Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Amend Options 1, Section 1; Options 2, Section 5; Options 3, Sections 5, 7, 10, 15 and 23, 81225-81237 [2020-27483]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 241 / Tuesday, December 15, 2020 / Notices
existing purpose 5, to promote
transparency.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
III. Description of the Modified System
of Records
Customers requesting Change-ofAddress mail forwarding services or
Hold Mail services.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(11),
interested persons are invited to submit
written data, views, or arguments on
this proposal. A report of the proposed
revisions to this SOR has been sent to
Congress and to the Office of
Management and Budget for their
evaluations. The Postal Service does not
expect this modified system of records
to have any adverse effect on individual
privacy rights. Accordingly, for the
reasons stated above, the Postal Service
proposes revisions to this system of
records as follows:
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
USPS 800.050, Address Mapping
Directory for Mail Fraud Detection and
Prevention.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
1. Customer information: For Changeof-Address requests, customer name(s),
including first name, middle name or
initial, last name and suffix, old and
new address, email address(es), options
selected for type of move (individual,
family, or business) and (permanent),
telephone numbers and device
identification; for Hold Mail requests,
customer name(s), including first name,
middle name or initial, last name and
suffix, address, email address(es), and
telephone numbers.
2. Online user information: Device
identification, internet Protocol (IP)
address.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
SYSTEM LOCATION:
Individual customers requesting
Change-of-Address, mail forwarding, or
Hold Mail services and other USPS
Products, Services and features from
USPS customer systems.
USPS National Customer Support
Center (NCSC) and USPS IT Eagan Host
Computing Services Center.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
None.
Standard routine uses 1. through 7, 10
and 11. apply.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS:
Vice President, Product Innovation,
United States Postal Service, 475
L’Enfant Plaza SW, Washington, DC
20260.
STORING, RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING,
AND DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF
RECORDS:
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
18 U.S.C. 1341, 1343 and 3061; 39
U.S.C. 401, 403, 404, 3003 and 3005.
1. To enhance the customer
experience by improving the security of
Change-of-Address (COA) and Hold
Mail processes.
2. To protect USPS customers from
becoming potential victims of mail
fraud and identity theft.
3. To identify and mitigate potential
fraud in the COA and Hold Mail
processes.
4. To verify a customer’s identity
when applying for COA and Hold Mail
services.
5. To facilitate mail fraud detection
and prevention for COA and Hold Mail
service requests through address
mapping comparisons and cross-checks
between multiple USPS customer
systems.
6. To facilitate the provision of
accurate and reliable mail and package
delivery services.
17:35 Dec 14, 2020
Jkt 253001
Retrieval is accomplished by a
computer-based system, using one or
more of the following elements: By
customer name(s), ZIP Code(s), address,
telephone number, email address,
device identification and/or IP address.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND
DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
COA and Hold Mail records are
retained in an electronic database for 5
years from the effective date.
Electronic records existing on
computer storage media are destroyed
according to the applicable USPS media
sanitization practice.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL
SAFEGUARDS:
Electronic records, computers, and
computer storage media are located in
controlled-access areas under
supervision of program personnel.
Access to records is limited to
individuals whose official duties require
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such access. Contractors and licensees
are subject to contract controls and
unannounced on-site audits and
inspections.
Computers are protected by
mechanical locks, card key systems, or
other physical access control methods.
The use of computer systems is
regulated with installed security
software, computer logon
identifications, and operating system
controls including access controls,
terminal and transaction logging, and
file management software.
Online data transmission and storage
is protected by encryption, dedicated
lines, and authorized access codes.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Requests for access must be made in
accordance with the Notification
Procedure above and the USPS Privacy
Act regulations regarding access to
records and verification of identity
under 39 CFR 266.5.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
See Notification Procedure and
Record Access Procedures above.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Customers wanting to know if
information about them is maintained in
this system of records must address
inquiries in writing to the system
manager. Inquiries must contain name,
address, email, and other identifying
information.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF
RECORDS:
PURPOSE(S):
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Automated databases.
81225
*
December 4, 2018, 83 FR 62631.
*
*
*
*
Joshua J. Hofer,
Attorney, Federal Compliance.
[FR Doc. 2020–27514 Filed 12–14–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–12–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–90622; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2020–083]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Options 1, Section 1; Options 2,
Section 5; Options 3, Sections 5, 7, 10,
15 and 23
December 9, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 241 / Tuesday, December 15, 2020 / Notices
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on November
30, 2020, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
(‘‘Nasdaq’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed
rule change as described in Items I and
II 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 amend the
rules of The Nasdaq Options Market
LLC (‘‘NOM’’) at Options 1, Section 1
(Definitions); Options 2, Section 5
(Market Maker Quotations); Options 3,
Section 5 (Entry and Display of Orders);
Options 3, Section 7 (Types of Orders
and Order and Quote Protocols);
Options 3, Section 10 (Order Book
Allocation); Options 3, Section 15 (Risk
Protections); and Options 3, Section 23
(Data Feeds and Trade Information).
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/
rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend
NOM Rules at Options 1, Section 1
(Definitions); Options 2, Section 5
(Market Maker Quotations); Options 3,
Section 5 (Entry and Display of Orders);
Options 3, Section 7 (Types of Orders
and Order and Quote Protocols);
Options 3, Section 10 (Order Book
Allocation); Options 3, Section 15 (Risk
1 15
2 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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17:35 Dec 14, 2020
Jkt 253001
Protections); and Options 3, Section 23
(Data Feeds and Trade Information).
Each change is described below.
Options 1, Section 1
The Exchange proposes to amend the
definition of ‘‘Public Customer’’ to
conform to Nasdaq Phlx LLC’s (‘‘Phlx’’)
definition at Options 1, Section 1(b)(46).
The Exchange believes that making clear
that a Public Customer could be a
person or entity and clarifying that a
Public Customer is not a Professional, as
defined within Options 1, Section
(a)(47),3 will make clear what it meant
by that term. Today, a Public Customer
is not a Professional. In order to
properly represent orders entered on the
Exchange, Participants are required to
indicate whether orders are
‘‘Professional Orders.’’ To comply with
this requirement, Participants are
required to review their Public
Customers’ activity on at least a
quarterly basis to determine whether
orders, which are not for the account of
a broker-dealer, should be represented
as Public Customer Orders or
Professional Orders.4 A Public Customer
may be a Professional, provided they
meet the requirements specified within
NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47). If the
Professional definition is not met, the
order is treated as a Public Customer
order.
The Exchange also proposes to
remove a sentence within Options 1,
Section 1(a)(47) which provides, ‘‘A
Participant or a Public Customers may,
without limitation, be a Professional.’’
This sentence is confusing, unnecessary,
and adds no information to this defined
term. By way of comparison, Phlx
Options 1, Section 1(b)(46) does not
contain a similar sentence and that
sentence was recently removed from
Nasdaq BX, Inc.’s (‘‘BX’’) Rules.5 The
Exchange adopted a Professional
3 NOM
Options 1, Section 1(a)(47) provides that,
‘‘The term ‘‘Professional’’ means any person or
entity that (i) is not a broker or dealer in securities,
and (ii) places more than 390 orders in listed
options per day on average during a calendar month
for its own beneficial account(s). A Participant or
a Public Customer may, without limitation, be a
Professional. All Professional orders shall be
appropriately marked by Participants.’’
4 Participants conduct a quarterly review and
make any appropriate changes to the way in which
they are representing orders within five days after
the end of each calendar quarter. While Participants
only will be required to review their accounts on
a quarterly basis, if during a quarter the Exchange
identifies a customer for which orders are being
represented as Public Customer Orders but that has
averaged more than 390 orders per day during a
month, the Exchange will notify the Participant and
the Participant will be required to change the
manner in which it is representing the customer’s
orders within five days.
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
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designation in 2010 6 and has
differentiated Public and Professional
customers since that time.
The Exchange also proposes to
remove a sentence, within Options 3,
Section 10(a)(1)(C)(i), which provides
that a Public Customer order does not
include a Professional order. Indicating
that a Public Customer order is not a
Professional Order is no longer
necessary because of the proposed
definition for Public Customer. Today,
the definition of a Public Customer does
not explicitly exclude a Professional.
The language that the Exchange
proposes to delete currently indicates
that Professionals would not be treated
the same as a Public Customer in terms
of priority and, therefore, would not
receive the same allocation that is
reserved for Public Customer orders.
Since NOM is amending the definition
of a Public Customer to explicitly
exclude Professionals, the language in
the allocation rule is no longer
necessary to distinguish these two types
of market participants.
Bid/Ask Differentials
Currently, NOM Market Maker intraday quoting requirements, within
Options 2, Section 5(d)(2), provide,
Bid/ask Differentials (Quote Spread
Parameters). Options on equities (including
Exchange-Traded Fund Shares), and on index
options must be quoted with a difference not
to exceed $5 between the bid and offer
regardless of the price of the bid, including
before and during the opening. However,
respecting in-the-money series where the
market for the underlying security is wider
than $5, the bid/ask differential may be as
wide as the spread between the national best
bid and offer in the underlying security. The
Exchange may establish differences other
than the above for one or more series or
classes of options.
The Exchange proposes to amend NOM
Options 2, Section 5(d)(2) to add the
words ‘‘Intra-Day’’ before the title ‘‘Bid/
ask Differentials (Quote Spread
Parameters)’’ to make clear that these
requirements are intra-day. Also, the
Exchange proposes to amend this
paragraph to remove the phrase,
‘‘including before and during the
opening.’’ The bid/ask differentials,
within NOM Options 2, Section 5(d)(2),
will continue to apply intra-day. This is
consistent with the Exchange’s existing
practice. Today, the bid/ask differentials
applicable to the opening are noted
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63028
(October 1, 2010), 75 FR 62443 (October 8, 2010)
(SR–NASDAQ–2010–099) (Order Approving a
Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Definition of
Professional and Require That All Professional
Orders Be Appropriately Marked).
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 241 / Tuesday, December 15, 2020 / Notices
within Options 3, Section 8(a)(6).7 As
noted within the rule, NOM publishes
its specified bid/ask differential on its
system settings page.8 The bid/ask
differentials noted for the Valid Width
NBBO within the opening provide for
quotations with a difference that does
not exceed $5 between the bid and offer
regardless of the price of the bid. It is
not necessary to discuss the opening
bid/ask differentials within Options 2,
Section 5 as those differentials are
specifically noted within the opening
rule.
Options 3, Section 5
The Exchange proposes to amend
Options 3, Section 5(c) to add additional
rule text similar to Phlx Options 3,
Section 5(c).9 NOM’s current Options 3,
Section 5(c) states, ‘‘The System
automatically executes eligible orders
using the Exchange’s displayed best bid
and offer (‘‘BBO’’) or the Exchange’s
non-displayed order book (‘‘internal
BBO’’).’’ The Exchange proposes to
state, ‘‘The System automatically
executes eligible orders using the
Exchange’s displayed best bid and offer
(‘‘BBO’’) or the Exchange’s nondisplayed order book (‘‘internal BBO’’)
if the best bid and/or offer on the
Exchange has been repriced pursuant to
subsection (d) below.’’ Today, NOM reprices certain orders to avoid locking
and crossing away markets, consistent
with its Trade-Through Compliance and
Locked or Crossed Markets
obligations.10 Orders which lock or
7 NOM Options 3, Section 8(a)(6) provides, ‘‘Valid
Width National Best Bid or Offer’’ or ‘‘Valid Width
NBBO’’ shall mean the combination of all away
market quotes and any combination of NOMregistered Market Maker orders and quotes received
over the QUO or SQF Protocols within a specified
bid/ask differential as established and published by
the Exchange. The Valid Width NBBO will be
configurable by underlying, and tables with valid
width differentials will be posted by Nasdaq on its
website. Away markets that are crossed will void
all Valid Width NBBO calculations. If any Market
Maker orders or quotes on NOM are crossed
internally, then all such orders and quotes will be
excluded from the Valid Width NBBO calculation.’’
8 NOM’s System Settings page is located at:
https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/2020/07/02/NOM_
SystemSettings.pdf.
9 Phlx has an All-or-None Order type that is nondisplayed. See Options 3, Section 7(b)(5). Phlx
Options 3, Section 5(c) accounts for this nondisplayed order on the order book. NOM has a Price
Improving Order is already described within
Options 3, Section 5(c). A Price Improving Order on
NOM displays differently than Phlx’s All-Or-None
Order and therefore is described differently within
Options 3, Section 5(c). Otherwise, NOM has no
other non-displayed order types.
10 NOM Options 3, Section 5(d) provides, ‘‘An
order will not be executed at a price that trades
through another market or displayed at a price that
would lock or cross another market. An order that
is designated by the member as routable will be
routed in compliance with applicable TradeThrough and Locked and Crossed Markets
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17:35 Dec 14, 2020
Jkt 253001
cross an away market automatically reprice one minimum price improvement
inferior to the original away best bid/
offer price to one minimum trading
increment away from the new away best
bid/offer price or its original limit
price.11 The re-priced order is displayed
on OPRA. The order remains on NOM’s
Order Book and is accessible at the nondisplayed price. For example, a limit
order may be accessed on NOM by a
Participant if the limit order is priced
better than the NBBO. The Exchange
believes that the addition of this rule
text will provide additional clarity.
Options 3, Section 7
The Exchange proposes to amend the
Cancel-Replacement Order, within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(1). By way of
background with respect to cancelling
and replacing an order, a Participant has
the option of either submitting a cancel
order and then separately submitting a
new order, which serves as a
replacement of the original order, in two
separate messages, or submitting a
single cancel and replace order in one
message (‘‘Cancel-Replacement Order’’).
Submitting a cancel order and then
separately submitting a new order will
not retain the priority of the original
order.
Currently, the rule text for CancelReplacement Order provides, ‘‘CancelReplacement Order shall mean a single
message for the immediate cancellation
of a previously received order and the
replacement of that order with a new
order with new terms and conditions. If
the previously placed order is already
filled partially or in its entirety, the
replacement order is automatically
canceled or reduced by the number of
contracts that were executed. The
replacement order will not retain the
priority of the cancelled order except
when the replacement order reduces the
size of the order and all other terms and
conditions are retained.’’ The Exchange
proposes to replace the words ‘‘shall
mean’’ with ‘‘is’’ and remove the final
sentence of the rule text.12 The
restrictions. An order that is designated by a
member as non-routable will be re-priced in order
to comply with applicable Trade-Through and
Locked and Crossed Markets restrictions. If, at the
time of entry, an order that the entering party has
elected not to make eligible for routing would cause
a locked or crossed market violation or would cause
a trade-through violation, it will be re-priced to the
current national best offer (for bids) or the current
national best bid (for offers) and displayed at one
minimum price variance above (for offers) or below
(for bids) the national best price.’’
11 See Options 5, Section 4 (Order Routing),
which describes the repricing of orders for both
routable and non-routable orders within Options 5,
Section 4(a)(iii)(A), (B) and (C).
12 The final sentence of current NOM Options 3,
Section 7(a)(1) provides, ‘‘The replacement order
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81227
Exchange proposes to add a new
sentence to the end of the rule which
provides, ‘‘The replacement order will
retain the priority of the cancelled
order, if the order posts to the Order
Book, provided the price is not
amended, and the size is not increased.’’
Unlike the sentence proposed for
deletion, the proposed sentence states in
the affirmative the conditions under
which the Cancel-Replacement Order
will retain priority. Price and size are
the terms that will determine if the
Cancel-Replacement Order retains its
priority, as is the case today, other terms
and conditions do not amend the
priority of the Cancel-Replacement
Order.
The Exchange is not amending the
current System functionality of a
Cancel-Replacement Order with respect
to the terms that will cause the order to
lose priority. Today, and with the
proposed change, if a Participant does
not change or increase the size of the
order, it would not trigger a loss in
priority. Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) states
only if the size of the order were
reduced would a loss of priority occur.13
The proposed rule reverses the phrasing
in the current rule and, instead,
describes changes to priority when size
is increased. Priority is retained if the
size of the order does not change or is
not increased. The rule is intended to
provide transparency regarding changes
to a Cancel-Replacement Order which
would trigger a loss in priority. Today,
and with the proposal, the price of the
order may not be changed when
submitting a Cancel-Replacement Order;
that would be a new order. A similar
change was recently made to BX’s
Cancel-Replacement Order.14
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘Limit Orders,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(2). The Exchange proposes
to style ‘‘Limit Orders’’ in the singular
and change ‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’ and
‘‘orders’’ to ‘‘order.’’ A Limit Order on
NOM operates in the same manner as a
Limit Order on BX. The Exchange
proposes to conform the rule text of
NOM’s Limit Order to BX Options 3,
Section 7(a)(3) by adding a sentence
describing marketable limit orders. BX
recently amended its rule to similarly
will not retain the priority of the cancelled order
except when the replacement order reduces the size
of the order and all other terms and conditions are
retained.’’
13 Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) provides, ‘‘The
replacement order will not retain the priority of the
cancelled order except when the replacement order
reduces the size of the order and all other terms and
conditions are retained.’’
14 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 241 / Tuesday, December 15, 2020 / Notices
change its description of Limit Order.15
The Exchange proposes to state, ‘‘A
marketable limit order is a limit order to
buy (sell) at or above (below) the best
offer (bid) on the Exchange.’’ The
Exchange believes that the rule
amendment more aptly describes a
marketable limit order as compared to
the current rule text, which is
confusing, but was intended to convey
the substance of the proposed text. The
new sentence does not substantively
amend the current rule text and
conforms NOM’s description with BX’s
description.
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘Minimum Quantity Orders,’’ within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(3). The
Exchange proposes to style ‘‘Minimum
Quantity Orders’’ in the singular and
change ‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’ and ‘‘orders’’ to
‘‘order.’’ These amendments are
technical and non-substantive. The
Exchange is otherwise not amending the
Minimum Quantity Order rule text.
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘Market Orders,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(4). The Exchange proposes
to style ‘‘Market Orders’’ in the singular
and change ‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’ and
‘‘orders’’ to ‘‘order.’’ These amendments
are technical and non-substantive. The
Exchange also proposes to amend a
current sentence to state, ‘‘Participants
can designate that their Market Orders
not executed after a pre-established
period of time, as established by the
Exchange, will be cancelled back to the
Participant, once an option series has
opened for trading.’’ Market Orders
submitted during the opening may be
executed, or cancelled if the Market
Order is priced through the opening
price. The Exchange would only cancel
those Market Orders that remained on
the Order Book once an option series
opened.16 The pre-established period of
time would commence once the intraday trading session begins for that
options series and the order would be
cancelled back to the Participant,
provided the Participant elected to
cancel back its Market Orders. The
Exchange proposes to make clear that
while the opening is on-going, and the
intra-day trading session has not
commenced, the pre-established period
of time would not commence. Further,
the Exchange proposes to note that
‘‘Market Orders on the Order Book
would be immediately cancelled if an
options series halted, provided the
Participant designated the cancellation
15 Id.
16 See NOM’s Trading Halts rule at Options 3,
Section 9(d)(2), ‘‘After the opening, the Exchange
shall reject Market Orders, as defined in Options 3,
Section 7, and shall notify Participants of the reason
for such rejection.’’
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17:35 Dec 14, 2020
Jkt 253001
of Market Orders.’’ Once an options
series halts for trading, the Exchange
conducts another Opening Process. In
the case where a Market Order was
resting on the Order Book, and the
Participant had designated the
cancellation of Market Orders, in the
event of a halt, the Market Orders
resting on the Order Book would
immediately cancel. This proposed rule
text is consistent with existing System
functionality. The Exchange believes
that this additional rule text brings
greater clarity to the Market Order type.
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘Price Improving Orders,’’ within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(5). The
Exchange proposes to style ‘‘Price
Improving Orders’’ in the singular and
change ‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’ and ‘‘orders’’ to
‘‘order.’’
The Exchange proposes to amend ‘‘On
the Open Order,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(6) by removing the words
‘‘The term’’ at the beginning of the
sentence and change ‘‘shall mean’’ to
‘‘is.’’
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘Intermarket Sweep Order’’ or ‘‘ISO,’’
within Options 3, Section 7(a)(7).
Today, the rule text provides,
‘‘Intermarket Sweep Order’’ or ‘‘ISO’’ are
limit orders that are designated as ISOs in the
manner prescribed by Nasdaq and are
executed within the System by Participants
at multiple price levels without respect to
Protected Quotations of other Eligible
Exchanges as defined in Options 5, Section
1. ISOs may have any time-in-force
designation except WAIT, are handled within
the System pursuant to Options 3, Section 10
and shall not be eligible for routing as set out
in Options 3, Section 19. ISOs with a timein-force designation of GTC are treated as
having a time-in-force designation of Day.
(1) Simultaneously with the routing of an
ISO to the System, one or more additional
limit orders, as necessary, are routed by the
entering party to execute against the full
displayed size of any protected bid or offer
(as defined in Options 5, Section 1) in the
case of a limit order to sell or buy with a
price that is superior to the limit price of the
limit order identified as an intermarket
sweep order (as defined in Options 5, Section
1). These additional routed orders must be
identified as ISOs.
The Exchange proposes to replace the
current rule, within Options 3, Section
7(a)(7), with the exception of Options 3,
Section 7(a)(7)(1), which is being
retained by re-lettered as ‘‘A,’’ with the
following rule text which is similar to
BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(6),17 to
describe an ISO Order, ‘‘is a Limit Order
that meets the requirements of Options
5, Section 1(8). Orders submitted to the
Exchange as ISO are not routable and
17 BX’s rule describes the PRISM mechanism,
while NOM has no auction mechanisms.
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Sfmt 4703
will ignore the ABBO and trade at
allowable prices on the Exchange. ISOs
may be entered on the Order Book. ISOs
may have any time-in-force designation
and are handled within the System
pursuant to Options 3, Section 10 and
shall not be eligible for routing as set
out in Options 5, Section 4. ISO Orders
may not be submitted during the
opening.’’
An ISO Order is a Limit Order, as
noted in the current text and Options 5,
Section 1, continues to be referenced in
the proposed text. The Exchange
continues to note that the orders are not
routable. The additional text, ‘‘. . . will
ignore the ABBO and trade at allowable
prices on the Exchange’’ is more precise
than the current rule text and describes
current functionality. The Exchange
further proposes to state, ‘‘ISOs may be
entered on the Order Book.’’ That is also
the case today. The remainder of the
current rule text is not necessary as
Options 5, Section 1(8) is cited.
Removing the current rule text and
replacing it with text which describes
the proper time-in-force designation
will make clear what is acceptable on
NOM today. This rule text is not
proposed to change the functionality of
an ISO Order. The Exchange believes
the proposed description provides a
more succinct description.
Today, ISOs may have any time-inforce designation, except WAIT, and
further requires that ISOs with a timein-force designation of GTC are treated
as having a time-in-force designation of
Day. The Exchange proposes to remove
the WAIT time-in-force within this
proposed rule change, as described in
more detail below, and, therefore, the
WAIT order type no longer needs to be
cited.
Further, today, NOM’s System does
not treat an ISO with a time-in-force
designation of GTC as having a time-inforce designation of Day, as provided for
within NOM’s current rule at Options 3,
Section 7(a)(6), rather those orders are
treated as GTC. The current sentence is
being removed because it is inaccurate.
The proposed sentence accurately
describes the System functionality. The
Exchange does not believe that an ISO
with a time-in-force designation of GTC
was ever treated as having a time-inforce designation of Day, the rule text
was simply inaccurate.
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘One-Cancels-the-Other Order’’ at
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(8)
by changing ‘‘shall mean’’ to ‘‘is.’’
The Exchange proposes to amend the
‘‘All-or-None Order,’’ within
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(9).
The Exchange proposes to replace ‘‘shall
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mean’’ with ‘‘is’’ and capitalize market
order and limit orders.
The Exchange proposes to amend the
‘‘Post-Only Orders,’’ within renumbered
Options 3, Section 7(a)(10). The
Exchange proposes to replace ‘‘are’’
with ‘‘is an’’ and make Post-Only Orders
singular. An extra space is also being
removed.
The Exchange proposes to amend
Options 3, Section 7(b) to define ‘‘Time
in Force’’ as ‘‘TIF’’.
With respect to an ‘‘On the Open
Order,’’ or ‘‘OPG’’ Order, within
Options 3, Section 7(b)(1), the Exchange
notes that OPGs may not route. This is
the case today. This order type
functions in the same way as BX’s OPG
Order at Options 3, Section 7(b)(1).18
The Exchange is adding rule text to
make clear the manner in which an OPG
Order would be treated, which is similar
to how a BX OPG Order is treated today.
The Exchange proposes to amend an
‘‘Immediate-Or-Cancel’’ Order or ‘‘IOC,’’
within Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) to add
hyphens and make ‘‘Or’’ lowercase. The
Exchange proposes to remove the
current description which provides that
an IOC Order, ‘‘shall mean for orders so
designated, that if after entry into the
System a marketable order (or
unexecuted portion thereof) becomes
non-marketable, the order (or
unexecuted portion thereof) shall be
canceled and returned to the entering
participant. IOC Orders shall be
available for entry from the time prior
to market open specified by the
Exchange on its website until market
close and for potential execution from
9:30 a.m. until market close. IOC Orders
entered between the time specified by
the Exchange on its website and 9:30
a.m. Eastern Time will be held within
the System until 9:30 a.m. at which time
the System shall determine whether
such orders are marketable.’’ The
Exchange proposes to replace this
description with rule text similar to BX
Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) 19 as these
18 BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(1) provides, ‘‘An
Opening Only order (‘‘OPG’’) is entered with a TIF
of ‘‘OPG’’. This order can only be executed in the
Opening Process pursuant to Options 3, Section 8.
This order type is not subject to any protections
listed in Options 3, Section 15. Any portion of the
order that is not executed during the Opening
Process is cancelled. OPG orders may not route.’’
19 BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) provides,
‘‘Immediate-or-Cancel’’ or ‘‘IOC’’ is a Market Order
or Limit Order to be executed in whole or in part
upon receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled. (A) Orders entered with a TIF of IOC are
not eligible for routing. (B) IOC orders may be
entered through FIX or SQF, provided that an IOC
Order entered by a Market Maker through SQF is
not subject to the Limit Order Price Protection or
the Market Order Spread Protection in Options 3,
Section 15(a)(1) and (a)(2), respectively; (C) Orders
entered into the Price Improvement Auction
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order types are identical, except that
NOM has the OTTO protocol and BX
does not, and also as mentioned
previously NOM has no auctions.
Additionally, BX’s rule addresses
limitations in order protections that do
not exist today on NOM. The Exchange
proposes to state that an Immediate-orCancel Order or ‘‘IOC’’ Order is a
Market Order or Limit Order to be
executed in whole or in part upon
receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled and/or routed pursuant to
Participant’s instruction. IOC orders
may be entered through FIX, OTTO or
SQF; IOC Orders entered through OTTO
or SQF may not route. Today, IOC
Orders entered through OTTO or SQF
do not route; only orders entered
through FIX may route. The SQF
interface is a quoting interface, the
Exchange does not route quotes. With
respect to OTTO, orders submitted by
NOM Market Makers over this interface
are treated as quotes and similarly do
not route. The Exchange is proposing to
memorialize this information within the
description of an IOC Order to add
clarity.
The Exchange proposes to amend the
TIF of ‘‘DAY’’ at Options 5, Section
7(b)(3) to remove the words ‘‘shall mean
for orders so designated’’ and add ‘‘is an
order’’ to conform the rule text to other
text in this rule. The Exchange also
proposes to conform the description of
a TIF of ‘‘DAY’’ similar to Phlx Options
3, Section 7(c)(1).20 The Exchange
believes that the remainder of the
description for a Day Order, ‘‘if after
entry into the System, the order is not
fully executed, the order (or unexecuted
portion thereof) shall remain available
for potential display and/or execution
until market close, unless canceled by
the entering party, after which it shall
be returned to the entering party. Day
Orders shall be available for entry from
the time prior to market open specified
by the Exchange on its website until
market close and for potential execution
from 9:30 a.m. until market close,’’ is
unnecessarily verbose and proposes to
remove this rule text. The Exchange
proposes to state, ‘‘Day’’ is an order
entered with a TIF of ‘‘Day’’ that expires
at the end of the day on which it was
entered, if not executed. All orders by
their terms are Day Orders unless
otherwise specified. Day Orders may be
(‘‘PRISM’’) Mechanism are considered to have a TIF
of IOC. By their terms, these orders will be: (1)
Executed after an exposure period, or (2) cancelled.
20 Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) provides, ‘‘Day.
If not executed, an order entered with a TIF of
‘‘Day’’ expires at the end of the day on which it was
entered. All orders by their terms are Day Orders
unless otherwise specified. Day orders may be
entered through FIX.’’
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81229
entered through FIX or OTTO. A Day
Order on Phlx functions in the same
way as a Day Order on NOM. The Phlx
rule text is more succinct in describing
this order type. Similar changes were
recently made on BX.21
The Exchange proposes to amend the
TIF of ‘‘Good Til Cancelled’’ or ‘‘GTC’’
at Options 5, Section 7(b)(4). The
Exchange proposes to remove the words
‘‘shall mean for orders’’ and add ‘‘is an
order.’’ The Exchange also proposes to
conform the rule text similar to Phlx
Options 3, Section 7(c)(4),22 and provide
that a ‘‘Good Til Cancelled’’ or ‘‘GTC’’
is ‘‘an order entered with a TIF of
‘‘GTC’’ that, if not fully executed, will
remain available for potential display
and/or execution unless cancelled by
the entering party, or until the option
expires, whichever comes first. GTC
Orders shall be available for entry from
the time prior to market open specified
by the Exchange until market close. GTC
Orders may only be entered through
FIX.’’ The Exchange would remove the
rule text which provides, ‘‘that if after
entry into System, the order is not fully
executed, the order (or unexecuted
portion thereof) shall remain available
for potential display and/or execution
unless cancelled by the entering party,
or until the option expires, whichever
comes first. GTC Orders shall be
available for entry from the time prior
to market open specified by the
Exchange on its website until market
close and for potential execution from
9:30 a.m. until market close.’’ A GTC
Order on Phlx functions in the same
way as a GTC Order on NOM. The
Exchange is not proposing to amend the
functionality of a GTC Order, rather the
Exchange believes the proposed
description is more succinct.
The Exchange proposes to no longer
offer a TIF of ‘‘WAIT.’’ The Exchange
would remove the rule text at NOM
Options 3, Section 7(b)(5). If the
Exchange desires to offer this TIF in the
future, it would file a proposed rule
change with the Commission pursuant
to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act.23 The
Exchange has provided notice of its
intention to remove the TIF of
21 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
22 Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4) provides, ‘‘A
Good Til Cancelled (‘‘GTC’’) Order entered with a
TIF of GTC, if not fully executed, will remain
available for potential display and/or execution
unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the
option expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders
shall be available for entry from the time prior to
market open specified by the Exchange until market
close.’’
23 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
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‘‘WAIT’’.24 BX previously offered a
WAIT order type recently and
discontinued this order types because it
was not being utilized to a great
extent.25
The Exchange proposes to note,
within NOM Options 3, Section 7(c), the
various routing options which are
available. The Exchange proposes to add
rule text which provides, ‘‘Routing
Strategies. Orders may be entered on the
Exchange with a routing strategy of
SEEK, SRCH or Do-Not-Route (‘‘DNR’’)
as provided in Options 5, Section 4
through FIX only.’’
Finally, the Exchange proposes to reletter current Options 3, Section 7(c)
and (d).
Options 3, Section 15
The Exchange proposes to amend
Options 3, Section 15(c) relating to AntiInternalization to make clear that the
Anti-Internalization functionality does
not apply during the opening. A similar
change was recently made to BX’s
Rules.26 The Exchange proposes to
clarify that Anti-Internalization does not
apply during an opening or reopening
following a trading halt, pursuant to
Options 3, Section 8, to provide more
specificity on how this functionality
currently operates. The Exchange notes
that the same procedures used during an
opening are used to reopen an option
series after a trading halt, and therefore
proposes to specify that AntiInternalization will not apply during the
opening (i.e., the opening and halt
reopening processes). During the
opening, Market Makers are able to
observe the primary market and then
determine how they would like to
quote. They are not required to quote in
the opening on NOM. Therefore, AntiInternalization is unnecessary during an
opening due to the high level of control
that Market Makers exercise over their
quotes during this process.
Options 3, Section 23
The Exchange proposes to amend
Options 3, Section 23, Data Feeds and
Trade Information, to update its
description of Nasdaq ITCH to Trade
Options (‘‘ITTO’’). The Exchange
proposes to amend ITTO at Options 3,
Section 23(a)(1) to more closely align
with current System operation. The
Exchange proposes a technical
amendment to the first sentence to
replace a comma with the word ‘‘and.’’
24 See
Options Trader Alert #2020–26.
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
26 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89759
(September 3, 2020). 85 FR 55877 (September 10,
2020) (SR–BX–2020–023).
25 See
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The Exchange also proposes to relocate
rule text concerning order imbalances to
the end of the description. The
Exchange proposes to amend the first
sentence to state that ITTO is a data feed
that provides full order and quote depth
information for individual orders and
quotes on the NOM book, and last sale
information for trades executed on
NOM. The Exchange would amend and
relocate the rule text that provides, ‘‘and
Order Imbalance Information as set forth
in NOM Rules Options 3, Section 8’’ at
the end of the first sentence. The
Exchange proposes to add a sentence at
the end of the description within
Options 3, Section 8 which states, ‘‘The
feed also provides order imbalances on
opening/re-opening (size of matched
contracts and size of the imbalance).’’
This sentence makes clear that order
imbalance information is provided for
both an opening and re-opening process.
Today, a re-opening process initiates
after a trading halt has occurred intraday. Also, the Exchange notes the
specific information that would be
provided, namely the size of matched
contracts and size of the imbalance. The
Exchange believes that this additional
context to imbalance messages will
provide market participants with more
complete information about what is
contained in the data feed. The
Exchange notes that this information is
available today and the rule text is being
amended to make clear what
information is currently provided.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)
of the Act,27 in general, and furthers the
objectives of Section 6(b)(5) of the Act,28
in particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general to protect
investors and the public interest.
Options 1, Section 1
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the definition of ‘‘Public Customer’’ to
conform to Phlx’s definition is intended
to provide greater specificity regarding
what is meant by the term ‘‘Public
Customer.’’ The Exchange believes that
making clear that a Public Customer
could be a person or entity and
clarifying that a Public Customer is not
a Professional, as defined within
Options 1, Section (a)(47),29 will make
27 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
29 NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47) provides that,
‘‘The term ‘‘Professional’’ means any person or
28 15
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clear what it meant by that term. Today,
a Public Customer is not a Professional.
In order to properly represent orders
entered on the Exchange, Participants
are required to indicate whether orders
are ‘‘Professional Orders.’’ To comply
with this requirement, Participants are
required to review their Public
Customers’ activity on at least a
quarterly basis to determine whether
orders, which are not for the account of
a broker-dealer, should be represented
as Public Customer Orders or
Professional Orders.30 A Public
Customer may be a Professional,
provided they meet the requirements
specified within NOM Options 1,
Section 1(a)(47). If the Professional
definition is not met, the order is treated
as a Public Customer order. The
Exchange believes that it is consistent
with the Act to state within the
definition of ‘‘Public Customers’’ that a
Professional is not a Public Customer.
As noted above, there is a process for
determining if a market participant
qualifies as a ‘‘Professional.’’ This
specificity will serve to protect investors
and the public interest in that the terms
‘‘Public Customer’’ and ‘‘Professional’’
are separate categories of market
participants, as defined. Also, this
definition conforms to Phlx’s definition
at Options 1, Section 1(b)(47).
The Exchange’s proposal to remove a
sentence within Options 1, Section
1(a)(47) which provides, ‘‘A Participant
or a Public Customers may, without
limitation, be a Professional,’’ is
consistent with the Act. This sentence is
confusing, unnecessary, and adds no
information to this defined term. By
way of comparison, Phlx Options 1,
Section 1(b)(46) does not contain a
similar sentence and that sentence was
recently removed from Nasdaq BX,
Inc.’s (‘‘BX’’) Rules.31 The Exchange
adopted a Professional designation in
entity that (i) is not a broker or dealer in securities,
and (ii) places more than 390 orders in listed
options per day on average during a calendar month
for its own beneficial account(s). A Participant or
a Public Customer may, without limitation, be a
Professional. All Professional orders shall be
appropriately marked by Participants.’’
30 Participants conduct a quarterly review and
make any appropriate changes to the way in which
they are representing orders within five days after
the end of each calendar quarter. While Participants
only will be required to review their accounts on
a quarterly basis, if during a quarter the Exchange
identifies a customer for which orders are being
represented as Public Customer Orders but that has
averaged more than 390 orders per day during a
month, the Exchange will notify the Participant and
the Participant will be required to change the
manner in which it is representing the customer’s
orders within five days.
31 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
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2010 32 and has differentiated Public
and Professional customers since that
time. NOM proposes removing this
sentence because it does not add useful
information to understanding who may
qualify as a Professional.
The Exchange’s proposal to remove a
sentence, within Options 3, Section
10(a)(1)(C)(i), which allocation rule
provides that a Public Customer order
does not include a Professional order is
consistent with the Act. Today, the
definition of a Public Customer does not
explicitly exclude a Professional.
Indicating that a Public Customer order
is not a Professional Order is no longer
necessary because of the proposed
definition for Public Customer. The
language that the Exchange proposes to
delete, currently indicates that
Professionals would not be treated the
same as a Public Customer in terms of
priority and, therefore, would not
receive the same allocation that is
reserved for Public Customer orders.
Since NOM is amending the definition
of a Public Customer to explicitly
exclude Professionals, the language in
the allocation rule is no longer
necessary to distinguish these two types
of market participants.
Bid/Ask Differentials
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
NOM Options 2, Section 5(d)(2) to add
the words ‘‘Intra-Day’’ before the title
‘‘Bid/ask Differentials (Quote Spread
Parameters)’’ and make clear that
remove references to the opening, will
make clear for Market Makers their
intra-day requirements. The bid/ask
differentials, within NOM Options 2,
Section 5(d)(2), will continue to apply
intra-day. This is consistent with the
Exchange’s existing practice. Today, the
bid/ask differentials applicable to the
opening are noted within Options 3,
Section 8(a)(6).33 As noted within the
rule, NOM publishes its specified bid/
ask differential on its system settings
32 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63028
(October 1, 2010), 75 FR 62443 (October 8, 2010)
(SR–NASDAQ–2020–099) (Order Approving a
Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Definition of
Professional and Require That All Professional
Orders Be Appropriately Marked).
33 NOM Options 3, Section 8(a)(6) provides,
‘‘Valid Width National Best Bid or Offer’’ or ‘‘Valid
Width NBBO’’ shall mean the combination of all
away market quotes and any combination of NOMregistered Market Maker orders and quotes received
over the QUO or SQF Protocols within a specified
bid/ask differential as established and published by
the Exchange. The Valid Width NBBO will be
configurable by underlying, and tables with valid
width differentials will be posted by Nasdaq on its
website. Away markets that are crossed will void
all Valid Width NBBO calculations. If any Market
Maker orders or quotes on NOM are crossed
internally, then all such orders and quotes will be
excluded from the Valid Width NBBO calculation.’’
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page.34 The bid/ask differentials noted
for the Valid Width NBBO within the
opening provide for quotations with a
difference that does not exceed $5
between the bid and offer regardless of
the price of the bid. It is not necessary
to discuss the opening bid/ask
differentials within Options 2, Section 5
as those differentials are specifically
noted within the opening rule. This
clarification is consistent with the Act
because it is designed to avoid any
confusion for Market Makers as to their
intra-day requirements versus their
opening requirements.
Options 3, Section 5
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
Options 3, Section 5(c) to add additional
rule text similar to Phlx Options 3,
Section 5(c) 35 is consistent with the
Act. Today, NOM re-prices certain
orders to avoid locking and crossing
away markets, consistent with its TradeThrough Compliance and Locked or
Crossed Markets obligations.36 Orders
which lock or cross an away market
automatically re-price one minimum
price improvement inferior to the
original away best bid/offer price to one
minimum trading increment away from
the new away best bid/offer price or its
original limit price.37 The re-priced
order is displayed on OPRA. The order
remains on NOM’s Order Book and is
accessible at the non-displayed price.
For example, a limit order may be
accessed on NOM by a Participant if the
limit order is priced better than the
NBBO. The Exchange believes that the
addition of this rule text will add greater
specificity to the rule.
Options 3, Section 7
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the Cancel-Replacement Order, within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(1), is consistent
with the Act. A Participant has the
option of either submitting a cancel
order and then separately submitting a
new order, which serves as a
replacement of the original order, in two
separate messages, or submitting a
34 NOM’s System Settings page is located at:
https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/2020/07/02/NOM_
SystemSettings.pdf.
35 Phlx has an All-or-None Order type that is nondisplayed. See Options 3, Section 7(b)(5). Phlx
Options 3, Section 5(c) accounts for this nondisplayed order on the order book. NOM has a Price
Improving Order is already described within
Options 3, Section 5(c). A Price Improving Order on
NOM displays differently than Phlx’s All-Or-None
Order and therefore is described differently within
Options 3, Section 5(c). Otherwise, NOM has no
other non-displayed order types.
36 See NOM Options 3, Section 5(d).
37 See Options 5, Section 4 (Order Routing),
which describes the repricing of orders for both
routable and non-routable orders within Options 5,
Section 4(a)(iii)(A), (B) and (C).
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81231
single cancel and replace order in one
message (‘‘Cancel-Replacement Order’’).
Submitting a cancel order and then
separately submitting a new order will
not retain the priority of the original
order. The Exchange’s proposal to
replace the words ‘‘shall mean’’ with
‘‘is’’ and remove the final sentence of
the rule text will bring greater clarity to
this rule. The Exchange addition of a
new sentence to the end of the rule
which provides, ‘‘The replacement
order will retain the priority of the
cancelled order, if the order posts to the
Order Book, provided the price is not
amended, and the size is not increased’’
states in the affirmative the conditions
under which the Cancel-Replacement
Order will retain priority. Price and size
are the terms that will determine if the
Cancel-Replacement Order retains its
priority, as is the case today, other terms
and conditions do not amend the
priority of the Cancel-Replacement
Order.
The Exchange’s proposal is not
amending the current System
functionality of a Cancel-Replacement
Order with respect to the terms that will
cause the order to lose priority. Today,
and with the proposed change, if a
Participant does not change or increase
the size of the order, it would not trigger
a loss in priority. Options 3, Section
7(a)(1) states only if the size of the order
were reduced would a loss of priority
occur.38 Priority is retained if the size of
the order does not change or is not
increased. The rule is intended to
provide transparency regarding changes
to a Cancel-Replacement Order which
would trigger a loss in priority. Today,
and with the proposal, the price of the
order may not be changed when
submitting a Cancel-Replacement Order;
that would be a new order. A similar
change was recently made to BX’s
Cancel-Replacement Order.39 Price and
size are the terms that will determine if
the Cancel-Replacement Order retains
its priority, as is the case today, other
terms and conditions do not amend the
priority of the Cancel-Replacement
Order.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Limit Orders,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(3), to add the sentence for
marketable limit orders which is
currently in BX’s rule is consistent with
the Act. A Limit Order on NOM
operates in the same manner as a Limit
38 Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) provides, ‘‘The
replacement order will not retain the priority of the
cancelled order except when the replacement order
reduces the size of the order and all other terms and
conditions are retained.’’
39 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
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Order on BX. The Exchange proposes to
conform the rule text of NOM’s Limit
Order to BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(3)
by adding the sentence describing
marketable limit orders. BX recently
amended its rule to similarly change its
description of Limit Order.40 The
Exchange proposes to state, ‘‘A
marketable limit order is a limit order to
buy (sell) at or above (below) the best
offer (bid) on the Exchange.’’ The
Exchange believes that the rule
amendment is consistent with the Act as
it more aptly describes a marketable
limit order as compared to the current
rule text, which is confusing, but was
intended to convey the substance of the
proposed text. The new sentence does
not substantively amend the current
rule text and conforms NOM’s
description with BX’s description.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Minimum Quantity Orders,’’ within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(3), is nonsubstantive and makes technical edits
that do not change the meaning of the
term. The Exchange is otherwise not
amending the Minimum Quantity Order
rule text.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Market Orders,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(4), is consistent with the
Act. The Exchange’s proposes to style
‘‘Market Orders’’ in the singular and
change ‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’ and ‘‘orders’’ to
‘‘order.’’ These amendments are
technical and non-substantive. The
Exchange’s proposal to amend the
current sentence to state, ‘‘Participants
can designate that their Market Orders
not executed after a pre-established
period of time, as established by the
Exchange, will be cancelled back to the
Participant, once an option series has
opened for trading.’’ Market Orders
submitted during the opening may be
executed, or cancelled if the Market
Order is priced through the opening
price. The Exchange would only cancel
those Market Orders that remained on
the Order Book once an option series
opened.41 The pre-established period of
time would commence once the intraday trading session begins for that
options series and the order would be
cancelled back to the Participant,
provided the Participant elected to
cancel back its Market Orders. The
Exchange’s proposal makes clear that
while the opening is on-going, and the
intra-day trading session has not
40 Id.
41 See NOM’s opening rule at Options 3, Section
8(d)(2), ‘‘After the opening, the Exchange shall
reject Market Orders, as defined in Options 3,
Section 7, and shall notify Participants of the reason
for such rejection.’’
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commenced, the pre-established period
of time would not commence.
The proposal to note that ‘‘Market
Orders on the Order Book would be
immediately cancelled if an options
series halted, provided the Participant
designated the cancellation of Market
Orders’’ is consistent with the Act. Once
an options series halts for trading, the
Exchange conducts another Opening
Process. In the case where a Market
Order was resting on the Order Book,
and the Participant had designated the
cancellation of Market Orders, in the
event of a halt, the Market Orders
resting on the Order Book would
immediately cancel. This proposed rule
text is consistent with existing System
functionality. The Exchange believes
that this additional rule text brings
greater clarity to the Market Order type.
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘Price Improving Orders,’’ within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(5) is consistent
with the Act. The Exchange proposes to
style ‘‘Price Improving Orders’’ in the
singular and change ‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’
and ‘‘orders’’ to ‘‘order’’ are nonsubstantive amendments.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘On the Open Order,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(6) by removing the words
‘‘The term’’ at the beginning of the
sentence and change ‘‘shall mean’’ to
‘‘is’’ are non-substantive amendments.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Intermarket Sweep Order’’ or ‘‘ISO’’
Orders, within Options 3, Section
7(a)(7), with the exception of Options 3,
Section 7(a)(7)(1), which is being
retained by re-lettered as ‘‘A,’’ and
addition of rule text is consistent with
the Act. The new rule text is similar to
BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(6).42
An ISO Order is a Limit Order, as
noted in the current text and Options 5,
Section 1, continues to be referenced in
the proposed text. The Exchange
continues to note that the orders are not
routable. The additional text, ‘‘. . .will
ignore the ABBO and trade at allowable
prices on the Exchange’’ is more precise
than the current rule text and describes
current functionality. The Exchange
further proposes to state, ‘‘ISOs may be
entered on the Order Book.’’ That is also
the case today. The remainder of the
current rule text is not necessary as
Options 5, Section 1(8) is cited.
Removing the current rule text and
replacing it with text which describes
the proper time-in-force designation
will make clear what is acceptable on
NOM today. This rule text is not
proposed to change the functionality of
an ISO Order. The Exchange believes
42 BX’s rule describes the PRISM mechanism,
while NOM has no auction mechanisms.
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the proposed description provides a
more succinct description.
Today, the rule provides that ISOs
may have any time-in-force designation,
except WAIT, and further requires that
ISOs with a time-in-force designation of
GTC are treated as having a time-inforce designation of Day. The Exchange
proposes to remove the WAIT time-inforce within this proposed rule change,
as described in more detail below, and,
therefore, the WAIT order type no
longer needs to be cited. NOM’s System
does not treat an ISO with a time-inforce designation of GTC as having a
time-in-force designation of Day, as
provided for within NOM’s current rule
at Options 3, Section 7(a)(6), rather
those orders are treated as GTC. The
current sentence is being removed
because it is inaccurate. The proposed
sentence is consistent with the Act
because it accurately describes the
System functionality. The Exchange
does not believe that an ISO with a
time-in-force designation of GTC was
ever treated as having a time-in-force
designation of Day, the rule text was
simply inaccurate. This proposal is
consistent with the protection of
investors and the public interest
because it will clarify the handling of
ISO Orders for market participants.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘One-Cancels-the-Other Order’’ within
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(8) is
consistent with the Act because the
changes are technical in nature and nonsubstantive.
The Exchange’s amendment to ‘‘Allor-None Order,’’ within renumbered
Options 3, Section 7(a)(9), is nonsubstantive and does not change the
meaning of the term.
The Exchange’s amendment to ‘‘PostOnly Orders,’’ within renumbered
Options 3, Section 7(a)(10), is nonsubstantive and does not change the
meaning of the term.
Adding ‘‘TIF to Options 3, Section
7(b) allows that term to be defined
within the Rules.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the ‘‘On the Open Order,’’ or ‘‘OPG’’
Order, within Options 3, Section 7(b)(1),
to note that OPGs may not route, is
consistent with the Act. The System
would not route an OPG Order today.
This order type functions in the same
way as BX’s OPG Order at Options 3,
Section 7(b)(1).43 The Exchange is
43 BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(1) provides, ‘‘An
Opening Only order (‘‘OPG’’) is entered with a TIF
of ‘‘OPG’’. This order can only be executed in the
Opening Process pursuant to Options 3, Section 8.
This order type is not subject to any protections
listed in Options 3, Section 15. Any portion of the
order that is not executed during the Opening
Process is cancelled. OPG orders may not route.’’
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adding rule text to make clear the
manner in which an OPG Order would
be treated, which is similar to how a BX
OPG Order is treated today. This
proposal is consistent with the
protection of investors and the public
interest because it will clarify the
handling of OPG Orders for market
participants.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend an
‘‘Immediate-Or-Cancel’’ Order or ‘‘IOC,’’
within Options 3, Section 7(b)(2), is
consistent with the Act. The Exchange’s
proposal replaces the current
description with Phlx’s description at
Options 3, Section 7(c)(2) as these order
types are identical. The Exchange’s
proposal to state that an Immediate-orCancel Order or ‘‘IOC’’ Order is a
Market Order or Limit Order to be
executed in whole or in part upon
receipt will bring greater clarity to the
rule. Further the Exchange’s proposal to
add that any portion not so executed is
cancelled is consistent with the current
description. The Exchange proposes to
replace this description with rule text
similar to BX Options 3, Section
7(b)(2) 44 as these order types are
identical, except that NOM has the
OTTO protocol and BX does not, and
also as mentioned previously NOM has
no auctions. Additionally, BX’s rule
addresses limitations in order
protections that do not exist today on
NOM. The Exchange proposes to state
that an Immediate-or-Cancel Order or
‘‘IOC’’ Order is a Market Order or Limit
Order to be executed in whole or in part
upon receipt. Any portion not so
executed is cancelled and/or routed
pursuant to Participant’s instruction.
IOC orders may be entered through FIX,
OTTO or SQF; IOC Orders entered
through OTTO or SQF may not route.
Today, IOC Orders entered through
OTTO or SQF do not route; only orders
entered through FIX may route. The
SQF interface is a quoting interface, the
Exchange does not route quotes. With
respect to OTTO, orders submitted by
NOM Market Makers over this interface
are treated as quotes and similarly do
not route. The Exchange’s amendments
are consistent with the Act in that the
changes memorialize pertinent
44 BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) provides,
‘‘Immediate-or-Cancel’’ or ‘‘IOC’’ is a Market Order
or Limit Order to be executed in whole or in part
upon receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled. (A) Orders entered with a TIF of IOC are
not eligible for routing. (B) IOC orders may be
entered through FIX or SQF, provided that an IOC
Order entered by a Market Maker through SQF is
not subject to the Limit Order Price Protection or
the Market Order Spread Protection in Options 3,
Section 15(a)(1) and (a)(2), respectively; (C) Orders
entered into the Price Improvement Auction
(‘‘PRISM’’) Mechanism are considered to have a TIF
of IOC. By their terms, these orders will be: (1)
Executed after an exposure period, or (2) cancelled.
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information within the description of an
IOC Order to add clarity.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the TIF of ‘‘DAY’’ at Options 3, Section
7(b)(3) to conform the description of a
TIF of ‘‘DAY’’ to Phlx Options 3,
Section 7(c)(1) 45 is consistent with the
Act. The Exchange believes the current
text describing NOM’s Day TIF is
unnecessarily verbose and proposes to
remove this language. A DAY Order on
Phlx functions in the same way as a
DAY Order on NOM. The proposal is
not amending the System functionality
of a DAY Order. The Phlx rule text is
more succinct in describing this order
type. Similar changes were recently
made on BX.46
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the TIF of ‘‘Good Til Cancelled’’ or
‘‘GTC’’ at Options 3, Section 7(b)(4) is
consistent with the Act. The Exchange
proposes to conform the rule text to
Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4).47 The
Exchange is not amending the manner
in which the System function with
respect to GTC Orders. GTC Orders, if
not fully executed, will remain available
for potential display and/or execution
unless cancelled by the entering party,
or until the option expires, whichever
comes first. GTC Orders shall be
available for entry from the time prior
to market open, as specified by the
Exchange, until market close, as is the
case today. Also, today, a GTC Order
may only be entered through FIX. A
GTC Order on Phlx functions in the
same way as a GTC Order on NOM. The
Exchange believes that the amended
rule text will bring greater transparency
to its rules as the proposed description
is more succinct and thereby protects
investors and the general public.
The Exchange’s proposal to no longer
offer a TIF of ‘‘WAIT’’ is consistent with
the Act because it will remove an order
type that is not in demand on NOM and
simply the offerings provided by NOM.
If the Exchange desires to offer this TIF
in the futures, it would file a proposed
rule change with the Commission
pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
45 Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) provides, ‘‘Day.
If not executed, an order entered with a TIF of
‘‘Day’’ expires at the end of the day on which it was
entered. All orders by their terms are Day Orders
unless otherwise specified. Day orders may be
entered through FIX.’’
46 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
47 Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4) provides, ‘‘A
Good Til Cancelled (‘‘GTC’’) Order entered with a
TIF of GTC, if not fully executed, will remain
available for potential display and/or execution
unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the
option expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders
shall be available for entry from the time prior to
market open specified by the Exchange until market
close.’’
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81233
Act.48 The Exchange has provided
notice of its intention to remove the TIF
of ‘‘WAIT’’.49 BX previously offered a
WAIT order type recently and
discontinued this order types because it
was not being utilized to a great
extent.50
The Exchange’s proposal to note,
within NOM Options 3, Section 7(c), the
various routing options which are
available is consistent with the Act.
Options 3, Section 15
The Exchange believes its proposal to
clarify that Anti-Internalization will not
apply during an opening is consistent
with the Act as it would provide more
specificity on how this functionality
currently operates. A similar change
was recently made to BX’s Rules.51 The
Exchange notes that the same
procedures used during an opening are
used to reopen an option series after a
trading halt, and therefore proposes to
specify that Anti-Internalization will not
apply during the opening (i.e., the
opening and halt reopening processes).
During the opening, Market Makers are
able to observe the primary market and
then determine how they would like to
quote. They are not required to quote in
the opening on NOM. Therefore, AntiInternalization is unnecessary during an
opening due to the high level of control
that Market Makers exercise over their
quotes during this process.
Options 3, Section 23
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
Options 3, Section 23, Data Feeds and
Trade Information, to update its
descriptions of the ITTO data feed is
consistent with the Act because the
updated descriptions will bring greater
transparency to the Exchange’s rules
and more closely align with current
System operation.
The Exchange’s proposal will make
clear that order imbalance information
is provided for both an opening and reopening process. Today, a re-opening
process initiates after a trading halt has
occurred intra-day. Also, the Exchange’s
proposal notes the specific information
that would be provided, namely the size
of matched contracts and size of the
imbalance. The Exchange believes that
this additional context to imbalance
messages will provide market
participants with more complete
information about what is contained in
48 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
Options Trader Alert #2020–26.
50 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
51 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89759
(September 3, 2020). 85 FR 55877 (September 10,
2020) (SR–BX–2020–023).
49 See
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the data feed. The Exchange notes that
this information is available today and
the rule text is being amended to make
clear what information is currently
provided.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
Options 1, Section 1
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the definition of ‘‘Public Customer’’ to
conform to Phlx’s definition is intended
to provide greater specificity regarding
what is meant by the term ‘‘Public
Customer.’’ This proposal does not
impose an undue burden on
competition, rather it makes clear that a
Public Customer could be a person or
entity and clarifies that a Public
Customer is not a Professional, as
defined within Options 1, Section
(a)(47).52 Today, a Public Customer is
not a Professional. In order to properly
represent orders entered on the
Exchange, Participants are required to
indicate whether orders are
‘‘Professional Orders.’’ To comply with
this requirement, Participants are
required to review their Public
Customers’ activity on at least a
quarterly basis to determine whether
orders, which are not for the account of
a broker-dealer, should be represented
as Public Customer Orders or
Professional Orders.53 A Public
Customer may be a Professional,
provided they meet the requirements
specified within NOM Options 1,
Section 1(a)(47). If the Professional
definition is not met, the order is treated
as a Public Customer order. The process
for determining if a market participant
qualifies as a ‘‘Professional’’ is
applicable to all Participants. Also, this
52 NOM
Options 1, Section 1(a)(47) provides that,
‘‘The term ‘‘Professional’’ means any person or
entity that (i) is not a broker or dealer in securities,
and (ii) places more than 390 orders in listed
options per day on average during a calendar month
for its own beneficial account(s). A Participant or
a Public Customer may, without limitation, be a
Professional. All Professional orders shall be
appropriately marked by Participants.’’
53 Participants conduct a quarterly review and
make any appropriate changes to the way in which
they are representing orders within five days after
the end of each calendar quarter. While Participants
only will be required to review their accounts on
a quarterly basis, if during a quarter the Exchange
identifies a customer for which orders are being
represented as Public Customer Orders but that has
averaged more than 390 orders per day during a
month, the Exchange will notify the Participant and
the Participant will be required to change the
manner in which it is representing the customer’s
orders within five days.
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definition conforms to Phlx’s definition
at Options 1, Section 1(b)(47).
The Exchange’s proposal to remove a
sentence within Options 1, Section
1(a)(47) which provides, ‘‘A Participant
or a Public Customers may, without
limitation, be a Professional,’’ does not
impose an undue burden on
competition. This sentence is confusing,
unnecessary, and adds no information
to this defined term. By way of
comparison, Phlx Options 1, Section
1(b)(46) does not contain a similar
sentence and that sentence was recently
removed from Nasdaq BX, Inc.’s (‘‘BX’’)
Rules.54 The Exchange adopted a
Professional designation in 2010 55 and
has differentiated Public and
Professional customers since that time.
NOM proposes removing this sentence
because it does not add useful
information to understanding who may
qualify as a Professional.
The Exchange’s proposal to remove a
sentence, within Options 3, Section
10(a)(1)(C)(i), which allocation rule
provides that a Public Customer order
does not include a Professional order
does not impose an undue burden on
competition. Today, the definition of a
Public Customer does not explicitly
exclude a Professional. Indicating that a
Public Customer order is not a
Professional Order is no longer
necessary because of the proposed
definition for Public Customer. The
language that the Exchange proposes to
delete, currently indicates that
Professionals would not be treated the
same as a Public Customer in terms of
priority and, therefore, would not
receive the same allocation that is
reserved for Public Customer orders.
Since NOM is amending the definition
of a Public Customer to explicitly
exclude Professionals, the language in
the allocation rule is no longer
necessary to distinguish these two types
of market participants.
Bid/Ask Differentials
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
NOM Options 2, Section 5(d)(2) to add
the words ‘‘Intra-Day’’ before the title
‘‘Bid/ask Differentials (Quote Spread
Parameters)’’ and make clear that
remove references to the opening, will
make clear for Market Makers their
intra-day requirements. The bid/ask
differentials, within NOM Options 2,
54 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
55 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63028
(October 1, 2010), 75 FR 62443 (October 8, 2010)
(SR–NASDAQ–2020–099) (Order Approving a
Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Definition of
Professional and Require That All Professional
Orders Be Appropriately Marked).
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Section 5(d)(2), will continue to apply
intra-day. This proposal does not
impose an undue burden on
competition, rather it conform the
Exchange’s existing practice. Today, the
bid/ask differentials applicable to the
opening are noted within Options 3,
Section 8(a)(6).56 As noted within the
rule, NOM publishes its specified bid/
ask differential on its system settings
page.57 The bid/ask differentials noted
for the Valid Width NBBO within the
opening provide for quotations with a
difference that does not exceed $5
between the bid and offer regardless of
the price of the bid. It is not necessary
to discuss the opening bid/ask
differentials within Options 2, Section 5
as those differentials are specifically
noted within the opening rule. This
clarification avoids any confusion for
Market Makers as to their intra-day
requirements versus their opening
requirements.
Options 3, Section 5
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
Options 3, Section 5(c) to add additional
rule text similar to Phlx Options 3,
Section 5(c) 58 does not impose an
undue burden on competition. Today,
NOM re-prices certain orders to avoid
locking and crossing away markets,
consistent with its Trade-Through
Compliance and Locked or Crossed
Markets obligations.59 Orders which
lock or cross an away market
automatically re-price one minimum
price improvement inferior to the
original away best bid/offer price to one
minimum trading increment away from
the new away best bid/offer price or its
original limit price.60 The re-priced
56 NOM Options 3, Section 8(a)(6) provides,
‘‘Valid Width National Best Bid or Offer’’ or ‘‘Valid
Width NBBO’’ shall mean the combination of all
away market quotes and any combination of NOMregistered Market Maker orders and quotes received
over the QUO or SQF Protocols within a specified
bid/ask differential as established and published by
the Exchange. The Valid Width NBBO will be
configurable by underlying, and tables with valid
width differentials will be posted by Nasdaq on its
website. Away markets that are crossed will void
all Valid Width NBBO calculations. If any Market
Maker orders or quotes on NOM are crossed
internally, then all such orders and quotes will be
excluded from the Valid Width NBBO calculation.’’
57 NOM’s System Settings page is located at:
https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/2020/07/02/NOM_
SystemSettings.pdf.
58 Phlx has an All-or-None Order type that is nondisplayed. See Options 3, Section 7(b)(5). Phlx
Options 3, Section 5(c) accounts for this nondisplayed order on the order book. NOM has a Price
Improving Order is already described within
Options 3, Section 5(c). A Price Improving Order on
NOM displays differently than Phlx’s All-Or-None
Order and therefore is described differently within
Options 3, Section 5(c). Otherwise, NOM has no
other non-displayed order types.
59 See NOM Options 3, Section 5(d).
60 See Options 5, Section 4 (Order Routing),
which describes the repricing of orders for both
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order is displayed on OPRA. The order
remains on NOM’s Order Book and is
accessible at the non-displayed price.
Options 3, Section 7
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the Cancel-Replacement Order, within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(1), does not
impose an undue burden on
competition. A Participant has the
option of either submitting a cancel
order and then separately submitting a
new order, which serves as a
replacement of the original order, in two
separate messages, or submitting a
single cancel and replace order in one
message (‘‘Cancel-Replacement Order’’).
Submitting a cancel order and then
separately submitting a new order will
not retain the priority of the original
order. The Exchange’s proposal to
replace the words ‘‘shall mean’’ with
‘‘is’’ and remove the final sentence of
the rule text will bring greater clarity to
this rule. The Exchange addition of a
new sentence to the end of the rule
states in the affirmative the conditions
under which the Cancel-Replacement
Order will retain priority. Price and size
are the terms that will determine if the
Cancel-Replacement Order retains its
priority, as is the case today, other terms
and conditions do not amend the
priority of the Cancel-Replacement
Order.
The Exchange’s proposal is not
amending the current System
functionality of a Cancel-Replacement
Order with respect to the terms that will
cause the order to lose priority. Today,
and with the proposed change, if a
Participant does not change or increase
the size of the order, it would not trigger
a loss in priority. Options 3, Section
7(a)(1) states only if the size of the order
were reduced would a loss of priority
occur.61 Priority is retained if the size of
the order does not change or is not
increased. The rule is intended to
provide transparency regarding changes
to a Cancel-Replacement Order which
would trigger a loss in priority. Today,
and with the proposal, the price of the
order may not be changed when
submitting a Cancel-Replacement Order;
that would be a new order. A similar
change was recently made to BX’s
Cancel-Replacement Order.62 Price and
size are the terms that will determine if
routable and non-routable orders within Options 5,
Section 4(a)(iii)(A), (B) and (C).
61 Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) provides, ‘‘The
replacement order will not retain the priority of the
cancelled order except when the replacement order
reduces the size of the order and all other terms and
conditions are retained.’’
62 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
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the Cancel-Replacement Order retains
its priority, as is the case today, other
terms and conditions do not amend the
priority of the Cancel-Replacement
Order.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Limit Orders,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(3), to add the sentence for
marketable limit orders which is
currently in BX’s rule does not impose
an undue burden on competition. A
Limit Order on NOM operates in the
same manner as a Limit Order on BX.
The Exchange proposes to conform the
rule text of NOM’s Limit Order to BX
Options 3, Section 7(a)(3) by adding a
sentence describing marketable limit
orders. BX recently amended its rule to
similarly change its description of Limit
Order.63 The proposed text more aptly
describes a marketable limit order as
compared to the current rule text, which
is confusing, but was intended to
convey the substance of the proposed
text. The new sentence does not
substantively amend the current rule
text and conforms NOM’s description
with BX’s description.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Minimum Quantity Orders,’’ within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(3), is nonsubstantive and makes technical edits
that do not change the meaning of the
term. The Exchange is otherwise not
amending the Minimum Quantity Order
rule text.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Market Orders,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(4), does not impose an
undue burden on competition. The
Exchange’s proposes to style ‘‘Market
Orders’’ in the singular and change
‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’ and ‘‘orders’’ to
‘‘order.’’ These amendments are
technical and non-substantive. Market
Orders submitted during the opening
may be executed, or cancelled if the
Market Order is priced through the
opening price. The Exchange would
only cancel those Market Orders that
remained on the Order Book once an
option series opened.64 The preestablished period of time would
commence once the intra-day trading
session begins for that options series
and the order would be cancelled back
to the Participant, provided the
Participant elected to cancel back its
Market Orders. The Exchange’s proposal
makes clear that while the opening is
on-going, and the intra-day trading
session has not commenced, the pre63 Id.
64 See NOM’s opening rule at Options 3, Section
8(d)(2), ‘‘After the opening, the Exchange shall
reject Market Orders, as defined in Options 3,
Section 7, and shall notify Participants of the reason
for such rejection.’’
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81235
established period of time would not
commence.
The proposal to note that ‘‘Market
Orders on the Order Book would be
immediately cancelled if an options
series halted, provided the Participant
designated the cancellation of Market
Orders’’ does not impose an undue
burden on competition. Once an options
series halts for trading, the Exchange
conducts another Opening Process. In
the case where a Market Order was
resting on the Order Book, and the
Participant had designated the
cancellation of Market Orders, in the
event of a halt, the Market Orders
resting on the Order Book would
immediately cancel. This proposed rule
text is consistent with existing System
functionality. The Exchange believes
that this additional rule text brings
greater clarity to the Market Order type.
The Exchange proposes to amend
‘‘Price Improving Orders,’’ within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(5) does not
impose an undue burden on
competition. The Exchange proposes to
style ‘‘Price Improving Orders’’ in the
singular and change ‘‘are’’ to ‘‘is an’’
and ‘‘orders’’ to ‘‘order’’ are nonsubstantive amendments.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘On the Open Order,’’ within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(6) by removing the words
‘‘The term’’ at the beginning of the
sentence and change ‘‘shall mean’’ to
‘‘is’’ are non-substantive amendments.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘Intermarket Sweep Order’’ or ‘‘ISO’’
Orders, within Options 3, Section
7(a)(7), with the exception of Options 3,
Section 7(a)(7)(1), which is being
retained by re-lettered as ‘‘A,’’ and
addition of rule text does not impose an
undue burden on competition. The new
rule text is similar to BX Options 3,
Section 7(a)(6).65
An ISO Order is a Limit Order, as
noted in the current text and Options 5,
Section 1, continues to be referenced in
the proposed text. The Exchange
continues to note that the orders are not
routable. The additional text is more
precise than the current rule text and
describes current functionality. The
Exchange further proposes to state,
‘‘ISOs may be entered on the Order
Book.’’ That is also the case today. The
remainder of the current rule text is not
necessary as Options 5, Section 1(8) is
cited. Removing the current rule text
and replacing it with text which
describes the proper time-in-force
designation will make clear what is
acceptable on NOM today. This rule text
is not proposed to change the
65 BX’s rule describes the PRISM mechanism,
while NOM has no auction mechanisms.
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functionality of an ISO Order. The
Exchange believes the proposed
description does not impose an undue
burden on competition, rather it
provides a more succinct description.
Today, ISOs may have any time-inforce designation, except WAIT, and
further requires that ISOs with a timein-force designation of GTC are treated
as having a time-in-force designation of
Day. The Exchange proposes to remove
the WAIT time-in-force within this
proposed rule change, as described in
more detail below, and, therefore, the
WAIT order type no longer needs to be
cited. NOM’s System does not treat an
ISO with a time-in-force designation of
GTC as having a time-in-force
designation of Day, as provided for
within NOM’s current rule at Options 3,
Section 7(a)(6), rather those orders are
treated as GTC. The current sentence is
being removed because it is inaccurate.
The proposed sentence does not impose
an undue burden on competition
because it accurately describes the
System functionality. The Exchange
does not believe that an ISO with a
time-in-force designation of GTC was
ever treated as having a time-in-force
designation of Day, the rule text was
simply inaccurate.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
‘‘One-Cancels-the-Other Order’’ within
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(8)
does not impose an undue burden on
competition because the changes are
technical in nature and non-substantive.
The Exchange’s amendment to ‘‘Allor-None Order,’’ within renumbered
Options 3, Section 7(a)(9), is nonsubstantive and does not change the
meaning of the term.
The Exchange’s amendment to ‘‘PostOnly Orders,’’ within renumbered
Options 3, Section 7(a)(10), is nonsubstantive and does not change the
meaning of the term.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the ‘‘On the Open Order,’’ or ‘‘OPG’’
Order, within Options 3, Section 7(b)(1),
to note that OPGs may not route, does
not impose an undue burden on
competition. The System would not
route an OPG Order today. This order
type functions in the same way as BX’s
OPG Order at Options 3, Section
7(b)(1).66 The Exchange is adding rule
text to make clear the manner in which
an OPG Order would be treated, which
66 BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(1) provides, ‘‘An
Opening Only order (‘‘OPG’’) is entered with a TIF
of ‘‘OPG’’. This order can only be executed in the
Opening Process pursuant to Options 3, Section 8.
This order type is not subject to any protections
listed in Options 3, Section 15. Any portion of the
order that is not executed during the Opening
Process is cancelled. OPG orders may not route.’’
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17:35 Dec 14, 2020
Jkt 253001
is similar to how a BX OPG Order is
treated today.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend an
‘‘Immediate-Or-Cancel’’ Order or ‘‘IOC,’’
within Options 3, Section 7(b)(2), does
not impose an undue burden on
competition. The Exchange’s proposal
replaces the current description with
Phlx’s description at Options 3, Section
7(c)(2) as these order types are identical.
The Exchange’s proposal to state that an
Immediate-or-Cancel Order or ‘‘IOC’’
Order is a Market Order or Limit Order
to be executed in whole or in part upon
receipt will bring greater clarity to the
rule. Further the Exchange’s proposal to
add that any portion not so executed is
cancelled is consistent with the current
description. The Exchange proposes to
replace this description with rule text
similar to BX Options 3, Section
7(b)(2) 67 as these order types are
identical, except that NOM has the
OTTO protocol and BX does not, and
also as mentioned previously NOM has
no auctions. Additionally, BX’s rule
addresses limitations in order
protections that do not exist today on
NOM. Today, IOC Orders entered
through OTTO or SQF do not route;
only orders entered through FIX may
route. The SQF interface is a quoting
interface, the Exchange does not route
quotes. With respect to OTTO, orders
submitted by NOM Market Makers over
this interface are treated as quotes and
similarly do not route.
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the TIF of ‘‘DAY’’ at Options 3, Section
7(b)(3) to conform the description of a
TIF of ‘‘DAY’’ to Phlx Options 3,
Section 7(c)(1) 68 does not impose an
undue burden on competition. The
Exchange believes the current text
describing NOM’s Day TIF is
unnecessarily verbose and proposes to
remove this language. A DAY Order on
Phlx functions in the same way as a
DAY Order on NOM. The proposal is
not amending the System functionality
of a DAY Order. The Phlx rule text is
67 BX
Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) provides,
‘‘Immediate-or-Cancel’’ or ‘‘IOC’’ is a Market Order
or Limit Order to be executed in whole or in part
upon receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled. (A) Orders entered with a TIF of IOC are
not eligible for routing. (B) IOC orders may be
entered through FIX or SQF, provided that an IOC
Order entered by a Market Maker through SQF is
not subject to the Limit Order Price Protection or
the Market Order Spread Protection in Options 3,
Section 15(a)(1) and (a)(2), respectively; (C) Orders
entered into the Price Improvement Auction
(‘‘PRISM’’) Mechanism are considered to have a TIF
of IOC. By their terms, these orders will be: (1)
Executed after an exposure period, or (2) cancelled.
68 Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) provides, ‘‘Day.
If not executed, an order entered with a TIF of
‘‘Day’’ expires at the end of the day on which it was
entered. All orders by their terms are Day Orders
unless otherwise specified. Day orders may be
entered through FIX.’’
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
more succinct in describing this order
type. Similar changes were recently
made on BX.69
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
the TIF of ‘‘Good Til Cancelled’’ or
‘‘GTC’’ at Options 3, Section 7(b)(4)
does not impose an undue burden on
competition. The Exchange proposes to
conform the rule text to Phlx Options 3,
Section 7(c)(4).70 The Exchange is not
amending the manner in which the
System function with respect to GTC
Orders. GTC Orders, if not fully
executed, will remain available for
potential display and/or execution
unless cancelled by the entering party,
or until the option expires, whichever
comes first. GTC Orders shall be
available for entry from the time prior
to market open, as specified by the
Exchange, until market close, as is the
case today. Also, today, a GTC Order
may only be entered through FIX. A
GTC Order on Phlx functions in the
same way as a GTC Order on NOM. The
Exchange believes that the amended
rule text will bring greater transparency
to its rules.
The Exchange’s proposal to no longer
offer a TIF of ‘‘WAIT’’ does not impose
an undue burden on competition
because it will remove an order type
that is not in demand on NOM and
simply the offerings provided by NOM.
If the Exchange desires to offer this TIF
in the futures, it would file a proposed
rule change with the Commission
pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Act.71 The Exchange has provided
notice of its intention to remove the TIF
of ‘‘WAIT’’.72 BX previously offered a
WAIT order type recently and
discontinued this order types because it
was not being utilized to a great
extent.73
The Exchange’s proposal to note,
within NOM Options 3, Section 7(c), the
various routing options which are
available does not impose an undue
burden on competition.
Options 3, Section 15
The Exchange believes its proposal to
clarify that Anti-Internalization will not
69 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
70 Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4) provides, ‘‘A
Good Til Cancelled (‘‘GTC’’) Order entered with a
TIF of GTC, if not fully executed, will remain
available for potential display and/or execution
unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the
option expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders
shall be available for entry from the time prior to
market open specified by the Exchange until market
close.’’
71 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
72 See Options Trader Alert #2020–26.
73 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476
(August 4, 2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020)
(SR–BX–2020–017).
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apply during an opening does not
impose an undue burden on
competition as it would provide more
specificity on how this functionality
currently operates. A similar change
was recently made to BX’s Rules.74 The
Exchange notes that the same
procedures used during an opening are
used to reopen an option series after a
trading halt, and therefore proposes to
specify that Anti-Internalization will not
apply during the opening (i.e., the
opening and halt reopening processes).
During the opening, Market Makers are
able to observe the primary market and
then determine how they would like to
quote. They are not required to quote in
the opening on NOM. Therefore, AntiInternalization is unnecessary during an
opening due to the high level of control
that Market Makers exercise over their
quotes during this process.
Options 3, Section 23
The Exchange’s proposal to amend
Options 3, Section 23, Data Feeds and
Trade Information, to update its
descriptions of the ITTO data feed does
not impose an undue burden on
competition because the updated
descriptions will bring greater
transparency to the Exchange’s rules
and more closely align with current
System operation.
The Exchange’s proposal will make
clear that order imbalance information
is provided for both an opening and reopening process. Today, a re-opening
process initiates after a trading halt has
occurred intra-day. Also, the Exchange’s
proposal notes the specific information
that would be provided, namely the size
of matched contracts and size of the
imbalance. The Exchange believes that
this additional context to imbalance
messages will provide market
participants with more complete
information about what is contained in
the data feed. The Exchange notes that
this information is available today and
the rule text is being amended to make
clear what information is currently
provided.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either
solicited or received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Because the foregoing proposed rule
change does not: (i) Significantly affect
74 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89759
(September 3, 2020). 85 FR 55877 (September 10,
2020) (SR–BX–2020–023).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:35 Dec 14, 2020
Jkt 253001
the protection of investors or the public
interest; (ii) impose any significant
burden on competition; and (iii) become
operative for 30 days from the date on
which it was filed, or such shorter time
as the Commission may designate, it has
become effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act 75 and
subparagraph (f)(6) of Rule 19b–4
thereunder.76
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NASDAQ–2020–083 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASDAQ–2020–083. 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
75 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6). In addition, Rule 19b–
4(f)(6)(iii) requires a self-regulatory organization to
give the Commission written notice of its intent to
file the proposed rule change, along with a brief
description and text of the proposed rule change,
at least five business days prior to the date of filing
of the proposed rule change, or such shorter time
as designated by the Commission. The Exchange
has satisfied this requirement.
76 17
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
81237
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASDAQ–2020–083, and
should be submitted on or before
January 5, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.77
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–27483 Filed 12–14–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–90616; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2020–086]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; 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 BrokerDealers Distributing Nasdaq Last Sale
to Professional Subscribers at Equity
7, Section 139
December 9, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on December
7, 2020, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
(‘‘Nasdaq’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed
rule change as described in Items I, II,
77 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
E:\FR\FM\15DEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 241 (Tuesday, December 15, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 81225-81237]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-27483]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-90622; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2020-083]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC;
Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To
Amend Options 1, Section 1; Options 2, Section 5; Options 3, Sections
5, 7, 10, 15 and 23
December 9, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
[[Page 81226]]
(``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on November 30, 2020, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq'' or
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``SEC'' or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in
Items I and II 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 amend the rules of The Nasdaq Options
Market LLC (``NOM'') at Options 1, Section 1 (Definitions); Options 2,
Section 5 (Market Maker Quotations); Options 3, Section 5 (Entry and
Display of Orders); Options 3, Section 7 (Types of Orders and Order and
Quote Protocols); Options 3, Section 10 (Order Book Allocation);
Options 3, Section 15 (Risk Protections); and Options 3, Section 23
(Data Feeds and Trade Information).
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public
Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend NOM Rules at Options 1, Section 1
(Definitions); Options 2, Section 5 (Market Maker Quotations); Options
3, Section 5 (Entry and Display of Orders); Options 3, Section 7 (Types
of Orders and Order and Quote Protocols); Options 3, Section 10 (Order
Book Allocation); Options 3, Section 15 (Risk Protections); and Options
3, Section 23 (Data Feeds and Trade Information). Each change is
described below.
Options 1, Section 1
The Exchange proposes to amend the definition of ``Public
Customer'' to conform to Nasdaq Phlx LLC's (``Phlx'') definition at
Options 1, Section 1(b)(46). The Exchange believes that making clear
that a Public Customer could be a person or entity and clarifying that
a Public Customer is not a Professional, as defined within Options 1,
Section (a)(47),\3\ will make clear what it meant by that term. Today,
a Public Customer is not a Professional. In order to properly represent
orders entered on the Exchange, Participants are required to indicate
whether orders are ``Professional Orders.'' To comply with this
requirement, Participants are required to review their Public
Customers' activity on at least a quarterly basis to determine whether
orders, which are not for the account of a broker-dealer, should be
represented as Public Customer Orders or Professional Orders.\4\ A
Public Customer may be a Professional, provided they meet the
requirements specified within NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47). If the
Professional definition is not met, the order is treated as a Public
Customer order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47) provides that, ``The term
``Professional'' means any person or entity that (i) is not a broker
or dealer in securities, and (ii) places more than 390 orders in
listed options per day on average during a calendar month for its
own beneficial account(s). A Participant or a Public Customer may,
without limitation, be a Professional. All Professional orders shall
be appropriately marked by Participants.''
\4\ Participants conduct a quarterly review and make any
appropriate changes to the way in which they are representing orders
within five days after the end of each calendar quarter. While
Participants only will be required to review their accounts on a
quarterly basis, if during a quarter the Exchange identifies a
customer for which orders are being represented as Public Customer
Orders but that has averaged more than 390 orders per day during a
month, the Exchange will notify the Participant and the Participant
will be required to change the manner in which it is representing
the customer's orders within five days.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also proposes to remove a sentence within Options 1,
Section 1(a)(47) which provides, ``A Participant or a Public Customers
may, without limitation, be a Professional.'' This sentence is
confusing, unnecessary, and adds no information to this defined term.
By way of comparison, Phlx Options 1, Section 1(b)(46) does not contain
a similar sentence and that sentence was recently removed from Nasdaq
BX, Inc.'s (``BX'') Rules.\5\ The Exchange adopted a Professional
designation in 2010 \6\ and has differentiated Public and Professional
customers since that time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63028 (October 1,
2010), 75 FR 62443 (October 8, 2010) (SR-NASDAQ-2010-099) (Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Definition of
Professional and Require That All Professional Orders Be
Appropriately Marked).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also proposes to remove a sentence, within Options 3,
Section 10(a)(1)(C)(i), which provides that a Public Customer order
does not include a Professional order. Indicating that a Public
Customer order is not a Professional Order is no longer necessary
because of the proposed definition for Public Customer. Today, the
definition of a Public Customer does not explicitly exclude a
Professional. The language that the Exchange proposes to delete
currently indicates that Professionals would not be treated the same as
a Public Customer in terms of priority and, therefore, would not
receive the same allocation that is reserved for Public Customer
orders. Since NOM is amending the definition of a Public Customer to
explicitly exclude Professionals, the language in the allocation rule
is no longer necessary to distinguish these two types of market
participants.
Bid/Ask Differentials
Currently, NOM Market Maker intra-day quoting requirements, within
Options 2, Section 5(d)(2), provide,
Bid/ask Differentials (Quote Spread Parameters). Options on
equities (including Exchange-Traded Fund Shares), and on index
options must be quoted with a difference not to exceed $5 between
the bid and offer regardless of the price of the bid, including
before and during the opening. However, respecting in-the-money
series where the market for the underlying security is wider than
$5, the bid/ask differential may be as wide as the spread between
the national best bid and offer in the underlying security. The
Exchange may establish differences other than the above for one or
more series or classes of options.
The Exchange proposes to amend NOM Options 2, Section 5(d)(2) to add
the words ``Intra-Day'' before the title ``Bid/ask Differentials (Quote
Spread Parameters)'' to make clear that these requirements are intra-
day. Also, the Exchange proposes to amend this paragraph to remove the
phrase, ``including before and during the opening.'' The bid/ask
differentials, within NOM Options 2, Section 5(d)(2), will continue to
apply intra-day. This is consistent with the Exchange's existing
practice. Today, the bid/ask differentials applicable to the opening
are noted
[[Page 81227]]
within Options 3, Section 8(a)(6).\7\ As noted within the rule, NOM
publishes its specified bid/ask differential on its system settings
page.\8\ The bid/ask differentials noted for the Valid Width NBBO
within the opening provide for quotations with a difference that does
not exceed $5 between the bid and offer regardless of the price of the
bid. It is not necessary to discuss the opening bid/ask differentials
within Options 2, Section 5 as those differentials are specifically
noted within the opening rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ NOM Options 3, Section 8(a)(6) provides, ``Valid Width
National Best Bid or Offer'' or ``Valid Width NBBO'' shall mean the
combination of all away market quotes and any combination of NOM-
registered Market Maker orders and quotes received over the QUO or
SQF Protocols within a specified bid/ask differential as established
and published by the Exchange. The Valid Width NBBO will be
configurable by underlying, and tables with valid width
differentials will be posted by Nasdaq on its website. Away markets
that are crossed will void all Valid Width NBBO calculations. If any
Market Maker orders or quotes on NOM are crossed internally, then
all such orders and quotes will be excluded from the Valid Width
NBBO calculation.''
\8\ NOM's System Settings page is located at: https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/2020/07/02/NOM_SystemSettings.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 3, Section 5
The Exchange proposes to amend Options 3, Section 5(c) to add
additional rule text similar to Phlx Options 3, Section 5(c).\9\ NOM's
current Options 3, Section 5(c) states, ``The System automatically
executes eligible orders using the Exchange's displayed best bid and
offer (``BBO'') or the Exchange's non-displayed order book (``internal
BBO'').'' The Exchange proposes to state, ``The System automatically
executes eligible orders using the Exchange's displayed best bid and
offer (``BBO'') or the Exchange's non-displayed order book (``internal
BBO'') if the best bid and/or offer on the Exchange has been repriced
pursuant to subsection (d) below.'' Today, NOM re-prices certain orders
to avoid locking and crossing away markets, consistent with its Trade-
Through Compliance and Locked or Crossed Markets obligations.\10\
Orders which lock or cross an away market automatically re-price one
minimum price improvement inferior to the original away best bid/offer
price to one minimum trading increment away from the new away best bid/
offer price or its original limit price.\11\ The re-priced order is
displayed on OPRA. The order remains on NOM's Order Book and is
accessible at the non-displayed price. For example, a limit order may
be accessed on NOM by a Participant if the limit order is priced better
than the NBBO. The Exchange believes that the addition of this rule
text will provide additional clarity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Phlx has an All-or-None Order type that is non-displayed.
See Options 3, Section 7(b)(5). Phlx Options 3, Section 5(c)
accounts for this non-displayed order on the order book. NOM has a
Price Improving Order is already described within Options 3, Section
5(c). A Price Improving Order on NOM displays differently than
Phlx's All-Or-None Order and therefore is described differently
within Options 3, Section 5(c). Otherwise, NOM has no other non-
displayed order types.
\10\ NOM Options 3, Section 5(d) provides, ``An order will not
be executed at a price that trades through another market or
displayed at a price that would lock or cross another market. An
order that is designated by the member as routable will be routed in
compliance with applicable Trade-Through and Locked and Crossed
Markets restrictions. An order that is designated by a member as
non-routable will be re-priced in order to comply with applicable
Trade-Through and Locked and Crossed Markets restrictions. If, at
the time of entry, an order that the entering party has elected not
to make eligible for routing would cause a locked or crossed market
violation or would cause a trade-through violation, it will be re-
priced to the current national best offer (for bids) or the current
national best bid (for offers) and displayed at one minimum price
variance above (for offers) or below (for bids) the national best
price.''
\11\ See Options 5, Section 4 (Order Routing), which describes
the repricing of orders for both routable and non-routable orders
within Options 5, Section 4(a)(iii)(A), (B) and (C).
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Options 3, Section 7
The Exchange proposes to amend the Cancel-Replacement Order, within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(1). By way of background with respect to
cancelling and replacing an order, a Participant has the option of
either submitting a cancel order and then separately submitting a new
order, which serves as a replacement of the original order, in two
separate messages, or submitting a single cancel and replace order in
one message (``Cancel-Replacement Order''). Submitting a cancel order
and then separately submitting a new order will not retain the priority
of the original order.
Currently, the rule text for Cancel-Replacement Order provides,
``Cancel-Replacement Order shall mean a single message for the
immediate cancellation of a previously received order and the
replacement of that order with a new order with new terms and
conditions. If the previously placed order is already filled partially
or in its entirety, the replacement order is automatically canceled or
reduced by the number of contracts that were executed. The replacement
order will not retain the priority of the cancelled order except when
the replacement order reduces the size of the order and all other terms
and conditions are retained.'' The Exchange proposes to replace the
words ``shall mean'' with ``is'' and remove the final sentence of the
rule text.\12\ The Exchange proposes to add a new sentence to the end
of the rule which provides, ``The replacement order will retain the
priority of the cancelled order, if the order posts to the Order Book,
provided the price is not amended, and the size is not increased.''
Unlike the sentence proposed for deletion, the proposed sentence states
in the affirmative the conditions under which the Cancel-Replacement
Order will retain priority. Price and size are the terms that will
determine if the Cancel-Replacement Order retains its priority, as is
the case today, other terms and conditions do not amend the priority of
the Cancel-Replacement Order.
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\12\ The final sentence of current NOM Options 3, Section
7(a)(1) provides, ``The replacement order will not retain the
priority of the cancelled order except when the replacement order
reduces the size of the order and all other terms and conditions are
retained.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange is not amending the current System functionality of a
Cancel-Replacement Order with respect to the terms that will cause the
order to lose priority. Today, and with the proposed change, if a
Participant does not change or increase the size of the order, it would
not trigger a loss in priority. Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) states only
if the size of the order were reduced would a loss of priority
occur.\13\ The proposed rule reverses the phrasing in the current rule
and, instead, describes changes to priority when size is increased.
Priority is retained if the size of the order does not change or is not
increased. The rule is intended to provide transparency regarding
changes to a Cancel-Replacement Order which would trigger a loss in
priority. Today, and with the proposal, the price of the order may not
be changed when submitting a Cancel-Replacement Order; that would be a
new order. A similar change was recently made to BX's Cancel-
Replacement Order.\14\
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\13\ Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) provides, ``The replacement
order will not retain the priority of the cancelled order except
when the replacement order reduces the size of the order and all
other terms and conditions are retained.''
\14\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to amend ``Limit Orders,'' within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(2). The Exchange proposes to style ``Limit Orders'' in the
singular and change ``are'' to ``is an'' and ``orders'' to ``order.'' A
Limit Order on NOM operates in the same manner as a Limit Order on BX.
The Exchange proposes to conform the rule text of NOM's Limit Order to
BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(3) by adding a sentence describing
marketable limit orders. BX recently amended its rule to similarly
[[Page 81228]]
change its description of Limit Order.\15\ The Exchange proposes to
state, ``A marketable limit order is a limit order to buy (sell) at or
above (below) the best offer (bid) on the Exchange.'' The Exchange
believes that the rule amendment more aptly describes a marketable
limit order as compared to the current rule text, which is confusing,
but was intended to convey the substance of the proposed text. The new
sentence does not substantively amend the current rule text and
conforms NOM's description with BX's description.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to amend ``Minimum Quantity Orders,'' within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(3). The Exchange proposes to style ``Minimum
Quantity Orders'' in the singular and change ``are'' to ``is an'' and
``orders'' to ``order.'' These amendments are technical and non-
substantive. The Exchange is otherwise not amending the Minimum
Quantity Order rule text.
The Exchange proposes to amend ``Market Orders,'' within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(4). The Exchange proposes to style ``Market Orders'' in
the singular and change ``are'' to ``is an'' and ``orders'' to
``order.'' These amendments are technical and non-substantive. The
Exchange also proposes to amend a current sentence to state,
``Participants can designate that their Market Orders not executed
after a pre-established period of time, as established by the Exchange,
will be cancelled back to the Participant, once an option series has
opened for trading.'' Market Orders submitted during the opening may be
executed, or cancelled if the Market Order is priced through the
opening price. The Exchange would only cancel those Market Orders that
remained on the Order Book once an option series opened.\16\ The pre-
established period of time would commence once the intra-day trading
session begins for that options series and the order would be cancelled
back to the Participant, provided the Participant elected to cancel
back its Market Orders. The Exchange proposes to make clear that while
the opening is on-going, and the intra-day trading session has not
commenced, the pre-established period of time would not commence.
Further, the Exchange proposes to note that ``Market Orders on the
Order Book would be immediately cancelled if an options series halted,
provided the Participant designated the cancellation of Market
Orders.'' Once an options series halts for trading, the Exchange
conducts another Opening Process. In the case where a Market Order was
resting on the Order Book, and the Participant had designated the
cancellation of Market Orders, in the event of a halt, the Market
Orders resting on the Order Book would immediately cancel. This
proposed rule text is consistent with existing System functionality.
The Exchange believes that this additional rule text brings greater
clarity to the Market Order type.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See NOM's Trading Halts rule at Options 3, Section 9(d)(2),
``After the opening, the Exchange shall reject Market Orders, as
defined in Options 3, Section 7, and shall notify Participants of
the reason for such rejection.''
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The Exchange proposes to amend ``Price Improving Orders,'' within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(5). The Exchange proposes to style ``Price
Improving Orders'' in the singular and change ``are'' to ``is an'' and
``orders'' to ``order.''
The Exchange proposes to amend ``On the Open Order,'' within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(6) by removing the words ``The term'' at the
beginning of the sentence and change ``shall mean'' to ``is.''
The Exchange proposes to amend ``Intermarket Sweep Order'' or
``ISO,'' within Options 3, Section 7(a)(7). Today, the rule text
provides,
``Intermarket Sweep Order'' or ``ISO'' are limit orders that are
designated as ISOs in the manner prescribed by Nasdaq and are
executed within the System by Participants at multiple price levels
without respect to Protected Quotations of other Eligible Exchanges
as defined in Options 5, Section 1. ISOs may have any time-in-force
designation except WAIT, are handled within the System pursuant to
Options 3, Section 10 and shall not be eligible for routing as set
out in Options 3, Section 19. ISOs with a time-in-force designation
of GTC are treated as having a time-in-force designation of Day.
(1) Simultaneously with the routing of an ISO to the System, one
or more additional limit orders, as necessary, are routed by the
entering party to execute against the full displayed size of any
protected bid or offer (as defined in Options 5, Section 1) in the
case of a limit order to sell or buy with a price that is superior
to the limit price of the limit order identified as an intermarket
sweep order (as defined in Options 5, Section 1). These additional
routed orders must be identified as ISOs.
The Exchange proposes to replace the current rule, within Options 3,
Section 7(a)(7), with the exception of Options 3, Section 7(a)(7)(1),
which is being retained by re-lettered as ``A,'' with the following
rule text which is similar to BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(6),\17\ to
describe an ISO Order, ``is a Limit Order that meets the requirements
of Options 5, Section 1(8). Orders submitted to the Exchange as ISO are
not routable and will ignore the ABBO and trade at allowable prices on
the Exchange. ISOs may be entered on the Order Book. ISOs may have any
time-in-force designation and are handled within the System pursuant to
Options 3, Section 10 and shall not be eligible for routing as set out
in Options 5, Section 4. ISO Orders may not be submitted during the
opening.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ BX's rule describes the PRISM mechanism, while NOM has no
auction mechanisms.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An ISO Order is a Limit Order, as noted in the current text and
Options 5, Section 1, continues to be referenced in the proposed text.
The Exchange continues to note that the orders are not routable. The
additional text, ``. . . will ignore the ABBO and trade at allowable
prices on the Exchange'' is more precise than the current rule text and
describes current functionality. The Exchange further proposes to
state, ``ISOs may be entered on the Order Book.'' That is also the case
today. The remainder of the current rule text is not necessary as
Options 5, Section 1(8) is cited. Removing the current rule text and
replacing it with text which describes the proper time-in-force
designation will make clear what is acceptable on NOM today. This rule
text is not proposed to change the functionality of an ISO Order. The
Exchange believes the proposed description provides a more succinct
description.
Today, ISOs may have any time-in-force designation, except WAIT,
and further requires that ISOs with a time-in-force designation of GTC
are treated as having a time-in-force designation of Day. The Exchange
proposes to remove the WAIT time-in-force within this proposed rule
change, as described in more detail below, and, therefore, the WAIT
order type no longer needs to be cited.
Further, today, NOM's System does not treat an ISO with a time-in-
force designation of GTC as having a time-in-force designation of Day,
as provided for within NOM's current rule at Options 3, Section
7(a)(6), rather those orders are treated as GTC. The current sentence
is being removed because it is inaccurate. The proposed sentence
accurately describes the System functionality. The Exchange does not
believe that an ISO with a time-in-force designation of GTC was ever
treated as having a time-in-force designation of Day, the rule text was
simply inaccurate.
The Exchange proposes to amend ``One-Cancels-the-Other Order'' at
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(8) by changing ``shall mean'' to
``is.''
The Exchange proposes to amend the ``All-or-None Order,'' within
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(9). The Exchange proposes to replace
``shall
[[Page 81229]]
mean'' with ``is'' and capitalize market order and limit orders.
The Exchange proposes to amend the ``Post-Only Orders,'' within
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(10). The Exchange proposes to
replace ``are'' with ``is an'' and make Post-Only Orders singular. An
extra space is also being removed.
The Exchange proposes to amend Options 3, Section 7(b) to define
``Time in Force'' as ``TIF''.
With respect to an ``On the Open Order,'' or ``OPG'' Order, within
Options 3, Section 7(b)(1), the Exchange notes that OPGs may not route.
This is the case today. This order type functions in the same way as
BX's OPG Order at Options 3, Section 7(b)(1).\18\ The Exchange is
adding rule text to make clear the manner in which an OPG Order would
be treated, which is similar to how a BX OPG Order is treated today.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(1) provides, ``An Opening Only
order (``OPG'') is entered with a TIF of ``OPG''. This order can
only be executed in the Opening Process pursuant to Options 3,
Section 8. This order type is not subject to any protections listed
in Options 3, Section 15. Any portion of the order that is not
executed during the Opening Process is cancelled. OPG orders may not
route.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to amend an ``Immediate-Or-Cancel'' Order or
``IOC,'' within Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) to add hyphens and make
``Or'' lowercase. The Exchange proposes to remove the current
description which provides that an IOC Order, ``shall mean for orders
so designated, that if after entry into the System a marketable order
(or unexecuted portion thereof) becomes non-marketable, the order (or
unexecuted portion thereof) shall be canceled and returned to the
entering participant. IOC Orders shall be available for entry from the
time prior to market open specified by the Exchange on its website
until market close and for potential execution from 9:30 a.m. until
market close. IOC Orders entered between the time specified by the
Exchange on its website and 9:30 a.m. Eastern Time will be held within
the System until 9:30 a.m. at which time the System shall determine
whether such orders are marketable.'' The Exchange proposes to replace
this description with rule text similar to BX Options 3, Section
7(b)(2) \19\ as these order types are identical, except that NOM has
the OTTO protocol and BX does not, and also as mentioned previously NOM
has no auctions. Additionally, BX's rule addresses limitations in order
protections that do not exist today on NOM. The Exchange proposes to
state that an Immediate-or-Cancel Order or ``IOC'' Order is a Market
Order or Limit Order to be executed in whole or in part upon receipt.
Any portion not so executed is cancelled and/or routed pursuant to
Participant's instruction. IOC orders may be entered through FIX, OTTO
or SQF; IOC Orders entered through OTTO or SQF may not route. Today,
IOC Orders entered through OTTO or SQF do not route; only orders
entered through FIX may route. The SQF interface is a quoting
interface, the Exchange does not route quotes. With respect to OTTO,
orders submitted by NOM Market Makers over this interface are treated
as quotes and similarly do not route. The Exchange is proposing to
memorialize this information within the description of an IOC Order to
add clarity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) provides, ``Immediate-or-
Cancel'' or ``IOC'' is a Market Order or Limit Order to be executed
in whole or in part upon receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled. (A) Orders entered with a TIF of IOC are not eligible for
routing. (B) IOC orders may be entered through FIX or SQF, provided
that an IOC Order entered by a Market Maker through SQF is not
subject to the Limit Order Price Protection or the Market Order
Spread Protection in Options 3, Section 15(a)(1) and (a)(2),
respectively; (C) Orders entered into the Price Improvement Auction
(``PRISM'') Mechanism are considered to have a TIF of IOC. By their
terms, these orders will be: (1) Executed after an exposure period,
or (2) cancelled.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to amend the TIF of ``DAY'' at Options 5,
Section 7(b)(3) to remove the words ``shall mean for orders so
designated'' and add ``is an order'' to conform the rule text to other
text in this rule. The Exchange also proposes to conform the
description of a TIF of ``DAY'' similar to Phlx Options 3, Section
7(c)(1).\20\ The Exchange believes that the remainder of the
description for a Day Order, ``if after entry into the System, the
order is not fully executed, the order (or unexecuted portion thereof)
shall remain available for potential display and/or execution until
market close, unless canceled by the entering party, after which it
shall be returned to the entering party. Day Orders shall be available
for entry from the time prior to market open specified by the Exchange
on its website until market close and for potential execution from 9:30
a.m. until market close,'' is unnecessarily verbose and proposes to
remove this rule text. The Exchange proposes to state, ``Day'' is an
order entered with a TIF of ``Day'' that expires at the end of the day
on which it was entered, if not executed. All orders by their terms are
Day Orders unless otherwise specified. Day Orders may be entered
through FIX or OTTO. A Day Order on Phlx functions in the same way as a
Day Order on NOM. The Phlx rule text is more succinct in describing
this order type. Similar changes were recently made on BX.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) provides, ``Day. If not
executed, an order entered with a TIF of ``Day'' expires at the end
of the day on which it was entered. All orders by their terms are
Day Orders unless otherwise specified. Day orders may be entered
through FIX.''
\21\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to amend the TIF of ``Good Til Cancelled'' or
``GTC'' at Options 5, Section 7(b)(4). The Exchange proposes to remove
the words ``shall mean for orders'' and add ``is an order.'' The
Exchange also proposes to conform the rule text similar to Phlx Options
3, Section 7(c)(4),\22\ and provide that a ``Good Til Cancelled'' or
``GTC'' is ``an order entered with a TIF of ``GTC'' that, if not fully
executed, will remain available for potential display and/or execution
unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the option expires,
whichever comes first. GTC Orders shall be available for entry from the
time prior to market open specified by the Exchange until market close.
GTC Orders may only be entered through FIX.'' The Exchange would remove
the rule text which provides, ``that if after entry into System, the
order is not fully executed, the order (or unexecuted portion thereof)
shall remain available for potential display and/or execution unless
cancelled by the entering party, or until the option expires, whichever
comes first. GTC Orders shall be available for entry from the time
prior to market open specified by the Exchange on its website until
market close and for potential execution from 9:30 a.m. until market
close.'' A GTC Order on Phlx functions in the same way as a GTC Order
on NOM. The Exchange is not proposing to amend the functionality of a
GTC Order, rather the Exchange believes the proposed description is
more succinct.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4) provides, ``A Good Til
Cancelled (``GTC'') Order entered with a TIF of GTC, if not fully
executed, will remain available for potential display and/or
execution unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the
option expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders shall be available
for entry from the time prior to market open specified by the
Exchange until market close.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to no longer offer a TIF of ``WAIT.'' The
Exchange would remove the rule text at NOM Options 3, Section 7(b)(5).
If the Exchange desires to offer this TIF in the future, it would file
a proposed rule change with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(1)
of the Act.\23\ The Exchange has provided notice of its intention to
remove the TIF of
[[Page 81230]]
``WAIT''.\24\ BX previously offered a WAIT order type recently and
discontinued this order types because it was not being utilized to a
great extent.\25\
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\23\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\24\ See Options Trader Alert #2020-26.
\25\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange proposes to note, within NOM Options 3, Section 7(c),
the various routing options which are available. The Exchange proposes
to add rule text which provides, ``Routing Strategies. Orders may be
entered on the Exchange with a routing strategy of SEEK, SRCH or Do-
Not-Route (``DNR'') as provided in Options 5, Section 4 through FIX
only.''
Finally, the Exchange proposes to re-letter current Options 3,
Section 7(c) and (d).
Options 3, Section 15
The Exchange proposes to amend Options 3, Section 15(c) relating to
Anti-Internalization to make clear that the Anti-Internalization
functionality does not apply during the opening. A similar change was
recently made to BX's Rules.\26\ The Exchange proposes to clarify that
Anti-Internalization does not apply during an opening or reopening
following a trading halt, pursuant to Options 3, Section 8, to provide
more specificity on how this functionality currently operates. The
Exchange notes that the same procedures used during an opening are used
to reopen an option series after a trading halt, and therefore proposes
to specify that Anti-Internalization will not apply during the opening
(i.e., the opening and halt reopening processes). During the opening,
Market Makers are able to observe the primary market and then determine
how they would like to quote. They are not required to quote in the
opening on NOM. Therefore, Anti-Internalization is unnecessary during
an opening due to the high level of control that Market Makers exercise
over their quotes during this process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89759 (September 3,
2020). 85 FR 55877 (September 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 3, Section 23
The Exchange proposes to amend Options 3, Section 23, Data Feeds
and Trade Information, to update its description of Nasdaq ITCH to
Trade Options (``ITTO''). The Exchange proposes to amend ITTO at
Options 3, Section 23(a)(1) to more closely align with current System
operation. The Exchange proposes a technical amendment to the first
sentence to replace a comma with the word ``and.'' The Exchange also
proposes to relocate rule text concerning order imbalances to the end
of the description. The Exchange proposes to amend the first sentence
to state that ITTO is a data feed that provides full order and quote
depth information for individual orders and quotes on the NOM book, and
last sale information for trades executed on NOM. The Exchange would
amend and relocate the rule text that provides, ``and Order Imbalance
Information as set forth in NOM Rules Options 3, Section 8'' at the end
of the first sentence. The Exchange proposes to add a sentence at the
end of the description within Options 3, Section 8 which states, ``The
feed also provides order imbalances on opening/re-opening (size of
matched contracts and size of the imbalance).'' This sentence makes
clear that order imbalance information is provided for both an opening
and re-opening process. Today, a re-opening process initiates after a
trading halt has occurred intra-day. Also, the Exchange notes the
specific information that would be provided, namely the size of matched
contracts and size of the imbalance. The Exchange believes that this
additional context to imbalance messages will provide market
participants with more complete information about what is contained in
the data feed. The Exchange notes that this information is available
today and the rule text is being amended to make clear what information
is currently provided.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with Section
6(b) of the Act,\27\ in general, and furthers the objectives of Section
6(b)(5) of the Act,\28\ in particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system, and, in general to protect investors and the public
interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\28\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 1, Section 1
The Exchange's proposal to amend the definition of ``Public
Customer'' to conform to Phlx's definition is intended to provide
greater specificity regarding what is meant by the term ``Public
Customer.'' The Exchange believes that making clear that a Public
Customer could be a person or entity and clarifying that a Public
Customer is not a Professional, as defined within Options 1, Section
(a)(47),\29\ will make clear what it meant by that term. Today, a
Public Customer is not a Professional. In order to properly represent
orders entered on the Exchange, Participants are required to indicate
whether orders are ``Professional Orders.'' To comply with this
requirement, Participants are required to review their Public
Customers' activity on at least a quarterly basis to determine whether
orders, which are not for the account of a broker-dealer, should be
represented as Public Customer Orders or Professional Orders.\30\ A
Public Customer may be a Professional, provided they meet the
requirements specified within NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47). If the
Professional definition is not met, the order is treated as a Public
Customer order. The Exchange believes that it is consistent with the
Act to state within the definition of ``Public Customers'' that a
Professional is not a Public Customer. As noted above, there is a
process for determining if a market participant qualifies as a
``Professional.'' This specificity will serve to protect investors and
the public interest in that the terms ``Public Customer'' and
``Professional'' are separate categories of market participants, as
defined. Also, this definition conforms to Phlx's definition at Options
1, Section 1(b)(47).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47) provides that, ``The term
``Professional'' means any person or entity that (i) is not a broker
or dealer in securities, and (ii) places more than 390 orders in
listed options per day on average during a calendar month for its
own beneficial account(s). A Participant or a Public Customer may,
without limitation, be a Professional. All Professional orders shall
be appropriately marked by Participants.''
\30\ Participants conduct a quarterly review and make any
appropriate changes to the way in which they are representing orders
within five days after the end of each calendar quarter. While
Participants only will be required to review their accounts on a
quarterly basis, if during a quarter the Exchange identifies a
customer for which orders are being represented as Public Customer
Orders but that has averaged more than 390 orders per day during a
month, the Exchange will notify the Participant and the Participant
will be required to change the manner in which it is representing
the customer's orders within five days.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to remove a sentence within Options 1,
Section 1(a)(47) which provides, ``A Participant or a Public Customers
may, without limitation, be a Professional,'' is consistent with the
Act. This sentence is confusing, unnecessary, and adds no information
to this defined term. By way of comparison, Phlx Options 1, Section
1(b)(46) does not contain a similar sentence and that sentence was
recently removed from Nasdaq BX, Inc.'s (``BX'') Rules.\31\ The
Exchange adopted a Professional designation in
[[Page 81231]]
2010 \32\ and has differentiated Public and Professional customers
since that time. NOM proposes removing this sentence because it does
not add useful information to understanding who may qualify as a
Professional.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
\32\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63028 (October 1,
2010), 75 FR 62443 (October 8, 2010) (SR-NASDAQ-2020-099) (Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Definition of
Professional and Require That All Professional Orders Be
Appropriately Marked).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to remove a sentence, within Options 3,
Section 10(a)(1)(C)(i), which allocation rule provides that a Public
Customer order does not include a Professional order is consistent with
the Act. Today, the definition of a Public Customer does not explicitly
exclude a Professional. Indicating that a Public Customer order is not
a Professional Order is no longer necessary because of the proposed
definition for Public Customer. The language that the Exchange proposes
to delete, currently indicates that Professionals would not be treated
the same as a Public Customer in terms of priority and, therefore,
would not receive the same allocation that is reserved for Public
Customer orders. Since NOM is amending the definition of a Public
Customer to explicitly exclude Professionals, the language in the
allocation rule is no longer necessary to distinguish these two types
of market participants.
Bid/Ask Differentials
The Exchange's proposal to amend NOM Options 2, Section 5(d)(2) to
add the words ``Intra-Day'' before the title ``Bid/ask Differentials
(Quote Spread Parameters)'' and make clear that remove references to
the opening, will make clear for Market Makers their intra-day
requirements. The bid/ask differentials, within NOM Options 2, Section
5(d)(2), will continue to apply intra-day. This is consistent with the
Exchange's existing practice. Today, the bid/ask differentials
applicable to the opening are noted within Options 3, Section
8(a)(6).\33\ As noted within the rule, NOM publishes its specified bid/
ask differential on its system settings page.\34\ The bid/ask
differentials noted for the Valid Width NBBO within the opening provide
for quotations with a difference that does not exceed $5 between the
bid and offer regardless of the price of the bid. It is not necessary
to discuss the opening bid/ask differentials within Options 2, Section
5 as those differentials are specifically noted within the opening
rule. This clarification is consistent with the Act because it is
designed to avoid any confusion for Market Makers as to their intra-day
requirements versus their opening requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ NOM Options 3, Section 8(a)(6) provides, ``Valid Width
National Best Bid or Offer'' or ``Valid Width NBBO'' shall mean the
combination of all away market quotes and any combination of NOM-
registered Market Maker orders and quotes received over the QUO or
SQF Protocols within a specified bid/ask differential as established
and published by the Exchange. The Valid Width NBBO will be
configurable by underlying, and tables with valid width
differentials will be posted by Nasdaq on its website. Away markets
that are crossed will void all Valid Width NBBO calculations. If any
Market Maker orders or quotes on NOM are crossed internally, then
all such orders and quotes will be excluded from the Valid Width
NBBO calculation.''
\34\ NOM's System Settings page is located at: https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/2020/07/02/NOM_SystemSettings.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 3, Section 5
The Exchange's proposal to amend Options 3, Section 5(c) to add
additional rule text similar to Phlx Options 3, Section 5(c) \35\ is
consistent with the Act. Today, NOM re-prices certain orders to avoid
locking and crossing away markets, consistent with its Trade-Through
Compliance and Locked or Crossed Markets obligations.\36\ Orders which
lock or cross an away market automatically re-price one minimum price
improvement inferior to the original away best bid/offer price to one
minimum trading increment away from the new away best bid/offer price
or its original limit price.\37\ The re-priced order is displayed on
OPRA. The order remains on NOM's Order Book and is accessible at the
non-displayed price. For example, a limit order may be accessed on NOM
by a Participant if the limit order is priced better than the NBBO. The
Exchange believes that the addition of this rule text will add greater
specificity to the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Phlx has an All-or-None Order type that is non-displayed.
See Options 3, Section 7(b)(5). Phlx Options 3, Section 5(c)
accounts for this non-displayed order on the order book. NOM has a
Price Improving Order is already described within Options 3, Section
5(c). A Price Improving Order on NOM displays differently than
Phlx's All-Or-None Order and therefore is described differently
within Options 3, Section 5(c). Otherwise, NOM has no other non-
displayed order types.
\36\ See NOM Options 3, Section 5(d).
\37\ See Options 5, Section 4 (Order Routing), which describes
the repricing of orders for both routable and non-routable orders
within Options 5, Section 4(a)(iii)(A), (B) and (C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 3, Section 7
The Exchange's proposal to amend the Cancel-Replacement Order,
within Options 3, Section 7(a)(1), is consistent with the Act. A
Participant has the option of either submitting a cancel order and then
separately submitting a new order, which serves as a replacement of the
original order, in two separate messages, or submitting a single cancel
and replace order in one message (``Cancel-Replacement Order'').
Submitting a cancel order and then separately submitting a new order
will not retain the priority of the original order. The Exchange's
proposal to replace the words ``shall mean'' with ``is'' and remove the
final sentence of the rule text will bring greater clarity to this
rule. The Exchange addition of a new sentence to the end of the rule
which provides, ``The replacement order will retain the priority of the
cancelled order, if the order posts to the Order Book, provided the
price is not amended, and the size is not increased'' states in the
affirmative the conditions under which the Cancel-Replacement Order
will retain priority. Price and size are the terms that will determine
if the Cancel-Replacement Order retains its priority, as is the case
today, other terms and conditions do not amend the priority of the
Cancel-Replacement Order.
The Exchange's proposal is not amending the current System
functionality of a Cancel-Replacement Order with respect to the terms
that will cause the order to lose priority. Today, and with the
proposed change, if a Participant does not change or increase the size
of the order, it would not trigger a loss in priority. Options 3,
Section 7(a)(1) states only if the size of the order were reduced would
a loss of priority occur.\38\ Priority is retained if the size of the
order does not change or is not increased. The rule is intended to
provide transparency regarding changes to a Cancel-Replacement Order
which would trigger a loss in priority. Today, and with the proposal,
the price of the order may not be changed when submitting a Cancel-
Replacement Order; that would be a new order. A similar change was
recently made to BX's Cancel-Replacement Order.\39\ Price and size are
the terms that will determine if the Cancel-Replacement Order retains
its priority, as is the case today, other terms and conditions do not
amend the priority of the Cancel-Replacement Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) provides, ``The replacement
order will not retain the priority of the cancelled order except
when the replacement order reduces the size of the order and all
other terms and conditions are retained.''
\39\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Limit Orders,'' within Options
3, Section 7(a)(3), to add the sentence for marketable limit orders
which is currently in BX's rule is consistent with the Act. A Limit
Order on NOM operates in the same manner as a Limit
[[Page 81232]]
Order on BX. The Exchange proposes to conform the rule text of NOM's
Limit Order to BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(3) by adding the sentence
describing marketable limit orders. BX recently amended its rule to
similarly change its description of Limit Order.\40\ The Exchange
proposes to state, ``A marketable limit order is a limit order to buy
(sell) at or above (below) the best offer (bid) on the Exchange.'' The
Exchange believes that the rule amendment is consistent with the Act as
it more aptly describes a marketable limit order as compared to the
current rule text, which is confusing, but was intended to convey the
substance of the proposed text. The new sentence does not substantively
amend the current rule text and conforms NOM's description with BX's
description.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Minimum Quantity Orders,''
within Options 3, Section 7(a)(3), is non-substantive and makes
technical edits that do not change the meaning of the term. The
Exchange is otherwise not amending the Minimum Quantity Order rule
text.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Market Orders,'' within Options
3, Section 7(a)(4), is consistent with the Act. The Exchange's proposes
to style ``Market Orders'' in the singular and change ``are'' to ``is
an'' and ``orders'' to ``order.'' These amendments are technical and
non-substantive. The Exchange's proposal to amend the current sentence
to state, ``Participants can designate that their Market Orders not
executed after a pre-established period of time, as established by the
Exchange, will be cancelled back to the Participant, once an option
series has opened for trading.'' Market Orders submitted during the
opening may be executed, or cancelled if the Market Order is priced
through the opening price. The Exchange would only cancel those Market
Orders that remained on the Order Book once an option series
opened.\41\ The pre-established period of time would commence once the
intra-day trading session begins for that options series and the order
would be cancelled back to the Participant, provided the Participant
elected to cancel back its Market Orders. The Exchange's proposal makes
clear that while the opening is on-going, and the intra-day trading
session has not commenced, the pre-established period of time would not
commence.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See NOM's opening rule at Options 3, Section 8(d)(2),
``After the opening, the Exchange shall reject Market Orders, as
defined in Options 3, Section 7, and shall notify Participants of
the reason for such rejection.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal to note that ``Market Orders on the Order Book would
be immediately cancelled if an options series halted, provided the
Participant designated the cancellation of Market Orders'' is
consistent with the Act. Once an options series halts for trading, the
Exchange conducts another Opening Process. In the case where a Market
Order was resting on the Order Book, and the Participant had designated
the cancellation of Market Orders, in the event of a halt, the Market
Orders resting on the Order Book would immediately cancel. This
proposed rule text is consistent with existing System functionality.
The Exchange believes that this additional rule text brings greater
clarity to the Market Order type.
The Exchange proposes to amend ``Price Improving Orders,'' within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(5) is consistent with the Act. The Exchange
proposes to style ``Price Improving Orders'' in the singular and change
``are'' to ``is an'' and ``orders'' to ``order'' are non-substantive
amendments.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``On the Open Order,'' within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(6) by removing the words ``The term'' at the
beginning of the sentence and change ``shall mean'' to ``is'' are non-
substantive amendments.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Intermarket Sweep Order'' or
``ISO'' Orders, within Options 3, Section 7(a)(7), with the exception
of Options 3, Section 7(a)(7)(1), which is being retained by re-
lettered as ``A,'' and addition of rule text is consistent with the
Act. The new rule text is similar to BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(6).\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ BX's rule describes the PRISM mechanism, while NOM has no
auction mechanisms.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An ISO Order is a Limit Order, as noted in the current text and
Options 5, Section 1, continues to be referenced in the proposed text.
The Exchange continues to note that the orders are not routable. The
additional text, ``. . .will ignore the ABBO and trade at allowable
prices on the Exchange'' is more precise than the current rule text and
describes current functionality. The Exchange further proposes to
state, ``ISOs may be entered on the Order Book.'' That is also the case
today. The remainder of the current rule text is not necessary as
Options 5, Section 1(8) is cited. Removing the current rule text and
replacing it with text which describes the proper time-in-force
designation will make clear what is acceptable on NOM today. This rule
text is not proposed to change the functionality of an ISO Order. The
Exchange believes the proposed description provides a more succinct
description.
Today, the rule provides that ISOs may have any time-in-force
designation, except WAIT, and further requires that ISOs with a time-
in-force designation of GTC are treated as having a time-in-force
designation of Day. The Exchange proposes to remove the WAIT time-in-
force within this proposed rule change, as described in more detail
below, and, therefore, the WAIT order type no longer needs to be cited.
NOM's System does not treat an ISO with a time-in-force designation of
GTC as having a time-in-force designation of Day, as provided for
within NOM's current rule at Options 3, Section 7(a)(6), rather those
orders are treated as GTC. The current sentence is being removed
because it is inaccurate. The proposed sentence is consistent with the
Act because it accurately describes the System functionality. The
Exchange does not believe that an ISO with a time-in-force designation
of GTC was ever treated as having a time-in-force designation of Day,
the rule text was simply inaccurate. This proposal is consistent with
the protection of investors and the public interest because it will
clarify the handling of ISO Orders for market participants.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``One-Cancels-the-Other Order''
within renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(8) is consistent with the Act
because the changes are technical in nature and non-substantive.
The Exchange's amendment to ``All-or-None Order,'' within
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(9), is non-substantive and does not
change the meaning of the term.
The Exchange's amendment to ``Post-Only Orders,'' within renumbered
Options 3, Section 7(a)(10), is non-substantive and does not change the
meaning of the term.
Adding ``TIF to Options 3, Section 7(b) allows that term to be
defined within the Rules.
The Exchange's proposal to amend the ``On the Open Order,'' or
``OPG'' Order, within Options 3, Section 7(b)(1), to note that OPGs may
not route, is consistent with the Act. The System would not route an
OPG Order today. This order type functions in the same way as BX's OPG
Order at Options 3, Section 7(b)(1).\43\ The Exchange is
[[Page 81233]]
adding rule text to make clear the manner in which an OPG Order would
be treated, which is similar to how a BX OPG Order is treated today.
This proposal is consistent with the protection of investors and the
public interest because it will clarify the handling of OPG Orders for
market participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(1) provides, ``An Opening Only
order (``OPG'') is entered with a TIF of ``OPG''. This order can
only be executed in the Opening Process pursuant to Options 3,
Section 8. This order type is not subject to any protections listed
in Options 3, Section 15. Any portion of the order that is not
executed during the Opening Process is cancelled. OPG orders may not
route.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to amend an ``Immediate-Or-Cancel'' Order
or ``IOC,'' within Options 3, Section 7(b)(2), is consistent with the
Act. The Exchange's proposal replaces the current description with
Phlx's description at Options 3, Section 7(c)(2) as these order types
are identical. The Exchange's proposal to state that an Immediate-or-
Cancel Order or ``IOC'' Order is a Market Order or Limit Order to be
executed in whole or in part upon receipt will bring greater clarity to
the rule. Further the Exchange's proposal to add that any portion not
so executed is cancelled is consistent with the current description.
The Exchange proposes to replace this description with rule text
similar to BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) \44\ as these order types are
identical, except that NOM has the OTTO protocol and BX does not, and
also as mentioned previously NOM has no auctions. Additionally, BX's
rule addresses limitations in order protections that do not exist today
on NOM. The Exchange proposes to state that an Immediate-or-Cancel
Order or ``IOC'' Order is a Market Order or Limit Order to be executed
in whole or in part upon receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled and/or routed pursuant to Participant's instruction. IOC
orders may be entered through FIX, OTTO or SQF; IOC Orders entered
through OTTO or SQF may not route. Today, IOC Orders entered through
OTTO or SQF do not route; only orders entered through FIX may route.
The SQF interface is a quoting interface, the Exchange does not route
quotes. With respect to OTTO, orders submitted by NOM Market Makers
over this interface are treated as quotes and similarly do not route.
The Exchange's amendments are consistent with the Act in that the
changes memorialize pertinent information within the description of an
IOC Order to add clarity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) provides, ``Immediate-or-
Cancel'' or ``IOC'' is a Market Order or Limit Order to be executed
in whole or in part upon receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled. (A) Orders entered with a TIF of IOC are not eligible for
routing. (B) IOC orders may be entered through FIX or SQF, provided
that an IOC Order entered by a Market Maker through SQF is not
subject to the Limit Order Price Protection or the Market Order
Spread Protection in Options 3, Section 15(a)(1) and (a)(2),
respectively; (C) Orders entered into the Price Improvement Auction
(``PRISM'') Mechanism are considered to have a TIF of IOC. By their
terms, these orders will be: (1) Executed after an exposure period,
or (2) cancelled.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to amend the TIF of ``DAY'' at Options 3,
Section 7(b)(3) to conform the description of a TIF of ``DAY'' to Phlx
Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) \45\ is consistent with the Act. The
Exchange believes the current text describing NOM's Day TIF is
unnecessarily verbose and proposes to remove this language. A DAY Order
on Phlx functions in the same way as a DAY Order on NOM. The proposal
is not amending the System functionality of a DAY Order. The Phlx rule
text is more succinct in describing this order type. Similar changes
were recently made on BX.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) provides, ``Day. If not
executed, an order entered with a TIF of ``Day'' expires at the end
of the day on which it was entered. All orders by their terms are
Day Orders unless otherwise specified. Day orders may be entered
through FIX.''
\46\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to amend the TIF of ``Good Til Cancelled''
or ``GTC'' at Options 3, Section 7(b)(4) is consistent with the Act.
The Exchange proposes to conform the rule text to Phlx Options 3,
Section 7(c)(4).\47\ The Exchange is not amending the manner in which
the System function with respect to GTC Orders. GTC Orders, if not
fully executed, will remain available for potential display and/or
execution unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the option
expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders shall be available for entry
from the time prior to market open, as specified by the Exchange, until
market close, as is the case today. Also, today, a GTC Order may only
be entered through FIX. A GTC Order on Phlx functions in the same way
as a GTC Order on NOM. The Exchange believes that the amended rule text
will bring greater transparency to its rules as the proposed
description is more succinct and thereby protects investors and the
general public.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4) provides, ``A Good Til
Cancelled (``GTC'') Order entered with a TIF of GTC, if not fully
executed, will remain available for potential display and/or
execution unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the
option expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders shall be available
for entry from the time prior to market open specified by the
Exchange until market close.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to no longer offer a TIF of ``WAIT'' is
consistent with the Act because it will remove an order type that is
not in demand on NOM and simply the offerings provided by NOM. If the
Exchange desires to offer this TIF in the futures, it would file a
proposed rule change with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(1)
of the Act.\48\ The Exchange has provided notice of its intention to
remove the TIF of ``WAIT''.\49\ BX previously offered a WAIT order type
recently and discontinued this order types because it was not being
utilized to a great extent.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\49\ See Options Trader Alert #2020-26.
\50\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to note, within NOM Options 3, Section
7(c), the various routing options which are available is consistent
with the Act.
Options 3, Section 15
The Exchange believes its proposal to clarify that Anti-
Internalization will not apply during an opening is consistent with the
Act as it would provide more specificity on how this functionality
currently operates. A similar change was recently made to BX's
Rules.\51\ The Exchange notes that the same procedures used during an
opening are used to reopen an option series after a trading halt, and
therefore proposes to specify that Anti-Internalization will not apply
during the opening (i.e., the opening and halt reopening processes).
During the opening, Market Makers are able to observe the primary
market and then determine how they would like to quote. They are not
required to quote in the opening on NOM. Therefore, Anti-
Internalization is unnecessary during an opening due to the high level
of control that Market Makers exercise over their quotes during this
process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89759 (September 3,
2020). 85 FR 55877 (September 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 3, Section 23
The Exchange's proposal to amend Options 3, Section 23, Data Feeds
and Trade Information, to update its descriptions of the ITTO data feed
is consistent with the Act because the updated descriptions will bring
greater transparency to the Exchange's rules and more closely align
with current System operation.
The Exchange's proposal will make clear that order imbalance
information is provided for both an opening and re-opening process.
Today, a re-opening process initiates after a trading halt has occurred
intra-day. Also, the Exchange's proposal notes the specific information
that would be provided, namely the size of matched contracts and size
of the imbalance. The Exchange believes that this additional context to
imbalance messages will provide market participants with more complete
information about what is contained in
[[Page 81234]]
the data feed. The Exchange notes that this information is available
today and the rule text is being amended to make clear what information
is currently provided.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
Options 1, Section 1
The Exchange's proposal to amend the definition of ``Public
Customer'' to conform to Phlx's definition is intended to provide
greater specificity regarding what is meant by the term ``Public
Customer.'' This proposal does not impose an undue burden on
competition, rather it makes clear that a Public Customer could be a
person or entity and clarifies that a Public Customer is not a
Professional, as defined within Options 1, Section (a)(47).\52\ Today,
a Public Customer is not a Professional. In order to properly represent
orders entered on the Exchange, Participants are required to indicate
whether orders are ``Professional Orders.'' To comply with this
requirement, Participants are required to review their Public
Customers' activity on at least a quarterly basis to determine whether
orders, which are not for the account of a broker-dealer, should be
represented as Public Customer Orders or Professional Orders.\53\ A
Public Customer may be a Professional, provided they meet the
requirements specified within NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47). If the
Professional definition is not met, the order is treated as a Public
Customer order. The process for determining if a market participant
qualifies as a ``Professional'' is applicable to all Participants.
Also, this definition conforms to Phlx's definition at Options 1,
Section 1(b)(47).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ NOM Options 1, Section 1(a)(47) provides that, ``The term
``Professional'' means any person or entity that (i) is not a broker
or dealer in securities, and (ii) places more than 390 orders in
listed options per day on average during a calendar month for its
own beneficial account(s). A Participant or a Public Customer may,
without limitation, be a Professional. All Professional orders shall
be appropriately marked by Participants.''
\53\ Participants conduct a quarterly review and make any
appropriate changes to the way in which they are representing orders
within five days after the end of each calendar quarter. While
Participants only will be required to review their accounts on a
quarterly basis, if during a quarter the Exchange identifies a
customer for which orders are being represented as Public Customer
Orders but that has averaged more than 390 orders per day during a
month, the Exchange will notify the Participant and the Participant
will be required to change the manner in which it is representing
the customer's orders within five days.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to remove a sentence within Options 1,
Section 1(a)(47) which provides, ``A Participant or a Public Customers
may, without limitation, be a Professional,'' does not impose an undue
burden on competition. This sentence is confusing, unnecessary, and
adds no information to this defined term. By way of comparison, Phlx
Options 1, Section 1(b)(46) does not contain a similar sentence and
that sentence was recently removed from Nasdaq BX, Inc.'s (``BX'')
Rules.\54\ The Exchange adopted a Professional designation in 2010 \55\
and has differentiated Public and Professional customers since that
time. NOM proposes removing this sentence because it does not add
useful information to understanding who may qualify as a Professional.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
\55\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63028 (October 1,
2010), 75 FR 62443 (October 8, 2010) (SR-NASDAQ-2020-099) (Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Definition of
Professional and Require That All Professional Orders Be
Appropriately Marked).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to remove a sentence, within Options 3,
Section 10(a)(1)(C)(i), which allocation rule provides that a Public
Customer order does not include a Professional order does not impose an
undue burden on competition. Today, the definition of a Public Customer
does not explicitly exclude a Professional. Indicating that a Public
Customer order is not a Professional Order is no longer necessary
because of the proposed definition for Public Customer. The language
that the Exchange proposes to delete, currently indicates that
Professionals would not be treated the same as a Public Customer in
terms of priority and, therefore, would not receive the same allocation
that is reserved for Public Customer orders. Since NOM is amending the
definition of a Public Customer to explicitly exclude Professionals,
the language in the allocation rule is no longer necessary to
distinguish these two types of market participants.
Bid/Ask Differentials
The Exchange's proposal to amend NOM Options 2, Section 5(d)(2) to
add the words ``Intra-Day'' before the title ``Bid/ask Differentials
(Quote Spread Parameters)'' and make clear that remove references to
the opening, will make clear for Market Makers their intra-day
requirements. The bid/ask differentials, within NOM Options 2, Section
5(d)(2), will continue to apply intra-day. This proposal does not
impose an undue burden on competition, rather it conform the Exchange's
existing practice. Today, the bid/ask differentials applicable to the
opening are noted within Options 3, Section 8(a)(6).\56\ As noted
within the rule, NOM publishes its specified bid/ask differential on
its system settings page.\57\ The bid/ask differentials noted for the
Valid Width NBBO within the opening provide for quotations with a
difference that does not exceed $5 between the bid and offer regardless
of the price of the bid. It is not necessary to discuss the opening
bid/ask differentials within Options 2, Section 5 as those
differentials are specifically noted within the opening rule. This
clarification avoids any confusion for Market Makers as to their intra-
day requirements versus their opening requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ NOM Options 3, Section 8(a)(6) provides, ``Valid Width
National Best Bid or Offer'' or ``Valid Width NBBO'' shall mean the
combination of all away market quotes and any combination of NOM-
registered Market Maker orders and quotes received over the QUO or
SQF Protocols within a specified bid/ask differential as established
and published by the Exchange. The Valid Width NBBO will be
configurable by underlying, and tables with valid width
differentials will be posted by Nasdaq on its website. Away markets
that are crossed will void all Valid Width NBBO calculations. If any
Market Maker orders or quotes on NOM are crossed internally, then
all such orders and quotes will be excluded from the Valid Width
NBBO calculation.''
\57\ NOM's System Settings page is located at: https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/2020/07/02/NOM_SystemSettings.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 3, Section 5
The Exchange's proposal to amend Options 3, Section 5(c) to add
additional rule text similar to Phlx Options 3, Section 5(c) \58\ does
not impose an undue burden on competition. Today, NOM re-prices certain
orders to avoid locking and crossing away markets, consistent with its
Trade-Through Compliance and Locked or Crossed Markets obligations.\59\
Orders which lock or cross an away market automatically re-price one
minimum price improvement inferior to the original away best bid/offer
price to one minimum trading increment away from the new away best bid/
offer price or its original limit price.\60\ The re-priced
[[Page 81235]]
order is displayed on OPRA. The order remains on NOM's Order Book and
is accessible at the non-displayed price.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Phlx has an All-or-None Order type that is non-displayed.
See Options 3, Section 7(b)(5). Phlx Options 3, Section 5(c)
accounts for this non-displayed order on the order book. NOM has a
Price Improving Order is already described within Options 3, Section
5(c). A Price Improving Order on NOM displays differently than
Phlx's All-Or-None Order and therefore is described differently
within Options 3, Section 5(c). Otherwise, NOM has no other non-
displayed order types.
\59\ See NOM Options 3, Section 5(d).
\60\ See Options 5, Section 4 (Order Routing), which describes
the repricing of orders for both routable and non-routable orders
within Options 5, Section 4(a)(iii)(A), (B) and (C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Options 3, Section 7
The Exchange's proposal to amend the Cancel-Replacement Order,
within Options 3, Section 7(a)(1), does not impose an undue burden on
competition. A Participant has the option of either submitting a cancel
order and then separately submitting a new order, which serves as a
replacement of the original order, in two separate messages, or
submitting a single cancel and replace order in one message (``Cancel-
Replacement Order''). Submitting a cancel order and then separately
submitting a new order will not retain the priority of the original
order. The Exchange's proposal to replace the words ``shall mean'' with
``is'' and remove the final sentence of the rule text will bring
greater clarity to this rule. The Exchange addition of a new sentence
to the end of the rule states in the affirmative the conditions under
which the Cancel-Replacement Order will retain priority. Price and size
are the terms that will determine if the Cancel-Replacement Order
retains its priority, as is the case today, other terms and conditions
do not amend the priority of the Cancel-Replacement Order.
The Exchange's proposal is not amending the current System
functionality of a Cancel-Replacement Order with respect to the terms
that will cause the order to lose priority. Today, and with the
proposed change, if a Participant does not change or increase the size
of the order, it would not trigger a loss in priority. Options 3,
Section 7(a)(1) states only if the size of the order were reduced would
a loss of priority occur.\61\ Priority is retained if the size of the
order does not change or is not increased. The rule is intended to
provide transparency regarding changes to a Cancel-Replacement Order
which would trigger a loss in priority. Today, and with the proposal,
the price of the order may not be changed when submitting a Cancel-
Replacement Order; that would be a new order. A similar change was
recently made to BX's Cancel-Replacement Order.\62\ Price and size are
the terms that will determine if the Cancel-Replacement Order retains
its priority, as is the case today, other terms and conditions do not
amend the priority of the Cancel-Replacement Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Options 3, Section 7(a)(1) provides, ``The replacement
order will not retain the priority of the cancelled order except
when the replacement order reduces the size of the order and all
other terms and conditions are retained.''
\62\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Limit Orders,'' within Options
3, Section 7(a)(3), to add the sentence for marketable limit orders
which is currently in BX's rule does not impose an undue burden on
competition. A Limit Order on NOM operates in the same manner as a
Limit Order on BX. The Exchange proposes to conform the rule text of
NOM's Limit Order to BX Options 3, Section 7(a)(3) by adding a sentence
describing marketable limit orders. BX recently amended its rule to
similarly change its description of Limit Order.\63\ The proposed text
more aptly describes a marketable limit order as compared to the
current rule text, which is confusing, but was intended to convey the
substance of the proposed text. The new sentence does not substantively
amend the current rule text and conforms NOM's description with BX's
description.
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\63\ Id.
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The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Minimum Quantity Orders,''
within Options 3, Section 7(a)(3), is non-substantive and makes
technical edits that do not change the meaning of the term. The
Exchange is otherwise not amending the Minimum Quantity Order rule
text.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Market Orders,'' within Options
3, Section 7(a)(4), does not impose an undue burden on competition. The
Exchange's proposes to style ``Market Orders'' in the singular and
change ``are'' to ``is an'' and ``orders'' to ``order.'' These
amendments are technical and non-substantive. Market Orders submitted
during the opening may be executed, or cancelled if the Market Order is
priced through the opening price. The Exchange would only cancel those
Market Orders that remained on the Order Book once an option series
opened.\64\ The pre-established period of time would commence once the
intra-day trading session begins for that options series and the order
would be cancelled back to the Participant, provided the Participant
elected to cancel back its Market Orders. The Exchange's proposal makes
clear that while the opening is on-going, and the intra-day trading
session has not commenced, the pre-established period of time would not
commence.
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\64\ See NOM's opening rule at Options 3, Section 8(d)(2),
``After the opening, the Exchange shall reject Market Orders, as
defined in Options 3, Section 7, and shall notify Participants of
the reason for such rejection.''
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The proposal to note that ``Market Orders on the Order Book would
be immediately cancelled if an options series halted, provided the
Participant designated the cancellation of Market Orders'' does not
impose an undue burden on competition. Once an options series halts for
trading, the Exchange conducts another Opening Process. In the case
where a Market Order was resting on the Order Book, and the Participant
had designated the cancellation of Market Orders, in the event of a
halt, the Market Orders resting on the Order Book would immediately
cancel. This proposed rule text is consistent with existing System
functionality. The Exchange believes that this additional rule text
brings greater clarity to the Market Order type.
The Exchange proposes to amend ``Price Improving Orders,'' within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(5) does not impose an undue burden on
competition. The Exchange proposes to style ``Price Improving Orders''
in the singular and change ``are'' to ``is an'' and ``orders'' to
``order'' are non-substantive amendments.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``On the Open Order,'' within
Options 3, Section 7(a)(6) by removing the words ``The term'' at the
beginning of the sentence and change ``shall mean'' to ``is'' are non-
substantive amendments.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``Intermarket Sweep Order'' or
``ISO'' Orders, within Options 3, Section 7(a)(7), with the exception
of Options 3, Section 7(a)(7)(1), which is being retained by re-
lettered as ``A,'' and addition of rule text does not impose an undue
burden on competition. The new rule text is similar to BX Options 3,
Section 7(a)(6).\65\
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\65\ BX's rule describes the PRISM mechanism, while NOM has no
auction mechanisms.
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An ISO Order is a Limit Order, as noted in the current text and
Options 5, Section 1, continues to be referenced in the proposed text.
The Exchange continues to note that the orders are not routable. The
additional text is more precise than the current rule text and
describes current functionality. The Exchange further proposes to
state, ``ISOs may be entered on the Order Book.'' That is also the case
today. The remainder of the current rule text is not necessary as
Options 5, Section 1(8) is cited. Removing the current rule text and
replacing it with text which describes the proper time-in-force
designation will make clear what is acceptable on NOM today. This rule
text is not proposed to change the
[[Page 81236]]
functionality of an ISO Order. The Exchange believes the proposed
description does not impose an undue burden on competition, rather it
provides a more succinct description.
Today, ISOs may have any time-in-force designation, except WAIT,
and further requires that ISOs with a time-in-force designation of GTC
are treated as having a time-in-force designation of Day. The Exchange
proposes to remove the WAIT time-in-force within this proposed rule
change, as described in more detail below, and, therefore, the WAIT
order type no longer needs to be cited. NOM's System does not treat an
ISO with a time-in-force designation of GTC as having a time-in-force
designation of Day, as provided for within NOM's current rule at
Options 3, Section 7(a)(6), rather those orders are treated as GTC. The
current sentence is being removed because it is inaccurate. The
proposed sentence does not impose an undue burden on competition
because it accurately describes the System functionality. The Exchange
does not believe that an ISO with a time-in-force designation of GTC
was ever treated as having a time-in-force designation of Day, the rule
text was simply inaccurate.
The Exchange's proposal to amend ``One-Cancels-the-Other Order''
within renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(8) does not impose an undue
burden on competition because the changes are technical in nature and
non-substantive.
The Exchange's amendment to ``All-or-None Order,'' within
renumbered Options 3, Section 7(a)(9), is non-substantive and does not
change the meaning of the term.
The Exchange's amendment to ``Post-Only Orders,'' within renumbered
Options 3, Section 7(a)(10), is non-substantive and does not change the
meaning of the term.
The Exchange's proposal to amend the ``On the Open Order,'' or
``OPG'' Order, within Options 3, Section 7(b)(1), to note that OPGs may
not route, does not impose an undue burden on competition. The System
would not route an OPG Order today. This order type functions in the
same way as BX's OPG Order at Options 3, Section 7(b)(1).\66\ The
Exchange is adding rule text to make clear the manner in which an OPG
Order would be treated, which is similar to how a BX OPG Order is
treated today.
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\66\ BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(1) provides, ``An Opening Only
order (``OPG'') is entered with a TIF of ``OPG''. This order can
only be executed in the Opening Process pursuant to Options 3,
Section 8. This order type is not subject to any protections listed
in Options 3, Section 15. Any portion of the order that is not
executed during the Opening Process is cancelled. OPG orders may not
route.''
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The Exchange's proposal to amend an ``Immediate-Or-Cancel'' Order
or ``IOC,'' within Options 3, Section 7(b)(2), does not impose an undue
burden on competition. The Exchange's proposal replaces the current
description with Phlx's description at Options 3, Section 7(c)(2) as
these order types are identical. The Exchange's proposal to state that
an Immediate-or-Cancel Order or ``IOC'' Order is a Market Order or
Limit Order to be executed in whole or in part upon receipt will bring
greater clarity to the rule. Further the Exchange's proposal to add
that any portion not so executed is cancelled is consistent with the
current description. The Exchange proposes to replace this description
with rule text similar to BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) \67\ as these
order types are identical, except that NOM has the OTTO protocol and BX
does not, and also as mentioned previously NOM has no auctions.
Additionally, BX's rule addresses limitations in order protections that
do not exist today on NOM. Today, IOC Orders entered through OTTO or
SQF do not route; only orders entered through FIX may route. The SQF
interface is a quoting interface, the Exchange does not route quotes.
With respect to OTTO, orders submitted by NOM Market Makers over this
interface are treated as quotes and similarly do not route.
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\67\ BX Options 3, Section 7(b)(2) provides, ``Immediate-or-
Cancel'' or ``IOC'' is a Market Order or Limit Order to be executed
in whole or in part upon receipt. Any portion not so executed is
cancelled. (A) Orders entered with a TIF of IOC are not eligible for
routing. (B) IOC orders may be entered through FIX or SQF, provided
that an IOC Order entered by a Market Maker through SQF is not
subject to the Limit Order Price Protection or the Market Order
Spread Protection in Options 3, Section 15(a)(1) and (a)(2),
respectively; (C) Orders entered into the Price Improvement Auction
(``PRISM'') Mechanism are considered to have a TIF of IOC. By their
terms, these orders will be: (1) Executed after an exposure period,
or (2) cancelled.
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The Exchange's proposal to amend the TIF of ``DAY'' at Options 3,
Section 7(b)(3) to conform the description of a TIF of ``DAY'' to Phlx
Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) \68\ does not impose an undue burden on
competition. The Exchange believes the current text describing NOM's
Day TIF is unnecessarily verbose and proposes to remove this language.
A DAY Order on Phlx functions in the same way as a DAY Order on NOM.
The proposal is not amending the System functionality of a DAY Order.
The Phlx rule text is more succinct in describing this order type.
Similar changes were recently made on BX.\69\
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\68\ Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(1) provides, ``Day. If not
executed, an order entered with a TIF of ``Day'' expires at the end
of the day on which it was entered. All orders by their terms are
Day Orders unless otherwise specified. Day orders may be entered
through FIX.''
\69\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
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The Exchange's proposal to amend the TIF of ``Good Til Cancelled''
or ``GTC'' at Options 3, Section 7(b)(4) does not impose an undue
burden on competition. The Exchange proposes to conform the rule text
to Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4).\70\ The Exchange is not amending
the manner in which the System function with respect to GTC Orders. GTC
Orders, if not fully executed, will remain available for potential
display and/or execution unless cancelled by the entering party, or
until the option expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders shall be
available for entry from the time prior to market open, as specified by
the Exchange, until market close, as is the case today. Also, today, a
GTC Order may only be entered through FIX. A GTC Order on Phlx
functions in the same way as a GTC Order on NOM. The Exchange believes
that the amended rule text will bring greater transparency to its
rules.
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\70\ Phlx Options 3, Section 7(c)(4) provides, ``A Good Til
Cancelled (``GTC'') Order entered with a TIF of GTC, if not fully
executed, will remain available for potential display and/or
execution unless cancelled by the entering party, or until the
option expires, whichever comes first. GTC Orders shall be available
for entry from the time prior to market open specified by the
Exchange until market close.''
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The Exchange's proposal to no longer offer a TIF of ``WAIT'' does
not impose an undue burden on competition because it will remove an
order type that is not in demand on NOM and simply the offerings
provided by NOM. If the Exchange desires to offer this TIF in the
futures, it would file a proposed rule change with the Commission
pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act.\71\ The Exchange has provided
notice of its intention to remove the TIF of ``WAIT''.\72\ BX
previously offered a WAIT order type recently and discontinued this
order types because it was not being utilized to a great extent.\73\
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\71\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\72\ See Options Trader Alert #2020-26.
\73\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89476 (August 4,
2020). 85 FR 48274 (August 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-017).
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The Exchange's proposal to note, within NOM Options 3, Section
7(c), the various routing options which are available does not impose
an undue burden on competition.
Options 3, Section 15
The Exchange believes its proposal to clarify that Anti-
Internalization will not
[[Page 81237]]
apply during an opening does not impose an undue burden on competition
as it would provide more specificity on how this functionality
currently operates. A similar change was recently made to BX's
Rules.\74\ The Exchange notes that the same procedures used during an
opening are used to reopen an option series after a trading halt, and
therefore proposes to specify that Anti-Internalization will not apply
during the opening (i.e., the opening and halt reopening processes).
During the opening, Market Makers are able to observe the primary
market and then determine how they would like to quote. They are not
required to quote in the opening on NOM. Therefore, Anti-
Internalization is unnecessary during an opening due to the high level
of control that Market Makers exercise over their quotes during this
process.
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\74\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89759 (September 3,
2020). 85 FR 55877 (September 10, 2020) (SR-BX-2020-023).
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Options 3, Section 23
The Exchange's proposal to amend Options 3, Section 23, Data Feeds
and Trade Information, to update its descriptions of the ITTO data feed
does not impose an undue burden on competition because the updated
descriptions will bring greater transparency to the Exchange's rules
and more closely align with current System operation.
The Exchange's proposal will make clear that order imbalance
information is provided for both an opening and re-opening process.
Today, a re-opening process initiates after a trading halt has occurred
intra-day. Also, the Exchange's proposal notes the specific information
that would be provided, namely the size of matched contracts and size
of the imbalance. The Exchange believes that this additional context to
imbalance messages will provide market participants with more complete
information about what is contained in the data feed. The Exchange
notes that this information is available today and the rule text is
being amended to make clear what information is currently provided.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either solicited or received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Because the foregoing proposed rule change does not: (i)
Significantly affect the protection of investors or the public
interest; (ii) impose any significant burden on competition; and (iii)
become operative for 30 days from the date on which it was filed, or
such shorter time as the Commission may designate, it has become
effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act \75\ and
subparagraph (f)(6) of Rule 19b-4 thereunder.\76\
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\75\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
\76\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(6). In addition, Rule 19b-4(f)(6)(iii)
requires a self-regulatory organization to give the Commission
written notice of its intent to file the proposed rule change, along
with a brief description and text of the proposed rule change, at
least five business days prior to the date of filing of the proposed
rule change, or such shorter time as designated by the Commission.
The Exchange has satisfied this requirement.
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At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. If the Commission
takes such action, the Commission shall institute proceedings to
determine whether the proposed rule should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-NASDAQ-2020-083 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NASDAQ-2020-083. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR-NASDAQ-2020-083, and should be submitted
on or before January 5, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\77\
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\77\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-27483 Filed 12-14-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P