Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of Filing of Amendment No. 1 and Order Instituting Proceedings To Determine Whether To Approve or Disapprove a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1, To Amend Rules 4702(b)(14) and (b)(15) Concerning Dynamic M-ELO Holding Periods, 22498-22506 [2023-07733]
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22498
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 71 / Thursday, April 13, 2023 / Notices
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
MEMX–2023–07 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
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• 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–MEMX–2023–07. This file
number should be included in 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 Section, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from
comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–MEMX–2023–07 and
should be submitted on or before May
4, 2023.
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For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.20
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–07736 Filed 4–12–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–97260; File No. SR-Phlx–
2023–07]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Nasdaq
PHLX LLC; Notice of Designation of a
Longer Period for Commission Action
on a Proposed Rule Change To Make
Permanent Certain P.M.-Settled Pilots
April 7, 2023.
On February 23, 2023, Nasdaq PHLX
LLC (‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
make permanent the pilot to permit the
listing and trading of options based on
1/100 the value of the Nasdaq-100 Index
and the Exchange’s nonstandard
expirations pilot program. The proposed
rule change was published for comment
in the Federal Register on March 2,
2023.3
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act 4 provides
that, within 45 days of the publication
of notice of the filing of a proposed rule
change, or within such longer period up
to 90 days as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding, or as to which the
self-regulatory organization consents,
the Commission shall either approve the
proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule change should be
disapproved. The 45th day after
publication of the notice for this
proposed rule change is April 16, 2023.
The Commission is extending this 45day time period. The Commission finds
that it is appropriate to designate a
longer period within which to take
action on the proposed rule change so
that it has sufficient time to consider the
proposed rule change. Accordingly, the
Commission, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Act,5 designates May 31,
20 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 96980
(February 24, 2023), 88 FR 13161.
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 Id.
1 15
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2023, as the date by which the
Commission shall either approve or
disapprove, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove, the
proposed rule change (File No. SRPhlx–2023–07).
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.6
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–07730 Filed 4–12–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–97263; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2022–079]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of
Filing of Amendment No. 1 and Order
Instituting Proceedings To Determine
Whether To Approve or Disapprove a
Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1, To Amend Rules
4702(b)(14) and (b)(15) Concerning
Dynamic M–ELO Holding Periods
April 7, 2023.
On December 21, 2022, The Nasdaq
Stock Market LLC (‘‘Nasdaq’’ or
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
replace the static holding period
requirements for Midpoint Extended
Life Orders and Midpoint Extended Life
Orders Plus Continuous Book with
dynamic holding periods. The proposed
rule change was published for comment
in the Federal Register on January 10,
2023.3 On February 22, 2023, pursuant
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 March 9,
2023, the Exchange filed Amendment
No.1 to the proposed rule change, which
amended and superseded the proposed
rule change as originally filed.6 The
6 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(31).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 92844
(January 4, 2023), 88 FR 1438.
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 96963,
88 FR 12710 (February 28, 2023).
6 In Amendment No. 1, the Exchange (i) included
additional information regarding the data used by
its model, including a list of the 142 categories of
1 15
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 71 / Thursday, April 13, 2023 / Notices
Commission received two comments on
the proposal, and the Exchange
submitted a response to comments
when it filed Amendment No. 1.7 The
Commission is publishing this notice
and order to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, from interested
persons and to institute proceedings
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the
Act 8 to determine whether to approve
or disapprove the proposed rule change,
as modified by Amendment No. 1.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rules 4702(b)(14) and (b)(15) of the
Exchange’s Rulebook to replace the
static holding period requirements for
Midpoint Extended Life Orders and
Midpoint Extended Life Orders Plus
Continuous Book with dynamic holding
periods. Amendment No. 1 supersedes
the original filing in its entirety.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/
rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of Purpose of, and Statutory
Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
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In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
data points; (ii) described its model retraining
process; (iii) added information regarding the types
of modifications for which it would request
Commission approval; (iv) indicated it would
regularly publish data regarding M–ELO and M–
ELO+CB performance and holding period changes;
and (v) stated its model would constitute an
established, non-discriminatory method and would
operate according to pre-disclosed rules and
objectives without the exercise of discretion. When
it submitted Amendment No. 1, the Exchange also
submitted it as a comment letter to the filing,
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/srnasdaq-2022-079/srnasdaq2022079-20159016327215.pdf.
7 Comments and the Exchange’s response to
comments are available at: https://www.sec.gov/
comments/sr-nasdaq-2022-079/srnasdaq2022079.
htm.
8 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rules 4702(b)(14) and (15) of the
Exchange’s Rulebook to replace the
static 10 millisecond holding period
requirements for its Midpoint Extended
Life Order (‘‘M–ELO’’) and Midpoint
Extended Life Order Plus Continuous
Book (‘‘M–ELO+CB’’) Order Types with
dynamic holding periods (‘‘Dynamic M–
ELO and M–ELO+CB’’ or collectively,
‘‘Dynamic M–ELO’’).
Background
In 2018, the Exchange introduced the
M–ELO, which is a Non-Displayed
Order priced at the Midpoint between
the National Best Bid and Offer
(‘‘NBBO’’) and which is eligible for
execution only against other eligible M–
ELOs and only after a minimum of onehalf second passes from the time that
the System accepts the order (the
‘‘Holding Period’’).9 In 2019, the
Exchange introduced the M–ELO+CB,
which closely resembles the M–ELO,
except that a M–ELO+CB may execute at
the midpoint of the NBBO, not only
against other eligible M–ELOs (and M–
ELO+CBs), but also against NonDisplayed Orders with Midpoint
Pegging and Midpoint Peg Post-Only
Orders (‘‘Midpoint Orders’’) that rest on
the Continuous Book for at least onehalf second and have Trade Now
enabled.10
When the Exchange designed M–ELO,
it originally set the length of the
Holding Period at one-half second
because it determined that this time
period would be sufficient to ensure
that likeminded investors would
interact only with each other, and with
minimal market impacts. The Exchange
believed that the longer length of the M–
ELO Holding Period and its simplicity
in design would provide greater
protection for participants than they
could achieve through competing delay
mechanisms.
In 2020, however, the Exchange
shortened the length of the Holding
Period to 10 milliseconds.11 The
9 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34–
82825 (March 7, 2018), 83 FR 10937 (March 13,
2018) (SR–NASDAQ–2017–074) (‘‘M–ELO
Approval Order’’).
10 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34–
86938 (September 11, 2019), 84 FR 48978
(September 17, 2019) (SR–NASDAQ–2019–048)
(‘‘M–ELO+CB Approval Order’’).
11 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34–
88743 (April 24, 2020), 85 FR 24068 (April 30,
2020) (SR–NASDAQ–2020–011) (‘‘M–ELO Timer
Approval Order’’).
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Exchange did so after studying two
years of actual use and performance of
M–ELOs, as well as customer feedback.
That is, the Exchange came to
understand that, while users of M–ELO
and M–ELO+CB are less concerned with
achieving rapid executions of their
Orders than are other participants, they
are not indifferent about the length of
time in which their M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs must wait before they are
eligible for execution. Indeed,
participants informed the Exchange that
in certain circumstances, such as when
they sought to trade symbols that on
average had a lower time-to-execution
than a half-second, they were reticent to
enter M–ELOs or M–ELO+CBs. They
indicated that the associated Holding
Periods for these Order Types were
longer than necessary to achieve the
desired protections and that, during the
residual portion of the Holding Periods,
they risked losing out on favorable
execution opportunities that would
otherwise be available to them had they
placed a non-MELO order.
Based upon this feedback, the
Exchange studied the potential effects of
reducing the length of the Holding
Periods for both M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs (as well as for Midpoint
Orders that would execute against M–
ELO+CBs). Ultimately, the Exchange
determined that it could reduce the
Holding Periods to 10 milliseconds
without compromising the protective
power that M–ELO and M–ELO+CB are
intended to provide to participants and
investors.12 Thus, the Exchange
determined that shortening the Holding
Periods to 10 milliseconds for M–ELOs
and M–ELO+CBs would increase the
efficacy of the mechanism while not
undermining the power of those Order
Types to fulfill their underlying purpose
of minimizing market impacts. At the
same time, the Exchange determined
12 The Exchange examined each of its historical
M–ELO executions to determine at what Midpoints
of the NBBO the M–ELOs would have executed if
their Holding Periods had been shorter than onehalf second (500 milliseconds). After examining the
historical effects of shorter Holding Periods of
between 10 milliseconds and 400 milliseconds, the
Exchange determined that a reduction of the M–
ELO Holding Period to as short as 10 milliseconds
would have caused an average impact on mark-outs
of only 0.10 basis points (across all symbols). In
other words, compared to the execution price of an
average M–ELO with a one-half second Holding
Period, the Exchange found that a M–ELO with a
10 millisecond Holding Period would have had an
average post-execution impact that was only a tenth
of a basis point per share—a difference in protective
effect that is immaterial. See Nasdaq, ‘‘The
Midpoint Extended Life Order (M–ELO); M–ELO
Holding Period,’’ available at https://
www.nasdaq.com/articles/the-midpoint-extendedlife-order-m-elo%3A-m-elo-holding-period-2020-0213 (analyzing effects of shortened Holding Periods
on M–ELO performance).
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that a reduction in the Holding Periods
to 10 milliseconds would dramatically
add to the circumstances in which M–
ELOs and M–ELO+CBs would be useful
to participants. In its M–ELO Timer
Approval Order, the Commission agreed
with the Exchange:
The Commission notes that, with the
proposed ten-millisecond Holding
Period and Resting Period, M–ELOs and
M–ELO+CBs would continue to be
optional order types that are available to
investors with longer investment time
horizons, including institutional
investors. The Commission also believes
that the proposal could make M–ELOs
and M–ELO+CBs more attractive for
securities that on average have a timeto-execution of less than one-half
second and, for investors who currently
do not use M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
for these securities, provide optional
order types that could enhance their
ability to participate effectively on the
Exchange. The Commission notes that,
if market participants determine that the
proposal would make M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs less attractive for their
particular investment objectives, such
market participants may elect to reduce
or eliminate their use of these optional
order types. Moreover, as noted above,
the Exchange will continue to conduct
real-time surveillance to monitor the use
of M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs to ensure
that such usage remains appropriately
tied to the intent of the order types. If,
as a result of such surveillance, the
Exchange determines that the shortened
Holding Period does not serve its
intended purpose or adversely impacts
market quality, the Exchange would
seek to make further recalibrations.13
For similar reasons and with even
better potential results for participants,
the Exchange now proposes to further
refine the length of the Holding Periods
for M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs, this time
through the application of innovative
and patent pending machine learning
technology.
Dynamic M–ELO
After receiving feedback from
participants that even 10 millisecond
Holding Periods for M–ELO and M–
ELO+CB may, at times, exceed what is
necessary to accomplish the underlying
intent of these Order Types, the
Exchange began to experiment with
making further refinements to the
duration of the Holding Periods.
Ultimately, the Exchange concluded
that shorter Holding Periods could
achieve the same, if not better results for
participants in terms of mark-outs, but
13 M–ELO Timer Approval Order, supra, at 85 FR
24069.
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not in all circumstances. That is, where
prices of the underlying securities are
stable, and not subject to imminent
unfavorable changes, M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs face lower risks of confronting
spread-crossing orders, such that shorter
Holding Periods could suffice to protect
M–ELOs and M–ELO+CB from such
orders. In periods of heightened price
volatility, however, M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs also face heightened risks,
such that longer Holding Periods would
continue to be beneficial in protecting
M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs from such
risks. Thus, the Exchange determined
that another across-the-board reduction
of the static 10 millisecond Holding
Periods would be sub-optimal because it
could impact the performance of the M–
ELO and M–ELO+CB Order Types
during periods of heightened volatility.
In light of these observations, the
Exchange tasked its artificial
intelligence and machine learning
laboratory (the ‘‘AI Core Development
Group’’) to explore whether it could
employ these innovative technologies to
optimize the length of M–ELO and M–
ELO+CB Holding Periods during various
states of price volatility, and then to
vary the lengths of the Holding Periods
dynamically during the lifecycles of M–
ELOs and M–ELO+CBs, with the
objectives of improving the performance
of these Order Types while also further
reducing opportunity costs.
As the Exchange explains in greater
depth in the attached [sic] white
paper,14 the AI Core Development
Group proceeded to develop an artificial
intelligence-based timer control system
that will achieve these objectives.15 The
AI Core Development Group did so by
using reinforcement learning
techniques—machine learning
paradigms which develop optimal
solutions to problems over time by
taking actions to solve them, generating
feedback on the results of such actions,
applying that feedback to direct and
improve the next round of solutions,
and then repeating the feedback loop
until the paradigm achieves optimized
solutions.
In this instance, the AI Core
Development Group applied
reinforcement learning techniques to a
simulation of the M–ELO Book that it
constructed using a representative data
set from the first quarter of 2022 (the
‘‘Training Period’’). The Training Period
data consisted of 380 out of the 6,257
symbols on the M–ELO Book
(accounting for approximately 67
percent of M–ELO volume). The
symbols chosen reflect both activelytraded and thinly-traded securities, and
both low-priced and high-priced
securities.
The AI Core Development Group then
developed a machine learning model
and applied it to the Training Period
data. The Group programmed the model
to value the achievement of higher fill
rates or lower mark-outs than that
which occurred in a historical
simulation of M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
involving the Training Period data.16
The Group then programmed the model
to seek to achieve its goals by taking one
of five possible actions with respect to
the duration of the Holding Periods at
30 second intervals 17 for each symbol
during each trading day of the Training
Period. That is, at each 30 second
internal, the model evaluated market
conditions for each symbol over the
prior 30 second period and either kept
the Holding Periods the same,
increased/decreased them by 0.25
milliseconds, or increased/decreased
them by 0.50 milliseconds.18 After each
decision-making round, the model
utilized the results to inform its actions
at the next 30 second increment.
In making its decisions, the model
(again, drawing upon a combination of
historical SIP and M–ELO-specific data)
considered 142 categories of data
points.19 A confluence of data points
14 See Diana Kafkes et al., ‘‘Applying Artificial
Intelligence & Reinforcement Learning Methods
Towards Improving Execution Outcomes,’’ SSRN,
October 19, 2022, available at https://
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_
id=4243985 (attached hereto [sic] as Exhibit 3(a))
(the ‘‘White Paper’’).
15 Although the AI Core Development Group
acknowledges that an optimal Holding Period
would update with every incoming order, it
determined that training a reinforcement learning
model on every order would be too difficult to
program and too difficult to implement given the
nanosecond latency requirements of the Exchange.
The Group then investigated more feasible update
cadences and determined the point at which
optimal outcomes were best balanced with the level
of programming and implementation difficulty to be
between 15 and 30 second updates. Ultimately, the
Group chose a 30 second update cadence to give the
model the greatest opportunity to learn between
potential actions.
16 As the White Paper explains, the Group
developed a model to simulate activity on the
Exchange involving M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
during the Training Period. See White Paper, supra,
at 10.
17 See id.
18 The AI Core Development Group experimented
with a range of permissible Holding Period
durations. Ultimately, it concluded that it could
produce better outcomes for M–ELO and M–
ELO+CB participants than the existing approach
using Holding Periods as low as 0.25 milliseconds
and as high as 2.5 milliseconds, under normal
market conditions.
19 Nasdaq attaches [sic] a full list of these data
elements (attached hereto [sic] as ‘‘Exhibit 3(b)’’),
along with an observation of the strength of the
correlations that currently exist between changes to
those data values and decisions the system makes
to set the duration of Holding Periods at any given
time. See also White Paper, supra, at 31, for a
description of these features.
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that correlated with an increase in
volatility tended to cause the model to
increase the durations of Holding
Periods, including increases in the
standard deviation of NBBO prices, the
number of unique participants placing
sell orders on M–ELO and M–ELO+CB,
and the volume-weighted average of the
NBBO spread. Conversely, a confluence
of data points that correlated with
greater price stability tended to cause
the model to decrease the durations of
Holding periods, such as an increase in
the median and max number of shares
per trade and the number of resting bids
left in the M–ELO and M–ELO+CB
Book.
The AI Core Development Team
produced variations of its model that
prioritized achievement of the lowest
mark-outs, the highest fill rates, and a
blend of these two objectives.20 Through
a process of learning and
experimentation involving a
combination of historical and simulated
data, the AI Core Development Group
settled on a Dynamic M–ELO model that
achieved substantial simulated
performance improvements for users of
M–ELO and M–ELO+CB—both in terms
of mark-outs and fill rates—as compared
to the static 10 millisecond Holding
Periods. As the White Paper explains in
greater detail, Dynamic M–ELO yielded
an average combined volume-weighted
(simulated) improvement of 31.7
percent, including a 20.3 percent
increase in fill rates and a 11.4 percent
reduction in mark-outs.21 The White
Paper provides a more fulsome
explanation of these improvements.22
Based upon these exciting results, the
Exchange now proposes to amend Rule
4702(b)(14) and (15) to replace the static
10 millisecond timers applicable to M–
ELO and M–ELO+CB with Dynamic M–
ELO Holding Periods. Using the
Exchange’s proprietary and patent
pending technology, the Dynamic M–
ELO system will evaluate and, as it
deems necessary, adjust the length of
the Holding Periods for each symbol
comprising M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
(and Midpoint Orders on the
20 The AI Core Development Group also applied
to the model a paradigm called ‘‘retraining’’ to
combat the degradation of model performance that
can otherwise occur as the reference data it uses for
initial comparison becomes stale. Finally, the AI
Core Development group added a stability
protection mechanism to the model to provide
maximum production to participants in the event
that the model observes extraordinary levels of
instability in the National Best Bid and Offer during
the prior three seconds as compared to reference
data. When the model detects such instability, it is
programmed to increase the length of the Holding
Period to 12 milliseconds for a period of 750
milliseconds.
21 See White Paper, supra, at 22.
22 See id.
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Continuous Book that opt to interact
with M–ELO+CBs after resting on the
Book) every 30 seconds throughout the
Market Hours (each such 30 second
interval, a ‘‘Change Event’’). In so doing,
Dynamic M–ELO will help participants
to achieve a more optimized blend of
the underlying purposes of the M–ELO
and M–ELO+CB Order Types:
protection against adverse selection
(low mark-outs) without sacrificing
opportunities to achieve high-quality
executions (high fill rates).
A proposed M–ELO or M–ELO+CB
with a Dynamic Holding Period will
operate as follows. At the outset of
Market Hours (approximately 9:30:00
a.m.), the Exchange will impose initial
Holding Periods of 1.25 milliseconds for
M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs in all
symbols. Thereafter, Holding Periods for
a given symbol will become eligible to
change dynamically from the initial
duration beginning at 9:30:30 a.m. and
then at 30 second intervals thereafter
during Market Hours. The Exchange
will then apply to the M–ELO or M–
ELO+CB Order a Holding Period that is
of the duration that prevailed at the time
of entry. For example, if participant A
enters a M–ELO for symbol XYZ at
9:30:25 a.m., then Holding Period for
that M–ELO will be 1.25 milliseconds.
If at 9:30:30:00 a.m., the System decides
to lower the duration of the Holding
Period by 0.50 milliseconds, and then
participant B enters a M–ELO for
symbol XYZ at 9:30:45 a.m., then the
System will assign a 0.75 millisecond
Holding Period to participant B’s M–
ELO. To be clear, the System will
determine Dynamic M–ELO Holding
Periods independently for M–ELOs and
M–ELO+CBs in each symbol.
During normal market conditions, the
range of potential Holding Period
durations for M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
will be between 0.25–2.50 milliseconds,
with the Holding Period duration being
eligible to change by increments of
either 0.25 or 0.50 milliseconds at each
Change Event. Thus, if the Holding
Period for a M–ELO in symbol XYZ is
set at 0.75 milliseconds at 2:22:11 p.m.,
and at 2:22:41 p.m., the System
determines to increase the duration of
the Holding Period, it may do so only
by 0.25 or 0.50 milliseconds during that
event.
When a Change Event occurs, and the
System determines to adjust the
duration of a Holding Period for a
symbol, that adjustment will apply, not
only to all M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs for
that symbol entered within the 30
second period after the Change Event
occurs, but also to M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs entered prior to the Change
Event with unexpired Holding Periods
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(with applicability retroactive to the
time of Order acceptance). Thus, if a
participant enters a M–ELO in symbol
XYZ at 1:14:299 p.m., and the prevailing
Holding Period applicable to that M–
ELO is 2 milliseconds, and at 1:14:30
p.m., the System modifies the Holding
Period to be 1.5 milliseconds, then the
M–ELO will become eligible to execute
at 1:14:3005 p.m. This is the case
because the M–ELO will have already
expended 1 millisecond of its Holding
Period as of the time of the Change
Event; thereafter, the M–ELO will need
to rest only another 0.5 milliseconds to
become eligible to execute under the
new 1.5 millisecond Holding Period (as
measured from 1:14:299 p.m.). This last
feature ensures that the M–ELO Book
maintains time priority among M–ELOs
and M–ELO+CBs in a dynamic
environment. That is, it ensures that no
M–ELO or M–ELO+CB with an
unexpired Holding Period at the time of
a Change Event will end up becoming
eligible to execute later than a M–ELO
entered after the Change Event which
has a shorter Holding Period applicable
to it.
If at any time, the System detects
extraordinary instability in a symbol,
then the System will activate a ‘‘stability
protection mechanism’’ to provide an
extra layer of protection to M–ELO and
M–ELO users from the heightened risks
of adverse selection that exists during
such periods of instability.23 The
stability protection mechanism will
override the prevailing Holding Periods
for M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs in a
symbol experiencing extraordinary
instability and immediately increase the
duration of those Holding Periods to 12
milliseconds for a period of 750
milliseconds. The System may activate
the stability protection mechanism even
between Change Events. The System
will evaluate, at each NBBO update,
whether market conditions remain
extraordinarily unstable and, if so, it
will restart the 750 millisecond Stability
Protected Period and maintain the 12
23 For purposes of this Rule, the System
determines that ‘‘extraordinary instability’’ for a
symbol exists through observations it makes
following every change in the NBBO for that symbol
that occurs during the trading day. When the NBBO
changes, the System looks back at the prior three
seconds of trading and measures the difference
between the highest and the lowest NBBO midpoint
values that occurred during that period, and then
it compares that measurement to a threshold value
for the symbol. The System concludes that
extraordinary instability exists for a symbol if the
measurement exceeds the threshold value. The
threshold value for a symbol, in turn, is the
difference between the highest and the lowest
NBBO midpoint values for the symbol that, if
applied to its trading activity during the prior
trading day, would have caused the System to deem
trading in the symbol to be extraordinarily unstable
for as close to one percent of that day as possible.
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millisecond Holding Period until
conditions stabilize. Once the System
determines that market conditions have
stabilized (i.e., all measurements for the
symbol are at or below the threshold
value throughout the duration of the
prevailing Stability Protected Period),
the System will revert the duration of
the Holding Periods to that which
prevailed as of the Change Event that
occurred immediately prior to the
activation of the stability protection
mechanism or, if the stability protection
mechanism was active when a Change
Event occurred, to the duration selected
at the immediately preceding Change
Event. The System will then proceed to
reevaluate the duration of the Holding
Periods as per the regular schedule of
Change Events.
The following is an illustration of the
operation of the stability protection
mechanism. At 11:10:04 a.m., the
prevailing Holding Period for M–ELOs
in symbol XYZ is 1.5 milliseconds. At
the same time, the NBBO for symbol
XYZ updates. The System looks back at
the prior three seconds of trading in
symbol XYZ and finds that during that
period, the highest observed NBBO
midpoint was $10.05, and the lowest
was $10.00, such that the difference
between these two values is a range of
$0.05. The System then looks back at
trading behavior for symbol XYZ during
the immediately preceding trading day.
In doing so, the System calculates the
value of the threshold that would have
caused the symbol to be deemed
extraordinarily unstable for one percent
of the trading day; the System
determines that this threshold value is
a range of $0.03. The System then
compares the $0.03 threshold to its
measurement of the prior three seconds
of NBBO changes ($0.05), and concludes
that over these past three seconds, the
symbol is extraordinarily unstable.
Accordingly, the System activates the
stability protection mechanism and the
Holding Period for M–ELOs in symbol
XYZ immediately increases to 12
milliseconds for a period of 750
milliseconds. However, 5 milliseconds
after the Stability Protection Period
commences, the NBBO updates again,
thus prompting the System to repeat its
assessment of the stability of the symbol
in light of the update. This reassessment
reveals that the symbol remains
unstable, such that a new Stability
Protection Period of 750 milliseconds
begins at that time (overriding the preexisting Period). Over the course of this
new Stability Protection Period, the
NBBO shifts two more times, but each
of the ensuing reassessments indicate
that the NBBO ranges for the symbol
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have fallen below the $0.03 threshold.
The Stability Protection Period elapses
750 milliseconds after it began with the
symbol remaining stable. Thus, the
Holding Period reverts to 1.5
milliseconds.
If the Exchange halts trading in a
symbol, then upon resumption of
trading, any new M–ELO or M–ELO+CB
in that symbol and any pending M–ELO
or M–ELO+CB in that symbol with an
unexpired Holding Period will be
subject to a new 12 milliseconds
Holding Period (running from the time
when trading resumes) until the next
scheduled Change Event, at which point
the System may determine to adjust that
Holding Period to a duration within the
range applicable under normal market
conditions.24 If, however, the System
determines that extraordinary instability
in the symbol exists, it will instead
determine to activate the stability
protection mechanism and maintain the
duration of the Holding Period at 12
milliseconds for another 750
milliseconds. This design will help to
ensure that M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
receive added protection coming out of
halt conditions.25
The Exchange notes that same
dynamic process described above will
also apply to and govern the time
periods during which Midpoint Orders
on the Continuous Book must rest
before they will become eligible to
interact with M–ELO+CBs (provided
that participants have opted for their
Midpoint Orders to interact with M–
ELO+CBs). Thus, the same Holding
Period duration that the System sets for
a M–ELO+CB in a symbol during
Regular Market Hours will also be the
length of time that a Midpoint Order
must rest on the Continuous Book must
rest before it may interact with a M–
ELO+CB.
Apart from these impacts of Dynamic
Holding Periods, M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs will continue to behave as
24 Prior to commencement of a new 12
millisecond Holding Period for a new or pending
M–ELO or M–ELO+CB following a Halt, the System
will first determine whether the M–ELO or M–
ELO+CB is or remains eligible for execution. That
is, the Holding Period will commence only if, upon
commencement of trading following the Halt, the
midpoint price for the Order is within the limit set
by the participant. If not, the System will hold the
Order until the midpoint falls within the limit set
by the participant, at which time the 12 millisecond
Holding Period will commence.
25 Also as a safeguard, the System will apply a
default Holding Period of 12 milliseconds to a M–
ELO or M–ELO+CB if ever it fails to receive a signal
during a Change Event as to whether the System
should adjust or maintain the duration of the
prevailing Holding Period. The System will
continue to apply the default 12 millisecond
Holding Period until the next Change Event where
the signal is restored and the System is able to act
dynamically again.
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they do now in all respects, and as set
forth in Rules 4702(b)(14) and (15).
It is important to note that within the
parameters discussed herein and in the
White Paper, the Exchange will
continue to re-train Dynamic M–ELO
and M–ELO+CB on a weekly basis
(outside of market hours) so that the
model will continue to learn from and
act upon the basis of more recent SIP
and M–ELO book data sets, and further
improve its performance over time. The
retraining process should not result in
dramatic or unpredictable changes to
the behavior of Dynamic M–ELO. The
retraining process will not retrain the
model from scratch each week; rather, it
will retain the model’s existing data
inputs, knowledge base, and
objectives—all without alteration.
Retraining will result in new behaviors
only as needed to address new scenarios
that the model did not confront
previously, and even then, only in a
manner designed to further optimize
outcomes, i.e., reduce mark-outs or
increase fill rates. If the System assesses
that a retrained model would be worse
than the existing model in achieving its
objectives, then the System will
continue to use the existing model and
discard the retrained model. This
retraining process is a standard and
accepted practice for use of deep
learning models; it helps to ensure that
deep learning models not only work
well, but that they continue to work
well in dynamic circumstances.26
The Exchange will not modify the
underlying structure of Dynamic M–
ELO and M–ELO+CB without first
obtaining the Commission’s approval to
do so, including modifications to the
data elements the model considers in
making decisions about Holding Period
durations, the conditions under which
the model may adjust the duration of
Holding Periods, the frequency with
which the model my adjust the Holding
Periods, the range of Holding Period
durations available to M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs, the increments by which
Holding Periods may change at any
given Change Event, and the procedures
for triggering, maintaining, and ending
12 millisecond Holding Periods during
times of extraordinary instability.27
26 During periods where the model is not
undergoing retraining, the System will behave
predictably from day to day, such that its decisions
when presented with given set of facts and
circumstances in a given security on day 1 should
be the same as they would be on day 2.
27 In addition to the proposed changes described
above, the Exchange proposes to delete an
extraneous reference in Rule 4702(b)(15) to M–
ELO+CB being eligible to execute against a
Midpoint Order on the Continuous Book if the
Continuous Book order has the ‘‘Midpoint’’ Trade
Now Attribute enabled. In a prior filing, the
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Although the Exchange will seek
Commission approval prior to changing
any of the data elements that the model
considers, the Exchange will not seek
Commission approval prior to retraining
the model to adjust the weighting it
applies to those data elements.
To aid investors in understanding and
evaluating Dynamic M–ELO, Nasdaq
will continue to publish weekly and
monthly transparency statistics on
Nasdaqtrader.com, as it does now, about
the performance of its M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs, including statistics listing the
weekly numbers of shares and trades in
M–ELOs by symbol, weekly aggregated
M–ELO share and trade data, and
monthly aggregated block data.28
Nasdaq also will continue to disclose
monthly data on Nasdaq.com, as it does
now (the M–ELO Monthly Report),
about M–ELO and M–ELO+CB markouts (quote stability by time horizon)
and fill rates.29 Moreover, Nasdaq will
add statistics to the M–ELO Monthly
Report about how frequently, on
average, the System changes Holding
Period durations for the top decile,
median, and bottom decile of symbols,
as measured by monthly M–ELO and
M–ELO+CB trading volumes. Nasdaq
will retain copies of each historical
iteration of its models as part of its
books and records, and make them
available to the Commission upon
request, should it wish to examine them
to understand how the model changes
over time. Furthermore, Nasdaq will
publish an equity trader alert in advance
of deploying a retrained version of
Dynamic M–ELO whenever Nasdaq has
reason to anticipate that the retrained
version will produce results that differ
materially from the prior version, i.e., a
projected change in mark-outs or fillrates of 10% or more in either direction.
Implementation
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
The Exchange intends to make the
proposed change effective for M–ELOs
and M–ELO+CBs in the Second or Third
Quarter of 2023, but that time frame is
subject to change. The Exchange will
Exchange folded the concept of ‘‘Midpoint Trade
Now’’ into the general ‘‘Trade Now’’ Attribute. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34–92180
(June 15, 2021), 86 FR 33420 (June 24, 2021)(SR–
NASDAQ–2021–044).
28 See https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/Trader.
aspx?id=MELOSymbolData.
29 See, e.g., https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/MELO-Monthly-Report. Nasdaq understands that
current users of M–ELO and M–ELO independently
monitor the performance of these Order Types.
Nasdaq often receives feedback from such users
about M–ELO and M–ELO+CB performance, which
Nasdaq then factors into decisions about
improvements and enhancements. Nasdaq expects
that this feedback loop will continue after
implementation of Dynamic M–ELO.
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publish a Trader Alert in advance of
making the proposed change effective.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)
of the Act,30 in general, and furthers the
objectives of Section 6(b)(5) of the Act,31
in particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general to protect
investors and the public interest, by
allowing for more widespread use of M–
ELOs and M–ELO+CBs.
When the Commission approved the
M–ELO and the M–ELO+CB, it
determined that these Order Types are
consistent with the Act because they
‘‘could create additional and more
efficient trading opportunities on the
Exchange for investors with longer
investment time horizons, including
institutional investors, and could
provide these investors with an ability
to limit the information leakage and the
market impact that could result from
their orders.’’ 32 Nothing about the
Exchange’s proposal should cause the
Commission to revisit or rethink this
determination. Indeed, the proposal will
not alter the fundamental design of
these Order Types, the manner in which
they operate, or their effects.
Even with Dynamic M–ELO Holding
Periods, M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs will
continue to provide their users with
protection against information leakage
and adverse selection—and they will do
so at levels which are substantially
undiminished from that which they
provide now.33
At the same time, however, the
proposal will benefit market
participants and investors by reducing
the opportunity costs of utilizing M–
ELOs and M–ELO+CBs. The proposal,
in other words, will re-calibrate the
lengths of the Holding Periods so that
M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs will operate
in the ‘‘Goldilocks’’ zone—their Holding
Periods will not be so short as to render
them unable to provide meaningful
protections against information leakage
and adverse selection, but the Holding
Periods also will not be too long so as
to cause participants and investors to
miss out on favorable execution
opportunities. Nasdaq believes the
proposal will render M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs more useful and attractive to
30 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
32 M–ELO Approval Order, supra 83 FR at 10938–
39; M–ELO+CB Approval Order, supra, 84 FR at
48980.
33 See note 12, supra.
31 15
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market participants and investors, and
this increased utility and attractiveness,
in turn, will spur an increase in M–ELO
and M–ELO+CB use cases on the
Exchange, both from new and existing
users of M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs.
Ultimately, the proposal should
enhance market quality by increasing
opportunities for midpoint executions
on the Exchange.
As Nasdaq explained above, the
proposal will operate within strict, welldefined, and transparent parameters.
Although it will undergo weekly
retraining (outside of market hours),
such retraining will aim to improve the
performance of the model in achieving
its twin objectives; retraining will not
alter the inputs, objectives, or basic
design parameters of Dynamic M–ELO
without prior Commission approval.34
Moreover, the Exchange will not deploy
a retrained model if it fails to achieve
performance improvements. To aid
investors in evaluating Dynamic M–
ELO, the Exchange will publish
statistics about its performance,
including as to mark-outs and fill rates,
as well as statistics about how
frequently the System changes Holding
Period durations. To further facilitate
accountability, the Exchange will retain
each historical iteration of its model as
part of its books and records, and make
such information available to the
Commission, upon request. The
Exchange will also publish equity trader
alerts whenever retraining will result in
a performance change of 10% or more.
Nasdaq notes that the twin objectives
it prescribes for the model involve the
absolute values of mark-outs and fill
rates; they are not designed to further
the performance of any participant or
any category of participant. Thus,
Nasdaq believes the model is objective
and designed to avoid bias and
discrimination.
The Exchange notes that use of
Dynamic M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
remains voluntary for all market
participants. Accordingly, if any market
participant feels that the dynamic
Holding Periods are still too long or too
short or because competing venues offer
more attractive delay mechanisms, then
34 As discussed above, Nasdaq will not seek
Commission approval prior to allowing the model,
as part of its re-training process, to vary the
weighting of the data elements it ingests. Nasdaq
believes this is appropriate because such variance
will only occur to the extent that it will improve
the model’s performance with respect to predefined objectives. Nasdaq will alert traders if the
retraining process would result in substantial
performance changes, and it will also publish
statistics to help participants to assess performance
themselves. Moreover, Nasdaq will retain historical
iterations of its models for the Commission’s
review, should it wish to examine how these
models have changed over time.
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the participants are free to pursue other
trading strategies or utilize other trading
venues. They need not utilize Dynamic
M–ELOs or M–ELO+CBs.
Furthermore, the design of DynamicMELO would constitute an ‘‘established,
non-discretionary’’ method that is
consistent with the definition of an
exchange, as set forth in SEC Rule 3b–
16.35 The Commission stated as follows
when it adopted Rule 3b–16:
A system uses established nondiscretionary methods either by providing a
trading facility or by setting rules governing
trading among subscribers. The Commission
intends for ‘‘established, non-discretionary
methods’’ to include any methods that
dictate the terms of trading among the
multiple buyers and sellers entering orders
into the system. Such methods include those
that set procedures or priorities under which
open terms of a trade may be determined. For
example, traditional exchanges’ rules of
priority, parity, and precedence are
‘‘established non-discretionary methods,’’ as
are the trading algorithms of electronic
systems. Similarly, systems that determine
the trading price at some designated future
date on the basis of pre-established criteria
(such as the weighted average trading price
for the security on the specified date in a
specified market or markets) are using
established, non-discretionary methods.36
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Nothing in the Reg. ATS Adopting
Release or in any of its illustrative
examples suggests that Dynamic M–ELO
would constitute an exercise of
discretionary behavior. Dynamic M–
ELO will handle and execute Orders
according to published, pre-determined
rules that are disclosed to the public
and which provide reasonable notice of
how the Order Type will behave.37 To
the extent that the design of the System
permits variation in the Holding Periods
for such Orders, it does so by design.
The range of potential variations, the
35 See 17 CFR 240.3b–16(a)(2) (‘‘(a) An
organization, association, or group of persons shall
be considered to constitute, maintain, or provide ‘a
market place or facilities for bringing together
purchasers and sellers of securities or for otherwise
performing with respect to securities the functions
commonly performed by a stock exchange,’ as those
terms are used in section 3(a)(1) of the Act, (15
U.S.C. 78c(a)(1)), if such organization, association,
or group of persons: (1) Brings together the orders
for securities of multiple buyers and sellers; and (2)
Uses established, non-discretionary methods
(whether by providing a trading facility or by
setting rules) under which such orders interact with
each other, and the buyers and sellers entering such
orders agree to the terms of a trade.’’).
36 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 40760
(December 8, 1998), 63 FR 70844, 70850 (December
22, 1998).
37 See id. at 70900 (‘‘an essential indication of the
non-discretionary status of rules and procedures is
that those rules and procedures are communicated
to the systems users’’ and ‘‘[t]hus, participants have
an expectation regarding the manner of execution—
that is, if an order is entered, it will be executed
in accordance with those procedures and not at the
discretion of a counterparty or intermediary.’’).
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objectives that such variations are
intended to achieve, and the factors that
determine when such variations may
occur are also predetermined and set
forth in the Exchange’s Rules or
otherwise disclosed to the public. The
mere fact that the System may apply
different weights over time to the factors
it uses to determine whether and by
how much to vary a Holding Period
does not mean that the System will act
with discretion in the same sense that
a human being could be said to be
exercise independent judgment when
deciding whether and how to handle an
order.38 Even when the System makes
decisions about changing the Holding
Periods, the System will operate
pursuant to a mathematical algorithm
from which it cannot deviate—an
algorithm that is programmed to achieve
pre-defined and pre-disclosed
objectives.39
38 Cf. id. at 70851 (explaining that a traditional
block trading desk is an example of a system that
does not use established, non-discretionary
methods because the operators of such desks do not
act according to fixed procedures known to their
customers, but instead shop orders around for
potential counterparties and make their own
determinations as to whether and how to execute
block orders, including by sometimes deciding to
take a proprietary position in part of the block
order).
39 See id. at 80755 (describing an example of a
system that would be non-discretionary in nature:
‘‘System I permits participants to enter a range of
ranked contingent buy and sell orders at which they
are willing to trade securities. These orders are
matched based on a mathematical algorithm whose
priorities are designed to achieve the participants’
objectives. System I does not display orders to any
participants. System I is included under Rule 3b–
16.’’); see also Securities Exchange Act Release No.
34–89686 (August 20, 2020), 85 FR 54438, at 54445,
n.92 (September 1, 2020) (Order approving SR–IEX–
2019–15) (rejecting argument that IEX’s D-Limit
order time is an exercise of discretion because ‘‘DLimit orders will not allow IEX to exercise any
discretion on any particular order by deviating from
the CQI and D-Limit functionality, which is
hardcoded in the IEX rulebook.’’; Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 34–78101 (June 17,
2016), 81 FR 41141, at 41153(June 17, 2016) (Order
approving IEX Form 1 and D-Peg Order Type) (‘‘the
Commission does not believe that the hardcoded
conditionality of the IEX proposed ‘‘discretionary’’
peg order type provides IEX with actual discretion
or the ability to exercise individualized judgment
when executing an order. Rather, if IEX’s fixed
formula determines the quote to be stable, the
discretionary peg order can execute up to the
midpoint; if it does not deem the quote to be stable,
then it will hold the order to its pegged price. As
such, IEX would not exercise discretion over the
routing and execution of a resting order’’). Nasdaq
does not believe that it is necessary to codify its
mathematical formula for Dynamic M–ELO in its
Rules because Nasdaq has disclosed sufficient
information in its Rules and in its filing to inform
the public as to the possible and expected behaviors
associated with Dynamic M–ELO, as well as a
means for the Commission and/or investors to
verify whether Dynamic M–ELO is performing
appropriately. Much as the Commission does not
require an exchange to codify the source code it
uses to effectuate other behaviors or actions that it
explains in its Rules, including the behaviors of
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Finally, the Exchange notes that it
will continue to conduct real-time
surveillance to monitor the use of M–
ELOs and M–ELO+CBs to ensure that
such usage remains appropriately tied to
the intent of the Order Types. If, as a
result of such surveillance, the
Exchange determines that the Dynamic
M–ELO Holding Periods do not serve
their intended purposes, or adversely
impact market quality, then the
Exchange will seek to make further recalibrations.
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. To the
contrary, the Exchange believes that this
proposal will promote the
competitiveness of the Exchange by
rendering its M–ELO and M–ELO+CB
Order Types more attractive to
participants.
The Exchange adopted the M–ELO
and M–ELO+CB as pro-competitive
measures intended to increase
participation on the Exchange by
allowing certain market participants
that may currently be underserved on
regulated exchanges to compete based
on elements other than speed. The
proposed change continues to achieve
this purpose. With Dynamic M–ELO
Holding Periods, both M–ELOs and M–
ELO+CBs will afford their users with a
level of protection from information
leakage and adverse selection that is
better from what is achievable at
present.40 At the same time, the
Dynamic Holding Periods will increase
opportunities to interact with other likeminded investors with longer time
horizons while also lowering the
opportunity costs for participants that
utilize M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs,
particularly for securities that trade
within the ‘‘Goldilocks’’ zone. In sum,
the proposed changes will not burden
competition, but instead may promote
competition for liquidity in M–ELOs
and M–ELO+CBs by broadening the
circumstances in which market
participants may find such Orders to be
useful. With the proposed changes,
market participants will be more likely
to determine that the benefits of
entering M–ELOs and M–ELO+CBs
outweigh the risks of doing so.
The proposed change will not place a
burden on competition among market
other complex Order Types, there is no basis to
require codification of the Dynamic M–ELO formula
in this instance.
40 See White Paper, supra.
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venues, as any market may adopt an
order type that operates similarly to a
M–ELO or a M–ELO+CB with Dynamic
M–ELO Holding Periods.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either
solicited or received.
III. Proceedings To Determine Whether
To Approve or Disapprove SR–
NASDAQ–2022–079, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1, and Grounds for
Disapproval Under Consideration
The Commission is instituting
proceedings pursuant to Section
19(b)(2)(B) of the Act 41 to determine
whether the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No.1, should
be approved or disapproved. Institution
of proceedings is appropriate at this
time in view of the legal and policy
issues raised by the proposed rule
change and the comments received
thereon. Institution of proceedings does
not indicate that the Commission has
reached any conclusions with respect to
any of the issues involved. Rather, the
Commission seeks and encourages
interested persons to provide additional
comment on the proposed rule change
to inform the Commission’s analysis of
whether to approve or disapprove the
proposed rule change.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the
Act,42 the Commission is providing
notice of the grounds for possible
disapproval under consideration. As
noted above, the Commission received
two comments on the proposal and the
Exchange simultaneously filed a
response to comments along with
Amendment No. 1.43 Of note, both
commenters assert that the Exchange
must provide additional information
about how it determines the Dynamic
Holding Periods proposed herein.44 One
of these commenters states that ‘‘as a
threshold question, how can the public
‘provide meaningful comment on the
proposal’ without knowing what all the
categories and parameters are.’’ 45 This
commenter also states that it is unclear
41 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
42 Id.
43 See
supra note 6.
Letters from Joseph Saluzzi, Partner,
Themis Trading LLC, to Vanessa Countryman,
Secretary, Commission, dated January 25, 2023, at
2 (‘‘Nasdaq should be required to reveal all of the
specifics behind their dynamic holding period
formula so others can evaluate how it works and
decide if they would like to have Nasdaq apply the
logic to their orders.’’); and R. T. Leuchtkafer to
Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission, dated
January 31, 2023, at 1–2 (‘‘Leuchtkafer Letter’’).
45 See Leuchtkafter Letter, at 1.
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under what circumstances the Exchange
believes it would need to file a proposed
rule change should the machine
learning model alter its methods or
functionalities, specifically citing the
proposed retraining of the artificial
intelligence based timer control
system.46 This commenter also
questions whether the proposed rule
change provides sufficient information
to determine whether (i) it is not
unfairly discriminatory and (ii) will not
place a burden on competition among
market venues.47
Nasdaq replied to these comments
with its own comment letter and by
filing Amendment No. 1. Nasdaq states,
among other things, that it is not
necessary to describe precisely how its
system will react in each and every
circumstance it will confront in the
market as long as the choices that the
system can make are bounded and its
range of behaviors are understood and
reasonably predictable, which it asserts
is ‘‘indeed the case for Dynamic M–
ELO.’’ 48 Nasdaq also submitted the full
list of these data elements as both an
Appendix A to its response to
comments and new Exhibit 3B to the
proposal in Amendment No. 1. Nasdaq
also states that:
Nasdaq is clear that it will seek approval
prior to altering the data inputs that the
system ingests for decision-making purposes,
but not for changes to the relative weighting
that the system applies to these data
elements. Nasdaq also will seek Commission
approval prior to altering the twin objectives
of Dynamic M–ELO or making changes to its
fundamental operating parameters, such as
changes to the permissible range of Holding
Periods, to the permissible change
increments for a Holding Period at any given
Change Event, to the frequency with which
Change Events may occur, to the procedures
for triggering, maintaining, and ending 12
millisecond Holding Periods during times of
extraordinary instability.49
The Commission is instituting
proceedings to allow for additional
analysis of, and input from commenters
with respect to, the consistency of the
proposal, as modified by Amendment
No. 1, with Sections 6(b)(5) 50 and
6(b)(8) of the Act.51 Section 6(b)(5) of
the Act requires that the rules of a
national securities exchange be
46 See id., at 2 (stating that ‘‘it’s not at all clear
under exactly what circumstances Nasdaq will seek
approval for a change.’’).
47 See id., at 2–3.
48 See Letter from Brett Kitt, Associate Vice
President and Principal Associate General Counsel,
Nasdaq, Inc., to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Commission, dated March 9, 2023, at 2 (‘‘Nasdaq
Letter’’).
49 See Nasdaq Letter at 3.
50 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
51 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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22505
designed, among other things, to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest, and
not be designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers. Section
6(b)(8) of the Act requires that the rules
of a national securities exchange not
impose any burden on competition that
is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
IV. Procedure: Request for Written
Comments
The Commission requests that
interested persons provide written
submissions of their views, data, and
arguments with respect to the issues
identified above, as well as any other
concerns they may have with the
proposal, as modified by Amendment
No. 1. In particular, the Commission
invites the written views of interested
persons concerning whether the
proposal, as modified by Amendment
No. 1, is consistent with Sections 6(b)(5)
and 6(b)(8), or any other provision of the
Act, or the rules and regulations
thereunder. Although there do not
appear to be any issues relevant to
approval or disapproval that would be
facilitated by an oral presentation of
views, data, and arguments, the
Commission will consider, pursuant to
Rule 19b–4, any request for an
opportunity to make an oral
presentation.52
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments regarding whether the
proposal, as modified by Amendment
No. 1, should be approved or
disapproved by May 4, 2023. Any
person who wishes to file a rebuttal to
any other person’s submission must file
that rebuttal by May 18, 2023.
Comments may be submitted by any
of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
52 Section 19(b)(2) of the Act, as amended by the
Securities Act Amendments of 1975, Public Law
94–29 (June 4, 1975), grants the Commission
flexibility to determine what type of proceeding—
either oral or notice and opportunity for written
comments—is appropriate for consideration of a
particular proposal by a self-regulatory
organization. See Securities Act Amendments of
1975, Senate Comm. on Banking, Housing & Urban
Affairs, S. Rep. No. 75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 30
(1975).
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 71 / Thursday, April 13, 2023 / Notices
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NASDAQ–2022–079 on the subject line.
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
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
Numbers SR–NASDAQ–2022–079. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of these
filings also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange.
All comments received will be posted
without change. Persons submitting
comments are cautioned that we do not
redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions.
You should submit only information
that you wish to make available
publicly. All submissions should refer
to File Number SR–NASDAQ–2022–079
and should be submitted on or before
May 4, 2023. Rebuttal comments should
be submitted by May 18, 2023.
[Release No. 34–97266; File No. SR–BOX–
2023–10]
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.53
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–07733 Filed 4–12–23; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
Self-Regulatory Organizations; BOX
Exchange LLC; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed
Rule Change To Amend the Fee
Schedule on the BOX Options Market
LLC Facility To Establish a New
Qualified Contingent Cross (‘‘QCC’’)
Growth Rebate
April 7, 2023.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on March 31,
2023, BOX Exchange LLC (‘‘Exchange’’)
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared by the Exchange.
The Exchange filed the proposed rule
change pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act,3 and Rule
19b–4(f)(2) thereunder,4 which renders
the proposal effective upon filing with
the Commission. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of the Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange is filing with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) a proposed rule change
to amend the Fee Schedule to establish
a new Qualified Contingent Cross
(‘‘QCC’’) Growth Rebate on the BOX
Options Market LLC (‘‘BOX’’) options
facility. While changes to the fee
schedule pursuant to this proposal will
be effective upon filing, the changes will
become operative on April 3, 2023. The
text of the proposed rule change is
available from the principal office of the
Exchange, at the Commission’s Public
Reference Room and also on the
Exchange’s internet website at https://
rules.boxexchange.com/rulefilings.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in Sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend the
Fee Schedule for trading on BOX to
establish a new Qualified Contingent
Cross (‘‘QCC’’) Growth Rebate.
Currently, BOX assesses $0.20 per
contract to Broker Dealers and Market
Makers for both the Agency Order and
contra order of a QCC transaction.
Public Customers and Professional
Customers are not assessed a QCC
Transaction Fee. Further, rebates are
paid on all qualifying orders pursuant to
Section IV.D.1 of the BOX Fee Schedule.
Specifically, a QCC Rebate is paid to the
Participant that entered the order into
the BOX system when at least one party
to the QCC transaction is a Broker
Dealer or Market Maker. The Participant
receives a per contract rebate on QCC
transactions according to the tier
achieved. Volume thresholds will be
calculated on a monthly basis by
totaling the Participant’s QCC Agency
Order volume on BOX. The Exchange
notes that the QCC Rebate is intended
to incentivize the sending of more QCC
Orders to BOX.
The QCC Rebate tier structure is as
follows:
Tier
QCC Agency order volume on BOX
(per month)
1 ..................................................
2 ..................................................
3 ..................................................
0 to 1,499,999 contracts .................................................................
1,500,000 to 2,499,999 contracts ...................................................
2,500,000 to 3,499,999 contracts ...................................................
53 17
2 17
1 15
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12), (57).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
3 15
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CFR 240.19b–4.
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
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Rebate 1
(per contract)
4 17
E:\FR\FM\13APN1.SGM
($0.14)
(0.16)
(0.16)
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(2).
13APN1
Rebate 2
(per contract)
($0.22)
(0.24)
(0.25)
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 71 (Thursday, April 13, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 22498-22506]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-07733]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-97263; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2022-079]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC;
Notice of Filing of Amendment No. 1 and Order Instituting Proceedings
To Determine Whether To Approve or Disapprove a Proposed Rule Change,
as Modified by Amendment No. 1, To Amend Rules 4702(b)(14) and (b)(15)
Concerning Dynamic M-ELO Holding Periods
April 7, 2023.
On December 21, 2022, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq'' or
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ a
proposed rule change to replace the static holding period requirements
for Midpoint Extended Life Orders and Midpoint Extended Life Orders
Plus Continuous Book with dynamic holding periods. The proposed rule
change was published for comment in the Federal Register on January 10,
2023.\3\ On February 22, 2023, pursuant 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 March 9, 2023, the Exchange filed Amendment
No.1 to the proposed rule change, which amended and superseded the
proposed rule change as originally filed.\6\ The
[[Page 22499]]
Commission received two comments on the proposal, and the Exchange
submitted a response to comments when it filed Amendment No. 1.\7\ The
Commission is publishing this notice and order to solicit comments on
the proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1, from
interested persons and to institute proceedings pursuant to Section
19(b)(2)(B) of the Act \8\ to determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 92844 (January 4,
2023), 88 FR 1438.
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 96963, 88 FR 12710
(February 28, 2023).
\6\ In Amendment No. 1, the Exchange (i) included additional
information regarding the data used by its model, including a list
of the 142 categories of data points; (ii) described its model
retraining process; (iii) added information regarding the types of
modifications for which it would request Commission approval; (iv)
indicated it would regularly publish data regarding M-ELO and M-
ELO+CB performance and holding period changes; and (v) stated its
model would constitute an established, non-discriminatory method and
would operate according to pre-disclosed rules and objectives
without the exercise of discretion. When it submitted Amendment No.
1, the Exchange also submitted it as a comment letter to the filing,
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2022-079/srnasdaq2022079-20159016-327215.pdf.
\7\ Comments and the Exchange's response to comments are
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2022-079/srnasdaq2022079.htm.
\8\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend Rules 4702(b)(14) and (b)(15) of the
Exchange's Rulebook to replace the static holding period requirements
for Midpoint Extended Life Orders and Midpoint Extended Life Orders
Plus Continuous Book with dynamic holding periods. Amendment No. 1
supersedes the original filing in its entirety.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public
Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend Rules 4702(b)(14) and (15) of the
Exchange's Rulebook to replace the static 10 millisecond holding period
requirements for its Midpoint Extended Life Order (``M-ELO'') and
Midpoint Extended Life Order Plus Continuous Book (``M-ELO+CB'') Order
Types with dynamic holding periods (``Dynamic M-ELO and M-ELO+CB'' or
collectively, ``Dynamic M-ELO'').
Background
In 2018, the Exchange introduced the M-ELO, which is a Non-
Displayed Order priced at the Midpoint between the National Best Bid
and Offer (``NBBO'') and which is eligible for execution only against
other eligible M-ELOs and only after a minimum of one-half second
passes from the time that the System accepts the order (the ``Holding
Period'').\9\ In 2019, the Exchange introduced the M-ELO+CB, which
closely resembles the M-ELO, except that a M-ELO+CB may execute at the
midpoint of the NBBO, not only against other eligible M-ELOs (and M-
ELO+CBs), but also against Non-Displayed Orders with Midpoint Pegging
and Midpoint Peg Post-Only Orders (``Midpoint Orders'') that rest on
the Continuous Book for at least one-half second and have Trade Now
enabled.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34-82825 (March 7,
2018), 83 FR 10937 (March 13, 2018) (SR-NASDAQ-2017-074) (``M-ELO
Approval Order'').
\10\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34-86938 (September
11, 2019), 84 FR 48978 (September 17, 2019) (SR-NASDAQ-2019-048)
(``M-ELO+CB Approval Order'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the Exchange designed M-ELO, it originally set the length of
the Holding Period at one-half second because it determined that this
time period would be sufficient to ensure that likeminded investors
would interact only with each other, and with minimal market impacts.
The Exchange believed that the longer length of the M-ELO Holding
Period and its simplicity in design would provide greater protection
for participants than they could achieve through competing delay
mechanisms.
In 2020, however, the Exchange shortened the length of the Holding
Period to 10 milliseconds.\11\ The Exchange did so after studying two
years of actual use and performance of M-ELOs, as well as customer
feedback. That is, the Exchange came to understand that, while users of
M-ELO and M-ELO+CB are less concerned with achieving rapid executions
of their Orders than are other participants, they are not indifferent
about the length of time in which their M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs must wait
before they are eligible for execution. Indeed, participants informed
the Exchange that in certain circumstances, such as when they sought to
trade symbols that on average had a lower time-to-execution than a
half-second, they were reticent to enter M-ELOs or M-ELO+CBs. They
indicated that the associated Holding Periods for these Order Types
were longer than necessary to achieve the desired protections and that,
during the residual portion of the Holding Periods, they risked losing
out on favorable execution opportunities that would otherwise be
available to them had they placed a non-MELO order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34-88743 (April 24,
2020), 85 FR 24068 (April 30, 2020) (SR-NASDAQ-2020-011) (``M-ELO
Timer Approval Order'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based upon this feedback, the Exchange studied the potential
effects of reducing the length of the Holding Periods for both M-ELOs
and M-ELO+CBs (as well as for Midpoint Orders that would execute
against M-ELO+CBs). Ultimately, the Exchange determined that it could
reduce the Holding Periods to 10 milliseconds without compromising the
protective power that M-ELO and M-ELO+CB are intended to provide to
participants and investors.\12\ Thus, the Exchange determined that
shortening the Holding Periods to 10 milliseconds for M-ELOs and M-
ELO+CBs would increase the efficacy of the mechanism while not
undermining the power of those Order Types to fulfill their underlying
purpose of minimizing market impacts. At the same time, the Exchange
determined
[[Page 22500]]
that a reduction in the Holding Periods to 10 milliseconds would
dramatically add to the circumstances in which M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs
would be useful to participants. In its M-ELO Timer Approval Order, the
Commission agreed with the Exchange:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ The Exchange examined each of its historical M-ELO
executions to determine at what Midpoints of the NBBO the M-ELOs
would have executed if their Holding Periods had been shorter than
one-half second (500 milliseconds). After examining the historical
effects of shorter Holding Periods of between 10 milliseconds and
400 milliseconds, the Exchange determined that a reduction of the M-
ELO Holding Period to as short as 10 milliseconds would have caused
an average impact on mark-outs of only 0.10 basis points (across all
symbols). In other words, compared to the execution price of an
average M-ELO with a one-half second Holding Period, the Exchange
found that a M-ELO with a 10 millisecond Holding Period would have
had an average post-execution impact that was only a tenth of a
basis point per share--a difference in protective effect that is
immaterial. See Nasdaq, ``The Midpoint Extended Life Order (M-ELO);
M-ELO Holding Period,'' available at https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/the-midpoint-extended-life-order-m-elo%3A-m-elo-holding-period-2020-02-13 (analyzing effects of shortened Holding Periods on
M-ELO performance).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission notes that, with the proposed ten-millisecond
Holding Period and Resting Period, M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs would continue
to be optional order types that are available to investors with longer
investment time horizons, including institutional investors. The
Commission also believes that the proposal could make M-ELOs and M-
ELO+CBs more attractive for securities that on average have a time-to-
execution of less than one-half second and, for investors who currently
do not use M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs for these securities, provide optional
order types that could enhance their ability to participate effectively
on the Exchange. The Commission notes that, if market participants
determine that the proposal would make M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs less
attractive for their particular investment objectives, such market
participants may elect to reduce or eliminate their use of these
optional order types. Moreover, as noted above, the Exchange will
continue to conduct real-time surveillance to monitor the use of M-ELOs
and M-ELO+CBs to ensure that such usage remains appropriately tied to
the intent of the order types. If, as a result of such surveillance,
the Exchange determines that the shortened Holding Period does not
serve its intended purpose or adversely impacts market quality, the
Exchange would seek to make further recalibrations.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ M-ELO Timer Approval Order, supra, at 85 FR 24069.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For similar reasons and with even better potential results for
participants, the Exchange now proposes to further refine the length of
the Holding Periods for M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs, this time through the
application of innovative and patent pending machine learning
technology.
Dynamic M-ELO
After receiving feedback from participants that even 10 millisecond
Holding Periods for M-ELO and M-ELO+CB may, at times, exceed what is
necessary to accomplish the underlying intent of these Order Types, the
Exchange began to experiment with making further refinements to the
duration of the Holding Periods. Ultimately, the Exchange concluded
that shorter Holding Periods could achieve the same, if not better
results for participants in terms of mark-outs, but not in all
circumstances. That is, where prices of the underlying securities are
stable, and not subject to imminent unfavorable changes, M-ELOs and M-
ELO+CBs face lower risks of confronting spread-crossing orders, such
that shorter Holding Periods could suffice to protect M-ELOs and M-
ELO+CB from such orders. In periods of heightened price volatility,
however, M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs also face heightened risks, such that
longer Holding Periods would continue to be beneficial in protecting M-
ELOs and M-ELO+CBs from such risks. Thus, the Exchange determined that
another across-the-board reduction of the static 10 millisecond Holding
Periods would be sub-optimal because it could impact the performance of
the M-ELO and M-ELO+CB Order Types during periods of heightened
volatility.
In light of these observations, the Exchange tasked its artificial
intelligence and machine learning laboratory (the ``AI Core Development
Group'') to explore whether it could employ these innovative
technologies to optimize the length of M-ELO and M-ELO+CB Holding
Periods during various states of price volatility, and then to vary the
lengths of the Holding Periods dynamically during the lifecycles of M-
ELOs and M-ELO+CBs, with the objectives of improving the performance of
these Order Types while also further reducing opportunity costs.
As the Exchange explains in greater depth in the attached [sic]
white paper,\14\ the AI Core Development Group proceeded to develop an
artificial intelligence-based timer control system that will achieve
these objectives.\15\ The AI Core Development Group did so by using
reinforcement learning techniques--machine learning paradigms which
develop optimal solutions to problems over time by taking actions to
solve them, generating feedback on the results of such actions,
applying that feedback to direct and improve the next round of
solutions, and then repeating the feedback loop until the paradigm
achieves optimized solutions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See Diana Kafkes et al., ``Applying Artificial Intelligence
& Reinforcement Learning Methods Towards Improving Execution
Outcomes,'' SSRN, October 19, 2022, available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4243985 (attached hereto
[sic] as Exhibit 3(a)) (the ``White Paper'').
\15\ Although the AI Core Development Group acknowledges that an
optimal Holding Period would update with every incoming order, it
determined that training a reinforcement learning model on every
order would be too difficult to program and too difficult to
implement given the nanosecond latency requirements of the Exchange.
The Group then investigated more feasible update cadences and
determined the point at which optimal outcomes were best balanced
with the level of programming and implementation difficulty to be
between 15 and 30 second updates. Ultimately, the Group chose a 30
second update cadence to give the model the greatest opportunity to
learn between potential actions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this instance, the AI Core Development Group applied
reinforcement learning techniques to a simulation of the M-ELO Book
that it constructed using a representative data set from the first
quarter of 2022 (the ``Training Period''). The Training Period data
consisted of 380 out of the 6,257 symbols on the M-ELO Book (accounting
for approximately 67 percent of M-ELO volume). The symbols chosen
reflect both actively-traded and thinly-traded securities, and both
low-priced and high-priced securities.
The AI Core Development Group then developed a machine learning
model and applied it to the Training Period data. The Group programmed
the model to value the achievement of higher fill rates or lower mark-
outs than that which occurred in a historical simulation of M-ELOs and
M-ELO+CBs involving the Training Period data.\16\ The Group then
programmed the model to seek to achieve its goals by taking one of five
possible actions with respect to the duration of the Holding Periods at
30 second intervals \17\ for each symbol during each trading day of the
Training Period. That is, at each 30 second internal, the model
evaluated market conditions for each symbol over the prior 30 second
period and either kept the Holding Periods the same, increased/
decreased them by 0.25 milliseconds, or increased/decreased them by
0.50 milliseconds.\18\ After each decision-making round, the model
utilized the results to inform its actions at the next 30 second
increment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ As the White Paper explains, the Group developed a model to
simulate activity on the Exchange involving M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs
during the Training Period. See White Paper, supra, at 10.
\17\ See id.
\18\ The AI Core Development Group experimented with a range of
permissible Holding Period durations. Ultimately, it concluded that
it could produce better outcomes for M-ELO and M-ELO+CB participants
than the existing approach using Holding Periods as low as 0.25
milliseconds and as high as 2.5 milliseconds, under normal market
conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In making its decisions, the model (again, drawing upon a
combination of historical SIP and M-ELO-specific data) considered 142
categories of data points.\19\ A confluence of data points
[[Page 22501]]
that correlated with an increase in volatility tended to cause the
model to increase the durations of Holding Periods, including increases
in the standard deviation of NBBO prices, the number of unique
participants placing sell orders on M-ELO and M-ELO+CB, and the volume-
weighted average of the NBBO spread. Conversely, a confluence of data
points that correlated with greater price stability tended to cause the
model to decrease the durations of Holding periods, such as an increase
in the median and max number of shares per trade and the number of
resting bids left in the M-ELO and M-ELO+CB Book.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Nasdaq attaches [sic] a full list of these data elements
(attached hereto [sic] as ``Exhibit 3(b)''), along with an
observation of the strength of the correlations that currently exist
between changes to those data values and decisions the system makes
to set the duration of Holding Periods at any given time. See also
White Paper, supra, at 31, for a description of these features.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The AI Core Development Team produced variations of its model that
prioritized achievement of the lowest mark-outs, the highest fill
rates, and a blend of these two objectives.\20\ Through a process of
learning and experimentation involving a combination of historical and
simulated data, the AI Core Development Group settled on a Dynamic M-
ELO model that achieved substantial simulated performance improvements
for users of M-ELO and M-ELO+CB--both in terms of mark-outs and fill
rates--as compared to the static 10 millisecond Holding Periods. As the
White Paper explains in greater detail, Dynamic M-ELO yielded an
average combined volume-weighted (simulated) improvement of 31.7
percent, including a 20.3 percent increase in fill rates and a 11.4
percent reduction in mark-outs.\21\ The White Paper provides a more
fulsome explanation of these improvements.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ The AI Core Development Group also applied to the model a
paradigm called ``retraining'' to combat the degradation of model
performance that can otherwise occur as the reference data it uses
for initial comparison becomes stale. Finally, the AI Core
Development group added a stability protection mechanism to the
model to provide maximum production to participants in the event
that the model observes extraordinary levels of instability in the
National Best Bid and Offer during the prior three seconds as
compared to reference data. When the model detects such instability,
it is programmed to increase the length of the Holding Period to 12
milliseconds for a period of 750 milliseconds.
\21\ See White Paper, supra, at 22.
\22\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based upon these exciting results, the Exchange now proposes to
amend Rule 4702(b)(14) and (15) to replace the static 10 millisecond
timers applicable to M-ELO and M-ELO+CB with Dynamic M-ELO Holding
Periods. Using the Exchange's proprietary and patent pending
technology, the Dynamic M-ELO system will evaluate and, as it deems
necessary, adjust the length of the Holding Periods for each symbol
comprising M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs (and Midpoint Orders on the Continuous
Book that opt to interact with M-ELO+CBs after resting on the Book)
every 30 seconds throughout the Market Hours (each such 30 second
interval, a ``Change Event''). In so doing, Dynamic M-ELO will help
participants to achieve a more optimized blend of the underlying
purposes of the M-ELO and M-ELO+CB Order Types: protection against
adverse selection (low mark-outs) without sacrificing opportunities to
achieve high-quality executions (high fill rates).
A proposed M-ELO or M-ELO+CB with a Dynamic Holding Period will
operate as follows. At the outset of Market Hours (approximately
9:30:00 a.m.), the Exchange will impose initial Holding Periods of 1.25
milliseconds for M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs in all symbols. Thereafter,
Holding Periods for a given symbol will become eligible to change
dynamically from the initial duration beginning at 9:30:30 a.m. and
then at 30 second intervals thereafter during Market Hours. The
Exchange will then apply to the M-ELO or M-ELO+CB Order a Holding
Period that is of the duration that prevailed at the time of entry. For
example, if participant A enters a M-ELO for symbol XYZ at 9:30:25
a.m., then Holding Period for that M-ELO will be 1.25 milliseconds. If
at 9:30:30:00 a.m., the System decides to lower the duration of the
Holding Period by 0.50 milliseconds, and then participant B enters a M-
ELO for symbol XYZ at 9:30:45 a.m., then the System will assign a 0.75
millisecond Holding Period to participant B's M-ELO. To be clear, the
System will determine Dynamic M-ELO Holding Periods independently for
M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs in each symbol.
During normal market conditions, the range of potential Holding
Period durations for M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs will be between 0.25-2.50
milliseconds, with the Holding Period duration being eligible to change
by increments of either 0.25 or 0.50 milliseconds at each Change Event.
Thus, if the Holding Period for a M-ELO in symbol XYZ is set at 0.75
milliseconds at 2:22:11 p.m., and at 2:22:41 p.m., the System
determines to increase the duration of the Holding Period, it may do so
only by 0.25 or 0.50 milliseconds during that event.
When a Change Event occurs, and the System determines to adjust the
duration of a Holding Period for a symbol, that adjustment will apply,
not only to all M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs for that symbol entered within the
30 second period after the Change Event occurs, but also to M-ELOs and
M-ELO+CBs entered prior to the Change Event with unexpired Holding
Periods (with applicability retroactive to the time of Order
acceptance). Thus, if a participant enters a M-ELO in symbol XYZ at
1:14:299 p.m., and the prevailing Holding Period applicable to that M-
ELO is 2 milliseconds, and at 1:14:30 p.m., the System modifies the
Holding Period to be 1.5 milliseconds, then the M-ELO will become
eligible to execute at 1:14:3005 p.m. This is the case because the M-
ELO will have already expended 1 millisecond of its Holding Period as
of the time of the Change Event; thereafter, the M-ELO will need to
rest only another 0.5 milliseconds to become eligible to execute under
the new 1.5 millisecond Holding Period (as measured from 1:14:299
p.m.). This last feature ensures that the M-ELO Book maintains time
priority among M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs in a dynamic environment. That is,
it ensures that no M-ELO or M-ELO+CB with an unexpired Holding Period
at the time of a Change Event will end up becoming eligible to execute
later than a M-ELO entered after the Change Event which has a shorter
Holding Period applicable to it.
If at any time, the System detects extraordinary instability in a
symbol, then the System will activate a ``stability protection
mechanism'' to provide an extra layer of protection to M-ELO and M-ELO
users from the heightened risks of adverse selection that exists during
such periods of instability.\23\ The stability protection mechanism
will override the prevailing Holding Periods for M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs
in a symbol experiencing extraordinary instability and immediately
increase the duration of those Holding Periods to 12 milliseconds for a
period of 750 milliseconds. The System may activate the stability
protection mechanism even between Change Events. The System will
evaluate, at each NBBO update, whether market conditions remain
extraordinarily unstable and, if so, it will restart the 750
millisecond Stability Protected Period and maintain the 12
[[Page 22502]]
millisecond Holding Period until conditions stabilize. Once the System
determines that market conditions have stabilized (i.e., all
measurements for the symbol are at or below the threshold value
throughout the duration of the prevailing Stability Protected Period),
the System will revert the duration of the Holding Periods to that
which prevailed as of the Change Event that occurred immediately prior
to the activation of the stability protection mechanism or, if the
stability protection mechanism was active when a Change Event occurred,
to the duration selected at the immediately preceding Change Event. The
System will then proceed to reevaluate the duration of the Holding
Periods as per the regular schedule of Change Events.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ For purposes of this Rule, the System determines that
``extraordinary instability'' for a symbol exists through
observations it makes following every change in the NBBO for that
symbol that occurs during the trading day. When the NBBO changes,
the System looks back at the prior three seconds of trading and
measures the difference between the highest and the lowest NBBO
midpoint values that occurred during that period, and then it
compares that measurement to a threshold value for the symbol. The
System concludes that extraordinary instability exists for a symbol
if the measurement exceeds the threshold value. The threshold value
for a symbol, in turn, is the difference between the highest and the
lowest NBBO midpoint values for the symbol that, if applied to its
trading activity during the prior trading day, would have caused the
System to deem trading in the symbol to be extraordinarily unstable
for as close to one percent of that day as possible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following is an illustration of the operation of the stability
protection mechanism. At 11:10:04 a.m., the prevailing Holding Period
for M-ELOs in symbol XYZ is 1.5 milliseconds. At the same time, the
NBBO for symbol XYZ updates. The System looks back at the prior three
seconds of trading in symbol XYZ and finds that during that period, the
highest observed NBBO midpoint was $10.05, and the lowest was $10.00,
such that the difference between these two values is a range of $0.05.
The System then looks back at trading behavior for symbol XYZ during
the immediately preceding trading day. In doing so, the System
calculates the value of the threshold that would have caused the symbol
to be deemed extraordinarily unstable for one percent of the trading
day; the System determines that this threshold value is a range of
$0.03. The System then compares the $0.03 threshold to its measurement
of the prior three seconds of NBBO changes ($0.05), and concludes that
over these past three seconds, the symbol is extraordinarily unstable.
Accordingly, the System activates the stability protection mechanism
and the Holding Period for M-ELOs in symbol XYZ immediately increases
to 12 milliseconds for a period of 750 milliseconds. However, 5
milliseconds after the Stability Protection Period commences, the NBBO
updates again, thus prompting the System to repeat its assessment of
the stability of the symbol in light of the update. This reassessment
reveals that the symbol remains unstable, such that a new Stability
Protection Period of 750 milliseconds begins at that time (overriding
the pre-existing Period). Over the course of this new Stability
Protection Period, the NBBO shifts two more times, but each of the
ensuing reassessments indicate that the NBBO ranges for the symbol have
fallen below the $0.03 threshold. The Stability Protection Period
elapses 750 milliseconds after it began with the symbol remaining
stable. Thus, the Holding Period reverts to 1.5 milliseconds.
If the Exchange halts trading in a symbol, then upon resumption of
trading, any new M-ELO or M-ELO+CB in that symbol and any pending M-ELO
or M-ELO+CB in that symbol with an unexpired Holding Period will be
subject to a new 12 milliseconds Holding Period (running from the time
when trading resumes) until the next scheduled Change Event, at which
point the System may determine to adjust that Holding Period to a
duration within the range applicable under normal market
conditions.\24\ If, however, the System determines that extraordinary
instability in the symbol exists, it will instead determine to activate
the stability protection mechanism and maintain the duration of the
Holding Period at 12 milliseconds for another 750 milliseconds. This
design will help to ensure that M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs receive added
protection coming out of halt conditions.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Prior to commencement of a new 12 millisecond Holding
Period for a new or pending M-ELO or M-ELO+CB following a Halt, the
System will first determine whether the M-ELO or M-ELO+CB is or
remains eligible for execution. That is, the Holding Period will
commence only if, upon commencement of trading following the Halt,
the midpoint price for the Order is within the limit set by the
participant. If not, the System will hold the Order until the
midpoint falls within the limit set by the participant, at which
time the 12 millisecond Holding Period will commence.
\25\ Also as a safeguard, the System will apply a default
Holding Period of 12 milliseconds to a M-ELO or M-ELO+CB if ever it
fails to receive a signal during a Change Event as to whether the
System should adjust or maintain the duration of the prevailing
Holding Period. The System will continue to apply the default 12
millisecond Holding Period until the next Change Event where the
signal is restored and the System is able to act dynamically again.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange notes that same dynamic process described above will
also apply to and govern the time periods during which Midpoint Orders
on the Continuous Book must rest before they will become eligible to
interact with M-ELO+CBs (provided that participants have opted for
their Midpoint Orders to interact with M-ELO+CBs). Thus, the same
Holding Period duration that the System sets for a M-ELO+CB in a symbol
during Regular Market Hours will also be the length of time that a
Midpoint Order must rest on the Continuous Book must rest before it may
interact with a M-ELO+CB.
Apart from these impacts of Dynamic Holding Periods, M-ELOs and M-
ELO+CBs will continue to behave as they do now in all respects, and as
set forth in Rules 4702(b)(14) and (15).
It is important to note that within the parameters discussed herein
and in the White Paper, the Exchange will continue to re-train Dynamic
M-ELO and M-ELO+CB on a weekly basis (outside of market hours) so that
the model will continue to learn from and act upon the basis of more
recent SIP and M-ELO book data sets, and further improve its
performance over time. The retraining process should not result in
dramatic or unpredictable changes to the behavior of Dynamic M-ELO. The
retraining process will not retrain the model from scratch each week;
rather, it will retain the model's existing data inputs, knowledge
base, and objectives--all without alteration. Retraining will result in
new behaviors only as needed to address new scenarios that the model
did not confront previously, and even then, only in a manner designed
to further optimize outcomes, i.e., reduce mark-outs or increase fill
rates. If the System assesses that a retrained model would be worse
than the existing model in achieving its objectives, then the System
will continue to use the existing model and discard the retrained
model. This retraining process is a standard and accepted practice for
use of deep learning models; it helps to ensure that deep learning
models not only work well, but that they continue to work well in
dynamic circumstances.\26\
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\26\ During periods where the model is not undergoing
retraining, the System will behave predictably from day to day, such
that its decisions when presented with given set of facts and
circumstances in a given security on day 1 should be the same as
they would be on day 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange will not modify the underlying structure of Dynamic M-
ELO and M-ELO+CB without first obtaining the Commission's approval to
do so, including modifications to the data elements the model considers
in making decisions about Holding Period durations, the conditions
under which the model may adjust the duration of Holding Periods, the
frequency with which the model my adjust the Holding Periods, the range
of Holding Period durations available to M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs, the
increments by which Holding Periods may change at any given Change
Event, and the procedures for triggering, maintaining, and ending 12
millisecond Holding Periods during times of extraordinary
instability.\27\
[[Page 22503]]
Although the Exchange will seek Commission approval prior to changing
any of the data elements that the model considers, the Exchange will
not seek Commission approval prior to retraining the model to adjust
the weighting it applies to those data elements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ In addition to the proposed changes described above, the
Exchange proposes to delete an extraneous reference in Rule
4702(b)(15) to M-ELO+CB being eligible to execute against a Midpoint
Order on the Continuous Book if the Continuous Book order has the
``Midpoint'' Trade Now Attribute enabled. In a prior filing, the
Exchange folded the concept of ``Midpoint Trade Now'' into the
general ``Trade Now'' Attribute. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 34-92180 (June 15, 2021), 86 FR 33420 (June 24, 2021)(SR-NASDAQ-
2021-044).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To aid investors in understanding and evaluating Dynamic M-ELO,
Nasdaq will continue to publish weekly and monthly transparency
statistics on Nasdaqtrader.com, as it does now, about the performance
of its M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs, including statistics listing the weekly
numbers of shares and trades in M-ELOs by symbol, weekly aggregated M-
ELO share and trade data, and monthly aggregated block data.\28\ Nasdaq
also will continue to disclose monthly data on Nasdaq.com, as it does
now (the M-ELO Monthly Report), about M-ELO and M-ELO+CB mark-outs
(quote stability by time horizon) and fill rates.\29\ Moreover, Nasdaq
will add statistics to the M-ELO Monthly Report about how frequently,
on average, the System changes Holding Period durations for the top
decile, median, and bottom decile of symbols, as measured by monthly M-
ELO and M-ELO+CB trading volumes. Nasdaq will retain copies of each
historical iteration of its models as part of its books and records,
and make them available to the Commission upon request, should it wish
to examine them to understand how the model changes over time.
Furthermore, Nasdaq will publish an equity trader alert in advance of
deploying a retrained version of Dynamic M-ELO whenever Nasdaq has
reason to anticipate that the retrained version will produce results
that differ materially from the prior version, i.e., a projected change
in mark-outs or fill-rates of 10% or more in either direction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/Trader.aspx?id=MELOSymbolData.
\29\ See, e.g., https://www.nasdaq.com/docs/M-ELO-Monthly-Report. Nasdaq understands that current users of M-ELO and M-ELO
independently monitor the performance of these Order Types. Nasdaq
often receives feedback from such users about M-ELO and M-ELO+CB
performance, which Nasdaq then factors into decisions about
improvements and enhancements. Nasdaq expects that this feedback
loop will continue after implementation of Dynamic M-ELO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Implementation
The Exchange intends to make the proposed change effective for M-
ELOs and M-ELO+CBs in the Second or Third Quarter of 2023, but that
time frame is subject to change. The Exchange will publish a Trader
Alert in advance of making the proposed change effective.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with Section
6(b) of the Act,\30\ in general, and furthers the objectives of Section
6(b)(5) of the Act,\31\ in particular, in that it is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system, and, in general to protect investors and the public
interest, by allowing for more widespread use of M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\31\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the Commission approved the M-ELO and the M-ELO+CB, it
determined that these Order Types are consistent with the Act because
they ``could create additional and more efficient trading opportunities
on the Exchange for investors with longer investment time horizons,
including institutional investors, and could provide these investors
with an ability to limit the information leakage and the market impact
that could result from their orders.'' \32\ Nothing about the
Exchange's proposal should cause the Commission to revisit or rethink
this determination. Indeed, the proposal will not alter the fundamental
design of these Order Types, the manner in which they operate, or their
effects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ M-ELO Approval Order, supra 83 FR at 10938-39; M-ELO+CB
Approval Order, supra, 84 FR at 48980.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Even with Dynamic M-ELO Holding Periods, M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs will
continue to provide their users with protection against information
leakage and adverse selection--and they will do so at levels which are
substantially undiminished from that which they provide now.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See note 12, supra.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At the same time, however, the proposal will benefit market
participants and investors by reducing the opportunity costs of
utilizing M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs. The proposal, in other words, will re-
calibrate the lengths of the Holding Periods so that M-ELOs and M-
ELO+CBs will operate in the ``Goldilocks'' zone--their Holding Periods
will not be so short as to render them unable to provide meaningful
protections against information leakage and adverse selection, but the
Holding Periods also will not be too long so as to cause participants
and investors to miss out on favorable execution opportunities. Nasdaq
believes the proposal will render M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs more useful and
attractive to market participants and investors, and this increased
utility and attractiveness, in turn, will spur an increase in M-ELO and
M-ELO+CB use cases on the Exchange, both from new and existing users of
M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs. Ultimately, the proposal should enhance market
quality by increasing opportunities for midpoint executions on the
Exchange.
As Nasdaq explained above, the proposal will operate within strict,
well-defined, and transparent parameters. Although it will undergo
weekly retraining (outside of market hours), such retraining will aim
to improve the performance of the model in achieving its twin
objectives; retraining will not alter the inputs, objectives, or basic
design parameters of Dynamic M-ELO without prior Commission
approval.\34\ Moreover, the Exchange will not deploy a retrained model
if it fails to achieve performance improvements. To aid investors in
evaluating Dynamic M-ELO, the Exchange will publish statistics about
its performance, including as to mark-outs and fill rates, as well as
statistics about how frequently the System changes Holding Period
durations. To further facilitate accountability, the Exchange will
retain each historical iteration of its model as part of its books and
records, and make such information available to the Commission, upon
request. The Exchange will also publish equity trader alerts whenever
retraining will result in a performance change of 10% or more.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ As discussed above, Nasdaq will not seek Commission
approval prior to allowing the model, as part of its re-training
process, to vary the weighting of the data elements it ingests.
Nasdaq believes this is appropriate because such variance will only
occur to the extent that it will improve the model's performance
with respect to pre-defined objectives. Nasdaq will alert traders if
the retraining process would result in substantial performance
changes, and it will also publish statistics to help participants to
assess performance themselves. Moreover, Nasdaq will retain
historical iterations of its models for the Commission's review,
should it wish to examine how these models have changed over time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nasdaq notes that the twin objectives it prescribes for the model
involve the absolute values of mark-outs and fill rates; they are not
designed to further the performance of any participant or any category
of participant. Thus, Nasdaq believes the model is objective and
designed to avoid bias and discrimination.
The Exchange notes that use of Dynamic M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs remains
voluntary for all market participants. Accordingly, if any market
participant feels that the dynamic Holding Periods are still too long
or too short or because competing venues offer more attractive delay
mechanisms, then
[[Page 22504]]
the participants are free to pursue other trading strategies or utilize
other trading venues. They need not utilize Dynamic M-ELOs or M-
ELO+CBs.
Furthermore, the design of Dynamic-MELO would constitute an
``established, non-discretionary'' method that is consistent with the
definition of an exchange, as set forth in SEC Rule 3b-16.\35\ The
Commission stated as follows when it adopted Rule 3b-16:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See 17 CFR 240.3b-16(a)(2) (``(a) An organization,
association, or group of persons shall be considered to constitute,
maintain, or provide `a market place or facilities for bringing
together purchasers and sellers of securities or for otherwise
performing with respect to securities the functions commonly
performed by a stock exchange,' as those terms are used in section
3(a)(1) of the Act, (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(1)), if such organization,
association, or group of persons: (1) Brings together the orders for
securities of multiple buyers and sellers; and (2) Uses established,
non-discretionary methods (whether by providing a trading facility
or by setting rules) under which such orders interact with each
other, and the buyers and sellers entering such orders agree to the
terms of a trade.'').
A system uses established non-discretionary methods either by
providing a trading facility or by setting rules governing trading
among subscribers. The Commission intends for ``established, non-
discretionary methods'' to include any methods that dictate the
terms of trading among the multiple buyers and sellers entering
orders into the system. Such methods include those that set
procedures or priorities under which open terms of a trade may be
determined. For example, traditional exchanges' rules of priority,
parity, and precedence are ``established non-discretionary
methods,'' as are the trading algorithms of electronic systems.
Similarly, systems that determine the trading price at some
designated future date on the basis of pre-established criteria
(such as the weighted average trading price for the security on the
specified date in a specified market or markets) are using
established, non-discretionary methods.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 40760 (December 8,
1998), 63 FR 70844, 70850 (December 22, 1998).
Nothing in the Reg. ATS Adopting Release or in any of its
illustrative examples suggests that Dynamic M-ELO would constitute an
exercise of discretionary behavior. Dynamic M-ELO will handle and
execute Orders according to published, pre-determined rules that are
disclosed to the public and which provide reasonable notice of how the
Order Type will behave.\37\ To the extent that the design of the System
permits variation in the Holding Periods for such Orders, it does so by
design. The range of potential variations, the objectives that such
variations are intended to achieve, and the factors that determine when
such variations may occur are also predetermined and set forth in the
Exchange's Rules or otherwise disclosed to the public. The mere fact
that the System may apply different weights over time to the factors it
uses to determine whether and by how much to vary a Holding Period does
not mean that the System will act with discretion in the same sense
that a human being could be said to be exercise independent judgment
when deciding whether and how to handle an order.\38\ Even when the
System makes decisions about changing the Holding Periods, the System
will operate pursuant to a mathematical algorithm from which it cannot
deviate--an algorithm that is programmed to achieve pre-defined and
pre-disclosed objectives.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See id. at 70900 (``an essential indication of the non-
discretionary status of rules and procedures is that those rules and
procedures are communicated to the systems users'' and ``[t]hus,
participants have an expectation regarding the manner of execution--
that is, if an order is entered, it will be executed in accordance
with those procedures and not at the discretion of a counterparty or
intermediary.'').
\38\ Cf. id. at 70851 (explaining that a traditional block
trading desk is an example of a system that does not use
established, non-discretionary methods because the operators of such
desks do not act according to fixed procedures known to their
customers, but instead shop orders around for potential
counterparties and make their own determinations as to whether and
how to execute block orders, including by sometimes deciding to take
a proprietary position in part of the block order).
\39\ See id. at 80755 (describing an example of a system that
would be non-discretionary in nature: ``System I permits
participants to enter a range of ranked contingent buy and sell
orders at which they are willing to trade securities. These orders
are matched based on a mathematical algorithm whose priorities are
designed to achieve the participants' objectives. System I does not
display orders to any participants. System I is included under Rule
3b-16.''); see also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34-89686
(August 20, 2020), 85 FR 54438, at 54445, n.92 (September 1, 2020)
(Order approving SR-IEX-2019-15) (rejecting argument that IEX's D-
Limit order time is an exercise of discretion because ``D-Limit
orders will not allow IEX to exercise any discretion on any
particular order by deviating from the CQI and D-Limit
functionality, which is hardcoded in the IEX rulebook.''; Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 34-78101 (June 17, 2016), 81 FR 41141, at
41153(June 17, 2016) (Order approving IEX Form 1 and D-Peg Order
Type) (``the Commission does not believe that the hardcoded
conditionality of the IEX proposed ``discretionary'' peg order type
provides IEX with actual discretion or the ability to exercise
individualized judgment when executing an order. Rather, if IEX's
fixed formula determines the quote to be stable, the discretionary
peg order can execute up to the midpoint; if it does not deem the
quote to be stable, then it will hold the order to its pegged price.
As such, IEX would not exercise discretion over the routing and
execution of a resting order''). Nasdaq does not believe that it is
necessary to codify its mathematical formula for Dynamic M-ELO in
its Rules because Nasdaq has disclosed sufficient information in its
Rules and in its filing to inform the public as to the possible and
expected behaviors associated with Dynamic M-ELO, as well as a means
for the Commission and/or investors to verify whether Dynamic M-ELO
is performing appropriately. Much as the Commission does not require
an exchange to codify the source code it uses to effectuate other
behaviors or actions that it explains in its Rules, including the
behaviors of other complex Order Types, there is no basis to require
codification of the Dynamic M-ELO formula in this instance.
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Finally, the Exchange notes that it will continue to conduct real-
time surveillance to monitor the use of M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs to ensure
that such usage remains appropriately tied to the intent of the Order
Types. If, as a result of such surveillance, the Exchange determines
that the Dynamic M-ELO Holding Periods do not serve their intended
purposes, or adversely impact market quality, then the Exchange will
seek to make further re-calibrations.
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. To the contrary, the Exchange
believes that this proposal will promote the competitiveness of the
Exchange by rendering its M-ELO and M-ELO+CB Order Types more
attractive to participants.
The Exchange adopted the M-ELO and M-ELO+CB as pro-competitive
measures intended to increase participation on the Exchange by allowing
certain market participants that may currently be underserved on
regulated exchanges to compete based on elements other than speed. The
proposed change continues to achieve this purpose. With Dynamic M-ELO
Holding Periods, both M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs will afford their users with
a level of protection from information leakage and adverse selection
that is better from what is achievable at present.\40\ At the same
time, the Dynamic Holding Periods will increase opportunities to
interact with other like-minded investors with longer time horizons
while also lowering the opportunity costs for participants that utilize
M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs, particularly for securities that trade within the
``Goldilocks'' zone. In sum, the proposed changes will not burden
competition, but instead may promote competition for liquidity in M-
ELOs and M-ELO+CBs by broadening the circumstances in which market
participants may find such Orders to be useful. With the proposed
changes, market participants will be more likely to determine that the
benefits of entering M-ELOs and M-ELO+CBs outweigh the risks of doing
so.
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\40\ See White Paper, supra.
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The proposed change will not place a burden on competition among
market
[[Page 22505]]
venues, as any market may adopt an order type that operates similarly
to a M-ELO or a M-ELO+CB with Dynamic M-ELO Holding Periods.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either solicited or received.
III. Proceedings To Determine Whether To Approve or Disapprove SR-
NASDAQ-2022-079, as Modified by Amendment No. 1, and Grounds for
Disapproval Under Consideration
The Commission is instituting proceedings pursuant to Section
19(b)(2)(B) of the Act \41\ to determine whether the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No.1, should be approved or
disapproved. Institution of proceedings is appropriate at this time in
view of the legal and policy issues raised by the proposed rule change
and the comments received thereon. Institution of proceedings does not
indicate that the Commission has reached any conclusions with respect
to any of the issues involved. Rather, the Commission seeks and
encourages interested persons to provide additional comment on the
proposed rule change to inform the Commission's analysis of whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.
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\41\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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Pursuant to Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act,\42\ the Commission is
providing notice of the grounds for possible disapproval under
consideration. As noted above, the Commission received two comments on
the proposal and the Exchange simultaneously filed a response to
comments along with Amendment No. 1.\43\ Of note, both commenters
assert that the Exchange must provide additional information about how
it determines the Dynamic Holding Periods proposed herein.\44\ One of
these commenters states that ``as a threshold question, how can the
public `provide meaningful comment on the proposal' without knowing
what all the categories and parameters are.'' \45\ This commenter also
states that it is unclear under what circumstances the Exchange
believes it would need to file a proposed rule change should the
machine learning model alter its methods or functionalities,
specifically citing the proposed retraining of the artificial
intelligence based timer control system.\46\ This commenter also
questions whether the proposed rule change provides sufficient
information to determine whether (i) it is not unfairly discriminatory
and (ii) will not place a burden on competition among market
venues.\47\
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\42\ Id.
\43\ See supra note 6.
\44\ See Letters from Joseph Saluzzi, Partner, Themis Trading
LLC, to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission, dated January 25,
2023, at 2 (``Nasdaq should be required to reveal all of the
specifics behind their dynamic holding period formula so others can
evaluate how it works and decide if they would like to have Nasdaq
apply the logic to their orders.''); and R. T. Leuchtkafer to
Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission, dated January 31, 2023,
at 1-2 (``Leuchtkafer Letter'').
\45\ See Leuchtkafter Letter, at 1.
\46\ See id., at 2 (stating that ``it's not at all clear under
exactly what circumstances Nasdaq will seek approval for a
change.'').
\47\ See id., at 2-3.
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Nasdaq replied to these comments with its own comment letter and by
filing Amendment No. 1. Nasdaq states, among other things, that it is
not necessary to describe precisely how its system will react in each
and every circumstance it will confront in the market as long as the
choices that the system can make are bounded and its range of behaviors
are understood and reasonably predictable, which it asserts is ``indeed
the case for Dynamic M-ELO.'' \48\ Nasdaq also submitted the full list
of these data elements as both an Appendix A to its response to
comments and new Exhibit 3B to the proposal in Amendment No. 1. Nasdaq
also states that:
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\48\ See Letter from Brett Kitt, Associate Vice President and
Principal Associate General Counsel, Nasdaq, Inc., to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission, dated March 9, 2023, at 2
(``Nasdaq Letter'').
Nasdaq is clear that it will seek approval prior to altering the
data inputs that the system ingests for decision-making purposes,
but not for changes to the relative weighting that the system
applies to these data elements. Nasdaq also will seek Commission
approval prior to altering the twin objectives of Dynamic M-ELO or
making changes to its fundamental operating parameters, such as
changes to the permissible range of Holding Periods, to the
permissible change increments for a Holding Period at any given
Change Event, to the frequency with which Change Events may occur,
to the procedures for triggering, maintaining, and ending 12
millisecond Holding Periods during times of extraordinary
instability.\49\
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\49\ See Nasdaq Letter at 3.
The Commission is instituting proceedings to allow for additional
analysis of, and input from commenters with respect to, the consistency
of the proposal, as modified by Amendment No. 1, with Sections 6(b)(5)
\50\ and 6(b)(8) of the Act.\51\ Section 6(b)(5) of the Act requires
that the rules of a national securities exchange be designed, among
other things, to promote just and equitable principles of trade, to
remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open
market and a national market system and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest, and not be designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers. Section
6(b)(8) of the Act requires that the rules of a national securities
exchange not impose any burden on competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
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\50\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\51\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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IV. Procedure: Request for Written Comments
The Commission requests that interested persons provide written
submissions of their views, data, and arguments with respect to the
issues identified above, as well as any other concerns they may have
with the proposal, as modified by Amendment No. 1. In particular, the
Commission invites the written views of interested persons concerning
whether the proposal, as modified by Amendment No. 1, is consistent
with Sections 6(b)(5) and 6(b)(8), or any other provision of the Act,
or the rules and regulations thereunder. Although there do not appear
to be any issues relevant to approval or disapproval that would be
facilitated by an oral presentation of views, data, and arguments, the
Commission will consider, pursuant to Rule 19b-4, any request for an
opportunity to make an oral presentation.\52\
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\52\ Section 19(b)(2) of the Act, as amended by the Securities
Act Amendments of 1975, Public Law 94-29 (June 4, 1975), grants the
Commission flexibility to determine what type of proceeding--either
oral or notice and opportunity for written comments--is appropriate
for consideration of a particular proposal by a self-regulatory
organization. See Securities Act Amendments of 1975, Senate Comm. on
Banking, Housing & Urban Affairs, S. Rep. No. 75, 94th Cong., 1st
Sess. 30 (1975).
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Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments regarding whether the proposal, as modified by Amendment No.
1, should be approved or disapproved by May 4, 2023. Any person who
wishes to file a rebuttal to any other person's submission must file
that rebuttal by May 18, 2023.
Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
[[Page 22506]]
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-NASDAQ-2022-079 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 Numbers SR-NASDAQ-2022-079. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other
than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of these filings also will be available
for inspection and copying at the principal office of the Exchange.
All comments received will be posted without change. Persons
submitting comments are cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File Number SR-NASDAQ-2022-079 and should
be submitted on or before May 4, 2023. Rebuttal comments should be
submitted by May 18, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\53\
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\53\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12), (57).
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Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023-07733 Filed 4-12-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P