Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change Amending the Fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades by Modifying the Application of the Access Fee and Amending the Fees for NYSE Trades by Adopting a Waiver Applicable to the Redistribution Fee, 73570-73581 [2020-25389]
Download as PDF
73570
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 223 / Wednesday, November 18, 2020 / Notices
participants can readily favor one of the
16 competing option exchanges if they
deem fee levels at a venue to be
excessive. In such an environment, the
Exchange must continually adjust its
fees to remain competitive with other
exchanges and to attract order flow to
the Exchange. Based on publiclyavailable information, and excluding
index-based options, no single exchange
currently has more than 16% of the
market share of executed volume of
multiply-listed equity and ETF options
trades.19 Therefore, no exchange
currently possesses significant pricing
power in the execution of multiplylisted equity & ETF options order flow.
More specifically, in August 2020, the
Exchange had less than 10% market
share of executed volume of multiplylisted equity & ETF options trades.20
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change reflects this
competitive environment because it
modifies the Exchange’s fees and rebates
in a manner designed to encourage ATP
Holders to direct trading interest to the
Exchange, to provide liquidity and to
attract order flow. To the extent that this
purpose is achieved, all the Exchange’s
market participants should benefit from
the improved market quality and
increased opportunities for price
improvement.
The Exchange believes that the
proposed changes could promote
competition between the Exchange and
other execution venues, including those
that currently offer similar pricing
incentives, by encouraging additional
orders to be sent to the Exchange for
execution.21
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
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The foregoing rule change is effective
upon filing pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A) 22 of the Act and
subparagraph (f)(2) of Rule 19b–4 23
thereunder, because it establishes a due,
19 See
supra note 15.
on OCC data, supra note 16, the
Exchange’s market share in equity-based options
increased from 7.73% for the month of August 2019
to 8.18% for the month of August 2020.
21 See, e.g., supra note 11 (regarding Cboe’s BreakUp Credits).
22 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
23 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(2).
20 Based
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fee, or other charge imposed by the
Exchange.
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of such 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
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) 24 of the Act to
determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NYSEAMER–2020–80 on the subject
line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSEAMER–2020–80. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSEAMER–2020–80, and
should be submitted on or before
December 9, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.25
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–25392 Filed 11–17–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–90407; File No. SR–NYSE–
2020–91]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New
York Stock Exchange LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change Amending the
Fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
by Modifying the Application of the
Access Fee and Amending the Fees for
NYSE Trades by Adopting a Waiver
Applicable to the Redistribution Fee
November 12, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on November
2, 2020, New York Stock Exchange LLC
(‘‘NYSE’’ or the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the ‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared by the Exchange.
The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested
persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to (1) amend
the fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades by modifying the application of
the Access Fee; and (2) amend the fees
for NYSE Trades by adopting a waiver
applicable to the Redistribution Fee.
25 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
24 15
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 223 / Wednesday, November 18, 2020 / Notices
The Exchange proposes to implement
the proposed fee changes on January 1,
2021. The proposed rule change is
available on the Exchange’s website at
www.nyse.com, at the principal office of
the Exchange, and at the Commission’s
Public Reference Room.
feed recipient and reports such recipient
to the Exchange. All of the proposed
changes would decrease fees for market
data on the Exchange.
The Exchange proposes to implement
these proposed fee changes on January
1, 2021.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of,
and basis for, the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
Background
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to decrease
the fees for certain NYSE market data
products, as set forth on the NYSE
Proprietary Market Data Fee Schedule
(‘‘Fee Schedule’’). These fee decreases,
taken together with similar fee decreases
filed by the Exchange’s affiliated
exchanges, NYSE American LLC
(‘‘NYSE American’’) and NYSE Arca,
Inc. (‘‘NYSE Arca’’),3 will reduce the
fees associated with the NYSE BQT
proprietary data product, which
competes directly with similar products
offered by both the Nasdaq and Cboe
families of U.S. equity exchanges.
Collectively, the proposed fee decreases
are intended to respond to the
competition posed by similar products
offered by the other exchange groups.
Specifically, the Exchange proposes to
(1) reduce the Access Fees by more than
93% for Redistributors 4 of NYSE BBO
and NYSE Trades that subscribe to only
such data feeds and do not subscribe to
any other market data product listed on
the Fee Schedule other than NYSE BQT,
and use such market data products for
external distribution only; and (2) waive
the Redistribution Fee for Redistributors
that are eligible for the Per User Access
Fee if the Redistributor provides NYSE
Trades externally to at least one data
3 See SR–NYSEAmer–2020–79 and SR–
NYSEArca–2020–95.
4 A Redistributor is a vendor or any other person
that provides a NYSE data product to a data
recipient or to any system that a data recipient uses,
irrespective of the means of transmission or access.
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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.’’ 5
While Regulation NMS has enhanced
competition, it has also fostered a
‘‘fragmented’’ market structure where
trading in a single stock can occur
across multiple trading centers. When
multiple trading centers compete for
order flow in the same stock, the
Commission has recognized that ‘‘such
competition can lead to the
fragmentation of order flow in that
stock.’’ 6 Indeed, equity trading is
currently dispersed across 16
exchanges,7 numerous alternative
trading systems,8 and broker-dealer
internalizers and wholesalers, all
competing for order flow. Based on
publicly-available information, no
single exchange currently has more than
18% market share (whether including or
excluding auction volume).9
With the NYSE BQT market data
product, NYSE and its affiliates compete
head to head with the Nasdaq Basic 10
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808
(June 9, 2005), 70 FR 37495, 37499 (June 29, 2005)
(S7–10–04) (Final Rule) (‘‘Regulation NMS
Adopting Release’’).
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358,
75 FR 3594, 3597 (January 21, 2010) (File No. S7–
02–10) (Concept Release on Equity Market
Structure).
7 See Cboe Global Markets, U.S. Equities Market
Volume Summary, available at https://
markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/. See
generally https://www.sec.gov/fast-answers/
divisionsmarketregmrexchangesshtml.html.
8 See FINRA ATS Transparency Data, available at
https://otctransparency.finra.org/otctransparency/
AtsIssueData. A list of alternative trading systems
registered with the Commission is available at
https://www.sec.gov/foia/docs/atslist.htm.
9 See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Equities Market
Volume Summary, available at https://
markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/.
10 As described on the Nasdaq website, available
here: https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/
Trader.aspx?id=nasdaqbasic, Nasdaq Basic is a
‘‘low cost alternative’’ that provides ‘‘Best Bid and
Offer and Last Sale information for all U.S.
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73571
and Cboe One Feed 11 market data
products. Similar to those market data
products, NYSE BQT, which was
established in 2014,12 consists of certain
elements from the NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades market data products as well as
from market data products from the
Exchange’s affiliates, NYSE American,
NYSE Arca, NYSE Chicago, Inc. (‘‘NYSE
Chicago’’),13 and NYSE National, Inc.
(‘‘NYSE National’’).14 Similar to both
Nasdaq Basic and the Cboe One Feed,
NYSE BQT provides investors with a
unified view of comprehensive last sale
and BBO data in all Tape A, B, and C
securities that trade on the Exchange,
NYSE American, NYSE Arca, NYSE
Chicago, and NYSE National. Also
similar to Nasdaq Basic and the Cboe
One Feed, NYSE BQT is not intended to
be used for purposes of making orderrouting or trading decisions, but rather
provides indicative prices for Tape A, B,
and C securities.15
The Exchange currently charges an
access fee of $250 per month for NYSE
BQT, and, as provided for in footnote 5
to the Fee Schedule, to subscribe to
NYSE BQT, subscribers must also
subscribe to, and pay applicable fees for,
NYSE BBO, NYSE Trades, NYSE
American BBO, NYSE American Trades,
NYSE Arca BBO, NYSE Arca Trades,
NYSE Chicago BBO, NYSE Chicago
Trades, NYSE National BBO, and NYSE
National Trades. Thus, an NYSE BQT
subscriber currently pays the $250
access fee for NYSE BQT,16 plus a
$1,500 access fee for each of NYSE BBO
and NYSE Trades, plus a $750 access
fee for each of NYSE American BBO and
exchange-listed securities based on liquidity within
the Nasdaq market center, as well as trades reported
to the FINRA Trade Reporting Facility (‘‘TRF’’).’’
11 As described on the Cboe website, available
here: https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_
data_services/cboe_one/, the Cboe One Feed is a
‘‘market data product that provides cost-effective,
high-quality reference quotes and trade data for
market participants looking for comprehensive,
real-time market data’’ and provides a ‘‘unified
view of the market from all four Cboe equity
exchanges: BZX Exchange, BYX Exchange, EDGX
Exchange, and EDGA Exchange.’’
12 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
72750 (August 4, 2014), 79 FR 46494 (August 8,
2014) (notice—NYSE BQT); and 73553 (November
6, 2014), 79 FR 67491 (November 13, 2014)
(approval order—NYSE BQT) (SR–NYSE–2014–40)
(‘‘NYSE BQT Filing’’).
13 In 2019, NYSE BQT was amended to include
NYSE Chicago BBO and NYSE Chicago Trades. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87511
(November 12, 2019), 84 FR 63689 (November 18,
2019) (SR–NYSE–2019–60).
14 In 2018, NYSE BQT was amended to include
NYSE National BBO and NYSE National Trades.
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83359
(June 1, 2018), 83 FR 26507 (June 7, 2018) (SR–
NYSE–2018–22).
15 See NYSE BQT Filing, supra note 13.
16 The Exchange is not proposing any change to
the $250 access fee for NYSE BQT.
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NYSE American Trades,17 plus a $750
access fee for each of NYSE Arca BBO
and NYSE Arca trades,18 for a total of
$6,250 ($250 + $3,000 + $1,500 +
$1,500).19 In addition, an NYSE BQT
subscriber would need to pay for the
applicable Professional or NonProfessional User Fees for the
underlying market data products, as
applicable.20
Because NYSE BQT is priced based
on the fees associated with the
underlying ten market data feeds, the
Exchange and its affiliates propose to
compete with the Nasdaq Basic and
Cboe One Feed by reducing fees for the
underlying market data products that
comprise NYSE BQT. Together with
NYSE American and NYSE Arca, the
Exchange similarly proposes to compete
for subscribers to NYSE BQT by
designing its fee decreases to be
attractive to Redistributors that intend
to subscribe to and externally
redistribute only NYSE BQT. The
Exchange understands that data
recipients that are interested in
subscribing to NYSE BQT obtain their
data from Redistributors that do not
currently subscribe to either the NYSE
BQT data feed or any other market data
product listed on the Fee Schedule.
Because such Redistributors do not
subscribe to NYSE BQT, the prospective
data recipients that are the customers of
such Redistributors are unable to
subscribe to NYSE BQT. The proposed
fee changes are designed to provide a
financial incentive for such
17 See NYSE American Equities Proprietary
Market Data Fees (‘‘NYSE American Price List’’),
available here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/
nyse/data/NYSE_Arca_Equities_Fee_Schedule.pdf.
18 See NYSE Arca Equities Proprietary Market
Data Fees (‘‘NYSE Arca Price List’’), available here:
https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/
NYSE_Arca_Equities_Fee_Schedule.pdf.
19 There are currently no fees charged for the
NYSE Chicago BBO, NYSE Chicago Trades, NYSE
National BBO, or NYSE National Trades market
data products.
20 The Exchange is not proposing any changes to
the User Fees. Currently, the Professional User Fees
for each of NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades is $4 per
month, and the Non-Professional User Fees for each
of NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades is $0.20 per month.
See Fees Schedule, available here: https://
www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/NYSE_
Market_Data_Fee_Schedule.pdf. The Professional
User Fees for each of NYSE American BBO and
NYSE American Trades is $4 per month, and the
Non-Professional User Fees for each of NYSE
American BBO and NYSE American Trades is $0.25
per month. See NYSE American Price List, available
here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/
NYSE_American_Equities_Market_Data_Fee_
Schedule.pdf. The Professional User Fees for each
of NYSE Arca BBO and NYSE Arca Trades is $4 per
month, and the Non-Professional User Fees for each
of NYSE Arca BBO and NYSE Arca Trades is $0.25
per month. See NYSE Arca Price List, available
here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/
NYSE_Arca_Equities_Proprietary_Data_Fee_
Schedule.pdf.
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Redistributors to subscribe to NYSE
BQT so that their customers, which
have expressed an interest in
subscribing to NYSE BQT, would be
able to access the product via such
Redistributors.
Access Fee—NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades
NYSE BBO is a NYSE-only market
data product that allows a vendor to
redistribute on a real-time basis the
same best-bid-and-offer information that
NYSE reports under the Consolidated
Quotation Plan (‘‘CQ Plan’’) for
inclusion in the CQ Plan’s consolidated
quotation information data stream
(‘‘NYSE BBO Information’’).21 NYSE
BBO Information includes the best bids
and offers for all securities that are
traded on the Exchange and for which
NYSE reports quotes under the CQ Plan.
NYSE BBO is available over a single
data feed, regardless of the markets on
which the securities are listed. NYSE
BBO is made available to its subscribers
no earlier than the information it
contains is made available to the
processor under the CQ Plan.
NYSE Trades is a NYSE-only market
data product that allows a vendor to
redistribute on a real-time basis the
same last sale information that NYSE
reports to the Consolidated Tape
Association (‘‘CTA’’) for inclusion in the
CTA’s consolidated data stream and
certain other related data elements
(‘‘NYSE Last Sale Information’’).22
NYSE Last Sale Information includes
last sale information for all securities
that are traded on the Exchange. NYSE
Trades is made available to subscribers
at the same time as the information it
contains is made available to the
processor under the CTA Plan.
Currently, subscribers of each of the
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades products
that receive a data feed pay an Access
Fee of $1,500 per month. In February
2020, the Exchange added the Per User
Access Fee, which is a reduced Access
Fee of $100 per month currently
available only for subscribers of NYSE
BBO and NYSE Trades that receive
those products in a display-only format,
including for internal use for
Professional Users and external
21 See
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
61914 (April 14, 2010), 75 FR 21077 (April 22,
2010) (SR–NYSE–2010–30) (notice—NYSE BBO);
and 62181 (May 26, 2010), 75 FR 31488 (June 3,
2010) (SR–NYSE–2010–30) (approval order—NYSE
BBO).
22 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
59309 (January 28, 2009), 74 FR 6073 (February 4,
2009) (SR–NYSE–2009–04) (notice—NYSE Trades);
and 59309 (March 19, 2009), 74 FR 13293 (March
26, 2009) (SR–NYSE–2009–04) (approval order—
NYSE Trades).
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distribution to both Professional and
Non-Professional Users.23
The Exchange now proposes that
Redistributors of NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades data feeds that do not subscribe
to any other market data product listed
on the Fee Schedule, and use such
market data products for external
distribution only, would also be eligible
for the reduced Per User Access Fee. A
Redistributor that receives a data feed of
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades and uses
the market data products for any other
purpose (such as internal use) or that
subscribes to any other products listed
on the Fee Schedule (other than NYSE
BQT) would continue to pay the $1,500
per month General Access Fee. As
currently set forth in footnote 8 to the
Fee Schedule, a subscriber would be
charged only one access fee for each of
the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
products, depending on the use of that
product.
To effect this change, the Exchange
proposes to modify footnote 8 to the Fee
Schedule as follows (proposed text is
italicized, proposed deletions
bracketed):
The Per User Access Fee is charged to: (i)
[A] a subscriber that receives a data feed and
uses the market data product only for
Professional Users and Non-Professional
Users in a display-only format, including for
internal use and external redistribution in a
display-only format, [will be charged the Per
User Access Fee] and (ii) a Redistributor that
subscribes only to the NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades data feeds, and does not subscribe to
any other Products listed on this Fee
Schedule other than NYSE BQT, and uses
these market data products for external
distribution only. A subscriber that receives
a data feed and uses the market data product
for any other purpose, including if combined
with Per User use, will be charged the
General Access Fee. A subscriber will be
charged only one access fee for each of the
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades products,
depending on the use of that product.
The proposed rule change would
result in lower fees for Redistributors of
each of the NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades products that receive NYSE BBO
and NYSE Trades data feeds and do not
subscribe to any other market data
product listed on the Fee Schedule, and
use such market data products for
external distribution only.24 The
23 A Per User Access Fee currently applies for
subscribers of NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades that
receive a data feed and use those market data
products in a display-only format. See Fee
Schedule. See also Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 87803 (December 19, 2019), 84 FR 71505
(December 27, 2019) (SR–NYSE–2019–70) (Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change, as Modified by Partial Amendment
No. 1, To Amend the Fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades) (‘‘BQT Fee Reduction Filing’’).
24 The Per User Access Fee is 93% lower than the
General Access Fee. Together with the
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Exchange believes that the proposed fee
reduction in NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades would provide an incentive for
such Redistributors to subscribe to the
NYSE BQT data feeds so that such
product would be available to their
customers, which have expressed an
interest in subscribing to NYSE BQT.
The proposed rule change is intended
to encourage greater use of NYSE BQT
by making it more affordable for
Redistributors that have customers
interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT
but that do not currently subscribe to
NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades or any other
products listed on the Fee Schedule.
The proposed fee reduction would
allow the Exchange to compete more
effectively with Nasdaq Basic and Cboe
One Feed by expanding the number of
Redistributors that would subscribe to
NYSE BQT, and therefore make the
product available to data subscribers
interested in NYSE BQT.
Redistribution Fee—NYSE Trades
The Exchange currently charges a
Redistribution Fee of $1,000 per month
for NYSE Trades. A Redistributor is
required to report to the Exchange each
month the number of Professional and
Non-Professional Users and data feed
recipients that receive NYSE Trades.
The Exchange proposes to waive the
Redistribution Fee for a Redistributor
that is eligible for the Per User Access
Fee if the Redistributor provides NYSE
Trades externally to at least one data
feed recipient and reports such data
feed recipient or recipients to the
Exchange. For example, a Redistributor
that subscribes to the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades data feeds and does not
subscribe to any other product listed on
the Fee Schedule would have the
Redistribution Fee waived for the month
if such Redistributor provides NYSE
BBO and NYSE Trades externally to at
least one data feed recipient and reports
such data feed recipient to the
Exchange.
By targeting this proposed fee waiver
to Redistributors that provide external
distribution of NYSE Trades, the
Exchange believes that this would
provide an incentive for Redistributors
to make the NYSE BQT market data
product available to its customers.
Specifically, if a data recipient is
interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT
and relies on a Redistributor to obtain
corresponding proposed rule changes by NYSE
American and NYSE Arca to similarly reduce the
access fees to their BBO and Trades products for
Redistributors, such Redistributors would be
eligible for significantly lower access fees for NYSE
BQT, from $6,250 per month to $850 per month
($250 + $200 + $200 + $200), a reduction of more
than 86%.
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market data products from the
Exchange, that data recipient would
need its Redistributor to redistribute
NYSE BQT. Currently, Redistributors
that redistribute some NYSE market
data products do not necessarily also
make NYSE BQT available. The
Exchange believes that this proposed fee
waiver for Redistributors of NYSE
Trades would provide an incentive for
Redistributors to make NYSE BQT
available to their customers, which will
increase the availability of NYSE BQT to
a larger potential population of data
recipients.25
Applicability of Proposed Rule Change
As noted above, the proposed rule
change is designed to further reduce the
overall cost of NYSE BQT by reducing
specified fees applicable to the
underlying market data products that
comprise NYSE BQT. Prior to the BQT
Fee Reduction Filing, the Exchange had
only one subscriber to NYSE BQT.
Today, the Exchange has seven
subscribers, three of whom became
customers as a direct result of the BQT
Fee Reduction Filing and currently pay
the reduced Per User Access Fee. The
Exchange believes that the proposed
rule changes would provide a further
incentive for Redistributors to subscribe
to NYSE BQT for purposes of providing
external distribution of NYSE BQT to
potential data recipients interested in
the product.
Because the proposed rule change is
targeted to potential Redistributors of
NYSE BQT that do not currently
subscribe to any NYSE market data
products, the proposed changes to the
availability of the NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades Per User Access Fees, together
with the proposed changes on NYSE
American and NYSE Arca, are narrowly
tailored with that purpose in mind.
Accordingly, these proposed fee
changes are not designed for
Redistributors that are existing
customers of NYSE market data
products or that engage in internal use
of NYSE BQT. This proposed rule
change would not result in any changes
to the market data fees for NYSE BBO
and NYSE Trades for such data
subscribers.
The Exchange believes that there are
at least three potential Redistributors
that would meet the qualifications to be
eligible for these proposed fee changes.
The Exchange further believes that this
proposed rule change has the potential
to attract these three Redistributors as
new Redistributors for NYSE BQT, as
well as new NYSE BQT subscribers that
25 NYSE does not charge a Redistribution Fee for
NYSE BBO.
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73573
would be subscribing to NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades for the first time.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the provisions of Section 6 of the Act,26
in general, and Sections 6(b)(4) and
6(b)(5) of the Act,27 in particular, in that
it provides an equitable allocation of
reasonable fees among users and
recipients of the data and is not
designed to permit unfair
discrimination among customers,
issuers, and brokers.
The Proposed Rule Change Is
Reasonable
In adopting Regulation NMS, the
Commission granted SROs and brokerdealers increased authority and
flexibility to offer new and unique
market data to the public. The
Commission has repeatedly expressed
its preference for competition over
regulatory intervention in determining
prices, products, and services in the
securities markets. Specifically, in
Regulation NMS, the Commission
highlighted the importance of market
forces in determining prices and SRO
revenues, and also recognized that
current regulation of the market system
‘‘has been remarkably successful in
promoting market competition in its
broader forms that are most important to
investors and listed companies.’’ 28
With respect to market data, the
decision of the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit in NetCoalition v. SEC upheld
the Commission’s reliance on the
existence of competitive market
mechanisms to evaluate the
reasonableness and fairness of fees for
proprietary market data:
In fact, the legislative history indicates that
the Congress intended that the market system
‘‘evolve through the interplay of competitive
forces as unnecessary regulatory restrictions
are removed’’ and that the SEC wield its
regulatory power ‘‘in those situations where
competition may not be sufficient,’’ such as
in the creation of a ‘‘consolidated
transactional reporting system.’’ 29
The court agreed with the
Commission’s conclusion that
‘‘Congress intended that ‘competitive
forces should dictate the services and
practices that constitute the U.S.
26 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(4), (5).
28 See Regulation NMS Adopting Release, 70 FR
37495, at 37499.
27 15
29 NetCoalition v. SEC, 615 F.3d 525, 535 (D.C.
Cir. 2010) (‘‘NetCoalition I’’) (quoting H.R. Rep. No.
94–229 at 92 (1975), as reprinted in 1975
U.S.C.C.A.N. 323).
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national market system for trading
equity securities.’ ’’ 30
More recently, the Commission
confirmed that it applies a ‘‘marketbased’’ test in its assessment of market
data fees, and that under that test:
the Commission considers whether the
exchange was subject to significant
competitive forces in setting the terms of its
proposal for [market data], including the
level of any fees. If an exchange meets this
burden, the Commission will find that its fee
rule is consistent with the Act unless there
is a substantial countervailing basis to find
that the terms of the rule violate the Act or
the rules thereunder.31
1. The Proposed Fees Are Constrained
by Significant Competitive Forces
a. Exchange Market Data Is Sold in a
Competitive Market
In 2018, Charles M. Jones, the Robert
W. Lear of Professor of Finance and
Economics of the Columbia University
School of Business, conducted an
analysis of the market for equity market
data in the United States. He canvassed
the demand for both consolidated and
exchange proprietary market data
products and the uses to which those
products were put by market
participants, and reported his
conclusions in a paper annexed
hereto.32 Among other things, Professor
Jones concluded that:
• ‘‘The market [for exchange market
data] is characterized by robust
competition: Exchanges compete with
each other in selling proprietary market
data products. They also compete with
consolidated data feeds and with data
provided by alternative trading systems
(‘ATSs’). Barriers to entry are very low,
so existing exchanges must also take
into account competition from new
entrants, who generally try to build
market share by offering their
proprietary market data products for
free for some period of time.’’ 33
• ‘‘Although there are regulatory
requirements for some market
participants to use consolidated data
products, there is no requirement for
market participants to purchase any
proprietary market data product for
regulatory purposes.’’ 34
at 535.
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34–
90217 (October 16, 2020), 85 FR 67392 (October 22,
2020) (SR–NYSENAT–2020–05) (‘‘National IF
Approval Order’’) (internal quotation marks
omitted), quoting Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 59039 (December 2, 2008), 73 FR 74770, 74781
(December 9, 2008) (‘‘2008 ArcaBook Approval
Order’’).
32 See Exhibit 3A, Charles M. Jones,
Understanding the Market for U.S. Equity Market
Data, August 31, 2018 (hereinafter ‘‘Jones Paper’’).
33 Jones Paper at 2.
34 Id.
• ‘‘There are a variety of data
products, and consumers of equity
market data choose among them based
on their needs. Like most producers,
exchanges offer a variety of market data
products at different price levels.
Advanced proprietary market data
products provide greater value to those
who subscribe. As in any other market,
each potential subscriber takes the
features and prices of available products
into account in choosing what market
data products to buy based on its
business model.’’ 35
• ‘‘Exchange equity market data fees
are a small cost for the industry overall:
The data demonstrates that total
exchange market data revenues are
orders of magnitude smaller than (i)
broker-dealer commissions, (ii)
investment bank earnings from equity
trading, and (iii) revenues earned by
third-party vendors.’’ 36
• ‘‘For proprietary exchange data
feeds, the main question is whether
there is a competitive market for
proprietary market data. More than 40
active exchanges and alternative trading
systems compete vigorously in both the
market for order flow and in the market
for market data. The two are closely
linked: An exchange needs to consider
the negative impact on its order flow if
it raises the price of its market data.
Furthermore, new entrants have been
frequent over the past 10 years or so,
and these venues often give market data
away for free, serving as a check on
pricing by more established exchanges.
These are all the standard hallmarks of
a competitive market.’’ 37
Professor Jones’ conclusions are
consistent with the demonstration of the
competitive constraints on the pricing of
market data demonstrated by analysis of
exchanges as platforms for market data
and trading services, as shown below.38
b. Exchanges That Offer Market Data
and Trading Services Function as TwoSided Platforms
An exchange may demonstrate that its
fees are constrained by competitive
forces by showing that platform
competition applies.
As the United States Supreme Court
recognized in Ohio v. American
30 Id.
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35 Id.
36 Id.
37 Id.
at 39–40.
recently, Professors Jonathan Brogaard
and James Brugler also looked at the market for
proprietary market data products and confirmed
that it is competitive. The authors document that
introducing fees for market data leads to lower
market share, and identify informed traders as the
most affected trader categories after fees are
introduced. See Jonathan Brogaard and James
Brugler, Competition and Exchange Data Fees,
October 2, 2020 (Exhibit 3B).
38 More
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Express, platforms are firms that act as
intermediaries between two or more sets
of agents, and typically the choices
made on one side of the platform affect
the results on the other side of the
platform via externalities, or ‘‘indirect
network effects.’’ 39 Externalities are
linkages between the different ‘‘sides’’
of a platform such that one cannot
understand pricing and competition for
goods or services on one side of the
platform in isolation; one must also
account for the influence of the other
side. As the Supreme Court explained:
To ensure sufficient participation, twosided platforms must be sensitive to the
prices that they charge each side. . . .
Raising the price on side A risks losing
participation on that side, which decreases
the value of the platform to side B. If the
participants on side B leave due to this loss
in value, then the platform has even less
value to side A—risking a feedback loop of
declining demand. . . . Two-sided platforms
therefore must take these indirect network
effects into account before making a change
in price on either side.40
The Exchange and its affiliated
exchanges have long maintained that
they function as platforms between
consumers of market data and
consumers of trading services. Proving
the existence of linkages between the
two sides of this platform requires an indepth economic analysis of both public
data and confidential Exchange data
about particular customers’ trading
activities and market data purchases.
Exchanges, however, are prohibited
from sharing details about these specific
customer activities and purchases. For
example, pursuant to Exchange Rule
7.41, transactions executed on the
Exchange are processed anonymously.
The Exchange and its affiliated
exchanges retained a third party expert,
Marc Rysman, Professor of Economics
Boston University, to analyze how
platform economics applies to stock
exchanges’ sale of market data products
and trading services, and to explain how
this affects the assessment of
competitive forces affecting the
exchanges’ data fees.41 Professor
Rysman was able to analyze exchange
data that is not otherwise publicly
available in a manner that is consistent
with the exchanges’ confidentiality
obligations to customers. As shown in
his paper, Professor Rysman surveyed
the existing economic literature
analyzing stock exchanges as platforms
between market data and trading
39 Ohio v. American Express, 138 S. Ct. 2274,
2280–81 (2018).
40 Id.
at 2281.
Exhibit 3C, Marc Rysman, Stock Exchanges
as Platforms for Data and Trading, December 2,
2019 (hereinafter ‘‘Rysman Paper’’), ¶ 7.
41 See
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activities, and explained the types of
linkages between market data access
and trading activities that must be
present for an exchange to function as
a platform. In addition, Professor
Rysman undertook an empirical
analysis of customers’ trading activities
within the NYSE group of exchanges in
reaction to NYSE’s introduction in 2015
of the NYSE Integrated Feed, a full
order-by-order depth of book data
product.42
Professor Rysman’s analysis of this
confidential firm-level data shows that
firms that purchased the NYSE
Integrated Feed market data product
after its introduction were more likely to
route orders to NYSE as opposed to one
of the other NYSE-affiliated exchanges,
such as NYSE Arca or NYSE
American.43 Moreover, Professor
Rysman shows that the same is true for
firms that did not subscribe to the NYSE
Integrated Feed: The introduction of the
NYSE Integrated Feed led to more
trading on NYSE (as opposed to other
NYSE-affiliated exchanges) by firms that
did not subscribe to the NYSE
Integrated Feed.44 This is the sort of
externality that is a key characteristic of
a platform market.45
From this empirical evidence,
Professor Rysman concludes:
• ‘‘[D]ata is more valuable when it
reflects more trading activity and more
liquidity-providing orders. These
linkages alone are enough to make
platform economics necessary for
understanding the pricing of market
data.’’ 46
• ‘‘[L]inkages running in the opposite
direction, from data to trading, are also
very likely to exist. This is because
market data from an exchange reduces
uncertainty about the likelihood, price,
or timing of execution for an order on
that exchange. This reduction in
uncertainty makes trading on that
exchange more attractive for traders that
subscribe to that exchange’s market
data. Increased trading by data
subscribers, in turn, makes trading on
the exchange in question more attractive
for traders that do not subscribe to the
exchange’s market data.’’ 47
42 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
74128 (January 23, 2015), 80 FR 4951 (January 29,
2015) (SR–NYSE–2015–03) (Notice of filing and
immediate effectiveness of proposed rule change to
establish NYSE Integrated Feed) and 76485
(November 20, 2015), 80 FR 74158 (November 27,
2015) (SR–NYSE–2015–57) (Notice of filing and
immediate effectiveness of proposed rule change to
establish fees for the NYSE Integrated Feed).
43 Rysman Paper ¶¶ 79–89.
44 Id. ¶¶ 90–91.
45 Id. ¶ 90.
46 Id. ¶ 95.
47 Id. ¶ 96.
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• The ‘‘mechanisms by which market
data makes trading on an exchange more
attractive for subscribers to market data
. . . apply to a wide assortment of
market data products, including BBO,
order book, and full order-by-order
depth of book data products at all
exchanges.’’ 48
• ‘‘[E]mpirical evidence confirms that
stock exchanges are platforms for data
and trading.’’ 49
• ‘‘The platform nature of stock
exchanges means that data fees cannot
be analyzed in isolation, without
accounting for the competitive
dynamics in trading services.’’ 50
• ‘‘Competition is properly
understood as being between platforms
(i.e., stock exchanges) that balance the
needs of consumers of data and
traders.’’ 51
• ‘‘Data fees, data use, trading fees,
and order flow are all interrelated.’’ 52
• ‘‘Competition for order flow can
discipline the pricing of market data,
and vice-versa.’’ 53
• ‘‘As with platforms generally,
overall competition between exchanges
will limit their overall profitability, not
margins on any particular side of the
platform.’’ 54
c. Exchange Market Data Fees Are
Constrained by the Availability of
Substitute Platforms
Professor Rysman’s conclusions that
exchanges function as platforms for
market data and transaction services
mean that exchanges do not set fees for
market data products without
considering, and being constrained by,
the effect the fees will have on the
order-flow side of the platform. And as
the D.C. Circuit recognized in
NetCoalition I, ‘‘[n]o one disputes that
competition for order flow is fierce.’’ 55
The court further noted that ‘‘no
exchange possesses a monopoly,
regulatory or otherwise, in the execution
of order flow from broker dealers,’’ and
that an exchange ‘‘must compete
vigorously for order flow to maintain its
share of trading volume.’’ 56
As noted above, while Regulation
NMS has enhanced competition, it has
also fostered a ‘‘fragmented’’ market
structure where trading in a single stock
can occur across multiple trading
centers. When multiple trading centers
48 Id.
49 Id.
50 Id.
¶ 97.
¶ 98.
51 Id.
52 Id.
53 Id.
54 Id.
¶ 100.
55 NetCoalition
I, 615 F.3d at 544 (internal
quotation omitted).
56 Id.
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73575
compete for order flow in the same
stock, the Commission has recognized
that ‘‘such competition can lead to the
fragmentation of order flow in that
stock.’’ 57 The Commission’s Division of
Trading and Markets has also
recognized that with so many
‘‘operating equities exchanges and
dozens of ATSs, there is vigorous price
competition among the U.S. equity
markets and, as a result, [transaction]
fees are tailored and frequently
modified to attract particular types of
order flow, some of which is highly
fluid and price sensitive.’’ 58 Indeed,
today, equity trading is currently
dispersed across 16 exchanges,59
numerous alternative trading systems,60
broker-dealer internalizers and
wholesalers, all competing for order
flow. Based on publicly-available
information, no single exchange
currently has more than 18% market
share.61
Further, low barriers to entry mean
that new exchanges may, and do,
rapidly and inexpensively enter the
market and offer additional substitute
platforms to compete with the
Exchange.62 For example, in 2020 alone,
three new exchanges have entered the
market: Long Term Stock Exchange
(LTSE), which began operations as an
exchange on August 28, 2020; 63
Members Exchange (MEMX), which
began operations as an exchange on
September 29, 2020; 64 and Miami
57 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358,
75 3594, 3597 (January 21, 2010) (File No. S7–02–
10) (Concept Release on Equity Market Structure).
58 Commission Division of Trading and Markets,
Memorandum to EMSAC, dated October 20, 2015,
available here: https://www.sec.gov/spotlight/
emsac/memo-maker-taker-fees-on-equitiesexchanges.pdf.
59 See Cboe Global Markets, U.S. Equities Market
Volume Summary, available at https://
markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/. See
generally https://www.sec.gov/fast-answers/
divisionsmarketregmrexchangesshtml.html.
60 See FINRA ATS Transparency Data, available
at https://otctransparency.finra.org/
otctransparency/AtsIssueData. A list of alternative
trading systems registered with the Commission is
available at https://www.sec.gov/foia/docs/
atslist.htm.
61 See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Equities Market
Volume Summary, available at https://
markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/.
62 See Jones Paper at 10–11.
63 See LTSE Market Announcement: MA–2020–
020, dated August 14, 2020, announcing LTSE
production securities phase-in planned for August
28, available here: https://assets.ctfassets.net/
cchj2z2dcfyd/rnGvgggJUplaIk6N1xNA7/
41926d3925a177d6455868090c46aeda/MA-2020020__Production_Securities_Launching_August_
28_-_Google_Docs.pdf and LTSE Market
Announcement: MA–2020–025, available here:
https://assets.ctfassets.net/cchj2z2dcfyd/
52nIKwAuOraU1agaNY5j80/0d27ab0eb9b540
c67a5e9f831f23f0ac/MA-2020-025.pdf.
64 As of October 29, 2020, MEMX is trading all
NMS symbols but has not yet enabled NMS routing.
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International Holdings (MIAX), which
began operations of its first equities
exchange on September 29, 2020.65
These low barriers enable existing
exchange customers to disintermediate
and start their own exchanges if they
think the prices charged for exchange
proprietary market data products are too
high. This is precisely the rationale
behind the creation of MEMX, which
was formed by some of the largest and
most well capitalized financial firms
that are also Exchange customers
(including Bank of America, BlackRock,
Charles Schwab, Citadel, Citi, E*Trade,
Fidelity, Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan,
Jane Street, Morgan Stanley, TD
Ameritrade, and others).66
For example, one of MEMX’s
founding principles is that exchange
proprietary market data prices are too
high, and that MEMX will benefit its
members by offering ‘‘[l]ower pricing on
market data.’’ 67 Nor is this a new
phenomenon: Exchange customers
formed BATS to compete with
incumbent exchanges and once
registered as an exchange in 2008, BATS
did not initially charge for market data.
The BATS venture was a financial
success for its founders, first through
recouping their investment in its initial
public offering and then in the
subsequent sale of BATS to Cboe, which
now charges for market data from those
exchanges. Notably, MEMX has some of
the same founding broker-dealer
customers, leading some to dub MEMX
‘‘BATS 2.0.’’ 68
The fact that this cycle is viable and
repeatable by entities that both trade on
and compete with existing exchanges
confirms that barriers to entry are low
and that these markets are competitive
and contestable.69 And low barriers to
See https://info.memxtrading.com/trader-alert-2010-memx-trading-symbols-update/.
65 See MIAX Pearl Press release, dated September
29, 2020, available here: https://
www.miaxoptions.com/sites/default/files/alert-files/
MIAX_Press_Release_09292020.pdf.
66 MEMX Home Page (‘‘Founded by members and
investors, MEMX aims to drive simplicity,
efficiency, and competition in equity markets.’’),
available at https://memx.com/.
67 MEMX home page, available at https://
memx.com/.
68 See ‘‘MEMX turns up the heat on US stock
exchanges,’’ Financial Times, January 9, 2019,
available at https://www.ft.com/content/4908c8b01418-11e9-a581-4ff78404524e; see also ‘‘US
equities exchanges: If you can’t beat them, join
them,’’ Euromoney, February 13, 2019, available at
https://www.euromoney.com/article/
b1d3tfby4p3y4v/us-equities-exchanges-if-you-cantbeat-them-join-them.
69 United States v. SunGard Data Sys., 172 F.
Supp. 2d 172, 186 (D.D.C. 2001) (recognizing that
‘‘[a]s a matter of law, courts have generally
recognized that when a customer can replace the
services of an external product with an internallycreated system, this captive output (i.e. the self-
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entry act as a market check on high
prices.70
Given Professor Rysman’s conclusion
that exchanges are platforms for market
data and trading, this fierce competition
for order flow on the trading side of the
platform acts to constrain, or
‘‘discipline,’’ the pricing of market data
on the other side of the platform.71 And
due to the ready availability of
substitutes and the low cost to move
order flow to those substitute trading
venues, an exchange setting market data
fees that are not at competitive levels
would expect to quickly lose business to
alternative platforms with more
attractive pricing.72 Although the
various exchanges may differ in their
strategies for pricing their market data
products and their transaction fees for
trades—with some offering market data
for free along with higher trading costs,
and others charging more for market
data and comparatively less for
trading—the fact that exchanges are
platforms ensures that no exchange
makes pricing decisions for one side of
its platform without considering, and
being constrained by, the effects that
price will have on the other side of the
platform.73
In sum, the fierce competition for
order flow thus constrains any exchange
from pricing its market data at a
supracompetitive price, and constrains
the Exchange in setting its fees at issue
here.
The proposed fees are therefore
reasonable because in setting them, the
production of all or part of the relevant product)
should be included in the same market.’’). In
SunGard, the court rejected the Antitrust Division’s
attempt to block SunGuard’s acquisition of the
disaster recovery assets of Comdisco on the basis
that the acquisition would ‘‘substantially lessen
competition in the market for shared hotsite
disaster recovery services,’’ when the evidence
showed that ‘‘internal hotsites’’ created by
customers competed with the ‘‘external shared
hotsite business’’ engaged in by the merging parties.
Id. at 173–74, 187.
70 United States v. Baker Hughes, 908 F.2d 981,
987 (1990) (‘‘In the absence of significant barriers
[to entry], a company probably cannot maintain
supracompetitive pricing for any length of time.’’);
see also David S. Evans and Richard Schmalensee,
Markets with Two-Sided Platforms, in 1 Issues In
Competition Law and Policy 667, 685 (ABA Section
of Antitrust Law 2008) (noting that exchange
mergers in 2005 and 2006 were approved by
competition authorities in part in reliance on
planned and likely entry of other firms).
71 Rysman Paper ¶ 98.
72 See Jones Paper at 11.
73 In the context of the fee proposal that led to
the National IF Approval Order, supra note 32, one
commenter contended that trading was not a
platform with exchange proprietary market data,
and that the exchanges’ proprietary market data
products were instead ‘‘complements’’ for which
exchanges could charge supracompetitive prices.
Professor Rysman debunked these contentions in an
additional paper. See Marc Rysman, Complements,
Competition, and Exchange Proprietary Data
Products, August 13, 2020 (Exhibit 3D).
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Exchange is constrained by the
availability of numerous substitute
platforms offering market data products
and trading. Such substitutes need not
be identical, but only substantially
similar to the product at hand.
More specifically, in reducing
specified fees for the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades market data products, the
Exchange is constrained by the fact that,
if its pricing across the platform is
unattractive to customers, customers
have their pick of an increasing number
of alternative platforms to use instead of
the Exchange. The Exchange believes
that it has considered all relevant factors
and has not considered irrelevant
factors in order to establish reasonable
fees. The existence of numerous
alternative platforms to the Exchange’s
platform ensures that the Exchange
cannot set unreasonable market data
fees without suffering the negative
effects of that decision in the fiercely
competitive market for trading order
flow.
d. The Availability of Substitute Market
Data Products Constrains Fees for NYSE
BBO, NYSE Trades, and NYSE BQT
Even putting aside the facts that
exchanges are platforms and that pricing
decisions on the two sides of the
platform are intertwined, the Exchange
is constrained in setting the proposed
market data fees by the availability of
numerous substitute market data
products. The Commission has been
clear that substitute products need not
be identical, but only substantially
similar to the product at hand.74
The Exchange’s NYSE BQT market
data product is subject to significant
competitive forces that constrain its
pricing. Specifically, as described
above, NYSE BQT competes head-tohead with the Nasdaq Basic product and
the Cboe One Feed. These products each
serve as reasonable substitutes for one
another as they are each designed to
provide investors with a unified view of
real-time quotes and last-sale prices in
all Tape A, B, and C securities. Each
product provides subscribers with
consolidated top-of-book quotes and
trades from multiple U.S. equities
74 For example, in the National IF Approval
Order, the Commission recognized that for some
customers, the best bid and offer information from
consolidated data feeds may function as a substitute
for the NYSE National Integrated Feed product,
which contains order by order information. See
National IF Approval Order, supra note 32, at 67397
[release p. 21] (‘‘[I]nformation provided by NYSE
National demonstrates that a number of executing
broker-dealers do not subscribe to the NYSE
National Integrated Feed and executing brokerdealers can otherwise obtain NYSE National best
bid and offer information from the consolidated
data feeds.’’ (internal quotations omitted)).
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markets. In the case of NYSE BQT, this
product provides top-of-book quotes
and trades data from five NYSEaffiliated U.S. equities exchanges, which
together account for approximately 22%
of consolidated U.S. equities trading
volume as of September 2020.75 Cboe
One Feed similarly provides top-of-book
quotes and trades data from Cboe’s four
U.S. equities exchanges. NYSE BQT,
Nasdaq Basic, and Cboe One Feed are
all intended to provide indicative
pricing and are not intended to be used
for order routing or trading decisions.
In addition to competing with
proprietary data products from Nasdaq
and Cboe, NYSE BQT also competes
with the consolidated data feed.
However, the Exchange does not claim
that NYSE BQT is a substitute for
consolidated data with respect to
requirements under the Vendor Display
Rule, which is Regulation NMS Rule
603(c).
The fact that this filing is proposing
reductions in certain fees and fee
waivers is itself confirmation of the
inherently competitive nature of the
market for the sale of proprietary market
data. For example, in August 2019, Cboe
filed proposed rule changes to reduce
certain of its Cboe One Feed fees and
noted that it attracted two additional
customers because of the reduced fees.76
75 See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Equities Market
Volume Summary, available at https://
markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/
market/2019-10-31/.
76 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
86667 (August 14, 2019) (SR–CboeBZX–2019–069);
86670 (August 14, 2019) (SR–CboeBYX–2019–012);
86676 (August 14, 2019) (SR–CboeEDGA–2019–
013); and 86678 (August 14, 2019) (SR–CboeEDGX–
2019–048) (Notices of filing and Immediate
effectiveness of proposed rule change to reduce fees
for the Cboe One Feed) (collectively ‘‘Cboe One Fee
Filings’’). The Cboe One Fee Filings were in effect
from August 1, 2019 until September 30, 2019,
when the Commission suspended them and
instituted proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove those proposals. See, e.g.,
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87164
(September 30, 2019), 84 FR 53208 (October 4,
2019) (SR–CboeBZX–2019–069). On October 1,
2019, the Cboe equities exchanges refiled the Cboe
One Fee Filings on the basis that they had new
customers subscribe as a result of the Cboe One Fee
Filings, and therefore its fee proposal had increased
competition for top-of-book market data. See
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 87312
(October 15, 2019), 84 FR 56235 (October 21, 2019)
(SR–CboeBZX–2019–086); 87305 (October 14,
2019), 84 FR 56210 (October 21, 2019) (SR–
CboeBYX–2019–015); 87295 (October 11, 2019), 84
FR 55624 (October 17, 2019) (SR–CboeEDGX–2019–
059); and 87294 (October 11, 2019), 84 FR 55638
(October 17, 2019) (SR–CboeEDGA–2019–015)
(Notices of filing and immediate effectiveness of
proposed rule changes to re-file the Small Retail
Broker Distribution Program) (‘‘Cboe One Fee ReFilings’’). On November 26, 2019, the Commission
suspended the Cboe One Fee Re-Filings and
instituted proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove those proposals. See, e.g.,
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87629
(November 26, 2019), 84 FR 66245 (December 3,
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More recently, Nasdaq filed a proposed
rule change to lower the enterprise
license fee for broker-dealers
distributing Nasdaq Basic to internal
Professional subscribers and the
enterprise license fee for broker-dealers
distributing Nasdaq Last Sale to
Professional subscribers.77
The Exchange notes that NYSE BBO,
NYSE Trades, and NYSE BQT are
entirely optional. The Exchange is not
required to make the proprietary data
products that are the subject of this
proposed rule change available or to
offer any specific pricing alternatives to
any customers, nor is any firm or
investor required to purchase the
Exchange’s data products. Unlike some
other data products (e.g., the
consolidated quotation and last-sale
information feeds) that firms are
required to purchase in order to fulfil
regulatory obligations,78 a customer’s
2019) (SR–CboeBZX–2019–086). On November 27,
2019, the Cboe equities exchanges refiled the Cboe
One Fee Filings with one revision to the
requirements for participating in the Small Retail
Broker Distribution Program and additional
information about the basis for the proposed fee
changes. See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
87712 (December 10, 2019), 84 FR 68508 (December
16, 2019) (SR–CboeBZX–2019–101); 88713
(December 10, 2019), 84 FR 68530 (December 16,
2019) (SR–CboeBYX–2019–023); 87709 (December
10, 2019), 84 FR 68523 (December 16, 2019) (SR–
CboeEDGA–2019–021); and 87711 (December 10,
2019), 84 FR 68501 (December 16, 2019) (SR–Cboe–
EDGX–2019–071) (Notices of filing and immediate
effectiveness of proposed rule changes to introduce
a Small Retail Broker Distribution Program) (‘‘Cboe
One Third Fee Re-Filings’’). On February 4, 2020,
the Cboe equities exchanges withdrew the Cboe
One Third Fee Re-Filings and, on the same date,
refiled the Cboe One Fee Filings. See Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 88221 (February 14,
2020), 85 FR 9904 (February 20, 2020) (SR–
CboeBYX–2020–007); 88218 (February 14, 2020), 85
FR 9827 (February 20, 2020) (SR–CboeBZX–2020–
014); 88220 (February 14, 2020), 85 FR 9912
(February 20, 2020) (SR–CboeEDGA–2020–004);
and 88219 (February 14, 2020), 85 FR 9872
(February 20, 2020) (SR–CboeEDGX–2020–008)
(Notices of filing and immediate effectiveness of
proposed rule changes to introduce a Small Retail
Broker Distribution Program) (‘‘Cboe One Fourth
Fee Re-Filings’’). On April 15, 2020, the Cboe
equities exchanges withdrew the Cboe One Fee
Filings and the Cboe One Fee Re-Filings. Pursuant
to the Cboe One Fourth Fee Re-Filings, the Small
Retail Broker Distribution Program is currently in
effect at the Cboe equities exchanges.
77 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90177
(October 14, 2020), 85 FR 66620 (October 20, 2020)
(SR–NASDAQ–2020–065) (Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change
To Lower the Enterprise License Fee for BrokerDealers Distributing Nasdaq Basic to Internal
Professional Subscribers as Set Forth in the Equity
7 Pricing Schedule, Section 147, and the Enterprise
License Fee for Broker-Dealers Distributing Nasdaq
Last Sale to Professional Subscribers at Equity 7,
Section 139).
78 The Exchange notes that broker-dealers are not
required to purchase proprietary market data to
comply with their best execution obligations. See In
the Matter of the Application of Securities Industry
and Financial Markets Association for Review of
Actions Taken by Self-Regulatory Organizations,
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73577
decision whether to purchase any of the
Exchange’s proprietary market data
feeds is entirely discretionary. Most
firms that choose to subscribe to the
NYSE’s proprietary market data feeds do
so for the primary goals of using them
to increase their revenues, reduce their
expenses, and in some instances
compete directly with the Exchange’s
trading services. Such firms are able to
determine for themselves whether or not
the products in question or any other
similar products are attractively priced.
If the NYSE market data feeds do not
provide sufficient value to firms based
on the uses those firms may have for it,
such firms may simply choose to
conduct their business operations in
ways that do not use the products.79
In addition, in the case of products
that are also redistributed through
market data vendors, such as Bloomberg
and Refinitiv, the vendors themselves
provide additional price discipline for
proprietary data products because they
control the primary means of access to
certain end users. These vendors impose
price discipline based upon their
business models. For example, vendors
that assess a surcharge on data they sell
are able to refuse to offer proprietary
products that their end users do not or
will not purchase in sufficient numbers.
This competitive constraint is precisely
what is driving the proposed fee
changes here, which are designed to
attract new market data vendors, and
through them new subscribers, to the
NYSE BQT product. Currently, only
four vendors subscribe to NYSE BQT,
and each vendor has limited
redistribution of NYSE BQT. No other
vendors currently subscribe to NYSE
BQT and likely will not unless their
customers request it, and customers will
not elect to pay the proposed fees unless
such product can provide value by
sufficiently increasing revenues or
reducing costs in the customer’s
business in a manner that will offset the
fees. All of these factors operate as
constraints on pricing proprietary data
products.
Because of the availability of
substitutes, an exchange that overprices
its market data products stands a high
risk that users may substitute another
source of market data information for its
own. Those competitive pressures
imposed by available alternatives are
evident in the Exchange’s proposed
pricing.
Release Nos. 34–72182; AP–3–15350; AP–3–15351
(May 16, 2014). Similarly, there is no requirement
in Regulation NMS or any other rule that
proprietary data be utilized for order routing
decisions, and some broker-dealers and ATSs have
chosen not to do so.
79 See generally Jones Paper at 8, 10–11.
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In setting the proposed fees, the
Exchange considered the
competitiveness of the market for
proprietary data and all of the
implications of that competition. The
Exchange believes that it has considered
all relevant factors and has not
considered irrelevant factors in order to
establish reasonable fees. The existence
of numerous alternatives to the
Exchange’s platform and, more
specifically, alternatives to the market
data products, including proprietary
data from other sources, ensures that the
Exchange cannot set unreasonable fees
when vendors and subscribers can elect
these alternatives or choose not to
purchase a specific proprietary data
product if the attendant fees are not
justified by the returns that any
particular vendor or data recipient
would achieve through the purchase.
2. The Proposed Fees Are Reasonable
The specific fees that the Exchange
proposes for NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades are reasonable, for the following
additional reasons.
Overall. This proposed fee change is
a result of the competitive environment,
as the Exchange seeks to decrease
certain of its fees to attract
Redistributors that do not currently
subscribe to the NYSE BQT market data
product. The Exchange is proposing the
fee reductions at issue to make the
Exchange’s fees more competitive for a
specific segment of market participants,
thereby increasing the availability of the
Exchange’s data products, and
expanding the options available to firms
making data purchasing decisions based
on their business needs. The Exchange
believes that this is consistent with the
principles contained in Regulation NMS
to ‘‘promote the wide availability of
market data and to allocate revenues to
SROs that produce the most useful data
for investors.’’ 80
Access Fee. By making the reduced
Per User Access Fee available to
Redistributors that subscribe only to the
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data feeds
and NYSE BQT and do not have any
internal use of such products, and do
not subscribe to any other products
listed on the Fee Schedule, the
Exchange believes that more
Redistributors may choose to subscribe
to these products, thereby expanding
the distribution of this market data for
the benefit of investors that participate
in the national market system and
increasing competition generally. The
Exchange also believes that offering the
Per User Access Fee to these
80 See Regulation NMS Adopting Release, 70 FR
37495, at 37503.
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Redistributors would expand the
availability of NYSE BQT to potential
data recipients that are interested in
subscribing to NYSE BQT but do not
have access to a Redistributor who
subscribes to the data feeds.
The Exchange determined to make the
reduced Per User Access Fee available
to these Redistributors because it
constitutes a substantial reduction of the
current fee, with the intended purpose
of increasing use of NYSE BQT by
Redistributors that do not currently
subscribe to any NYSE market data
products. NYSE BQT has been in place
since 2014 but has a very small number
of subscribers. The Exchange believes
that in order to compete with other
indicative pricing products such as
Nasdaq Basic and Cboe One Feed, it
needs to provide a meaningful financial
incentive for more Redistributors to
choose to subscribe to NYSE BQT so
that they can make it available to their
customers. Accordingly, the proposed
reduction to the access fees for NYSE
BBO and NYSE Trades, together with
the proposed reduction to the access
fees for NYSE American BBO, NYSE
American Trades, NYSE Arca BBO, and
NYSE Arca Trades, is reasonable
because the reductions will make NYSE
BQT a more attractive offering for
Redistributors that do not currently
subscribe to any NYSE market data
products and make it more competitive
with Nasdaq Basic and Cboe One Feed.
For example, the External Distribution
Fee for Cboe One Feed is currently
$5,000 (which is the sum of the External
Distribution fees for the four exchange
data products that are included in Cboe
One Feed) plus a Data Consolidation
Fee of $1,000, for a total of $6,000.
Evidence of the competition among
exchange groups for these products has
previously been demonstrated via fee
changes. For example, following the
introduction of the Cboe One Feed,
Nasdaq responded by reducing its fees
for the Nasdaq Basic product.81 With the
proposed changes by the Exchange,
NYSE Arca, and NYSE American, the
Exchange is similarly seeking to
compete by decreasing the total access
fees for NYSE BQT from $6,250 to $850
for Redistributors that do not currently
81 See e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No.
83751 (July 31, 2018), 83 FR 38428 (August 6, 2018)
(SR–NASDAQ–2018–058) (Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change
To Lower Fees and Administrative Costs for
Distributors of Nasdaq Basic, Nasdaq Last Sale, NLS
Plus and the Nasdaq Depth-of-Book Products
Through a Consolidated Enterprise License).
Nasdaq filed the proposed fee change to lower the
Enterprise Fee for Nasdaq Basic and other market
data products in response to the Enterprise Fee for
the Cboe One Feed adopted by Cboe family of
exchanges.
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subscribe to any NYSE market data
products and have customers that are
interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT
but cannot do so until their
Redistributor also subscribes. This
proposed rule change therefore
demonstrates the existence of an
effective, competitive market because
this proposal resulted from a need to
generate innovative approaches in
response to competition from other
exchanges that offer market data for a
specific segment of market participants.
Redistribution Fees. Similarly, the
proposed reduction to the NYSE Trades
Redistribution Fee is reasonable because
it is designed to provide an incentive for
Redistributors to make NYSE BQT
available so that data recipients can
subscribe to NYSE BQT. The Exchange
further believes that the proposed
waiver of the NYSE Trades
Redistribution Fee is reasonable because
it is designed to compete with market
data products offered by the Cboe family
of equity exchanges.82
For all of the foregoing reasons, the
Exchange believes that the proposed
fees are reasonable.
The Proposed Fees Are Equitably
Allocated
The Exchange believes the proposed
fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
are allocated fairly and equitably among
the various categories of users of the
feed, and any differences among
categories of users are justified.
Overall. As noted above, this
proposed fee change is a result of the
competitive environment for market
data products that provide indicative
pricing information across a family of
exchanges. To respond to this
competitive environment, the Exchange
seeks to amend its fees to access NYSE
BBO and NYSE Trades for
Redistributors that would be subscribing
only to the NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades data feeds and would use these
market data products for external
distribution only, which the Exchange
hopes will attract new Redistributor
subscribers for its NYSE BQT market
data product so that the product can be
made available to prospective market
data recipients. The Exchange is
proposing the fee reductions to make
the Exchange’s fees more competitive
82 See, e.g., BZX Price List—U.S. Equities
available at https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/
Trader.aspx?id=DPUSdata#db. BZX charges $500
per month for internal distribution, and $2,500 per
month for external distribution, of BZX Last Sale.
BZX also charges $500 per month for internal
distribution, and $2,500 per month for external
distribution, of BZX Top. See Cboe BZX U.S.
Equities Exchange Fee Schedule at https://
markets.cboe.com/us/equities/membership/fee_
schedule/bzx/.
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for a specific segment of market
participants, thereby increasing the
availability of the Exchange’s data
products, expanding the options
available to firms making data
purchasing decisions based on their
business needs, and generally increasing
competition.
Access Fee. The Exchange believes
that making the Per User Access Fee
available to Redistributors that would be
subscribing only to the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades data feeds and would use
these market data products for external
distribution only is equitable as it
would apply equally to all data
recipients that choose to subscribe to
NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades for external
distribution only and who do not
subscribe to any other products listed
on the Fee Schedule. Because NYSE
BBO and NYSE Trades are optional
products, any data recipient could
choose to subscribe only to NYSE BBO
or NYSE Trades to distribute externally
and be eligible for the proposed reduced
fee. The Exchange does not believe that
it is inequitable that this proposed fee
reduction would be available only to
data recipients that subscribe only to
NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades and only for
external distribution. Internal use of
data represents a different set of use
cases than a Redistributor that is
engaged only in external distribution of
data. For example, non-display data can
be used by data recipients for a wide
variety of profit-generating purposes,
including proprietary and agency
trading and smart order routing, as well
as by data recipients that operate order
matching and execution platforms that
compete directly with the Exchange for
order flow. The data also can be used for
a variety of non-trading purposes that
indirectly support trading, such as risk
management and compliance. Although
some of these non-trading uses do not
directly generate revenues, they can
nonetheless substantially reduce the
recipient’s costs by automating such
functions so that they can be carried out
in a more efficient and accurate manner
and reduce errors and labor costs,
thereby benefiting end users. The
Exchange believes that charging a
different access fee for a Redistributor
that is engaged solely in external
distribution of only the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades products is equitable
because it would make NYSE BQT
available to more data recipients that are
customers of such Redistributors and
who would not otherwise be able to
access NYSE BQT if their Redistributor
did not subscribe to and redistribute
NYSE BQT.
Redistribution Fees. The Exchange
believes the proposed change to provide
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17:59 Nov 17, 2020
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a waiver of the Redistribution Fee to a
Redistributor that would be eligible for
the Per User Access Fee because it only
externally redistributes NYSE Trades to
at least one data feed recipient is
equitably allocated. The proposed
change would apply equally to all
Redistributors that are eligible for the
Per User Access Fee and choose to
externally redistribute the NYSE Trades
product, and would serve as an
incentive for Redistributors to make
NYSE Trades more broadly available for
use by both Professional and NonProfessional Users. This, in turn, could
provide an incentive for Redistributors
that do not currently subscribe to any
NYSE market data products to subscribe
to NYSE BQT and make it available to
their customers.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the
Exchange believes that the proposed
fees for the NYSE market data products
are equitably allocated.
The Proposed Fees Are Not Unfairly
Discriminatory
The Exchange believes the proposed
fees are not unfairly discriminatory
because any differences in the
application of the fees are based on
meaningful distinctions between
customers, and those meaningful
distinctions are not unfairly
discriminatory between customers.
Overall. As noted above, this
proposed fee change is a result of the
competitive environment for market
data products that provide indicative
pricing information across a family of
exchanges. To respond to this
competitive environment, the Exchange
seeks to amend its fees to provide a
financial incentive for Redistributors
that do not currently subscribe to any
NYSE market data products that decide
to subscribe to NYSE BQT, which the
Exchange hopes will attract more
subscribers for its NYSE BQT market
data product. The Exchange is
proposing the fee reductions to make
the Exchange’s fees more competitive
for a specific segment of market
participants, thereby increasing the
availability of the Exchange’s data
products, expanding the options
available to firms making data
purchasing decisions based on their
business needs, and generally increasing
competition.
Access Fee. The Exchange believes
that making the Per User Access Fee
available to Redistributors that would be
subscribing only to the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades data feeds and would use
these market data products for external
distribution only is not unfairly
discriminatory as it would apply
equally to all Redistributors that choose
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73579
to subscribe to NYSE BBO or NYSE
Trades for external distribution only
and who do not subscribe to any other
products listed on the Fee Schedule.
Because NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
are optional products, any data recipient
could choose to subscribe only to NYSE
BBO or NYSE Trades to distribute
externally and be eligible for the
proposed reduced fee. The Exchange
does not believe that it is unfairly
discriminatory that this proposed fee
reduction would be available only to
data recipients that subscribe only to
NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades and only for
external distribution. Internal use of
data represents a different set of use
cases than a Redistributor that is
engaged only in external distribution of
data. For example, non-display data can
be used by data recipients for a wide
variety of profit-generating purposes,
including proprietary and agency
trading and smart order routing, as well
as by data recipients that operate order
matching and execution platforms that
compete directly with the Exchange for
order flow. The data also can be used for
a variety of non-trading purposes that
indirectly support trading, such as risk
management and compliance. While
some of these non-trading uses do not
directly generate revenues, they can
nonetheless substantially reduce the
recipient’s costs by automating such
functions so that they can be carried out
in a more efficient and accurate manner
and reduce errors and labor costs,
thereby benefiting end users. The
Exchange therefore believes that there is
a meaningful distinction between
internal use and redistribution of market
data and that charging a different access
fee to a Redistributor that is engaged
solely in external distribution of only
the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
products is not unfairly discriminatory
because it would make NYSE BQT
available to more data recipients that are
customers of such Redistributors and
who would not otherwise be able to
access NYSE BQT if their Redistributor
did not subscribe to and redistribute
NYSE BQT.
Moreover, the Exchange does not
believe that it is unfairly discriminatory
to offer the Per User Access Fee only to
those Redistributors that would
subscribe only to the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades data feeds and no other
products on the Fee Schedule, and only
for external distribution. The Exchange
does not currently have any
Redistributors that fit this description.
This proposed rule change is designed
to provide an incentive for
Redistributors that do not currently
subscribe to NYSE BQT or any other
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products listed on the Fee Schedule, but
have customers that are interested in
subscribing to NYSE BQT, to subscribe
to the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data
feeds so that they can make NYSE BQT
available to their customers. This fee
incentive is not necessary for
Redistributors that currently subscribe
to the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data
feeds because such Redistributors could
already subscribe to NYSE BQT, but
have chosen not to, and a reduction in
their existing access fees would likely
not result in such Redistributors
choosing to subscribe to NYSE BQT.
Redistribution Fees. The Exchange
believes the proposed change to provide
a waiver of the Redistribution Fee to a
Redistributor that would be eligible for
the Per User Access Fee because it only
externally redistributes NYSE Trades to
at least one data recipient is not unfairly
discriminatory. The proposed waiver
would apply equally to all
Redistributors that are eligible for the
Per User Access Fee and choose to
externally redistribute the NYSE Trades
product, and would serve as an
incentive for Redistributors that do not
currently subscribe to any NYSE market
data products to subscribe to NYSE
Trades and then make NYSE BQT
available to their customers.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the
Exchange believes that the proposed
fees are not unfairly discriminatory.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. Indeed, as
demonstrated above, the Exchange
believes the proposed rule changes are
pro-competitive.
Intramarket Competition. The
Exchange believes that the proposed
fees do not put any market participants
at a relative disadvantage compared to
other market participants. As noted
above, the proposed fee schedule would
apply to all subscribers of NYSE market
data products, and customers may not
only choose whether to subscribe to the
products at all, but also may tailor their
subscriptions to include only the
products and uses that they deem
suitable for their business needs. The
Exchange also believes that the
proposed fees neither favor nor penalize
one or more categories of market
participants in a manner that would
impose an undue market on
competition. As shown above, to the
extent that particular proposed fees
apply to only a subset of subscribers,
those distinctions are not unfairly
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discriminatory and do unfairly burden
one set of customers over another.
Intermarket Competition. The
Exchange believes that the proposed
fees do not impose a burden on
competition on other exchanges that is
not necessary or appropriate; indeed,
the Exchange believes the proposed fee
changes would have the effect of
increasing competition. As
demonstrated above and in Professor
Rysman’s paper, exchanges are
platforms for market data and trading. In
setting the proposed fees, the Exchange
is constrained by the availability of
substitute platforms also offering market
data products and trading, and low
barriers to entry mean new exchange
platforms are frequently introduced.
The fact that exchanges are platforms
ensures that no exchange can make
pricing decisions for one side of its
platform without considering, and being
constrained by, the effects that price
will have on the other side of the
platform. In setting fees at issue here,
the Exchange is constrained by the fact
that, if its pricing across the platform is
unattractive to customers, customers
will have its pick of an increasing
number of alternative platforms to use
instead of the Exchange. Given this
intense competition between platforms,
no one exchange’s market data fees can
impose an unnecessary burden on
competition, and the Exchange’s
proposed fees do not do so here.
In addition, the Exchange believes
that the proposed fees do not impose a
burden on competition or on other
exchanges that is not necessary or
appropriate because of the availability
of numerous substitute market data
products. Specifically, as described
above, NYSE BQT competes head-tohead with the Nasdaq Basic product and
the Cboe One Feed. These products each
serve as reasonable substitutes for one
another as they are each designed to
provide investors with a unified view of
real-time quotes and last-sale prices in
all Tape A, B, and C securities. Each
product provides subscribers with
consolidated top-of-book quotes and
trades from multiple U.S. equities
markets. NYSE BQT provides top-ofbook quotes and trades data from five
NYSE-affiliated U.S. equities exchanges,
while Cboe One Feed similarly provides
top-of-book quotes and trades data from
Cboe’s four U.S. equities exchanges.
NYSE BQT, Nasdaq Basic, and Cboe
One Feed are all intended to provide
indicative pricing and therefore, are
reasonable substitutes for one another.
Additionally, market data vendors are
also able to offer close substitutes to
NYSE BQT. Because market data users
can find suitable substitute feeds, an
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Sfmt 4703
exchange that overprices its market data
products stands a high risk that users
may substitute another source of market
data information for its own. These
competitive pressures ensure that no
one exchange’s market data fees can
impose an unnecessary burden on
competition, and the Exchange’s
proposed fees do not do so here.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change is effective
upon filing pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A) 83 of the Act and
subparagraph (f)(2) of Rule 19b–4 84
thereunder, because it establishes a due,
fee, or other charge imposed by the
Exchange.
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of such 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
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) 85 of the Act to
determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NYSE–2020–91 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.
83 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(2).
85 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
84 17
E:\FR\FM\18NON1.SGM
18NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 223 / Wednesday, November 18, 2020 / Notices
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSE–2020–91. 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–NYSE–2020–91, and
should be submitted on or before
December 9, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.86
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–25389 Filed 11–17–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[SEC File No. 270–316, OMB Control No.
3235–0359]
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request
Upon Written Request, Copies Available
From: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–2736
Extension:
Form N–17f–1
86 17
1 This estimate is based on the following
calculation: (1.5 hours × 3 responses annually = 4.5
hours).
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 17, 2020
Notice is hereby given that pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), the Securities
and Exchange Commission (the
‘‘Commission’’) is soliciting comments
on the collections of information
summarized below. The Commission
plans to submit this existing collection
of information to the Office of
Management and Budget for extension
and approval.
Form N–17f–1 (17 CFR 274.219) is
entitled ‘‘Certificate of Accounting of
Securities and Similar Investments of a
Management Investment Company in
the Custody of Members of National
Securities Exchanges.’’ The form serves
as a cover sheet to the accountant’s
certificate that is required to be filed
periodically with the Commission
pursuant to rule 17f–1 (17 CFR
270.17f–1) under the Act, entitled
‘‘Custody of Securities with Members of
National Securities Exchanges,’’ which
sets forth the conditions under which a
fund may place its assets in the custody
of a member of a national securities
exchange. Rule 17f–1 requires, among
other things, that an independent public
accountant verify the fund’s assets at the
end of every annual and semi-annual
fiscal period, and at least one other time
during the fiscal year as chosen by the
independent accountant. Requiring an
independent accountant to examine the
fund’s assets in the custody of a member
of a national securities exchange assists
Commission staff in its inspection
program and helps to ensure that the
fund assets are subject to proper
auditing procedures. The accountant’s
certificate stating that it has made an
examination, and describing the nature
and the extent of the examination, must
be attached to Form N–17f–1 and filed
with the Commission promptly after
each examination. The form facilitates
the filing of the accountant’s certificates,
and increases the accessibility of the
certificates to both Commission staff
and interested investors.
Commission staff estimates that it
takes: (i) 1 hour of clerical time to
prepare and file Form N–17f–1; and (ii)
0.5 hour for the fund’s chief compliance
officer to review Form N–17f–1 prior to
filing with the Commission, for a total
of 1.5 hours. Each fund is required to
make 3 filings annually, for a total
annual burden per fund of
approximately 4.5 hours.1 Commission
staff estimates that an average of 6 funds
currently file Form N–17f–1 with the
Commission 3 times each year, for a
Jkt 253001
PO 00000
Frm 00127
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
73581
total of 18 responses annually.2 The
total annual hour burden for Form
N–17f–1 is therefore estimated to be
approximately 27 hours.3
The estimate of average burden hours
is made solely for the purposes of the
Paperwork Reduction Act, and is not
derived from a comprehensive or even
a representative survey or study of the
costs of Commission rules. Compliance
with the collections of information
required by Form N–17f–1 is mandatory
for funds that place their assets in the
custody of a national securities
exchange member. Responses will not
be kept confidential. An agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to a collection of
information unless it displays a
currently valid control number.
The Commission requests written
comments on: (a) Whether the
collections of information are necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the Commission, including
whether the information has practical
utility; (b) the accuracy of the
Commission’s estimate of the burdens of
the collection of information; (c) ways to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity
of the information collected; and (d)
ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
Consideration will be given to
comments and suggestions submitted in
writing within 60 days of this
publication.
Please direct your written comments
to David Bottom, Director/Chief
Information Officer, Securities and
Exchange Commission, C/O Cynthia
Roscoe, 100 F Street NE, Washington,
DC 20549; or send an email to: PRA_
Mailbox@sec.gov.
Dated: November 12, 2020.
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–25356 Filed 11–17–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
2 This estimate is based on a review of Form N–
17f–1 filings made with the Commission over the
last three years.
3 This estimate is based on the following
calculations: (4.5 hours × 6 funds = 27 total hours).
E:\FR\FM\18NON1.SGM
18NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 223 (Wednesday, November 18, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 73570-73581]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-25389]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-90407; File No. SR-NYSE-2020-91]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC;
Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change
Amending the Fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades by Modifying the
Application of the Access Fee and Amending the Fees for NYSE Trades by
Adopting a Waiver Applicable to the Redistribution Fee
November 12, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(the ``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given
that on November 2, 2020, New York Stock Exchange LLC (``NYSE'' or the
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the
``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I, II,
and III below, which Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The
Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to (1) amend the fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades by modifying the application of the Access Fee; and (2) amend
the fees for NYSE Trades by adopting a waiver applicable to the
Redistribution Fee.
[[Page 73571]]
The Exchange proposes to implement the proposed fee changes on January
1, 2021. The proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at www.nyse.com, at the principal office of the Exchange, and
at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the self-regulatory organization
included statements concerning the purpose of, and basis for, the
proposed rule change and discussed any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant parts of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to decrease the fees for certain NYSE market
data products, as set forth on the NYSE Proprietary Market Data Fee
Schedule (``Fee Schedule''). These fee decreases, taken together with
similar fee decreases filed by the Exchange's affiliated exchanges,
NYSE American LLC (``NYSE American'') and NYSE Arca, Inc. (``NYSE
Arca''),\3\ will reduce the fees associated with the NYSE BQT
proprietary data product, which competes directly with similar products
offered by both the Nasdaq and Cboe families of U.S. equity exchanges.
Collectively, the proposed fee decreases are intended to respond to the
competition posed by similar products offered by the other exchange
groups.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See SR-NYSEAmer-2020-79 and SR-NYSEArca-2020-95.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, the Exchange proposes to (1) reduce the Access Fees
by more than 93% for Redistributors \4\ of NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
that subscribe to only such data feeds and do not subscribe to any
other market data product listed on the Fee Schedule other than NYSE
BQT, and use such market data products for external distribution only;
and (2) waive the Redistribution Fee for Redistributors that are
eligible for the Per User Access Fee if the Redistributor provides NYSE
Trades externally to at least one data feed recipient and reports such
recipient to the Exchange. All of the proposed changes would decrease
fees for market data on the Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ A Redistributor is a vendor or any other person that
provides a NYSE data product to a data recipient or to any system
that a data recipient uses, irrespective of the means of
transmission or access.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to implement these proposed fee changes on
January 1, 2021.
Background
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.'' \5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9,
2005), 70 FR 37495, 37499 (June 29, 2005) (S7-10-04) (Final Rule)
(``Regulation NMS Adopting Release'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While Regulation NMS has enhanced competition, it has also fostered
a ``fragmented'' market structure where trading in a single stock can
occur across multiple trading centers. When multiple trading centers
compete for order flow in the same stock, the Commission has recognized
that ``such competition can lead to the fragmentation of order flow in
that stock.'' \6\ Indeed, equity trading is currently dispersed across
16 exchanges,\7\ numerous alternative trading systems,\8\ and broker-
dealer internalizers and wholesalers, all competing for order flow.
Based on publicly-available information, no single exchange currently
has more than 18% market share (whether including or excluding auction
volume).\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358, 75 FR 3594,
3597 (January 21, 2010) (File No. S7-02-10) (Concept Release on
Equity Market Structure).
\7\ See Cboe Global Markets, U.S. Equities Market Volume
Summary, available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/. See generally https://www.sec.gov/fast-answers/divisionsmarketregmrexchangesshtml.html.
\8\ See FINRA ATS Transparency Data, available at https://otctransparency.finra.org/otctransparency/AtsIssueData. A list of
alternative trading systems registered with the Commission is
available at https://www.sec.gov/foia/docs/atslist.htm.
\9\ See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Equities Market Volume Summary,
available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/.
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With the NYSE BQT market data product, NYSE and its affiliates
compete head to head with the Nasdaq Basic \10\ and Cboe One Feed \11\
market data products. Similar to those market data products, NYSE BQT,
which was established in 2014,\12\ consists of certain elements from
the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades market data products as well as from
market data products from the Exchange's affiliates, NYSE American,
NYSE Arca, NYSE Chicago, Inc. (``NYSE Chicago''),\13\ and NYSE
National, Inc. (``NYSE National'').\14\ Similar to both Nasdaq Basic
and the Cboe One Feed, NYSE BQT provides investors with a unified view
of comprehensive last sale and BBO data in all Tape A, B, and C
securities that trade on the Exchange, NYSE American, NYSE Arca, NYSE
Chicago, and NYSE National. Also similar to Nasdaq Basic and the Cboe
One Feed, NYSE BQT is not intended to be used for purposes of making
order-routing or trading decisions, but rather provides indicative
prices for Tape A, B, and C securities.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ As described on the Nasdaq website, available here: https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/Trader.aspx?id=nasdaqbasic, Nasdaq Basic is a
``low cost alternative'' that provides ``Best Bid and Offer and Last
Sale information for all U.S. exchange-listed securities based on
liquidity within the Nasdaq market center, as well as trades
reported to the FINRA Trade Reporting Facility (``TRF'').''
\11\ As described on the Cboe website, available here: https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_data_services/cboe_one/, the
Cboe One Feed is a ``market data product that provides cost-
effective, high-quality reference quotes and trade data for market
participants looking for comprehensive, real-time market data'' and
provides a ``unified view of the market from all four Cboe equity
exchanges: BZX Exchange, BYX Exchange, EDGX Exchange, and EDGA
Exchange.''
\12\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 72750 (August 4,
2014), 79 FR 46494 (August 8, 2014) (notice--NYSE BQT); and 73553
(November 6, 2014), 79 FR 67491 (November 13, 2014) (approval
order--NYSE BQT) (SR-NYSE-2014-40) (``NYSE BQT Filing'').
\13\ In 2019, NYSE BQT was amended to include NYSE Chicago BBO
and NYSE Chicago Trades. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
87511 (November 12, 2019), 84 FR 63689 (November 18, 2019) (SR-NYSE-
2019-60).
\14\ In 2018, NYSE BQT was amended to include NYSE National BBO
and NYSE National Trades. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
83359 (June 1, 2018), 83 FR 26507 (June 7, 2018) (SR-NYSE-2018-22).
\15\ See NYSE BQT Filing, supra note 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange currently charges an access fee of $250 per month for
NYSE BQT, and, as provided for in footnote 5 to the Fee Schedule, to
subscribe to NYSE BQT, subscribers must also subscribe to, and pay
applicable fees for, NYSE BBO, NYSE Trades, NYSE American BBO, NYSE
American Trades, NYSE Arca BBO, NYSE Arca Trades, NYSE Chicago BBO,
NYSE Chicago Trades, NYSE National BBO, and NYSE National Trades. Thus,
an NYSE BQT subscriber currently pays the $250 access fee for NYSE
BQT,\16\ plus a $1,500 access fee for each of NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades,
plus a $750 access fee for each of NYSE American BBO and
[[Page 73572]]
NYSE American Trades,\17\ plus a $750 access fee for each of NYSE Arca
BBO and NYSE Arca trades,\18\ for a total of $6,250 ($250 + $3,000 +
$1,500 + $1,500).\19\ In addition, an NYSE BQT subscriber would need to
pay for the applicable Professional or Non-Professional User Fees for
the underlying market data products, as applicable.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The Exchange is not proposing any change to the $250 access
fee for NYSE BQT.
\17\ See NYSE American Equities Proprietary Market Data Fees
(``NYSE American Price List''), available here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/NYSE_Arca_Equities_Fee_Schedule.pdf.
\18\ See NYSE Arca Equities Proprietary Market Data Fees (``NYSE
Arca Price List''), available here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/NYSE_Arca_Equities_Fee_Schedule.pdf.
\19\ There are currently no fees charged for the NYSE Chicago
BBO, NYSE Chicago Trades, NYSE National BBO, or NYSE National Trades
market data products.
\20\ The Exchange is not proposing any changes to the User Fees.
Currently, the Professional User Fees for each of NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades is $4 per month, and the Non-Professional User Fees for each
of NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades is $0.20 per month. See Fees Schedule,
available here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/NYSE_Market_Data_Fee_Schedule.pdf. The Professional User Fees for
each of NYSE American BBO and NYSE American Trades is $4 per month,
and the Non-Professional User Fees for each of NYSE American BBO and
NYSE American Trades is $0.25 per month. See NYSE American Price
List, available here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/NYSE_American_Equities_Market_Data_Fee_Schedule.pdf. The
Professional User Fees for each of NYSE Arca BBO and NYSE Arca
Trades is $4 per month, and the Non-Professional User Fees for each
of NYSE Arca BBO and NYSE Arca Trades is $0.25 per month. See NYSE
Arca Price List, available here: https://www.nyse.com/publicdocs/nyse/data/NYSE_Arca_Equities_Proprietary_Data_Fee_Schedule.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because NYSE BQT is priced based on the fees associated with the
underlying ten market data feeds, the Exchange and its affiliates
propose to compete with the Nasdaq Basic and Cboe One Feed by reducing
fees for the underlying market data products that comprise NYSE BQT.
Together with NYSE American and NYSE Arca, the Exchange similarly
proposes to compete for subscribers to NYSE BQT by designing its fee
decreases to be attractive to Redistributors that intend to subscribe
to and externally redistribute only NYSE BQT. The Exchange understands
that data recipients that are interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT
obtain their data from Redistributors that do not currently subscribe
to either the NYSE BQT data feed or any other market data product
listed on the Fee Schedule. Because such Redistributors do not
subscribe to NYSE BQT, the prospective data recipients that are the
customers of such Redistributors are unable to subscribe to NYSE BQT.
The proposed fee changes are designed to provide a financial incentive
for such Redistributors to subscribe to NYSE BQT so that their
customers, which have expressed an interest in subscribing to NYSE BQT,
would be able to access the product via such Redistributors.
Access Fee--NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
NYSE BBO is a NYSE-only market data product that allows a vendor to
redistribute on a real-time basis the same best-bid-and-offer
information that NYSE reports under the Consolidated Quotation Plan
(``CQ Plan'') for inclusion in the CQ Plan's consolidated quotation
information data stream (``NYSE BBO Information'').\21\ NYSE BBO
Information includes the best bids and offers for all securities that
are traded on the Exchange and for which NYSE reports quotes under the
CQ Plan. NYSE BBO is available over a single data feed, regardless of
the markets on which the securities are listed. NYSE BBO is made
available to its subscribers no earlier than the information it
contains is made available to the processor under the CQ Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 61914 (April 14,
2010), 75 FR 21077 (April 22, 2010) (SR-NYSE-2010-30) (notice--NYSE
BBO); and 62181 (May 26, 2010), 75 FR 31488 (June 3, 2010) (SR-NYSE-
2010-30) (approval order--NYSE BBO).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NYSE Trades is a NYSE-only market data product that allows a vendor
to redistribute on a real-time basis the same last sale information
that NYSE reports to the Consolidated Tape Association (``CTA'') for
inclusion in the CTA's consolidated data stream and certain other
related data elements (``NYSE Last Sale Information'').\22\ NYSE Last
Sale Information includes last sale information for all securities that
are traded on the Exchange. NYSE Trades is made available to
subscribers at the same time as the information it contains is made
available to the processor under the CTA Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 59309 (January 28,
2009), 74 FR 6073 (February 4, 2009) (SR-NYSE-2009-04) (notice--NYSE
Trades); and 59309 (March 19, 2009), 74 FR 13293 (March 26, 2009)
(SR-NYSE-2009-04) (approval order--NYSE Trades).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Currently, subscribers of each of the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
products that receive a data feed pay an Access Fee of $1,500 per
month. In February 2020, the Exchange added the Per User Access Fee,
which is a reduced Access Fee of $100 per month currently available
only for subscribers of NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades that receive those
products in a display-only format, including for internal use for
Professional Users and external distribution to both Professional and
Non-Professional Users.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ A Per User Access Fee currently applies for subscribers of
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades that receive a data feed and use those
market data products in a display-only format. See Fee Schedule. See
also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87803 (December 19, 2019),
84 FR 71505 (December 27, 2019) (SR-NYSE-2019-70) (Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Partial Amendment No. 1, To Amend the Fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades) (``BQT Fee Reduction Filing'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange now proposes that Redistributors of NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades data feeds that do not subscribe to any other market data
product listed on the Fee Schedule, and use such market data products
for external distribution only, would also be eligible for the reduced
Per User Access Fee. A Redistributor that receives a data feed of NYSE
BBO and NYSE Trades and uses the market data products for any other
purpose (such as internal use) or that subscribes to any other products
listed on the Fee Schedule (other than NYSE BQT) would continue to pay
the $1,500 per month General Access Fee. As currently set forth in
footnote 8 to the Fee Schedule, a subscriber would be charged only one
access fee for each of the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades products, depending
on the use of that product.
To effect this change, the Exchange proposes to modify footnote 8
to the Fee Schedule as follows (proposed text is italicized, proposed
deletions bracketed):
The Per User Access Fee is charged to: (i) [A] a subscriber that
receives a data feed and uses the market data product only for
Professional Users and Non-Professional Users in a display-only
format, including for internal use and external redistribution in a
display-only format, [will be charged the Per User Access Fee] and
(ii) a Redistributor that subscribes only to the NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades data feeds, and does not subscribe to any other Products
listed on this Fee Schedule other than NYSE BQT, and uses these
market data products for external distribution only. A subscriber
that receives a data feed and uses the market data product for any
other purpose, including if combined with Per User use, will be
charged the General Access Fee. A subscriber will be charged only
one access fee for each of the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades products,
depending on the use of that product.
The proposed rule change would result in lower fees for
Redistributors of each of the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades products that
receive NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data feeds and do not subscribe to any
other market data product listed on the Fee Schedule, and use such
market data products for external distribution only.\24\ The
[[Page 73573]]
Exchange believes that the proposed fee reduction in NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades would provide an incentive for such Redistributors to subscribe
to the NYSE BQT data feeds so that such product would be available to
their customers, which have expressed an interest in subscribing to
NYSE BQT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ The Per User Access Fee is 93% lower than the General
Access Fee. Together with the corresponding proposed rule changes by
NYSE American and NYSE Arca to similarly reduce the access fees to
their BBO and Trades products for Redistributors, such
Redistributors would be eligible for significantly lower access fees
for NYSE BQT, from $6,250 per month to $850 per month ($250 + $200 +
$200 + $200), a reduction of more than 86%.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change is intended to encourage greater use of
NYSE BQT by making it more affordable for Redistributors that have
customers interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT but that do not
currently subscribe to NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades or any other products
listed on the Fee Schedule. The proposed fee reduction would allow the
Exchange to compete more effectively with Nasdaq Basic and Cboe One
Feed by expanding the number of Redistributors that would subscribe to
NYSE BQT, and therefore make the product available to data subscribers
interested in NYSE BQT.
Redistribution Fee--NYSE Trades
The Exchange currently charges a Redistribution Fee of $1,000 per
month for NYSE Trades. A Redistributor is required to report to the
Exchange each month the number of Professional and Non-Professional
Users and data feed recipients that receive NYSE Trades.
The Exchange proposes to waive the Redistribution Fee for a
Redistributor that is eligible for the Per User Access Fee if the
Redistributor provides NYSE Trades externally to at least one data feed
recipient and reports such data feed recipient or recipients to the
Exchange. For example, a Redistributor that subscribes to the NYSE BBO
and NYSE Trades data feeds and does not subscribe to any other product
listed on the Fee Schedule would have the Redistribution Fee waived for
the month if such Redistributor provides NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
externally to at least one data feed recipient and reports such data
feed recipient to the Exchange.
By targeting this proposed fee waiver to Redistributors that
provide external distribution of NYSE Trades, the Exchange believes
that this would provide an incentive for Redistributors to make the
NYSE BQT market data product available to its customers. Specifically,
if a data recipient is interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT and relies
on a Redistributor to obtain market data products from the Exchange,
that data recipient would need its Redistributor to redistribute NYSE
BQT. Currently, Redistributors that redistribute some NYSE market data
products do not necessarily also make NYSE BQT available. The Exchange
believes that this proposed fee waiver for Redistributors of NYSE
Trades would provide an incentive for Redistributors to make NYSE BQT
available to their customers, which will increase the availability of
NYSE BQT to a larger potential population of data recipients.\25\
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\25\ NYSE does not charge a Redistribution Fee for NYSE BBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicability of Proposed Rule Change
As noted above, the proposed rule change is designed to further
reduce the overall cost of NYSE BQT by reducing specified fees
applicable to the underlying market data products that comprise NYSE
BQT. Prior to the BQT Fee Reduction Filing, the Exchange had only one
subscriber to NYSE BQT. Today, the Exchange has seven subscribers,
three of whom became customers as a direct result of the BQT Fee
Reduction Filing and currently pay the reduced Per User Access Fee. The
Exchange believes that the proposed rule changes would provide a
further incentive for Redistributors to subscribe to NYSE BQT for
purposes of providing external distribution of NYSE BQT to potential
data recipients interested in the product.
Because the proposed rule change is targeted to potential
Redistributors of NYSE BQT that do not currently subscribe to any NYSE
market data products, the proposed changes to the availability of the
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades Per User Access Fees, together with the
proposed changes on NYSE American and NYSE Arca, are narrowly tailored
with that purpose in mind. Accordingly, these proposed fee changes are
not designed for Redistributors that are existing customers of NYSE
market data products or that engage in internal use of NYSE BQT. This
proposed rule change would not result in any changes to the market data
fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades for such data subscribers.
The Exchange believes that there are at least three potential
Redistributors that would meet the qualifications to be eligible for
these proposed fee changes. The Exchange further believes that this
proposed rule change has the potential to attract these three
Redistributors as new Redistributors for NYSE BQT, as well as new NYSE
BQT subscribers that would be subscribing to NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
for the first time.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the proposed rule change is consistent
with the provisions of Section 6 of the Act,\26\ in general, and
Sections 6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5) of the Act,\27\ in particular, in that it
provides an equitable allocation of reasonable fees among users and
recipients of the data and is not designed to permit unfair
discrimination among customers, issuers, and brokers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\27\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4), (5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Proposed Rule Change Is Reasonable
In adopting Regulation NMS, the Commission granted SROs and broker-
dealers increased authority and flexibility to offer new and unique
market data to the public. The Commission has repeatedly expressed its
preference for competition over regulatory intervention in determining
prices, products, and services in the securities markets. Specifically,
in Regulation NMS, the Commission highlighted the importance of market
forces in determining prices and SRO revenues, and also recognized that
current regulation of the market system ``has been remarkably
successful in promoting market competition in its broader forms that
are most important to investors and listed companies.'' \28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See Regulation NMS Adopting Release, 70 FR 37495, at 37499.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to market data, the decision of the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in NetCoalition
v. SEC upheld the Commission's reliance on the existence of competitive
market mechanisms to evaluate the reasonableness and fairness of fees
for proprietary market data:
In fact, the legislative history indicates that the Congress
intended that the market system ``evolve through the interplay of
competitive forces as unnecessary regulatory restrictions are
removed'' and that the SEC wield its regulatory power ``in those
situations where competition may not be sufficient,'' such as in the
creation of a ``consolidated transactional reporting system.'' \29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ NetCoalition v. SEC, 615 F.3d 525, 535 (D.C. Cir. 2010)
(``NetCoalition I'') (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 94-229 at 92 (1975), as
reprinted in 1975 U.S.C.C.A.N. 323).
The court agreed with the Commission's conclusion that ``Congress
intended that `competitive forces should dictate the services and
practices that constitute the U.S.
[[Page 73574]]
national market system for trading equity securities.' '' \30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Id. at 535.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
More recently, the Commission confirmed that it applies a ``market-
based'' test in its assessment of market data fees, and that under that
test:
the Commission considers whether the exchange was subject to
significant competitive forces in setting the terms of its proposal
for [market data], including the level of any fees. If an exchange
meets this burden, the Commission will find that its fee rule is
consistent with the Act unless there is a substantial countervailing
basis to find that the terms of the rule violate the Act or the
rules thereunder.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34-90217 (October
16, 2020), 85 FR 67392 (October 22, 2020) (SR-NYSENAT-2020-05)
(``National IF Approval Order'') (internal quotation marks omitted),
quoting Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59039 (December 2,
2008), 73 FR 74770, 74781 (December 9, 2008) (``2008 ArcaBook
Approval Order'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. The Proposed Fees Are Constrained by Significant Competitive Forces
a. Exchange Market Data Is Sold in a Competitive Market
In 2018, Charles M. Jones, the Robert W. Lear of Professor of
Finance and Economics of the Columbia University School of Business,
conducted an analysis of the market for equity market data in the
United States. He canvassed the demand for both consolidated and
exchange proprietary market data products and the uses to which those
products were put by market participants, and reported his conclusions
in a paper annexed hereto.\32\ Among other things, Professor Jones
concluded that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See Exhibit 3A, Charles M. Jones, Understanding the Market
for U.S. Equity Market Data, August 31, 2018 (hereinafter ``Jones
Paper'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``The market [for exchange market data] is characterized
by robust competition: Exchanges compete with each other in selling
proprietary market data products. They also compete with consolidated
data feeds and with data provided by alternative trading systems
(`ATSs'). Barriers to entry are very low, so existing exchanges must
also take into account competition from new entrants, who generally try
to build market share by offering their proprietary market data
products for free for some period of time.'' \33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Jones Paper at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``Although there are regulatory requirements for some
market participants to use consolidated data products, there is no
requirement for market participants to purchase any proprietary market
data product for regulatory purposes.'' \34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``There are a variety of data products, and consumers of
equity market data choose among them based on their needs. Like most
producers, exchanges offer a variety of market data products at
different price levels. Advanced proprietary market data products
provide greater value to those who subscribe. As in any other market,
each potential subscriber takes the features and prices of available
products into account in choosing what market data products to buy
based on its business model.'' \35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``Exchange equity market data fees are a small cost for
the industry overall: The data demonstrates that total exchange market
data revenues are orders of magnitude smaller than (i) broker-dealer
commissions, (ii) investment bank earnings from equity trading, and
(iii) revenues earned by third-party vendors.'' \36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``For proprietary exchange data feeds, the main question
is whether there is a competitive market for proprietary market data.
More than 40 active exchanges and alternative trading systems compete
vigorously in both the market for order flow and in the market for
market data. The two are closely linked: An exchange needs to consider
the negative impact on its order flow if it raises the price of its
market data. Furthermore, new entrants have been frequent over the past
10 years or so, and these venues often give market data away for free,
serving as a check on pricing by more established exchanges. These are
all the standard hallmarks of a competitive market.'' \37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Id. at 39-40.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Professor Jones' conclusions are consistent with the demonstration
of the competitive constraints on the pricing of market data
demonstrated by analysis of exchanges as platforms for market data and
trading services, as shown below.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ More recently, Professors Jonathan Brogaard and James
Brugler also looked at the market for proprietary market data
products and confirmed that it is competitive. The authors document
that introducing fees for market data leads to lower market share,
and identify informed traders as the most affected trader categories
after fees are introduced. See Jonathan Brogaard and James Brugler,
Competition and Exchange Data Fees, October 2, 2020 (Exhibit 3B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Exchanges That Offer Market Data and Trading Services Function as
Two-Sided Platforms
An exchange may demonstrate that its fees are constrained by
competitive forces by showing that platform competition applies.
As the United States Supreme Court recognized in Ohio v. American
Express, platforms are firms that act as intermediaries between two or
more sets of agents, and typically the choices made on one side of the
platform affect the results on the other side of the platform via
externalities, or ``indirect network effects.'' \39\ Externalities are
linkages between the different ``sides'' of a platform such that one
cannot understand pricing and competition for goods or services on one
side of the platform in isolation; one must also account for the
influence of the other side. As the Supreme Court explained:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Ohio v. American Express, 138 S. Ct. 2274, 2280-81 (2018).
To ensure sufficient participation, two-sided platforms must be
sensitive to the prices that they charge each side. . . . Raising
the price on side A risks losing participation on that side, which
decreases the value of the platform to side B. If the participants
on side B leave due to this loss in value, then the platform has
even less value to side A--risking a feedback loop of declining
demand. . . . Two-sided platforms therefore must take these indirect
network effects into account before making a change in price on
either side.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Id. at 2281.
The Exchange and its affiliated exchanges have long maintained that
they function as platforms between consumers of market data and
consumers of trading services. Proving the existence of linkages
between the two sides of this platform requires an in-depth economic
analysis of both public data and confidential Exchange data about
particular customers' trading activities and market data purchases.
Exchanges, however, are prohibited from sharing details about these
specific customer activities and purchases. For example, pursuant to
Exchange Rule 7.41, transactions executed on the Exchange are processed
anonymously.
The Exchange and its affiliated exchanges retained a third party
expert, Marc Rysman, Professor of Economics Boston University, to
analyze how platform economics applies to stock exchanges' sale of
market data products and trading services, and to explain how this
affects the assessment of competitive forces affecting the exchanges'
data fees.\41\ Professor Rysman was able to analyze exchange data that
is not otherwise publicly available in a manner that is consistent with
the exchanges' confidentiality obligations to customers. As shown in
his paper, Professor Rysman surveyed the existing economic literature
analyzing stock exchanges as platforms between market data and trading
[[Page 73575]]
activities, and explained the types of linkages between market data
access and trading activities that must be present for an exchange to
function as a platform. In addition, Professor Rysman undertook an
empirical analysis of customers' trading activities within the NYSE
group of exchanges in reaction to NYSE's introduction in 2015 of the
NYSE Integrated Feed, a full order-by-order depth of book data
product.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See Exhibit 3C, Marc Rysman, Stock Exchanges as Platforms
for Data and Trading, December 2, 2019 (hereinafter ``Rysman
Paper''), ] 7.
\42\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 74128 (January 23,
2015), 80 FR 4951 (January 29, 2015) (SR-NYSE-2015-03) (Notice of
filing and immediate effectiveness of proposed rule change to
establish NYSE Integrated Feed) and 76485 (November 20, 2015), 80 FR
74158 (November 27, 2015) (SR-NYSE-2015-57) (Notice of filing and
immediate effectiveness of proposed rule change to establish fees
for the NYSE Integrated Feed).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Professor Rysman's analysis of this confidential firm-level data
shows that firms that purchased the NYSE Integrated Feed market data
product after its introduction were more likely to route orders to NYSE
as opposed to one of the other NYSE-affiliated exchanges, such as NYSE
Arca or NYSE American.\43\ Moreover, Professor Rysman shows that the
same is true for firms that did not subscribe to the NYSE Integrated
Feed: The introduction of the NYSE Integrated Feed led to more trading
on NYSE (as opposed to other NYSE-affiliated exchanges) by firms that
did not subscribe to the NYSE Integrated Feed.\44\ This is the sort of
externality that is a key characteristic of a platform market.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Rysman Paper ]] 79-89.
\44\ Id. ]] 90-91.
\45\ Id. ] 90.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
From this empirical evidence, Professor Rysman concludes:
``[D]ata is more valuable when it reflects more trading
activity and more liquidity-providing orders. These linkages alone are
enough to make platform economics necessary for understanding the
pricing of market data.'' \46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Id. ] 95.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``[L]inkages running in the opposite direction, from data
to trading, are also very likely to exist. This is because market data
from an exchange reduces uncertainty about the likelihood, price, or
timing of execution for an order on that exchange. This reduction in
uncertainty makes trading on that exchange more attractive for traders
that subscribe to that exchange's market data. Increased trading by
data subscribers, in turn, makes trading on the exchange in question
more attractive for traders that do not subscribe to the exchange's
market data.'' \47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ Id. ] 96.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ``mechanisms by which market data makes trading on an
exchange more attractive for subscribers to market data . . . apply to
a wide assortment of market data products, including BBO, order book,
and full order-by-order depth of book data products at all exchanges.''
\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``[E]mpirical evidence confirms that stock exchanges are
platforms for data and trading.'' \49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Id. ] 97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``The platform nature of stock exchanges means that data
fees cannot be analyzed in isolation, without accounting for the
competitive dynamics in trading services.'' \50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ Id. ] 98.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``Competition is properly understood as being between
platforms (i.e., stock exchanges) that balance the needs of consumers
of data and traders.'' \51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``Data fees, data use, trading fees, and order flow are
all interrelated.'' \52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``Competition for order flow can discipline the pricing of
market data, and vice-versa.'' \53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``As with platforms generally, overall competition between
exchanges will limit their overall profitability, not margins on any
particular side of the platform.'' \54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Id. ] 100.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Exchange Market Data Fees Are Constrained by the Availability of
Substitute Platforms
Professor Rysman's conclusions that exchanges function as platforms
for market data and transaction services mean that exchanges do not set
fees for market data products without considering, and being
constrained by, the effect the fees will have on the order-flow side of
the platform. And as the D.C. Circuit recognized in NetCoalition I,
``[n]o one disputes that competition for order flow is fierce.'' \55\
The court further noted that ``no exchange possesses a monopoly,
regulatory or otherwise, in the execution of order flow from broker
dealers,'' and that an exchange ``must compete vigorously for order
flow to maintain its share of trading volume.'' \56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ NetCoalition I, 615 F.3d at 544 (internal quotation
omitted).
\56\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, while Regulation NMS has enhanced competition, it
has also fostered a ``fragmented'' market structure where trading in a
single stock can occur across multiple trading centers. When multiple
trading centers compete for order flow in the same stock, the
Commission has recognized that ``such competition can lead to the
fragmentation of order flow in that stock.'' \57\ The Commission's
Division of Trading and Markets has also recognized that with so many
``operating equities exchanges and dozens of ATSs, there is vigorous
price competition among the U.S. equity markets and, as a result,
[transaction] fees are tailored and frequently modified to attract
particular types of order flow, some of which is highly fluid and price
sensitive.'' \58\ Indeed, today, equity trading is currently dispersed
across 16 exchanges,\59\ numerous alternative trading systems,\60\
broker-dealer internalizers and wholesalers, all competing for order
flow. Based on publicly-available information, no single exchange
currently has more than 18% market share.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358, 75 3594,
3597 (January 21, 2010) (File No. S7-02-10) (Concept Release on
Equity Market Structure).
\58\ Commission Division of Trading and Markets, Memorandum to
EMSAC, dated October 20, 2015, available here: https://www.sec.gov/spotlight/emsac/memo-maker-taker-fees-on-equities-exchanges.pdf.
\59\ See Cboe Global Markets, U.S. Equities Market Volume
Summary, available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/. See generally https://www.sec.gov/fast-answers/divisionsmarketregmrexchangesshtml.html.
\60\ See FINRA ATS Transparency Data, available at https://otctransparency.finra.org/otctransparency/AtsIssueData. A list of
alternative trading systems registered with the Commission is
available at https://www.sec.gov/foia/docs/atslist.htm.
\61\ See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Equities Market Volume
Summary, available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, low barriers to entry mean that new exchanges may, and do,
rapidly and inexpensively enter the market and offer additional
substitute platforms to compete with the Exchange.\62\ For example, in
2020 alone, three new exchanges have entered the market: Long Term
Stock Exchange (LTSE), which began operations as an exchange on August
28, 2020; \63\ Members Exchange (MEMX), which began operations as an
exchange on September 29, 2020; \64\ and Miami
[[Page 73576]]
International Holdings (MIAX), which began operations of its first
equities exchange on September 29, 2020.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See Jones Paper at 10-11.
\63\ See LTSE Market Announcement: MA-2020-020, dated August 14,
2020, announcing LTSE production securities phase-in planned for
August 28, available here: https://assets.ctfassets.net/cchj2z2dcfyd/rnGvgggJUplaIk6N1xNA7/41926d3925a177d6455868090c46aeda/MA-2020-020__Production_Securities_Launching_August_28_-_Google_Docs.pdf and LTSE Market Announcement: MA-2020-025,
available here: https://assets.ctfassets.net/cchj2z2dcfyd/52nIKwAuOraU1agaNY5j80/0d27ab0eb9b540c67a5e9f831f23f0ac/MA-2020-025.pdf.
\64\ As of October 29, 2020, MEMX is trading all NMS symbols but
has not yet enabled NMS routing. See https://info.memxtrading.com/trader-alert-20-10-memx-trading-symbols-update/.
\65\ See MIAX Pearl Press release, dated September 29, 2020,
available here: https://www.miaxoptions.com/sites/default/files/alert-files/MIAX_Press_Release_09292020.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These low barriers enable existing exchange customers to
disintermediate and start their own exchanges if they think the prices
charged for exchange proprietary market data products are too high.
This is precisely the rationale behind the creation of MEMX, which was
formed by some of the largest and most well capitalized financial firms
that are also Exchange customers (including Bank of America, BlackRock,
Charles Schwab, Citadel, Citi, E*Trade, Fidelity, Goldman Sachs, J.P.
Morgan, Jane Street, Morgan Stanley, TD Ameritrade, and others).\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ MEMX Home Page (``Founded by members and investors, MEMX
aims to drive simplicity, efficiency, and competition in equity
markets.''), available at https://memx.com/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For example, one of MEMX's founding principles is that exchange
proprietary market data prices are too high, and that MEMX will benefit
its members by offering ``[l]ower pricing on market data.'' \67\ Nor is
this a new phenomenon: Exchange customers formed BATS to compete with
incumbent exchanges and once registered as an exchange in 2008, BATS
did not initially charge for market data. The BATS venture was a
financial success for its founders, first through recouping their
investment in its initial public offering and then in the subsequent
sale of BATS to Cboe, which now charges for market data from those
exchanges. Notably, MEMX has some of the same founding broker-dealer
customers, leading some to dub MEMX ``BATS 2.0.'' \68\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ MEMX home page, available at https://memx.com/.
\68\ See ``MEMX turns up the heat on US stock exchanges,''
Financial Times, January 9, 2019, available at https://www.ft.com/content/4908c8b0-1418-11e9-a581-4ff78404524e; see also ``US equities
exchanges: If you can't beat them, join them,'' Euromoney, February
13, 2019, available at https://www.euromoney.com/article/b1d3tfby4p3y4v/us-equities-exchanges-if-you-cant-beat-them-join-them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The fact that this cycle is viable and repeatable by entities that
both trade on and compete with existing exchanges confirms that
barriers to entry are low and that these markets are competitive and
contestable.\69\ And low barriers to entry act as a market check on
high prices.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ United States v. SunGard Data Sys., 172 F. Supp. 2d 172,
186 (D.D.C. 2001) (recognizing that ``[a]s a matter of law, courts
have generally recognized that when a customer can replace the
services of an external product with an internally-created system,
this captive output (i.e. the self-production of all or part of the
relevant product) should be included in the same market.''). In
SunGard, the court rejected the Antitrust Division's attempt to
block SunGuard's acquisition of the disaster recovery assets of
Comdisco on the basis that the acquisition would ``substantially
lessen competition in the market for shared hotsite disaster
recovery services,'' when the evidence showed that ``internal
hotsites'' created by customers competed with the ``external shared
hotsite business'' engaged in by the merging parties. Id. at 173-74,
187.
\70\ United States v. Baker Hughes, 908 F.2d 981, 987 (1990)
(``In the absence of significant barriers [to entry], a company
probably cannot maintain supracompetitive pricing for any length of
time.''); see also David S. Evans and Richard Schmalensee, Markets
with Two-Sided Platforms, in 1 Issues In Competition Law and Policy
667, 685 (ABA Section of Antitrust Law 2008) (noting that exchange
mergers in 2005 and 2006 were approved by competition authorities in
part in reliance on planned and likely entry of other firms).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given Professor Rysman's conclusion that exchanges are platforms
for market data and trading, this fierce competition for order flow on
the trading side of the platform acts to constrain, or ``discipline,''
the pricing of market data on the other side of the platform.\71\ And
due to the ready availability of substitutes and the low cost to move
order flow to those substitute trading venues, an exchange setting
market data fees that are not at competitive levels would expect to
quickly lose business to alternative platforms with more attractive
pricing.\72\ Although the various exchanges may differ in their
strategies for pricing their market data products and their transaction
fees for trades--with some offering market data for free along with
higher trading costs, and others charging more for market data and
comparatively less for trading--the fact that exchanges are platforms
ensures that no exchange makes pricing decisions for one side of its
platform without considering, and being constrained by, the effects
that price will have on the other side of the platform.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Rysman Paper ] 98.
\72\ See Jones Paper at 11.
\73\ In the context of the fee proposal that led to the National
IF Approval Order, supra note 32, one commenter contended that
trading was not a platform with exchange proprietary market data,
and that the exchanges' proprietary market data products were
instead ``complements'' for which exchanges could charge
supracompetitive prices. Professor Rysman debunked these contentions
in an additional paper. See Marc Rysman, Complements, Competition,
and Exchange Proprietary Data Products, August 13, 2020 (Exhibit
3D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, the fierce competition for order flow thus constrains any
exchange from pricing its market data at a supracompetitive price, and
constrains the Exchange in setting its fees at issue here.
The proposed fees are therefore reasonable because in setting them,
the Exchange is constrained by the availability of numerous substitute
platforms offering market data products and trading. Such substitutes
need not be identical, but only substantially similar to the product at
hand.
More specifically, in reducing specified fees for the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades market data products, the Exchange is constrained by the
fact that, if its pricing across the platform is unattractive to
customers, customers have their pick of an increasing number of
alternative platforms to use instead of the Exchange. The Exchange
believes that it has considered all relevant factors and has not
considered irrelevant factors in order to establish reasonable fees.
The existence of numerous alternative platforms to the Exchange's
platform ensures that the Exchange cannot set unreasonable market data
fees without suffering the negative effects of that decision in the
fiercely competitive market for trading order flow.
d. The Availability of Substitute Market Data Products Constrains Fees
for NYSE BBO, NYSE Trades, and NYSE BQT
Even putting aside the facts that exchanges are platforms and that
pricing decisions on the two sides of the platform are intertwined, the
Exchange is constrained in setting the proposed market data fees by the
availability of numerous substitute market data products. The
Commission has been clear that substitute products need not be
identical, but only substantially similar to the product at hand.\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ For example, in the National IF Approval Order, the
Commission recognized that for some customers, the best bid and
offer information from consolidated data feeds may function as a
substitute for the NYSE National Integrated Feed product, which
contains order by order information. See National IF Approval Order,
supra note 32, at 67397 [release p. 21] (``[I]nformation provided by
NYSE National demonstrates that a number of executing broker-dealers
do not subscribe to the NYSE National Integrated Feed and executing
broker-dealers can otherwise obtain NYSE National best bid and offer
information from the consolidated data feeds.'' (internal quotations
omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's NYSE BQT market data product is subject to
significant competitive forces that constrain its pricing.
Specifically, as described above, NYSE BQT competes head-to-head with
the Nasdaq Basic product and the Cboe One Feed. These products each
serve as reasonable substitutes for one another as they are each
designed to provide investors with a unified view of real-time quotes
and last-sale prices in all Tape A, B, and C securities. Each product
provides subscribers with consolidated top-of-book quotes and trades
from multiple U.S. equities
[[Page 73577]]
markets. In the case of NYSE BQT, this product provides top-of-book
quotes and trades data from five NYSE-affiliated U.S. equities
exchanges, which together account for approximately 22% of consolidated
U.S. equities trading volume as of September 2020.\75\ Cboe One Feed
similarly provides top-of-book quotes and trades data from Cboe's four
U.S. equities exchanges. NYSE BQT, Nasdaq Basic, and Cboe One Feed are
all intended to provide indicative pricing and are not intended to be
used for order routing or trading decisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ See Cboe Global Markets U.S. Equities Market Volume
Summary, available at https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/market_share/market/2019-10-31/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to competing with proprietary data products from Nasdaq
and Cboe, NYSE BQT also competes with the consolidated data feed.
However, the Exchange does not claim that NYSE BQT is a substitute for
consolidated data with respect to requirements under the Vendor Display
Rule, which is Regulation NMS Rule 603(c).
The fact that this filing is proposing reductions in certain fees
and fee waivers is itself confirmation of the inherently competitive
nature of the market for the sale of proprietary market data. For
example, in August 2019, Cboe filed proposed rule changes to reduce
certain of its Cboe One Feed fees and noted that it attracted two
additional customers because of the reduced fees.\76\ More recently,
Nasdaq filed a proposed rule change to lower the enterprise license fee
for broker-dealers distributing Nasdaq Basic to internal Professional
subscribers and the enterprise license fee for broker-dealers
distributing Nasdaq Last Sale to Professional subscribers.\77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 86667 (August 14,
2019) (SR-CboeBZX-2019-069); 86670 (August 14, 2019) (SR-CboeBYX-
2019-012); 86676 (August 14, 2019) (SR-CboeEDGA-2019-013); and 86678
(August 14, 2019) (SR-CboeEDGX-2019-048) (Notices of filing and
Immediate effectiveness of proposed rule change to reduce fees for
the Cboe One Feed) (collectively ``Cboe One Fee Filings''). The Cboe
One Fee Filings were in effect from August 1, 2019 until September
30, 2019, when the Commission suspended them and instituted
proceedings to determine whether to approve or disapprove those
proposals. See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87164
(September 30, 2019), 84 FR 53208 (October 4, 2019) (SR-CboeBZX-
2019-069). On October 1, 2019, the Cboe equities exchanges refiled
the Cboe One Fee Filings on the basis that they had new customers
subscribe as a result of the Cboe One Fee Filings, and therefore its
fee proposal had increased competition for top-of-book market data.
See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 87312 (October 15, 2019),
84 FR 56235 (October 21, 2019) (SR-CboeBZX-2019-086); 87305 (October
14, 2019), 84 FR 56210 (October 21, 2019) (SR-CboeBYX-2019-015);
87295 (October 11, 2019), 84 FR 55624 (October 17, 2019) (SR-
CboeEDGX-2019-059); and 87294 (October 11, 2019), 84 FR 55638
(October 17, 2019) (SR-CboeEDGA-2019-015) (Notices of filing and
immediate effectiveness of proposed rule changes to re-file the
Small Retail Broker Distribution Program) (``Cboe One Fee Re-
Filings''). On November 26, 2019, the Commission suspended the Cboe
One Fee Re-Filings and instituted proceedings to determine whether
to approve or disapprove those proposals. See, e.g., Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 87629 (November 26, 2019), 84 FR 66245
(December 3, 2019) (SR-CboeBZX-2019-086). On November 27, 2019, the
Cboe equities exchanges refiled the Cboe One Fee Filings with one
revision to the requirements for participating in the Small Retail
Broker Distribution Program and additional information about the
basis for the proposed fee changes. See Securities Exchange Act
Release Nos. 87712 (December 10, 2019), 84 FR 68508 (December 16,
2019) (SR-CboeBZX-2019-101); 88713 (December 10, 2019), 84 FR 68530
(December 16, 2019) (SR-CboeBYX-2019-023); 87709 (December 10,
2019), 84 FR 68523 (December 16, 2019) (SR-CboeEDGA-2019-021); and
87711 (December 10, 2019), 84 FR 68501 (December 16, 2019) (SR-Cboe-
EDGX-2019-071) (Notices of filing and immediate effectiveness of
proposed rule changes to introduce a Small Retail Broker
Distribution Program) (``Cboe One Third Fee Re-Filings''). On
February 4, 2020, the Cboe equities exchanges withdrew the Cboe One
Third Fee Re-Filings and, on the same date, refiled the Cboe One Fee
Filings. See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 88221 (February
14, 2020), 85 FR 9904 (February 20, 2020) (SR-CboeBYX-2020-007);
88218 (February 14, 2020), 85 FR 9827 (February 20, 2020) (SR-
CboeBZX-2020-014); 88220 (February 14, 2020), 85 FR 9912 (February
20, 2020) (SR-CboeEDGA-2020-004); and 88219 (February 14, 2020), 85
FR 9872 (February 20, 2020) (SR-CboeEDGX-2020-008) (Notices of
filing and immediate effectiveness of proposed rule changes to
introduce a Small Retail Broker Distribution Program) (``Cboe One
Fourth Fee Re-Filings''). On April 15, 2020, the Cboe equities
exchanges withdrew the Cboe One Fee Filings and the Cboe One Fee Re-
Filings. Pursuant to the Cboe One Fourth Fee Re-Filings, the Small
Retail Broker Distribution Program is currently in effect at the
Cboe equities exchanges.
\77\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90177 (October 14,
2020), 85 FR 66620 (October 20, 2020) (SR-NASDAQ-2020-065) (Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To
Lower the Enterprise License Fee for Broker-Dealers Distributing
Nasdaq Basic to Internal Professional Subscribers as Set Forth in
the Equity 7 Pricing Schedule, Section 147, and the Enterprise
License Fee for Broker-Dealers Distributing Nasdaq Last Sale to
Professional Subscribers at Equity 7, Section 139).
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The Exchange notes that NYSE BBO, NYSE Trades, and NYSE BQT are
entirely optional. The Exchange is not required to make the proprietary
data products that are the subject of this proposed rule change
available or to offer any specific pricing alternatives to any
customers, nor is any firm or investor required to purchase the
Exchange's data products. Unlike some other data products (e.g., the
consolidated quotation and last-sale information feeds) that firms are
required to purchase in order to fulfil regulatory obligations,\78\ a
customer's decision whether to purchase any of the Exchange's
proprietary market data feeds is entirely discretionary. Most firms
that choose to subscribe to the NYSE's proprietary market data feeds do
so for the primary goals of using them to increase their revenues,
reduce their expenses, and in some instances compete directly with the
Exchange's trading services. Such firms are able to determine for
themselves whether or not the products in question or any other similar
products are attractively priced. If the NYSE market data feeds do not
provide sufficient value to firms based on the uses those firms may
have for it, such firms may simply choose to conduct their business
operations in ways that do not use the products.\79\
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\78\ The Exchange notes that broker-dealers are not required to
purchase proprietary market data to comply with their best execution
obligations. See In the Matter of the Application of Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association for Review of Actions
Taken by Self-Regulatory Organizations, Release Nos. 34-72182; AP-3-
15350; AP-3-15351 (May 16, 2014). Similarly, there is no requirement
in Regulation NMS or any other rule that proprietary data be
utilized for order routing decisions, and some broker-dealers and
ATSs have chosen not to do so.
\79\ See generally Jones Paper at 8, 10-11.
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In addition, in the case of products that are also redistributed
through market data vendors, such as Bloomberg and Refinitiv, the
vendors themselves provide additional price discipline for proprietary
data products because they control the primary means of access to
certain end users. These vendors impose price discipline based upon
their business models. For example, vendors that assess a surcharge on
data they sell are able to refuse to offer proprietary products that
their end users do not or will not purchase in sufficient numbers. This
competitive constraint is precisely what is driving the proposed fee
changes here, which are designed to attract new market data vendors,
and through them new subscribers, to the NYSE BQT product. Currently,
only four vendors subscribe to NYSE BQT, and each vendor has limited
redistribution of NYSE BQT. No other vendors currently subscribe to
NYSE BQT and likely will not unless their customers request it, and
customers will not elect to pay the proposed fees unless such product
can provide value by sufficiently increasing revenues or reducing costs
in the customer's business in a manner that will offset the fees. All
of these factors operate as constraints on pricing proprietary data
products.
Because of the availability of substitutes, an exchange that
overprices its market data products stands a high risk that users may
substitute another source of market data information for its own. Those
competitive pressures imposed by available alternatives are evident in
the Exchange's proposed pricing.
[[Page 73578]]
In setting the proposed fees, the Exchange considered the
competitiveness of the market for proprietary data and all of the
implications of that competition. The Exchange believes that it has
considered all relevant factors and has not considered irrelevant
factors in order to establish reasonable fees. The existence of
numerous alternatives to the Exchange's platform and, more
specifically, alternatives to the market data products, including
proprietary data from other sources, ensures that the Exchange cannot
set unreasonable fees when vendors and subscribers can elect these
alternatives or choose not to purchase a specific proprietary data
product if the attendant fees are not justified by the returns that any
particular vendor or data recipient would achieve through the purchase.
2. The Proposed Fees Are Reasonable
The specific fees that the Exchange proposes for NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades are reasonable, for the following additional reasons.
Overall. This proposed fee change is a result of the competitive
environment, as the Exchange seeks to decrease certain of its fees to
attract Redistributors that do not currently subscribe to the NYSE BQT
market data product. The Exchange is proposing the fee reductions at
issue to make the Exchange's fees more competitive for a specific
segment of market participants, thereby increasing the availability of
the Exchange's data products, and expanding the options available to
firms making data purchasing decisions based on their business needs.
The Exchange believes that this is consistent with the principles
contained in Regulation NMS to ``promote the wide availability of
market data and to allocate revenues to SROs that produce the most
useful data for investors.'' \80\
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\80\ See Regulation NMS Adopting Release, 70 FR 37495, at 37503.
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Access Fee. By making the reduced Per User Access Fee available to
Redistributors that subscribe only to the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data
feeds and NYSE BQT and do not have any internal use of such products,
and do not subscribe to any other products listed on the Fee Schedule,
the Exchange believes that more Redistributors may choose to subscribe
to these products, thereby expanding the distribution of this market
data for the benefit of investors that participate in the national
market system and increasing competition generally. The Exchange also
believes that offering the Per User Access Fee to these Redistributors
would expand the availability of NYSE BQT to potential data recipients
that are interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT but do not have access
to a Redistributor who subscribes to the data feeds.
The Exchange determined to make the reduced Per User Access Fee
available to these Redistributors because it constitutes a substantial
reduction of the current fee, with the intended purpose of increasing
use of NYSE BQT by Redistributors that do not currently subscribe to
any NYSE market data products. NYSE BQT has been in place since 2014
but has a very small number of subscribers. The Exchange believes that
in order to compete with other indicative pricing products such as
Nasdaq Basic and Cboe One Feed, it needs to provide a meaningful
financial incentive for more Redistributors to choose to subscribe to
NYSE BQT so that they can make it available to their customers.
Accordingly, the proposed reduction to the access fees for NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades, together with the proposed reduction to the access fees
for NYSE American BBO, NYSE American Trades, NYSE Arca BBO, and NYSE
Arca Trades, is reasonable because the reductions will make NYSE BQT a
more attractive offering for Redistributors that do not currently
subscribe to any NYSE market data products and make it more competitive
with Nasdaq Basic and Cboe One Feed. For example, the External
Distribution Fee for Cboe One Feed is currently $5,000 (which is the
sum of the External Distribution fees for the four exchange data
products that are included in Cboe One Feed) plus a Data Consolidation
Fee of $1,000, for a total of $6,000. Evidence of the competition among
exchange groups for these products has previously been demonstrated via
fee changes. For example, following the introduction of the Cboe One
Feed, Nasdaq responded by reducing its fees for the Nasdaq Basic
product.\81\ With the proposed changes by the Exchange, NYSE Arca, and
NYSE American, the Exchange is similarly seeking to compete by
decreasing the total access fees for NYSE BQT from $6,250 to $850 for
Redistributors that do not currently subscribe to any NYSE market data
products and have customers that are interested in subscribing to NYSE
BQT but cannot do so until their Redistributor also subscribes. This
proposed rule change therefore demonstrates the existence of an
effective, competitive market because this proposal resulted from a
need to generate innovative approaches in response to competition from
other exchanges that offer market data for a specific segment of market
participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83751 (July
31, 2018), 83 FR 38428 (August 6, 2018) (SR-NASDAQ-2018-058) (Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To
Lower Fees and Administrative Costs for Distributors of Nasdaq
Basic, Nasdaq Last Sale, NLS Plus and the Nasdaq Depth-of-Book
Products Through a Consolidated Enterprise License). Nasdaq filed
the proposed fee change to lower the Enterprise Fee for Nasdaq Basic
and other market data products in response to the Enterprise Fee for
the Cboe One Feed adopted by Cboe family of exchanges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Redistribution Fees. Similarly, the proposed reduction to the NYSE
Trades Redistribution Fee is reasonable because it is designed to
provide an incentive for Redistributors to make NYSE BQT available so
that data recipients can subscribe to NYSE BQT. The Exchange further
believes that the proposed waiver of the NYSE Trades Redistribution Fee
is reasonable because it is designed to compete with market data
products offered by the Cboe family of equity exchanges.\82\
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\82\ See, e.g., BZX Price List--U.S. Equities available at
https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/Trader.aspx?id=DPUSdata#db. BZX charges
$500 per month for internal distribution, and $2,500 per month for
external distribution, of BZX Last Sale. BZX also charges $500 per
month for internal distribution, and $2,500 per month for external
distribution, of BZX Top. See Cboe BZX U.S. Equities Exchange Fee
Schedule at https://markets.cboe.com/us/equities/membership/fee_schedule/bzx/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Exchange believes that the
proposed fees are reasonable.
The Proposed Fees Are Equitably Allocated
The Exchange believes the proposed fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades are allocated fairly and equitably among the various categories
of users of the feed, and any differences among categories of users are
justified.
Overall. As noted above, this proposed fee change is a result of
the competitive environment for market data products that provide
indicative pricing information across a family of exchanges. To respond
to this competitive environment, the Exchange seeks to amend its fees
to access NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades for Redistributors that would be
subscribing only to the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data feeds and would
use these market data products for external distribution only, which
the Exchange hopes will attract new Redistributor subscribers for its
NYSE BQT market data product so that the product can be made available
to prospective market data recipients. The Exchange is proposing the
fee reductions to make the Exchange's fees more competitive
[[Page 73579]]
for a specific segment of market participants, thereby increasing the
availability of the Exchange's data products, expanding the options
available to firms making data purchasing decisions based on their
business needs, and generally increasing competition.
Access Fee. The Exchange believes that making the Per User Access
Fee available to Redistributors that would be subscribing only to the
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data feeds and would use these market data
products for external distribution only is equitable as it would apply
equally to all data recipients that choose to subscribe to NYSE BBO or
NYSE Trades for external distribution only and who do not subscribe to
any other products listed on the Fee Schedule. Because NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades are optional products, any data recipient could choose to
subscribe only to NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades to distribute externally and
be eligible for the proposed reduced fee. The Exchange does not believe
that it is inequitable that this proposed fee reduction would be
available only to data recipients that subscribe only to NYSE BBO or
NYSE Trades and only for external distribution. Internal use of data
represents a different set of use cases than a Redistributor that is
engaged only in external distribution of data. For example, non-display
data can be used by data recipients for a wide variety of profit-
generating purposes, including proprietary and agency trading and smart
order routing, as well as by data recipients that operate order
matching and execution platforms that compete directly with the
Exchange for order flow. The data also can be used for a variety of
non-trading purposes that indirectly support trading, such as risk
management and compliance. Although some of these non-trading uses do
not directly generate revenues, they can nonetheless substantially
reduce the recipient's costs by automating such functions so that they
can be carried out in a more efficient and accurate manner and reduce
errors and labor costs, thereby benefiting end users. The Exchange
believes that charging a different access fee for a Redistributor that
is engaged solely in external distribution of only the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades products is equitable because it would make NYSE BQT
available to more data recipients that are customers of such
Redistributors and who would not otherwise be able to access NYSE BQT
if their Redistributor did not subscribe to and redistribute NYSE BQT.
Redistribution Fees. The Exchange believes the proposed change to
provide a waiver of the Redistribution Fee to a Redistributor that
would be eligible for the Per User Access Fee because it only
externally redistributes NYSE Trades to at least one data feed
recipient is equitably allocated. The proposed change would apply
equally to all Redistributors that are eligible for the Per User Access
Fee and choose to externally redistribute the NYSE Trades product, and
would serve as an incentive for Redistributors to make NYSE Trades more
broadly available for use by both Professional and Non-Professional
Users. This, in turn, could provide an incentive for Redistributors
that do not currently subscribe to any NYSE market data products to
subscribe to NYSE BQT and make it available to their customers.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Exchange believes that the
proposed fees for the NYSE market data products are equitably
allocated.
The Proposed Fees Are Not Unfairly Discriminatory
The Exchange believes the proposed fees are not unfairly
discriminatory because any differences in the application of the fees
are based on meaningful distinctions between customers, and those
meaningful distinctions are not unfairly discriminatory between
customers.
Overall. As noted above, this proposed fee change is a result of
the competitive environment for market data products that provide
indicative pricing information across a family of exchanges. To respond
to this competitive environment, the Exchange seeks to amend its fees
to provide a financial incentive for Redistributors that do not
currently subscribe to any NYSE market data products that decide to
subscribe to NYSE BQT, which the Exchange hopes will attract more
subscribers for its NYSE BQT market data product. The Exchange is
proposing the fee reductions to make the Exchange's fees more
competitive for a specific segment of market participants, thereby
increasing the availability of the Exchange's data products, expanding
the options available to firms making data purchasing decisions based
on their business needs, and generally increasing competition.
Access Fee. The Exchange believes that making the Per User Access
Fee available to Redistributors that would be subscribing only to the
NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data feeds and would use these market data
products for external distribution only is not unfairly discriminatory
as it would apply equally to all Redistributors that choose to
subscribe to NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades for external distribution only and
who do not subscribe to any other products listed on the Fee Schedule.
Because NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades are optional products, any data
recipient could choose to subscribe only to NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades to
distribute externally and be eligible for the proposed reduced fee. The
Exchange does not believe that it is unfairly discriminatory that this
proposed fee reduction would be available only to data recipients that
subscribe only to NYSE BBO or NYSE Trades and only for external
distribution. Internal use of data represents a different set of use
cases than a Redistributor that is engaged only in external
distribution of data. For example, non-display data can be used by data
recipients for a wide variety of profit-generating purposes, including
proprietary and agency trading and smart order routing, as well as by
data recipients that operate order matching and execution platforms
that compete directly with the Exchange for order flow. The data also
can be used for a variety of non-trading purposes that indirectly
support trading, such as risk management and compliance. While some of
these non-trading uses do not directly generate revenues, they can
nonetheless substantially reduce the recipient's costs by automating
such functions so that they can be carried out in a more efficient and
accurate manner and reduce errors and labor costs, thereby benefiting
end users. The Exchange therefore believes that there is a meaningful
distinction between internal use and redistribution of market data and
that charging a different access fee to a Redistributor that is engaged
solely in external distribution of only the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades
products is not unfairly discriminatory because it would make NYSE BQT
available to more data recipients that are customers of such
Redistributors and who would not otherwise be able to access NYSE BQT
if their Redistributor did not subscribe to and redistribute NYSE BQT.
Moreover, the Exchange does not believe that it is unfairly
discriminatory to offer the Per User Access Fee only to those
Redistributors that would subscribe only to the NYSE BBO and NYSE
Trades data feeds and no other products on the Fee Schedule, and only
for external distribution. The Exchange does not currently have any
Redistributors that fit this description. This proposed rule change is
designed to provide an incentive for Redistributors that do not
currently subscribe to NYSE BQT or any other
[[Page 73580]]
products listed on the Fee Schedule, but have customers that are
interested in subscribing to NYSE BQT, to subscribe to the NYSE BBO and
NYSE Trades data feeds so that they can make NYSE BQT available to
their customers. This fee incentive is not necessary for Redistributors
that currently subscribe to the NYSE BBO and NYSE Trades data feeds
because such Redistributors could already subscribe to NYSE BQT, but
have chosen not to, and a reduction in their existing access fees would
likely not result in such Redistributors choosing to subscribe to NYSE
BQT.
Redistribution Fees. The Exchange believes the proposed change to
provide a waiver of the Redistribution Fee to a Redistributor that
would be eligible for the Per User Access Fee because it only
externally redistributes NYSE Trades to at least one data recipient is
not unfairly discriminatory. The proposed waiver would apply equally to
all Redistributors that are eligible for the Per User Access Fee and
choose to externally redistribute the NYSE Trades product, and would
serve as an incentive for Redistributors that do not currently
subscribe to any NYSE market data products to subscribe to NYSE Trades
and then make NYSE BQT available to their customers.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Exchange believes that the
proposed fees are not unfairly discriminatory.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. Indeed, as demonstrated
above, the Exchange believes the proposed rule changes are pro-
competitive.
Intramarket Competition. The Exchange believes that the proposed
fees do not put any market participants at a relative disadvantage
compared to other market participants. As noted above, the proposed fee
schedule would apply to all subscribers of NYSE market data products,
and customers may not only choose whether to subscribe to the products
at all, but also may tailor their subscriptions to include only the
products and uses that they deem suitable for their business needs. The
Exchange also believes that the proposed fees neither favor nor
penalize one or more categories of market participants in a manner that
would impose an undue market on competition. As shown above, to the
extent that particular proposed fees apply to only a subset of
subscribers, those distinctions are not unfairly discriminatory and do
unfairly burden one set of customers over another.
Intermarket Competition. The Exchange believes that the proposed
fees do not impose a burden on competition on other exchanges that is
not necessary or appropriate; indeed, the Exchange believes the
proposed fee changes would have the effect of increasing competition.
As demonstrated above and in Professor Rysman's paper, exchanges are
platforms for market data and trading. In setting the proposed fees,
the Exchange is constrained by the availability of substitute platforms
also offering market data products and trading, and low barriers to
entry mean new exchange platforms are frequently introduced. The fact
that exchanges are platforms ensures that no exchange can make pricing
decisions for one side of its platform without considering, and being
constrained by, the effects that price will have on the other side of
the platform. In setting fees at issue here, the Exchange is
constrained by the fact that, if its pricing across the platform is
unattractive to customers, customers will have its pick of an
increasing number of alternative platforms to use instead of the
Exchange. Given this intense competition between platforms, no one
exchange's market data fees can impose an unnecessary burden on
competition, and the Exchange's proposed fees do not do so here.
In addition, the Exchange believes that the proposed fees do not
impose a burden on competition or on other exchanges that is not
necessary or appropriate because of the availability of numerous
substitute market data products. Specifically, as described above, NYSE
BQT competes head-to-head with the Nasdaq Basic product and the Cboe
One Feed. These products each serve as reasonable substitutes for one
another as they are each designed to provide investors with a unified
view of real-time quotes and last-sale prices in all Tape A, B, and C
securities. Each product provides subscribers with consolidated top-of-
book quotes and trades from multiple U.S. equities markets. NYSE BQT
provides top-of-book quotes and trades data from five NYSE-affiliated
U.S. equities exchanges, while Cboe One Feed similarly provides top-of-
book quotes and trades data from Cboe's four U.S. equities exchanges.
NYSE BQT, Nasdaq Basic, and Cboe One Feed are all intended to provide
indicative pricing and therefore, are reasonable substitutes for one
another. Additionally, market data vendors are also able to offer close
substitutes to NYSE BQT. Because market data users can find suitable
substitute feeds, an exchange that overprices its market data products
stands a high risk that users may substitute another source of market
data information for its own. These competitive pressures ensure that
no one exchange's market data fees can impose an unnecessary burden on
competition, and the Exchange's proposed fees do not do so here.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited or received with respect to the
proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change is effective upon filing pursuant to
Section 19(b)(3)(A) \83\ of the Act and subparagraph (f)(2) of Rule
19b-4 \84\ thereunder, because it establishes a due, fee, or other
charge imposed by the Exchange.
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\83\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\84\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(2).
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At any time within 60 days of the filing of such 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 under
Section 19(b)(2)(B) \85\ of the Act to determine whether the proposed
rule change should be approved or disapproved.
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\85\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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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-NYSE-2020-91 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.
[[Page 73581]]
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NYSE-2020-91. 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-NYSE-2020-91, and should be submitted on
or before December 9, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\86\
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\86\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-25389 Filed 11-17-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P