Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change Regarding Solicitation Auction Mechanism (SAM) Fees, Qualified Contingent Cross (QCC) Order Rebates, and Automated Improvement Mechanism (AIM) Fees, 11406-11413 [2020-03919]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 39 / Thursday, February 27, 2020 / Notices
Section 17A of the Act 55 and the rules
and regulations promulgated
thereunder.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 56 that
proposed rule change SR–FICC–2019–
007, be, and hereby is, approved.57
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.58
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–03914 Filed 2–26–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–88264; File No. SR–
CboeEDGX–2020–009]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of a
Proposed Rule Change Regarding
Solicitation Auction Mechanism (SAM)
Fees, Qualified Contingent Cross
(QCC) Order Rebates, and Automated
Improvement Mechanism (AIM) Fees
February 21, 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 February
11, 2020, Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.
(the ‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘EDGX’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the ‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared by the 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 EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘EDGX Options’’)
proposes to amend its Fee Schedule in
connection with its recently adopted
Solicitation Auction Mechanism
(‘‘SAM’’ or ‘‘SAM Auction’’) and with
Qualified Contingent Cross (‘‘QCC’’)
orders, as well as make certain
clarifications in connection with AIM
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55 15
U.S.C. 78q–1.
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
57 In approving the proposed rule change, the
Commission considered the proposals’ impact on
efficiency, competition, and capital formation. 15
U.S.C. 78c(f).
58 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
56 15
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fees. The text of the proposed rule
change is provided in Exhibit 5.
The text of the proposed rule change
is also available on the Exchange’s
website (https://markets.cboe.com/us/
options/regulation/rule_filings/edgx/),
at the Exchange’s Office of the
Secretary, and at the Commission’s
Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to modify the
Fee Schedule to adopt fees for its
recently adopted SAM Auction and
tiered pricing in connection with certain
QCC and SAM orders, effective
February 3, 2020.
The Exchange first notes that it
operates in a highly competitive market
in which market participants can
readily direct order flow to competing
venues if they deem fee levels at a
particular venue to be excessive or
incentives to be insufficient. More
specifically, the Exchange is only one of
16 options venues to which market
participants may direct their order flow.
Based on publicly available information,
no single options exchange has more
than 22% of the market share.3 Thus, in
such a low-concentrated and highly
competitive market, no single options
exchange possesses significant pricing
power in the execution of option order
flow. The Exchange believes that the
ever-shifting market share among the
exchanges from month to month
demonstrates that market participants
can shift order flow, or discontinue use
of certain categories of products, in
response to fee changes. Accordingly,
competitive forces constrain the
Exchange’s transaction fees, and market
3 See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Options Market
Monthly Volume Summary (January 22, 2020),
available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/
market_statistics/.
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participants can readily trade on
competing venues if they deem pricing
levels at those other venues to be more
favorable. In response to the competitive
environment, the Exchange offers
specific rates and credits in its fees
schedule, like that of other options
exchanges’ fees schedules, which the
Exchange believes provide incentive to
Members to increase order flow of
certain qualifying orders.
SAM Overview
SAM is the Exchange’s recently
adopted solicited order mechanism for
larger-sized orders.4 By way of
background, SAM will provide an
additional method for market
participants to effect orders in a price
improvement auction for larger-sized
orders. SAM includes functionality in
which a Member (an ‘‘Initiating
Member’’) may electronically submit for
execution an order it represents as agent
on behalf of a customer,5 broker dealer,
or any other person or entity (‘‘Agency
Order’’) 6 against any other order it
represents as agent (an ‘‘Initiating
Order’’, or ‘‘Contra Order’’), provided it
submits the Agency Order for electronic
execution into the SAM Auction
pursuant to Rule 21.21 (SAM Auction
for simple orders) or Rule 21.22 (SAM
Auction for complex orders). The
Exchange may designate any class of
options traded on EDGX Options as
eligible for SAM. The Exchange notes
that all Users, other than the Initiating
Member, may submit responses to a
SAM Auction (‘‘Response Orders’’).
SAM Auctions take into account SAM
Responses as well as contra interest
resting on the EDGX Options Book at
the conclusion of the SAM Auction
(‘‘unrelated orders’’), regardless of
whether such unrelated orders were
already present on the Book when the
Agency Order was received by the
Exchange or were received after the
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87692
(December 9, 2019), 84 FR 68231 (December 13,
2019) (Order Approving a Proposed Rule Change To
Adopt Rule 21.23 (Complex Solicitation Auction
Mechanism)) (SR–CboeEDGX–2019–064).
5 The term ‘‘Priority Customer’’ means any person
or entity that is not: (A) A broker or dealer in
securities; or (B) a Professional. The term ‘‘Priority
Customer Order’’ means an order for the account of
a Priority Customer. See Rule 16.1(a)(45). A
‘‘Professional’’ is any person or entity that: (A) Is
not a broker or dealer in securities; and (B) places
more than 390 orders in listed options per day on
average during a calendar month for its own
beneficial account(s). All Professional orders shall
be appropriately marked by Options Members. See
Rule 16.1(a)(46).
6 The Agency Order must be for at least the
minimum size designated by the Exchange (which
may not be less than 500 standard option contracts
or 5,000 mini-option contracts). The Initiating
Member must designate each Agency Order as allor-none (‘‘AON’’). See Rule 21.21(a)(3).
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Exchange commenced the SAM
Auction. If contracts remain from one or
more unrelated orders at the time the
Auction ends, they are considered for
participation in the SAM order
allocation process.
SAM Definitions
In connection with the proposed
SAM-related fees, the Exchange
proposes to adopt definitions necessary
for SAM pricing. First, the Exchange
proposes to adopt the terms ‘‘SAM’’ and
‘‘SAM Auction’’ to refer to the
Solicitation Auction Mechanism.
Second, the Exchange proposes to adopt
the term ‘‘SAM Agency Order’’, defined
as an order represented as agent by a
Member on behalf of another party and
submitted to SAM for potential price
improvement pursuant to Rule 21.21
and Rule 21.23. Third, the Exchange
proposes to adopt the terms ‘‘SAM
Contra Order’’ or ‘‘Initiating Order’’,
defined as an order submitted by a
Member entering a SAM Agency Order
for execution within SAM that will
potentially execute against the SAM
Agency Order pursuant to Rule 21.21
and 21.23. Finally, the Exchange
proposes to adopt the term ‘‘SAM
Response Order’’, to include any order
submitted in response to and
specifically designated to participate in
a SAM Auction as well as unrelated
orders that are received by the Exchange
after a SAM Auction has begun.
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AIM Clarifications
The Exchange also proposes to update
the term ‘‘AIM Responder’’ order
throughout in the Fee Schedule to
provide instead for ‘‘AIM Response’’
orders, as this is more consistent with
the term used in Rule 5.37(c)(5), which
governs Automatic Improvement
Mechanism (‘‘AIM’ [sic] or ‘‘AIM
Auction’’) Responses, as well as add
‘‘Rule 21.22’’ (Complex AIM) under the
definitions of ‘‘AIM Agency Order’’ and
‘‘AIM Contra Order’’ or ‘‘Initiating
Order’’, in order to clarify that these
currently include orders submitted into
Complex AIM.
SAM Pricing
The Exchange proposes to adopt six
new fee codes in connection with SAM
into the Fee Codes and Associated Fees
table of the Fee Schedule. The Exchange
proposes to adopt two fee codes for
SAM Agency Orders, fee code SA and
fee code SC, which will apply to NonCustomer and Customer Agency orders,
respectively. As proposed, fee code SA
will apply to Non-Customer SAM
Agency Orders that are executed in a
SAM Auction and will be assessed a fee
of $0.20 per contract. Fee code SC will
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apply to Customer SAM Agency Orders
that are executed in a SAM Auction and
will be assessed no charge. Next, the
Exchange proposes to adopt two fee
codes for SAM Contra Orders, fee code
SF and fee code SB, which will apply
to Non-Customer and Customer Contra
orders, respectively. Fee code SF will
apply to Non-Customer SAM Contra
Orders executed in an SAM Auction
and will be assessed a fee of $0.20. Fee
code SB will apply to Customer SAM
Agency Orders executed in a SAM
Auction and will be assessed no charge.
The Exchange also proposes to adopt fee
codes SD and SE, which will apply to
SAM Response Orders in Penny Pilot
securities and Non-Penny Pilot
securities, respectively. As proposed,
fee code SD will apply to a SAM
Response Order that is executed in a
SAM Auction in a Penny Pilot security,
and will be assessed a fee of $0.50.
Likewise, fee code SE will apply to a
SAM Response Order that is executed in
a SAM Auction in a Non-Penny Pilot
security, and will be assessed a fee of
$1.05.
In addition, the Exchange proposes to
amend footnote 6, which currently
summarizes pricing for another
Exchange auction mechanism, AIM,
which is substantially similar to that of
the SAM Auction. Particularly, the
Exchange proposes to rename footnote 6
from ‘‘Automated Improvement
Mechanism (‘‘AIM’’) Pricing’’ to ‘‘AIM
and SAM Mechanism Pricing’’ and
incorporate a summary of SAM fees and
rebates into the existing structure of the
table that currently summarizes AIM
fees and rebates for the same types of
auction-related orders. This pricing
table is intended to provide clarity to
Members by summarizing in table form
the different types of orders submitted
into an auction and their corresponding
fee codes and rates. The Exchange also
proposes to amend the table footnote
appended to the single asterisk, which
currently states that when an AIM
Agency Order executes against one or
more resting orders that were already on
the Exchange’s order book when the
AIM Agency Order was received by the
Exchange, the AIM Agency Order and
the resting order(s) will receive the
Standard Fee Rates. The proposed
change would remove specific
references to AIM, thereby amending it
to refer to only ‘‘Agency Order’’, as this
footnote is applicable in the same
manner to both AIM and SAM Agency
Orders 7 and makes it clear that for
SAM, like AIM currently, the fee
7 The Exchange notes that Customer-to-Customer
Immediate Cross is not applicable to SAM
Auctions.
PO 00000
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11407
structure for such an execution would
not be altered and instead the Exchange
would charge a fee or provide a rebate
to each side of the transaction as if it
were a transaction occurring on the
Exchange’s order book pursuant to the
Exchange’s normal order handling
methodology and not in in an auction.
This is distinguished from SAM
Response Orders (like current AIM
Response Orders), which, as defined,
include unrelated orders that are
received by the Exchange after a SAM
Auction has begun and which would be
charged or provided rebates based
specifically on SAM pricing.
SAM Agency Orders and Designated
Give Up
Footnote 5 of the Fee Schedule
currently specifies that when an order is
submitted with a Designated Give Up, as
defined in Rule 21.12(b)(1), the
applicable rebates for such orders when
executed on the Exchange (yielding fee
code BC, NC, PC, QA or QM) are
provided to the Member who routed the
order to the Exchange. Pursuant to Rule
21.12, which specifies the process to
submit an order with a Designated Give
Up, a Member acting as an options
routing firm on behalf of one or more
other Exchange Members (a ‘‘Routing
Firm’’) is able to route orders to the
Exchange and to immediately give up
the party (a party other than the Routing
Firm itself or the Routing Firm’s own
clearing firm) who accepts and clears
any resulting transaction. Because the
Routing Firm is responsible for the
decision to route the order to the
Exchange, the Exchange currently
provides such Member with the rebate
when orders that yield fee code BC, NC,
PC, QA or CM are executed. In
connection with the adoption of SAMrelated fees, the Exchange proposes to
add new fee code SC (SAM Agency
Customer Order) to the lead-in sentence
of footnote 5 and to append footnote 5
to fee code SC in the Fee Codes and
Associated Fees table of the Fee
Schedule.
SAM Agency Orders and Break-Up
Credits
In addition, the Exchange also
proposes to amend the provision
regarding Break-Up Credits located
under the AIM and SAM Pricing table
in footnote 6. Specifically, it proposes to
rename this provision from ‘‘AIM BreakUp Credits’’ to ‘‘AIM and SAM BreakUp Credits’’ and remove references to
‘‘AIM’’ within the provision as it will
apply to agency orders submitted in
either the AIM (as it does currently) or
SAM auction that trades with a response
order in the respective auction. As
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proposed, the Break-Up Credits will
apply to the Member that submitted an
Agency Order (i.e., either an AIM or
SAM Agency Order), including a
Member who routed an order to the
Exchange with a Designated Give Up,
when the Agency Order trades with a
Response Order (i.e., an AIM or SAM
Response Order, as applicable). The
Exchange proposes to adopt a Break-Up
Credit for qualifying SAM Agency Order
of $0.15 per contract in both Penny Pilot
and Non-Penny Pilot securities.
Marketing Fees and SAM Pricing
The Fee Schedule currently contains
a section entitled ‘‘Marketing Fees’’,
which specifies that marketing fees are
charged to all Market Makers who are
counterparties to a trade with a
Customer, with certain exceptions,
including the exclusion of AIM Pricing
set forth in footnote 6. The Exchange
proposes to extend the marketing
exclusion to orders subject to SAM
Pricing set forth in footnote 6.
QCC Initiator/Solicitation Rebate Tiers
The Exchange currently provides
functionality that allows for participants
on the Exchange to submit QCC orders
to the Exchange and its Fee Schedule
correspondingly provides for various fee
codes and rates in connection with
different types of QCC orders.
Specifically, footnote 7 currently
provides for the QCC Initiator Rebate
and provides a rebate of $0.05 to a
Member that submits a QCC Agency
Order to the Exchange when at least one
side of the transaction is of NonCustomer capacity. The QCC Initiator
Rebate is currently provided to all
Members submitting QCC Agency
Orders, yielding either fee code QA 8 or
fee code QM, 9 to the Exchange,
including a Member who routed an
order to the Exchange with a Designated
Give Up (as discussed above). Also as
discussed in detail above, the Exchange
operates in a highly-competitive market
by which competitive forces constrain
the Exchange’s transaction fees and
market participants can readily trade on
competing venues if they deem pricing
levels at those other venues to be more
favorable. In response to the competitive
environment, the Exchange offers,
among other things, tiered pricing
which provides Members opportunities
to qualify for higher rebates or reduced
fees where certain volume criteria and
thresholds are met. Tiered pricing
provides an incremental incentive for
The Exchange proposes to modify the
QCC Initiator Rebate, as well as provide
a ‘‘Solicitation’’ Rebate, to apply per tier
of incrementally increasing volume
thresholds. First, the Exchange notes
that it proposes to add the fee codes
appended to SAM Agency orders, SA
and SC, to the list of fee codes (i.e., QA
and QM 10) currently eligible for the
rebate provided under footnote 7.
Accordingly, it also proposes to update
the name of the table under footnote 7
and the description therein to refer to
the ‘‘QCC Initiator/Solicitation Rebate’’.
Next, the Exchange proposes to remove
the single rebate rate of $0.05 per
contract in all securities and replace it
with six new tiers that correspond to
increasingly higher volume thresholds
and increasingly higher rebates.
Particularly, the Exchange proposes to
add: Tier 1, which will provide no
rebates for Members that submit
qualifying orders (i.e., QA, QM, SA and
SC) totaling 0 to 99,999 contracts per
month; Tier 2, which will provide a
rebate of $0.05 per contract for Members
that submit qualifying orders totaling
100,000 to 199,999 contracts per month;
Tier 3, which will provide a rebate of
$0.07 per contract for Members that
submit qualifying orders totaling
200,000 to 499,999 contracts per month;
Tier 4, which will provide a rebate of
$0.09 per contract for Members that
submit qualifying orders totaling
500,000 to 749,999 contracts per month;
Tier 5, which will provide a rebate of
$0.10 per contract for Members that
submit qualifying orders totaling
750,000 to 999,999 contracts per month;
and Tier 6, which will provide a rebate
of $0.11 per contract for Members that
submit qualifying orders totaling
1,000,000 or more contracts per month.
8 Appended to QCC Customer Agency orders and
assessed no charge.
9 Appended to QCC non-Customer Agency orders
and assessed a standard fee of $0.08.
10 QA is appended to a QCC Customer Agency
Order and assessed no charge and QM is appended
to a QCC Non-Customer Agency order and assessed
a fee of $0.08.
QCC Initiator Rebate Overview
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Members to strive for higher tier levels,
which provides increasingly higher
benefits or discounts for satisfying
increasingly more stringent criteria. For
example, the Exchange currently offers
various Customer volume tiers under
footnote 1 which provide enhanced
rebates for qualifying Customer orders
that meet certain add liquidity
thresholds, as well as eight Market
Maker volume tiers under footnote 2
which provide reduced fees for
qualifying Market Maker order that meet
certain add liquidity thresholds.
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2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6 of the Act,11 in general, and
furthers the requirements of Section
6(b)(4),12 in particular, as it is designed
to provide for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees and other charges
among its facilities and does not
unfairly discriminate between
customers, issuers, brokers or dealers.
As stated above, the Exchange
operates in a highly-competitive market
in which market participants can
readily direct order flow to competing
venues if they deem fee levels at a
particular venue to be excessive or
incentives to be insufficient. The
Exchange is only one of several options
venues to which market participants
may direct their order flow, and it
represents a small percentage of the
overall market. The proposed fee
changes reflect a competitive pricing
structure designed to incentivize market
participants to direct their order flow to
the Exchange’s price improvement
auction and/or their QCC order flow,
which the Exchange believes would
enhance market quality to the benefit of
all Members. Overall, the Exchange
believes that its proposed adoption of
fees in connection with the SAM
Auction, and volume-based tiers for
QCC and SAM Agency Orders is
consistent with Section 6(b)(4) of the
Act in that the proposed fees are
reasonable, equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory. The Exchange believes
that the proposed fees are reasonable,
equitable, and not unfairly
discriminatory in that competing
options exchanges, including the
Exchange’s affiliated options exchanges
or the Exchange itself, offer
substantially the same fees and credits
in connection with similar price
improvement auctions,13 as well as
11 15
U.S.C. 78f.
U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
13 See MIAX Options Fee Schedule, Section
1(a)(v), ‘‘MIAX Price Improvement Mechanism
(‘‘PRIME’’) Fees, which provides for comparable
rates for similar response, contra, and agency type
orders submitted into its PRIME auctions. For
example, it assesses a fee of $0.50 (Penny Classes)
and $0.99 (non-Penny Classes) for PRIME
responses, and offers a break-up credit of $0.25
(Penny Classes) and $0.60 (non-Penny Classes) for
PRIME Agency orders; NYSE American Options Fee
Schedule, Section I(G), ‘‘CUBE Auction Fees and
Credits’’, which assesses a fee of $0.50 (Penny
Classes) and $0.99 (non-Penny Classes) for CUBE
(its Customer Best Execution Auction) responses,
and offers a break-up credit of $0.25 (Penny Classes)
and $0.60 (non-Penny Classes) for PRIME Agency
orders, and an Initiating Participant Credit (akin to
an Agency Order) of $0.30 (Penny Pilot) and $0.70
(non-Penny Pilot); and Nasdaq ISE Rules, Options
7 Pricing Schedule, Section 3, which provides a
Facilitation and Solicitation Break-Up Rebate of
$0.15, the same as proposed herein. See generally
12 15
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volume-based incentives in connection
with QCC and/or Solicitation orders,14
as the Exchange now proposes.
SAM Definitions and AIM Clarifications
The Exchange believes that the
proposed SAM-related definitions are
reasonable and equitable as they are
consistent with the corresponding
Exchange Rules that govern the SAM
Auction as well as consistent, to the
extent possible, with the corresponding
AIM-related definitions currently in the
Fee Schedule. Also, the proposed
update to ‘‘AIM Response’’ orders is
reasonably designed to be more
consistent with the term used in Rule
21.19(c)(5), which governs AIM Auction
Responses.
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SAM Pricing
The Exchange’s proposal establishes
fees and rebates regarding SAM, which
promotes price improvement to the
benefit of market participants. The
Exchange believes that the adoption of
the SAM Auction on the Exchange will
encourage market participants, and in
particular liquidity providers on the
Exchange, to compete to provide
opportunities for price improvement for
large-sized orders in a competitive
auction process. The Exchange believes
that its proposal is reasonable designed
to allow the Exchange to recoup the
costs associated with implementing and
maintaining SAM while also
incentivizing its use, which benefits all
market participants. The Exchange notes
that the proposed SAM fees and pricing
structure is reasonable and equitable as
it is comparable to the fees and structure
currently in place for the same type of
orders submitted into the Exchange’s
AIM Auction (i.e., Response, Contra,
and Agency, distinguished between
Customer and Non-Customer and Penny
Pilot and Non-Penny Pilot securities). In
particular, the proposed fees and rebate
structure in relation to SAM orders are
EDGX Options Exchange Fee Schedule, ‘‘Fee Codes
and Associated Fees’’, which provide the same or
comparable rates for corresponding response,
contra, and agency orders in AIM; see also ‘‘AIM
Break-Up Credits’’, which offers a credit of $0.25 for
AIM Agency Orders in Penny Pilot securities and
$0.60 for such orders in non-Penny Pilot securities.
14 See Nasdaq ISE Rules, Options 7 Pricing
Schedule, Section 6A, ‘‘QCC and Solicitation
Rebate’’, which currently assesses the same rebate
amounts for the same increasing increments of
contracts, as proposed herein, for qualified QCC
and/or other solicited crossing orders; and Nasdaq
Phlx Rules, Options 7 Pricing Schedule, Section 4,
‘‘QCC Rebate Schedule’’, which currently assesses
the same rebate amounts for the same increasing
increments of contracts, as proposed herein, for
qualified QCC orders. See also Cboe Options Fees
Schedule, ‘‘QCC Rate Table’’, which assesses a flat
credit of $0.10 per contract (which is on the higherend of the range of tiered rebates proposed herein)
for QCC Initiators.
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designed to promote order flow through
SAM and, in particular, to attract
Customer liquidity, which benefits all
market participants by providing
additional trading opportunities at
improved prices. This, in turn, attracts
increased large-order flow from
liquidity providers which facilitates
tighter spreads and potentially triggers a
corresponding increase in order flow
originating from other market
participants.
The Exchange further notes that,
generally, the proposed fee and rebate
schedule is reasonably designed because
it is within the range of fees and rebates
assessed by other exchanges employing
similar fee structures for price
improvement mechanisms.15 Other
competing exchanges offer different fees
and rebates for agency orders, contraside orders, and responder orders to the
auction in a manner similar to the
proposal. Other competing exchanges
also charge different rates for
transactions in their price improvement
mechanisms for customers versus their
non-customers in a manner similar to
the proposal. The Exchange believes the
fee and rebate schedule as proposed
continues to reflect differentiation
among different market participants
typically found in options fee and rebate
schedules.
In particular, the Exchange believes
that charging market participants, other
than Customers, a higher effective rate
for certain SAM transactions is
reasonable, equitable, and not unfairly
discriminatory because these types of
market participants are more
sophisticated and have higher levels of
order flow activity and system usage.
Facilitating this level of trading activity
requires a greater amount of Exchange
system resources than that of
Customers, and thus, generates greater
ongoing operational costs for the
Exchange. Therefore, the Exchange
believes that the proposed fees for SAM
Non-Customer Agency and Contra
Orders are reasonably designed to
provide associated revenue to allow the
Exchange to promote and maintain SAM
and continue to enhance its services,
which is beneficial to all market
participants. Also, the Exchange
believes that the proposed fee for SAM
Non-Customer Agency and Contra
orders ($0.20 per contract) is reasonable
because it encourages participation in
SAM by offering a rate that is equivalent
to or better than most other price
improvement auctions offered by other
15 See
PO 00000
supra note 12.
Frm 00080
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11409
options exchanges as well as the
Exchange itself.16
The Exchange believes that the SAM
Customer Agency and Contra Orders are
reasonable because Customer volume is
important as it attracts continuous
liquidity, including from Market Makers
to the Exchange, which benefits all
market participants by providing more
trading opportunities. An increase in
Market Maker activity, in turn, may
facilitate tighter spreads, which may
cause an additional corresponding
increase in order flow from other market
participants, contributing to increased
price discovery and a more robust
marketplace. The Exchange also notes
that the options industry has a long
history of providing preferential pricing
to Customer orders in order to
incentivize increased, and important,
Customer order flow through a fee and
rebate schedule in order to attract
professional liquidity providers. The
Exchange’s current Fee Schedule
currently does so in many places,
particularly in relation to its similar
auction, AIM, as do the fees structures
in relation to auctions of multiple other
exchanges.17 Indeed, the proposed new
fees and rebates for SAM are generally
intended to encourage greater Customer
trade volume to the Exchange in line
with industry practice.
Moreover, the Exchange believes that
assessing no charge on SAM Customer
Agency and Contra Orders and assessing
a fee of $0.20 for SAM Non-Customer
Agency and Contra Orders is equitable
and not unfairly discriminatory. First,
the Exchange notes that the respective
fees will apply the same to all similarly
situated participants. Second, the
Exchange again notes that not assessing
a fee on SAM Customer orders while
assessing a fee on SAM Non-Customer
orders is in line with an industry
practice intended to increase in
Customer order flow in order to attract
greater volume and liquidity and
provide for tighter spreads and more
trading opportunities at improve prices
to the benefit of all market participants.
Regarding the proposed fees for SAM
Response Orders, the Exchange believes
16 See e.g. MIAX Options Fee Schedule, Section
1(a)(v), ‘‘MIAX Price Improvement Mechanism
(‘‘PRIME’’) Fees, which provides that PRIME
Customer Agency orders are also free of charge and
PRIME Non-Customer Agency orders are assessed a
higher fee of $0.30, see also Cboe Options Fees
Schedule, ‘‘Rate Table—All Products Excluding
Underlying Symbol List A (34)(13)’’, which also
assesses a fee of $0.20 for Non-Customer Agency
orders submitted into its AIM and SAM auctions;
and EDGX Options Fee Schedule, ‘‘Fee Codes and
Associated Fees’’, which also assesses a fee of $0.20
for Non-Customer Contra orders submitted into its
AIM auction, which is substantially similar to the
SAM auction.
17 See supra note 12.
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that assessing a fee of $0.50 per contract
for orders in Penny Pilot Securities and
a fee of $1.05 per contract for orders in
Non-Penny Pilot Securities is reasonable
because this associated revenue will
also contribute to the Exchange’s
maintenance and enhancement of SAM.
Similar to that described above, the
proposed fees in connection with SAM
Response Orders are also reasonable as
they are similar to, or within the range
of, fees and rebates assessed by other
exchanges employing similar fee
structures for price improvement
mechanisms, and are identical to the
fees currently assessed by the Exchange
for comparable AIM Response Orders.18
Other competing exchanges offer
different fees and rebates for agency
orders, contra-side order, and
responders to the auction in a manner
similar to the proposal. Further, the
proposed fee for such orders is equitable
and not unfairly discriminatory because
it will apply the same rates to all
participants’ SAM Response orders and
will vary only based on whether the
security is a Penny Pilot Security or a
Non-Penny Pilot Security.
The Exchange further believes its
proposal represents a reasonable and
equitable allocation of dues and fees in
that the proposal would treat an
unrelated order, as well as a SAM
Agency Order that executes against such
order, differently depending on whether
the unrelated order was already resting
on the Exchange’s order book at the time
the SAM Agency Order was received or
was received after the SAM Auction had
begun. The Exchange believes that this
proposal is reasonable, equitable, and
not unfairly discriminatory as the Fee
Schedule currently provides that
unrelated orders and Agency Orders in
the AIM Auction (which, as noted, is
substantially similar to the SAM
Auction) will be treated in the same
manner that is being proposed for
unrelated and Agency Orders in a SAM
Auction. As proposed, an unrelated
order would be considered a SAM
Responder Order if received after the
SAM Auction had commenced. As a
result, both the SAM Agency Order
executing against such order and such
order itself would be assessed fees and
provided rebates according to the
proposed SAM pricing. The Exchange
believes this is a reasonable and
equitable allocation of dues and fees,
and is not unreasonably discriminatory,
because it ensures that market
participants are treated similarly with
respect to their executions against SAM
Agency Orders. To do otherwise, to the
extent fees are higher pursuant to SAM
18 See
supra note 12.
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pricing than under the Exchange’s
Standard Fee Rates, would potentially
incentivize a market participant that
wished to participate in an auction to
nonetheless avoid sending orders to the
Exchange that are not targeted towards
the auction and instead send orders to
the Exchange’s order book generally,
knowing that such orders would still be
considered in the auction. In contrast, as
proposed, to the extent an unrelated
order was already present on the
Exchange’s order book when a SAM
Agency Order is received, such
unrelated order, if executed in an
Auction, as well as the SAM Agency
Order against which it trades would be
charged a fee or provided a rebate as if
the transaction occurred on the
Exchange’s order book pursuant to the
Exchange’s normal order handling
methodology and not in SAM. The
Exchange similarly believes this is a
reasonable and equitable allocation of
dues and fees, and is not unreasonably
discriminatory, because it will ensure
that the participant that had established
position on the Exchange’s order book
first, the unrelated order, is not
impacted with respect to applicable fees
or rebates despite the later arrival of a
SAM Agency Order that commences an
Auction.
SAM Agency Orders and Designated
Give Up
The Exchange believes that the
proposal to add new fee code SC to the
lead-in sentence of footnote 5 and to
append footnote 5 to fee code SC is a
reasonable and equitable allocation of
fees and dues and is not unreasonably
discriminatory because, as is currently
the case pursuant to footnote 5 and Rule
21.12(b)(1), the proposal simply makes
clear that a firm acting as a Routing
Firm that routes SAM Agency Orders to
the Exchange will be provided
applicable rebates, including any SAM
Break-Up Credits, based on the Routing
Firm’s decision to route the order to the
Exchange.
SAM Agency Orders and Break-Up
Credits
With respect to the proposal to adopt
SAM-related Break-Up Credits under
footnote 6, the Exchange believes this is
reasonable because it encourages use of
SAM and because Break-Up Credits are
currently applied in the same manner to
similar AIM Agency Orders.
Specifically, the Exchange believes that
the proposed Break-Up Credits for SAM
Agency Orders would encourage
increased Agency Order flow to SAM
Auctions, thereby potentially increasing
the initiation of and volume executed
through SAM Auctions. Additional
PO 00000
Frm 00081
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Sfmt 4703
auction order flow provides market
participants with additional trading
opportunities at improved prices. The
Exchange also believes that the
proposed SAM Break-Up Credits of
$0.15 for both a Penny Pilot Security
and a Non-Penny Pilot Security are
reasonable and equitable as this credit is
in line with a corresponding break-up
fee for a price improvement auction
offered by another options exchange.19
Also, the proposed SAM Break-Up
Credits are not unreasonably
discriminatory because such credits are
equally available to all Members
submitting SAM Agency Orders to the
Exchange. In addition, the Exchange
believes that it is reasonable and
equitable to update the language in the
Break-Up Credit section of footnote 6, to
make clear that a Routing Firm will be
provided any applicable SAM or AIM
Break-Up Credits.
Marketing Fees and SAM Pricing
The Exchange believes its proposal to
expand the exclusions listed in the
marketing fees section to also exclude
orders subject to SAM Pricing set forth
in footnote 6 is reasonable and equitable
because the rates for Market Makers for
orders subject to SAM Pricing are
allocated as an all-inclusive rate (i.e.,
the same SAM ‘‘Non-Customer’’ rate
applies to Market Makers as it would a
proprietary firm or other liquidity
provider) but would increase such rates
to a level higher than that paid by other
Non-Customer participants if Marketing
Fees were also assessed on Market
Makers’ SAM transactions. The
Exchange believes that it is reasonable
and equitable to waive the marketing fee
as it applies to Market Maker orders
subject to SAM pricing, and
consequently assess the same fees for
Market Maker and all other NonCustomer orders in SAM, because the
application of marketing fees to Market
Maker orders in SAM may discourage
Market Maker participation in the SAM
Auction. The Exchange recognizes that
Market Makers are the primary liquidity
providers in the options markets, and
particularly, during auctions. Thus, the
Exchange believes Market Makers
provide the most accurate prices
reflective of the true state of the market
and are primarily responsible for
encouraging more aggressive quoting
and superior price improvement during
an auction. By waiving the marketing
fees for such orders the Exchange aims
to incentivize Market Maker
participation in SAM. The Exchange
does not believe that this proposal is
19 See supra note 12, Nasdaq ISE Facilitation and
Solicitation Break-Up Rebate.
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unfairly discriminatory as the marketing
fees currently apply only to Market
Makers and the proposed change is
uniformly excluding Market Maker
orders subject to SAM pricing from the
marketing fees, thus, uniformly
applying the proposed SAM rates for
Non-Customer orders to all NonCustomers. Also, the Exchange notes
that Market Maker executions subject to
the similar AIM price improvement
auction are currently excluded from
marketing fees, as are market makers on
another options exchange that provides
for similar marketing fees and auction
pricing.20
QCC Initiator/Solicitation Rebate Tiers
The Exchange believes the proposed
adoption of a Solicitation Rebate, and
modification of the QCC Initiator
Rebate, to apply by tiers are reasonable
because they provide opportunities for
Members to receive higher rebates by
providing for incrementally increasing
volume-based criteria they can reach
for. The Exchange again notes that
volume-based incentives and discounts
have been widely adopted by other
exchanges,21 and believes that the
proposed tiers are reasonable, equitable
and non-discriminatory because they
are open to all Members on an equal
basis.
The Exchange believes the proposed
QCC Initiator/Solicitation Rebate tiers
are reasonable means to encourage
Members to increase their liquidity on
the Exchange, particularly in connection
with additional QCC and/or Solicitation
Agency Order flow to the Exchange in
order to benefit from the proposed
enhanced rebates. The Exchange
believes that the proposed tiers are
reasonable in that they provide an
ample number of opportunities for a
Member to receive an enhanced rebate
for qualifying orders. The proposed tiers
provide an incremental incentive for
Members to strive for the highest tier
levels, which provide increasingly
higher rebates for incrementally more
QCC Initiator/Solicitation volume
achieved, which the Exchange believes
is a reasonably designed incentive for
Members to grow their QCC Initiator
and/or Solicitation order flow to receive
the enhanced rebates. The Exchange
notes that it currently experiences little
to no QCC volume on the Exchange, and
therefore believes that all Members are
similarly situated and incentivized to
achieve the proposed tiers upon the
20 See MIAX Options Fee Schedule, Section 1(b),
‘‘Marketing Fees’’, which provides that the
exchange will not assess a marketing fee to market
makers for agency orders, as well as other orders,
executed in the exchange’s PRIME auction.
21 See supra note 13.
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implementation of such tiers. The
Exchange additionally notes that, if a
Member does not reach a tier between
Tiers 2 and 6, the Member will still
receive no charge on qualifying orders
submitted (per Tier 1). The Exchange
believes that incentivizing greater QCC
Initiator and/or Solicitation order flow
would provide more opportunities for
participation in QCC trades or in the
SAM Auction, thus increasing
opportunities for price improvement.
The Exchange also notes that any
overall increased liquidity that may
result from the proposed tier incentives
benefits all investors by offering
additional flexibility for all investors to
enjoy cost savings, supporting the
quality of price discovery, promoting
market transparency and improving
investor protection. The Exchange also
believes that proposed enhanced rebates
are reasonable based on the difficulty of
satisfying each proposed tiers’ volume
criteria and ensures the proposed
rebates and thresholds appropriately
reflect the incremental difficulty to
achieve each ascending tier. The
proposed enhanced rebate and volume
amounts are the same on other options
exchanges that provide tiered rebates or
credits for QCC and/or solicitation
orders.22 The Exchange believes that the
proposal represents an equitable
allocation of fees and is not unfairly
discriminatory because it applies
uniformly to all Members that chose to
submit QCC Agency Orders or a SAM
Agency Orders, and each has a
reasonable opportunity to satisfy any of
the proposed tiers’ criteria, which, as
stated, the Exchange believes is
reasonably designed to be incrementally
more difficult per ascending tier.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. Rather, as
discussed above, the Exchange believes
that the proposed change would
encourage the submission of additional
order flow to a public exchange, thereby
promoting market depth, execution
incentives and enhanced execution
opportunities, as well as price discovery
and transparency for all Members. As a
result, the Exchange believes that the
proposed change furthers the
Commission’s goal in adopting
Regulation NMS of fostering
competition among orders, which
22 See supra note 13, Nasdaq ISE QCC and
Solicitation Rebate; and Nasdaq Phlx QCC Rebate
Schedule.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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11411
promotes ‘‘more efficient pricing of
individual stocks for all types of orders,
large and small.’’
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change does not impose
any burden on intramarket competition
that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed change to adopt SAM pricing
would not impose any burden on
intramarket competition, but rather,
serves to increase intramarket
competition by incentivizing members
to direct their orders, and, in particular,
Customer orders, to the Exchange’s
SAM Auction, in turn providing for
more opportunities to compete at
improved prices. The proposed SAMrelated fees and Break-Up Credits will
apply uniformly to all Members that
submit such qualifying orders (e.g., all
Members have the opportunity to
choose to submit a SAM Response order
and all Members’ SAM Response orders
will be assessed the same fee according
to the proposed rates). To the extent that
there is a differentiation between
proposed fees assessed to Customers as
opposed to other market participants,
the Exchange believes that this is
appropriate because preferential pricing
to Customers is a long-standing options
industry practice to incentivize
increased Customer order flow through
a fee and rebate schedule in order to
attract professional liquidity providers.
Indeed, the proposed fee changes serve
to enhance Customer volume on the
Exchange because Customer volume
continues to attract liquidity, including
Market Maker activity, by providing
more trading opportunities. As stated,
increased Market Maker activity may
facilitate tighter spreads potentially
triggering an additional corresponding
increase in order flow from other market
participants and contributing to
increased price discovery and overall
enhancing quality of the market. The
Exchange also notes that the options
industry has a long history of providing
preferential pricing to Customers orders
in order. The Exchange’s current Fee
Schedule currently provides preferential
pricing to Customer orders in many
places, particularly in relation to its
similar auction, AIM, as do the fees
structures in relation to auctions of
multiple other exchanges.23
Further, the Exchange believes that
the proposed fees and rebates generally
for participation in the SAM Auction
will not impose a burden on intramarket
competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act because the
23 See
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supra note 12.
27FEN1
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proposed rates are based on the total
cost for participants to transact as
respondents to the Auction as compared
to the cost for participants to engage in
non-Auction electronic transactions on
the Exchange.
In addition to this, the Exchange notes
that the proposed exclusion of
marketing fees for orders subject to SAM
pricing will not impose a burden on
intramarket competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act because the
waiver of the marketing fee as it applies
to Market Maker orders subject to SAM
pricing will ensure that pricing for all
Non-Customer SAM orders will be the
same for Market Makers and all other
Non-Customers, thus, encouraging
Market Maker participation in the SAM
Auction, an important source of price
discovery and price improvement
during an auction.
Finally, the Exchange believes that
the proposed QCC Initiator/Solicitation
Rebate does not impose any burden on
intramarket competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act as it applies
uniformly to all market participants that
choose to submit qualifying orders. As
stated, the tiers represent a reasonable
ascension of criteria difficulty and
greater rebates, and at the very least, if
a Member submits a qualifying order
they will still be assessed no charge (per
Tier 1).
Next, the Exchange believes the
proposed rule change does not impose
any burden on intermarket competition
that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
As previously discussed, the Exchange
operates in a highly competitive market.
Members have numerous alternative
venues they may participate on and
direct their order flow, including 15
other options exchanges. Additionally,
the Exchange represents a small
percentage of the overall market. Based
on publicly available information, no
single options exchange has more than
22% of the market share.24 Therefore,
no exchange possesses significant
pricing power in the execution of order
flow. Indeed, participants can readily
choose to send their orders to other
exchanges and off-exchange venues if
they deem fee levels at those other
venues to be more favorable. As noted
above, the Exchange believes that the
proposed pricing for the SAM Auction
is comparable to that of other exchanges
offering similar electronic price
improvement mechanisms, and the
Exchange believes that, based on general
industry practice and experience, the
price-improving benefits offered by an
auction justify and offset the transaction
costs associated with such auction [sic]
The Exchange again notes that the
proposed pricing and volume ranges are
identical to that of other options
exchanges for QCC initiator orders and/
or solicitation orders.25 Moreover, 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, also, 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.’’ The
fact that this market is competitive has
also long been recognized by the courts.
In NetCoalition v. Securities and
Exchange Commission, the D.C. Circuit
stated as follows: ‘‘[n]o one disputes
that competition for order flow is
‘fierce.’ . . . As the SEC explained, ‘[i]n
the U.S. national market system, buyers
and sellers of securities, and the brokerdealers that act as their order-routing
agents, have a wide range of choices of
where to route orders for execution’;
[and] ‘no exchange can afford to take its
market share percentages for granted’
because ‘no exchange possesses a
monopoly, regulatory or otherwise, in
the execution of order flow from broker
dealers’. . . .’’. Accordingly, the
Exchange does not believe its proposed
fee change imposes any burden on
competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange neither solicited nor
received comments on the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)
of the Act 26 and paragraph (f) of Rule
19b–4 27 thereunder. At any time within
60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
25 See
supra note 13.
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
27 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f).
26 15
24 See
supra note 3.
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action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission will institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
CboeEDGX–2020–009 on the subject
line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CboeEDGX–2020–009. 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
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to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CboeEDGX–2020–009 and
should be submitted on or before March
19, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.28
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–03919 Filed 2–26–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–88266; File No. SR–FICC–
2020–801]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Fixed
Income Clearing Corporation; Notice of
Filing of Advance Notice To Amend the
Mortgage-Backed Securities Division
Stress Testing Methodology
February 24, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
entitled the Payment, Clearing, and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4(n)(1)(i) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’),2 notice is
hereby given that on January 21, 2020,
Fixed Income Clearing Corporation
(‘‘FICC’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
the advance notice SR–FICC–2020–801
(‘‘Advance Notice’’) as described in
Items I, II and III below, which Items
have been prepared by the clearing
agency. The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comments on the
Advance Notice from interested
persons.
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This Advance Notice consists of
modifications to the Mortgage-Backed
Securities Division’s (‘‘MBSD’’) stress
testing methodology.3 FICC is proposing
to (1) use vendor-supplied historical
risk factor 4 time series data (‘‘Historical
28 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i).
3 Capitalized terms used herein and not otherwise
defined shall have the meaning assigned to such
terms in the FICC MBSD Clearing Rules (the
‘‘MBSD Rules’’), available at www.dtcc.com/legal/
rules-and-procedures.aspx.
4 Generally, the term ‘‘risk factor’’ (or ‘‘risk
driver’’) means an attribute, characteristic, variable
or other concrete determinant that influences the
risk profile of a system, entity, or financial asset.
Risk factors may be causes of risk or merely
correlated with risk.
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Data’’) in MBSD’s stress testing
methodology’s historical stress scenario
selection (‘‘Scenario Selection’’)
process, (2) change the look-back period
for identifying historical stress scenarios
for the Scenario Selection process, (3)
use vendor-supplied security-level risk
sensitivity data 5 (‘‘Security-Level Data’’)
and Historical Data in the stress testing
methodology’s calculation of stress
profits and losses (‘‘P&L’’) for Clearing
Members’ portfolios,6 and (4) use a
back-up calculation in the event the
vendor fails to provide the SecurityLevel Data and Historical Data (such
failure, a ‘‘Vendor Data Disruption’’), as
described in greater detail below.7 The
5 The term ‘‘sensitivity’’ means the percentage
value change of a security given each risk factor
change.
6 The proposed change to use Security-Level Data
would be applicable to MBSD’s stress testing
methodology for historical and hypothetical
scenarios. The proposed change to use Historical
Data would be applicable only for historical
scenarios. FICC currently receives the SecurityLevel Data and Historical Data from a vendor. FICC
currently utilizes this Security-Level Data and
Historical Data in MBSD’s value-at-risk (‘‘VaR’’)
model, which calculates the VaR Charge component
in each Clearing Member’s margin (referred to in
the MBSD Rules as Required Fund Deposit). See
MBSD Rule 1, Definitions—VaR Charge, supra note
3. FICC is proposing to use this same data set in
MBSD’s Scenario Selection process, and stress P&L
calculation of each Clearing Member’s portfolio.
7 FICC would receive the following data from the
vendor:
• Interest rate (including 11 tenors) measures the
sensitivity of a price change to changes in interest
rates;
• convexity measures the degree of curvature in
the price/yield relationship of key interest rates
(convexity would not be utilized in the scenarios
selection process; it would only be utilized in the
stress P&L calculation);
• mortgage option adjusted spread is the yield
spread that is added to a benchmark yield curve to
discount a TBA’s cash flows to match its market
price, which takes into account a credit premium
and the option-like feature of mortgage-backedsecurities due to prepayment;
• interest rate volatility reflects the implied
volatility observed from the swaption market to
estimate fluctuations in interest rates; and
• mortgage basis captures the basis risk between
the prevailing mortgage rate and a blended U.S.
Treasury rate, which impacts borrowers’ refinance
incentives and the model prepayment assumptions.
The Historical Data would include (1) interest
rate, (2) mortgage option adjusted spread, (3)
interest rate volatility, and (4) mortgage basis.
The Security Level Data would include (1)
sensitivity to interest rates, (2) convexity, (3)
sensitivity to mortgage option adjusted spread, (4)
sensitivity to interest rate volatility, and (5)
sensitivity to mortgage basis.
FICC does not believe that its current engagement
of the vendor would present a conflict of interest
because the vendor is not an existing Clearing
Member nor are any of the vendor’s affiliates
existing Clearing Members. To the extent that the
vendor or any of its affiliates applies to become a
Clearing Member, FICC will negotiate an
appropriate information barrier with the applicant
in an effort to prevent a conflict of interest from
arising. An affiliate of the vendor currently provides
an existing service to FICC; however, this
arrangement does not present a conflict of interest
PO 00000
Frm 00084
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
11413
proposed changes would not require
modifications to the MBSD Rules.
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, the
clearing agency included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the Advance Notice and discussed any
comments it received on the Advance
Notice. The text of these statements may
be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The clearing agency has
prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A and B below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Advance Notice
Received From Members, Participants,
or Others
FICC has not received or solicited any
written comments relating to this
proposal. FICC will notify the
Commission of any written comments
received by FICC.
(B) Advance Notice Filed Pursuant to
Section 806(e) of the Clearing
Supervision Act
I. Nature of the Proposed Change
A. Background
Stress testing is an essential
component of FICC’s risk management.
FICC uses stress testing to help ensure
that it is collecting adequate prefunded
financial resources 8 to cover MBSD’s
potential losses resulting from the
default of a Clearing Member and such
Clearing Member’s affiliated family (that
are also Clearing Members) (‘‘Affiliated
Family’’) under multiple extreme but
plausible market stress conditions
(sometimes referred to as ‘‘stress
scenarios’’).9 As set forth in the
Framework, the development of FICC’s
because the existing agreement between FICC and
the vendor, and the existing agreement between
FICC and the vendor’s affiliate, each contains
provisions that limit the sharing of confidential
information.
8 MBSD’s prefunded financial resources consist of
Required Fund Deposits collected from Clearing
Members in the form of cash and/or Eligible
Clearing Fund Securities, with any such Eligible
Clearing Fund Securities being subject to a haircut.
See MBSD Rules 1 and 4, supra note 3.
9 Consistent with the Clearing Agency Stress
Testing Framework (Market Risk) (‘‘Framework’’),
FICC aggregates each Clearing Member’s stress
deficiency within such Clearing Member’s
applicable Affiliated Family because FICC assumes
that all Affiliated Families will simultaneously
default, and the gains and losses of different legal
entities within an Affiliated Family would not
offset each other. The Framework is described in
rule filing SR–FICC–2017–009. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 82368 (December 19,
2017), 82 FR 61082 (December 26, 2017)
(‘‘Framework Approval Order’’).
E:\FR\FM\27FEN1.SGM
27FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 39 (Thursday, February 27, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11406-11413]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-03919]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-88264; File No. SR-CboeEDGX-2020-009]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change
Regarding Solicitation Auction Mechanism (SAM) Fees, Qualified
Contingent Cross (QCC) Order Rebates, and Automated Improvement
Mechanism (AIM) Fees
February 21, 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 February 11, 2020, Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange''
or ``EDGX'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the
``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I, II,
and III below, which Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The
Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or ``EDGX Options'')
proposes to amend its Fee Schedule in connection with its recently
adopted Solicitation Auction Mechanism (``SAM'' or ``SAM Auction'') and
with Qualified Contingent Cross (``QCC'') orders, as well as make
certain clarifications in connection with AIM fees. The text of the
proposed rule change is provided in Exhibit 5.
The text of the proposed rule change is also available on the
Exchange's website (https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/regulation/rule_filings/edgx/), at the Exchange's Office of the Secretary, and at
the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to modify the Fee Schedule to adopt fees for
its recently adopted SAM Auction and tiered pricing in connection with
certain QCC and SAM orders, effective February 3, 2020.
The Exchange first notes that it operates in a highly competitive
market in which market participants can readily direct order flow to
competing venues if they deem fee levels at a particular venue to be
excessive or incentives to be insufficient. More specifically, the
Exchange is only one of 16 options venues to which market participants
may direct their order flow. Based on publicly available information,
no single options exchange has more than 22% of the market share.\3\
Thus, in such a low-concentrated and highly competitive market, no
single options exchange possesses significant pricing power in the
execution of option order flow. The Exchange believes that the ever-
shifting market share among the exchanges from month to month
demonstrates that market participants can shift order flow, or
discontinue use of certain categories of products, in response to fee
changes. Accordingly, competitive forces constrain the Exchange's
transaction fees, and market participants can readily trade on
competing venues if they deem pricing levels at those other venues to
be more favorable. In response to the competitive environment, the
Exchange offers specific rates and credits in its fees schedule, like
that of other options exchanges' fees schedules, which the Exchange
believes provide incentive to Members to increase order flow of certain
qualifying orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Options Market Monthly Volume
Summary (January 22, 2020), available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/market_statistics/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SAM Overview
SAM is the Exchange's recently adopted solicited order mechanism
for larger-sized orders.\4\ By way of background, SAM will provide an
additional method for market participants to effect orders in a price
improvement auction for larger-sized orders. SAM includes functionality
in which a Member (an ``Initiating Member'') may electronically submit
for execution an order it represents as agent on behalf of a
customer,\5\ broker dealer, or any other person or entity (``Agency
Order'') \6\ against any other order it represents as agent (an
``Initiating Order'', or ``Contra Order''), provided it submits the
Agency Order for electronic execution into the SAM Auction pursuant to
Rule 21.21 (SAM Auction for simple orders) or Rule 21.22 (SAM Auction
for complex orders). The Exchange may designate any class of options
traded on EDGX Options as eligible for SAM. The Exchange notes that all
Users, other than the Initiating Member, may submit responses to a SAM
Auction (``Response Orders''). SAM Auctions take into account SAM
Responses as well as contra interest resting on the EDGX Options Book
at the conclusion of the SAM Auction (``unrelated orders''), regardless
of whether such unrelated orders were already present on the Book when
the Agency Order was received by the Exchange or were received after
the
[[Page 11407]]
Exchange commenced the SAM Auction. If contracts remain from one or
more unrelated orders at the time the Auction ends, they are considered
for participation in the SAM order allocation process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87692 (December 9,
2019), 84 FR 68231 (December 13, 2019) (Order Approving a Proposed
Rule Change To Adopt Rule 21.23 (Complex Solicitation Auction
Mechanism)) (SR-CboeEDGX-2019-064).
\5\ The term ``Priority Customer'' means any person or entity
that is not: (A) A broker or dealer in securities; or (B) a
Professional. The term ``Priority Customer Order'' means an order
for the account of a Priority Customer. See Rule 16.1(a)(45). A
``Professional'' is any person or entity that: (A) Is not a broker
or dealer in securities; and (B) places more than 390 orders in
listed options per day on average during a calendar month for its
own beneficial account(s). All Professional orders shall be
appropriately marked by Options Members. See Rule 16.1(a)(46).
\6\ The Agency Order must be for at least the minimum size
designated by the Exchange (which may not be less than 500 standard
option contracts or 5,000 mini-option contracts). The Initiating
Member must designate each Agency Order as all-or-none (``AON'').
See Rule 21.21(a)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SAM Definitions
In connection with the proposed SAM-related fees, the Exchange
proposes to adopt definitions necessary for SAM pricing. First, the
Exchange proposes to adopt the terms ``SAM'' and ``SAM Auction'' to
refer to the Solicitation Auction Mechanism. Second, the Exchange
proposes to adopt the term ``SAM Agency Order'', defined as an order
represented as agent by a Member on behalf of another party and
submitted to SAM for potential price improvement pursuant to Rule 21.21
and Rule 21.23. Third, the Exchange proposes to adopt the terms ``SAM
Contra Order'' or ``Initiating Order'', defined as an order submitted
by a Member entering a SAM Agency Order for execution within SAM that
will potentially execute against the SAM Agency Order pursuant to Rule
21.21 and 21.23. Finally, the Exchange proposes to adopt the term ``SAM
Response Order'', to include any order submitted in response to and
specifically designated to participate in a SAM Auction as well as
unrelated orders that are received by the Exchange after a SAM Auction
has begun.
AIM Clarifications
The Exchange also proposes to update the term ``AIM Responder''
order throughout in the Fee Schedule to provide instead for ``AIM
Response'' orders, as this is more consistent with the term used in
Rule 5.37(c)(5), which governs Automatic Improvement Mechanism (``AIM'
[sic] or ``AIM Auction'') Responses, as well as add ``Rule 21.22''
(Complex AIM) under the definitions of ``AIM Agency Order'' and ``AIM
Contra Order'' or ``Initiating Order'', in order to clarify that these
currently include orders submitted into Complex AIM.
SAM Pricing
The Exchange proposes to adopt six new fee codes in connection with
SAM into the Fee Codes and Associated Fees table of the Fee Schedule.
The Exchange proposes to adopt two fee codes for SAM Agency Orders, fee
code SA and fee code SC, which will apply to Non-Customer and Customer
Agency orders, respectively. As proposed, fee code SA will apply to
Non-Customer SAM Agency Orders that are executed in a SAM Auction and
will be assessed a fee of $0.20 per contract. Fee code SC will apply to
Customer SAM Agency Orders that are executed in a SAM Auction and will
be assessed no charge. Next, the Exchange proposes to adopt two fee
codes for SAM Contra Orders, fee code SF and fee code SB, which will
apply to Non-Customer and Customer Contra orders, respectively. Fee
code SF will apply to Non-Customer SAM Contra Orders executed in an SAM
Auction and will be assessed a fee of $0.20. Fee code SB will apply to
Customer SAM Agency Orders executed in a SAM Auction and will be
assessed no charge. The Exchange also proposes to adopt fee codes SD
and SE, which will apply to SAM Response Orders in Penny Pilot
securities and Non-Penny Pilot securities, respectively. As proposed,
fee code SD will apply to a SAM Response Order that is executed in a
SAM Auction in a Penny Pilot security, and will be assessed a fee of
$0.50. Likewise, fee code SE will apply to a SAM Response Order that is
executed in a SAM Auction in a Non-Penny Pilot security, and will be
assessed a fee of $1.05.
In addition, the Exchange proposes to amend footnote 6, which
currently summarizes pricing for another Exchange auction mechanism,
AIM, which is substantially similar to that of the SAM Auction.
Particularly, the Exchange proposes to rename footnote 6 from
``Automated Improvement Mechanism (``AIM'') Pricing'' to ``AIM and SAM
Mechanism Pricing'' and incorporate a summary of SAM fees and rebates
into the existing structure of the table that currently summarizes AIM
fees and rebates for the same types of auction-related orders. This
pricing table is intended to provide clarity to Members by summarizing
in table form the different types of orders submitted into an auction
and their corresponding fee codes and rates. The Exchange also proposes
to amend the table footnote appended to the single asterisk, which
currently states that when an AIM Agency Order executes against one or
more resting orders that were already on the Exchange's order book when
the AIM Agency Order was received by the Exchange, the AIM Agency Order
and the resting order(s) will receive the Standard Fee Rates. The
proposed change would remove specific references to AIM, thereby
amending it to refer to only ``Agency Order'', as this footnote is
applicable in the same manner to both AIM and SAM Agency Orders \7\ and
makes it clear that for SAM, like AIM currently, the fee structure for
such an execution would not be altered and instead the Exchange would
charge a fee or provide a rebate to each side of the transaction as if
it were a transaction occurring on the Exchange's order book pursuant
to the Exchange's normal order handling methodology and not in in an
auction. This is distinguished from SAM Response Orders (like current
AIM Response Orders), which, as defined, include unrelated orders that
are received by the Exchange after a SAM Auction has begun and which
would be charged or provided rebates based specifically on SAM pricing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The Exchange notes that Customer-to-Customer Immediate Cross
is not applicable to SAM Auctions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SAM Agency Orders and Designated Give Up
Footnote 5 of the Fee Schedule currently specifies that when an
order is submitted with a Designated Give Up, as defined in Rule
21.12(b)(1), the applicable rebates for such orders when executed on
the Exchange (yielding fee code BC, NC, PC, QA or QM) are provided to
the Member who routed the order to the Exchange. Pursuant to Rule
21.12, which specifies the process to submit an order with a Designated
Give Up, a Member acting as an options routing firm on behalf of one or
more other Exchange Members (a ``Routing Firm'') is able to route
orders to the Exchange and to immediately give up the party (a party
other than the Routing Firm itself or the Routing Firm's own clearing
firm) who accepts and clears any resulting transaction. Because the
Routing Firm is responsible for the decision to route the order to the
Exchange, the Exchange currently provides such Member with the rebate
when orders that yield fee code BC, NC, PC, QA or CM are executed. In
connection with the adoption of SAM-related fees, the Exchange proposes
to add new fee code SC (SAM Agency Customer Order) to the lead-in
sentence of footnote 5 and to append footnote 5 to fee code SC in the
Fee Codes and Associated Fees table of the Fee Schedule.
SAM Agency Orders and Break-Up Credits
In addition, the Exchange also proposes to amend the provision
regarding Break-Up Credits located under the AIM and SAM Pricing table
in footnote 6. Specifically, it proposes to rename this provision from
``AIM Break-Up Credits'' to ``AIM and SAM Break-Up Credits'' and remove
references to ``AIM'' within the provision as it will apply to agency
orders submitted in either the AIM (as it does currently) or SAM
auction that trades with a response order in the respective auction. As
[[Page 11408]]
proposed, the Break-Up Credits will apply to the Member that submitted
an Agency Order (i.e., either an AIM or SAM Agency Order), including a
Member who routed an order to the Exchange with a Designated Give Up,
when the Agency Order trades with a Response Order (i.e., an AIM or SAM
Response Order, as applicable). The Exchange proposes to adopt a Break-
Up Credit for qualifying SAM Agency Order of $0.15 per contract in both
Penny Pilot and Non-Penny Pilot securities.
Marketing Fees and SAM Pricing
The Fee Schedule currently contains a section entitled ``Marketing
Fees'', which specifies that marketing fees are charged to all Market
Makers who are counterparties to a trade with a Customer, with certain
exceptions, including the exclusion of AIM Pricing set forth in
footnote 6. The Exchange proposes to extend the marketing exclusion to
orders subject to SAM Pricing set forth in footnote 6.
QCC Initiator Rebate Overview
The Exchange currently provides functionality that allows for
participants on the Exchange to submit QCC orders to the Exchange and
its Fee Schedule correspondingly provides for various fee codes and
rates in connection with different types of QCC orders. Specifically,
footnote 7 currently provides for the QCC Initiator Rebate and provides
a rebate of $0.05 to a Member that submits a QCC Agency Order to the
Exchange when at least one side of the transaction is of Non-Customer
capacity. The QCC Initiator Rebate is currently provided to all Members
submitting QCC Agency Orders, yielding either fee code QA \8\ or fee
code QM, \9\ to the Exchange, including a Member who routed an order to
the Exchange with a Designated Give Up (as discussed above). Also as
discussed in detail above, the Exchange operates in a highly-
competitive market by which competitive forces constrain the Exchange's
transaction fees and market participants can readily trade on competing
venues if they deem pricing levels at those other venues to be more
favorable. In response to the competitive environment, the Exchange
offers, among other things, tiered pricing which provides Members
opportunities to qualify for higher rebates or reduced fees where
certain volume criteria and thresholds are met. Tiered pricing provides
an incremental incentive for Members to strive for higher tier levels,
which provides increasingly higher benefits or discounts for satisfying
increasingly more stringent criteria. For example, the Exchange
currently offers various Customer volume tiers under footnote 1 which
provide enhanced rebates for qualifying Customer orders that meet
certain add liquidity thresholds, as well as eight Market Maker volume
tiers under footnote 2 which provide reduced fees for qualifying Market
Maker order that meet certain add liquidity thresholds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Appended to QCC Customer Agency orders and assessed no
charge.
\9\ Appended to QCC non-Customer Agency orders and assessed a
standard fee of $0.08.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
QCC Initiator/Solicitation Rebate Tiers
The Exchange proposes to modify the QCC Initiator Rebate, as well
as provide a ``Solicitation'' Rebate, to apply per tier of
incrementally increasing volume thresholds. First, the Exchange notes
that it proposes to add the fee codes appended to SAM Agency orders, SA
and SC, to the list of fee codes (i.e., QA and QM \10\) currently
eligible for the rebate provided under footnote 7. Accordingly, it also
proposes to update the name of the table under footnote 7 and the
description therein to refer to the ``QCC Initiator/Solicitation
Rebate''. Next, the Exchange proposes to remove the single rebate rate
of $0.05 per contract in all securities and replace it with six new
tiers that correspond to increasingly higher volume thresholds and
increasingly higher rebates. Particularly, the Exchange proposes to
add: Tier 1, which will provide no rebates for Members that submit
qualifying orders (i.e., QA, QM, SA and SC) totaling 0 to 99,999
contracts per month; Tier 2, which will provide a rebate of $0.05 per
contract for Members that submit qualifying orders totaling 100,000 to
199,999 contracts per month; Tier 3, which will provide a rebate of
$0.07 per contract for Members that submit qualifying orders totaling
200,000 to 499,999 contracts per month; Tier 4, which will provide a
rebate of $0.09 per contract for Members that submit qualifying orders
totaling 500,000 to 749,999 contracts per month; Tier 5, which will
provide a rebate of $0.10 per contract for Members that submit
qualifying orders totaling 750,000 to 999,999 contracts per month; and
Tier 6, which will provide a rebate of $0.11 per contract for Members
that submit qualifying orders totaling 1,000,000 or more contracts per
month.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ QA is appended to a QCC Customer Agency Order and assessed
no charge and QM is appended to a QCC Non-Customer Agency order and
assessed a fee of $0.08.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the proposed rule change is consistent
with Section 6 of the Act,\11\ in general, and furthers the
requirements of Section 6(b)(4),\12\ in particular, as it is designed
to provide for the equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees and
other charges among its facilities and does not unfairly discriminate
between customers, issuers, brokers or dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ 15 U.S.C. 78f.
\12\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated above, the Exchange operates in a highly-competitive
market in which market participants can readily direct order flow to
competing venues if they deem fee levels at a particular venue to be
excessive or incentives to be insufficient. The Exchange is only one of
several options venues to which market participants may direct their
order flow, and it represents a small percentage of the overall market.
The proposed fee changes reflect a competitive pricing structure
designed to incentivize market participants to direct their order flow
to the Exchange's price improvement auction and/or their QCC order
flow, which the Exchange believes would enhance market quality to the
benefit of all Members. Overall, the Exchange believes that its
proposed adoption of fees in connection with the SAM Auction, and
volume-based tiers for QCC and SAM Agency Orders is consistent with
Section 6(b)(4) of the Act in that the proposed fees are reasonable,
equitable and not unfairly discriminatory. The Exchange believes that
the proposed fees are reasonable, equitable, and not unfairly
discriminatory in that competing options exchanges, including the
Exchange's affiliated options exchanges or the Exchange itself, offer
substantially the same fees and credits in connection with similar
price improvement auctions,\13\ as well as
[[Page 11409]]
volume-based incentives in connection with QCC and/or Solicitation
orders,\14\ as the Exchange now proposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See MIAX Options Fee Schedule, Section 1(a)(v), ``MIAX
Price Improvement Mechanism (``PRIME'') Fees, which provides for
comparable rates for similar response, contra, and agency type
orders submitted into its PRIME auctions. For example, it assesses a
fee of $0.50 (Penny Classes) and $0.99 (non-Penny Classes) for PRIME
responses, and offers a break-up credit of $0.25 (Penny Classes) and
$0.60 (non-Penny Classes) for PRIME Agency orders; NYSE American
Options Fee Schedule, Section I(G), ``CUBE Auction Fees and
Credits'', which assesses a fee of $0.50 (Penny Classes) and $0.99
(non-Penny Classes) for CUBE (its Customer Best Execution Auction)
responses, and offers a break-up credit of $0.25 (Penny Classes) and
$0.60 (non-Penny Classes) for PRIME Agency orders, and an Initiating
Participant Credit (akin to an Agency Order) of $0.30 (Penny Pilot)
and $0.70 (non-Penny Pilot); and Nasdaq ISE Rules, Options 7 Pricing
Schedule, Section 3, which provides a Facilitation and Solicitation
Break-Up Rebate of $0.15, the same as proposed herein. See generally
EDGX Options Exchange Fee Schedule, ``Fee Codes and Associated
Fees'', which provide the same or comparable rates for corresponding
response, contra, and agency orders in AIM; see also ``AIM Break-Up
Credits'', which offers a credit of $0.25 for AIM Agency Orders in
Penny Pilot securities and $0.60 for such orders in non-Penny Pilot
securities.
\14\ See Nasdaq ISE Rules, Options 7 Pricing Schedule, Section
6A, ``QCC and Solicitation Rebate'', which currently assesses the
same rebate amounts for the same increasing increments of contracts,
as proposed herein, for qualified QCC and/or other solicited
crossing orders; and Nasdaq Phlx Rules, Options 7 Pricing Schedule,
Section 4, ``QCC Rebate Schedule'', which currently assesses the
same rebate amounts for the same increasing increments of contracts,
as proposed herein, for qualified QCC orders. See also Cboe Options
Fees Schedule, ``QCC Rate Table'', which assesses a flat credit of
$0.10 per contract (which is on the higher-end of the range of
tiered rebates proposed herein) for QCC Initiators.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SAM Definitions and AIM Clarifications
The Exchange believes that the proposed SAM-related definitions are
reasonable and equitable as they are consistent with the corresponding
Exchange Rules that govern the SAM Auction as well as consistent, to
the extent possible, with the corresponding AIM-related definitions
currently in the Fee Schedule. Also, the proposed update to ``AIM
Response'' orders is reasonably designed to be more consistent with the
term used in Rule 21.19(c)(5), which governs AIM Auction Responses.
SAM Pricing
The Exchange's proposal establishes fees and rebates regarding SAM,
which promotes price improvement to the benefit of market participants.
The Exchange believes that the adoption of the SAM Auction on the
Exchange will encourage market participants, and in particular
liquidity providers on the Exchange, to compete to provide
opportunities for price improvement for large-sized orders in a
competitive auction process. The Exchange believes that its proposal is
reasonable designed to allow the Exchange to recoup the costs
associated with implementing and maintaining SAM while also
incentivizing its use, which benefits all market participants. The
Exchange notes that the proposed SAM fees and pricing structure is
reasonable and equitable as it is comparable to the fees and structure
currently in place for the same type of orders submitted into the
Exchange's AIM Auction (i.e., Response, Contra, and Agency,
distinguished between Customer and Non-Customer and Penny Pilot and
Non-Penny Pilot securities). In particular, the proposed fees and
rebate structure in relation to SAM orders are designed to promote
order flow through SAM and, in particular, to attract Customer
liquidity, which benefits all market participants by providing
additional trading opportunities at improved prices. This, in turn,
attracts increased large-order flow from liquidity providers which
facilitates tighter spreads and potentially triggers a corresponding
increase in order flow originating from other market participants.
The Exchange further notes that, generally, the proposed fee and
rebate schedule is reasonably designed because it is within the range
of fees and rebates assessed by other exchanges employing similar fee
structures for price improvement mechanisms.\15\ Other competing
exchanges offer different fees and rebates for agency orders, contra-
side orders, and responder orders to the auction in a manner similar to
the proposal. Other competing exchanges also charge different rates for
transactions in their price improvement mechanisms for customers versus
their non-customers in a manner similar to the proposal. The Exchange
believes the fee and rebate schedule as proposed continues to reflect
differentiation among different market participants typically found in
options fee and rebate schedules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See supra note 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In particular, the Exchange believes that charging market
participants, other than Customers, a higher effective rate for certain
SAM transactions is reasonable, equitable, and not unfairly
discriminatory because these types of market participants are more
sophisticated and have higher levels of order flow activity and system
usage. Facilitating this level of trading activity requires a greater
amount of Exchange system resources than that of Customers, and thus,
generates greater ongoing operational costs for the Exchange.
Therefore, the Exchange believes that the proposed fees for SAM Non-
Customer Agency and Contra Orders are reasonably designed to provide
associated revenue to allow the Exchange to promote and maintain SAM
and continue to enhance its services, which is beneficial to all market
participants. Also, the Exchange believes that the proposed fee for SAM
Non-Customer Agency and Contra orders ($0.20 per contract) is
reasonable because it encourages participation in SAM by offering a
rate that is equivalent to or better than most other price improvement
auctions offered by other options exchanges as well as the Exchange
itself.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See e.g. MIAX Options Fee Schedule, Section 1(a)(v), ``MIAX
Price Improvement Mechanism (``PRIME'') Fees, which provides that
PRIME Customer Agency orders are also free of charge and PRIME Non-
Customer Agency orders are assessed a higher fee of $0.30, see also
Cboe Options Fees Schedule, ``Rate Table--All Products Excluding
Underlying Symbol List A (34)(13)'', which also assesses a fee of
$0.20 for Non-Customer Agency orders submitted into its AIM and SAM
auctions; and EDGX Options Fee Schedule, ``Fee Codes and Associated
Fees'', which also assesses a fee of $0.20 for Non-Customer Contra
orders submitted into its AIM auction, which is substantially
similar to the SAM auction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that the SAM Customer Agency and Contra
Orders are reasonable because Customer volume is important as it
attracts continuous liquidity, including from Market Makers to the
Exchange, which benefits all market participants by providing more
trading opportunities. An increase in Market Maker activity, in turn,
may facilitate tighter spreads, which may cause an additional
corresponding increase in order flow from other market participants,
contributing to increased price discovery and a more robust
marketplace. The Exchange also notes that the options industry has a
long history of providing preferential pricing to Customer orders in
order to incentivize increased, and important, Customer order flow
through a fee and rebate schedule in order to attract professional
liquidity providers. The Exchange's current Fee Schedule currently does
so in many places, particularly in relation to its similar auction,
AIM, as do the fees structures in relation to auctions of multiple
other exchanges.\17\ Indeed, the proposed new fees and rebates for SAM
are generally intended to encourage greater Customer trade volume to
the Exchange in line with industry practice.
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\17\ See supra note 12.
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Moreover, the Exchange believes that assessing no charge on SAM
Customer Agency and Contra Orders and assessing a fee of $0.20 for SAM
Non-Customer Agency and Contra Orders is equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory. First, the Exchange notes that the respective fees will
apply the same to all similarly situated participants. Second, the
Exchange again notes that not assessing a fee on SAM Customer orders
while assessing a fee on SAM Non-Customer orders is in line with an
industry practice intended to increase in Customer order flow in order
to attract greater volume and liquidity and provide for tighter spreads
and more trading opportunities at improve prices to the benefit of all
market participants.
Regarding the proposed fees for SAM Response Orders, the Exchange
believes
[[Page 11410]]
that assessing a fee of $0.50 per contract for orders in Penny Pilot
Securities and a fee of $1.05 per contract for orders in Non-Penny
Pilot Securities is reasonable because this associated revenue will
also contribute to the Exchange's maintenance and enhancement of SAM.
Similar to that described above, the proposed fees in connection with
SAM Response Orders are also reasonable as they are similar to, or
within the range of, fees and rebates assessed by other exchanges
employing similar fee structures for price improvement mechanisms, and
are identical to the fees currently assessed by the Exchange for
comparable AIM Response Orders.\18\ Other competing exchanges offer
different fees and rebates for agency orders, contra-side order, and
responders to the auction in a manner similar to the proposal. Further,
the proposed fee for such orders is equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because it will apply the same rates to all
participants' SAM Response orders and will vary only based on whether
the security is a Penny Pilot Security or a Non-Penny Pilot Security.
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\18\ See supra note 12.
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The Exchange further believes its proposal represents a reasonable
and equitable allocation of dues and fees in that the proposal would
treat an unrelated order, as well as a SAM Agency Order that executes
against such order, differently depending on whether the unrelated
order was already resting on the Exchange's order book at the time the
SAM Agency Order was received or was received after the SAM Auction had
begun. The Exchange believes that this proposal is reasonable,
equitable, and not unfairly discriminatory as the Fee Schedule
currently provides that unrelated orders and Agency Orders in the AIM
Auction (which, as noted, is substantially similar to the SAM Auction)
will be treated in the same manner that is being proposed for unrelated
and Agency Orders in a SAM Auction. As proposed, an unrelated order
would be considered a SAM Responder Order if received after the SAM
Auction had commenced. As a result, both the SAM Agency Order executing
against such order and such order itself would be assessed fees and
provided rebates according to the proposed SAM pricing. The Exchange
believes this is a reasonable and equitable allocation of dues and
fees, and is not unreasonably discriminatory, because it ensures that
market participants are treated similarly with respect to their
executions against SAM Agency Orders. To do otherwise, to the extent
fees are higher pursuant to SAM pricing than under the Exchange's
Standard Fee Rates, would potentially incentivize a market participant
that wished to participate in an auction to nonetheless avoid sending
orders to the Exchange that are not targeted towards the auction and
instead send orders to the Exchange's order book generally, knowing
that such orders would still be considered in the auction. In contrast,
as proposed, to the extent an unrelated order was already present on
the Exchange's order book when a SAM Agency Order is received, such
unrelated order, if executed in an Auction, as well as the SAM Agency
Order against which it trades would be charged a fee or provided a
rebate as if the transaction occurred on the Exchange's order book
pursuant to the Exchange's normal order handling methodology and not in
SAM. The Exchange similarly believes this is a reasonable and equitable
allocation of dues and fees, and is not unreasonably discriminatory,
because it will ensure that the participant that had established
position on the Exchange's order book first, the unrelated order, is
not impacted with respect to applicable fees or rebates despite the
later arrival of a SAM Agency Order that commences an Auction.
SAM Agency Orders and Designated Give Up
The Exchange believes that the proposal to add new fee code SC to
the lead-in sentence of footnote 5 and to append footnote 5 to fee code
SC is a reasonable and equitable allocation of fees and dues and is not
unreasonably discriminatory because, as is currently the case pursuant
to footnote 5 and Rule 21.12(b)(1), the proposal simply makes clear
that a firm acting as a Routing Firm that routes SAM Agency Orders to
the Exchange will be provided applicable rebates, including any SAM
Break-Up Credits, based on the Routing Firm's decision to route the
order to the Exchange.
SAM Agency Orders and Break-Up Credits
With respect to the proposal to adopt SAM-related Break-Up Credits
under footnote 6, the Exchange believes this is reasonable because it
encourages use of SAM and because Break-Up Credits are currently
applied in the same manner to similar AIM Agency Orders. Specifically,
the Exchange believes that the proposed Break-Up Credits for SAM Agency
Orders would encourage increased Agency Order flow to SAM Auctions,
thereby potentially increasing the initiation of and volume executed
through SAM Auctions. Additional auction order flow provides market
participants with additional trading opportunities at improved prices.
The Exchange also believes that the proposed SAM Break-Up Credits of
$0.15 for both a Penny Pilot Security and a Non-Penny Pilot Security
are reasonable and equitable as this credit is in line with a
corresponding break-up fee for a price improvement auction offered by
another options exchange.\19\ Also, the proposed SAM Break-Up Credits
are not unreasonably discriminatory because such credits are equally
available to all Members submitting SAM Agency Orders to the Exchange.
In addition, the Exchange believes that it is reasonable and equitable
to update the language in the Break-Up Credit section of footnote 6, to
make clear that a Routing Firm will be provided any applicable SAM or
AIM Break-Up Credits.
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\19\ See supra note 12, Nasdaq ISE Facilitation and Solicitation
Break-Up Rebate.
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Marketing Fees and SAM Pricing
The Exchange believes its proposal to expand the exclusions listed
in the marketing fees section to also exclude orders subject to SAM
Pricing set forth in footnote 6 is reasonable and equitable because the
rates for Market Makers for orders subject to SAM Pricing are allocated
as an all-inclusive rate (i.e., the same SAM ``Non-Customer'' rate
applies to Market Makers as it would a proprietary firm or other
liquidity provider) but would increase such rates to a level higher
than that paid by other Non-Customer participants if Marketing Fees
were also assessed on Market Makers' SAM transactions. The Exchange
believes that it is reasonable and equitable to waive the marketing fee
as it applies to Market Maker orders subject to SAM pricing, and
consequently assess the same fees for Market Maker and all other Non-
Customer orders in SAM, because the application of marketing fees to
Market Maker orders in SAM may discourage Market Maker participation in
the SAM Auction. The Exchange recognizes that Market Makers are the
primary liquidity providers in the options markets, and particularly,
during auctions. Thus, the Exchange believes Market Makers provide the
most accurate prices reflective of the true state of the market and are
primarily responsible for encouraging more aggressive quoting and
superior price improvement during an auction. By waiving the marketing
fees for such orders the Exchange aims to incentivize Market Maker
participation in SAM. The Exchange does not believe that this proposal
is
[[Page 11411]]
unfairly discriminatory as the marketing fees currently apply only to
Market Makers and the proposed change is uniformly excluding Market
Maker orders subject to SAM pricing from the marketing fees, thus,
uniformly applying the proposed SAM rates for Non-Customer orders to
all Non-Customers. Also, the Exchange notes that Market Maker
executions subject to the similar AIM price improvement auction are
currently excluded from marketing fees, as are market makers on another
options exchange that provides for similar marketing fees and auction
pricing.\20\
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\20\ See MIAX Options Fee Schedule, Section 1(b), ``Marketing
Fees'', which provides that the exchange will not assess a marketing
fee to market makers for agency orders, as well as other orders,
executed in the exchange's PRIME auction.
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QCC Initiator/Solicitation Rebate Tiers
The Exchange believes the proposed adoption of a Solicitation
Rebate, and modification of the QCC Initiator Rebate, to apply by tiers
are reasonable because they provide opportunities for Members to
receive higher rebates by providing for incrementally increasing
volume-based criteria they can reach for. The Exchange again notes that
volume-based incentives and discounts have been widely adopted by other
exchanges,\21\ and believes that the proposed tiers are reasonable,
equitable and non-discriminatory because they are open to all Members
on an equal basis.
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\21\ See supra note 13.
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The Exchange believes the proposed QCC Initiator/Solicitation
Rebate tiers are reasonable means to encourage Members to increase
their liquidity on the Exchange, particularly in connection with
additional QCC and/or Solicitation Agency Order flow to the Exchange in
order to benefit from the proposed enhanced rebates. The Exchange
believes that the proposed tiers are reasonable in that they provide an
ample number of opportunities for a Member to receive an enhanced
rebate for qualifying orders. The proposed tiers provide an incremental
incentive for Members to strive for the highest tier levels, which
provide increasingly higher rebates for incrementally more QCC
Initiator/Solicitation volume achieved, which the Exchange believes is
a reasonably designed incentive for Members to grow their QCC Initiator
and/or Solicitation order flow to receive the enhanced rebates. The
Exchange notes that it currently experiences little to no QCC volume on
the Exchange, and therefore believes that all Members are similarly
situated and incentivized to achieve the proposed tiers upon the
implementation of such tiers. The Exchange additionally notes that, if
a Member does not reach a tier between Tiers 2 and 6, the Member will
still receive no charge on qualifying orders submitted (per Tier 1).
The Exchange believes that incentivizing greater QCC Initiator and/or
Solicitation order flow would provide more opportunities for
participation in QCC trades or in the SAM Auction, thus increasing
opportunities for price improvement. The Exchange also notes that any
overall increased liquidity that may result from the proposed tier
incentives benefits all investors by offering additional flexibility
for all investors to enjoy cost savings, supporting the quality of
price discovery, promoting market transparency and improving investor
protection. The Exchange also believes that proposed enhanced rebates
are reasonable based on the difficulty of satisfying each proposed
tiers' volume criteria and ensures the proposed rebates and thresholds
appropriately reflect the incremental difficulty to achieve each
ascending tier. The proposed enhanced rebate and volume amounts are the
same on other options exchanges that provide tiered rebates or credits
for QCC and/or solicitation orders.\22\ The Exchange believes that the
proposal represents an equitable allocation of fees and is not unfairly
discriminatory because it applies uniformly to all Members that chose
to submit QCC Agency Orders or a SAM Agency Orders, and each has a
reasonable opportunity to satisfy any of the proposed tiers' criteria,
which, as stated, the Exchange believes is reasonably designed to be
incrementally more difficult per ascending tier.
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\22\ See supra note 13, Nasdaq ISE QCC and Solicitation Rebate;
and Nasdaq Phlx QCC Rebate Schedule.
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B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. Rather, as discussed above,
the Exchange believes that the proposed change would encourage the
submission of additional order flow to a public exchange, thereby
promoting market depth, execution incentives and enhanced execution
opportunities, as well as price discovery and transparency for all
Members. As a result, the Exchange believes that the proposed change
furthers the Commission's goal in adopting Regulation NMS of fostering
competition among orders, which promotes ``more efficient pricing of
individual stocks for all types of orders, large and small.''
The Exchange believes that the proposed rule change does not impose
any burden on intramarket competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The Exchange
believes that the proposed change to adopt SAM pricing would not impose
any burden on intramarket competition, but rather, serves to increase
intramarket competition by incentivizing members to direct their
orders, and, in particular, Customer orders, to the Exchange's SAM
Auction, in turn providing for more opportunities to compete at
improved prices. The proposed SAM-related fees and Break-Up Credits
will apply uniformly to all Members that submit such qualifying orders
(e.g., all Members have the opportunity to choose to submit a SAM
Response order and all Members' SAM Response orders will be assessed
the same fee according to the proposed rates). To the extent that there
is a differentiation between proposed fees assessed to Customers as
opposed to other market participants, the Exchange believes that this
is appropriate because preferential pricing to Customers is a long-
standing options industry practice to incentivize increased Customer
order flow through a fee and rebate schedule in order to attract
professional liquidity providers. Indeed, the proposed fee changes
serve to enhance Customer volume on the Exchange because Customer
volume continues to attract liquidity, including Market Maker activity,
by providing more trading opportunities. As stated, increased Market
Maker activity may facilitate tighter spreads potentially triggering an
additional corresponding increase in order flow from other market
participants and contributing to increased price discovery and overall
enhancing quality of the market. The Exchange also notes that the
options industry has a long history of providing preferential pricing
to Customers orders in order. The Exchange's current Fee Schedule
currently provides preferential pricing to Customer orders in many
places, particularly in relation to its similar auction, AIM, as do the
fees structures in relation to auctions of multiple other
exchanges.\23\
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\23\ See supra note 12.
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Further, the Exchange believes that the proposed fees and rebates
generally for participation in the SAM Auction will not impose a burden
on intramarket competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act because the
[[Page 11412]]
proposed rates are based on the total cost for participants to transact
as respondents to the Auction as compared to the cost for participants
to engage in non-Auction electronic transactions on the Exchange.
In addition to this, the Exchange notes that the proposed exclusion
of marketing fees for orders subject to SAM pricing will not impose a
burden on intramarket competition that is not necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act because the waiver of the
marketing fee as it applies to Market Maker orders subject to SAM
pricing will ensure that pricing for all Non-Customer SAM orders will
be the same for Market Makers and all other Non-Customers, thus,
encouraging Market Maker participation in the SAM Auction, an important
source of price discovery and price improvement during an auction.
Finally, the Exchange believes that the proposed QCC Initiator/
Solicitation Rebate does not impose any burden on intramarket
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act as it applies uniformly to all market participants
that choose to submit qualifying orders. As stated, the tiers represent
a reasonable ascension of criteria difficulty and greater rebates, and
at the very least, if a Member submits a qualifying order they will
still be assessed no charge (per Tier 1).
Next, the Exchange believes the proposed rule change does not
impose any burden on intermarket competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. As previously
discussed, the Exchange operates in a highly competitive market.
Members have numerous alternative venues they may participate on and
direct their order flow, including 15 other options exchanges.
Additionally, the Exchange represents a small percentage of the overall
market. Based on publicly available information, no single options
exchange has more than 22% of the market share.\24\ Therefore, no
exchange possesses significant pricing power in the execution of order
flow. Indeed, participants can readily choose to send their orders to
other exchanges and off-exchange venues if they deem fee levels at
those other venues to be more favorable. As noted above, the Exchange
believes that the proposed pricing for the SAM Auction is comparable to
that of other exchanges offering similar electronic price improvement
mechanisms, and the Exchange believes that, based on general industry
practice and experience, the price-improving benefits offered by an
auction justify and offset the transaction costs associated with such
auction [sic] The Exchange again notes that the proposed pricing and
volume ranges are identical to that of other options exchanges for QCC
initiator orders and/or solicitation orders.\25\ Moreover, 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, also, 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.'' The fact that this market is
competitive has also long been recognized by the courts. In
NetCoalition v. Securities and Exchange Commission, the D.C. Circuit
stated as follows: ``[n]o one disputes that competition for order flow
is `fierce.' . . . As the SEC explained, `[i]n the U.S. national market
system, buyers and sellers of securities, and the broker-dealers that
act as their order-routing agents, have a wide range of choices of
where to route orders for execution'; [and] `no exchange can afford to
take its market share percentages for granted' because `no exchange
possesses a monopoly, regulatory or otherwise, in the execution of
order flow from broker dealers'. . . .''. Accordingly, the Exchange
does not believe its proposed fee change imposes any burden on
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act.
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\24\ See supra note 3.
\25\ See supra note 13.
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C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange neither solicited nor received comments on the
proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A) of the Act \26\ and paragraph (f) of Rule 19b-4 \27\
thereunder. At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed
rule change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. If the Commission
takes such action, the Commission will institute proceedings to
determine whether the proposed rule change should be approved or
disapproved.
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\26\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\27\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f).
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IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-CboeEDGX-2020-009 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-CboeEDGX-2020-009. 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
[[Page 11413]]
to make available publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number
SR-CboeEDGX-2020-009 and should be submitted on or before March 19,
2020.
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\28\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\28\
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-03919 Filed 2-26-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P