Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Amend Equity 7, Section 114(e) and Equity 7, Section 118 of the Fee Schedule, 56663-56668 [2020-20126]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 178 / Monday, September 14, 2020 / Notices
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–89781; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2020–059]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Equity 7, Section 114(e) and Equity 7,
Section 118 of the Fee Schedule
September 8, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on August
31, 2020, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
(‘‘Nasdaq’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed
rule change as described in Items I, II,
and III below, which Items have been
prepared by the Exchange. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to (i) amend
the Exchange’s transaction fees to adjust
the qualification requirements for
certain Qualified Market Maker
(‘‘QMM’’) fees and rebates at Equity 7,
Section 114(e); and (ii) establish new
credits and fee tiers and amend the
qualification requirements for existing
credit tiers at Equity 7, Section 118, as
described further below.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/
rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
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II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
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.
1 15
2 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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1. Purpose
Over the course of the last few
months, the Exchange has experimented
with various modifications of its pricing
schedule with the aim of increasing
activity on the Exchange, improving
market quality, and increasing market
share.3 Although these changes have
met with success, the Exchange
continues to examine and amend its
pricing schedule to achieve the results
it desires. Accordingly, the Exchange
proposes to make modifications to its
pricing schedule in a further attempt to
improve the attractiveness of the market
to new and existing market participants.
Changes to Section 114
The Exchange proposes to amend the
QMM fees and credits pursuant to
Equity 7, Section 114, in two respects.
First, a QMM currently qualifies for
the Tier 3 credit if the QMM (i) executes
shares of liquidity provided in all
securities through one or more of its
Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs that
represent above 1.25% of Consolidated
Volume 4 during the month; (ii) quotes
at the NBBO at least 25% of the time
during the month during regular market
hours in an average of at least 2,700
symbols per day; (iii) quotes at the
NBBO at least 25% of the time during
the month during regular market hours
in an average of at least 1,200 symbols
in securities in Tape A per day; and (iv)
executes shares of liquidity provided in
securities in Tape A through one or
more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs
that represent an increase of at least
0.50% of Consolidated Volume relative
to May 2020. The Exchange proposes to
offer the rebate per MPID by amending
the requirements to provide a credit
when a QMM’s MPID meets the
qualifying criteria. The proposed
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 89343
(July 20, 2020), 85 FR 44941 (July 24, 2020) (SR–
Nasdaq–2020–041); 89115 (June 22, 2020), 85 FR
38414 (June 26, 2020) (SR–Nasdaq–2020–030);
87882 (January 2, 2020); 85 FR 939 (January 8,
2020) (SR–Nasdaq–2019–101); 87708 (December 10,
2019), 84 FR 68496 (December 16, 2019) (Nasdaq–
2019–094); 85861 (May 15, 2019) 84 FR 23105 (May
21, 2019) (Nasdaq–2019–036).
4 Pursuant to Equity 7, Section 118(a), the term
‘‘Consolidated Volume’’ means the total
consolidated volume reported to all consolidated
transaction reporting plans by all exchanges and
trade reporting facilities during a month in equity
securities, excluding executed orders with a size of
less than one round lot. For purposes of calculating
Consolidated Volume and the extent of a member’s
trading activity the date of the annual reconstitution
of the Russell Investments Indexes is excluded from
both total Consolidated Volume and the member’s
trading activity.
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amendment would remove the current
Tier 3 rebate 5 and instead provide an
additional $0.00005 per share executed
credit for a QMM’s MPID if the MPID (i)
executes shares of liquidity provided
that represents above 1.25% of
Consolidated Volume during the month;
(ii) quotes at the NBBO at least 50% of
the time during the month during
regular market hours in an average of at
least 2,700 symbols per day; (iii) quotes
at the NBBO at least 50% of the time
during the month during regular market
hours in an average of at least 1,200
symbols in securities in Tape A per day;
and (iv) executes shares of liquidity
provided that represents an increase of
at least 0.50% of Consolidated Volume
relative to May 2020. Additionally, the
Exchange is proposing clarifying
language to explain that, for purposes of
this rebate, an MPID is considered to be
quoting at the NBBO if the MPID has a
displayed order (other than a Designated
Retail Order) at either the national best
bid or the national best offer or both the
national best bid and offer. On a daily
basis, the Exchange will determine the
number of securities that satisfy the
50% NBBO requirements for the MPID.
The QMM would be eligible for the
proposed credit in addition to
qualifying for the Tier 2 credit. By
amending the credit to allow a QMM to
qualify at the MPID level, the Exchange
intends to provide a further incentive
for members to increase their activity on
the Exchange that is attributable to
adding liquidity and quoting at the
NBBO.
Second, the Exchange currently
charges a QMM a fee of $0.00295 per
share executed for orders in securities
listed on exchanges other than Nasdaq
priced at $1 or more per share that
access liquidity on the Nasdaq Market
Center; provided, however, that the
QMM’s volume of liquidity added
through one or more of its Nasdaq
Market Center MPIDs during the month
(as a percentage of Consolidated
Volume) is not less than 0.85%. The
Exchange also charges a $0.0029 per
share executed fee to QMMs that meet
the criteria of Tier 2 or Tier 3 for orders
in securities listed on exchanges other
than Nasdaq priced at $1 or more per
share that access liquidity on the
Nasdaq Market Center if the QMM has
a combined Consolidated Volume
(adding and removing liquidity) of at
least 3.7% and MOC/LOC volume
greater than 0.25% of Consolidated
Volume. The Exchange proposes to
modify the requirements for charging a
QMM a fee of $0.00295 per share
5 The Exchange is also proposing to remove the
asterisk accompanying the current Tier 3 rebate.
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executed by increasing the volume of
liquidity added from 0.85% to 1.00%
during the month (as a percentage of
Consolidated Volume). Additionally,
the Exchange proposes to modify the
requirements for charging a fee of
$0.0029 per share executed to a QMM
that meets the criteria of Tier 2 by
increasing the required MOC/LOC
volume from 0.25% to 0.35% of
Consolidated Volume, and introducing a
new requirement of providing 0.15% or
more of Consolidated Volume through
midpoint orders. The Exchange also
proposes to remove the reference to Tier
3 and make a technical modification by
changing the 3.7% qualification
requirement for the $0.0029 fee to
3.70%. By modifying the requirements
for members to qualify for the lower fee,
the Exchange will incentivize members
to increase their liquidity, which will
promote price discovery and
transparency.
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Changes to Section 118
The Exchange is also proposing to
amend the schedule of fees and credits
provided to member organizations,
pursuant to Equity 7, Section 118(a), in
several respects and amend the Tier A
closing cross fees, pursuant to Section
118(d).
First, the Exchange proposes to
amend Section 118(a) to charge a fee of
$0.0020 to a member entering RTFY
orders that remove liquidity from
Nasdaq Market Center or that execute in
a venue other than the Nasdaq Market
Center and has less than a 75% ratio of
its RTFY liquidity adding activity to its
RTFY total volume. The proposed fee
would be applicable to Tape A, Tape B
and Tape C and would only apply to
orders submitted with the RTFY 6
routing option. By proposing a new fee
for participants that have less than a
75% ratio 7 of its RTFY liquidity adding
activity to its RTFY total volume, the
Exchange hopes to incentivize
participants to increase their RTFY
liquidity adding activity rather than
removing liquidity or submitting orders
6 RTFY is a routing option available for an order
that qualifies as a Designated Retail Order under
which orders check the System for available shares
only if so instructed by the entering firm and are
thereafter routed to destinations on the System
routing table. If shares remain unexecuted after
routing, they are posted to the book. Once on the
book, should the order subsequently be locked or
crossed by another market center, the System will
not route the order to the locking or crossing market
center. RTFY is designed to allow orders to
participate in the opening, reopening and closing
process of the primary listing market for a security.
See Rule 4748(a)(1)(v)(b).
7 The ratio is calculated by dividing the
participant’s RTFY liquidity adding activity on
Nasdaq by the participant’s total RTFY volume
executed on all venues.
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that route outside of the Exchange. The
Exchange also proposes to make a nonsubstantive change to add the word
‘‘other’’ to the RTFY fees that remain at
$0.0000 per share executed.
Second, the Exchange proposes to
lower the $0.0030 per share executed
credit in Section 118(a) to $0.0029 per
share executed for a member with
shares of liquidity provided in all
securities through one or more of its
Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs that
represent 0.625% or more of
Consolidated Volume during the month,
including shares of liquidity provided
with respect to securities that are listed
on exchanges other than Nasdaq or
NYSE that represent 0.15% or more of
Consolidated Volume. The proposed
change would be applicable to Tape A,
Tape B and Tape C. Although the
Exchange is lowering the credit, it is
providing members with three
additional new credit options as
discussed below.
Third, the Exchange proposes to add
three new credits in Section 118(a). The
Exchange proposes to adopt a credit of
$0.00295 per share executed across
Tapes A, B and C to a member (i) with
shares of liquidity provided in all
securities through one or more of its
Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs that
represent 0.70% or more of
Consolidated Volume during the month;
(ii) executes 0.20% or more of
Consolidated Volume during the month
through providing midpoint orders and
through MELO; and (iii) removes at least
1.10% of Consolidated Volume during
the month. The Exchange also proposes
to adopt a credit of $0.0030 per share
executed across Tapes A, B and C to a
member with shares of liquidity
provided in all securities through one or
more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs
that represent 1.30% or more of
Consolidated Volume during the month,
which includes shares of liquidity
provided with respect to securities that
are listed on exchanges other than
Nasdaq or NYSE that represent 0.40% or
more of Consolidated Volume. The
Exchange also proposes to add a
$0.00075 per share executed credit for
Tape C securities for certain nondisplayed orders that provide liquidity
if the member, during the month (i)
provides 0.90% or more of Consolidated
Volume; (ii) increases providing
liquidity through non-displayed orders
(other than midpoint orders) by 10% or
more relative to the member’s July 2020
Consolidated Volume provided through
non-displayed orders (other than
midpoint orders) and; (iii) provides
0.20% or more Consolidated Volume
through non-displayed orders (other
than midpoint orders). The Exchange
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believes that the availability of the three
new credits will incentivize members to
increase their liquidity adding and
removing activity on the Exchange in
order to attain one of the new credits.
An increase in liquidity adding and
removing activity on the Exchange
would help to improve the quality of the
market for all participants.
Fourth, the Exchange currently
provides a credit of $0.0030 per share
executed in Section 118(a) to a member
with shares of liquidity provided in all
securities through one or more of its
Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs that
represent more than 0.75% of
Consolidated Volume during the month
and provides a daily average of at least
5 million shares of non-displayed
liquidity. The Exchange proposes to
amend the qualifications by increasing
the volume threshold from 0.75% to
1.00%. The Exchange also proposes to
remove the requirement for providing a
daily average of at least 5 million shares
of non-displayed liquidity and to add a
requirement that a member’s nondisplayed liquidity provided in all
securities through one or more of its
Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs represents
more than 0.25% of Consolidated
Volume.
Lastly, the Exchange currently charges
a Tier A fee of $0.0008 per executed
share in Section 118(d) for Market-onClose and Limit-on-Close (‘‘MOC/LOC’’)
orders for members with shares of
liquidity provided in all securities
through one or more of its Nasdaq
Market Center MPIDs that represent
above 1.80% of Consolidated Volume or
MOC/LOC volume above 0.50% of
Consolidated Volume. Additionally, the
Exchange currently charges a Tier B fee
of $0.0011 per executed share in Section
118(d) for MOC and LOC orders for
members with shares of liquidity
provided in all securities through one or
more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs
that represent above 0.80% to 1.80% of
Consolidated Volume or MOC/LOC
volume above 0.30% to 0.50% of
Consolidated Volume. The Exchange
proposes to lower the volume threshold
from 1.80% to 1.75% for Tier A and
proposes to make a conforming change
for Tier B. Similarly to lowering the
volume threshold for credits, by
lowering the volume threshold from
1.80% to 1.75%for charging the fee, the
Exchange hopes to incentivize members
who are close to, but currently do not
meet the 1.75% threshold to increase
their liquidity in order to qualify for the
lower fee.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)
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of the Act,8 in general, and furthers the
objectives of Sections 6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5)
of the Act,9 in particular, in that it
provides for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees and other charges
among members and issuers and other
persons using any facility, and is not
designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers. The
proposal is also consistent with Section
11A of the Act relating to the
establishment of the national market
system for securities.
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The Proposal Is Reasonable
The Exchange’s proposed changes to
its schedule of fees and credits are
reasonable in several respects. As a
threshold matter, the Exchange is
subject to significant competitive forces
in the market for equity securities
transaction services that constrain its
pricing determinations in that market.
The fact that this market is competitive
has long been recognized by the courts.
In NetCoalition v. Securities and
Exchange Commission, the D.C. Circuit
stated as follows: ‘‘[n]o one disputes
that competition for order flow is
‘fierce.’ . . . As the SEC explained, ‘[i]n
the U.S. national market system, buyers
and sellers of securities, and the brokerdealers that act as their order-routing
agents, have a wide range of choices of
where to route orders for execution’;
[and] ‘no exchange can afford to take its
market share percentages for granted’
because ‘no exchange possesses a
monopoly, regulatory or otherwise, in
the execution of order flow from broker
dealers’. . . .’’ 10
The Commission and the courts have
repeatedly expressed their preference
for competition over regulatory
intervention in determining prices,
products, and services in the securities
markets. In Regulation NMS, while
adopting a series of steps to improve the
current market model, 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.’’ 11
Numerous indicia demonstrate the
competitive nature of this market. For
8 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(4) and (5).
10 NetCoalition v. SEC, 615 F.3d 525, 539 (D.C.
Cir. 2010) (quoting Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 59039 (December 2, 2008), 73 FR 74770, 74782–
83 (December 9, 2008) (SR–NYSEArca–2006–21)).
11 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808
(June 9, 2005), 70 FR 37496, 37499 (June 29, 2005)
(‘‘Regulation NMS Adopting Release’’).
9 15
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example, clear substitutes to the
Exchange exist in the market for equity
security transaction services. The
Exchange is only one of several equity
venues to which market participants
may direct their order flow. Competing
equity exchanges offer similar tiered
pricing structures to that of the
Exchange, including schedules of
rebates and fees that apply based upon
members achieving certain volume
thresholds. 12
Within this environment, market
participants can freely and often do shift
their order flow among the Exchange
and competing venues in response to
changes in their respective pricing
schedules. As such, the proposal
represents a reasonable attempt by the
Exchange to increase its liquidity and
market share relative to its competitors.
The Exchange has designed its
proposed schedule of credits and
charges to provide increased overall
incentives to members to increase their
liquidity removal and adding activity on
the Exchange. An increase in liquidity
removal and adding activity on the
Exchange will, in turn, improve the
quality of the Nasdaq market and
increase its attractiveness to existing
and prospective participants. Generally,
the proposed new credits and charges
will be comparable to, if not favorable
to, those that its competitors provide.13
Moreover, the Exchange believes that
it is reasonable to modify certain fees
and credits within its fee schedule as a
means of incentivizing market
participants to increase their
contributions to the improvement of the
quality of the Exchange.
In particular, the Exchange believes
that it is reasonable to create a stricter
qualification for the additional rebate of
$0.00005 per share executed for a QMM
and to apply the qualifications to each
MPID because the activity of QMMs that
currently qualify for the Tier 3 credit
has grown, such that an increase in
credit qualifying criteria is needed to
ensure that this credit remains relevant
to current levels of liquidity providing
activity on the Exchange and continues
to incentivize QMMs to provide
liquidity and quote at the NBBO in more
securities. To the extent that this
proposal results in an increase in
liquidity adding and quoting activity on
the Exchange, this will improve the
quality of the Nasdaq market and
increase its attractiveness to existing
and prospective participants.
12 As an example, CBOE EDGX provides a
standard rebate for liquidity adders of $0.00170 per
share executed (or between $0.0020 and $0.0029)
per share executed if a member qualifies for a
volume tier.
13 Id.
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Additionally, the Exchange believes it is
reasonable to increase the volume
threshold for the QMM fees. By
increasing the volume threshold and
adding a new threshold requirement for
liquidity adding activity to qualify for
the lower fee, the Exchange hopes to
incentivize liquidity adding activity on
the Exchange.
The Exchange also believes that it is
reasonable to charge a fee of $0.0020 per
share executed in Section 118(a) to a
member entering RTFY orders that
remove liquidity from Nasdaq Market
Center or that execute on a venue other
than the Nasdaq Market Center and has
less than a 75% ratio of its RTFY
liquidity adding activity to its RTFY
total volume. Since the inception of the
RTFY routing option, there has been no
charge to participants entering RTFY
orders even if the order ultimately
executes on the Exchange.14 Retail order
flow firms benefit from the RTFY
routing option by not incurring liquidity
removal fees while obtaining potential
price improvements and better
execution quality. By proposing a new
fee for participants that have less than
a 75% ratio of its RTFY liquidity adding
activity to its RTFY total volume, the
Exchange hopes to incentivize
participants to increase their RTFY
liquidity adding activity rather than
removing liquidity or submitting orders
that route outside of the Exchange.
The Exchange believes that it is
reasonable to lower the $0.0030 per
share executed credit in Section 118(a)
to $0.0029 per share executed because
the Exchange is proposing three new
credit options for members to qualify
for.
Moreover, the Exchange believes it is
reasonable to add three new credits to
Section 118(a). The Exchange believes
that the availability of the three new
credits will incentivize members to
increase their liquidity adding and
removing activity on the Exchange in
order to attain one of the new credits.
An increase in liquidity adding and
removing activity on the Exchange
would help to improve the quality of the
market for all participants.
Additionally, the Exchange believes
that it is reasonable to modify the
Section 118(a) requirements for the
credit of $0.0030 per share executed by
increasing the volume threshold from
0.75% to 1.00% and removing the
requirement for providing a daily
average of at least 5 million shares of
non-displayed liquidity and adding a
requirement that a member’s non14 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 75987
(September 25, 2015), 80 FR 59210 (October 1,
2015) (SR–Nasdaq–2015–112).
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displayed liquidity provided in all
securities through one or more of its
Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs represents
more than 0.25% of Consolidated
Volume. By increasing the volume
threshold for displayed liquidity and
changing the requirement for the shares
of non-displayed liquidity, the
Exchange believes it will incentivize
members to increase the extent of their
liquidity adding activity on the
Exchange to qualify for and to continue
to qualify for this credit.
Similarly to lowering the volume
threshold for credits, the Exchange
believes that it is reasonable to lower
the volume threshold in Section 118(d)
for MOC and LOC fees from 1.80% to
1.75% for Tiers A and B because the
Exchange hopes to incentivize members
who are close to, but currently do not
meet the 1.75% threshold to increase
their liquidity in order to qualify for the
lower fee.
To the extent that these proposed
changes lead to an increase in overall
liquidity activity on the Exchange and
more competitive pricing, this will
improve the quality of the Exchange’s
market and increase its attractiveness to
existing and prospective participants.
The Exchange notes that those market
participants that are dissatisfied with
the new fees or credits are free to shift
their order flow to competing venues
that offer them lower charges or higher
credits.
The Proposal Is an Equitable Allocation
of Credits
The Exchange believes its proposal
will allocate its credits and fees fairly
among its market participants. The
proposal will amend the $0.00005 per
share executed credit for QMMs in
Section 114 to allow a QMM to qualify
at the MPID level. It is equitable to make
the qualification requirement in Section
114 stricter for the additional rebate of
$0.00005 per share executed for QMMs
as a means of ensuring the credit
remains relevant to current levels of
liquidity providing activity on the
Exchange. By amending the credit to
allow a QMM to qualify at the MPID
level, the Exchange intends to provide
a further incentive for members to
increase their activity on the Exchange
that is attributable to adding liquidity
and quoting at the NBBO. An increase
in liquidity providing activity on the
Exchange will improve the quality of
the Nasdaq market and increase its
attractiveness to existing and
prospective participants.
Furthermore, the Exchange also
believes that it is equitable to establish
three new credits in Section 118(a). In
particular, the Exchange believes that it
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is equitable to establish a new $0.00295
per share executed credit in Tapes A, B
and C and a new $0.0030 per share
executed credit in Tapes A, B and C as
a means of incentivizing members to
provide and remove meaningful
amounts of liquidity to the Exchange.
To the extent that the Exchange
succeeds in increasing liquidity adding
and removal activity on the Exchange
and in attracting additional order flow,
then the Exchange would experience
improvements in its market quality,
which would benefit all market
participants. Further, the Exchange
believes it is equitable to lower the
$0.0030 per share executed credit to
$0.0029 because the Exchange has
added two new credits with the
Exchange’s goal to promote increased
liquidity. An increase in overall
liquidity adding activity on the
Exchange will improve the quality of
the Nasdaq market and increase its
attractiveness to existing and
prospective participants.
Lastly, the Exchange believes it is
equitable to provide a $0.00075 per
share executed credit for other nondisplayed orders in Tape C securities.
The Exchange believes it is equitable for
the Exchange to propose a credit for
members with non-displayed orders in
securities in Tapes C due to the
Exchange’s goal to specifically promote
increased liquidity in securities in Tape
C. Additionally, the Exchange has not
seen the level of volume in Tape C that
it has expected. An increase in overall
liquidity adding activity on the
Exchange will improve the quality of
the Nasdaq market and increase its
attractiveness to existing and
prospective participants.
The Proposal Is an Equitable Allocation
of Fees
The Exchange believes its proposal
will allocate its fees fairly among its
market participants. It is equitable to
modify the fees to members who
execute MOC and LOC orders in the
closing cross in Section 118(d) and the
fees to members whose RTFY orders
remove liquidity or are routed out of the
Exchange.
In particular, the Exchange believes it
is equitable for the Exchange to charge
a fee of $0.0020 to a member entering
RTFY orders that remove liquidity from
Nasdaq Market Center or that execute in
a venue other than the Nasdaq Market
Center and has less than a 75% ratio of
its RTFY liquidity adding activity to its
RTFY total volume. By adding this fee,
the Exchange hopes to incentivize
participants to increase their RTFY
liquidity adding activity rather than
removing liquidity or submitting orders
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that route outside of the Exchange.
Additionally, the Exchange believes that
the fee will encourage market
participants to increase their liquidity
adding activity.
Additionally, it is equitable for the
Exchange to lower the volume threshold
for obtaining the $0.0008 per executed
share fee for MOC and LOC orders by
incentivizing members to increase their
liquidity in order to qualify for the
lowest closing cross fee offered by the
exchange.
Furthermore, it is equitable for the
Exchange to increase the volume
threshold and add a new threshold
requirement for QMM liquidity adding
activity to qualify for the lower fees
because increasing the volume
threshold, the Exchange hopes to
incentivize liquidity adding activity on
the Exchange.
The Proposed Amended Credits Are Not
Unfairly Discriminatory
The Exchange believes that the
proposal is not unfairly discriminatory.
As an initial matter, the Exchange
believes that nothing about its volumebased tiered pricing model is inherently
unfair; instead, it is a rational pricing
model that is well-established and
ubiquitous in today’s economy among
firms in various industries—from cobranded credit cards to grocery stores to
cellular telephone data plans—that use
it to reward the loyalty of their best
customers that provide high levels of
business activity and incent other
customers to increase the extent of their
business activity. It is also a pricing
model that the Exchange and its
competitors have long employed with
the assent of the Commission. It is fair
because it incentivizes customer activity
that increases liquidity, enhances price
discovery, and improves the overall
quality of the equity markets.
Although Section 114(e) of the
Exchange’s proposal to allow a QMM to
qualify for an additional $0.00005 per
share executed credit will require that a
QMM meet the criteria at the MPID
level, any resulting increase in liquidity
on the Exchange will improve marketwide quality and price discovery, to the
benefit of all participants. Moreover, to
the extent that the proposal causes
members to increase the extent of their
liquidity adding and quoting activity on
the Exchange, the Exchange market
quality will improve, and all market
participants will benefit. Moreover, any
market participant that does not wish to
receive lower a credit is free to shift its
order flow to a competing venue.
The Exchange also believes that its
three proposed new credits in Section
118(a) are not unfairly discriminatory.
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These proposed credits stand to
improve the overall market quality of
the Exchange, to the benefit of all
market participants, by incentivizing
members to provide meaningful
amounts of liquidity to the Exchange,
including in securities in Tape C.
Additionally, it is not unfairly
discriminatory to target the $0.00075
per share executed credit in Tape C, in
part, to increase activity in other nondisplayed orders, because attracting
additional order flow stands to benefit
all market participants. Likewise, it is
not unfairly discriminatory to target the
$0.00075 per share executed credit, in
part, to liquidity adding activity in
securities in Tape C, because the
Exchange believes that the market for
such securities would benefit from
additional liquidity. As discussed above
the Exchange has not seen the level of
volume in Tape C that it has expected.
The Exchange notes that it has limited
funds to apply in the form of incentives,
and thus must deploy those limited
funds to incentives that it believes will
be the most effective at improving
market quality in areas that the
Exchange determines are in need of
improvement.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
The Proposed Amended Fees Are Not
Unfairly Discriminatory
The Exchange believes that the
proposal is not unfairly discriminatory.
Nasdaq currently charges a QMM a fee
of $0.0030 per share executed for orders
in Nasdaq-listed securities priced at $1
or more per share that access liquidity
on the Nasdaq Market Center. The
Exchange currently charges a QMM a
fee of $0.00295 per share and $0.0029
per share if the QMM meets certain
volume thresholds. It is not unfairly
discriminatory for the Exchange to
increase the volume thresholds for these
fees and and to add a new volume
thresholds for the $0.0029 per share fee
because an increase in overall liquidity
adding activity on the Exchange will
improve the quality of the Nasdaq
market and increase its attractiveness to
existing and prospective market
participants.
The Exchange does not believe that it
is discriminatory to charge a fee of
$0.0020 to a member entering RTFY
orders that remove liquidity Nasdaq
Market Center or that execute in a venue
other than the Nasdaq Market Center
and has less than a 75% ratio of its
RTFY liquidity adding activity to its
RTFY total volume. The Exchange is
proposing to add the fee to Tapes A, B
and C. By adding this fee related to
RTFY volume, the Exchange hopes to
incentivize participants to increase their
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17:51 Sep 11, 2020
Jkt 250001
RTFY liquidity adding activity rather
than removing liquidity or submitting
orders that route outside of the
Exchange. Similarly, the Exchange does
not believe it is discriminatory to lower
the volume threshold for obtaining the
$0.0008 per executed share fee for MOC
and LOC orders because it will
incentivize members to increase their
liquidity adding activity in order to
obtain the lower fee, which enhances
price discovery, and improves the
overall quality of the equity markets.
Moreover, any market participant that
does not wish to pay higher charges is
free to shift its order flow to a
competing venue.
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 not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
Intramarket Competition
The Exchange does not believe that its
proposals will place any category of
Exchange participant at a competitive
disadvantage. To the contrary, the
proposed changes will provide
opportunities for members to receive
new and amended credits or lower fees
based on their market-improving
behavior. Any member may elect to
provide the levels of market activity
required in order to receive the new or
amended credits or lower fees.
Furthermore, all members of the
Exchange will benefit from any increase
in market activity that the proposals
effectuates.
Moreover, members are free to trade
on other venues to the extent they
believe that the credits provided are too
low or the qualification criteria are not
attractive. As one can observe by
looking at any market share chart, price
competition between exchanges is
fierce, with liquidity and market share
moving freely between exchanges in
reaction to fee and credit changes. The
Exchange notes that the tier structure is
consistent with broker-dealer fee
practices as well as the other industries,
as described above.
Intermarket Competition
The Exchange believes that its
proposed modification to its schedule of
credits will not impose a burden on
competition because the Exchange’s
execution services are completely
voluntary and subject to extensive
competition both from the other 12 live
exchanges and from off-exchange
venues, which include 34 alternative
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
56667
trading systems. The Exchange notes
that it operates in a highly competitive
market in which market participants can
readily favor competing venues if they
deem fee levels at a particular venue to
be excessive, or rebate opportunities
available at other venues to be more
favorable. In such an environment, the
Exchange must continually adjust its
fees and credits to remain competitive
with other exchanges and with
alternative trading systems that have
been exempted from compliance with
the statutory standards applicable to
exchanges. Because competitors are free
to modify their own fees in response,
and because market participants may
readily adjust their order routing
practices, the Exchange believes that the
degree to which fee and credit changes
in this market may impose any burden
on competition is extremely limited.
The proposed amended fees and
credits are reflective of this competition
because, even as one of the largest U.S.
equities exchanges by volume, the
Exchange has less than 18% market
share, which in most markets could
hardly be categorized as having enough
market power to burden competition.
Moreover, as noted above, price
competition between exchanges is
fierce, with liquidity and market share
moving freely between exchanges in
reaction to fee and credit changes. This
is in addition to free flow of order flow
to and among off-exchange venues
which comprised more than 43% of
industry volume for the month of July
2020.
The Exchange’s proposals are procompetitive in that the Exchange
intends for them to increase liquidity on
the Exchange and thereby render the
Exchange a more attractive and vibrant
venue to market participants.
In sum, if the changes proposed
herein are unattractive to market
participants, it is likely that the
Exchange will lose market share as a
result. Accordingly, the Exchange does
not believe that the proposed changes
will impair the ability of members or
competing order execution venues to
maintain their competitive standing in
the financial markets.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either
solicited or received.
E:\FR\FM\14SEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 178 / Monday, September 14, 2020 / Notices
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of
the Act,15 the Exchange has designated
this proposal as establishing or changing
a due, fee, or other charge imposed by
the self-regulatory organization on any
person, whether or not the person is a
member of the self-regulatory
organization, which renders the
proposed rule change effective upon
filing.
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is: (i) Necessary or appropriate in
the public interest; (ii) for the protection
of investors; or (iii) otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
If the Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
should be approved or disapproved.
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–
NASDAQ–2020–059 on the subject line.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
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–NASDAQ–2020–059. 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
15 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Sep 11, 2020
Jkt 250001
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASDAQ–2020–059 and
should be submitted on or before
October 5, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.16
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–20126 Filed 9–11–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–89786; File No. SR–MIAX–
2020–30]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Miami
International Securities Exchange,
LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule
Change To Adopt Exchange Rule 1326,
Transfer of Positions
September 8, 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
September 4, 2020, Miami International
Securities Exchange, LLC (‘‘MIAX’’ or
the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(the ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the Exchange. The Exchange filed the
proposal as a ‘‘non-controversial’’
proposed rule change pursuant to
Section 19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act 3 and
Rule 19b–4(f)(6) thereunder.4 The
Commission is publishing this notice to
16 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
4 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6).
1 15
PO 00000
Frm 00097
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange is filing a proposal to
adopt new Exchange Rule 1326,
Transfer of Positions.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://www.miaxoptions.com/rulefilings/ at MIAX’s principal office, and
at the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to adopt new
Exchange Rule 1326, Transfer of
Positions, to provide a process by which
Members 5 may transfer option positions
in limited circumstances. This proposed
rule specifies the specific limited
circumstances under which a Member
may effect transfers of positions. This
rule would permit market participants
to move positions from one account to
another without first exposure of the
transaction on the Exchange. This rule
would permit transfers upon the
occurrence of significant, non-recurring
events. The proposed rule change is
similar to Nasdaq ISE Options 6, Section
5.
Currently, the rules of the Exchange
do not specifically address transfers of
option positions between accounts,
individuals, or entities. The Exchange,
however, plans on aligning its Rule with
its competitors by allowing transfers in
situations similar to those permitted on
other exchanges. The proposed rule will
5 The term ‘‘Member’’ means an individual or
organization approved to exercise the trading rights
associated with a Trading Permit. Members are
deemed ‘‘members’’ under the Exchange Act. See
Exchange Rule 100.
E:\FR\FM\14SEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 178 (Monday, September 14, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 56663-56668]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-20126]
[[Page 56663]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-89781; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2020-059]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC;
Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To
Amend Equity 7, Section 114(e) and Equity 7, Section 118 of the Fee
Schedule
September 8, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on August 31, 2020, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq'' or
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``SEC'' or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items have been prepared by the
Exchange. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments
on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to (i) amend the Exchange's transaction fees
to adjust the qualification requirements for certain Qualified Market
Maker (``QMM'') fees and rebates at Equity 7, Section 114(e); and (ii)
establish new credits and fee tiers and amend the qualification
requirements for existing credit tiers at Equity 7, Section 118, as
described further below.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public
Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the 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
Over the course of the last few months, the Exchange has
experimented with various modifications of its pricing schedule with
the aim of increasing activity on the Exchange, improving market
quality, and increasing market share.\3\ Although these changes have
met with success, the Exchange continues to examine and amend its
pricing schedule to achieve the results it desires. Accordingly, the
Exchange proposes to make modifications to its pricing schedule in a
further attempt to improve the attractiveness of the market to new and
existing market participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 89343 (July 20,
2020), 85 FR 44941 (July 24, 2020) (SR-Nasdaq-2020-041); 89115 (June
22, 2020), 85 FR 38414 (June 26, 2020) (SR-Nasdaq-2020-030); 87882
(January 2, 2020); 85 FR 939 (January 8, 2020) (SR-Nasdaq-2019-101);
87708 (December 10, 2019), 84 FR 68496 (December 16, 2019) (Nasdaq-
2019-094); 85861 (May 15, 2019) 84 FR 23105 (May 21, 2019) (Nasdaq-
2019-036).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Changes to Section 114
The Exchange proposes to amend the QMM fees and credits pursuant to
Equity 7, Section 114, in two respects.
First, a QMM currently qualifies for the Tier 3 credit if the QMM
(i) executes shares of liquidity provided in all securities through one
or more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs that represent above 1.25% of
Consolidated Volume \4\ during the month; (ii) quotes at the NBBO at
least 25% of the time during the month during regular market hours in
an average of at least 2,700 symbols per day; (iii) quotes at the NBBO
at least 25% of the time during the month during regular market hours
in an average of at least 1,200 symbols in securities in Tape A per
day; and (iv) executes shares of liquidity provided in securities in
Tape A through one or more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs that
represent an increase of at least 0.50% of Consolidated Volume relative
to May 2020. The Exchange proposes to offer the rebate per MPID by
amending the requirements to provide a credit when a QMM's MPID meets
the qualifying criteria. The proposed amendment would remove the
current Tier 3 rebate \5\ and instead provide an additional $0.00005
per share executed credit for a QMM's MPID if the MPID (i) executes
shares of liquidity provided that represents above 1.25% of
Consolidated Volume during the month; (ii) quotes at the NBBO at least
50% of the time during the month during regular market hours in an
average of at least 2,700 symbols per day; (iii) quotes at the NBBO at
least 50% of the time during the month during regular market hours in
an average of at least 1,200 symbols in securities in Tape A per day;
and (iv) executes shares of liquidity provided that represents an
increase of at least 0.50% of Consolidated Volume relative to May 2020.
Additionally, the Exchange is proposing clarifying language to explain
that, for purposes of this rebate, an MPID is considered to be quoting
at the NBBO if the MPID has a displayed order (other than a Designated
Retail Order) at either the national best bid or the national best
offer or both the national best bid and offer. On a daily basis, the
Exchange will determine the number of securities that satisfy the 50%
NBBO requirements for the MPID. The QMM would be eligible for the
proposed credit in addition to qualifying for the Tier 2 credit. By
amending the credit to allow a QMM to qualify at the MPID level, the
Exchange intends to provide a further incentive for members to increase
their activity on the Exchange that is attributable to adding liquidity
and quoting at the NBBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Pursuant to Equity 7, Section 118(a), the term
``Consolidated Volume'' means the total consolidated volume reported
to all consolidated transaction reporting plans by all exchanges and
trade reporting facilities during a month in equity securities,
excluding executed orders with a size of less than one round lot.
For purposes of calculating Consolidated Volume and the extent of a
member's trading activity the date of the annual reconstitution of
the Russell Investments Indexes is excluded from both total
Consolidated Volume and the member's trading activity.
\5\ The Exchange is also proposing to remove the asterisk
accompanying the current Tier 3 rebate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the Exchange currently charges a QMM a fee of $0.00295 per
share executed for orders in securities listed on exchanges other than
Nasdaq priced at $1 or more per share that access liquidity on the
Nasdaq Market Center; provided, however, that the QMM's volume of
liquidity added through one or more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs
during the month (as a percentage of Consolidated Volume) is not less
than 0.85%. The Exchange also charges a $0.0029 per share executed fee
to QMMs that meet the criteria of Tier 2 or Tier 3 for orders in
securities listed on exchanges other than Nasdaq priced at $1 or more
per share that access liquidity on the Nasdaq Market Center if the QMM
has a combined Consolidated Volume (adding and removing liquidity) of
at least 3.7% and MOC/LOC volume greater than 0.25% of Consolidated
Volume. The Exchange proposes to modify the requirements for charging a
QMM a fee of $0.00295 per share
[[Page 56664]]
executed by increasing the volume of liquidity added from 0.85% to
1.00% during the month (as a percentage of Consolidated Volume).
Additionally, the Exchange proposes to modify the requirements for
charging a fee of $0.0029 per share executed to a QMM that meets the
criteria of Tier 2 by increasing the required MOC/LOC volume from 0.25%
to 0.35% of Consolidated Volume, and introducing a new requirement of
providing 0.15% or more of Consolidated Volume through midpoint orders.
The Exchange also proposes to remove the reference to Tier 3 and make a
technical modification by changing the 3.7% qualification requirement
for the $0.0029 fee to 3.70%. By modifying the requirements for members
to qualify for the lower fee, the Exchange will incentivize members to
increase their liquidity, which will promote price discovery and
transparency.
Changes to Section 118
The Exchange is also proposing to amend the schedule of fees and
credits provided to member organizations, pursuant to Equity 7, Section
118(a), in several respects and amend the Tier A closing cross fees,
pursuant to Section 118(d).
First, the Exchange proposes to amend Section 118(a) to charge a
fee of $0.0020 to a member entering RTFY orders that remove liquidity
from Nasdaq Market Center or that execute in a venue other than the
Nasdaq Market Center and has less than a 75% ratio of its RTFY
liquidity adding activity to its RTFY total volume. The proposed fee
would be applicable to Tape A, Tape B and Tape C and would only apply
to orders submitted with the RTFY \6\ routing option. By proposing a
new fee for participants that have less than a 75% ratio \7\ of its
RTFY liquidity adding activity to its RTFY total volume, the Exchange
hopes to incentivize participants to increase their RTFY liquidity
adding activity rather than removing liquidity or submitting orders
that route outside of the Exchange. The Exchange also proposes to make
a non-substantive change to add the word ``other'' to the RTFY fees
that remain at $0.0000 per share executed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ RTFY is a routing option available for an order that
qualifies as a Designated Retail Order under which orders check the
System for available shares only if so instructed by the entering
firm and are thereafter routed to destinations on the System routing
table. If shares remain unexecuted after routing, they are posted to
the book. Once on the book, should the order subsequently be locked
or crossed by another market center, the System will not route the
order to the locking or crossing market center. RTFY is designed to
allow orders to participate in the opening, reopening and closing
process of the primary listing market for a security. See Rule
4748(a)(1)(v)(b).
\7\ The ratio is calculated by dividing the participant's RTFY
liquidity adding activity on Nasdaq by the participant's total RTFY
volume executed on all venues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the Exchange proposes to lower the $0.0030 per share
executed credit in Section 118(a) to $0.0029 per share executed for a
member with shares of liquidity provided in all securities through one
or more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs that represent 0.625% or more
of Consolidated Volume during the month, including shares of liquidity
provided with respect to securities that are listed on exchanges other
than Nasdaq or NYSE that represent 0.15% or more of Consolidated
Volume. The proposed change would be applicable to Tape A, Tape B and
Tape C. Although the Exchange is lowering the credit, it is providing
members with three additional new credit options as discussed below.
Third, the Exchange proposes to add three new credits in Section
118(a). The Exchange proposes to adopt a credit of $0.00295 per share
executed across Tapes A, B and C to a member (i) with shares of
liquidity provided in all securities through one or more of its Nasdaq
Market Center MPIDs that represent 0.70% or more of Consolidated Volume
during the month; (ii) executes 0.20% or more of Consolidated Volume
during the month through providing midpoint orders and through MELO;
and (iii) removes at least 1.10% of Consolidated Volume during the
month. The Exchange also proposes to adopt a credit of $0.0030 per
share executed across Tapes A, B and C to a member with shares of
liquidity provided in all securities through one or more of its Nasdaq
Market Center MPIDs that represent 1.30% or more of Consolidated Volume
during the month, which includes shares of liquidity provided with
respect to securities that are listed on exchanges other than Nasdaq or
NYSE that represent 0.40% or more of Consolidated Volume. The Exchange
also proposes to add a $0.00075 per share executed credit for Tape C
securities for certain non-displayed orders that provide liquidity if
the member, during the month (i) provides 0.90% or more of Consolidated
Volume; (ii) increases providing liquidity through non-displayed orders
(other than midpoint orders) by 10% or more relative to the member's
July 2020 Consolidated Volume provided through non-displayed orders
(other than midpoint orders) and; (iii) provides 0.20% or more
Consolidated Volume through non-displayed orders (other than midpoint
orders). The Exchange believes that the availability of the three new
credits will incentivize members to increase their liquidity adding and
removing activity on the Exchange in order to attain one of the new
credits. An increase in liquidity adding and removing activity on the
Exchange would help to improve the quality of the market for all
participants.
Fourth, the Exchange currently provides a credit of $0.0030 per
share executed in Section 118(a) to a member with shares of liquidity
provided in all securities through one or more of its Nasdaq Market
Center MPIDs that represent more than 0.75% of Consolidated Volume
during the month and provides a daily average of at least 5 million
shares of non-displayed liquidity. The Exchange proposes to amend the
qualifications by increasing the volume threshold from 0.75% to 1.00%.
The Exchange also proposes to remove the requirement for providing a
daily average of at least 5 million shares of non-displayed liquidity
and to add a requirement that a member's non-displayed liquidity
provided in all securities through one or more of its Nasdaq Market
Center MPIDs represents more than 0.25% of Consolidated Volume.
Lastly, the Exchange currently charges a Tier A fee of $0.0008 per
executed share in Section 118(d) for Market-on-Close and Limit-on-Close
(``MOC/LOC'') orders for members with shares of liquidity provided in
all securities through one or more of its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs
that represent above 1.80% of Consolidated Volume or MOC/LOC volume
above 0.50% of Consolidated Volume. Additionally, the Exchange
currently charges a Tier B fee of $0.0011 per executed share in Section
118(d) for MOC and LOC orders for members with shares of liquidity
provided in all securities through one or more of its Nasdaq Market
Center MPIDs that represent above 0.80% to 1.80% of Consolidated Volume
or MOC/LOC volume above 0.30% to 0.50% of Consolidated Volume. The
Exchange proposes to lower the volume threshold from 1.80% to 1.75% for
Tier A and proposes to make a conforming change for Tier B. Similarly
to lowering the volume threshold for credits, by lowering the volume
threshold from 1.80% to 1.75%for charging the fee, the Exchange hopes
to incentivize members who are close to, but currently do not meet the
1.75% threshold to increase their liquidity in order to qualify for the
lower fee.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with Section
6(b)
[[Page 56665]]
of the Act,\8\ in general, and furthers the objectives of Sections
6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5) of the Act,\9\ in particular, in that it provides
for the equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees and other charges
among members and issuers and other persons using any facility, and is
not designed to permit unfair discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers. The proposal is also consistent with
Section 11A of the Act relating to the establishment of the national
market system for securities.
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\8\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\9\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4) and (5).
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The Proposal Is Reasonable
The Exchange's proposed changes to its schedule of fees and credits
are reasonable in several respects. As a threshold matter, the Exchange
is subject to significant competitive forces in the market for equity
securities transaction services that constrain its pricing
determinations in that market. The fact that this market is competitive
has long been recognized by the courts. In NetCoalition v. Securities
and Exchange Commission, the D.C. Circuit stated as follows: ``[n]o one
disputes that competition for order flow is `fierce.' . . . As the SEC
explained, `[i]n the U.S. national market system, buyers and sellers of
securities, and the broker-dealers that act as their order-routing
agents, have a wide range of choices of where to route orders for
execution'; [and] `no exchange can afford to take its market share
percentages for granted' because `no exchange possesses a monopoly,
regulatory or otherwise, in the execution of order flow from broker
dealers'. . . .'' \10\
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\10\ NetCoalition v. SEC, 615 F.3d 525, 539 (D.C. Cir. 2010)
(quoting Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59039 (December 2,
2008), 73 FR 74770, 74782-83 (December 9, 2008) (SR-NYSEArca-2006-
21)).
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The Commission and the courts have repeatedly expressed their
preference for competition over regulatory intervention in determining
prices, products, and services in the securities markets. In Regulation
NMS, while adopting a series of steps to improve the current market
model, 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.'' \11\
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\11\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9, 2005),
70 FR 37496, 37499 (June 29, 2005) (``Regulation NMS Adopting
Release'').
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Numerous indicia demonstrate the competitive nature of this market.
For example, clear substitutes to the Exchange exist in the market for
equity security transaction services. The Exchange is only one of
several equity venues to which market participants may direct their
order flow. Competing equity exchanges offer similar tiered pricing
structures to that of the Exchange, including schedules of rebates and
fees that apply based upon members achieving certain volume thresholds.
\12\
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\12\ As an example, CBOE EDGX provides a standard rebate for
liquidity adders of $0.00170 per share executed (or between $0.0020
and $0.0029) per share executed if a member qualifies for a volume
tier.
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Within this environment, market participants can freely and often
do shift their order flow among the Exchange and competing venues in
response to changes in their respective pricing schedules. As such, the
proposal represents a reasonable attempt by the Exchange to increase
its liquidity and market share relative to its competitors.
The Exchange has designed its proposed schedule of credits and
charges to provide increased overall incentives to members to increase
their liquidity removal and adding activity on the Exchange. An
increase in liquidity removal and adding activity on the Exchange will,
in turn, improve the quality of the Nasdaq market and increase its
attractiveness to existing and prospective participants. Generally, the
proposed new credits and charges will be comparable to, if not
favorable to, those that its competitors provide.\13\
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\13\ Id.
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Moreover, the Exchange believes that it is reasonable to modify
certain fees and credits within its fee schedule as a means of
incentivizing market participants to increase their contributions to
the improvement of the quality of the Exchange.
In particular, the Exchange believes that it is reasonable to
create a stricter qualification for the additional rebate of $0.00005
per share executed for a QMM and to apply the qualifications to each
MPID because the activity of QMMs that currently qualify for the Tier 3
credit has grown, such that an increase in credit qualifying criteria
is needed to ensure that this credit remains relevant to current levels
of liquidity providing activity on the Exchange and continues to
incentivize QMMs to provide liquidity and quote at the NBBO in more
securities. To the extent that this proposal results in an increase in
liquidity adding and quoting activity on the Exchange, this will
improve the quality of the Nasdaq market and increase its
attractiveness to existing and prospective participants. Additionally,
the Exchange believes it is reasonable to increase the volume threshold
for the QMM fees. By increasing the volume threshold and adding a new
threshold requirement for liquidity adding activity to qualify for the
lower fee, the Exchange hopes to incentivize liquidity adding activity
on the Exchange.
The Exchange also believes that it is reasonable to charge a fee of
$0.0020 per share executed in Section 118(a) to a member entering RTFY
orders that remove liquidity from Nasdaq Market Center or that execute
on a venue other than the Nasdaq Market Center and has less than a 75%
ratio of its RTFY liquidity adding activity to its RTFY total volume.
Since the inception of the RTFY routing option, there has been no
charge to participants entering RTFY orders even if the order
ultimately executes on the Exchange.\14\ Retail order flow firms
benefit from the RTFY routing option by not incurring liquidity removal
fees while obtaining potential price improvements and better execution
quality. By proposing a new fee for participants that have less than a
75% ratio of its RTFY liquidity adding activity to its RTFY total
volume, the Exchange hopes to incentivize participants to increase
their RTFY liquidity adding activity rather than removing liquidity or
submitting orders that route outside of the Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 75987 (September
25, 2015), 80 FR 59210 (October 1, 2015) (SR-Nasdaq-2015-112).
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The Exchange believes that it is reasonable to lower the $0.0030
per share executed credit in Section 118(a) to $0.0029 per share
executed because the Exchange is proposing three new credit options for
members to qualify for.
Moreover, the Exchange believes it is reasonable to add three new
credits to Section 118(a). The Exchange believes that the availability
of the three new credits will incentivize members to increase their
liquidity adding and removing activity on the Exchange in order to
attain one of the new credits. An increase in liquidity adding and
removing activity on the Exchange would help to improve the quality of
the market for all participants.
Additionally, the Exchange believes that it is reasonable to modify
the Section 118(a) requirements for the credit of $0.0030 per share
executed by increasing the volume threshold from 0.75% to 1.00% and
removing the requirement for providing a daily average of at least 5
million shares of non-displayed liquidity and adding a requirement that
a member's non-
[[Page 56666]]
displayed liquidity provided in all securities through one or more of
its Nasdaq Market Center MPIDs represents more than 0.25% of
Consolidated Volume. By increasing the volume threshold for displayed
liquidity and changing the requirement for the shares of non-displayed
liquidity, the Exchange believes it will incentivize members to
increase the extent of their liquidity adding activity on the Exchange
to qualify for and to continue to qualify for this credit.
Similarly to lowering the volume threshold for credits, the
Exchange believes that it is reasonable to lower the volume threshold
in Section 118(d) for MOC and LOC fees from 1.80% to 1.75% for Tiers A
and B because the Exchange hopes to incentivize members who are close
to, but currently do not meet the 1.75% threshold to increase their
liquidity in order to qualify for the lower fee.
To the extent that these proposed changes lead to an increase in
overall liquidity activity on the Exchange and more competitive
pricing, this will improve the quality of the Exchange's market and
increase its attractiveness to existing and prospective participants.
The Exchange notes that those market participants that are dissatisfied
with the new fees or credits are free to shift their order flow to
competing venues that offer them lower charges or higher credits.
The Proposal Is an Equitable Allocation of Credits
The Exchange believes its proposal will allocate its credits and
fees fairly among its market participants. The proposal will amend the
$0.00005 per share executed credit for QMMs in Section 114 to allow a
QMM to qualify at the MPID level. It is equitable to make the
qualification requirement in Section 114 stricter for the additional
rebate of $0.00005 per share executed for QMMs as a means of ensuring
the credit remains relevant to current levels of liquidity providing
activity on the Exchange. By amending the credit to allow a QMM to
qualify at the MPID level, the Exchange intends to provide a further
incentive for members to increase their activity on the Exchange that
is attributable to adding liquidity and quoting at the NBBO. An
increase in liquidity providing activity on the Exchange will improve
the quality of the Nasdaq market and increase its attractiveness to
existing and prospective participants.
Furthermore, the Exchange also believes that it is equitable to
establish three new credits in Section 118(a). In particular, the
Exchange believes that it is equitable to establish a new $0.00295 per
share executed credit in Tapes A, B and C and a new $0.0030 per share
executed credit in Tapes A, B and C as a means of incentivizing members
to provide and remove meaningful amounts of liquidity to the Exchange.
To the extent that the Exchange succeeds in increasing liquidity adding
and removal activity on the Exchange and in attracting additional order
flow, then the Exchange would experience improvements in its market
quality, which would benefit all market participants. Further, the
Exchange believes it is equitable to lower the $0.0030 per share
executed credit to $0.0029 because the Exchange has added two new
credits with the Exchange's goal to promote increased liquidity. An
increase in overall liquidity adding activity on the Exchange will
improve the quality of the Nasdaq market and increase its
attractiveness to existing and prospective participants.
Lastly, the Exchange believes it is equitable to provide a $0.00075
per share executed credit for other non-displayed orders in Tape C
securities. The Exchange believes it is equitable for the Exchange to
propose a credit for members with non-displayed orders in securities in
Tapes C due to the Exchange's goal to specifically promote increased
liquidity in securities in Tape C. Additionally, the Exchange has not
seen the level of volume in Tape C that it has expected. An increase in
overall liquidity adding activity on the Exchange will improve the
quality of the Nasdaq market and increase its attractiveness to
existing and prospective participants.
The Proposal Is an Equitable Allocation of Fees
The Exchange believes its proposal will allocate its fees fairly
among its market participants. It is equitable to modify the fees to
members who execute MOC and LOC orders in the closing cross in Section
118(d) and the fees to members whose RTFY orders remove liquidity or
are routed out of the Exchange.
In particular, the Exchange believes it is equitable for the
Exchange to charge a fee of $0.0020 to a member entering RTFY orders
that remove liquidity from Nasdaq Market Center or that execute in a
venue other than the Nasdaq Market Center and has less than a 75% ratio
of its RTFY liquidity adding activity to its RTFY total volume. By
adding this fee, the Exchange hopes to incentivize participants to
increase their RTFY liquidity adding activity rather than removing
liquidity or submitting orders that route outside of the Exchange.
Additionally, the Exchange believes that the fee will encourage market
participants to increase their liquidity adding activity.
Additionally, it is equitable for the Exchange to lower the volume
threshold for obtaining the $0.0008 per executed share fee for MOC and
LOC orders by incentivizing members to increase their liquidity in
order to qualify for the lowest closing cross fee offered by the
exchange.
Furthermore, it is equitable for the Exchange to increase the
volume threshold and add a new threshold requirement for QMM liquidity
adding activity to qualify for the lower fees because increasing the
volume threshold, the Exchange hopes to incentivize liquidity adding
activity on the Exchange.
The Proposed Amended Credits Are Not Unfairly Discriminatory
The Exchange believes that the proposal is not unfairly
discriminatory. As an initial matter, the Exchange believes that
nothing about its volume-based tiered pricing model is inherently
unfair; instead, it is a rational pricing model that is well-
established and ubiquitous in today's economy among firms in various
industries--from co-branded credit cards to grocery stores to cellular
telephone data plans--that use it to reward the loyalty of their best
customers that provide high levels of business activity and incent
other customers to increase the extent of their business activity. It
is also a pricing model that the Exchange and its competitors have long
employed with the assent of the Commission. It is fair because it
incentivizes customer activity that increases liquidity, enhances price
discovery, and improves the overall quality of the equity markets.
Although Section 114(e) of the Exchange's proposal to allow a QMM
to qualify for an additional $0.00005 per share executed credit will
require that a QMM meet the criteria at the MPID level, any resulting
increase in liquidity on the Exchange will improve market-wide quality
and price discovery, to the benefit of all participants. Moreover, to
the extent that the proposal causes members to increase the extent of
their liquidity adding and quoting activity on the Exchange, the
Exchange market quality will improve, and all market participants will
benefit. Moreover, any market participant that does not wish to receive
lower a credit is free to shift its order flow to a competing venue.
The Exchange also believes that its three proposed new credits in
Section 118(a) are not unfairly discriminatory.
[[Page 56667]]
These proposed credits stand to improve the overall market quality of
the Exchange, to the benefit of all market participants, by
incentivizing members to provide meaningful amounts of liquidity to the
Exchange, including in securities in Tape C. Additionally, it is not
unfairly discriminatory to target the $0.00075 per share executed
credit in Tape C, in part, to increase activity in other non-displayed
orders, because attracting additional order flow stands to benefit all
market participants. Likewise, it is not unfairly discriminatory to
target the $0.00075 per share executed credit, in part, to liquidity
adding activity in securities in Tape C, because the Exchange believes
that the market for such securities would benefit from additional
liquidity. As discussed above the Exchange has not seen the level of
volume in Tape C that it has expected. The Exchange notes that it has
limited funds to apply in the form of incentives, and thus must deploy
those limited funds to incentives that it believes will be the most
effective at improving market quality in areas that the Exchange
determines are in need of improvement.
The Proposed Amended Fees Are Not Unfairly Discriminatory
The Exchange believes that the proposal is not unfairly
discriminatory. Nasdaq currently charges a QMM a fee of $0.0030 per
share executed for orders in Nasdaq-listed securities priced at $1 or
more per share that access liquidity on the Nasdaq Market Center. The
Exchange currently charges a QMM a fee of $0.00295 per share and
$0.0029 per share if the QMM meets certain volume thresholds. It is not
unfairly discriminatory for the Exchange to increase the volume
thresholds for these fees and and to add a new volume thresholds for
the $0.0029 per share fee because an increase in overall liquidity
adding activity on the Exchange will improve the quality of the Nasdaq
market and increase its attractiveness to existing and prospective
market participants.
The Exchange does not believe that it is discriminatory to charge a
fee of $0.0020 to a member entering RTFY orders that remove liquidity
Nasdaq Market Center or that execute in a venue other than the Nasdaq
Market Center and has less than a 75% ratio of its RTFY liquidity
adding activity to its RTFY total volume. The Exchange is proposing to
add the fee to Tapes A, B and C. By adding this fee related to RTFY
volume, the Exchange hopes to incentivize participants to increase
their RTFY liquidity adding activity rather than removing liquidity or
submitting orders that route outside of the Exchange. Similarly, the
Exchange does not believe it is discriminatory to lower the volume
threshold for obtaining the $0.0008 per executed share fee for MOC and
LOC orders because it will incentivize members to increase their
liquidity adding activity in order to obtain the lower fee, which
enhances price discovery, and improves the overall quality of the
equity markets.
Moreover, any market participant that does not wish to pay higher
charges is free to shift its order flow to a competing venue.
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 not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
Intramarket Competition
The Exchange does not believe that its proposals will place any
category of Exchange participant at a competitive disadvantage. To the
contrary, the proposed changes will provide opportunities for members
to receive new and amended credits or lower fees based on their market-
improving behavior. Any member may elect to provide the levels of
market activity required in order to receive the new or amended credits
or lower fees. Furthermore, all members of the Exchange will benefit
from any increase in market activity that the proposals effectuates.
Moreover, members are free to trade on other venues to the extent
they believe that the credits provided are too low or the qualification
criteria are not attractive. As one can observe by looking at any
market share chart, price competition between exchanges is fierce, with
liquidity and market share moving freely between exchanges in reaction
to fee and credit changes. The Exchange notes that the tier structure
is consistent with broker-dealer fee practices as well as the other
industries, as described above.
Intermarket Competition
The Exchange believes that its proposed modification to its
schedule of credits will not impose a burden on competition because the
Exchange's execution services are completely voluntary and subject to
extensive competition both from the other 12 live exchanges and from
off-exchange venues, which include 34 alternative trading systems. The
Exchange notes that it operates in a highly competitive market in which
market participants can readily favor competing venues if they deem fee
levels at a particular venue to be excessive, or rebate opportunities
available at other venues to be more favorable. In such an environment,
the Exchange must continually adjust its fees and credits to remain
competitive with other exchanges and with alternative trading systems
that have been exempted from compliance with the statutory standards
applicable to exchanges. Because competitors are free to modify their
own fees in response, and because market participants may readily
adjust their order routing practices, the Exchange believes that the
degree to which fee and credit changes in this market may impose any
burden on competition is extremely limited.
The proposed amended fees and credits are reflective of this
competition because, even as one of the largest U.S. equities exchanges
by volume, the Exchange has less than 18% market share, which in most
markets could hardly be categorized as having enough market power to
burden competition. Moreover, as noted above, price competition between
exchanges is fierce, with liquidity and market share moving freely
between exchanges in reaction to fee and credit changes. This is in
addition to free flow of order flow to and among off-exchange venues
which comprised more than 43% of industry volume for the month of July
2020.
The Exchange's proposals are pro-competitive in that the Exchange
intends for them to increase liquidity on the Exchange and thereby
render the Exchange a more attractive and vibrant venue to market
participants.
In sum, if the changes proposed herein are unattractive to market
participants, it is likely that the Exchange will lose market share as
a result. Accordingly, the Exchange does not believe that the proposed
changes will impair the ability of members or competing order execution
venues to maintain their competitive standing in the financial markets.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either solicited or received.
[[Page 56668]]
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act,\15\ the Exchange
has designated this proposal as establishing or changing a due, fee, or
other charge imposed by the self-regulatory organization on any person,
whether or not the person is a member of the self-regulatory
organization, which renders the proposed rule change effective upon
filing.
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\15\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
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At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is: (i)
Necessary or appropriate in the public interest; (ii) for the
protection of investors; or (iii) otherwise in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. If the Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule should be approved or disapproved.
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-NASDAQ-2020-059 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-NASDAQ-2020-059. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549, on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR-NASDAQ-2020-059 and should be submitted
on or before October 5, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\16\
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\16\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-20126 Filed 9-11-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P