Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE American LLC; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change To Establish a Schedule of Wireless Connectivity Fees and Charges With Wireless Connections, 8946-8953 [2020-03096]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 32 / Tuesday, February 18, 2020 / Notices
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provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
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For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.34
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–03095 Filed 2–14–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
[Release No. 34–88169; File No. SR–
NYSEAMER–2020–05]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
American LLC; Notice of Filing of
Proposed Rule Change To Establish a
Schedule of Wireless Connectivity
Fees and Charges With Wireless
Connections
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February 11, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that on January
30, 2020, NYSE American LLC (‘‘NYSE
American’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’)
the proposed rule change as described
in Items I, II, and III 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.
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to establish
the Wireless Fee Schedule with wireless
connections between the Mahwah, New
Jersey data center and three data centers
that are owned and operated by third
parties unaffiliated with the Exchange:
(1) Carteret, New Jersey, (2) Secaucus,
New Jersey, and (3) Markham, Canada
(collectively, the ‘‘Third Party Data
Centers’’). Market participants that
purchase such a wireless connection (a
‘‘Wireless Connection’’) are charged an
initial and monthly fee. In addition, the
Exchange proposes to include a General
Note to the Wireless Fee Schedule.
The Exchange does not believe that
the present proposed change is a change
to the ‘‘rules of an exchange’’ 4 required
to be filed with the Commission under
the Act. The definition of ‘‘exchange’’
under the Act includes ‘‘the market
facilities maintained by such
exchange.’’ 5 Based on its review of the
relevant facts and circumstances, and as
discussed further below, the Exchange
has concluded that the Wireless
4 See 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(27) (defining the term
‘‘rules of an exchange’’).
5 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(1). See 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(2)
(defining the term ‘‘facility’’ as applied to an
exchange).
34 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 15 U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
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II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of,
and basis for, the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to establish a
schedule of Wireless Connectivity Fees
and Charges (the ‘‘Wireless Fee
Schedule’’) with wireless connections
between the Mahwah, New Jersey data
center and other data centers. The
proposed rule change is available on the
Exchange’s website at www.nyse.com, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and
at the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
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Connections are not facilities of the
Exchange within the meaning of the
Act, and therefore do not need to be
included in its rules.
The Exchange is making the current
proposal solely because the Staff of the
Commission has advised the Exchange
that it believes the Wireless Connections
are facilities of the Exchange and so
must be filed as part of its rules.6 The
Staff has not set forth the basis of its
conclusion beyond verbally noting that
the Wireless Connections are provided
by an affiliate of the Exchange and a
market participant could use a Wireless
Connection to trade on, or receive the
market data of, the Exchange.7
The Exchange expects the proposed
change to be operative 60 days after the
present filing becomes effective.
The Exchange and the ICE Affiliates
To understand the Exchange’s
conclusion that the Wireless
Connections are not facilities of the
Exchange within the meaning of the
Act, it is important to understand the
very real distinction between the
Exchange and its corporate affiliates (the
‘‘ICE Affiliates’’). The Exchange is an
indirect subsidiary of Intercontinental
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘ICE’’). Around the
world, ICE operates seven regulated
exchanges in addition to the Exchange
and its four national securities exchange
affiliates,8 including futures markets, as
6 Telephone conversation between Commission
staff and representatives of the Exchange, December
12, 2019.
7 Id. The Commission has previously stated that
services were facilities of an exchange subject to the
rule filing requirements without fully explaining its
reasoning. In 2010, the Commission stated that
exchanges had to file proposed rule changes with
respect to co-location because ‘‘[t]he Commission
views co-location services as being a material aspect
of the operation of the facilities of an exchange.’’
The Commission did not specify why it reached
that conclusion. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 61358 (January 14, 2010), 75 FR 3594
(January 21, 2010) (concept release on equity
market structure), at note 76.
In addition, in 2014, the Commission instituted
proceedings to determine whether to disapprove a
proposed rule change by The NASDAQ Stock
Market LLC (‘‘Nasdaq’’) on the basis that Nasdaq’s
‘‘provision of third-party market data feeds to colocated clients appears to be an integral feature of
its co-location program, and co-location programs
are subject to the rule filing process.’’ Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 72654 (July 22, 2014), 79
FR 43808 (July 28, 2014) (SR–NASDAQ–2014–034).
In its order, the Commission did not explain why
it believed that the provision of third party data was
an integral feature of co-location, or if it believed
that it was a facility of Nasdaq, although the Nasdaq
filing analyzed each prong of the definition of
facility in turn. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 71990 (April 22, 2014), 79 FR 23389 (April 28,
2014) (SR–NASDAQ–2014–034).
8 The Exchange’s four national securities
exchange affiliates are the New York Stock
Exchange LLC, NYSE Arca, Inc., NYSE Chicago,
Inc., and NYSE National, Inc. (together, the
‘‘Affiliate SROs’’).
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well as six clearing houses. Among
others, the ICE Affiliates are subject to
the jurisdiction of regulators in the U.S.,
U.K., E.U., the Netherlands, Canada and
Singapore.9 In all, the ICE Affiliates
include hundreds of ICE subsidiaries,
including more than thirty that are
significant legal entity subsidiaries as
defined by Commission rule.10
Through its ICE Data Services (‘‘IDS’’)
business,11 ICE operates the ICE Global
Network (‘‘IGN’’), a global connectivity
network whose infrastructure provides
access to over 150 global markets,
including the Exchange and Affiliate
SROs, and over 750 data sources. All the
ICE Affiliates are ultimately controlled
by ICE, as the indirect parent company,
but generally they do not control each
other. In the present case, it is IDS, not
the Exchange, that provides the Wireless
Connections to market participants. The
Exchange does not control IDS.
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Wireless Connections
If a market participant wants a
connection between one of the Third
Party Data Centers and the Mahwah data
center, it may opt to purchase a Wireless
Connection, for which it will be charged
an initial and monthly fee.
Once requested, IDS establishes a
Wireless Connection between the IDS
equipment in the Third Party Data
Center and IDS equipment in the
Mahwah data center. IDS contracts with
a non-ICE entity to provide the Wireless
Connections between the Secaucus and
Carteret Third Party Data Centers and
the Mahwah data center, through a
series of towers equipped with wireless
equipment. IDS uses its own wireless
network for the Wireless Connection
between the Markham Third Party Data
Center and the Mahwah data center. At
either end of the Wireless Connection,
the customer uses a cross connect or
other cable to connect its own
equipment to the IDS equipment.12 In
the Mahwah data center, the cross
connect leads to the customer’s server in
co-location.
The Wireless Connection does not
connect to the Exchange trading and
9 Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. Annual Report
on Form 10–K for the year ended December 31,
2018, Exhibit 21.1 (filed February 7, 2019), at 15–
16.
10 Id. at Exhibit 21.1.
11 The IDS business operates through several
different ICE Affiliates, including NYSE
Technologies Connectivity, Inc., an indirect
subsidiary of the NYSE.
12 A cable connects the IDS and customer
equipment in the Markham Third Party Data Center.
Elsewhere, the customer buys a cross connect from
IDS. The cross connects utilized in the Mahwah
data center are filed with the Commission. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67665 (August
15, 2012), 77 FR 50734 (August 22, 2012) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2012–11).
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17:48 Feb 14, 2020
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execution systems, nor is it a system of
communication from the customer’s
server in co-location to the trading and
execution systems of the Exchange or
the Affiliate SROs (collectively, the
‘‘SRO Systems’’). Rather, a Wireless
Connection facilitates the customer’s
interaction with itself. Essentially, a
Wireless Connection is an empty pipe
that a customer can use to communicate
between its equipment in co-location
and its equipment in the Third Party
Data Center.
Customers have control over the data
they send over their Wireless
Connections. They may, but are not
required to, use them to send trading
orders to their equipment in co-location;
relay Exchange market data, third party
market data and public quote feeds from
Securities Information Processors; send
risk management, billing, or compliance
information to their preferred location;
or to carry any other market information
or other data they wish to and from their
equipment in the Third Party Data
Centers and Mahwah data center. The
Exchange does not, and cannot, know
what data customers send over the
Wireless Connections. The Exchange
does not send or receive any data over
the Wireless Connections.
Market participants that want a
connection between a Third Party Data
Center and the Mahwah data center
have options. There are currently at
least three other vendors that offer
market participants wireless network
connections between the Mahwah data
center and the Carteret and Secaucus
Third Party Data Centers using wireless
equipment installed on towers and
buildings near the Mahwah data center.
Some market participants have their
own proprietary wireless networks. A
market participant may create a new
proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market
participant, or utilize fiber connections
offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates,
other service providers and third party
telecommunications providers.
The Wireless Connections Are Not
Facilities of the Exchange
The Definition of ‘‘Exchange’’
The definition of ‘‘exchange’’ focuses
on the exchange entity and what it
does: 13
The term ‘‘exchange’’ means any
organization, association, or group of
persons, whether incorporated or
unincorporated, which constitutes,
maintains, or provides a market place or
facilities for bringing together purchasers and
sellers of securities or for otherwise
performing with respect to securities the
13 15
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78c(a)(1).
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Fmt 4703
functions commonly performed by a stock
exchange as that term is generally
understood, and includes the market place
and the market facilities maintained by such
exchange.
If the ‘‘exchange’’ definition included
all of an exchange’s affiliates, the
‘‘Exchange’’ would encompass a global
network of futures markets, clearing
houses, and data providers, and all of
those entities worldwide would be
subject to regulation by the
Commission. That, however, is not what
the definition in the Act provides.
The Exchange and the Affiliate SROs
fall squarely within the Act’s definition
of an ‘‘exchange’’: They each provide a
market place to bring together
purchasers and sellers of securities and
perform with respect to securities the
functions commonly performed by a
stock exchange.
That is not true for the non-exchange
ICE Affiliates. Those ICE Affiliates do
not provide such a marketplace or
perform ‘‘with respect to securities the
functions commonly performed by a
stock exchange,’’ and therefore they are
not an ‘‘exchange’’ or part of the
‘‘Exchange’’ for purposes of the Act.
Accordingly, in conducting its analysis,
the Exchange does not automatically
collapse the ICE Affiliates into the
Exchange. The Wireless Connections are
also not part of the Exchange, as they
are services, and as such cannot be part
of an ‘‘organization, association or group
of persons’’ with the Exchange.
In Rule 3b–16 the Commission further
defined the term ‘‘exchange’’ under the
Act, stating that: 14
(a) An organization, association, or group
of persons shall be considered to constitute,
maintain, or provide ‘‘a market place or
facilities for bringing together purchasers and
sellers of securities or for otherwise
performing with respect to securities the
functions commonly performed by a stock
exchange,’’ as those terms are used in section
3(a)(1) of the Act . . . if such organization,
association, or group of persons:
(1) Brings together the orders for securities
of multiple buyers and sellers; and
(2) Uses established, non-discretionary
methods (whether by providing a trading
facility or by setting rules) under which such
orders interact with each other, and the
buyers and sellers entering such orders agree
to the terms of a trade.
The non-exchange ICE Affiliates do
not bring ‘‘together orders for securities
of multiple buyers and sellers,’’ and so
are not an ‘‘exchange’’ or part of the
‘‘Exchange’’ for purposes of Rule 3b–16.
The relevant question, then, is
whether the Wireless Connections are
‘‘facilities’’ of the Exchange.
14 17
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The Definition of ‘‘Facility’’
The Act defines a ‘‘facility’’ 15 as
follows:
The term ‘‘facility’’ when used with respect
to an exchange includes [1] its premises, [2]
tangible or intangible property whether on
the premises or not, [3] any right to the use
of such premises or property or any service
thereof for the purpose of effecting or
reporting a transaction on an exchange
(including, among other things, any system of
communication to or from the exchange, by
ticker or otherwise, maintained by or with
the consent of the exchange), and [4] any
right of the exchange to the use of any
property or service.
In 2015 the Commission noted that
whether something is a ‘‘facility’’ is not
always black and white, as ‘‘any
determination as to whether a service or
other product is a facility of an
exchange requires an analysis of the
particular facts and circumstances.’’ 16
Accordingly, the Exchange understands
that the specific facts and circumstances
of the Wireless Connections must be
assessed before a determination can be
made regarding whether or not they are
facilities of the Exchange.17
The first prong of the definition is that
‘‘facility,’’ when used with respect to an
exchange, includes ‘‘its premises.’’ That
prong is not applicable in this case,
because the Wireless Connections are
not premises of the Exchange. The term
‘‘premises’’ is generally defined as
referring to an entity’s building, land,
and appurtenances.18 The wireless
network that runs between IDS
equipment in the Mahwah data center
and IDS equipment in Third Party Data
Centers, much of which is actually
owned, operated and maintained by a
15 15
U.S.C. 78c(a)(2).
Exchange Act Release No. 76127
(October 9, 2015), 80 FR 62584 (October 16, 2015)
(SR–NYSE–2015–36), at note 9 (order approving
proposed rule change amending Section 907.00 of
the Listed Company Manual). See also 79 FR 23389,
supra note 7, at note 4 (noting that that the
definition of the term ‘‘facility’’ has not changed
since it was originally adopted) and 23389 (stating
that the SEC ‘‘has not separately interpreted the
definition of ‘facility’’’).
17 As with the definition of ‘‘exchange,’’ the ICE
Affiliates do not automatically fall within the
definition of a ‘‘facility.’’ The definition focuses on
ownership and the right to use properties and
services, not corporate relationships. Indeed, if the
term ‘‘exchange’’ in the definition of a facility
included ‘‘an exchange and its affiliates,’’ then the
rest of the functional prongs of the facility
definition would be meaningless. Fundamental
rules of statutory construction dictate that statutes
be interpreted to give effect to each of their
provisions, so as not to render sections of the
statute superfluous.
18 See, e.g., definition of ‘‘premises’’ in MiriamWebster Dictionary, at https://www.merriamwebster.com/dictionary/premises, and Cambridge
English Dictionary, at https://
dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/
premises.
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16 Securities
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non-ICE entity,19 does not connect to
the Exchange trading and execution
systems and is not the premises of the
Exchange. The portion of the Mahwah
data center where the ‘‘exchange’’
functions are performed—i.e. the SRO
Systems that bring together purchasers
and sellers of securities and perform
with respect to securities the functions
commonly performed by a stock
exchange—could be construed as the
‘‘premises’’ of the Exchange, but the
same is not true for a wireless network
that is almost completely outside of the
Mahwah data center.
The second prong of the definition of
‘‘facility’’ provides that a facility
includes the exchange’s ‘‘tangible or
intangible property whether on the
premises or not.’’ The Wireless
Connections are not the property of the
Exchange: They are services. The
underlying wireless network is owned
by ICE Affiliates and a non-ICE entity.
As noted, the Act does not
automatically collapse affiliates into the
definition of an ‘‘exchange.’’ A review of
the facts set forth above shows that there
is a real distinction between the
Exchange and its ICE Affiliates with
respect to the Wireless Connections, and
so something owned by an ICE Affiliate
is not owned by the Exchange.
The third prong of the definition of
‘‘facility’’ provides that a facility
includes
any right to the use of such premises or
property or any service thereof for the
purpose of effecting or reporting a transaction
on an exchange (including, among other
things, any system of communication to or
from the exchange, by ticker or otherwise,
maintained by or with the consent of the
exchange).20
This prong does not capture the
Wireless Connections because the
Exchange does not have the right to use
the Wireless Connections to effect or
report a transaction on the Exchange.
ICE Affiliates and a non-ICE entity own
and maintain the wireless network
underlying the Wireless Connections,
and ICE Affiliates, not the Exchange,
offer and provide the Wireless
Connections to customers. The
Exchange does not know whether or
when a market participant has entered
into an agreement for a Wireless
Connection and has no right to approve
or disapprove of the provision of a
Wireless Connection, in the same way
that the Exchange would have no right
to approve or disapprove of the
19 A non-ICE entity owns, operates and maintains
the wireless network between the Mahwah data
center and the Carteret and Secaucus Third Party
Data Centers pursuant to an agreement between the
non-ICE entity and an ICE Affiliate.
20 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(2).
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provision of connectivity to a market
participant in co-location or elsewhere
by any other provider. The Exchange
does not put content onto the Wireless
Connections. When a customer
terminates a Wireless Connection, the
Exchange does not consent to the
termination.
The Wireless Connections do not
connect to the Exchange trading and
execution systems. As such, the
Wireless Connections are not provided
for ‘‘the purpose of effecting or reporting
a transaction on’’ the Exchange. Rather,
a Wireless Connection facilitates the
customer’s interaction with itself. Each
Wireless Connection connects the IDS
equipment in the Third Party Data
Center and IDS equipment in the
Mahwah data center. At either end of
the Wireless Connection, the customer
uses a cross connect or other cable to
connect its own equipment to the IDS
equipment. In the Mahwah data center,
the cross connect leads to the
customer’s server in co-location, not the
Exchange trading and execution
systems.
It is important to remember that the
customers’ equipment in the Mahwah
data center is not provided by, part of,
or a facility of, the Exchange. The
Exchange provides the space in which
customers’ equipment is housed, and
permits customers to use their
equipment to communicate with the
SRO Systems through services, such as
connections to the local area networks,
that are filed with the Commission.21
The Exchange provides the space, but
not the equipment. Accordingly, even if
a customer were to use a Wireless
Connection to send instructions to trade
or to receive a report of a trade, the
customer would not be sending
instructions to the Exchange, but rather
to its own equipment.
The Exchange believes the example in
the parenthetical in the third prong of
the definition of ‘‘facility’’ cannot be
read as an independent prong of the
definition. Such a reading would ignore
that the parentheses and the word
‘‘including’’ clearly indicate that ‘‘any
system of communication to or from an
exchange . . . maintained by or with
21 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62961
(September 21, 2010), 75 FR 59299 (September 27,
2010) (SR–NYSEAmex–2010–80) order approving a
proposed rule change amending the price list to
reflect fees charged for co-location services). As
described by the Commission, co-location is when
a ‘‘trading center . . . rents rack space to market
participants that enables them to place their servers
in close physical proximity to a trading center’s
matching engine.’’ 75 FR 3594, supra note 7, at
3610 (noting that ‘‘[c]o-location helps minimize
network and other types of latencies between the
matching engine of trading centers and the servers
of market participants’’).
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the consent of the exchange’’ is
explaining the preceding text. By its
terms, the parenthetical is providing a
non-exclusive example of the type of
property or service to which the prong
refers, and does not remove the
requirement that there must be a right
to use the premises, property or service
to effect or report a transaction on an
exchange. It is making sure the reader
understands that ‘‘facility’’ includes a
ticker system that an exchange has the
right to use, not creating a new fifth
prong to the definition. In fact, if the
‘‘right to use’’ requirement were
ignored, every communication provider
that connected to an exchange,
including any broker-dealer system and
telecommunications network, would
become a facility of that exchange so
long as the exchange consented to the
connection, whether or not the
connection was used to trade or report
a trade, and whether or not the
exchange had any right at all to the use
of the connection.
The fourth prong of the definition
provides that a facility includes ‘‘any
right of the exchange to the use of any
property or service.’’ 22 As described
above, the Exchange does not have the
right to use the Wireless Connections.
Instead, the customers of the Wireless
Connections are customers who enter
into an agreement with ICE Affiliates for
connections over a wireless network,
much of which is owned, operated and
maintained by a non-ICE entity.
Accordingly, for all the reasons
discussed above, the Wireless
Connections provided by ICE Affiliates
are not facilities of the Exchange.
The legal conclusion that the Wireless
Connections are not facilities of the
Exchange is strongly supported by the
facts. The Wireless Connections are
neither necessary for, nor integrally
connected to, the operations of the
Exchange. They are empty pipes that
customers can use as they like. In this
context, IDS simply acts as a vendor
selling connectivity, just like the other
vendors that offer wireless connections
in the Carteret and Secaucus Third Party
Data Centers and fiber connections to all
the Third Party Data Centers. The fact
that in this case it is ICE Affiliates that
offer the Wireless Connections does not
make the Wireless Connections facilities
of the Exchange any more than are the
connections offered by other parties.
Further, the Exchange believes that
requiring it to file this proposed rule
change is not necessary in order for the
Commission to ensure that the Exchange
is satisfying its requirements under the
Act. Because, as described above, the
Wireless Connections are not necessary
for, nor connected to, the operations of
the Exchange, and customers are not
required to use the Wireless
Connections, holding the Wireless
Connections to the statutory standards
in Section 6(b) serves no purpose.
Instead, the sole impact of the
requirement that the Exchange file the
Wireless Connections is to place an
undue burden on competition on the
ICE Affiliates that offer the connections,
compared to their market competitors.
This filing requirement, thus, itself is
inconsistent with the requirement under
Section 6(b)(8) of the Act that the rules
of the exchange not ‘‘impose any burden
on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of [the Act].’’ 23 This burden
on competition arises because IDS
would be unable, for example, to offer
a client or potential client a different
bandwidth it requests, without the delay
and uncertainty of a filing, but its
Type of service
Description
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Secaucus access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Secaucus access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Secaucus access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Secaucus access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Carteret access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Carteret access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Carteret access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Carteret access center.
Wireless Connections between (a) Mahwah Data Center and
Carteret access center and (b) Mahwah Data Center and
Secaucus Data Center.
10 Mb Circuit ......
22 Id.
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50 Mb Circuit ......
100 Mb Circuit ....
200 Mb Circuit ....
10 Mb Circuit ......
50 Mb Circuit ......
100 Mb Circuit ....
200 Mb Circuit ....
50 Mb Circuits ....
competitors will. Similarly, if a
competitor decides to undercut IDS’ fees
because IDS, unlike the competitor, has
to make its fees public, IDS will not be
able to respond quickly, if at all. Indeed,
because its competitors are not required
to make their services or fees public,
and are not subject to a Commission
determination of whether such services
or fees are ‘‘not unfairly discriminatory’’
or equitably allocated, IDS is at a
competitive disadvantage from the very
start.
The Proposed Service and Fees
As noted above, the Exchange
proposes to add to its rules a Wireless
Fee Schedule setting forth the fees
charged by IDS related to the Wireless
Connections between the Mahwah data
center and the Third Party Data Centers.
For each Wireless Connection, a
customer would be charged a nonrecurring initial charge and a monthly
recurring charge (‘‘MRC’’) that would
vary depending upon bandwidth and
the location of the connection. The
proposal would waive the first month’s
MRC, to allow customers to test a new
Wireless Connection for a month before
incurring any MRCs, and the Exchange
proposes to add text to the Wireless Fee
Schedule accordingly. If a customer had
an existing Wireless Connection and
opted to upgrade or downgrade to a
different size circuit connecting to the
same Third Party Access Center, it
would not be subject to the initial
charge.
The Exchange proposes to establish
the Wireless Fee Schedule with a
section under the heading ‘‘A. Wireless
Connectivity’’ setting forth the fees
charged by IDS related to the Wireless
Connections, as follows:
Amount of charge
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $9,000.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $13,500.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $23,000.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $44,000.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $10,000.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $15,000.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $25,000.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $45,000.
$15,000 initial charge for both connections plus monthly
charge for both connections of $22,000.
U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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Type of service
Description
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Markham access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Markham access center.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data Center and
Markham access center.
5 Mb Circuit ........
10 Mb Circuit ......
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $6,000.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $15,500.
$10,000 per connection initial charge plus monthly charge
per connection of $23,000.
Proposed General Note
Competitive Environment
The Exchange and each of the
Affiliate SROs are filing the Wireless
Connections. Although each such
market will have a Wireless Fee
Schedule, a market participant that
obtains a Wireless Connection will not
be charged more than once for that
service, irrespective of whether it is a
member of one, some or none of the
Exchange and the Affiliate SROs.
Accordingly, the Exchange proposes
that the Wireless Fee Schedule include
a General Note that describes the billing
practice for market participants, as
follows:
There are currently at least three other
vendors that offer market participants
wireless network connections between
the Mahwah data center and the
Secaucus and Carteret Third Party
Access Centers using wireless
equipment installed on towers and
buildings near the Mahwah data center.
In addition, some market participants
have their own proprietary wireless
networks. Based on the information
available to it, the Exchange believes
that the wireless connections offered by
non-ICE entities provide connectivity at
the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same
or similar cost. The Exchange believes
the Wireless Connections between the
Mahwah data center and the Markham
Third Party Data Center are the first
public, commercially available wireless
connections between the two points,
creating a new connectivity option for
customers in Markham.
Market participants that want a
connection between a Third Party Data
Center and the Mahwah data center
have additional options. A market
participant may create a new
proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market
participant, or utilize fiber connections
offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates,
other service providers and third party
telecommunications providers.
Wireless connections involve beaming
signals through the air between
antennas that are within sight of one
another. Because the signals travel a
straight, unimpeded line, and because
light waves travel faster through air than
through glass (fiber optics), wireless
messages have lower latency than
messages travelling through fiber optics.
At the same time, as a general rule
wireless networks have less uptime than
fiber networks. Wireless networks are
directly and immediately affected by
adverse weather conditions, which can
cause message loss and outage periods.
Wireless networks cannot be configured
with redundancy in the same way that
fiber networks can. As a result, an
equipment or weather issue at any one
location on the network will cause the
entire network to have an outage. In
addition, maintenance can take longer
A market participant that incurs fees from
the New York Stock Exchange LLC, NYSE
American LLC, NYSE Arca, Inc., NYSE
Chicago, Inc. or NYSE National, Inc.
(collectively, the ‘‘Affiliate SROs’’) for a
particular service pursuant to this Fee
Schedule shall not be subject to fees for the
same service charged by the other Affiliate
SROs.
The proposed General Note would be
consistent with the first general note in
the co-location section of the Exchange
and Affiliate SROs’ price lists and fee
schedule,24 as well as the Nasdaq Stock
Market rules.25
Application and Impact of the Proposed
Change
The proposed change would apply to
all market participants equally. The
proposed change would not apply
differently to distinct types or sizes of
market participants. Market participants
that require other types or sizes of
network connections between the
Mahwah data center and the Third Party
Data Centers could still request them.
The purchase of the service is
completely voluntary and the Wireless
Fee Schedule will be applied uniformly
to all market participants.
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1 Mb Circuit ........
Amount of charge
24 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
70206 (August 15, 2013), 78 FR 51765 (August 21,
2013) (SR–NYSE–2013–59); 70176 (August 13,
2013), 78 FR 50471 (August 19, 2013) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2013–67); 70173 (August 13, 2013), 78
FR 50459 (August 19, 2013) (SR–NYSEArca–2013–
80); 83351 (May 31, 2018), 83 FR 26314 (June 6,
2018) (SR–NYSENAT–2018–07; and 87408 (October
28, 2019), 84 FR 58778 (November 1, 2019) (SR–
NYSECHX–2019–12).
25 See, e.g., The Nasdaq Stock Market General
Equity and Options Rules, General 8, Section 1.
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than it would with a fiber based
network, as the relevant tower may be
in a hard to reach location, or weather
conditions may present safety issues,
delaying technicians servicing
equipment. Even under normal
conditions, a wireless network will have
a higher error rate than a fiber network
of the same length.
The proposed Wireless Connections
traverse wireless connections through a
series of towers equipped with wireless
equipment, including, in the case of the
Carteret and Secaucus connections, a
pole on the grounds of the Mahwah data
center. With the exception of the nonICE entity that owns the wireless
network used for the Wireless
Connections to Secaucus and Carteret,26
third parties do not have access to such
pole. However, access to such pole is
not required for third parties to establish
wireless networks that can compete
with the Wireless Connections to the
Carteret and Secaucus Third Party Data
Centers, as witnessed by the existing
wireless connections offered by non-ICE
entities currently serving market
participants.
Proximity to a data center is not the
only determinant of a wireless
network’s latency. Rather, the latency of
a wireless network depends on several
factors. Variables include the wireless
equipment utilized; the route of, and
number of towers or buildings in, the
network; and the fiber equipment used
at either end of the connection.
Moreover, latency is not the only
consideration that a market participant
may have in selecting a wireless
network. Other considerations may
include the bandwidth of the offered
connection; amount of network uptime;
the equipment that the network uses;
the cost of the connection; and the
applicable contractual provisions.
Indeed, fiber network connections may
be more attractive to some market
participants as they are more reliable
and less susceptible to weather
conditions.
2. Statutory Basis
Although the Exchange does not
believe that the present proposed
change is a change to the ‘‘rules of an
26 See
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note 19, supra.
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exchange’’ 27 required to be filed with
the Commission under the Act, the
Exchange believes that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section
6(b) of the Act,28 in general, and furthers
the objectives of Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act,29 in particular, because it is
designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in
regulating, clearing, settling, processing
information with respect to, and
facilitating transactions in securities, to
remove impediments to, and perfect the
mechanisms of, a free and open market
and a national market system and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest and does not unfairly
discriminate between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers. The
Exchange also believes that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b)(4) of the Act,30 because it
provides for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees, and other charges
among its members, issuers and other
persons using its facilities and does not
unfairly discriminate between
customers, issuers, brokers or dealers.
The Proposed Change Is Reasonable
The Exchange believes its proposal is
reasonable.
There are currently at least three other
vendors that offer market participants
wireless network connections between
the Mahwah data center and the
Secaucus and Carteret Third Party
Access Centers using wireless
equipment installed on towers and
buildings near the Mahwah data center.
In addition, some market participants
have their own proprietary wireless
networks. Based on the information
available to it, the Exchange believes
that the wireless connections offered by
non-ICE entities provide connectivity at
the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same
or similar cost. The Exchange believes
the Wireless Connections between the
Mahwah data center and the Markham
Third Party Data Center are the first
public, commercially available wireless
connections between the two points,
creating a new connectivity option for
customers in Markham.
The Wireless Connections provide
market participants with one means of
connectivity, but substitute products are
available, as witnessed by the existing
27 See 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(27) (defining the term
‘‘rules of an exchange’’).
28 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
29 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
30 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
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wireless connections offered by non-ICE
entities currently serving market
participants. A market participant may
create a new proprietary wireless
connection, connect through another
market participant, or utilize fiber
connections offered by the Exchange,
ICE Affiliates, other service providers
and third party telecommunications
providers.
Market participants’ considerations in
determining what connectivity to
purchase may include latency;
bandwidth size; amount of network
uptime; the equipment that the network
uses; the cost of the connection; and the
applicable contractual provisions.
Indeed, fiber network connections may
be more attractive to some market
participants as they are more reliable
and less susceptible to weather
conditions.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed pricing for the Wireless
Connections is reasonable because it
allows market participants to select the
connectivity options that best suit their
needs. A market participant that opts to
connect with a Wireless Network would
be able to select the route and
bandwidth that better suit its needs,
thereby helping it tailor its operations to
the requirements of its business
operations. The fees also reflect the
benefit received by customers in terms
of lower latency over the fiber optics
options.
Only market participants that
voluntarily select to receive Wireless
Connections are charged for them, and
those services are available to all market
participants. Furthermore, the Exchange
believes that the services and fees
proposed herein are reasonable because,
in addition to the services being
completely voluntary, they are available
to all market participants on an equal
basis (i.e., the same products and
services are available to all market
participants). All market participants
that voluntarily select Wireless
Connections would be charged the same
amount for the same services and would
have their first month’s MRC for
Wireless Connections waived.
Overall, the Exchange believes that
the proposed change is reasonable
because the Wireless Connections
described herein are offered as a
convenience to market participants, but
offering them requires the provision,
maintenance and operation of the
Mahwah data center, wireless networks
and access centers in the Third Party
Data Centers, including the installation
and monitoring, support and
maintenance of the services.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed waiver of the first month’s
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8951
MRC is reasonable as it would allow
customers to test a Wireless Connection
for a month before incurring any
monthly recurring fees and may act as
an incentive to market participants to
connect to a Wireless Connection. The
Exchange believes that the proposed
waiver of the initial charge if a customer
has an existing Wireless Connection and
opted to upgrade or downgrade to a
different size circuit at the same Third
Party Data Center is reasonable because
the change in Wireless Connection
would not require IDS to do any
physical work to implement the
connection.
The Exchange believes that its
proposed General Note is reasonable
because it would provide transparency
regarding how the billing practice for
Wireless Connections functions. The
Exchange believes that a customer
should not be charged more than once
for a Wireless Connection. For example,
to charge one customer twice for a
Wireless Connection because that
customer is a member of two Affiliate
SROs, and so subject to the rules of both
Affiliate SROs, when another customer
that buys the same Wireless Connection
only pays once, would not promote just
and equitable principles of trade, and
could result in the Exchanges and
Affiliate SROs receiving the proceeds
from multiple fees despite only
providing a service once.
The Proposed Change Is an Equitable
Allocation of Fees and Credits
The Exchange believes its proposal
equitably allocates its fees among its
market participants.
The proposed change would not
apply differently to distinct types or
sizes of market participants. Rather, it
would apply to all market participants
equally. As is currently the case, the
purchase of any connectivity service is
completely voluntary and the Wireless
Fee Schedule will be applied uniformly
to all customers.
Without this proposed rule change,
market participants seeking connectivity
to a Third Party Data Center would have
fewer options. With it, because the
Wireless Connections are offered at
different bandwidths and price points,
market participants have more choices
with respect to the form and price of the
connectivity they use, allowing a market
participant that opts to connect with a
wireless network to select the
connectivity and bandwidth that better
suit its needs, thereby helping it tailor
its operations to the requirements of its
business operations.
The Exchange believes that its
proposed General Note is equitable
because a customer would not be
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charged more than once for a Wireless
Connection. For example, to charge one
customer twice for a Wireless
Connection because that customer is a
member of two Affiliate SROs, and so
subject to the rules of both Affiliate
SROs, when another customer that buys
the same Wireless Connection only pays
once, would not promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and could
result in the Exchanges and Affiliate
SROs receiving the proceeds from
multiple fees despite only providing a
service once. The Exchange believes
that its proposed General Note is
reasonable because it would provide
transparency regarding how the billing
practice for Wireless Connections
functions.
The Proposed Change Is Not Unfairly
Discriminatory
The Exchange believes its proposal is
not unfairly discriminatory.
The proposed change would not
apply differently to distinct types or
sizes of market participants. Rather, it
would apply to all market participants
equally. As is currently the case, the
purchase of any connectivity service is
completely voluntary and the Wireless
Fee Schedule will be applied uniformly
to all customers.
Without this proposed rule change,
market participants seeking connectivity
to a Third Party Data Center would have
fewer options. With it, because the
Wireless Connections are offered at
different bandwidths and price points,
market participants have more choices
with respect to the form and price of the
connectivity they use, allowing a market
participant that opts to connect with a
wireless network to select the
connectivity and bandwidth that better
suit its needs, thereby helping it tailor
its operations to the requirements of its
business operations.
There are currently at least three other
vendors that offer market participants
wireless network connections between
the Mahwah data center and the
Secaucus and Carteret Third Party
Access Centers using wireless
equipment installed on towers and
buildings near the Mahwah data center.
In addition, some market participants
have their own proprietary wireless
networks. Based on the information
available to it, the Exchange believes
that the wireless connections offered by
non-ICE entities provide connectivity at
the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same
or similar cost. The Exchange believes
the Wireless Connections between the
Mahwah data center and the Markham
Third Party Data Center are the first
public, commercially available wireless
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connections between the two points,
creating a new connectivity option for
customers in Markham.
Market participants that want a
connection between a Third Party Data
Center and the Mahwah data center
have additional options. A market
participant may create a new
proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market
participant, or utilize fiber connections
offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates,
other service providers and third party
telecommunications providers.
Market participants’ considerations in
determining what connectivity to
purchase may include latency;
bandwidth size; amount of network
uptime; the equipment that the network
uses; the cost of the connection; and the
applicable contractual provisions.
Indeed, fiber network connections may
be more attractive to some market
participants as they are more reliable
and less susceptible to weather
conditions.
The Exchange believes that its
proposed General Note would not be
unfairly discriminatory because a
customer would not be charged more
than once for a Wireless Connection.
For example, to charge one customer
twice for a Wireless Connection because
that customer is a member of two
Affiliate SROs, and so subject to the
rules of both Affiliate SROs, when
another customer that buys the same
Wireless Connection only pays once,
would not promote just and equitable
principles of trade, and could result in
the Exchanges and Affiliate SROs
receiving the proceeds from multiple
fees despite only providing a service
once.
For these reasons, the Exchange
believes that the proposal is consistent
with the Act.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange believes that the only
burden on competition of the proposed
change is on IDS and other commercial
connectivity providers. Solely because
IDS is wholly owned by the same parent
company as the Exchange, IDS will be
at a competitive disadvantage to its
commercial competitors, and its
commercial competitors, without a
filing requirement, will be at a relative
competitive advantage to IDS.
By permitting IDS to continue to offer
the Wireless Connectivity, approval of
the proposed changes would contribute
to competition by allowing IDS to
compete with other connectivity
providers, and thus provides market
participants another connectivity
option. For this reason, the proposed
PO 00000
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rule changes will not impose any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of Section 6(b)(8) of the
Act.31
There are currently at least three other
vendors that offer market participants
wireless network connections between
the Mahwah data center and the
Secaucus and Carteret Third Party
Access Centers using wireless
equipment installed on towers and
buildings near the Mahwah data center.
In addition, some market participants
have their own proprietary wireless
networks. Based on the information
available to it, the Exchange believes
that the wireless connections offered by
non-ICE entities provide connectivity at
the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same
or similar cost. The Exchange believes
the Wireless Connections between the
Mahwah data center and the Markham
Third Party Data Center are the first
public, commercially available wireless
connections between the two points,
creating a new connectivity option for
customers in Markham. Importantly, the
Exchange does not control the Third
Party Data Centers and could not
preclude other parties from creating
new wireless or fiber connections to any
of the Third Party Data Centers.
Market participants that want a
connection between a Third Party Data
Center and the Mahwah data center
have additional options. A market
participant may create a new
proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market
participant, or utilize fiber connections
offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates,
other service providers and third party
telecommunications providers. Indeed,
fiber network connections may be more
attractive to some market participants as
they are more reliable and less
susceptible to weather conditions.
The proposed Wireless Connections
traverse wireless connections through a
series of towers equipped with wireless
equipment, including, in the case of the
Carteret and Secaucus connections, a
pole on the grounds of the Mahwah data
center. With the exception of the nonICE entity that owns the wireless
network used for the Wireless
Connections to Secaucus and Carteret,32
third parties do not have access to such
pole, as the IDS wireless network has
exclusive rights to operate wireless
equipment on the Mahwah data center
pole. IDS does not sell rights to third
parties to operate wireless equipment on
the pole, due to space limitations,
31 15
U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
note 19, supra.
32 See
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security concerns, and the interference
that would arise between equipment
placed too closely together.
Access to the pole or roof is not
required for other parties to establish
wireless networks that can compete
with the Wireless Connections, as
witnessed by the existing wireless
connections offered by non-ICE entities
currently serving market participants.
The latency of a wireless network
depends on several factors, not just
proximity to a data center. Variables
include the wireless equipment utilized;
the route of, and number of towers or
buildings in, the network; and the fiber
equipment used at either end of the
connection. In addition, latency is not
the only consideration that a market
participant may have in selecting a
wireless network. Market participants’
considerations in determining what
connectivity to purchase may include
latency; bandwidth size; amount of
network uptime; the equipment that the
network uses; the cost of the
connection; and the applicable
contractual provisions.
The Exchange operates in a highly
competitive market in which exchanges
and other vendors offer connectivity
options between data centers as a means
to facilitate the trading and other market
activities of market participants. The
Commission has repeatedly expressed
its preference for competition over
regulatory intervention in determining
prices, products, and services in the
securities markets. Specifically, in
Regulation NMS, the Commission
highlighted the importance of market
forces in determining prices and SRO
revenues and recognized that current
regulation of the market system ‘‘has
been remarkably successful in
promoting market competition in its
broader forms that are most important to
investors and listed companies.’’ 33
The proposed change does not affect
competition among national securities
exchanges or among members of the
Exchange, but rather between IDS and
its commercial competitors.
For the reasons described above, the
Exchange believes that the proposed
rule changes reflect this competitive
environment.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
33 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808
(June 9, 2005), 70 FR 37496, at 37499 (June 29,
2005).
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17:48 Feb 14, 2020
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III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or up to 90 days (i) as the
Commission may designate if it finds
such longer period to be appropriate
and publishes its reasons for so finding
or (ii) as to which the self-regulatory
organization consents, the Commission
will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove
the proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NYSEAMER–2020–05 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–NYSEAMER–2020–05. 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
PO 00000
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8953
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–NYSEAMER–2020–05, and
should be submitted on or before March
10, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.34
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–03096 Filed 2–14–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–88159; File No. SR–
CboeBZX–2020–013]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
BZX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of a
Proposed Rule Change To Amend Its
Fee Schedule
February 11, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that, on January
31, 2020, Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘BZX’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(the ‘‘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 BZX Equities Exchange (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘BZX Equities’’) is filing
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) a
proposed rule change to amend its Fee
Schedule. 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/
equities/regulation/rule_filings/bzx/), at
the Exchange’s Office of the Secretary,
34 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
E:\FR\FM\18FEN1.SGM
18FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 32 (Tuesday, February 18, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 8946-8953]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-03096]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-88169; File No. SR-NYSEAMER-2020-05]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE American LLC; Notice of
Filing of Proposed Rule Change To Establish a Schedule of Wireless
Connectivity Fees and Charges With Wireless Connections
February 11, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) \1\ of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (``Act''),\2\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\3\ notice is hereby given
that on January 30, 2020, NYSE American LLC (``NYSE American'' or
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``SEC'' or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III 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.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 15 U.S.C. 78a.
\3\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to establish a schedule of Wireless
Connectivity Fees and Charges (the ``Wireless Fee Schedule'') with
wireless connections between the Mahwah, New Jersey data center and
other data centers. The proposed rule change is available on the
Exchange's website at www.nyse.com, at the principal office of the
Exchange, and at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the self-regulatory organization
included statements concerning the purpose of, and basis for, the
proposed rule change and discussed any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant parts of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to establish the Wireless Fee Schedule with
wireless connections between the Mahwah, New Jersey data center and
three data centers that are owned and operated by third parties
unaffiliated with the Exchange: (1) Carteret, New Jersey, (2) Secaucus,
New Jersey, and (3) Markham, Canada (collectively, the ``Third Party
Data Centers''). Market participants that purchase such a wireless
connection (a ``Wireless Connection'') are charged an initial and
monthly fee. In addition, the Exchange proposes to include a General
Note to the Wireless Fee Schedule.
The Exchange does not believe that the present proposed change is a
change to the ``rules of an exchange'' \4\ required to be filed with
the Commission under the Act. The definition of ``exchange'' under the
Act includes ``the market facilities maintained by such exchange.'' \5\
Based on its review of the relevant facts and circumstances, and as
discussed further below, the Exchange has concluded that the Wireless
Connections are not facilities of the Exchange within the meaning of
the Act, and therefore do not need to be included in its rules.
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\4\ See 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(27) (defining the term ``rules of an
exchange'').
\5\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(1). See 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(2) (defining the
term ``facility'' as applied to an exchange).
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The Exchange is making the current proposal solely because the
Staff of the Commission has advised the Exchange that it believes the
Wireless Connections are facilities of the Exchange and so must be
filed as part of its rules.\6\ The Staff has not set forth the basis of
its conclusion beyond verbally noting that the Wireless Connections are
provided by an affiliate of the Exchange and a market participant could
use a Wireless Connection to trade on, or receive the market data of,
the Exchange.\7\
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\6\ Telephone conversation between Commission staff and
representatives of the Exchange, December 12, 2019.
\7\ Id. The Commission has previously stated that services were
facilities of an exchange subject to the rule filing requirements
without fully explaining its reasoning. In 2010, the Commission
stated that exchanges had to file proposed rule changes with respect
to co-location because ``[t]he Commission views co-location services
as being a material aspect of the operation of the facilities of an
exchange.'' The Commission did not specify why it reached that
conclusion. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358 (January
14, 2010), 75 FR 3594 (January 21, 2010) (concept release on equity
market structure), at note 76.
In addition, in 2014, the Commission instituted proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove a proposed rule change by The NASDAQ
Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq'') on the basis that Nasdaq's ``provision
of third-party market data feeds to co-located clients appears to be
an integral feature of its co-location program, and co-location
programs are subject to the rule filing process.'' Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 72654 (July 22, 2014), 79 FR 43808 (July
28, 2014) (SR-NASDAQ-2014-034). In its order, the Commission did not
explain why it believed that the provision of third party data was
an integral feature of co-location, or if it believed that it was a
facility of Nasdaq, although the Nasdaq filing analyzed each prong
of the definition of facility in turn. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 71990 (April 22, 2014), 79 FR 23389 (April 28, 2014)
(SR-NASDAQ-2014-034).
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The Exchange expects the proposed change to be operative 60 days
after the present filing becomes effective.
The Exchange and the ICE Affiliates
To understand the Exchange's conclusion that the Wireless
Connections are not facilities of the Exchange within the meaning of
the Act, it is important to understand the very real distinction
between the Exchange and its corporate affiliates (the ``ICE
Affiliates''). The Exchange is an indirect subsidiary of
Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (``ICE''). Around the world, ICE
operates seven regulated exchanges in addition to the Exchange and its
four national securities exchange affiliates,\8\ including futures
markets, as
[[Page 8947]]
well as six clearing houses. Among others, the ICE Affiliates are
subject to the jurisdiction of regulators in the U.S., U.K., E.U., the
Netherlands, Canada and Singapore.\9\ In all, the ICE Affiliates
include hundreds of ICE subsidiaries, including more than thirty that
are significant legal entity subsidiaries as defined by Commission
rule.\10\
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\8\ The Exchange's four national securities exchange affiliates
are the New York Stock Exchange LLC, NYSE Arca, Inc., NYSE Chicago,
Inc., and NYSE National, Inc. (together, the ``Affiliate SROs'').
\9\ Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2018, Exhibit 21.1 (filed February
7, 2019), at 15-16.
\10\ Id. at Exhibit 21.1.
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Through its ICE Data Services (``IDS'') business,\11\ ICE operates
the ICE Global Network (``IGN''), a global connectivity network whose
infrastructure provides access to over 150 global markets, including
the Exchange and Affiliate SROs, and over 750 data sources. All the ICE
Affiliates are ultimately controlled by ICE, as the indirect parent
company, but generally they do not control each other. In the present
case, it is IDS, not the Exchange, that provides the Wireless
Connections to market participants. The Exchange does not control IDS.
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\11\ The IDS business operates through several different ICE
Affiliates, including NYSE Technologies Connectivity, Inc., an
indirect subsidiary of the NYSE.
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Wireless Connections
If a market participant wants a connection between one of the Third
Party Data Centers and the Mahwah data center, it may opt to purchase a
Wireless Connection, for which it will be charged an initial and
monthly fee.
Once requested, IDS establishes a Wireless Connection between the
IDS equipment in the Third Party Data Center and IDS equipment in the
Mahwah data center. IDS contracts with a non-ICE entity to provide the
Wireless Connections between the Secaucus and Carteret Third Party Data
Centers and the Mahwah data center, through a series of towers equipped
with wireless equipment. IDS uses its own wireless network for the
Wireless Connection between the Markham Third Party Data Center and the
Mahwah data center. At either end of the Wireless Connection, the
customer uses a cross connect or other cable to connect its own
equipment to the IDS equipment.\12\ In the Mahwah data center, the
cross connect leads to the customer's server in co-location.
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\12\ A cable connects the IDS and customer equipment in the
Markham Third Party Data Center. Elsewhere, the customer buys a
cross connect from IDS. The cross connects utilized in the Mahwah
data center are filed with the Commission. See Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 67665 (August 15, 2012), 77 FR 50734 (August 22,
2012) (SR-NYSEMKT-2012-11).
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The Wireless Connection does not connect to the Exchange trading
and execution systems, nor is it a system of communication from the
customer's server in co-location to the trading and execution systems
of the Exchange or the Affiliate SROs (collectively, the ``SRO
Systems''). Rather, a Wireless Connection facilitates the customer's
interaction with itself. Essentially, a Wireless Connection is an empty
pipe that a customer can use to communicate between its equipment in
co-location and its equipment in the Third Party Data Center.
Customers have control over the data they send over their Wireless
Connections. They may, but are not required to, use them to send
trading orders to their equipment in co-location; relay Exchange market
data, third party market data and public quote feeds from Securities
Information Processors; send risk management, billing, or compliance
information to their preferred location; or to carry any other market
information or other data they wish to and from their equipment in the
Third Party Data Centers and Mahwah data center. The Exchange does not,
and cannot, know what data customers send over the Wireless
Connections. The Exchange does not send or receive any data over the
Wireless Connections.
Market participants that want a connection between a Third Party
Data Center and the Mahwah data center have options. There are
currently at least three other vendors that offer market participants
wireless network connections between the Mahwah data center and the
Carteret and Secaucus Third Party Data Centers using wireless equipment
installed on towers and buildings near the Mahwah data center. Some
market participants have their own proprietary wireless networks. A
market participant may create a new proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market participant, or utilize fiber
connections offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates, other service
providers and third party telecommunications providers.
The Wireless Connections Are Not Facilities of the Exchange
The Definition of ``Exchange''
The definition of ``exchange'' focuses on the exchange entity and
what it does: \13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(1).
The term ``exchange'' means any organization, association, or
group of persons, whether incorporated or unincorporated, which
constitutes, maintains, or provides a market place or facilities for
bringing together purchasers and sellers of securities or for
otherwise performing with respect to securities the functions
commonly performed by a stock exchange as that term is generally
understood, and includes the market place and the market facilities
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maintained by such exchange.
If the ``exchange'' definition included all of an exchange's
affiliates, the ``Exchange'' would encompass a global network of
futures markets, clearing houses, and data providers, and all of those
entities worldwide would be subject to regulation by the Commission.
That, however, is not what the definition in the Act provides.
The Exchange and the Affiliate SROs fall squarely within the Act's
definition of an ``exchange'': They each provide a market place to
bring together purchasers and sellers of securities and perform with
respect to securities the functions commonly performed by a stock
exchange.
That is not true for the non-exchange ICE Affiliates. Those ICE
Affiliates do not provide such a marketplace or perform ``with respect
to securities the functions commonly performed by a stock exchange,''
and therefore they are not an ``exchange'' or part of the ``Exchange''
for purposes of the Act. Accordingly, in conducting its analysis, the
Exchange does not automatically collapse the ICE Affiliates into the
Exchange. The Wireless Connections are also not part of the Exchange,
as they are services, and as such cannot be part of an ``organization,
association or group of persons'' with the Exchange.
In Rule 3b-16 the Commission further defined the term ``exchange''
under the Act, stating that: \14\
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\14\ 17 CFR 240.3b-16(a).
(a) An organization, association, or group of persons shall be
considered to constitute, maintain, or provide ``a market place or
facilities for bringing together purchasers and sellers of
securities or for otherwise performing with respect to securities
the functions commonly performed by a stock exchange,'' as those
terms are used in section 3(a)(1) of the Act . . . if such
organization, association, or group of persons:
(1) Brings together the orders for securities of multiple buyers
and sellers; and
(2) Uses established, non-discretionary methods (whether by
providing a trading facility or by setting rules) under which such
orders interact with each other, and the buyers and sellers entering
such orders agree to the terms of a trade.
The non-exchange ICE Affiliates do not bring ``together orders for
securities of multiple buyers and sellers,'' and so are not an
``exchange'' or part of the ``Exchange'' for purposes of Rule 3b-16.
The relevant question, then, is whether the Wireless Connections
are ``facilities'' of the Exchange.
[[Page 8948]]
The Definition of ``Facility''
The Act defines a ``facility'' \15\ as follows:
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\15\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(2).
The term ``facility'' when used with respect to an exchange
includes [1] its premises, [2] tangible or intangible property
whether on the premises or not, [3] any right to the use of such
premises or property or any service thereof for the purpose of
effecting or reporting a transaction on an exchange (including,
among other things, any system of communication to or from the
exchange, by ticker or otherwise, maintained by or with the consent
of the exchange), and [4] any right of the exchange to the use of
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any property or service.
In 2015 the Commission noted that whether something is a
``facility'' is not always black and white, as ``any determination as
to whether a service or other product is a facility of an exchange
requires an analysis of the particular facts and circumstances.'' \16\
Accordingly, the Exchange understands that the specific facts and
circumstances of the Wireless Connections must be assessed before a
determination can be made regarding whether or not they are facilities
of the Exchange.\17\
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\16\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 76127 (October 9,
2015), 80 FR 62584 (October 16, 2015) (SR-NYSE-2015-36), at note 9
(order approving proposed rule change amending Section 907.00 of the
Listed Company Manual). See also 79 FR 23389, supra note 7, at note
4 (noting that that the definition of the term ``facility'' has not
changed since it was originally adopted) and 23389 (stating that the
SEC ``has not separately interpreted the definition of
`facility''').
\17\ As with the definition of ``exchange,'' the ICE Affiliates
do not automatically fall within the definition of a ``facility.''
The definition focuses on ownership and the right to use properties
and services, not corporate relationships. Indeed, if the term
``exchange'' in the definition of a facility included ``an exchange
and its affiliates,'' then the rest of the functional prongs of the
facility definition would be meaningless. Fundamental rules of
statutory construction dictate that statutes be interpreted to give
effect to each of their provisions, so as not to render sections of
the statute superfluous.
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The first prong of the definition is that ``facility,'' when used
with respect to an exchange, includes ``its premises.'' That prong is
not applicable in this case, because the Wireless Connections are not
premises of the Exchange. The term ``premises'' is generally defined as
referring to an entity's building, land, and appurtenances.\18\ The
wireless network that runs between IDS equipment in the Mahwah data
center and IDS equipment in Third Party Data Centers, much of which is
actually owned, operated and maintained by a non-ICE entity,\19\ does
not connect to the Exchange trading and execution systems and is not
the premises of the Exchange. The portion of the Mahwah data center
where the ``exchange'' functions are performed--i.e. the SRO Systems
that bring together purchasers and sellers of securities and perform
with respect to securities the functions commonly performed by a stock
exchange--could be construed as the ``premises'' of the Exchange, but
the same is not true for a wireless network that is almost completely
outside of the Mahwah data center.
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\18\ See, e.g., definition of ``premises'' in Miriam-Webster
Dictionary, at https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/premises,
and Cambridge English Dictionary, at https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/premises.
\19\ A non-ICE entity owns, operates and maintains the wireless
network between the Mahwah data center and the Carteret and Secaucus
Third Party Data Centers pursuant to an agreement between the non-
ICE entity and an ICE Affiliate.
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The second prong of the definition of ``facility'' provides that a
facility includes the exchange's ``tangible or intangible property
whether on the premises or not.'' The Wireless Connections are not the
property of the Exchange: They are services. The underlying wireless
network is owned by ICE Affiliates and a non-ICE entity. As noted, the
Act does not automatically collapse affiliates into the definition of
an ``exchange.'' A review of the facts set forth above shows that there
is a real distinction between the Exchange and its ICE Affiliates with
respect to the Wireless Connections, and so something owned by an ICE
Affiliate is not owned by the Exchange.
The third prong of the definition of ``facility'' provides that a
facility includes
any right to the use of such premises or property or any service
thereof for the purpose of effecting or reporting a transaction on
an exchange (including, among other things, any system of
communication to or from the exchange, by ticker or otherwise,
maintained by or with the consent of the exchange).\20\
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\20\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(2).
This prong does not capture the Wireless Connections because the
Exchange does not have the right to use the Wireless Connections to
effect or report a transaction on the Exchange. ICE Affiliates and a
non-ICE entity own and maintain the wireless network underlying the
Wireless Connections, and ICE Affiliates, not the Exchange, offer and
provide the Wireless Connections to customers. The Exchange does not
know whether or when a market participant has entered into an agreement
for a Wireless Connection and has no right to approve or disapprove of
the provision of a Wireless Connection, in the same way that the
Exchange would have no right to approve or disapprove of the provision
of connectivity to a market participant in co-location or elsewhere by
any other provider. The Exchange does not put content onto the Wireless
Connections. When a customer terminates a Wireless Connection, the
Exchange does not consent to the termination.
The Wireless Connections do not connect to the Exchange trading and
execution systems. As such, the Wireless Connections are not provided
for ``the purpose of effecting or reporting a transaction on'' the
Exchange. Rather, a Wireless Connection facilitates the customer's
interaction with itself. Each Wireless Connection connects the IDS
equipment in the Third Party Data Center and IDS equipment in the
Mahwah data center. At either end of the Wireless Connection, the
customer uses a cross connect or other cable to connect its own
equipment to the IDS equipment. In the Mahwah data center, the cross
connect leads to the customer's server in co-location, not the Exchange
trading and execution systems.
It is important to remember that the customers' equipment in the
Mahwah data center is not provided by, part of, or a facility of, the
Exchange. The Exchange provides the space in which customers' equipment
is housed, and permits customers to use their equipment to communicate
with the SRO Systems through services, such as connections to the local
area networks, that are filed with the Commission.\21\ The Exchange
provides the space, but not the equipment. Accordingly, even if a
customer were to use a Wireless Connection to send instructions to
trade or to receive a report of a trade, the customer would not be
sending instructions to the Exchange, but rather to its own equipment.
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\21\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62961 (September
21, 2010), 75 FR 59299 (September 27, 2010) (SR-NYSEAmex-2010-80)
order approving a proposed rule change amending the price list to
reflect fees charged for co-location services). As described by the
Commission, co-location is when a ``trading center . . . rents rack
space to market participants that enables them to place their
servers in close physical proximity to a trading center's matching
engine.'' 75 FR 3594, supra note 7, at 3610 (noting that ``[c]o-
location helps minimize network and other types of latencies between
the matching engine of trading centers and the servers of market
participants'').
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The Exchange believes the example in the parenthetical in the third
prong of the definition of ``facility'' cannot be read as an
independent prong of the definition. Such a reading would ignore that
the parentheses and the word ``including'' clearly indicate that ``any
system of communication to or from an exchange . . . maintained by or
with
[[Page 8949]]
the consent of the exchange'' is explaining the preceding text. By its
terms, the parenthetical is providing a non-exclusive example of the
type of property or service to which the prong refers, and does not
remove the requirement that there must be a right to use the premises,
property or service to effect or report a transaction on an exchange.
It is making sure the reader understands that ``facility'' includes a
ticker system that an exchange has the right to use, not creating a new
fifth prong to the definition. In fact, if the ``right to use''
requirement were ignored, every communication provider that connected
to an exchange, including any broker-dealer system and
telecommunications network, would become a facility of that exchange so
long as the exchange consented to the connection, whether or not the
connection was used to trade or report a trade, and whether or not the
exchange had any right at all to the use of the connection.
The fourth prong of the definition provides that a facility
includes ``any right of the exchange to the use of any property or
service.'' \22\ As described above, the Exchange does not have the
right to use the Wireless Connections. Instead, the customers of the
Wireless Connections are customers who enter into an agreement with ICE
Affiliates for connections over a wireless network, much of which is
owned, operated and maintained by a non-ICE entity.
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\22\ Id.
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Accordingly, for all the reasons discussed above, the Wireless
Connections provided by ICE Affiliates are not facilities of the
Exchange.
The legal conclusion that the Wireless Connections are not
facilities of the Exchange is strongly supported by the facts. The
Wireless Connections are neither necessary for, nor integrally
connected to, the operations of the Exchange. They are empty pipes that
customers can use as they like. In this context, IDS simply acts as a
vendor selling connectivity, just like the other vendors that offer
wireless connections in the Carteret and Secaucus Third Party Data
Centers and fiber connections to all the Third Party Data Centers. The
fact that in this case it is ICE Affiliates that offer the Wireless
Connections does not make the Wireless Connections facilities of the
Exchange any more than are the connections offered by other parties.
Further, the Exchange believes that requiring it to file this
proposed rule change is not necessary in order for the Commission to
ensure that the Exchange is satisfying its requirements under the Act.
Because, as described above, the Wireless Connections are not necessary
for, nor connected to, the operations of the Exchange, and customers
are not required to use the Wireless Connections, holding the Wireless
Connections to the statutory standards in Section 6(b) serves no
purpose.
Instead, the sole impact of the requirement that the Exchange file
the Wireless Connections is to place an undue burden on competition on
the ICE Affiliates that offer the connections, compared to their market
competitors. This filing requirement, thus, itself is inconsistent with
the requirement under Section 6(b)(8) of the Act that the rules of the
exchange not ``impose any burden on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of [the Act].'' \23\ This
burden on competition arises because IDS would be unable, for example,
to offer a client or potential client a different bandwidth it
requests, without the delay and uncertainty of a filing, but its
competitors will. Similarly, if a competitor decides to undercut IDS'
fees because IDS, unlike the competitor, has to make its fees public,
IDS will not be able to respond quickly, if at all. Indeed, because its
competitors are not required to make their services or fees public, and
are not subject to a Commission determination of whether such services
or fees are ``not unfairly discriminatory'' or equitably allocated, IDS
is at a competitive disadvantage from the very start.
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\23\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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The Proposed Service and Fees
As noted above, the Exchange proposes to add to its rules a
Wireless Fee Schedule setting forth the fees charged by IDS related to
the Wireless Connections between the Mahwah data center and the Third
Party Data Centers.
For each Wireless Connection, a customer would be charged a non-
recurring initial charge and a monthly recurring charge (``MRC'') that
would vary depending upon bandwidth and the location of the connection.
The proposal would waive the first month's MRC, to allow customers to
test a new Wireless Connection for a month before incurring any MRCs,
and the Exchange proposes to add text to the Wireless Fee Schedule
accordingly. If a customer had an existing Wireless Connection and
opted to upgrade or downgrade to a different size circuit connecting to
the same Third Party Access Center, it would not be subject to the
initial charge.
The Exchange proposes to establish the Wireless Fee Schedule with a
section under the heading ``A. Wireless Connectivity'' setting forth
the fees charged by IDS related to the Wireless Connections, as
follows:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of service Description Amount of charge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 10 Mb Circuit..................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Secaucus access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $9,000.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 50 Mb Circuit..................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Secaucus access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $13,500.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 100 Mb Circuit.................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Secaucus access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $23,000.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 200 Mb Circuit.................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Secaucus access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $44,000.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 10 Mb Circuit..................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Carteret access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $10,000.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 50 Mb Circuit..................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Carteret access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $15,000.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 100 Mb Circuit.................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Carteret access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $25,000.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 200 Mb Circuit.................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Carteret access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $45,000.
Wireless Connections between (a) Mahwah 50 Mb Circuits.................... $15,000 initial charge for both
Data Center and Carteret access center connections plus monthly charge
and (b) Mahwah Data Center and Secaucus for both connections of $22,000.
Data Center.
[[Page 8950]]
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 1 Mb Circuit...................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Markham access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $6,000.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 5 Mb Circuit...................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Markham access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $15,500.
Wireless Connection between Mahwah Data 10 Mb Circuit..................... $10,000 per connection initial
Center and Markham access center. charge plus monthly charge per
connection of $23,000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed General Note
The Exchange and each of the Affiliate SROs are filing the Wireless
Connections. Although each such market will have a Wireless Fee
Schedule, a market participant that obtains a Wireless Connection will
not be charged more than once for that service, irrespective of whether
it is a member of one, some or none of the Exchange and the Affiliate
SROs. Accordingly, the Exchange proposes that the Wireless Fee Schedule
include a General Note that describes the billing practice for market
participants, as follows:
A market participant that incurs fees from the New York Stock
Exchange LLC, NYSE American LLC, NYSE Arca, Inc., NYSE Chicago, Inc.
or NYSE National, Inc. (collectively, the ``Affiliate SROs'') for a
particular service pursuant to this Fee Schedule shall not be
subject to fees for the same service charged by the other Affiliate
SROs.
The proposed General Note would be consistent with the first
general note in the co-location section of the Exchange and Affiliate
SROs' price lists and fee schedule,\24\ as well as the Nasdaq Stock
Market rules.\25\
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\24\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 70206 (August 15,
2013), 78 FR 51765 (August 21, 2013) (SR-NYSE-2013-59); 70176
(August 13, 2013), 78 FR 50471 (August 19, 2013) (SR-NYSEMKT-2013-
67); 70173 (August 13, 2013), 78 FR 50459 (August 19, 2013) (SR-
NYSEArca-2013-80); 83351 (May 31, 2018), 83 FR 26314 (June 6, 2018)
(SR-NYSENAT-2018-07; and 87408 (October 28, 2019), 84 FR 58778
(November 1, 2019) (SR-NYSECHX-2019-12).
\25\ See, e.g., The Nasdaq Stock Market General Equity and
Options Rules, General 8, Section 1.
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Application and Impact of the Proposed Change
The proposed change would apply to all market participants equally.
The proposed change would not apply differently to distinct types or
sizes of market participants. Market participants that require other
types or sizes of network connections between the Mahwah data center
and the Third Party Data Centers could still request them. The purchase
of the service is completely voluntary and the Wireless Fee Schedule
will be applied uniformly to all market participants.
Competitive Environment
There are currently at least three other vendors that offer market
participants wireless network connections between the Mahwah data
center and the Secaucus and Carteret Third Party Access Centers using
wireless equipment installed on towers and buildings near the Mahwah
data center. In addition, some market participants have their own
proprietary wireless networks. Based on the information available to
it, the Exchange believes that the wireless connections offered by non-
ICE entities provide connectivity at the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same or similar cost. The Exchange
believes the Wireless Connections between the Mahwah data center and
the Markham Third Party Data Center are the first public, commercially
available wireless connections between the two points, creating a new
connectivity option for customers in Markham.
Market participants that want a connection between a Third Party
Data Center and the Mahwah data center have additional options. A
market participant may create a new proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market participant, or utilize fiber
connections offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates, other service
providers and third party telecommunications providers.
Wireless connections involve beaming signals through the air
between antennas that are within sight of one another. Because the
signals travel a straight, unimpeded line, and because light waves
travel faster through air than through glass (fiber optics), wireless
messages have lower latency than messages travelling through fiber
optics. At the same time, as a general rule wireless networks have less
uptime than fiber networks. Wireless networks are directly and
immediately affected by adverse weather conditions, which can cause
message loss and outage periods. Wireless networks cannot be configured
with redundancy in the same way that fiber networks can. As a result,
an equipment or weather issue at any one location on the network will
cause the entire network to have an outage. In addition, maintenance
can take longer than it would with a fiber based network, as the
relevant tower may be in a hard to reach location, or weather
conditions may present safety issues, delaying technicians servicing
equipment. Even under normal conditions, a wireless network will have a
higher error rate than a fiber network of the same length.
The proposed Wireless Connections traverse wireless connections
through a series of towers equipped with wireless equipment, including,
in the case of the Carteret and Secaucus connections, a pole on the
grounds of the Mahwah data center. With the exception of the non-ICE
entity that owns the wireless network used for the Wireless Connections
to Secaucus and Carteret,\26\ third parties do not have access to such
pole. However, access to such pole is not required for third parties to
establish wireless networks that can compete with the Wireless
Connections to the Carteret and Secaucus Third Party Data Centers, as
witnessed by the existing wireless connections offered by non-ICE
entities currently serving market participants.
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\26\ See note 19, supra.
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Proximity to a data center is not the only determinant of a
wireless network's latency. Rather, the latency of a wireless network
depends on several factors. Variables include the wireless equipment
utilized; the route of, and number of towers or buildings in, the
network; and the fiber equipment used at either end of the connection.
Moreover, latency is not the only consideration that a market
participant may have in selecting a wireless network. Other
considerations may include the bandwidth of the offered connection;
amount of network uptime; the equipment that the network uses; the cost
of the connection; and the applicable contractual provisions. Indeed,
fiber network connections may be more attractive to some market
participants as they are more reliable and less susceptible to weather
conditions.
2. Statutory Basis
Although the Exchange does not believe that the present proposed
change is a change to the ``rules of an
[[Page 8951]]
exchange'' \27\ required to be filed with the Commission under the Act,
the Exchange believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b) of the Act,\28\ in general, and furthers the objectives of
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act,\29\ in particular, because it is designed
to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to promote
just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing, settling,
processing information with respect to, and facilitating transactions
in securities, to remove impediments to, and perfect the mechanisms of,
a free and open market and a national market system and, in general, to
protect investors and the public interest and does not unfairly
discriminate between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers. The
Exchange also believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b)(4) of the Act,\30\ because it provides for the equitable
allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and other charges among its
members, issuers and other persons using its facilities and does not
unfairly discriminate between customers, issuers, brokers or dealers.
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\27\ See 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(27) (defining the term ``rules of an
exchange'').
\28\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\29\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\30\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
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The Proposed Change Is Reasonable
The Exchange believes its proposal is reasonable.
There are currently at least three other vendors that offer market
participants wireless network connections between the Mahwah data
center and the Secaucus and Carteret Third Party Access Centers using
wireless equipment installed on towers and buildings near the Mahwah
data center. In addition, some market participants have their own
proprietary wireless networks. Based on the information available to
it, the Exchange believes that the wireless connections offered by non-
ICE entities provide connectivity at the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same or similar cost. The Exchange
believes the Wireless Connections between the Mahwah data center and
the Markham Third Party Data Center are the first public, commercially
available wireless connections between the two points, creating a new
connectivity option for customers in Markham.
The Wireless Connections provide market participants with one means
of connectivity, but substitute products are available, as witnessed by
the existing wireless connections offered by non-ICE entities currently
serving market participants. A market participant may create a new
proprietary wireless connection, connect through another market
participant, or utilize fiber connections offered by the Exchange, ICE
Affiliates, other service providers and third party telecommunications
providers.
Market participants' considerations in determining what
connectivity to purchase may include latency; bandwidth size; amount of
network uptime; the equipment that the network uses; the cost of the
connection; and the applicable contractual provisions. Indeed, fiber
network connections may be more attractive to some market participants
as they are more reliable and less susceptible to weather conditions.
The Exchange believes that the proposed pricing for the Wireless
Connections is reasonable because it allows market participants to
select the connectivity options that best suit their needs. A market
participant that opts to connect with a Wireless Network would be able
to select the route and bandwidth that better suit its needs, thereby
helping it tailor its operations to the requirements of its business
operations. The fees also reflect the benefit received by customers in
terms of lower latency over the fiber optics options.
Only market participants that voluntarily select to receive
Wireless Connections are charged for them, and those services are
available to all market participants. Furthermore, the Exchange
believes that the services and fees proposed herein are reasonable
because, in addition to the services being completely voluntary, they
are available to all market participants on an equal basis (i.e., the
same products and services are available to all market participants).
All market participants that voluntarily select Wireless Connections
would be charged the same amount for the same services and would have
their first month's MRC for Wireless Connections waived.
Overall, the Exchange believes that the proposed change is
reasonable because the Wireless Connections described herein are
offered as a convenience to market participants, but offering them
requires the provision, maintenance and operation of the Mahwah data
center, wireless networks and access centers in the Third Party Data
Centers, including the installation and monitoring, support and
maintenance of the services.
The Exchange believes that the proposed waiver of the first month's
MRC is reasonable as it would allow customers to test a Wireless
Connection for a month before incurring any monthly recurring fees and
may act as an incentive to market participants to connect to a Wireless
Connection. The Exchange believes that the proposed waiver of the
initial charge if a customer has an existing Wireless Connection and
opted to upgrade or downgrade to a different size circuit at the same
Third Party Data Center is reasonable because the change in Wireless
Connection would not require IDS to do any physical work to implement
the connection.
The Exchange believes that its proposed General Note is reasonable
because it would provide transparency regarding how the billing
practice for Wireless Connections functions. The Exchange believes that
a customer should not be charged more than once for a Wireless
Connection. For example, to charge one customer twice for a Wireless
Connection because that customer is a member of two Affiliate SROs, and
so subject to the rules of both Affiliate SROs, when another customer
that buys the same Wireless Connection only pays once, would not
promote just and equitable principles of trade, and could result in the
Exchanges and Affiliate SROs receiving the proceeds from multiple fees
despite only providing a service once.
The Proposed Change Is an Equitable Allocation of Fees and Credits
The Exchange believes its proposal equitably allocates its fees
among its market participants.
The proposed change would not apply differently to distinct types
or sizes of market participants. Rather, it would apply to all market
participants equally. As is currently the case, the purchase of any
connectivity service is completely voluntary and the Wireless Fee
Schedule will be applied uniformly to all customers.
Without this proposed rule change, market participants seeking
connectivity to a Third Party Data Center would have fewer options.
With it, because the Wireless Connections are offered at different
bandwidths and price points, market participants have more choices with
respect to the form and price of the connectivity they use, allowing a
market participant that opts to connect with a wireless network to
select the connectivity and bandwidth that better suit its needs,
thereby helping it tailor its operations to the requirements of its
business operations.
The Exchange believes that its proposed General Note is equitable
because a customer would not be
[[Page 8952]]
charged more than once for a Wireless Connection. For example, to
charge one customer twice for a Wireless Connection because that
customer is a member of two Affiliate SROs, and so subject to the rules
of both Affiliate SROs, when another customer that buys the same
Wireless Connection only pays once, would not promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and could result in the Exchanges and
Affiliate SROs receiving the proceeds from multiple fees despite only
providing a service once. The Exchange believes that its proposed
General Note is reasonable because it would provide transparency
regarding how the billing practice for Wireless Connections functions.
The Proposed Change Is Not Unfairly Discriminatory
The Exchange believes its proposal is not unfairly discriminatory.
The proposed change would not apply differently to distinct types
or sizes of market participants. Rather, it would apply to all market
participants equally. As is currently the case, the purchase of any
connectivity service is completely voluntary and the Wireless Fee
Schedule will be applied uniformly to all customers.
Without this proposed rule change, market participants seeking
connectivity to a Third Party Data Center would have fewer options.
With it, because the Wireless Connections are offered at different
bandwidths and price points, market participants have more choices with
respect to the form and price of the connectivity they use, allowing a
market participant that opts to connect with a wireless network to
select the connectivity and bandwidth that better suit its needs,
thereby helping it tailor its operations to the requirements of its
business operations.
There are currently at least three other vendors that offer market
participants wireless network connections between the Mahwah data
center and the Secaucus and Carteret Third Party Access Centers using
wireless equipment installed on towers and buildings near the Mahwah
data center. In addition, some market participants have their own
proprietary wireless networks. Based on the information available to
it, the Exchange believes that the wireless connections offered by non-
ICE entities provide connectivity at the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same or similar cost. The Exchange
believes the Wireless Connections between the Mahwah data center and
the Markham Third Party Data Center are the first public, commercially
available wireless connections between the two points, creating a new
connectivity option for customers in Markham.
Market participants that want a connection between a Third Party
Data Center and the Mahwah data center have additional options. A
market participant may create a new proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market participant, or utilize fiber
connections offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates, other service
providers and third party telecommunications providers.
Market participants' considerations in determining what
connectivity to purchase may include latency; bandwidth size; amount of
network uptime; the equipment that the network uses; the cost of the
connection; and the applicable contractual provisions. Indeed, fiber
network connections may be more attractive to some market participants
as they are more reliable and less susceptible to weather conditions.
The Exchange believes that its proposed General Note would not be
unfairly discriminatory because a customer would not be charged more
than once for a Wireless Connection. For example, to charge one
customer twice for a Wireless Connection because that customer is a
member of two Affiliate SROs, and so subject to the rules of both
Affiliate SROs, when another customer that buys the same Wireless
Connection only pays once, would not promote just and equitable
principles of trade, and could result in the Exchanges and Affiliate
SROs receiving the proceeds from multiple fees despite only providing a
service once.
For these reasons, the Exchange believes that the proposal is
consistent with the Act.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange believes that the only burden on competition of the
proposed change is on IDS and other commercial connectivity providers.
Solely because IDS is wholly owned by the same parent company as the
Exchange, IDS will be at a competitive disadvantage to its commercial
competitors, and its commercial competitors, without a filing
requirement, will be at a relative competitive advantage to IDS.
By permitting IDS to continue to offer the Wireless Connectivity,
approval of the proposed changes would contribute to competition by
allowing IDS to compete with other connectivity providers, and thus
provides market participants another connectivity option. For this
reason, the proposed rule changes will not impose any burden on
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of Section 6(b)(8) of the Act.\31\
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\31\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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There are currently at least three other vendors that offer market
participants wireless network connections between the Mahwah data
center and the Secaucus and Carteret Third Party Access Centers using
wireless equipment installed on towers and buildings near the Mahwah
data center. In addition, some market participants have their own
proprietary wireless networks. Based on the information available to
it, the Exchange believes that the wireless connections offered by non-
ICE entities provide connectivity at the same or similar speed as the
Wireless Connections, and at the same or similar cost. The Exchange
believes the Wireless Connections between the Mahwah data center and
the Markham Third Party Data Center are the first public, commercially
available wireless connections between the two points, creating a new
connectivity option for customers in Markham. Importantly, the Exchange
does not control the Third Party Data Centers and could not preclude
other parties from creating new wireless or fiber connections to any of
the Third Party Data Centers.
Market participants that want a connection between a Third Party
Data Center and the Mahwah data center have additional options. A
market participant may create a new proprietary wireless connection,
connect through another market participant, or utilize fiber
connections offered by the Exchange, ICE Affiliates, other service
providers and third party telecommunications providers. Indeed, fiber
network connections may be more attractive to some market participants
as they are more reliable and less susceptible to weather conditions.
The proposed Wireless Connections traverse wireless connections
through a series of towers equipped with wireless equipment, including,
in the case of the Carteret and Secaucus connections, a pole on the
grounds of the Mahwah data center. With the exception of the non-ICE
entity that owns the wireless network used for the Wireless Connections
to Secaucus and Carteret,\32\ third parties do not have access to such
pole, as the IDS wireless network has exclusive rights to operate
wireless equipment on the Mahwah data center pole. IDS does not sell
rights to third parties to operate wireless equipment on the pole, due
to space limitations,
[[Page 8953]]
security concerns, and the interference that would arise between
equipment placed too closely together.
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\32\ See note 19, supra.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Access to the pole or roof is not required for other parties to
establish wireless networks that can compete with the Wireless
Connections, as witnessed by the existing wireless connections offered
by non-ICE entities currently serving market participants. The latency
of a wireless network depends on several factors, not just proximity to
a data center. Variables include the wireless equipment utilized; the
route of, and number of towers or buildings in, the network; and the
fiber equipment used at either end of the connection. In addition,
latency is not the only consideration that a market participant may
have in selecting a wireless network. Market participants'
considerations in determining what connectivity to purchase may include
latency; bandwidth size; amount of network uptime; the equipment that
the network uses; the cost of the connection; and the applicable
contractual provisions.
The Exchange operates in a highly competitive market in which
exchanges and other vendors offer connectivity options between data
centers as a means to facilitate the trading and other market
activities of market participants. The Commission has repeatedly
expressed its preference for competition over regulatory intervention
in determining prices, products, and services in the securities
markets. Specifically, in Regulation NMS, the Commission highlighted
the importance of market forces in determining prices and SRO revenues
and recognized that current regulation of the market system ``has been
remarkably successful in promoting market competition in its broader
forms that are most important to investors and listed companies.'' \33\
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\33\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9,
2005), 70 FR 37496, at 37499 (June 29, 2005).
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The proposed change does not affect competition among national
securities exchanges or among members of the Exchange, but rather
between IDS and its commercial competitors.
For the reasons described above, the Exchange believes that the
proposed rule changes reflect this competitive environment.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited or received with respect to the
proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or up to 90 days (i) as the Commission may designate
if it finds such longer period to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or (ii) as to which the self-regulatory
organization consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove the proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-NYSEAMER-2020-05 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-NYSEAMER-2020-05. 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-NYSEAMER-2020-05, and should be
submitted on or before March 10, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\34\
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\34\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-03096 Filed 2-14-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P