Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change Relating To Adopt All-or-None (“AON”) Orders, 16119-16130 [2019-07616]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 74 / Wednesday, April 17, 2019 / Notices
venues to be more favorable. In such an
environment, the Exchange must
continually adjust its fees to remain
competitive with other exchanges and
with alternative trading systems that
have been exempted from compliance
with the statutory standards applicable
to exchanges. Because competitors are
free to modify their own fees in
response, and because market
participants may readily adjust their
order routing practices, the Exchange
believes that the degree to which fee
changes in this market may impose any
burden on competition is extremely
limited.
In this instance, the Exchange’s
proposed credit amendment does not
impose a burden on competition
because the Exchange’s execution
services are completely voluntary and
subject to extensive competition both
from other exchanges and from offexchange venues. The proposed
modification to the $0.0015 per share
executed credit represents a modest
decrease in the criteria required to
qualify for the credit. Thus, members
will be able to receive the credit by
accessing a lower amount of
Consolidated Volume during a month.
The Exchange believes that lowering the
level of Consolidated Volume will
incentivize more members to provide
the market-improving Consolidated
Volume needed to qualify for the credit.
If the proposal is unattractive to market
participants, it is likely that the
Exchange will lose market share as a
result. Accordingly, the Exchange does
not believe that the proposal will impair
the ability of members or competing
order execution venues to maintain
their competitive standing in the
financial markets.
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C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either
solicited or received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act.12
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is: (i) Necessary or appropriate in
the public interest; (ii) for the protection
of investors; or (iii) otherwise in
12 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
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furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
If the Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
should be approved or disapproved.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.13
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Deputy Secretary.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
[FR Doc. 2019–07615 Filed 4–16–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
BX–2019–006 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–BX–2019–006. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–BX–2019–006 and should
be submitted on or before May 8, 2019.
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–85626; File No. SR–
CboeEDGX–2019–017]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of a
Proposed Rule Change Relating To
Adopt All-or-None (‘‘AON’’) Orders
April 11, 2019.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on April 2,
2019, Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.
(‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘‘‘EDGX’’’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I and II below, which Items have
been prepared by the Exchange. The
Exchange filed the proposal as a ‘‘noncontroversial’’ proposed rule change
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of
the Act 3 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6)
thereunder.4 The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘EDGX’’) proposes to
adopt all-or-none (‘‘AON’’) orders. The
text of the proposed rule change is
provided in Exhibit 5.
The text of the proposed rule change
is also available on the Exchange’s
website (https://markets.cboe.com/us/
options/regulation/rule_filings/edgx/),
at the Exchange’s Office of the
Secretary, and at the Commission’s
Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
13 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
4 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6).
1 15
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 74 / Wednesday, April 17, 2019 / Notices
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
In 2016, the Exchange’s parent
company, Cboe Global Markets, Inc.
(‘‘Cboe Global’’), which is the parent
company of Cboe Exchange, Inc. (‘‘Cboe
Options’’) and Cboe C2 Exchange, Inc.
(‘‘C2’’), acquired the Exchange, Cboe
EDGA Exchange, Inc. (‘‘EDGA’’), Cboe
BZX Exchange, Inc. (‘‘BZX or BZX
Options’’), and Cboe BYX Exchange,
Inc. (‘‘BYX’’ and, together with C2, Cboe
Options, the Exchange, EDGA, and BZX,
the ‘‘Cboe Affiliated Exchanges’’). The
Cboe Affiliated Exchanges are working
to align certain system functionality,
retaining only intended differences
between the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges,
in the context of a technology migration.
Cboe Options intends to migrate its
technology to the same trading platform
used by the Exchange, C2, and BZX
Options in the fourth quarter of 2019.
The proposal set forth below is intended
to add certain functionality to the
Exchange’s System that is available on
Cboe Options in order to ultimately
provide a consistent technology offering
for market participants who interact
with the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges.
Although the Exchange intentionally
offers certain features that differ from
those offered by its affiliates and will
continue to do so, the Exchange believes
that offering similar functionality to the
extent practicable will reduce potential
confusion for Users.
The Exchange proposes to adopt AON
orders. Proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4) defines
AON orders as orders to be executed in
their entirety or not at all. Additionally,
it specifies that AON orders may be
market or limit orders. Several other
options exchanges offer AON orders
(which can be market or limit orders),
and this proposed definition is
consistent with the definition of AON
orders in other options exchanges’ rules,
including Cboe Options.5 The Exchange
5 See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.53(i); NASDAQ
ISE, LLC (‘‘ISE’’) Rule 715(c) (ISE requires AON
orders to be entered as immediate-or-cancel
(‘‘IOC’’)); NASDAQ OMX PHLX, LLC (‘‘PHLX’’)
Rule 1066(c)(4); NASDAQ Options Market LLC
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will not disseminate bids or offers of
AON orders to OPRA, as the prices of
AON orders are not included in the
Exchange’s best bid or offer (‘‘BBO’’) for
a series.6
The proposed AON order is similar to
the existing Minimum Quantity Order
currently available on the Exchange.
Minimum Quantity Orders are orders
that require a specified minimum
quantity of contracts be obtained, or the
order is cancelled.7 Today, a Minimum
Quantity Order with the minimum set
as the full size of the order would
function similar to the proposed AON
order (except, as noted above, an AON
order will not be required to be
submitted as IOC).8 The Exchange also
offers a fill-or-kill (‘‘FOK’’) Time-inForce, pursuant to which a limit order
is to be executed in its entirety as soon
as it is received and, if not so executed,
cancelled.9 A FOK order is equivalent to
(‘‘NOM’’) Chapter VI, Section 1(e)(10) (NOM
requires AON orders to be entered as IOC and only
after the market open); and NYSE Arca, Inc.
(‘‘Arca’’) Rule 6.62–O(d)(4). The proposed rule
change permits Users to apply all Times-in-Force to
AON orders (as Cboe Options permits), as the
Exchange already offers fill-or-kill (‘‘FOK’’) orders,
which are the equivalent of an IOC AON order. See
Rule 21.1(f)(5) (a FOK order is a limit order that is
to be executed in its entirety as soon as it is
received and, if not so executed, cancelled).
However, as discussed below, Users may not apply
a Post Only instruction to AON orders.
6 See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(A). Rules of other
options exchanges explicitly provide that AON
orders are not disseminated to OPRA. See, e.g.,
Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy
.02; and Phlx Option Floor Procedures A–9.
Proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(E) states the Exchange
may restrict the entry of AON orders in a series or
class if the Exchange deems it necessary or
appropriate to maintain a fair and orderly market.
Cboe Options rules provide it with the same
authority. See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.44,
Interpretation and Policy .03.
7 See Rule 21.1(d)(3). While Minimum Quantity
Orders may only be IOC, the proposed rule change
does not limit the Times-in-Force that Users may
apply to AON orders as discussed above.
8 For example, a Minimum Quantity Order for
100 contracts with a minimum set at 100 contracts
has the same result as an AON order for 100
contracts, because both can only trade against an
order(s) for 100 contracts.
9 See Rule 21.1(f)(5). The proposed rule change
does not adopt a provision corresponding to Cboe
Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policies .04
or .05, because the Exchange believes those
provisions are redundant and unnecessary. Cboe
Options Rule 6.44 states that an all-or-none bid or
offer shall be deemed to be made only for the
amount stated (i.e., deemed to be all-or-none),
which is redundant of the proposed definition of an
AON order. Similarly, Cboe Options Rule 6.44,
Interpretation and Policy .04, which essentially says
that a FOK order will be deemed to be made only
for the amount stated, is redundant of the
Exchange’s current definition of a FOK order. Cboe
Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy .05
relates to minimum volume orders (which are
similar to Minimum Quantity Orders on the
Exchange, except minimum volume orders on Cboe
Options may only be executed in open outcry), and
states minimum volume orders will be deemed to
be made only for the amount stated (i.e., deemed
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an AON entered with an IOC Time-inForce. As discussed below, unlike
Minimum Quantity Orders or orders
designated as FOK, AON orders may
rest in the Book or be routed, may also
be market orders, and may have any
Time-in-Force. However, the primary
characteristic of both, which is that they
must execute in their entirety, is the
same.
The proposed rule change does not
permit a User to designate an AON
order as Post Only.10 An AON order’s
size contingency, and the fact that (as
discussed below) AON orders will have
last priority while resting in the EDGX
Options Book, will provide AON orders
resting on the EDGX Options Book with
few opportunities for AON orders to
receive an execution. For this reason,
the Exchange believes there will be
minimal investor demand for Post Only
AON orders.11 The Exchange believes it
is appropriate to not restrict the
opportunities for execution of an AON
order to the minimal execution
opportunities that would exist for an
AON order while resting on the Book.
This ensures that an AON order may
execute upon entry if there is sufficient
size resting on the EDGX Options Book,
as well as have an opportunity for
execution if it cannot so execute.
Additionally, the proposed rule
change only permits Users to apply
MCN (MTP cancel newest), but no other
MTP Modifiers, to an AON order.12 Rule
21.1(g)(1) provides that an incoming
order marked with the MCN Modifier
will not execute against opposite side
resting interest market with any MTP
modifier originating from the same
Unique Identifier. The incoming order
marked with the MCN modifier will be
cancelled back to the originating
User(s). The resting order marked with
an MTP modifier will remain on the
EGDX Options Book. The Exchange
believes there will be little demand for
the use of any MTP Modifiers on AON
orders given that primarily retail
investors submit AONs, and retail
investors are unlikely to have interest
to be all-or-none), which the Exchange believes is
redundant of the Exchange’s current definition of a
Minimum Quantity Order.
10 See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(B). Pursuant to
Rule 21.1(d)(8), a Post Only order may not, among
other things, remove liquidity from the EDGX
Options Book.
11 Cboe Options does not offer a Post Only
instruction. Additionally, other exchanges, such as
ISE and NOM, only permit AON orders to be
entered as IOC, and thus AON orders at those
options exchanges would only execute upon entry
and never rest on the book (and thus Post Only, if
available on those exchanges, would not be
permitted).
12 See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(D). If a User
applies any other MTP Modifier to an AON order,
the System will handle it as an MCN).
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on both sides of the market. Given this
expected minimal demand, the
Exchange believes offering one MTP
Modifier for AON orders is sufficient.
The Exchange believes MCN is the most
appropriate MTP modifier for AON
orders, because it is the simplest
modifier to implement from a System
perspective and an offering of other
MTP modifier for investors would
present significant technical
complexities given the size contingency
of AON orders.13 Additionally, the
Exchange has determined to handle an
AON order with any other MTP
Modifier as an MCN rather than cancel
the AON, because the proposed rules
provide investors with sufficient
transparency regarding how the System
will handle AON orders with MTP
Modifiers, and Users may achieve other
results manually if so desired. For
example, if User were to prefer to have
a resting order with an MTP Modifier
cancel and let the newer AON order
rest, it could manually cancel the
resting order and then resubmit the
AON order.
Cboe Options offers match trade
prevention only for market-makers, and
thus the Cboe Options rules regarding
AON orders contains no restrictions on
the use of match trade prevention
instructions, as it would only be
available to market-makers that submit
AON orders. Because the Exchange has
match-trade prevention functionality
available for all Users and not just
Market-Makers, the Exchange believes it
is appropriate to provide this
functionality to all Users that submit
AON orders and want match trade
prevention functionality. The rules of
other exchanges are also silent on
whether any match trade prevention
instructions are available for AON
orders.
An AON limit order will always be
subject to the Price Adjust process in
Rule 21.1(i).14 Because AON orders will
have last priority on the EDGX Options
Book (as discussed below), the
Exchange believes it will maximize
execution opportunities for AON limit
orders to be subject to the Price Adjust
process.15 The Price Adjust process
13 Additionally, the Decrement and Cancel MTP
Modifier is inconsistent with an AON order,
because it may result in partial execution of an
order.
14 See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(C). If an AON
market order is unable to execute for any reason,
it would cancel in accordance with the terms of a
market order. This is consistent with the handling
of any other market order that was not able to
execute on the Exchange.
15 If a User does not want an AON order to rest
on the EDGX Options Book at an adjusted price, it
may cancel the AON order and resubmit it for
execution at a later time.
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applies to orders (subject to the User’s
instructions or the Rules) that do not
execute upon entry and go to rest in the
EDGX Options Book (for example,
because an order is not marketable upon
entry, is not eligible to route, or, in the
case of an AON order, there is
insufficient size to satisfy its size
contingency). It ensures these orders
rest at executable prices in accordance
with linkage rules.16
Currently, if an order, at the time of
entry, would lock or cross a Protected
Quotation of another options exchange
or the Exchange, it will be ranked and
displayed by the System at one
minimum price variation below (above)
the current NBO (NBB) for bids
(offers).17 An AON order resting on the
EDGX Options Book is not displayed or
part of the BBO (thus is not protected
and would not be part of the NBBO).
The proposed rule change provides that
AON orders will rest on the EDGX
Options Book at potentially executable
prices (and thus not at prices that cross
a Protected Quotation or the BBO).
Specifically, proposed Rule
21.1(i)(1)(A)(ii) provides if a buy (sell)
non-AON order, at the time of entry,
would lock or cross the offer (bid) of a
sell (buy) AON order resting on the
EDGX Options Book at or better than the
Exchange’s best offer (bid), the System
ranks 18 the resting AON order at one
minimum price variation above (below)
the bid (offer) of the non-AON order.
This is consistent with the price at
which non-AON orders would rest on
the EDGX Options Book if subject to
price adjustment (except price
adjustment currently only applies to
incoming orders, not resting orders). For
example, if an AON order to buy 5 at
1.10 is resting on the EDGX Options
Book (which is the NBB), and a nonAON order to sell 1 (which does not
satisfy the size of the AON order) at 1.10
enters the EDGX Options Book, the
System reprices the AON order to rest
in the EDGX Options Book at 1.05
(assuming the minimum price variation
for the class is $0.05).
Similarly, pursuant to proposed Rule
21.1(i)(1)(B)(ii), if a buy (sell) AON
order, at the time of entry, would lock
or cross a Protected Offer (Bid) of the
16 See
Rule 27.3, which provides that the
Exchange will reasonably avoid displaying
quotations that lock or cross a Protected Quotation.
17 See current Rule 21.1(i)(1) (which the proposed
rule change renumbers and letters to be Rule
21.1(i)(1)(A)(i)).
18 In the EDGX Rules, the term ‘‘ranked’’ means
that an order will be prioritized and eligible for
execution at its ranked price for purposes of
allocation if an execution were to occur at that
price. For an AON order ‘‘ranked’’ at a price, it
would be prioritized last at that price (as discussed
above).
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Exchange, the System ranks the
incoming AON order at a price one
minimum price variation below (above)
the offer (bid) of the non-AON order
resting on the EDGX Options Book at
the Protected Offer (Bid). This is
consistent with how an incoming nonAON would be handled if it locked or
crossed a Protected Offer (Bid) of the
Exchange. For example, if a non-AON
order to buy 1 at 1.10 is resting at the
top of the EDGX Options Book, and an
AON order to sell 5 (which cannot
satisfied by the resting interest) at 1.10
enters the EDGX Options Book, the
System reprices the AON order to rest
in the EDGX Options Book at 1.15
(assuming the minimum price variation
for the class is $0.05).
Proposed subparagraph (i)(1)(B)(i)
states if a buy (sell) AON order, at the
time of entry, would cross a Protected
Offer (Bid) of another options exchange
or a sell (buy) AON order resting on the
EDGX Options Book at or better than the
Exchange’s best offer (bid), the System
will rank the incoming AON order at a
price equal to the Protected Offer (Bid)
or the offer (bid) of the resting AON
order, respectively. For example, if a
buy AON order has a bid of 1.05 and
enters the EDGX Options Book when the
NBO is 1.00, the System ranks the AON
order at a 1.00 bid.19 Or, if a sell AON
order has an offer of 1.10 and enters the
EDGX Options Book, where there is a
resting AON order with a bid of 1.15,
the System ranks the incoming AON
order at a price of 1.15.
The proposed rule change applies the
current Price Adjust process to the
existence of AONs to reflect the fact that
AONs are not displayed on the EDGX
Options Book (and thus are not
Protected Quotations). This factor
distinguishes AONs from other orders
on the Exchange. The Exchange believes
the proposed application of the Price
Adjust process to AONs is reasonable,
because an AON order will rest on the
EDGX Options Book at an executable
price (i.e., a price that locks or is one
minimum price variation away from the
new Protected Quotation or AON resting
on the EDGX Options Book at or better
than the Exchange’s BBO).20 The
19 Pursuant to subparagraph (i)(2), if the NBO
changes to 1.05, the resting AON order would
receive a new timestamp and be repriced to 1.05.
20 The proposed rule change makes
corresponding changes to Rule 21.1(i)(2) to provide
that in the event the circumstances that caused the
System to adjust the price of an order pursuant to
proposed subparagraph (1) change so that it would
not lock or cross, as applicable, a Protected
Quotation or an AON resting on the EDGX Options
Book at a price at or better than the Exchange’s
BBO, the order subject to the price adjust will
receive a new timestamp and be ranked or
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proposed process will generally re-price
the incoming (and thus later arriving
order), which is consistent with the
current Price Adjust process. As
proposed, if an incoming buy (sell) AON
order locked or crosses a Protected Offer
(Bid) of the Exchange (i.e., a non-AON
order that was displayed at the
Exchange’s best offer (bid)), the System
would adjust the price of the AON order
to be one minimum price variation
below (above) the Protected Offer (Bid).
Similarly, if an incoming buy (sell) AON
order crossed a Protected Offer (Bid) of
another options market or a sell (buy)
AON order resting on the Exchange, the
System would adjust the price of the
incoming order. However, unlike the
current Price Adjust process, the
proposed rule change will reprice a
resting AON order rather than an
incoming non-AON order, because AON
orders have last priority (as discussed
below) and are not displayed, and thus
should not cause the price of an
incoming non-AON order to reprice.
Because AONs are not displayed and
have last priority on the Book, the
Exchange believes it is appropriate to
adjust the price of an AON rather than
an incoming order that would be
displayed and protected. The proposed
rule change is consistent with linkage
rules, because AONs will not be part of
the EDGX BBO, and repricing an AON
to lock an away exchange price or a
resting (and nondisplayed) order on the
EDGX Options Book will, therefore, not
result in a displayed locked market.
The proposed rule change also
ensures that a resting AON order will
not lock the price of a Protected
Quotation on the EDGX Options Book.
This prevents the situation in which an
incoming order may execute ahead of
the resting non-AON order. For
example, if a non-AON order to buy 1
at 1.10 is resting on the EDGX Options
Book, and an AON order to sell 5 (and
thus is not satisfied by the resting
interest) at 1.10 enters the EDGX
Options Book, if the System permitted
the AON order to rest at a price of 1.10
(rather than reprice the AON to rest at
1.15 as proposed), if subsequently an
displayed at a price that locks or is one minimum
price variation away from the new Protected
Quotation or AON resting on the EDGX Options
Book at a price at or better than the Exchange’s
BBO. These proposed changes reflect the fact that
the trade or cancellation of an order resting on the
EDGX Options Book at or better than the Exchange’s
best offer (bid) (as applicable) may cause a resting
AON order to become repriced. Pursuant to the
current Price Adjust process applicable to non-AON
orders, repricing only occurs when the NBBO
changes. The proposed rule change adds the phrase
‘‘if applicable’’ to the current rule text regarding
orders being ranked and displayed to reflect the fact
that AON orders will not be displayed in the EDGX
Options Book.
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AON to buy 5 at 1.10 was submitted to
EDGX Options, that AON would execute
against the resting AON at 1.10, and
thus ahead of the non-AON order to
buy.21 The proposed rule change will
also reprice an AON order to a more
aggressive price up to the limit price at
which it would be able to execute
without causing a trade-through as the
market changes.22
Cboe Options does not have
functionality that corresponds to the
Price Adjust process. However, Cboe
Options rules do not provide any
special handling that applies to AON
orders that lock or cross orders on Cboe
Options or the quote of an away options
market. Therefore, pursuant to Cboe
Options’ rules, if an AON order is
unable to execute upon entry into the
Cboe Options System (or after routing,
if eligible for routing pursuant to Cboe
Options’ rules), the AON order will rest
at its price, even if it locks or crosses the
Cboe Options BBO or the quote of an
away options market.23 The proposed
rule change will similarly permit an
AON order to rest at a price that locks
the quote of an away options market, as
well as an AON order resting on the
EDGX Options Book at a price at or
better than the EDGX Options BBO. On
Cboe Options, an AON order resting at
a price that locks or crosses an order
may only execute in accordance with
the priority principles set forth in Cboe
Options Rule 6.45 and may not execute
at prices that would cause a tradethrough pursuant to Cboe Options Rule
6.81. The Exchange believes the
proposed rule change ultimately creates
the same result for a resting AON order
that would otherwise occur on Cboe
Options (the proposed rule change
merely changes the price of an AON
order upon entry rather than at the time
of execution), and in some cases results
in price improvement for an AON order.
For example, as proposed, if the
EDGX BBO was 1.15 x 1.30 (size of 50),
and the NBBO was 1.15 x 1.20 (size of
21 Priority rules apply to orders resting in the
Book, not incoming orders. Therefore, with respect
to an incoming order, the System checks opposite
side interest to see if the incoming order can
execute. It does not check to see if there is sameside interest ahead of which it cannot trade, as there
would only be marketable same-side interest (from
a price perspective) that would not otherwise
execute against opposite side interest if such
opposite side interest was an AON order.
22 See Rules 27.2 (which prohibits trade-throughs,
subject to certain exceptions) and 27.3 (requires the
Exchange to reasonably avoid displaying quotes
that lock a Protected Quotation).
23 If the AON order submitted to Cboe Options
was a market order and was unable to execute for
any reason, it would cancel in accordance with the
terms of a market order. This is consistent with the
handling of any other market order that was not
able to execute on the Exchange.
PO 00000
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50), and a User submitted an AON order
for 100 to buy at 1.25, the AON order
would rest on the EDGX Options Book
with a price of 1.20 (which locks the
Protected Offer of 1.20). If an order to
sell 100 at 1.20 was later submitted to
EDGX Options, it would execute against
the resting AON order at its ranked
price of 1.20. On Cboe Options, the
AON would rest at 1.25. If an order to
sell 100 at 1.20 was later submitted to
Cboe Options, it would execute against
the resting AON order at a price of 1.20
(and thus the same price at which it
would execute on EDGX Options), as
executions may only occur at or within
the NBBO.
Additionally, suppose the EDGX BBO
was 1.15 x 1.25 (non-AON order with
size of 50), and was also the NBBO, and
a User submitted an AON order for 100
to buy at 1.25, the AON order would
rest on the EDGX Options Book with a
price of 1.20 (which is one minimum
price variation below the resting nonAON order). If an order to sell 100 at
1.20 was later submitted to EDGX
Options, it would execute against the
resting AON order at a price of 1.20
(which results in price improvement for
the AON order). On Cboe Options, the
AON would rest at 1.25. If an order to
sell 100 at 1.20 was later submitted to
Cboe Options, the AON would receive
execution at a price of 1.25.24 The
Exchange believes the proposed rule
change is an enhancement that will
prevent such incoming orders to trade
against a resting AON at the same price
as a resting non-AON order on the
opposite side of the market that had
insufficient size to trade against the
AON order.
As another example, if the EDGX BBO
was 1.15 x 1.30 and was also the NBBO,
and there was a sell AON order for 50
to sell at 1.25 resting on the EDGX
Options Book, and a User submitted an
AON order for 100 to buy at 1.25, the
incoming AON order would rest on the
EDGX Options Book at 1.25 (which
locks the resting AON order). If an order
to sell 100 at 1.25 was later submitted
to EDGX Options, it would execute
against the resting AON order to buy at
1.25. This is the same result that would
occur on Cboe Options.
Because the proposed Price Adjust
process always applies to an AON order,
which provides that an AON order may
rest at a price that locks the price of an
away options exchange, proposed Rule
21.9(a)(3)(B) states that a User may not
apply the Super Aggressive Re-Route
instruction. The Super Aggressive ReRoute instruction provides that if an
order resting on the EDGX Options Book
24 See
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at a price that becomes subsequently
locked or crossed by the price of another
options exchange, the System will route
the order to that exchange. This
instruction conflicts with the proposed
Price Adjust process for an AON order,
which may enter the EDGX Options
Book at a price that locks the price of
another options exchange. A User may
apply the Aggressive Re-Route
instruction pursuant to Rule
21.9(a)(3)(A), pursuant to which a
resting AON order may be re-routed if
its price is subsequently crossed by
another options exchange.
Cboe Options does not have a process
that corresponds to the Exchange’s ReRoute instructions. As a result, if an
AON order were resting on the Cboe
Options Book, it will remain there, even
if it is resting at a price that
subsequently becomes locked or crossed
by another options exchange. AON
orders resting on the EDGX Options
Book that subsequently become locked
by another options exchange will be
handled in the same manner as those
AON orders would be handled by Cboe
Options—they will remain on the EDGX
options Book and not route to an away
market. However, because the Exchange
will make the Aggressive Re-Route
instruction available to AON orders
(which Users may specify when
submitting AON orders), the proposed
rule change will provide an AON order
submitted to the Exchange that includes
an Aggressive Re-Route instruction and
rests at a price that subsequently
becomes crossed by another options
exchange with additional routing (and
thus execution) opportunities not
currently available to AON orders on
Cboe Options.
The proposed rule change provides
that the Exchange will accept AON
orders for queuing prior to the
completion of the Opening Process, but
AON orders will not participate in the
Opening Process. Following completion
of the Opening Process, the System
processes any queued AON orders in
accordance with Rule 21.8.25 In other
words, it may execute if possible or rest
in the EDGX Options Book, subject to a
User’s instructions (for example, the
User may cancel the AON order). As set
forth in Rule 21.7(b), the System
executes orders at the opening price, in
accordance with standard priority (as
discussed below, AON orders will have
last priority at each price level). Given
the size contingency of an AON order
and the last priority of AON orders, it
will not be known whether there will be
sufficient size to execute AON orders at
the opening price until after the System
25 See
proposed Rule 21.7(a).
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executes all other interest at the opening
price. AON orders will be eligible for
execution once a series is open for
trading.
Currently on Cboe Options, AON
orders may participate in the opening
process in classes in which it has
activated the Hybrid Agency Liaison
(‘‘HAL’’) for openings.26 HAL is the
Cboe Options equivalent to the
Exchange’s Step Up Mechanism
(‘‘SUM’’). EDGX does not activate SUM
for openings, making classes trading on
EDGX similar to classes trading on Cboe
Options in which Cboe Options has not
activated HAL for openings. Therefore,
the proposed rule change is consistent
with the Cboe Options rule.
Additionally, the opening process on
Cboe Options is an auction and thus
significantly different than the
Exchange’s Opening Process, which is a
cross at a valid price as set forth in Rule
21.7. The Exchange believes it is best for
investors to open a series for trading as
soon as possible. As noted above, it will
not be known whether there will be
sufficient size to execute AON orders at
the opening price until after the System
executes all other interest at the opening
price, since AON orders will have last
priority. The Exchange believes it is
appropriate to exclude AON orders from
the Opening Process to ensure series can
open as fast as possible. Currently, once
the Exchange determines the Opening
Price for a series (for example, the
NBBO), it executes as much interest as
possible at that price and opens a series.
If AONs were eligible for execution
during the Opening Process, after
executing non-AON interest, the System
would then have to check to determine
whether there was sufficient size to
execute against any AON orders. Rather
than delay the opening of a series to
determine whether an execution of AON
orders can occur (and no execution may
ultimately occur), the Exchange believes
it is appropriate to open the series and
let all non-executed orders (including
AONs) be eligible for execution in an
open trading state. Execution of any
AON orders whose size contingency can
be satisfied by any other interest on the
Exchange would occur just after the
opening of the series, which is close to
the time at which it would have
executed if the System waited to open
the series and executed these orders
during the Opening Process. Therefore,
the Exchange believes not attempting to
execute AON orders until after the
Opening Process would have a de
minimis impact, if any, on the time of
execution of an AON order.
26 See
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16123
Proposed Rule 21.8(m) sets forth the
priority of AON orders. AON orders will
have last priority at each price level
(including after nondisplayed Reserve
Quantity). The System allocates AON
orders at the same price based on the
time the System receives them (i.e., in
time priority), except if the Exchange
applies the Customer Overlay to a class,
Priority Customer AON orders have
priority over non-Priority Customer
AON orders.27 An AON order must
always be last in priority to ensure there
is sufficient size to satisfy the condition
of that order to trade in its entirety after
all other orders at the same price have
executed. Additionally, the Exchange
believes it is reasonable for orders not
displayed in the book to not receive
priority over orders that are displayed,
as this encourages market participants
to display their best bids and offers,
which may lead to enhanced liquidity
and tighter markets. This is consistent
with the non-inclusion of AON orders
in the BBO or NBBO, as discussed
above.
The proposed rule change states that
a transaction may occur at the same
price as an AON order resting on the
EDGX Options Book without the AON
order participating in the transaction,
and that a transaction may occur at a
price lower (higher) than an AON order
bid (offer) resting on the EDGX Options
Book if the size of the transaction is less
than the size of the resting AON order.
As discussed above, an AON order will
trade last at each price level. These
proposed provisions ensure execution of
an AON order if there is sufficient size
to satisfy the AON order, while not
preventing execution of orders that can
execute against other interest but cannot
satisfy the AON order size
contingency.28
Users may designate AON orders to be
routable pursuant to Rule 21.9. Pursuant
to proposed rule 21.9(a)(1), the System
only routes an AON order (as an FOK)
designated as available for routing to
options exchanges with sufficient size to
satisfy the AON order. Pursuant to
current Rule 21.9(a)(1), orders are
routed as IOCs. Because a FOK order is
equivalent to an AON order designated
as IOC, routing an AON as a FOK is
27 This priority is the same as the priority of AON
orders on Cboe Options. See Cboe Options Rule
6.45(a)(v)(D). This priority is also consistent with
Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy
.01, which the Exchange is not explicitly adopting
because it is redundant with this proposed
provision, because having last priority means that
AON orders will only trade if there is no other
interest at the same price. Cboe Options Rule 6.44
does not address customer priority.
28 These provisions are substantively the same as
Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy
.02.
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consistent with the Exchange’s current
routing rule. Only routing an AON order
to an exchange with sufficient size to
satisfy the AON order ensures the
System will only route an AON order at
which it may receive an execution.29
An AON order may be exposed
pursuant to the Exchange’s Step Up
Mechanism (‘‘SUM’’) pursuant to Rule
21.18. An AON order will be exposed
and executed in the same manner as a
non-AON order during SUM, except as
follows:
• Currently, any responses priced at
the prevailing NBBO 30 or better, and
any unrelated order (or quote) on the
opposite side of the market from the
exposed order that could trade against
the exposed order at the prevailing
NBBO or better, will immediately trade
against the exposed order, and the
exposure period will continue.31 A
SUM exposure period will currently
terminate upon the receipt of a response
(or unrelated order or quote) to trade the
entire exposed order at the NBBO or
better.32 Because an AON order cannot
partially execute pursuant to its terms,
the proposed rule change provides that
during the exposure of an AON order,
the System will hold responses priced at
or better than the prevailing NBBO
(rather than trade against the exposed
AON immediately) until there is
sufficient aggregate size to satisfy the
AON order, and that a SUM exposure
period will terminate upon the receipt
of multiple responses with sufficient
aggregate size to satisfy the AON
order.33 The proposed rule change also
states that if the exposed order is an
AON order, the exposure period will
terminate upon the receipt of multiple
responses and unrelated orders in
quotes with sufficient aggregate size to
satisfy the exposed AON order.34 This is
consistent with size contingency of an
AON order and will provide an AON
order with opportunities to have its size
contingency met during an exposure
period, while ensuring the entire AON
order will trade at a price equal to or
better than the NBBO.
29 If the size at the away options exchange was
not available when the AON order arrived at the
away options exchange, it would return to the
Exchange and continue to be processed, as is the
case for any other order that routes to an away
options exchange and is unable to execute. While
not specified in Cboe Options rules, the Exchange
understands this proposed change is the same as
Cboe Options functionality.
30 References to the ‘‘prevailing NBBO’’ mean the
NBBO at the time of any execution.
31 See Rule 21.18(c)(1) and (2).
32 See Rule 21.18(d).
33 See proposed Rule 21.18(c)(1) and (d).
34 While not specified in Cboe Options rules, the
Exchange understands this proposed change is the
same as Cboe Options functionality.
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Jkt 247001
• Currently, as noted above, if the
Exchange receives an unrelated order or
quote that could trade against the
exposed order at the prevailing NBBO
price or better, that order executes
against the exposed order, and the
exposure period continues. The
proposed rule change states if an AON
order is exposed and the Exchange
receives an unrelated order (or quote)
that would be displayed at a price at or
better than the NBBO with insufficient
size to satisfy the exposed order, the
SUM exposure period terminates and
the exposed order is processed pursuant
to Rule 21.18(c) (it either executes,
routes, or enters the EDGX Options
Book, subject to a User’s instructions).35
If an AON order is exposed and the
Exchange receives an unrelated AON
order with a price at or better than the
NBBO with insufficient size to satisfy
the exposed order the exposure period
will continue.36 This is consistent with
current SUM functionality, pursuant to
which the exposed price of an order will
not lock the Exchange’s opposite side
BBO if the BBO is not at the NBBO.
Because a SUM would not have begun
if the Exchange displayed a contra-side
order at the NBBO, the Exchange
believes it is appropriate to terminate
the exposure period if that situation
arises during the exposure period.
Unlike when non-AON orders are
exposed, an unrelated order (if it is
smaller than the exposed AON order)
will not execute against the exposed
order, and thus would enter the EDGX
Options Book. For example, suppose the
NBBO is 1.00 x 1.20 and the EDGX
Options BBO is 1.00 x 1.25, and an AON
order to buy 10 at 1.20 is exposed at
1.20 pursuant to SUM. During the
exposure period, the Exchange receives
an order to sell 5 at 1.20. The incoming
order cannot satisfy the size of the
exposed AON order, so it would enter
the EDGX Options Book and would
cause the EDGX Options BBO to become
1.00 x 1.20. Therefore, upon receipt of
that order, the exposure period
terminates and the exposed AON order
will be process pursuant to Rule
21.18(c) (as further discussed below, it
will be routed or will enter the EDGX
Options Book, subject to a User’s
instructions). In this case, if there is
insufficient size at the away markets to
execute the AON order at 1.20 (and
assuming the AON order is eligible for
35 See proposed Rule 21.18(d)(3). While not
explicitly stated in Rule 21.18(c), pursuant to Rule
21.9(a)(1), any order that does not execute in full
after routing away may be posted (the unfilled
balance) to the EDGX Options Book.
36 This is because the incoming AON order would
not be displayed at a price at or better than the
NBBO.
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routing), the AON order will enter the
EDGX Options Book and rest at a bid of
1.15 (pursuant to the Price Adjust
process described above, an AON order
will be ranked at one minimum price
variation (in this case, 0.05) below the
opposite side BBO).
Except as noted above, an exposed
AON order will be processed in the
same manner as any other order
exposed through a SUM auction. If at
the end of the exposure period there is
sufficient size to satisfy the AON order,
it will execute. If there is insufficient
size, then the Exchange would route the
AON order if there was sufficient size at
an away market to satisfy the AON order
(unless otherwise instructed by the
User), as it would any remaining portion
of any other exposed order (in the case
of an AON order, the entire size would
be remaining).37 Like any AON order
that routes to another options exchange,
if there is sufficient size at the away
market to satisfy the AON order once
the AON reaches that market, the AON
will execute. If there is no longer
sufficient size when routed, the AON
will return and rest on the EDGX
Options Book. Similarly, if an AON
order is not eligible to route, it will
enter the EDGX Options Book (subject to
the User’s instructions).
The proposed reason to terminate the
exposure period for an AON order early
similarly will cause an exposure period
to end, because if an order on the
opposite side of the exposed order were
displayed on the EDGX Options Book
prior to the exposure period, the AON
order would not have been exposed. For
example, if the BBO and the NBBO was
1.00 x 1.20, and there was a non-AON
order for 5 contracts resting at the 1.20
offer, an incoming AON order to buy 10
at 1.20 would not be exposed pursuant
to SUM, because neither of the
conditions in Rule 21.18(a) would be
present). In this case, the AON order
would enter the EDGX Options Book at
a price of 1.15 (pursuant to the Price
Adjust process as proposed above).
Similar to the current reasons that
would cause an exposure period to
terminate early (see current Rule
21.18(d)), the proposed early
termination provision will prevent an
exposure period from continuing while
conditions exist that would have
prevented an exposure period from
beginning if those conditions existed
prior to the exposure period.
The proposed rule change amends
Rule 21.19(e) to provide that AON
orders will have last priority at price
levels better than the stop price
following the conclusion of an
37 See
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Automated Improvement Mechanism
(‘‘AIM’’) auction if there is sufficient
size to satisfy the size of the AON order
(with Priority Customer AON order
trading ahead of non-Priority Customer
AON orders). AON orders resting at the
stop price will not trade against the
Agency Order, even if the Initiating
Member of an AIM auction selects last
priority.38 As discussed above, AON
orders will have last priority at each
price level. The Exchange notes there
would be significant technical
complexities associated with
reprogramming priority within the
System to provide AON orders with
second to last priority in a specific (and
likely uncommon situation), as would
be required to permit AON orders to
execute at the stop price, even if the
Initiating Member selects last priority.
The Exchange believes it would be rare
for there to be a resting AON order at
the stop price of an AIM Auction that
could be satisfied by the remaining
contracts of an Agency Order at that
stop price, and thus the Exchange
believes the proposed rule change will
have a de minimis impact, if any, on the
execution opportunities for resting AON
orders.
The proposed rule change also
provides that the System will exclude
the size of any AON orders when
determining the number of contracts the
Initiating Order will execute against at
each price level better than the stop
price when the Initiating Member
selects auto-match.39 Due to the size
contingency of an AON order, the
System cannot determine whether there
will be sufficient contracts remaining in
the Agency Order to execute against any
AON order at a price level until after
execution of the applicable number of
contracts against the Initiating Order
and other contra-side interest. However,
after those auto-match executions at that
price level, the System will execute the
Agency Order against any AON orders
at that price level for which the size can
be satisfied by the remaining contracts
in the Agency Order.40
38 See Rule 21.19(e)(1) and (5). The proposed rule
change amends Rule 21.19(e)(1), which sets forth
the priority of resting orders at the stop price, to
state that AON orders will be excluded when the
Agency Order executes against contra-side interest
(after Priority Customer Orders, the specified
percentage of the Initiating Order, and Priority
Orders). Therefore, AON orders at the stop price
will not execute at the stop price in any situation.
While not specified in Cboe Options rules, the
Exchange understands this proposed change is the
same as Cboe Options functionality.
39 See proposed Rule 21.19(e)(3). While not
specified in Cboe Options rules, the Exchange
understands this proposed change is the same as
Cboe Options functionality.
40 See proposed Rule 21.19(e)(3). After executions
at price levels better than the stop price, including
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The Exchange proposes to make the
AON instruction available for complex
orders.41 An AON complex order is a
complex order that (like an AON simple
order) is to be executed in its entirety or
not at all.42 An AON complex order may
only execute following a complex order
auction (‘‘COA’’),43 and will not be
eligible to rest in the complex order
book (‘‘COB’’).44 An incoming AON
complex order will initiate a COA. If a
Member marks an AON complex order
to not initiate a COA (i.e., as a do-noCOA order), or an AON complex order
does not satisfy the COA eligibility
criteria in Rule 21.20(d)(1), the System
cancels the AON complex order.45 The
Exchange believes that, like AON
simple orders, AON complex orders that
would rest on the COB would have last
priority, and would have even fewer
execution opportunities because they
would not be able to execute at the same
price as resting interest until after both
simple and complex order interest
executed. Therefore, an AON complex
order resting on the COB would have
minimal execution opportunities given
its size contingency. The Exchange
believes there would be little value, in
terms of executing opportunities, in
permitting AON complex orders to rest
in the COB.
At the conclusion of a COA of an
AON complex order, the AON complex
order may only execute against COA
responses and unrelated complex orders
on the COB in price-time priority if
there is sufficient size to satisfy the
AON complex order. If there is
insufficient size to satisfy the AON
complex order at the conclusion of the
against AON orders for which the size can be
satisfied at those price levels, if there are remaining
contracts from the Agency Order at the stop price,
those contracts will execute against contra-side
interest as set forth in subparagraph (e)(1). While
not specified in Cboe Options rules, the Exchange
understands this proposed change is the same as
Cboe Options functionality.
41 See Cboe Options Rule 6.53C(b); see also Phlx
Rule 1098(b)(v); and ISE Rule 722(b)(3). The
proposed rule change amends Rule 21.20(b) to
change references to the term ‘‘User’’ to ‘‘Member’’
to be consistent with the remainder of Rule 21.20,
which only uses the term ‘‘Member.’’
42 See proposed Rule 21.20(b)(6).
43 See Rule 21.20(d).
44 While not specified in Cboe Options rules, the
Exchange understands AON complex orders on
Cboe Options may only initiate a COA and will be
cancelled if not executed following a COA (and
thus are not eligible to rest in the Cboe Options
COB). This is set forth in Cboe Options Regulatory
Circular RG17–042 (March 24, 2017), available at
https://www.cboe.com/publish/RegCir/RG17042.pdf. Other options exchanges require AON
complex orders to be IOC, and thus similarly do not
permit AON complex orders to rest in a complex
order book. It is not clear from their rules whether
such orders may enter a complex order auction on
those exchanges. See, e.g., ISE Rule 722(b)(3).
45 See proposed Rule 21.20(b)(2) and (d)(1).
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COA, the System cancels the order.46
AON complex orders may not Leg into
the Simple Book to execute against
individual orders in the legs because of
the manner in which complex orders on
EDGX execute following a COA.47
Pursuant to current EDGX Rules for
execution following a COA, a complex
order will be allocated first in price
priority and then at the same price to
Priority Customer orders resting on the
Simple Book, COA responses and
unrelated complex orders on the COB in
time priority, and remaining individual
orders in the Simple Book (i.e., nonPriority Customer), which will be
allocated pursuant to Rule 21.8.48
The Simple Book and the COB are
separate, and orders on each do not
interact unless a complex order Legs
into the Simple Book. As a result, the
System is not able to calculate the
aggregate size of COA responses and
complex orders on the COB and the size
of simple orders in the legs that
comprise the complex strategy at each
potential execution price (as executions
may occur at multiple prices) prior to
execution of an order following a COA.
Following a COA, the System first looks
to determine whether there are Priority
Customer orders resting in the Simple
Book at the final auction price (and in
the applicable ratio). If there are, the
System executes the complex order
against those simple orders. Following
that execution, the System then looks
back at the COA responses and complex
orders resting in the COB to determine
whether there is interest against which
the order can execute. If there is, the
System executes the remaining portion
of the complex order against that
complex contra-side interest. Finally, if
there is any size left, the System looks
back at the Simple Book to determine
whether any orders in the legs are able
to trade against any remaining contracts
in the complex order. If there is, the
System executes the remaining portion
of the complex order again against
orders in the Simple Book. Because of
this process, prior to execution against
any Priority Customer orders, the
System would not know whether there
is sufficient aggregate interest in both
the Simple book and COB to satisfy the
entire size of the AON. Additionally, it
is possible for a complex order to
execute at multiple price levels. This
46 See proposed Rule 21.20(d)(7). Currently, after
a COA, a complex order will execute first against
Priority Customer orders resting on the Simple
Book, then against COA responses and unrelated
orders on the COB, and finally against remaining
individual orders in the Simple Book. See Rule
21.20(d)(7).
47 See proposed Rule 21.20(c)(2)(F) and (d)(7).
48 See Rule 21.20(d)(7).
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process would have to occur at each
price level. Therefore, if the Exchange
were to permit Legging of AON complex
orders into the Simple Book, it would be
possible for a partial execution to occur,
which is inconsistent with the AON
instruction. The Exchange notes there
would be significant technical
complexities associated with
reprogramming priority within the
System to permit AON complex orders
to Leg into the Simple Book and provide
AON orders with priority consistent
with these standard priority principles.
Only permitting an AON complex order
to execute against COA responses and
complex orders in the COB ensures the
size contingency of the AON complex
order can be satisfied.49
To ensure protection of orders on the
Simple Book given this restriction on
Legging, an AON complex order may
only execute following a COA if it
improves the then-current (i.e., existing
at the conclusion of the COA) synthetic
Exchange best bid or offer (‘‘SBBO’’).50
If there is insufficient size among COA
responses and unrelated complex orders
to satisfy the AON complex order
following a COA, the System cancels the
order.51
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2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to the Exchange
and, in particular, the requirements of
Section 6(b) of the Act.52 Specifically,
the Exchange believes the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Section
6(b)(5) 53 requirements that the rules of
an exchange be designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged
in regulating, clearing, settling,
processing information with respect to,
and facilitating transactions in
securities, to remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and
49 Cboe Options does not restrict AON orders
from legging into its simple book. The priority on
Cboe Options differs from the priority on EDGX
Options (on Cboe Options, all orders on the simple
book have priority over the complex book).
However, another options exchange restricts AON
orders from legging into the simple book during the
complex order opening process, from the complex
order book, and following a complex order price
improvement auction (similar to COA). See, e.g.,
Phlx Rule 1098(d)(ii)(C)(2), (e)(vi)(A), (e)(viii)(C)(3),
and (f)(iii)(A). Phlx also only permits non-brokerdealer customers to submit AON complex orders.
See Phlx Rule 1098(b)(v).
50 See proposed Rule 21.20(c)(2)(E) and (d)(6).
51 See proposed Rule 21.20(d)(7).
52 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
53 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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open market and a national market
system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest.
Additionally, the Exchange believes the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the Section 6(b)(5) 54 requirement that
the rules of an exchange not be designed
to permit unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
In particular, the proposed rule
change protects investors because it
provides them with an additional order
instruction that may be applied to both
simple and complex orders. This
provides investors with additional
flexibility and more control over their
executions of both simple and complex
orders on the Exchange. The proposed
rule change also benefits investors by
providing transparency regarding how
the System will handle and execute
AON orders, which handling and
execution are consistent with the size
contingency of AON orders. As noted
above and below, the proposed
definition and several other portions of
the proposed rules are based on rules
and current functionality of Cboe
Options.55
The Exchange believes not permitting
Users to apply the Post Only instruction
to AON orders will protect investors,
because it will maximize execution
opportunities for AON orders. An AON
order’s size contingency, and the fact
that AON orders will have last priority
while resting in the EDGX Options
Book, will provide AON orders resting
on the EDGX Options Book with few
opportunities for AON orders to receive
an execution. For this reason, the
Exchange believes there will be minimal
investor demand for Post Only AON
orders. This ensures that an AON order
may execute upon entry if there is
sufficient size resting on the EDGX
Options Book. Additionally, as noted
above, other exchanges do not permit
AON orders to rest in the book at all (as
they are required to be IOC).56 Unlike
those exchanges, the Exchange will
permit AON orders to rest in the EDGX
Options Book, and will merely not
permit AON orders to only rest in the
book. Cboe Options does not offer a Post
Only instruction, and therefore, an AON
order submitted to EDGX Options will
be handled in the same manner as it
would be handled on Cboe Options, as
such an order would execute upon entry
(if possible), route (if eligible), or enter
54 Id.
55 See Cboe Options Rules 6.53(i) and 6.44,
Interpretations .02 and .03; see also ISE Rule 715(c);
and NOM Chapter VI, section 1(e)(10).
56 See, e.g., ISE Rule 715(c); NOM Chapter VI,
section 1(e)(10); and Phlx Rule 1066(c)(4).
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the EDGX Options Book (subject to any
User instructions).
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change to offer use of the MCN
Modifier (and not the other MTP
Modifiers) for AON orders protects
investors, because it provides all
investors with the option to apply
match-trade prevention functionality to
AON orders. The Exchange believes
there will be little demand for the use
of any MTP Modifiers on AON orders
given that primarily retail investors
submit AONs, and retail investors are
unlikely to have interest on both sides
of the market. Given this expected
minimal demand, the Exchange believes
offering one MTP Modifier for AON
orders is sufficient. Additionally, the
Exchange believes that MCN is the most
appropriate MTP modifier for AON
orders because an offering of other MTP
modifier for investors would present
significant technical complexities given
the size contingency of AON orders and
that MCN is the simplest modifier to
implement from a System perspective.57
The proposed rules provide investors
with sufficient transparency regarding
how the System will handle AON orders
with MTP Modifiers, and Users may
achieve other results manually if so
desired. For example, if a User were to
prefer to have a resting order with an
MTP Modifier cancel and let the newer
AON order rest, it could manually
cancel the resting order and then
resubmit the AON order. The Exchange
has determined to handle an AON order
with any other MTP Modifier as an
MCN rather than cancel the AON, and
the Exchange believes the proposed
rules will protect investors because they
provide investors with sufficient
transparency regarding how the System
will handle AON orders with MTP
Modifiers. Additionally, Users may
achieve other results manually if so
desired.
Cboe Options offers match trade
prevention only for market-makers, and
thus the Cboe Options rules regarding
AON orders contains no restrictions on
the use of match trade prevention
instructions, as it would only be
available to market-makers that submit
AON orders. Because the Exchange has
match-trade prevention functionality
available for all Users and not just
Market-Makers, the Exchange believes it
is appropriate to provide this
functionality to all Users that submit
AON orders and want match trade
prevention functionality. The Exchange
57 Additionally, the Decrement and Cancel MTP
Modifier is inconsistent with an AON order,
because it may result in partial execution of an
order.
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believes offering one MTP Modifier is
sufficient given that non-market-makers
on Cboe Options currently have no
match-trade prevention functionality
available for AON orders.
The Exchange believes the proposed
Price Adjust process with respect to
AON orders will protect investors,
because it will rest an AON order on the
EDGX Options Book at an executable
price (i.e., a price that locks or is one
minimum price variation away from the
new Protected Quotation or AON resting
on the EDGX Options Book at or better
than the Exchange’s BBO) while
preventing trade-throughs as the market
changes and protecting non-AON orders
resting on the opposite side of the EDGX
Options Book. The proposed process
will generally re-price the incoming
(and thus later arriving order), which is
consistent with the current Price Adjust
process. However, the proposed rule
change will reprice a resting AON order
rather than an incoming non-AON
order, because AON orders have last
priority (as discussed below) and are not
displayed, and thus should not cause
the price of a non-AON order to reprice.
Repricing an AON order one minimum
price variation away from the price of a
resting non-AON order is consistent
with the repricing that applies to nonAON orders that lock or cross the
opposite side NBBO.
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change will remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, because it is consistent with
linkage rules. AON orders will not be
part of the EDGX BBO, and repricing an
AON order to lock the Protected
Quotation of an away market or a resting
(and nondisplayed) AON order on the
EDGX Options Book at a price at or
better than the Exchange’s BBO will,
therefore, not result in a displayed
locked market in accordance with
linkage rules.58 The Exchange believes
the proposed rule change is a reasonable
application of the current Price Adjust
process to avoid displaying a locked or
crossed market and to prevent tradethroughs while making AON orders
resting on the EDGX Options Book
available for execution at executable
prices (i.e., a price that locks (but not
crosses) a Protected Quotation of
another options exchange or another
AON resting on the EDGX Options
Book, but not a price that locks or
crosses a Protected Quotation on the
EDGX Options Book. The proposed
process will generally re-price the
incoming (and thus later arriving order),
which is consistent with the current
Price Adjust process. However, the
proposed rule change will reprice a
resting AON order rather than an
incoming non-AON order, because AON
orders have last priority (as discussed
above) and are not displayed or
protected, and thus should not cause the
price of an incoming non-AON order to
reprice.
Cboe Options does not have
functionality that corresponds to the
Price Adjust process. Therefore, an AON
order that enters the Cboe Options book
may rest at a price that locks or crosses
the Cboe Options market or an away
market (and thus, it is not novel or
unique to permit an AON order to rest
at a price that locks or crosses the
Exchange’s market or an away market,
as the proposed rule change permits).
As demonstrated above, even though the
proposed rule change does not permit
an AON order to rest at a price that
crosses an away market or an AON
order on the EDGX Options Book, or
that locks or crosses a Protected
Quotation on the EDGX Options Book,
the Price Adjust process as proposed
will ultimately create the same potential
execution for an AON order resting on
the EDGX Options Book that would
otherwise occur for an AON order
resting on the Cboe Options Book, and
in some cases may result in price
improvement for an AON.
Additionally, while the current Price
Adjust process does not permit an
incoming order to rest at a price that
locks a Protected Quotation on the
Exchange or an away options exchange,
the display-price sliding process on
BZX Options does permit an incoming
order to be ranked and eligible for
execution at a locking price.59 Pursuant
to the BZX display-price sliding
process, an order that, at the time of
entry, would lock or cross a Protected
Quotation of another options exchange
will be ranked at the locking price in the
BZX Options Book and displayed by the
System at one minimum price variation
below [sic] the current opposite-side
NBBO. While an AON order, as
proposed, will not be displayed at any
price on the Exchange (as an AON order
is never displayed), it will be ranked at
a price that locks a Protected Quotation
of an away market (and a resting AON
order on the Exchange).
Recently, NYSE Arca, Inc. (‘‘Arca’’)
adopted order types called the Repricing
Liquidity Adding Order (‘‘RALO’’) and
the Repricing Post No Preference Order
(‘‘RPNP’’).60 While these are different
BZX Options Rule 21.1(h).
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 84737
(December 6, 2018), 83 FR 63919 (December 12,
Rule 27.3(a).
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order types than an AON, pursuant to
the repricing process, if either of these
orders would not be able to trade upon
entry (for example, because the RALO
would take liquidity or display at a
price that locks or crosses any interest
on the Exchange or the NBBO), it would
be displayed at one minimum price
variation below (above) such sell (buy)
interest. However, it would have an
undisplayed price at which it is eligible
to trade. The displayed and
nondisplayed prices would move as the
market moves. Like these order types,
an AON order will rest at an
undisplayed price (which price will
move as the market moves) at which it
is eligible for execution (in accordance
with linkage rules). However, an AON
order will not have a displayed price, as
it is never displayed (unlike an RALO
or RPNP).
Therefore, it is not novel or unique to
permit an order to be ranked at an
undisplayed price on an exchange at a
price that locks the best-priced quote of
that exchange or an away exchange, at
which price it is eligible for execution,
and which price may be adjusted in
response to changes in the market.
The proposed rule change to only
route an AON order as a FOK to options
exchanges with sufficient size to satisfy
the AON order will remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, because
it is consistent with linkage rules and
current Cboe Options functionality.
The proposed rule change to not
permit use of the Super Aggressive ReRoute instruction to AON orders is
consistent with the proposed Price
Adjust process, which provides that an
AON order may rest at a price that locks
the price of an away options exchange.
This proposed change will remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, because
it is consistent with linkage rules. The
Super Aggressive Re-Route instruction
provides that an order on the EDGX
Options Book that subsequently locks or
crosses the price of another options
exchange, the System will route the
order to that exchange to an AON order.
This instruction conflicts with the
proposed Price Adjust process for an
AON order, which may enter the EDGX
Options Book at a price that locks the
price of another options exchange,
which price is executable if subsequent
contra-side interest is submitted to the
Exchange.
59 See
60 See
58 See
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2018) (SR–NYSEArca–2018–74) (order approving
the proposed order types).
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The proposed rule change will further
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, because
it will handle resting AON orders that
become subsequently locked by an away
market in the same manner as Cboe
Options handles resting AON orders
that become subsequently locked by an
away market. In both cases, AON orders
will remain on the local respective
book. However, the proposed rule
change will benefit investors, because it
provides a resting AON order that
becomes subsequently crossed by an
away market with an opportunity (if a
User designated the order with the
Aggressive Re-Route instruction) to
route to the away market for execution.
This execution opportunity is not
currently available on Cboe Options,
and thus a similar AON order would
remain on the Cboe Options book.
The proposed rule change to exclude
AON orders from participating in the
Exchange’s opening process will protect
investors and promote just and
equitable principles of trade, because it
will provide for the opening of a series
for trading as soon as possible and not
delay the opening of a series to attempt
to execute AON orders (which
ultimately may not be able to execute).
The Exchange believes not attempting to
execute AON orders until after the
Opening Process would have a de
minimis impact, if any, on the time of
execution of an AON order that is able
to execute at the opening. The proposed
rule change will remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, because excluding AON orders
from participating during the Opening
Process is equivalent to Cboe Options
excluding AON orders from
participating in its opening process in
classes in which it has not activated
HAL, because the Exchange has not
activated SUM during the Opening
Process.61
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change regarding the priority and
allocation of AON orders promotes just
and equitable principles of trade, as it
is reasonable for orders not displayed in
the book to not receive priority over
orders that are displayed, as this
encourages market participants to
display their best bids and offers, which
may lead to enhanced liquidity and
tighter markets. The Exchange believes
an AON order must always be last in
priority at each price level to ensure
61 See Cboe Options Rule 6.2(c)(1)(B).
Additionally, Cboe Options’ opening process is an
auction and thus significantly different than the
Exchange’s Opening Process, which is a cross at a
valid price as set forth in Rule 21.7.
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there is sufficient size to satisfy the
condition of that order to trade in its
entirety after all other orders at the same
price have executed. The proposed
priority for AON orders will remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and national market system, because it
is the same as the priority of AON
orders on Cboe Options.62
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change regarding the handling of
AON orders exposed pursuant to SUM
will protect investor, because it will
provide AON orders with execution
opportunities when the Exchange is not
at the NBBO in a manner consistent
with the current SUM process. The
proposed rule change modifies the SUM
process only to address an AON order’s
size contingency. The proposed rule
change that the exposure period for an
AON order will terminate when there is
sufficient aggregate contra-side interest
to satisfy the exposed AON order is
consistent with the current SUM
process, except it will not execute any
incoming contra-side interest
immediately against the exposed AON
order, unless it has sufficient size (as
occurs for an exposed non-AON order).
This will prevent a partial execution in
conflict with the AON size contingency.
This proposed rule change is also the
same as current Cboe Options HAL
functionality. The proposed rule change
regarding an early termination of the
exposure period of an AON order is
consistent with current reasons that will
cause an exposure period to terminate,
as it will prevent an exposure period
from continuing while conditions exist
that would have prevented an exposure
period from beginning if those
conditions existed prior to the exposure
period. Except for these two proposed
changes, an exposed AON order will be
processed in the same manner as any
other order exposed through SUM. The
proposed rule change will remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of free and open market and
a national market system, because it
ensures the entire AON order will trade
at a price equal to or better than the
NBBO in accordance with linkage rules.
The proposed allocation of AON
orders following an AIM auction will
protect investors, because it will
provide Priority Customers and other
displayed interest with priority over
non-displayed orders and is consistent
with the proposed general priority of
AON orders described above. As noted
above, the Exchange believes this
encourages market participants to
display their best bids and offers, which
may lead to enhanced liquidity and
tighter markets. While AON orders will
not be eligible for execution at the stop
price, the Exchange believes it would be
rare for there to be a resting AON order
at the stop price of an AIM Auction that
could be satisfied by the remaining
contracts of an Agency Order at that
stop price. The Exchange notes there
would be significant technical
complexities associated with
reprogramming priority within the
System to provide AON orders with
second to last priority in a specific (and
likely uncommon situation), as would
be required to permit AON orders to
execute at the stop price, even if the
Initiating Member selects last priority.
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change will have a de minimis
impact, if any, on the execution
opportunities for resting AON orders.
Similarly, due to the size contingency of
an AON order, the System cannot
determine whether there will be
sufficient contracts remaining in the
Agency Order to execute against any
AON order at a price level until after
execution of the applicable number of
contracts against the Initiating Order
and other contra-side interest. However,
AON orders at each price level better
than the stop price for which the size
can be satisfied by the remaining
contracts in the Agency Order will
execute. The Exchange also believes the
proposed rule change will remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, because
it is the same as the allocation of AON
orders following an AIM auction on
Cboe Options.
The proposed rule change to require
AON complex orders to COA and not
permit them to rest in the COB or Leg
into the Simple Book will protect
investors, because it will provide AON
complex orders with opportunities for
execution and continue to protect orders
on the Simple Book. As the Exchange
noted above, there would be significant
technical complexities associated with
reprogramming priority within the
System to permit AON complex orders
to Leg into the Simple Book and provide
AON orders with priority consistent
with the standard priority principles
described above. The Exchange notes
that other options exchange do not
permit AON complex orders to rest in
the complex order book 63 or to leg into
62 See Cboe Options Rules 6.44, Interpretation
and Policy .01 and 6.45(a)(v)(D); see also Cboe
Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy .02.
63 See, e.g., ISE Rule 722(b)(3) (which requires
AON complex orders to be submitted as IOC
orders). While not specified in Cboe Options rules,
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the simple book.64 In addition, as
described above, the proposed rule
change protects resting Leg market
interest because AON complex orders
may not execute unless they improve
the SBBO at the conclusion of a COA.
As noted above, the proposed rule
change will remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of free and open
market and a national market system,
because other options exchanges offer
similar functionality.65 Additionally, as
discussed above, the proposed rule
change will benefit investors, because it
provides additional detail on which the
rules of other exchanges are silent, such
as detail regarding routing and handling
during auctions. The Exchange believes
the proposed application of Exchange
functionality to AON orders (some of
which is not available on other
exchanges) is consistent with current
Exchange functionality. Additionally,
any differences with respect to how that
functionality will apply to AON orders
have been proposed only due to the size
contingency of an AON order and the
fact that an AON order is not displayed.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change will provide Users
with transparency regarding how the
System will handle their AON orders.
The proposed rule change will protect
investors, because it will provide Users
with additional flexibility to manage
their orders on the Exchange, as well as
increased functionality on the
Exchange. This may encourage market
participants to bring additional liquidity
to the market, which benefits all
investors. Additionally, this will
provide Users with greater
harmonization between the order
handling instructions available among
the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges. The
proposed rule change is generally
intended to align system functionality
currently offered by the Exchange with
Cboe Options functionality in order to
provide a consistent technology offering
for the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges. A
consistent technology offering, in turn,
will simplify the technology
implementation, changes, and
maintenance by Users of the Exchange
that are also participants on Cboe
Affiliated Exchanges. The proposed rule
change would also provide Users with
access to functionality that is generally
available on options exchanges other
the Exchange understands this proposed change is
the same as Cboe Options functionality.
64 See, e.g., Phlx Rule 1098(e)(vi)(A).
65 See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.53(i); ISE Rule
715(c); PHLX Rule 1066(c)(4); NOM Chapter VI,
Section 1(e)(10); and Arca Rule 6.62–O(d)(4) (AON
simple orders); see also Cboe Options Rule
6.53C(b); Phlx Rule 1098(b)(v); and ISE Rule
722(b)(3) (AON complex orders).
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than the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges,66
which will provide Users with
additional flexibility and increased
functionality on the Exchange’s System.
When Cboe Options migrates to the
same technology as that of the Exchange
and other Cboe Affiliated Exchanges,
Users of the Exchange and other Cboe
Affiliated Exchanges will have access to
similar functionality on all Cboe
Affiliated Exchanges. As such, the
proposed rule change would foster
cooperation and coordination with
persons engaged in facilitating
transactions in securities and would
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. The
proposed rule change will not impose
any burden on intramarket competition
that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act,
because use of the AON order
instruction on simple and complex
orders will be optional and available to
all Users. All Users may determine
whether to apply an AON order
instruction to the simple or complex
orders they submit to the Exchange. The
System will handle all AON orders
submitted to the Exchange in the same
manner in accordance with the
proposed rule change. The Exchange
believes the proposed priority and
allocation of AON orders is reasonable,
as it is consistent with current
allocation principles that provide for
displayed interest to trade ahead of
nondisplayed interest, and ensures an
AON order will only execute if there is
sufficient size to satisfy its size
contingency.
Additionally, the proposed rule
change will not impose any burden
intermarket competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act, because other
options exchanges offer similar
functionality, as discussed above.67 The
Exchange believes this proposed rule
change is necessary to permit fair
competition among the options
exchanges. Additionally, the Exchange
believes the proposed application of
66 Id.
67 See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.53(i); ISE Rule
715(c); PHLX Rule 1066(c)(4); NOM Chapter VI,
Section 1(e)(10); and Arca Rule 6.62–O(d)(4) (AON
simple orders); see also Cboe Options Rule
6.53C(b), Phlx Rule 1098(b)(v), and ISE Rule
722(b)(3) (AON complex orders).
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Exchange functionality (such as MTP
Modifiers, SUM, routing instructions,
and AIM) to AON orders is consistent
with current Exchange functionality and
modified such functionality only to
account for the size contingency of an
AON order and the fact that an AON
order is not displayed, and believes that
the proposed rule change will provide
Users with additional transparency
regarding how the System will handle
their AON orders. The Exchange
believes that the proposed rule change
will relieve any burden on, or otherwise
promote, competition, because it will
permit the Exchange to offer Users
similar functionality that is current
available to market participants on other
options exchanges.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange neither solicited nor
received comments on the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Because the foregoing proposed rule
change does not:
A. Significantly affect the protection
of investors or the public interest;
B. impose any significant burden on
competition; and
C. become operative for 30 days from
the date on which it was filed, or such
shorter time as the Commission may
designate, it has become effective
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the
Act 68 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6) 69
thereunder.70
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission will institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
68 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6).
70 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6). In addition, Rule 19b–
4(f)(6)(iii) requires a self-regulatory organization to
give the Commission written notice of its intent to
file the proposed rule change, along with a brief
description and text of the proposed rule change,
at least five business days prior to the date of filing
of the proposed rule change, or such shorter time
as designated by the Commission. The Exchange
has satisfied this requirement.
69 17
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 74 / Wednesday, April 17, 2019 / Notices
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
CboeEDGX–2019–017 on the subject
line.
Paper Comments
amozie on DSK9F9SC42PROD with NOTICES
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CboeEDGX–2019–017. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CboeEDGX–2019–017 and
should be submitted on or before May
8, 2019.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:23 Apr 16, 2019
Jkt 247001
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.71
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–07616 Filed 4–16–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–85624; File No. SR–C2–
2019–008]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
C2 Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed
Rule Change To Extend the Pilot for
Certain Options Market Rules That Are
Linked to the Equity Market Plan To
Address Extraordinary Market
Volatility
April 11, 2019.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on April 9,
2019, Cboe C2 Exchange, Inc.
(‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘C2’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the Exchange. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe C2 Exchange, Inc. (‘‘C2’’ or the
‘‘Exchange’’) is filing with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (the
‘‘Commission’’) a proposed rule change
to extend the pilot to the close of
business on October 18, 2019, for
certain options market rules that are
linked to the equity market Plan to
Address Extraordinary Market
Volatility. The text of the proposed rule
change is attached as Exhibit 5 [sic].
The text of the proposed rule change
is also available on the Exchange’s
website (https://markets.cboe.com/us/
options/regulation/rule_filings/ctwo/),
at the Exchange’s Office of the
Secretary, and at the Commission’s
Public Reference Room.
71 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
PO 00000
Frm 00137
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to extend the pilot to the close
of business on October 18, 2019, for
certain options market rules that are
linked to the equity market Plan to
Address Extraordinary Market Volatility
(the ‘‘Limit Up-Limit Down Plan’’ or the
‘‘Plan’’). This change is being proposed
in connection with a proposed
amendment to the Limit Up-Limit Down
Plan that would allow the Plan to
continue to operate on a permanent
basis (‘‘Amendment 18’’).
In an attempt to address extraordinary
market volatility in NMS Stock, and, in
particular, events like the severe
volatility on May 6, 2010, U.S. national
securities exchanges and the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(collectively, ‘‘Participants’’) drafted the
Plan pursuant to Rule 608 of Regulation
NMS and under the Act.3 On May 31,
2012, the Commission approved the
Plan, as amended, on a one-year pilot
basis.4 Though the Plan was primarily
designed for equity markets, the
Exchange believed it would, indirectly,
potentially impact the options markets
as well. Thus, the Exchange has
previously amended and adopted
Interpretation and Policy .01 to Rule
6.29, Interpretation and Policy .01 to
Rule 6.32 and Rule 6.39 to ensure the
option markets were not harmed as a
result of the Plan’s implementation and
has implemented such rules on a pilot
basis that has coincided with the pilot
period for the Plan (the ‘‘Options
Pilots’’).5
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 64547
(May 25, 2011), 76 FR 31647 (June 1, 2011) (File
No. 4–631).
4 See Securities and Exchange Act Release No.
67091 (May 31, 2012) 77 FR 33498 (June 6, 2012).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 69345
(April 8, 2013), 78 FR 21985 (April 12, 2013) (SR–
E:\FR\FM\17APN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 74 (Wednesday, April 17, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 16119-16130]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-07616]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-85626; File No. SR-CboeEDGX-2019-017]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change
Relating To Adopt All-or-None (``AON'') Orders
April 11, 2019.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on April 2, 2019, Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (``Exchange'' or
````EDGX'''') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I and
II below, which Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The Exchange
filed the proposal as a ``non-controversial'' proposed rule change
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act \3\ and Rule 19b-
4(f)(6) thereunder.\4\ The Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
\4\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(6).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or ``EDGX'') proposes to
adopt all-or-none (``AON'') orders. The text of the proposed rule
change is provided in Exhibit 5.
The text of the proposed rule change is also available on the
Exchange's website (https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/regulation/rule_filings/edgx/), at the Exchange's Office of the Secretary, and at
the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
[[Page 16120]]
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
In 2016, the Exchange's parent company, Cboe Global Markets, Inc.
(``Cboe Global''), which is the parent company of Cboe Exchange, Inc.
(``Cboe Options'') and Cboe C2 Exchange, Inc. (``C2''), acquired the
Exchange, Cboe EDGA Exchange, Inc. (``EDGA''), Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc.
(``BZX or BZX Options''), and Cboe BYX Exchange, Inc. (``BYX'' and,
together with C2, Cboe Options, the Exchange, EDGA, and BZX, the ``Cboe
Affiliated Exchanges''). The Cboe Affiliated Exchanges are working to
align certain system functionality, retaining only intended differences
between the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges, in the context of a technology
migration. Cboe Options intends to migrate its technology to the same
trading platform used by the Exchange, C2, and BZX Options in the
fourth quarter of 2019. The proposal set forth below is intended to add
certain functionality to the Exchange's System that is available on
Cboe Options in order to ultimately provide a consistent technology
offering for market participants who interact with the Cboe Affiliated
Exchanges. Although the Exchange intentionally offers certain features
that differ from those offered by its affiliates and will continue to
do so, the Exchange believes that offering similar functionality to the
extent practicable will reduce potential confusion for Users.
The Exchange proposes to adopt AON orders. Proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)
defines AON orders as orders to be executed in their entirety or not at
all. Additionally, it specifies that AON orders may be market or limit
orders. Several other options exchanges offer AON orders (which can be
market or limit orders), and this proposed definition is consistent
with the definition of AON orders in other options exchanges' rules,
including Cboe Options.\5\ The Exchange will not disseminate bids or
offers of AON orders to OPRA, as the prices of AON orders are not
included in the Exchange's best bid or offer (``BBO'') for a series.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.53(i); NASDAQ ISE, LLC
(``ISE'') Rule 715(c) (ISE requires AON orders to be entered as
immediate-or-cancel (``IOC'')); NASDAQ OMX PHLX, LLC (``PHLX'') Rule
1066(c)(4); NASDAQ Options Market LLC (``NOM'') Chapter VI, Section
1(e)(10) (NOM requires AON orders to be entered as IOC and only
after the market open); and NYSE Arca, Inc. (``Arca'') Rule 6.62-
O(d)(4). The proposed rule change permits Users to apply all Times-
in-Force to AON orders (as Cboe Options permits), as the Exchange
already offers fill-or-kill (``FOK'') orders, which are the
equivalent of an IOC AON order. See Rule 21.1(f)(5) (a FOK order is
a limit order that is to be executed in its entirety as soon as it
is received and, if not so executed, cancelled). However, as
discussed below, Users may not apply a Post Only instruction to AON
orders.
\6\ See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(A). Rules of other options
exchanges explicitly provide that AON orders are not disseminated to
OPRA. See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy
.02; and Phlx Option Floor Procedures A-9. Proposed Rule
21.1(d)(4)(E) states the Exchange may restrict the entry of AON
orders in a series or class if the Exchange deems it necessary or
appropriate to maintain a fair and orderly market. Cboe Options
rules provide it with the same authority. See, e.g., Cboe Options
Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy .03.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed AON order is similar to the existing Minimum Quantity
Order currently available on the Exchange. Minimum Quantity Orders are
orders that require a specified minimum quantity of contracts be
obtained, or the order is cancelled.\7\ Today, a Minimum Quantity Order
with the minimum set as the full size of the order would function
similar to the proposed AON order (except, as noted above, an AON order
will not be required to be submitted as IOC).\8\ The Exchange also
offers a fill-or-kill (``FOK'') Time-in-Force, pursuant to which a
limit order is to be executed in its entirety as soon as it is received
and, if not so executed, cancelled.\9\ A FOK order is equivalent to an
AON entered with an IOC Time-in-Force. As discussed below, unlike
Minimum Quantity Orders or orders designated as FOK, AON orders may
rest in the Book or be routed, may also be market orders, and may have
any Time-in-Force. However, the primary characteristic of both, which
is that they must execute in their entirety, is the same.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See Rule 21.1(d)(3). While Minimum Quantity Orders may only
be IOC, the proposed rule change does not limit the Times-in-Force
that Users may apply to AON orders as discussed above.
\8\ For example, a Minimum Quantity Order for 100 contracts with
a minimum set at 100 contracts has the same result as an AON order
for 100 contracts, because both can only trade against an order(s)
for 100 contracts.
\9\ See Rule 21.1(f)(5). The proposed rule change does not adopt
a provision corresponding to Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation
and Policies .04 or .05, because the Exchange believes those
provisions are redundant and unnecessary. Cboe Options Rule 6.44
states that an all-or-none bid or offer shall be deemed to be made
only for the amount stated (i.e., deemed to be all-or-none), which
is redundant of the proposed definition of an AON order. Similarly,
Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy .04, which
essentially says that a FOK order will be deemed to be made only for
the amount stated, is redundant of the Exchange's current definition
of a FOK order. Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy
.05 relates to minimum volume orders (which are similar to Minimum
Quantity Orders on the Exchange, except minimum volume orders on
Cboe Options may only be executed in open outcry), and states
minimum volume orders will be deemed to be made only for the amount
stated (i.e., deemed to be all-or-none), which the Exchange believes
is redundant of the Exchange's current definition of a Minimum
Quantity Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change does not permit a User to designate an AON
order as Post Only.\10\ An AON order's size contingency, and the fact
that (as discussed below) AON orders will have last priority while
resting in the EDGX Options Book, will provide AON orders resting on
the EDGX Options Book with few opportunities for AON orders to receive
an execution. For this reason, the Exchange believes there will be
minimal investor demand for Post Only AON orders.\11\ The Exchange
believes it is appropriate to not restrict the opportunities for
execution of an AON order to the minimal execution opportunities that
would exist for an AON order while resting on the Book. This ensures
that an AON order may execute upon entry if there is sufficient size
resting on the EDGX Options Book, as well as have an opportunity for
execution if it cannot so execute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(B). Pursuant to Rule
21.1(d)(8), a Post Only order may not, among other things, remove
liquidity from the EDGX Options Book.
\11\ Cboe Options does not offer a Post Only instruction.
Additionally, other exchanges, such as ISE and NOM, only permit AON
orders to be entered as IOC, and thus AON orders at those options
exchanges would only execute upon entry and never rest on the book
(and thus Post Only, if available on those exchanges, would not be
permitted).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the proposed rule change only permits Users to apply
MCN (MTP cancel newest), but no other MTP Modifiers, to an AON
order.\12\ Rule 21.1(g)(1) provides that an incoming order marked with
the MCN Modifier will not execute against opposite side resting
interest market with any MTP modifier originating from the same Unique
Identifier. The incoming order marked with the MCN modifier will be
cancelled back to the originating User(s). The resting order marked
with an MTP modifier will remain on the EGDX Options Book. The Exchange
believes there will be little demand for the use of any MTP Modifiers
on AON orders given that primarily retail investors submit AONs, and
retail investors are unlikely to have interest
[[Page 16121]]
on both sides of the market. Given this expected minimal demand, the
Exchange believes offering one MTP Modifier for AON orders is
sufficient. The Exchange believes MCN is the most appropriate MTP
modifier for AON orders, because it is the simplest modifier to
implement from a System perspective and an offering of other MTP
modifier for investors would present significant technical complexities
given the size contingency of AON orders.\13\ Additionally, the
Exchange has determined to handle an AON order with any other MTP
Modifier as an MCN rather than cancel the AON, because the proposed
rules provide investors with sufficient transparency regarding how the
System will handle AON orders with MTP Modifiers, and Users may achieve
other results manually if so desired. For example, if User were to
prefer to have a resting order with an MTP Modifier cancel and let the
newer AON order rest, it could manually cancel the resting order and
then resubmit the AON order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(D). If a User applies any
other MTP Modifier to an AON order, the System will handle it as an
MCN).
\13\ Additionally, the Decrement and Cancel MTP Modifier is
inconsistent with an AON order, because it may result in partial
execution of an order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cboe Options offers match trade prevention only for market-makers,
and thus the Cboe Options rules regarding AON orders contains no
restrictions on the use of match trade prevention instructions, as it
would only be available to market-makers that submit AON orders.
Because the Exchange has match-trade prevention functionality available
for all Users and not just Market-Makers, the Exchange believes it is
appropriate to provide this functionality to all Users that submit AON
orders and want match trade prevention functionality. The rules of
other exchanges are also silent on whether any match trade prevention
instructions are available for AON orders.
An AON limit order will always be subject to the Price Adjust
process in Rule 21.1(i).\14\ Because AON orders will have last priority
on the EDGX Options Book (as discussed below), the Exchange believes it
will maximize execution opportunities for AON limit orders to be
subject to the Price Adjust process.\15\ The Price Adjust process
applies to orders (subject to the User's instructions or the Rules)
that do not execute upon entry and go to rest in the EDGX Options Book
(for example, because an order is not marketable upon entry, is not
eligible to route, or, in the case of an AON order, there is
insufficient size to satisfy its size contingency). It ensures these
orders rest at executable prices in accordance with linkage rules.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See proposed Rule 21.1(d)(4)(C). If an AON market order is
unable to execute for any reason, it would cancel in accordance with
the terms of a market order. This is consistent with the handling of
any other market order that was not able to execute on the Exchange.
\15\ If a User does not want an AON order to rest on the EDGX
Options Book at an adjusted price, it may cancel the AON order and
resubmit it for execution at a later time.
\16\ See Rule 27.3, which provides that the Exchange will
reasonably avoid displaying quotations that lock or cross a
Protected Quotation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Currently, if an order, at the time of entry, would lock or cross a
Protected Quotation of another options exchange or the Exchange, it
will be ranked and displayed by the System at one minimum price
variation below (above) the current NBO (NBB) for bids (offers).\17\ An
AON order resting on the EDGX Options Book is not displayed or part of
the BBO (thus is not protected and would not be part of the NBBO). The
proposed rule change provides that AON orders will rest on the EDGX
Options Book at potentially executable prices (and thus not at prices
that cross a Protected Quotation or the BBO).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See current Rule 21.1(i)(1) (which the proposed rule change
renumbers and letters to be Rule 21.1(i)(1)(A)(i)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, proposed Rule 21.1(i)(1)(A)(ii) provides if a buy
(sell) non-AON order, at the time of entry, would lock or cross the
offer (bid) of a sell (buy) AON order resting on the EDGX Options Book
at or better than the Exchange's best offer (bid), the System ranks
\18\ the resting AON order at one minimum price variation above (below)
the bid (offer) of the non-AON order. This is consistent with the price
at which non-AON orders would rest on the EDGX Options Book if subject
to price adjustment (except price adjustment currently only applies to
incoming orders, not resting orders). For example, if an AON order to
buy 5 at 1.10 is resting on the EDGX Options Book (which is the NBB),
and a non-AON order to sell 1 (which does not satisfy the size of the
AON order) at 1.10 enters the EDGX Options Book, the System reprices
the AON order to rest in the EDGX Options Book at 1.05 (assuming the
minimum price variation for the class is $0.05).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ In the EDGX Rules, the term ``ranked'' means that an order
will be prioritized and eligible for execution at its ranked price
for purposes of allocation if an execution were to occur at that
price. For an AON order ``ranked'' at a price, it would be
prioritized last at that price (as discussed above).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, pursuant to proposed Rule 21.1(i)(1)(B)(ii), if a buy
(sell) AON order, at the time of entry, would lock or cross a Protected
Offer (Bid) of the Exchange, the System ranks the incoming AON order at
a price one minimum price variation below (above) the offer (bid) of
the non-AON order resting on the EDGX Options Book at the Protected
Offer (Bid). This is consistent with how an incoming non-AON would be
handled if it locked or crossed a Protected Offer (Bid) of the
Exchange. For example, if a non-AON order to buy 1 at 1.10 is resting
at the top of the EDGX Options Book, and an AON order to sell 5 (which
cannot satisfied by the resting interest) at 1.10 enters the EDGX
Options Book, the System reprices the AON order to rest in the EDGX
Options Book at 1.15 (assuming the minimum price variation for the
class is $0.05).
Proposed subparagraph (i)(1)(B)(i) states if a buy (sell) AON
order, at the time of entry, would cross a Protected Offer (Bid) of
another options exchange or a sell (buy) AON order resting on the EDGX
Options Book at or better than the Exchange's best offer (bid), the
System will rank the incoming AON order at a price equal to the
Protected Offer (Bid) or the offer (bid) of the resting AON order,
respectively. For example, if a buy AON order has a bid of 1.05 and
enters the EDGX Options Book when the NBO is 1.00, the System ranks the
AON order at a 1.00 bid.\19\ Or, if a sell AON order has an offer of
1.10 and enters the EDGX Options Book, where there is a resting AON
order with a bid of 1.15, the System ranks the incoming AON order at a
price of 1.15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Pursuant to subparagraph (i)(2), if the NBO changes to
1.05, the resting AON order would receive a new timestamp and be
repriced to 1.05.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change applies the current Price Adjust process
to the existence of AONs to reflect the fact that AONs are not
displayed on the EDGX Options Book (and thus are not Protected
Quotations). This factor distinguishes AONs from other orders on the
Exchange. The Exchange believes the proposed application of the Price
Adjust process to AONs is reasonable, because an AON order will rest on
the EDGX Options Book at an executable price (i.e., a price that locks
or is one minimum price variation away from the new Protected Quotation
or AON resting on the EDGX Options Book at or better than the
Exchange's BBO).\20\ The
[[Page 16122]]
proposed process will generally re-price the incoming (and thus later
arriving order), which is consistent with the current Price Adjust
process. As proposed, if an incoming buy (sell) AON order locked or
crosses a Protected Offer (Bid) of the Exchange (i.e., a non-AON order
that was displayed at the Exchange's best offer (bid)), the System
would adjust the price of the AON order to be one minimum price
variation below (above) the Protected Offer (Bid). Similarly, if an
incoming buy (sell) AON order crossed a Protected Offer (Bid) of
another options market or a sell (buy) AON order resting on the
Exchange, the System would adjust the price of the incoming order.
However, unlike the current Price Adjust process, the proposed rule
change will reprice a resting AON order rather than an incoming non-AON
order, because AON orders have last priority (as discussed below) and
are not displayed, and thus should not cause the price of an incoming
non-AON order to reprice. Because AONs are not displayed and have last
priority on the Book, the Exchange believes it is appropriate to adjust
the price of an AON rather than an incoming order that would be
displayed and protected. The proposed rule change is consistent with
linkage rules, because AONs will not be part of the EDGX BBO, and
repricing an AON to lock an away exchange price or a resting (and
nondisplayed) order on the EDGX Options Book will, therefore, not
result in a displayed locked market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ The proposed rule change makes corresponding changes to
Rule 21.1(i)(2) to provide that in the event the circumstances that
caused the System to adjust the price of an order pursuant to
proposed subparagraph (1) change so that it would not lock or cross,
as applicable, a Protected Quotation or an AON resting on the EDGX
Options Book at a price at or better than the Exchange's BBO, the
order subject to the price adjust will receive a new timestamp and
be ranked or displayed at a price that locks or is one minimum price
variation away from the new Protected Quotation or AON resting on
the EDGX Options Book at a price at or better than the Exchange's
BBO. These proposed changes reflect the fact that the trade or
cancellation of an order resting on the EDGX Options Book at or
better than the Exchange's best offer (bid) (as applicable) may
cause a resting AON order to become repriced. Pursuant to the
current Price Adjust process applicable to non-AON orders, repricing
only occurs when the NBBO changes. The proposed rule change adds the
phrase ``if applicable'' to the current rule text regarding orders
being ranked and displayed to reflect the fact that AON orders will
not be displayed in the EDGX Options Book.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change also ensures that a resting AON order will
not lock the price of a Protected Quotation on the EDGX Options Book.
This prevents the situation in which an incoming order may execute
ahead of the resting non-AON order. For example, if a non-AON order to
buy 1 at 1.10 is resting on the EDGX Options Book, and an AON order to
sell 5 (and thus is not satisfied by the resting interest) at 1.10
enters the EDGX Options Book, if the System permitted the AON order to
rest at a price of 1.10 (rather than reprice the AON to rest at 1.15 as
proposed), if subsequently an AON to buy 5 at 1.10 was submitted to
EDGX Options, that AON would execute against the resting AON at 1.10,
and thus ahead of the non-AON order to buy.\21\ The proposed rule
change will also reprice an AON order to a more aggressive price up to
the limit price at which it would be able to execute without causing a
trade-through as the market changes.\22\
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\21\ Priority rules apply to orders resting in the Book, not
incoming orders. Therefore, with respect to an incoming order, the
System checks opposite side interest to see if the incoming order
can execute. It does not check to see if there is same-side interest
ahead of which it cannot trade, as there would only be marketable
same-side interest (from a price perspective) that would not
otherwise execute against opposite side interest if such opposite
side interest was an AON order.
\22\ See Rules 27.2 (which prohibits trade-throughs, subject to
certain exceptions) and 27.3 (requires the Exchange to reasonably
avoid displaying quotes that lock a Protected Quotation).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cboe Options does not have functionality that corresponds to the
Price Adjust process. However, Cboe Options rules do not provide any
special handling that applies to AON orders that lock or cross orders
on Cboe Options or the quote of an away options market. Therefore,
pursuant to Cboe Options' rules, if an AON order is unable to execute
upon entry into the Cboe Options System (or after routing, if eligible
for routing pursuant to Cboe Options' rules), the AON order will rest
at its price, even if it locks or crosses the Cboe Options BBO or the
quote of an away options market.\23\ The proposed rule change will
similarly permit an AON order to rest at a price that locks the quote
of an away options market, as well as an AON order resting on the EDGX
Options Book at a price at or better than the EDGX Options BBO. On Cboe
Options, an AON order resting at a price that locks or crosses an order
may only execute in accordance with the priority principles set forth
in Cboe Options Rule 6.45 and may not execute at prices that would
cause a trade-through pursuant to Cboe Options Rule 6.81. The Exchange
believes the proposed rule change ultimately creates the same result
for a resting AON order that would otherwise occur on Cboe Options (the
proposed rule change merely changes the price of an AON order upon
entry rather than at the time of execution), and in some cases results
in price improvement for an AON order.
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\23\ If the AON order submitted to Cboe Options was a market
order and was unable to execute for any reason, it would cancel in
accordance with the terms of a market order. This is consistent with
the handling of any other market order that was not able to execute
on the Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For example, as proposed, if the EDGX BBO was 1.15 x 1.30 (size of
50), and the NBBO was 1.15 x 1.20 (size of 50), and a User submitted an
AON order for 100 to buy at 1.25, the AON order would rest on the EDGX
Options Book with a price of 1.20 (which locks the Protected Offer of
1.20). If an order to sell 100 at 1.20 was later submitted to EDGX
Options, it would execute against the resting AON order at its ranked
price of 1.20. On Cboe Options, the AON would rest at 1.25. If an order
to sell 100 at 1.20 was later submitted to Cboe Options, it would
execute against the resting AON order at a price of 1.20 (and thus the
same price at which it would execute on EDGX Options), as executions
may only occur at or within the NBBO.
Additionally, suppose the EDGX BBO was 1.15 x 1.25 (non-AON order
with size of 50), and was also the NBBO, and a User submitted an AON
order for 100 to buy at 1.25, the AON order would rest on the EDGX
Options Book with a price of 1.20 (which is one minimum price variation
below the resting non-AON order). If an order to sell 100 at 1.20 was
later submitted to EDGX Options, it would execute against the resting
AON order at a price of 1.20 (which results in price improvement for
the AON order). On Cboe Options, the AON would rest at 1.25. If an
order to sell 100 at 1.20 was later submitted to Cboe Options, the AON
would receive execution at a price of 1.25.\24\ The Exchange believes
the proposed rule change is an enhancement that will prevent such
incoming orders to trade against a resting AON at the same price as a
resting non-AON order on the opposite side of the market that had
insufficient size to trade against the AON order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See Cboe Options Rule 6.45.[sic]
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As another example, if the EDGX BBO was 1.15 x 1.30 and was also
the NBBO, and there was a sell AON order for 50 to sell at 1.25 resting
on the EDGX Options Book, and a User submitted an AON order for 100 to
buy at 1.25, the incoming AON order would rest on the EDGX Options Book
at 1.25 (which locks the resting AON order). If an order to sell 100 at
1.25 was later submitted to EDGX Options, it would execute against the
resting AON order to buy at 1.25. This is the same result that would
occur on Cboe Options.
Because the proposed Price Adjust process always applies to an AON
order, which provides that an AON order may rest at a price that locks
the price of an away options exchange, proposed Rule 21.9(a)(3)(B)
states that a User may not apply the Super Aggressive Re-Route
instruction. The Super Aggressive Re-Route instruction provides that if
an order resting on the EDGX Options Book
[[Page 16123]]
at a price that becomes subsequently locked or crossed by the price of
another options exchange, the System will route the order to that
exchange. This instruction conflicts with the proposed Price Adjust
process for an AON order, which may enter the EDGX Options Book at a
price that locks the price of another options exchange. A User may
apply the Aggressive Re-Route instruction pursuant to Rule
21.9(a)(3)(A), pursuant to which a resting AON order may be re-routed
if its price is subsequently crossed by another options exchange.
Cboe Options does not have a process that corresponds to the
Exchange's Re-Route instructions. As a result, if an AON order were
resting on the Cboe Options Book, it will remain there, even if it is
resting at a price that subsequently becomes locked or crossed by
another options exchange. AON orders resting on the EDGX Options Book
that subsequently become locked by another options exchange will be
handled in the same manner as those AON orders would be handled by Cboe
Options--they will remain on the EDGX options Book and not route to an
away market. However, because the Exchange will make the Aggressive Re-
Route instruction available to AON orders (which Users may specify when
submitting AON orders), the proposed rule change will provide an AON
order submitted to the Exchange that includes an Aggressive Re-Route
instruction and rests at a price that subsequently becomes crossed by
another options exchange with additional routing (and thus execution)
opportunities not currently available to AON orders on Cboe Options.
The proposed rule change provides that the Exchange will accept AON
orders for queuing prior to the completion of the Opening Process, but
AON orders will not participate in the Opening Process. Following
completion of the Opening Process, the System processes any queued AON
orders in accordance with Rule 21.8.\25\ In other words, it may execute
if possible or rest in the EDGX Options Book, subject to a User's
instructions (for example, the User may cancel the AON order). As set
forth in Rule 21.7(b), the System executes orders at the opening price,
in accordance with standard priority (as discussed below, AON orders
will have last priority at each price level). Given the size
contingency of an AON order and the last priority of AON orders, it
will not be known whether there will be sufficient size to execute AON
orders at the opening price until after the System executes all other
interest at the opening price. AON orders will be eligible for
execution once a series is open for trading.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See proposed Rule 21.7(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Currently on Cboe Options, AON orders may participate in the
opening process in classes in which it has activated the Hybrid Agency
Liaison (``HAL'') for openings.\26\ HAL is the Cboe Options equivalent
to the Exchange's Step Up Mechanism (``SUM''). EDGX does not activate
SUM for openings, making classes trading on EDGX similar to classes
trading on Cboe Options in which Cboe Options has not activated HAL for
openings. Therefore, the proposed rule change is consistent with the
Cboe Options rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See Cboe Options Rule 6.2(c)(i)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the opening process on Cboe Options is an auction and
thus significantly different than the Exchange's Opening Process, which
is a cross at a valid price as set forth in Rule 21.7. The Exchange
believes it is best for investors to open a series for trading as soon
as possible. As noted above, it will not be known whether there will be
sufficient size to execute AON orders at the opening price until after
the System executes all other interest at the opening price, since AON
orders will have last priority. The Exchange believes it is appropriate
to exclude AON orders from the Opening Process to ensure series can
open as fast as possible. Currently, once the Exchange determines the
Opening Price for a series (for example, the NBBO), it executes as much
interest as possible at that price and opens a series. If AONs were
eligible for execution during the Opening Process, after executing non-
AON interest, the System would then have to check to determine whether
there was sufficient size to execute against any AON orders. Rather
than delay the opening of a series to determine whether an execution of
AON orders can occur (and no execution may ultimately occur), the
Exchange believes it is appropriate to open the series and let all non-
executed orders (including AONs) be eligible for execution in an open
trading state. Execution of any AON orders whose size contingency can
be satisfied by any other interest on the Exchange would occur just
after the opening of the series, which is close to the time at which it
would have executed if the System waited to open the series and
executed these orders during the Opening Process. Therefore, the
Exchange believes not attempting to execute AON orders until after the
Opening Process would have a de minimis impact, if any, on the time of
execution of an AON order.
Proposed Rule 21.8(m) sets forth the priority of AON orders. AON
orders will have last priority at each price level (including after
nondisplayed Reserve Quantity). The System allocates AON orders at the
same price based on the time the System receives them (i.e., in time
priority), except if the Exchange applies the Customer Overlay to a
class, Priority Customer AON orders have priority over non-Priority
Customer AON orders.\27\ An AON order must always be last in priority
to ensure there is sufficient size to satisfy the condition of that
order to trade in its entirety after all other orders at the same price
have executed. Additionally, the Exchange believes it is reasonable for
orders not displayed in the book to not receive priority over orders
that are displayed, as this encourages market participants to display
their best bids and offers, which may lead to enhanced liquidity and
tighter markets. This is consistent with the non-inclusion of AON
orders in the BBO or NBBO, as discussed above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ This priority is the same as the priority of AON orders on
Cboe Options. See Cboe Options Rule 6.45(a)(v)(D). This priority is
also consistent with Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation and
Policy .01, which the Exchange is not explicitly adopting because it
is redundant with this proposed provision, because having last
priority means that AON orders will only trade if there is no other
interest at the same price. Cboe Options Rule 6.44 does not address
customer priority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change states that a transaction may occur at the
same price as an AON order resting on the EDGX Options Book without the
AON order participating in the transaction, and that a transaction may
occur at a price lower (higher) than an AON order bid (offer) resting
on the EDGX Options Book if the size of the transaction is less than
the size of the resting AON order. As discussed above, an AON order
will trade last at each price level. These proposed provisions ensure
execution of an AON order if there is sufficient size to satisfy the
AON order, while not preventing execution of orders that can execute
against other interest but cannot satisfy the AON order size
contingency.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ These provisions are substantively the same as Cboe Options
Rule 6.44, Interpretation and Policy .02.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Users may designate AON orders to be routable pursuant to Rule
21.9. Pursuant to proposed rule 21.9(a)(1), the System only routes an
AON order (as an FOK) designated as available for routing to options
exchanges with sufficient size to satisfy the AON order. Pursuant to
current Rule 21.9(a)(1), orders are routed as IOCs. Because a FOK order
is equivalent to an AON order designated as IOC, routing an AON as a
FOK is
[[Page 16124]]
consistent with the Exchange's current routing rule. Only routing an
AON order to an exchange with sufficient size to satisfy the AON order
ensures the System will only route an AON order at which it may receive
an execution.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ If the size at the away options exchange was not available
when the AON order arrived at the away options exchange, it would
return to the Exchange and continue to be processed, as is the case
for any other order that routes to an away options exchange and is
unable to execute. While not specified in Cboe Options rules, the
Exchange understands this proposed change is the same as Cboe
Options functionality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An AON order may be exposed pursuant to the Exchange's Step Up
Mechanism (``SUM'') pursuant to Rule 21.18. An AON order will be
exposed and executed in the same manner as a non-AON order during SUM,
except as follows:
Currently, any responses priced at the prevailing NBBO
\30\ or better, and any unrelated order (or quote) on the opposite side
of the market from the exposed order that could trade against the
exposed order at the prevailing NBBO or better, will immediately trade
against the exposed order, and the exposure period will continue.\31\ A
SUM exposure period will currently terminate upon the receipt of a
response (or unrelated order or quote) to trade the entire exposed
order at the NBBO or better.\32\ Because an AON order cannot partially
execute pursuant to its terms, the proposed rule change provides that
during the exposure of an AON order, the System will hold responses
priced at or better than the prevailing NBBO (rather than trade against
the exposed AON immediately) until there is sufficient aggregate size
to satisfy the AON order, and that a SUM exposure period will terminate
upon the receipt of multiple responses with sufficient aggregate size
to satisfy the AON order.\33\ The proposed rule change also states that
if the exposed order is an AON order, the exposure period will
terminate upon the receipt of multiple responses and unrelated orders
in quotes with sufficient aggregate size to satisfy the exposed AON
order.\34\ This is consistent with size contingency of an AON order and
will provide an AON order with opportunities to have its size
contingency met during an exposure period, while ensuring the entire
AON order will trade at a price equal to or better than the NBBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ References to the ``prevailing NBBO'' mean the NBBO at the
time of any execution.
\31\ See Rule 21.18(c)(1) and (2).
\32\ See Rule 21.18(d).
\33\ See proposed Rule 21.18(c)(1) and (d).
\34\ While not specified in Cboe Options rules, the Exchange
understands this proposed change is the same as Cboe Options
functionality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Currently, as noted above, if the Exchange receives an
unrelated order or quote that could trade against the exposed order at
the prevailing NBBO price or better, that order executes against the
exposed order, and the exposure period continues. The proposed rule
change states if an AON order is exposed and the Exchange receives an
unrelated order (or quote) that would be displayed at a price at or
better than the NBBO with insufficient size to satisfy the exposed
order, the SUM exposure period terminates and the exposed order is
processed pursuant to Rule 21.18(c) (it either executes, routes, or
enters the EDGX Options Book, subject to a User's instructions).\35\ If
an AON order is exposed and the Exchange receives an unrelated AON
order with a price at or better than the NBBO with insufficient size to
satisfy the exposed order the exposure period will continue.\36\ This
is consistent with current SUM functionality, pursuant to which the
exposed price of an order will not lock the Exchange's opposite side
BBO if the BBO is not at the NBBO. Because a SUM would not have begun
if the Exchange displayed a contra-side order at the NBBO, the Exchange
believes it is appropriate to terminate the exposure period if that
situation arises during the exposure period. Unlike when non-AON orders
are exposed, an unrelated order (if it is smaller than the exposed AON
order) will not execute against the exposed order, and thus would enter
the EDGX Options Book. For example, suppose the NBBO is 1.00 x 1.20 and
the EDGX Options BBO is 1.00 x 1.25, and an AON order to buy 10 at 1.20
is exposed at 1.20 pursuant to SUM. During the exposure period, the
Exchange receives an order to sell 5 at 1.20. The incoming order cannot
satisfy the size of the exposed AON order, so it would enter the EDGX
Options Book and would cause the EDGX Options BBO to become 1.00 x
1.20. Therefore, upon receipt of that order, the exposure period
terminates and the exposed AON order will be process pursuant to Rule
21.18(c) (as further discussed below, it will be routed or will enter
the EDGX Options Book, subject to a User's instructions). In this case,
if there is insufficient size at the away markets to execute the AON
order at 1.20 (and assuming the AON order is eligible for routing), the
AON order will enter the EDGX Options Book and rest at a bid of 1.15
(pursuant to the Price Adjust process described above, an AON order
will be ranked at one minimum price variation (in this case, 0.05)
below the opposite side BBO).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See proposed Rule 21.18(d)(3). While not explicitly stated
in Rule 21.18(c), pursuant to Rule 21.9(a)(1), any order that does
not execute in full after routing away may be posted (the unfilled
balance) to the EDGX Options Book.
\36\ This is because the incoming AON order would not be
displayed at a price at or better than the NBBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Except as noted above, an exposed AON order will be processed in
the same manner as any other order exposed through a SUM auction. If at
the end of the exposure period there is sufficient size to satisfy the
AON order, it will execute. If there is insufficient size, then the
Exchange would route the AON order if there was sufficient size at an
away market to satisfy the AON order (unless otherwise instructed by
the User), as it would any remaining portion of any other exposed order
(in the case of an AON order, the entire size would be remaining).\37\
Like any AON order that routes to another options exchange, if there is
sufficient size at the away market to satisfy the AON order once the
AON reaches that market, the AON will execute. If there is no longer
sufficient size when routed, the AON will return and rest on the EDGX
Options Book. Similarly, if an AON order is not eligible to route, it
will enter the EDGX Options Book (subject to the User's instructions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See Rule 21.18(c)(4) and (5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed reason to terminate the exposure period for an AON
order early similarly will cause an exposure period to end, because if
an order on the opposite side of the exposed order were displayed on
the EDGX Options Book prior to the exposure period, the AON order would
not have been exposed. For example, if the BBO and the NBBO was 1.00 x
1.20, and there was a non-AON order for 5 contracts resting at the 1.20
offer, an incoming AON order to buy 10 at 1.20 would not be exposed
pursuant to SUM, because neither of the conditions in Rule 21.18(a)
would be present). In this case, the AON order would enter the EDGX
Options Book at a price of 1.15 (pursuant to the Price Adjust process
as proposed above). Similar to the current reasons that would cause an
exposure period to terminate early (see current Rule 21.18(d)), the
proposed early termination provision will prevent an exposure period
from continuing while conditions exist that would have prevented an
exposure period from beginning if those conditions existed prior to the
exposure period.
The proposed rule change amends Rule 21.19(e) to provide that AON
orders will have last priority at price levels better than the stop
price following the conclusion of an
[[Page 16125]]
Automated Improvement Mechanism (``AIM'') auction if there is
sufficient size to satisfy the size of the AON order (with Priority
Customer AON order trading ahead of non-Priority Customer AON orders).
AON orders resting at the stop price will not trade against the Agency
Order, even if the Initiating Member of an AIM auction selects last
priority.\38\ As discussed above, AON orders will have last priority at
each price level. The Exchange notes there would be significant
technical complexities associated with reprogramming priority within
the System to provide AON orders with second to last priority in a
specific (and likely uncommon situation), as would be required to
permit AON orders to execute at the stop price, even if the Initiating
Member selects last priority. The Exchange believes it would be rare
for there to be a resting AON order at the stop price of an AIM Auction
that could be satisfied by the remaining contracts of an Agency Order
at that stop price, and thus the Exchange believes the proposed rule
change will have a de minimis impact, if any, on the execution
opportunities for resting AON orders.
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\38\ See Rule 21.19(e)(1) and (5). The proposed rule change
amends Rule 21.19(e)(1), which sets forth the priority of resting
orders at the stop price, to state that AON orders will be excluded
when the Agency Order executes against contra-side interest (after
Priority Customer Orders, the specified percentage of the Initiating
Order, and Priority Orders). Therefore, AON orders at the stop price
will not execute at the stop price in any situation. While not
specified in Cboe Options rules, the Exchange understands this
proposed change is the same as Cboe Options functionality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change also provides that the System will exclude
the size of any AON orders when determining the number of contracts the
Initiating Order will execute against at each price level better than
the stop price when the Initiating Member selects auto-match.\39\ Due
to the size contingency of an AON order, the System cannot determine
whether there will be sufficient contracts remaining in the Agency
Order to execute against any AON order at a price level until after
execution of the applicable number of contracts against the Initiating
Order and other contra-side interest. However, after those auto-match
executions at that price level, the System will execute the Agency
Order against any AON orders at that price level for which the size can
be satisfied by the remaining contracts in the Agency Order.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ See proposed Rule 21.19(e)(3). While not specified in Cboe
Options rules, the Exchange understands this proposed change is the
same as Cboe Options functionality.
\40\ See proposed Rule 21.19(e)(3). After executions at price
levels better than the stop price, including against AON orders for
which the size can be satisfied at those price levels, if there are
remaining contracts from the Agency Order at the stop price, those
contracts will execute against contra-side interest as set forth in
subparagraph (e)(1). While not specified in Cboe Options rules, the
Exchange understands this proposed change is the same as Cboe
Options functionality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to make the AON instruction available for
complex orders.\41\ An AON complex order is a complex order that (like
an AON simple order) is to be executed in its entirety or not at
all.\42\ An AON complex order may only execute following a complex
order auction (``COA''),\43\ and will not be eligible to rest in the
complex order book (``COB'').\44\ An incoming AON complex order will
initiate a COA. If a Member marks an AON complex order to not initiate
a COA (i.e., as a do-no-COA order), or an AON complex order does not
satisfy the COA eligibility criteria in Rule 21.20(d)(1), the System
cancels the AON complex order.\45\ The Exchange believes that, like AON
simple orders, AON complex orders that would rest on the COB would have
last priority, and would have even fewer execution opportunities
because they would not be able to execute at the same price as resting
interest until after both simple and complex order interest executed.
Therefore, an AON complex order resting on the COB would have minimal
execution opportunities given its size contingency. The Exchange
believes there would be little value, in terms of executing
opportunities, in permitting AON complex orders to rest in the COB.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See Cboe Options Rule 6.53C(b); see also Phlx Rule
1098(b)(v); and ISE Rule 722(b)(3). The proposed rule change amends
Rule 21.20(b) to change references to the term ``User'' to
``Member'' to be consistent with the remainder of Rule 21.20, which
only uses the term ``Member.''
\42\ See proposed Rule 21.20(b)(6).
\43\ See Rule 21.20(d).
\44\ While not specified in Cboe Options rules, the Exchange
understands AON complex orders on Cboe Options may only initiate a
COA and will be cancelled if not executed following a COA (and thus
are not eligible to rest in the Cboe Options COB). This is set forth
in Cboe Options Regulatory Circular RG17-042 (March 24, 2017),
available at https://www.cboe.com/publish/RegCir/RG17-042.pdf. Other
options exchanges require AON complex orders to be IOC, and thus
similarly do not permit AON complex orders to rest in a complex
order book. It is not clear from their rules whether such orders may
enter a complex order auction on those exchanges. See, e.g., ISE
Rule 722(b)(3).
\45\ See proposed Rule 21.20(b)(2) and (d)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At the conclusion of a COA of an AON complex order, the AON complex
order may only execute against COA responses and unrelated complex
orders on the COB in price-time priority if there is sufficient size to
satisfy the AON complex order. If there is insufficient size to satisfy
the AON complex order at the conclusion of the COA, the System cancels
the order.\46\ AON complex orders may not Leg into the Simple Book to
execute against individual orders in the legs because of the manner in
which complex orders on EDGX execute following a COA.\47\ Pursuant to
current EDGX Rules for execution following a COA, a complex order will
be allocated first in price priority and then at the same price to
Priority Customer orders resting on the Simple Book, COA responses and
unrelated complex orders on the COB in time priority, and remaining
individual orders in the Simple Book (i.e., non-Priority Customer),
which will be allocated pursuant to Rule 21.8.\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ See proposed Rule 21.20(d)(7). Currently, after a COA, a
complex order will execute first against Priority Customer orders
resting on the Simple Book, then against COA responses and unrelated
orders on the COB, and finally against remaining individual orders
in the Simple Book. See Rule 21.20(d)(7).
\47\ See proposed Rule 21.20(c)(2)(F) and (d)(7).
\48\ See Rule 21.20(d)(7).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Simple Book and the COB are separate, and orders on each do not
interact unless a complex order Legs into the Simple Book. As a result,
the System is not able to calculate the aggregate size of COA responses
and complex orders on the COB and the size of simple orders in the legs
that comprise the complex strategy at each potential execution price
(as executions may occur at multiple prices) prior to execution of an
order following a COA. Following a COA, the System first looks to
determine whether there are Priority Customer orders resting in the
Simple Book at the final auction price (and in the applicable ratio).
If there are, the System executes the complex order against those
simple orders. Following that execution, the System then looks back at
the COA responses and complex orders resting in the COB to determine
whether there is interest against which the order can execute. If there
is, the System executes the remaining portion of the complex order
against that complex contra-side interest. Finally, if there is any
size left, the System looks back at the Simple Book to determine
whether any orders in the legs are able to trade against any remaining
contracts in the complex order. If there is, the System executes the
remaining portion of the complex order again against orders in the
Simple Book. Because of this process, prior to execution against any
Priority Customer orders, the System would not know whether there is
sufficient aggregate interest in both the Simple book and COB to
satisfy the entire size of the AON. Additionally, it is possible for a
complex order to execute at multiple price levels. This
[[Page 16126]]
process would have to occur at each price level. Therefore, if the
Exchange were to permit Legging of AON complex orders into the Simple
Book, it would be possible for a partial execution to occur, which is
inconsistent with the AON instruction. The Exchange notes there would
be significant technical complexities associated with reprogramming
priority within the System to permit AON complex orders to Leg into the
Simple Book and provide AON orders with priority consistent with these
standard priority principles. Only permitting an AON complex order to
execute against COA responses and complex orders in the COB ensures the
size contingency of the AON complex order can be satisfied.\49\
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\49\ Cboe Options does not restrict AON orders from legging into
its simple book. The priority on Cboe Options differs from the
priority on EDGX Options (on Cboe Options, all orders on the simple
book have priority over the complex book). However, another options
exchange restricts AON orders from legging into the simple book
during the complex order opening process, from the complex order
book, and following a complex order price improvement auction
(similar to COA). See, e.g., Phlx Rule 1098(d)(ii)(C)(2),
(e)(vi)(A), (e)(viii)(C)(3), and (f)(iii)(A). Phlx also only permits
non-broker-dealer customers to submit AON complex orders. See Phlx
Rule 1098(b)(v).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To ensure protection of orders on the Simple Book given this
restriction on Legging, an AON complex order may only execute following
a COA if it improves the then-current (i.e., existing at the conclusion
of the COA) synthetic Exchange best bid or offer (``SBBO'').\50\ If
there is insufficient size among COA responses and unrelated complex
orders to satisfy the AON complex order following a COA, the System
cancels the order.\51\
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\50\ See proposed Rule 21.20(c)(2)(E) and (d)(6).
\51\ See proposed Rule 21.20(d)(7).
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2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Act'') and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to the Exchange and, in particular,
the requirements of Section 6(b) of the Act.\52\ Specifically, the
Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with the
Section 6(b)(5) \53\ requirements that the rules of an exchange be
designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing,
settling, processing information with respect to, and facilitating
transactions in securities, to remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system, and,
in general, to protect investors and the public interest. Additionally,
the Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with the
Section 6(b)(5) \54\ requirement that the rules of an exchange not be
designed to permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers,
brokers, or dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\53\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\54\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In particular, the proposed rule change protects investors because
it provides them with an additional order instruction that may be
applied to both simple and complex orders. This provides investors with
additional flexibility and more control over their executions of both
simple and complex orders on the Exchange. The proposed rule change
also benefits investors by providing transparency regarding how the
System will handle and execute AON orders, which handling and execution
are consistent with the size contingency of AON orders. As noted above
and below, the proposed definition and several other portions of the
proposed rules are based on rules and current functionality of Cboe
Options.\55\
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\55\ See Cboe Options Rules 6.53(i) and 6.44, Interpretations
.02 and .03; see also ISE Rule 715(c); and NOM Chapter VI, section
1(e)(10).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes not permitting Users to apply the Post Only
instruction to AON orders will protect investors, because it will
maximize execution opportunities for AON orders. An AON order's size
contingency, and the fact that AON orders will have last priority while
resting in the EDGX Options Book, will provide AON orders resting on
the EDGX Options Book with few opportunities for AON orders to receive
an execution. For this reason, the Exchange believes there will be
minimal investor demand for Post Only AON orders. This ensures that an
AON order may execute upon entry if there is sufficient size resting on
the EDGX Options Book. Additionally, as noted above, other exchanges do
not permit AON orders to rest in the book at all (as they are required
to be IOC).\56\ Unlike those exchanges, the Exchange will permit AON
orders to rest in the EDGX Options Book, and will merely not permit AON
orders to only rest in the book. Cboe Options does not offer a Post
Only instruction, and therefore, an AON order submitted to EDGX Options
will be handled in the same manner as it would be handled on Cboe
Options, as such an order would execute upon entry (if possible), route
(if eligible), or enter the EDGX Options Book (subject to any User
instructions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ See, e.g., ISE Rule 715(c); NOM Chapter VI, section
1(e)(10); and Phlx Rule 1066(c)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change to offer use of the
MCN Modifier (and not the other MTP Modifiers) for AON orders protects
investors, because it provides all investors with the option to apply
match-trade prevention functionality to AON orders. The Exchange
believes there will be little demand for the use of any MTP Modifiers
on AON orders given that primarily retail investors submit AONs, and
retail investors are unlikely to have interest on both sides of the
market. Given this expected minimal demand, the Exchange believes
offering one MTP Modifier for AON orders is sufficient. Additionally,
the Exchange believes that MCN is the most appropriate MTP modifier for
AON orders because an offering of other MTP modifier for investors
would present significant technical complexities given the size
contingency of AON orders and that MCN is the simplest modifier to
implement from a System perspective.\57\ The proposed rules provide
investors with sufficient transparency regarding how the System will
handle AON orders with MTP Modifiers, and Users may achieve other
results manually if so desired. For example, if a User were to prefer
to have a resting order with an MTP Modifier cancel and let the newer
AON order rest, it could manually cancel the resting order and then
resubmit the AON order. The Exchange has determined to handle an AON
order with any other MTP Modifier as an MCN rather than cancel the AON,
and the Exchange believes the proposed rules will protect investors
because they provide investors with sufficient transparency regarding
how the System will handle AON orders with MTP Modifiers. Additionally,
Users may achieve other results manually if so desired.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ Additionally, the Decrement and Cancel MTP Modifier is
inconsistent with an AON order, because it may result in partial
execution of an order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cboe Options offers match trade prevention only for market-makers,
and thus the Cboe Options rules regarding AON orders contains no
restrictions on the use of match trade prevention instructions, as it
would only be available to market-makers that submit AON orders.
Because the Exchange has match-trade prevention functionality available
for all Users and not just Market-Makers, the Exchange believes it is
appropriate to provide this functionality to all Users that submit AON
orders and want match trade prevention functionality. The Exchange
[[Page 16127]]
believes offering one MTP Modifier is sufficient given that non-market-
makers on Cboe Options currently have no match-trade prevention
functionality available for AON orders.
The Exchange believes the proposed Price Adjust process with
respect to AON orders will protect investors, because it will rest an
AON order on the EDGX Options Book at an executable price (i.e., a
price that locks or is one minimum price variation away from the new
Protected Quotation or AON resting on the EDGX Options Book at or
better than the Exchange's BBO) while preventing trade-throughs as the
market changes and protecting non-AON orders resting on the opposite
side of the EDGX Options Book. The proposed process will generally re-
price the incoming (and thus later arriving order), which is consistent
with the current Price Adjust process. However, the proposed rule
change will reprice a resting AON order rather than an incoming non-AON
order, because AON orders have last priority (as discussed below) and
are not displayed, and thus should not cause the price of a non-AON
order to reprice. Repricing an AON order one minimum price variation
away from the price of a resting non-AON order is consistent with the
repricing that applies to non-AON orders that lock or cross the
opposite side NBBO.
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change will remove
impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and
a national market system, because it is consistent with linkage rules.
AON orders will not be part of the EDGX BBO, and repricing an AON order
to lock the Protected Quotation of an away market or a resting (and
nondisplayed) AON order on the EDGX Options Book at a price at or
better than the Exchange's BBO will, therefore, not result in a
displayed locked market in accordance with linkage rules.\58\ The
Exchange believes the proposed rule change is a reasonable application
of the current Price Adjust process to avoid displaying a locked or
crossed market and to prevent trade-throughs while making AON orders
resting on the EDGX Options Book available for execution at executable
prices (i.e., a price that locks (but not crosses) a Protected
Quotation of another options exchange or another AON resting on the
EDGX Options Book, but not a price that locks or crosses a Protected
Quotation on the EDGX Options Book. The proposed process will generally
re-price the incoming (and thus later arriving order), which is
consistent with the current Price Adjust process. However, the proposed
rule change will reprice a resting AON order rather than an incoming
non-AON order, because AON orders have last priority (as discussed
above) and are not displayed or protected, and thus should not cause
the price of an incoming non-AON order to reprice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ See Rule 27.3(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cboe Options does not have functionality that corresponds to the
Price Adjust process. Therefore, an AON order that enters the Cboe
Options book may rest at a price that locks or crosses the Cboe Options
market or an away market (and thus, it is not novel or unique to permit
an AON order to rest at a price that locks or crosses the Exchange's
market or an away market, as the proposed rule change permits). As
demonstrated above, even though the proposed rule change does not
permit an AON order to rest at a price that crosses an away market or
an AON order on the EDGX Options Book, or that locks or crosses a
Protected Quotation on the EDGX Options Book, the Price Adjust process
as proposed will ultimately create the same potential execution for an
AON order resting on the EDGX Options Book that would otherwise occur
for an AON order resting on the Cboe Options Book, and in some cases
may result in price improvement for an AON.
Additionally, while the current Price Adjust process does not
permit an incoming order to rest at a price that locks a Protected
Quotation on the Exchange or an away options exchange, the display-
price sliding process on BZX Options does permit an incoming order to
be ranked and eligible for execution at a locking price.\59\ Pursuant
to the BZX display-price sliding process, an order that, at the time of
entry, would lock or cross a Protected Quotation of another options
exchange will be ranked at the locking price in the BZX Options Book
and displayed by the System at one minimum price variation below [sic]
the current opposite-side NBBO. While an AON order, as proposed, will
not be displayed at any price on the Exchange (as an AON order is never
displayed), it will be ranked at a price that locks a Protected
Quotation of an away market (and a resting AON order on the Exchange).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ See BZX Options Rule 21.1(h).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recently, NYSE Arca, Inc. (``Arca'') adopted order types called the
Repricing Liquidity Adding Order (``RALO'') and the Repricing Post No
Preference Order (``RPNP'').\60\ While these are different order types
than an AON, pursuant to the repricing process, if either of these
orders would not be able to trade upon entry (for example, because the
RALO would take liquidity or display at a price that locks or crosses
any interest on the Exchange or the NBBO), it would be displayed at one
minimum price variation below (above) such sell (buy) interest.
However, it would have an undisplayed price at which it is eligible to
trade. The displayed and nondisplayed prices would move as the market
moves. Like these order types, an AON order will rest at an undisplayed
price (which price will move as the market moves) at which it is
eligible for execution (in accordance with linkage rules). However, an
AON order will not have a displayed price, as it is never displayed
(unlike an RALO or RPNP).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 84737 (December 6,
2018), 83 FR 63919 (December 12, 2018) (SR-NYSEArca-2018-74) (order
approving the proposed order types).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, it is not novel or unique to permit an order to be
ranked at an undisplayed price on an exchange at a price that locks the
best-priced quote of that exchange or an away exchange, at which price
it is eligible for execution, and which price may be adjusted in
response to changes in the market.
The proposed rule change to only route an AON order as a FOK to
options exchanges with sufficient size to satisfy the AON order will
remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open
market and a national market system, because it is consistent with
linkage rules and current Cboe Options functionality.
The proposed rule change to not permit use of the Super Aggressive
Re-Route instruction to AON orders is consistent with the proposed
Price Adjust process, which provides that an AON order may rest at a
price that locks the price of an away options exchange. This proposed
change will remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free
and open market and a national market system, because it is consistent
with linkage rules. The Super Aggressive Re-Route instruction provides
that an order on the EDGX Options Book that subsequently locks or
crosses the price of another options exchange, the System will route
the order to that exchange to an AON order. This instruction conflicts
with the proposed Price Adjust process for an AON order, which may
enter the EDGX Options Book at a price that locks the price of another
options exchange, which price is executable if subsequent contra-side
interest is submitted to the Exchange.
[[Page 16128]]
The proposed rule change will further remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national market
system, because it will handle resting AON orders that become
subsequently locked by an away market in the same manner as Cboe
Options handles resting AON orders that become subsequently locked by
an away market. In both cases, AON orders will remain on the local
respective book. However, the proposed rule change will benefit
investors, because it provides a resting AON order that becomes
subsequently crossed by an away market with an opportunity (if a User
designated the order with the Aggressive Re-Route instruction) to route
to the away market for execution. This execution opportunity is not
currently available on Cboe Options, and thus a similar AON order would
remain on the Cboe Options book.
The proposed rule change to exclude AON orders from participating
in the Exchange's opening process will protect investors and promote
just and equitable principles of trade, because it will provide for the
opening of a series for trading as soon as possible and not delay the
opening of a series to attempt to execute AON orders (which ultimately
may not be able to execute). The Exchange believes not attempting to
execute AON orders until after the Opening Process would have a de
minimis impact, if any, on the time of execution of an AON order that
is able to execute at the opening. The proposed rule change will remove
impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and
a national market system, because excluding AON orders from
participating during the Opening Process is equivalent to Cboe Options
excluding AON orders from participating in its opening process in
classes in which it has not activated HAL, because the Exchange has not
activated SUM during the Opening Process.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ See Cboe Options Rule 6.2(c)(1)(B). Additionally, Cboe
Options' opening process is an auction and thus significantly
different than the Exchange's Opening Process, which is a cross at a
valid price as set forth in Rule 21.7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change regarding the
priority and allocation of AON orders promotes just and equitable
principles of trade, as it is reasonable for orders not displayed in
the book to not receive priority over orders that are displayed, as
this encourages market participants to display their best bids and
offers, which may lead to enhanced liquidity and tighter markets. The
Exchange believes an AON order must always be last in priority at each
price level to ensure there is sufficient size to satisfy the condition
of that order to trade in its entirety after all other orders at the
same price have executed. The proposed priority for AON orders will
remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open
market and national market system, because it is the same as the
priority of AON orders on Cboe Options.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See Cboe Options Rules 6.44, Interpretation and Policy .01
and 6.45(a)(v)(D); see also Cboe Options Rule 6.44, Interpretation
and Policy .02.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change regarding the
handling of AON orders exposed pursuant to SUM will protect investor,
because it will provide AON orders with execution opportunities when
the Exchange is not at the NBBO in a manner consistent with the current
SUM process. The proposed rule change modifies the SUM process only to
address an AON order's size contingency. The proposed rule change that
the exposure period for an AON order will terminate when there is
sufficient aggregate contra-side interest to satisfy the exposed AON
order is consistent with the current SUM process, except it will not
execute any incoming contra-side interest immediately against the
exposed AON order, unless it has sufficient size (as occurs for an
exposed non-AON order). This will prevent a partial execution in
conflict with the AON size contingency. This proposed rule change is
also the same as current Cboe Options HAL functionality. The proposed
rule change regarding an early termination of the exposure period of an
AON order is consistent with current reasons that will cause an
exposure period to terminate, as it will prevent an exposure period
from continuing while conditions exist that would have prevented an
exposure period from beginning if those conditions existed prior to the
exposure period. Except for these two proposed changes, an exposed AON
order will be processed in the same manner as any other order exposed
through SUM. The proposed rule change will remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of free and open market and a national market
system, because it ensures the entire AON order will trade at a price
equal to or better than the NBBO in accordance with linkage rules.
The proposed allocation of AON orders following an AIM auction will
protect investors, because it will provide Priority Customers and other
displayed interest with priority over non-displayed orders and is
consistent with the proposed general priority of AON orders described
above. As noted above, the Exchange believes this encourages market
participants to display their best bids and offers, which may lead to
enhanced liquidity and tighter markets. While AON orders will not be
eligible for execution at the stop price, the Exchange believes it
would be rare for there to be a resting AON order at the stop price of
an AIM Auction that could be satisfied by the remaining contracts of an
Agency Order at that stop price. The Exchange notes there would be
significant technical complexities associated with reprogramming
priority within the System to provide AON orders with second to last
priority in a specific (and likely uncommon situation), as would be
required to permit AON orders to execute at the stop price, even if the
Initiating Member selects last priority. The Exchange believes the
proposed rule change will have a de minimis impact, if any, on the
execution opportunities for resting AON orders. Similarly, due to the
size contingency of an AON order, the System cannot determine whether
there will be sufficient contracts remaining in the Agency Order to
execute against any AON order at a price level until after execution of
the applicable number of contracts against the Initiating Order and
other contra-side interest. However, AON orders at each price level
better than the stop price for which the size can be satisfied by the
remaining contracts in the Agency Order will execute. The Exchange also
believes the proposed rule change will remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national market
system, because it is the same as the allocation of AON orders
following an AIM auction on Cboe Options.
The proposed rule change to require AON complex orders to COA and
not permit them to rest in the COB or Leg into the Simple Book will
protect investors, because it will provide AON complex orders with
opportunities for execution and continue to protect orders on the
Simple Book. As the Exchange noted above, there would be significant
technical complexities associated with reprogramming priority within
the System to permit AON complex orders to Leg into the Simple Book and
provide AON orders with priority consistent with the standard priority
principles described above. The Exchange notes that other options
exchange do not permit AON complex orders to rest in the complex order
book \63\ or to leg into
[[Page 16129]]
the simple book.\64\ In addition, as described above, the proposed rule
change protects resting Leg market interest because AON complex orders
may not execute unless they improve the SBBO at the conclusion of a
COA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ See, e.g., ISE Rule 722(b)(3) (which requires AON complex
orders to be submitted as IOC orders). While not specified in Cboe
Options rules, the Exchange understands this proposed change is the
same as Cboe Options functionality.
\64\ See, e.g., Phlx Rule 1098(e)(vi)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, the proposed rule change will remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of free and open market and a national market
system, because other options exchanges offer similar
functionality.\65\ Additionally, as discussed above, the proposed rule
change will benefit investors, because it provides additional detail on
which the rules of other exchanges are silent, such as detail regarding
routing and handling during auctions. The Exchange believes the
proposed application of Exchange functionality to AON orders (some of
which is not available on other exchanges) is consistent with current
Exchange functionality. Additionally, any differences with respect to
how that functionality will apply to AON orders have been proposed only
due to the size contingency of an AON order and the fact that an AON
order is not displayed. The Exchange believes that the proposed rule
change will provide Users with transparency regarding how the System
will handle their AON orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.53(i); ISE Rule 715(c); PHLX
Rule 1066(c)(4); NOM Chapter VI, Section 1(e)(10); and Arca Rule
6.62-O(d)(4) (AON simple orders); see also Cboe Options Rule
6.53C(b); Phlx Rule 1098(b)(v); and ISE Rule 722(b)(3) (AON complex
orders).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change will protect investors, because it will
provide Users with additional flexibility to manage their orders on the
Exchange, as well as increased functionality on the Exchange. This may
encourage market participants to bring additional liquidity to the
market, which benefits all investors. Additionally, this will provide
Users with greater harmonization between the order handling
instructions available among the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges. The
proposed rule change is generally intended to align system
functionality currently offered by the Exchange with Cboe Options
functionality in order to provide a consistent technology offering for
the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges. A consistent technology offering, in
turn, will simplify the technology implementation, changes, and
maintenance by Users of the Exchange that are also participants on Cboe
Affiliated Exchanges. The proposed rule change would also provide Users
with access to functionality that is generally available on options
exchanges other than the Cboe Affiliated Exchanges,\66\ which will
provide Users with additional flexibility and increased functionality
on the Exchange's System.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When Cboe Options migrates to the same technology as that of the
Exchange and other Cboe Affiliated Exchanges, Users of the Exchange and
other Cboe Affiliated Exchanges will have access to similar
functionality on all Cboe Affiliated Exchanges. As such, the proposed
rule change would foster cooperation and coordination with persons
engaged in facilitating transactions in securities and would remove
impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and
a national market system.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The proposed rule change
will not impose any burden on intramarket competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act,
because use of the AON order instruction on simple and complex orders
will be optional and available to all Users. All Users may determine
whether to apply an AON order instruction to the simple or complex
orders they submit to the Exchange. The System will handle all AON
orders submitted to the Exchange in the same manner in accordance with
the proposed rule change. The Exchange believes the proposed priority
and allocation of AON orders is reasonable, as it is consistent with
current allocation principles that provide for displayed interest to
trade ahead of nondisplayed interest, and ensures an AON order will
only execute if there is sufficient size to satisfy its size
contingency.
Additionally, the proposed rule change will not impose any burden
intermarket competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act, because other options exchanges
offer similar functionality, as discussed above.\67\ The Exchange
believes this proposed rule change is necessary to permit fair
competition among the options exchanges. Additionally, the Exchange
believes the proposed application of Exchange functionality (such as
MTP Modifiers, SUM, routing instructions, and AIM) to AON orders is
consistent with current Exchange functionality and modified such
functionality only to account for the size contingency of an AON order
and the fact that an AON order is not displayed, and believes that the
proposed rule change will provide Users with additional transparency
regarding how the System will handle their AON orders. The Exchange
believes that the proposed rule change will relieve any burden on, or
otherwise promote, competition, because it will permit the Exchange to
offer Users similar functionality that is current available to market
participants on other options exchanges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ See, e.g., Cboe Options Rule 6.53(i); ISE Rule 715(c); PHLX
Rule 1066(c)(4); NOM Chapter VI, Section 1(e)(10); and Arca Rule
6.62-O(d)(4) (AON simple orders); see also Cboe Options Rule
6.53C(b), Phlx Rule 1098(b)(v), and ISE Rule 722(b)(3) (AON complex
orders).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange neither solicited nor received comments on the
proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Because the foregoing proposed rule change does not:
A. Significantly affect the protection of investors or the public
interest;
B. impose any significant burden on competition; and
C. become operative for 30 days from the date on which it was
filed, or such shorter time as the Commission may designate, it has
become effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act \68\ and
Rule 19b-4(f)(6) \69\ thereunder.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\69\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(6).
\70\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(6). In addition, Rule 19b-4(f)(6)(iii)
requires a self-regulatory organization to give the Commission
written notice of its intent to file the proposed rule change, along
with a brief description and text of the proposed rule change, at
least five business days prior to the date of filing of the proposed
rule change, or such shorter time as designated by the Commission.
The Exchange has satisfied this requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. If the Commission
takes such action, the Commission will institute proceedings to
determine whether the proposed rule change should be approved or
disapproved.
[[Page 16130]]
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-CboeEDGX-2019-017 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-CboeEDGX-2019-017. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR-CboeEDGX-2019-017 and should be
submitted on or before May 8, 2019.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-07616 Filed 4-16-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P