Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend Its Fees Schedule in Connection With Migration, 42042-42063 [2020-14972]
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42042
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 134 / Monday, July 13, 2020 / Notices
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CboeEDGA–2020–020 and
should be submitted on or before
August 3, 2020.
IV. Commission’s Findings and Order
Granting Accelerated Approval of
Proposed Rule Change
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The Commission finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the requirements of the Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to a national securities
exchange.17 In particular, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section
6(b)(5) of the Act,18 which requires that
the rules of an exchange be designed to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments and to
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest. The
Commission also believes that the
proposal is consistent with Sections
6(b)(1) and 6(b)(6) of the Act 19 which
require that the rules of an exchange
enforce compliance with, and provide
appropriate discipline for, violations of
Commission and Exchange rules.
Finally, the Commission finds that the
proposal is consistent with the public
interest, the protection of investors, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes
of the Act, as required by Rule 19d–
1(c)(2) under the Act,20 which governs
minor rule violation plans.
As stated above, the Exchange
proposes to add the CAT Compliance
Rules to the list of minor rule violations
in Rule 8.15 to be consistent with the
approach FINRA has taken for minor
violations of its corresponding CAT
17 In approving this proposed rule change, the
Commission has considered the proposed rule’s
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
18 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
19 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(1) and 78f(b)(6).
20 17 CFR 240.19d–1(c)(2).
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Compliance Rules.21 The Commission
has already approved FINRA’s treatment
of CAT Compliance Rules violations
when it approved the addition of CAT
Compliance Rules to FINRA’s MRVP.22
As noted in that order, and similarly
herein, the Commission believes that
Exchange’s treatment of CAT
Compliance Rules violations as part of
its MRVP provides a reasonable means
of addressing violations that do not rise
to the level of requiring formal
disciplinary proceedings, while
providing greater flexibility in handling
certain violations. However, the
Commission expects that, as with
FINRA, the Exchange will continue to
conduct surveillance with due diligence
and make determinations based on its
findings, on a case-by-case basis,
regarding whether a sanction under the
rule is appropriate, or whether a
violation requires formal disciplinary
action. Accordingly, the Commission
believes the proposal raises no novel or
significant issues.
For the same reasons discussed above,
the Commission finds good cause,
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,23 for approving the proposed rule
change prior to the thirtieth day after
the date of publication of the notice of
the filing thereof in the Federal
Register. The proposal merely adds the
CAT Compliance Rules to the
Exchange’s MRVP and harmonizes its
application with FINRA’s application of
CAT Compliance Rules under its own
MRVP. Accordingly, the Commission
believes that a full notice-and-comment
period is not necessary before approving
the proposal.
V. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 24 and Rule
19d–1(c)(2) thereunder,25 that the
proposed rule change (SR–CboeEDGA–
2020–020) be, and hereby is, approved
on an accelerated basis.
21 As discussed above, the Exchange has entered
into a Rule 17d–2 Plan and an RSA with FINRA
with respect to the CAT Compliance Rules. The
Commission notes that, unless relieved by the
Commission of its responsibility, as may be the case
under the Rule 17d–2 Plan, the Exchange continues
to bear the responsibility for self-regulatory conduct
and liability for self-regulatory failures, not the selfregulatory organization retained to perform
regulatory functions on the Exchange’s behalf
pursuant to an RSA. See Securities Exchange
Release No. 61419 (January 26, 2010), 75 FR 5157
(February 1, 2010) (SR–BATS–2009–031), note 93
and accompanying text.
22 See supra note 7.
23 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
24 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
25 17 CFR 240.19d–1(c)(2).
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For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.26
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–14967 Filed 7–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–89239; File No. SR–CBOE–
2020–064]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed
Rule Change To Amend Its Fees
Schedule in Connection With Migration
July 7, 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 July 2,
2020, Cboe Exchange, Inc. (the
‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘Cboe Options’’) 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 the Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe Exchange, Inc. (the ‘‘Exchange’’
or ‘‘Cboe Options’’) proposes to amend
its Fees Schedule in connection with
migration. The text of the proposed rule
change is provided in Exhibit 5.3
26 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 The Exchange notes that subsequent to the
Original Filing that proposed these changes on
October 1 and 2, 2019 (SR–CBOE–2019–077 and
SR–CBOE–2019–082) and subsequent to the Second
Proposed Rule Change and Third Proposed Rule
Change Filings that proposed these changes on
November 29, 2019 (SR–CBOE–2019–111) and
January 28, 2020 (SR–CBOE–2020–005), the
Exchange submitted SR–CBOE–2020–021 which
adopted Footnote 12. Footnote 12 governs pricing
changes in the event the Exchange trading floor
becomes inoperable and is appended to the MarketMaker Tier Appointment Fees and Floor Broker
Trading Permit Sliding Scales tables. Additionally,
subsequent to the Fourth Proposed Rule Change
filed on March 27, 2020 (SR–CBOE–2020–028), the
Exchange submitted SR–CBOE–2020–044, which
appended Footnotes 41 to the Market maker Tier
Appointment Fees table and the Floor Broker
Trading Surcharge. Lastly, subsequent to the
Exchange’s Fifth Proposed Rule Change filed on
May 22, 2020 (SR–CBOE–2020–48), the Exchange
submitted (1) SR–CBOE–2020–058, which adopted
new Footnote 24, appended Footnote 24 in the
Market-Maker Tier Appointment Fees table and
1 15
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The text of the proposed rule change
is also available on the Exchange’s
website (https://www.cboe.com/
AboutCBOE/
CBOELegalRegulatoryHome.aspx), 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
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1. Purpose
In 2016, the Exchange’s parent
company, Cboe Global Markets, Inc.
(formerly named CBOE Holdings, Inc.)
(‘‘Cboe Global’’), which is also the
parent company of Cboe C2 Exchange,
Inc. (‘‘C2’’), acquired Cboe EDGA
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘EDGA’’), Cboe EDGX
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘EDGX’’ or ‘‘EDGX
Options’’), Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc.
(‘‘BZX’’ or ‘‘BZX Options’’), and Cboe
BYX Exchange, Inc. (‘‘BYX’’ and,
together with Cboe Options, C2, EDGX,
EDGA, and BZX, the ‘‘Affiliated
Exchanges’’). The Cboe Affiliated
Exchanges recently aligned certain
system functionality, including with
respect to connectivity, retaining only
intended differences between the
Affiliated Exchanges, in the context of a
technology migration. The Exchange
migrated its trading platform to the
same system used by the Affiliated
Exchanges, which the Exchange
completed on October 7, 2019 (the
‘‘migration’’). As a result of this
migration, the Exchange’s pre-migration
connectivity architecture was rendered
obsolete, and as such, the Exchange now
offers new functionality, including new
logical connectivity, and therefore
Floor Trading Permit Sliding Scales Table, as well
as added language to the Floor Broker ADV
Discount Table and (2) SR–CBOE–2020–061 which
added further language in Footnote 24. The
additions proposed by filings SR–CBOE–2020–
021,SR–CBOE–2020–044, SR–CBOE–2020–058 and
SR–CBOE–2020–061 are double underlined in
Exhibit 5A.
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proposes to adopt corresponding fees.4
In determining the proposed fee
changes, the Exchange assessed the
impact on market participants to ensure
that the proposed fees would not create
an undue financial burden on any
market participants, including smaller
market participants. While the Exchange
has no way of predicting with certainty
the impact of the proposed changes, the
Exchange had anticipated its postmigration connectivity revenue 5 to be
approximately 1.75% lower than
connectivity revenue pre-migration.6 In
addition to providing a consistent
technology offering across the Cboe
Affiliated Exchanges, the migration also
provided market participants a latency
equalized infrastructure, improved
4 As of October 7, 2019, market participants no
longer have the ability to connect to the old
Exchange architecture.
5 Connectivity revenue post-migration includes
revenue from physical port fees (other than for
disaster recovery), Cboe Data Services Port Fee,
logical port fees, Trading Permit Fees, MarketMaker EAP Appointment Unit fees, Tier
Appointment Surcharges and Floor Broker Trading
Surcharges, less the Floor Broker ADV discounts
and discounts on BOE Bulk Ports via the Affiliate
Volume Plan and the Market-Maker Access Credit
program.
6 For February 2020, the Exchange’s connectivity
revenue was approximately 2.5% higher than
connectivity revenue pre-migration. For purposes of
a fair comparison of the Exchange’s initial
projection of post-migration connectivity revenue to
realized post-migration revenue connectivity, the
Exchange excluded from the February 2020
calculation revenue from a Trading Permit Holder
who became a Market-Maker post October 7, 2019,
a Trading Permit Holder that grew it’s footprint on
the Exchange significantly, and revenue derived
from incremental usage in light of the extreme
volatility and volume experienced in February, as
such circumstances were not otherwise anticipated
or incorporated into the Exchange’s original
projection. As noted, the Exchange had no way of
predicting with certainty the impact of the
proposed changes, nor control over choices market
participants ultimately decided to make. The
Exchange notes connectivity revenue was higher
than anticipated in part due to (1) a higher number
of 10 Gb Physical Ports being maintained by TPHs
than expected (although 34% of Trading Permit
Holders maintained the same number of 10 Gb
Physical and 44% reduced the amount of 10 Gb
Physical Ports maintained), (2) a higher quantity of
BOE/FIX Logical Ports being purchased than
predicted, and (3) a significantly higher quantity of
the optional Drop, GRP, Multicast PITCH/Top Spin
Server Ports and Purge Ports being purchased than
predicted. For April 2020, the Exchange’s
connectivity revenue was approximately 21.97%
less than connectivity revenue pre-migration using
the same calculation. For May 2020, the Exchange’s
connectivity revenue was approximately 22.32%
less than connectivity revenue pre-migration using
the same calculation. The Exchange notes that due
to the closure of its trading floor on March 16, 2020
through June 15, 2020, it adopted a number of
corresponding temporary pricing changes,
including waiving floor Trading Permit fees. See
Cboe Options Fees Schedule. The Exchange also
notes that it provided the dollar amounts of the
Exchange’s monthly connectivity revenue to the
Securities and Exchange Commission (the
‘‘Commission’’) for the months of February–May
2020 with a confidential treatment request.
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system performance, and increased
sustained order and quote per second
capacity, as discussed more fully below.
Accordingly, in connection with the
migration and in order to more closely
align the Exchange’s fee structure with
that of its Affiliated Exchanges, the
Exchange intends to update and
simplify its fee structure with respect to
access and connectivity and adopt new
access and connectivity fees.
The Exchange initially filed the
proposed fee changes on October 1,
2019 (SR–CBOE–2019–077) (the
‘‘Original Filing’’).7 The Commission
received only one comment letter on the
Original Filing, six days after the
comment period deadline ended.8 On
November 29, 2019, the Exchange
withdrew the Original Filing and
submitted SR–CBOE–2019–111
(‘‘Second Proposed Rule Change’’).9
Among other things, the Second
Proposed Rule Change was filed in
response to, and addressed, the
Commission’s request for inclusion of
the following information: Clarity as to
what revenue streams are included in
the Exchange’s calculation of
‘‘connectivity’’ revenue; an update on
post-migration connectivity revenue; 10
further information regarding the
Exchange’s new latency equalized
infrastructure including additional
detail regarding the benefits of such
structure; clarity on how the Cboe Data
Services Port fee is applied; data
regarding the number of market
participants that connect directly versus
indirectly and the volume attributed to
each; enhanced discussion regarding
products that compete with exclusively
listed products; an update on whether
any market participant terminated their
direct connectivity or membership postmigration (and whether it was because
of the fee changes); and generally
provide an update on various
projections made in the filing, including
how many ports market participants
purchased post-migration, how many
Trading Permit Holders were paying
higher or lower fees, and how many
7 On business date October 2, 2019, due to a
technical error, the Exchange withdrew that filing
and submitted SR–CBOE–2019–082. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 87304 (October 15, 2019),
84 FR 56240, (October 21, 2019) (‘‘Original Filing’’).
8 See Letter from Tyler Gellasch, Executive
Director, The Healthy Markets Association
(‘‘Healthy Markets’’), to Vanessa Countryman,
Secretary, Commission, dated November 18, 2019.
9 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87727
(December 12, 2019), 84 FR 69428 (December 18,
2019).
10 Many market participants were still
transitioning to the new connectivity structure at
that time and as such, the Exchange noted it did
not expect its connectivity revenue projections
regarding port purchases to be realized prior to
February 2020.
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Trading Permit Holders achieved
proposed incentive tiers. The
Commission received no comment
letters on the Second Proposed Rule
Change.
On January 28, 2020, the Exchange
withdrew the Second Proposed Rule
Change filing and submitted SR–CBOE–
2020–005 (‘‘Third Proposed Rule
Change’’).11 The Third Proposed Rule
Change was filed in response to, and
addressed, the Commission’s request for
further discussion regarding how
competitive forces constrained fees,
further detail on potential substitute
products for the Exchange’s exclusively
listed products, updated data on the
number of ports purchased postmigration and an update on the
projected post-migration connectivity
revenue.12 The Exchange also provided
updated data on how many Trading
Permit Holders connected directly
versus indirectly to the Exchange and
the volume attributed to each. The
Commission received no comment
letters on the Third Proposed Rule
Change.
On March 27, 2020, the Exchange
submitted SR–CBOE–2020–028
(‘‘Fourth Proposed Rule Change’’).13
The Fourth Proposed Rule Change was
filed in response to the Commission’s
sole request to update the connectivity
revenue collected in February 2020, as
the transition of physical ports had been
completed. The Commission received
only one comment letter on the Fourth
Proposed Rule Change.14
On May 21, 2020, the Exchange
withdrew that filing and submitted SR–
CBOE–20202–048 (‘‘Fifth Proposed Rule
Change’’).15 The Fifth Proposed Rule
11 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88164
(February 11, 2020), 85 FR 8897, (February 18,
2020).
12 Many market participants were still
transitioning to the new connectivity structure at
that time and as such, the Exchange again noted it
did not expect its connectivity revenue projections
regarding port purchases to be realized prior to
February 2020.
13 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88586
(April 8, 2020), 85 FR 20773, (April 14, 2020).
14 See Letter from Tyler Gellasch, Executive
Director, The Healthy Markets Association
(‘‘Healthy Markets’’), to Vanessa Countryman,
Secretary, Commission, dated May 5, 2020, which
letter mischaracterized the Exchange’s proposed
fees as linking market data costs to trading volume,
among other factual inaccuracies.
15 The Exchange refiled the Fifth Proposed Rule
Change on May 22, 2020 due to a technical error
(SR–CBOE–2020–048). See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 88984 (June 1, 2020), 85 FR 34670,
(June 6, 2020).
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Change was filed in response to the
Commission’s request for (1) updated
connectivity revenue for April 2020, (2)
examples of alternative products to VIX
and (3) any further evidence the
Exchange had to support its argument
that competitive forces constrain
pricing. The Commission received no
comments letters on the Fifth Proposed
Rule Change.
Today, the Exchange is withdrawing
the Fifth Proposed Rule Change and
submitting this filing (‘‘Sixth Proposed
Rule Change’’) as part of its ongoing
efforts to adopt the post-migration
connectivity fees and to respond to the
Commission’s request for another
update on the Exchange’s postmigration connectivity revenue and to
provide further data demonstrating
competition in the marketplace. The
Exchange notes the proposed fees have
been effective, and thus have been paid
by Trading Permit Holders, for
approximately nine months. The
Exchange has received no feedback from
market participants claiming the
proposed fees are unreasonable.
As discussed herein, the Exchange
believes that the proposed changes are
consistent with the Act because they are
reasonable, equitably allocated, not
unfairly discriminatory, and not an
undue burden on competition, as they
are supported by evidence (including
data and analysis) and are constrained
by significant competitive forces. The
Exchange also believes the proposed
fees are reasonable as they are in line
with the amounts assessed by other
exchanges for similar connectivity
offerings. Additionally, the Exchange
believes the proposed changes are
consistent with the SEC Division of
Trading and Markets (the ‘‘Division’’)
issued non-rulemaking fee filing
guidance titled ‘‘Staff Guidance on SRO
Rule Filings Relating to Fees’’ (‘‘Fee
Guidance’’) issued on May 21, 2020.16
16 Where possible, the Exchange is including
numerical examples and percentages, including
with respect to revenue impact. In addition, the
Exchange is providing data to the Commission in
support of its arguments herein, which is consistent
with the Fee Guidance. The non-rulemaking Fee
Guidance covers all aspects of a fee filing, but as
acknowledged by the Commission, has ‘‘no legal
force or effect’’, is ‘‘not a rule, regulation or
statement of the Commission’’, does not ‘‘alter or
amend applicable law’’ and ‘‘creates no new or
additional obligations for SROs and the
Commission.’’ See Chairman Jay Clayton, Statement
on Division of Trading and Markets Staff Fee
Guidance, June 12, 2019. The Exchange nonetheless
has extensively addressed the Fee Guidance
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Accordingly, the Exchange believes that
the Commission should find that the
Proposed Fee Increases are consistent
with the Act. The proposed rule change
is immediately effective upon filing
with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act.
Physical Connectivity
A physical port is utilized by a
Trading Permit Holder (‘‘TPH’’) or nonTPH to connect to the Exchange at the
data centers where the Exchange’s
servers are located. The Exchange
currently assesses fees for Network
Access Ports for these physical
connections to the Exchange.
Specifically, TPHs and non-TPHs can
elect to connect to Cboe Options’
trading system via either a 1 gigabit per
second (‘‘Gb’’) Network Access Port or
a 10 Gb Network Access Port. Premigration the Exchange assessed a
monthly fee of $1,500 per port for 1 Gb
Network Access Ports and a monthly fee
of $5,000 per port for 10 Gb Network
Access Ports for access to Cboe Options
primary system. Through January 31,
2020, Cboe Options market participants
will continue to have the ability to
connect to Cboe Options’ trading system
via the current Network Access Ports.
As of October 7, 2019, in connection
with the migration, TPHs and non-TPHs
may alternatively elect to connect to
Cboe Options via new latency equalized
Physical Ports.17 The new Physical Ports
similarly allow TPHs and non-TPHs the
ability to connect to the Exchange at the
data center where the Exchange’s
servers are located and TPHs and nonTPHs have the option to connect via 1
Gb or 10 Gb Physical Ports. As noted
above, both the new 1 Gb and 10 Gb
Physical Ports provide latency
equalization, meaning that each market
participant will be afforded the same
latency for 1 Gb or 10 Gb Physical Ports
in the primary data center to the
Exchange’s customer-facing switches
regardless of location of the market
participant’s cage 18 in the primary data
center relative to the Exchange’s servers.
throughout this filing and prior versions of this
filing.
17 As previously noted, market participants will
continue to have the option of connecting to Cboe
Options via a 1 Gbps or 10 Gbps Network Access
Port at the same rates as proposed, respectively.
18 A market participant’s ‘‘cage’’ is the cage
within the data center that contains a market
participant’s servers, switches and cabling.
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Conversely, the legacy Network Access
Ports are not latency equalized, meaning
the location of a market participant’s
cage within the data center may affect
latency. For example, in the legacy
system, a cage located further from the
Exchange’s servers may experience
higher latency than those located closer
to the Exchange’s servers.19 As such, the
proposed Physical Ports ensure all
market participants connected to the
Exchange via the new Physical Ports
will receive the same respective latency
for each port size and ensure that no
market participant has a latency
advantage over another market
participant within the primary data
center.20 Additionally, the new
infrastructure utilizes new and faster
switches resulting in lower overall
latency.
The Exchange proposes to assess the
following fees for any physical port,
regardless of whether the TPH or nonTPH connects via the current Network
Access Ports or the new Physical Ports.
Specifically, the Exchange proposes to
continue to assess a monthly fee of
$1,500 per port for 1 Gb Network Access
Ports and new Physical Ports and
increase the monthly fee for 10 Gb
Network Access Ports and new Physical
Ports to $7,000 per port. Physical port
fees will be prorated based on the
remaining trading days in the calendar
month. The proposed fee for 10 Gb
Physical Ports is in line with the
amounts assessed by other exchanges
for similar connections by its Affiliated
Exchanges and other Exchanges that
utilize the same connectivity
infrastructure.21
Cboe Data Services—Port Fees
The Exchange proposes to amend the
‘‘Port Fee’’ under the Cboe Data Services
(‘‘CDS’’) Fees Schedule. Currently, the
Port Fee is payable by any Customer 23
that receives data through two types of
sources; a direct connection to CDS
(‘‘direct connection’’) or through a
connection to CDS provided by an
extranet service provider (‘‘extranet
connection’’). The Port Fee applies to
receipt of any Cboe Options data feed
but is only assessed once per data port.
The Exchange proposes to amend the
19 The Exchange equalizes physical connectivity
in the data center for its primary system by taking
the farthest possible distance that a Cboe market
participant cage may exist from the Exchange’s
customer-facing switches and using that distance as
the cable length for any cross-connect.
20 The Exchange notes that 10 Gb Physical Ports
have an 11 microsecond latency advantage over 1
Gb Physical Ports. Other than this difference, there
are no other means to receive a latency advantage
as compared to another market participant in the
new connectivity structure.
21 See Cboe EDGA U.S. Equities Exchange Fee
Schedule, Physical Connectivity Fees; Cboe EDGX
U.S. Equities Exchange Fee Schedule, Physical
Connectivity Fees; Cboe BZX U.S. Equities
Exchange Fee Schedule, Physical Connectivity
Fees; Cboe BYX U.S. Equities Exchange Fee
Schedule, Physical Connectivity Fees; Cboe EDGX
Options Exchange Fee Schedule, Physical
Connectivity Fees; and Cboe BZX Options Exchange
Fee Schedule, Physical Connectivity Fees
(collectively, ‘‘Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules’’).
See e.g., Nasdaq PHLX and ISE Rules, General
Equity and Options Rules, General 8. Phlx and ISE
each charge a monthly fee of $2,500 for each 1Gb
connection, $10,000 for each 10Gb connection and
$15,000 for each 10Gb Ultra connection. See also
Nasdaq Price List—Trading Connectivity. Nasdaq
charges a monthly fee of $7,500 for each 10Gb
direct connection to Nasdaq and $2,500 for each
direct connection that supports up to 1Gb. See also
NYSE American Fee Schedule, Section V.B, and
Arca Fees and Charges, Co-Location Fees. NYSE
American and Arca each charge a monthly fee of
$5,000 for each 1Gb circuit, $14,000 for each 10Gb
circuit and $22,000 for each 10Gb LX circuit.
22 The Exchange proposes to eliminate the current
Cboe Command Connectivity Charges table in its
entirety and create and relocate such fees in a new
table in the Fees Schedule that addresses fees for
physical connectivity, including fees for the current
Network Access Ports, the new Physical Ports and
Disaster Recovery (‘‘DR’’) Ports. The Exchange notes
that it is not proposing any changes with respect to
DR Ports other than renaming the DR ports from
‘‘Network Access Ports’’ to ‘‘Physical Ports’’ to
conform to the new Physical Port terminology. The
Exchange also notes that subsequent to the initial
filings that proposed these fee changes on October
1 and 2, 2019 (SR–CBOE–2019–077 and SR–CBOE–
2019–082), the Exchange amended the proposed
port fees to waive fees for ports used for PULSe in
filing No. SR–CBOE–2019–105. The additions
proposed by filing SR–CBOE–2019–105 are double
underlined in Exhibit 5A and the deletions are
doubled bracketed in Exhibit 5A.
23 A Customer is any person, company or other
entity that, pursuant to a market data agreement
with CDS, is entitled to receive data, either directly
from CDS or through an authorized redistributor
(i.e., a Customer or extranet service provider),
whether that data is distributed externally or used
internally.
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In addition to the benefits resulting
from the new Physical Ports providing
latency equalization and new switches
(i.e., improved latency), TPHs and nonTPHs may be able to reduce their overall
physical connectivity fees. Particularly,
Network Access Port fees are assessed
for unicast (orders, quotes) and
multicast (market data) connectivity
separately. More specifically, Network
Access Ports may only receive one type
of connectivity each (thus requiring a
market participant to maintain two ports
if that market participant desires both
types of connectivity). The new Physical
Ports however, allow access to both
unicast and multicast connectivity with
a single physical connection to the
Exchange. Therefore, TPHs and nonTPHs that currently purchase two legacy
Network Access Ports for the purpose of
receiving each type of connectivity now
have the option to purchase only one
new Physical Port to accommodate their
connectivity needs, which may result in
reduced costs for physical
connectivity.22
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42045
monthly CDS Port Fee to provide that it
is payable ‘‘per source’’ used to receive
data, instead of ‘‘per data port’’. The
Exchange also proposes to increase the
fee from $500 per data port/month to
$1,000 per data source/month.24 The
Exchange notes the proposed change in
assessing the fee (i.e., per source vs per
port) and the proposed fee amount are
the same as the corresponding fee on its
affiliate C2.25
In connection with the proposed
change, the Exchange also proposes to
rename the ‘‘Port Fee’’ to ‘‘Direct Data
Access Fee’’. As the fee will be payable
‘‘per data source’’ used to receive data,
instead of ‘‘per data port’’, the Exchange
believes the proposed name is more
appropriate and that eliminating the
term ‘‘port’’ from the fee will eliminate
confusion as to how the fee is assessed.
Logical Connectivity
Next, the Exchange proposes to
amend its login fees. By way of
background, Cboe Options market
participants were able to access Cboe
Command via either a CMI or a FIX
Port, depending on how their systems
are configured. Effective October 7,
2019, market participants are no longer
able to use CMI and FIX Login IDs.
Rather, the Exchange utilizes a variety
of logical connectivity ports as further
described below. Both a legacy CMI/FIX
Login ID and logical port represent a
technical port established by the
Exchange within the Exchange’s trading
system for the delivery and/or receipt of
trading messages—i.e., orders, accepts,
cancels, transactions, etc. Market
participants that wish to connect
directly to the Exchange can request a
number of different types of ports,
including ports that support order entry,
customizable purge functionality, or the
receipt of market data. Market
participants can also choose to connect
indirectly through a number of different
third-party providers, such as another
broker-dealer or service bureau that the
Exchange permits through specialized
24 For example, under the pre-migration ‘‘per
port’’ methodology, if a TPH maintained 4 ports
that receive market data, that TPH would be
assessed $2,000 per month (i.e., $500 × 4 ports),
regardless of how many sources it used to receive
data. Under the proposed ‘‘per source’’
methodology, if a TPH maintains 4 ports that
receive market data, but receives data through only
one source (e.g., a direct connection) that TPH
would be assessed $1,000 per month (i.e., $1000 ×
1 source). If that TPH maintains 4 ports but receives
data from both a direct connection and an extranet
connection, that TPH would be assessed $2,000 per
month (i.e., $1,000 × 2 sources). Similarly, if that
TPH maintains 4 ports and receives data from two
separate extranet providers, that TPH would be
assessed $2,000 per month (i.e., $1,000 × 2).
25 See Cboe C2 Options Exchange Fee Schedule,
Cboe Data Services, LLC Fees, Section IV, Systems
Fees.
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access to the Exchange’s trading system
and that may provide additional
services or operate at a lower
mutualized cost by providing access to
multiple members. In light of the
discontinuation of CMI and FIX Login
IDs, the Exchange proposes to eliminate
the fees associated with the CMI and
Service
FIX login IDs and adopt the below
pricing for logical connectivity in its
place.
Cost per month
Logical Ports (BOE, FIX) 1 to 5 ...............................................................
Logical Ports (BOE, FIX) >5 .....................................................................
Logical Ports (Drop) .................................................................................
BOE Bulk Ports 1 to 5 ..............................................................................
BOE Bulk Ports 6 to 30 ............................................................................
BOE Bulk Ports >30 .................................................................................
Purge ports ...............................................................................................
GRP Ports ................................................................................................
Multicast PITCH/Top Spin Server Ports ...................................................
The Exchange proposes to provide for
each of the logical connectivity fees that
new requests will be prorated for the
first month of service. Cancellation
requests are billed in full month
increments as firms are required to pay
for the service for the remainder of the
month, unless the session is terminated
within the first month of service. The
Exchange notes that the proration policy
is the same on its Affiliated
Exchanges.26
Logical Ports (BOE, FIX, Drop): The
new Logical Ports represent ports
$750 per port.
$800 per port.
$750 per port.
$1,500 per port.
$2,500 per port.
$3,000 per port.
$850 per port.
$750/primary (A or C Feed).
$750/set of primary (A or C feed)
established by the Exchange within the
Exchange’s system for trading purposes.
Each Logical Port established is specific
to a TPH or non-TPH and grants that
TPH or non-TPH the ability to operate
a specific application, such as order/
quote 27 entry (FIX and BOE Logical
Ports) or drop copies (Drop Logical
Ports). Similar to CMI and FIX Login
IDs, each Logical Port will entitle a firm
to submit message traffic of up to
specified number of orders per
second.28 The Exchange proposes to
assess $750 per port per month for all
Drop Logical Ports and also assess $750
per port per month (which is the same
amount currently assessed per CMI/FIX
Login ID per month), for the first 5 FIX/
BOE Logical Ports and thereafter assess
$800 per port, per month for each
additional FIX/BOE Logical Port. While
the proposed ports will be assessed the
same monthly fees as current CMI/FIX
Login IDs (for the first five logical ports),
the proposed logical ports provide for
significantly more message traffic (and
thus cost less per message sent) as
shown below:
CMI/FIX Login Ids
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Bandwidth Limit per login ..............
Cost ................................................
Cost per Quote/Order Sent @
Limit.
BOE/FIX Logical ports
Quotes
Orders
Quotes/orders
5,000 quotes/3 sec 29 ...................
$750 each .....................................
$0.15 per quote/3 sec ..................
30 orders/sec ................................
$750 each .....................................
$25.00 per order/sec ....................
15,000 quotes/orders/3 sec.
$750/$800 each.
$0.05/$0.053 per quote/order/3
sec.
Logical Port fees will be limited to
Logical Ports in the Exchange’s primary
data center and no Logical Port fees will
be assessed for redundant secondary
data center ports. Each BOE or FIX
Logical Port will incur the logical port
fee indicated in the table above when
used to enter up to 70,000 orders per
trading day per logical port as measured
on average in a single month. Each
incremental usage of up to 70,000 per
day per logical port will incur an
additional logical port fee of $800 per
month. Incremental usage will be
determined on a monthly basis based on
the average orders per day entered in a
single month across all of a market
participant’s subscribed BOE and FIX
Logical Ports. The Exchange believes
that the pricing implications of going
beyond 70,000 orders per trading day
per Logical Port encourage users to
mitigate message traffic as necessary.
The Exchange notes that the proposed
fee of $750 per port is the same amount
assessed not only for current CMI and
FIX Login Ids, but also similar ports
available on an affiliate exchange.30
The Exchange also proposes to
provide that the fee for one FIX Logical
Port connection to PULSe and one FIX
Logical Port connection to Cboe Silexx
will be waived per TPH. The Exchange
notes that only one FIX Logical Port
connection is required to support a
firm’s access through each of PULSe and
Cboe Silexx FLEX.
BOE Bulk Logical Ports: The Exchange
also offers BOE Bulk Logical Ports,
which provide users with the ability to
submit single and bulk order messages
to enter, modify, or cancel orders
designated as Post Only Orders with a
Time-in-Force of Day or GTD with an
expiration time on that trading day.
While BOE Bulk Ports will be available
to all market participants, the Exchange
anticipates they will be used primarily
by Market-Makers or firms that conduct
similar business activity, as the primary
purpose of the proposed bulk message
functionality is to encourage marketmaker quoting on exchanges. As
26 See Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules, Logical
Port Fees.
27 As of October 7, 2019, the definition of quote
in Cboe Options Rule 1.1 means a firm bid or offer
a Market-Maker (a) submits electronically as an
order or bulk message (including to update any bid
or offer submitted in a previous order or bulk
message) or (b) represents in open outcry on the
trading floor.
28 Login Ids restrict the maximum number of
orders and quotes per second in the same way
logical ports do, and Users may similarly have
multiple logical ports as they may have Trading
Permits and/or bandwidth packets to accommodate
their order and quote entry needs.
29 Each Login ID has a bandwidth limit of 80,000
quotes per 3 seconds. However, in order to place
such bandwidth onto a single Login ID, a TPH or
non-TPH would need to purchase a minimum of 15
Market-Maker Permits or Bandwidth Packets (each
Market-Maker Permit and Bandwidth Packet
provides 5,000 quotes/3 sec). For purposes of
comparing ‘‘quote’’ bandwidth, the provided
example assumes only 1 Market-Maker Permit or
Bandwidth Packet has been purchased.
30 See Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule,
Options Logical Port Fees.
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indicated above, BOE Bulk Logical Ports
are assessed $1,500 per port, per month
for the first 5 BOE Bulk Logical Ports,
assessed $2,500 per port, per month
thereafter up to 30 ports and thereafter
assessed $3,000 per port, per month for
each additional BOE Bulk Logical Port.
Like CMI and FIX Login IDs, and FIX/
BOX Logical Ports, BOE Bulk Ports will
also entitle a firm to submit message
traffic of up to specified number of
quotes/orders per second.31 The
proposed BOE Bulk ports also provide
for significantly more message traffic
(and thus cost less per message sent) as
compared to current CMI/FIX Login IDs,
as shown below:
CMI/FIX Login Ids
BOE Bulk ports
Quotes
Quotes 32
Bandwidth Limit .................................................
Cost ...................................................................
Cost per Quote/Order Sent @Limit ...................
5,000 quotes/3 sec 33 .......................................
$750 each .........................................................
$0.15 per quote/3 sec ......................................
225,000 quotes 3 sec.
$1,500/$2,500/$3,000 each.
$0.006/$0.011/$0.013 per quote/3 sec.
Each BOE Bulk Logical Port will incur
the logical port fee indicated in the table
above when used to enter up to
30,000,000 orders per trading day per
logical port as measured on average in
a single month. Each incremental usage
of up to 30,000,000 orders per day per
BOE Bulk Logical Port will incur an
additional logical port fee of $3,000 per
month. Incremental usage will be
determined on a monthly basis based on
the average orders per day entered in a
single month across all of a market
participant’s subscribed BOE Bulk
Logical Ports. The Exchange believes
that the pricing implications of going
beyond 30,000,000 orders per trading
day per BOE Bulk Logical Port
encourage users to mitigate message
traffic as necessary. The Exchange notes
that the proposed BOE Bulk Logical Port
fees are similar to the fees assessed for
these ports by BZX Options.34
Purge Ports: As part of the migration,
the Exchange introduced Purge Ports to
provide TPHs additional risk
management and open order control
functionality. Purge ports were designed
to assist TPHs, in the management of,
and risk control over, their quotes,
particularly if the TPH is dealing with
a large number of options. Particularly,
Purge Ports allow TPHs to submit a
cancelation for all open orders, or a
subset thereof, across multiple sessions
under the same Executing Firm ID
(‘‘EFID’’). This would allow TPHs to
seamlessly avoid unintended
executions, while continuing to evaluate
the direction of the market. While Purge
Ports are available to all market
participants, the Exchange anticipates
they will be used primarily by MarketMakers or firms that conduct similar
business activity and are therefore
exposed to a large amount of risk across
a number of securities. The Exchange
notes that market participants are also
able to cancel orders through FIX/BOE
Logical Ports and as such a dedicated
Purge Port is not required nor necessary.
Rather, Purge Ports were specially
developed as an optional service to
further assist firms in effectively
managing risk. As indicated in the table
above, the Exchange proposes to assess
a monthly charge of $850 per Purge
Port. The Exchange notes that the
proposed fee is in line with the fee
assessed by other exchanges, including
its Affiliated Exchanges, for Purge
Ports.35
Multicast PITCH/Top Spin Server and
GRP Ports: In connection with the
migration, the Exchange also offers
optional Multicast PITCH/Top Spin
Server (‘‘Spin’’) and GRP ports and
proposes to assess $750 per month, per
port. Spin Ports and GRP Ports are used
to request and receive a retransmission
of data from the Exchange’s Multicast
PITCH/Top data feeds. The Exchange’s
Multicast PITCH/Top data feeds are
available from two primary feeds,
identified as the ‘‘A feed’’ and the ‘‘C
feed’’, which contain the same
information but differ only in the way
such feeds are received. The Exchange
also offers two redundant feeds,
identified as the ‘‘B feed’’ and the ‘‘D
feed.’’ All secondary feed Spin and GRP
Ports will be provided for redundancy at
no additional cost. The Exchange notes
a dedicated Spin and GRP Port is not
required nor necessary. Rather, Spin
ports enable a market participant to
receive a snapshot of the current book
quickly in the middle of the trading
session without worry of gap request
limits and GRP Ports were specially
developed to request and receive
retransmission of data in the event of
missed or dropped message. The
Exchange notes that the proposed fee is
in line with the fee assessed for the
same ports on BZX Options.36
31 The Exchange notes that while technically
there is no bandwidth limit per BOE Bulk Port,
there may be possible performance degradation at
15,000 messages per second (which is the
equivalent of 225,000 quotes/orders per 3 seconds).
As such, the Exchange uses the number at which
performance may be degraded for purposes of
comparison.
32 See Cboe Options Rule 1.1.
33 Each Login ID has a bandwidth limit of 80,000
quotes per 3 seconds. However, in order to place
such bandwidth onto a single Login ID, a TPH or
non-TPH would need to purchase a minimum of 15
Market-Maker Permits or Bandwidth Packets (each
Market-Maker Permit and Bandwidth Packet
provides 5,000 quotes/3 sec). For purposes of
comparing ‘‘quote’’ bandwidth, the provided
example assumes only 1 Market-Maker Permit or
Bandwidth Packet has been purchased.
34 See Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule,
Options Logical Port Fees.
35 See e.g., Nasdaq ISE Options Pricing Schedule,
Section 7(C), Ports and Other Services. See also
Cboe EDGX Options Exchange Fee Schedule,
Options Logical Port Fees; Cboe C2 Options
Exchange Fee Schedule, Options Logical Port Fees
and Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule,
Options Logical Port Fees.
36 See Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule,
Options Logical Port Fees.
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Access Credits
The Exchange next proposes to amend
its Affiliate Volume Plan (‘‘AVP’’) to
provide Market-Makers an opportunity
to obtain credits on their monthly BOE
Bulk Port Fees.37 By way of background,
under AVP, if a TPH Affiliate 38 or
Appointed OFP 39 (collectively, an
‘‘affiliate’’) of a Market-Maker qualifies
under the Volume Incentive Program
(‘‘VIP’’) (i.e., achieves VIP Tiers 2–5),
that Market-Maker will also qualify for
a discount on that Market-Maker’s
Liquidity Provider (‘‘LP’’) Sliding Scale
transaction fees and Trading Permit
fees. The Exchange proposes to amend
AVP to provide that qualifying MarketMakers will receive a discount on Bulk
Port fees (instead of Trading Permits)
where an affiliate achieves VIP Tiers 4
37 As noted above, while BOE Bulk Ports will be
available to all market participants, the Exchange
anticipates they will be used primarily by Market
Makers or firms that conduct similar business
activity.
38 For purposes of AVP, ‘‘Affiliate’’ is defined as
having at least 75% common ownership between
the two entities as reflected on each entity’s Form
BD, Schedule A.
39 See Cboe Options Fees Schedule Footnote 23.
Particularly, a Market-Maker may designate an
Order Flow Provider (‘‘OFP’’) as its ‘‘Appointed
OFP’’ and an OFP may designate a Market-Maker
to be its ‘‘Appointed Market-Maker’’ for purposes of
qualifying for credits under AVP.
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or 5. As discussed more fully below, the
Exchange is amending its Trading
Permit structure, such that off-floor
Market-Makers no longer need to hold
more than one Market-Maker Trading
Permit. As such, in place of credits for
Trading Permits, the Exchange will
provide credits for BOE Bulk Ports.40
The proposed credits are as follows:
Market maker affiliate access credit
Credit Tier ..........................................................................................................................................................
The Exchange believes the proposed
change to AVP continues to allow the
Exchange to provide TPHs that have
both Market-Maker and agency
operations reduced Market-Maker costs
via the credits, albeit credits on BOE
Bulk Port fees instead of Trading Permit
fees. AVP also continues to provide
incremental incentives for TPHs to
strive for the higher tier levels, which
provide increasingly higher benefits for
satisfying increasingly more stringent
criteria.
In addition to the opportunity to
receive credits via AVP, the Exchange
proposes to provide an additional
opportunity for Market-Makers to obtain
credits on their monthly BOE Bulk Port
fees based on the previous month’s
make rate percentage. By way of
background, the Liquidity Provider
Sliding Scale Adjustment Table
provides that Taker fees be applied to
electronic ‘‘Taker’’ volume and a Maker
rebate be applied to electronic ‘‘Maker’’
volume, in addition to the transaction
fees assessed under the Liquidity
Provider Sliding Scale.41 The amount of
the Taker fee (or Maker rebate) is
determined by the Liquidity Provider’s
percentage of volume from the previous
month that was Maker (‘‘Make Rate’’).42
Liquidity provider
sliding scale
adjustment
performance tier
Market maker access credit
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Credit Tier .........................................................
1
2
3
4
5
40 The Exchange notes that Trading Permits
currently each include a set bandwidth allowance
and 3 logins. Current logins and bandwidth are akin
to the proposed logical ports, including BOE Bulk
Ports which will primarily be used by MarketMakers.
41 See Cboe Options Exchange Fees Schedule,
Liquidity Provider Sliding Scale Adjustment Table.
42 More specifically, the Make Rate is derived
from a Liquidity Provider’s electronic volume the
previous month in all symbols excluding
Underlying Symbol List A using the following
formula: (i) The Liquidity Provider’s total electronic
automatic execution (‘‘auto-ex’’) volume (i.e.,
volume resulting from that Liquidity Provider’s
resting quotes or single sided quotes/orders that
were executed by an incoming order or quote),
divided by (ii) the Liquidity Provider’s total autoex volume (i.e., volume that resulted from the
Liquidity Provider’s resting quotes/orders and
volume that resulted from that LP’s quotes/orders
that removed liquidity). For example, a TPH’s
electronic Make volume in September 2019 is
2,500,000 contracts and its total electronic auto-ex
volume is 3,000,000 contracts, resulting in a Make
Rate of 83% (Performance Tier 4). As such, the TPH
would receive a 40% credit on its monthly Bulk
Jkt 250001
Bandwidth Packets
As described above, post-migration,
the Exchange utilizes a variety of logical
ports. Part of this functionality is similar
to bandwidth packets that were
previously available on the Exchange.
Bandwidth packets restricted the
maximum number of orders and quotes
per second. Post-migration, market
participants may similarly have
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0
0
0
15
25
Market-Makers are given a Performance
Tier based on their Make Rate
percentage which currently provides
adjustments to transaction fees. Thus,
the program is designed to attract
liquidity from traditional MarketMakers. The Exchange proposes to now
also provide BOE Bulk Port fee credits
if Market-Makers satisfy the thresholds
of certain Performance Tiers.
Particularly, the Performance Tier
earned will also determine the
percentage credit applied to a MarketMaker’s monthly BOE Bulk Port fees, as
shown below:
0%–50% ...........................................................
Above 50%–60% ..............................................
Above 60%–75% ..............................................
Above 75%–90% ..............................................
Above 90% .......................................................
have been applied (i.e. an electronic
MM can earn a credit from 15% to
65%).
20:25 Jul 10, 2020
1
2
3
4
5
Make rate
(percent based on prior month)
The Exchange believes the proposal
mitigates costs incurred by traditional
Market-Makers that focus on adding
liquidity to the Exchange (as opposed to
those that provide and take, or just
take). The Exchange lastly notes that
both the Market-Maker Affiliate Access
Credit under AVP and the Market-Maker
Access Credit tied to Performance Tiers
can both be earned by a TPH, and these
credits will each apply to the total
monthly BOE Bulk Port Fees including
any incremental BOE Bulk Port fees
incurred, before any credits/adjustments
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Percent credit on
monthly BOE bulk
port fees
VIP Tier
Percent credit on
monthly BOE bulk
port fees
0
0
0
40
40
multiple Logical Ports and/or BOE Bulk
Ports as they may have had bandwidth
packets to accommodate their order and
quote entry needs. As such, the
Exchange proposes to eliminate all of
the current Bandwidth Packet fees.43
The Exchange believes that the
proposed pricing implications of going
beyond specified bandwidth described
above in the logical connectivity fees
section will be able to otherwise
mitigate message traffic as necessary.
Port fees for the month of October 2019. For the
month of October 2019, the Exchange will be billing
certain incentive programs separately, including the
Liquidity Provider Sliding Scale Adjustment Table,
for the periods of October 1–October 4 and October
7–October 31 in light of the migration of its billing
system. As such, a Market-Maker’s Performance
Tier for November 2019 will be determined by the
Market-Maker’s percentage of volume that was
Maker from the period of October 7–October 31,
2019.
43 See Cboe Options Fees Schedule, Bandwidth
Packet Fees.
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CAS Servers
By way of background, in order to
connect to the legacy Cboe Command,
which allowed a TPH to trade on the
Cboe Options System, a TPH had to
connect via either a CMI or FIX interface
(depending on the configuration of the
TPH’s own systems). For TPHs that
connected via a CMI interface, they had
to use CMI CAS Servers. In order to
ensure that a CAS Server was not
overburdened by quoting activity for
Market-Makers, the Exchange allotted
each Market-Maker a certain number of
CASs (in addition to the shared
backups) based on the amount of
quoting bandwidth that they had. The
Exchange no longer uses CAS Servers,
post-migration. In light of the
elimination of CAS Servers, the
Exchange proposes to eliminate the CAS
Server allotment table and extra CAS
Server fee.
Trading Permit Fees
By way of background, the Exchange
may issue different types of Trading
Permits and determine the fees for those
Trading Permits.44 Pre-migration, the
Exchange issued the following three
types of Trading Permits: (1) MarketMaker Trading Permits, which were
assessed a monthly fee of $5,000 per
permit; (2) Floor Broker Trading
Permits, which were assessed a monthly
fee of $9,000 per permit; and (3)
Electronic Access Permits (‘‘EAPs’’),
which were assessed a monthly fee of
$1,600 per permit. The Exchange also
offered separate Market-Maker and
Electronic Access Permits for the Global
Trading Hours (‘‘GTH’’) session, which
were assessed a monthly fee of $1,000
per permit and $500 per permit
respectively.45 For further color, a
Market-Maker Trading Permit entitled
the holder to act as a Market-Maker,
including a Market-Maker trading
remotely, DPM, eDPM, or LMM, and
also provided an appointment credit of
1.0, a quoting and order entry
bandwidth allowance, up to three
logins, trading floor access and TPH
status.46 A Floor Broker Trading Permit
entitled the holder to act as a Floor
Broker, provided an order entry
bandwidth allowance, up to 3 logins,
trading floor access and TPH status.47
Lastly, an EAP entitled the holder to
electronic access to the Exchange.
Holders of EAPs must have been brokerdealers registered with the Exchange in
44 See
Cboe Options Rules 3.1(a)(iv)–(v).
45 The fees were waived through September 2019
for the first Market-Maker and Electronic Access
GTH Trading Permits.
46 See Cboe Options Fees Schedule.
47 Id.
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20:25 Jul 10, 2020
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one or more of the following capacities:
(a) Clearing TPH, (b) TPH organization
approved to transact business with the
public, (c) Proprietary TPHs and (d)
order service firms. The permit did not
provide access to the trading floor. An
EAP also provided an order entry
bandwidth allowance, up to 3 logins
and TPH status.48 The Exchange also
provided an opportunity for TPHs to
pay reduced rates for Trading Permits
via the Market Maker and Floor Broker
Trading Permit Sliding Scale Programs
(‘‘TP Sliding Scales’’). Particularly, the
TP Sliding Scales allowed MarketMakers and Floor Brokers to pay
reduced rates for their Trading Permits
if they committed in advance to a
specific tier that includes a minimum
number of eligible Market-Maker and
Floor Broker Trading Permits,
respectively, for each calendar year.49
As noted above, Trading Permits were
tied to bandwidth allocation, logins and
appointment costs, and as such, TPH
organizations may hold multiple
Trading Permits of the same type in
order to meet their connectivity and
appointment cost needs. Post-Migration,
bandwidth allocation, logins and
appointment costs are no longer tied to
a Trading Permit, and as such, the
Exchange proposes to modify its
Trading Permit structure. Particularly,
in connection with the migration, the
Exchange adopted separate on-floor and
off-floor Trading Permits for MarketMakers and Floor Brokers, adopted a
new Clearing TPH Permit, and proposes
to modify the corresponding fees and
discounts. As was the case premigration, the proposed access fees
discussed below will continue to be
non-refundable and will be assessed
through the integrated billing system
during the first week of the following
month. If a Trading Permit is issued
during a calendar month after the first
trading day of the month, the access fee
for the Trading Permit for that calendar
month is prorated based on the
remaining trading days in the calendar
month. Trading Permits will be renewed
automatically for the next month unless
the Trading Permit Holder submits
written notification to the Membership
Services Department by 4 p.m. CT on
the second-to-last business day of the
prior month to cancel the Trading
Permit effective at or prior to the end of
the applicable month. Trading Permit
48 Id.
49 Due to the October 7 migration, the Exchange
had amended the TP Sliding Scale Programs to
provide that any commitment to Trading Permits
under the TP Sliding Scales shall be in place
through September 2019, instead of the calendar
year. See Cboe Options Fees Schedule, Footnotes 24
and 25.
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42049
Holders will only be assessed a single
monthly fee for each type of electronic
Trading Permit it holds.
First, TPHs no longer need to hold
multiple permits for each type of
electronic Trading Permit (i.e.,
electronic Market-Maker Trading
Permits and/or and Electronic Access
Permits). Rather, for electronic access to
the Exchange, a TPH need only
purchase one of the following permit
types for each trading function the TPH
intends to perform: Market-Maker
Electronic Access Permit (‘‘MM EAP’’)
in order to act as an off-floor MarketMaker and which will continue to be
assessed a monthly fee of $5,000,
Electronic Access Permit (‘‘EAP’’) in
order to submit orders electronically to
the Exchange 50 and which will be
assessed a monthly fee of $3,000, and a
Clearing TPH Permit, for TPHs acting
solely as a Clearing TPH, which will be
assessed a monthly fee of $2,000 (and is
more fully described below). For
example, a TPH organization that
wishes to act as a Market-Maker and
also submit orders electronically in a
non-Market Maker capacity would have
to purchase one MM EAP and one EAP.
TPHs will be assessed the monthly fee
for each type of Permit once per
electronic access capacity.
Next, the Exchange proposes to adopt
a new Trading Permit, exclusively for
Clearing TPHs that are approved to act
solely as a Clearing TPH (as opposed to
those that are also approved in a
capacity that allows them to submit
orders electronically). Currently any
TPH that is registered to act as a
Clearing TPH must purchase an EAP,
whether or not that Clearing TPH acts
solely as a Clearing TPH or acts as a
Clearing TPH and submits orders
electronically. The Exchange proposes
to adopt a new Trading Permit, for any
TPH that is registered to act solely as
Clearing TPH at a discounted rate of
$2,000 per month.51
Additionally, the Exchange proposes
to eliminate its fees for Global Trading
Hours Trading Permits. Particularly, the
Exchange proposes to provide that any
Market-Maker EAP, EAP and Clearing
TPH Permit provides access (at no
50 EAPs may be purchased by TPHs that both
clear transactions for other TPHs (i.e., a ‘‘Clearing
TPH’’) and submit orders electronically.
51 Cboe Option Rules provides the Exchange
authority to issue different types of Trading Permits
which allows holders, among other things, to act in
one or more trading functions authorized by the
Rules. See Cboe Options Rule 3.1(a)(iv). The
Exchange notes that currently 17 out of 38 Clearing
TPHs are acting solely as a Clearing TPH on the
Exchange.
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additional cost) to the GTH session.52
Additionally, the Exchange proposes to
amend Footnote 37 of the Fees Schedule
regarding GTH in connection with the
migration. Currently Footnote 37
provides that separate access permits
and connectivity is needed for the GTH
session. The Exchange proposes to
eliminate this language as that is no
longer the case post-migration (i.e., an
electronic Trading Permits will grant
access to both sessions and physical and
logical ports may be used in both
sessions, eliminating the need to
purchase separate connectivity). The
Exchange also notes that in connection
with migration, the Book used during
Regular Trading Hours (‘‘RTH’’) will be
the same Book used during GTH (as
compared to pre-migration where the
Exchange maintained separate Books for
each session). The Exchange therefore
also proposes to eliminate language in
Footnote 37 stating that GTH is a
segregated trading session and that there
is no market interaction between the
two sessions.
The Exchange next proposes to adopt
MM EAP Appointment fees. By way of
background, a registered Market-Maker
may currently create a Virtual Trading
Crowd (‘‘VTC’’) Appointment, which
confers the right to quote electronically
in an appropriate number of classes
selected from ‘‘tiers’’ that have been
structured according to trading volume
statistics, except for the AA tier.53 Each
Trading Permit historically held by a
Market-Maker had an appointment
credit of 1.0. A Market-Maker could
select for each Trading Permit the
Market-Maker held any combination of
classes whose aggregate appointment
cost did not exceed 1.0. A Market-Maker
could not hold a combination of
appointments whose aggregate
appointment cost was greater than the
number of Trading Permits that MarketMaker held.54
As discussed, post-migration,
bandwidth allocation, logins and
appointment costs are no longer tied to
a single Trading Permit and therefore
TPHs no longer need to have multiple
permits for each type of electronic
Trading Permit. Market-Makers must
still select class appointments in the
classes they seek to make markets
electronically.55 Particularly, a MarketMaker firm will only be required to have
one permit and will thereafter be
charged for one or more ‘‘Appointment
Units’’ (which will scale from 1 ‘‘unit’’
to more than 5 ‘‘units’’), depending on
which classes they elect appointments
in. Appointment Units will replace the
standard 1.0 appointment cost, but
function in the same manner.
Appointment weights (formerly known
as ‘‘appointment costs’’) for each
appointed class will be set forth in Cboe
Options Rule 5.50(g) and will be
summed for each Market-Maker in order
to determine the total appointment
units, to which fees will be assessed.
This was the manner in which the tier
costs per class appointment were
summed to meet the 1.0 appointment
cost, the only difference being that if a
Market-Maker exceeds this ‘‘unit’’, then
their fees will be assessed under the
‘‘unit’’ that corresponds to the total of
their appointment weights, as opposed
to holding another Trading Permit
because it exceeded the 1.0 ‘‘unit’’.
Particularly, the Exchange proposes to
adopt a new MM EAP Appointment
Sliding Scale. Appointment Units for
each assigned class will be aggregated
for each Market-Maker and MarketMaker affiliate. If the sum of
appointments is a fractional amount, the
total will be rounded up to the next
highest whole Appointment Unit. The
following lists the progressive monthly
fees for Appointment Units: 56
Market-Maker EAP appointments
Quantity
Appointment Units ...................................................................................................................................................
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As noted above, upon migration the
Exchange required separate Trading
Permits for on-floor and off-floor
activity. As such, the Exchange
proposes to maintain a Floor Broker
Trading Permit and adopt a new MarketMaker Floor Permit for on-floor MarketMakers. In addition, RUT, SPX, and VIX
Tier Appointment fees will be charged
separately for Permit, as discussed more
fully below.
As briefly described above, the
Exchange currently maintains TP
Sliding Scales, which allow MarketMakers and Floor Brokers to pay
reduced rates for their Trading Permits
if they commit in advance to a specific
tier that includes a minimum number of
Current permit qty
Market-Maker Floor Permit .............................
1–10 ...............................................................
11–20 .............................................................
21 or more ......................................................
52 The Exchange notes that Clearing TPHs must be
properly authorized by the Options Clearing
Corporation (‘‘OCC’’) to operate during the Global
Trading Hours session and all TPHs must have a
Letter of Guarantee to participate in the GTH
session (as is the case today).
53 See Cboe Options Rule 5.50 (Appointment of
Market-Makers).
54 For example, if a Market-Maker selected a
combination of appointments that has an aggregate
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appointment cost of 2.5, that Market-Maker must
hold at least 3 Market-Maker Trading Permits.
55 See Cboe Options Rule 5.50(a).
56 For example, if a Market-Maker’s total
appointment costs amount to 3.5 unites, the MarketMaker will be assessed a total monthly fee of
$14,000 (1 appointment unit at $0, 1 appointment
unit at $6,000 and 2 appointment units at $4,000)
as and for appointment fees and $5,000 for a
Market-Maker Trading Permit, for a total monthly
PO 00000
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$0
6,000
4,000
3,100
eligible Market-Maker and Floor Broker
Trading Permits, respectively, for each
calendar year. The Exchange proposes
to eliminate the current TP Sliding
Scales, including the requirement to
commit to a specific tier, and replace it
with new TP Sliding Scales as
follows: 57
Current
monthly fee
(per permit)
Floor TPH permits
1
2
3 to 5
>5
Monthly fees
(per unit)
$5,000
3,700
1,800
Proposed
permit qty
1 .....................
2 to 5 .............
6 to 10 ...........
>10 .................
Proposed
monthly fee
(per permit)
$6,000
4,500
3,500
2,000
sum of $19,000, where a Market-Maker currently
(i.e., prior to migration) with a total appointment
cost of 3.5 would need to hold 4 Trading Permits
and would therefore be assessed a monthly fee of
$20,000.
57 In light of the proposed change to eliminate the
TP Sliding Scale, the Exchange proposes to
eliminate Footnote 24 in its entirety.
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Current permit qty
Floor Broker Permit ........................................
1 .....................................................................
2–5 .................................................................
6 or more ........................................................
Floor Broker ADV Discount
Footnote 25, which governs rebates on
Floor Broker Trading Permits, currently
provides that any Floor Broker that
executes a certain average of customer
or professional customer/voluntary
customer (collectively ‘‘customer’’)
open-outcry contracts per day over the
course of a calendar month in all
underlying symbols excluding
Underlying Symbol List A (except RLG,
RLV, RUI, and UKXM), DJX, XSP, and
subcabinet trades (‘‘Qualifying
Symbols’’), will receive a rebate on that
TPH’s Floor Broker Trading Permit Fees.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Current
monthly fee
(per permit)
Floor TPH permits
9,000
5,000
3,000
Specifically, any Floor Broker Trading
Permit Holder that executes an average
of 15,000 customer (‘‘C’’ origin code)
and/or professional customer and
voluntary customer (‘‘W’’ origin code)
open-outcry contracts per day over the
course of a calendar month in
Qualifying Symbols will receive a rebate
of $9,000 on that TPH’s Floor Broker
Trading Permit fees. Additionally, any
Floor Broker that executes an average of
25,000 customer open-outcry contracts
per day over the course of a calendar
month in Qualifying Symbols will
receive a rebate of $14,000 on that
Proposed
permit qty
1 .....................
2 to 3 .............
4 to 5 .............
>5 ...................
42051
Proposed
monthly fee
(per permit)
7,500
5,700
4,500
3,200
TPH’s Floor Broker Trading Permit fees.
The Exchange proposes to maintain, but
modify, its discount for Floor Broker
Trading Permit fees. First, the
measurement criteria to qualify for a
rebate will be modified to only include
customer (‘‘C’’ origin code) open-outcry
contracts executed per day over the
course of a calendar month in all
underlying symbols, while the rebate
amount will be modified to be a
percentage of the TPH’s Floor Broker
Permit total costs, instead of a straight
rebate.58 The criteria and corresponding
percentage rebates are noted below.59
Floor broker
permit rebate
(percent)
Floor broker ADV discount tier
ADV
1 ..................................................................................................
2 ..................................................................................................
3 ..................................................................................................
0 to 99,999 .................................................................................
100,000 to 174,999 ....................................................................
>174,999 .....................................................................................
0
15
25
Next, the Exchange proposes to
modify its SPX, VIX and RUT Tier
Appointment Fees. Currently, these fees
are assessed to any Market-Maker TPH
that either (i) has the respective SPX,
VIX or RUT appointment at any time
during a calendar month and trades a
specified number of contracts or (ii)
trades a specified number of contracts in
open outcry during a calendar month.
More specifically, the Fees Schedule
provides that the $3,000 per month SPX
Tier Appointment is assessed to any
Market-Maker Trading Permit Holder
that either (i) has an SPX Tier
Appointment at any time during a
calendar month and trades at least 100
SPX contracts while that appointment is
active or (ii) conducts any open outcry
transaction in SPX or SPX Weeklys at
any time during the month. The $2,000
per month VIX Tier Appointment is
assessed to any Market-Maker Trading
Permit Holder that either (i) has an SPX
Tier Appointment at any time during a
calendar month and trades at least 100
VIX contracts while that appointment is
active or (ii) conducts at least 1000 open
outcry transaction in VIX at any time
during the month. Lastly, the $1,000
RUT Tier Appointment is assessed to
any Market-Maker Trading Permit
Holder that either (i) has an RUT Tier
Appointment at any time during a
calendar month and trades at least 100
RUT contracts while that appointment
is active or (ii) conducts at least 1000
open outcry transaction in RUT at any
time during the month.
Because the Exchange is separating
Market-Maker Trading Permits for
electronic and open-outcry marketmaking, the Exchange will be assessing
separate Tier Appointment Fees for each
type of Market-Maker Trading Permit.
The Exchange proposes that a MM EAP
will be assessed the Tier Appointment
Fee whenever the Market-Maker
executes the corresponding specified
number of contracts, if any. The
Exchange also proposes to modify the
threshold number of contracts a Market-
Maker must execute in a month to
trigger the fee for SPX, VIX and RUT.
Particularly, for SPX, the Exchange
proposes to eliminate the 100 contract
threshold for electronic SPX
executions.60 The Exchange notes that
historically, all TPHs that trade SPX
electronically executed more than 100
contracts electronically each month (i.e.,
no TPH electronically traded between 1
and 100 contracts of SPX). As no TPH
would currently be negatively impacted
by this change, the Exchange proposes
to eliminate the threshold for SPX and
align the electronic SPX Tier
Appointment Fee with that of the floor
SPX Tier Appointment Fee, which is
not subject to any executed volume
threshold. For the VIX and RUT Tier
appointments, the Exchange proposes to
increase the threshold from 100
contracts a month to 1,000 contracts a
month. The Exchange notes the Tier
Appointment Fee amounts are not
58 As is the case today, the Floor Broker ADV
Discount will be available for all Floor Broker
Trading Permits held by affiliated Trading Permit
Holders and TPH organizations.
59 In light of the proposal to eliminate the TP
Sliding Scales and the Floor Broker rebates
currently set forth under Footnote 25, the Exchange
proposes to eliminate Footnote 25 in its entirety.
60 The Exchange notes that subsequent to the
Original Filing that proposed these changes on
October 1 and 2, 2019 (SR–CBOE–2019–077 and
SR–CBOE–2019–082), and subsequent to the
Second Proposed Rule Change filing that proposed
these changes on November 29, 2019 (SR–CBOE–
2019–111), the Exchange amended the proposed
Market-Maker Tier Appointment fees to provide
that the SPX Tier Appointment Fee will be assessed
to any Market-Maker EAP that executes at least
1,000 contracts in SPX (including SPXW) excluding
contracts executed during the opening rotation on
the final settlement date of VIX options and futures
with the expiration used in the VIX settlement
calculation in filing No. SR–CBOE–2019–124. The
additions proposed by filing SR–CBOE–2019–124
are double underlined in Exhibit 5A and the
deletions are doubled bracketed in Exhibit 5A.
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changing.61 In connection with the
proposed changes, the Exchange
proposes to relocate the Tier
Appointment Fees to a new table and
eliminate the language in the current
respective notes sections of each Tier
Appointment Fee as it is no longer
necessary.
Trading Permit Holder Regulatory Fee
The Fees Schedule provides for a
Trading Permit Holder Regulatory Fee of
$90 per month, per RTH Trading Permit,
applicable to all TPHs, which fee helps
more closely cover the costs of
regulating all TPHs and performing
regulatory responsibilities. In light of
the changes to the Exchange’s Trading
Permit structure, the Exchange proposes
to eliminate the TPH Regulatory Fee.
The Exchange notes that there is no
regulatory requirement to maintain this
fee.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to the Exchange
and, in particular, the requirements of
Section 6(b) of the Act.62 Specifically,
the Exchange believes the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Section
6(b)(5) 63 requirements that the rules of
an exchange be designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged
in regulating, clearing, settling,
processing information with respect to,
and facilitating transactions in
securities, to remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest.
Additionally, the Exchange believes the
proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b)(4) of the Act,64 which
requires that Exchange rules provide for
the equitable allocation of reasonable
dues, fees, and other charges among its
Trading Permit Holders and other
persons using its facilities. Additionally,
the Exchange believes the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Section
6(b)(5) 65 requirement that the rules of
61 Floor Broker Trading Surcharges for SPX/
SPXW and VIX are also not changing. The Exchange
however, is creating a new table for Floor Broker
Trading Surcharges and relocating such fees in the
Fees Schedule in connection with the proposal to
eliminate fees currently set forth in the ‘‘Trading
Permit and Tier Appointment Fees’’ Table.
62 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
63 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
64 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
65 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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an exchange not be designed to permit
unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
The Exchange first stresses that the
proposed changes were not designed
with the objective to generate an overall
increase in access fee revenue, as
demonstrated by the anticipated loss of
revenue discussed above. Rather, the
proposed changes were prompted by the
Exchange’s technology migration and
the adoption of a new (and improved)
connectivity infrastructure, rendering
the pre-migration structure obsolete.
Such changes accordingly necessitated
an overhaul of the Exchange’s previous
access fee structure and corresponding
fees. Moreover, the proposed changes
more closely align the Exchange’s access
fees to those of its Affiliated Exchanges,
and reasonably so, as the Affiliated
Exchanges offer substantially similar
connectivity and functionality and are
on the same platform that the Exchange
has now migrated to.
The Exchange also notes that it
operates in a highly competitive
environment. The SEC Division of
Trading and Markets’ Fee Guidance
provides that in determining whether a
proposed fee is constrained by
significant competitive forces, the
Commission will consider whether
there are reasonable substitutes for the
product or service that is the subject of
a proposed fee. As described in further
detail below, the Exchange believes
substitutable products and services are
in fact available to market participants,
including, among other things, other
options exchanges a market participant
may connect to in lieu of the Exchange,
indirect connectivity to the Exchange
via a third-party reseller of connectivity
and/or trading of any options product,
including proprietary products, in the
Over-the-Counter (OTC) markets.
Indeed, there are currently 16 registered
options exchanges that trade options,
some of which have similar or lower
connectivity fees.66 Based on publicly
available information, no single options
exchange has more than 17% of the
market share.67 Further, low barriers to
entry mean that new exchanges may
rapidly and inexpensively enter the
market and offer additional substitute
platforms to further compete with the
Exchange. For example, there have been
4 exchanges that have been added in the
U.S. options markets in the last 5 years
66 See e.g., Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules.
See also e.g., BOX Options Fees Schedule, Section
VI (Technology Fees) and Section IX (Participant
Fees).
67 See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Options Market
Volume Summary (June 26, 2020), available at
https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/market_
statistics/.
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(i.e., Cboe EDGX Inc., Nasdaq MRX,
LLC, MIAX Pearl, LLC and MIAX
Emerald LLC).
There is also no regulatory
requirement that any market participant
connect to any one options exchange,
that any market participant connect at a
particular connection speed or act in a
particular capacity on the Exchange, or
trade any particular product offered on
an exchange. Moreover, membership is
not a requirement to participate on the
Exchange. A market participant may
submit orders to the Exchange via a TPH
broker.68 Indeed, the Exchange is
unaware of any one options exchange
whose membership includes every
registered broker-dealer. In fact, the
Exchange believes that as of June 2020,
only 9 broker-dealers out of
approximately 250 broker-dealers that
are members of at least one exchange
that lists options for trading were
members of all 16 options exchanges.69
Additionally, several broker-dealers are
members of only a single exchange that
lists options for trading.70 The Exchange
has also identified numerous brokerdealers that are members of other
options exchanges, but not the
Exchange. For example, the Exchange
has identified approximately 20 brokerdealers that are members of Nasdaq ISE,
LLC (an exchange that lists only
options), but not Cboe Exchange, Inc
(which also lists only options).
Similarly, the Exchange has identified at
least 4 broker-dealers that trade options
and are members of one or more of the
Exchange’s affiliated options exchanges,
but not Cboe Exchange, Inc. Indeed, the
number of members at each exchange
that trades options varies greatly.
Particularly, the number of members of
exchanges that trade options vary
between approximately 9 and 171
broker-dealers.71 Even the number of
68 Such market participant would be subject to
the fees of that broker. The Exchange notes that
such broker is not required to publicize, let alone
justify or file with the Commission its fees, and as
such could charge the market participant any fees
it deems appropriate, even if such fees would
otherwise be considered potentially unreasonable
or uncompetitive fees.
69 See SEC June 2020 Active Broker Dealer
Report.
70 Id. Approximately 10 broker-dealers are
members of the Cboe Exchange, Inc. only,
approximately 7 broker-dealers are members of only
Nasdaq PHLX LLC, approximately 3 broker-dealers
are members of only NYSE Arca, Inc., and
approximately 3 broker-dealers are members of only
NYSE American LLC.
71 See SEC June 2020 Active Broker Dealer
Report. More specifically, 1 exchange has 9
members, 4 exchanges have between 36–50
members, 5 exchanges have between 50–100
members, 4 exchanges have between 100–150
members and 2 exchanges have more than 150
members. The Exchange notes however that some
of these exchanges also trade equities and the
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members between the Exchange and its
3 other options exchange affiliates vary.
Particularly, while the Exchange
currently has 94 members, Cboe EDGX
and Cboe C2 have 53 members that
trade options and Cboe BZX has 63
members that trade options.
The rule structure for options
exchanges are also fundamentally
different from those of equities
exchanges. In particular, options market
participants are not forced to connect to
(and purchase market data from) all
options exchanges. For example, there
are many order types that are available
in the equities markets that are not
utilized in the options markets, which
relate to mid-point pricing and pegged
pricing which require connection to the
SIPs and each of the equities exchanges
in order to properly execute those
orders in compliance with best
execution obligations. Additionally, in
the options markets, the linkage routing
and trade through protection are
handled by the exchanges, not by the
individual members. Thus not
connecting to an options exchange or
disconnecting from an options exchange
does not potentially subject a brokerdealer to violate order protection
requirements.72 Gone are the days when
the retail brokerage firms (such as
Fidelity, Schwab, and eTrade) were
members of the options exchanges—
they are not members of the Exchange
or its affiliates, they do not purchase
connectivity to the Exchange, and they
do not purchase market data from the
Exchange.
The Exchange is also not aware of any
reason why any particular market
participant could not simply drop its
connections and cease being a TPH of
the Exchange if the Exchange were to
establish ‘‘unreasonable’’ and
uncompetitive price increases for its
connectivity alternatives. As further
evidence of the fact that market
participants can and do disconnect from
exchanges based on connectivity
pricing, R2G Services LLC (‘‘R2G’’) filed
a comment letter after BOX Exchange
LLC (‘‘BOX’’) proposed rule changes to
increase its connectivity fees (SR–BOX–
2018–24, SRBOX–2018–37, and SR–
BOX–2019–04).73 The R2G Letter stated,
Exchange is therefore unable to determine how
many members at each exchange trade options.
72 The Exchange notes this discussion is
consistent with the Fee Guidance suggestion that
any discussion of alternatives should ‘‘include a
discussion of how regulatory requirements,
particularly best execution obligations, Regulation
NMS Rule 611 (the Order Protection Rule), and/or
the Options Order Protection and Locked/Crossed
Market Plan (Options Linkage Plan), as applicable,
affect the competitive analysis.’’
73 See Letter from Stefano Durdic, R2G, to
Vanessa Countryman, Acting Secretary,
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‘‘[w]hen BOX instituted a $10,000/
month price increase for connectivity;
we had no choice but to terminate
connectivity into them as well as
terminate our market data relationship.
The cost benefit analysis just didn’t
make any sense for us at those new
levels.’’ Accordingly, this example
shows that if an exchange sets too high
of a fee for connectivity and/or market
data services for its relevant
marketplace, market participants can
choose to disconnect from the
Exchange. Moreover, the Exchange does
not assess any termination fee for a
market participant to drop its
connectivity or membership, nor is the
Exchange aware of any other costs that
would be incurred by a market
participant to do so. The Exchange notes
that in fact, a number of firms currently
do not participate on the Exchange or
participate on the Exchange though
sponsored access arrangements with
other broker-dealers rather than by
becoming a member. Additionally, as
noted above, only 9 broker-dealers are
members of all 16 options exchanges,
which the Exchange believes
demonstrates that, in addition to the
absence of a rule requirement to connect
to every option exchange, there is no
prevailing business model that would
practically require a broker-dealer to
connect to every single options
exchange.74
Additionally, the Exchange notes that
non-TPHs such as Service Bureaus and
Extranets resell Cboe Options
connectivity.75 This indirect
connectivity is another viable
alternative for market participants to
trade on the Exchange without
connecting directly to the Exchange
(and thus not pay the Exchange’s
connectivity fees), which alternative is
already being used by non-TPHs and
further constrains the price that the
Exchange is able to charge for
Commission, dated March 27, 2019 (the ‘‘R2G
Letter’’).
74 The Exchange further notes that these 9 brokerdealers represent different market participants.
Particularly, 5 of these broker-dealers are bulge
bracket banks (of which 1 is also a market-maker),
2 are brokerage firms and 2 are clearing firms.
75 Prior to migration, there were 13 firms that
resold Cboe Options connectivity. Post-migration,
the Exchange anticipated that there would be 19
firms that resell Cboe Options connectivity (both
physical and logical) and as of January 2020 there
are 15 firms that resell Cboe Options connectivity.
The Exchange does not have specific knowledge as
to what latency a market participant may
experience using an indirect connection versus a
direct connection and notes it may vary by the
service provided by the extranet provider and vary
between extranet providers. The Exchange believes
however, that there are extranet providers able to
provide connections with a latency that is
comparable to latency experienced using a direct
connection.
PO 00000
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42053
connectivity to its Exchange. The
Exchange does not receive any
connectivity revenue when connectivity
is resold by a third-party, which often
is resold to multiple customers, some of
whom are agency broker-dealers that
have numerous customers of their
own.76 Accordingly, in the event that a
market participant views one exchange’s
direct connectivity and access fees as
more or less attractive than the
competition, they can choose to connect
to that exchange indirectly or may
choose not to connect to that exchange
and connect instead to one or more of
the other 15 options markets. For
example, two TPHs that connected
directly to the Exchange pre-migration,
now connect indirectly via an extranet
provider. The Exchange notes that it has
not received any comments that, and
has no evidence to suggest, the two
TPHs that transitioned from direct
connections to an indirect connections
post-migration were the result of an
undue financial burden resulting from
the proposed fee changes.77 Rather, the
Exchange believes the transitions
demonstrate that indirect connectivity is
in fact a viable option for market
participants, therefore reflecting a
competitive environment.78 It further
demonstrates the manner in which
market participants connect to the
Exchange is entirely within the
discretion of market participants, who
can consider the fees charged by the
Exchange and by resellers when making
decisions.
Additionally, pre-migration, in
August 2019, the Exchange had 97
members (TPH organizations), of which
nearly half connected indirectly to the
Exchange.79 Similarly, in December
2019, after a new broker-dealer became
a member of the Exchange in late
76 The Exchange notes that resellers are not
required to publicize, let alone justify or file with
the Commission their fees, and as such could
charge the market participant any fees it deems
appropriate (including connectivity fees higher than
the Exchange’s connectivity fees), even if such fees
would otherwise be considered potentially
unreasonable or uncompetitive fees.
77 The Exchange notes that TPHs are not required
to specify to the Exchange why it opts to no longer
be a TPH, or why it cancels its ports, nor is a nonTPH market participating required to specify to the
Exchange why it opts to not be a TPH and directly
connect to the Exchange.
78 As shown above, the availability of 15
alternative options exchanges in addition to the
viable option of indirect connectivity demonstrates
that substitute connectivity products and services
do exist supporting the assertion the proposed fees
are constrained by competitive forces.
79 The Exchange notes that one firm terminated in
late September 2019, but that it believes it was
unrelated to the migration and the proposed fee
changes.
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November 2019,80 the Exchange had 97
members, of which nearly half of the
participants connected indirectly to the
Exchange. More specifically, in
December 2019, 47 TPHs connected
directly to the Exchange and accounted
for approximately 66% of the
Exchange’s volume, 46 TPHs connected
indirectly to the Exchange and
accounted for approximately 29% of the
Exchange’s volume and 4 TPHs utilized
both direct and indirect connections
and accounted for approximately 5% of
the Exchange’s volume. In December
2019, TPHs that connected directly to
the Exchange purchased a collective 179
physical ports (including legacy
physical ports), 144 of which were 10
Gb ports and 35 of which were 1 Gb
ports.81 The Exchange notes that of
those market participants that do
connect to the Exchange, it is the
individual needs of each market
participant that determine the amount
and type of Trading Permits and
physical and logical connections to the
Exchange.82 With respect to physical
connectivity, many TPHs were able to
purchase small quantities of physical
ports. For example, approximately 36%
of TPHs that connected directly to the
Exchange purchased only one to two 1
Gb ports, approximately 40% purchased
only one to two 10 Gb ports, and
approximately 40% had purchased a
combined total of one to two ports (for
both 1 Gb and 10 Gb). Further, no TPHs
that connected directly to the Exchange
had more than five 1 Gb ports, and only
8.5% of TPHs that connected directly to
the Exchange had between six and ten
10 GB ports and only 8.5% had between
ten and fourteen 10 Gb ports. There
were also a combined total of 41 ports
used for indirect connectivity (twentyone 1 Gb ports and twenty 10 Gb
ports).83 The Exchange notes that all
types of members connected indirectly
to the Exchange including Clearing
firms, Floor Brokers, order flow
providers, and on-floor and off-floor
Market-Makers, further reflecting the
80 In February 2020, such member also became a
member of the Exchange’s affiliated options
exchanges, which have similar physical and logical
connectivity fees to the proposed fees in this filing.
81 Of the 4 TPHs that connected both directly and
indirectly to the Exchange, 1 TPH had two 1 Gb
Ports and the remaining 3 TPHs had a combined
total of six 10 Gb ports.
82 To assist market participants that are connected
or considering connecting to the Exchange, the
Exchange provides detailed information and
specifications about its available connectivity
alternatives in the Cboe C1 Options Exchange
Connectivity Manual, as well as the various
technical specifications. See https://
markets.cboe.com/us/options/support/technical/.
83 The Exchange notes that it does not know how
many, and which kind of, connections each TPH
that indirectly connects to the Exchange has.
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fact that each type of market participant
has the option to participate on an
exchange without direct connectivity.
Indeed, market participants choose if
and how to connect to a particular
exchange and because it is a choice, the
Exchange must set reasonable
connectivity pricing, otherwise
prospective members would not connect
and existing members would disconnect
or connect through a third-party reseller
of connectivity.
Moreover, the Exchange notes that the
Commission itself has repeatedly
expressed its preference for competition
over regulatory intervention in
determining prices, products, and
services in the securities markets.
Particularly, 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.’’ 84 The
number of available exchanges to
connect to ensures increased
competition in the marketplace, and
constrains the ability of exchanges to
charge supracompetitive fees for access
to its market. The Exchange is also not
aware of any evidence that has been
offered or demonstrated that a market
share of approximately 17% provides
the Exchange with anti-competitive
pricing power. Additionally, the
Exchange notes that its affiliated options
exchanges have substantially similar
physical and logical connectivity fees,
notwithstanding a much lower market
share ranging from approximately
2.5%–9%.85 As discussed, if an
exchange sets too high of a fee for
connectivity and/or market data services
for its relevant marketplace, market
participants can choose to disconnect
from the Exchange.
The Exchange also believes that
competition in the marketplace
constrains the ability of exchanges to
charge supracompetitive fees for access
to its market, even if such market, like
the Exchange, offers proprietary
products exclusive to that market.
Notably, just as there is no regulatory
requirement to become a member of any
one options exchange, there is also no
regulatory requirement for any market
participant to trade any particular
product, nor is there any requirement
84 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808
(June 9, 2005), 70 FR 37496, 37499 (June 29, 2005)
(‘‘Regulation NMS Adopting Release’’).
85 See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Options Market
Volume Summary (June 26, 2020), available at
https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/market_
statistics/.
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that any Exchange create or indefinitely
maintain any particular product.86 The
Exchange also highlights that market
participants may trade an Exchange’s
proprietary products through a thirdparty without directly or indirectly
connecting to the Exchange.
Additionally, market participants may
trade any options product, including
proprietary products, in the unregulated
Over-the-Counter (OTC) markets for
which there is no requirement for fees
related to those markets to be public.
Given the benefits offered by trading
options on a listed exchange, such as
increased market transparency and
heightened contra-party
creditworthiness due to the role of the
Options Clearing Corporation as issuer
and guarantor, the Exchange generally
seeks to incentivize market participants
to trade options on an exchange, which
further constrains connectivity pricing.
Market participants may also access
other exchanges to trade other similar or
competing proprietary or multi-listed
products. Alternative products to the
Exchange’s proprietary products may
include other options products,
including options on ETFs or options
futures, as well as particular ETFs or
futures. For example, exclusively listed
SPX options may compete with the
following products traded on other
markets: Multiply-listed SPY options
(options on the ETF), E-mini S&P 500
Options (options on futures), and EMini S&P 500 futures (futures on index).
Additionally, exclusively listed VIX
options may compete with the following
products traded on other markets:
Multiply-listed VXX options (options on
the ETF) and exclusively listed SPIKES
options on the Miami International
Securities Exchange, LLC (‘‘MIAX’’).87
Other options exchanges are also not
precluded from creating new
proprietary products that may achieve
similar objectives to (and therefore
86 If an option class is open for trading on another
national securities exchange, the Exchange may
delist such option class immediately. For
proprietary products, the Exchange may determine
to not open for trading any additional series in that
option class; may restrict series with open interest
to closing transactions, provided that, opening
transactions by Market-Makers executed to
accommodate closing transactions of other market
participants and opening transactions by TPH
organizations to facilitate the closing transactions of
public customers executed as crosses pursuant to
and in accordance with Rule 6.74(b) or (d) may be
permitted; and may delist the option class when all
series within that class have expired. See Cboe Rule
4.4, Interpretations and Policies .11.
87 MIAX has described SPIKES options as
‘‘designed specifically to compete head-to-head
against Cboe’s proprietary VIX® product.’’ See
MIAX Press Release, SPIKES Options Launched on
MIAX, February 21, 2019, available at https://
www.miaxoptions.com/sites/default/files/press_
release-files/MIAX_Press_Release_02212019.pdf.
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compete with) the Exchange’s existing
proprietary products. For example,
Nasdaq PHLX exclusively lists options
on the Nasdaq-100, which options, like
index options listed on the Exchange,
offer investors an alternative method to
manage and hedge portfolio exposure to
the U.S. equity markets. Indeed, even
though exclusively listed proprietary
products may not be offered by
competitors, a competitor could create
similar products if demand were
adequate. As noted above for example,
MIAX created its exclusive product
SPIKES specifically to compete against
VIX options.88 In connection with a
recently proposed amendment to the
National Market System Plan Governing
the Consolidated Audit Trail (‘‘CAT
NMS Plan’’),89 the Commission
discussed the existence of competition
in the marketplace generally, and
particularly for exchanges with unique
business models. Specifically, the
Commission contemplated the
possibility of a forced exit by an
exchange as a result of a proposed
amendment that could reduce the
amount of CAT funding a participant
could recover if certain implementation
milestones were missed. The
Commission acknowledged that, even if
an exchange were to exit the
marketplace due to its proposed feerelated change, it would not
significantly impact competition in the
market for exchange trading services
because these markets are served by
multiple competitors.90 The
Commission explicitly stated that
‘‘[c]onsequently, demand for these
services in the event of the exit of a
competitor is likely to be swiftly met by
existing competitors.’’ 91 The
Commission further recognized that
while some exchanges may have a
unique business model that is not
currently offered by competitors, a
competitor could create similar business
models if demand were adequate, and if
they did not do so, the Commission
believes it would be likely that new
entrants would do so if the exchange
with that unique business model was
otherwise profitable.92 Similarly,
although the Exchange may have
proprietary products not offered by
other competitors, not unlike unique
business models, a competitor could
create similar products to an existing
proprietary product if demand were
88 Id.
89 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 86901
(September 9, 2019), 84 FR 48458 (September 13,
2019) (File No. S7–13–19).
90 Id.
91 Id.
92 Id.
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adequate. As noted above, other
exchanges, that have comparable
connectivity fees, also currently offer
exclusively listed products.93 As such,
the Exchange is still very much subject
to competition and does not possess
anti-competitive pricing power, even
with its offering of proprietary products.
Rather, the Exchange must still set
reasonable connectivity pricing,
otherwise prospective members would
not connect, and existing members
would disconnect or connect through a
third-party reseller of connectivity,
regardless of what products its offers.
For all the reasons discussed above,
the Exchange believes its proposed fees
are reasonable and that the Exchange
was subject to significant competitive
forces in setting its proposed fees. In
addition, the Exchange believes its
proposed fees are reasonable in light of
the numerous benefits the new
connectivity infrastructure provides
market participants. As described, the
post-migration connectivity architecture
provides for a latency equalized
infrastructure, improved system
performance, and increased sustained
order and quote per second capacity. As
such, even where a fee for a particular
type or kind of connectivity may be
higher than it was to its pre-migration
equivalent, such increase is reasonable
given the increased benefits market
participants are getting for a similar or
modestly higher price. Moreover, as
noted above, the objective of the
proposed fee changes was not to
generate an overall increase in access
fee revenue, but rather adopt fees in
connection with a new (and improved)
connectivity infrastructure. Indeed, the
Exchange tried to the best of its ability
to approximate the overall connectivity
revenue generated by the Exchange’s
pre-migration fees. Notably, the
Exchange’s pre-migration access fees
were previously filed with the
Commission and not suspended nor
93 See e.g., Nasdaq PHLX LLC Rules, (Options 7
Pricing Schedule), Section 8A (Permit and
Registration Fees) which provide for floor permit
fees between $4,000 to $6,000 per permit and
Section 9B (Port Fees), which provides various port
fees ranging from $500 to $1,250 per port. See also
Nasdaq PHLX LLC Rules, General 8 Connectivity,
which provides for monthly physical connectivity
fees including fees for 1 Gb physical connections
priced at $2,500 per port and for 10 Gb physical
connections starting at $10,000 per port and see
MIAX Options Fees Schedule, Section 3b
(Membership Fees, Monthly Trading Permit Fee),
which provides for trading permit fees ranging from
$1,500 to $22,000 per permit (which may include
market-maker appointment costs) and Section 5
(System Connectivity Fees) which provides for
monthly physical connectivity fees including fees
for 1 Gb physical connections priced at $1,400 per
port and for 10 Gb physical connections priced at
$6,100 per port.
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42055
disapproved.94 The Exchange further
believes that the reasonableness of its
proposed connectivity fees is
demonstrated by the very fact that such
fees are in line with, and in some cases
lower than, the costs of connectivity at
other Exchanges,95 including its own
affiliated exchanges which have the
same connectivity infrastructure as the
Exchange currently does since
migration.96 The Exchange notes these
fees were similarly filed with the
Commission and not suspended nor
disapproved.97
94 Although the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (the ‘‘DoddFrank Act’’) amended 19(b) of the Exchange Act to
provide that SROs’ fee changes become
immediately effective on filing, the legislative
history makes clear that while Congress intended to
streamline SROs’ rule filing procedures, the
proposed change did not ‘‘[diminish ]the SEC’s
authority to reject an improperly filed rule,
disapprove a rule that is not consistent with the
Exchange Act or [diminish] the applicable public
notice and comment period.’’ See S. Rep 111–176,
at 106 (2010). The Commission therefore had every
right to pursue a suspension and disapproval order
of prior rule filings that adopted or amended
connectivity fees that were in place prior to the
migration if it had believed any proposed fees in
those rule filings were not consistent with the
Exchange Act. Additionally, the Commission did
not request additional data or discussion in
connection with prior rule filings regarding
connectivity fees, as it has with respect to the
proposed fees in this filing (and its previous
versions). In the absence of such an order, the
Exchange presumes that its pre-migration fees were
reasonable and consistent with the Exchange Act.
95 See e.g., Nasdaq PHLX and ISE Rules, General
Equity and Options Rules, General 8. Phlx and ISE
each charge a monthly fee of $2,500 for each 1Gb
connection, $10,000 for each 10Gb connection and
$15,000 for each 10Gb Ultra connection. See also
Nasdaq Price List—Trading Connectivity. Nasdaq
charges a monthly fee of $7,500 for each 10Gb
direct connection to Nasdaq and $2,500 for each
direct connection that supports up to 1Gb. See also
NYSE American Fee Schedule, Section V.B, and
Arca Fees and Charges, Co-Location Fees. NYSE
American and Arca each charge a monthly fee of
$5,000 for each 1Gb circuit, $14,000 for each 10Gb
circuit and $22,000 for each 10Gb LX circuit.
96 See e.g., Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules,
Physical Connectivity Fees. For example, Cboe
BZX, Cboe EDGX and C2 each charge a monthly fee
of $2,500 for each 1Gb connection and $7,500 for
each 10Gb connection.
97 For the same reason noted above, the Exchange
presumes that the fees of other exchanges,
including its affiliates, are reasonable, as required
by the Exchange Act in the absence of any
suspension or disapproval order by the Commission
providing otherwise. The Exchange highlights the
Exchange’s affiliate C2 similarly underwent a
migration of its trading platform to the same trading
platform to which the Exchange migrated,
overhauling its connectivity structure and adopting
similar connectivity fees under similar
circumstances as those proposed herein. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83201 (May 9,
2018), 83 FR 22546 (May 15, 2018) (SR–C2–2018–
006). While the Commission had the opportunity to
suspend that proposed rule change and institute
proceedings to determine whether that proposed
rule change should be approved or disapproved if
the Commission believed C2 failed to meet its
burden to demonstrate its proposal was reasonable,
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Furthermore, in determining the
proposed fee changes discussed above,
the Exchange reviewed the current
competitive landscape, considered the
fees historically paid by market
participants for connectivity to the premigration system, and also assessed the
impact on market participants to ensure
that the proposed fees would not create
an undue financial burden on any
market participants, including smaller
market participants. Indeed, the
Exchange received no comments from
any TPH suggesting they were unduly
burdened by the proposed changes
described herein, which were first
announced via Exchange Notice nearly
two months in advance of the migration
(i.e., now nine months ago), nor were
any timely comment letters received by
the Commission by the comment period
submission deadline of November 12,
2019.98 The Exchange also underscores
the fact that no comment letters were
received in response to its Second,
Third or Fifth Proposed Rule Change,
and that no individual market
participant has provided any written
comments specifically suggesting that
the Exchange has failed to provide
sufficient information in the Original
Second, Third, Fourth or Fifth Proposed
Rule Change to meets its burden to
demonstrate its proposed fees are
consistent with the requirements of the
Exchange Act.
The Exchange also highlights that two
market participants have in fact
expanded their connectivity footprint
since the implementation of the
proposed fee changes. One of those
market participants was a TPH that had
discussed terminating its membership
from the Exchange altogether prior to
migration. However, after that TPH
reviewed the notice the Exchange issued
describing the proposed post-migration
fees, the TPH relayed to the Exchange
that it would instead remain a member
and add logical connectivity in light of
the cost savings it expected to realize
due to the proposed changes. The
Exchange believes this further
demonstrates competition within the
market for exchange connectivity,
which as a result constrains fees the
Exchange may charge for that
connectivity. Another TPH, that prior to
migration acted only as a proprietary
equitable and not unfairly discriminatory, it
declined to do so. Additionally, the Exchange notes
the Commission did not repeatedly request data
regarding the proposed C2 connectivity fees as it
has in connection with the Exchange’s proposed
migration fees.
98 See Exchange Notice ‘‘Cboe Options Exchange
Access and Capacity Fee Schedule Changes
Effective October 1, 2019 and November 1, 2019’’
Reference ID C2019081900.
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trading firm, added the trading function
as a Market-Maker on the Exchange
(which required the purchase of
additional trading permits and
connectivity). The Exchange also notes
that since migration, one TPH
terminated its membership with the
Exchange but retained its membership
with 10 other SROs.99 The Exchange
believes the fact that it lost only one
TPH in the past nine months
demonstrates the proposed fees are
appropriate and reasonable and not
unduly burdensome. While the TPH
that did terminate did not specify to the
Exchange why it ended its membership,
if it had in fact determined that the
Exchange’s proposed connectivity fees
did not make business sense for itself,
for all the reasons discussed above, it
was free to leave the Exchange at no cost
and retain its membership with other
SROs and/or pursue new memberships.
The proposed connectivity structure
and corresponding fees, like the premigration connectivity structure and
fees, continue to provide market
participants flexibility with respect to
how to connect to the Exchange based
on each market participants’ respective
business needs. For example, the
amount and type of physical and logical
ports are determined by factors relevant
and specific to each market participant,
including its business model, costs of
connectivity, how its business is
segmented and allocated and volume of
messages sent to the Exchange.
Moreover, the Exchange notes that it
does not have unlimited system
capacity to support an unlimited
number of order and quote entry per
second. Accordingly, the proposed
connectivity fees, and connectivity
structure are designed to encourage
market participants to be efficient with
their respective physical and logical
port usage. While the Exchange has no
way of predicting with certainty the
amount or type of connections market
participants will in fact purchase, if any,
the Exchange anticipates that like today,
some market participants will continue
to decline to connect and participate on
the Exchange, some will participate on
the Exchange via indirect connectivity,
some will only purchase one physical
connection and/or logical port
connection, and others will purchase
multiple connections.
In sum, the Exchange believes the
proposed fees are reasonable and reflect
a competitive environment, as the
99 Two other Trading Permit Holders also
terminated their respective memberships in the first
quarter of 2020. The Exchange notes, however, that
one TPH consolidated its membership with an
affiliate and another TPH no longer appears to be
a registered broker-dealer.
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Exchange seeks to amend its access fees
in connection with the migration of its
technology platform, while still
attracting market participants to
continue to be, or become, connected to
the Exchange.
Physical Ports
The Exchange believes increasing the
fee for the new 10 Gb Physical Port is
reasonable because unlike, the current
10 Gb Network Access Ports, the new
Physical Ports provides a connection
through a latency equalized
infrastructure with faster switches and
also allows access to both unicast order
entry and multicast market data with a
single physical connection. As
discussed above, legacy Network Access
Ports do not permit market participants
to receive unicast and multicast
connectivity. As such, in order to
receive both connectivity types premigration, a market participant needed
to purchase and maintain at least two 10
Gb Network Access Ports. The proposed
Physical Ports not only provide latency
equalization (i.e., eliminate latency
advantages between market participants
based on location) as compared to the
legacy ports, but also alleviate the need
to pay for two physical ports as a result
of needing unicast and multicast
connectivity. Accordingly, market
participants who historically had to
purchase two separate ports for each of
multicast and unicast activity, will be
able to purchase only one port, and
consequently pay lower fees overall. For
example, pre-migration if a TPH had
two 10 Gb legacy Network Access Ports,
one of which received unicast traffic
and the other of which received
multicast traffic, that TPH would have
been assessed $10,000 per month
($5,000 per port). Under the proposed
rule change, using the new Physical
Ports, that TPH has the option of
utilizing one single port, instead of two
ports, to receive both unicast and
multicast traffic, therefore paying only
$7,000 per month for a port that
provides both connectivity types. The
Exchange notes that pre-migration,
approximately 50% of TPHs maintained
two or more 10 Gb Network Access
Ports. While the Exchange has no way
of predicting with certainty the amount
or type of connections market
participants will in fact purchase postmigration, the Exchange anticipated
approximately 50% of the TPHs with
two or more 10 Gb Network Access
Ports to reduce the number of 10 Gb
Physical Ports that they purchase and
expected the remaining 50% of TPHs to
maintain their current 10 Gb Physical
Ports, but reduce the number of 1 Gb
Physical Ports. Particularly, pre-
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migration, a number of TPHs
maintained two 10 Gb Network Access
Ports to receive multicast data and two
1 Gb Network Access Ports for order
entry (unicast connectivity). As the new
10 Gb Physical Ports are able to
accommodate unicast connectivity
(order entry), TPHs may choose to
eliminate their 1 Gb Network Access
Ports and utilize the new 10 Gb Physical
Ports for both multicast and unicast
connectivity. The Exchange notes that
in February 2020, approximately 78% of
TPHs that maintained a 1 Gb Network
Access Port pre-migration, no longer
maintained a 1 Gb Physical Port.
Additionally, as of February 2020,
approximately 44% reduced the
quantity of 10 Gb Physical Ports they
maintained as compared to premigration.
As discussed above, if a TPH deems
a particular exchange as charging
excessive fees for connectivity, such
market participants may opt to
terminate their connectivity
arrangements with that exchange, and
adopt a possible range of alternative
strategies, including routing to the
applicable exchange through another
participant or market center or taking
that exchange’s data indirectly.
Accordingly, if the Exchange charges
excessive fees, it would stand to lose not
only connectivity revenues but also
revenues associated with the execution
of orders routed to it, and, to the extent
applicable, market data revenues. The
Exchange believes that this competitive
dynamic imposes powerful restraints on
the ability of any exchange to charge
unreasonable fees for physical
connectivity. The Exchange also notes
that the proposal represents an equitable
allocation of reasonable dues, fees and
other charges as its fees for physical
connectivity are reasonably constrained
by competitive alternatives, as
discussed above. The proposed amounts
are in line with, and in some cases
lower than, the costs of physical
connectivity at other Exchanges,100
including the Cboe Affiliated
Exchanges, which have the same
connectivity infrastructure the Exchange
has migrated to and some of which also
100 See e.g., Nasdaq PHLX and ISE Rules, General
Equity and Options Rules, General 8. Phlx and ISE
each charge a monthly fee of $2,500 for each 1Gb
connection, $10,000 for each 10Gb connection and
$15,000 for each 10Gb Ultra connection. See also
Nasdaq Price List—Trading Connectivity. Nasdaq
charges a monthly fee of $7,500 for each 10Gb
direct connection to Nasdaq and $2,500 for each
direct connection that supports up to 1Gb. See also
NYSE American Fee Schedule, Section V.B, and
Arca Fees and Charges, Co-Location Fees. NYSE
American and Arca each charge a monthly fee of
$5,000 for each 1Gb circuit, $14,000 for each 10Gb
circuit and $22,000 for each 10Gb LX circuit.
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offer exclusive products.101 The
Exchange does not believe it is
unreasonable to assess fees that are in
line with fees that have already been
established for the same physical ports
used to connect to the same
connectivity infrastructure and common
platform. The Exchange believes the
proposed Physical Port fees are
equitable and not unreasonably
discriminatory as the connectivity
pricing is associated with relative usage
of the various market participants
(including smaller participants) and the
Exchange has not been presented with
any evidence to suggest its proposed fee
changes would impose a barrier to entry
for participants, including smaller
participants. In fact, as noted above, the
Exchange is unaware of any market
participant that has terminated direct
connectivity solely as a result of the
proposed fee changes. The Exchange
also believes increasing the fee for 10 Gb
Physical Ports and charging a higher fee
as compared to the 1 Gb Physical Port
is equitable as the 1 Gb Physical Port is
1/10th the size of the 10 Gb Physical
Port and therefore does not offer access
to many of the products and services
offered by the Exchange (e.g., ability to
receive certain market data products).
Thus the value of the 1 Gb alternative
is lower than the value of the 10 Gb
alternative, when measured based on
the type of Exchange access it offers.
Moreover, market participants that
purchase 10 Gb Physical Ports utilize
the most bandwidth and therefore
consume the most resources from the
network. As such, the Exchange believes
the proposed fees for the 1 and 10 Gb
Physical Ports, respectively are
reasonably and appropriately allocated.
Data Port Fees
The Exchange believes assessing the
data port fee per data source, instead of
per port, is reasonable because it may
allow for market participants to
maintain more ports at a lower cost and
applies uniformly to all market
participants. The Exchange believes the
proposed increase is reasonable
because, as noted above, market
participants may pay lower fees as a
result of charging per data source and
not per data port. Indeed, while the
Exchange has no way of predicting with
certainty the impact of the proposed
changes, the Exchange had anticipated
approximately 76% of the 51 market
participants who pay data port fees to
pay the same or lower fees upon
101 See e.g., Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules,
Physical Connectivity Fees. For example, Cboe
BZX, Cboe EDGX and C2 each charge a monthly fee
of $2,500 for each 1Gb connection and $7,500 for
each 10Gb connection.
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implementation of the proposed change.
As of December 2019, 46 market
participants 102 pay the proposed data
port fees, of which approximately 78%
market participants are paying the same
or lower fees in connection with the
proposed change. Monthly savings for
firms paying lower fees range from $500
to $6,000 per month. The Exchange also
anticipated that 19% of TPHs who pay
data port fees would pay a modest
increase of only $500 per month. In
December 2019, approximately 22%
market participants paid higher fees,
with the majority of those market
participants paying a modest monthly
increase of $500 and only 3 firms paying
either $1,000 or $1,500 more per month.
Additionally, as discussed above, the
Exchange’s affiliate C2 has the same fee
which is also assessed at the proposed
rate and assessed by data source instead
of per port. The proposed name change
is also appropriate in light of the
Exchange’s proposed changes and may
alleviate potential confusion.
Logical Connectivity
Port Fees
The Exchange believes it’s reasonable
to eliminate certain fees associated with
legacy options for connecting to the
Exchange and to replace them with fees
associated with new options for
connecting to the Exchange that are
similar to those offered at its Affiliated
Exchanges. In particular, the Exchange
believes it’s reasonable to no longer
assess fees for CMI and FIX Login IDs
because the Login IDs were retired and
rendered obsolete upon migration and
because the Exchange is proposing to
replace them with fees associated with
the new logical connectivity options.
The Exchange believes that it is
reasonable to harmonize the Exchange’s
logical connectivity options and
corresponding connectivity fees now
that the Exchange is on a common
platform as its Affiliated Exchanges.
Additionally, the Exchange notes the
proposed fees are the same as, or in line
with, the fees assessed on its Affiliated
Exchanges for similar connectivity.103
The proposed logical connectivity fees
are also equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because the Exchange
will apply the same fees to all market
participants that use the same respective
connectivity options.
The Exchange believes the proposed
Logical Port fees are reasonable as it is
the same fee for Drop Ports and the first
102 The Exchange notes the reduction in market
participants that pay the data port fee is due to firm
consolidations and acquisitions.
103 See Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules,
Logical Port Fees.
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five BOE/FIX Ports that is assessed for
CMI and FIX Logins, which the
Exchange is eliminating in lieu of
logical ports. Additionally, while the
proposed ports will be assessed the
same monthly fees as current CMI/FIX
Login IDs, the proposed logical ports
provide for significantly more message
traffic. Specifically, the proposed BOE/
FIX Logical Ports will provide for 3
times the amount of quoting 104 capacity
and approximately 165 times order
entry capacity. Similarly, the Exchange
believes the proposed BOE Bulk Port
fees are reasonable because while the
fees are higher than the CMI and FIX
Login Id fees and the proposed Logical
Port fees, BOE Bulk Ports offer
significantly more bandwidth capacity
than both CMI and FIX Login Ids and
Logical Ports. Particularly, a single BOE
Bulk Port offers 45 times the amount of
quoting bandwidth than CMI/FIX Login
Ids 105 and 5 times the amount of
quoting bandwidth than Logical Ports
will offer. Additionally, the Exchange
believes that its fees for logical
connectivity are reasonable, equitable,
and not unfairly discriminatory as they
are designed to ensure that firms that
use the most capacity pay for that
capacity, rather than placing that
burden on market participants that have
more modest needs. Although the
Exchange charges a ‘‘per port’’ fee for
logical connectivity, it notes that this fee
is in effect a capacity fee as each FIX,
BOE or BOE Bulk port used for order/
quote entry supports a specified
capacity (i.e., messages per second) in
the matching engine, and firms
purchase additional logical ports when
they require more capacity due to their
business needs.
An obvious driver for a market
participant’s decision to purchase
multiple ports will be their desire to
send or receive additional levels of
message traffic in some manner, either
by increasing their total amount of
message capacity available, or by
segregating order flow for different
trading desks and clients to avoid
latency sensitive applications from
competing for a single thread of
resources. For example, a TPH may
purchase one or more ports for its
market making business based on the
amount of message traffic needed to
support that business, and then
purchase separate ports for proprietary
trading or customer facing businesses so
that those businesses have their own
distinct connection, allowing the firm to
104 Based on the purchase of a single MarketMaker Trading Permit or Bandwidth Packet.
105 Based on the purchase of a single MarketMaker Trading Permit or Bandwidth Packet.
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send multiple messages into the
Exchange’s trading system in parallel
rather than sequentially. Some TPHs
that provide direct market access to
their customers may also choose to
purchase separate ports for different
clients as a service for latency sensitive
customers that desire the lowest
possible latency to improve trading
performance. Thus, while a smaller TPH
that demands more limited message
traffic may connect through a service
bureau or other service provider, or may
choose to purchase one or two logical
ports that are billed at a rate of $750 per
month each, a larger market participant
with a substantial and diversified U.S.
options business may opt to purchase
additional ports to support both the
volume and types of activity that they
conduct on the Exchange. While the
Exchange has no way of predicting with
certainty the amount or type of logical
ports market participants will in fact
purchase post-migration, the Exchange
anticipated approximately 16% of TPHs
to purchase one to two logical ports, and
approximately 22% of TPHs to not
purchase any logical ports. In December
2019, 13% of TPHs purchased one to
two logical ports and 27% have not
purchased any logical ports. At the same
time, market participants that desire
more total capacity due to their business
needs, or that wish to segregate order
flow by purchasing separate capacity
allocations to reduce latency or for other
operational reasons, would be permitted
to choose to purchase such additional
capacity at the same marginal cost. The
Exchange believes the proposal to assess
an additional Logical and BOE Bulk port
fee for incremental usage per logical
port is reasonable because the proposed
fees are modestly higher than the
proposed Logical Port and BOE Bulk
fees and encourage users to mitigate
message traffic as necessary. The
Exchange notes one of its Affiliated
Exchanges has similar implied port
fees.106
In sum, the Exchange believes that the
proposed BOE/FIX Logical Port and
BOE Bulk Port fees are appropriate as
these fees would ensure that market
participants continue to pay for the
amount of capacity that they request,
and the market participants that pay the
most are the ones that demand the most
resources from the Exchange. The
Exchange also believes that its logical
connectivity fees are aligned with the
goals of the Commission in facilitating
a competitive market for all firms that
trade on the Exchange and of ensuring
that critical market infrastructure has
106 See e.g., Cboe C2 Options Exchange Fees
Schedule, Logical Connectivity Fees.
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‘‘levels of capacity, integrity, resiliency,
availability, and security adequate to
maintain their operational capability
and promote the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets.’’ 107
The Exchange believes waiving the
FIX/BOE Logical Port fee for one FIX
Logical Port used to access PULSe and
Silexx (for FLEX Trading) is reasonable
because it will allow all TPHs using
PULSe and Silexx to avoid having to
pay a fee that they would otherwise
have to pay. The waiver is equitable and
not unfairly discriminatory because
TPHs using PULSe are already subject to
a monthly fee for the PULSe
Workstation, which the Exchange views
as inclusive of fees to access the
Exchange. Moreover, while PULSe users
today do not require a FIX/CMI Login
Id, post-migration, due to changes to the
connectivity infrastructure, PULSe users
will be required to maintain a FIX
Logical Port and as such incur a fee they
previously would not have been subject
to. Similarly, the Exchange believes that
the waiver for Silexx (for FLEX trading)
will encourage TPHs to transact
business using FLEX Options using the
new Silexx System and encourage
trading of FLEX Options. Additionally,
the Exchange notes that it currently
waives the Login Id fees for Login IDs
used to access the CFLEX system.
The Exchange believes its proposed
fee for Purge Ports is reasonable as it is
also in line with the amount assessed
for purge ports offered by its Affiliated
Exchanges, as well as other
exchanges.108 Moreover, the Exchange
believes that offering purge port
functionality at the Exchange level
promotes robust risk management across
the industry, and thereby facilitates
investor protection. Some market
participants, and, in particular, larger
firms, could build similar risk
functionality on their trading systems
that permit the flexible cancellation of
orders entered on the Exchange.
Offering Exchange level protections
however, ensures that such
functionality is widely available to all
firms, including smaller firms that may
otherwise not be willing to incur the
costs and development work necessary
to support their own customized mass
cancel functionality. The Exchange
operates in a highly competitive market
in which exchanges offer connectivity
and related services as a means to
107 See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
73639 (November 19, 2014), 79 FR 72251
(December 5, 2014) (File No. S7–01–13) (Regulation
SCI Adopting Release).
108 See Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules,
Logical Port Fees. See also, Nasdaq ISE Pricing
Schedule, Section 7(C). ISE charges a fee of $1,100
per month for SQF Purge Ports.
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facilitate the trading activities of TPHs
and other participants. As the proposed
Purge Ports provide voluntary risk
management functionality, excessive
fees would simply serve to reduce
demand for this optional product. The
Exchange also believes that the
proposed Purge Port fees are not
unfairly discriminatory because they
will apply uniformly to all TPHs that
choose to use dedicated Purge Ports.
The proposed Purge Ports are
completely voluntary and, as they relate
solely to optional risk management
functionality, no TPH is required or
under any regulatory obligation to
utilize them. The Exchange believes that
adopting separate fees for these ports
ensures that the associated costs are
borne exclusively by TPHs that
determine to use them based on their
business needs, including MarketMakers or similarly situated market
participants. Similar to Purge Ports,
Spin and GRP Ports are optional
products that provide an alternative
means for market participants to receive
multicast data and request and receive
a retransmission of such data. As such
excessive fees would simply serve to
reduce demand for these products,
which TPHs are under no regulatory
obligation to utilize. All TPHs that
voluntarily select these service options
(i.e., Purge Ports, Spin Ports or GRP
Ports) will be charged the same amount
for the same respective services. All
TPHs have the option to select any
connectivity option, and there is no
differentiation among TPHs with regard
to the fees charged for the services
offered by the Exchange.
Access Credits
The Exchange believes the proposal to
adopt credits for BOE Bulk Ports is
reasonable, equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because it provides an
opportunity for TPHs to pay lower fees
for logical connectivity. The Exchange
notes that the proposed credits are in
lieu of the current credits that MarketMakers are eligible to receive today for
Trading Permits fees. Although only
Market-Makers may receive the
proposed BOE Bulk Port credits,
Market-Makers are valuable market
participants that provide liquidity in the
marketplace and incur costs that other
market participants do not incur. For
example, Market-Makers have a number
of obligations, including quoting
obligations and fees associated with
appointments that other market
participants do not have. The Exchange
also believes that the proposals provide
incremental incentives for TPHs to
strive for the higher tier levels, which
provide increasingly higher benefits for
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satisfying increasingly more stringent
criteria, including criteria to provide
more liquidity to the Exchange. The
Exchange believes the value of the
proposed credits is commensurate with
the difficulty to achieve the
corresponding tier thresholds of each
program.
First, the Exchange believes the
proposed BOE Bulk Port fee credits
provided under AVP will incentivize
the routing of orders to the Exchange by
TPHs that have both Market-Maker and
agency operations, as well as incent
Market-Makers to continue to provide
critical liquidity notwithstanding the
costs incurred with being a MarketMaker. More specifically, in the options
industry, many options orders are
routed by consolidators, which are firms
that have both order router and MarketMaker operations. The Exchange is
aware not only of the importance of
providing credits on the order routing
side in order to encourage the
submission of orders, but also of the
operations costs on the Market-Maker
side. The Exchange believes the
proposed change to AVP continues to
allow the Exchange to provide relief to
the Market-Maker side via the credits,
albeit credits on BOE Bulk Port fees
instead of Trading Permit fees.
Additionally, the proposed credits may
incentivize and attract more volume and
liquidity to the Exchange, which will
benefit all Exchange participants
through increased opportunities to trade
as well as enhancing price discovery.
While the Exchange has no way of
predicting with certainty how many and
which TPHs will satisfy the required
criteria to receive the credits, the
Exchange had anticipated
approximately two TPHs (out of
approximately 5 TPHs that are eligible
for AVP) to reach VIP Tiers 4 or 5 and
consequently earn the BOE Bulk Port fee
credits for their respective MarketMaker affiliate. For the month of
October 2019, two TPHs received access
credits under Tier 5 and no TPHs
received credits under Tier 4. The
Exchange notes that it believes its
reasonable, equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory to no longer provider
access credits for Market-Makers whose
affiliates achieve VIP Tiers 2 or 3 as the
Exchange has adopted another
opportunity for all Market-Makers, not
just Market-Makers that are part of a
consolidator, to receive credits on BOE
Bulk Port fees (i.e., credits available via
the proposed Market-Maker Access
Credit Program). More specifically,
limiting the credits under AVP to the
top two tiers enables the Exchange to
provide further credits under the new
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Market-Maker Access Credit Program.
Furthermore, the Exchange notes that it
is not required to provide any credits at
any tier level.
The Exchange believes the proposed
BOE Bulk Port fee credits available for
TPHs that reach certain Performance
Tiers under the Liquidity Provider
Sliding Scale Adjustment Table is
reasonable as the credits provide for
reduced connectivity costs for those
Market-Makers that reach the required
thresholds. The Exchange believe it’s
reasonable, equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory to provide credits to
those Market-Makers that primarily
provide and post liquidity to the
Exchange, as the Exchange wants to
continue to encourage Market-Makers
with significant Make Rates to continue
to participate on the Exchange and add
liquidity. Greater liquidity benefits all
market participants by providing more
trading opportunities and tighter
spreads.
Moreover, the Exchange notes that
Market-Makers with a high Make Rate
percentage generally require higher
amounts of capacity than other MarketMakers. Particularly, Market-Makers
with high Make Rates are generally
streaming significantly more quotes
than those with lower Make Rates. As
such, Market-Makers with high Make
Rates may incur more costs than other
Market-Makers as they may need to
purchase multiple BOE Bulk Ports in
order to accommodate their capacity
needs. The Exchange believes the
proposed credits for BOE Bulk Ports
encourages Market-Makers to continue
to provide liquidity for the Exchange,
notwithstanding the costs incurred by
purchasing multiple ports. Particularly,
the proposal is intended to mitigate the
costs incurred by traditional MarketMakers that focus on adding liquidity to
the Exchange (as opposed to those that
provide and take, or just take). While
the Exchange cannot predict with
certainty which Market-Makers will
reach Performance Tiers 4 and 5 each
month, based on historical performance
it anticipated approximately 10 MarketMakers would achieve Tiers 4 or 5. In
October 2019, 12 Market-Makers
achieved Tiers 4 or 5. Lastly, the
Exchange notes that it is common
practice among options exchanges to
differentiate fees for adding liquidity
and fees for removing liquidity.109
Bandwidth Packets and CMI CAS Server
Fees
The Exchange believes it’s reasonable
to eliminate Bandwidth Packet fees and
109 See e.g., MIAX Options Fees Schedule,
Section 1(a), Market Maker Transaction Fees.
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the CMI CAS Server fee because TPHs
will not pay fees for these connectivity
options and because Bandwidth Packets
and CAS Servers have been retired and
rendered obsolete as part of the
migration. The Exchange believes that
even though it will be discontinuing
Bandwidth Packets, the proposed
incremental pricing for Logical Ports
and BOE Bulk Ports will continue to
encourage users to mitigate message
traffic. The proposed change is equitable
and not unfairly discriminatory because
it will apply uniformly to all TPHs.
Access Fees
The Exchange believes the
restructuring of its Trading Permits is
reasonable in light of the changes to the
Exchange’s connectivity infrastructure
in connection with the migration and
the resulting separation of bandwidth
allowance, logins and appointment
costs from each Trading Permit. The
Exchange also believes that it is
reasonable to harmonize the Exchange’s
Trading Permit structure and
corresponding connectivity options to
more closely align with the structures
offered at its Affiliated Exchanges once
the Exchange is on a common platform
as its Affiliated Exchanges.110 The
proposed Trading Permit structure and
corresponding fees are also in line with
the structure and fees provided by other
exchanges. The proposed Trading
Permit fees are also equitable and not
unfairly discriminatory because the
Exchange will apply the same fees to all
market participants that use the same
type and number of Trading Permits.
With respect to electronic Trading
Permits, the Exchange notes that TPHs
previously requested multiple Trading
Permits because of bandwidth, login or
appointment cost needs. As described
above, in connection with migration,
bandwidth, logins and appointment
costs are no longer tied to Trading
Permits or Bandwidth Packets and as
such, the need to hold multiple permits
and/or Bandwidth Packets is obsolete.
As such, the Exchange believes the
structure to require only one of each
type of applicable electronic Trading
Permit is appropriate. Moreover, the
Exchange believes offering separate
marketing making permits for off-floor
and on-floor Market-Makers provides for
a cleaner, more streamlined approach to
trading permits and corresponding fees.
Other exchanges similarly provide
separate and distinct fees for MarketMakers that operate on-floor vs off-floor
and their corresponding fees are similar
to those proposed by the Exchange.111
The Exchange believes the proposed
fee for its MM EAP Trading Permits is
reasonable as it is the same fee it assess
today for Market-Maker Trading Permits
(i.e., $5,000 per month per permit).
Additionally, the proposed fee is in line
with, and in some cases even lower
than, the amounts assessed for similar
access fees at other exchanges,
including its affiliate C2.112 The
Exchange believes the proposed EAP fee
is also reasonable, and in line with the
fees assessed by other Exchanges for
non-Market-Maker electronic access.113
The Exchange notes that while the
Trading Permit fee is increasing, TPHs
overall cost to access the Exchange may
be reduced in light of the fact that a TPH
no longer must purchase multiple
Trading Permits, Bandwidth Packets
and Login Ids in order to receive
sufficient bandwidth and logins to meet
their respective business needs. To
illustrate the value of the new
connectivity infrastructure, the
Exchange notes that the cost that would
be incurred by a TPH today in order to
receive the same amount of order
capacity that will be provided by a
single Logical Port post-migration (i.e.,
5,000 orders per second), is
approximately 98% higher than the cost
for the same capacity post-migration.
The following examples further
demonstrate potential cost savings/
value added for an EAP holder with
modest capacity needs and an EAP
holder with larger capacity needs:
TPH THAT HOLDS 1 EAP, NO BANDWIDTH PACKETS AND 1 CMI LOGIN
Current fee structure
Post-migration fee structure
EAP ....................................................................
CMI Login/Logical Port .......................................
Bandwidth Packets .............................................
Total Bandwidth Available ..................................
$1,600 ..............................................................
$750 .................................................................
0 .......................................................................
30 orders/sec ...................................................
$3,000.
$750..
N/A.
5,000 orders/sec.
Total Cost ....................................................
Total Cost per message ..............................
$2,350 ..............................................................
$78.33/order/sec ..............................................
$3,750.
$0.75/order/sec.
TPH THAT HOLDS 1 EAP, 4 BANDWIDTH PACKETS AND 15 CMI LOGINS
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Current fee structure
Post-migration fee structure
EAP ....................................................................
CMI Login/Logical Port .......................................
Bandwidth Packets .............................................
Total Bandwidth Available ..................................
$1,600 ..............................................................
$11,250 (15@750) ...........................................
$6,400 (4@$1,600) ..........................................
150 orders/sec .................................................
$3,000.
$750.
N/A.
5,000 orders/sec.
Total Cost ....................................................
Total Cost per message ..............................
$19,250 ............................................................
$128.33/order/sec ............................................
$3,750.
$0.75/order/sec.
110 For example, the Exchange’s affiliate, C2,
similarly provides for Trading Permits that are not
tied to connectivity, and similar physical and
logical port options at similar pricings. See Cboe C2
Options Exchange Fees Schedule. Physical
connectivity and logical connectivity are also not
tied to any type of permits on the Exchange’s other
options exchange affiliates.
111 See e.g., PHLX Section 8A, Permit and
Registration Fees. See also, BOX Options Fee
Schedule, Section IX Participant Fees; NYSE
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American Options Fees Schedule, Section III(A)
Monthly ATP Fees and NYSE Arca Options Fees
and Charges, OTP Trading Participant Rights. For
similar Trading Floor Permits for Floor Market
Makers, Nasdaq PHLX charges $6,000; BOX charges
up to $5,500 for 3 registered permits in addition to
a $1,500 Participant Fee, NYSE Arca charges up to
$6,000; and NYSE American charges up to $8,000.
112 See e.g., Cboe C2 Options Exchange Fees
Schedule. See also, NYSE Arca Options Fees and
Charges, General Options and Trading Permit (OTP)
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Fees, which assesses up to $6,000 per Market Maker
OTP and NYSE American Options Fee Schedule,
Section III. Monthly ATP Fees, which assess up to
$8,000 per Market Maker ATP. See also, PHLX
Section 8A, Permit and Registration Fees, which
assesses up to $4,000 per Market Maker Permit.
113 See e.g., PHLX Section 8A, Permit and
Registration Fees, which assesses up to $4,000 per
Permit for all member and member organizations
other than Floor Specialists and Market Makers.
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The Exchange believes the proposal to
adopt a new Clearing TPH Permit is
reasonable because it offers TPHs that
only clear transactions of TPHs a
discount. Particularly, Clearing TPHs
that also submit orders electronically to
the Exchange would purchase the
proposed EAP at $3,000 per permit. The
Exchange believe it’s reasonable to
provide a discount to Clearing TPHs
that only clear transactions and do not
otherwise submit electronic orders to
the Exchange. The Exchange notes that
another exchange similarly charges a
separate fee for clearing firms.114
The Exchange believes the proposed
fee structure for on-floor Market-Makers
is reasonable as the fees are in line with
those offered at other Exchanges.115 The
Exchange believes that the proposed fee
for MM Floor Permits as compared to
MM EAPs is reasonable because it is
only modestly higher than MM EAPs
and Floor MMs don’t have other costs
that MM EAP holders have, such as MM
EAP Appointment fees.
The Exchange believes its proposed
fees for Floor Broker Permits are
reasonable because the fees are similar
to, and in some cases lower than, the
fees the Exchange currently assesses for
such permits. Specifically, based on the
number of Trading Permits TPHs held
upon migration, 60% of TPHs that hold
Floor Broker Trading Permits will pay
lower Trading Permit fees. Particularly,
any Floor Broker holding ten or less
Floor Broker Trading Permits will pay
lower fees under the proposed tiers as
compared to what they pay today. While
the remaining 40% of TPHs holding
Floor Broker Trading Permits (who each
hold between 12–21 Floor Broker
Trading Permits) will pay higher fees,
the Exchange notes the monthly
increase is de minimis, ranging from an
increase of 0.6%–2.72%.116
The Exchange believes the proposed
ADV Discount is reasonable because it
provides an opportunity for Floor
Brokers to pay lower FB Trading Permit
fees, similar to the current rebate
program offered to Floor Brokers. The
Exchange notes that while the new ADV
Discount program includes only
customer volume (‘‘C’’ origin code) as
compared to Customer and Professional
Customer/Voluntary Professional, the
amount of Professional Customer/
Voluntary Professional volume was de
minimis and the Exchange does not
believe the absence of such volume will
have a significant impact.117
Additionally, the Exchange notes that
while the ADV requirements under the
proposed ADV Discount program are
higher than are required under the
current rebate program, the proposed
ADV Discount counts volume from all
products towards the thresholds as
compared to the current rebate program
which excludes volume from
Underlying Symbol List A (except RLG,
RLV, RUI, and UKXM), DJX, XSP, and
subcabinet trades. Moreover, the ADV
Discount is designed to encourage the
execution of orders in all classes via
open outcry, which may increase
volume, which would benefit all market
participants (including Floor Brokers
who do not hit the ADV thresholds)
trading via open outcry (and indeed,
this increased volume could make it
possible for some Floor Brokers to hit
the ADV thresholds). The Exchange
believes the proposed discounts are
equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because all Floor Brokers
are eligible. While the Exchange has no
way of predicting with certainty how
many and which TPHs will satisfy the
various thresholds under the ADV
Discount, the Exchange anticipated
approximately 3 Floor Brokers to
receive a rebate under the program. In
December 2019, 2 Floor Brokers
received a rebate under the program.
The Exchange believes its proposed
MM EAP Appointment fees are
reasonable in light of the Exchange’s
elimination of appointment costs tied to
Trading Permits. Other exchanges also
offer a similar structure with respect to
fees for appointment classes.118
42061
Additionally, the proposed MM EAP
Appointment fee structure results in
approximately 36% electronic MMs
paying lower fees for trading permit and
appointment costs. For example, in
order to have the ability to make
electronic markets in every class on the
Exchange, a Market-Maker would need
1 Market-Maker Trading Permit and 37
Appointment Units post-migration.
Under, the current pricing structure, in
order for a Market-Maker to quote the
entire universe of available classes, a
Market-Maker would need 33
Appointment Credits, thus necessitating
33 Market-Maker Trading Permits. With
respect to fees for Trading Permits and
Appointment Unit Fees, under the
proposed pricing structure, the cost for
a TPH wishing to quote the entire
universe of available classes is
approximately 29% less (if they are not
eligible for the MM TP Sliding Scale) or
approximately 2% less (if they are
eligible for the MM TP Sliding Scale).
To further demonstrate the potential
cost savings/value added, the Exchange
is providing the following examples
comparing current Market-Maker
connectivity and access fees to projected
connectivity and access fees for
different scenarios. The Exchange notes
that the below examples not only
compare Trading Permit and
Appointment Unit costs, but also the
cost incurred for logical connectivity
and bandwidth. Particularly, the first
example demonstrates the total
minimum cost that would be incurred
today in order for a Market-Maker to
have the same amount of capacity as a
Market-Maker post-migration that
would have only 1 MM EAP and 1
Logical Port (i.e., 15,000 quotes/3 sec).
The Exchange is also providing
examples that demonstrate the costs of
(i) a Market-Maker with small capacity
needs and appointment unit of 1.0 and
(ii) a Market-Maker with large capacity
needs and appointment cost/unit of
30.0:
MARKET-MAKER THAT NEEDS CAPACITY OF 15,000/QUOTES/3 SECONDS
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Current fee structure
Post-migration fee structure
MM Permit/MM EAP ...........................................
Appointment Unit Cost .......................................
CMI Login/Logical Port .......................................
Bandwidth Packets .............................................
$5,000 ..............................................................
N/A (1 appointment cost) .................................
$750 119 ............................................................
$5,500 (2@$2,750) ..........................................
$5,000.
$0 (1 appointment unit).
$750.
N/A.
Total Bandwidth Available ...........................
15,000 quotes/3 sec ........................................
15,000 quotes/3 sec.
114 See e.g., NYSE Arca Options Fees and
Charges, General Options and Trading Permit (OTP)
Fees and NYSE American Options Fee Schedule,
Section III. Monthly ATP Fees.
115 See e.g., PHLX Section 8A, Permit and
Registration Fees, which assesses $6,000 per permit
for Floor Specialists and Market Makers.
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116 The Floor Brokers whose fees are increasing
have each committed to a minimum number of
permits and therefore currently receive the rates set
forth in the current Floor Broker TP Sliding Scale.
117 Furthermore, post-migration the Exchange will
not have Voluntary Professionals.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
118 See e.g., PHLX Section 8. Membership Fees, B,
Streaming Quote Trader (‘‘SQT’’) Fees and C.
Remote Market Maker Organization (RMO) Fee.
119 The maximum quoting bandwidth that may be
applied to a single Login Id is 80,000 quotes/3 sec.
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 134 / Monday, July 13, 2020 / Notices
MARKET-MAKER THAT NEEDS CAPACITY OF 15,000/QUOTES/3 SECONDS—Continued
Current fee structure
Total Cost ....................................................
Total Cost per message allowed ................
$11,250 ............................................................
$0.75/quote/3 sec ............................................
Post-migration fee structure
$5,750.
$0.38/quote/3 sec.
MARKET MAKER THAT NEEDS CAPACITY OF NO MORE THAN 5,000 QUOTES/3 SECS
Current fee structure
Post-migration fee structure
MM Permit/MM EAP ...........................................
Appointment Unit Cost .......................................
CMI Login/Logical Port .......................................
Bandwidth Packets .............................................
$5,000 ..............................................................
N/A (1 appointment cost) .................................
$750 .................................................................
0 .......................................................................
$5,000.
$0 (1 appointment unit).
$750.
N/A.
Total Bandwidth Available ...........................
Total Cost ....................................................
Total Cost per message allowed ................
5,000 quotes/3 sec ..........................................
$5,750 ..............................................................
$1.15/quote/3 sec ............................................
15,000 quotes/3 sec.
$5,750.
$0.38/quote/3 sec.
MARKET-MAKER THAT NEEDS 30 APPOINTMENT UNITS AND CAPACITY OF 300,000 QUOTES/3 SEC
Current fee structure
MM Permits/MM EAP .........................................
Post-migration fee structure
Appointment Units Cost .....................................
CMI Logins/BOE Bulk Port .................................
Bandwidth Packets .............................................
$105,000 (30 MM Permits assumes eligible
for MM TP Sliding Scale) 120.
N/A (30 appointment costs) .............................
$3,000 (4@$750) 121 ........................................
$82,500(30@$2750) ........................................
$5,000.
$95,500 (30 appointment units).
$3,000 (2 BOE Bulk@$1,500).
N/A.
Total Bandwidth Available ...........................
Total Cost ....................................................
Total Cost per message allowed ................
300,000 quotes/3 sec ......................................
$190,500 ..........................................................
$0.63/quotes/3 sec ...........................................
* 450,000 quotes/3 sec.
$103,500.
$0.23/quote/3 sec.
* Possible performance degradation at 15,000 messages per second.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
The Exchange believes its proposal to
provide separate fees for Tier
Appointments for MM EAPs and MM
Floor Permits as the Exchange will be
issuing separate Trading Permits for onfloor and off-floor market making as
discussed above. The proposal to
eliminate the volume threshold for the
electronic SPX Tier Appointment fee is
reasonable as no TPHs in the past
several months have electronically
traded more than 1 SPX contract or less
than 100 SPX contracts per month and
therefore will not be negatively
impacted by the proposed change, and
because it aligns the electronic SPX Tier
Appointment with the floor SPX Tier
Appointment, which has no volume
threshold. The Exchange believes the
proposal to increase the electronic
volume thresholds for VIX and RUT are
reasonable as those that do not regularly
trade VIX or RUT in open-outcry will
continue to not be assessed the fee. In
fact, any TPH that executes more than
100 contracts but less than 1,000 in the
respective classes will no longer have to
120 For simplicity of the comparison, this assumes
no appointments in SPX, VIX, RUT, XEO or OEX
(which are not included in the TP Sliding Scale).
121 Given the bandwidth limit per Login Id of
80,000 quotes/3 sec, example assumes MarketMaker purchases minimum amount of Login IDs to
accommodate 300,000 quotes/3 sec.
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20:25 Jul 10, 2020
Jkt 250001
pay the proposed Tier Appointment fee.
As noted above, the Exchange is not
proposing to change the amounts
assessed for each Tier Appointment Fee.
The proposed change is equitable and
not unfairly discriminatory because it
will apply uniformly to all TPHs.
Trading Permit Holder Regulatory Fee
The Exchange believes it’s reasonable
to eliminate the Trading Permit Holder
Regulatory fee because TPHs will not
pay this fee and because the Exchange
is restructuring its Trading Permit
structure. The Exchange notes that
although it will less closely be covering
the costs of regulating all TPHs and
performing its regulatory
responsibilities, it still has sufficient
funds to do so. The proposed change is
equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because it will apply
uniformly to all TPHs.
The Exchange believes corresponding
changes to eliminate obsolete language
in connection with the proposed
changes described above and to relocate
and reorganize its fees in connection
with the proposed changes maintain
clarity in the Fees Schedule and
alleviate potential confusion, thereby
removing impediments to and
perfecting the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
PO 00000
Frm 00125
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
system, and, in general, protecting
investors and the public interest.
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.
With respect to intra-market
competition, the Exchange does not
believe that the proposed rule change
would place certain market participants
at the Exchange at a relative
disadvantage compared to other market
participants or affect the ability of such
market participants to compete. As
stated above, the Exchange does not
believe its proposed pricing will impose
a barrier to entry to smaller participants
and notes that its proposed connectivity
pricing is associated with relative usage
of the various market participants. For
example, market participants with
modest capacity needs can buy the less
expensive 1 Gb Physical Port and utilize
only one Logical Port. Moreover, the
pricing for 1 Gb Physical Ports and FIX/
BOE Logical Ports are no different than
are assessed today (i.e., $1,500 and $750
per port, respectively), yet the capacity
and access associated with each is
greatly increasing. While pricing may be
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 134 / Monday, July 13, 2020 / Notices
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
increased for larger capacity physical
and logical ports, such options provide
far more capacity and are purchased by
those that consume more resources from
the network. Accordingly, the proposed
connectivity fees do not favor certain
categories of market participants in a
manner that would impose a burden on
competition; rather, the allocation
reflects the network resources
consumed by the various size of market
participants—lowest bandwidth
consuming members pay the least, and
highest bandwidth consuming members
pays the most, particularly since higher
bandwidth consumption translates to
higher costs to the Exchange.
The Exchange also does not believe
that the proposed rule change will result
in any burden on inter-market
competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. As discussed in the
Statutory Basis section above, options
market participants are not forced to
connect to (or purchase market data
from) all options exchanges, as shown
by the number of TPHs at Cboe and
shown by the fact that there are varying
number of members across each of
Cboe’s Affiliated Exchanges. The
Exchange operates in a highly
competitive environment, and as
discussed above, its ability to price
access and connectivity is constrained
by competition among exchanges and
third parties. As discussed, there are
other options markets of which market
participants may connect to trade
options. There is also a possible range
of alternative strategies, including
routing to the exchange through another
participant or market center or accessing
the Exchange indirectly. For example,
there are 15 other U.S. options
exchanges, which the Exchange must
consider in its pricing discipline in
order to compete for market
participants. In this competitive
environment, market participants are
free to choose which competing
exchange or reseller to use to satisfy
their business needs. As a result, the
Exchange believes this proposed rule
change permits fair competition among
national securities exchanges.
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 written comments on the
proposed rule change.
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20:25 Jul 10, 2020
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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 122 and paragraph (f) of Rule
19b–4 123 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.
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–
CBOE–2020–064 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–CBOE–2020–064. 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
PO 00000
122 15
123 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
CFR 240.19b–4(f).
Frm 00126
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42063
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 such
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CBOE–2020–064, and
should be submitted on or before
August 3, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.124
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–14972 Filed 7–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Data Collection Available for Public
Comments
60-Day notice and request for
comments.
ACTION:
The Small Business
Administration (SBA) intends to request
approval, from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), for the
collection of information described
below. The Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) requires Federal agencies to
publish a notice in the Federal Register
concerning each collection of
information before submission to OMB
and to allow 60 days for public
comment in response to the notice. This
notice complies with that requirement.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
September 11, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Send all comments to
Cynthia Pitts, Office of Disaster
Assistance, Small Business
Administration, 409 3rd Street, 6th
Floor, Washington, DC 20416.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Cynthia Pitts, Director, Disaster
Administrative Services, 202–205–7570,
Cynthia.pitts@sba.gov or Curtis B. Rich,
Management Analyst, 202–205–7030,
curtis.rich@sba.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
7(b) of the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C.
636, as amended, authorizes the Small
Business Administration to make
disaster loans to businesses and
SUMMARY:
124 17
E:\FR\FM\13JYN1.SGM
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
13JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 134 (Monday, July 13, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 42042-42063]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-14972]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-89239; File No. SR-CBOE-2020-064]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe Exchange, Inc.; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Its Fees Schedule in Connection With Migration
July 7, 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 July 2, 2020, Cboe Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or ``Cboe
Options'') 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 the
Substance of the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or ``Cboe Options'') proposes
to amend its Fees Schedule in connection with migration. The text of
the proposed rule change is provided in Exhibit 5.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Exchange notes that subsequent to the Original Filing
that proposed these changes on October 1 and 2, 2019 (SR-CBOE-2019-
077 and SR-CBOE-2019-082) and subsequent to the Second Proposed Rule
Change and Third Proposed Rule Change Filings that proposed these
changes on November 29, 2019 (SR-CBOE-2019-111) and January 28, 2020
(SR-CBOE-2020-005), the Exchange submitted SR-CBOE-2020-021 which
adopted Footnote 12. Footnote 12 governs pricing changes in the
event the Exchange trading floor becomes inoperable and is appended
to the Market-Maker Tier Appointment Fees and Floor Broker Trading
Permit Sliding Scales tables. Additionally, subsequent to the Fourth
Proposed Rule Change filed on March 27, 2020 (SR-CBOE-2020-028), the
Exchange submitted SR-CBOE-2020-044, which appended Footnotes 41 to
the Market maker Tier Appointment Fees table and the Floor Broker
Trading Surcharge. Lastly, subsequent to the Exchange's Fifth
Proposed Rule Change filed on May 22, 2020 (SR-CBOE-2020-48), the
Exchange submitted (1) SR-CBOE-2020-058, which adopted new Footnote
24, appended Footnote 24 in the Market-Maker Tier Appointment Fees
table and Floor Trading Permit Sliding Scales Table, as well as
added language to the Floor Broker ADV Discount Table and (2) SR-
CBOE-2020-061 which added further language in Footnote 24. The
additions proposed by filings SR-CBOE-2020-021,SR-CBOE-2020-044, SR-
CBOE-2020-058 and SR-CBOE-2020-061 are double underlined in Exhibit
5A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 42043]]
The text of the proposed rule change is also available on the
Exchange's website (https://www.cboe.com/AboutCBOE/CBOELegalRegulatoryHome.aspx), 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
In 2016, the Exchange's parent company, Cboe Global Markets, Inc.
(formerly named CBOE Holdings, Inc.) (``Cboe Global''), which is also
the parent company of Cboe C2 Exchange, Inc. (``C2''), acquired Cboe
EDGA Exchange, Inc. (``EDGA''), Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (``EDGX'' or
``EDGX Options''), Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc. (``BZX'' or ``BZX
Options''), and Cboe BYX Exchange, Inc. (``BYX'' and, together with
Cboe Options, C2, EDGX, EDGA, and BZX, the ``Affiliated Exchanges'').
The Cboe Affiliated Exchanges recently aligned certain system
functionality, including with respect to connectivity, retaining only
intended differences between the Affiliated Exchanges, in the context
of a technology migration. The Exchange migrated its trading platform
to the same system used by the Affiliated Exchanges, which the Exchange
completed on October 7, 2019 (the ``migration''). As a result of this
migration, the Exchange's pre-migration connectivity architecture was
rendered obsolete, and as such, the Exchange now offers new
functionality, including new logical connectivity, and therefore
proposes to adopt corresponding fees.\4\ In determining the proposed
fee changes, the Exchange assessed the impact on market participants to
ensure that the proposed fees would not create an undue financial
burden on any market participants, including smaller market
participants. While the Exchange has no way of predicting with
certainty the impact of the proposed changes, the Exchange had
anticipated its post-migration connectivity revenue \5\ to be
approximately 1.75% lower than connectivity revenue pre-migration.\6\
In addition to providing a consistent technology offering across the
Cboe Affiliated Exchanges, the migration also provided market
participants a latency equalized infrastructure, improved system
performance, and increased sustained order and quote per second
capacity, as discussed more fully below. Accordingly, in connection
with the migration and in order to more closely align the Exchange's
fee structure with that of its Affiliated Exchanges, the Exchange
intends to update and simplify its fee structure with respect to access
and connectivity and adopt new access and connectivity fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ As of October 7, 2019, market participants no longer have
the ability to connect to the old Exchange architecture.
\5\ Connectivity revenue post-migration includes revenue from
physical port fees (other than for disaster recovery), Cboe Data
Services Port Fee, logical port fees, Trading Permit Fees, Market-
Maker EAP Appointment Unit fees, Tier Appointment Surcharges and
Floor Broker Trading Surcharges, less the Floor Broker ADV discounts
and discounts on BOE Bulk Ports via the Affiliate Volume Plan and
the Market-Maker Access Credit program.
\6\ For February 2020, the Exchange's connectivity revenue was
approximately 2.5% higher than connectivity revenue pre-migration.
For purposes of a fair comparison of the Exchange's initial
projection of post-migration connectivity revenue to realized post-
migration revenue connectivity, the Exchange excluded from the
February 2020 calculation revenue from a Trading Permit Holder who
became a Market-Maker post October 7, 2019, a Trading Permit Holder
that grew it's footprint on the Exchange significantly, and revenue
derived from incremental usage in light of the extreme volatility
and volume experienced in February, as such circumstances were not
otherwise anticipated or incorporated into the Exchange's original
projection. As noted, the Exchange had no way of predicting with
certainty the impact of the proposed changes, nor control over
choices market participants ultimately decided to make. The Exchange
notes connectivity revenue was higher than anticipated in part due
to (1) a higher number of 10 Gb Physical Ports being maintained by
TPHs than expected (although 34% of Trading Permit Holders
maintained the same number of 10 Gb Physical and 44% reduced the
amount of 10 Gb Physical Ports maintained), (2) a higher quantity of
BOE/FIX Logical Ports being purchased than predicted, and (3) a
significantly higher quantity of the optional Drop, GRP, Multicast
PITCH/Top Spin Server Ports and Purge Ports being purchased than
predicted. For April 2020, the Exchange's connectivity revenue was
approximately 21.97% less than connectivity revenue pre-migration
using the same calculation. For May 2020, the Exchange's
connectivity revenue was approximately 22.32% less than connectivity
revenue pre-migration using the same calculation. The Exchange notes
that due to the closure of its trading floor on March 16, 2020
through June 15, 2020, it adopted a number of corresponding
temporary pricing changes, including waiving floor Trading Permit
fees. See Cboe Options Fees Schedule. The Exchange also notes that
it provided the dollar amounts of the Exchange's monthly
connectivity revenue to the Securities and Exchange Commission (the
``Commission'') for the months of February-May 2020 with a
confidential treatment request.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange initially filed the proposed fee changes on October 1,
2019 (SR-CBOE-2019-077) (the ``Original Filing'').\7\ The Commission
received only one comment letter on the Original Filing, six days after
the comment period deadline ended.\8\ On November 29, 2019, the
Exchange withdrew the Original Filing and submitted SR-CBOE-2019-111
(``Second Proposed Rule Change'').\9\ Among other things, the Second
Proposed Rule Change was filed in response to, and addressed, the
Commission's request for inclusion of the following information:
Clarity as to what revenue streams are included in the Exchange's
calculation of ``connectivity'' revenue; an update on post-migration
connectivity revenue; \10\ further information regarding the Exchange's
new latency equalized infrastructure including additional detail
regarding the benefits of such structure; clarity on how the Cboe Data
Services Port fee is applied; data regarding the number of market
participants that connect directly versus indirectly and the volume
attributed to each; enhanced discussion regarding products that compete
with exclusively listed products; an update on whether any market
participant terminated their direct connectivity or membership post-
migration (and whether it was because of the fee changes); and
generally provide an update on various projections made in the filing,
including how many ports market participants purchased post-migration,
how many Trading Permit Holders were paying higher or lower fees, and
how many
[[Page 42044]]
Trading Permit Holders achieved proposed incentive tiers. The
Commission received no comment letters on the Second Proposed Rule
Change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ On business date October 2, 2019, due to a technical error,
the Exchange withdrew that filing and submitted SR-CBOE-2019-082.
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87304 (October 15, 2019), 84
FR 56240, (October 21, 2019) (``Original Filing'').
\8\ See Letter from Tyler Gellasch, Executive Director, The
Healthy Markets Association (``Healthy Markets''), to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission, dated November 18, 2019.
\9\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87727 (December 12,
2019), 84 FR 69428 (December 18, 2019).
\10\ Many market participants were still transitioning to the
new connectivity structure at that time and as such, the Exchange
noted it did not expect its connectivity revenue projections
regarding port purchases to be realized prior to February 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 28, 2020, the Exchange withdrew the Second Proposed Rule
Change filing and submitted SR-CBOE-2020-005 (``Third Proposed Rule
Change'').\11\ The Third Proposed Rule Change was filed in response to,
and addressed, the Commission's request for further discussion
regarding how competitive forces constrained fees, further detail on
potential substitute products for the Exchange's exclusively listed
products, updated data on the number of ports purchased post-migration
and an update on the projected post-migration connectivity revenue.\12\
The Exchange also provided updated data on how many Trading Permit
Holders connected directly versus indirectly to the Exchange and the
volume attributed to each. The Commission received no comment letters
on the Third Proposed Rule Change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88164 (February 11,
2020), 85 FR 8897, (February 18, 2020).
\12\ Many market participants were still transitioning to the
new connectivity structure at that time and as such, the Exchange
again noted it did not expect its connectivity revenue projections
regarding port purchases to be realized prior to February 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On March 27, 2020, the Exchange submitted SR-CBOE-2020-028
(``Fourth Proposed Rule Change'').\13\ The Fourth Proposed Rule Change
was filed in response to the Commission's sole request to update the
connectivity revenue collected in February 2020, as the transition of
physical ports had been completed. The Commission received only one
comment letter on the Fourth Proposed Rule Change.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88586 (April 8,
2020), 85 FR 20773, (April 14, 2020).
\14\ See Letter from Tyler Gellasch, Executive Director, The
Healthy Markets Association (``Healthy Markets''), to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission, dated May 5, 2020, which letter
mischaracterized the Exchange's proposed fees as linking market data
costs to trading volume, among other factual inaccuracies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 21, 2020, the Exchange withdrew that filing and submitted
SR-CBOE-20202-048 (``Fifth Proposed Rule Change'').\15\ The Fifth
Proposed Rule Change was filed in response to the Commission's request
for (1) updated connectivity revenue for April 2020, (2) examples of
alternative products to VIX and (3) any further evidence the Exchange
had to support its argument that competitive forces constrain pricing.
The Commission received no comments letters on the Fifth Proposed Rule
Change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ The Exchange refiled the Fifth Proposed Rule Change on May
22, 2020 due to a technical error (SR-CBOE-2020-048). See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 88984 (June 1, 2020), 85 FR 34670, (June 6,
2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Today, the Exchange is withdrawing the Fifth Proposed Rule Change
and submitting this filing (``Sixth Proposed Rule Change'') as part of
its ongoing efforts to adopt the post-migration connectivity fees and
to respond to the Commission's request for another update on the
Exchange's post-migration connectivity revenue and to provide further
data demonstrating competition in the marketplace. The Exchange notes
the proposed fees have been effective, and thus have been paid by
Trading Permit Holders, for approximately nine months. The Exchange has
received no feedback from market participants claiming the proposed
fees are unreasonable.
As discussed herein, the Exchange believes that the proposed
changes are consistent with the Act because they are reasonable,
equitably allocated, not unfairly discriminatory, and not an undue
burden on competition, as they are supported by evidence (including
data and analysis) and are constrained by significant competitive
forces. The Exchange also believes the proposed fees are reasonable as
they are in line with the amounts assessed by other exchanges for
similar connectivity offerings. Additionally, the Exchange believes the
proposed changes are consistent with the SEC Division of Trading and
Markets (the ``Division'') issued non-rulemaking fee filing guidance
titled ``Staff Guidance on SRO Rule Filings Relating to Fees'' (``Fee
Guidance'') issued on May 21, 2020.\16\ Accordingly, the Exchange
believes that the Commission should find that the Proposed Fee
Increases are consistent with the Act. The proposed rule change is
immediately effective upon filing with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Where possible, the Exchange is including numerical
examples and percentages, including with respect to revenue impact.
In addition, the Exchange is providing data to the Commission in
support of its arguments herein, which is consistent with the Fee
Guidance. The non-rulemaking Fee Guidance covers all aspects of a
fee filing, but as acknowledged by the Commission, has ``no legal
force or effect'', is ``not a rule, regulation or statement of the
Commission'', does not ``alter or amend applicable law'' and
``creates no new or additional obligations for SROs and the
Commission.'' See Chairman Jay Clayton, Statement on Division of
Trading and Markets Staff Fee Guidance, June 12, 2019. The Exchange
nonetheless has extensively addressed the Fee Guidance throughout
this filing and prior versions of this filing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Physical Connectivity
A physical port is utilized by a Trading Permit Holder (``TPH'') or
non-TPH to connect to the Exchange at the data centers where the
Exchange's servers are located. The Exchange currently assesses fees
for Network Access Ports for these physical connections to the
Exchange. Specifically, TPHs and non-TPHs can elect to connect to Cboe
Options' trading system via either a 1 gigabit per second (``Gb'')
Network Access Port or a 10 Gb Network Access Port. Pre-migration the
Exchange assessed a monthly fee of $1,500 per port for 1 Gb Network
Access Ports and a monthly fee of $5,000 per port for 10 Gb Network
Access Ports for access to Cboe Options primary system. Through January
31, 2020, Cboe Options market participants will continue to have the
ability to connect to Cboe Options' trading system via the current
Network Access Ports. As of October 7, 2019, in connection with the
migration, TPHs and non-TPHs may alternatively elect to connect to Cboe
Options via new latency equalized Physical Ports.\17\ The new Physical
Ports similarly allow TPHs and non-TPHs the ability to connect to the
Exchange at the data center where the Exchange's servers are located
and TPHs and non-TPHs have the option to connect via 1 Gb or 10 Gb
Physical Ports. As noted above, both the new 1 Gb and 10 Gb Physical
Ports provide latency equalization, meaning that each market
participant will be afforded the same latency for 1 Gb or 10 Gb
Physical Ports in the primary data center to the Exchange's customer-
facing switches regardless of location of the market participant's cage
\18\ in the primary data center relative to the Exchange's servers.
[[Page 42045]]
Conversely, the legacy Network Access Ports are not latency equalized,
meaning the location of a market participant's cage within the data
center may affect latency. For example, in the legacy system, a cage
located further from the Exchange's servers may experience higher
latency than those located closer to the Exchange's servers.\19\ As
such, the proposed Physical Ports ensure all market participants
connected to the Exchange via the new Physical Ports will receive the
same respective latency for each port size and ensure that no market
participant has a latency advantage over another market participant
within the primary data center.\20\ Additionally, the new
infrastructure utilizes new and faster switches resulting in lower
overall latency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ As previously noted, market participants will continue to
have the option of connecting to Cboe Options via a 1 Gbps or 10
Gbps Network Access Port at the same rates as proposed,
respectively.
\18\ A market participant's ``cage'' is the cage within the data
center that contains a market participant's servers, switches and
cabling.
\19\ The Exchange equalizes physical connectivity in the data
center for its primary system by taking the farthest possible
distance that a Cboe market participant cage may exist from the
Exchange's customer-facing switches and using that distance as the
cable length for any cross-connect.
\20\ The Exchange notes that 10 Gb Physical Ports have an 11
microsecond latency advantage over 1 Gb Physical Ports. Other than
this difference, there are no other means to receive a latency
advantage as compared to another market participant in the new
connectivity structure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to assess the following fees for any physical
port, regardless of whether the TPH or non-TPH connects via the current
Network Access Ports or the new Physical Ports. Specifically, the
Exchange proposes to continue to assess a monthly fee of $1,500 per
port for 1 Gb Network Access Ports and new Physical Ports and increase
the monthly fee for 10 Gb Network Access Ports and new Physical Ports
to $7,000 per port. Physical port fees will be prorated based on the
remaining trading days in the calendar month. The proposed fee for 10
Gb Physical Ports is in line with the amounts assessed by other
exchanges for similar connections by its Affiliated Exchanges and other
Exchanges that utilize the same connectivity infrastructure.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Cboe EDGA U.S. Equities Exchange Fee Schedule, Physical
Connectivity Fees; Cboe EDGX U.S. Equities Exchange Fee Schedule,
Physical Connectivity Fees; Cboe BZX U.S. Equities Exchange Fee
Schedule, Physical Connectivity Fees; Cboe BYX U.S. Equities
Exchange Fee Schedule, Physical Connectivity Fees; Cboe EDGX Options
Exchange Fee Schedule, Physical Connectivity Fees; and Cboe BZX
Options Exchange Fee Schedule, Physical Connectivity Fees
(collectively, ``Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules''). See e.g.,
Nasdaq PHLX and ISE Rules, General Equity and Options Rules, General
8. Phlx and ISE each charge a monthly fee of $2,500 for each 1Gb
connection, $10,000 for each 10Gb connection and $15,000 for each
10Gb Ultra connection. See also Nasdaq Price List--Trading
Connectivity. Nasdaq charges a monthly fee of $7,500 for each 10Gb
direct connection to Nasdaq and $2,500 for each direct connection
that supports up to 1Gb. See also NYSE American Fee Schedule,
Section V.B, and Arca Fees and Charges, Co-Location Fees. NYSE
American and Arca each charge a monthly fee of $5,000 for each 1Gb
circuit, $14,000 for each 10Gb circuit and $22,000 for each 10Gb LX
circuit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the benefits resulting from the new Physical Ports
providing latency equalization and new switches (i.e., improved
latency), TPHs and non-TPHs may be able to reduce their overall
physical connectivity fees. Particularly, Network Access Port fees are
assessed for unicast (orders, quotes) and multicast (market data)
connectivity separately. More specifically, Network Access Ports may
only receive one type of connectivity each (thus requiring a market
participant to maintain two ports if that market participant desires
both types of connectivity). The new Physical Ports however, allow
access to both unicast and multicast connectivity with a single
physical connection to the Exchange. Therefore, TPHs and non-TPHs that
currently purchase two legacy Network Access Ports for the purpose of
receiving each type of connectivity now have the option to purchase
only one new Physical Port to accommodate their connectivity needs,
which may result in reduced costs for physical connectivity.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The Exchange proposes to eliminate the current Cboe Command
Connectivity Charges table in its entirety and create and relocate
such fees in a new table in the Fees Schedule that addresses fees
for physical connectivity, including fees for the current Network
Access Ports, the new Physical Ports and Disaster Recovery (``DR'')
Ports. The Exchange notes that it is not proposing any changes with
respect to DR Ports other than renaming the DR ports from ``Network
Access Ports'' to ``Physical Ports'' to conform to the new Physical
Port terminology. The Exchange also notes that subsequent to the
initial filings that proposed these fee changes on October 1 and 2,
2019 (SR-CBOE-2019-077 and SR-CBOE-2019-082), the Exchange amended
the proposed port fees to waive fees for ports used for PULSe in
filing No. SR-CBOE-2019-105. The additions proposed by filing SR-
CBOE-2019-105 are double underlined in Exhibit 5A and the deletions
are doubled bracketed in Exhibit 5A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cboe Data Services--Port Fees
The Exchange proposes to amend the ``Port Fee'' under the Cboe Data
Services (``CDS'') Fees Schedule. Currently, the Port Fee is payable by
any Customer \23\ that receives data through two types of sources; a
direct connection to CDS (``direct connection'') or through a
connection to CDS provided by an extranet service provider (``extranet
connection''). The Port Fee applies to receipt of any Cboe Options data
feed but is only assessed once per data port. The Exchange proposes to
amend the monthly CDS Port Fee to provide that it is payable ``per
source'' used to receive data, instead of ``per data port''. The
Exchange also proposes to increase the fee from $500 per data port/
month to $1,000 per data source/month.\24\ The Exchange notes the
proposed change in assessing the fee (i.e., per source vs per port) and
the proposed fee amount are the same as the corresponding fee on its
affiliate C2.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ A Customer is any person, company or other entity that,
pursuant to a market data agreement with CDS, is entitled to receive
data, either directly from CDS or through an authorized
redistributor (i.e., a Customer or extranet service provider),
whether that data is distributed externally or used internally.
\24\ For example, under the pre-migration ``per port''
methodology, if a TPH maintained 4 ports that receive market data,
that TPH would be assessed $2,000 per month (i.e., $500 x 4 ports),
regardless of how many sources it used to receive data. Under the
proposed ``per source'' methodology, if a TPH maintains 4 ports that
receive market data, but receives data through only one source
(e.g., a direct connection) that TPH would be assessed $1,000 per
month (i.e., $1000 x 1 source). If that TPH maintains 4 ports but
receives data from both a direct connection and an extranet
connection, that TPH would be assessed $2,000 per month (i.e.,
$1,000 x 2 sources). Similarly, if that TPH maintains 4 ports and
receives data from two separate extranet providers, that TPH would
be assessed $2,000 per month (i.e., $1,000 x 2).
\25\ See Cboe C2 Options Exchange Fee Schedule, Cboe Data
Services, LLC Fees, Section IV, Systems Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In connection with the proposed change, the Exchange also proposes
to rename the ``Port Fee'' to ``Direct Data Access Fee''. As the fee
will be payable ``per data source'' used to receive data, instead of
``per data port'', the Exchange believes the proposed name is more
appropriate and that eliminating the term ``port'' from the fee will
eliminate confusion as to how the fee is assessed.
Logical Connectivity
Next, the Exchange proposes to amend its login fees. By way of
background, Cboe Options market participants were able to access Cboe
Command via either a CMI or a FIX Port, depending on how their systems
are configured. Effective October 7, 2019, market participants are no
longer able to use CMI and FIX Login IDs. Rather, the Exchange utilizes
a variety of logical connectivity ports as further described below.
Both a legacy CMI/FIX Login ID and logical port represent a technical
port established by the Exchange within the Exchange's trading system
for the delivery and/or receipt of trading messages--i.e., orders,
accepts, cancels, transactions, etc. Market participants that wish to
connect directly to the Exchange can request a number of different
types of ports, including ports that support order entry, customizable
purge functionality, or the receipt of market data. Market participants
can also choose to connect indirectly through a number of different
third-party providers, such as another broker-dealer or service bureau
that the Exchange permits through specialized
[[Page 42046]]
access to the Exchange's trading system and that may provide additional
services or operate at a lower mutualized cost by providing access to
multiple members. In light of the discontinuation of CMI and FIX Login
IDs, the Exchange proposes to eliminate the fees associated with the
CMI and FIX login IDs and adopt the below pricing for logical
connectivity in its place.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Service Cost per month
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Logical Ports (BOE, FIX) 1 to 5........ $750 per port.
Logical Ports (BOE, FIX) >5............ $800 per port.
Logical Ports (Drop)................... $750 per port.
BOE Bulk Ports 1 to 5.................. $1,500 per port.
BOE Bulk Ports 6 to 30................. $2,500 per port.
BOE Bulk Ports >30..................... $3,000 per port.
Purge ports............................ $850 per port.
GRP Ports.............................. $750/primary (A or C Feed).
Multicast PITCH/Top Spin Server Ports.. $750/set of primary (A or C
feed)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to provide for each of the logical
connectivity fees that new requests will be prorated for the first
month of service. Cancellation requests are billed in full month
increments as firms are required to pay for the service for the
remainder of the month, unless the session is terminated within the
first month of service. The Exchange notes that the proration policy is
the same on its Affiliated Exchanges.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules, Logical Port Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Logical Ports (BOE, FIX, Drop): The new Logical Ports represent
ports established by the Exchange within the Exchange's system for
trading purposes. Each Logical Port established is specific to a TPH or
non-TPH and grants that TPH or non-TPH the ability to operate a
specific application, such as order/quote \27\ entry (FIX and BOE
Logical Ports) or drop copies (Drop Logical Ports). Similar to CMI and
FIX Login IDs, each Logical Port will entitle a firm to submit message
traffic of up to specified number of orders per second.\28\ The
Exchange proposes to assess $750 per port per month for all Drop
Logical Ports and also assess $750 per port per month (which is the
same amount currently assessed per CMI/FIX Login ID per month), for the
first 5 FIX/BOE Logical Ports and thereafter assess $800 per port, per
month for each additional FIX/BOE Logical Port. While the proposed
ports will be assessed the same monthly fees as current CMI/FIX Login
IDs (for the first five logical ports), the proposed logical ports
provide for significantly more message traffic (and thus cost less per
message sent) as shown below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ As of October 7, 2019, the definition of quote in Cboe
Options Rule 1.1 means a firm bid or offer a Market-Maker (a)
submits electronically as an order or bulk message (including to
update any bid or offer submitted in a previous order or bulk
message) or (b) represents in open outcry on the trading floor.
\28\ Login Ids restrict the maximum number of orders and quotes
per second in the same way logical ports do, and Users may similarly
have multiple logical ports as they may have Trading Permits and/or
bandwidth packets to accommodate their order and quote entry needs.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMI/FIX Login Ids BOE/FIX Logical ports
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quotes Orders Quotes/orders
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bandwidth Limit per login............ 5,000 quotes/3 sec \29\ 30 orders/sec.......... 15,000 quotes/orders/3
sec.
Cost................................. $750 each.............. $750 each.............. $750/$800 each.
Cost per Quote/Order Sent @ Limit.... $0.15 per quote/3 sec.. $25.00 per order/sec... $0.05/$0.053 per quote/
order/3 sec.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Logical Port fees will be limited to Logical Ports in the
Exchange's primary data center and no Logical Port fees will be
assessed for redundant secondary data center ports. Each BOE or FIX
Logical Port will incur the logical port fee indicated in the table
above when used to enter up to 70,000 orders per trading day per
logical port as measured on average in a single month. Each incremental
usage of up to 70,000 per day per logical port will incur an additional
logical port fee of $800 per month. Incremental usage will be
determined on a monthly basis based on the average orders per day
entered in a single month across all of a market participant's
subscribed BOE and FIX Logical Ports. The Exchange believes that the
pricing implications of going beyond 70,000 orders per trading day per
Logical Port encourage users to mitigate message traffic as necessary.
The Exchange notes that the proposed fee of $750 per port is the same
amount assessed not only for current CMI and FIX Login Ids, but also
similar ports available on an affiliate exchange.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Each Login ID has a bandwidth limit of 80,000 quotes per 3
seconds. However, in order to place such bandwidth onto a single
Login ID, a TPH or non-TPH would need to purchase a minimum of 15
Market-Maker Permits or Bandwidth Packets (each Market-Maker Permit
and Bandwidth Packet provides 5,000 quotes/3 sec). For purposes of
comparing ``quote'' bandwidth, the provided example assumes only 1
Market-Maker Permit or Bandwidth Packet has been purchased.
\30\ See Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule, Options Logical
Port Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also proposes to provide that the fee for one FIX
Logical Port connection to PULSe and one FIX Logical Port connection to
Cboe Silexx will be waived per TPH. The Exchange notes that only one
FIX Logical Port connection is required to support a firm's access
through each of PULSe and Cboe Silexx FLEX.
BOE Bulk Logical Ports: The Exchange also offers BOE Bulk Logical
Ports, which provide users with the ability to submit single and bulk
order messages to enter, modify, or cancel orders designated as Post
Only Orders with a Time-in-Force of Day or GTD with an expiration time
on that trading day. While BOE Bulk Ports will be available to all
market participants, the Exchange anticipates they will be used
primarily by Market-Makers or firms that conduct similar business
activity, as the primary purpose of the proposed bulk message
functionality is to encourage market-maker quoting on exchanges. As
[[Page 42047]]
indicated above, BOE Bulk Logical Ports are assessed $1,500 per port,
per month for the first 5 BOE Bulk Logical Ports, assessed $2,500 per
port, per month thereafter up to 30 ports and thereafter assessed
$3,000 per port, per month for each additional BOE Bulk Logical Port.
Like CMI and FIX Login IDs, and FIX/BOX Logical Ports, BOE Bulk Ports
will also entitle a firm to submit message traffic of up to specified
number of quotes/orders per second.\31\ The proposed BOE Bulk ports
also provide for significantly more message traffic (and thus cost less
per message sent) as compared to current CMI/FIX Login IDs, as shown
below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ The Exchange notes that while technically there is no
bandwidth limit per BOE Bulk Port, there may be possible performance
degradation at 15,000 messages per second (which is the equivalent
of 225,000 quotes/orders per 3 seconds). As such, the Exchange uses
the number at which performance may be degraded for purposes of
comparison.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMI/FIX Login Ids BOE Bulk ports
---------------------------------------
Quotes Quotes \32\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bandwidth Limit................. 5,000 quotes/3 sec 225,000 quotes 3
\33\. sec.
Cost............................ $750 each......... $1,500/$2,500/
$3,000 each.
Cost per Quote/Order Sent @Limit $0.15 per quote/3 $0.006/$0.011/
sec. $0.013 per quote/
3 sec.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Each BOE Bulk Logical Port will incur the logical port fee
indicated in the table above when used to enter up to 30,000,000 orders
per trading day per logical port as measured on average in a single
month. Each incremental usage of up to 30,000,000 orders per day per
BOE Bulk Logical Port will incur an additional logical port fee of
$3,000 per month. Incremental usage will be determined on a monthly
basis based on the average orders per day entered in a single month
across all of a market participant's subscribed BOE Bulk Logical Ports.
The Exchange believes that the pricing implications of going beyond
30,000,000 orders per trading day per BOE Bulk Logical Port encourage
users to mitigate message traffic as necessary. The Exchange notes that
the proposed BOE Bulk Logical Port fees are similar to the fees
assessed for these ports by BZX Options.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See Cboe Options Rule 1.1.
\33\ Each Login ID has a bandwidth limit of 80,000 quotes per 3
seconds. However, in order to place such bandwidth onto a single
Login ID, a TPH or non-TPH would need to purchase a minimum of 15
Market-Maker Permits or Bandwidth Packets (each Market-Maker Permit
and Bandwidth Packet provides 5,000 quotes/3 sec). For purposes of
comparing ``quote'' bandwidth, the provided example assumes only 1
Market-Maker Permit or Bandwidth Packet has been purchased.
\34\ See Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule, Options Logical
Port Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Purge Ports: As part of the migration, the Exchange introduced
Purge Ports to provide TPHs additional risk management and open order
control functionality. Purge ports were designed to assist TPHs, in the
management of, and risk control over, their quotes, particularly if the
TPH is dealing with a large number of options. Particularly, Purge
Ports allow TPHs to submit a cancelation for all open orders, or a
subset thereof, across multiple sessions under the same Executing Firm
ID (``EFID''). This would allow TPHs to seamlessly avoid unintended
executions, while continuing to evaluate the direction of the market.
While Purge Ports are available to all market participants, the
Exchange anticipates they will be used primarily by Market-Makers or
firms that conduct similar business activity and are therefore exposed
to a large amount of risk across a number of securities. The Exchange
notes that market participants are also able to cancel orders through
FIX/BOE Logical Ports and as such a dedicated Purge Port is not
required nor necessary. Rather, Purge Ports were specially developed as
an optional service to further assist firms in effectively managing
risk. As indicated in the table above, the Exchange proposes to assess
a monthly charge of $850 per Purge Port. The Exchange notes that the
proposed fee is in line with the fee assessed by other exchanges,
including its Affiliated Exchanges, for Purge Ports.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See e.g., Nasdaq ISE Options Pricing Schedule, Section
7(C), Ports and Other Services. See also Cboe EDGX Options Exchange
Fee Schedule, Options Logical Port Fees; Cboe C2 Options Exchange
Fee Schedule, Options Logical Port Fees and Cboe BZX Options
Exchange Fee Schedule, Options Logical Port Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Multicast PITCH/Top Spin Server and GRP Ports: In connection with
the migration, the Exchange also offers optional Multicast PITCH/Top
Spin Server (``Spin'') and GRP ports and proposes to assess $750 per
month, per port. Spin Ports and GRP Ports are used to request and
receive a retransmission of data from the Exchange's Multicast PITCH/
Top data feeds. The Exchange's Multicast PITCH/Top data feeds are
available from two primary feeds, identified as the ``A feed'' and the
``C feed'', which contain the same information but differ only in the
way such feeds are received. The Exchange also offers two redundant
feeds, identified as the ``B feed'' and the ``D feed.'' All secondary
feed Spin and GRP Ports will be provided for redundancy at no
additional cost. The Exchange notes a dedicated Spin and GRP Port is
not required nor necessary. Rather, Spin ports enable a market
participant to receive a snapshot of the current book quickly in the
middle of the trading session without worry of gap request limits and
GRP Ports were specially developed to request and receive
retransmission of data in the event of missed or dropped message. The
Exchange notes that the proposed fee is in line with the fee assessed
for the same ports on BZX Options.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule, Options Logical
Port Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Access Credits
The Exchange next proposes to amend its Affiliate Volume Plan
(``AVP'') to provide Market-Makers an opportunity to obtain credits on
their monthly BOE Bulk Port Fees.\37\ By way of background, under AVP,
if a TPH Affiliate \38\ or Appointed OFP \39\ (collectively, an
``affiliate'') of a Market-Maker qualifies under the Volume Incentive
Program (``VIP'') (i.e., achieves VIP Tiers 2-5), that Market-Maker
will also qualify for a discount on that Market-Maker's Liquidity
Provider (``LP'') Sliding Scale transaction fees and Trading Permit
fees. The Exchange proposes to amend AVP to provide that qualifying
Market-Makers will receive a discount on Bulk Port fees (instead of
Trading Permits) where an affiliate achieves VIP Tiers 4
[[Page 42048]]
or 5. As discussed more fully below, the Exchange is amending its
Trading Permit structure, such that off-floor Market-Makers no longer
need to hold more than one Market-Maker Trading Permit. As such, in
place of credits for Trading Permits, the Exchange will provide credits
for BOE Bulk Ports.\40\ The proposed credits are as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ As noted above, while BOE Bulk Ports will be available to
all market participants, the Exchange anticipates they will be used
primarily by Market Makers or firms that conduct similar business
activity.
\38\ For purposes of AVP, ``Affiliate'' is defined as having at
least 75% common ownership between the two entities as reflected on
each entity's Form BD, Schedule A.
\39\ See Cboe Options Fees Schedule Footnote 23. Particularly, a
Market-Maker may designate an Order Flow Provider (``OFP'') as its
``Appointed OFP'' and an OFP may designate a Market-Maker to be its
``Appointed Market-Maker'' for purposes of qualifying for credits
under AVP.
\40\ The Exchange notes that Trading Permits currently each
include a set bandwidth allowance and 3 logins. Current logins and
bandwidth are akin to the proposed logical ports, including BOE Bulk
Ports which will primarily be used by Market-Makers.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent credit on
Market maker affiliate access credit VIP Tier monthly BOE bulk
port fees
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Credit Tier........................... 1 0
2 0
3 0
4 15
5 25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed change to AVP continues to allow
the Exchange to provide TPHs that have both Market-Maker and agency
operations reduced Market-Maker costs via the credits, albeit credits
on BOE Bulk Port fees instead of Trading Permit fees. AVP also
continues to provide incremental incentives for TPHs to strive for the
higher tier levels, which provide increasingly higher benefits for
satisfying increasingly more stringent criteria.
In addition to the opportunity to receive credits via AVP, the
Exchange proposes to provide an additional opportunity for Market-
Makers to obtain credits on their monthly BOE Bulk Port fees based on
the previous month's make rate percentage. By way of background, the
Liquidity Provider Sliding Scale Adjustment Table provides that Taker
fees be applied to electronic ``Taker'' volume and a Maker rebate be
applied to electronic ``Maker'' volume, in addition to the transaction
fees assessed under the Liquidity Provider Sliding Scale.\41\ The
amount of the Taker fee (or Maker rebate) is determined by the
Liquidity Provider's percentage of volume from the previous month that
was Maker (``Make Rate'').\42\ Market-Makers are given a Performance
Tier based on their Make Rate percentage which currently provides
adjustments to transaction fees. Thus, the program is designed to
attract liquidity from traditional Market-Makers. The Exchange proposes
to now also provide BOE Bulk Port fee credits if Market-Makers satisfy
the thresholds of certain Performance Tiers. Particularly, the
Performance Tier earned will also determine the percentage credit
applied to a Market-Maker's monthly BOE Bulk Port fees, as shown below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See Cboe Options Exchange Fees Schedule, Liquidity Provider
Sliding Scale Adjustment Table.
\42\ More specifically, the Make Rate is derived from a
Liquidity Provider's electronic volume the previous month in all
symbols excluding Underlying Symbol List A using the following
formula: (i) The Liquidity Provider's total electronic automatic
execution (``auto-ex'') volume (i.e., volume resulting from that
Liquidity Provider's resting quotes or single sided quotes/orders
that were executed by an incoming order or quote), divided by (ii)
the Liquidity Provider's total auto-ex volume (i.e., volume that
resulted from the Liquidity Provider's resting quotes/orders and
volume that resulted from that LP's quotes/orders that removed
liquidity). For example, a TPH's electronic Make volume in September
2019 is 2,500,000 contracts and its total electronic auto-ex volume
is 3,000,000 contracts, resulting in a Make Rate of 83% (Performance
Tier 4). As such, the TPH would receive a 40% credit on its monthly
Bulk Port fees for the month of October 2019. For the month of
October 2019, the Exchange will be billing certain incentive
programs separately, including the Liquidity Provider Sliding Scale
Adjustment Table, for the periods of October 1-October 4 and October
7-October 31 in light of the migration of its billing system. As
such, a Market-Maker's Performance Tier for November 2019 will be
determined by the Market-Maker's percentage of volume that was Maker
from the period of October 7-October 31, 2019.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Liquidity provider
sliding scale Make rate (percent based Percent credit on
Market maker access credit adjustment on prior month) monthly BOE bulk
performance tier port fees
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Credit Tier............................. 1 0%-50%.................... 0
2 Above 50%-60%............. 0
3 Above 60%-75%............. 0
4 Above 75%-90%............. 40
5 Above 90%................. 40
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposal mitigates costs incurred by
traditional Market-Makers that focus on adding liquidity to the
Exchange (as opposed to those that provide and take, or just take). The
Exchange lastly notes that both the Market-Maker Affiliate Access
Credit under AVP and the Market-Maker Access Credit tied to Performance
Tiers can both be earned by a TPH, and these credits will each apply to
the total monthly BOE Bulk Port Fees including any incremental BOE Bulk
Port fees incurred, before any credits/adjustments have been applied
(i.e. an electronic MM can earn a credit from 15% to 65%).
Bandwidth Packets
As described above, post-migration, the Exchange utilizes a variety
of logical ports. Part of this functionality is similar to bandwidth
packets that were previously available on the Exchange. Bandwidth
packets restricted the maximum number of orders and quotes per second.
Post-migration, market participants may similarly have multiple Logical
Ports and/or BOE Bulk Ports as they may have had bandwidth packets to
accommodate their order and quote entry needs. As such, the Exchange
proposes to eliminate all of the current Bandwidth Packet fees.\43\ The
Exchange believes that the proposed pricing implications of going
beyond specified bandwidth described above in the logical connectivity
fees section will be able to otherwise mitigate message traffic as
necessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See Cboe Options Fees Schedule, Bandwidth Packet Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 42049]]
CAS Servers
By way of background, in order to connect to the legacy Cboe
Command, which allowed a TPH to trade on the Cboe Options System, a TPH
had to connect via either a CMI or FIX interface (depending on the
configuration of the TPH's own systems). For TPHs that connected via a
CMI interface, they had to use CMI CAS Servers. In order to ensure that
a CAS Server was not overburdened by quoting activity for Market-
Makers, the Exchange allotted each Market-Maker a certain number of
CASs (in addition to the shared backups) based on the amount of quoting
bandwidth that they had. The Exchange no longer uses CAS Servers, post-
migration. In light of the elimination of CAS Servers, the Exchange
proposes to eliminate the CAS Server allotment table and extra CAS
Server fee.
Trading Permit Fees
By way of background, the Exchange may issue different types of
Trading Permits and determine the fees for those Trading Permits.\44\
Pre-migration, the Exchange issued the following three types of Trading
Permits: (1) Market-Maker Trading Permits, which were assessed a
monthly fee of $5,000 per permit; (2) Floor Broker Trading Permits,
which were assessed a monthly fee of $9,000 per permit; and (3)
Electronic Access Permits (``EAPs''), which were assessed a monthly fee
of $1,600 per permit. The Exchange also offered separate Market-Maker
and Electronic Access Permits for the Global Trading Hours (``GTH'')
session, which were assessed a monthly fee of $1,000 per permit and
$500 per permit respectively.\45\ For further color, a Market-Maker
Trading Permit entitled the holder to act as a Market-Maker, including
a Market-Maker trading remotely, DPM, eDPM, or LMM, and also provided
an appointment credit of 1.0, a quoting and order entry bandwidth
allowance, up to three logins, trading floor access and TPH status.\46\
A Floor Broker Trading Permit entitled the holder to act as a Floor
Broker, provided an order entry bandwidth allowance, up to 3 logins,
trading floor access and TPH status.\47\ Lastly, an EAP entitled the
holder to electronic access to the Exchange. Holders of EAPs must have
been broker-dealers registered with the Exchange in one or more of the
following capacities: (a) Clearing TPH, (b) TPH organization approved
to transact business with the public, (c) Proprietary TPHs and (d)
order service firms. The permit did not provide access to the trading
floor. An EAP also provided an order entry bandwidth allowance, up to 3
logins and TPH status.\48\ The Exchange also provided an opportunity
for TPHs to pay reduced rates for Trading Permits via the Market Maker
and Floor Broker Trading Permit Sliding Scale Programs (``TP Sliding
Scales''). Particularly, the TP Sliding Scales allowed Market-Makers
and Floor Brokers to pay reduced rates for their Trading Permits if
they committed in advance to a specific tier that includes a minimum
number of eligible Market-Maker and Floor Broker Trading Permits,
respectively, for each calendar year.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See Cboe Options Rules 3.1(a)(iv)-(v).
\45\ The fees were waived through September 2019 for the first
Market-Maker and Electronic Access GTH Trading Permits.
\46\ See Cboe Options Fees Schedule.
\47\ Id.
\48\ Id.
\49\ Due to the October 7 migration, the Exchange had amended
the TP Sliding Scale Programs to provide that any commitment to
Trading Permits under the TP Sliding Scales shall be in place
through September 2019, instead of the calendar year. See Cboe
Options Fees Schedule, Footnotes 24 and 25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, Trading Permits were tied to bandwidth allocation,
logins and appointment costs, and as such, TPH organizations may hold
multiple Trading Permits of the same type in order to meet their
connectivity and appointment cost needs. Post-Migration, bandwidth
allocation, logins and appointment costs are no longer tied to a
Trading Permit, and as such, the Exchange proposes to modify its
Trading Permit structure. Particularly, in connection with the
migration, the Exchange adopted separate on-floor and off-floor Trading
Permits for Market-Makers and Floor Brokers, adopted a new Clearing TPH
Permit, and proposes to modify the corresponding fees and discounts. As
was the case pre-migration, the proposed access fees discussed below
will continue to be non-refundable and will be assessed through the
integrated billing system during the first week of the following month.
If a Trading Permit is issued during a calendar month after the first
trading day of the month, the access fee for the Trading Permit for
that calendar month is prorated based on the remaining trading days in
the calendar month. Trading Permits will be renewed automatically for
the next month unless the Trading Permit Holder submits written
notification to the Membership Services Department by 4 p.m. CT on the
second-to-last business day of the prior month to cancel the Trading
Permit effective at or prior to the end of the applicable month.
Trading Permit Holders will only be assessed a single monthly fee for
each type of electronic Trading Permit it holds.
First, TPHs no longer need to hold multiple permits for each type
of electronic Trading Permit (i.e., electronic Market-Maker Trading
Permits and/or and Electronic Access Permits). Rather, for electronic
access to the Exchange, a TPH need only purchase one of the following
permit types for each trading function the TPH intends to perform:
Market-Maker Electronic Access Permit (``MM EAP'') in order to act as
an off-floor Market-Maker and which will continue to be assessed a
monthly fee of $5,000, Electronic Access Permit (``EAP'') in order to
submit orders electronically to the Exchange \50\ and which will be
assessed a monthly fee of $3,000, and a Clearing TPH Permit, for TPHs
acting solely as a Clearing TPH, which will be assessed a monthly fee
of $2,000 (and is more fully described below). For example, a TPH
organization that wishes to act as a Market-Maker and also submit
orders electronically in a non-Market Maker capacity would have to
purchase one MM EAP and one EAP. TPHs will be assessed the monthly fee
for each type of Permit once per electronic access capacity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ EAPs may be purchased by TPHs that both clear transactions
for other TPHs (i.e., a ``Clearing TPH'') and submit orders
electronically.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Next, the Exchange proposes to adopt a new Trading Permit,
exclusively for Clearing TPHs that are approved to act solely as a
Clearing TPH (as opposed to those that are also approved in a capacity
that allows them to submit orders electronically). Currently any TPH
that is registered to act as a Clearing TPH must purchase an EAP,
whether or not that Clearing TPH acts solely as a Clearing TPH or acts
as a Clearing TPH and submits orders electronically. The Exchange
proposes to adopt a new Trading Permit, for any TPH that is registered
to act solely as Clearing TPH at a discounted rate of $2,000 per
month.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ Cboe Option Rules provides the Exchange authority to issue
different types of Trading Permits which allows holders, among other
things, to act in one or more trading functions authorized by the
Rules. See Cboe Options Rule 3.1(a)(iv). The Exchange notes that
currently 17 out of 38 Clearing TPHs are acting solely as a Clearing
TPH on the Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the Exchange proposes to eliminate its fees for
Global Trading Hours Trading Permits. Particularly, the Exchange
proposes to provide that any Market-Maker EAP, EAP and Clearing TPH
Permit provides access (at no
[[Page 42050]]
additional cost) to the GTH session.\52\ Additionally, the Exchange
proposes to amend Footnote 37 of the Fees Schedule regarding GTH in
connection with the migration. Currently Footnote 37 provides that
separate access permits and connectivity is needed for the GTH session.
The Exchange proposes to eliminate this language as that is no longer
the case post-migration (i.e., an electronic Trading Permits will grant
access to both sessions and physical and logical ports may be used in
both sessions, eliminating the need to purchase separate connectivity).
The Exchange also notes that in connection with migration, the Book
used during Regular Trading Hours (``RTH'') will be the same Book used
during GTH (as compared to pre-migration where the Exchange maintained
separate Books for each session). The Exchange therefore also proposes
to eliminate language in Footnote 37 stating that GTH is a segregated
trading session and that there is no market interaction between the two
sessions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ The Exchange notes that Clearing TPHs must be properly
authorized by the Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC'') to operate
during the Global Trading Hours session and all TPHs must have a
Letter of Guarantee to participate in the GTH session (as is the
case today).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange next proposes to adopt MM EAP Appointment fees. By way
of background, a registered Market-Maker may currently create a Virtual
Trading Crowd (``VTC'') Appointment, which confers the right to quote
electronically in an appropriate number of classes selected from
``tiers'' that have been structured according to trading volume
statistics, except for the AA tier.\53\ Each Trading Permit
historically held by a Market-Maker had an appointment credit of 1.0. A
Market-Maker could select for each Trading Permit the Market-Maker held
any combination of classes whose aggregate appointment cost did not
exceed 1.0. A Market-Maker could not hold a combination of appointments
whose aggregate appointment cost was greater than the number of Trading
Permits that Market-Maker held.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See Cboe Options Rule 5.50 (Appointment of Market-Makers).
\54\ For example, if a Market-Maker selected a combination of
appointments that has an aggregate appointment cost of 2.5, that
Market-Maker must hold at least 3 Market-Maker Trading Permits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed, post-migration, bandwidth allocation, logins and
appointment costs are no longer tied to a single Trading Permit and
therefore TPHs no longer need to have multiple permits for each type of
electronic Trading Permit. Market-Makers must still select class
appointments in the classes they seek to make markets
electronically.\55\ Particularly, a Market-Maker firm will only be
required to have one permit and will thereafter be charged for one or
more ``Appointment Units'' (which will scale from 1 ``unit'' to more
than 5 ``units''), depending on which classes they elect appointments
in. Appointment Units will replace the standard 1.0 appointment cost,
but function in the same manner. Appointment weights (formerly known as
``appointment costs'') for each appointed class will be set forth in
Cboe Options Rule 5.50(g) and will be summed for each Market-Maker in
order to determine the total appointment units, to which fees will be
assessed. This was the manner in which the tier costs per class
appointment were summed to meet the 1.0 appointment cost, the only
difference being that if a Market-Maker exceeds this ``unit'', then
their fees will be assessed under the ``unit'' that corresponds to the
total of their appointment weights, as opposed to holding another
Trading Permit because it exceeded the 1.0 ``unit''. Particularly, the
Exchange proposes to adopt a new MM EAP Appointment Sliding Scale.
Appointment Units for each assigned class will be aggregated for each
Market-Maker and Market-Maker affiliate. If the sum of appointments is
a fractional amount, the total will be rounded up to the next highest
whole Appointment Unit. The following lists the progressive monthly
fees for Appointment Units: \56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ See Cboe Options Rule 5.50(a).
\56\ For example, if a Market-Maker's total appointment costs
amount to 3.5 unites, the Market-Maker will be assessed a total
monthly fee of $14,000 (1 appointment unit at $0, 1 appointment unit
at $6,000 and 2 appointment units at $4,000) as and for appointment
fees and $5,000 for a Market-Maker Trading Permit, for a total
monthly sum of $19,000, where a Market-Maker currently (i.e., prior
to migration) with a total appointment cost of 3.5 would need to
hold 4 Trading Permits and would therefore be assessed a monthly fee
of $20,000.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monthly fees
Market-Maker EAP appointments Quantity (per unit)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appointment Units....................... 1 $0
2 6,000
3 to 5 4,000
>5 3,100
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, upon migration the Exchange required separate
Trading Permits for on-floor and off-floor activity. As such, the
Exchange proposes to maintain a Floor Broker Trading Permit and adopt a
new Market-Maker Floor Permit for on-floor Market-Makers. In addition,
RUT, SPX, and VIX Tier Appointment fees will be charged separately for
Permit, as discussed more fully below.
As briefly described above, the Exchange currently maintains TP
Sliding Scales, which allow Market-Makers and Floor Brokers to pay
reduced rates for their Trading Permits if they commit in advance to a
specific tier that includes a minimum number of eligible Market-Maker
and Floor Broker Trading Permits, respectively, for each calendar year.
The Exchange proposes to eliminate the current TP Sliding Scales,
including the requirement to commit to a specific tier, and replace it
with new TP Sliding Scales as follows: \57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ In light of the proposed change to eliminate the TP Sliding
Scale, the Exchange proposes to eliminate Footnote 24 in its
entirety.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current Proposed
Floor TPH permits Current permit qty monthly fee Proposed permit qty monthly fee
(per permit) (per permit)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market-Maker Floor Permit........ 1-10................ $5,000 1...................... $6,000
11-20............... 3,700 2 to 5................. 4,500
21 or more.......... 1,800 6 to 10................ 3,500
>10.................... 2,000
[[Page 42051]]
Floor Broker Permit.............. 1................... 9,000 1...................... 7,500
2-5................. 5,000 2 to 3................. 5,700
6 or more........... 3,000 4 to 5................. 4,500
>5..................... 3,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Floor Broker ADV Discount
Footnote 25, which governs rebates on Floor Broker Trading Permits,
currently provides that any Floor Broker that executes a certain
average of customer or professional customer/voluntary customer
(collectively ``customer'') open-outcry contracts per day over the
course of a calendar month in all underlying symbols excluding
Underlying Symbol List A (except RLG, RLV, RUI, and UKXM), DJX, XSP,
and subcabinet trades (``Qualifying Symbols''), will receive a rebate
on that TPH's Floor Broker Trading Permit Fees. Specifically, any Floor
Broker Trading Permit Holder that executes an average of 15,000
customer (``C'' origin code) and/or professional customer and voluntary
customer (``W'' origin code) open-outcry contracts per day over the
course of a calendar month in Qualifying Symbols will receive a rebate
of $9,000 on that TPH's Floor Broker Trading Permit fees. Additionally,
any Floor Broker that executes an average of 25,000 customer open-
outcry contracts per day over the course of a calendar month in
Qualifying Symbols will receive a rebate of $14,000 on that TPH's Floor
Broker Trading Permit fees. The Exchange proposes to maintain, but
modify, its discount for Floor Broker Trading Permit fees. First, the
measurement criteria to qualify for a rebate will be modified to only
include customer (``C'' origin code) open-outcry contracts executed per
day over the course of a calendar month in all underlying symbols,
while the rebate amount will be modified to be a percentage of the
TPH's Floor Broker Permit total costs, instead of a straight
rebate.\58\ The criteria and corresponding percentage rebates are noted
below.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ As is the case today, the Floor Broker ADV Discount will be
available for all Floor Broker Trading Permits held by affiliated
Trading Permit Holders and TPH organizations.
\59\ In light of the proposal to eliminate the TP Sliding Scales
and the Floor Broker rebates currently set forth under Footnote 25,
the Exchange proposes to eliminate Footnote 25 in its entirety.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Floor broker
Floor broker ADV discount tier ADV permit rebate
(percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1................................. 0 to 99,999......... 0
2................................. 100,000 to 174,999.. 15
3................................. >174,999............ 25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Next, the Exchange proposes to modify its SPX, VIX and RUT Tier
Appointment Fees. Currently, these fees are assessed to any Market-
Maker TPH that either (i) has the respective SPX, VIX or RUT
appointment at any time during a calendar month and trades a specified
number of contracts or (ii) trades a specified number of contracts in
open outcry during a calendar month. More specifically, the Fees
Schedule provides that the $3,000 per month SPX Tier Appointment is
assessed to any Market-Maker Trading Permit Holder that either (i) has
an SPX Tier Appointment at any time during a calendar month and trades
at least 100 SPX contracts while that appointment is active or (ii)
conducts any open outcry transaction in SPX or SPX Weeklys at any time
during the month. The $2,000 per month VIX Tier Appointment is assessed
to any Market-Maker Trading Permit Holder that either (i) has an SPX
Tier Appointment at any time during a calendar month and trades at
least 100 VIX contracts while that appointment is active or (ii)
conducts at least 1000 open outcry transaction in VIX at any time
during the month. Lastly, the $1,000 RUT Tier Appointment is assessed
to any Market-Maker Trading Permit Holder that either (i) has an RUT
Tier Appointment at any time during a calendar month and trades at
least 100 RUT contracts while that appointment is active or (ii)
conducts at least 1000 open outcry transaction in RUT at any time
during the month.
Because the Exchange is separating Market-Maker Trading Permits for
electronic and open-outcry market-making, the Exchange will be
assessing separate Tier Appointment Fees for each type of Market-Maker
Trading Permit. The Exchange proposes that a MM EAP will be assessed
the Tier Appointment Fee whenever the Market-Maker executes the
corresponding specified number of contracts, if any. The Exchange also
proposes to modify the threshold number of contracts a Market-Maker
must execute in a month to trigger the fee for SPX, VIX and RUT.
Particularly, for SPX, the Exchange proposes to eliminate the 100
contract threshold for electronic SPX executions.\60\ The Exchange
notes that historically, all TPHs that trade SPX electronically
executed more than 100 contracts electronically each month (i.e., no
TPH electronically traded between 1 and 100 contracts of SPX). As no
TPH would currently be negatively impacted by this change, the Exchange
proposes to eliminate the threshold for SPX and align the electronic
SPX Tier Appointment Fee with that of the floor SPX Tier Appointment
Fee, which is not subject to any executed volume threshold. For the VIX
and RUT Tier appointments, the Exchange proposes to increase the
threshold from 100 contracts a month to 1,000 contracts a month. The
Exchange notes the Tier Appointment Fee amounts are not
[[Page 42052]]
changing.\61\ In connection with the proposed changes, the Exchange
proposes to relocate the Tier Appointment Fees to a new table and
eliminate the language in the current respective notes sections of each
Tier Appointment Fee as it is no longer necessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ The Exchange notes that subsequent to the Original Filing
that proposed these changes on October 1 and 2, 2019 (SR-CBOE-2019-
077 and SR-CBOE-2019-082), and subsequent to the Second Proposed
Rule Change filing that proposed these changes on November 29, 2019
(SR-CBOE-2019-111), the Exchange amended the proposed Market-Maker
Tier Appointment fees to provide that the SPX Tier Appointment Fee
will be assessed to any Market-Maker EAP that executes at least
1,000 contracts in SPX (including SPXW) excluding contracts executed
during the opening rotation on the final settlement date of VIX
options and futures with the expiration used in the VIX settlement
calculation in filing No. SR-CBOE-2019-124. The additions proposed
by filing SR-CBOE-2019-124 are double underlined in Exhibit 5A and
the deletions are doubled bracketed in Exhibit 5A.
\61\ Floor Broker Trading Surcharges for SPX/SPXW and VIX are
also not changing. The Exchange however, is creating a new table for
Floor Broker Trading Surcharges and relocating such fees in the Fees
Schedule in connection with the proposal to eliminate fees currently
set forth in the ``Trading Permit and Tier Appointment Fees'' Table.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trading Permit Holder Regulatory Fee
The Fees Schedule provides for a Trading Permit Holder Regulatory
Fee of $90 per month, per RTH Trading Permit, applicable to all TPHs,
which fee helps more closely cover the costs of regulating all TPHs and
performing regulatory responsibilities. In light of the changes to the
Exchange's Trading Permit structure, the Exchange proposes to eliminate
the TPH Regulatory Fee. The Exchange notes that there is no regulatory
requirement to maintain this fee.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Act'') and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to the Exchange and, in particular,
the requirements of Section 6(b) of the Act.\62\ Specifically, the
Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with the
Section 6(b)(5) \63\ requirements that the rules of an exchange be
designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing,
settling, processing information with respect to, and facilitating
transactions in securities, to remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system, and,
in general, to protect investors and the public interest. Additionally,
the Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b)(4) of the Act,\64\ which requires that Exchange rules
provide for the equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and
other charges among its Trading Permit Holders and other persons using
its facilities. Additionally, the Exchange believes the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Section 6(b)(5) \65\ requirement that the
rules of an exchange not be designed to permit unfair discrimination
between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\63\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\64\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
\65\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange first stresses that the proposed changes were not
designed with the objective to generate an overall increase in access
fee revenue, as demonstrated by the anticipated loss of revenue
discussed above. Rather, the proposed changes were prompted by the
Exchange's technology migration and the adoption of a new (and
improved) connectivity infrastructure, rendering the pre-migration
structure obsolete. Such changes accordingly necessitated an overhaul
of the Exchange's previous access fee structure and corresponding fees.
Moreover, the proposed changes more closely align the Exchange's access
fees to those of its Affiliated Exchanges, and reasonably so, as the
Affiliated Exchanges offer substantially similar connectivity and
functionality and are on the same platform that the Exchange has now
migrated to.
The Exchange also notes that it operates in a highly competitive
environment. The SEC Division of Trading and Markets' Fee Guidance
provides that in determining whether a proposed fee is constrained by
significant competitive forces, the Commission will consider whether
there are reasonable substitutes for the product or service that is the
subject of a proposed fee. As described in further detail below, the
Exchange believes substitutable products and services are in fact
available to market participants, including, among other things, other
options exchanges a market participant may connect to in lieu of the
Exchange, indirect connectivity to the Exchange via a third-party
reseller of connectivity and/or trading of any options product,
including proprietary products, in the Over-the-Counter (OTC) markets.
Indeed, there are currently 16 registered options exchanges that trade
options, some of which have similar or lower connectivity fees.\66\
Based on publicly available information, no single options exchange has
more than 17% of the market share.\67\ Further, low barriers to entry
mean that new exchanges may rapidly and inexpensively enter the market
and offer additional substitute platforms to further compete with the
Exchange. For example, there have been 4 exchanges that have been added
in the U.S. options markets in the last 5 years (i.e., Cboe EDGX Inc.,
Nasdaq MRX, LLC, MIAX Pearl, LLC and MIAX Emerald LLC).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ See e.g., Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules. See also e.g.,
BOX Options Fees Schedule, Section VI (Technology Fees) and Section
IX (Participant Fees).
\67\ See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Options Market Volume Summary
(June 26, 2020), available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/market_statistics/.
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There is also no regulatory requirement that any market participant
connect to any one options exchange, that any market participant
connect at a particular connection speed or act in a particular
capacity on the Exchange, or trade any particular product offered on an
exchange. Moreover, membership is not a requirement to participate on
the Exchange. A market participant may submit orders to the Exchange
via a TPH broker.\68\ Indeed, the Exchange is unaware of any one
options exchange whose membership includes every registered broker-
dealer. In fact, the Exchange believes that as of June 2020, only 9
broker-dealers out of approximately 250 broker-dealers that are members
of at least one exchange that lists options for trading were members of
all 16 options exchanges.\69\ Additionally, several broker-dealers are
members of only a single exchange that lists options for trading.\70\
The Exchange has also identified numerous broker-dealers that are
members of other options exchanges, but not the Exchange. For example,
the Exchange has identified approximately 20 broker-dealers that are
members of Nasdaq ISE, LLC (an exchange that lists only options), but
not Cboe Exchange, Inc (which also lists only options). Similarly, the
Exchange has identified at least 4 broker-dealers that trade options
and are members of one or more of the Exchange's affiliated options
exchanges, but not Cboe Exchange, Inc. Indeed, the number of members at
each exchange that trades options varies greatly. Particularly, the
number of members of exchanges that trade options vary between
approximately 9 and 171 broker-dealers.\71\ Even the number of
[[Page 42053]]
members between the Exchange and its 3 other options exchange
affiliates vary. Particularly, while the Exchange currently has 94
members, Cboe EDGX and Cboe C2 have 53 members that trade options and
Cboe BZX has 63 members that trade options.
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\68\ Such market participant would be subject to the fees of
that broker. The Exchange notes that such broker is not required to
publicize, let alone justify or file with the Commission its fees,
and as such could charge the market participant any fees it deems
appropriate, even if such fees would otherwise be considered
potentially unreasonable or uncompetitive fees.
\69\ See SEC June 2020 Active Broker Dealer Report.
\70\ Id. Approximately 10 broker-dealers are members of the Cboe
Exchange, Inc. only, approximately 7 broker-dealers are members of
only Nasdaq PHLX LLC, approximately 3 broker-dealers are members of
only NYSE Arca, Inc., and approximately 3 broker-dealers are members
of only NYSE American LLC.
\71\ See SEC June 2020 Active Broker Dealer Report. More
specifically, 1 exchange has 9 members, 4 exchanges have between 36-
50 members, 5 exchanges have between 50-100 members, 4 exchanges
have between 100-150 members and 2 exchanges have more than 150
members. The Exchange notes however that some of these exchanges
also trade equities and the Exchange is therefore unable to
determine how many members at each exchange trade options.
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The rule structure for options exchanges are also fundamentally
different from those of equities exchanges. In particular, options
market participants are not forced to connect to (and purchase market
data from) all options exchanges. For example, there are many order
types that are available in the equities markets that are not utilized
in the options markets, which relate to mid-point pricing and pegged
pricing which require connection to the SIPs and each of the equities
exchanges in order to properly execute those orders in compliance with
best execution obligations. Additionally, in the options markets, the
linkage routing and trade through protection are handled by the
exchanges, not by the individual members. Thus not connecting to an
options exchange or disconnecting from an options exchange does not
potentially subject a broker-dealer to violate order protection
requirements.\72\ Gone are the days when the retail brokerage firms
(such as Fidelity, Schwab, and eTrade) were members of the options
exchanges--they are not members of the Exchange or its affiliates, they
do not purchase connectivity to the Exchange, and they do not purchase
market data from the Exchange.
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\72\ The Exchange notes this discussion is consistent with the
Fee Guidance suggestion that any discussion of alternatives should
``include a discussion of how regulatory requirements, particularly
best execution obligations, Regulation NMS Rule 611 (the Order
Protection Rule), and/or the Options Order Protection and Locked/
Crossed Market Plan (Options Linkage Plan), as applicable, affect
the competitive analysis.''
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The Exchange is also not aware of any reason why any particular
market participant could not simply drop its connections and cease
being a TPH of the Exchange if the Exchange were to establish
``unreasonable'' and uncompetitive price increases for its connectivity
alternatives. As further evidence of the fact that market participants
can and do disconnect from exchanges based on connectivity pricing, R2G
Services LLC (``R2G'') filed a comment letter after BOX Exchange LLC
(``BOX'') proposed rule changes to increase its connectivity fees (SR-
BOX-2018-24, SRBOX-2018-37, and SR-BOX-2019-04).\73\ The R2G Letter
stated, ``[w]hen BOX instituted a $10,000/month price increase for
connectivity; we had no choice but to terminate connectivity into them
as well as terminate our market data relationship. The cost benefit
analysis just didn't make any sense for us at those new levels.''
Accordingly, this example shows that if an exchange sets too high of a
fee for connectivity and/or market data services for its relevant
marketplace, market participants can choose to disconnect from the
Exchange. Moreover, the Exchange does not assess any termination fee
for a market participant to drop its connectivity or membership, nor is
the Exchange aware of any other costs that would be incurred by a
market participant to do so. The Exchange notes that in fact, a number
of firms currently do not participate on the Exchange or participate on
the Exchange though sponsored access arrangements with other broker-
dealers rather than by becoming a member. Additionally, as noted above,
only 9 broker-dealers are members of all 16 options exchanges, which
the Exchange believes demonstrates that, in addition to the absence of
a rule requirement to connect to every option exchange, there is no
prevailing business model that would practically require a broker-
dealer to connect to every single options exchange.\74\
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\73\ See Letter from Stefano Durdic, R2G, to Vanessa Countryman,
Acting Secretary, Commission, dated March 27, 2019 (the ``R2G
Letter'').
\74\ The Exchange further notes that these 9 broker-dealers
represent different market participants. Particularly, 5 of these
broker-dealers are bulge bracket banks (of which 1 is also a market-
maker), 2 are brokerage firms and 2 are clearing firms.
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Additionally, the Exchange notes that non-TPHs such as Service
Bureaus and Extranets resell Cboe Options connectivity.\75\ This
indirect connectivity is another viable alternative for market
participants to trade on the Exchange without connecting directly to
the Exchange (and thus not pay the Exchange's connectivity fees), which
alternative is already being used by non-TPHs and further constrains
the price that the Exchange is able to charge for connectivity to its
Exchange. The Exchange does not receive any connectivity revenue when
connectivity is resold by a third-party, which often is resold to
multiple customers, some of whom are agency broker-dealers that have
numerous customers of their own.\76\ Accordingly, in the event that a
market participant views one exchange's direct connectivity and access
fees as more or less attractive than the competition, they can choose
to connect to that exchange indirectly or may choose not to connect to
that exchange and connect instead to one or more of the other 15
options markets. For example, two TPHs that connected directly to the
Exchange pre-migration, now connect indirectly via an extranet
provider. The Exchange notes that it has not received any comments
that, and has no evidence to suggest, the two TPHs that transitioned
from direct connections to an indirect connections post-migration were
the result of an undue financial burden resulting from the proposed fee
changes.\77\ Rather, the Exchange believes the transitions demonstrate
that indirect connectivity is in fact a viable option for market
participants, therefore reflecting a competitive environment.\78\ It
further demonstrates the manner in which market participants connect to
the Exchange is entirely within the discretion of market participants,
who can consider the fees charged by the Exchange and by resellers when
making decisions.
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\75\ Prior to migration, there were 13 firms that resold Cboe
Options connectivity. Post-migration, the Exchange anticipated that
there would be 19 firms that resell Cboe Options connectivity (both
physical and logical) and as of January 2020 there are 15 firms that
resell Cboe Options connectivity. The Exchange does not have
specific knowledge as to what latency a market participant may
experience using an indirect connection versus a direct connection
and notes it may vary by the service provided by the extranet
provider and vary between extranet providers. The Exchange believes
however, that there are extranet providers able to provide
connections with a latency that is comparable to latency experienced
using a direct connection.
\76\ The Exchange notes that resellers are not required to
publicize, let alone justify or file with the Commission their fees,
and as such could charge the market participant any fees it deems
appropriate (including connectivity fees higher than the Exchange's
connectivity fees), even if such fees would otherwise be considered
potentially unreasonable or uncompetitive fees.
\77\ The Exchange notes that TPHs are not required to specify to
the Exchange why it opts to no longer be a TPH, or why it cancels
its ports, nor is a non-TPH market participating required to specify
to the Exchange why it opts to not be a TPH and directly connect to
the Exchange.
\78\ As shown above, the availability of 15 alternative options
exchanges in addition to the viable option of indirect connectivity
demonstrates that substitute connectivity products and services do
exist supporting the assertion the proposed fees are constrained by
competitive forces.
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Additionally, pre-migration, in August 2019, the Exchange had 97
members (TPH organizations), of which nearly half connected indirectly
to the Exchange.\79\ Similarly, in December 2019, after a new broker-
dealer became a member of the Exchange in late
[[Page 42054]]
November 2019,\80\ the Exchange had 97 members, of which nearly half of
the participants connected indirectly to the Exchange. More
specifically, in December 2019, 47 TPHs connected directly to the
Exchange and accounted for approximately 66% of the Exchange's volume,
46 TPHs connected indirectly to the Exchange and accounted for
approximately 29% of the Exchange's volume and 4 TPHs utilized both
direct and indirect connections and accounted for approximately 5% of
the Exchange's volume. In December 2019, TPHs that connected directly
to the Exchange purchased a collective 179 physical ports (including
legacy physical ports), 144 of which were 10 Gb ports and 35 of which
were 1 Gb ports.\81\ The Exchange notes that of those market
participants that do connect to the Exchange, it is the individual
needs of each market participant that determine the amount and type of
Trading Permits and physical and logical connections to the
Exchange.\82\ With respect to physical connectivity, many TPHs were
able to purchase small quantities of physical ports. For example,
approximately 36% of TPHs that connected directly to the Exchange
purchased only one to two 1 Gb ports, approximately 40% purchased only
one to two 10 Gb ports, and approximately 40% had purchased a combined
total of one to two ports (for both 1 Gb and 10 Gb). Further, no TPHs
that connected directly to the Exchange had more than five 1 Gb ports,
and only 8.5% of TPHs that connected directly to the Exchange had
between six and ten 10 GB ports and only 8.5% had between ten and
fourteen 10 Gb ports. There were also a combined total of 41 ports used
for indirect connectivity (twenty-one 1 Gb ports and twenty 10 Gb
ports).\83\ The Exchange notes that all types of members connected
indirectly to the Exchange including Clearing firms, Floor Brokers,
order flow providers, and on-floor and off-floor Market-Makers, further
reflecting the fact that each type of market participant has the option
to participate on an exchange without direct connectivity. Indeed,
market participants choose if and how to connect to a particular
exchange and because it is a choice, the Exchange must set reasonable
connectivity pricing, otherwise prospective members would not connect
and existing members would disconnect or connect through a third-party
reseller of connectivity.
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\79\ The Exchange notes that one firm terminated in late
September 2019, but that it believes it was unrelated to the
migration and the proposed fee changes.
\80\ In February 2020, such member also became a member of the
Exchange's affiliated options exchanges, which have similar physical
and logical connectivity fees to the proposed fees in this filing.
\81\ Of the 4 TPHs that connected both directly and indirectly
to the Exchange, 1 TPH had two 1 Gb Ports and the remaining 3 TPHs
had a combined total of six 10 Gb ports.
\82\ To assist market participants that are connected or
considering connecting to the Exchange, the Exchange provides
detailed information and specifications about its available
connectivity alternatives in the Cboe C1 Options Exchange
Connectivity Manual, as well as the various technical
specifications. See https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/support/technical/.
\83\ The Exchange notes that it does not know how many, and
which kind of, connections each TPH that indirectly connects to the
Exchange has.
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Moreover, the Exchange notes that the Commission itself has
repeatedly expressed its preference for competition over regulatory
intervention in determining prices, products, and services in the
securities markets. Particularly, 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.'' \84\ The number of available exchanges to
connect to ensures increased competition in the marketplace, and
constrains the ability of exchanges to charge supracompetitive fees for
access to its market. The Exchange is also not aware of any evidence
that has been offered or demonstrated that a market share of
approximately 17% provides the Exchange with anti-competitive pricing
power. Additionally, the Exchange notes that its affiliated options
exchanges have substantially similar physical and logical connectivity
fees, notwithstanding a much lower market share ranging from
approximately 2.5%-9%.\85\ As discussed, if an exchange sets too high
of a fee for connectivity and/or market data services for its relevant
marketplace, market participants can choose to disconnect from the
Exchange.
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\84\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9,
2005), 70 FR 37496, 37499 (June 29, 2005) (``Regulation NMS Adopting
Release'').
\85\ See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Options Market Volume Summary
(June 26, 2020), available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/options/market_statistics/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also believes that competition in the marketplace
constrains the ability of exchanges to charge supracompetitive fees for
access to its market, even if such market, like the Exchange, offers
proprietary products exclusive to that market. Notably, just as there
is no regulatory requirement to become a member of any one options
exchange, there is also no regulatory requirement for any market
participant to trade any particular product, nor is there any
requirement that any Exchange create or indefinitely maintain any
particular product.\86\ The Exchange also highlights that market
participants may trade an Exchange's proprietary products through a
third-party without directly or indirectly connecting to the Exchange.
Additionally, market participants may trade any options product,
including proprietary products, in the unregulated Over-the-Counter
(OTC) markets for which there is no requirement for fees related to
those markets to be public. Given the benefits offered by trading
options on a listed exchange, such as increased market transparency and
heightened contra-party creditworthiness due to the role of the Options
Clearing Corporation as issuer and guarantor, the Exchange generally
seeks to incentivize market participants to trade options on an
exchange, which further constrains connectivity pricing. Market
participants may also access other exchanges to trade other similar or
competing proprietary or multi-listed products. Alternative products to
the Exchange's proprietary products may include other options products,
including options on ETFs or options futures, as well as particular
ETFs or futures. For example, exclusively listed SPX options may
compete with the following products traded on other markets: Multiply-
listed SPY options (options on the ETF), E-mini S&P 500 Options
(options on futures), and E-Mini S&P 500 futures (futures on index).
Additionally, exclusively listed VIX options may compete with the
following products traded on other markets: Multiply-listed VXX options
(options on the ETF) and exclusively listed SPIKES options on the Miami
International Securities Exchange, LLC (``MIAX'').\87\ Other options
exchanges are also not precluded from creating new proprietary products
that may achieve similar objectives to (and therefore
[[Page 42055]]
compete with) the Exchange's existing proprietary products. For
example, Nasdaq PHLX exclusively lists options on the Nasdaq-100, which
options, like index options listed on the Exchange, offer investors an
alternative method to manage and hedge portfolio exposure to the U.S.
equity markets. Indeed, even though exclusively listed proprietary
products may not be offered by competitors, a competitor could create
similar products if demand were adequate. As noted above for example,
MIAX created its exclusive product SPIKES specifically to compete
against VIX options.\88\ In connection with a recently proposed
amendment to the National Market System Plan Governing the Consolidated
Audit Trail (``CAT NMS Plan''),\89\ the Commission discussed the
existence of competition in the marketplace generally, and particularly
for exchanges with unique business models. Specifically, the Commission
contemplated the possibility of a forced exit by an exchange as a
result of a proposed amendment that could reduce the amount of CAT
funding a participant could recover if certain implementation
milestones were missed. The Commission acknowledged that, even if an
exchange were to exit the marketplace due to its proposed fee-related
change, it would not significantly impact competition in the market for
exchange trading services because these markets are served by multiple
competitors.\90\ The Commission explicitly stated that
``[c]onsequently, demand for these services in the event of the exit of
a competitor is likely to be swiftly met by existing competitors.''
\91\ The Commission further recognized that while some exchanges may
have a unique business model that is not currently offered by
competitors, a competitor could create similar business models if
demand were adequate, and if they did not do so, the Commission
believes it would be likely that new entrants would do so if the
exchange with that unique business model was otherwise profitable.\92\
Similarly, although the Exchange may have proprietary products not
offered by other competitors, not unlike unique business models, a
competitor could create similar products to an existing proprietary
product if demand were adequate. As noted above, other exchanges, that
have comparable connectivity fees, also currently offer exclusively
listed products.\93\ As such, the Exchange is still very much subject
to competition and does not possess anti-competitive pricing power,
even with its offering of proprietary products. Rather, the Exchange
must still set reasonable connectivity pricing, otherwise prospective
members would not connect, and existing members would disconnect or
connect through a third-party reseller of connectivity, regardless of
what products its offers.
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\86\ If an option class is open for trading on another national
securities exchange, the Exchange may delist such option class
immediately. For proprietary products, the Exchange may determine to
not open for trading any additional series in that option class; may
restrict series with open interest to closing transactions, provided
that, opening transactions by Market-Makers executed to accommodate
closing transactions of other market participants and opening
transactions by TPH organizations to facilitate the closing
transactions of public customers executed as crosses pursuant to and
in accordance with Rule 6.74(b) or (d) may be permitted; and may
delist the option class when all series within that class have
expired. See Cboe Rule 4.4, Interpretations and Policies .11.
\87\ MIAX has described SPIKES options as ``designed
specifically to compete head-to-head against Cboe's proprietary
VIX[supreg] product.'' See MIAX Press Release, SPIKES Options
Launched on MIAX, February 21, 2019, available at https://www.miaxoptions.com/sites/default/files/press_release-files/MIAX_Press_Release_02212019.pdf.
\88\ Id.
\89\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 86901 (September 9,
2019), 84 FR 48458 (September 13, 2019) (File No. S7-13-19).
\90\ Id.
\91\ Id.
\92\ Id.
\93\ See e.g., Nasdaq PHLX LLC Rules, (Options 7 Pricing
Schedule), Section 8A (Permit and Registration Fees) which provide
for floor permit fees between $4,000 to $6,000 per permit and
Section 9B (Port Fees), which provides various port fees ranging
from $500 to $1,250 per port. See also Nasdaq PHLX LLC Rules,
General 8 Connectivity, which provides for monthly physical
connectivity fees including fees for 1 Gb physical connections
priced at $2,500 per port and for 10 Gb physical connections
starting at $10,000 per port and see MIAX Options Fees Schedule,
Section 3b (Membership Fees, Monthly Trading Permit Fee), which
provides for trading permit fees ranging from $1,500 to $22,000 per
permit (which may include market-maker appointment costs) and
Section 5 (System Connectivity Fees) which provides for monthly
physical connectivity fees including fees for 1 Gb physical
connections priced at $1,400 per port and for 10 Gb physical
connections priced at $6,100 per port.
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For all the reasons discussed above, the Exchange believes its
proposed fees are reasonable and that the Exchange was subject to
significant competitive forces in setting its proposed fees. In
addition, the Exchange believes its proposed fees are reasonable in
light of the numerous benefits the new connectivity infrastructure
provides market participants. As described, the post-migration
connectivity architecture provides for a latency equalized
infrastructure, improved system performance, and increased sustained
order and quote per second capacity. As such, even where a fee for a
particular type or kind of connectivity may be higher than it was to
its pre-migration equivalent, such increase is reasonable given the
increased benefits market participants are getting for a similar or
modestly higher price. Moreover, as noted above, the objective of the
proposed fee changes was not to generate an overall increase in access
fee revenue, but rather adopt fees in connection with a new (and
improved) connectivity infrastructure. Indeed, the Exchange tried to
the best of its ability to approximate the overall connectivity revenue
generated by the Exchange's pre-migration fees. Notably, the Exchange's
pre-migration access fees were previously filed with the Commission and
not suspended nor disapproved.\94\ The Exchange further believes that
the reasonableness of its proposed connectivity fees is demonstrated by
the very fact that such fees are in line with, and in some cases lower
than, the costs of connectivity at other Exchanges,\95\ including its
own affiliated exchanges which have the same connectivity
infrastructure as the Exchange currently does since migration.\96\ The
Exchange notes these fees were similarly filed with the Commission and
not suspended nor disapproved.\97\
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\94\ Although the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act of 2010 (the ``Dodd-Frank Act'') amended 19(b) of the
Exchange Act to provide that SROs' fee changes become immediately
effective on filing, the legislative history makes clear that while
Congress intended to streamline SROs' rule filing procedures, the
proposed change did not ``[diminish ]the SEC's authority to reject
an improperly filed rule, disapprove a rule that is not consistent
with the Exchange Act or [diminish] the applicable public notice and
comment period.'' See S. Rep 111-176, at 106 (2010). The Commission
therefore had every right to pursue a suspension and disapproval
order of prior rule filings that adopted or amended connectivity
fees that were in place prior to the migration if it had believed
any proposed fees in those rule filings were not consistent with the
Exchange Act. Additionally, the Commission did not request
additional data or discussion in connection with prior rule filings
regarding connectivity fees, as it has with respect to the proposed
fees in this filing (and its previous versions). In the absence of
such an order, the Exchange presumes that its pre-migration fees
were reasonable and consistent with the Exchange Act.
\95\ See e.g., Nasdaq PHLX and ISE Rules, General Equity and
Options Rules, General 8. Phlx and ISE each charge a monthly fee of
$2,500 for each 1Gb connection, $10,000 for each 10Gb connection and
$15,000 for each 10Gb Ultra connection. See also Nasdaq Price List--
Trading Connectivity. Nasdaq charges a monthly fee of $7,500 for
each 10Gb direct connection to Nasdaq and $2,500 for each direct
connection that supports up to 1Gb. See also NYSE American Fee
Schedule, Section V.B, and Arca Fees and Charges, Co-Location Fees.
NYSE American and Arca each charge a monthly fee of $5,000 for each
1Gb circuit, $14,000 for each 10Gb circuit and $22,000 for each 10Gb
LX circuit.
\96\ See e.g., Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules, Physical
Connectivity Fees. For example, Cboe BZX, Cboe EDGX and C2 each
charge a monthly fee of $2,500 for each 1Gb connection and $7,500
for each 10Gb connection.
\97\ For the same reason noted above, the Exchange presumes that
the fees of other exchanges, including its affiliates, are
reasonable, as required by the Exchange Act in the absence of any
suspension or disapproval order by the Commission providing
otherwise. The Exchange highlights the Exchange's affiliate C2
similarly underwent a migration of its trading platform to the same
trading platform to which the Exchange migrated, overhauling its
connectivity structure and adopting similar connectivity fees under
similar circumstances as those proposed herein. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 83201 (May 9, 2018), 83 FR 22546 (May 15,
2018) (SR-C2-2018-006). While the Commission had the opportunity to
suspend that proposed rule change and institute proceedings to
determine whether that proposed rule change should be approved or
disapproved if the Commission believed C2 failed to meet its burden
to demonstrate its proposal was reasonable, equitable and not
unfairly discriminatory, it declined to do so. Additionally, the
Exchange notes the Commission did not repeatedly request data
regarding the proposed C2 connectivity fees as it has in connection
with the Exchange's proposed migration fees.
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[[Page 42056]]
Furthermore, in determining the proposed fee changes discussed
above, the Exchange reviewed the current competitive landscape,
considered the fees historically paid by market participants for
connectivity to the pre-migration system, and also assessed the impact
on market participants to ensure that the proposed fees would not
create an undue financial burden on any market participants, including
smaller market participants. Indeed, the Exchange received no comments
from any TPH suggesting they were unduly burdened by the proposed
changes described herein, which were first announced via Exchange
Notice nearly two months in advance of the migration (i.e., now nine
months ago), nor were any timely comment letters received by the
Commission by the comment period submission deadline of November 12,
2019.\98\ The Exchange also underscores the fact that no comment
letters were received in response to its Second, Third or Fifth
Proposed Rule Change, and that no individual market participant has
provided any written comments specifically suggesting that the Exchange
has failed to provide sufficient information in the Original Second,
Third, Fourth or Fifth Proposed Rule Change to meets its burden to
demonstrate its proposed fees are consistent with the requirements of
the Exchange Act.
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\98\ See Exchange Notice ``Cboe Options Exchange Access and
Capacity Fee Schedule Changes Effective October 1, 2019 and November
1, 2019'' Reference ID C2019081900.
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The Exchange also highlights that two market participants have in
fact expanded their connectivity footprint since the implementation of
the proposed fee changes. One of those market participants was a TPH
that had discussed terminating its membership from the Exchange
altogether prior to migration. However, after that TPH reviewed the
notice the Exchange issued describing the proposed post-migration fees,
the TPH relayed to the Exchange that it would instead remain a member
and add logical connectivity in light of the cost savings it expected
to realize due to the proposed changes. The Exchange believes this
further demonstrates competition within the market for exchange
connectivity, which as a result constrains fees the Exchange may charge
for that connectivity. Another TPH, that prior to migration acted only
as a proprietary trading firm, added the trading function as a Market-
Maker on the Exchange (which required the purchase of additional
trading permits and connectivity). The Exchange also notes that since
migration, one TPH terminated its membership with the Exchange but
retained its membership with 10 other SROs.\99\ The Exchange believes
the fact that it lost only one TPH in the past nine months demonstrates
the proposed fees are appropriate and reasonable and not unduly
burdensome. While the TPH that did terminate did not specify to the
Exchange why it ended its membership, if it had in fact determined that
the Exchange's proposed connectivity fees did not make business sense
for itself, for all the reasons discussed above, it was free to leave
the Exchange at no cost and retain its membership with other SROs and/
or pursue new memberships.
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\99\ Two other Trading Permit Holders also terminated their
respective memberships in the first quarter of 2020. The Exchange
notes, however, that one TPH consolidated its membership with an
affiliate and another TPH no longer appears to be a registered
broker-dealer.
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The proposed connectivity structure and corresponding fees, like
the pre-migration connectivity structure and fees, continue to provide
market participants flexibility with respect to how to connect to the
Exchange based on each market participants' respective business needs.
For example, the amount and type of physical and logical ports are
determined by factors relevant and specific to each market participant,
including its business model, costs of connectivity, how its business
is segmented and allocated and volume of messages sent to the Exchange.
Moreover, the Exchange notes that it does not have unlimited system
capacity to support an unlimited number of order and quote entry per
second. Accordingly, the proposed connectivity fees, and connectivity
structure are designed to encourage market participants to be efficient
with their respective physical and logical port usage. While the
Exchange has no way of predicting with certainty the amount or type of
connections market participants will in fact purchase, if any, the
Exchange anticipates that like today, some market participants will
continue to decline to connect and participate on the Exchange, some
will participate on the Exchange via indirect connectivity, some will
only purchase one physical connection and/or logical port connection,
and others will purchase multiple connections.
In sum, the Exchange believes the proposed fees are reasonable and
reflect a competitive environment, as the Exchange seeks to amend its
access fees in connection with the migration of its technology
platform, while still attracting market participants to continue to be,
or become, connected to the Exchange.
Physical Ports
The Exchange believes increasing the fee for the new 10 Gb Physical
Port is reasonable because unlike, the current 10 Gb Network Access
Ports, the new Physical Ports provides a connection through a latency
equalized infrastructure with faster switches and also allows access to
both unicast order entry and multicast market data with a single
physical connection. As discussed above, legacy Network Access Ports do
not permit market participants to receive unicast and multicast
connectivity. As such, in order to receive both connectivity types pre-
migration, a market participant needed to purchase and maintain at
least two 10 Gb Network Access Ports. The proposed Physical Ports not
only provide latency equalization (i.e., eliminate latency advantages
between market participants based on location) as compared to the
legacy ports, but also alleviate the need to pay for two physical ports
as a result of needing unicast and multicast connectivity. Accordingly,
market participants who historically had to purchase two separate ports
for each of multicast and unicast activity, will be able to purchase
only one port, and consequently pay lower fees overall. For example,
pre-migration if a TPH had two 10 Gb legacy Network Access Ports, one
of which received unicast traffic and the other of which received
multicast traffic, that TPH would have been assessed $10,000 per month
($5,000 per port). Under the proposed rule change, using the new
Physical Ports, that TPH has the option of utilizing one single port,
instead of two ports, to receive both unicast and multicast traffic,
therefore paying only $7,000 per month for a port that provides both
connectivity types. The Exchange notes that pre-migration,
approximately 50% of TPHs maintained two or more 10 Gb Network Access
Ports. While the Exchange has no way of predicting with certainty the
amount or type of connections market participants will in fact purchase
post-migration, the Exchange anticipated approximately 50% of the TPHs
with two or more 10 Gb Network Access Ports to reduce the number of 10
Gb Physical Ports that they purchase and expected the remaining 50% of
TPHs to maintain their current 10 Gb Physical Ports, but reduce the
number of 1 Gb Physical Ports. Particularly, pre-
[[Page 42057]]
migration, a number of TPHs maintained two 10 Gb Network Access Ports
to receive multicast data and two 1 Gb Network Access Ports for order
entry (unicast connectivity). As the new 10 Gb Physical Ports are able
to accommodate unicast connectivity (order entry), TPHs may choose to
eliminate their 1 Gb Network Access Ports and utilize the new 10 Gb
Physical Ports for both multicast and unicast connectivity. The
Exchange notes that in February 2020, approximately 78% of TPHs that
maintained a 1 Gb Network Access Port pre-migration, no longer
maintained a 1 Gb Physical Port. Additionally, as of February 2020,
approximately 44% reduced the quantity of 10 Gb Physical Ports they
maintained as compared to pre-migration.
As discussed above, if a TPH deems a particular exchange as
charging excessive fees for connectivity, such market participants may
opt to terminate their connectivity arrangements with that exchange,
and adopt a possible range of alternative strategies, including routing
to the applicable exchange through another participant or market center
or taking that exchange's data indirectly. Accordingly, if the Exchange
charges excessive fees, it would stand to lose not only connectivity
revenues but also revenues associated with the execution of orders
routed to it, and, to the extent applicable, market data revenues. The
Exchange believes that this competitive dynamic imposes powerful
restraints on the ability of any exchange to charge unreasonable fees
for physical connectivity. The Exchange also notes that the proposal
represents an equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees and other
charges as its fees for physical connectivity are reasonably
constrained by competitive alternatives, as discussed above. The
proposed amounts are in line with, and in some cases lower than, the
costs of physical connectivity at other Exchanges,\100\ including the
Cboe Affiliated Exchanges, which have the same connectivity
infrastructure the Exchange has migrated to and some of which also
offer exclusive products.\101\ The Exchange does not believe it is
unreasonable to assess fees that are in line with fees that have
already been established for the same physical ports used to connect to
the same connectivity infrastructure and common platform. The Exchange
believes the proposed Physical Port fees are equitable and not
unreasonably discriminatory as the connectivity pricing is associated
with relative usage of the various market participants (including
smaller participants) and the Exchange has not been presented with any
evidence to suggest its proposed fee changes would impose a barrier to
entry for participants, including smaller participants. In fact, as
noted above, the Exchange is unaware of any market participant that has
terminated direct connectivity solely as a result of the proposed fee
changes. The Exchange also believes increasing the fee for 10 Gb
Physical Ports and charging a higher fee as compared to the 1 Gb
Physical Port is equitable as the 1 Gb Physical Port is 1/10th the size
of the 10 Gb Physical Port and therefore does not offer access to many
of the products and services offered by the Exchange (e.g., ability to
receive certain market data products). Thus the value of the 1 Gb
alternative is lower than the value of the 10 Gb alternative, when
measured based on the type of Exchange access it offers. Moreover,
market participants that purchase 10 Gb Physical Ports utilize the most
bandwidth and therefore consume the most resources from the network. As
such, the Exchange believes the proposed fees for the 1 and 10 Gb
Physical Ports, respectively are reasonably and appropriately
allocated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ See e.g., Nasdaq PHLX and ISE Rules, General Equity and
Options Rules, General 8. Phlx and ISE each charge a monthly fee of
$2,500 for each 1Gb connection, $10,000 for each 10Gb connection and
$15,000 for each 10Gb Ultra connection. See also Nasdaq Price List--
Trading Connectivity. Nasdaq charges a monthly fee of $7,500 for
each 10Gb direct connection to Nasdaq and $2,500 for each direct
connection that supports up to 1Gb. See also NYSE American Fee
Schedule, Section V.B, and Arca Fees and Charges, Co-Location Fees.
NYSE American and Arca each charge a monthly fee of $5,000 for each
1Gb circuit, $14,000 for each 10Gb circuit and $22,000 for each 10Gb
LX circuit.
\101\ See e.g., Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules, Physical
Connectivity Fees. For example, Cboe BZX, Cboe EDGX and C2 each
charge a monthly fee of $2,500 for each 1Gb connection and $7,500
for each 10Gb connection.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data Port Fees
The Exchange believes assessing the data port fee per data source,
instead of per port, is reasonable because it may allow for market
participants to maintain more ports at a lower cost and applies
uniformly to all market participants. The Exchange believes the
proposed increase is reasonable because, as noted above, market
participants may pay lower fees as a result of charging per data source
and not per data port. Indeed, while the Exchange has no way of
predicting with certainty the impact of the proposed changes, the
Exchange had anticipated approximately 76% of the 51 market
participants who pay data port fees to pay the same or lower fees upon
implementation of the proposed change. As of December 2019, 46 market
participants \102\ pay the proposed data port fees, of which
approximately 78% market participants are paying the same or lower fees
in connection with the proposed change. Monthly savings for firms
paying lower fees range from $500 to $6,000 per month. The Exchange
also anticipated that 19% of TPHs who pay data port fees would pay a
modest increase of only $500 per month. In December 2019, approximately
22% market participants paid higher fees, with the majority of those
market participants paying a modest monthly increase of $500 and only 3
firms paying either $1,000 or $1,500 more per month. Additionally, as
discussed above, the Exchange's affiliate C2 has the same fee which is
also assessed at the proposed rate and assessed by data source instead
of per port. The proposed name change is also appropriate in light of
the Exchange's proposed changes and may alleviate potential confusion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ The Exchange notes the reduction in market participants
that pay the data port fee is due to firm consolidations and
acquisitions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Logical Connectivity
Port Fees
The Exchange believes it's reasonable to eliminate certain fees
associated with legacy options for connecting to the Exchange and to
replace them with fees associated with new options for connecting to
the Exchange that are similar to those offered at its Affiliated
Exchanges. In particular, the Exchange believes it's reasonable to no
longer assess fees for CMI and FIX Login IDs because the Login IDs were
retired and rendered obsolete upon migration and because the Exchange
is proposing to replace them with fees associated with the new logical
connectivity options. The Exchange believes that it is reasonable to
harmonize the Exchange's logical connectivity options and corresponding
connectivity fees now that the Exchange is on a common platform as its
Affiliated Exchanges. Additionally, the Exchange notes the proposed
fees are the same as, or in line with, the fees assessed on its
Affiliated Exchanges for similar connectivity.\103\ The proposed
logical connectivity fees are also equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because the Exchange will apply the same fees to all
market participants that use the same respective connectivity options.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ See Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules, Logical Port Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed Logical Port fees are reasonable
as it is the same fee for Drop Ports and the first
[[Page 42058]]
five BOE/FIX Ports that is assessed for CMI and FIX Logins, which the
Exchange is eliminating in lieu of logical ports. Additionally, while
the proposed ports will be assessed the same monthly fees as current
CMI/FIX Login IDs, the proposed logical ports provide for significantly
more message traffic. Specifically, the proposed BOE/FIX Logical Ports
will provide for 3 times the amount of quoting \104\ capacity and
approximately 165 times order entry capacity. Similarly, the Exchange
believes the proposed BOE Bulk Port fees are reasonable because while
the fees are higher than the CMI and FIX Login Id fees and the proposed
Logical Port fees, BOE Bulk Ports offer significantly more bandwidth
capacity than both CMI and FIX Login Ids and Logical Ports.
Particularly, a single BOE Bulk Port offers 45 times the amount of
quoting bandwidth than CMI/FIX Login Ids \105\ and 5 times the amount
of quoting bandwidth than Logical Ports will offer. Additionally, the
Exchange believes that its fees for logical connectivity are
reasonable, equitable, and not unfairly discriminatory as they are
designed to ensure that firms that use the most capacity pay for that
capacity, rather than placing that burden on market participants that
have more modest needs. Although the Exchange charges a ``per port''
fee for logical connectivity, it notes that this fee is in effect a
capacity fee as each FIX, BOE or BOE Bulk port used for order/quote
entry supports a specified capacity (i.e., messages per second) in the
matching engine, and firms purchase additional logical ports when they
require more capacity due to their business needs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\104\ Based on the purchase of a single Market-Maker Trading
Permit or Bandwidth Packet.
\105\ Based on the purchase of a single Market-Maker Trading
Permit or Bandwidth Packet.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An obvious driver for a market participant's decision to purchase
multiple ports will be their desire to send or receive additional
levels of message traffic in some manner, either by increasing their
total amount of message capacity available, or by segregating order
flow for different trading desks and clients to avoid latency sensitive
applications from competing for a single thread of resources. For
example, a TPH may purchase one or more ports for its market making
business based on the amount of message traffic needed to support that
business, and then purchase separate ports for proprietary trading or
customer facing businesses so that those businesses have their own
distinct connection, allowing the firm to send multiple messages into
the Exchange's trading system in parallel rather than sequentially.
Some TPHs that provide direct market access to their customers may also
choose to purchase separate ports for different clients as a service
for latency sensitive customers that desire the lowest possible latency
to improve trading performance. Thus, while a smaller TPH that demands
more limited message traffic may connect through a service bureau or
other service provider, or may choose to purchase one or two logical
ports that are billed at a rate of $750 per month each, a larger market
participant with a substantial and diversified U.S. options business
may opt to purchase additional ports to support both the volume and
types of activity that they conduct on the Exchange. While the Exchange
has no way of predicting with certainty the amount or type of logical
ports market participants will in fact purchase post-migration, the
Exchange anticipated approximately 16% of TPHs to purchase one to two
logical ports, and approximately 22% of TPHs to not purchase any
logical ports. In December 2019, 13% of TPHs purchased one to two
logical ports and 27% have not purchased any logical ports. At the same
time, market participants that desire more total capacity due to their
business needs, or that wish to segregate order flow by purchasing
separate capacity allocations to reduce latency or for other
operational reasons, would be permitted to choose to purchase such
additional capacity at the same marginal cost. The Exchange believes
the proposal to assess an additional Logical and BOE Bulk port fee for
incremental usage per logical port is reasonable because the proposed
fees are modestly higher than the proposed Logical Port and BOE Bulk
fees and encourage users to mitigate message traffic as necessary. The
Exchange notes one of its Affiliated Exchanges has similar implied port
fees.\106\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ See e.g., Cboe C2 Options Exchange Fees Schedule, Logical
Connectivity Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, the Exchange believes that the proposed BOE/FIX Logical
Port and BOE Bulk Port fees are appropriate as these fees would ensure
that market participants continue to pay for the amount of capacity
that they request, and the market participants that pay the most are
the ones that demand the most resources from the Exchange. The Exchange
also believes that its logical connectivity fees are aligned with the
goals of the Commission in facilitating a competitive market for all
firms that trade on the Exchange and of ensuring that critical market
infrastructure has ``levels of capacity, integrity, resiliency,
availability, and security adequate to maintain their operational
capability and promote the maintenance of fair and orderly markets.''
\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73639 (November
19, 2014), 79 FR 72251 (December 5, 2014) (File No. S7-01-13)
(Regulation SCI Adopting Release).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes waiving the FIX/BOE Logical Port fee for one
FIX Logical Port used to access PULSe and Silexx (for FLEX Trading) is
reasonable because it will allow all TPHs using PULSe and Silexx to
avoid having to pay a fee that they would otherwise have to pay. The
waiver is equitable and not unfairly discriminatory because TPHs using
PULSe are already subject to a monthly fee for the PULSe Workstation,
which the Exchange views as inclusive of fees to access the Exchange.
Moreover, while PULSe users today do not require a FIX/CMI Login Id,
post-migration, due to changes to the connectivity infrastructure,
PULSe users will be required to maintain a FIX Logical Port and as such
incur a fee they previously would not have been subject to. Similarly,
the Exchange believes that the waiver for Silexx (for FLEX trading)
will encourage TPHs to transact business using FLEX Options using the
new Silexx System and encourage trading of FLEX Options. Additionally,
the Exchange notes that it currently waives the Login Id fees for Login
IDs used to access the CFLEX system.
The Exchange believes its proposed fee for Purge Ports is
reasonable as it is also in line with the amount assessed for purge
ports offered by its Affiliated Exchanges, as well as other
exchanges.\108\ Moreover, the Exchange believes that offering purge
port functionality at the Exchange level promotes robust risk
management across the industry, and thereby facilitates investor
protection. Some market participants, and, in particular, larger firms,
could build similar risk functionality on their trading systems that
permit the flexible cancellation of orders entered on the Exchange.
Offering Exchange level protections however, ensures that such
functionality is widely available to all firms, including smaller firms
that may otherwise not be willing to incur the costs and development
work necessary to support their own customized mass cancel
functionality. The Exchange operates in a highly competitive market in
which exchanges offer connectivity and related services as a means to
[[Page 42059]]
facilitate the trading activities of TPHs and other participants. As
the proposed Purge Ports provide voluntary risk management
functionality, excessive fees would simply serve to reduce demand for
this optional product. The Exchange also believes that the proposed
Purge Port fees are not unfairly discriminatory because they will apply
uniformly to all TPHs that choose to use dedicated Purge Ports. The
proposed Purge Ports are completely voluntary and, as they relate
solely to optional risk management functionality, no TPH is required or
under any regulatory obligation to utilize them. The Exchange believes
that adopting separate fees for these ports ensures that the associated
costs are borne exclusively by TPHs that determine to use them based on
their business needs, including Market-Makers or similarly situated
market participants. Similar to Purge Ports, Spin and GRP Ports are
optional products that provide an alternative means for market
participants to receive multicast data and request and receive a
retransmission of such data. As such excessive fees would simply serve
to reduce demand for these products, which TPHs are under no regulatory
obligation to utilize. All TPHs that voluntarily select these service
options (i.e., Purge Ports, Spin Ports or GRP Ports) will be charged
the same amount for the same respective services. All TPHs have the
option to select any connectivity option, and there is no
differentiation among TPHs with regard to the fees charged for the
services offered by the Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See Affiliated Exchange Fee Schedules, Logical Port Fees.
See also, Nasdaq ISE Pricing Schedule, Section 7(C). ISE charges a
fee of $1,100 per month for SQF Purge Ports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Access Credits
The Exchange believes the proposal to adopt credits for BOE Bulk
Ports is reasonable, equitable and not unfairly discriminatory because
it provides an opportunity for TPHs to pay lower fees for logical
connectivity. The Exchange notes that the proposed credits are in lieu
of the current credits that Market-Makers are eligible to receive today
for Trading Permits fees. Although only Market-Makers may receive the
proposed BOE Bulk Port credits, Market-Makers are valuable market
participants that provide liquidity in the marketplace and incur costs
that other market participants do not incur. For example, Market-Makers
have a number of obligations, including quoting obligations and fees
associated with appointments that other market participants do not
have. The Exchange also believes that the proposals provide incremental
incentives for TPHs to strive for the higher tier levels, which provide
increasingly higher benefits for satisfying increasingly more stringent
criteria, including criteria to provide more liquidity to the Exchange.
The Exchange believes the value of the proposed credits is commensurate
with the difficulty to achieve the corresponding tier thresholds of
each program.
First, the Exchange believes the proposed BOE Bulk Port fee credits
provided under AVP will incentivize the routing of orders to the
Exchange by TPHs that have both Market-Maker and agency operations, as
well as incent Market-Makers to continue to provide critical liquidity
notwithstanding the costs incurred with being a Market-Maker. More
specifically, in the options industry, many options orders are routed
by consolidators, which are firms that have both order router and
Market-Maker operations. The Exchange is aware not only of the
importance of providing credits on the order routing side in order to
encourage the submission of orders, but also of the operations costs on
the Market-Maker side. The Exchange believes the proposed change to AVP
continues to allow the Exchange to provide relief to the Market-Maker
side via the credits, albeit credits on BOE Bulk Port fees instead of
Trading Permit fees. Additionally, the proposed credits may incentivize
and attract more volume and liquidity to the Exchange, which will
benefit all Exchange participants through increased opportunities to
trade as well as enhancing price discovery. While the Exchange has no
way of predicting with certainty how many and which TPHs will satisfy
the required criteria to receive the credits, the Exchange had
anticipated approximately two TPHs (out of approximately 5 TPHs that
are eligible for AVP) to reach VIP Tiers 4 or 5 and consequently earn
the BOE Bulk Port fee credits for their respective Market-Maker
affiliate. For the month of October 2019, two TPHs received access
credits under Tier 5 and no TPHs received credits under Tier 4. The
Exchange notes that it believes its reasonable, equitable and not
unfairly discriminatory to no longer provider access credits for
Market-Makers whose affiliates achieve VIP Tiers 2 or 3 as the Exchange
has adopted another opportunity for all Market-Makers, not just Market-
Makers that are part of a consolidator, to receive credits on BOE Bulk
Port fees (i.e., credits available via the proposed Market-Maker Access
Credit Program). More specifically, limiting the credits under AVP to
the top two tiers enables the Exchange to provide further credits under
the new Market-Maker Access Credit Program. Furthermore, the Exchange
notes that it is not required to provide any credits at any tier level.
The Exchange believes the proposed BOE Bulk Port fee credits
available for TPHs that reach certain Performance Tiers under the
Liquidity Provider Sliding Scale Adjustment Table is reasonable as the
credits provide for reduced connectivity costs for those Market-Makers
that reach the required thresholds. The Exchange believe it's
reasonable, equitable and not unfairly discriminatory to provide
credits to those Market-Makers that primarily provide and post
liquidity to the Exchange, as the Exchange wants to continue to
encourage Market-Makers with significant Make Rates to continue to
participate on the Exchange and add liquidity. Greater liquidity
benefits all market participants by providing more trading
opportunities and tighter spreads.
Moreover, the Exchange notes that Market-Makers with a high Make
Rate percentage generally require higher amounts of capacity than other
Market-Makers. Particularly, Market-Makers with high Make Rates are
generally streaming significantly more quotes than those with lower
Make Rates. As such, Market-Makers with high Make Rates may incur more
costs than other Market-Makers as they may need to purchase multiple
BOE Bulk Ports in order to accommodate their capacity needs. The
Exchange believes the proposed credits for BOE Bulk Ports encourages
Market-Makers to continue to provide liquidity for the Exchange,
notwithstanding the costs incurred by purchasing multiple ports.
Particularly, the proposal is intended to mitigate the costs incurred
by traditional Market-Makers that focus on adding liquidity to the
Exchange (as opposed to those that provide and take, or just take).
While the Exchange cannot predict with certainty which Market-Makers
will reach Performance Tiers 4 and 5 each month, based on historical
performance it anticipated approximately 10 Market-Makers would achieve
Tiers 4 or 5. In October 2019, 12 Market-Makers achieved Tiers 4 or 5.
Lastly, the Exchange notes that it is common practice among options
exchanges to differentiate fees for adding liquidity and fees for
removing liquidity.\109\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ See e.g., MIAX Options Fees Schedule, Section 1(a), Market
Maker Transaction Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bandwidth Packets and CMI CAS Server Fees
The Exchange believes it's reasonable to eliminate Bandwidth Packet
fees and
[[Page 42060]]
the CMI CAS Server fee because TPHs will not pay fees for these
connectivity options and because Bandwidth Packets and CAS Servers have
been retired and rendered obsolete as part of the migration. The
Exchange believes that even though it will be discontinuing Bandwidth
Packets, the proposed incremental pricing for Logical Ports and BOE
Bulk Ports will continue to encourage users to mitigate message
traffic. The proposed change is equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because it will apply uniformly to all TPHs.
Access Fees
The Exchange believes the restructuring of its Trading Permits is
reasonable in light of the changes to the Exchange's connectivity
infrastructure in connection with the migration and the resulting
separation of bandwidth allowance, logins and appointment costs from
each Trading Permit. The Exchange also believes that it is reasonable
to harmonize the Exchange's Trading Permit structure and corresponding
connectivity options to more closely align with the structures offered
at its Affiliated Exchanges once the Exchange is on a common platform
as its Affiliated Exchanges.\110\ The proposed Trading Permit structure
and corresponding fees are also in line with the structure and fees
provided by other exchanges. The proposed Trading Permit fees are also
equitable and not unfairly discriminatory because the Exchange will
apply the same fees to all market participants that use the same type
and number of Trading Permits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ For example, the Exchange's affiliate, C2, similarly
provides for Trading Permits that are not tied to connectivity, and
similar physical and logical port options at similar pricings. See
Cboe C2 Options Exchange Fees Schedule. Physical connectivity and
logical connectivity are also not tied to any type of permits on the
Exchange's other options exchange affiliates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to electronic Trading Permits, the Exchange notes that
TPHs previously requested multiple Trading Permits because of
bandwidth, login or appointment cost needs. As described above, in
connection with migration, bandwidth, logins and appointment costs are
no longer tied to Trading Permits or Bandwidth Packets and as such, the
need to hold multiple permits and/or Bandwidth Packets is obsolete. As
such, the Exchange believes the structure to require only one of each
type of applicable electronic Trading Permit is appropriate. Moreover,
the Exchange believes offering separate marketing making permits for
off-floor and on-floor Market-Makers provides for a cleaner, more
streamlined approach to trading permits and corresponding fees. Other
exchanges similarly provide separate and distinct fees for Market-
Makers that operate on-floor vs off-floor and their corresponding fees
are similar to those proposed by the Exchange.\111\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ See e.g., PHLX Section 8A, Permit and Registration Fees.
See also, BOX Options Fee Schedule, Section IX Participant Fees;
NYSE American Options Fees Schedule, Section III(A) Monthly ATP Fees
and NYSE Arca Options Fees and Charges, OTP Trading Participant
Rights. For similar Trading Floor Permits for Floor Market Makers,
Nasdaq PHLX charges $6,000; BOX charges up to $5,500 for 3
registered permits in addition to a $1,500 Participant Fee, NYSE
Arca charges up to $6,000; and NYSE American charges up to $8,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed fee for its MM EAP Trading
Permits is reasonable as it is the same fee it assess today for Market-
Maker Trading Permits (i.e., $5,000 per month per permit).
Additionally, the proposed fee is in line with, and in some cases even
lower than, the amounts assessed for similar access fees at other
exchanges, including its affiliate C2.\112\ The Exchange believes the
proposed EAP fee is also reasonable, and in line with the fees assessed
by other Exchanges for non-Market-Maker electronic access.\113\ The
Exchange notes that while the Trading Permit fee is increasing, TPHs
overall cost to access the Exchange may be reduced in light of the fact
that a TPH no longer must purchase multiple Trading Permits, Bandwidth
Packets and Login Ids in order to receive sufficient bandwidth and
logins to meet their respective business needs. To illustrate the value
of the new connectivity infrastructure, the Exchange notes that the
cost that would be incurred by a TPH today in order to receive the same
amount of order capacity that will be provided by a single Logical Port
post-migration (i.e., 5,000 orders per second), is approximately 98%
higher than the cost for the same capacity post-migration. The
following examples further demonstrate potential cost savings/value
added for an EAP holder with modest capacity needs and an EAP holder
with larger capacity needs:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\112\ See e.g., Cboe C2 Options Exchange Fees Schedule. See
also, NYSE Arca Options Fees and Charges, General Options and
Trading Permit (OTP) Fees, which assesses up to $6,000 per Market
Maker OTP and NYSE American Options Fee Schedule, Section III.
Monthly ATP Fees, which assess up to $8,000 per Market Maker ATP.
See also, PHLX Section 8A, Permit and Registration Fees, which
assesses up to $4,000 per Market Maker Permit.
\113\ See e.g., PHLX Section 8A, Permit and Registration Fees,
which assesses up to $4,000 per Permit for all member and member
organizations other than Floor Specialists and Market Makers.
TPH That Holds 1 EAP, no Bandwidth Packets and 1 CMI Login
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current fee Post-migration fee
structure structure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EAP......................... $1,600.............. $3,000.
CMI Login/Logical Port...... $750................ $750..
Bandwidth Packets........... 0................... N/A.
Total Bandwidth Available... 30 orders/sec....... 5,000 orders/sec.
-------------------------------------------
Total Cost.............. $2,350.............. $3,750.
Total Cost per message.. $78.33/order/sec.... $0.75/order/sec.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TPH That Holds 1 EAP, 4 Bandwidth Packets and 15 CMI Logins
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current fee Post-migration fee
structure structure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EAP......................... $1,600.............. $3,000.
CMI Login/Logical Port...... $11,250 ([email protected]).... $750.
Bandwidth Packets........... $6,400 ([email protected]$1,600)... N/A.
Total Bandwidth Available... 150 orders/sec...... 5,000 orders/sec.
-------------------------------------------
Total Cost.............. $19,250............. $3,750.
Total Cost per message.. $128.33/order/sec... $0.75/order/sec.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 42061]]
The Exchange believes the proposal to adopt a new Clearing TPH
Permit is reasonable because it offers TPHs that only clear
transactions of TPHs a discount. Particularly, Clearing TPHs that also
submit orders electronically to the Exchange would purchase the
proposed EAP at $3,000 per permit. The Exchange believe it's reasonable
to provide a discount to Clearing TPHs that only clear transactions and
do not otherwise submit electronic orders to the Exchange. The Exchange
notes that another exchange similarly charges a separate fee for
clearing firms.\114\
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\114\ See e.g., NYSE Arca Options Fees and Charges, General
Options and Trading Permit (OTP) Fees and NYSE American Options Fee
Schedule, Section III. Monthly ATP Fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed fee structure for on-floor
Market-Makers is reasonable as the fees are in line with those offered
at other Exchanges.\115\ The Exchange believes that the proposed fee
for MM Floor Permits as compared to MM EAPs is reasonable because it is
only modestly higher than MM EAPs and Floor MMs don't have other costs
that MM EAP holders have, such as MM EAP Appointment fees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\115\ See e.g., PHLX Section 8A, Permit and Registration Fees,
which assesses $6,000 per permit for Floor Specialists and Market
Makers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes its proposed fees for Floor Broker Permits
are reasonable because the fees are similar to, and in some cases lower
than, the fees the Exchange currently assesses for such permits.
Specifically, based on the number of Trading Permits TPHs held upon
migration, 60% of TPHs that hold Floor Broker Trading Permits will pay
lower Trading Permit fees. Particularly, any Floor Broker holding ten
or less Floor Broker Trading Permits will pay lower fees under the
proposed tiers as compared to what they pay today. While the remaining
40% of TPHs holding Floor Broker Trading Permits (who each hold between
12-21 Floor Broker Trading Permits) will pay higher fees, the Exchange
notes the monthly increase is de minimis, ranging from an increase of
0.6%-2.72%.\116\
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\116\ The Floor Brokers whose fees are increasing have each
committed to a minimum number of permits and therefore currently
receive the rates set forth in the current Floor Broker TP Sliding
Scale.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed ADV Discount is reasonable
because it provides an opportunity for Floor Brokers to pay lower FB
Trading Permit fees, similar to the current rebate program offered to
Floor Brokers. The Exchange notes that while the new ADV Discount
program includes only customer volume (``C'' origin code) as compared
to Customer and Professional Customer/Voluntary Professional, the
amount of Professional Customer/Voluntary Professional volume was de
minimis and the Exchange does not believe the absence of such volume
will have a significant impact.\117\ Additionally, the Exchange notes
that while the ADV requirements under the proposed ADV Discount program
are higher than are required under the current rebate program, the
proposed ADV Discount counts volume from all products towards the
thresholds as compared to the current rebate program which excludes
volume from Underlying Symbol List A (except RLG, RLV, RUI, and UKXM),
DJX, XSP, and subcabinet trades. Moreover, the ADV Discount is designed
to encourage the execution of orders in all classes via open outcry,
which may increase volume, which would benefit all market participants
(including Floor Brokers who do not hit the ADV thresholds) trading via
open outcry (and indeed, this increased volume could make it possible
for some Floor Brokers to hit the ADV thresholds). The Exchange
believes the proposed discounts are equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory because all Floor Brokers are eligible. While the
Exchange has no way of predicting with certainty how many and which
TPHs will satisfy the various thresholds under the ADV Discount, the
Exchange anticipated approximately 3 Floor Brokers to receive a rebate
under the program. In December 2019, 2 Floor Brokers received a rebate
under the program.
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\117\ Furthermore, post-migration the Exchange will not have
Voluntary Professionals.
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The Exchange believes its proposed MM EAP Appointment fees are
reasonable in light of the Exchange's elimination of appointment costs
tied to Trading Permits. Other exchanges also offer a similar structure
with respect to fees for appointment classes.\118\ Additionally, the
proposed MM EAP Appointment fee structure results in approximately 36%
electronic MMs paying lower fees for trading permit and appointment
costs. For example, in order to have the ability to make electronic
markets in every class on the Exchange, a Market-Maker would need 1
Market-Maker Trading Permit and 37 Appointment Units post-migration.
Under, the current pricing structure, in order for a Market-Maker to
quote the entire universe of available classes, a Market-Maker would
need 33 Appointment Credits, thus necessitating 33 Market-Maker Trading
Permits. With respect to fees for Trading Permits and Appointment Unit
Fees, under the proposed pricing structure, the cost for a TPH wishing
to quote the entire universe of available classes is approximately 29%
less (if they are not eligible for the MM TP Sliding Scale) or
approximately 2% less (if they are eligible for the MM TP Sliding
Scale). To further demonstrate the potential cost savings/value added,
the Exchange is providing the following examples comparing current
Market-Maker connectivity and access fees to projected connectivity and
access fees for different scenarios. The Exchange notes that the below
examples not only compare Trading Permit and Appointment Unit costs,
but also the cost incurred for logical connectivity and bandwidth.
Particularly, the first example demonstrates the total minimum cost
that would be incurred today in order for a Market-Maker to have the
same amount of capacity as a Market-Maker post-migration that would
have only 1 MM EAP and 1 Logical Port (i.e., 15,000 quotes/3 sec). The
Exchange is also providing examples that demonstrate the costs of (i) a
Market-Maker with small capacity needs and appointment unit of 1.0 and
(ii) a Market-Maker with large capacity needs and appointment cost/unit
of 30.0:
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\118\ See e.g., PHLX Section 8. Membership Fees, B, Streaming
Quote Trader (``SQT'') Fees and C. Remote Market Maker Organization
(RMO) Fee.
\119\ The maximum quoting bandwidth that may be applied to a
single Login Id is 80,000 quotes/3 sec.
Market-Maker That Needs Capacity of 15,000/Quotes/3 Seconds
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current fee Post-migration fee
structure structure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MM Permit/MM EAP............ $5,000.............. $5,000.
Appointment Unit Cost....... N/A (1 appointment $0 (1 appointment
cost). unit).
CMI Login/Logical Port...... $750 \119\.......... $750.
Bandwidth Packets........... $5,500 ([email protected]$2,750)... N/A.
-------------------------------------------
Total Bandwidth 15,000 quotes/3 sec. 15,000 quotes/3 sec.
Available.
[[Page 42062]]
Total Cost.............. $11,250............. $5,750.
Total Cost per message $0.75/quote/3 sec... $0.38/quote/3 sec.
allowed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market Maker That Needs Capacity of No More than 5,000 Quotes/3 Secs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current fee Post-migration fee
structure structure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MM Permit/MM EAP............ $5,000.............. $5,000.
Appointment Unit Cost....... N/A (1 appointment $0 (1 appointment
cost). unit).
CMI Login/Logical Port...... $750................ $750.
Bandwidth Packets........... 0................... N/A.
-------------------------------------------
Total Bandwidth 5,000 quotes/3 sec.. 15,000 quotes/3 sec.
Available.
Total Cost.............. $5,750.............. $5,750.
Total Cost per message $1.15/quote/3 sec... $0.38/quote/3 sec.
allowed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market-Maker That Needs 30 Appointment Units and Capacity of 300,000
Quotes/3 Sec
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current fee Post-migration fee
structure structure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MM Permits/MM EAP........... $105,000 (30 MM $5,000.
Permits assumes
eligible for MM TP
Sliding Scale)
\120\.
Appointment Units Cost...... N/A (30 appointment $95,500 (30
costs). appointment units).
CMI Logins/BOE Bulk Port.... $3,000 ([email protected]$750) $3,000 (2 BOE
\121\. [email protected]$1,500).
Bandwidth Packets........... $82,500([email protected]$2750)... N/A.
-------------------------------------------
Total Bandwidth 300,000 quotes/3 sec * 450,000 quotes/3
Available. sec.
Total Cost.............. $190,500............ $103,500.
Total Cost per message $0.63/quotes/3 sec.. $0.23/quote/3 sec.
allowed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Possible performance degradation at 15,000 messages per second.
The Exchange believes its proposal to provide separate fees for
Tier Appointments for MM EAPs and MM Floor Permits as the Exchange will
be issuing separate Trading Permits for on-floor and off-floor market
making as discussed above. The proposal to eliminate the volume
threshold for the electronic SPX Tier Appointment fee is reasonable as
no TPHs in the past several months have electronically traded more than
1 SPX contract or less than 100 SPX contracts per month and therefore
will not be negatively impacted by the proposed change, and because it
aligns the electronic SPX Tier Appointment with the floor SPX Tier
Appointment, which has no volume threshold. The Exchange believes the
proposal to increase the electronic volume thresholds for VIX and RUT
are reasonable as those that do not regularly trade VIX or RUT in open-
outcry will continue to not be assessed the fee. In fact, any TPH that
executes more than 100 contracts but less than 1,000 in the respective
classes will no longer have to pay the proposed Tier Appointment fee.
As noted above, the Exchange is not proposing to change the amounts
assessed for each Tier Appointment Fee. The proposed change is
equitable and not unfairly discriminatory because it will apply
uniformly to all TPHs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\120\ For simplicity of the comparison, this assumes no
appointments in SPX, VIX, RUT, XEO or OEX (which are not included in
the TP Sliding Scale).
\121\ Given the bandwidth limit per Login Id of 80,000 quotes/3
sec, example assumes Market-Maker purchases minimum amount of Login
IDs to accommodate 300,000 quotes/3 sec.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trading Permit Holder Regulatory Fee
The Exchange believes it's reasonable to eliminate the Trading
Permit Holder Regulatory fee because TPHs will not pay this fee and
because the Exchange is restructuring its Trading Permit structure. The
Exchange notes that although it will less closely be covering the costs
of regulating all TPHs and performing its regulatory responsibilities,
it still has sufficient funds to do so. The proposed change is
equitable and not unfairly discriminatory because it will apply
uniformly to all TPHs.
The Exchange believes corresponding changes to eliminate obsolete
language in connection with the proposed changes described above and to
relocate and reorganize its fees in connection with the proposed
changes maintain clarity in the Fees Schedule and alleviate potential
confusion, thereby removing impediments to and perfecting the mechanism
of a free and open market and a national market system, and, in
general, protecting investors and the public interest.
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.
With respect to intra-market competition, the Exchange does not
believe that the proposed rule change would place certain market
participants at the Exchange at a relative disadvantage compared to
other market participants or affect the ability of such market
participants to compete. As stated above, the Exchange does not believe
its proposed pricing will impose a barrier to entry to smaller
participants and notes that its proposed connectivity pricing is
associated with relative usage of the various market participants. For
example, market participants with modest capacity needs can buy the
less expensive 1 Gb Physical Port and utilize only one Logical Port.
Moreover, the pricing for 1 Gb Physical Ports and FIX/BOE Logical Ports
are no different than are assessed today (i.e., $1,500 and $750 per
port, respectively), yet the capacity and access associated with each
is greatly increasing. While pricing may be
[[Page 42063]]
increased for larger capacity physical and logical ports, such options
provide far more capacity and are purchased by those that consume more
resources from the network. Accordingly, the proposed connectivity fees
do not favor certain categories of market participants in a manner that
would impose a burden on competition; rather, the allocation reflects
the network resources consumed by the various size of market
participants--lowest bandwidth consuming members pay the least, and
highest bandwidth consuming members pays the most, particularly since
higher bandwidth consumption translates to higher costs to the
Exchange.
The Exchange also does not believe that the proposed rule change
will result in any burden on inter-market competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. As
discussed in the Statutory Basis section above, options market
participants are not forced to connect to (or purchase market data
from) all options exchanges, as shown by the number of TPHs at Cboe and
shown by the fact that there are varying number of members across each
of Cboe's Affiliated Exchanges. The Exchange operates in a highly
competitive environment, and as discussed above, its ability to price
access and connectivity is constrained by competition among exchanges
and third parties. As discussed, there are other options markets of
which market participants may connect to trade options. There is also a
possible range of alternative strategies, including routing to the
exchange through another participant or market center or accessing the
Exchange indirectly. For example, there are 15 other U.S. options
exchanges, which the Exchange must consider in its pricing discipline
in order to compete for market participants. In this competitive
environment, market participants are free to choose which competing
exchange or reseller to use to satisfy their business needs. As a
result, the Exchange believes this proposed rule change permits fair
competition among national securities exchanges. 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 written 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 \122\ and paragraph (f) of Rule 19b-4 \123\
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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\122\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\123\ 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-CBOE-2020-064 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-CBOE-2020-064. 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 such filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR-CBOE-2020-064, and should be submitted
on or before August 3, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\124\
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\124\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-14972 Filed 7-10-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P