Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.; Order Granting Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 2, To Adopt Proposed Rule 6439 (Requirements for Member Inter-Dealer Quotation Systems) and Rescind the Rules Related to the OTC Bulletin Board Service, 30663-30671 [2021-12026]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 9, 2021 / Notices
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.
Inter-Market Competition
The proposal does not impose an
undue burden on inter-market
competition. The Exchange believes its
proposal remains competitive with
other options markets and will offer
market participants with another choice
of where to transact options. The
Exchange notes that it operates in a
highly competitive market in which
market participants can readily favor
competing venues if they deem fee
levels at a particular venue to be
excessive, or rebate opportunities
available at other venues to be more
favorable. In such an environment, the
Exchange must continually adjust its
fees to remain competitive with other
options exchanges. Because competitors
are free to modify their own fees in
response, and because market
participants may readily adjust their
order routing practices, the Exchange
believes that the degree to which fee
changes in this market may impose any
burden on competition is extremely
limited.
Intra-Market Competition
Options 7, Section 1
The Exchange’s proposal to relocate
rule text related to the Removal of Days
for Purposes of Pricing Tiers within
Options 7, Section 2(6) into Options 7,
Section 1, General Provisions, without
change, does not impose an undue
burden on competition as the rule text
will continue to apply uniformly to all
Participants.
Options 7, Section 2
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The Exchange’s proposal to adopt
Block Order Mechanism and Customer
Cross Order pricing does not impose an
undue burden on competition as no
Participant would be subject to any fees
or be paid any rebates for orders
executed into the Block Order
Mechanism or Customer Cross Orders.
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.
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III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act.10 At any time
within 60 days of the filing of the
proposed rule change, the Commission
summarily may temporarily suspend
such rule change if it appears to the
Commission that such action is: (i)
Necessary or appropriate in the public
interest; (ii) for the protection of
investors; or (iii) otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
If the Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
30663
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;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–BX–2021–025 and should
be submitted on or before June 30, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.11
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–12032 Filed 6–8–21; 8:45 am]
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:
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–92105; File No. SR–FINRA–
2020–031]
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–
BX–2021–025 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–BX–2021–025. 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,
10
PO 00000
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Order Granting
Approval of a Proposed Rule Change,
as Modified by Amendment No. 2, To
Adopt Proposed Rule 6439
(Requirements for Member Inter-Dealer
Quotation Systems) and Rescind the
Rules Related to the OTC Bulletin
Board Service
June 3, 2021.
I. Introduction
On September 24, 2020, the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(‘‘FINRA’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’),
pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’
or ‘‘Exchange Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
rescind the rules related to the OTC
Bulletin Board Service and cease its
operation and to adopt new
requirements for member inter-dealer
quotation systems that disseminate
quotations in equity securities traded
over-the-counter (‘‘OTC’’). The proposed
rule change was published for comment
in the Federal Register on October 7,
2020.3 On November 4, 2020, pursuant
11 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Exchange Act Release No. 90067 (October 1,
2020), 85 FR 63314 (‘‘Notice’’). Comments on the
proposed rule change can be found at: https://
1 15
15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
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to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,4 the
Commission designated a longer period
within which to approve the proposed
rule change, disapprove the proposed
rule change, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change.5 On December
21, 2020, FINRA filed Amendment No.
1 to the proposed rule change.6 On
December 30, 2020, the Commission
published notice of Amendment No. 1
and instituted proceedings pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act 7 to
determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule change.8
On April 5, 2021, the Commission
extended the period for consideration of
the proposed rule change to June 4,
2021.9 On June 1, 2021, FINRA filed
Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule
change, which replaces and supersedes
Amendment No. 1 in its entirety.10 The
Commission received four comment
letters regarding the proposed rule
change,11 and two responses to
comments from FINRA.12 This order
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2020-031/
srfinra2020031.htm.
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 See Exchange Act Release No. 90335 (November
4, 2020). The Commission designated January 5,
2021, as the date by which the Commission shall
approve or disapprove, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to approve or disapprove, the
proposed rule change.
6 Amendment No. 1 may be found at: https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2020-031/
srfinra2020031-8841399-238269.pdf.
7 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
8 See Exchange Act Release No. 90824, 86 FR 653
(January 6, 2021).
9 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91474,
86 FR 18583 (April 9, 2021).
10 Amendment No. 2 is a partial amendment in
which FINRA added a representation that the
effective date for deleting the rules related to the
OTCBB (as defined herein) will not occur until: (1)
Proposed Rule 6439 (except for Rule 6439(d)(1)(B))
is effective; and (2) the Commission grants FINRA’s
request set forth in the QEQS Designation Request
Letter (as defined herein) (or FINRA files a rule
filing otherwise setting the implementation date for
deleting the rules related to the OTCBB and the
Commission approves such rule filing, if required).
Because Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule
clarifies the timing of effectiveness of the proposed
rule change and does not materially alter the
substance of the proposed rule change, Amendment
No. 2 is not subject to notice and comment.
Amendment No. 2 may be found at: https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2020-031/
srfinra2020031.htm.
11 See Letters from Christopher Bok, Chief
Compliance Officer, OTC Link, LLC, dated October
28, 2020 (‘‘OTC Link Letter 1’’); Kimberly Unger,
CEO and Executive Director, The Security Traders
Association of New York, Inc., dated October 28,
2020 (‘‘STANY Letter’’); Sherry J. Sandler, Global
OTC, dated November 9, 2020 (‘‘Global OTC
Letter’’), and Cass Sanford, Associate General
Counsel, OTC Markets Group, Inc., dated January
27, 2021 (‘‘OTC Link Letter 2’’).
12 See Letters from Racquel Russell, Associate
General Counsel, FINRA, dated November 20, 2020
(‘‘FINRA Letter 1’’) and February 12, 2021 (‘‘FINRA
Letter 2’’).
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18:13 Jun 08, 2021
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approves the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No. 2.
II. Summary of the Proposal, as
Modified by Amendment No. 2
As further described below, FINRA
proposes to (i) rescind FINRA’s rules
governing the OTC Bulletin Board
Service (‘‘OTCBB’’) and cease its
operation; and (ii) adopt new Rule 6439
(Requirements for Member Inter-Dealer
Quotation Systems) to expand the
obligations of member interdealer
quotation systems (‘‘IDQSs’’) 13 that
disseminate quotation updates on a realtime basis in OTC Equity Securities.14
A. Rescission of Rules Governing the
OTCBB
The OTCBB is a FINRA-operated
IDQS available for use by broker-dealers
to publish quotations in eligible OTC
Equity Securities.15 FINRA has operated
the OTCBB since 1990.16 FINRA states
that, due to technological advancements
since 1990 and the increase in
alternative electronic venues with more
extensive functionality than the OTCBB,
the level of quotation activity occurring
on the OTCBB has continued to decline
over the past several years and is now
nonexistent.17 FINRA represents that, as
of the date that it filed the proposed rule
change, the OTCBB does not display or
widely disseminate quotation
information on any OTC Equity
Security.18
FINRA states that it does not believe
that continued operation of the OTCBB
serves any benefit to investors or the
marketplace and that ceasing operation
of the OTCBB would eliminate potential
investor confusion regarding the
availability of quotation information for
OTC Equity Securities.19 In addition,
13 FINRA Rule 6420(c) defines ‘‘inter-dealer
quotation system’’ as ‘‘any system of general
circulation to brokers or dealers which regularly
disseminates quotations of identified brokers or
dealers.’’ This definition tracks the Commission’s
definition of the same term in Exchange Act Rule
15c2–11, 17 CFR 240.15c2–11.
14 The term ‘‘OTC Equity Security’’ is defined in
FINRA Rule 6420(f) as any equity security that is
not an ‘‘NMS stock’’ as that term is defined in Rule
600(b)(47) of Regulation NMS; provided, however,
that the term ‘‘OTC Equity Security’’ shall not
include any Restricted Equity Security. The term
‘‘Restricted Equity Security’’ is further defined in
FINRA Rule 6420(k) to mean any equity security
that meets the definition of ‘‘restricted security’’ as
contained in Rule 144(a)(3) under the Securities Act
of 1933.
15 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63315.
16 See id.
17 See id.
18 See id.
19 See id. at 63318. For example, FINRA states
that where investors look to feeds that solely
disseminate OTCBB data for quotation information
on a particular OTC Equity Security, investors
mistakenly may conclude that there are no current
quotations in the security (when, in fact, there may
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FINRA states that it does not believe
that the OTCBB, in its current state,
furthers the goals and objectives of
Section 17B of the Act and, therefore,
does not meet the characteristics of a
system described in Section 17B of the
Act regarding the widespread
dissemination of reliable and accurate
quotation information with respect to
‘‘penny stocks.’’ 20
As a result, FINRA proposes to
rescind the FINRA Rule 6500 Series,
which governs the operation of the
OTCBB. Among other things, the FINRA
Rule Series 6500 contains provisions
regarding the securities eligible to be
quoted on the OTCBB (FINRA Rule
6530), market maker obligations on the
OTCBB (FINRA Rule 6540), and
transaction reporting (FINRA Rule
6550). FINRA also proposes to rescind
FINRA Rule 7720, which sets forth the
fees applicable to a broker-dealer that
displays quotations or trading interest in
the OTCBB, and to amend FINRA Rule
be numerous quotations available elsewhere—i.e.,
on member-operated IDQSs). See id.
20 Section 17B(b)(1) of the Act, which was added
by the Securities Enforcement Remedies and Penny
Stock Reform Act of 1990 (‘‘Penny Stock Act’’),
directs the Commission to ‘‘facilitate the
widespread dissemination of reliable and accurate
last sale and quotation information with respect to
penny stocks . . . with a view toward establishing,
at the earliest feasible time, one or more automated
quotation systems that will collect and disseminate
information regarding all penny stocks.’’ 15 U.S.C.
78q–2(b)(1). Under Exchange Act Rule 3a51–1,
‘‘penny stock’’ is a non-NMS stock that among other
things, does not include securities that have a price
of five dollars or more as determined either on a
per transaction basis or, in the absence of a
transaction, on the basis of the inside bid quotation
for the security displayed on an automated
interdealer quotation system that has the
characteristics set forth in Section 17B(b)(2) of the
Act or such other automated interdealer system that
is designated by the Commission for purposes of the
rule (such a system, a ‘‘Qualifying Electronic
Quotation System’’ or ‘‘QEQS’’). See 17 CFR
240.3a51–1; Exchange Act Release No. 30608 (April
20, 1992), 57 FR 18004 (April 28, 1992) (‘‘Penny
Stock Rules Adopting Release’’); 17 CFR 240.3a51–
1, 15g–1 through 15g–9 and 15g–100 (‘‘Penny Stock
Rules’’). The Commission, in adopting the Penny
Stock Rules, set forth standards it would consider
when designating a QEQS. See Penny Stock Rules
Adopting Release, 57 FR at 18012 n.64. The QEQS
designation criteria set forth in the Penny Stock
Rules are based on the Exchange Act Section 17B
characteristics of an automated quotation system
that would facilitate the widespread dissemination
of reliable and accurate last sale and quotation
information with respect to penny stocks. See 15
U.S.C. 78q–2(b)(1) and (2). In 1992, the Commission
designated the OTCBB, then operated by FINRA’s
predecessor the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. (‘‘NASD’’), as an automated interdealer
quotation system and a QEQS for purposes of the
Penny Stock Rules. See Letter from Margaret H.
McFarland, Deputy Secretary, Commission, to
Richard Ketchum, Executive Vice President, NASD,
Inc., dated December 30, 1992 (‘‘OTCBB
Designation Letter’’). The Commission thereafter
granted the NASD’s request for an extension of
QEQS status. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 38101 (Dec. 31, 1996), 62 FR 1010 (Jan. 7,
1997).
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9217 (Violations Appropriate for
Disposition Under Plan Pursuant to SEA
Rule 19d–1(c)(2)) to remove reference to
FINRA Rule 6550 (Transaction
Reporting). While these proposed
changes to the FINRA rulebook would
cause the operation of the OTCBB to
terminate, FINRA states that it would
not cease operation of the OTCBB until:
(1) Proposed Rule 6439 (except for
proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B)) is
effective, and (2) the Commission grants
FINRA’s request set forth in the QEQS
Designation Request Letter (or FINRA
files a rule filing otherwise setting the
implementation date for deleting the
rules related to the OTCBB and the
Commission approves such rule filing, if
required).21
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B. Proposed Rule 6439 (Requirements
for Member Inter-Dealer Quotation
Systems)
FINRA states that all quotation
activity in OTC Equity Securities now
occurs on member-operated IDQSs,
rather than the OTCBB.22 FINRA
proposes, in conjunction with the
cessation of the OTCBB, to adopt new
requirements for member IDQSs that
provide quotations in OTC Equity
Securities in order to ensure that they
have minimum standards in place.23
FINRA states that it believes that the
proposed requirements would
complement the existing framework
governing the form and content of
quotations 24 and are consistent with the
goals and objectives of Section 17B of
the Act regarding the facilitation of
widespread dissemination of reliable
and accurate quotation information in
penny stocks.25
Proposed Rule 6439 would apply to
member IDQSs (whether or not such
member is also an alternative trading
system (‘‘ATS’’)) that permit quotation
updates on a real-time basis in OTC
21 See Amendment No. 2, supra note 10. See also
infra notes 46–47 and accompanying text.
22 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63320.
23 Id. at 63316.
24 FINRA currently has in place rules that govern
the activity of member firms when they engage in
quoting OTC Equity Securities. Specifically, the
FINRA Rule 6400 Series (Quoting and Trading in
OTC Equity Securities), among other things,
provides a regulatory framework that governs the
form and content of OTC Equity Securities’
quotations, and the FINRA Rule 5200 Series sets
forth rules of general applicability that govern
quoting and trading practices in this market sector
(hereinafter, the FINRA Rule Series 6400 and 5200
are collectively referred to as the ‘‘FINRA Quotation
Governance Rules’’). See Notice, supra note 3, at
63314–15. Rather than governing the activity of
member firms, like the FINRA Quotation
Governance Rules, proposed Rule 6439 would
provide quotation governance standards for member
IDQSs on or through which quotations are
displayed.
25 See supra note 20.
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Equity Securities. Under proposed Rule
6439(a), member IDQSs must establish,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures relating to the collection
and dissemination of quotation
information in OTC Equity Securities on
or through their systems. Such written
policies and procedures must be
reasonably designed to ensure that
quotations received and disseminated
are informative, reliable, accurate, firm,
and treated in a not unfairly
discriminatory manner, including by
establishing non-discretionary standards
under which quotations are prioritized
and displayed.26 Member IDQSs must
also prominently disclose these written
policies and procedures, along with any
material updates, modifications and
revisions thereto, to subscribers within
five business days following the date of
establishment of a policy or procedure
or implementation of a material change,
as well as provide them to prospective
subscribers upon request.27
Under proposed Rule 6439(b),
member IDQSs must establish nondiscriminatory written standards for
granting access to quoting and trading in
OTC Equity Securities on their systems
that do not unreasonably prohibit or
limit any person with respect to access
to services offered by such member
IDQS.28 As with the requirements under
proposed Rule 6439(a), member IDQSs
would be required to prominently
disclose these written standards relating
to fair access, and any material updates,
modifications and revisions thereto, to
their subscribers within five business
26 For example, FINRA states that a member IDQS
would be required to address in its procedures its
methodology for ranking quotations, including at a
minimum, addressing factors such as price
(including any applicable quote access fee), size,
time, capacity and type of quotation (such as
unpriced quotes and bid/offer wanted quotations).
The member IDQS also would be required to
include any other factors relevant to the ranking
and display of quotations (e.g., reserve sizes,
quotation updates, treatment of closed quotations,
and quotation information imported from other
systems). See Notice, supra note 3, at 63316.
27 FINRA states that a member that is an IDQS at
the time of the effective date of this proposed rule
change would be required to prominently disclose
the required information to its subscribers upon the
effective date of the proposed rule change and,
thereafter, within five business days of the
implementation of any material update,
modification or revision thereto. See id., at n.16.
28 FINRA states that this proposed requirement is
consistent with the ‘‘fair access’’ requirements of
Regulation ATS but would apply to quoting and
trading in all OTC Equity Securities on the member
IDQS, regardless of the percentage of average daily
volume that such member IDQS had in the security.
See 17 CFR 242.301(b)(5). FINRA states that while
certain member IDQSs may already be subject to the
similar volume-based fair access requirements
under Regulation ATS, proposed Rule 6439 would
ensure the application of fair access requirements
to all member IDQSs. See Notice, supra note 3, at
63316.
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30665
days following the date of establishment
of written standards or implementation
of a material change, as well as provide
them to prospective subscribers upon
request.29 In addition, member IDQSs
would be required to make and keep
records of all grants of access and all
denials or limitations of access. Such
records must include, for all
subscribers, the reasons for granting
access, and, for all denials or limitations
of access, the reasons for denying or
limiting such access.30
Proposed Rules 6439(c) and (d) would
apply only to member IDQSs that do not
automatically execute all orders
presented for execution against
displayed quotations for which a
member subscriber has an obligation
under FINRA Rule 5220 (Offers at
Stated Prices) 31 (such a system is
hereafter referred to as a ‘‘non-autoexecuting member IDQS’’). Under
proposed Rule 6439(c), non-autoexecuting member IDQSs must
establish, maintain and enforce written
policies and procedures that are
reasonably designed to address
instances of unresponsiveness to orders
in an OTC Equity Security. At a
minimum, these policies and
procedures must specify an efficient
process for: (i) Monitoring subscriber
unresponsiveness; (ii) subscribers to
submit complaints to the non-autoexecuting member IDQS regarding
potential instances of order
unresponsiveness; (iii) documenting the
subscriber’s rationale for
unresponsiveness; and (iv) determining
specified steps when an instance of, or
repeated, order unresponsiveness may
have occurred.32
Under proposed Rule 6439(d), nonauto-executing member IDQSs must
report to FINRA, in a form and manner
prescribed by FINRA,33 certain
aggregate and order-level information in
OTC Equity Securities. Specifically,
proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(A) would
require a non-auto-executing member
IDQS to report to FINRA on a monthly
basis the following aggregated
information, categorized by FINRA
29 See
id. at 63316–17. See also supra note 27.
proposed Rule 6439(b).
31 FINRA Rule 5220 and its associated
Supplementary Material set forth members’ firm
quote obligations. Specifically, FINRA Rule 5220
provides that no member shall make an offer to buy
from or sell to any person any security at a stated
price unless such member is prepared to purchase
or sell, as the case may be, at such price and under
such conditions as are stated at the time of such
offer to buy or sell.
32 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63317.
33 FINRA states that following Commission
approval, FINRA would announce in a Regulatory
Notice details about the required manner and
timing of the submission of this information to
FINRA. See Notice, supra note 3, at 63317, n.27.
30 See
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member subscriber market participant
identifier (MPID) across all symbols
quoted by the MPID during the previous
calendar month: (i) Total number of
marketable orders presented for
execution against the MPID’s
quotation; 34 (ii) average execution (full
or partial) time for marketable orders
presented against the MPID’s quotation
based on the time an order is presented;
(iii) total number of full or partial
executions based on the time a
marketable order is presented that are
within the following execution
timeframes: <5 seconds; ≥5 and <10
seconds; ≥10 and <20 seconds; and ≥20
seconds; (iv) total number of marketable
orders presented against the MPID’s
quotation that did not receive a full or
partial execution; and (v) average
response time of the highest 10% and
highest 50% of the MPID’s response
times for marketable orders (for full or
partial executions).35
Proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) would
require non-auto-executing member
IDQSs to provide to FINRA the
following order-level information for
each order presented against an MPID’s
quotation during the previous calendar
month: (i) Buy/sell; (ii) security symbol;
(iii) price; (iv) size; (v) All or None
indicator (yes or no); (vi) order entry
firm MPID; (vii) order receipt time; (viii)
time in force; (ix) response time; (x)
order response (e.g., execute, reject
cancel, etc.); (xi) executed quantity; (xii)
system-generated order number (if any);
and (xiii) position in queue for quote
(e.g., IL1, IL2).36 However, to the extent
that the above order-level information is
or becomes reportable under the
Consolidated Audit Trail (‘‘CAT’’)
pursuant to FINRA Rule 6830 (Industry
Member Data Reporting), non-autoexecuting member IDQSs would not be
required to report this order-level
information under proposed Rule
6439(d)(1)(B).37
Proposed Rule 6439(e) would require
each member IDQS to make available to
customers on its website (or its affiliate
distributor’s website) a written
description of each OTC Equity Security
order- or quotation-related data product
offered by such member IDQS and
related pricing information, including
fees, rebates, discounts and cross34 FINRA states that in this context, a ‘‘marketable
order’’ refers to a message presented against a
market maker’s quote that is priced to be
immediately executable. See id., n.29.
35 See proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(A).
36 See proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B).
37 See proposed Rule 6439(d)(2). If such
information is reportable to the CAT pursuant to
FINRA Rule 6830, this information will be available
to FINRA. Thus, separate reporting pursuant to
proposed FINRA Rule 6439(d) would be
duplicative.
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product pricing incentives. Member
IDQSs would be required to keep the
relevant website page(s) accurate and
up-to-date with respect to the required
data product descriptions and pricing
information and to make such
information available at least two
business days in advance of offering a
data product.38 Proposed Rule 6439(e)
would specify that a member IDQS is
not precluded from negotiating lower
fees with customers, provided that the
member IDQS discloses on such website
page(s) the circumstances under which
it may do so.
Finally, under proposed Rule 6439(f),
a member IDQS must provide FINRA
with prompt notification when it
reasonably becomes aware of any
systems disruption that is not de
minimis that degrades, limits, or
otherwise impacts the member IDQS’s
functionality with respect to trading or
the dissemination of market data.39
Such notification must include, on a
reasonable best efforts basis, a brief
description of the event, its impact, and
the member IDQS’s resolution efforts.40
FINRA states that, to comply with this
requirement, a member IDQS that is an
SCI ATS, as defined in Rule 1000 of
Regulation SCI, could provide FINRA
with the same information (or a
duplicate copy of any notification)
submitted to the Commission as
required under Regulation SCI Rule
1002(b) 41 promptly after filing the
notification with the Commission.42
FINRA states that, if a member IDQS is
not an SCI ATS, it could comply with
this requirement by providing FINRA
prompt notification when it reasonably
becomes aware of any such systems
disruption, and by providing periodic
updates on the event and its
resolution.43 Such notifications would
include, on a reasonable best efforts
basis, a brief description of the event, its
impact, and resolution efforts.44
FINRA states that, if the proposed rule
change is approved by the Commission,
FINRA will announce in a Regulatory
Notice the effective date(s) of the
proposed rule change, which may be
phased in but will be no later than 365
days following Commission approval.45
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
effective date for rescinding the rules
38 See
proposed Rule 6439(e).
would announce in a Regulatory Notice
the methods and process by which members may
provide systems disruption notifications to FINRA.
See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
40 See proposed Rule 6439(f).
41 17 CFR 242.1002(b).
42 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
43 See id.
44 See id.
45 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63319.
39 FINRA
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related to the OTCBB will not occur
until: (1) Proposed Rule 6439 (except for
Rule 6439(d)(1)(B)) is effective,46 and (2)
the Commission grants FINRA’s request
set forth in the QEQS Designation
Request Letter 47 (or FINRA files a rule
filing otherwise setting the
implementation date for deleting the
rules related to the OTCBB and the SEC
approves such rule filing, if required).48
FINRA also states that it will examine
for compliance by member IDQSs with
proposed Rule 6439, including by
reviewing the adequacy of member
IDQSs’ written policies and procedures
and written fair access standards
required under the proposal, conducting
a targeted exam of impacted member
IDQSs after the initial effectiveness of
the rule, and will incorporate a Rule
6439 review as part of the regular exam
program for impacted member firms.49
III. Discussion and Commission
Findings
After carefully reviewing the
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No.2, the comment letters,
and the FINRA letters, the Commission
finds that the proposed rule change is
consistent with the requirements of the
Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to a national
securities association.50 In particular,
the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section
15A(b)(6) of the Act,51 in that it is
designed, among other things, to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest. In addition, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section
15A(b)(11) of the Act, in that it includes
provisions governing the form and
content of quotations relating to
securities sold otherwise than on a
national securities exchange which may
46 FINRA states that proposed Rule 6439, with
one exception related to the reporting to FINRA of
order-level information, will become effective at the
same time or prior to the rescission of the OTCBB
rules. FINRA states that paragraph (d)(1)(B) of
proposed Rule 6439 (requiring reporting of
specified order-level information) may be phased at
a later date within the 365-day timeframe to allow
FINRA to better coordinate with the timeline for
reporting information in OTC Equity Securities to
the CAT under FINRA Rule 6830 (Industry Member
Data Reporting). See Amendment No. 2, supra note
10.
47 See infra note 66.
48 See id.
49 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63316, n.17.
50 In approving this proposed rule change, the
Commission has considered the proposed rule’s
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
51 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(6).
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be distributed or published by any
member or person associated with a
member, and the persons to whom such
quotations may be supplied, and that
such rules are designed to produce fair
and informative quotations, to prevent
fictitious or misleading quotations, and
to promote orderly procedures for
collecting, distributing, and publishing
quotations.52 The Commission also
finds that the proposal is consistent
with Section 17B(b)(1) of the Act in that
it is designed to facilitate the
widespread dissemination of reliable
and accurate last sale and quotation
information with respect to penny
stocks.53
A. Rescission of Rules Governing the
OTCBB
As noted by FINRA, the OTCBB
currently does not display or widely
disseminate quotation information on
any OTC Equity Securities, and all
quotation activity in OTC Equity
Securities occurs on member IDQSs.54
As a result, FINRA represents that
discontinuance of the OTCBB as an
IDQS will not impact the current level
of quotation information available for
OTC Equity Securities.55 The
Commission received two comment
letters supporting FINRA’s proposal to
cease operation of the OTCBB.56 These
commenters agreed that the OTCBB no
longer benefits investors or the
marketplace due to how the market for
OTC Equity Securities has evolved.57
The Commission believes that the
continued operation of the OTCBB,
which FINRA represents is essentially
defunct, provides no current benefit to
the market and could cause investor
confusion with respect to the
availability of quotations in OTC Equity
Securities. The Commission recently
estimated 58 that, on average, there were
52 15
U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(11).
U.S.C 78q–2(b)(1).
54 See supra notes 18 and 22 and accompanying
text.
55 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
56 See OTC Link Letter 1 and STANY Letter,
supra note 11.
57 See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 1; OTC
Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 1.
58 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
89891 (September 16, 2020), 85 FR 68124, 68185–
86 (October 27, 2020) (‘‘Exchange Act Rule 15c2–
11 Release’’). The Commission uses three sources of
data on OTC securities. OTC Markets Group’s ‘‘Endof-Day Pricing Service’’ and ‘‘OTC Security Data
File’’ provide closing trade and quote data for the
U.S. OTC equity market and include identifying
information for securities and issuers. The
Commission also uses information from the weekly
OTC Markets Group’s ‘‘OTC Company Data File.’’
Company Data Files include information about
issuer reporting, shell, and bankruptcy status, as
well as the SEC Central Index Key (CIK) identifier
and whether an issuer’s financial statements are
audited. See id., at 68185, n.640.
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9,998 quoted OTC securities 59 that had
published quotations per day during the
calendar year 2019.60 OTC Markets
Group, which operates OTC Link ATS (a
member IDQS that would be subject to
proposed Rule 6439), currently
identifies 81 broker-dealers that are
active on the OTC Link ATS in OTC
securities.61 In addition, from
aggregated OTC Markets Group data for
the calendar year 2019, the Commission
identified 19,141 unique OTC securities
for 16,059 unique companies.62 Of these
securities, 11,542 unique OTC securities
had at least one published quotation on
OTC Link ATS and 9,895 unique
companies had a security that was
quoted at least once on OTC Link ATS
during the calendar year 2019.63 By
contrast, the Commission understands
that there currently is no quoting
activity occurring on the OTCBB.64
Given the non-existent quoting activity
on the OTCBB and the emergence of
member IDQSs, such as OTC Link ATS,
as the dominant sources for quotation
activity in OTC Equity Securities, the
Commission agrees with FINRA that the
continued operation of the OTCBB
could result in confusion with respect to
the availability of quotations in OTC
Equity Securities. For example, an
investor looking solely to the OTCBB for
quotation data for a particular OTC
Equity Security could mistakenly
conclude that there are no current
quotations in the security when, in fact,
there may be quotations available
elsewhere—i.e., on member IDQSs.
Further, FINRA has represented that it
will not cease operation of the OTCBB
until proposed Rule 6439 (except for
Rule 6439(d)(1)(B)) is effective and the
Commission either grants FINRA’s
request set forth in the QEQS
59 While this data may include OTC securities
that are restricted securities and thus outside of the
scope of FINRA’s definition of OTC Equity
Securities, the Commission believes that the data is
reasonably representative of quoting and trading
activity in OTC Equity Securities.
60 See id. at 68185. The number of securities
quoted includes those securities with published
priced and unpriced quotations. The Commission
estimated that approximately seven percent of
quoted OTC securities did not have priced
quotations. See id. at 68185, n.641.
61 See Broker-Dealer Directory, OTC Markets
Group. Inc., https://www.otcmarkets.com/otc-link/
broker-dealer-directory (last visited Apr. 19, 2021,
2:16 p.m.). The Commission expects that not all of
the broker-dealers included in the directory are
actively engaged in quoting OTC securities. See also
Exchange Act Rule 15c2–11 Release, supra note 58,
at 68184.
62 See Exchange Act Rule 15c2–11 Release, supra
note 58, at 68185.
63 See id. at 68185, n.640. The Commission
believes that OTC Markets Group data are
reasonably representative of all OTC quoting and
trading activity in the U.S. OTC equities market.
See id.
64 See supra note 18 and accompanying text.
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30667
Designation Request Letter or approves
(if necessary) a subsequent rule filing
from FINRA that otherwise sets the
implementation date for deleting the
rules related to the OTCBB.65
Accordingly, the Commission finds that
the proposed rule change to rescind
FINRA’s rules governing the OTCBB
and cease its operation, while
simultaneously implementing enhanced
regulatory requirements for member
IDQSs pursuant to Rule 6439, will
protect investors and the public interest,
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the
Act, by eliminating investor confusion
that could arise because members no
longer submit quotations to the OTCBB
and, as a result, the OTCBB no longer
displays any quotations in OTC Equity
Securities.66
B. Proposed Rule 6439 (Requirements
for Member Inter-Dealer Quotation
Systems)
The Commission finds that the
proposed requirements set forth in Rule
6439 relating to member IDQSs that
permit quotation updates on a real-time
basis in OTC Equity Securities are
consistent with the Exchange Act.
First, the Commission finds that
proposed Rule 6439(a), which would
require member IDQSs to establish,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures relating to the collection
and dissemination of quotation
information in OTC Equity Securities on
or through their systems, is consistent
with Section 15A(b)(11) of the Act,
which requires FINRA rules relating to
quotations for securities sold other than
on a national securities exchange to be
designed to produce fair and
informative quotations, to prevent
fictitious or misleading quotations, and
to promote orderly procedures for
collecting, distributing, and publishing
quotations. The Commission believes
that proposed Rule 6439(a) is designed
to promote orderly procedures for
collecting, distributing, and publishing
quotations in OTC Equity Securities
because the proposed requirements
would apply to all member IDQSs that
permit quotation updates on a real-time
65 See
Amendment No. 2, supra note 10.
noted above, the Commission previously
designated the OTCBB as an automated interdealer
quotation system and QEQS for purposes of the
Penny Stock Rules. Historically, the universe of
securities quoted on the OTCBB included penny
stocks as well as higher priced OTC Equity
Securities. See OTCBB Designation Letter, supra
note 20. FINRA has stated that it intends to request
that the Commission designate the FINRA OTC
Reporting Facility (see infra note 109 and
accompanying text), together with any FINRAmember IDQS, as a QEQS for purposes of the Penny
Stock Rules (‘‘QEQS Designation Request Letter’’).
See Notice, supra note 3, at 63116, n.15;
Amendment No. 2, supra note 10.
66 As
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basis in OTC Equity Securities. In
addition, proposed Rule 6439(a) would
require that a member IDQS’s policies
and procedures relating to collection
and dissemination of quotation
information must be reasonably
designed to ensure that quotations
received and disseminated are
informative, reliable, accurate, firm and
treated in a not unfairly discriminatory
manner, including by establishing nondiscretionary standards under which
quotations are prioritized and
displayed. Moreover, member IDQSs
would be accountable to FINRA should
their policies and procedures not meet
the minimum standards set forth in
proposed Rule 6439(a) and FINRA has
represented that it will examine member
IDQSs for compliance with the
requirements of proposed Rule 6439,
including by reviewing the adequacy of
member IDQSs’ written policies and
procedures.67 In addition, by requiring
that all member-IDQSs that provide
quotations in OTC Equity Securities
maintain policies and procedures for
collecting and disseminating quotation
information, and that such policies and
procedures be reasonably designed to
ensure that quotations received and
disseminated are informative, reliable,
accurate, firm and treated in a not
unfairly discriminatory manner, the
Commission finds that proposed Rule
6439(a) is designed to promote just and
equitable principles of trade and protect
investors and the public interest,
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the
Act.
Second, the Commission finds that
proposed Rule 6439(b), which would
require a member IDQS to establish nondiscriminatory written standards for
granting access to quoting and trading in
OTC Equity Securities on its system that
do not unreasonably prohibit or limit
any person in respect to access to
services offered by such member IDQS,
is consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of
the Act, which requires that FINRA’s
rules be designed to promote just and
equitable principles of trade and protect
investors and the public interest. The
Commission believes that the proposed
requirements relating to fair access are
designed to afford fair and nondiscriminatory access for all market
participants to the quotation systems of
all member IDQSs that provide real-time
quotations in OTC Equity Securities.
Given the significant role that member
IDQSs serve in the marketplace for
quotations in OTC Equity Securities, the
Commission believes that these
requirements should improve access to
quotations for these securities, which
67 See
supra note 49 and accompanying text.
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should help to ensure that investors
have the pricing information necessary
to make informed investment decisions
with respect to OTC Equity Securities.
As a result, the Commission finds that
the requirements of proposed Rule
6439(b) are designed to promote just
and equitable principles of trade and
protect investors and the public interest,
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the
Act.
One commenter suggested that
member IDQSs that are subject to the
fair access requirements under
Regulation ATS should be exempt from
the fair access requirements of proposed
Rule 6439(b) because such requirements
are duplicative.68 In response, FINRA
stated that, to the extent that a member
IDQS already is subject to Regulation
ATS’s fair access standards with respect
to all OTC Equity Securities traded on
its platform, then the proposal would
only additionally require that the
member IDQS prominently disclose
such fair access policies and procedures
to subscribers.69 However, to the extent
that a member IDQS is not already
subject to the fair access standards of
Regulation ATS for all OTC Equity
Securities traded on its platform, FINRA
stated that the proposal would fill that
gap by requiring the member IDQS to
expand the fair access standards to
activity in all OTC Equity Securities and
to prominently disclose such fair access
policies and procedures.70
As discussed, the Commission
believes that the requirements relating
to fair access for member IDQSs, as set
forth in proposed Rule 6439(b), are
consistent with the Exchange Act. The
fair access requirements set forth in
Rule 301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS,71
which are consistent with the
requirements set forth in proposed Rule
6439(b), only apply if an ATS meets
certain volume thresholds set forth Rule
301(b)(5).72 On the other hand, the
requirements set forth in proposed Rule
6439(b) would apply to quoting and
trading in all OTC Equity Securities on
a member IDQS, regardless of the
percentage of average daily volume that
such member IDQS has in the security.
Thus, FINRA’s proposal would ensure
the application of fair access
requirements to all member IDQSs that
68 See OTC Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 4. The
Commission notes that while the commenter, in
making this suggestion, referred to paragraph (c) of
the proposed rule, it is paragraph (b) under
proposed Rule 6439— not paragraph (c) that sets
forth the proposed fair access requirements in Rule
6439. See supra notes 28–30 and accompanying
text.
69 See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 5.
70 See id., at 5–6.
71 17 CFR 242.301(b)(5).
72 See supra note 28.
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permit quotation updates on a real-time
basis in OTC Equity Securities and to all
OTC Equity Securities quoted and
traded on such member IDQSs.
Furthermore, as noted by FINRA in its
response to comments,73 proposed Rule
6439(b) sets forth an additional
requirement that is not included in Rule
301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS: That a
member IDQS’s written standards
relating to access and any material
updates, modifications and revisions
thereto ‘‘be prominently disclosed to
subscribers within five business days
following the date of establishment of
the written standards or implementation
of the material change and provided to
prospective subscribers upon request.’’
Accordingly, contrary to the
commenter’s assertion, the Commission
notes that the proposed fair access
requirements under Rule 6439(b) are not
duplicative of the fair access
requirements set forth in Rule 301(b)(5)
of Regulation ATS. Further, the
Commission believes that exempting
member IDQSs subject to the fair access
requirements under Regulation ATS
from proposed Rule 6439(b), as the
commenter requested, would result in
such member IDQSs not being subject to
a key requirement of the proposed rule
and would result in disparate treatment
among member IDQSs.
Third, proposed Rules 6439(c) and (d)
would require non-auto-executing
member IDQSs to establish, maintain
and enforce written policies and
procedures that are reasonably designed
to address instances of
unresponsiveness when orders are
presented to trade with firm quotations
displayed in OTC Equity Securities, and
to report on a monthly basis certain
aggregate and order-level information to
FINRA. FINRA states that such
requirements are designed to enhance
compliance with the firm quote
requirements for non-auto-executing
member IDQSs as set forth in FINRA
Rule 5220.74 FINRA also states that the
proposed information to be reported to
FINRA would support its oversight of
the OTC securities market by providing
FINRA with additional information
regarding the quotation activities
occurring on non-auto-executing
member IDQSs and would assist FINRA
in surveilling for member compliance
73 See
FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 5–6.
Notice, supra note 3, at 63317. FINRA
states that order unresponsiveness is an area where
it regularly receives complaints. FINRA notes that
in 2018, it received 119 complaints from members
regarding instances of unresponsiveness to requests
to execute against a displayed quotation. See id., at
63318, n.26.
74 See
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with firm quote obligations and
unresponsiveness.75
The Commission agrees that
unresponsiveness by those who display
quotations in the OTC Equity Securities
market can be harmful to the market and
investors in OTC Equity Securities. The
principle that a displayed quotation
should be ‘‘firm’’ is well established in
the securities markets.76 In its proposal,
FINRA would require member IDQSs
that provide quotations in OTC Equity
Securities but do not auto-execute
orders presented for execution against
such quotations to adopt standards to
address instances of unresponsiveness
by their subscribers. Because a system
that permits manual responses to orders
received against displayed quotations
can result in order unresponsiveness,
the Commission believes that requiring
such systems to establish, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures
that are reasonably designed to address
instances of unresponsiveness should
help to ensure that market participants
can reasonably rely on the displayed
quotations on member IDQSs that do
not auto-execute orders. In addition, the
requirement for non-auto-executing
member IDQSs to report aggregate and
order-level information to FINRA
should help FINRA surveil for
unresponsiveness and ‘‘backing away’’
by members and to take remedial
actions against such members, if
necessary. As such, the Commission
finds that paragraphs (c) and (d) of
proposed Rule 6439 are consistent with
Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act in that they
are designed, among other things, to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest.
Two commenters suggested that
FINRA revise proposed Rule 6439(d) to
exempt member-IDQSs that would have
reporting obligations under proposed
75 See
id.
e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No.
60835 (October 16, 2009), 74 FR 54616 (October 22,
2009) (FINRA–2009–055) (approving proposal to
adopt FINRA Rule 5220 (Offers at Stated Prices)
into FINRA’s consolidated rulebook) (‘‘The
Commission believes that the proposed rule change
is designed to protect investors and promote the
maintenance of fair, orderly and efficient markets
by prohibiting a member from publishing a report
of any transaction unless the member believes that
it was a bona fide purchase or sale of the security
and from ‘‘backing away’’ from its quotations.’’);
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 12670 (July 29,
1976), 41 FR 32856 (August 5, 1976) (proposing
Exchange Act Rule 11Ac1–1 (predecessor to Rule
602 of Regulation NMS) (‘‘The reliability and
availability of quotation information are basic
components of a national market system and are
needed so that broker-dealers are able to make best
execution decisions for their customers’ orders, and
customers are able to make order entry decisions.’’).
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paragraph (d) 77 from applicable CAT
reporting obligations.78 These
commenters stated that proposed Rule
6439 would provide a reporting
mechanism that is more consistent with
the way in which IDQSs operate and
therefore would make collection and
reporting more efficient and effective
than under the order-based reporting
prescribed by the CAT.79 In response,
FINRA stated that the proposal was
never intended to impact the outcome of
whether the commenters’ order-level
information should become CAT
reportable and that FINRA continues to
believe that it is appropriate to exempt
a non-auto-executing member IDQS
from reporting under proposed Rule
6439(d)(1)(B) if the IDQS’s order-level
information is CAT reportable.80
The Commission finds that FINRA’s
proposal to exempt non-auto-executing
member IDQSs from reporting orderlevel information pursuant to proposed
Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) to the extent such
information becomes reportable to CAT
is reasonable and is designed to
effectively reduce reporting
redundancies. If the information
required to be reported pursuant to Rule
6439(d)(1)(B) is already reportable, or
becomes reportable, to the CAT
pursuant to FINRA Rule 6830, it will be
available to FINRA through the CAT, so
separate reporting pursuant to proposed
FINRA Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) would be
duplicative. As a result, the Commission
finds the proposed exemption is
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the
77 See supra notes 33–37 and accompanying text
for a discussion of the requirements proposed under
Rule 6439(d).
78 See STANY Letter, supra note, 11 at 2; OTC
Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 3–4. As proposed,
non-auto-executing member IDQSs would be
exempt from the reporting requirements under
proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) to the extent that such
items are subject to reporting to the CAT under
FINRA Rule 6830. See supra note 37 and
accompanying text.
79 See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 2; OTC
Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 3–4. In connection
with this suggested modification, one commenter
stated its view that trade messages on its ATS—
OTC Link ATS—are negotiations and do not
constitute ‘‘orders’’ for purposes of Rule 6439 or
with respect to any CAT reporting obligations. See
OTC Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 4. FINRA
stated in its proposal, and again in its response to
comments, that such negotiation activities are
indeed ‘‘orders’’ for purposes of FINRA’s firm quote
rule obligations and proposed Rule 6439. See
Notice, supra note 3, at 63317, n.28 (stating that
such negotiation activities are considered ‘‘orders’’
for purposes of firm quote rule obligations and
proposed Rule 6439). See FINRA Letter 1, supra
note 12, at 4, n.12. See also Exchange Act Rule 3b–
16(c) and Rule 300(e) of Regulation ATS (defining
an ‘‘order’’ as ‘‘any firm indication of a willingness
to buy or sell a security, as either principal or agent,
including any bid or offer quotation, market order,
limit order, or other priced order’’).
80 See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 4.
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Act in that it is designed to promote just
and equitable principles of trade.
These two commenters also requested
that FINRA provide additional guidance
with respect to proposed Rule 6439(c)(3)
and (4), which would require non-autoexecuting member IDQSs to maintain
policies and procedures that specify an
efficient process for documenting a
subscriber’s rationale for
unresponsiveness and for determining
specified steps when an instance of
repeated order unresponsiveness may
have occurred.81 In response to these
comments, FINRA provided some
additional guidance specifically
requested by commenters relating to the
requirements of proposed Rule
6439(c)(3) and (4).82
In response, one commenter raised
concerns regarding the requirements of
proposed Rule 6439(c)(2) and (c)(3),
which would require non-auto81 See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 3; OTC
Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 2–3. One commenter
noted that, as the only non-auto-executing member
IDQS, it would be the only IDQS that would be
subject to the requirements set forth in paragraph
(c) of the Rule, and requested that FINRA issue
guidance confirming that its existing ‘‘saturation’’
feature and provision of data regarding subscriber
unresponsiveness to certain order messages under
its trading functionalities meet the standards set
forth in paragraphs (c)(3) and (c)(4) of proposed
Rule 6439. See OTC Link Letter 1, supra note 11.
at 2–3.
82 See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 3–4.
FINRA stated that it agrees that OTC Link ATS’s
‘‘saturation’’ feature, as FINRA understands it, is
consistent with the objectives of some of the
proposed requirements in Rule 6439(c), such as
proposed Rule 6439(c)(1) and (c)(4), which would
require that a member IDQS’s policies and
procedures specify an efficient process for
monitoring subscriber unresponsiveness and
determining specified steps when an instance of
repeated order unresponsiveness may have
occurred. However, FINRA indicated that it does
not believe that OTC Link ATS’s current saturation
feature would meet the objectives of proposed
paragraphs (c)(2) or (3) of Rule 6439, which, when
combined, would require that the member IDQS
provide a mechanism or process whereby one
subscriber may submit or report to the non-autoexecuting member IDQS a potential instance of
order unresponsiveness by another subscriber and
document the subscriber’s rationale in response to
that event. FINRA further stated that it does not
expect the member IDQS to investigate or confirm
a subscriber’s rationale for the unresponsiveness,
but expects that the member IDQS provide a
mechanism or process that would permit a
subscriber to submit or report a potential instance
of order unresponsiveness and the member IDQS
would be required to request that the other
subscriber provide its rationale in connection with
the instance. For example, the member IDQS could
provide a messaging protocol or other mechanism
that would permit a subscriber to submit or report
to the member IDQS a potential instance of order
unresponsiveness and that also would contact the
other party to obtain their rationale. FINRA stated
that it believes that the member IDQS is in the best
position to obtain this information from the
subscriber at the time of, or close in time to, the
event, and to document this information and make
it available to FINRA upon request. See id., at 3–
4.
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executing member IDQSs to maintain
policies and procedures that specify an
efficient process for subscribers
submitting to the member IDQS
complaints regarding potential instances
of order unresponsiveness and
documenting the subscriber’s rationale
for unresponsiveness.83 This commenter
stated that, in attempting to perform this
function, its member IDQS would not
have access to the necessary underlying
information regarding the issue and
would lack the regulatory authority to
resolve the dispute.84 This commenter
further stated that these proposed
requirements effectively require member
IDQSs to act as a clearinghouse for
subscriber complaints of nonresponsiveness and blurs the distinction
between SROs and commercial market
operators.85 The commenter accordingly
requested that FINRA amend the
proposal to only require that a member
IDQS escalate instances of
unresponsiveness to FINRA for review
when the IDQS is informed of such
cases via appropriate channels (i.e.,
phone, email, message).86
In response, FINRA stated that it is
cognizant that IDQSs, including the
commenter, lack access to certain
information and lack regulatory
authority and that it would not expect
a member IDQS to gather extraneous
information or resolve disputes (beyond
steps that may be taken pursuant to
proposed Rule 6439(c)(4)).87 FINRA
stated that the proposal would require
that reasonable policies and procedures
be developed, which could include
specifying reasonable and appropriate
form and methods through which a
member would accept complaints from
subscribers pursuant to proposed
paragraph (c)(2).88 In addition, the
proposed rule would not require that
member IDQSs, including the
commenter, investigate or confirm a
subscriber’s rationale for
unresponsiveness or determine whether
a violation of FINRA Rule 5220 (Offers
at Stated Prices) has occurred.89 FINRA
stated that the role of a member IDQS
under proposed paragraph (c)(3) would
be limited to information collection, and
the lack of access to certain information
83 See
OTC Link Letter 2, supra note 9.
id., at 2.
85 See id., at 3.
86 See id.
87 See FINRA Letter 2, supra note 12, at 3.
88 See id. As an example, FINRA stated that OTC
Markets may determine to accept complaints only
through a specified email address or through a
complaint protocol that it may establish and, in
doing so, its obligations under proposed paragraph
(c)(3) would be limited to complaints received
through reasonable, specified, established channels.
See id.
89 See id.
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84 See
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18:13 Jun 08, 2021
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regarding instances of potential
unresponsive would therefore not
impair a member IDQS’s ability to
establish policies and procedures
required under the proposal.90 FINRA
provided that it continues to believe
that the requirements of proposed Rule
6439(c) are reasonable and appropriate
for non-auto-executing member IDQSs
given that order unresponsiveness only
occurs on systems that permit manual
response to orders received against
displayed quotations and that it
believed the member IDQS is in the best
position to obtain this information from
the subscriber at the time of, or close in
time to, the event, and to document this
information and make it available to
FINRA upon request.91
The Commission has considered
commenters’ request for guidance and
modifications to the proposed
requirements and FINRA’s responses
and believes FINRA’s responses support
the finding that the proposed Rule
6439(c) is designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, and, in general, to
protect investors and the public interest,
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the
Act. As previously noted, a system that
permits manual responses to orders
received against displayed quotations
can result in order unresponsiveness.
The Commission agrees with FINRA
that requiring such systems to establish,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures that are reasonably
designed to address instances of
unresponsiveness, which includes
requiring such systems to maintain
policies and procedures that specify an
efficient process for subscribers
submitting to the member IDQS
complaints regarding potential instances
of order unresponsiveness and
documenting the subscriber’s rationale
for unresponsiveness, should help
ensure that market participants can
reasonably rely on the displayed
quotations on member IDQSs that do
not auto-execute orders and help FINRA
surveil for unresponsiveness on such
systems.
Further, the Commission finds that
proposed Rule 6439(e), which will
require member IDQSs to publish and
keep updated information about orderor quotation-related data products, is
consistent with both Exchange Act
Section 15A(b)(6)’s requirement that
FINRA’s rules be designed to protect
investors and the public interest and
Exchange Act Section 15A(b)(11)’s
requirement that FINRA’s rules contain
90 See
91 See
PO 00000
id.
id., at 4.
Frm 00085
provisions governing the form and
content of quotations relating to
securities sold otherwise than on a
national securities exchange which may
be distributed or published by any
member or person associated with a
member, and the persons to whom such
quotations may be supplied. The
publication of such information will
provide FINRA with useful information
to ensure compliance with FINRA rules
and to monitor the widespread
availability of OTC Equity Securities’
quotation information to investors and
to market participants through non-SRO
sources. In addition, market participants
will benefit from a better understanding
of such data products when assessing a
particular member IDQS as a potential
trading venue.
Finally, the Commission finds that
proposed Rule 6439(f), which would
require a member IDQS to provide
FINRA with prompt notification when it
reasonably becomes aware of any
systems disruption that is not de
minimis that degrades, limits, or
otherwise impacts the member IDQS’s
functionality with respect to trading or
the dissemination of market data, is
consistent with Exchange Act Section
15A(b)(6)’s requirement that FINRA’s
rules be designed to protect investors
and the public interest and Section
15A(b)(11)’s requirement that FINRA’s
rules relating to quotations be designed
to promote orderly procedures for
collecting, distributing, and publishing
quotations. The Commission believes
that the uninterrupted operation of
member IDQSs is vital to investor
confidence in the OTC securities market
structure and furthers the goals of
Section 17B of the Act.92 As such, the
Commission believes that proposed
Rule 6439(f) should help FINRA
monitor and resolve any issues that
could disrupt investors’ ability to quote
and execute trades in OTC Equity
Securities, thereby promoting orderly
procedures with respect to quotations in
OTC Equity Securities and protecting
investors and the public interest.
FINRA has committed to examining
member IDQSs for compliance with
proposed Rule 6439 and has represented
that it will conduct a targeted exam of
impacted member IDQSs after the initial
effectiveness of the rule and will
incorporate a proposed Rule 6439
review as part of the regular exam
program for impacted member firms.93
The Commission believes that these
exams should assist FINRA in reviewing
92 See
93 See
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\09JNN1.SGM
infra notes 99–101 and accompanying text.
supra note 49 and accompanying text.
09JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 9, 2021 / Notices
for compliance by member IDQSs with
the requirements of proposed Rule 6439.
The Commission notes that, despite
certain suggested modifications to the
proposed rule, all three commenters
supported FINRA’s proposal to enhance
regulatory requirements for IDQSs.94 In
addition to commenters’ suggested
modifications discussed above,95 two
commenters also suggested that FINRA
revise Rule 6437 (Prohibition from
Locking and Crossing), which currently
prohibits locking and crossing
quotations displayed in the same IDQS,
to also prohibit locking and crossing
displayed quotations between
connected IDQSs.96 In its response to
comments, FINRA stated that it has
been actively considering whether any
changes to the scope of Rule 6437 are
appropriate and that it will continue to
separately assess this issue outside of
the context of this proposed rule
change.97 The Commission agrees with
FINRA that the commenters’ suggestion
related to FINRA Rule 6437 is beyond
the scope of the proposed rule change.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
C. Section 17B of the Act
Finally, the Commission believes that
the proposed rule change to rescind the
rules related to the OTCBB and cease its
operation and adopt proposed Rule
6439 to expand the obligations of
member IDQSs that display quotations
in OTC Equity Securities is consistent
with Section 17B of the Act.98 FINRA
has operated the OTCBB pursuant to the
Commission’s obligations under Section
17B of the Act to facilitate the
widespread dissemination of quotation
information for penny stocks through an
automated quotation system operated by
a registered securities association.99
When Congress enacted Section 17B, it
found that there was a lack of reliable
and accurate quotation and last sale
information in the markets for penny
stocks.100 As such, Section 17B was
designed to remedy inefficiencies and
address regulatory concerns caused by
this lack of reliable market information
about penny stocks traded OTC, and
Congress found that a fully
94 See, generally, OTC Link Letter 1, STANY
Letter and Global OTC Letter, supra note 11.
95 See supra notes 68, 78–79, and 81 and
accompanying text.
96 See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 3; OTC
Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 4–5.
97 See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 6.
98 15 U.S.C. 78q–2. See also supra note 20.
Section 17B was enacted by Congress as part of the
Penny Stock Act, which was designed to remedy
inefficiencies and address regulatory concerns
caused by the lack of reliable market information
on penny stocks traded OTC.
99 See 15 U.S.C. 78q–2(b). See also OTCBB
Designation Letter, supra note 20.
100 See 15 U.S.C. 78q–2(a)(1).
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18:13 Jun 08, 2021
Jkt 253001
implemented automated quotation
system for penny stocks would meet the
information needs of investors and
market participants and add visibility
and regulatory and surveillance data to
that market.101
Based on how the OTC market has
evolved since the adoption of Section
17B,102 the Commission believes that
the OTCBB no longer furthers the goals
and objectives of Section 17B of the
Exchange Act because it no longer is
utilized as a source of quotation
information for those OTC Equity
Securities that meet the definition of
‘‘penny stock.’’ 103 Rather, member
IDQSs currently collect and disseminate
all quotation information in OTC Equity
Securities, including penny stocks, and
make such quotation information
available to investors and market
participants.104 Therefore, the
Commission finds that discontinuing
dissemination of potentially incomplete
and misleading quotation information
from the marketplace by ceasing
operation of the OTCBB, while at the
same time implementing enhanced
requirements for member IDQSs on or
through which quotations in OTC
Equity Securities, including penny
stocks, are currently displayed, as set
forth in proposed Rule 6439, best serves
and promotes the goals of Section 17B
of the Act with respect to the
widespread availability of quotation
information in penny stocks.105
FINRA has represented that, in
advance of the discontinuance of the
OTCBB, FINRA will take steps to ensure
a smooth transition for issuers and
members.106 Specifically, although there
are no members currently using the
OTCBB, FINRA will publicize
announcements through its website.107
In addition, FINRA has represented that,
following the cessation of the OTCBB,
FINRA will continue to assess the
widespread availability of quotation
transparency to investors and market
101 See
15 U.S.C. 78q–2(a)(3).
Public Law 101–429, 104 Stat. 931 (1990).
103 See supra notes 60–64 and accompanying text.
As noted above, the universe of securities
historically quoted in the OTCBB included penny
stocks as well as higher priced OTC Equity
Securities. See supra note 66.
104 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
105 See supra note 20 and 66. As discussed above,
the Commission previously designated the OTCBB
as a QEQS for purposes of the Penny Stock Rules.
In connection with FINRA’s cessation of the
OTCBB, FINRA has stated that it intends to request
that the Commission designate the FINRA OTC
Reporting Facility (see infra note 109 and
accompanying text), together with any FINRAmember IDQS, as a QEQS for purposes of the Penny
Stock Rules. See supra note 66.
106 See Notice, supra note 3, at 63319.
107 See id. FINRA represents that there currently
are no OTCBB symbols. See id., at 63319, n.37.
102 See
PO 00000
Frm 00086
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
30671
participants through non-SRO sources
on a regular basis, and if the availability
of quotation information to investors
declines, FINRA will revisit and, if
necessary, file a proposed rule change to
establish an SRO-operated IDQS (or
other measure) to facilitate the type of
widespread quotation transparency
described in Section 17B of the Act.108
Finally, FINRA will continue to
centralize last sale transaction reporting
in OTC Equity Securities, including for
penny stock transactions, through the
FINRA OTC Reporting Facility (‘‘ORF’’),
a FINRA-operated system that provides
last sale information on OTC Equity
Securities.109 Thus, following cessation
of the OTCBB, member IDQSs subject to
proposed Rule 6439 will continue to
collect and disseminate quotation
information for OTC Equity Securities,
including penny stocks, while the ORF
will continue to collect and disseminate
real-time last sale price and volume
information for OTC Equity Securities,
including penny stocks.
IV. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered that, pursuant
to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,110 the
proposed rule change (SR–FINRA–
2020–031), as modified by Amendment
No. 2, be, and hereby is, approved.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.111
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–12026 Filed 6–8–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice: 11439]
Notice of Determinations; Culturally
Significant Objects Being Imported for
Exhibition—Determinations:
‘‘Impressionism to Modernism: Monet
to Matisse From the Bemberg
Foundation’’ Exhibition
Notice is hereby given of the
following determinations: I hereby
determine that certain objects being
imported from abroad pursuant to an
agreement with their foreign owner or
custodian for temporary display in the
SUMMARY:
108 See
id.
FINRA Rule 6600 and 7300 Series (OTC
Reporting Facility). FINRA members generally are
required to report trades in OTC Equity Securities
to the ORF within 10 seconds of execution and
FINRA widely disseminates this transaction
information in real-time. See FINRA Rule 6622
(Transaction Reporting). See also Notice, supra note
3, at 63318, n.36.
110 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
111 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
109 See
E:\FR\FM\09JNN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 109 (Wednesday, June 9, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30663-30671]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-12026]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-92105; File No. SR-FINRA-2020-031]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Order Granting Approval of a Proposed Rule Change, as
Modified by Amendment No. 2, To Adopt Proposed Rule 6439 (Requirements
for Member Inter-Dealer Quotation Systems) and Rescind the Rules
Related to the OTC Bulletin Board Service
June 3, 2021.
I. Introduction
On September 24, 2020, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority,
Inc. (``FINRA'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'' or ``Exchange Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4
thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule change to rescind the rules related to
the OTC Bulletin Board Service and cease its operation and to adopt new
requirements for member inter-dealer quotation systems that disseminate
quotations in equity securities traded over-the-counter (``OTC''). The
proposed rule change was published for comment in the Federal Register
on October 7, 2020.\3\ On November 4, 2020, pursuant
[[Page 30664]]
to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,\4\ the Commission designated a longer
period within which to approve the proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute proceedings to determine whether to
disapprove the proposed rule change.\5\ On December 21, 2020, FINRA
filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change.\6\ On December 30,
2020, the Commission published notice of Amendment No. 1 and instituted
proceedings pursuant to Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act \7\ to determine
whether to approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\8\ On April
5, 2021, the Commission extended the period for consideration of the
proposed rule change to June 4, 2021.\9\ On June 1, 2021, FINRA filed
Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule change, which replaces and
supersedes Amendment No. 1 in its entirety.\10\ The Commission received
four comment letters regarding the proposed rule change,\11\ and two
responses to comments from FINRA.\12\ This order approves the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ See Exchange Act Release No. 90067 (October 1, 2020), 85 FR
63314 (``Notice''). Comments on the proposed rule change can be
found at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2020-031/srfinra2020031.htm.
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\5\ See Exchange Act Release No. 90335 (November 4, 2020). The
Commission designated January 5, 2021, as the date by which the
Commission shall approve or disapprove, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to approve or disapprove, the proposed rule
change.
\6\ Amendment No. 1 may be found at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2020-031/srfinra2020031-8841399-238269.pdf.
\7\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
\8\ See Exchange Act Release No. 90824, 86 FR 653 (January 6,
2021).
\9\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91474, 86 FR 18583
(April 9, 2021).
\10\ Amendment No. 2 is a partial amendment in which FINRA added
a representation that the effective date for deleting the rules
related to the OTCBB (as defined herein) will not occur until: (1)
Proposed Rule 6439 (except for Rule 6439(d)(1)(B)) is effective; and
(2) the Commission grants FINRA's request set forth in the QEQS
Designation Request Letter (as defined herein) (or FINRA files a
rule filing otherwise setting the implementation date for deleting
the rules related to the OTCBB and the Commission approves such rule
filing, if required). Because Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule
clarifies the timing of effectiveness of the proposed rule change
and does not materially alter the substance of the proposed rule
change, Amendment No. 2 is not subject to notice and comment.
Amendment No. 2 may be found at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2020-031/srfinra2020031.htm.
\11\ See Letters from Christopher Bok, Chief Compliance Officer,
OTC Link, LLC, dated October 28, 2020 (``OTC Link Letter 1'');
Kimberly Unger, CEO and Executive Director, The Security Traders
Association of New York, Inc., dated October 28, 2020 (``STANY
Letter''); Sherry J. Sandler, Global OTC, dated November 9, 2020
(``Global OTC Letter''), and Cass Sanford, Associate General
Counsel, OTC Markets Group, Inc., dated January 27, 2021 (``OTC Link
Letter 2'').
\12\ See Letters from Racquel Russell, Associate General
Counsel, FINRA, dated November 20, 2020 (``FINRA Letter 1'') and
February 12, 2021 (``FINRA Letter 2'').
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II. Summary of the Proposal, as Modified by Amendment No. 2
As further described below, FINRA proposes to (i) rescind FINRA's
rules governing the OTC Bulletin Board Service (``OTCBB'') and cease
its operation; and (ii) adopt new Rule 6439 (Requirements for Member
Inter-Dealer Quotation Systems) to expand the obligations of member
interdealer quotation systems (``IDQSs'') \13\ that disseminate
quotation updates on a real-time basis in OTC Equity Securities.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ FINRA Rule 6420(c) defines ``inter-dealer quotation
system'' as ``any system of general circulation to brokers or
dealers which regularly disseminates quotations of identified
brokers or dealers.'' This definition tracks the Commission's
definition of the same term in Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11, 17 CFR
240.15c2-11.
\14\ The term ``OTC Equity Security'' is defined in FINRA Rule
6420(f) as any equity security that is not an ``NMS stock'' as that
term is defined in Rule 600(b)(47) of Regulation NMS; provided,
however, that the term ``OTC Equity Security'' shall not include any
Restricted Equity Security. The term ``Restricted Equity Security''
is further defined in FINRA Rule 6420(k) to mean any equity security
that meets the definition of ``restricted security'' as contained in
Rule 144(a)(3) under the Securities Act of 1933.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Rescission of Rules Governing the OTCBB
The OTCBB is a FINRA-operated IDQS available for use by broker-
dealers to publish quotations in eligible OTC Equity Securities.\15\
FINRA has operated the OTCBB since 1990.\16\ FINRA states that, due to
technological advancements since 1990 and the increase in alternative
electronic venues with more extensive functionality than the OTCBB, the
level of quotation activity occurring on the OTCBB has continued to
decline over the past several years and is now nonexistent.\17\ FINRA
represents that, as of the date that it filed the proposed rule change,
the OTCBB does not display or widely disseminate quotation information
on any OTC Equity Security.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63315.
\16\ See id.
\17\ See id.
\18\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA states that it does not believe that continued operation of
the OTCBB serves any benefit to investors or the marketplace and that
ceasing operation of the OTCBB would eliminate potential investor
confusion regarding the availability of quotation information for OTC
Equity Securities.\19\ In addition, FINRA states that it does not
believe that the OTCBB, in its current state, furthers the goals and
objectives of Section 17B of the Act and, therefore, does not meet the
characteristics of a system described in Section 17B of the Act
regarding the widespread dissemination of reliable and accurate
quotation information with respect to ``penny stocks.'' \20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See id. at 63318. For example, FINRA states that where
investors look to feeds that solely disseminate OTCBB data for
quotation information on a particular OTC Equity Security, investors
mistakenly may conclude that there are no current quotations in the
security (when, in fact, there may be numerous quotations available
elsewhere--i.e., on member-operated IDQSs). See id.
\20\ Section 17B(b)(1) of the Act, which was added by the
Securities Enforcement Remedies and Penny Stock Reform Act of 1990
(``Penny Stock Act''), directs the Commission to ``facilitate the
widespread dissemination of reliable and accurate last sale and
quotation information with respect to penny stocks . . . with a view
toward establishing, at the earliest feasible time, one or more
automated quotation systems that will collect and disseminate
information regarding all penny stocks.'' 15 U.S.C. 78q-2(b)(1).
Under Exchange Act Rule 3a51-1, ``penny stock'' is a non-NMS stock
that among other things, does not include securities that have a
price of five dollars or more as determined either on a per
transaction basis or, in the absence of a transaction, on the basis
of the inside bid quotation for the security displayed on an
automated interdealer quotation system that has the characteristics
set forth in Section 17B(b)(2) of the Act or such other automated
interdealer system that is designated by the Commission for purposes
of the rule (such a system, a ``Qualifying Electronic Quotation
System'' or ``QEQS''). See 17 CFR 240.3a51-1; Exchange Act Release
No. 30608 (April 20, 1992), 57 FR 18004 (April 28, 1992) (``Penny
Stock Rules Adopting Release''); 17 CFR 240.3a51-1, 15g-1 through
15g-9 and 15g-100 (``Penny Stock Rules''). The Commission, in
adopting the Penny Stock Rules, set forth standards it would
consider when designating a QEQS. See Penny Stock Rules Adopting
Release, 57 FR at 18012 n.64. The QEQS designation criteria set
forth in the Penny Stock Rules are based on the Exchange Act Section
17B characteristics of an automated quotation system that would
facilitate the widespread dissemination of reliable and accurate
last sale and quotation information with respect to penny stocks.
See 15 U.S.C. 78q-2(b)(1) and (2). In 1992, the Commission
designated the OTCBB, then operated by FINRA's predecessor the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (``NASD''), as an
automated interdealer quotation system and a QEQS for purposes of
the Penny Stock Rules. See Letter from Margaret H. McFarland, Deputy
Secretary, Commission, to Richard Ketchum, Executive Vice President,
NASD, Inc., dated December 30, 1992 (``OTCBB Designation Letter'').
The Commission thereafter granted the NASD's request for an
extension of QEQS status. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
38101 (Dec. 31, 1996), 62 FR 1010 (Jan. 7, 1997).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a result, FINRA proposes to rescind the FINRA Rule 6500 Series,
which governs the operation of the OTCBB. Among other things, the FINRA
Rule Series 6500 contains provisions regarding the securities eligible
to be quoted on the OTCBB (FINRA Rule 6530), market maker obligations
on the OTCBB (FINRA Rule 6540), and transaction reporting (FINRA Rule
6550). FINRA also proposes to rescind FINRA Rule 7720, which sets forth
the fees applicable to a broker-dealer that displays quotations or
trading interest in the OTCBB, and to amend FINRA Rule
[[Page 30665]]
9217 (Violations Appropriate for Disposition Under Plan Pursuant to SEA
Rule 19d-1(c)(2)) to remove reference to FINRA Rule 6550 (Transaction
Reporting). While these proposed changes to the FINRA rulebook would
cause the operation of the OTCBB to terminate, FINRA states that it
would not cease operation of the OTCBB until: (1) Proposed Rule 6439
(except for proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B)) is effective, and (2) the
Commission grants FINRA's request set forth in the QEQS Designation
Request Letter (or FINRA files a rule filing otherwise setting the
implementation date for deleting the rules related to the OTCBB and the
Commission approves such rule filing, if required).\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Amendment No. 2, supra note 10. See also infra notes
46-47 and accompanying text.
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B. Proposed Rule 6439 (Requirements for Member Inter-Dealer Quotation
Systems)
FINRA states that all quotation activity in OTC Equity Securities
now occurs on member-operated IDQSs, rather than the OTCBB.\22\ FINRA
proposes, in conjunction with the cessation of the OTCBB, to adopt new
requirements for member IDQSs that provide quotations in OTC Equity
Securities in order to ensure that they have minimum standards in
place.\23\ FINRA states that it believes that the proposed requirements
would complement the existing framework governing the form and content
of quotations \24\ and are consistent with the goals and objectives of
Section 17B of the Act regarding the facilitation of widespread
dissemination of reliable and accurate quotation information in penny
stocks.\25\
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\22\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63320.
\23\ Id. at 63316.
\24\ FINRA currently has in place rules that govern the activity
of member firms when they engage in quoting OTC Equity Securities.
Specifically, the FINRA Rule 6400 Series (Quoting and Trading in OTC
Equity Securities), among other things, provides a regulatory
framework that governs the form and content of OTC Equity
Securities' quotations, and the FINRA Rule 5200 Series sets forth
rules of general applicability that govern quoting and trading
practices in this market sector (hereinafter, the FINRA Rule Series
6400 and 5200 are collectively referred to as the ``FINRA Quotation
Governance Rules''). See Notice, supra note 3, at 63314-15. Rather
than governing the activity of member firms, like the FINRA
Quotation Governance Rules, proposed Rule 6439 would provide
quotation governance standards for member IDQSs on or through which
quotations are displayed.
\25\ See supra note 20.
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Proposed Rule 6439 would apply to member IDQSs (whether or not such
member is also an alternative trading system (``ATS'')) that permit
quotation updates on a real-time basis in OTC Equity Securities. Under
proposed Rule 6439(a), member IDQSs must establish, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures relating to the collection and
dissemination of quotation information in OTC Equity Securities on or
through their systems. Such written policies and procedures must be
reasonably designed to ensure that quotations received and disseminated
are informative, reliable, accurate, firm, and treated in a not
unfairly discriminatory manner, including by establishing non-
discretionary standards under which quotations are prioritized and
displayed.\26\ Member IDQSs must also prominently disclose these
written policies and procedures, along with any material updates,
modifications and revisions thereto, to subscribers within five
business days following the date of establishment of a policy or
procedure or implementation of a material change, as well as provide
them to prospective subscribers upon request.\27\
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\26\ For example, FINRA states that a member IDQS would be
required to address in its procedures its methodology for ranking
quotations, including at a minimum, addressing factors such as price
(including any applicable quote access fee), size, time, capacity
and type of quotation (such as unpriced quotes and bid/offer wanted
quotations). The member IDQS also would be required to include any
other factors relevant to the ranking and display of quotations
(e.g., reserve sizes, quotation updates, treatment of closed
quotations, and quotation information imported from other systems).
See Notice, supra note 3, at 63316.
\27\ FINRA states that a member that is an IDQS at the time of
the effective date of this proposed rule change would be required to
prominently disclose the required information to its subscribers
upon the effective date of the proposed rule change and, thereafter,
within five business days of the implementation of any material
update, modification or revision thereto. See id., at n.16.
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Under proposed Rule 6439(b), member IDQSs must establish non-
discriminatory written standards for granting access to quoting and
trading in OTC Equity Securities on their systems that do not
unreasonably prohibit or limit any person with respect to access to
services offered by such member IDQS.\28\ As with the requirements
under proposed Rule 6439(a), member IDQSs would be required to
prominently disclose these written standards relating to fair access,
and any material updates, modifications and revisions thereto, to their
subscribers within five business days following the date of
establishment of written standards or implementation of a material
change, as well as provide them to prospective subscribers upon
request.\29\ In addition, member IDQSs would be required to make and
keep records of all grants of access and all denials or limitations of
access. Such records must include, for all subscribers, the reasons for
granting access, and, for all denials or limitations of access, the
reasons for denying or limiting such access.\30\
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\28\ FINRA states that this proposed requirement is consistent
with the ``fair access'' requirements of Regulation ATS but would
apply to quoting and trading in all OTC Equity Securities on the
member IDQS, regardless of the percentage of average daily volume
that such member IDQS had in the security. See 17 CFR 242.301(b)(5).
FINRA states that while certain member IDQSs may already be subject
to the similar volume-based fair access requirements under
Regulation ATS, proposed Rule 6439 would ensure the application of
fair access requirements to all member IDQSs. See Notice, supra note
3, at 63316.
\29\ See id. at 63316-17. See also supra note 27.
\30\ See proposed Rule 6439(b).
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Proposed Rules 6439(c) and (d) would apply only to member IDQSs
that do not automatically execute all orders presented for execution
against displayed quotations for which a member subscriber has an
obligation under FINRA Rule 5220 (Offers at Stated Prices) \31\ (such a
system is hereafter referred to as a ``non-auto-executing member
IDQS''). Under proposed Rule 6439(c), non-auto-executing member IDQSs
must establish, maintain and enforce written policies and procedures
that are reasonably designed to address instances of unresponsiveness
to orders in an OTC Equity Security. At a minimum, these policies and
procedures must specify an efficient process for: (i) Monitoring
subscriber unresponsiveness; (ii) subscribers to submit complaints to
the non-auto-executing member IDQS regarding potential instances of
order unresponsiveness; (iii) documenting the subscriber's rationale
for unresponsiveness; and (iv) determining specified steps when an
instance of, or repeated, order unresponsiveness may have occurred.\32\
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\31\ FINRA Rule 5220 and its associated Supplementary Material
set forth members' firm quote obligations. Specifically, FINRA Rule
5220 provides that no member shall make an offer to buy from or sell
to any person any security at a stated price unless such member is
prepared to purchase or sell, as the case may be, at such price and
under such conditions as are stated at the time of such offer to buy
or sell.
\32\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63317.
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Under proposed Rule 6439(d), non-auto-executing member IDQSs must
report to FINRA, in a form and manner prescribed by FINRA,\33\ certain
aggregate and order-level information in OTC Equity Securities.
Specifically, proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(A) would require a non-auto-
executing member IDQS to report to FINRA on a monthly basis the
following aggregated information, categorized by FINRA
[[Page 30666]]
member subscriber market participant identifier (MPID) across all
symbols quoted by the MPID during the previous calendar month: (i)
Total number of marketable orders presented for execution against the
MPID's quotation; \34\ (ii) average execution (full or partial) time
for marketable orders presented against the MPID's quotation based on
the time an order is presented; (iii) total number of full or partial
executions based on the time a marketable order is presented that are
within the following execution timeframes: <5 seconds; >=5 and <10
seconds; >=10 and <20 seconds; and >=20 seconds; (iv) total number of
marketable orders presented against the MPID's quotation that did not
receive a full or partial execution; and (v) average response time of
the highest 10% and highest 50% of the MPID's response times for
marketable orders (for full or partial executions).\35\
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\33\ FINRA states that following Commission approval, FINRA
would announce in a Regulatory Notice details about the required
manner and timing of the submission of this information to FINRA.
See Notice, supra note 3, at 63317, n.27.
\34\ FINRA states that in this context, a ``marketable order''
refers to a message presented against a market maker's quote that is
priced to be immediately executable. See id., n.29.
\35\ See proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(A).
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Proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) would require non-auto-executing member
IDQSs to provide to FINRA the following order-level information for
each order presented against an MPID's quotation during the previous
calendar month: (i) Buy/sell; (ii) security symbol; (iii) price; (iv)
size; (v) All or None indicator (yes or no); (vi) order entry firm
MPID; (vii) order receipt time; (viii) time in force; (ix) response
time; (x) order response (e.g., execute, reject cancel, etc.); (xi)
executed quantity; (xii) system-generated order number (if any); and
(xiii) position in queue for quote (e.g., IL1, IL2).\36\ However, to
the extent that the above order-level information is or becomes
reportable under the Consolidated Audit Trail (``CAT'') pursuant to
FINRA Rule 6830 (Industry Member Data Reporting), non-auto-executing
member IDQSs would not be required to report this order-level
information under proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B).\37\
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\36\ See proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B).
\37\ See proposed Rule 6439(d)(2). If such information is
reportable to the CAT pursuant to FINRA Rule 6830, this information
will be available to FINRA. Thus, separate reporting pursuant to
proposed FINRA Rule 6439(d) would be duplicative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 6439(e) would require each member IDQS to make
available to customers on its website (or its affiliate distributor's
website) a written description of each OTC Equity Security order- or
quotation-related data product offered by such member IDQS and related
pricing information, including fees, rebates, discounts and cross-
product pricing incentives. Member IDQSs would be required to keep the
relevant website page(s) accurate and up-to-date with respect to the
required data product descriptions and pricing information and to make
such information available at least two business days in advance of
offering a data product.\38\ Proposed Rule 6439(e) would specify that a
member IDQS is not precluded from negotiating lower fees with
customers, provided that the member IDQS discloses on such website
page(s) the circumstances under which it may do so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ See proposed Rule 6439(e).
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Finally, under proposed Rule 6439(f), a member IDQS must provide
FINRA with prompt notification when it reasonably becomes aware of any
systems disruption that is not de minimis that degrades, limits, or
otherwise impacts the member IDQS's functionality with respect to
trading or the dissemination of market data.\39\ Such notification must
include, on a reasonable best efforts basis, a brief description of the
event, its impact, and the member IDQS's resolution efforts.\40\ FINRA
states that, to comply with this requirement, a member IDQS that is an
SCI ATS, as defined in Rule 1000 of Regulation SCI, could provide FINRA
with the same information (or a duplicate copy of any notification)
submitted to the Commission as required under Regulation SCI Rule
1002(b) \41\ promptly after filing the notification with the
Commission.\42\ FINRA states that, if a member IDQS is not an SCI ATS,
it could comply with this requirement by providing FINRA prompt
notification when it reasonably becomes aware of any such systems
disruption, and by providing periodic updates on the event and its
resolution.\43\ Such notifications would include, on a reasonable best
efforts basis, a brief description of the event, its impact, and
resolution efforts.\44\
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\39\ FINRA would announce in a Regulatory Notice the methods and
process by which members may provide systems disruption
notifications to FINRA. See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
\40\ See proposed Rule 6439(f).
\41\ 17 CFR 242.1002(b).
\42\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
\43\ See id.
\44\ See id.
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FINRA states that, if the proposed rule change is approved by the
Commission, FINRA will announce in a Regulatory Notice the effective
date(s) of the proposed rule change, which may be phased in but will be
no later than 365 days following Commission approval.\45\
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the effective date for rescinding the
rules related to the OTCBB will not occur until: (1) Proposed Rule 6439
(except for Rule 6439(d)(1)(B)) is effective,\46\ and (2) the
Commission grants FINRA's request set forth in the QEQS Designation
Request Letter \47\ (or FINRA files a rule filing otherwise setting the
implementation date for deleting the rules related to the OTCBB and the
SEC approves such rule filing, if required).\48\ FINRA also states that
it will examine for compliance by member IDQSs with proposed Rule 6439,
including by reviewing the adequacy of member IDQSs' written policies
and procedures and written fair access standards required under the
proposal, conducting a targeted exam of impacted member IDQSs after the
initial effectiveness of the rule, and will incorporate a Rule 6439
review as part of the regular exam program for impacted member
firms.\49\
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\45\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63319.
\46\ FINRA states that proposed Rule 6439, with one exception
related to the reporting to FINRA of order-level information, will
become effective at the same time or prior to the rescission of the
OTCBB rules. FINRA states that paragraph (d)(1)(B) of proposed Rule
6439 (requiring reporting of specified order-level information) may
be phased at a later date within the 365-day timeframe to allow
FINRA to better coordinate with the timeline for reporting
information in OTC Equity Securities to the CAT under FINRA Rule
6830 (Industry Member Data Reporting). See Amendment No. 2, supra
note 10.
\47\ See infra note 66.
\48\ See id.
\49\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63316, n.17.
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III. Discussion and Commission Findings
After carefully reviewing the proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No.2, the comment letters, and the FINRA letters, the
Commission finds that the proposed rule change is consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to a national securities association.\50\ In particular, the
Commission finds that the proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,\51\ in that it is designed, among other
things, to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, and, in general, to
protect investors and the public interest. In addition, the Commission
finds that the proposed rule change is consistent with Section
15A(b)(11) of the Act, in that it includes provisions governing the
form and content of quotations relating to securities sold otherwise
than on a national securities exchange which may
[[Page 30667]]
be distributed or published by any member or person associated with a
member, and the persons to whom such quotations may be supplied, and
that such rules are designed to produce fair and informative
quotations, to prevent fictitious or misleading quotations, and to
promote orderly procedures for collecting, distributing, and publishing
quotations.\52\ The Commission also finds that the proposal is
consistent with Section 17B(b)(1) of the Act in that it is designed to
facilitate the widespread dissemination of reliable and accurate last
sale and quotation information with respect to penny stocks.\53\
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\50\ In approving this proposed rule change, the Commission has
considered the proposed rule's impact on efficiency, competition,
and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\51\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
\52\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(11).
\53\ 15 U.S.C 78q-2(b)(1).
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A. Rescission of Rules Governing the OTCBB
As noted by FINRA, the OTCBB currently does not display or widely
disseminate quotation information on any OTC Equity Securities, and all
quotation activity in OTC Equity Securities occurs on member IDQSs.\54\
As a result, FINRA represents that discontinuance of the OTCBB as an
IDQS will not impact the current level of quotation information
available for OTC Equity Securities.\55\ The Commission received two
comment letters supporting FINRA's proposal to cease operation of the
OTCBB.\56\ These commenters agreed that the OTCBB no longer benefits
investors or the marketplace due to how the market for OTC Equity
Securities has evolved.\57\
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\54\ See supra notes 18 and 22 and accompanying text.
\55\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
\56\ See OTC Link Letter 1 and STANY Letter, supra note 11.
\57\ See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 1; OTC Link Letter 1,
supra note 11, at 1.
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The Commission believes that the continued operation of the OTCBB,
which FINRA represents is essentially defunct, provides no current
benefit to the market and could cause investor confusion with respect
to the availability of quotations in OTC Equity Securities. The
Commission recently estimated \58\ that, on average, there were 9,998
quoted OTC securities \59\ that had published quotations per day during
the calendar year 2019.\60\ OTC Markets Group, which operates OTC Link
ATS (a member IDQS that would be subject to proposed Rule 6439),
currently identifies 81 broker-dealers that are active on the OTC Link
ATS in OTC securities.\61\ In addition, from aggregated OTC Markets
Group data for the calendar year 2019, the Commission identified 19,141
unique OTC securities for 16,059 unique companies.\62\ Of these
securities, 11,542 unique OTC securities had at least one published
quotation on OTC Link ATS and 9,895 unique companies had a security
that was quoted at least once on OTC Link ATS during the calendar year
2019.\63\ By contrast, the Commission understands that there currently
is no quoting activity occurring on the OTCBB.\64\ Given the non-
existent quoting activity on the OTCBB and the emergence of member
IDQSs, such as OTC Link ATS, as the dominant sources for quotation
activity in OTC Equity Securities, the Commission agrees with FINRA
that the continued operation of the OTCBB could result in confusion
with respect to the availability of quotations in OTC Equity
Securities. For example, an investor looking solely to the OTCBB for
quotation data for a particular OTC Equity Security could mistakenly
conclude that there are no current quotations in the security when, in
fact, there may be quotations available elsewhere--i.e., on member
IDQSs. Further, FINRA has represented that it will not cease operation
of the OTCBB until proposed Rule 6439 (except for Rule 6439(d)(1)(B))
is effective and the Commission either grants FINRA's request set forth
in the QEQS Designation Request Letter or approves (if necessary) a
subsequent rule filing from FINRA that otherwise sets the
implementation date for deleting the rules related to the OTCBB.\65\
Accordingly, the Commission finds that the proposed rule change to
rescind FINRA's rules governing the OTCBB and cease its operation,
while simultaneously implementing enhanced regulatory requirements for
member IDQSs pursuant to Rule 6439, will protect investors and the
public interest, consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act, by
eliminating investor confusion that could arise because members no
longer submit quotations to the OTCBB and, as a result, the OTCBB no
longer displays any quotations in OTC Equity Securities.\66\
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\58\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 89891 (September
16, 2020), 85 FR 68124, 68185-86 (October 27, 2020) (``Exchange Act
Rule 15c2-11 Release''). The Commission uses three sources of data
on OTC securities. OTC Markets Group's ``End-of-Day Pricing
Service'' and ``OTC Security Data File'' provide closing trade and
quote data for the U.S. OTC equity market and include identifying
information for securities and issuers. The Commission also uses
information from the weekly OTC Markets Group's ``OTC Company Data
File.'' Company Data Files include information about issuer
reporting, shell, and bankruptcy status, as well as the SEC Central
Index Key (CIK) identifier and whether an issuer's financial
statements are audited. See id., at 68185, n.640.
\59\ While this data may include OTC securities that are
restricted securities and thus outside of the scope of FINRA's
definition of OTC Equity Securities, the Commission believes that
the data is reasonably representative of quoting and trading
activity in OTC Equity Securities.
\60\ See id. at 68185. The number of securities quoted includes
those securities with published priced and unpriced quotations. The
Commission estimated that approximately seven percent of quoted OTC
securities did not have priced quotations. See id. at 68185, n.641.
\61\ See Broker-Dealer Directory, OTC Markets Group. Inc.,
https://www.otcmarkets.com/otc-link/broker-dealer-directory (last
visited Apr. 19, 2021, 2:16 p.m.). The Commission expects that not
all of the broker-dealers included in the directory are actively
engaged in quoting OTC securities. See also Exchange Act Rule 15c2-
11 Release, supra note 58, at 68184.
\62\ See Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11 Release, supra note 58, at
68185.
\63\ See id. at 68185, n.640. The Commission believes that OTC
Markets Group data are reasonably representative of all OTC quoting
and trading activity in the U.S. OTC equities market. See id.
\64\ See supra note 18 and accompanying text.
\65\ See Amendment No. 2, supra note 10.
\66\ As noted above, the Commission previously designated the
OTCBB as an automated interdealer quotation system and QEQS for
purposes of the Penny Stock Rules. Historically, the universe of
securities quoted on the OTCBB included penny stocks as well as
higher priced OTC Equity Securities. See OTCBB Designation Letter,
supra note 20. FINRA has stated that it intends to request that the
Commission designate the FINRA OTC Reporting Facility (see infra
note 109 and accompanying text), together with any FINRA-member
IDQS, as a QEQS for purposes of the Penny Stock Rules (``QEQS
Designation Request Letter''). See Notice, supra note 3, at 63116,
n.15; Amendment No. 2, supra note 10.
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B. Proposed Rule 6439 (Requirements for Member Inter-Dealer Quotation
Systems)
The Commission finds that the proposed requirements set forth in
Rule 6439 relating to member IDQSs that permit quotation updates on a
real-time basis in OTC Equity Securities are consistent with the
Exchange Act.
First, the Commission finds that proposed Rule 6439(a), which would
require member IDQSs to establish, maintain and enforce written
policies and procedures relating to the collection and dissemination of
quotation information in OTC Equity Securities on or through their
systems, is consistent with Section 15A(b)(11) of the Act, which
requires FINRA rules relating to quotations for securities sold other
than on a national securities exchange to be designed to produce fair
and informative quotations, to prevent fictitious or misleading
quotations, and to promote orderly procedures for collecting,
distributing, and publishing quotations. The Commission believes that
proposed Rule 6439(a) is designed to promote orderly procedures for
collecting, distributing, and publishing quotations in OTC Equity
Securities because the proposed requirements would apply to all member
IDQSs that permit quotation updates on a real-time
[[Page 30668]]
basis in OTC Equity Securities. In addition, proposed Rule 6439(a)
would require that a member IDQS's policies and procedures relating to
collection and dissemination of quotation information must be
reasonably designed to ensure that quotations received and disseminated
are informative, reliable, accurate, firm and treated in a not unfairly
discriminatory manner, including by establishing non-discretionary
standards under which quotations are prioritized and displayed.
Moreover, member IDQSs would be accountable to FINRA should their
policies and procedures not meet the minimum standards set forth in
proposed Rule 6439(a) and FINRA has represented that it will examine
member IDQSs for compliance with the requirements of proposed Rule
6439, including by reviewing the adequacy of member IDQSs' written
policies and procedures.\67\ In addition, by requiring that all member-
IDQSs that provide quotations in OTC Equity Securities maintain
policies and procedures for collecting and disseminating quotation
information, and that such policies and procedures be reasonably
designed to ensure that quotations received and disseminated are
informative, reliable, accurate, firm and treated in a not unfairly
discriminatory manner, the Commission finds that proposed Rule 6439(a)
is designed to promote just and equitable principles of trade and
protect investors and the public interest, consistent with Section
15A(b)(6) of the Act.
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\67\ See supra note 49 and accompanying text.
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Second, the Commission finds that proposed Rule 6439(b), which
would require a member IDQS to establish non-discriminatory written
standards for granting access to quoting and trading in OTC Equity
Securities on its system that do not unreasonably prohibit or limit any
person in respect to access to services offered by such member IDQS, is
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act, which requires that
FINRA's rules be designed to promote just and equitable principles of
trade and protect investors and the public interest. The Commission
believes that the proposed requirements relating to fair access are
designed to afford fair and non-discriminatory access for all market
participants to the quotation systems of all member IDQSs that provide
real-time quotations in OTC Equity Securities. Given the significant
role that member IDQSs serve in the marketplace for quotations in OTC
Equity Securities, the Commission believes that these requirements
should improve access to quotations for these securities, which should
help to ensure that investors have the pricing information necessary to
make informed investment decisions with respect to OTC Equity
Securities. As a result, the Commission finds that the requirements of
proposed Rule 6439(b) are designed to promote just and equitable
principles of trade and protect investors and the public interest,
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act.
One commenter suggested that member IDQSs that are subject to the
fair access requirements under Regulation ATS should be exempt from the
fair access requirements of proposed Rule 6439(b) because such
requirements are duplicative.\68\ In response, FINRA stated that, to
the extent that a member IDQS already is subject to Regulation ATS's
fair access standards with respect to all OTC Equity Securities traded
on its platform, then the proposal would only additionally require that
the member IDQS prominently disclose such fair access policies and
procedures to subscribers.\69\ However, to the extent that a member
IDQS is not already subject to the fair access standards of Regulation
ATS for all OTC Equity Securities traded on its platform, FINRA stated
that the proposal would fill that gap by requiring the member IDQS to
expand the fair access standards to activity in all OTC Equity
Securities and to prominently disclose such fair access policies and
procedures.\70\
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\68\ See OTC Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 4. The Commission
notes that while the commenter, in making this suggestion, referred
to paragraph (c) of the proposed rule, it is paragraph (b) under
proposed Rule 6439-- not paragraph (c) that sets forth the proposed
fair access requirements in Rule 6439. See supra notes 28-30 and
accompanying text.
\69\ See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 5.
\70\ See id., at 5-6.
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As discussed, the Commission believes that the requirements
relating to fair access for member IDQSs, as set forth in proposed Rule
6439(b), are consistent with the Exchange Act. The fair access
requirements set forth in Rule 301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS,\71\ which
are consistent with the requirements set forth in proposed Rule
6439(b), only apply if an ATS meets certain volume thresholds set forth
Rule 301(b)(5).\72\ On the other hand, the requirements set forth in
proposed Rule 6439(b) would apply to quoting and trading in all OTC
Equity Securities on a member IDQS, regardless of the percentage of
average daily volume that such member IDQS has in the security. Thus,
FINRA's proposal would ensure the application of fair access
requirements to all member IDQSs that permit quotation updates on a
real-time basis in OTC Equity Securities and to all OTC Equity
Securities quoted and traded on such member IDQSs. Furthermore, as
noted by FINRA in its response to comments,\73\ proposed Rule 6439(b)
sets forth an additional requirement that is not included in Rule
301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS: That a member IDQS's written standards
relating to access and any material updates, modifications and
revisions thereto ``be prominently disclosed to subscribers within five
business days following the date of establishment of the written
standards or implementation of the material change and provided to
prospective subscribers upon request.'' Accordingly, contrary to the
commenter's assertion, the Commission notes that the proposed fair
access requirements under Rule 6439(b) are not duplicative of the fair
access requirements set forth in Rule 301(b)(5) of Regulation ATS.
Further, the Commission believes that exempting member IDQSs subject to
the fair access requirements under Regulation ATS from proposed Rule
6439(b), as the commenter requested, would result in such member IDQSs
not being subject to a key requirement of the proposed rule and would
result in disparate treatment among member IDQSs.
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\71\ 17 CFR 242.301(b)(5).
\72\ See supra note 28.
\73\ See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 5-6.
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Third, proposed Rules 6439(c) and (d) would require non-auto-
executing member IDQSs to establish, maintain and enforce written
policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to address
instances of unresponsiveness when orders are presented to trade with
firm quotations displayed in OTC Equity Securities, and to report on a
monthly basis certain aggregate and order-level information to FINRA.
FINRA states that such requirements are designed to enhance compliance
with the firm quote requirements for non-auto-executing member IDQSs as
set forth in FINRA Rule 5220.\74\ FINRA also states that the proposed
information to be reported to FINRA would support its oversight of the
OTC securities market by providing FINRA with additional information
regarding the quotation activities occurring on non-auto-executing
member IDQSs and would assist FINRA in surveilling for member
compliance
[[Page 30669]]
with firm quote obligations and unresponsiveness.\75\
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\74\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63317. FINRA states that order
unresponsiveness is an area where it regularly receives complaints.
FINRA notes that in 2018, it received 119 complaints from members
regarding instances of unresponsiveness to requests to execute
against a displayed quotation. See id., at 63318, n.26.
\75\ See id.
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The Commission agrees that unresponsiveness by those who display
quotations in the OTC Equity Securities market can be harmful to the
market and investors in OTC Equity Securities. The principle that a
displayed quotation should be ``firm'' is well established in the
securities markets.\76\ In its proposal, FINRA would require member
IDQSs that provide quotations in OTC Equity Securities but do not auto-
execute orders presented for execution against such quotations to adopt
standards to address instances of unresponsiveness by their
subscribers. Because a system that permits manual responses to orders
received against displayed quotations can result in order
unresponsiveness, the Commission believes that requiring such systems
to establish, maintain and enforce written policies and procedures that
are reasonably designed to address instances of unresponsiveness should
help to ensure that market participants can reasonably rely on the
displayed quotations on member IDQSs that do not auto-execute orders.
In addition, the requirement for non-auto-executing member IDQSs to
report aggregate and order-level information to FINRA should help FINRA
surveil for unresponsiveness and ``backing away'' by members and to
take remedial actions against such members, if necessary. As such, the
Commission finds that paragraphs (c) and (d) of proposed Rule 6439 are
consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act in that they are designed,
among other things, to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the public interest.
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\76\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 60835
(October 16, 2009), 74 FR 54616 (October 22, 2009) (FINRA-2009-055)
(approving proposal to adopt FINRA Rule 5220 (Offers at Stated
Prices) into FINRA's consolidated rulebook) (``The Commission
believes that the proposed rule change is designed to protect
investors and promote the maintenance of fair, orderly and efficient
markets by prohibiting a member from publishing a report of any
transaction unless the member believes that it was a bona fide
purchase or sale of the security and from ``backing away'' from its
quotations.''); Securities Exchange Act Release No. 12670 (July 29,
1976), 41 FR 32856 (August 5, 1976) (proposing Exchange Act Rule
11Ac1-1 (predecessor to Rule 602 of Regulation NMS) (``The
reliability and availability of quotation information are basic
components of a national market system and are needed so that
broker-dealers are able to make best execution decisions for their
customers' orders, and customers are able to make order entry
decisions.'').
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Two commenters suggested that FINRA revise proposed Rule 6439(d) to
exempt member-IDQSs that would have reporting obligations under
proposed paragraph (d) \77\ from applicable CAT reporting
obligations.\78\ These commenters stated that proposed Rule 6439 would
provide a reporting mechanism that is more consistent with the way in
which IDQSs operate and therefore would make collection and reporting
more efficient and effective than under the order-based reporting
prescribed by the CAT.\79\ In response, FINRA stated that the proposal
was never intended to impact the outcome of whether the commenters'
order-level information should become CAT reportable and that FINRA
continues to believe that it is appropriate to exempt a non-auto-
executing member IDQS from reporting under proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B)
if the IDQS's order-level information is CAT reportable.\80\
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\77\ See supra notes 33-37 and accompanying text for a
discussion of the requirements proposed under Rule 6439(d).
\78\ See STANY Letter, supra note, 11 at 2; OTC Link Letter 1,
supra note 11, at 3-4. As proposed, non-auto-executing member IDQSs
would be exempt from the reporting requirements under proposed Rule
6439(d)(1)(B) to the extent that such items are subject to reporting
to the CAT under FINRA Rule 6830. See supra note 37 and accompanying
text.
\79\ See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 2; OTC Link Letter 1,
supra note 11, at 3-4. In connection with this suggested
modification, one commenter stated its view that trade messages on
its ATS--OTC Link ATS--are negotiations and do not constitute
``orders'' for purposes of Rule 6439 or with respect to any CAT
reporting obligations. See OTC Link Letter 1, supra note 11, at 4.
FINRA stated in its proposal, and again in its response to comments,
that such negotiation activities are indeed ``orders'' for purposes
of FINRA's firm quote rule obligations and proposed Rule 6439. See
Notice, supra note 3, at 63317, n.28 (stating that such negotiation
activities are considered ``orders'' for purposes of firm quote rule
obligations and proposed Rule 6439). See FINRA Letter 1, supra note
12, at 4, n.12. See also Exchange Act Rule 3b-16(c) and Rule 300(e)
of Regulation ATS (defining an ``order'' as ``any firm indication of
a willingness to buy or sell a security, as either principal or
agent, including any bid or offer quotation, market order, limit
order, or other priced order'').
\80\ See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 4.
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The Commission finds that FINRA's proposal to exempt non-auto-
executing member IDQSs from reporting order-level information pursuant
to proposed Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) to the extent such information becomes
reportable to CAT is reasonable and is designed to effectively reduce
reporting redundancies. If the information required to be reported
pursuant to Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) is already reportable, or becomes
reportable, to the CAT pursuant to FINRA Rule 6830, it will be
available to FINRA through the CAT, so separate reporting pursuant to
proposed FINRA Rule 6439(d)(1)(B) would be duplicative. As a result,
the Commission finds the proposed exemption is consistent with Section
15A(b)(6) of the Act in that it is designed to promote just and
equitable principles of trade.
These two commenters also requested that FINRA provide additional
guidance with respect to proposed Rule 6439(c)(3) and (4), which would
require non-auto-executing member IDQSs to maintain policies and
procedures that specify an efficient process for documenting a
subscriber's rationale for unresponsiveness and for determining
specified steps when an instance of repeated order unresponsiveness may
have occurred.\81\ In response to these comments, FINRA provided some
additional guidance specifically requested by commenters relating to
the requirements of proposed Rule 6439(c)(3) and (4).\82\
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\81\ See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 3; OTC Link Letter 1,
supra note 11, at 2-3. One commenter noted that, as the only non-
auto-executing member IDQS, it would be the only IDQS that would be
subject to the requirements set forth in paragraph (c) of the Rule,
and requested that FINRA issue guidance confirming that its existing
``saturation'' feature and provision of data regarding subscriber
unresponsiveness to certain order messages under its trading
functionalities meet the standards set forth in paragraphs (c)(3)
and (c)(4) of proposed Rule 6439. See OTC Link Letter 1, supra note
11. at 2-3.
\82\ See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 3-4. FINRA stated
that it agrees that OTC Link ATS's ``saturation'' feature, as FINRA
understands it, is consistent with the objectives of some of the
proposed requirements in Rule 6439(c), such as proposed Rule
6439(c)(1) and (c)(4), which would require that a member IDQS's
policies and procedures specify an efficient process for monitoring
subscriber unresponsiveness and determining specified steps when an
instance of repeated order unresponsiveness may have occurred.
However, FINRA indicated that it does not believe that OTC Link
ATS's current saturation feature would meet the objectives of
proposed paragraphs (c)(2) or (3) of Rule 6439, which, when
combined, would require that the member IDQS provide a mechanism or
process whereby one subscriber may submit or report to the non-auto-
executing member IDQS a potential instance of order unresponsiveness
by another subscriber and document the subscriber's rationale in
response to that event. FINRA further stated that it does not expect
the member IDQS to investigate or confirm a subscriber's rationale
for the unresponsiveness, but expects that the member IDQS provide a
mechanism or process that would permit a subscriber to submit or
report a potential instance of order unresponsiveness and the member
IDQS would be required to request that the other subscriber provide
its rationale in connection with the instance. For example, the
member IDQS could provide a messaging protocol or other mechanism
that would permit a subscriber to submit or report to the member
IDQS a potential instance of order unresponsiveness and that also
would contact the other party to obtain their rationale. FINRA
stated that it believes that the member IDQS is in the best position
to obtain this information from the subscriber at the time of, or
close in time to, the event, and to document this information and
make it available to FINRA upon request. See id., at 3-4.
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In response, one commenter raised concerns regarding the
requirements of proposed Rule 6439(c)(2) and (c)(3), which would
require non-auto-
[[Page 30670]]
executing member IDQSs to maintain policies and procedures that specify
an efficient process for subscribers submitting to the member IDQS
complaints regarding potential instances of order unresponsiveness and
documenting the subscriber's rationale for unresponsiveness.\83\ This
commenter stated that, in attempting to perform this function, its
member IDQS would not have access to the necessary underlying
information regarding the issue and would lack the regulatory authority
to resolve the dispute.\84\ This commenter further stated that these
proposed requirements effectively require member IDQSs to act as a
clearinghouse for subscriber complaints of non-responsiveness and blurs
the distinction between SROs and commercial market operators.\85\ The
commenter accordingly requested that FINRA amend the proposal to only
require that a member IDQS escalate instances of unresponsiveness to
FINRA for review when the IDQS is informed of such cases via
appropriate channels (i.e., phone, email, message).\86\
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\83\ See OTC Link Letter 2, supra note 9.
\84\ See id., at 2.
\85\ See id., at 3.
\86\ See id.
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In response, FINRA stated that it is cognizant that IDQSs,
including the commenter, lack access to certain information and lack
regulatory authority and that it would not expect a member IDQS to
gather extraneous information or resolve disputes (beyond steps that
may be taken pursuant to proposed Rule 6439(c)(4)).\87\ FINRA stated
that the proposal would require that reasonable policies and procedures
be developed, which could include specifying reasonable and appropriate
form and methods through which a member would accept complaints from
subscribers pursuant to proposed paragraph (c)(2).\88\ In addition, the
proposed rule would not require that member IDQSs, including the
commenter, investigate or confirm a subscriber's rationale for
unresponsiveness or determine whether a violation of FINRA Rule 5220
(Offers at Stated Prices) has occurred.\89\ FINRA stated that the role
of a member IDQS under proposed paragraph (c)(3) would be limited to
information collection, and the lack of access to certain information
regarding instances of potential unresponsive would therefore not
impair a member IDQS's ability to establish policies and procedures
required under the proposal.\90\ FINRA provided that it continues to
believe that the requirements of proposed Rule 6439(c) are reasonable
and appropriate for non-auto-executing member IDQSs given that order
unresponsiveness only occurs on systems that permit manual response to
orders received against displayed quotations and that it believed the
member IDQS is in the best position to obtain this information from the
subscriber at the time of, or close in time to, the event, and to
document this information and make it available to FINRA upon
request.\91\
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\87\ See FINRA Letter 2, supra note 12, at 3.
\88\ See id. As an example, FINRA stated that OTC Markets may
determine to accept complaints only through a specified email
address or through a complaint protocol that it may establish and,
in doing so, its obligations under proposed paragraph (c)(3) would
be limited to complaints received through reasonable, specified,
established channels. See id.
\89\ See id.
\90\ See id.
\91\ See id., at 4.
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The Commission has considered commenters' request for guidance and
modifications to the proposed requirements and FINRA's responses and
believes FINRA's responses support the finding that the proposed Rule
6439(c) is designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the public interest, consistent with
Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act. As previously noted, a system that
permits manual responses to orders received against displayed
quotations can result in order unresponsiveness. The Commission agrees
with FINRA that requiring such systems to establish, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to
address instances of unresponsiveness, which includes requiring such
systems to maintain policies and procedures that specify an efficient
process for subscribers submitting to the member IDQS complaints
regarding potential instances of order unresponsiveness and documenting
the subscriber's rationale for unresponsiveness, should help ensure
that market participants can reasonably rely on the displayed
quotations on member IDQSs that do not auto-execute orders and help
FINRA surveil for unresponsiveness on such systems.
Further, the Commission finds that proposed Rule 6439(e), which
will require member IDQSs to publish and keep updated information about
order- or quotation-related data products, is consistent with both
Exchange Act Section 15A(b)(6)'s requirement that FINRA's rules be
designed to protect investors and the public interest and Exchange Act
Section 15A(b)(11)'s requirement that FINRA's rules contain provisions
governing the form and content of quotations relating to securities
sold otherwise than on a national securities exchange which may be
distributed or published by any member or person associated with a
member, and the persons to whom such quotations may be supplied. The
publication of such information will provide FINRA with useful
information to ensure compliance with FINRA rules and to monitor the
widespread availability of OTC Equity Securities' quotation information
to investors and to market participants through non-SRO sources. In
addition, market participants will benefit from a better understanding
of such data products when assessing a particular member IDQS as a
potential trading venue.
Finally, the Commission finds that proposed Rule 6439(f), which
would require a member IDQS to provide FINRA with prompt notification
when it reasonably becomes aware of any systems disruption that is not
de minimis that degrades, limits, or otherwise impacts the member
IDQS's functionality with respect to trading or the dissemination of
market data, is consistent with Exchange Act Section 15A(b)(6)'s
requirement that FINRA's rules be designed to protect investors and the
public interest and Section 15A(b)(11)'s requirement that FINRA's rules
relating to quotations be designed to promote orderly procedures for
collecting, distributing, and publishing quotations. The Commission
believes that the uninterrupted operation of member IDQSs is vital to
investor confidence in the OTC securities market structure and furthers
the goals of Section 17B of the Act.\92\ As such, the Commission
believes that proposed Rule 6439(f) should help FINRA monitor and
resolve any issues that could disrupt investors' ability to quote and
execute trades in OTC Equity Securities, thereby promoting orderly
procedures with respect to quotations in OTC Equity Securities and
protecting investors and the public interest.
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\92\ See infra notes 99-101 and accompanying text.
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FINRA has committed to examining member IDQSs for compliance with
proposed Rule 6439 and has represented that it will conduct a targeted
exam of impacted member IDQSs after the initial effectiveness of the
rule and will incorporate a proposed Rule 6439 review as part of the
regular exam program for impacted member firms.\93\ The Commission
believes that these exams should assist FINRA in reviewing
[[Page 30671]]
for compliance by member IDQSs with the requirements of proposed Rule
6439.
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\93\ See supra note 49 and accompanying text.
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The Commission notes that, despite certain suggested modifications
to the proposed rule, all three commenters supported FINRA's proposal
to enhance regulatory requirements for IDQSs.\94\ In addition to
commenters' suggested modifications discussed above,\95\ two commenters
also suggested that FINRA revise Rule 6437 (Prohibition from Locking
and Crossing), which currently prohibits locking and crossing
quotations displayed in the same IDQS, to also prohibit locking and
crossing displayed quotations between connected IDQSs.\96\ In its
response to comments, FINRA stated that it has been actively
considering whether any changes to the scope of Rule 6437 are
appropriate and that it will continue to separately assess this issue
outside of the context of this proposed rule change.\97\ The Commission
agrees with FINRA that the commenters' suggestion related to FINRA Rule
6437 is beyond the scope of the proposed rule change.
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\94\ See, generally, OTC Link Letter 1, STANY Letter and Global
OTC Letter, supra note 11.
\95\ See supra notes 68, 78-79, and 81 and accompanying text.
\96\ See STANY Letter, supra note 11, at 3; OTC Link Letter 1,
supra note 11, at 4-5.
\97\ See FINRA Letter 1, supra note 12, at 6.
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C. Section 17B of the Act
Finally, the Commission believes that the proposed rule change to
rescind the rules related to the OTCBB and cease its operation and
adopt proposed Rule 6439 to expand the obligations of member IDQSs that
display quotations in OTC Equity Securities is consistent with Section
17B of the Act.\98\ FINRA has operated the OTCBB pursuant to the
Commission's obligations under Section 17B of the Act to facilitate the
widespread dissemination of quotation information for penny stocks
through an automated quotation system operated by a registered
securities association.\99\ When Congress enacted Section 17B, it found
that there was a lack of reliable and accurate quotation and last sale
information in the markets for penny stocks.\100\ As such, Section 17B
was designed to remedy inefficiencies and address regulatory concerns
caused by this lack of reliable market information about penny stocks
traded OTC, and Congress found that a fully implemented automated
quotation system for penny stocks would meet the information needs of
investors and market participants and add visibility and regulatory and
surveillance data to that market.\101\
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\98\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-2. See also supra note 20. Section 17B was
enacted by Congress as part of the Penny Stock Act, which was
designed to remedy inefficiencies and address regulatory concerns
caused by the lack of reliable market information on penny stocks
traded OTC.
\99\ See 15 U.S.C. 78q-2(b). See also OTCBB Designation Letter,
supra note 20.
\100\ See 15 U.S.C. 78q-2(a)(1).
\101\ See 15 U.S.C. 78q-2(a)(3).
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Based on how the OTC market has evolved since the adoption of
Section 17B,\102\ the Commission believes that the OTCBB no longer
furthers the goals and objectives of Section 17B of the Exchange Act
because it no longer is utilized as a source of quotation information
for those OTC Equity Securities that meet the definition of ``penny
stock.'' \103\ Rather, member IDQSs currently collect and disseminate
all quotation information in OTC Equity Securities, including penny
stocks, and make such quotation information available to investors and
market participants.\104\ Therefore, the Commission finds that
discontinuing dissemination of potentially incomplete and misleading
quotation information from the marketplace by ceasing operation of the
OTCBB, while at the same time implementing enhanced requirements for
member IDQSs on or through which quotations in OTC Equity Securities,
including penny stocks, are currently displayed, as set forth in
proposed Rule 6439, best serves and promotes the goals of Section 17B
of the Act with respect to the widespread availability of quotation
information in penny stocks.\105\
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\102\ See Public Law 101-429, 104 Stat. 931 (1990).
\103\ See supra notes 60-64 and accompanying text. As noted
above, the universe of securities historically quoted in the OTCBB
included penny stocks as well as higher priced OTC Equity
Securities. See supra note 66.
\104\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63318.
\105\ See supra note 20 and 66. As discussed above, the
Commission previously designated the OTCBB as a QEQS for purposes of
the Penny Stock Rules. In connection with FINRA's cessation of the
OTCBB, FINRA has stated that it intends to request that the
Commission designate the FINRA OTC Reporting Facility (see infra
note 109 and accompanying text), together with any FINRA-member
IDQS, as a QEQS for purposes of the Penny Stock Rules. See supra
note 66.
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FINRA has represented that, in advance of the discontinuance of the
OTCBB, FINRA will take steps to ensure a smooth transition for issuers
and members.\106\ Specifically, although there are no members currently
using the OTCBB, FINRA will publicize announcements through its
website.\107\ In addition, FINRA has represented that, following the
cessation of the OTCBB, FINRA will continue to assess the widespread
availability of quotation transparency to investors and market
participants through non-SRO sources on a regular basis, and if the
availability of quotation information to investors declines, FINRA will
revisit and, if necessary, file a proposed rule change to establish an
SRO-operated IDQS (or other measure) to facilitate the type of
widespread quotation transparency described in Section 17B of the
Act.\108\ Finally, FINRA will continue to centralize last sale
transaction reporting in OTC Equity Securities, including for penny
stock transactions, through the FINRA OTC Reporting Facility (``ORF''),
a FINRA-operated system that provides last sale information on OTC
Equity Securities.\109\ Thus, following cessation of the OTCBB, member
IDQSs subject to proposed Rule 6439 will continue to collect and
disseminate quotation information for OTC Equity Securities, including
penny stocks, while the ORF will continue to collect and disseminate
real-time last sale price and volume information for OTC Equity
Securities, including penny stocks.
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\106\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 63319.
\107\ See id. FINRA represents that there currently are no OTCBB
symbols. See id., at 63319, n.37.
\108\ See id.
\109\ See FINRA Rule 6600 and 7300 Series (OTC Reporting
Facility). FINRA members generally are required to report trades in
OTC Equity Securities to the ORF within 10 seconds of execution and
FINRA widely disseminates this transaction information in real-time.
See FINRA Rule 6622 (Transaction Reporting). See also Notice, supra
note 3, at 63318, n.36.
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IV. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered that, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,\110\ the proposed rule change (SR-FINRA-2020-031), as modified by
Amendment No. 2, be, and hereby is, approved.
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\110\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\111\
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\111\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021-12026 Filed 6-8-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P