complete view of how their broker-dealers handle their
not held orders and allow them to better evaluate how their broker-
dealer manages information leakage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\272\ See id. at 23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is adopting, with modifications discussed below, the
requirement that broker-dealers disclose the venue(s) to which not held
NMS stock orders were exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable IOI. The Commission continues to believe that disclosure of
the specific venue(s) to which a broker-dealer exposed such an order by
an actionable IOI would be useful for the customer to further assess
the extent, if any, of information leakage of their not held orders and
potential conflicts of interest facing their broker-dealers.
Specifically, the Commission believes that such information will enable
customers to assess whether their broker-dealers are exposing their not
held orders to select market participants with which the broker-dealer
has affiliations or business relationships, or from which the broker-
dealer receives other incentives. In addition, the Commission believes
that disclosure of this information will provide the customer with a
more complete understanding of the broker-dealer's order handling
activities for purposes of assessing the broker-dealer's execution
quality generally.
Commenters generally supported requiring a broker-dealer to
identify the venue(s) that were sent actionable IOIs.\273\ One
commenter expressed broad support for requiring a broker-dealer to
identify for customers the total number of orders exposed, and the
venue(s) to which orders were exposed, through actionable IOIs.\274\
This commenter also stated that the venue information is necessary for
an institution to evaluate the exposure of its orders through
actionable IOIs for information leakage and conflicts of interest.\275\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\273\ See HMA Letter at 10; NYSE Letter at 1-2; Markit Letter at
4, 11-12; FIF Letter at 7; Fidelity Letter at 4; STA Letter II at 3.
\274\ See NYSE Letter at 1.
\275\ See id. at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters suggested that the Commission should clarify that
the reference in proposed Rule 606(b)(3) to the venue(s) to which not
held NMS stock orders were exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable IOI does not include IOIs that a broker-dealer may send to
its institutional customers.\276\ They stated that including broker-
dealers' institutional customers as ``venues'' under the rule would be
problematic from a competitive perspective, as broker-dealers would be
required to disclose their customer lists, and many customers likely
would not want their identities to be disclosed.\277\ Some of these
commenters suggested that, to effectuate the suggested clarification,
the Commission should require disclosure of actionable IOI information
only with respect to actionable IOIs sent to ``market centers'' as
defined in Rule 600(b)(38), which would not include broker-dealers'
customers.\278\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\276\ See Markit Letter at 4, 11-12; FIF Letter at 7; Fidelity
Letter at 4; STA Letter II at 3.
\277\ See Market Letter at 12; FIF Letter at 7; Fidelity Letter
at 4; STA Letter II at 3.
\278\ 17 CFR 242.600(b)(38). See FIF Letter at 7; FIF Addendum
at 4 n.7; Fidelity Letter at 4; STA Letter II at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission's reference to ``venues'' for purposes of Rule
606(b)(3) is meant to refer to external liquidity providers to which
the broker-dealer may send actionable IOIs. To provide the clarity
requested by commenters, the Commission intends in this context for
these external liquidity providers generally to include market
participants that operate a business of providing liquidity by buying
and selling securities for their own account and seek to profit from
the spread between such trades, and that may reasonably be assumed by a
broker-dealer to be willing to take the opposite side of a trade in
connection with that business. The Commission believes that this
category of market participants likely would include market centers as
defined in Rule 600(b)(38), but may not be limited to such market
centers. For example, as noted above, for purposes of Rule 606(b)(3),
the Commission believes that the venues referenced by Rule 606(b)(3)
generally would include an external liquidity provider that trades
proprietarily. Rule 600(b)(38) defines market centers to include OTC
market makers, among other things. In this context, an external
liquidity provider that trades proprietarily, and to which a broker-
dealer sends an actionable IOI, may be an OTC market maker and thus a
market center under Rule 600(b)(38). But even if such an external
liquidity provider is not an OTC market maker and does not qualify as a
market center under Rule 600(b)(38), the Commission generally would
consider a venue to be covered by Rule 606(b)(3) if it operates a
business of providing liquidity by buying and selling securities for
its own account and seeks to profit from the spread from such trades,
and may reasonably be assumed by a broker-dealer to be willing to take
the opposite side of a trade in connection with that business.
The Commission has considered commenters' concerns regarding the
potential disclosure of customer identities if customers to which
broker-dealers send actionable IOIs are ``venues'' under the rule. The
Commission believes that it is appropriate to protect the
confidentiality of broker-dealer customer information, which can be
proprietary. At the same time, the Commission believes that it is
important for a customer to receive detailed, standardized disclosures
from its broker-dealer that enable the customer to better evaluate the
broker-dealer's handling of its not held NMS stock orders. If a broker-
dealer exposes a customer's not held NMS stock order to one or more of
its other customers via an actionable IOI, the customer should be
entitled to that information as it may inform its assessment of its
broker-dealer's performance in handling its orders. Accordingly, the
Commission is adopting a modification to Rule
[[Page 58366]]
606(b)(3) that requires broker-dealers to disclose the fact that
actionable IOIs were sent to other customers, but not the identity of
such customers. The Commission believes that this approach strikes an
appropriate balance between protecting the identities of broker-
dealers' customers and sufficient and meaningful disclosure to
customers of the venues to which broker-dealers expose their not held
NMS stock orders through actionable IOIs. Thus, in pertinent part,
final Rule 606(b)(3) requires that the broker-dealer's customer-
specific order handling report include the venue(s) to which not held
NMS stock orders were exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable IOI provided that, where applicable, a broker-dealer must
disclose that it exposed a customer's order through an actionable IOI
to other customers but need not disclose the identity of such
customers.\279\ In other words, where a broker-dealer exposes a
customer's not held NMS stock order through an actionable IOI to a
venue that is a person or entity that may place an order, such as
another of the broker-dealer's customers, the broker-dealer's
disclosure in the Rule 606(b)(3) report with respect to this exposure
may be aggregated and anonymized, and simply state that the customer's
order was exposed to other customers of the broker-dealer via an
actionable IOI.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\279\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter suggested that IOIs should be reported separately
from orders.\280\ This commenter stated that the execution quality and
routing characteristics of IOIs are fundamentally different from normal
parent and child orders, and must be reported separately for investors
to properly analyze how orders are being handled; otherwise, according
to this commenter, the IOIs could generate potentially misleading
information.\281\ Consistent with this comment and what was proposed,
actionable IOIs are required to be reported separately under Rule
606(b)(3). Specifically, with respect to the order flow sent by the
customer to the broker-dealer, Rule 606(b)(3) requires disclosure of,
among other things: The total number of not held NMS stock orders
exposed by the broker-dealer through an actionable IOI and the venue or
venues to which such orders were exposed by the broker-dealer through
an actionable IOI. These are the only disclosures for actionable IOIs
under Rule 606(b)(3), and each such disclosure must be set forth
separately in the Rule 606(b)(3) report. The other Rule 606(b)(3)
disclosures pertain to customers' not held NMS stock orders (and any
child orders derived therefrom). They are distinct from the actionable
IOI disclosures, and they generally should not include actionable IOIs
in the reported information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\280\ See HMA Letter at 10.
\281\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, one commenter stated that Rule 606 should require
disclosure of routing statistics in response to IOIs received by smart
order routers.\282\ According to this commenter, many smart order
routers accept IOIs and use them to make routing decisions, while few
smart order routers send IOIs. This commenter suggested that the
amendments to Rule 606 should require disclosure of routing statistics
in response to IOIs received by SORs including the fill rates on orders
sent to external liquidity providers or other venues, categorized by
the receipt of a contra-side IOI or not.\283\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\282\ See Markit Letter at 4, 11-12, 23, 34.
\283\ See id. at 23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the commenter acknowledged, Rule 606(b)(3) focuses on requiring
the disclosure of IOIs sent by routing broker-dealers on behalf of
orders received from their customers, not of IOIs received by broker-
dealers.\284\ The Commission, at this time, intends to maintain the
focus of the rule's disclosure requirement for actionable IOIs on IOIs
sent by the broker-dealer. The required disclosures are intended to be
a baseline from which customers can, if they so choose, negotiate with
their broker-dealers for further data. The Commission believes that
such a baseline is provided, with respect to actionable IOIs, through
requiring disclosure of the actionable IOIs sent by a broker-dealer on
behalf of an order received from its customer. The Commission also
believes that this information would provide an adequate basis for
customers to assess the extent, if any, of information leakage of their
orders and potential conflicts of interest facing their broker-dealers,
as well as enable such customers to assess whether their broker-dealers
are exposing their orders to select market participants with which the
broker-dealer has affiliations or business relationships, or from which
the broker-dealer receives other incentives. The Commission does not
believe, at this juncture, that also including disclosures related to
IOIs received by broker-dealers would provide significantly more useful
information to customers in making those assessments with respect to
their broker-dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\284\ See id. at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, Rule 606(b)(3) requires, with respect to the not held
NMS stock order flow sent by the customer to the broker-dealer, the
total number of shares of orders sent to the broker-dealer by the
customer during the relevant period; the total number of shares
executed by the broker-dealer as principal for its own account; the
total number of orders exposed by the broker-dealer through an
actionable indication of interest; and the venue or venues to which
orders were exposed by the broker-dealer through an actionable
indication of interest, provided that the identity of such venue or
venues may be anonymized if the venue is a person or entity that may
place an order with the broker-dealer.\285\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\285\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Information For Each Venue to Which the Broker-Dealer Routed Orders
For the Customer
i. Proposal
The Commission proposed that the customer-specific order handling
report required under proposed Rule 606(b)(3) include specific columns
of information for each venue to which the broker-dealer routed orders
for the customer, in the aggregate and broken down by passive, medium,
and aggressive order routing strategies.\286\ The proposed rule
identified four categories of such information: Information on order
routing, information on order execution, information on orders that
provided liquidity, and information on orders that removed
liquidity.\287\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\286\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3). As discussed above, the
Commission is not adopting the proposed order routing strategy
categorization. See supra Section III.A.5.a.
\287\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv). See also
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49453-58 for additional detail
on the Commission's proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information on Order Routing. With respect to information on order
routing, the Commission proposed to require, within each venue and
order routing strategy category, disclosure of: (1) Total shares
routed; (2) total shares routed marked immediate or cancel; \288\ (3)
total shares routed that were further routable; and (4) average order
size routed.\289\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\288\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49453.
\289\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(i). See also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49453-54.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information on Order Execution. With respect to information on
order execution, the Commission proposed to require disclosure of: (1)
Total shares executed; (2) fill rate; \290\ (3) average fill size;
\291\ (4) average net execution fee or
[[Page 58367]]
rebate; \292\ (5) total number of shares executed at the midpoint;
\293\ (6) percentage of shares executed at the midpoint; (7) total
number of shares executed that were priced on the side of the spread
more favorable to the order; (8) percentage of total shares executed
that were priced on the side of the spread more favorable to the order;
(9) total number of shares executed that were priced on the side of the
spread less favorable to the order; and (10) percentage of total shares
executed that were priced on the side of the spread less favorable to
the order.\294\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\290\ Fill rate would be calculated by the shares executed
divided by the shares routed.
\291\ Average fill size would be the average size, by number of
shares, of each order executed on the venue.
\292\ The fee and rebate would be measured in cents per 100
shares, specified to four decimal places.
\293\ The midpoint would be the price halfway between the
national best bid and national best offer.
\294\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(ii). See also Proposing
Release, supra note 1, at 49454-55.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information on Orders that Provided Liquidity. In addition to the
order routing and execution data described above, the Commission
proposed to require disclosure of information on orders that provided
liquidity.\295\ Specifically, the Commission proposed to require
disclosure of: (1) Total number of shares executed of orders providing
liquidity; (2) percentage of shares executed of orders providing
liquidity; (3) average time between order entry and execution or
cancellation for orders providing liquidity (in milliseconds); and (4)
the average net execution rebate or fee for shares of orders providing
liquidity (cents per 100 shares, specified to four decimal
places).\296\ In connection with this new proposed requirement, the
Commission proposed to define the term ``orders providing liquidity''
to mean ``orders that were executed against after resting at a trading
center.'' \297\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\295\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(iii).
\296\ See id. See also Proposing Release, supra note 1, at
49456.
\297\ See proposed Rule 600(b)(58).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information on Orders that Removed Liquidity. Similar to orders
that provided liquidity, the Commission proposed to require the
disclosure of information on orders that removed liquidity.\298\
Specifically, the Commission proposed to require disclosure of: (1)
Total number of shares executed of orders removing liquidity; (2)
percentage of shares executed of orders removing liquidity; and (3)
average net execution fee or rebate for shares of orders removing
liquidity (cents per 100 shares, specified to four decimal
places).\299\ Relatedly, the Commission also proposed to define the
term ``orders removing liquidity'' as ``orders that executed against
resting trading interest at a trading center.'' \300\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\298\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(iv).
\299\ See proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(iv)(A) through (C). See also
Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49458.
\300\ See proposed Rule 600(b)(56).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is adopting as proposed the requirement that the
Rule 606(b)(3) customer-specific order handling report include specific
columns of information for each venue to which the broker-dealer routed
orders for the customer,\301\ and is adopting as proposed the specific
pieces of information set forth in Rules 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv) that
are required to be included in the reports.\302\ Specifically, the
Commission is adopting as proposed the required data points for
information on order routing specified in Rule 606(b)(3)(i), for
information on order execution specified in Rule 606(b)(3)(ii), for
information on orders that provided liquidity specified in Rule
606(b)(3)(iii), and for information on orders that removed liquidity
specified in Rule 606(b)(iv).\303\ The Commission also is adopting as
proposed the definitions of the terms ``orders providing liquidity''
and ``orders removing liquidity.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\301\ See Rule 606(b)(3). As discussed above, the Commission is
making two modifications to the format of the Rule 606(b)(3). First,
the Commission is not adopting the proposed order routing strategy
categorization. See supra Section III.A.5.a. Second, the Commission
is requiring that the Rule 606(b)(3) report be divided into two
separate sections--one for directed orders and the other for non-
directed orders. See Section III.A.5.b. The Commission also is
revising the Rule 600(b) definitions of the terms ``directed order''
and ``non-directed order.'' See id.; see also supra Section
III.A.1.b.vii.
\302\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
\303\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters broadly supported the Proposal to require broker-dealers
to provide more detailed order handling information to their customers
upon request, and expressed varied views on what specific or additional
metrics would be most useful and should be included in the report. Some
commenters suggested requiring additional execution quality-related
metrics in Rule 606(b)(3),\304\ such as: A spread capture metric that
measures the execution price relative to the NBBO or displayed
quote,\305\ information concerning the realized spread and the
effective spread and quoted spread percentages,\306\ price improvement
statistics,\307\ average time between order entry and execution or
cancellation for orders that remove liquidity,\308\ and median order
size routed and median fill size.\309\ Other comments related to fee
and rebate disclosures. Specifically, some commenters suggested
revising the data points in Rule 606(b)(3) by requiring an estimate of
execution fees and rebate information.\310\ One commenter asserted that
the fee and rebate disclosures in proposed Rule 606(b)(3)(iv) lack
actionable data, and recommended a completely revised version of the
Rule 606(b)(3) report.\311\ Another commenter, by contrast, supported
disclosure of the net execution fee or rebate and believed that broker-
dealers have the capability to track this information.\312\ Another
commenter suggested that broker-dealers should disclose to
institutional (and retail) customers the nature of payment for order
flow and profit-sharing relationships, including whether or not they
pass any of the rebates or order-flow payments to their customers, as
well as additional information that the commenter asserted is designed
to help investors understand the state of the market at the time of
execution and whether the broker-dealer was using a venue in which
there is a conflict of interest or economic routing inducement.\313\
One commenter believed that the Proposal does not address the economic
pressures or transaction-based costs incurred by the broker-dealer
prior to receiving the order, particularly in light of broker-dealer
use of order management systems (``OMSs'') and fees associated with
OMSs and connectivity, and suggested
[[Page 58368]]
that broker-dealers be required to disclose such fees to their
customers.\314\ Finally, some commenters suggested requiring execution
venues to provide standard liquidity indicators to broker-dealers,\315\
and one commenter broadly recommended that the Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling disclosures build off the FIX Trading Community's FIX
Execution Venue Reporting Recommended Best Practices in order to
achieve standardization and objectivity in the disclosures.\316\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\304\ See, e.g., HMA Letter at 4, 11; ICI Letter at 9-10; Markit
Letter at 8-10, 24-26, Appendix A.
\305\ See, e.g., HMA Letter at 11; ICI Letter at 9; BlackRock
Letter at 2. https://fif.com/images/Retail_Execution_Quality_Statistics/FIF_Rule_605-606_WG_-_Retail_Execution_Quality_Stats_Wholesaler_Template.pdf).
\306\ See, e.g., BlackRock Letter at 2; Markit Letter at 24.
\307\ See, e.g., ICI Letter at 9; Markit Letter at 24.
\308\ See, e.g., FSR Letter at 6; ICI Letter at 10.
\309\ See Capital Group Letter at 6.
\310\ See Fidelity Letter at 5; Markit Letter at 16 and n.37,
25. One of these commenters also sought clarity as to what fee a
broker should use if a broker executes a trade on its own ATS. See
Fidelity Letter at 5. Rules 606(b)(3(ii) through (iv) requires the
broker-dealer to disclose the average net execution fees or rebates.
Thus, the Commission believes that a broker generally would need to
disclose this information to the extent relevant to execution of a
trade on its own ATS. If the broker incurs no fee or rebate for such
an execution, then that is what should be disclosed.
\311\ See Markit Letter at 8-10, Appendix A.
\312\ See HMA Letter at 11.
\313\ See Better Markets Letter at 7-8. This commenter also
stated that, while broker-dealers are under ``best execution''
obligations, venues they route their orders to (which may themselves
re-route to other venues) are not subject to the same obligations,
and that the Commission should harmonize the duties of care. See id.
The Commission notes that harmonization of duties of best execution
and care across venues and broker-dealers is outside the scope of
this rulemaking.
\314\ See Bloomberg Letter at 2-7. This commenter also contended
that the Proposal is predicated on positions regarding depth of book
data and a broker-dealer's duty of best execution that are odds with
an Initial Decision in a Commission Administrative Proceeding, and
that the Commission should address the fees charged by exchanges for
their market data products. See id. at 2-3, 7-11. The Commission
separately has issued an order dated October 16, 2018. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 84432 (October 16, 2018),
available at https://www.sec.gov/litigation/opinions/2018/34-84432.pdf.
\315\ See Fidelity Letter at 5; Thomson Reuters Letter at 2.
\316\ See KCG Letter at 6-7; see also EMSAC Rule 606
Recommendations, supra note 16, at 3. As the KCG Letter
acknowledged, however, these FIX recommended best practices focus on
institutional execution information and not order routing data. See
id. at 7. As such, the Commission does not believe that they would
be an appropriate basis for the order handling disclosures that are
the focus of the Commission's amendments to Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While commenters suggested different order handling metrics that
could be useful to customers and provide more in-depth insight into how
broker-dealers handle not held NMS stock orders, the Commission's
intent in establishing the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures is not to require
broker-dealers to provide every specific piece of data that may be
available for an order and potentially valuable to certain customers.
Rather, the Commission's intent is to provide a baseline of
standardized order handling information that (subject to two de minimis
exceptions) all customers that submit not held NMS stock orders to
broker-dealers are entitled to receive from their broker-dealers and
that customers can use to evaluate their broker-dealers' order handling
performance. Rules 606(b)(3)(i) through (iv) require broker-dealers to
provide detailed information regarding order routing, order execution,
orders that provided liquidity, and orders that removed liquidity. Each
of those four categories of information is further divided into several
subcategories of specific pieces of data that must be disclosed. The
Commission continues to believe that these data points are sufficient
to provide the Commission's intended baseline, standardized set of
information that customers can use to evaluate how their broker-dealers
handle their orders and, in particular, assess how their broker-dealers
comply with best execution obligations and manage the potential for
information leakage and conflicts of interest.
The Commission does not believe that it is necessary for the
achievement of this goal to require, at this time, that the Rule
606(b)(3) order handling report include the additional order handling
statistics suggested by commenters. There is a large spectrum of types
of customers, and commenters suggested a wide range of order handling
statistics. While certain additional data metrics may be more useful to
certain types of market participants, the Commission does not view any
particular data element suggested by commenters as likely to
significantly enhance the degree to which the Rule 606(b)(3) report
provides a standardized baseline of order handling information that is
broadly useful to all customers that submit orders to their broker-
dealers.
Moreover, incorporating additional metrics into the Rule 606(b)(3)
report may increase the complexity of the report and the associated
costs, and the Commission believes at this time that such costs and
complexity would not be justified by the expected benefits to customers
in evaluating the order handling performance of their broker-dealers.
As summarized above, commenters suggested revised or additional
disclosures related to execution quality and fee/rebate
information.\317\ While incorporating the suggested execution quality
and fee/rebate disclosures into the Rule 606(b)(3) reports may add
extra utility to the reports for certain customers, in adopting Rule
606(b)(3) the Commission must balance the cost of compliance against
the usefulness of the information that is required to be disclosed
under the rule. Requiring broker-dealers to make mandatory disclosures
imposes a cost on broker-dealers, and each additional required data
item potentially raises that compliance cost, as well as potentially
increases the complexity of the report. Incorporating commenters'
suggested disclosures into the Rule 606(b)(3) reports would, therefore,
likely raise compliance costs and add to the complexity of the report.
As but one example, requiring the broker-dealer to disclose the
displayed quote at the time when the broker-dealer routed an order to
an exchange could increase reporting complexity and costs in
calculating the displayed quote and the synchronization of clocks
between a broker-dealer and the venue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\317\ As is also summarized above, some commenters suggested
requiring execution venues to provide standard liquidity indicators
to broker-dealers. See supra note 315. The rule amendments being
adopted today enhance the order handling information that broker-
dealers must provide to their customers, and do not address
standardization of the information that execution venues provide to
broker-dealers. As such, these comments are outside the scope of
this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In light of the fact that the Commission believes that the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures are sufficient to provide a baseline,
standardized set of information that customers can use to evaluate how
their broker-dealers handle their orders, the Commission believes that
the compliance costs and added complexity associated with commenters'
suggested additional disclosures would not be justified by the marginal
utility that these disclosures may add to the report beyond that which
is provided by the disclosures. Specifically, the additional metrics
related to fees and rebates and economic incentives suggested by
commenters could provide customers with additional information on how
venue fees and rebates impact how their broker-dealers' handle their
orders, particularly in light of the potential for conflicts of
interest caused by fees and rebates; however, the Commission believes
that the Rule 606(b)(3) disclosures already contain sufficient fee and
rebate information for customers to adequately evaluate their broker-
dealers' potential conflict of interest. Thus, any added value in the
report created by the suggested fee and rebate information would, in
the Commission's view, not justify the additional complexity, as well
as the additional costs, associated with including the information.
Likewise, the additional execution quality metrics suggested by
commenters could provide customers with more information regarding how
their broker-dealers achieve best execution and attempt to prevent
information leakage, but the Commission believes that the Rule
606(b)(3) disclosures, as proposed, already provide a sufficient basis
for customers to evaluate their broker-dealers' performance in this
regard. Thus, any added value in the report created by the suggested
execution quality disclosures would not, in the Commission's view, be
justified by the additional costs and complexity associated with
including the information.
The Commission believes that adopting the Rule 606(b)(3) report
content as proposed will help minimize the reporting complexity and
costs, while creating a report that is universally useful across the
spectrum of customer types, some of which may be more sophisticated
than others in their ability to digest the reported
[[Page 58369]]
information. The Commission did not receive comments suggesting that
the order handling statistics set forth in Rule 606(b)(3) as proposed
would be too difficult or complex for broker-dealers to generate or for
institutional customers in particular to use.
This determination is not an indication that the Commission has
formed a decision on the validity or usefulness of the various
different order handling metrics that commenters suggested. Rather, in
light of the fact that, as noted above, the Commission believes that
Rule 606(b)(3), as proposed, is reasonably designed to provide a
standardized baseline of order handling disclosures that (subject to
two de minimis exceptions) all customers that submit not held NMS stock
orders to their broker-dealers are entitled to receive, the Commission
has determined to adopt Rule 606(b)(3) as proposed.
As stated elsewhere herein, customers remain free to negotiate with
their broker-dealers for additional disclosures regarding broker-
dealers' handling of their orders, and broker-dealers of course remain
free to compete by providing more detailed information than is required
under Rule 606(b)(3). As a result of the rules being adopted today,
customers that choose to negotiate with their broker-dealers for
additional disclosures will be doing so from a more standardized
baseline of enhanced order routing disclosures, and in the case of
customers that previously did not receive detailed order handling
disclosures from their broker-dealers, from a strengthened and more
informed negotiating position. In light of the Commission's belief that
the disclosures required by Rule 606(b)(3), as proposed and as adopted,
are reasonably designed to provide such a standardized baseline of
order handling information for customers to use to assess their broker-
dealers' order handling performance, the Commission believes, at this
juncture, that the disclosure of additional order handling statistics
would be best left to competitive forces in the market and should not
be mandated by Commission rule.
Accordingly, the Commission is adopting as proposed the requirement
that certain order routing information be disclosed within the proposed
venue segmentation in the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling report.
Specifically, Rule 606(b)(3) requires that the order handling
information specified in subparagraphs (b)(3)(i) through (iv) of the
rule be provided for each venue to which the broker-dealer routed
orders for the customer.\318\ In addition, Rules 606(b)(3)(i) through
(iv) specify the same required information on order routing, order
execution, orders that provided liquidity, and orders that removed
liquidity as was proposed. Further, Rule 606(b) is being amended to
define the term ``orders providing liquidity'' to mean orders that were
executed against after resting at a trading center,\319\ and the term
``orders removing liquidity'' to mean orders that executed against
resting trading interest at a trading center.\320\ The Commission
received no comments regarding these defined terms, and is adopting
them as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\318\ See Rule 606(b)(3).
\319\ See Rule 600(b)(54).
\320\ See Rule 600(b)(55).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. Rule 606(c) Quarterly Aggregated Public Report of Rule 606(b)(3)
Information
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to require a broker-dealer that receives
orders covered by Rule 606(b)(3) to make publicly available \321\ a
report that aggregates the Rule 606(b)(3) order handling information
for all such orders that it receives.\322\ As proposed, broker-dealers
would be required to make the report publicly available for each
calendar quarter, broken down by calendar month, within one month after
the end of the quarter.\323\ The Commission proposed that this public
aggregated order handling report be mandatory for all of the orders
subject to Rule 606(b)(3) that a broker-dealer handles within a
calendar quarter regardless of whether any of its customers request
customer-specific order handling reports pursuant to Rule
606(b)(3).\324\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\321\ ``Make publicly available'' is defined in Rule 600 of
Regulation NMS. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(36).
\322\ See proposed Rule 606(c).
\323\ See id.
\324\ See id.; see also Proposing Release, supra note 1, at
49459.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, similar to the customer-specific order handling
reports required under proposed Rule 606(b),\325\ the Commission
proposed to require that the public aggregated order handling report be
made available using an XML schema and associated PDF renderer
published on the Commission's website.\326\ Further, the Commission
proposed to require that broker-dealers keep such public aggregated
order handling reports posted on a website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the website.\327\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\325\ See supra Section III.A.3.
\326\ See proposed Rule 606(c).
\327\ See id. See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49458-59
for additional detail on the Commission's proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is not adopting proposed Rule 606(c), and thus the
Commission is not adopting the proposed requirement that broker-dealers
publicly report, on a quarterly basis, aggregated Rule 606(b)(3) order
handling information. As a result, under the rule amendments being
adopted today, for not held orders in NMS stock, broker-dealers are
required only to provide the customer-specific order handling reports
required by Rule 606(b)(3) (or Rule 606(b)(1), as applicable),\328\ and
there is no public reporting component of the information set forth in
Rule 606(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\328\ See supra Sections III.A.1.b.iv-v.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Multiple commenters stated that directed orders should be excluded
from the proposed Rule 606(c) public aggregated reports, or
alternatively, that directed orders should be reported separately.\329\
Commenters asserted that including a customer's directed orders in the
public aggregated report could cause the report to be misleading
because routing behavior that was directed by the customer pursuant to
a directed order would be misrepresented in the report as routing
behavior determined by the broker-dealer itself pursuant to its
independent routing logic.\330\ One commenter stated that even a
directed versus non-directed order distinction in the public report
would be insufficient because institutional clients provide
instructions on orders without explicitly directing an order to a
venue, such as by directing a large portion of their order flow to
high-rebate venues or directing their brokers to avoid routing to a
specific
[[Page 58370]]
venue or type of venue, and instead the commenter suggested a more
nuanced distinction in the report between orders that solely reflect
the broker-dealer's routing decisions and orders that are subject to
specific client routing instructions.\331\ One commenter stated that
the proposed Rule 606(c) aggregated order handling report would not
serve its intended use and that a modified version should be available
only to institutional customers upon request.\332\ This commenter
expressed concern that the public aggregated report would be easy for
market analysts to misinterpret, creating confusion in the market, and
that it could present potential competitive concerns for broker-
dealers, such as with respect to the confidentiality of their business
operations and book of business.\333\ Some commenters believed that
public disclosure of aggregated order handling information could be
useful to market participants.\334\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\329\ See SIFMA Letter at 2, 5; FIF Letter at 5; Fidelity Letter
at 6; STA Letter at 5-6; STA Letter II at 2; EMSAC Rule 606
Recommendations, supra note 16, at 3. One commenter suggested that
orders from individuals should be reported separately in the
quarterly public reports under proposed Rule 606(c), but that
suggestion was premised on the commenter's view that the proposal to
define ``institutional order'' based on dollar amount would result
in large orders from retail customers being considered institutional
orders. See ICI Letter at 10. Similarly, another commenter stated
that the quarterly public reports under proposed Rule 606(c) should
exclude retail block-sized orders. See Fidelity Letter at 6. As
discussed above, the Commission is adopting Rule 606(b) disclosure
requirements based on whether an order is held or not held and is
not adopting proposed Rule 606(c). As a result, retail block-sized
orders will not be included in quarterly public reports unless these
orders are subject to Rule 606(a)(1).
\330\ See SIFMA Letter at 5; FIF Letter at 5; Fidelity Letter at
6; ICI Letter at 3.
\331\ See SIFMA Letter at 5.
\332\ See Fidelity Letter at 6.
\333\ See Fidelity Letter at 6 and n.14.
\334\ See HMA Letter at 4; CFA Letter at 9; Markit Letter at 27;
Better Markets Letter at 3-6.
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In light of the comments submitted and after further consideration,
the Commission is not adopting Rule 606(c) or any requirement that a
broker-dealer make publicly available an aggregated report with respect
to its handling of customers' not held NMS stock orders.\335\ The
Commission believes, upon further consideration, that the proposed
quarterly public reports of aggregated Rule 606(b)(3) order handling
information would be of limited utility. As discussed in greater detail
below, the Commission believes that the proposed reports would not
allow for fair ``apples-to-apples'' comparisons, and instead could
generate misleading impressions of broker-dealer order handling
practices. As a result, the aggregated Rule 606(b)(3) information in
the proposed public report may not allow for meaningful insight into
the quality of broker-dealers' order routing performance or comparisons
of order handling performance across broker-dealers, and is unlikely to
provide the same benefits as the aggregated Rule 606(a) public
disclosures for held orders in NMS stock because of the disparate
nature and trading behavior of customers that use not held orders in
NMS stock.\336\
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\335\ The Commission also received comment that provided
suggestions and modifications to proposed Rule 606(c), which the
Commission is not adopting. See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 4-5;
Fidelity Letter at 6; Citadel Letter at 1; FIF Letter at 13; Markit
Letter at 27, 29.
\336\ For similar reasons, the Commission is not requiring
broker-dealers to disclose additional information or a more detailed
order handling report as part of regular public reporting as was
suggested by some commenters. See, e.g., Better Markets Letter at 3-
6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, broker-dealers may have different types of
customers that utilize not held orders in NMS stock. For example, one
broker-dealer may serve as a broker-dealer for only quantitative
trading firms, while another broker-dealer may serve only investment
advisers. Each customer has a unique set of circumstances, goals, and
order flow that dictates how a broker-dealer handles that customer's
orders. For example, the trading objectives of a quantitative firm
primarily trading principally are different from the trading objectives
of another type of customer, such as a diversified mutual fund. In
light of this, the Commission believes that there would be limited
ability to understand the quality of broker-dealers' routing
performance or meaningfully compare broker-dealer order handling
performance based on the aggregated information for not held NMS stock
orders in the proposed public reports without requiring additional
disclosures regarding customers and potentially sensitive proprietary
information.
Indeed, broker-dealers' order routing behavior differs based on the
customers they serve, and understanding the quality of their routing
performance would likely require an understanding of the investment or
trading needs of their underlying customers, which would not be
obtainable from the aggregated information in the public reports.
Moreover, some customers give complete discretion to a broker-dealer in
handling their orders while other customers may place limits on or
provide instructions regarding how a broker-dealer can handle their
orders. In fact, orders from certain customers frequently limit broker-
dealer discretion in some manner. For example, cost-sensitive customers
may place restrictions on the venues a broker-dealer may use to execute
their orders, which could have a significant impact on how the broker-
dealer routes those orders and the resulting execution metrics. In
particular, some customers choose cost-plus fee arrangements and
specify a desire to maximize rebates or low pricing venues to the
extent practicable. Or, customers may instruct broker-dealers to use
certain algorithms or strategies that preference certain routing
options or behavior. A taking algorithm acts differently than a posting
algorithm, and there may also be routing strategies or configurations
available with both taking and posting algorithms. Further, the
Commission believes based on its experience that quantitative firms,
for example, represent a large segment of the institutional marketplace
and a significant portion of them use largely passive trading
strategies, which can result in a demand for advantageous pricing
arrangements, including cost-plus arrangements with their broker-
dealers. This, in turn, can result in selecting rebate maximization
strategies. Such strategies are often meaningfully different than the
posting strategies used by long-only mutual funds, for example. The
Commission believes based on its experience that aggregating the order
handling information of cost-sensitive customers or customers that have
specified certain algorithms or trading strategies for the broker-
dealer to utilize with customers that have given the broker-dealer
complete routing discretion creates dilutive effects in the aggregated
information that wash out the routing nuances that are relevant to each
type of customer and important to understanding a broker-dealer's
routing decisions when granted full discretion.
The proposed aggregated public disclosures for not held NMS stock
orders could therefore be unclear, and potentially misleading, due to
the nature or requests of a broker-dealer's specific customers. A
report may reflect apparently substandard order handling practices even
though the broker-dealer is performing competently or is satisfying
specific customer requests. Even a customer interested in comparing the
performance of its specific orders to other orders handled by its own
broker-dealer would likely be unable to meaningfully analyze the
aggregate order handling report because the customer likely would not
know the nature of, practices and requests of the broker-dealer's other
customers. Due to the limited utility of the public reports as
proposed, the Commission further believes that the burden of compiling
and publishing aggregate order handling information for not held NMS
stock orders does not at this time justify the expected benefits.
In addition, the Commission recognizes that broker-dealers have
proprietary methods for order handling, and is cognizant of the
sensitive nature of such business practices and intellectual property.
The Commission believes that quarterly public disclosures as proposed
may risk the exposure of sensitive proprietary information on the
broker-dealers' order handling techniques. The Commission noted in the
Proposing Release that it
[[Page 58371]]
believed that any such risk would be minimal, but in combination with
the potentially limited utility of the public reports as proposed, the
Commission believes it is not appropriate to impose any such risk, no
matter how small. In addition, the risk may be more pronounced for
certain segments of customers than it is for others. In particular, new
or small broker-dealers with only a few customers may end up disclosing
confidential order routing information if such information is required
to be included in public reports. This could significantly disadvantage
new or small broker-dealers.
Furthermore, the Commission believes that not held order handling
is not analogous to held order handling and that the benefits that
accrue from the public disclosure of aggregated held order handling
reports are not likely to accrue from the public disclosure of
aggregated not held order handling reports. Currently, Rule 606(a)
requires public aggregated reporting of certain order handling
information.\337\ As noted in the Proposing Release, some market
participants have stated that the public disclosure of meaningful data
in Rule 606 reports can assist broker-dealers in evaluating their own
performance relative to other firms.\338\ The Commission also has
previously noted its belief that these public aggregated disclosures
spur competition among broker-dealers to provide enhanced order routing
services and better execution quality.\339\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\337\ See Rule 606(a).
\338\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49461.
\339\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission does not believe the same benefits would accrue to
customers that utilize not held orders due to the fundamental
differences between held order flow and not held order flow. Held
orders are typically non-directed orders with no specific order
handling instructions for the broker-dealer. Moreover, held order flow
generally is handled similarly by broker-dealers--held orders are
generally small orders that are internalized or sent to OTC market
makers if marketable or fully executed on a single trading center if
not marketable.\340\ By contrast, not held order flow is diverse and
fundamentally different from held order flow in that customers may
provide specific order handling instructions to their broker-dealers or
limit the order handling discretion of their broker-dealers in some
manner. As discussed above, broker-dealers' handling of customer not
held orders is impacted by specific customer needs such as cost
sensitivity, the preferencing or disfavoring of specific market venues,
or other requests that limit broker-dealer discretion. The disparate
behavior of customers when using not held orders limits the ability of
both customers and broker-dealers to utilize the aggregated Rule
606(b)(3) order handling information in the public reports to better
understand broker-dealers' routing behavior or perform meaningful
comparisons of order routing performance across broker-dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\340\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49460.
Internalization is the process in which a broker-dealer fills an
order to buy a security from its own inventory, or fills an order to
sell by taking a security into its inventory. See Proposing Release,
supra note 1, at 49439 n. 64.
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B. Public Order Routing Report Under Rule 606(a)
Prior to today, Rule 606(a) required, among other things, that
broker-dealers that route customer orders--which do not include orders
for NMS stock above $200,000 in market value or orders for options
contracts above $50,000 in value \341\--provide a quarterly public
report of certain information regarding non-directed orders in NMS
securities that is organized by listing market and that sets forth
material aspects of their relationships with the ten venues to which
they routed the largest number of total non-directed orders and with
any venue to which they routed 5% or more of such orders (collectively,
``Specified Venues'').\342\ In the Commission's view, customers have
benefited from the Rule 606(a) reporting requirements for customer
orders, as the Rule 606(a) reports spurred competition among broker-
dealers to provide enhanced order routing services and better execution
quality, which in turn motivated trading centers to deliver more
efficient and innovative execution services as they competed for order
flow.
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\341\ See Rule 600(b)(18).
\342\ See Rule 606(a).
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But as noted above and detailed in the Proposing Release, changes
to market structure and order routing practices have led the Commission
to analyze the current requirements for public order routing disclosure
under Rule 606(a).\343\ The U.S. equity markets have evolved in recent
years to become more automated, dispersed, and complex, and the
resulting competition among trading centers has intensified practices
to attract order flow, including order flow from retail customers. As a
result of this market evolution, the utility of the Rule 606(a) public
reports and the degree to which they help achieve the rule's intended
benefits may be diminished. It is, therefore, important for the
Commission to enhance the Rule 606(a) public order handling reports in
a manner designed to update them consistent with market developments.
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\343\ See supra Section I; see also Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49461.
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Accordingly, the Commission believes that it is appropriate to make
limited updates to the Rule 606(a) requirements regarding broker-
dealers' public disclosure of their order routing practices, and in
conjunction with Rule 606(b)(3)'s applicability to NMS stock orders of
any size that are submitted on a not held basis, amend Rule 606(a) such
that it applies to NMS stock orders of any size that are submitted on a
held basis. Commenters were broadly supportive of enhanced Rule 606(a)
order routing disclosures.\344\ The Commission believes that the
amendments being adopted today to Rule 606(a), discussed in detail
below, should enhance broker-dealers' public order handling disclosures
by bringing them more up-to-date with current market and order routing
practices, and by focusing them on the types of NMS stock orders for
which the public disclosures are most relevant and would be most
useful. As a result, customers--and retail investors in particular--
that submit orders to their broker-dealers should be better able to
assess the quality of order handling services provided by their broker-
dealers and whether their broker-dealers are effectively managing
potential conflicts of interest.
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\344\ See, e.g., KCG Letter at 1-3; Ameritrade Letter at 3;
SIFMA Letter at 1; Better Markets Letter at 1, 8-9; HMA Letter at 3;
FSR Letter at 1; Citadel Letter at 1; and CFA Letter at 1.
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1. Orders Covered By Rule 606(a) Public Disclosures
a. Proposal
As discussed above,\345\ the proposed definition of ``institutional
order'' dovetailed with the current definition of ``customer order.''
This would allow the Commission to maintain Rule 606(a)(1)'s
applicability to orders in NMS stocks with a market value less than
$200,000 and NMS securities that are options contracts, and propose
enhancements to the existing disclosure requirements under Rule
606(a)(1) for such orders, without altering the substance of the
current definition of ``customer order'' in Rule 600(b). However, the
Commission proposed to rename the current ``customer order'' definition
as ``retail order'' without changing the substance of the definition
[[Page 58372]]
itself, such that an order for NMS stock would be categorized as either
an ``institutional order'' or a ``retail order'' under Rule 600(b) and
for the purposes of Rule 606 depending on its dollar value, and an
order for an NMS security that is an option contract for less than
$50,000 in market value would be categorized as a ``retail order.''
\346\
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\345\ See supra Sections III.A.1.a.
\346\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49434, 49465-66
for additional detail on the Commission's proposal.
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b. Final Rule and Response to Comments
As discussed above,\347\ the Commission is not adopting a
definition of ``institutional order'' or an order dollar value-based
approach to delineate the NMS stock orders covered by new Rule
606(b)(3). Consequently, the Commission is not renaming the term
``customer order'' as ``retail order'' in Rule 600(b), and the
Commission is amending Rule 606(a)(1) without any order dollar value
limitation on the rule's coverage of NMS stock orders.\348\ As amended,
Rule 606(a)(1) applies to NMS stock orders of any size that are
submitted on a held basis. Rule 606(a)(1) also continues to apply to
any order (whether held or not held) for an NMS security that is an
option contract with a market value less than $50,000, as the
Commission did not propose, and is not adopting, any modifications to
Rule 606's coverage of option orders.\349\
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\347\ See supra Section III.A.1.b.
\348\ Moreover, in light of the fact that the Commission is not
adopting the proposed amendment to rename ``customer order'' as
``retail order'' in Rule 600(b), and instead is maintaining
``customer order'' as currently defined, there is no longer any
need, as proposed, to revise existing cross-references to ``customer
order'' in Rules 600(b)(19), 600(b)(23), 600(b)(48), 605, 606, and
607. See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49466.
\349\ See supra notes 37 and 135.
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Specifically, Rule 606(a)(1), as amended, states that every broker-
dealer must make publicly available for each calendar quarter a report
on its routing of non-directed orders in NMS stocks that are submitted
on a held basis and in non-directed orders that are customer orders in
NMS securities that are option contracts during that quarter broker
down by calendar month. As noted above,\350\ the Commission is adopting
a modified definition of the term ``non-directed order'' that no longer
includes a dollar-value limitation on NMS stock orders,\351\ but
continues to exclude orders from a broker-dealer. Because Rule
606(a)(1) explicitly references ``non-directed orders'' in NMS stock,
the rule no longer covers only NMS stock orders with a market value
less than $200,000; rather, the rule now applies to NMS stock orders of
any size that are submitted on a held basis. With respect to orders for
NMS securities that are option contracts, however, Rule 606(a)(1)
explicitly references ``non-directed orders'' that are ``customer
orders.'' By virtue of this reference to ``customer orders,'' Rule
606(a)(1) continues to apply to an order for an NMS security that is an
option contract only if the order has a market value less than $50,000.
In both cases--held orders for NMS stock and orders for NMS securities
that are option contracts--Rule 606(a)(1) applies only if the order is
not from a broker-dealer.
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\350\ See supra Section III.A.1.b.vii.
\351\ Consistent with the modifications discussed in Section
III.A.1.b.vii, supra, Rule 606(a)(1)(i) also is revised to no longer
refer to the defined term ``customer order.''
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Rule 606(a)(1)'s application to held NMS stock orders of any size
works in unison with the customer-specific disclosures contained in
Rule 606(b)(1) and Rule 606(b)(3) to ensure that all NMS stock orders
are covered by order handling disclosure rules and to avoid overlap
between such rules.\352\ If Rule 606(a)(1)'s coverage were not amended
in conjunction with Rules 606(b)(1) and (3), there would be overlap
between the these rules--e.g., Rule 606(a)(1) would apply to NMS stock
orders of less than $200,000 in market value, and Rule 606(b)(3) also
would apply to such orders to the extent that they were not held. As
discussed above, numerous commenters criticized the proposed order
dollar value-based distinction between the orders covered by Rule
606(a)(1) versus Rule 606(b)(3), and the Commission believes that it
would be more appropriate to differentiate the NMS stock orders covered
by each rule according to whether an order is held or not held.
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\352\ See supra Section III.A.1.b.
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For the same reasons as discussed above,\353\ the Commission
believes that this method of differentiation is appropriate because
broker-dealers generally handle not held orders differently from held
orders due to the discretion they are afforded with not held orders but
not with held orders. As a result, the information pertinent to
understanding broker-dealers' order handling practices for not held
orders is not the same as for held orders. Unlike with not held orders,
the Commission's concern regarding how broker-dealers handle held
orders is less about the difficulties posed by more automated,
dispersed and complex order routing and execution practices. Rather,
the Commission's main concern with held NMS stock orders is the impact
of intensified competition for customer order flow--particularly retail
investor order flow--that has arisen concomitant with the rise in the
number of trading centers and the introduction of new fee models for
execution services.\354\ Financial inducements to attract order flow
from broker-dealers that handle retail investor orders have become more
prevalent and for some broker-dealers such inducements may be a
significant source of revenue.\355\ These financial inducements create
new, and in many cases significant, potential conflicts of interest for
broker-dealers with respect to how they handle held orders from
customers--and retail customers in particular. The Commission believes
that enhanced public disclosures should focus on providing more
detailed information regarding these financial inducements, as opposed
to the different information geared towards not held orders from
customers that is set forth in Rule 606(b)(3).
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\353\ See id.
\354\ See supra Section I; see also Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49434.
\355\ See id.
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In practice, the coverage of Rule 606(a)(1) as amended is likely to
be largely similar to the rule's coverage under its pre-existing
application to NMS stock orders of less than $200,000 in market value.
The Commission expects that the majority of customer (i.e., non-broker-
dealer) NMS stock orders having a market value of at least $200,000
will be not held orders and therefore not be covered under Rule
606(a)(1).\356\ Retail investors' orders are typically submitted on a
held basis and are typically smaller in size.\357\ So the smaller NMS
stock orders that were covered by the pre-existing rule likely also
were held orders and therefore will be covered by Rule 606(a)(1) as
amended. The difference is that, under the rule as amended, any non-
broker-dealer NMS stock orders that are for at least $200,000 in value
and submitted on a held basis will now be covered by Rule 606(a)(1) and
thus subject to public aggregated required order routing disclosures
for the first time.
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\356\ See supra Section III.A.1.b.vi (citing Eric Kelley and
Paul Tetlock, How Wise Are Crowds? Insights from Retail Orders and
Stock Returns, 68 Journal of Finance 1229-1265 (2013) and Brad M.
Barber and Terrence Odean, Trading Is Hazardous to Your Wealth: The
Common Stock Investment Performance of Individual Investors, 55
Journal of Finance 773 (2000)).
\357\ Accordingly, the Commission believes that the number of
higher value held orders for NMS stock that will be included in the
Rule 606(a)(1) public reporting regime will be limited.
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Under the Proposal, a non-broker-dealer NMS stock order with a
market value of at least $200,000 would have been defined as an
institutional order--regardless of whether it was a held or
[[Page 58373]]
not held order--and subject to the new customer-specific disclosures
set forth in proposed Rule 606(b)(3) and the new public aggregated
order handling report set forth in proposed Rule 606(c). The adopted
approach to NMS stock order handling disclosure is based on whether an
NMS stock order is submitted on a held or not held basis. In addition
to being appropriate for non-broker-dealer NMS stock held orders with a
market value of less than $200,000, the Commission believes that the
Rule 606(a)(1) public disclosures are appropriate for non-broker-dealer
NMS stock held orders with a market value of $200,000 or more because,
regardless of the order's dollar value or the nature of the customer
that submitted the order, broker-dealers must attempt to execute held
orders immediately. Thus, the Commission's concerns noted above for
held NMS stock orders are implicated regardless of the order's dollar
value or the nature of the customer that submitted the order. The Rule
606(a)(1) public disclosures are designed to address these concerns in
particular by focusing on providing enhanced transparency for financial
inducements faced by broker-dealers when determining where to route
held NMS stock order flow. Moreover, to the extent that it is a retail
customer that submits a larger held NMS stock order for $200,000 or
more, commenters appeared to agree that such orders would be
appropriately covered by Rule 606(a)(1).\358\ The Commission believes
that this enhancement over the current reporting regime will benefit
customers that submit held NMS stock orders, including large-sized
ones. They will be better able to assess the nature and quality of the
order handling services being provided by their broker-dealers,
including the potential for broker-dealer conflicts of interest. They
will also benefit to the extent that broker-dealers are spurred to
compete further by providing enhanced order routing services and better
execution quality, which in turn could motivate trading centers to
deliver more efficient and innovative execution services as they
compete for order flow.
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\358\ See, e.g., Fidelity Letter at 2-3; Wells Fargo Letter at
5; KCG Letter at 4; Thomson Reuters Letter at 1; FSR Letter at 3-4;
Citadel Letter at 2-3; Ameritrade Letter at 2.
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2. Marketable Limit Orders and Non-Marketable Limit Orders
a. Proposal
The Commission proposed to amend Rule 606(a)(1)(i) and (ii) to
require the public order routing report to split limit orders and
separately disclose them as marketable and non-marketable.\359\ In
connection with this new requirement, the Commission also proposed to
amend Rule 600(b) of Regulation NMS to include a definition of the term
``non-marketable limit order,'' which the Commission proposed to define
to mean any limit order other than a marketable limit order.\360\
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\359\ See Proposing Release, supra note 1, at 49462.
\360\ See proposed Rule 600(b)(51). See Proposing Release, supra
note 1, at 49462 for additional detail on the Commission's proposal.
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b. Final Rule and Response to Comments
The Commission is adopting as proposed the amendments to Rule
606(a)(1)(i) and (ii) to require the disclosure of order routing
information for marketable limit orders separately from non-marketable
limit orders.\361\ The Commission also is adopting as proposed the
definition of the term ``non-marketable limit order'' to mean any limit
order other than a marketable limit order.\362\ While one commenter
believed that the separation is unlikely to be valuable to retail
customers and that the separation will not promote additional
competition amongst broker-dealers,\363\ most commenters who addressed
this issue supported distinguishing between non-marketable and
marketable limit orders in the Rule 606(a) disclosures and believed
that this separation would provide customers with valuable and more
useful information.\364\
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\361\ See Rule 606(a)(1)(i)-(ii). As noted above, the Commission
also has revised Rule 606(a)(1)(i) to