Self-Regulatory Organizations; MIAX Emerald, LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend Its Fee Schedule To Adopt Port Fees and Increase Certain Network Connectivity Fees, 66636-66645 [2020-23149]
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Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–90184; File No. SR–
EMERALD–2020–12]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; MIAX
Emerald, LLC; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed
Rule Change To Amend Its Fee
Schedule To Adopt Port Fees and
Increase Certain Network Connectivity
Fees
October 14, 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 October
1, 2020, MIAX Emerald, LLC (‘‘MIAX
Emerald’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’), filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) a 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 is filing a proposal to
amend the MIAX Emerald Fee Schedule
(the ‘‘Fee Schedule’’).
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://www.miaxoptions.com/rulefilings/emerald, 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
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 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.
4 ‘‘Waiver Period’’ means, for each applicable fee,
the period of time from the initial effective date of
the MIAX Emerald Fee Schedule until such time
that the Exchange has an effective fee filing
establishing the applicable fee. The Exchange will
issue a Regulatory Circular announcing the
establishment of an applicable fee that was subject
to a Waiver Period at least fifteen (15) days prior
to the termination of the Waiver Period and
2 17
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend the
Fee Schedule to: (1) Adopt Port fees;
and (2) increase the Exchange’s network
connectivity fees for its 10 gigabit
(‘‘Gb’’) ultra-low latency (‘‘ULL’’) fiber
connection for Members 3 and nonMembers (collectively, the ‘‘Proposed
Access Fees’’). On September 15, 2020,
the Exchange issued a Regulatory
Circular which announced, among other
things, that the Exchange would adopt
Port fees, thereby terminating the
Waiver Period 4 for such fees, and
increase the fees for its 10Gb ULL
connection for Members and nonMembers, beginning October 1, 2020.5
Port Fees
The Exchange proposes to adopt fees
for ‘‘Ports’’, which are used by Members
and non-Members to access the
Exchange. MIAX Emerald provides four
Port types: (i) The FIX Port, which
allows Members to electronically send
orders in all products traded on the
Exchange; (ii) the MEI Port, which
allows Market Makers to submit
electronic orders and quotes to the
Exchange; (iii) the Clearing Trade Drop
Port (‘‘CTD Port’’),6 which provides realtime trade clearing information to the
participants to a trade on MIAX Emerald
and to the participants’ respective
clearing firms; and (iv) the FIX Drop
Copy (‘‘FXD Port’’),7 which provides a
copy of real-time trade execution,
correction and cancellation information
through a FIX Port to any number of FIX
Ports designated by an EEM to receive
such messages. The Exchange also
proposes to increase the monthly fee for
each additional Limited Service MEI
Port per matching engine for Market
Makers over and above the two (2)
effective date of any such applicable fee. See the
Definitions Section of the Fee Schedule.
5 See MIAX Emerald Regulatory Circular 2020–41
available at https://www.miaxoptions.com/sites/
default/files/circular-files/MIAX_Emerald_RC_
2020_41.pdf.
6 ‘‘CTD Port’’ or ‘‘Clearing Trade Drop Port’’
provides an Exchange Member with a real-time
clearing trade updates. The updates include the
Member’s clearing trade messages on a low latency,
real-time basis. The trade messages are routed to a
Member’s connection containing certain
information. The information includes, among other
things, the following: (i) Trade date and time; (ii)
symbol information; (iii) trade price/size
information; (iv) Member type (for example, and
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Limited Service MEI Ports per matching
engine that are allocated with the Full
Service MEI Ports, as described below.
Since the launch of the Exchange, all
Port fees have been waived by the
Exchange in order to incentivize market
participants to connect to the Exchange,
except for additional Limited Service
MEI Ports. However, also at the launch,
the Exchange introduced the structure
of Port fees on its Fee Schedule (without
proposing the actual fee amounts), in
order to indicate to market participants
that Port fees would ultimately apply
upon expiration of the Waiver Period.
The Exchange now proposes to assess
monthly Port fees for Members and nonMembers in each month the market
participant is credentialed to use a Port
in the production environment and
based upon the number of credentialed
Ports that a user is entitled to use. MIAX
Emerald has Primary and Secondary
Facilities and a Disaster Recovery
Facility. Each type of Port provides
access to all Exchange facilities for a
single fee. The Exchange notes that,
unless otherwise specifically set forth in
the Fee Schedule, the Port fees include
the information communicated through
the Port. That is, unless otherwise
specifically set forth in the Fee
Schedule, there is no additional charge
for the information that is
communicated through the Port apart
from what the user is assessed for each
Port.
FIX Port Fees
Since the launch of the Exchange, fees
for FIX Ports have been waived for the
Waiver Period. The Exchange now
proposes to assess a monthly FIX Port
fee to Members in each month the
Member is credentialed to use a FIX
Port in the production environment and
based upon the number of credentialed
FIX Ports, as follows: $550 for the first
FIX Port; $350 for FIX Ports two through
five; and $150 for each FIX Port over
five.
Below is the proposed table showing
the FIX Port fees:
without limitation, Market Maker, Electronic
Exchange Member, Broker-Dealer); and (v)
Exchange MPID for each side of the transaction,
including Clearing Member MPID. See the
Definitions Section of the Fee Schedule.
7 The FIX Drop Copy (‘‘FXD’’) Port is a messaging
interface that will provide a copy of real-time trade
execution, trade correction and trade cancellation
information to FXD Port users who subscribe to the
service. FXD Port users are those users who are
designated by an EEM to receive the information
and the information is restricted for use by the
EEM. FXD Port Fees will be assessed in any month
the Member is credentialed to use the FXD Port in
the production environment. See Fee Schedule,
Section 4)d)iv).
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MIAX Emerald monthly
port fees
(includes connectivity to
the Primary, Secondary
and Disaster Recovery
data centers)
FIX Port fees
1st FIX Port ..........................................................................................................................................................................
FIX Ports 2 through 5 ..........................................................................................................................................................
Additional FIX Ports over 5 .................................................................................................................................................
MEI Port Fees
MIAX Emerald offers different options
of MEI Ports depending on the services
required by Market Makers. Since the
launch of the Exchange, fees for MEI
Ports have been waived for the Waiver
Period. The Exchange now proposes to
assess monthly MEI Port Fees to Market
Makers based upon the number of
classes or class volume accessed by the
Market Maker. Market Makers are
allocated two (2) Full Service MEI
Ports 8 and two (2) Limited Service MEI
Ports 9 per Matching Engine 10 to which
they connect. The Full Service MEI
Ports, Limited Service MEI Ports and the
additional Limited Service MEI Ports all
include access to the Exchange’s
Primary and Secondary data centers and
its Disaster Recovery center.
Specifically, the Exchange proposes to
adopt MEI Port fees assessable to Market
Makers based upon the number of
classes or class volume accessed by the
Market Maker. The Exchange proposes
to adopt the following MEI Port fees: (i)
$5,000 for Market Maker Assignments in
up to 5 option classes or up to 10% of
option classes by volume; (ii) $10,000
for Market Maker Assignments in up to
10 option classes or up to 20% of option
8 Full Service MEI Ports means a port which
provides Market Makers with the ability to send
Market Maker simple and complex quotes, eQuotes,
and quote purge messages to the MIAX Emerald
System. Full Service MEI Ports are also capable of
receiving administrative information. Market
Makers are limited to two Full Service MEI Ports
per Matching Engine. See the Definitions Section of
the Fee Schedule.
9 Limited Service MEI Ports means a port which
provides Market Makers with the ability to send
simple and complex eQuotes and quote purge
messages only, but not Market Maker Quotes, to the
MIAX Emerald System. Limited Service MEI Ports
are also capable of receiving administrative
information. Market Makers initially receive two
Limited Service MEI Ports per Matching Engine.
See the Definitions Section of the Fee Schedule.
10 A ‘‘matching engine’’ is a part of the MIAX
Emerald electronic system that processes options
quotes and trades on a symbol-by-symbol basis.
Some matching engines will process option classes
with multiple root symbols, and other matching
engines will be dedicated to one single option root
symbol (for example, options on SPY will be
processed by one single matching engine that is
dedicated only to SPY). A particular root symbol
may only be assigned to a single designated
matching engine. A particular root symbol may not
be assigned to multiple matching engines. See the
Definitions Section of the Fee Schedule.
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classes by volume; (iii) $14,000 for
Market Maker Assignments in up to 40
option classes or up to 35% of option
classes by volume; (iv) $17,500 for
Market Maker Assignments in up to 100
option classes or up to 50% of option
classes by volume; and (v) $20,500 for
Market Maker Assignments in over 100
option classes or over 50% of option
classes by volume up to all option
classes listed on MIAX Emerald.
The Exchange also proposes to adopt
new footnote ‘‘D’’ for its MEI Port fees
that will apply to the Market Makers
who fall within the following MEI Port
fee levels, which represent the 4th and
5th levels of the fee table: Market
Makers who have (i) Assignments in up
to 100 option classes or up to 50% of
option classes by volume and (ii)
Assignments in over 100 option classes
or over 50% of option classes by volume
up to all option classes listed on MIAX
Emerald. Specifically, the Exchange
proposes for these monthly MEI Port tier
levels, if the Market Maker’s total
monthly executed volume during the
relevant month is less than 0.025% of
the total monthly executed volume
reported by OCC in the customer
account type for MIAX Emerald–listed
option classes for that month, then the
fee will be $14,500 instead of the fee
otherwise applicable to such level.
The purpose of this proposed lower
monthly MEI Port fee is to provide a
lower fixed cost to those Market Makers
who are willing to quote the entire
Exchange market (or substantial amount
of the Exchange market), as objectively
measured by either number of classes
assigned or national ADV, but who do
not otherwise execute a significant
amount of volume on the Exchange. The
Exchange believes that, by offering
lower fixed costs to Market Makers that
execute less volume, the Exchange will
retain and attract smaller-scale Market
Makers, which are an integral
component of the option industry
marketplace, but have been decreasing
in number in recent years, due to
industry consolidation and lower
market maker profitability. Since these
smaller-scale Market Makers utilize less
Exchange capacity due to lower overall
volume executed, the Exchange believes
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$550.00
350.00
150.00
it is reasonable and appropriate to offer
such Market Makers a lower fixed cost.
The Exchange notes that other options
exchanges assess certain of their fees at
different rates, based upon a member’s
participation on that exchange,11 and, as
such, this concept is not novel. The
proposed changes to the MEI Port fees
for Market Makers who fall within the
4th and 5th levels of the fee table are
based upon a business determination of
current Market Maker assignments and
trading volume.
For the calculation of the monthly
MEI Port Fees that apply to Market
Makers, the number of classes is defined
as the greatest number of classes the
Market Maker was assigned to quote in
on any given day within the calendar
month and the class volume percentage
is based on the total national average
daily volume in classes listed on MIAX
Emerald in the prior calendar quarter.12
Newly listed option classes are
excluded from the calculation of the
monthly MEI Port Fee until the calendar
quarter following their listing, at which
time the newly listed option classes will
be included in both the per class count
and the percentage of total national
average daily volume. The Exchange
proposes to assess Market Makers the
monthly MEI Port Fees based on the
greatest number of classes listed on
MIAX Emerald that the Market Maker
was assigned to quote in on any given
day within a calendar month and the
applicable fee rate that is the lesser of
either the per class basis or percentage
of total national average daily volume
measurement.
11 See, e.g., Cboe BZX Options Exchange (‘‘BZX
Options’’) assesses the Participant Fee, which is a
membership fee, according to a member’s ADV. See
Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule under
‘‘Membership Fees’’. The Participant Fee is $500 if
the member ADV is less than 5000 contracts and
$1,000 if the member ADV is equal to or greater
than 5,000 contracts.
12 The Exchange will use the following formula to
calculate the percentage of total national average
daily volume that the Market Maker assignment is
for purposes of the MEI Port Fee for a given month:
Market Maker assignment percentage of national
average daily volume = [total volume during the
prior calendar quarter in a class in which the
Market Maker was assigned]/[total national volume
in classes listed on MIAX in the prior calendar
quarter].
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The Exchange currently charges $50
per month for each additional Limited
Service MEI Port per matching engine
for Market Makers over and above the
two (2) Limited Service MEI Ports per
matching engine that are allocated with
the Full Service MEI Ports. The Full
Service MEI Ports, Limited Service MEI
Ports and the additional Limited Service
MEI Ports all include access to the
Exchange’s Primary and Secondary data
centers and its Disaster Recovery center.
Currently, footnote ‘‘*’’ in the MEI Port
Fee table provides that the fees for
Additional Limited Service MEI Ports
are not subject to the Waiver Period.
Accordingly, in connection with this
proposal, the Exchange proposes to
delete footnote ‘‘*’’ since the Exchange
proposes to begin assessing MEI Port
fees, which will no longer be subject to
the Waiver Period. The Exchange also
proposes to increase the monthly fee
from $50 to $100 for each additional
Limited Service MEI Port per matching
engine for Market Makers over and
above the two (2) Limited Service MEI
Ports per matching engine that are
allocated with the Full Service MEI
Ports.
Below is the proposed table showing
the MEI Port fees:
Market Maker Assignments
(the lesser of the applicable measurements below)
Monthly MIAX Emerald
MEI fees
$5,000.00 ............................................................
$10,000.00 ..........................................................
$14,000.00 ..........................................................
$17,500.00 D ........................................................
$20,500.00 D ........................................................
Per class
% of national average daily volume
Up to 5 Classes ...............................................
Up to 10 Classes .............................................
Up to 40 Classes .............................................
Up to 100 Classes ...........................................
Over 100 Classes ............................................
Up to 10% of Classes by volume.
Up to 20% of Classes by volume.
Up to 35% of Classes by volume.
Up to 50% of Classes by volume.
Over 50% of Classes by volume up to all
Classes listed on MIAX Emerald.
D For these Monthly MIAX Emerald MEI Port tier levels, if the Market Maker’s total monthly executed volume during the relevant month is less
than 0.025% of the total monthly executed volume reported by OCC in the customer account type for MIAX Emerald-listed option classes for that
month, then the fee will be $14,500 instead of the fee otherwise applicable to such level.
Purge Port Fees
The Exchange also offers Market
Makers the ability to request and be
allocated two (2) Purge Ports per
Matching Engine to which it connects.
Purge Ports provide Market Makers with
the ability to send quote purge messages
to the MIAX Emerald System. Purge
Ports are not capable of sending or
receiving any other type of messages or
information. Since the launch of the
Exchange, fees for Purge Ports have been
waived for the Waiver Period. The
Exchange now proposes to amend its
Fee Schedule to adopt fees for Purge
Ports. For each month in which the
MIAX Emerald Market Maker has been
credentialed to use Purge Ports in the
production environment and has been
assigned to quote in at least one class,
the Exchange proposes to assess the
MIAX Emerald Market Maker a flat fee
$1,500, regardless of the number of
Purge Ports allocated to the MIAX
Emerald Market Maker.
CTD Port Fees
The Exchange proposes to assess a
CTD Port fee as a monthly fixed amount,
not tied to transacted volume of the
Member. This fixed fee structure is the
same structure in place at Nasdaq PHLX
with respect to the proposed CTD Port
Fees.13 Since the launch of the
Exchange, CTD Port Fees have been
waived for the Waiver Period. CTD
provides Exchange members with realtime clearing trade updates. The
updates include the Member’s clearing
trade messages on a low latency, realtime basis. The trade messages are
routed to a Member’s connection
containing certain information. The
information includes, among other
things, the following: (i) Trade date and
time; (ii) symbol information; (iii) trade
price/size information; (iv) Member type
(for example, and without limitation,
Market Maker, Electronic Exchange
Member, Broker-Dealer); (v) Exchange
Member Participant Identifier (‘‘MPID’’)
for each side of the transaction,
including Clearing Member MPID; and
(vi) strategy specific information for
complex transactions. CTD Port fees
will be assessed in any month the
Member is credentialed to use the CTD
Port in the production environment.
The Exchange proposes to assess a CTD
Port fee of $450 per month. Below is the
proposed table for the CTD Port fees:
Description
Monthly fee
Real-Time CTD Information .................................................................................................................................................
$450.00
FXD Port Fee
The Exchange proposes to assess an
FXD Port Fee as a monthly fixed
amount, not tied to transacted volume of
the Member. This fixed fee structure is
the same structure in place at Nasdaq
PHLX with respect to FXD Port Fees.14
Since the launch of the Exchange, FXD
13 See Nasdaq PHLX Pricing Schedule, Options 7,
Section 9, Other Member Fees, B. Port Fees.
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Port Fees have been waived for the
Waiver Period. FXD is a messaging
interface that will provide a copy of
real-time trade execution, trade
correction and trade cancellation
information to FXD Port users who
subscribe to the service. FXD Port users
are those users who are designated by
an EEM to receive the information and
the information is restricted for use by
the EEM. FXD Port fees will be assessed
in any month the Member is
credentialed to use the FXD Port in the
production environment. The Exchange
proposes to assess an FXD Port fee of
$500 per month. Below is the proposed
table for the FXD Port fees:
14 Id.
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66639
Description
MIAX Emerald monthly
port fees
(includes connectivity to
the Primary, Secondary
and Disaster Recovery
data centers)
FIX Drop Copy Port .............................................................................................................................................................
$500.00
10Gb ULL Connectivity Fee
The Exchange proposes to amend
Sections 5a) and b) of the Fee Schedule
to increase the monthly network
connectivity fees for the 10Gb ULL fiber
connection, which is charged to both
Members and non-Members of the
Exchange for connectivity to the
Exchange’s primary/secondary facility.
The Exchange offers to both Members
and non-Members two bandwidth
alternatives for connectivity to the
Exchange, to its primary and secondary
facilities, consisting of a 1Gb fiber
connection and a 10Gb ULL fiber
connection. The 10Gb ULL offering uses
an ultra-low latency switch, which
provides faster processing of messages
sent to it in comparison to the switch
used for the other types of connectivity.
The Exchange now proposes to increase
its monthly network connectivity fee for
its 10Gb ULL connection to $10,000 for
Members and non-Members.
*
*
*
*
*
MIAX Emerald believes that
exchanges, in setting fees of all types,
should meet very high standards of
transparency to demonstrate why each
new fee or fee increase meets the
requirements of the Act that fees be
reasonable, equitably allocated, not
unfairly discriminatory, and not create
an undue burden on competition among
members and markets. MIAX Emerald
believes this high standard is especially
important when an exchange imposes
various access fees for market
participants to access an exchange’s
marketplace. MIAX Emerald deems Port
fees and Connectivity Fees to be access
fees. The Exchange believes that it is
important to demonstrate that these fees
are based on its costs and reasonable
business needs. Accordingly, the
Exchange believes the Proposed Access
Fees will allow the Exchange to offset
expense the Exchange has and will
incur, and that the Exchange is
providing sufficient transparency (as
described below) into how the Exchange
determined to charge such fees.
Accordingly, the Exchange is providing
an analysis of its revenues, costs, and
profitability (before the proposed
changes), and the Exchange’s revenues,
costs, and profitability (following the
proposed changes) for the Proposed
Access Fees. This analysis includes
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information regarding its methodology
for determining the costs and revenues
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees.
In order to determine the Exchange’s
costs associated with providing the
Proposed Access Fees, the Exchange
conducted an extensive cost review in
which the Exchange analyzed every
expense item in the Exchange’s general
expense ledger to determine whether
each such expense relates to the
Proposed Access Fees, and, if such
expense did so relate, what portion (or
percentage) of such expense actually
supports the services included in the
Proposed Access Fees. The sum of all
such portions of expenses represents the
total cost of the Exchange to provide the
Proposed Access Fees. For the
avoidance of doubt, no expense amount
was allocated twice. The Exchange is
also providing detailed information
regarding the Exchange’s cost allocation
methodology—namely, information that
explains the Exchange’s rationale for
determining that it was reasonable to
allocate certain expenses described in
this filing towards the total cost to the
Exchange to provide the Proposed
Access Fees.
In order to determine the Exchange’s
projected revenues associated with
providing the Proposed Access Fees, the
Exchange analyzed the number of
Members and non-Members currently
utilizing the Exchange’s services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees during 2020, and, utilizing a
recently completed monthly billing
cycle, extrapolated annualized revenue
on a going-forward basis.
The Exchange is presenting its
revenue and expense associated with
the Proposed Access Fees in this filing
in a manner that is consistent with how
the Exchange presents its revenue and
expense in its Audited Unconsolidated
Financial Statements. The Exchange’s
most recent Audited Unconsolidated
Financial Statement is for 2019.
However, since the revenue and
expense associated with the Proposed
Access Fees were not in place in 2019
or for the first three quarters of 2020, the
Exchange believes its 2019 Audited
Unconsolidated Financial Statement is
not useful for analyzing the
reasonableness of the total annual
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revenue and costs associated with the
Proposed Access Fees. Accordingly, the
Exchange believes it is more appropriate
to analyze the Proposed Access Fees
utilizing its 2020 actual (9 months to
date) and projected (3 months
remaining) revenue and costs, as
described herein, which utilize the same
presentation methodology as set forth in
the Exchange’s previously-issued
Audited Unconsolidated Financial
Statements. Based on this analysis, the
Exchange believes that the Proposed
Access Fees are fair and reasonable
because they will not result in excessive
pricing or supra-competitive profit
when comparing the Exchange’s total
annual expense associated with
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees versus the
total projected annual revenue the
Exchange will collect for providing
those services.
On March 29, 2019, the Commission
issued its Order Disapproving Proposed
Rule Changes to Amend the Fee
Schedule on the BOX Market LLC
Options Facility to Establish BOX
Connectivity Fees for Participants and
Non-Participants Who Connect to the
BOX Network (the ‘‘BOX Order’’).15 On
May 21, 2019, the Commission issued
the Staff Guidance on SRO Rule Filings
Relating to Fees.16 On December 20,
2019, the Exchange adopted
Connectivity Fees in a filing utilizing a
cost-based justification framework that
is substantially similar to the cost-based
justification framework utilized for the
instant Proposed Access Fees.17
Accordingly, the Exchange believes that
the Proposed Access Fees are consistent
with the Act because they (i) are
reasonable, equitably allocated, not
unfairly discriminatory, and not an
undue burden on competition; (ii)
comply with the BOX Order and the
Guidance; (iii) are supported by
evidence (including comprehensive
15 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 85459
(March 29, 2019), 84 FR 13363 (April 4, 2019) (SR–
BOX–2018–24, SR–BOX–2018–37, and SR–BOX–
2019–04).
16 See Staff Guidance on SRO Rule Filings
Relating to Fees (May 21, 2019), at https://
www.sec.gov/tm/staff-guidance-sro-rule-filings-fees
(the ‘‘Guidance’’).
17 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87877
(December 31, 2019), 84 FR 738 (January 7, 2020)
(SR–EMERALD–2019–39).
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revenue and cost data and analysis) that
they are fair and reasonable because
they not result in excessive pricing or
supra-competitive profit; and (iv) utilize
a cost-based justification framework that
is substantially similar to a framework
previously used by the Exchange to
establish Connectivity Fees.
Accordingly, the Exchange believes that
the Commission should find that the
Proposed Fees 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.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal to amend its Fee Schedule is
consistent with Section 6(b) of the Act 18
in general, and furthers the objectives of
Section 6(b)(4) of the Act 19 in
particular, in that it provides for the
equitable allocation of reasonable dues,
fees and other charges among Exchange
Members and issuers and other persons
using any facility or system which the
Exchange operates or controls. The
Exchange also believes the proposal
furthers the objectives of Section 6(b)(5)
of the Act 20 in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, 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 and is
not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customer,
issuers, brokers and dealers.
The Commission has repeatedly
expressed its preference for competition
over regulatory intervention in
determining prices, products, and
services in the securities markets. 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.’’ 21
Numerous indicia demonstrate the
competitive nature of this market. For
example, clear substitutes to the
Exchange exist in the market for options
transaction services. The Exchange is
one of several options venues to which
market participants may direct their
order flow, and it represents a small
18 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
20 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
21 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808
(June 9, 2005), 70 FR 37496 (June 29, 2005).
19 15
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percentage of the overall market. 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. There are currently 16
registered options exchanges competing
for order flow. Based on publiclyavailable information, and excluding
index-based options, no single exchange
has more than approximately 16% of
the market share of executed volume of
multiply-listed equity and exchangetraded fund (‘‘ETF’’) options.22
Therefore, no exchange possesses
significant pricing power. More
specifically, for the month of August
2020, the Exchange had a market share
of approximately 3.24% of executed
multiply-listed equity options.23
The Exchange also believes that the
ever-shifting market share among the
exchanges from month to month
demonstrates that market participants
can discontinue or reduce use of certain
categories of products, or shift order
flow, in response to non-transaction and
transaction fee changes. For example, on
February 28, 2019, the Exchange’s
affiliate, MIAX PEARL, LLC (‘‘MIAX
PEARL’’) filed with the Commission a
proposal to increase Taker fees in
certain Tiers for options transactions in
certain Penny classes for Priority
Customers and decrease Maker rebates
in certain Tiers for options transactions
in Penny classes for Priority Customers
(which fee was to be effective March 1,
2019).24 MIAX PEARL experienced a
decrease in total market share for the
month of March 2019, after the proposal
went into effect. Accordingly, the
Exchange believes that the MIAX
PEARL March 1, 2019 fee change, to
increase certain transaction fees and
decrease certain transaction rebates,
may have contributed to the decrease in
MIAX PEARL’s market share and, as
such, the Exchange believes competitive
forces constrain the Exchange’s, and
other options exchanges, ability to set
transaction fees and non-transaction
fees and market participants can shift
order flow based on fee changes
instituted by the exchanges.
The Exchange launched trading on
March 1, 2019. The Exchange has only
a 3.24% market share of the U.S.
options industry in August 2020 in
22 The Options Clearing Corporation (‘‘OCC’’)
publishes options and futures volume in a variety
of formats, including daily and monthly volume by
exchange, available here: https://www.theocc.com/
market-data/volume/default.jsp.
23 See id.
24 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 85304
(March 13, 2019), 84 FR 10144 (March 19, 2019)
(SR–PEARL–2019–07).
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equity option classes according to the
OCC.25 The Exchange is not aware of
any evidence that a market share of
approximately 3% provides the
Exchange with anti-competitive pricing
power. If the Exchange were to attempt
to establish unreasonable pricing, then
no market participant would join or
connect, and existing market
participants would disconnect.
Separately, the Exchange is not aware
of any reason why market participants
could not simply drop their connections
to an exchange (or not connect to an
exchange) if an exchange were to
establish prices for its non-transaction
fees that, in the determination of such
market participant, did not make
business or economic sense for such
market participant to connect to such
exchange. No options market participant
is required by rule, regulation, or
competitive forces to be a Member of the
Exchange. As evidence of the fact that
market participants can and do
disconnect from exchanges based on
non-transaction fee pricing, R2G
Services LLC (‘‘R2G’’) filed a comment
letter after BOX’s proposed rule changes
to increase its connectivity fees (SR–
BOX–2018–24, SR–BOX–2018–37, and
SR–BOX–2019–04).26 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.’’ 27 Accordingly, this
example shows that if an exchange sets
too high of a fee for connectivity and/
or other non-transaction fees for its
relevant marketplace, market
participants can choose to disconnect
from such exchange.
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with Section
6(b)(4) of the Act because the Proposed
Access Fees will not result in excessive
or supra-competitive profit. The costs
associated with providing access to
Exchange Members and non-Members,
as well as the general expansion of a
state-of-the-art infrastructure, are
extensive, have increased year-overyear, and are projected to increase yearover-year in the future. In particular, the
Exchange has experienced a material
increase in its costs in 2020, in
connection with a project to make its
network environment more transparent
and deterministic, based on customer
25 See
supra note 22.
Letter from Stefano Durdic, R2G, to
Vanessa Countryman, Acting Secretary,
Commission, dated March 27, 2019 (the ‘‘R2G
Letter’’).
27 See id.
26 See
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demand. This project will allow the
Exchange to enhance its network
architecture with the intent of ensuring
a best-in-class, transparent and
deterministic trading system while
maintaining its industry leading latency
and throughput capabilities. In order to
provide this greater amount of
transparency and higher determinism,
MIAX Emerald has made significant
capital expenditures (‘‘CapEx’’),
incurred increased ongoing operational
expenditures, and undertaken
additional engineering R&D in the
following areas: (i) Implementing an
improved network design to ensure the
minimum latency between multicast
market data signals disseminated by the
Exchange across the extranet switches,
improving the unicast jitter profile to
reduce the occurrence of message
sequence inversions from Members to
the Exchange quoting gateway
processors, and introducing a new
optical fiber network infrastructure that
ensures the optical fiber path for
participants within extremely tight
tolerances; (ii) introducing a rearchitected and engineered participant
quoting gateway that ensures the
delivery of messages to the match
engine with absolute determinism,
eliminating the message processing
inversions that can occur with messages
received nanoseconds apart; and (iii)
designing an improved monitoring
platform to better measure the
performance of the network and systems
at extremely tight tolerances and to
provide Members with reporting on the
performance of their systems. Just the
CapEx associated with phase 1 of this
project in 2020 was approximately $1.85
million. This expense does not include
the significant increase in employee
time and other resources necessary to
maintain and service this network,
which expense is captured in the
operating expense (‘‘OpEx’’) discussed
below. This project, which results in a
material increase in expense of the
Exchange, is a primary driver for the
increase in network connectivity fees
proposed by the Exchange.
However, in order to provide more
detail and to quantify the Exchange’s
costs associated with providing access
to the Exchange in general, the
Exchange notes that there are material
costs associated with providing the
infrastructure and headcount to fullysupport access to the Exchange. The
Exchange incurs technology expense
related to establishing and maintaining
Information Security services, enhanced
network monitoring and customer
reporting, as well as Regulation SCI
mandated processes, associated with its
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network technology. While some of the
expense is fixed, much of the expense
is not fixed, and thus increases as the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees increase. For example, new
10Gb ULL connections and Ports require
the purchase of additional hardware to
support those connections as well as
enhanced monitoring and reporting of
customer performance that MIAX
Emerald and its affiliates provide.
Further, as the total number of all
connections and Ports increase, MIAX
Emerald and its affiliates need to
increase their data center footprint and
consume more power, resulting in
increased costs charged by their thirdparty data center provider. Accordingly,
the cost to MIAX Emerald and its
affiliates is not fixed. The Exchange
believes the Proposed Access Fees are
reasonable in order to offset the costs to
the Exchange associated with providing
access to its network infrastructure.
Further, because the costs of operating
its own data center are significant and
not economically feasible for the
Exchange at this time, the Exchange
does not operate its own data centers,
and instead contracts with a third-party
data center provider. The Exchange
notes that other competing exchange
operators own/operate their data
centers, which offers them greater
control over their data center costs.
Because those exchanges own and
operate their data centers as profit
centers, the Exchange is subject to
additional costs. The Proposed Access
Fees, which are charged for accessing
the Exchange’s data center network
infrastructure, are directly related to the
network and offset such costs.
The Exchange invests significant
resources in network R&D to improve
the overall performance and stability of
its network. For example, the Exchange
has a number of network monitoring
tools (some of which were developed inhouse, and some of which are licensed
from third-parties), that continually
monitor, detect, and report network
performance, many of which serve as
significant value-adds to the Exchange’s
Members and enable the Exchange to
provide a high level of customer service.
These tools detect and report
performance issues, and thus enable the
Exchange to proactively notify a
Member (and the SIPs) when the
Exchange detects a problem with a
Member’s connectivity. In fact, the
Exchange often receives inquiries from
other industry participants regarding the
status of networking issues outside of
the Exchange’s own network
environment that are impacting the
industry as a whole via the SIPs,
including inquiries from regulators,
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66641
because the Exchange has a superior,
state-of the-art network that, through its
enhanced monitoring and reporting
solutions, often detects and identifies
industry-wide networking issues ahead
of the SIPs. The Exchange also incurs
costs associated with the maintenance
and improvement of existing tools and
the development of new tools.
Additionally, certain Exchangedeveloped network aggregation and
monitoring tools provide the Exchange
with the ability to measure network
traffic with a much more granular level
of variability. This is important as
Exchange Members demand a higher
level of network determinism and the
ability to measure variability in terms of
single digit nanoseconds. Also, routine
R&D projects to improve the
performance of the network’s hardware
infrastructure result in additional cost.
In sum, the costs associated with
maintaining and enhancing a state-ofthe-art exchange network in the U.S.
options industry is a significant expense
for the Exchange that also increases
year-over-year, and thus the Exchange
believes that it is reasonable to offset
those costs through the Proposed Access
Fees. The Exchange invests in and offers
a superior network infrastructure as part
of its overall options exchange services
offering, resulting in significant costs
associated with maintaining this
network infrastructure, which are
directly tied to the amount of the
Proposed Access Fees that must be
charged to access it, in order to recover
those costs.
The Exchange only has four primary
sources of revenue: Transaction fees,
access fees (of which the Proposed
Access Fees constitute the majority),
regulatory fees, and market data fees.
Accordingly, the Exchange must cover
all of its expenses from these four
primary sources of revenue.
The Proposed Access Fees are fair and
reasonable because they will not result
in excessive pricing or supracompetitive profit, when comparing the
total annual expense of MIAX Emerald
associated with providing these services
versus the total projected annual
revenue that the Exchange projects to
collect. For 2020, the total annual
expense for providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees for MIAX Emerald is projected to
be approximately $9.3 million. The $9.3
million in projected total annual
expense is comprised of the following,
all of which are directly related to the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees: (1) Third-party expense,
relating to fees paid by MIAX Emerald
to third-parties for certain products and
services; and (2) internal expense,
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relating to the internal costs of MIAX
Emerald to provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees. The $9.3 million in projected total
annual expense is directly related to the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees, and not any other product
or service offered by the Exchange. It
does not include general costs of
operating matching systems and other
trading technology, and no expense
amount was allocated twice.
As discussed, the Exchange
conducted an extensive cost review in
which the Exchange analyzed every
expense item in the Exchange’s general
expense ledger (this includes over 150
separate and distinct expense items) to
determine whether each such expense
relates to the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees, and, if such
expense did so relate, what portion (or
percentage) of such expense actually
supports those services, and thus bears
a relationship that is, ‘‘in nature and
closeness,’’ directly related to those
services. The sum of all such portions
of expenses represents the total cost of
the Exchange to provide services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees.
For 2020, total third-party expense,
relating to fees paid by MIAX Emerald
to third-parties for certain products and
services for the Exchange to be able to
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, is projected to be
$1,932,519. This includes, but is not
limited to, a portion of the fees paid to:
(1) Equinix, for data center services, for
the primary, secondary, and disaster
recovery locations of the MIAX Emerald
trading system infrastructure; (2) Zayo
Group Holdings, Inc. (‘‘Zayo’’) for
network services (fiber and bandwidth
products and services) linking MIAX
Emerald’s office locations in Princeton,
NJ and Miami, FL to all data center
locations; (3) Secure Financial
Transaction Infrastructure (‘‘SFTI’’),28
which supports connectivity and feeds
for the entire U.S. options industry; (4)
various other services providers
(including Thompson Reuters, NYSE,
Nasdaq, and Internap), which provide
content, connectivity services, and
infrastructure services for critical
28 In fact, on October 22, 2019, the Exchange was
notified by SFTI that it is again raising its fees
charged to the Exchange by approximately 11%,
without having to show that such fee change
complies with the Act by being reasonable,
equitably allocated, and not unfairly
discriminatory. It is unfathomable to the Exchange
that, given the critical nature of the infrastructure
services provided by SFTI, that its fees are not
required to be rule-filed with the Commission
pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act and Rule
19b–4 thereunder. See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1) and 17
CFR 240.19b–4, respectively.
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components of options connectivity and
network services; and (5) various other
hardware and software providers
(including Dell and Cisco, which
support the production environment in
which Members and non-Members
connect to the network to trade, receive
market data, etc.).
For clarity, only a portion of all fees
paid to such third-parties is included in
the third-party expense herein, and no
expense amount is allocated twice.
Accordingly, MIAX Emerald does not
allocate its entire information
technology and communication costs to
the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable
to allocate such third-party expense
described above towards the total cost to
the Exchange to provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees. In particular, the Exchange
believes it is reasonable to allocate the
identified portion of the Equinix
expense because Equinix operates the
data centers (primary, secondary, and
disaster recovery) that host the
Exchange’s network infrastructure. This
includes, among other things, the
necessary storage space, which
continues to expand and increase in
cost, power to operate the network
infrastructure, and cooling apparatuses
to ensure the Exchange’s network
infrastructure maintains stability.
Without these services from Equinix,
the Exchange would not be able to
operate and support the network and
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees to its Members
and non-Members and their customers.
The Exchange did not allocate all of the
Equinix expense toward the cost of
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees, only that
portion which the Exchange identified
as being specifically mapped to
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees,
approximately 73% of the total Equinix
expense. The Exchange believes this
allocation is reasonable because it
represents the Exchange’s actual cost to
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, and not any
other service, as supported by its cost
review.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable
to allocate the identified portion of the
Zayo expense because Zayo provides
the internet, fiber and bandwidth
connections with respect to the
network, linking MIAX Emerald with its
affiliates, MIAX and MIAX PEARL, as
well as the data center and disaster
recovery locations. As such, all of the
trade data, including the billions of
messages each day per exchange, flow
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through Zayo’s infrastructure over the
Exchange’s network. Without these
services from Zayo, the Exchange would
not be able to operate and support the
network and provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees. The Exchange did not allocate all
of the Zayo expense toward the cost of
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees, only the
portion which the Exchange identified
as being specifically mapped to
providing the Proposed Access Fees,
approximately 66% of the total Zayo
expense. The Exchange believes this
allocation is reasonable because it
represents the Exchange’s actual cost to
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, and not any
other service, as supported by its cost
review.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable
to allocate the identified portions of the
SFTI expense and various other service
providers’ (including Thompson
Reuters, NYSE, Nasdaq, and Internap)
expense because those entities provide
connectivity and feeds for the entire
U.S. options industry, as well as the
content, connectivity services, and
infrastructure services for critical
components of the network. Without
these services from SFTI and various
other service providers, the Exchange
would not be able to operate and
support the network and provide access
to its Members and non-Members and
their customers. The Exchange did not
allocate all of the SFTI and other service
providers’ expense toward the cost of
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees, only the
portions which the Exchange identified
as being specifically mapped to
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees,
approximately 94% of the total SFTI
and other service providers’ expense.
The Exchange believes this allocation is
reasonable because it represents the
Exchange’s actual cost to provide the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable
to allocate the identified portion of the
other hardware and software provider
expense because this includes costs for
dedicated hardware licenses for
switches and servers, as well as
dedicated software licenses for security
monitoring and reporting across the
network. Without this hardware and
software, the Exchange would not be
able to operate and support the network
and provide access to its Members and
non-Members and their customers. The
Exchange did not allocate all of the
hardware and software provider
expense toward the cost of providing
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the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, only the portions
which the Exchange identified as being
specifically mapped to providing the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees, approximately 57% of the
total hardware and software provider
expense. The Exchange believes this
allocation is reasonable because it
represents the Exchange’s actual cost to
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees.
For 2020, total projected internal
expense, relating to the internal costs of
MIAX Emerald to provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees, is projected to be $7,367,259. This
includes, but is not limited to, costs
associated with: (1) Employee
compensation and benefits for full-time
employees that support the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees, including staff in network
operations, trading operations,
development, system operations,
business, as well as staff in general
corporate departments (such as legal,
regulatory, and finance) that support
those employees and functions
(including an increase as a result of the
higher determinism project); (2)
depreciation and amortization of
hardware and software used to provide
the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, including
equipment, servers, cabling, purchased
software and internally developed
software used in the production
environment to support the network for
trading; and (3) occupancy costs for
leased office space for staff that provide
the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees. The breakdown
of these costs is more fully-described
below. For clarity, only a portion of all
such internal expenses are included in
the internal expense herein, and no
expense amount is allocated twice.
Accordingly, MIAX Emerald does not
allocate its entire costs contained in
those items to the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable
to allocate such internal expense
described above towards the total cost to
the Exchange to provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees. In particular, MIAX Emerald’s
employee compensation and benefits
expense relating to providing the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees is projected to be
$4,489,924, which is only a portion of
the $9,354,009 total projected expense
for employee compensation and
benefits. The Exchange believes it is
reasonable to allocate the identified
portion of such expense because this
includes the time spent by employees of
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18:08 Oct 19, 2020
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several departments, including
Technology, Back Office, Systems
Operations, Networking, Business
Strategy Development (who create the
business requirement documents that
the Technology staff use to develop
network features and enhancements),
Trade Operations, Finance (who provide
billing and accounting services relating
to the network), and Legal (who provide
legal services relating to the network,
such as rule filings and various license
agreements and other contracts). As part
of the extensive cost review conducted
by the Exchange, the Exchange reviewed
the amount of time spent by each
employee on matters relating to the
provision of services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees. Without these
employees, the Exchange would not be
able to provide the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees to its
Members and non-Members and their
customers. The Exchange did not
allocate all of the employee
compensation and benefits expense
toward the cost of the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees, only the portions which the
Exchange identified as being
specifically mapped to providing the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees, approximately 48% of the
total employee compensation and
benefits expense. The Exchange believes
this allocation is reasonable because it
represents the Exchange’s actual cost to
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, and not any
other service, as supported by its cost
review.
MIAX Emerald’s depreciation and
amortization expense relating to
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees is projected to
be $2,630,687, which is only a portion
of the $3,812,590 total projected
expense for depreciation and
amortization. The Exchange believes it
is reasonable to allocate the identified
portion of such expense because such
expense includes the actual cost of the
computer equipment, such as dedicated
servers, computers, laptops, monitors,
information security appliances and
storage, and network switching
infrastructure equipment, including
switches and taps that were purchased
to operate and support the network and
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees. Without this
equipment, the Exchange would not be
able to operate the network and provide
the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees to its Members
and non-Members and their customers.
The Exchange did not allocate all of the
depreciation and amortization expense
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66643
toward the cost of providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees, only the portion which the
Exchange identified as being
specifically mapped to providing the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees, approximately 69% of the
total depreciation and amortization
expense, as these services would not be
possible without relying on such
equipment. The Exchange believes this
allocation is reasonable because it
represents the Exchange’s actual cost to
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, and not any
other service, as supported by its cost
review.
MIAX Emerald’s occupancy expense
relating to providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees is projected to be $246,648, which
is only a portion of the $474,323 total
projected expense for occupancy. The
Exchange believes it is reasonable to
allocate the identified portion of such
expense because such expense
represents the portion of the Exchange’s
cost to rent and maintain a physical
location for the Exchange’s staff who
operate and support the network,
including providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees. This amount consists primarily of
rent for the Exchange’s Princeton, NJ
office, as well as various related costs,
such as physical security, property
management fees, property taxes, and
utilities. The Exchange operates its
Network Operations Center (‘‘NOC’’)
and Security Operations Center (‘‘SOC’’)
from its Princeton, New Jersey office
location. A centralized office space is
required to house the staff that operates
and supports the network. The
Exchange currently has approximately
150 employees. Approximately twothirds of the Exchange’s staff are in the
Technology department, and the
majority of those staff have some role in
the operation and performance of the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees. Without this office space,
the Exchange would not be able to
operate and support the network and
provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees to its Members
and non-Members and their customers.
Accordingly, the Exchange believes it is
reasonable to allocate the identified
portion of its occupancy expense
because such amount represents the
Exchange’s actual cost to house the
equipment and personnel who operate
and support the Exchange’s network
infrastructure and the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees. The Exchange did not allocate all
of the occupancy expense toward the
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cost of providing the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees, only the
portion which the Exchange identified
as being specifically mapped to
operating and supporting the network,
approximately 52% of the total
occupancy expense. The Exchange
believes this allocation is reasonable
because it represents the Exchange’s
cost to provide the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees, and not
any other service, as supported by its
cost review [sic].
Accordingly, based on the facts and
circumstances presented, the Exchange
believes that its provision of the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees will not result in excessive pricing
or supra-competitive profit. To
illustrate, for 2020, the Exchange’s total
revenue for non-transaction fees—
consisting of only 1Gb and 10Gb ULL
connectivity and MEI additional limited
service port fees—for the first 9 months
of 2020, was approximately $3.9
million. Total projected revenue
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees for the remaining three months of
2020 is approximately $2.55 million.
Therefore, total projected revenue for
the Exchange for 2020 for the provision
of such access fees is approximately
$6.5 million. Total projected expense for
the Exchange for 2020 for the provision
of access fees is approximately $9.3
million. Accordingly, the provision of
the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees will not result in
excessive pricing or supra-competitive
profit (rather, it will result in a loss of
$2.8 million for 2020).
On a going-forward, fully-annualized
basis, the Exchange projects that its
annualized revenue for providing the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees would be approximately
$10.2 million per annum, based on a
most recently completed billing cycle.
The Exchange projects that its
annualized expense for providing the
services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees would be approximately
$9.3 million per annum. Accordingly,
on a fully-annualized basis, the
Exchange believes its total projected
revenue for the providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access
Fees will not result in excessive pricing
or supra-competitive profit, as the
Exchange will make only a 9% profit
margin on the Proposed Access Fees
($10.2 million ¥ 9.3 million = $900,000
per annum). This profit margin does not
take into account the cost of the CapEx
the Exchange is projected to spend in
2020 of $1.85 million, or the amounts
the Exchange is projected to spend each
year on CapEx going forward.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:08 Oct 19, 2020
Jkt 253001
For the avoidance of doubt, none of
the expenses included herein relating to
the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees relate to the
provision of any other services offered
by MIAX Emerald. Stated differently, no
expense amount of the Exchange is
allocated twice.
The Exchange believes it is
reasonable, equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory to allocate the respective
percentages of each expense category
described above towards the total cost to
the Exchange of operating and
supporting the network, including
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees because the
Exchange performed a line-by-line item
analysis of all the expenses of the
Exchange, and has determined the
expenses that directly relate to
operation and support of the network.
Further, the Exchange notes that,
without the specific third-party and
internal items listed above, the
Exchange would not be able to operate
and support the network, including
providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees to its
Members and non-Members and their
customers. Each of these expense items,
including physical hardware, software,
employee compensation and benefits,
occupancy costs, and the depreciation
and amortization of equipment, have
been identified through a line-by-line
item analysis to be integral to the
operation and support of the network.
The Proposed Access Fees are intended
to recover the Exchange’s costs of
operating and supporting the network.
Accordingly, the Exchange believes that
the Proposed Access Fee Increases are
fair and reasonable because they do not
result in excessive pricing or supracompetitive profit, when comparing the
actual network operation and support
costs to the Exchange versus the
projected annual revenue from the
Proposed Access Fees, including the
increased amount.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on 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.
Intra-Market Competition
The Exchange believes that the
Proposed Access Fees do not place
certain market participants at a relative
disadvantage to other market
participants because the Proposed
Access Fees do not favor certain
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
categories of market participants in a
manner that would impose a burden on
competition; rather, the allocation of the
Proposed Access Fees 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.
Inter-Market Competition
The Exchange believes the Proposed
Access Fees do not place an undue
burden on competition on other SROs
that is not necessary or appropriate. In
particular, options market participants
are not forced to connect to (and
purchase market data from) all options
exchanges. The Exchange had one of its
member firms cancel its membership
with the Exchange as a direct result of
the Proposed Access Fees. The
Exchange also notes that it has far less
Members as compared to the much
greater number of members at other
options exchanges. Not only does MIAX
Emerald have less than half the number
of members as certain other options
exchanges, but there are also a number
of the Exchange’s Members that do not
connect directly to MIAX Emerald.
There are a number of large market
makers and broker-dealers that are
members of other options exchange but
not Members of MIAX Emerald. The
Exchange is also unaware of any
assertion that its existing fee levels or
the Proposed Access Fees would
somehow unduly impair its competition
with other options exchanges. To the
contrary, if the fees charged are deemed
too high by market participants, they
can simply disconnect, as described
above.
The Exchange operates in a highly
competitive market in which market
participants can readily favor one of the
16 competing options venues if they
deem fee levels at a particular venue to
be excessive.29 Based on publiclyavailable information, and excluding
index-based options, no single exchange
has more than 16% market share.
Therefore, no exchange possesses
significant pricing power in the
execution of multiply-listed equity and
ETF options order flow. For the month
of August 2020, the Exchange had a
market share of approximately 3.24% of
executed multiply-listed equity
options 30 and the Exchange believes
that the ever-shifting market share
among exchanges from month to month
29 See
supra note 22.
30 Id.
E:\FR\FM\20OCN1.SGM
20OCN1
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 203 / Tuesday, October 20, 2020 / Notices
demonstrates that market participants
can discontinue or reduce use of certain
categories of products, or shift order
flow, in response to fee changes. In such
an environment, the Exchange must
continually adjust its fees and fee
waivers to remain competitive with
other exchanges and to attract order
flow to the Exchange.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
Written comments were neither
solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act,31 and Rule
19b–4(f)(2) 32 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 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–
EMERALD–2020–12 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–EMERALD–2020–12. 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–EMERALD–2020–12 and
should be submitted on or before
November 10, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.33
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–23149 Filed 10–19–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–90178; File No. SR–
NYSEAMER–2020–64]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
American LLC; Notice of Designation
of a Longer Period for Commission
Action on a Proposed Rule Change To
Modify Rules 971.1NY and 971.2NY
Regarding CUBE Auctions
On August 19, 2020, NYSE American
LLC (‘‘NYSE American’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
modify Rules 971.1NY and 971.2NY
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
32 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(2).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:08 Oct 19, 2020
1 15
Jkt 253001
regarding its Customer Best Execution
(‘‘CUBE’’) auction to provide optional
all-or-none functionality for larger-sized
orders in both the Single-Leg and
Complex CUBE Auctions. The proposed
rule change was published for comment
in the Federal Register on September 8,
2020.3 The Commission has received no
comment letters on the proposed rule
change.
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 4 provides
that within 45 days of the publication of
notice of the filing of a proposed rule
change, or within such longer period up
to 90 days as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding, or as to which the
self-regulatory organization consents,
the Commission shall either approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule change should be
disapproved. The 45th day after
publication of the notice for this
proposed rule change is October 23,
2020. The Commission is extending this
45-day time period.
The Commission finds it appropriate
to designate a longer period within
which to take action on the proposed
rule change so that it has sufficient time
to consider the proposed rule change.
Accordingly, the Commission, pursuant
to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,5
designates December 7, 2020, as the date
by which the Commission shall either
approve or disapprove, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to
disapprove, the proposed rule change
(File No. SR–NYSEAMER–2020–64).
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.6
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–23139 Filed 10–19–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
October 14, 2020.
33 17
31 15
66645
PO 00000
Frm 00113
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89723
(September 1, 2020), 85 FR 55562 (September 8,
2020).
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 Id.
6 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(31).
E:\FR\FM\20OCN1.SGM
20OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 203 (Tuesday, October 20, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 66636-66645]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-23149]
[[Page 66636]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-90184; File No. SR-EMERALD-2020-12]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; MIAX Emerald, LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Its Fee Schedule To Adopt Port Fees and Increase Certain Network
Connectivity Fees
October 14, 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 October 1, 2020, MIAX Emerald, LLC (``MIAX Emerald'' or
``Exchange''), filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission'') a 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 is filing a proposal to amend the MIAX Emerald Fee
Schedule (the ``Fee Schedule'').
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at https://www.miaxoptions.com/rule-filings/emerald, 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 amend the Fee Schedule to: (1) Adopt Port
fees; and (2) increase the Exchange's network connectivity fees for its
10 gigabit (``Gb'') ultra-low latency (``ULL'') fiber connection for
Members \3\ and non-Members (collectively, the ``Proposed Access
Fees''). On September 15, 2020, the Exchange issued a Regulatory
Circular which announced, among other things, that the Exchange would
adopt Port fees, thereby terminating the Waiver Period \4\ for such
fees, and increase the fees for its 10Gb ULL connection for Members and
non-Members, beginning October 1, 2020.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 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.
\4\ ``Waiver Period'' means, for each applicable fee, the period
of time from the initial effective date of the MIAX Emerald Fee
Schedule until such time that the Exchange has an effective fee
filing establishing the applicable fee. The Exchange will issue a
Regulatory Circular announcing the establishment of an applicable
fee that was subject to a Waiver Period at least fifteen (15) days
prior to the termination of the Waiver Period and effective date of
any such applicable fee. See the Definitions Section of the Fee
Schedule.
\5\ See MIAX Emerald Regulatory Circular 2020-41 available at
https://www.miaxoptions.com/sites/default/files/circular-files/MIAX_Emerald_RC_2020_41.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Port Fees
The Exchange proposes to adopt fees for ``Ports'', which are used
by Members and non-Members to access the Exchange. MIAX Emerald
provides four Port types: (i) The FIX Port, which allows Members to
electronically send orders in all products traded on the Exchange; (ii)
the MEI Port, which allows Market Makers to submit electronic orders
and quotes to the Exchange; (iii) the Clearing Trade Drop Port (``CTD
Port''),\6\ which provides real-time trade clearing information to the
participants to a trade on MIAX Emerald and to the participants'
respective clearing firms; and (iv) the FIX Drop Copy (``FXD
Port''),\7\ which provides a copy of real-time trade execution,
correction and cancellation information through a FIX Port to any
number of FIX Ports designated by an EEM to receive such messages. The
Exchange also proposes to increase the monthly fee for each additional
Limited Service MEI Port per matching engine for Market Makers over and
above the two (2) Limited Service MEI Ports per matching engine that
are allocated with the Full Service MEI Ports, as described below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ ``CTD Port'' or ``Clearing Trade Drop Port'' provides an
Exchange Member with a real-time clearing trade updates. The updates
include the Member's clearing trade messages on a low latency, real-
time basis. The trade messages are routed to a Member's connection
containing certain information. The information includes, among
other things, the following: (i) Trade date and time; (ii) symbol
information; (iii) trade price/size information; (iv) Member type
(for example, and without limitation, Market Maker, Electronic
Exchange Member, Broker-Dealer); and (v) Exchange MPID for each side
of the transaction, including Clearing Member MPID. See the
Definitions Section of the Fee Schedule.
\7\ The FIX Drop Copy (``FXD'') Port is a messaging interface
that will provide a copy of real-time trade execution, trade
correction and trade cancellation information to FXD Port users who
subscribe to the service. FXD Port users are those users who are
designated by an EEM to receive the information and the information
is restricted for use by the EEM. FXD Port Fees will be assessed in
any month the Member is credentialed to use the FXD Port in the
production environment. See Fee Schedule, Section 4)d)iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the launch of the Exchange, all Port fees have been waived by
the Exchange in order to incentivize market participants to connect to
the Exchange, except for additional Limited Service MEI Ports. However,
also at the launch, the Exchange introduced the structure of Port fees
on its Fee Schedule (without proposing the actual fee amounts), in
order to indicate to market participants that Port fees would
ultimately apply upon expiration of the Waiver Period. The Exchange now
proposes to assess monthly Port fees for Members and non-Members in
each month the market participant is credentialed to use a Port in the
production environment and based upon the number of credentialed Ports
that a user is entitled to use. MIAX Emerald has Primary and Secondary
Facilities and a Disaster Recovery Facility. Each type of Port provides
access to all Exchange facilities for a single fee. The Exchange notes
that, unless otherwise specifically set forth in the Fee Schedule, the
Port fees include the information communicated through the Port. That
is, unless otherwise specifically set forth in the Fee Schedule, there
is no additional charge for the information that is communicated
through the Port apart from what the user is assessed for each Port.
FIX Port Fees
Since the launch of the Exchange, fees for FIX Ports have been
waived for the Waiver Period. The Exchange now proposes to assess a
monthly FIX Port fee to Members in each month the Member is
credentialed to use a FIX Port in the production environment and based
upon the number of credentialed FIX Ports, as follows: $550 for the
first FIX Port; $350 for FIX Ports two through five; and $150 for each
FIX Port over five.
Below is the proposed table showing the FIX Port fees:
[[Page 66637]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MIAX Emerald monthly
port fees (includes
connectivity to the
FIX Port fees Primary, Secondary and
Disaster Recovery data
centers)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1st FIX Port................................... $550.00
FIX Ports 2 through 5.......................... 350.00
Additional FIX Ports over 5.................... 150.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MEI Port Fees
MIAX Emerald offers different options of MEI Ports depending on the
services required by Market Makers. Since the launch of the Exchange,
fees for MEI Ports have been waived for the Waiver Period. The Exchange
now proposes to assess monthly MEI Port Fees to Market Makers based
upon the number of classes or class volume accessed by the Market
Maker. Market Makers are allocated two (2) Full Service MEI Ports \8\
and two (2) Limited Service MEI Ports \9\ per Matching Engine \10\ to
which they connect. The Full Service MEI Ports, Limited Service MEI
Ports and the additional Limited Service MEI Ports all include access
to the Exchange's Primary and Secondary data centers and its Disaster
Recovery center.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Full Service MEI Ports means a port which provides Market
Makers with the ability to send Market Maker simple and complex
quotes, eQuotes, and quote purge messages to the MIAX Emerald
System. Full Service MEI Ports are also capable of receiving
administrative information. Market Makers are limited to two Full
Service MEI Ports per Matching Engine. See the Definitions Section
of the Fee Schedule.
\9\ Limited Service MEI Ports means a port which provides Market
Makers with the ability to send simple and complex eQuotes and quote
purge messages only, but not Market Maker Quotes, to the MIAX
Emerald System. Limited Service MEI Ports are also capable of
receiving administrative information. Market Makers initially
receive two Limited Service MEI Ports per Matching Engine. See the
Definitions Section of the Fee Schedule.
\10\ A ``matching engine'' is a part of the MIAX Emerald
electronic system that processes options quotes and trades on a
symbol-by-symbol basis. Some matching engines will process option
classes with multiple root symbols, and other matching engines will
be dedicated to one single option root symbol (for example, options
on SPY will be processed by one single matching engine that is
dedicated only to SPY). A particular root symbol may only be
assigned to a single designated matching engine. A particular root
symbol may not be assigned to multiple matching engines. See the
Definitions Section of the Fee Schedule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, the Exchange proposes to adopt MEI Port fees
assessable to Market Makers based upon the number of classes or class
volume accessed by the Market Maker. The Exchange proposes to adopt the
following MEI Port fees: (i) $5,000 for Market Maker Assignments in up
to 5 option classes or up to 10% of option classes by volume; (ii)
$10,000 for Market Maker Assignments in up to 10 option classes or up
to 20% of option classes by volume; (iii) $14,000 for Market Maker
Assignments in up to 40 option classes or up to 35% of option classes
by volume; (iv) $17,500 for Market Maker Assignments in up to 100
option classes or up to 50% of option classes by volume; and (v)
$20,500 for Market Maker Assignments in over 100 option classes or over
50% of option classes by volume up to all option classes listed on MIAX
Emerald.
The Exchange also proposes to adopt new footnote ``[ssquf]'' for
its MEI Port fees that will apply to the Market Makers who fall within
the following MEI Port fee levels, which represent the 4th and 5th
levels of the fee table: Market Makers who have (i) Assignments in up
to 100 option classes or up to 50% of option classes by volume and (ii)
Assignments in over 100 option classes or over 50% of option classes by
volume up to all option classes listed on MIAX Emerald. Specifically,
the Exchange proposes for these monthly MEI Port tier levels, if the
Market Maker's total monthly executed volume during the relevant month
is less than 0.025% of the total monthly executed volume reported by
OCC in the customer account type for MIAX Emerald-listed option classes
for that month, then the fee will be $14,500 instead of the fee
otherwise applicable to such level.
The purpose of this proposed lower monthly MEI Port fee is to
provide a lower fixed cost to those Market Makers who are willing to
quote the entire Exchange market (or substantial amount of the Exchange
market), as objectively measured by either number of classes assigned
or national ADV, but who do not otherwise execute a significant amount
of volume on the Exchange. The Exchange believes that, by offering
lower fixed costs to Market Makers that execute less volume, the
Exchange will retain and attract smaller-scale Market Makers, which are
an integral component of the option industry marketplace, but have been
decreasing in number in recent years, due to industry consolidation and
lower market maker profitability. Since these smaller-scale Market
Makers utilize less Exchange capacity due to lower overall volume
executed, the Exchange believes it is reasonable and appropriate to
offer such Market Makers a lower fixed cost. The Exchange notes that
other options exchanges assess certain of their fees at different
rates, based upon a member's participation on that exchange,\11\ and,
as such, this concept is not novel. The proposed changes to the MEI
Port fees for Market Makers who fall within the 4th and 5th levels of
the fee table are based upon a business determination of current Market
Maker assignments and trading volume.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See, e.g., Cboe BZX Options Exchange (``BZX Options'')
assesses the Participant Fee, which is a membership fee, according
to a member's ADV. See Cboe BZX Options Exchange Fee Schedule under
``Membership Fees''. The Participant Fee is $500 if the member ADV
is less than 5000 contracts and $1,000 if the member ADV is equal to
or greater than 5,000 contracts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the calculation of the monthly MEI Port Fees that apply to
Market Makers, the number of classes is defined as the greatest number
of classes the Market Maker was assigned to quote in on any given day
within the calendar month and the class volume percentage is based on
the total national average daily volume in classes listed on MIAX
Emerald in the prior calendar quarter.\12\ Newly listed option classes
are excluded from the calculation of the monthly MEI Port Fee until the
calendar quarter following their listing, at which time the newly
listed option classes will be included in both the per class count and
the percentage of total national average daily volume. The Exchange
proposes to assess Market Makers the monthly MEI Port Fees based on the
greatest number of classes listed on MIAX Emerald that the Market Maker
was assigned to quote in on any given day within a calendar month and
the applicable fee rate that is the lesser of either the per class
basis or percentage of total national average daily volume measurement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ The Exchange will use the following formula to calculate
the percentage of total national average daily volume that the
Market Maker assignment is for purposes of the MEI Port Fee for a
given month:
Market Maker assignment percentage of national average daily
volume = [total volume during the prior calendar quarter in a class
in which the Market Maker was assigned]/[total national volume in
classes listed on MIAX in the prior calendar quarter].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 66638]]
The Exchange currently charges $50 per month for each additional
Limited Service MEI Port per matching engine for Market Makers over and
above the two (2) Limited Service MEI Ports per matching engine that
are allocated with the Full Service MEI Ports. The Full Service MEI
Ports, Limited Service MEI Ports and the additional Limited Service MEI
Ports all include access to the Exchange's Primary and Secondary data
centers and its Disaster Recovery center. Currently, footnote ``*'' in
the MEI Port Fee table provides that the fees for Additional Limited
Service MEI Ports are not subject to the Waiver Period. Accordingly, in
connection with this proposal, the Exchange proposes to delete footnote
``*'' since the Exchange proposes to begin assessing MEI Port fees,
which will no longer be subject to the Waiver Period. The Exchange also
proposes to increase the monthly fee from $50 to $100 for each
additional Limited Service MEI Port per matching engine for Market
Makers over and above the two (2) Limited Service MEI Ports per
matching engine that are allocated with the Full Service MEI Ports.
Below is the proposed table showing the MEI Port fees:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market Maker Assignments (the lesser of
the applicable measurements below)
Monthly MIAX Emerald MEI -------------------------------------------
fees % of national
Per class average daily volume
------------------------------------------------------------------------
$5,000.00................... Up to 5 Classes..... Up to 10% of Classes
by volume.
$10,000.00.................. Up to 10 Classes.... Up to 20% of Classes
by volume.
$14,000.00.................. Up to 40 Classes.... Up to 35% of Classes
by volume.
$17,500.00 [ssquf].......... Up to 100 Classes... Up to 50% of Classes
by volume.
$20,500.00 [ssquf].......... Over 100 Classes.... Over 50% of Classes
by volume up to all
Classes listed on
MIAX Emerald.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[ssquf] For these Monthly MIAX Emerald MEI Port tier levels, if the
Market Maker's total monthly executed volume during the relevant month
is less than 0.025% of the total monthly executed volume reported by
OCC in the customer account type for MIAX Emerald-listed option
classes for that month, then the fee will be $14,500 instead of the
fee otherwise applicable to such level.
Purge Port Fees
The Exchange also offers Market Makers the ability to request and
be allocated two (2) Purge Ports per Matching Engine to which it
connects. Purge Ports provide Market Makers with the ability to send
quote purge messages to the MIAX Emerald System. Purge Ports are not
capable of sending or receiving any other type of messages or
information. Since the launch of the Exchange, fees for Purge Ports
have been waived for the Waiver Period. The Exchange now proposes to
amend its Fee Schedule to adopt fees for Purge Ports. For each month in
which the MIAX Emerald Market Maker has been credentialed to use Purge
Ports in the production environment and has been assigned to quote in
at least one class, the Exchange proposes to assess the MIAX Emerald
Market Maker a flat fee $1,500, regardless of the number of Purge Ports
allocated to the MIAX Emerald Market Maker.
CTD Port Fees
The Exchange proposes to assess a CTD Port fee as a monthly fixed
amount, not tied to transacted volume of the Member. This fixed fee
structure is the same structure in place at Nasdaq PHLX with respect to
the proposed CTD Port Fees.\13\ Since the launch of the Exchange, CTD
Port Fees have been waived for the Waiver Period. CTD provides Exchange
members with real-time clearing trade updates. The updates include the
Member's clearing trade messages on a low latency, real-time basis. The
trade messages are routed to a Member's connection containing certain
information. The information includes, among other things, the
following: (i) Trade date and time; (ii) symbol information; (iii)
trade price/size information; (iv) Member type (for example, and
without limitation, Market Maker, Electronic Exchange Member, Broker-
Dealer); (v) Exchange Member Participant Identifier (``MPID'') for each
side of the transaction, including Clearing Member MPID; and (vi)
strategy specific information for complex transactions. CTD Port fees
will be assessed in any month the Member is credentialed to use the CTD
Port in the production environment. The Exchange proposes to assess a
CTD Port fee of $450 per month. Below is the proposed table for the CTD
Port fees:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See Nasdaq PHLX Pricing Schedule, Options 7, Section 9,
Other Member Fees, B. Port Fees.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description Monthly fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Real-Time CTD Information..................... $450.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FXD Port Fee
The Exchange proposes to assess an FXD Port Fee as a monthly fixed
amount, not tied to transacted volume of the Member. This fixed fee
structure is the same structure in place at Nasdaq PHLX with respect to
FXD Port Fees.\14\ Since the launch of the Exchange, FXD Port Fees have
been waived for the Waiver Period. FXD is a messaging interface that
will provide a copy of real-time trade execution, trade correction and
trade cancellation information to FXD Port users who subscribe to the
service. FXD Port users are those users who are designated by an EEM to
receive the information and the information is restricted for use by
the EEM. FXD Port fees will be assessed in any month the Member is
credentialed to use the FXD Port in the production environment. The
Exchange proposes to assess an FXD Port fee of $500 per month. Below is
the proposed table for the FXD Port fees:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Id.
[[Page 66639]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MIAX Emerald monthly
port fees (includes
connectivity to the
Description Primary, Secondary and
Disaster Recovery data
centers)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIX Drop Copy Port............................ $500.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
10Gb ULL Connectivity Fee
The Exchange proposes to amend Sections 5a) and b) of the Fee
Schedule to increase the monthly network connectivity fees for the 10Gb
ULL fiber connection, which is charged to both Members and non-Members
of the Exchange for connectivity to the Exchange's primary/secondary
facility. The Exchange offers to both Members and non-Members two
bandwidth alternatives for connectivity to the Exchange, to its primary
and secondary facilities, consisting of a 1Gb fiber connection and a
10Gb ULL fiber connection. The 10Gb ULL offering uses an ultra-low
latency switch, which provides faster processing of messages sent to it
in comparison to the switch used for the other types of connectivity.
The Exchange now proposes to increase its monthly network connectivity
fee for its 10Gb ULL connection to $10,000 for Members and non-Members.
* * * * *
MIAX Emerald believes that exchanges, in setting fees of all types,
should meet very high standards of transparency to demonstrate why each
new fee or fee increase meets the requirements of the Act that fees be
reasonable, equitably allocated, not unfairly discriminatory, and not
create an undue burden on competition among members and markets. MIAX
Emerald believes this high standard is especially important when an
exchange imposes various access fees for market participants to access
an exchange's marketplace. MIAX Emerald deems Port fees and
Connectivity Fees to be access fees. The Exchange believes that it is
important to demonstrate that these fees are based on its costs and
reasonable business needs. Accordingly, the Exchange believes the
Proposed Access Fees will allow the Exchange to offset expense the
Exchange has and will incur, and that the Exchange is providing
sufficient transparency (as described below) into how the Exchange
determined to charge such fees. Accordingly, the Exchange is providing
an analysis of its revenues, costs, and profitability (before the
proposed changes), and the Exchange's revenues, costs, and
profitability (following the proposed changes) for the Proposed Access
Fees. This analysis includes information regarding its methodology for
determining the costs and revenues associated with the Proposed Access
Fees.
In order to determine the Exchange's costs associated with
providing the Proposed Access Fees, the Exchange conducted an extensive
cost review in which the Exchange analyzed every expense item in the
Exchange's general expense ledger to determine whether each such
expense relates to the Proposed Access Fees, and, if such expense did
so relate, what portion (or percentage) of such expense actually
supports the services included in the Proposed Access Fees. The sum of
all such portions of expenses represents the total cost of the Exchange
to provide the Proposed Access Fees. For the avoidance of doubt, no
expense amount was allocated twice. The Exchange is also providing
detailed information regarding the Exchange's cost allocation
methodology--namely, information that explains the Exchange's rationale
for determining that it was reasonable to allocate certain expenses
described in this filing towards the total cost to the Exchange to
provide the Proposed Access Fees.
In order to determine the Exchange's projected revenues associated
with providing the Proposed Access Fees, the Exchange analyzed the
number of Members and non-Members currently utilizing the Exchange's
services associated with the Proposed Access Fees during 2020, and,
utilizing a recently completed monthly billing cycle, extrapolated
annualized revenue on a going-forward basis.
The Exchange is presenting its revenue and expense associated with
the Proposed Access Fees in this filing in a manner that is consistent
with how the Exchange presents its revenue and expense in its Audited
Unconsolidated Financial Statements. The Exchange's most recent Audited
Unconsolidated Financial Statement is for 2019. However, since the
revenue and expense associated with the Proposed Access Fees were not
in place in 2019 or for the first three quarters of 2020, the Exchange
believes its 2019 Audited Unconsolidated Financial Statement is not
useful for analyzing the reasonableness of the total annual revenue and
costs associated with the Proposed Access Fees. Accordingly, the
Exchange believes it is more appropriate to analyze the Proposed Access
Fees utilizing its 2020 actual (9 months to date) and projected (3
months remaining) revenue and costs, as described herein, which utilize
the same presentation methodology as set forth in the Exchange's
previously-issued Audited Unconsolidated Financial Statements. Based on
this analysis, the Exchange believes that the Proposed Access Fees are
fair and reasonable because they will not result in excessive pricing
or supra-competitive profit when comparing the Exchange's total annual
expense associated with providing the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees versus the total projected annual revenue the
Exchange will collect for providing those services.
On March 29, 2019, the Commission issued its Order Disapproving
Proposed Rule Changes to Amend the Fee Schedule on the BOX Market LLC
Options Facility to Establish BOX Connectivity Fees for Participants
and Non-Participants Who Connect to the BOX Network (the ``BOX
Order'').\15\ On May 21, 2019, the Commission issued the Staff Guidance
on SRO Rule Filings Relating to Fees.\16\ On December 20, 2019, the
Exchange adopted Connectivity Fees in a filing utilizing a cost-based
justification framework that is substantially similar to the cost-based
justification framework utilized for the instant Proposed Access
Fees.\17\ Accordingly, the Exchange believes that the Proposed Access
Fees are consistent with the Act because they (i) are reasonable,
equitably allocated, not unfairly discriminatory, and not an undue
burden on competition; (ii) comply with the BOX Order and the Guidance;
(iii) are supported by evidence (including comprehensive
[[Page 66640]]
revenue and cost data and analysis) that they are fair and reasonable
because they not result in excessive pricing or supra-competitive
profit; and (iv) utilize a cost-based justification framework that is
substantially similar to a framework previously used by the Exchange to
establish Connectivity Fees. Accordingly, the Exchange believes that
the Commission should find that the Proposed Fees are consistent with
the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 85459 (March 29,
2019), 84 FR 13363 (April 4, 2019) (SR-BOX-2018-24, SR-BOX-2018-37,
and SR-BOX-2019-04).
\16\ See Staff Guidance on SRO Rule Filings Relating to Fees
(May 21, 2019), at https://www.sec.gov/tm/staff-guidance-sro-rule-filings-fees (the ``Guidance'').
\17\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87877 (December 31,
2019), 84 FR 738 (January 7, 2020) (SR-EMERALD-2019-39).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change is immediately effective upon filing with
the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Act.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal to amend its Fee Schedule
is consistent with Section 6(b) of the Act \18\ in general, and
furthers the objectives of Section 6(b)(4) of the Act \19\ in
particular, in that it provides for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees and other charges among Exchange Members and
issuers and other persons using any facility or system which the
Exchange operates or controls. The Exchange also believes the proposal
furthers the objectives of Section 6(b)(5) of the Act \20\ in that it
is designed to promote just and equitable principles of trade, 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 and is not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customer, issuers, brokers and dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\19\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
\20\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission has repeatedly expressed its preference for
competition over regulatory intervention in determining prices,
products, and services in the securities markets. 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.'' \21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9,
2005), 70 FR 37496 (June 29, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Numerous indicia demonstrate the competitive nature of this market.
For example, clear substitutes to the Exchange exist in the market for
options transaction services. The Exchange is one of several options
venues to which market participants may direct their order flow, and it
represents a small percentage of the overall market. 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. There are currently 16
registered options exchanges competing for order flow. Based on
publicly-available information, and excluding index-based options, no
single exchange has more than approximately 16% of the market share of
executed volume of multiply-listed equity and exchange-traded fund
(``ETF'') options.\22\ Therefore, no exchange possesses significant
pricing power. More specifically, for the month of August 2020, the
Exchange had a market share of approximately 3.24% of executed
multiply-listed equity options.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC'') publishes
options and futures volume in a variety of formats, including daily
and monthly volume by exchange, available here: https://www.theocc.com/market-data/volume/default.jsp.
\23\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also believes that the ever-shifting market share
among the exchanges from month to month demonstrates that market
participants can discontinue or reduce use of certain categories of
products, or shift order flow, in response to non-transaction and
transaction fee changes. For example, on February 28, 2019, the
Exchange's affiliate, MIAX PEARL, LLC (``MIAX PEARL'') filed with the
Commission a proposal to increase Taker fees in certain Tiers for
options transactions in certain Penny classes for Priority Customers
and decrease Maker rebates in certain Tiers for options transactions in
Penny classes for Priority Customers (which fee was to be effective
March 1, 2019).\24\ MIAX PEARL experienced a decrease in total market
share for the month of March 2019, after the proposal went into effect.
Accordingly, the Exchange believes that the MIAX PEARL March 1, 2019
fee change, to increase certain transaction fees and decrease certain
transaction rebates, may have contributed to the decrease in MIAX
PEARL's market share and, as such, the Exchange believes competitive
forces constrain the Exchange's, and other options exchanges, ability
to set transaction fees and non-transaction fees and market
participants can shift order flow based on fee changes instituted by
the exchanges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 85304 (March 13,
2019), 84 FR 10144 (March 19, 2019) (SR-PEARL-2019-07).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange launched trading on March 1, 2019. The Exchange has
only a 3.24% market share of the U.S. options industry in August 2020
in equity option classes according to the OCC.\25\ The Exchange is not
aware of any evidence that a market share of approximately 3% provides
the Exchange with anti-competitive pricing power. If the Exchange were
to attempt to establish unreasonable pricing, then no market
participant would join or connect, and existing market participants
would disconnect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See supra note 22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Separately, the Exchange is not aware of any reason why market
participants could not simply drop their connections to an exchange (or
not connect to an exchange) if an exchange were to establish prices for
its non-transaction fees that, in the determination of such market
participant, did not make business or economic sense for such market
participant to connect to such exchange. No options market participant
is required by rule, regulation, or competitive forces to be a Member
of the Exchange. As evidence of the fact that market participants can
and do disconnect from exchanges based on non-transaction fee pricing,
R2G Services LLC (``R2G'') filed a comment letter after BOX's proposed
rule changes to increase its connectivity fees (SR-BOX-2018-24, SR-BOX-
2018-37, and SR-BOX-2019-04).\26\ 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.'' \27\ Accordingly, this example
shows that if an exchange sets too high of a fee for connectivity and/
or other non-transaction fees for its relevant marketplace, market
participants can choose to disconnect from such exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See Letter from Stefano Durdic, R2G, to Vanessa Countryman,
Acting Secretary, Commission, dated March 27, 2019 (the ``R2G
Letter'').
\27\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with Section
6(b)(4) of the Act because the Proposed Access Fees will not result in
excessive or supra-competitive profit. The costs associated with
providing access to Exchange Members and non-Members, as well as the
general expansion of a state-of-the-art infrastructure, are extensive,
have increased year-over-year, and are projected to increase year-over-
year in the future. In particular, the Exchange has experienced a
material increase in its costs in 2020, in connection with a project to
make its network environment more transparent and deterministic, based
on customer
[[Page 66641]]
demand. This project will allow the Exchange to enhance its network
architecture with the intent of ensuring a best-in-class, transparent
and deterministic trading system while maintaining its industry leading
latency and throughput capabilities. In order to provide this greater
amount of transparency and higher determinism, MIAX Emerald has made
significant capital expenditures (``CapEx''), incurred increased
ongoing operational expenditures, and undertaken additional engineering
R&D in the following areas: (i) Implementing an improved network design
to ensure the minimum latency between multicast market data signals
disseminated by the Exchange across the extranet switches, improving
the unicast jitter profile to reduce the occurrence of message sequence
inversions from Members to the Exchange quoting gateway processors, and
introducing a new optical fiber network infrastructure that ensures the
optical fiber path for participants within extremely tight tolerances;
(ii) introducing a re-architected and engineered participant quoting
gateway that ensures the delivery of messages to the match engine with
absolute determinism, eliminating the message processing inversions
that can occur with messages received nanoseconds apart; and (iii)
designing an improved monitoring platform to better measure the
performance of the network and systems at extremely tight tolerances
and to provide Members with reporting on the performance of their
systems. Just the CapEx associated with phase 1 of this project in 2020
was approximately $1.85 million. This expense does not include the
significant increase in employee time and other resources necessary to
maintain and service this network, which expense is captured in the
operating expense (``OpEx'') discussed below. This project, which
results in a material increase in expense of the Exchange, is a primary
driver for the increase in network connectivity fees proposed by the
Exchange.
However, in order to provide more detail and to quantify the
Exchange's costs associated with providing access to the Exchange in
general, the Exchange notes that there are material costs associated
with providing the infrastructure and headcount to fully-support access
to the Exchange. The Exchange incurs technology expense related to
establishing and maintaining Information Security services, enhanced
network monitoring and customer reporting, as well as Regulation SCI
mandated processes, associated with its network technology. While some
of the expense is fixed, much of the expense is not fixed, and thus
increases as the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees
increase. For example, new 10Gb ULL connections and Ports require the
purchase of additional hardware to support those connections as well as
enhanced monitoring and reporting of customer performance that MIAX
Emerald and its affiliates provide. Further, as the total number of all
connections and Ports increase, MIAX Emerald and its affiliates need to
increase their data center footprint and consume more power, resulting
in increased costs charged by their third-party data center provider.
Accordingly, the cost to MIAX Emerald and its affiliates is not fixed.
The Exchange believes the Proposed Access Fees are reasonable in order
to offset the costs to the Exchange associated with providing access to
its network infrastructure.
Further, because the costs of operating its own data center are
significant and not economically feasible for the Exchange at this
time, the Exchange does not operate its own data centers, and instead
contracts with a third-party data center provider. The Exchange notes
that other competing exchange operators own/operate their data centers,
which offers them greater control over their data center costs. Because
those exchanges own and operate their data centers as profit centers,
the Exchange is subject to additional costs. The Proposed Access Fees,
which are charged for accessing the Exchange's data center network
infrastructure, are directly related to the network and offset such
costs.
The Exchange invests significant resources in network R&D to
improve the overall performance and stability of its network. For
example, the Exchange has a number of network monitoring tools (some of
which were developed in-house, and some of which are licensed from
third-parties), that continually monitor, detect, and report network
performance, many of which serve as significant value-adds to the
Exchange's Members and enable the Exchange to provide a high level of
customer service. These tools detect and report performance issues, and
thus enable the Exchange to proactively notify a Member (and the SIPs)
when the Exchange detects a problem with a Member's connectivity. In
fact, the Exchange often receives inquiries from other industry
participants regarding the status of networking issues outside of the
Exchange's own network environment that are impacting the industry as a
whole via the SIPs, including inquiries from regulators, because the
Exchange has a superior, state-of the-art network that, through its
enhanced monitoring and reporting solutions, often detects and
identifies industry-wide networking issues ahead of the SIPs. The
Exchange also incurs costs associated with the maintenance and
improvement of existing tools and the development of new tools.
Additionally, certain Exchange-developed network aggregation and
monitoring tools provide the Exchange with the ability to measure
network traffic with a much more granular level of variability. This is
important as Exchange Members demand a higher level of network
determinism and the ability to measure variability in terms of single
digit nanoseconds. Also, routine R&D projects to improve the
performance of the network's hardware infrastructure result in
additional cost. In sum, the costs associated with maintaining and
enhancing a state-of-the-art exchange network in the U.S. options
industry is a significant expense for the Exchange that also increases
year-over-year, and thus the Exchange believes that it is reasonable to
offset those costs through the Proposed Access Fees. The Exchange
invests in and offers a superior network infrastructure as part of its
overall options exchange services offering, resulting in significant
costs associated with maintaining this network infrastructure, which
are directly tied to the amount of the Proposed Access Fees that must
be charged to access it, in order to recover those costs.
The Exchange only has four primary sources of revenue: Transaction
fees, access fees (of which the Proposed Access Fees constitute the
majority), regulatory fees, and market data fees. Accordingly, the
Exchange must cover all of its expenses from these four primary sources
of revenue.
The Proposed Access Fees are fair and reasonable because they will
not result in excessive pricing or supra-competitive profit, when
comparing the total annual expense of MIAX Emerald associated with
providing these services versus the total projected annual revenue that
the Exchange projects to collect. For 2020, the total annual expense
for providing the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees for
MIAX Emerald is projected to be approximately $9.3 million. The $9.3
million in projected total annual expense is comprised of the
following, all of which are directly related to the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees: (1) Third-party expense, relating to
fees paid by MIAX Emerald to third-parties for certain products and
services; and (2) internal expense,
[[Page 66642]]
relating to the internal costs of MIAX Emerald to provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees. The $9.3 million in projected
total annual expense is directly related to the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees, and not any other product or service
offered by the Exchange. It does not include general costs of operating
matching systems and other trading technology, and no expense amount
was allocated twice.
As discussed, the Exchange conducted an extensive cost review in
which the Exchange analyzed every expense item in the Exchange's
general expense ledger (this includes over 150 separate and distinct
expense items) to determine whether each such expense relates to the
services associated with the Proposed Access Fees, and, if such expense
did so relate, what portion (or percentage) of such expense actually
supports those services, and thus bears a relationship that is, ``in
nature and closeness,'' directly related to those services. The sum of
all such portions of expenses represents the total cost of the Exchange
to provide services associated with the Proposed Access Fees.
For 2020, total third-party expense, relating to fees paid by MIAX
Emerald to third-parties for certain products and services for the
Exchange to be able to provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, is projected to be $1,932,519. This includes, but
is not limited to, a portion of the fees paid to: (1) Equinix, for data
center services, for the primary, secondary, and disaster recovery
locations of the MIAX Emerald trading system infrastructure; (2) Zayo
Group Holdings, Inc. (``Zayo'') for network services (fiber and
bandwidth products and services) linking MIAX Emerald's office
locations in Princeton, NJ and Miami, FL to all data center locations;
(3) Secure Financial Transaction Infrastructure (``SFTI''),\28\ which
supports connectivity and feeds for the entire U.S. options industry;
(4) various other services providers (including Thompson Reuters, NYSE,
Nasdaq, and Internap), which provide content, connectivity services,
and infrastructure services for critical components of options
connectivity and network services; and (5) various other hardware and
software providers (including Dell and Cisco, which support the
production environment in which Members and non-Members connect to the
network to trade, receive market data, etc.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ In fact, on October 22, 2019, the Exchange was notified by
SFTI that it is again raising its fees charged to the Exchange by
approximately 11%, without having to show that such fee change
complies with the Act by being reasonable, equitably allocated, and
not unfairly discriminatory. It is unfathomable to the Exchange
that, given the critical nature of the infrastructure services
provided by SFTI, that its fees are not required to be rule-filed
with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act and Rule
19b-4 thereunder. See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1) and 17 CFR 240.19b-4,
respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For clarity, only a portion of all fees paid to such third-parties
is included in the third-party expense herein, and no expense amount is
allocated twice. Accordingly, MIAX Emerald does not allocate its entire
information technology and communication costs to the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate such third-party
expense described above towards the total cost to the Exchange to
provide the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees. In
particular, the Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate the
identified portion of the Equinix expense because Equinix operates the
data centers (primary, secondary, and disaster recovery) that host the
Exchange's network infrastructure. This includes, among other things,
the necessary storage space, which continues to expand and increase in
cost, power to operate the network infrastructure, and cooling
apparatuses to ensure the Exchange's network infrastructure maintains
stability. Without these services from Equinix, the Exchange would not
be able to operate and support the network and provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees to its Members and non-Members
and their customers. The Exchange did not allocate all of the Equinix
expense toward the cost of providing the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, only that portion which the Exchange identified
as being specifically mapped to providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees, approximately 73% of the total Equinix
expense. The Exchange believes this allocation is reasonable because it
represents the Exchange's actual cost to provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees, and not any other service, as
supported by its cost review.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate the identified
portion of the Zayo expense because Zayo provides the internet, fiber
and bandwidth connections with respect to the network, linking MIAX
Emerald with its affiliates, MIAX and MIAX PEARL, as well as the data
center and disaster recovery locations. As such, all of the trade data,
including the billions of messages each day per exchange, flow through
Zayo's infrastructure over the Exchange's network. Without these
services from Zayo, the Exchange would not be able to operate and
support the network and provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees. The Exchange did not allocate all of the Zayo
expense toward the cost of providing the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, only the portion which the Exchange identified as
being specifically mapped to providing the Proposed Access Fees,
approximately 66% of the total Zayo expense. The Exchange believes this
allocation is reasonable because it represents the Exchange's actual
cost to provide the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees,
and not any other service, as supported by its cost review.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate the identified
portions of the SFTI expense and various other service providers'
(including Thompson Reuters, NYSE, Nasdaq, and Internap) expense
because those entities provide connectivity and feeds for the entire
U.S. options industry, as well as the content, connectivity services,
and infrastructure services for critical components of the network.
Without these services from SFTI and various other service providers,
the Exchange would not be able to operate and support the network and
provide access to its Members and non-Members and their customers. The
Exchange did not allocate all of the SFTI and other service providers'
expense toward the cost of providing the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, only the portions which the Exchange identified
as being specifically mapped to providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees, approximately 94% of the total SFTI and other
service providers' expense. The Exchange believes this allocation is
reasonable because it represents the Exchange's actual cost to provide
the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate the identified
portion of the other hardware and software provider expense because
this includes costs for dedicated hardware licenses for switches and
servers, as well as dedicated software licenses for security monitoring
and reporting across the network. Without this hardware and software,
the Exchange would not be able to operate and support the network and
provide access to its Members and non-Members and their customers. The
Exchange did not allocate all of the hardware and software provider
expense toward the cost of providing
[[Page 66643]]
the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees, only the
portions which the Exchange identified as being specifically mapped to
providing the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees,
approximately 57% of the total hardware and software provider expense.
The Exchange believes this allocation is reasonable because it
represents the Exchange's actual cost to provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees.
For 2020, total projected internal expense, relating to the
internal costs of MIAX Emerald to provide the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees, is projected to be $7,367,259. This includes,
but is not limited to, costs associated with: (1) Employee compensation
and benefits for full-time employees that support the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees, including staff in network
operations, trading operations, development, system operations,
business, as well as staff in general corporate departments (such as
legal, regulatory, and finance) that support those employees and
functions (including an increase as a result of the higher determinism
project); (2) depreciation and amortization of hardware and software
used to provide the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees,
including equipment, servers, cabling, purchased software and
internally developed software used in the production environment to
support the network for trading; and (3) occupancy costs for leased
office space for staff that provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees. The breakdown of these costs is more fully-
described below. For clarity, only a portion of all such internal
expenses are included in the internal expense herein, and no expense
amount is allocated twice. Accordingly, MIAX Emerald does not allocate
its entire costs contained in those items to the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate such internal
expense described above towards the total cost to the Exchange to
provide the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees. In
particular, MIAX Emerald's employee compensation and benefits expense
relating to providing the services associated with the Proposed Access
Fees is projected to be $4,489,924, which is only a portion of the
$9,354,009 total projected expense for employee compensation and
benefits. The Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate the
identified portion of such expense because this includes the time spent
by employees of several departments, including Technology, Back Office,
Systems Operations, Networking, Business Strategy Development (who
create the business requirement documents that the Technology staff use
to develop network features and enhancements), Trade Operations,
Finance (who provide billing and accounting services relating to the
network), and Legal (who provide legal services relating to the
network, such as rule filings and various license agreements and other
contracts). As part of the extensive cost review conducted by the
Exchange, the Exchange reviewed the amount of time spent by each
employee on matters relating to the provision of services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees. Without these employees, the Exchange
would not be able to provide the services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees to its Members and non-Members and their customers. The
Exchange did not allocate all of the employee compensation and benefits
expense toward the cost of the services associated with the Proposed
Access Fees, only the portions which the Exchange identified as being
specifically mapped to providing the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, approximately 48% of the total employee
compensation and benefits expense. The Exchange believes this
allocation is reasonable because it represents the Exchange's actual
cost to provide the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees,
and not any other service, as supported by its cost review.
MIAX Emerald's depreciation and amortization expense relating to
providing the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees is
projected to be $2,630,687, which is only a portion of the $3,812,590
total projected expense for depreciation and amortization. The Exchange
believes it is reasonable to allocate the identified portion of such
expense because such expense includes the actual cost of the computer
equipment, such as dedicated servers, computers, laptops, monitors,
information security appliances and storage, and network switching
infrastructure equipment, including switches and taps that were
purchased to operate and support the network and provide the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees. Without this equipment, the
Exchange would not be able to operate the network and provide the
services associated with the Proposed Access Fees to its Members and
non-Members and their customers. The Exchange did not allocate all of
the depreciation and amortization expense toward the cost of providing
the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees, only the portion
which the Exchange identified as being specifically mapped to providing
the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees, approximately
69% of the total depreciation and amortization expense, as these
services would not be possible without relying on such equipment. The
Exchange believes this allocation is reasonable because it represents
the Exchange's actual cost to provide the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees, and not any other service, as supported by its
cost review.
MIAX Emerald's occupancy expense relating to providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees is projected to be $246,648,
which is only a portion of the $474,323 total projected expense for
occupancy. The Exchange believes it is reasonable to allocate the
identified portion of such expense because such expense represents the
portion of the Exchange's cost to rent and maintain a physical location
for the Exchange's staff who operate and support the network, including
providing the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees. This
amount consists primarily of rent for the Exchange's Princeton, NJ
office, as well as various related costs, such as physical security,
property management fees, property taxes, and utilities. The Exchange
operates its Network Operations Center (``NOC'') and Security
Operations Center (``SOC'') from its Princeton, New Jersey office
location. A centralized office space is required to house the staff
that operates and supports the network. The Exchange currently has
approximately 150 employees. Approximately two-thirds of the Exchange's
staff are in the Technology department, and the majority of those staff
have some role in the operation and performance of the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees. Without this office space,
the Exchange would not be able to operate and support the network and
provide the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees to its
Members and non-Members and their customers. Accordingly, the Exchange
believes it is reasonable to allocate the identified portion of its
occupancy expense because such amount represents the Exchange's actual
cost to house the equipment and personnel who operate and support the
Exchange's network infrastructure and the services associated with the
Proposed Access Fees. The Exchange did not allocate all of the
occupancy expense toward the
[[Page 66644]]
cost of providing the services associated with the Proposed Access
Fees, only the portion which the Exchange identified as being
specifically mapped to operating and supporting the network,
approximately 52% of the total occupancy expense. The Exchange believes
this allocation is reasonable because it represents the Exchange's cost
to provide the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees, and
not any other service, as supported by its cost review [sic].
Accordingly, based on the facts and circumstances presented, the
Exchange believes that its provision of the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees will not result in excessive pricing or supra-
competitive profit. To illustrate, for 2020, the Exchange's total
revenue for non-transaction fees--consisting of only 1Gb and 10Gb ULL
connectivity and MEI additional limited service port fees--for the
first 9 months of 2020, was approximately $3.9 million. Total projected
revenue associated with the Proposed Access Fees for the remaining
three months of 2020 is approximately $2.55 million. Therefore, total
projected revenue for the Exchange for 2020 for the provision of such
access fees is approximately $6.5 million. Total projected expense for
the Exchange for 2020 for the provision of access fees is approximately
$9.3 million. Accordingly, the provision of the services associated
with the Proposed Access Fees will not result in excessive pricing or
supra-competitive profit (rather, it will result in a loss of $2.8
million for 2020).
On a going-forward, fully-annualized basis, the Exchange projects
that its annualized revenue for providing the services associated with
the Proposed Access Fees would be approximately $10.2 million per
annum, based on a most recently completed billing cycle. The Exchange
projects that its annualized expense for providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees would be approximately $9.3
million per annum. Accordingly, on a fully-annualized basis, the
Exchange believes its total projected revenue for the providing the
services associated with the Proposed Access Fees will not result in
excessive pricing or supra-competitive profit, as the Exchange will
make only a 9% profit margin on the Proposed Access Fees ($10.2 million
- 9.3 million = $900,000 per annum). This profit margin does not take
into account the cost of the CapEx the Exchange is projected to spend
in 2020 of $1.85 million, or the amounts the Exchange is projected to
spend each year on CapEx going forward.
For the avoidance of doubt, none of the expenses included herein
relating to the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees
relate to the provision of any other services offered by MIAX Emerald.
Stated differently, no expense amount of the Exchange is allocated
twice.
The Exchange believes it is reasonable, equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory to allocate the respective percentages of each expense
category described above towards the total cost to the Exchange of
operating and supporting the network, including providing the services
associated with the Proposed Access Fees because the Exchange performed
a line-by-line item analysis of all the expenses of the Exchange, and
has determined the expenses that directly relate to operation and
support of the network. Further, the Exchange notes that, without the
specific third-party and internal items listed above, the Exchange
would not be able to operate and support the network, including
providing the services associated with the Proposed Access Fees to its
Members and non-Members and their customers. Each of these expense
items, including physical hardware, software, employee compensation and
benefits, occupancy costs, and the depreciation and amortization of
equipment, have been identified through a line-by-line item analysis to
be integral to the operation and support of the network. The Proposed
Access Fees are intended to recover the Exchange's costs of operating
and supporting the network. Accordingly, the Exchange believes that the
Proposed Access Fee Increases are fair and reasonable because they do
not result in excessive pricing or supra-competitive profit, when
comparing the actual network operation and support costs to the
Exchange versus the projected annual revenue from the Proposed Access
Fees, including the increased amount.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on 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.
Intra-Market Competition
The Exchange believes that the Proposed Access Fees do not place
certain market participants at a relative disadvantage to other market
participants because the Proposed Access Fees do not favor certain
categories of market participants in a manner that would impose a
burden on competition; rather, the allocation of the Proposed Access
Fees 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.
Inter-Market Competition
The Exchange believes the Proposed Access Fees do not place an
undue burden on competition on other SROs that is not necessary or
appropriate. In particular, options market participants are not forced
to connect to (and purchase market data from) all options exchanges.
The Exchange had one of its member firms cancel its membership with the
Exchange as a direct result of the Proposed Access Fees. The Exchange
also notes that it has far less Members as compared to the much greater
number of members at other options exchanges. Not only does MIAX
Emerald have less than half the number of members as certain other
options exchanges, but there are also a number of the Exchange's
Members that do not connect directly to MIAX Emerald. There are a
number of large market makers and broker-dealers that are members of
other options exchange but not Members of MIAX Emerald. The Exchange is
also unaware of any assertion that its existing fee levels or the
Proposed Access Fees would somehow unduly impair its competition with
other options exchanges. To the contrary, if the fees charged are
deemed too high by market participants, they can simply disconnect, as
described above.
The Exchange operates in a highly competitive market in which
market participants can readily favor one of the 16 competing options
venues if they deem fee levels at a particular venue to be
excessive.\29\ Based on publicly-available information, and excluding
index-based options, no single exchange has more than 16% market share.
Therefore, no exchange possesses significant pricing power in the
execution of multiply-listed equity and ETF options order flow. For the
month of August 2020, the Exchange had a market share of approximately
3.24% of executed multiply-listed equity options \30\ and the Exchange
believes that the ever-shifting market share among exchanges from month
to month
[[Page 66645]]
demonstrates that market participants can discontinue or reduce use of
certain categories of products, or shift order flow, in response to fee
changes. In such an environment, the Exchange must continually adjust
its fees and fee waivers to remain competitive with other exchanges and
to attract order flow to the Exchange.
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\29\ See supra note 22.
\30\ Id.
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C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
Written comments were neither solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act,\31\ and Rule 19b-4(f)(2) \32\ 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 shall institute proceedings to determine whether
the proposed rule should be approved or disapproved.
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\31\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
\32\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(2).
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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-EMERALD-2020-12 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-EMERALD-2020-12. 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-EMERALD-2020-12 and should be submitted
on or before November 10, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\33\
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\33\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-23149 Filed 10-19-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P