Joint Industry Plan; Order Instituting Proceedings To Determine Whether To Approve or Disapprove an Amendment to the National Market System Plan Governing the Consolidated Audit Trail, 41142-41161 [2023-13340]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 120 / Friday, June 23, 2023 / Notices
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) 26 of the Act to
determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
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IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
publicly. We may redact in part or
withhold entirely from publication
submitted material that is obscene or
subject to copyright protection. All
submissions should refer to file number
SR–NYSEArca–2023–42 and should be
submitted on or before July 14, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.27
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–13339 Filed 6–22–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–97750; File No. 4–698]
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–
NYSEArca–2023–42 on the subject line.
Joint Industry Plan; Order Instituting
Proceedings To Determine Whether To
Approve or Disapprove an Amendment
to the National Market System Plan
Governing the Consolidated Audit Trail
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to: Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–NYSEArca–2023–42. 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
a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of the filing also
will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of the
Exchange. Do not include personal
identifiable information in submissions;
you should submit only information
that you wish to make available
I. Introduction
On March 13, 2023, the Consolidated
Audit Trail, LLC (‘‘CAT LLC’’), on
behalf of the Participants 1 to the
National Market System Plan Governing
the Consolidated Audit Trail (‘‘CAT
NMS Plan’’ or ‘‘Plan’’),2 filed with the
26 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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June 16, 2023.
27 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
Participants are: BOX Exchange LLC, Cboe
BYX Exchange, Inc., Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc., Cboe
C2 Exchange, Inc., Cboe EDGA Exchange, Inc., Cboe
EDGX Exchange, Inc., Cboe Exchange, Inc., The
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(‘‘FINRA’’), Investors Exchange LLC, Long-Term
Stock Exchange, Inc., MEMX LLC, Miami
International Securities Exchange, LLC, MIAX
Emerald, LLC, MIAX PEARL, LLC, Nasdaq BX, Inc.,
Nasdaq GEMX, LLC, Nasdaq ISE, LLC, Nasdaq
MRX, LLC, Nasdaq PHLX LLC, The Nasdaq Stock
Market LLC, New York Stock Exchange LLC, NYSE
American LLC, NYSE Arca, Inc., NYSE Chicago,
Inc., and NYSE National, Inc. (collectively, the
‘‘Participants,’’ ‘‘self-regulatory organizations,’’ or
‘‘SROs’’).
2 The CAT NMS Plan is a national market system
plan approved by the Commission pursuant to
Section 11A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’) and the rules and regulations
thereunder. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 78318 (Nov. 15, 2016), 81 FR 84696 (Nov. 23,
2016) (‘‘CAT NMS Plan Approval Order’’). The CAT
NMS Plan is Exhibit A to the CAT NMS Plan
Approval Order. See CAT NMS Plan Approval
Order, 81 FR at 84943–85034. The CAT NMS Plan
functions as the limited liability company
agreement of the jointly owned limited liability
company formed under Delaware state law through
which the Participants conduct the activities of the
CAT (‘‘Company’’). Each Participant is a member of
the Company and jointly owns the Company on an
equal basis. The Participants submitted to the
Commission a proposed amendment to the CAT
NMS Plan on August 29, 2019, which they
designated as effective on filing. On August 29,
2019, the Participants replaced the CAT NMS Plan
in its entirety with the limited liability company
agreement of a new limited liability company, CAT
1 The
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Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
11A of the Exchange Act 3 and Rule 608
of Regulation National Market System
(‘‘Regulation NMS’’) thereunder,4 a
proposed amendment to the CAT NMS
Plan (‘‘Proposed Amendment’’) to
implement a revised funding model
(‘‘Executed Share Model’’) for the
consolidated audit trail (‘‘CAT’’) and to
establish a fee schedule for Participant
CAT fees in accordance with the
Executed Share Model (‘‘Proposed
Participant Fee Schedule’’).5 The
Proposed Amendment was published
for comment in the Federal Register on
March 21, 2023.6
This order institutes proceedings,
under Rule 608(b)(2)(i) of Regulation
NMS,7 to determine whether to
disapprove the Proposed Amendment or
to approve the Proposed Amendment
with any changes or subject to any
conditions the Commission deems
necessary or appropriate.8
II. Background
On July 11, 2012, the Commission
adopted Rule 613 of Regulation NMS,
which required the SROs to submit a
national market system (‘‘NMS’’) plan to
create, implement and maintain a
consolidated audit trail that would
capture customer and order event
information for orders in NMS
securities.9 On November 15, 2016, the
Commission approved the CAT NMS
Plan.10 Under the CAT NMS Plan, the
Operating Committee of the Company,
of which each Participant is a member,
LLC, which became the Company. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 87149 (Sept. 27, 2019),
84 FR 52905 (Oct. 3, 2019). The latest version of
the CAT NMS Plan is available at https://
catnmsplan.com/about-cat/cat-nms-plan.
3 15 U.S.C. 78k–1.
4 17 CFR 242.608.
5 See Letter from Brandon Becker, Chair, CAT
NMS Plan Operating Committee, to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission (Mar. 13,
2023) (‘‘Transmittal Letter’’).
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97151
(Mar. 15, 2023), 88 FR 17086 (Mar. 21, 2023)
(‘‘Notice’’). Comments received in response to the
Notice can be found on the Commission’s website
at https://www.sec.gov/comments/4-698/4-698a.htm.
7 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2)(i).
8 On June 15, 2023, the Participants submitted a
letter consenting to a 30-day extension (until July
20, 2023) of the date by which the Commission
shall, by order, approve or disapprove the Proposed
Amendment, or institute proceedings to determine
whether the Proposed Amendment should be
disapproved. See Letter from Brandon Becker,
Chair, CAT NMS Plan Operating Committee, to
Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission (Jun.
15, 2023). Nevertheless, the Commission believes it
is appropriate for the reasons stated herein to
institute proceedings under Rule 608(b)(2)(i) of
Regulation NMS and Rules 700 and 701 of the
Commission’s Rules of Practice.
9 17 CFR 242.613.
10 See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2.
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has the discretion (subject to the
funding principles set forth in the Plan)
to establish funding for the Company to
operate the CAT, including establishing
fees to be paid by the Participants and
Industry Members.11
Under the CAT NMS Plan, CAT fees
are to be implemented in accordance
with various funding principles,
including an ‘‘allocation of the
Company’s related costs among
Participants and Industry Members that
is consistent with the Exchange Act
taking into account . . . distinctions in
the securities trading operations of
Participants and Industry Members and
their relative impact upon the Company
resources and operations’’ and the
‘‘avoid[ance of] any disincentives such
as placing an inappropriate burden on
competition and reduction in market
quality.’’ 12 The Plan specifies that, in
establishing the funding of the
Company, the Operating Committee
shall establish ‘‘a tiered fee structure in
which the fees charged to: (1) CAT
Reporters 13 that are Execution
Venues,14 including ATSs,15 are based
upon the level of market share; (2)
Industry Members’ non-ATS activities
are based upon message traffic; and (3)
the CAT Reporters with the most CATrelated activity (measured by market
share and/or message traffic, as
applicable) are generally comparable
(where, for these comparability
purposes, the tiered fee structure takes
into consideration affiliations between
or among CAT Reporters, whether
Execution Venues and/or Industry
Members).’’ 16
On May 15, 2020, the Commission
adopted amendments to the CAT NMS
Plan designed to increase the
Participants’ financial accountability for
the timely completion of the CAT
(‘‘Financial Accountability
Amendments’’).17 The Financial
Accountability Amendments added
11 The CAT NMS Plan defines ‘‘Industry
Member’’ as ‘‘a member of a national securities
exchange or a member of a national securities
association.’’ See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at
Section 1.1. See also id. at Section 11.1(b).
12 Id. at Section 11.2(b) and (e).
13 The CAT NMS Plan defines ‘‘CAT Reporter’’ as
‘‘each national securities exchange, national
securities association and Industry Member that is
required to record and report information to the
Central Repository pursuant to SEC Rule 613(c).’’
Id. at Section 1.1.
14 The CAT NMS Plan defines ‘‘Execution Venue’’
as ‘‘a Participant or an alternative trading system
(‘ATS’) (as defined in Rule 300 of Regulation ATS)
that operates pursuant to Rule 301 of Regulation
ATS (excluding any such ATS that does not execute
orders).’’ Id.
15 Id.
16 CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at Section
11.2(c). See id. at Article XI for additional detail.
17 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88890,
85 FR 31322 (May 22, 2020).
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Section 11.6 to the CAT NMS Plan to
govern the recovery from Industry
Members of any fees, costs, and
expenses (including legal and
consulting fees, costs and expenses)
incurred by or for the Company in
connection with the development,
implementation and operation of the
CAT from June 22, 2020 until such time
that the Participants have completed
Full Implementation of CAT NMS Plan
Requirements 18 (‘‘Post-Amendment
Expenses’’). Section 11.6 establishes
target deadlines for four Financial
Accountability Milestones (Periods 1, 2,
3 and 4) 19 and reduces the amount of
fee recovery available to the Participants
if these deadlines are missed.20
III. Summary of Proposal 21
CAT LLC proposes to replace the
funding model set forth in Article XI of
the CAT NMS Plan (‘‘Original Funding
Model’’) with the Executed Share
Model. The Original Funding Model
involved a bifurcated approach, where
costs associated with building and
operating the CAT would be borne by
(1) Industry Members (other than
alternative trading systems (‘‘ATSs’’)
that execute transactions in Eligible
Securities (‘‘Execution Venue ATSs’’))
through fixed tiered fees based on
message traffic for Eligible Securities,
and (2) Participants and Industry
Members that are Execution Venue
ATSs for Eligible Securities through
fixed tiered fees based on market
18 ‘‘Full Implementation of CAT NMS Plan
Requirements’’ means ‘‘the point at which the
Participants have satisfied all of their obligations to
build and implement the CAT, such that all CAT
system functionality required by Rule 613 and the
CAT NMS Plan has been developed, successfully
tested, and fully implemented at the initial Error
Rates specified by Section 6.5(d)(i) or less,
including functionality that efficiently permits the
Participants and the Commission to access all CAT
Data required to be stored in the Central Repository
pursuant to Section 6.5(a), including Customer
Account Information, Customer-ID, Customer
Identifying Information, and Allocation Reports,
and to analyze the full lifecycle of an order across
the national market system, from order origination
through order execution or order cancellation,
including any related allocation information
provided in an Allocation Report. This Financial
Accountability Milestone shall be considered
complete as of the date identified in a Quarterly
Progress Report meeting the requirements of
Section 6.6(c).’’ CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at
Section 1.1.
19 Id. at Section 11.6(a)(i).
20 Id. at Section 11.6(a)(ii) and (iii).
21 This section summarizes the proposed changes
to the CAT NMS Plan. For a full discussion of the
Proposed Amendment, including the Participants’
justifications for the Proposed Amendment, such as
comparability to existing fees, alternatives
considered, fee pass-throughs, treatment of FINRA,
cost transparency (including the Historical CAT
Costs prior to 2022) and satisfaction of the
Exchange Act and CAT NMS Plan requirements, see
Notice, supra note 6.
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share.22 In contrast, the Executed Share
Model would charge fees based on the
executed equivalent share volume of
transactions in Eligible Securities rather
than based on market share and message
traffic.23 In addition, instead of charging
fees to Industry Members, under the
Executed Share Model, fees would be
charged to each Industry Member that is
a CAT Executing Broker 24 for the buyer
in a transaction in Eligible Securities
(‘‘CAT Executing Broker for the Buyer’’
or ‘‘CEBB’’) and each Industry Member
that is the CAT Executing Broker for the
seller in a transaction in Eligible
Securities (‘‘CAT Executing Broker for
the Seller’’ or ‘‘CEBS’’).25
Under the Executed Share Model,
CAT LLC proposes to establish two
categories of CAT fees. The first
category of CAT fees would be fees
(‘‘CAT Fees’’) payable by Participants
and Industry Members that are CAT
Executing Brokers for the Buyer and for
the Seller with regard to CAT costs not
previously paid by the Participants
(‘‘Prospective CAT Costs’’).26 The
second category of CAT fees would be
fees (‘‘Historical CAT Assessments’’) to
be payable by Industry Members that are
CAT Executing Brokers for the Buyer
and for the Seller with regard to CAT
costs previously paid by the Participants
(‘‘Past CAT Costs’’).27 Each Historical
CAT Assessment will recover an
amount of ‘‘Historical CAT Costs’’,
which will be Past CAT Costs minus
Past CAT Costs reasonably excluded
from Historical CAT Costs by the
Operating Committee.28
For each category of fees, each CEBB
and each CEBS will be required to pay
a CAT fee for each such transaction in
Eligible Securities in the prior month
based on CAT Data.29 The CEBB’s CAT
fee or CEBS’s CAT fee (as applicable) for
each transaction in Eligible Securities
will be calculated by multiplying the
number of executed equivalent shares in
the transaction by one-third and by the
reasonably determined Fee Rate,30 as
22 See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at Section
11.3(a) and (b).
23 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17086.
24 See infra Section III.A.1. for the definition of
CAT Executing Broker.
25 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17087.
26 Id. at 17086; see also proposed Section 11.3(a).
The defined term ‘‘CAT Fees’’ applies specifically
to CAT fees related to Prospective CAT Costs. Id.
27 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17086; see
also proposed Section 11.3(b).
28 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17096; see
also proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(C).
29 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17093; see
also proposed Section 11.3(a)(iii), proposed Section
11.3(b)(iii).
30 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17124 for
the definition and description of the calculation of
the Fee Rate.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 120 / Friday, June 23, 2023 / Notices
described below.31 Participants would
incur CAT Fees only for Prospective
CAT Costs and the Participant CAT Fee
will be calculated by multiplying the
number of executed equivalent shares in
the transaction by one-third and by the
reasonably determined Fee Rate.32 The
Participants’ one-third share of
Historical CAT Costs and such other
additional Past CAT Costs as reasonably
determined by the Operating Committee
will be paid by the cancellation of loans
made to the Company on a pro rata basis
based on the outstanding loan amounts
due under the loans.33
As Plan Processor, FINRA CAT would
be responsible for calculating the CAT
fees and submitting invoices to the CAT
Executing Brokers based on this CAT
Data.34 All data used to calculate the
fees under the Executed Share Model
would be CAT Data, and, therefore, it
would be available through the CAT for
calculating CAT fees.35
Once the Proposed Amendment has
been approved by the Commission, the
Participants would separately file
proposed rule changes pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act 36 to
establish the amounts of the proposed
CAT Fees and Historical CAT
Assessments to be charged to Industry
Members, subject to the satisfaction of
applicable Financial Accountability
Milestones as set forth in Section 11.6
of the CAT NMS Plan and the
implementation of the billing and
collection system for the CAT fees.37 In
each proposed rule change, if the
Participants seek to recover amounts
under the Financial Accountability
Milestones, they would need to discuss
their completion of the applicable
milestone.38
A. Description of Amendments
1. Definition of CAT Executing Broker
The Executed Share Model would
define ‘‘CAT Executing Broker’’ in
Section 1.1 of the CAT NMS Plan as:
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(a) with respect to a transaction in an
Eligible Security that is executed on an
exchange, the Industry Member identified as
31 Id. at 17095; see also proposed Section
11.3(a)(iii), proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii).
32 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17094; see
also proposed Section 11.3(a)(ii).
33 See proposed Section 11.3(b)(ii).
34 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17088.
35 Id.
36 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
37 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17086,
17122.
38 Proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(III) would
prohibit any Participant from filing proposed rule
changes pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange
Act regarding any Historical CAT Assessment until
any applicable Financial Accountability Milestone
in Section 11.6 of the CAT NMS Plan has been
satisfied.
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the Industry Member responsible for the
order on the buy-side of the transaction and
the Industry Member responsible for the sellside of the transaction in the equity order
trade event and option trade event in the
CAT Data submitted to the CAT by the
relevant exchange pursuant to the Participant
Technical Specifications; and (b) with
respect to a transaction in an Eligible
Security that is executed otherwise than on
an exchange and required to be reported to
an equity trade reporting facility of a
registered national securities association, the
Industry Member identified as the executing
broker and the Industry Member identified as
the contra-side executing broker in the TRF/
ORF/ADF transaction data event in the CAT
Data submitted to the CAT by FINRA
pursuant to the Participant Technical
Specifications; provided, however, in those
circumstances where there is a non-Industry
Member identified as the contra-side
executing broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF
transaction data event or no contra-side
executing broker is identified in the TRF/
ORF/ADF transaction data event, then the
Industry Member identified as the executing
broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF transaction data
event would be treated as CAT Executing
Broker for the Buyer and for the Seller.
Under the Participant Technical
Specifications, for transactions
occurring on a Participant exchange,
there is a field for the exchange to report
the market participant identifier
(‘‘MPID’’) of ‘‘the member firm that is
responsible for the order on this side of
the trade.’’ 39 The Industry Members
identified in these fields for the
transaction reports would be the CAT
Executing Brokers for transactions
executed on an exchange.
FINRA is required to report to the
CAT transactions in Eligible Securities
reported to a FINRA trade reporting
facility (i.e., the FINRA Trade Reporting
Facilities (‘‘TRF’’), Over-the Counter
Reporting Facility (‘‘ORF’’) and
Alternative Display Facility (‘‘ADF’’)).40
Under the Participant Technical
Specifications, for such transactions
reported to a FINRA trade reporting
facility, FINRA is required to report the
MPID of the executing party as well as
the MPID of the contra-side executing
party. The Industry Members identified
in these two fields for the transaction
reports would be the CAT Executing
Brokers for over-the-counter
transactions.
CAT LLC states that a CAT Executing
Broker in over-the-counter transactions
39 See Section 4.7 (Order Trade Event) and
Section 5.2.5.1 (Simple Option Trade Event: Side
Details) of the CAT Reporting Technical
Specifications for Plan Participants, Version 4.1.0–
r17 (Feb. 21, 2023), https://www.catnmsplan.com/
sites/default/files/2023-02/02.21.2023-CATReporting-Technical-Specifications-forParticipants-4.1.0-r17.pdf.
40 See Section 6.1 of the CAT Reporting Technical
Specifications for Plan Participants (Feb. 21, 2023).
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identified on the TRF/ORF/ADF
Transaction Data Event is determined
based on the tape or media report, that
is, a trade report that is submitted to a
FINRA trade reporting facility and
reported to and publicly disseminated
by the appropriate exclusive Securities
Information Processor. A CAT Executing
Broker for over-the-counter transactions
is not determined based on a non-tape
report (e.g., a regulatory report or a
clearing report), which are not publicly
disseminated.41
Therefore, with respect to transactions
on an exchange and over-the-counter
transactions, CAT LLC would use
transaction reports reported to the CAT
by FINRA or the exchanges to identify
the transaction, as well as the CAT
Executing Broker for each transaction,
for purposes of calculating the CAT fees.
Accordingly, all data used to calculate
the fees under the Executed Share
Model would be CAT Data, and,
therefore, it would be available through
the CAT for calculating CAT fees.
FINRA CAT would be responsible for
calculating the CAT fees 42 and
submitting invoices to the CAT
Executing Brokers 43 based on this CAT
Data.
a. Treatment of ATSs
The definition of a ‘‘CAT Executing
Broker’’ as proposed above would
determine the CAT Executing Brokers
for transactions executed on an ATS.
Specifically, if an ATS is identified as
the executing party and/or the contraside executing party in the TRF/ORF/
ADF Transaction Data Event, then the
ATS would be a CAT Executing Broker
for purposes of the Executed Share
Model. If the ATS is identified as the
executing party for the buyer in such
transaction reports, then the ATS would
be the CAT Executing Broker for the
Buyer. If the ATS is identified as the
executing party for the seller in such
41 There is an exception to this statement for
away-from-market trades. These are non-media
trades reported to the TRF with an ‘‘SRO Required
Modifier Code’’ of ‘‘R’’.
42 According to CAT LLC, because CAT fees
would be charged based on the Equity Order Trade
Events, Options Trade Events and the ADF/ORF/
TRF Transaction Data Events in the Participant
Technical Specifications and none of these
transaction reports provide for fractional quantities,
CAT fees would be calculated without reference to
fractional shares or fractional share components of
executed orders. To the extent that FINRA’s equity
transaction reporting facilities or the exchanges
report transactions in fractional shares in the future,
then the calculation of CAT fees would reflect
fractional shares as well.
43 CAT LLC states that each CAT Executing
Broker could determine, but would not be required,
to pass their CAT fees through to their clients, who,
in turn, could pass their CAT fees to their clients,
until the fee is imposed on the ultimate participant
in the transaction.
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transaction reports, then the ATS would
be the CAT Executing Broker for the
Seller. An ATS also could be identified
as both the CAT Executing Broker for
the Buyer and the CAT Executing
Broker for the Seller. ATSs would
determine the executing party and the
contra-side executing party reported to
FINRA’s equity trading facilities in
accordance with the transaction
reporting requirements for FINRA’s
equity trading facilities.
b. Non-Industry Members on
Transaction Reports
The Executed Share Model also
would address how transactions that
involve a non-Industry Member would
be treated (e.g., for internalized trades or
trades with a non-FINRA member). The
FINRA trade reporting requirements
state that ‘‘[w]hen reporting a trade with
a broker-dealer that is not a FINRA
member, the non-member should not be
identified on the trade report as the
contra party to the trade.’’ 44
Accordingly, when the transaction in
these cases is reported to CAT via the
TRF/ORF/ADF Transaction Data Event,
the field for the reportingExecutingMpid
would be populated with the MPID of
the executing broker and the field for
the contraExecutingMpid would be
blank or null. As noted above, the
reportingExecutingMpid is a required
field (include key = ‘R’) that must be
entered on all CAT reports, but the
contraExecutingMpid field is
conditional; it does not need to be
populated, specifically to account for
cases like those at issue here (e.g.,
transactions with a non-FINRA
member). Therefore, in those scenarios
where the contraExecutingMpid is
blank, the FINRA member identified in
the reportingExecutingMpid field would
be treated as the CAT Executing Broker
for both the buy-side and the sell-side
of the transaction, that is, as the CEBS
and CEBB.
In addition, under the FINRA trade
reporting requirements, there is a
limited exception to the general rule
about not reporting a non-member as the
contra party to the trade. Specifically,
pursuant to FINRA Trade Reporting
FAQ 202.1, ‘‘[t]here is a limited
exception where a Canadian nonmember firm uses the FINRA/NASDAQ
TRF or ORF for purposes of comparing
trades pursuant to a valid Non-Member
Addendum to the NASDAQ Services
Agreement. In that instance, however,
the Canadian non-member must appear
on the trade report as the contra party
to the trade and not as the reporting
party. For any trade report on which a
44 FINRA
Trade Reporting FAQ 202.1.
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Canadian non-member appears as a
party to the trade, the FINRA member
must appear as the reporting party.’’ In
this case involving the Canadian nonmember firm exception, the executing
broker identified in the
reportingExecutingMpid field would be
billed for both sides of the transaction.
CAT LLC proposes to include
language in the definition of ‘‘CAT
Executing Broker’’ to address these
scenarios. Specifically, CAT LLC
proposes to state the following in the
definition of ‘‘CAT Executing Broker:
‘‘in those circumstances where there is
a non-Industry Member identified as the
contra-side executing broker in the TRF/
ORF/ADF transaction data event or no
contra-side executing broker is
identified in the TRF/ORF/ADF
transaction data event, then the Industry
Member identified as the executing
broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF transaction
data event would be treated as CAT
Executing Broker for the Buyer and for
the Seller.’’
c. Cancellations and Corrections
The Executed Share Model also
would provide for cancellations and
corrections. CAT LLC expects to
determine CAT fees based on the
transaction reports for a month as of a
particular day. To the extent that
changes are made to the transaction
reports on or before the day the CAT
fees are determined for the given month,
the changes will be reflected in the
monthly bill. To the extent that changes
are made to the transaction reports after
the day the CAT fees are determined for
that month, subsequent bills will reflect
any changes via debits or credits, as
applicable. As CAT LLC is required by
Section 11.1(d) of the CAT NMS Plan to
adopt policies, procedures, and
practices regarding the billing and
collection of fees, CAT LLC will
establish specific policies and
procedures regarding the treatment of
such adjustments as those related to
cancellations and corrections.
Furthermore, CAT LLC will inform
Industry Members and other market
participants of these policies and
procedures via FAQs, CAT Alerts and/
or other appropriate methods.
2. CAT Budget
Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan
describes the requirement for the
Operating Committee to approve an
operating budget for CAT LLC on an
annual basis. It requires the budget to
‘‘include the projected costs of the
Company, including the costs of
developing and operating the CAT for
the upcoming year, and the sources of
all revenues to cover such costs, as well
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41145
as the funding of any reserve that the
Operating Committee reasonably deems
appropriate for prudent operation of the
Company.’’ CAT LLC proposes to
provide additional detail regarding the
CAT LLC operating budget by adding
proposed subparagraphs (i) and (ii) to
Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan.
a. Budgeted CAT Costs
CAT LLC proposes to add
subparagraph (i) to Section 11.1(a) of the
CAT NMS Plan to list the types of CAT
costs to be included in the budget.
Specifically, proposed Section 11.1(a)(i)
of the CAT NMS Plan would state that
‘‘[w]ithout limiting the foregoing, the
reasonably budgeted CAT costs shall
include technology (including cloud
hosting services, operating fees, CAIS
operating fees, change request fees and
capitalized developed technology costs),
legal, consulting, insurance,
professional and administration, and
public relations costs, a reserve, and
such other categories as reasonably
determined by the Operating Committee
to be included in the budget.’’
CAT LLC proposes to require the
inclusion of five subcategories of
technology costs in the budget: (1) cloud
hosting services, (2) operating fees, (3)
Customer and Account Information
System (‘‘CAIS’’) operating fees, (4)
change request fees, and (5) capitalized
developed technology costs.45 CAT LLC
states that it will consider the need to
provide additional cost disclosure going
forward.46
CAT LLC proposes to amend Section
11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan to require
CAT LLC to determine costs for the
operating budget for the CAT in a
reasonable manner. Specifically, the
first sentence of Section 11.1(a) of the
CAT NMS Plan would be revised to
read: ‘‘On an annual basis the Operating
Committee shall approve a reasonable
operating budget for the Company.’’
Similarly, CAT LLC proposes to include
the term ‘‘reasonably’’ in proposed
paragraph (a)(i) of Section 11.1 of the
45 CAT LLC states that breaking out technology
costs in this manner is consistent with how such
costs are broken out in the CAT budgets available
on the CAT website. The CAT LLC budgets are
available on the CAT website at https://
www.catnmsplan.com/cat-financial-and-operatingbudget. CAT LLC states that it currently does not
propose to require the disclosure of additional
subcategories of cost information, such as a further
breakdown of the category of cloud hosting services
into production costs, including linker costs and
storage costs. Additionally, CAT LLC notes that the
CAT NMS Plan requires that detailed cost
information be made available to the Commission
upon request, and detailed information on CAT
costs and operations is regularly made available to
the Commission staff and the Advisory Committee
on a confidential basis. See Notice, supra note 6,
88 FR at 17090.
46 Id.
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CAT NMS Plan. Specifically, that
section would read: ‘‘Without limiting
the foregoing, the reasonably budgeted
CAT costs shall include technology
(including cloud hosting services,
operating fees, CAIS operating fees,
change request fees, and capitalized
developed technology costs), legal,
consulting, insurance, professional and
administration, and public relations
costs, a reserve and such other cost
categories as reasonably determined by
the Operating Committee to be included
in the budget.’’
Finally, CAT LLC proposes to amend
Section 11.1(b) of the CAT NMS Plan.
Currently, Section 11.1(b) of the CAT
NMS Plan states that:
Subject to Section 11.2, the Operating
Committee shall have discretion to establish
funding for the Company, including: (i)
establishing fees that the Participants shall
pay; and (ii) establishing fees for Industry
Members that shall be implemented by
Participants. The Participants shall file with
the SEC under Section 19(b) of the Exchange
Act any such fees on Industry Members that
the Operating Committee approves, and such
fees shall be labeled as ‘‘Consolidated Audit
Trail Funding Fees.’’
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CAT LLC proposes to amend Section
11.1(b) to include a reference to Section
11.1 as well as Section 11.2 in the
‘‘subject to’’ clause at the beginning of
the provision.
b. Reserve
Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan
states that the budget shall include ‘‘the
funding of any reserve that the
Operating Committee reasonably deems
appropriate for prudent operation of the
Company.’’ In addition, proposed
Section 11.1(a)(i) of the CAT NMS Plan
would state that the budgeted CAT costs
shall include a reserve. Section 11.1(c)
of the CAT NMS Plan states that ‘‘[a]ny
surplus of the Company’s revenues over
its expenses shall be treated as an
operational reserve to offset future fees.’’
CAT LLC proposes to add paragraph
(ii) to Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS
Plan to set forth the parameters for the
size of the reserve. Proposed Section
11.1(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan would
state that ‘‘[f]or the reserve referenced in
paragraph (a)(i) of this Section, the
budget will include an amount
reasonably necessary to allow the
Company to maintain a reserve of not
more than 25% of the annual budget.’’
In addition, proposed Section 11.1(a)(ii)
of the CAT NMS Plan would state that
‘‘[f]or the avoidance of doubt, the
calculation of the amount of the reserve
would exclude the amount of the
reserve from the budget.’’
CAT LLC proposes to provide
additional information as to how budget
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surpluses would be treated for purposes
of the reserve. Specifically, proposed
subparagraph (ii) of Section 11.1(a) of
the CAT NMS Plan would state that
‘‘[t]o the extent collected CAT fees
exceed CAT costs, including the reserve
of 25% of the annual budget, such
surplus will be used to offset future
fees.’’ In addition, CAT LLC further
proposes to state in proposed Section
11.1(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan that
‘‘[f]or the avoidance of doubt, the
Company will only include an amount
for the reserve in the annual budget if
the Company does not have a sufficient
reserve (which shall be up to but not
more than 25% of the annual budget).’’
3. CAT Fees Related to Prospective CAT
Costs
CAT LLC proposes to revise the
introductory statement in proposed
Section 11.3(a) of the CAT NMS Plan to
state that the Operating Committee will
establish the CAT Fees to be payable by
Participants and Industry Members with
regard to Prospective CAT Costs.
a. Fee Rate for CAT Fees
CAT LLC proposes to describe the
timing and method for calculating the
Fee Rate for the CAT Fees related to
Prospective CAT Costs in proposed
Section 11.3(a)(i) of the CAT NMS Plan,
and to provide additional detail
regarding the Fee Rate in that provision.
Proposed Section 11.3(a)(i) of the CAT
NMS Plan would state that CAT Fees
related to Prospective CAT Costs would
be calculated twice a year, once at the
beginning of the year and once during
the year.
Proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(A)(I) of
the CAT NMS Plan would provide that
at the beginning of each year, the
Operating Committee will calculate the
Fee Rate by dividing the reasonably
budgeted CAT costs for the year by the
reasonably projected total executed
equivalent share volume of all
transactions in Eligible Securities for the
year. Once the Operating Committee has
approved such Fee Rate, the
Participants shall be required to file
with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act CAT
Fees to be charged to Industry Members
calculated using such Fee Rate.
Participants and Industry Members will
be required to pay CAT Fees calculated
using this Fee Rate once such CAT Fees
are in effect with regard to Industry
Members in accordance with Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act.
Proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(A)(II) of
the CAT NMS provides that during each
year, the Operating Committee will
calculate a new Fee Rate by dividing the
reasonably budgeted CAT costs for the
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remainder of the year by the reasonably
projected total executed equivalent
share volume of all transactions in
Eligible Securities for the remainder of
the year. Once the Operating Committee
has approved the new Fee Rate, the
Participants shall be required to file
with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act CAT
Fees to be charged to Industry Members
calculated using the new Fee Rate.
Participants and Industry Members will
be required to pay CAT Fees calculated
using this new Fee Rate once such CAT
Fees are in effect with regard to Industry
Members in accordance with Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act. CAT LLC
also proposes to add Section
11.3(a)(i)(A)(III) to the CAT NMS Plan to
state that CAT Fees related to
Prospective CAT Costs do not sunset
automatically; such CAT Fees would
remain in place until new CAT Fees are
in place with a new Fee Rate. The
Executed Share Model is designed to
collect CAT fees continuously to
provide uninterrupted revenue to pay
CAT bills.47
b. Executed Equivalent Shares
CAT LLC proposes to describe in
proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(B) of the
CAT NMS Plan how executed
equivalent shares would be counted for
purposes of calculating CAT Fees. The
Executed Share Model uses the concept
of executed equivalent shares as the
transactions subject to a CAT Fee
involve NMS Stocks, Listed Options and
OTC Equity Securities, each of which
have different trading characteristics.
NMS Stocks. Under the Executed
Share Model, each executed share for a
transaction in NMS Stocks would be
counted as one executed equivalent
share.
Listed Options. Recognizing that
Listed Options trade in contracts rather
than shares, each executed contract for
a transaction in Listed Options will be
counted using the contract multiplier
applicable to the specific Listed Option
in the relevant transaction. Typically, a
Listed Option contract represents 100
shares; however, it may also represent
another designated number of shares.
OTC Equity Securities. Similarly, in
recognition of the different trading
characteristics of OTC Equity Securities
as compared to NMS Stocks, the
Executed Share Model would discount
47 CAT LLC proposes to add proposed Section
11.3(a)(i)(A)(IV) to the CAT NMS Plan. This
provision would state that ‘‘[f]or the avoidance of
doubt, the first CAT Fee may commence at the
beginning of the year or during the year. If it were
to commence during the year, the CAT Fee would
be calculated as described in paragraph (II) of this
Section.’’
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the share volume of OTC Equity
Securities when calculating CAT Fees.
To address this potential concern, the
Executed Share Model would count
each executed share for a transaction in
OTC Equity Securities as 0.01 executed
equivalent shares.
c. Budgeted CAT Costs
The calculation of the Fee Rate for
CAT Fees related to Prospective CAT
Costs requires the determination of the
budgeted CAT costs for the year or other
relevant period. Proposed Section
11.3(a)(i)(C) of the CAT NMS Plan
would state that the budgeted CAT costs
for the year shall be comprised of all
reasonable fees, costs and expenses
reasonably budgeted to be incurred by
or for the Company in connection with
the development, implementation and
operation of the CAT as set forth in the
annual operating budget approved by
the Operating Committee pursuant to
Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan, or
as adjusted during the year by the
Operating Committee.
In addition, proposed Section
11.3(a)(i)(C) of the CAT NMS Plan
would provide that the budgeted CAT
costs for the year shall be comprised of
all reasonable fees, costs and expenses
reasonably budgeted to be incurred by
or for the Company in connection with
the development, implementation and
operation of the CAT as set forth in the
annual operating budget approved by
the Operating Committee pursuant to
Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan, or
as adjusted during the year by the
Operating Committee.
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d. Projected Total Executed Equivalent
Share Volume
The calculation of the Fee Rate for
CAT Fees also requires the
determination of the projected total
executed equivalent share volume of
transactions in Eligible Securities for
each relevant period. Pursuant to
proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(D) of the
CAT NMS Plan, each year, the
Operating Committee would reasonably
determine this projection based on the
total executed equivalent share volume
of transactions in Eligible Securities
from the prior twelve months. As set
forth in proposed Section 11.3(a)(iii)(B),
Participants will be required to provide
a description of the calculation of the
projection in their fee filings pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.
Furthermore, CAT LLC intends to
calculate the CAT Fees based on a
reasonable determination of the
projected total executed equivalent
share volume of transactions in Eligible
Securities.
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18:01 Jun 22, 2023
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e. Participant CAT Fees for Prospective
CAT Costs
CAT LLC proposes to add paragraph
(A) to proposed Section 11.3(a)(ii) of the
CAT NMS Plan to describe the CAT Fee
obligation of the Participants. Each
Participant that is a national securities
exchange will be required to pay the
CAT Fee for each transaction in Eligible
Securities executed on the exchange in
the prior month based on CAT Data.
Each Participant that is a national
securities association will be required to
pay the CAT Fee for each transaction in
Eligible Securities executed otherwise
than on an exchange in the prior month
based on CAT Data. The CAT Fee for
each transaction in Eligible Securities
will be calculated by multiplying the
number of executed equivalent shares in
the transaction by one-third and by the
Fee Rate determined pursuant to
paragraph (a)(i) of Section 11.3.
CAT LLC also proposes to include
proposed paragraph (B) of proposed
Section 11.3(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan
to clarify that Participants would only
be required to pay CAT Fees when
Industry Members are required to pay
CAT Fees. Under the Executed Share
Model, CAT Fees are designed to cover
100% of CAT costs by allocating costs
between and among Participants and
Industry Members. However, the CAT
Fees charged to Participants are
implemented via a different process
than CAT Fees charged to Industry
Members. CAT Fees charged to
Participants are implemented via an
approval of the CAT Fees by the
Operating Committee in accordance
with the requirements of the CAT NMS
Plan. In contrast, CAT Fees charged to
Industry Members may only become
effective in accordance with the
requirements of Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act.
f. Industry Member CAT Fees for
Prospective CAT Costs
CAT LLC proposes to describe the
CAT Fees related to Prospective CAT
Costs that would be charged to Industry
Members in proposed Section
11.3(a)(iii)(A) of the CAT NMS Plan.
Each Industry Member that is the CEBB
in a transaction in Eligible Securities
and each Industry Member that is the
CEBS in a transaction in Eligible
Securities) will be required to pay a
CAT Fee for each such transaction in
Eligible Securities in the prior month
based on CAT Data. The CEBB’s CAT
Fee or CEBS’s CAT Fee (as applicable)
for each transaction in Eligible
Securities will be calculated by
multiplying the number of executed
equivalent shares in the transaction by
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41147
one-third and by the Fee Rate
reasonably determined pursuant to
paragraph (a)(i) of this Section 11.3.
Proposed paragraph (B) of proposed
Section 11.3(a)(iii) of the CAT NMS
Plan would require the fee filings to be
made pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act and Rule 19b–4
thereunder 48 for Industry Member CAT
Fees to include with regard to the CAT
Fee: (A) the Fee Rate; (B) the budget for
the upcoming year (or remainder of the
year, as applicable), including a brief
description of each line item in the
budget, including (1) technology line
items of cloud hosting services,
operating fees, CAIS operating fees,
change request fees and capitalized
developed technology costs, (2) legal, (3)
consulting, (4) insurance, (5)
professional and administration, and (6)
public relations costs, a reserve and/or
such other categories as reasonably
determined by the Operating Committee
to be included in the budget and the
reason for changes in each such line
item from the prior CAT Fee filing; 49 (C)
a discussion of how the budget is
reconciled to the collected fees; and (D)
the projected total executed equivalent
share volume of all transactions in
Eligible Securities for the year (or
remainder of the year, as applicable),
and a description of the calculation of
the projection. This detail would
describe how the Fee Rate is calculated
and explain how the budget used in the
calculation is reconciled to the collected
fees.50
In addition, in proposed Section
11.3(a)(iii)(B), CAT LLC proposes to
state that the budgeted CAT costs
described in the fee filings must provide
sufficient detail to demonstrate that the
CAT budget used in calculating the CAT
Fees is reasonable and appropriate.
The collection of CAT Fees from
Industry Members is subject to Section
11.6 of the CAT NMS Plan regarding the
Financial Accountability Milestones.
Accordingly, CAT LLC proposes to state
in proposed paragraph (C) to proposed
48 CAT LLC expects the fee filings required to be
made by the Participants pursuant to Section 19(b)
of the Exchange Act with regard to CAT Fees to be
filed pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the
Exchange Act and Rule 19b–(f)(2) thereunder. In
accordance with Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the
Exchange Act and Rule 19b–4(f)(2) thereunder, such
fee filings would be effective upon filing.
49 CAT LLC intends to include any other
categories as reasonably determined by the
Operation Committee. Accordingly, this provision
refers to ‘‘such other categories as reasonably
determined by the Operating Committee to be
included in the budget.’’
50 As a practical matter, the fee filing would
provide the exact fee per executed equivalent share
to be paid for the CAT Fees, by multiplying the Fee
Rate by one-third and describing the relevant
number of decimal places for the fee.
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Section 11.3(a)(iii) that Participants will
not make fee filings pursuant to Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act regarding
CAT Fees until the Financial
Accountability Milestone related to
Period 4 described in Section 11.6 of the
CAT NMS Plan has been satisfied.
g. CAT Fee Details
CAT LLC proposes to add proposed
Section 11.3(a)(iv)(A) to the CAT NMS
Plan to state that details regarding the
calculation of a Participant or CAT
Executing Broker’s CAT Fees will be
provided upon request to such
Participant or CAT Executing Broker. At
a minimum, such details would include
each Participant or CAT Executing
Broker’s executed equivalent share
volume and corresponding fee by (1)
Listed Options, NMS Stocks and OTC
Equity Securities, (2) by transactions
executed on each exchange and
transactions executed otherwise than on
an exchange, and (3) by buy-side
transactions and sell-side transactions.’’
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to
make certain aggregate statistics
regarding the CAT Fees publicly
available, which would include, at a
minimum, the aggregate executed
equivalent share volume and
corresponding aggregate fee by (1)
Listed Options, NMS Stocks and OTC
Equity Securities, (2) by transactions
executed on each exchange and
transactions executed otherwise than on
an exchange, and (3) by buy-side
transactions and sell-side transactions.51
4. Historical CAT Assessment
CAT LLC proposes to revise Section
11.3(b) of the CAT NMS Plan to provide
that the Operating Committee will
establish one or more Historical CAT
Assessments to be payable by Industry
Members with regard to Past CAT
Costs.52
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a. Historical Fee Rate for Historical CAT
Assessments
Proposed paragraph (A) of proposed
Section 11.3(b)(i) of the CAT NMS Plan
would state that the Operating
Committee will calculate the Historical
Fee Rate for each Historical CAT
Assessment by dividing the Historical
CAT Costs for each Historical CAT
Assessment by the reasonably projected
total executed equivalent share volume
of all transactions in Eligible Securities
51 See proposed Section 11.3(a)(iv)(B) of the CAT
NMS Plan.
52 There may be one or more Historical CAT
Assessments, depending upon the timing of any
approval of the amendment to the CAT NMS Plan
and the completion of the Financial Accountability
Milestones. For a discussion of the Financial
Accountability Milestones, see Section 11.6 of the
CAT NMS Plan.
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for the Historical Recovery Period for
each Historical CAT Assessment. Once
the Operating Committee has approved
such Historical Fee Rate, the
Participants shall be required to file
with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act such
Historical CAT Assessment to be
charged Industry Members calculated
using such Historical Fee Rate. Industry
Members will be required to pay such
Historical CAT Assessment calculated
using such Historical Fee Rate once
such Historical CAT Assessment is in
effect in accordance with Section 19(b)
of the Exchange Act.
b. Executed Equivalent Shares
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(B) of the
CAT NMS Plan would state that the
Historical CAT Assessment would be
calculated based on the same executed
equivalent share calculation as CAT
Fees related to Prospective CAT Costs.
c. Historical CAT Costs
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(C) of the
CAT NMS Plan would describe the
Historical CAT Costs for calculating
Historical CAT Assessments and would
state that ‘‘[t]he Operating Committee
will reasonably determine the Historical
CAT Costs sought to be recovered by
each Historical CAT Assessment, where
the Historical CAT Costs will be Past
CAT Costs minus Past CAT Costs
reasonably excluded from Historical
CAT Costs by the Operating
Committee.’’
CAT LLC proposes to further clarify
the amount to be collected by the
Historical CAT Assessments by adding
a clarifying statement in proposed
Section 11.3(b)(i)(C) that ‘‘[e]ach
Historical CAT Assessment will seek to
recover from CAT Executing Brokers
two-thirds of Historical CAT Costs
incurred during the period covered by
the Historical CAT Assessment.’’ Each
CEBS and CEBB pays one-third, and,
therefore, two-thirds of the Historical
CAT Costs would be collected from CAT
Executing Brokers.
CAT LLC also proposes to add the
term ‘‘reasonably’’ to the following
sentence in Section 11.1(c) of the CAT
NMS Plan before the word ‘‘incurred’’:
‘‘In determining fees on Participants and
Industry Members the Operating
Committee shall take into account fees,
costs and expenses (including legal and
consulting fees) reasonably incurred by
the Participants on behalf of the
Company prior to the Effective Date in
connection with the creation and
implementation of the CAT.’’
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d. Historical Recovery Period
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(D)(I) of
the CAT NMS Plan would describe the
Historical Recovery Period used in
calculating the Historical Fee Rate. This
proposed provision would state that
‘‘[t]he length of the Historical Recovery
Period used in calculating each
Historical Fee Rate will be reasonably
established by the Operating Committee
based upon the amount of the Historical
CAT Costs to be recovered by the
Historical CAT Assessment.’’ This
proposed provision, however, would
state that ‘‘no Historical Recovery
Period used in calculating the Historical
Fee Rate shall be less than 24 months or
more than five years.’’
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(D)(II) of
the CAT NMS Plan would describe the
length of the time that the Historical
CAT Assessment would be in effect,
which may be greater than or less than
the Historical Recovery Period,
depending on the amount of the
Historical CAT Assessments collected
based on the actual volume during the
time that the Historical Assessment is in
effect. Any Historical CAT Assessment
would remain in effect until the relevant
Historical CAT Costs are collected,
whether that time is shorter or longer
than the Historical Recovery Period
used in calculating the Historical Fee
Rate.
e. Projected Total Executed Equivalent
Share Volume
The Historical Fee Rate for a
Historical CAT Assessment would be
calculated by using the projected total
executed equivalent share volume of all
transactions in Eligible Securities for the
Historical Recovery Period for such
Historical CAT Assessment. As set forth
in proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(E) of the
CAT NMS Plan, ‘‘[t]he Operating
Committee shall reasonably determine
the projected total executed equivalent
share volume of all transactions in
Eligible Securities for each Historical
Recovery Period based on the executed
equivalent share volume of all
transactions in Eligible Securities for the
prior twelve months.’’ In addition, CAT
LLC proposes to allow the Operating
Committee to base its projection on the
prior twelve months, but to use its
discretion to analyze the likely volume
for the upcoming year. As set forth in
proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(II) of the
CAT NMS Plan, Participants will be
required to provide a description of the
calculation of the projection in their fee
filings pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act for Historical CAT
Assessments.
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f. Past CAT Costs and Participants
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(ii) of the
CAT NMS Plan would clarify that the
Participants would not be required to
pay the Historical CAT Assessment as
the Participants previously have paid all
Past CAT Costs. In addition, proposed
Section 11.3(b)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan
would state that ‘‘[i]n lieu of a Historical
CAT Assessment, the Participants’ onethird share of Historical CAT Costs and
such other additional Past CAT Costs as
reasonably determined by the Operating
Committee will be paid by the
cancellation of loans made to the
Company on a pro rata basis based on
the outstanding loan amounts due under
the loans.’’ Furthermore, proposed
Section 11.3(b)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan
would emphasize that ‘‘[t]he Historical
CAT Assessment is designed to recover
two-thirds of the Historical CAT Costs.’’
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g. Historical CAT Assessment for
Industry Members
CAT LLC proposes to describe the
Historical CAT Assessment charged to
Industry Members in proposed Section
11.3(b)(iii)(A) of the CAT NMS Plan.
Each month in which a Historical CAT
Assessment is in effect, each CEBB and
each CEBS shall pay a fee for each
transaction in Eligible Securities
executed by the CEBB or CEBS from the
prior month as set forth in CAT Data,
where the Historical CAT Assessment
for each transaction will be calculated
by multiplying the number of executed
equivalent shares in the transaction by
one-third and by the Historical Fee Rate
reasonably determined pursuant to
paragraph (b)(i) of this Section 11.3.
CAT LLC proposes to provide
additional details regarding the fee
filings to be filed by the Participants
regarding each Historical CAT
Assessment pursuant to Section 19(b) of
the Exchange Act in proposed Section
11.3(b)(iii)(B) of the CAT NMS Plan.53
Specifically, CAT LLC proposes to state
that each Participant will be required to
file a fee filing pursuant to Section 19(b)
of the Exchange Act to describe each
Historical CAT Assessment.54
CAT LLC also proposes to provide
additional detail about the information
that Participants would be required to
include in their fee filings to be made
pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange and Rule 19b–4(f)(2) for
53 CAT LLC expects the fee filings required to be
made by the Participants pursuant to Section 19(b)
of the Exchange Act with regard to Historical CAT
Assessments to be filed pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A) of the Exchange Act. In accordance with
Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Exchange Act, fee filings
made pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the
Exchange Act would be effective upon filing.
54 See proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(I).
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Historical CAT Assessments in
proposed paragraph (b)(iii)(B)(II) of
proposed Section 11.3 of the CAT NMS
Plan. Specifically, such filings would be
required to include: (A) the Historical
Fee Rate; (B) a brief description of the
amount and type of Historical CAT
Costs, including (1) the technology line
items of cloud hosting services,
operating fees, CAIS operating fees,
change request fees and capitalized
developed technology costs, (2) legal, (3)
consulting, (4) insurance, (5)
professional and administration, and (6)
public relations costs; (C) the Historical
Recovery Period and the reasons for its
length; and (D) the projected total
executed equivalent share volume of all
transactions in Eligible Securities for the
Historical Recovery Period, and a
description of the calculation of the
projection.55
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to
clarify in proposed Section
11.3(b)(iii)(B)(II) that the Historical CAT
Costs described in the fee filings must
provide sufficient detail to demonstrate
that such costs are reasonable and
appropriate.
The collection of Historical CAT
Assessments from Industry Members is
subject to Section 11.6 of the CAT NMS
Plan regarding the Financial
Accountability Milestones. Accordingly,
CAT LLC proposes to clarify in
proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(III) that
Participants will not make CAT fee
filings pursuant to Section 19(b) of the
Exchange Act regarding a Historical
CAT Assessment until any applicable
Financial Accountability Milestone has
been satisfied.
h. Historical CAT Assessment Details
CAT LLC proposes to add proposed
Section 11.3(b)(iv)(A) to the CAT NMS
Plan to state that details regarding the
calculation of a CAT Executing Broker’s
Historical CAT Assessments will be
provided upon request to such CAT
Executing Broker. At a minimum, such
details would include each CAT
Executing Broker’s executed equivalent
share volume and corresponding fee by
(1) Listed Options, NMS Stocks and
OTC Equity Securities, (2) by
transactions executed on each exchange
and transactions executed otherwise
than on an exchange, and (3) by buyside transactions and sell-side
transactions.
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to
make certain aggregate statistics
55 As a practical matter, the fee filing would
provide the exact fee per executed equivalent share
to be paid for the Historical CAT Assessment, by
multiplying the Historical Fee Rate by one-third
and describing the relevant number of decimal
places for the fee.
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41149
regarding Historical CAT Assessments
publicly available, which would
include, at a minimum, the aggregate
executed equivalent share volume and
corresponding aggregate fee by (1)
Listed Options, NMS Stocks and OTC
Equity Securities, (2) by transactions
executed on each exchange and
transactions executed otherwise than on
an exchange, and (3) by buy-side
transactions and sell-side transactions.56
5. Additional Changes From Original
Funding Model
CAT LLC proposes certain revisions
to Article XI of the CAT NMS Plan to
implement the Executed Share Model.
CAT LLC proposes to make the
following changes to the CAT NMS Plan
in addition to the proposed changes to
the CAT NMS Plan discussed above.
a. Elimination of Definition of
‘‘Execution Venue’’
Section 1.1 of the CAT NMS Plan
defines the term ‘‘Execution Venue’’ to
mean ‘‘a Participant or an alternative
trading system (‘ATS’) (as defined in
Rule 300 of Regulation ATS) that
operates pursuant to Rule 301 of
Regulation ATS (excluding any such
ATS that does not execute orders).’’
Currently, the term ‘‘Execution Venue’’
is used in Sections 11.2 and 11.3 of the
CAT NMS Plan to describe how CAT
costs would be allocated among CAT
Reporters under the Original Funding
Model. The Original Funding Model
would have imposed fees based on
market share to CAT Reporters that are
Execution Venues, including ATSs, and
fees based on message traffic for
Industry Members’ non-ATS activities.
In contrast, the Executed Share Model
would impose fees based on the
executed equivalent shares of
transactions in Eligible Securities for
three categories of CAT Reporters:
Participants, CEBBs and CEBSs.
Accordingly, as the concept for an
‘‘Execution Venue’’ would not be
relevant for the Executed Share Model,
CAT LLC proposes to delete this term
and its definition from Section 1.1 of the
CAT NMS Plan.
b. Use of Executed Equivalent Share
Volume Under Executed Share Model
The Original Funding Model set forth
in the CAT NMS Plan requires
Participants and Execution Venue ATSs
to pay CAT fees based on market share
and Industry Members (other than
Execution Venue ATSs) to pay CAT fees
based on message traffic. The CAT NMS
Plan also describes how the market
56 See proposed Section 11.3(b)(iv)(B) of the CAT
NMS Plan.
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share-based fee would be calculated for
Participants and other Execution Venue
ATSs and how the message traffic-based
fee would be calculated for Industry
Members (other than Execution Venue
ATSs). CAT LLC proposes to amend the
CAT NMS Plan to require Participants,
CEBBs and CEBSs to pay CAT fees
based on the number of executed
equivalent shares in a transaction in
Eligible Securities, rather than based on
market share and message traffic.
Accordingly, the Operating Committee
proposes to amend Section 11.2(b) and
(c) and Section 11.3(a) and (b) of the
CAT NMS Plan to reflect the proposed
use of the number of executed
equivalent shares in transactions in
Eligible Securities in calculating CAT
fees.
Section 11.2(b) of the CAT NMS Plan
states that ‘‘[i]n establishing the funding
of the Company, the Operating
Committee shall seek . . . (b) to
establish an allocation of the Company’s
related costs among Participants and
Industry Members that is consistent
with the Exchange Act, taking into
account the timeline for implementation
of the CAT and distinctions in the
securities trading operations of
Participants and Industry Members and
their relative impact upon Company
resources and operations.’’ CAT LLC
proposes to delete the requirement to
take into account ‘‘distinctions in the
securities trading operations of
Participants and Industry Members and
their relative impact upon Company
resources and operations.’’ CAT LLC
represents that this requirement related
to using message traffic and market
share in the calculation of CAT fees, as
message traffic and market share were
metrics related to the impact of a CAT
Reporter on the Company’s resources
and operations. CAT LLC represents
that with the proposed move to the use
of the executed equivalent shares metric
instead of message traffic and market
share, the requirement is no longer
relevant.
Section 11.2(c) of the CAT NMS Plan
states that ‘‘[i]n establishing the funding
of the Company, the Operating
Committee shall seek . . . (c) to
establish a tiered fee structure in which
the fees charged to: (i) CAT Reporters
that are Execution Venues, including
ATSs, are based upon the level of
market share; (ii) Industry Members’
non-ATS activities are based upon
message traffic.’’ CAT LLC proposes to
delete subparagraphs (i) and (ii) and
replace these subparagraphs with the
requirement that the fee structure in
which the fees charged to ‘‘Participants
and Industry Members are based upon
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the executed equivalent share volume of
transactions in Eligible Securities.’’
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to
amend the CAT funding principles to
clarify that CAT Fees and the Historical
CAT Assessments are intended to be
cost-based fees—that is, the fees are
designed to recover the cost of the
creation, implementation and operation
of the CAT. CAT LLC proposes to
amend the funding principle set forth in
Section 11.2(c) by making a specific
reference to the costs of the CAT.
CAT LLC proposes to delete Section
11.3(a) of the CAT NMS Plan, which
provides additional detail regarding the
market share-based fees to be paid by
Participants and Execution Venue ATSs
under the Original Funding Model, and
replace it with a description of the CAT
Fees related to Prospective CAT Costs,
as described above.
CAT LLC proposes to delete Section
11.3(b) of the CAT NMS Plan, which
provides additional detail regarding the
message traffic-based CAT fees to be
paid by Industry Members (other than
Execution Venue ATSs) under the
Original Funding Model, and replace it
with a description of the Historical CAT
Assessments, as described above.
c. Elimination of Tiered Fees
CAT LLC proposes to eliminate the
use of tiered fees that were included in
the Original Funding Model. Instead,
under the Executed Share Model, each
Participant, CEBB or CEBS would pay a
fee based solely on its transactions in
Eligible Securities. The Operating
Committee therefore proposes to amend
Sections 11.1(d), 11.2(c), 11.3(a) and
11.3(b) of the CAT NMS Plan to
eliminate tiered fees and related
concepts.
Section 11.1(d) of the CAT NMS Plan
states that ‘‘[c]onsistent with this Article
XI, the Operating Committee shall adopt
policies, procedures, and practices
regarding the budget and budgeting
process, assignment of tiers, resolution
of disputes, billing and collection of
fees, and other related matters.’’ With
the elimination of tiered fees, the
reference to the ‘‘assignment of tiers’’
would no longer be relevant for the
Executed Share Model. Therefore, CAT
LLC proposes to delete the reference to
‘‘assignment of tiers’’ from Section
11.1(d). Similarly, CAT LLC also
proposes to delete the following
sentences from Section 11.1(d) because
the Executed Share Model would not
use tiered fees:
For the avoidance of doubt, as part of its
regular review of fees for the CAT, the
Operating Committee shall have the right to
change the tier assigned to any particular
Person in accordance with fee schedules
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previously filed with the Commission that
are reasonable, equitable and not unfairly
discriminatory and subject to public notice
and comment, pursuant to this Article XI.
Any such changes will be effective upon
reasonable notice to such Person.
CAT LLC also proposes to delete the
references to ‘‘tiered’’ fees from Section
11.2(c) of the CAT NMS Plan and
paragraph (iii) of Section 11.2(c) of the
CAT NMS Plan, which relates to the
establishment of a tiered fee structure.
As discussed above, the Operating
Committee proposes to replace the
language in Sections 11.3(a) and (b) of
the CAT NMS Plan with language
implementing the Executed Share
Model. These proposed changes would
remove the references to tiers in
Sections 11.3(a)(i) and (ii) and 11.3(b) of
the CAT NMS Plan, along with the other
proposed changes.
d. No Fixed Fees
As discussed above, CAT LLC
proposes to replace the language in
Sections 11.3(a) and (b) of the CAT NMS
Plan with language implementing the
Executed Share Model. These proposed
changes also would remove the
references to ‘‘fixed fees’’ in Sections
11.3(a), 11.3(a)(i), 11.3(a)(ii) and 11.3(b)
and replaced them with references to
‘‘fees.’’ Under the Executed Share
Model, the CAT fees to be paid by
Participants, CEBBs and CEBSs will
vary in accordance with their executed
equivalent share volume of transactions
in Eligible Securities, although the Fee
Rate will be fixed for a relevant period.
6. Plan Amendment Process for Fee Rate
Changes
Under the Executed Share Model,
once any Fee Rate has been established
by a majority vote of the Operating
Committee in accordance with the
Executed Share Model set forth in the
CAT NMS Plan,57 each Participant
would be required to pay the applicable
CAT Fee calculated in accordance with
the requirements set forth in the CAT
NMS Plan (subject to the requirement
for the Industry Member CAT Fee to be
in effect). CAT LLC does not plan to
submit an amendment to the CAT NMS
Plan each time that the Fee Rate for the
CAT Fee is established or adjusted
because of the length of time and
burden required to amend the CAT
NMS Plan for each adjustment to the
Fee Rate.
57 Participants would be required to pay the CAT
Fee once the CAT Fee is in effect with regard to
Industry Members in accordance with Section 19(b)
of the Exchange Act.
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B. CAT Fee Schedule for Participants
To implement the Participant CAT
fees, CAT LLC proposes to add a fee
schedule, entitled ‘‘Consolidated Audit
Trail Funding Fees,’’ to Appendix B of
the CAT NMS Plan. Proposed paragraph
(a) of the fee schedule would describe
the CAT Fees to be paid by the
Participants under the Executed Share
Model. Specifically, paragraph (a) of the
Participant fee schedule would state
that ‘‘[e]ach Participant shall pay the
CAT Fee set forth in Section 11.3(a) of
the CAT NMS Plan to Consolidated
Audit Trail, LLC in the manner
prescribed by Consolidated Audit Trail,
LLC on a monthly basis based on the
Participant’s transactions in Eligible
Securities in the prior month.’’
IV. Summary of Comments
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A. Allocation of Fee Among Participants
and Industry Members
Under the Executed Share Model,
CAT fees would be allocated one-third
to the applicable Participant, one-third
to the CEBS and one-third to the CEBB
of a transaction. Two commenters
opposed the proposed allocation.58 One
commenter stated that, while the
Proposed Amendment justified the
fairness of the Executed Share Model
because it would operate like other fees,
like FINRA’s TAF, Section 31 fees, and
the options regulatory fee,59 the
Proposed Amendment did not support
why those fee frameworks should be
used as a model in this context.60 For
example, the commenter stated that the
TAF is designed to recover the costs of
FINRA’s regulatory activities, while the
CAT fees are intended to align with the
costs to build, operate and administer
the CAT.61 Further, the commenter
58 See Letters to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Commission, from Marcia E. Asquith, Corporate
Secretary, EVP, Board and External Relations,
FINRA, dated May 25, 2023 (‘‘FINRA May 2023
Letter’’); April 11, 2023 (‘‘FINRA April 2023
Letter’’); and June 22, 2022 (‘‘FINRA June 2022
Letter’’) (the FINRA June 2022 Letter was submitted
in response to the prior funding proposal and was
attached and incorporated by reference in the
FINRA April 2023 Letter); Letters to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission, from Ellen
Greene, Managing Director, Equities & Options
Market Structure, and Joseph Corcoran, Managing
Director, Associate General Counsel, SIFMA, dated
June 5, 2023 (‘‘SIFMA June 2023 Letter’’); May 2,
2023 (‘‘SIFMA May 2023 Letter’’); January 12, 2023
(‘‘SIFMA January 2023 Letter’’); December 14, 2022
(‘‘SIFMA December 2022 Letter’’); October 7, 2022
(‘‘SIFMA October 2022 Letter’’); and June 22, 2022
(‘‘SIFMA June 2022 Letter’’) (the SIFMA June 2022
Letter, SIFMA October 2022 Letter, SIFMA
December 2022 Letter and SIFMA January 2023
Letter were submitted in response to the prior
funding proposal and incorporated by reference in
the SIFMA May 2023 Letter).
59 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17122.
60 See FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4.
61 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 8.
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stated that the Proposed Amendment
has insufficiently explained the
connection between the TAF and CAT
fees, merely stating that they are similar
fees because they are transaction-based
fees to provide funding for regulatory
costs.62 The commenter stated that
‘‘CAT LLC’s observations superficially
focus on the fact that these fees also use
transaction-based metrics (and may be
assessed on members) and neglects
other factors relevant to the analysis
including, for example, that these fees
are used in combination with other
funding mechanisms and metrics to
support an overall funding
framework.’’ 63
Another commenter disagreed with
the Participants’ statement that the
Executed Share Model’s similarity to
other transaction-based fees approved
by the Commission is adequate
justification for consistency with the
Exchange Act.64 The commenter stated
that similarity to other transaction-based
fees is not an adequate basis to show
that the Executed Share Model is
consistent with relevant standards; each
proposed fee must be individually
supported.65
Commenters also questioned the
Participants’ justifications for the onethird allocation methodology. One
commenter argued that the Proposed
Amendment did not justify why the
proposed allocation by thirds to the
Participant, buy-side and sell-side is
equitable in the context of the CAT
NMS Plan.66 The commenter also
argued that the Proposed Amendment
did not consider alternatives suggested
by commenters on a prior proposed
funding model,67 such as a model
similar to Section 31 fees and a CAT
funding model based on the ‘‘Cost
Recovery Principle’’ and the ‘‘Benefits
Received Principle.’’ 68 The commenter
urged that the Commission require those
alternatives to be analyzed.69
One commenter stated that the
Participants have not met their burden
to demonstrate the proposed allocation
62 Id. The commenter also stated that ‘‘it is
unclear how assessing on FINRA the largest
allocation of the SRO portion of CAT expenses
‘provides funding for regulatory costs’ in any
reasonable and equitable sense comparable to the
TAF . . .’’ Id.
63 FINRA May 2023 Letter at 3.
64 See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4.
65 Id.
66 See FINRA June 2022 Letter at 3.
67 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
94984 (May 25, 2022), 87 FR 33226 (June 1, 2022);
96394 (Nov. 28, 2022), 87 FR 74183 (Dec. 2, 2022);
and Letter from Michael Simon, Chair Emeritus,
CAT NMS Plan Operating Committee, to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission (Feb. 15,
2023).
68 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 5.
69 Id.
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41151
is consistent with the Exchange Act fee
standards and not arbitrary.70 The
commenter stated that because FINRA is
funded by Industry Members, Industry
Members would pay over 80% of CAT
costs since they must pay not only their
own share but FINRA’s as well;
therefore, the Commission should
disapprove the proposal.71 The
commenter also argued that the
Proposed Amendment fails to explain
how allocating 80% of total CAT costs
to the industry in perpetuity without a
mechanism to limit the budget 72 is
consistent with the Exchange Act and
guidance on SRO filings related to fees
when the industry has no role in the
governance, oversight or design of CAT
and does not benefit from the CAT.73
The commenter quoted a Commission
release stating that the Participants are
potentially conflicted in allocating CAT
fees to themselves and the Industry
Members.74
Additionally, this commenter stated
that the Participants do not account for
‘‘the time and expense Industry
Members have devoted to developing
and maintaining internal systems to be
able to report the [sic] CAT, as well as
the time and expense Industry Members
have devoted to assisting the Operating
Committee with its job of developing
reporting specifications that allow the
CAT to achieve its regulatory
purpose.’’ 75 The commenter stated that
the Participants have not taken Industry
Members’ time and expenses into
account when deciding to allocate twothirds of the CAT costs to Industry
Members and that ‘‘this omission is a
flaw with the Participants’ decision to
allocate two-thirds of the CAT costs to
Industry Members and its inclusion
would demonstrate that the
Participants’ Executed Share Model
70 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 6; SIFMA June
2023 Letter at 1–2. The commenter also stated that
the Proposed Amendment provides unsupported
conclusory statements that it meets the
requirements of the Exchange Act. See SIFMA June
2023 Letter at 2; see also id. at n 11.
71 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2. See also
SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 1–2 (stating that the
proposed cost allocation methodology is
inconsistent with Exchange Act fee standards
because most costs would be imposed on Industry
Members).
72 The commenter noted that the CAT annual
budget increased over 30% in the last year. See
SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4.
73 SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 3, 4. The commenter
also stated that approving such a proposal would
‘‘directly threaten[ ] efficiency, competition, and
capital formation in U.S. securities markets.’’ Id.
74 Id. at 4. See also Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 89618 (Aug. 19, 2020), 85 FR 65470,
65482 (Oct. 15, 2020).
75 SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA
January 2023 Letter at 4.
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does not provide for the equitable
allocation of reasonable fees.’’ 76
The commenter also objected to
statements made in the Proposed
Amendment that the complexity of
Industry Member business models
contributes substantially to the costs of
the CAT.77 The commenter stated that
the proposed allocation of two-thirds of
CAT costs to Industry Members is
unfair, unreasonable and arbitrary
because the Participants are equally
responsible for the complexity of
trading activity in the markets.78 The
commenter contested the Participants’
argument that the allocation satisfies
Exchange Act fee standards because
Industry Members and the complexity
of their business models drive the costs
of the CAT, by stating that the examples
provided of complexities were
developed to address order types,
activities and fee structures (such as the
maker-taker fee structure) established by
the Participant exchanges.79 The
commenter argued that the Participants
are just as responsible for such costdriving complex trading activity in the
equity and options markets as Industry
Members due to the ‘‘large number of
equity and options exchanges
established by the exchange families
with fundamentally different execution
models and order types.’’ 80 The
commenter argued that the Participant
exchanges have not analyzed how their
own business decisions have resulted in
the complexity of Industry Member
order routing practices and CAT costs.81
The commenter also dismissed other
justifications made in the Proposed
Amendment for the proposed allocation;
specifically, that there are more Industry
Members than Participants and that
Industry Members receive more in
revenue than the Participants,82 stating
that these assertions are not relevant in
demonstrating that the proposed
allocation is fair and reasonable.83 The
commenter argued that the Participants
are justifying the allocation based on the
ability to pay rather than cost
generation, which the commenter
believes is inconsistent ‘‘with the
Participant Exchanges’ proposed
approach. . . of allocating CAT costs
76 SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4–5. See also SIFMA
January 2023 Letter at 5.
77 See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17104.
78 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3. See also
SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2, 3–4.
79 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 6–7. See also
SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 3; Notice, supra note
6, 88 FR at 17104.
80 SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 3.
81 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7.
82 Id. See also Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at
17104.
83 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7. See also
SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4.
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based on approximate responsibility for
generating them. . .’’ and ‘‘with the
historical CAT decision to allocate costs
to the parties responsible for generating
them.’’ 84 The commenter suggested an
alternative allocation that would equally
split CAT costs between Participant
exchanges and Industry Members, while
FINRA would be subject only to a
nominal regulatory user fee to access
CAT Data.85
Commenters also argued against
statements in the Proposed Amendment
that CAT costs would be passed on to
investors.86 One commenter stated,
‘‘[s]uch an assertion is inaccurate
because it is almost certain that there
will be scenarios faced by Industry
Members in which they will not be able
to figure out who was responsible for
generating certain Historical CAT
Costs.’’ 87 The commenter warned that
such assertions would minimize the
Participants’ obligation to allocate fees
consistent with Exchange Act fee
standards and could result in the
inequitable allocation of CAT fees to
Industry Members under the
assumption that such fees would be
passed down to investors.88 Another
commenter objected to statements in the
Proposed Amendment that Industry
Members can pass through to their
customers their CAT cost allocation and
additional costs resulting from an
increase in FINRA fees.89 The
commenter stated that ‘‘[s]ummarily
stating that investors can be made to
bear the costs resulting from the
Funding Model without a detailed
description of and transparency into
how these fees would be determined or
passed on to customers is inadequate,
and does not provide interested parties
sufficient information to consider the
costs and benefits related to the Fee
Proposal.’’ 90
84 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7. The
commenter cited to the funding principles in
Section 11.2 of the CAT NMS Plan.
85 See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4. See also
SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8; SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 5; SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 4. This
commenter also suggested another alternative
allocation in which costs would be allocated to
those Participants and Industry Members most
directly responsible for the costs. Under this
alternative, Industry Members would be responsible
for the cost associated with initial ingestion of the
data into the CAT system. The commenter
explained that Participants would be responsible
for the costs associated with the stages after the data
is initially ingested into the CAT system because
the regulators directly control and benefit from
these stages of the CAT system after ingestion. See
SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 5–6.
86 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8; FINRA April
2023 Letter at 6–7.
87 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8.
88 Id.
89 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6–7.
90 Id. at 7.
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In response to the comment noting
that the Participants had not analyzed a
suggested Section 31-style approach to a
funding model,91 CAT LLC stated that
the CAT fee approach is similar to the
Section 31 fee approach in how an
exchange would be obligated to pay a
transaction fee based on transactions
occurring on that exchange, and that
FINRA would be obligated to pay a
transaction fee based on transactions in
the over-the-counter market.92 CAT LLC
argued that the approaches are also
similar because, in both, an exchange
would be able to determine to pass the
fee onto its members, as would
FINRA.93 CAT LLC stated that if the
Section 31 approach would comply
with the Exchange Act, then the
proposed CAT fee approach should also
comply with the Exchange Act and
CEBBs and CEBSs could determine
whether to pass such fees onto their
clients.94
In response, the commenter stated
that the CAT LLC Response Letter
misrepresented the commenter’s letter
by incorrectly stating that the
commenter’s letter recommended an
approach similar to Section 31 fees.95
The commenter clarified that it was
noting that the Commission had
received comments suggesting a model
like the Section 31 fees, that the
Participants had not ‘‘meaningfully
analyzed’’ the suggested alternatives in
the Proposed Amendment, and that the
Commission should require the
Participants to analyze the
alternatives.96
In response to the comments on
whether Participants’ models are
equally to blame for the complexity of
the markets,97 CAT LLC stated that its
analysis of the complexity of the
industry’s business models is based on
the effects of those models on the costs
of the CAT, which it stated are more
profound than those of Participants, not
on complexity of the market in
general.98 CAT LLC explained that the
complexity of the Industry Members’
business models results in significant
data processing and storage costs, which
Participants do not contribute to as they
do not originate market activity or
91 Id.
at 5.
Letter to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Commission, from Brandon Becker, Chair, CAT
NMS Plan Operating Committee, dated May 18,
2023 (‘‘CAT LLC Response Letter’’), at 9.
93 Id.
94 Id.
95 See FINRA May 2023 Letter at 3, n.8.
96 Id.
97 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3. See also
SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2, 3–4.
98 See CAT LLC Response Letter at 6.
92 See
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orders.99 CAT LLC also stated that the
Participants would pay the same
amount as the CEBB and CEBS in each
transaction.100
CAT LLC also disagreed with one
commenter’s dismissal of CAT LLC’s
consideration of the Industry Members’
relative ability to pay,101 stating that the
Exchange Act specifically requires that
the fees be fair and reasonable, which
necessitates consideration of the relative
ability to pay.102 Additionally, CAT LLC
objected to the commenter’s statement
that the proposed allocation is
‘‘inconsistent with the historical CAT
decision to allocate costs to the parties
responsible for generating them.’’ 103
CAT LLC stated that, while the CAT
NMS Plan does not require CAT costs to
be allocated to the parties responsible
for generating such costs, the proposed
allocation addresses cost burden on the
CAT by (i) taking into account the
impact of Industry Member activity on
CAT costs, and (ii) using trading
activity, which CAT LLC believes is a
‘‘reasonable proxy for cost burden on
the CAT,’’ 104 as the metric for cost
allocation.105
Additionally, CAT LLC responded to
the commenter’s suggested alternative
proposal that would equally allocate
CAT costs to Participant exchanges and
Industry Members, stating that the
commenter did not explain why the
alternative would satisfy the Exchange
Act standards, and noting that CAT LLC
had previously considered such an
allocation but believed that it would not
result in a fair and equitable allocation
due to the greater number of Industry
Members than Participants, the greater
financial resources of Industry
Members, and the failure of the
suggested allocation to take into account
how the complexity of Industry Member
business models contributes
substantially to CAT costs.106
In response, the commenter stated
that the CAT LLC Response Letter did
not meaningfully address the concerns
it raised about the allocation of CAT
costs between Participants and Industry
Members.107
B. Executed Equivalent Shares
a. Executed Equivalent Share Volume
One commenter stated that the
Participants failed to justify why the
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99 Id.
at 7.
at 6.
101 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7. See also
SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4.
102 CAT LLC Response Letter at 7.
103 Id.; SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7.
104 CAT LLC Response Letter at 7.
105 Id.
106 Id.
107 See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
100 Id.
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Executed Share Model would
appropriately treat high-volume trades
in low-priced stocks, arguing that
Section 31 fees are charged only on the
sell-side of a transaction and are based
on the notional value of a trade.108
Another commenter argued that the
Proposed Amendment does not explain
why the use of executed share volume
as the basis of the cost allocation
methodology, instead of message traffic,
is equitable.109 The commenter
explained that in prior models, message
traffic was the key proxy for cost
generation used to align CAT fees with
CAT costs, but the Executed Share
Model would base its cost allocation
methodology entirely on executed share
volume.110 The commenter stated that
the Participants’ argument that executed
share volume is related to cost
generation is not enough to demonstrate
that its use is reasonable and
equitable.111 This commenter further
stated that the Executed Share Model is
inconsistent with the ‘‘cost alignment’’
funding principle in Section 11.2(b) of
the CAT NMS Plan, which requires the
Participants to seek to establish an
allocation of costs that takes into
account distinctions in the securities
trading operations of Participants and
Industry Members and their relative
impact upon Company resources and
operations.112 The commenter stated
that ‘‘the Proposal fails to establish a
sufficient nexus between executed share
volume and the technology burdens that
generate CAT costs and fails to relate
each reporter group’s allocation to the
burden that each reporter group imposes
on CAT.’’ 113
CAT LLC responded to the
commenter’s statement that the
proposed allocation is inconsistent with
the cost alignment principles of the CAT
NMS Plan by noting that the Proposed
Amendment incorporates the concept of
cost burden in at least two ways.114
Specifically, CAT LLC stated that it does
so because ‘‘the allocation of CAT costs
contemplates the effect of Industry
Member activity on the cost of the
CAT. . . and because trading activity
provides a reasonable proxy for cost
burden on the CAT, trading activity is
an appropriate metric for allocating CAT
costs among CAT Reporters.’’ 115 CAT
LLC added that because there are other
examples of trading activity-based fees,
108 See
109 See
SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 7.
FINRA June 2022 Letter at 3.
110 Id.
111 Id.
at 4.
See also FINRA April 2023 Letter at 7–9.
113 FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4.
114 CAT LLC Response Letter at 7.
115 Id.
112 Id.
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the Executed Share Model would not be
novel or unique.116
With respect to the deletion in
Section 11.2(b) of the requirement that,
when establishing the funding of the
CAT, the Operating Committee must
take into account ‘‘distinctions in the
securities trading operations of
Participants and Industry Members and
their relative impact upon Company
resources and operations,’’ the same
commenter argued that the Participants
have proposed to delete the language in
Section 11.2(b) because the proposed
Executed Share Model is inconsistent
with the language.117 This commenter
stated that the Proposed Amendment
‘‘seeks to amend the core funding
principles to align with an unjustified
allocation methodology.’’ 118 The
commenter stated that any changes to
the funding principles ‘‘must be wellreasoned and transparent and must
continue to support the achievement of
a fair and equitable outcome.’’ 119
Additionally, the commenter objected
to the statement in the Proposed
Amendment that ‘‘trading activity
provides a reasonable proxy for cost
burden on the CAT, and therefore is an
appropriate metric for allocating CAT
costs among CAT Reporters.’’ 120 The
commenter stated that this statement is
inconsistent with information that
demonstrates that volume from FINRA
trading facilities (‘‘TRF’’) contributes ‘‘a
very small percentage of annual CAT
compute and storage costs.’’ 121 The
commenter stated, ‘‘. . . despite the
minimal data compute and storage costs
for transactions reported to the TRF,
FINRA would be assessed an estimated
34% of the total CAT costs to be borne
amongst the 25 Participants, and more
than all options exchanges
combined.’’ 122 The commenter stated
that as a result, it cannot support the
Participants’ assertion that trading
activity is a reasonable proxy for cost
burden.123 The commenter stated that
the Proposed Amendment ‘‘fails to
provide for reasonable fees that are
equitably allocated and not unfairly
discriminatory, does not reflect a
reasonable approach to allocating costs
116 Id.
117 See FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4; see also
FINRA April 2023 Letter at 7.
118 FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4. The commenter
states that the Executed Share Model instead places
the greatest emphasis on the funding principle
relating to the ‘‘ease of billing and other
administrative functions,’’ favoring that principle
over cost alignment. Id. at 5.
119 Id.; FINRA April 2023 Letter at 8–9.
120 Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17103.
121 FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2.
122 Id.
123 See id. See also FINRA April 2023 Letter at
8.
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amongst the Participants, nor does it
transparently or accurately present
information regarding the true sources
of cost burdens on the CAT.’’ 124
b. FINRA Allocation
Two commenters objected to the
proposed allocation of Participant CAT
fees to FINRA.125 Both commenters
objected to the allocation to FINRA of
34% of the total CAT costs 126 to be
borne by the Participants.127 One
commenter argued that this amount was
a ‘‘disproportionate share of CAT
costs,’’ 128 especially as FINRA does not
operate a market,129 and that the
Proposed Amendment would place an
undue burden on FINRA.130 The
commenter stated that FINRA’s share
was ‘‘more than double that of the next
highest Participant and $4 million more
than all option exchanges
combined.’’ 131 The commenter also
stated that FINRA’s allocation would
largely be based on transaction volume
reported to the TRF; however, the
commenter stated that TRF transactions
generate fewer costs for the CAT,132 as
opposed to options activity, but that
only 25% of total Participant CAT fees
would be assessed for options activity,
while the remaining 75% would be
assessed for equities activity.133 The
commenter stated that ‘‘. . . FINRA
would be assessed an estimated 34% of
the total CAT costs to be borne amongst
the 25 Participants, and more than all
options exchanges combined.’’ 134
The commenter argued that, unlike
the exchange Participants, transactions
are not executed on a FINRA
marketplace and FINRA does not
receive commercial revenue for those
124 FINRA
May 2023 Letter at 4.
FINRA May 2023 Letter; FINRA April
2023 Letter; FINRA June 2022 Letter; SIFMA May
2023 Letter; SIFMA June 2022 Letter; SIFMA
October 2022 Letter. One of the commenters
supported the points raised in the FINRA April
2023 Letter that argued that the Proposed
Amendment would result in the inequitable
allocation of fees and should be disapproved. See
SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2.
126 One commenter stated that this estimate is
based on 2021 data and urged the Commission to
require the Participants to amend the Proposed
Amendment to include the 2022 data and fee
allocation estimates, stating that the CAT budget
has grown significantly from 2021. See FINRA April
2023 Letter at 3, 4–5. In its response to comments,
CAT LLC provided the Historical CAT Costs for
2022. See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17111; CAT
LLC Response Letter at 13.
127 See FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2; FINRA April
2023 Letter at 3; SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2.
128 FINRA April 2023 Letter at 3.
129 Id.
130 FINRA June 2022 Letter at 6.
131 FINRA April 2023 Letter at 4; see also FINRA
June 2022 Letter at 5.
132 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 8, n.23.
133 Id.; FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2.
134 FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2.
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125 See
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transactions.135 The commenter
explained that ‘‘while the NMS stock
allocation to FINRA under the Funding
Model is based on transactions that are
reported to FINRA [TRFs], these
transactions are not executed on a
FINRA marketplace and FINRA does not
retain commercial revenues from those
transactions’’ 136 unlike the exchanges
that operate each FINRA TRF, which
retain the market data and trade
reporting revenue of the TRF.137 The
commenter stated that, unlike FINRA,
these exchanges would thus have a
revenue stream related to the
transactions that would be assessed a
CAT fee, and that also, unlike FINRA,
exchanges generate revenue from
listings and proprietary data feeds in
NMS securities.138 The commenter also
stated that FINRA members can report
over-the-counter transactions in listed
stocks to the FINRA Alternative Display
Facility, although most transactions are
reported to a TRF.139
The commenter further stated that
FINRA cannot necessarily recoup its
costs through regulatory services
agreements (‘‘RSAs’’) that it has entered
into with certain exchanges 140 because
the exchanges must first agree to be
charged CAT costs under the RSAs;
therefore, RSAs would not be a reliable
source of CAT funding for FINRA.141
Additionally, the commenter questioned
CAT LLC’s statement that the Proposed
Amendment ‘‘reflects a reasonable effort
to allocate costs based on the extent to
which different CAT Reporters
participate in and benefit from the
equities and options markets.’’ 142
Specifically, the commenter asked how
CAT LLC’s statement explains the size
of FINRA’s allocation 143 and noted that
this statement ‘‘conflates the costs to
create and operate the CAT with the
usage of CAT data.’’ 144
Two commenters expressed concern
about alleged arbitrary treatment of
FINRA by the other Participants of the
CAT NMS Plan.145 One commenter
believes that FINRA’s ‘‘outsized
135 See
FINRA April 2023 Letter at 3.
136 Id.
137 Id.
138 Id.
at 4.
at 3, n.8.
140 This statement was made in response to a
statement in the Proposed Amendment that FINRA,
like the exchange Participants, has revenue sources
other than membership fees, giving as an example
the RSAs. See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17107.
141 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 4.
142 Id. at 7.
143 Id.
144 Id.; see also FINRA June 2022 Letter at 6.
145 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6, n.16; SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 3. See also SIFMA May 2023
Letter at 6, n.11.
139 Id.
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allocation’’ 146 was because of its limited
voting power, only having one out of 25
votes on the Operating Committee as it
does not control, nor is under common
control with, any other Participant.147
Another commenter stated that the
current CAT NMS Plan voting structure
results in the unfair and inequitable
treatment of FINRA.148 Both
commenters believe that the exchange
Participants treat FINRA arbitrarily to
benefit themselves, treating FINRA as a
market center in the CAT NMS Plan
while not as a market center under the
National Market System Plan Regarding
Consolidated Equity Market Data (‘‘CT
Plan’’),149 which governs the public
dissemination of real-time consolidated
market data for national market system
stocks.150 One commenter argued that
the Participants do not treat FINRA as
a market center under the CT Plan in
order to limit FINRA’s voting power and
therefore its ability to decide how to
allocate market data revenue.151 The
commenter stated that this example
demonstrates the ‘‘. . . inherent
conflicts of interest that for-profit
exchanges have in operating as SROs
. . .’’ 152 The commenter suggested that
the Commission issue an order
soliciting comment on whether the
Operating Committee should be
reorganized consistent with the CT
146 FINRA April 2023 Letter at 7; FINRA June
2022 Letter at 6.
147 FINRA April 2023 Letter at 4, 8. See also
FINRA June 2022 Letter at 8.
148 See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 3, n.7.
149 See Joint Industry Plan; Order Approving, as
Modified, a National Market System Plan Regarding
Consolidated Equity Market Data; Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 92586 (Aug. 6, 2021), 86
FR 44142 (Aug. 11, 2021) (File No. 4–757) (‘‘Order
Approving the CT Plan’’). The Order Approving the
CT Plan was vacated by the D.C. Circuit on July 5,
2022. See The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC et al. v.
SEC, Case No. 21–1167, D.C. Cir. (July 5, 2022). See
also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88827;
File No. 4–757 (May 6, 2020), 85 FR 28702 (May 13,
2020) (Order Directing the Exchanges and the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority to Submit
a New National Market System Plan Regarding
Consolidated Equity Market Data).
150 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6; SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 3. See also SIFMA May 2023
Letter at 6, n.11. One commenter argued that the
Participants treat FINRA in ways that are
financially beneficial to them without considering
FINRA’s role in the marketplace ‘‘. . . as the notfor-profit self-regulator for the entire brokerage
industry . . .’’ SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 3. See
also SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4; SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 4; SIFMA May 2023 Letter
at 8 (recommending that FINRA be treated
differently from the Participant exchanges due to its
unique role).
151 See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 3–4. See
also SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 6, n.11.
152 SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 3. See also
SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4 (quoting a Commission
release stating that the Participants are potentially
conflicted in allocating CAT fees to themselves and
the Industry Members); supra note 74.
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Plan.153 This commenter further stated,
‘‘[w]e believe such a governance
structure for the CAT would help
facilitate a fairer structure for the views
of the SROs and industry to be heard
and incorporated into any further CAT
funding proposal by reducing the ability
of the largest exchange groups to dictate
the terms of any CAT funding proposal
over the objections of other SRO
Participants and the industry.’’ 154
Both commenters also believe the
allocation to FINRA would increase the
allocation to Industry Members.155 One
commenter stated that FINRA, which
relies on regulatory fees from its
members for funding, must increase its
member fees in order to fund CAT costs
that it cannot recover from contractual
arrangements with TRF business
members.156 The commenter stated that
the Proposed Amendment does not
adequately analyze the allocation’s
impact, including whether the
allocation would increase Industry
Members’ allocation of total costs
beyond two-thirds.157 The commenter
dismissed as inadequate the
Participants’ argument that Industry
Members can pass through their costs,
stating that the Proposed Amendment
lacks a detailed description of and
transparency into how the fees may be
passed on to customers.158 Another
commenter argued that the Participants
‘‘do not address the fact that the
Executed Share Model for Prospective
CAT Costs allocates two-thirds of CAT
costs to Industry Members for exchange
transactions and more for off-exchange
transactions’’ 159 because they cannot
demonstrate that the proposed
allocation results in an equitable
allocation of reasonable fees.160 The
commenter stated that Industry
Members, who would be subject to twothirds of Prospective CAT Costs under
the Executed Share Model, already pay
FINRA’s operating costs through
regulatory fines and fees; therefore,
Industry Members would additionally
153 SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 2.
The commenter also argued that the
Industry Members are not voting members of the
Operating Committee and have no way to direct the
cost control efforts of the Participants or change
their course if the cost control efforts prove to be
unsuccessful. See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 8.
155 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 5–7; SIFMA
June 2022 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA October 2022
Letter at 2, 3.
156 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 5–6; see also
FINRA June 2022 Letter at 7.
157 See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6.
158 Id. at 6–7.
159 SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 3 (‘‘. . . we believe the
proposal is flawed because it fails to appropriately
consider that Industry Members pay the full costs
of operating FINRA.’’).
160 See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4.
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be indirectly assessed FINRA’s onethird CAT fee for off-exchange
transactions.161 The commenter
suggested an alternative allocation 162
that would subject FINRA only to a
nominal regulatory user fee to access
CAT Data.163
One commenter requested that if the
Commission were to approve the
Proposed Amendment, that it
acknowledge ‘‘FINRA’s need and ability
to cover CAT costs that are not
recovered through contractual
arrangements through member fee
increases, so as not to jeopardize
FINRA’s ability to carry out its critical
regulatory mission.’’ 164 The commenter
stated that FINRA would file a rule
change to increase its member fees with
the filing of any proposed rule change
to effectuate the Funding Model.165
CAT LLC disagreed with one
commenter’s proposal to charge FINRA
only a nominal regulatory fee.166 CAT
LLC stated that the proposed
transaction-based CAT fee is purposely
agnostic as to the location of where a
trade occurs, and an intent of this
design is to avoid influencing whether
or where any trading activity would take
place. Moreover, CAT LLC stated that
FINRA is no different from the
exchanges in terms of its regulatory
obligations regarding the CAT.167
C. CAT Executing Broker
Two commenters objected to the
proposed definition of ‘‘CAT Executing
Broker.’’ 168 One commenter argued that
the term ‘‘CAT Executing Broker’’ ‘‘does
not appear to be universally defined or
161 Id. The commenter also stated that the
proposed allocation would result in two-thirds of
CAT costs for exchange transactions being imposed
on Industry Members, and that this amount would
be higher for off-exchange transactions as FINRA
would be assessed one-third as the venue fee and
Industry Members would be indirectly assessed
FINRA’s portion of CAT costs as they pay the entire
costs of operating FINRA. Id. See also SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 2.
162 See supra notes 84–85 and accompanying text.
163 See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4. See also
SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8; SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 5; SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 4.
164 FINRA April 2023 Letter at 7.
165 Id.
166 See CAT LLC Response Letter at 8.
167 Id.
168 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter; Letter from
Timothy Miller, Chief Operating Officer, DASH
Financial Technologies, LLC to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission (April 11,
2023) (‘‘DASH April 2023 Letter’’), at 1–2. The
DASH April 2023 Letter also incorporated by
reference a separate letter submitted by the
commenter on the prior funding proposal (stating
that the concerns expressed in the prior letter
concerning the operating and competitive burdens
of the proposed funding model are unchanged). See
Letter from Timothy Miller, Chief Operating Officer,
DASH Financial Technologies LLC, to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission (Jan. 3, 2023)
(‘‘DASH January 2023 Letter’’).
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41155
accepted by Option Industry Members
or Participants’’ and that such lack of
acceptance ‘‘present[s] a challenge when
firms try to assess the impact the
‘Funding Proposal’ will have on their
respective businesses.’’ 169 Accordingly,
the commenter advocated that the
Executed Share Model follow the
‘‘structure already in place for
[collecting] Regulatory Fees,’’ such as
charging Clearing Brokers.170
Another commenter argued that the
proposed definition of executing broker
would result in the inequitable
allocation of fees.171 While the
commenter supported the change from
having clearing firms be assessed
Industry Member CAT fees to executing
brokers having this obligation,172
because clearing firms would have been
unfairly burdened with CAT costs and
could have been placed in situations in
which they would have been unable to
identify the client responsible for the
costs,173 the commenter expressed
concerns with how the Participants
determined which entities would be
considered executing brokers.174 In
comment letters on the prior proposal,
which was amended to require
executing brokers instead of clearing
firms to be assessed CAT fees, the
commenter requested additional detail
on how an executing broker would be
defined.175 The commenter
subsequently stated that the definition
in the current Proposed Amendment
suffers from the same problems as the
prior proposal in which CAT fees were
allocated to clearing firms and would
result in the inequitable allocation of
CAT fees among Industry Members.176
The commenter explained that CAT
operates on a cost-recovery basis, with
costs resulting from the number of
messages that Participants and Industry
Members report to the CAT, the
processing and linking of such
169 DASH
April 2023 Letter at 1.
at 2.
171 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3.
172 Id. See also SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 7–
170 Id.
8.
173 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3–4. See also
SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5. The commenter
also argued against the assessment of CAT fees on
clearing firms because clearing firms would be
required to collect fees and thus would have to
develop new systems and processes under the
Executed Share Model, and because a clearing firm
for a buyer or seller would not always be a party
to a trade as it could be the clearer of a trade on
behalf of an executing broker. See SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 9; SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 7.
174 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 4.
175 See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2, 8; SIFMA
December 2022 Letter at 3. See also SIFMA May
2023 Letter at 4.
176 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 4. See also
SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 9–10; SIFMA October
2022 Letter at 5.
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messages, and the costs of providing
tools to regulators to analyze CAT
data.177 The commenter stated that the
use of message traffic as the basis of
fees, in the Original Funding Model,
would have ensured that all CAT
Reporters would contribute to CAT’s
funding.178 However, the commenter
stated that, since the Proposed
Amendment would not impose fees on
all CAT Reporters, instead imposing
fees on executing brokers, it would
result in an inequitable allocation of
fees as the executing brokers would be
the last broker among many other
brokers handling an order.179 The
commenter stated that any analysis of
such a funding model must evaluate
whether (i) the executing brokers would
pass-through or absorb the CAT fees and
any negative impacts on competition,
noting that the Proposed Amendment
would require executing brokers to
incur expenses that other Industry
Members would not incur since they
would be required to collect the
Industry Member portion of CAT fees on
behalf of the Participants,180 and (ii)
Industry Members that executed trades
for introducing brokers and acting as
order consolidators and ATSs would be
responsible for CAT fees for transactions
they did not originate and would have
to either pay the fee for their clients or
develop software and processes to
collect the fees from their clients as they
often are not capable of passing through
fees to the clients that sent them the
orders.181 The commenter stated that
the Proposed Amendment would
subject executing brokers to unfair
burdens and require them to ‘‘shoulder
CAT costs in scenarios in which they
could not determine which client firm
was responsible for creating the CAT
costs by initiating the transaction.’’ 182
The commenter argued instead in
favor of an allocation in which the
Industry Member that originated an
order would be treated as an ‘‘executing
broker’’ and therefore be responsible for
Industry Member CAT fees.183 Under
this alternative, ‘‘the Industry Member
who originates a new principal order or
the Industry Member who initially
receives and routes a customer order for
execution on an agency basis would be
directly assessed CAT Fees.’’ 184 The
commenter stated that this would be the
most reasonable way to allocate CAT
177 See
SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 4.
178 Id.
179 Id.
180 Id.
185 Id.
at 5.
at 6.
187 See DASH April 2023 Letter.
188 Id. at 1; see also DASH January 2023 Letter at
186 Id.
1.
189 DASH
at 4–5.
at 5.
181 Id.
182 Id.
183 See
184 Id.
costs among Industry Members 185 and
that it would be ‘‘relatively easy to
accommodate this approach.’’ 186
One commenter expressed concerns
about the imposition of CAT fees on
CAT Executing Brokers.187 The
commenter argued that charging CAT
Executing Brokers ‘‘inordinately
burdens Broker Dealers, especially small
to medium-sized firms.’’ 188 This
commenter recommended using instead
the existing structure for regulatory fees,
including ‘‘the efficiencies afforded by
the current structure, and the resulting
alleviation of risk.’’ 189 In this regard,
the commenter stated that ‘‘Clearing
Firms are best suited to process the
collection of fees as it can occur at trade
settlement and the cost is ultimately
borne by the end beneficiary of each
transaction.’’ 190 The commenter also
stated that small and medium-sized
executing brokers could expect a
significant negative impact on their net
capital as a result of the proposal,
stating, ‘‘. . . the firms will be forced to
recoup these costs by passing them on
to their clients, either in the form of
higher commission rates or as a separate
transactional fee. Using [Clearing
Member Trade Agreement] commission
invoicing and/or SEC 31(b) fees in a
broker-to-broker relationship as a proxy,
these invoices are generally paid well
after the 60-day milestone to qualify the
receivable as ‘good capital.’ ’’ 191
In response to the comment about the
definition of CAT Executing Broker and
the billing and collection process being
better suited for clearing firms, CAT
LLC stated that the proposed assessment
of CAT fees on CAT Executing Brokers
only addresses the party obligated to
pay the CAT fee.192 CAT LLC stated that
a CAT Executing Broker can decide to
enter into an arrangement with its
clearing broker for the clearing broker to
collect and pass-through the CAT fees
like it does in other contexts.193 With
respect to alternatives to the proposed
definition of the CAT Executing Broker,
CAT LLC stated that the ‘‘originating
broker’’ suggestion was from a
commenter who had previously
recommended charging executing
brokers in comment letters on the prior
SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 5.
at 6.
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January 2023 Letter at 3; see also DASH
April 2023 Letter at 1–2.
190 DASH April 2023 Letter at 1; see also DASH
January 2023 Letter at 1.
191 DASH January 2023 Letter at 2.
192 See CAT LLC Response Letter at 12.
193 Id.
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proposed funding model.194 CAT LLC
stated that the commenter’s objection to
charging executing brokers in the
Executed Share Model was an attempt
to further delay the approval of a
funding model and the resultant
payment of CAT fees by its members,
rather than expressing a concern about
the merits of charging executing
brokers.195
In response, the commenter stated
that the CAT Operating Committee
mischaracterized the commenter’s
position on the assessment of CAT fees
to executing brokers by stating in the
CAT LLC Response Letter that the
commenter changed its position on this
proposed change to delay adoption of a
CAT funding model.196 The commenter
represented that it stated in comment
letters it submitted on the prior funding
model that initially proposed the use of
executing brokers that (1) the
Participants did not define who would
be an executing broker in a transaction,
(2) a clear definition is necessary for
Industry Members to understand when
they would be assessed costs under the
Executed Share Model, and (3) its
understanding was that the concept of
executing broker generally refers to the
Industry Member that initiates an
order.197 The commenter stated that the
Participants only provided a definition
of executing broker in the Proposed
Amendment.198 The commenter stated
that it provided concerns about the
proposed definition in its May 2023
comment letter which the commenter
argued were mischaracterized by the
CAT Operating Committee in the CAT
LLC Response Letter.199 The commenter
stated that the CAT Operating
Committee mischaracterized the
commenter’s position to rush the
Commission to a decision on the
Proposed Amendment.200
In response to the comment that
imposing fees on executing brokers
would result in an inequitable
allocation of fees and the suggestion that
the use of message traffic as the basis of
fees would have ensured that all CAT
Reporters would contribute to CAT’s
funding, CAT LLC disagreed and stated
that because the message traffic is
separate from whether or not a
transaction occurs, fees based on
message traffic may not correlate with
common revenue or fee models.201 CAT
194 Id.
at 2.
at 3.
196 See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 5.
197 Id.
198 Id.
199 Id. at 5–6.
200 Id. at 6.
201 See CAT LLC Response Letter at 4.
195 Id.
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LLC stated that, as a result, CAT fees
based on message traffic could impose
an outsized adverse financial impact on
certain Industry Members, raising this
same issue of an inequitable allocation
of fees.202 Further, in response to the
commenter’s criticism that in charging
executing brokers, the fee would be
charged to a subset of Industry Members
and, as a result, that subset of Industry
Members would incur expenses that
other Industry Members would not
incur, CAT LLC stated that it continues
to believe that charging CAT Executing
Brokers would satisfy the requirements
of the Exchange Act.203 CAT LLC stated
that in the past, the Commission has
approved fees that are charged to some,
but not all, broker-dealers.204 CAT LLC
noted that, for example, FINRA’s trading
activity fee is assessed to a subset of
FINRA members—that is, it is assessed
on the sell side of member
transactions.205 CAT LLC also stated
that the options exchanges charge
options regulatory fees per executed
contract side, and, for both options and
equities, Section 31-related fees are
charged to the sell-side in a
transaction.206 CAT LLC recognized
that, under the proposal to charge CAT
Executing Brokers, the CAT Executing
Broker, but not other Industry Members
involved in a given order lifecycle,
would be required to pay the CAT fees,
and that Industry Members that sought
to recoup such fees would have to
develop processes to collect such fees
from their clients.207 CAT LLC stated
that this regulatory requirement would
have a similar effect as other types of
regulatory fees, such as the FINRA
trading activity fee, the options
regulatory fee and Section 31-related
sales value pass-through fees because,
‘‘[i]n each such case, a subset of brokerdealers is required to pay a transactionbased regulatory fee, and those brokerdealers seeking to recover such fees
from other broker-dealers or non-brokerdealers have established processes with
regard to the pass-through of such
fees.’’ 208
CAT LLC further stated that it
disagrees with charging an originating
broker instead of an executing broker
because there are already several
existing examples of transaction-based
fees being assessed to executing brokers
as opposed to the originating broker,
and it disagrees with the assertion that
charging originating brokers would be
easier.209 CAT LLC stated that charging
the originating Industry Member would
be difficult to implement and would
increase the costs of implementing CAT
fees, whereas charging CAT Executing
Brokers is simple, straightforward and
in line with existing fee and business
models because for any given trade (buy
or sell), there is only one CAT Executing
Broker to which shares can be
allocated.210 As such, CAT LLC stated
that ‘‘charging the CAT Executing
Broker is simple and straightforward,
and leverages a one-to-one relationship
between billable events (trades) and
billable parties.’’ 211 CAT LLC argued
that, for a single trade event, there may
be many originating brokers, and each
trade must be broken down on a pro-rata
basis to ‘‘account[] for one or more
layers of aggregation, disaggregation,
and representation of the underlying
orders.’’ 212 Therefore, CAT LLC stated
that the commenter’s ‘‘suggestion of a
model that begins the funding analysis
with new order events (e.g., MENO or
MONO events) and then looks for any
execution or fulfillment that is directly
associated with that event does not
reduce or mitigate the complexity
associated with aggregation.’’ 213
Further, CAT LLC argued that the
commenter’s recommendation would
not work with the design of the CAT
system, stating that ‘‘[w]hile CAT is
indeed designed to capture and unwind
complex aggregation scenarios, the data
and linkages are structured to facilitate
regulatory use, and not a billing
mechanism that assesses fees on a
distinct set of executed trades; it is not
simply a matter of using existing CAT
linkages.’’ 214 Finally, CAT LLC stated
that charging originating brokers would
implicate issues related to lifecycle
linkage rates, and issues related to
corrections, cancellations and
allocations, but charging CAT Executing
Brokers would avoid such
complications.215
203 Id.
a. Budgeted CAT Costs
One commenter argued that the
budget line item categories are too high
level.216 The commenter urged the
inclusion of much greater detail and
specificity on the budget spending
at 5.
210 Id.
at 3.
211 Id.
204 Id.
212 See
205 Id.
213 Id.
CAT LLC Response Letter at 3.
at 4.
206 See
214 Id.
207 Id.
215 Id.
208 Id.
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18:01 Jun 22, 2023
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choices, especially in technology,217 to
allow Industry Members and the public
to understand and evaluate CAT
spending decisions.218
The commenter also stated that an
independent cost review mechanism is
necessary to ensure future CAT fees are
fair and reasonable and to safeguard
against unchecked spending.219 The
commenter urged the inclusion of a
mechanism to allow the public to
review the annual CAT budget before it
is finalized, since, as proposed, the
public would only have the opportunity
to review the CAT budget when the
Participants submit proposed rule
changes, pursuant to Section 19(b) of
the Exchange Act,220 to implement CAT
fees on Industry Members.221 The
commenter also stated that it is unlikely
that the Commission would decide that
a proposed CAT fee does not meet
Exchange Act fee standards and require
the Participants to modify the CAT
budget because it would be a lengthy,
time-consuming process and due to ‘‘the
regulatory value of CAT data and the
CAT system to the Commission.’’ 222
The commenter stated that the
Commission is ‘‘directly conflicted in its
role as the user and beneficiary of the
CAT system for regulatory functions and
its role as the reviewer of the CAT
budget and fee filings, a conflict that is
only heightened due to a lack of a
Commission funding obligation for
CAT.’’ 223 As a result, the commenter
urged the adoption of an independent
cost review mechanism to ensure that
CAT spending will be appropriate and
consistent with the Exchange Act.224
The commenter also requested that ‘‘the
Participants’ proposed budget include
as a separate line-item projected usage
costs and system change costs related to
the Commission’s use and design of the
CAT system.’’ 225
In response, CAT LLC stated that such
an independent cost review is not
necessary, because such a review
process would go beyond what is
required by either Rule 613 or the CAT
D. Prospective CAT Fees
209 Id.
202 Id.
41157
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217 The commenter stated that CAT spending on
technology should be broken into further refined
cost breakdowns of the following categories: cloud
hosting services, operating fees, CAIS operating fees
and change request fees. Id.
218 Id.
219 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3, 8–10. See
also SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5–6; SIFMA
January 2023 Letter at 2, 5–6; SIFMA June 2023
Letter at 2, n.10, 4.
220 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
221 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8–9. See also
SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 8–9; SIFMA October
2022 Letter at 6; SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 5,
6.
222 SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 9.
223 Id. at 9–10.
224 Id. at 10.
225 Id. See also SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 6.
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NMS Plan, and would be superfluous
since any CAT fees must, prior to being
implemented, undergo the review
process detailed in Rule 608 and
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.226
CAT LLC also noted that the
Commission is entitled to request
additional budget or cost information it
views as necessary to better evaluate
those fees.227 CAT LLC also stated that
it already provides significant cost
transparency through the public
disclosure of its quarterly budget
information and its financials, and that
it is already actively engaged in cost
discipline efforts, including through a
designated cost-management working
group.228 CAT LLC further explained
that Participants are subject to
regulatory requirements to implement
CAT and oversee their members and
cannot have their compliance subject to
a third party without such
restrictions.229 CAT LLC added that the
Commission itself could have its ability
to oversee the securities markets
undermined if CAT is subject to review
by a third party without regulatory
restrictions.230
In response, the commenter stated
that the CAT LLC Response Letter did
not meaningfully address its concerns
about the lack of a cost control
mechanism.231
In response to the suggested inclusion
of the Commission’s line item costs
associated with its usage and design of
the CAT in the budget,232 CAT LLC
responded that, because all costs related
to CAT are a result of the Commission’s
adoption of Rule 613 and the total costs
are reflected in the budget, it would be
impractical to break out Commissionspecific costs and would not be useful
as a practical matter.233
b. Reserve
One commenter argued that the
proposed reserve of not more than 25%
of the CAT budget is excessive.234 The
commenter noted that the support
provided for the proposed change was
the Participants’ difficulty in forecasting
CAT costs, which the commenter stated
demonstrates a need for an independent
cost review mechanism.235
226 CAT
LLC Response Letter at 10.
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227 Id.
E. Historical CAT Assessment
One commenter disagreed with the
proposed method of calculating the
Historical CAT Assessment using
current transaction activity ‘‘due to
difficulty of using current volumes and
trading activity by individual Industry
Members as a mechanism for assessing
costs in the past where the trading
volumes and individual Industry
Member trading activity likely were
different.’’ 236 The commenter also
argued that the proposed assessment of
Past CAT Costs on current Industry
Members based on their current trading
activity is not fair or reasonable because
new Industry Members would be
assessed a share of Past CAT Costs even
if they were not in operation when those
costs were incurred, and that such costs
would be attributable to Industry
Members that are no longer in
business.237 The commenter added that
the Proposed Amendment has not
explained how allocating
‘‘approximately $350 million in
historical costs . . . to a small group of
executing broker firms based on current
market volumes’’ is consistent with the
Exchange Act or how it would impact
liquidity and competition.238 The
commenter stated that since the
proposed allocation would be based on
current market share and unrelated to
the firms or activity that contributed to
historical costs, there would be little
ability for executing brokers to pass on
such costs.239 The commenter also
stated that the assessment of
‘‘retroactive liability for monies spent
that private parties had no control over’’
for public purposes would violate the
Fifth Amendment Takings Clause.240
The commenter recommended a
reevaluation of the use of transaction
fees to assess Past CAT Costs,241 and
suggested an alternative approach in
which Past CAT Costs would be
assigned to Industry Members ‘‘based on
the lesser of (i) the CAT Fees that would
be assessed on an Industry Member
under the Participants’ proposed
approach of using current trading
activity or (ii) the CAT Fees that would
be assessed on such member based on
their prior trading activity in the years
since 2016 when the CAT was being
built and then operationalized . . .’’ 242
The commenter stated that the share of
Past CAT Costs belonging to Industry
Members that are no longer in business
228 Id.
229 Id.
236 SIFMA
230 Id.
237 See
231 See
SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 10.
233 CAT LLC Response Letter at 11.
234 See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 6, n.15.
235 Id.
232 See
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October 2022 Letter at 5.
SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 7.
238 SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4.
239 See id.
240 Id. at 8.
241 See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5.
242 SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 7.
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could be calculated using this approach
and then divided equally among the
current Industry Members, while
Industry Members that entered into
business after certain Past CAT Costs
were incurred would be assessed Past
CAT Costs starting in the year after
which they started operating based on
the above approach.243 The commenter
acknowledged that, while this approach
would require more effort by the
Participants, it would be ‘‘significantly
closer to the fair and reasonable
standard in the Exchange Act than the
approach set forth by the Participants in
the Executed Share Model.’’ 244
Additionally, the commenter stated
that the Participants have failed to
justify the allocation of Past CAT Costs
to Industry Members during the period
when only Participants were reporting
to the CAT.245 The commenter argued
that Industry Members should not be
assessed any fees related to the decision
to employ Thesys Technologies, LLC as
the Plan Processor or legal or consulting
fees incurred by the Participants in the
creation of the CAT NMS Plan.246 The
commenter stated that the Proposed
Amendment fails to provide how of
much of the allocation to Industry
Members is related to Thesys
Technologies, LLC, and, therefore, the
Participants have not demonstrated how
the Executed Share Model is consistent
with the Exchange Act.247 The
commenter also argued that Industry
Members were not subject to CAT
obligations before the CAT NMS Plan’s
approval, had no input into the
selection of the service providers, and
that ‘‘it is difficult to envision how the
Participants could demonstrate that
such an allocation provides for the
equitable allocation of reasonable fees
due to the fact that the CAT NMS Plan
did not exist during the period prior to
its approval.’’ 248
The commenter also argued that the
Participants have not analyzed different
alternatives to collecting Past CAT Costs
and the costs associated with such
alternatives or the costs associated with
the proposed approach.249 The
commenter urged collaboration between
the Participants and Industry Members
on the allocation of Past CAT Costs.250
243 Id.
244 Id.
245 See
SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 7.
SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 7; SIFMA
January 2023 Letter at 6–7.
247 See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 7.
248 Id.
249 See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5.
250 Id. See also SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 2
(‘‘[w]e also reiterate our call for the Participants to
work with SIFMA and the industry in a
246 See
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With respect to the commenter’s
criticisms of the calculation and
assessment of the Historical CAT
Assessment,251 CAT LLC stated that the
commenter had a ‘‘persistent
misunderstanding’’ of the Historical
CAT Assessment, explaining that,
contrary to the commenter’s assertions
in its comment letters, the Historical
CAT Assessment would be assessed
based on current market activity, not
past market activity.252 While the fee
rate would be calculated based on
Historical CAT Costs, the fee rate would
be applied to current market
transactions.253 CAT LLC stated that the
process of assessing fees for the
Historical CAT Assessment would be
exactly the same as with CAT Fees
related to Prospective CAT Costs, and
could be passed through in the same
manner if a CEBB or CEBS so
chooses.254 CAT LLC also stated that it
would provide CAT Executing Brokers
with details of their CAT fees to
facilitate this process.255
In response, the commenter stated
that the CAT LLC Response Letter did
not meaningfully address the concerns
it raised about ‘‘the inability of firms
defined as ‘executing brokers’ to transfer
fees to those who may be more
appropriate to bear certain historical
CAT costs in the first place.’’ 256
F. Other Comments
a. Lack of Industry Input
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Two commenters argued that the
Proposed Amendment lacks input from
the industry.257 One commenter stated
that the Participants did not
meaningfully solicit input from the
industry when developing the Executed
Share Model.258 Another commenter
stated that the Proposed Amendment
reflects a lack of representation by
executing brokers and offered its
participation in future discussions and
collaborative manner to establish a viable CAT
funding model.’’).
251 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8; SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 4–5; supra notes 87–88 and
accompanying text.
252 See CAT LLC Response Letter at 9.
253 Id.
254 Id.
255 Id.
256 See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
257 See DASH April 2023 Letter at 2; DASH
January 2023 Letter at 3; SIFMA June 2023 Letter
at 4; SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2; SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 2; SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2. See also
FINRA June 2022 Letter at 8, 9 (advocating for a
more inclusive development process that would
include input from the industry).
258 See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2; see also
SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4, 5; SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 2; SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2.
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advisory committees on the topic of
CAT funding.259
In response, CAT LLC stated that it
has engaged with the industry on the
funding model over the past seven
years, explaining that it has discussed
funding model issues with the CAT
Advisory Committee, which includes
representation from the industry, as
well as with industry associations such
as SIFMA and the Financial Information
Forum, and with individual Industry
Members; analyzed and responded to
comment letters on the prior proposals;
and hosted webinars for the industry on
funding issues.260 CAT LLC stated that
it welcomes industry input on the
funding model but believes a decision
on the model is overdue.261
In response, one commenter stated
that Industry Members are willing to
work with the Commission and the
Participants to develop a CAT funding
model.262 The commenter urged
collaboration and dialogue between the
Participants and the Industry Members
before the filing of a formal proposal
with the Commission.263 The
commenter stated that limiting industry
input to the notice and comment
process for NMS plan amendments is an
inefficient process resulting in
significant delays.264
b. Implementation
One commenter suggested that upon
approval of any CAT funding model,
Industry Members should be given at
least a year ‘‘to implement any
necessary changes to systems and
processes for them to be able to capture
their portion of CAT costs.’’ 265 CAT
LLC responded that it was unlikely to
take Industry Members a year to
implement any needed changes,
particularly given the relatively small
fees likely to be incurred by most small
Industry Members that would not
require extensive new processes to
pay.266
c. Rule 613 and the CAT NMS Plan
One commenter stated that the
Proposed Amendment is not what was
originally envisioned by the
Commission in Rule 613 of Regulation
NMS and in the CAT NMS Plan as
approved in 2016,267 and recommended
that the Commission come up with a
new structure for the CAT.268 The
commenter argued that Rule 613 and the
2016 CAT NMS Plan do not support
CAT as it is currently structured 269 and
provided examples where it believes
that subsequent changes to the CAT
requested by the Commission have
caused the CAT to become inconsistent
with the requirements of Rule 613 and
the 2016 CAT NMS Plan.270 The
commenter stated that the changes
resulted from discussions between the
Commission and the Participants, that
such changes ‘‘significantly increased
CAT costs,’’ and that Industry Members
with ‘‘no voice and little transparency’’
into the building of the CAT system
would be allocated most of the
increased CAT costs.271 The commenter
stated that the Commission cannot
approve a funding proposal for a system
that is not consistent with Rule 613 and
the CAT NMS Plan, stating that this
would be arbitrary and capricious
action.272
d. Funding in the Appropriation Process
The commenter stated that the
Proposed Amendment would
‘‘evade’’ 273 the separation of powers
established by the Constitution, arguing
that since the CAT is a ‘‘Commission
system used for enforcement’’ 274 and
that law enforcement ‘‘is an executive
prerogative,’’ 275 Congress must approve
public funds to build the CAT through
the appropriations process.276 The
commenter stated ‘‘[t]he Constitution
does not permit the Commission to fund
its own enforcement apparatus through
the backdoor—to require the SROs to
raise and spend hundreds of millions of
dollars to build a new law enforcement
tool for the Commission.’’ 277
e. Rule 608 of Regulation NMS and Rule
19b–4
One commenter preliminarily
believes the assessment of CAT fees
through filings submitted by each
exchange under Rule 19b–4 is likely
inconsistent with Rule 608.278 The
commenter stated that the Commission
amended Rule 608 in 2020 to remove
the effective-upon-filing procedure for
NMS plan fees by requiring that NMS
plan fees be subject to notice and
comment and Commission approval
268 Id.
259 See
DASH April 2023 Letter at 2; DASH
January 2023 Letter at 3.
260 See CAT LLC Response Letter at 12.
261 Id.
262 See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4.
263 Id.
264 Id. at 4–5.
265 SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2.
266 See CAT LLC Response Letter at 12.
267 See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2, 6.
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41159
at 6.
at 6–7.
270 Id. at 6.
271 Id. at 7.
272 Id.
273 See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 8.
274 Id.
275 Id.
276 Id.
277 Id.
278 Id. at 4, 9.
269 Id.
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prior to becoming effective.279 The
commenter stated that Rule 608 was
amended by the Commission due to
concerns about the assessment of SIP
market data fees by the SROs without a
meaningful review opportunity.280 The
commenter also stated that the 2020
amendment specifically contemplates
that CAT fees would be subject to Rule
608.281 The commenter stated that the
Commission was considering approving
a process for CAT fees that would not
permit a meaningful review
opportunity, contrary to the Rule 608
amendment.282 The commenter
acknowledged that the CAT NMS Plan
provides for Section 19(b) fee filings but
also stated that the CAT NMS Plan is
silent about whether Section 19(b) fee
filings would need to be made after the
CAT Operating Committee receives
approval to assess the fees under Rule
608.283 The commenter suggested that
the CAT Operating Committee create a
new funding process consistent with
Rule 608 and stated that the
Commission cannot find that the
Proposed Amendment is consistent with
the Exchange Act.284
f. Miscellaneous
One commenter stated that the
Commission failed to address data
security concerns associated with the
CAT,285 and that the Commission is
rushing to approve the Proposed
Amendment without careful
consideration.286 The commenter also
argued that the Commission is
prematurely moving forward with the
Proposed Amendment while
simultaneously considering revisions of
the rules governing equity and options
market structure and proceeding with
other proposals that will impose costs
on Industry Members.287 The
commenter stated that ‘‘[t]he
unequitable distribution of CAT costs
contemplated by the Funding Proposal
will exacerbate these problems, harming
the functioning of U.S. securities
markets.’’ 288 The commenter argued
that the Commission cannot determine
whether the proposed allocation of costs
is equitable without assessing the
distribution of costs and benefits under
the other pending proposals.289
279 See
SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 9.
280 Id.
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281 Id.
282 Id.
283 Id.
V. Proceedings to Determine Whether
To Approve or Disapprove the
Proposed Amendment
The Commission is instituting
proceedings pursuant to Rule
608(b)(2)(i) of Regulation NMS,290 and
Rules 700 and 701 of the Commission’s
Rules of Practice,291 to determine
whether to disapprove the Proposed
Amendment or to approve the Proposed
Amendment with any changes or
subject to any conditions the
Commission deems necessary or
appropriate. The Commission is
instituting proceedings to have
sufficient time to consider the complex
issues raised by Proposed Amendment,
including comments received.
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 Amendment
to inform the Commission’s analysis.
Rule 608(b)(2) of Regulation NMS
provides that the Commission ‘‘shall
approve a national market system plan
or proposed amendment to an effective
national market system plan, with such
changes or subject to such conditions as
the Commission may deem necessary or
appropriate, if it finds that such plan or
amendment is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, for the protection
of investors and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets, to remove
impediments to, and perfect the
mechanisms of, a national market
system, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Exchange Act.’’ 292
Rule 608(b)(2) further provides that the
Commission shall disapprove a national
market system plan or proposed
amendment if it does not make such a
finding.293 In the Notice, the
Commission sought comment on the
Proposed Amendment, including
whether the Proposed Amendment is
consistent with the Exchange Act.294 In
this order, pursuant to Rule 608(b)(2)(i)
of Regulation NMS,295 the Commission
is providing notice of the grounds for
disapproval under consideration:
• Whether, consistent with Rule 608
of Regulation NMS, the Participants
have demonstrated how the Proposed
Amendment is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, for the protection
of investors and the maintenance of fair
and orderly markets, to remove
at 9, n.45.
284 Id.
290 17
285 See
291 17
SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
286 Id. at 3.
287 Id.
288 Id.
289 Id.
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CFR 242.608.
CFR 201.700; 17 CFR 201.701.
292 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2).
293 Id.
294 See Notice, supra note 6.
295 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2)(i).
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
impediments to, and perfect the
mechanisms of, a national market
system, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Exchange Act; 296
• Whether the Participants have
demonstrated how the Proposed
Amendment is consistent with Section
6(b)(4) 297 and Section 15A(b)(5),298 of
the Exchange Act, which require that
the rules of a national securities
exchange ‘‘provide for the equitable
allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and
other charges among its members and
issuers and other persons using its
facilities’’ and that the rules of a
national securities association ‘‘provide
for the equitable allocation of reasonable
dues, fees, and other charges among
members and issuers and other persons
using any facility or system which the
association operates or controls;’’
• Whether the Participants have
demonstrated how the Proposed
Amendment is consistent with Section
6(b)(5) 299 and Section 15A(b)(6),300 of
the Exchange Act, which require that
the rules of a national securities
exchange or national securities
association ‘‘promote just and equitable
principles of trade. . . protect investors
and the public interest; and [to be] not
designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers;’’
• Whether the Participants have
demonstrated how the Proposed
Amendment is consistent with Section
6(b)(8) 301 and Section 15A(b)(9) 302 of
the Exchange Act, which require that
the rules of a national securities
exchange or national securities
association ‘‘do not impose any burden
on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of [the Exchange Act];’’ and
• Whether the Participants have
demonstrated how the Proposed
Amendment is consistent with the
funding principles of the CAT NMS
Plan that are not proposed to be
amended by the Proposed Amendment,
which principles state that the
Operating Committee shall seek, among
other things, ‘‘to create transparent,
predictable revenue streams for the
Company that are aligned with the
anticipated costs to build, operate and
administer the CAT and the other costs
of the Company,’’ 303 ‘‘to provide for
ease of billing and other administrative
296 17
CFR 242.608(b)(2).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
298 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(5).
299 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
300 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(6).
301 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
302 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(9).
303 See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 1, at Section
11.2(a).
297 15
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 120 / Friday, June 23, 2023 / Notices
functions,’’ 304 ‘‘to avoid any
disincentives such as placing an
inappropriate burden on competition
and a reduction in market quality,’’ 305
and ‘‘to build financial stability to
support the Company as a going
concern.’’ 306
Under the Commission’s Rules of
Practice, the ‘‘burden to demonstrate
that a NMS plan filing is consistent with
the Exchange Act and the rules and
regulations issued thereunder. . . is on
the plan participants that filed the NMS
plan filing.’’ 307 The description of the
NMS plan filing, its purpose and
operation, its effect, and a legal analysis
of its consistency with applicable
requirements must all be sufficiently
detailed and specific to support an
affirmative Commission finding.308 Any
failure of the plan participants that filed
the NMS plan filing to provide such
detail and specificity may result in the
Commission not having a sufficient
basis to make an affirmative finding that
the NMS plan filing is consistent with
the Exchange Act and the applicable
rules and regulations thereunder.309
VI. Commission’s Solicitation of
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
Proposed Amendment. In particular, the
Commission invites the written views of
interested persons concerning whether
the Proposed Amendment is consistent
with Section 11A, Section 6(b)(4),
Section 6(b)(5), Section 6(b)(8), Section
15A(b)(5), Section 15A(b)(6), Section
15A(b)(9), or any other provision of the
Exchange Act, or the rules and
regulations thereunder, or the funding
principles of the CAT NMS Plan.
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 608(b)(2)(i)
of Regulation NMS,310 any request for
an opportunity to make an oral
presentation.311 The Commission asks
304 Id.
at Section 11.2(d).
at Section 11.2(e).
306 Id. at Section 11.2(f).
307 17 CFR 201.701(b)(3)(ii).
308 Id.
309 Id.
310 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2)(i).
311 Rule 700(c)(ii) of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice provides that ‘‘[t]he Commission, in its sole
discretion, may determine whether any issues
relevant to approval or disapproval would be
facilitated by the opportunity for an oral
presentation of views.’’ 17 CFR 201.700(c)(ii).
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
305 Id.
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that commenters address the sufficiency
and merit of the Participants’ statements
in support of the Proposed
Amendment,312 in addition to any other
comments they may wish to submit
about the proposed rule changes. In
addition, the Commission seeks
comment on the following:
1. Commenters’ views on any
questions in the Solicitation of
Comments Section of the Order
Instituting Proceedings related to a prior
funding model amendment that are
relevant to the Proposed
Amendment; 313
2. Commenters’ views on whether the
proposed definition of ‘‘CAT Executing
Broker’’ is clear and whether
identification of those brokers who meet
the definition is easily available through
CAT Data; and
3. Commenters’ views on the
incentives of the Participants to control
Prospective CAT Costs.
The Commission also requests that
commenters provide analysis to support
their views, if possible.
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments regarding whether the
Proposed Amendment should be
approved or disapproved by July 14,
2023. Any person who wishes to file a
rebuttal to any other person’s
submission must file that rebuttal by
July 28, 2023. Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
41161
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
a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of the filing also
will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of the
Exchange. Do not include personal
identifiable information in submissions;
you should submit only information
that you wish to make available
publicly. We may redact in part or
withhold entirely from publication
submitted material that is obscene or
subject to copyright protection. All
submissions should refer to file number
4–698 and should be submitted on or
before July 14, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.314
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–13340 Filed 6–22–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
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 4–
698 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to: Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to file
number 4–698. 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
[Release No. 34–97745; File No. SR–
NYSENAT–2023–11]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
National, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change for Amendments to the
Exchange’s Rules Regarding
Continuing Education Requirements
June 16, 2023.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) 2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that on June 5,
2023, NYSE National, Inc. (‘‘NYSE
National’’ or the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the ‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I and II below, which Items have
been prepared by the self-regulatory
organization. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
312 See
314 17
313 See
1 15
Notice, supra note 6.
Securities Exchange Act Release No.
95634 (Aug. 30, 2022), 87 FR 54558, 54577–79
(Sept. 6, 2022).
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
CFR 200.30–3(a)(85).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 15 U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
E:\FR\FM\23JNN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 120 (Friday, June 23, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41142-41161]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-13340]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-97750; File No. 4-698]
Joint Industry Plan; Order Instituting Proceedings To Determine
Whether To Approve or Disapprove an Amendment to the National Market
System Plan Governing the Consolidated Audit Trail
June 16, 2023.
I. Introduction
On March 13, 2023, the Consolidated Audit Trail, LLC (``CAT LLC''),
on behalf of the Participants \1\ to the National Market System Plan
Governing the Consolidated Audit Trail (``CAT NMS Plan'' or
``Plan''),\2\ filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission''), pursuant to Section 11A of the Exchange Act \3\ and
Rule 608 of Regulation National Market System (``Regulation NMS'')
thereunder,\4\ a proposed amendment to the CAT NMS Plan (``Proposed
Amendment'') to implement a revised funding model (``Executed Share
Model'') for the consolidated audit trail (``CAT'') and to establish a
fee schedule for Participant CAT fees in accordance with the Executed
Share Model (``Proposed Participant Fee Schedule'').\5\ The Proposed
Amendment was published for comment in the Federal Register on March
21, 2023.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Participants are: BOX Exchange LLC, Cboe BYX Exchange,
Inc., Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc., Cboe C2 Exchange, Inc., Cboe EDGA
Exchange, Inc., Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc., Cboe Exchange, Inc., The
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (``FINRA''), Investors
Exchange LLC, Long-Term Stock Exchange, Inc., MEMX LLC, Miami
International Securities Exchange, LLC, MIAX Emerald, LLC, MIAX
PEARL, LLC, Nasdaq BX, Inc., Nasdaq GEMX, LLC, Nasdaq ISE, LLC,
Nasdaq MRX, LLC, Nasdaq PHLX LLC, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC, New
York Stock Exchange LLC, NYSE American LLC, NYSE Arca, Inc., NYSE
Chicago, Inc., and NYSE National, Inc. (collectively, the
``Participants,'' ``self-regulatory organizations,'' or ``SROs'').
\2\ The CAT NMS Plan is a national market system plan approved
by the Commission pursuant to Section 11A of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') and the rules and regulations
thereunder. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78318 (Nov. 15,
2016), 81 FR 84696 (Nov. 23, 2016) (``CAT NMS Plan Approval
Order''). The CAT NMS Plan is Exhibit A to the CAT NMS Plan Approval
Order. See CAT NMS Plan Approval Order, 81 FR at 84943-85034. The
CAT NMS Plan functions as the limited liability company agreement of
the jointly owned limited liability company formed under Delaware
state law through which the Participants conduct the activities of
the CAT (``Company''). Each Participant is a member of the Company
and jointly owns the Company on an equal basis. The Participants
submitted to the Commission a proposed amendment to the CAT NMS Plan
on August 29, 2019, which they designated as effective on filing. On
August 29, 2019, the Participants replaced the CAT NMS Plan in its
entirety with the limited liability company agreement of a new
limited liability company, CAT LLC, which became the Company. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87149 (Sept. 27, 2019), 84 FR
52905 (Oct. 3, 2019). The latest version of the CAT NMS Plan is
available at https://catnmsplan.com/about-cat/cat-nms-plan.
\3\ 15 U.S.C. 78k-1.
\4\ 17 CFR 242.608.
\5\ See Letter from Brandon Becker, Chair, CAT NMS Plan
Operating Committee, to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission
(Mar. 13, 2023) (``Transmittal Letter'').
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97151 (Mar. 15,
2023), 88 FR 17086 (Mar. 21, 2023) (``Notice''). Comments received
in response to the Notice can be found on the Commission's website
at https://www.sec.gov/comments/4-698/4-698-a.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This order institutes proceedings, under Rule 608(b)(2)(i) of
Regulation NMS,\7\ to determine whether to disapprove the Proposed
Amendment or to approve the Proposed Amendment with any changes or
subject to any conditions the Commission deems necessary or
appropriate.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2)(i).
\8\ On June 15, 2023, the Participants submitted a letter
consenting to a 30-day extension (until July 20, 2023) of the date
by which the Commission shall, by order, approve or disapprove the
Proposed Amendment, or institute proceedings to determine whether
the Proposed Amendment should be disapproved. See Letter from
Brandon Becker, Chair, CAT NMS Plan Operating Committee, to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission (Jun. 15, 2023). Nevertheless, the
Commission believes it is appropriate for the reasons stated herein
to institute proceedings under Rule 608(b)(2)(i) of Regulation NMS
and Rules 700 and 701 of the Commission's Rules of Practice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
On July 11, 2012, the Commission adopted Rule 613 of Regulation
NMS, which required the SROs to submit a national market system
(``NMS'') plan to create, implement and maintain a consolidated audit
trail that would capture customer and order event information for
orders in NMS securities.\9\ On November 15, 2016, the Commission
approved the CAT NMS Plan.\10\ Under the CAT NMS Plan, the Operating
Committee of the Company, of which each Participant is a member,
[[Page 41143]]
has the discretion (subject to the funding principles set forth in the
Plan) to establish funding for the Company to operate the CAT,
including establishing fees to be paid by the Participants and Industry
Members.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 17 CFR 242.613.
\10\ See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2.
\11\ The CAT NMS Plan defines ``Industry Member'' as ``a member
of a national securities exchange or a member of a national
securities association.'' See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at Section
1.1. See also id. at Section 11.1(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the CAT NMS Plan, CAT fees are to be implemented in
accordance with various funding principles, including an ``allocation
of the Company's related costs among Participants and Industry Members
that is consistent with the Exchange Act taking into account . . .
distinctions in the securities trading operations of Participants and
Industry Members and their relative impact upon the Company resources
and operations'' and the ``avoid[ance of] any disincentives such as
placing an inappropriate burden on competition and reduction in market
quality.'' \12\ The Plan specifies that, in establishing the funding of
the Company, the Operating Committee shall establish ``a tiered fee
structure in which the fees charged to: (1) CAT Reporters \13\ that are
Execution Venues,\14\ including ATSs,\15\ are based upon the level of
market share; (2) Industry Members' non-ATS activities are based upon
message traffic; and (3) the CAT Reporters with the most CAT-related
activity (measured by market share and/or message traffic, as
applicable) are generally comparable (where, for these comparability
purposes, the tiered fee structure takes into consideration
affiliations between or among CAT Reporters, whether Execution Venues
and/or Industry Members).'' \16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Id. at Section 11.2(b) and (e).
\13\ The CAT NMS Plan defines ``CAT Reporter'' as ``each
national securities exchange, national securities association and
Industry Member that is required to record and report information to
the Central Repository pursuant to SEC Rule 613(c).'' Id. at Section
1.1.
\14\ The CAT NMS Plan defines ``Execution Venue'' as ``a
Participant or an alternative trading system (`ATS') (as defined in
Rule 300 of Regulation ATS) that operates pursuant to Rule 301 of
Regulation ATS (excluding any such ATS that does not execute
orders).'' Id.
\15\ Id.
\16\ CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at Section 11.2(c). See id. at
Article XI for additional detail.
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On May 15, 2020, the Commission adopted amendments to the CAT NMS
Plan designed to increase the Participants' financial accountability
for the timely completion of the CAT (``Financial Accountability
Amendments'').\17\ The Financial Accountability Amendments added
Section 11.6 to the CAT NMS Plan to govern the recovery from Industry
Members of any fees, costs, and expenses (including legal and
consulting fees, costs and expenses) incurred by or for the Company in
connection with the development, implementation and operation of the
CAT from June 22, 2020 until such time that the Participants have
completed Full Implementation of CAT NMS Plan Requirements \18\
(``Post-Amendment Expenses''). Section 11.6 establishes target
deadlines for four Financial Accountability Milestones (Periods 1, 2, 3
and 4) \19\ and reduces the amount of fee recovery available to the
Participants if these deadlines are missed.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88890, 85 FR 31322
(May 22, 2020).
\18\ ``Full Implementation of CAT NMS Plan Requirements'' means
``the point at which the Participants have satisfied all of their
obligations to build and implement the CAT, such that all CAT system
functionality required by Rule 613 and the CAT NMS Plan has been
developed, successfully tested, and fully implemented at the initial
Error Rates specified by Section 6.5(d)(i) or less, including
functionality that efficiently permits the Participants and the
Commission to access all CAT Data required to be stored in the
Central Repository pursuant to Section 6.5(a), including Customer
Account Information, Customer-ID, Customer Identifying Information,
and Allocation Reports, and to analyze the full lifecycle of an
order across the national market system, from order origination
through order execution or order cancellation, including any related
allocation information provided in an Allocation Report. This
Financial Accountability Milestone shall be considered complete as
of the date identified in a Quarterly Progress Report meeting the
requirements of Section 6.6(c).'' CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at
Section 1.1.
\19\ Id. at Section 11.6(a)(i).
\20\ Id. at Section 11.6(a)(ii) and (iii).
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III. Summary of Proposal 21
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ This section summarizes the proposed changes to the CAT NMS
Plan. For a full discussion of the Proposed Amendment, including the
Participants' justifications for the Proposed Amendment, such as
comparability to existing fees, alternatives considered, fee pass-
throughs, treatment of FINRA, cost transparency (including the
Historical CAT Costs prior to 2022) and satisfaction of the Exchange
Act and CAT NMS Plan requirements, see Notice, supra note 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAT LLC proposes to replace the funding model set forth in Article
XI of the CAT NMS Plan (``Original Funding Model'') with the Executed
Share Model. The Original Funding Model involved a bifurcated approach,
where costs associated with building and operating the CAT would be
borne by (1) Industry Members (other than alternative trading systems
(``ATSs'') that execute transactions in Eligible Securities
(``Execution Venue ATSs'')) through fixed tiered fees based on message
traffic for Eligible Securities, and (2) Participants and Industry
Members that are Execution Venue ATSs for Eligible Securities through
fixed tiered fees based on market share.\22\ In contrast, the Executed
Share Model would charge fees based on the executed equivalent share
volume of transactions in Eligible Securities rather than based on
market share and message traffic.\23\ In addition, instead of charging
fees to Industry Members, under the Executed Share Model, fees would be
charged to each Industry Member that is a CAT Executing Broker \24\ for
the buyer in a transaction in Eligible Securities (``CAT Executing
Broker for the Buyer'' or ``CEBB'') and each Industry Member that is
the CAT Executing Broker for the seller in a transaction in Eligible
Securities (``CAT Executing Broker for the Seller'' or ``CEBS'').\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 2, at Section 11.3(a) and (b).
\23\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17086.
\24\ See infra Section III.A.1. for the definition of CAT
Executing Broker.
\25\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17087.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Executed Share Model, CAT LLC proposes to establish two
categories of CAT fees. The first category of CAT fees would be fees
(``CAT Fees'') payable by Participants and Industry Members that are
CAT Executing Brokers for the Buyer and for the Seller with regard to
CAT costs not previously paid by the Participants (``Prospective CAT
Costs'').\26\ The second category of CAT fees would be fees
(``Historical CAT Assessments'') to be payable by Industry Members that
are CAT Executing Brokers for the Buyer and for the Seller with regard
to CAT costs previously paid by the Participants (``Past CAT
Costs'').\27\ Each Historical CAT Assessment will recover an amount of
``Historical CAT Costs'', which will be Past CAT Costs minus Past CAT
Costs reasonably excluded from Historical CAT Costs by the Operating
Committee.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ Id. at 17086; see also proposed Section 11.3(a). The
defined term ``CAT Fees'' applies specifically to CAT fees related
to Prospective CAT Costs. Id.
\27\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17086; see also proposed
Section 11.3(b).
\28\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17096; see also proposed
Section 11.3(b)(i)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For each category of fees, each CEBB and each CEBS will be required
to pay a CAT fee for each such transaction in Eligible Securities in
the prior month based on CAT Data.\29\ The CEBB's CAT fee or CEBS's CAT
fee (as applicable) for each transaction in Eligible Securities will be
calculated by multiplying the number of executed equivalent shares in
the transaction by one-third and by the reasonably determined Fee
Rate,\30\ as
[[Page 41144]]
described below.\31\ Participants would incur CAT Fees only for
Prospective CAT Costs and the Participant CAT Fee will be calculated by
multiplying the number of executed equivalent shares in the transaction
by one-third and by the reasonably determined Fee Rate.\32\ The
Participants' one-third share of Historical CAT Costs and such other
additional Past CAT Costs as reasonably determined by the Operating
Committee will be paid by the cancellation of loans made to the Company
on a pro rata basis based on the outstanding loan amounts due under the
loans.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17093; see also proposed
Section 11.3(a)(iii), proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii).
\30\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17124 for the definition
and description of the calculation of the Fee Rate.
\31\ Id. at 17095; see also proposed Section 11.3(a)(iii),
proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii).
\32\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17094; see also proposed
Section 11.3(a)(ii).
\33\ See proposed Section 11.3(b)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As Plan Processor, FINRA CAT would be responsible for calculating
the CAT fees and submitting invoices to the CAT Executing Brokers based
on this CAT Data.\34\ All data used to calculate the fees under the
Executed Share Model would be CAT Data, and, therefore, it would be
available through the CAT for calculating CAT fees.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17088.
\35\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Once the Proposed Amendment has been approved by the Commission,
the Participants would separately file proposed rule changes pursuant
to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act \36\ to establish the amounts of
the proposed CAT Fees and Historical CAT Assessments to be charged to
Industry Members, subject to the satisfaction of applicable Financial
Accountability Milestones as set forth in Section 11.6 of the CAT NMS
Plan and the implementation of the billing and collection system for
the CAT fees.\37\ In each proposed rule change, if the Participants
seek to recover amounts under the Financial Accountability Milestones,
they would need to discuss their completion of the applicable
milestone.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
\37\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17086, 17122.
\38\ Proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(III) would prohibit any
Participant from filing proposed rule changes pursuant to Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act regarding any Historical CAT Assessment
until any applicable Financial Accountability Milestone in Section
11.6 of the CAT NMS Plan has been satisfied.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Description of Amendments
1. Definition of CAT Executing Broker
The Executed Share Model would define ``CAT Executing Broker'' in
Section 1.1 of the CAT NMS Plan as:
(a) with respect to a transaction in an Eligible Security that
is executed on an exchange, the Industry Member identified as the
Industry Member responsible for the order on the buy-side of the
transaction and the Industry Member responsible for the sell-side of
the transaction in the equity order trade event and option trade
event in the CAT Data submitted to the CAT by the relevant exchange
pursuant to the Participant Technical Specifications; and (b) with
respect to a transaction in an Eligible Security that is executed
otherwise than on an exchange and required to be reported to an
equity trade reporting facility of a registered national securities
association, the Industry Member identified as the executing broker
and the Industry Member identified as the contra-side executing
broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF transaction data event in the CAT Data
submitted to the CAT by FINRA pursuant to the Participant Technical
Specifications; provided, however, in those circumstances where
there is a non-Industry Member identified as the contra-side
executing broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF transaction data event or no
contra-side executing broker is identified in the TRF/ORF/ADF
transaction data event, then the Industry Member identified as the
executing broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF transaction data event would be
treated as CAT Executing Broker for the Buyer and for the Seller.
Under the Participant Technical Specifications, for transactions
occurring on a Participant exchange, there is a field for the exchange
to report the market participant identifier (``MPID'') of ``the member
firm that is responsible for the order on this side of the trade.''
\39\ The Industry Members identified in these fields for the
transaction reports would be the CAT Executing Brokers for transactions
executed on an exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ See Section 4.7 (Order Trade Event) and Section 5.2.5.1
(Simple Option Trade Event: Side Details) of the CAT Reporting
Technical Specifications for Plan Participants, Version 4.1.0-r17
(Feb. 21, 2023), https://www.catnmsplan.com/sites/default/files/2023-02/02.21.2023-CAT-Reporting-Technical-Specifications-for-Participants-4.1.0-r17.pdf.
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FINRA is required to report to the CAT transactions in Eligible
Securities reported to a FINRA trade reporting facility (i.e., the
FINRA Trade Reporting Facilities (``TRF''), Over-the Counter Reporting
Facility (``ORF'') and Alternative Display Facility (``ADF'')).\40\
Under the Participant Technical Specifications, for such transactions
reported to a FINRA trade reporting facility, FINRA is required to
report the MPID of the executing party as well as the MPID of the
contra-side executing party. The Industry Members identified in these
two fields for the transaction reports would be the CAT Executing
Brokers for over-the-counter transactions.
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\40\ See Section 6.1 of the CAT Reporting Technical
Specifications for Plan Participants (Feb. 21, 2023).
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CAT LLC states that a CAT Executing Broker in over-the-counter
transactions identified on the TRF/ORF/ADF Transaction Data Event is
determined based on the tape or media report, that is, a trade report
that is submitted to a FINRA trade reporting facility and reported to
and publicly disseminated by the appropriate exclusive Securities
Information Processor. A CAT Executing Broker for over-the-counter
transactions is not determined based on a non-tape report (e.g., a
regulatory report or a clearing report), which are not publicly
disseminated.\41\
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\41\ There is an exception to this statement for away-from-
market trades. These are non-media trades reported to the TRF with
an ``SRO Required Modifier Code'' of ``R''.
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Therefore, with respect to transactions on an exchange and over-
the-counter transactions, CAT LLC would use transaction reports
reported to the CAT by FINRA or the exchanges to identify the
transaction, as well as the CAT Executing Broker for each transaction,
for purposes of calculating the CAT fees. Accordingly, all data used to
calculate the fees under the Executed Share Model would be CAT Data,
and, therefore, it would be available through the CAT for calculating
CAT fees. FINRA CAT would be responsible for calculating the CAT fees
\42\ and submitting invoices to the CAT Executing Brokers \43\ based on
this CAT Data.
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\42\ According to CAT LLC, because CAT fees would be charged
based on the Equity Order Trade Events, Options Trade Events and the
ADF/ORF/TRF Transaction Data Events in the Participant Technical
Specifications and none of these transaction reports provide for
fractional quantities, CAT fees would be calculated without
reference to fractional shares or fractional share components of
executed orders. To the extent that FINRA's equity transaction
reporting facilities or the exchanges report transactions in
fractional shares in the future, then the calculation of CAT fees
would reflect fractional shares as well.
\43\ CAT LLC states that each CAT Executing Broker could
determine, but would not be required, to pass their CAT fees through
to their clients, who, in turn, could pass their CAT fees to their
clients, until the fee is imposed on the ultimate participant in the
transaction.
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a. Treatment of ATSs
The definition of a ``CAT Executing Broker'' as proposed above
would determine the CAT Executing Brokers for transactions executed on
an ATS. Specifically, if an ATS is identified as the executing party
and/or the contra-side executing party in the TRF/ORF/ADF Transaction
Data Event, then the ATS would be a CAT Executing Broker for purposes
of the Executed Share Model. If the ATS is identified as the executing
party for the buyer in such transaction reports, then the ATS would be
the CAT Executing Broker for the Buyer. If the ATS is identified as the
executing party for the seller in such
[[Page 41145]]
transaction reports, then the ATS would be the CAT Executing Broker for
the Seller. An ATS also could be identified as both the CAT Executing
Broker for the Buyer and the CAT Executing Broker for the Seller. ATSs
would determine the executing party and the contra-side executing party
reported to FINRA's equity trading facilities in accordance with the
transaction reporting requirements for FINRA's equity trading
facilities.
b. Non-Industry Members on Transaction Reports
The Executed Share Model also would address how transactions that
involve a non-Industry Member would be treated (e.g., for internalized
trades or trades with a non-FINRA member). The FINRA trade reporting
requirements state that ``[w]hen reporting a trade with a broker-dealer
that is not a FINRA member, the non-member should not be identified on
the trade report as the contra party to the trade.'' \44\ Accordingly,
when the transaction in these cases is reported to CAT via the TRF/ORF/
ADF Transaction Data Event, the field for the reportingExecutingMpid
would be populated with the MPID of the executing broker and the field
for the contraExecutingMpid would be blank or null. As noted above, the
reportingExecutingMpid is a required field (include key = `R') that
must be entered on all CAT reports, but the contraExecutingMpid field
is conditional; it does not need to be populated, specifically to
account for cases like those at issue here (e.g., transactions with a
non-FINRA member). Therefore, in those scenarios where the
contraExecutingMpid is blank, the FINRA member identified in the
reportingExecutingMpid field would be treated as the CAT Executing
Broker for both the buy-side and the sell-side of the transaction, that
is, as the CEBS and CEBB.
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\44\ FINRA Trade Reporting FAQ 202.1.
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In addition, under the FINRA trade reporting requirements, there is
a limited exception to the general rule about not reporting a non-
member as the contra party to the trade. Specifically, pursuant to
FINRA Trade Reporting FAQ 202.1, ``[t]here is a limited exception where
a Canadian non-member firm uses the FINRA/NASDAQ TRF or ORF for
purposes of comparing trades pursuant to a valid Non-Member Addendum to
the NASDAQ Services Agreement. In that instance, however, the Canadian
non-member must appear on the trade report as the contra party to the
trade and not as the reporting party. For any trade report on which a
Canadian non-member appears as a party to the trade, the FINRA member
must appear as the reporting party.'' In this case involving the
Canadian non-member firm exception, the executing broker identified in
the reportingExecutingMpid field would be billed for both sides of the
transaction.
CAT LLC proposes to include language in the definition of ``CAT
Executing Broker'' to address these scenarios. Specifically, CAT LLC
proposes to state the following in the definition of ``CAT Executing
Broker: ``in those circumstances where there is a non-Industry Member
identified as the contra-side executing broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF
transaction data event or no contra-side executing broker is identified
in the TRF/ORF/ADF transaction data event, then the Industry Member
identified as the executing broker in the TRF/ORF/ADF transaction data
event would be treated as CAT Executing Broker for the Buyer and for
the Seller.''
c. Cancellations and Corrections
The Executed Share Model also would provide for cancellations and
corrections. CAT LLC expects to determine CAT fees based on the
transaction reports for a month as of a particular day. To the extent
that changes are made to the transaction reports on or before the day
the CAT fees are determined for the given month, the changes will be
reflected in the monthly bill. To the extent that changes are made to
the transaction reports after the day the CAT fees are determined for
that month, subsequent bills will reflect any changes via debits or
credits, as applicable. As CAT LLC is required by Section 11.1(d) of
the CAT NMS Plan to adopt policies, procedures, and practices regarding
the billing and collection of fees, CAT LLC will establish specific
policies and procedures regarding the treatment of such adjustments as
those related to cancellations and corrections. Furthermore, CAT LLC
will inform Industry Members and other market participants of these
policies and procedures via FAQs, CAT Alerts and/or other appropriate
methods.
2. CAT Budget
Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan describes the requirement for
the Operating Committee to approve an operating budget for CAT LLC on
an annual basis. It requires the budget to ``include the projected
costs of the Company, including the costs of developing and operating
the CAT for the upcoming year, and the sources of all revenues to cover
such costs, as well as the funding of any reserve that the Operating
Committee reasonably deems appropriate for prudent operation of the
Company.'' CAT LLC proposes to provide additional detail regarding the
CAT LLC operating budget by adding proposed subparagraphs (i) and (ii)
to Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan.
a. Budgeted CAT Costs
CAT LLC proposes to add subparagraph (i) to Section 11.1(a) of the
CAT NMS Plan to list the types of CAT costs to be included in the
budget. Specifically, proposed Section 11.1(a)(i) of the CAT NMS Plan
would state that ``[w]ithout limiting the foregoing, the reasonably
budgeted CAT costs shall include technology (including cloud hosting
services, operating fees, CAIS operating fees, change request fees and
capitalized developed technology costs), legal, consulting, insurance,
professional and administration, and public relations costs, a reserve,
and such other categories as reasonably determined by the Operating
Committee to be included in the budget.''
CAT LLC proposes to require the inclusion of five subcategories of
technology costs in the budget: (1) cloud hosting services, (2)
operating fees, (3) Customer and Account Information System (``CAIS'')
operating fees, (4) change request fees, and (5) capitalized developed
technology costs.\45\ CAT LLC states that it will consider the need to
provide additional cost disclosure going forward.\46\
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\45\ CAT LLC states that breaking out technology costs in this
manner is consistent with how such costs are broken out in the CAT
budgets available on the CAT website. The CAT LLC budgets are
available on the CAT website at https://www.catnmsplan.com/cat-financial-and-operating-budget. CAT LLC states that it currently
does not propose to require the disclosure of additional
subcategories of cost information, such as a further breakdown of
the category of cloud hosting services into production costs,
including linker costs and storage costs. Additionally, CAT LLC
notes that the CAT NMS Plan requires that detailed cost information
be made available to the Commission upon request, and detailed
information on CAT costs and operations is regularly made available
to the Commission staff and the Advisory Committee on a confidential
basis. See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17090.
\46\ Id.
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CAT LLC proposes to amend Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan to
require CAT LLC to determine costs for the operating budget for the CAT
in a reasonable manner. Specifically, the first sentence of Section
11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan would be revised to read: ``On an annual
basis the Operating Committee shall approve a reasonable operating
budget for the Company.'' Similarly, CAT LLC proposes to include the
term ``reasonably'' in proposed paragraph (a)(i) of Section 11.1 of the
[[Page 41146]]
CAT NMS Plan. Specifically, that section would read: ``Without limiting
the foregoing, the reasonably budgeted CAT costs shall include
technology (including cloud hosting services, operating fees, CAIS
operating fees, change request fees, and capitalized developed
technology costs), legal, consulting, insurance, professional and
administration, and public relations costs, a reserve and such other
cost categories as reasonably determined by the Operating Committee to
be included in the budget.''
Finally, CAT LLC proposes to amend Section 11.1(b) of the CAT NMS
Plan. Currently, Section 11.1(b) of the CAT NMS Plan states that:
Subject to Section 11.2, the Operating Committee shall have
discretion to establish funding for the Company, including: (i)
establishing fees that the Participants shall pay; and (ii)
establishing fees for Industry Members that shall be implemented by
Participants. The Participants shall file with the SEC under Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act any such fees on Industry Members that the
Operating Committee approves, and such fees shall be labeled as
``Consolidated Audit Trail Funding Fees.''
CAT LLC proposes to amend Section 11.1(b) to include a reference to
Section 11.1 as well as Section 11.2 in the ``subject to'' clause at
the beginning of the provision.
b. Reserve
Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan states that the budget shall
include ``the funding of any reserve that the Operating Committee
reasonably deems appropriate for prudent operation of the Company.'' In
addition, proposed Section 11.1(a)(i) of the CAT NMS Plan would state
that the budgeted CAT costs shall include a reserve. Section 11.1(c) of
the CAT NMS Plan states that ``[a]ny surplus of the Company's revenues
over its expenses shall be treated as an operational reserve to offset
future fees.''
CAT LLC proposes to add paragraph (ii) to Section 11.1(a) of the
CAT NMS Plan to set forth the parameters for the size of the reserve.
Proposed Section 11.1(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan would state that
``[f]or the reserve referenced in paragraph (a)(i) of this Section, the
budget will include an amount reasonably necessary to allow the Company
to maintain a reserve of not more than 25% of the annual budget.'' In
addition, proposed Section 11.1(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan would state
that ``[f]or the avoidance of doubt, the calculation of the amount of
the reserve would exclude the amount of the reserve from the budget.''
CAT LLC proposes to provide additional information as to how budget
surpluses would be treated for purposes of the reserve. Specifically,
proposed subparagraph (ii) of Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan would
state that ``[t]o the extent collected CAT fees exceed CAT costs,
including the reserve of 25% of the annual budget, such surplus will be
used to offset future fees.'' In addition, CAT LLC further proposes to
state in proposed Section 11.1(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan that ``[f]or
the avoidance of doubt, the Company will only include an amount for the
reserve in the annual budget if the Company does not have a sufficient
reserve (which shall be up to but not more than 25% of the annual
budget).''
3. CAT Fees Related to Prospective CAT Costs
CAT LLC proposes to revise the introductory statement in proposed
Section 11.3(a) of the CAT NMS Plan to state that the Operating
Committee will establish the CAT Fees to be payable by Participants and
Industry Members with regard to Prospective CAT Costs.
a. Fee Rate for CAT Fees
CAT LLC proposes to describe the timing and method for calculating
the Fee Rate for the CAT Fees related to Prospective CAT Costs in
proposed Section 11.3(a)(i) of the CAT NMS Plan, and to provide
additional detail regarding the Fee Rate in that provision. Proposed
Section 11.3(a)(i) of the CAT NMS Plan would state that CAT Fees
related to Prospective CAT Costs would be calculated twice a year, once
at the beginning of the year and once during the year.
Proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(A)(I) of the CAT NMS Plan would provide
that at the beginning of each year, the Operating Committee will
calculate the Fee Rate by dividing the reasonably budgeted CAT costs
for the year by the reasonably projected total executed equivalent
share volume of all transactions in Eligible Securities for the year.
Once the Operating Committee has approved such Fee Rate, the
Participants shall be required to file with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act CAT Fees to be charged to Industry
Members calculated using such Fee Rate. Participants and Industry
Members will be required to pay CAT Fees calculated using this Fee Rate
once such CAT Fees are in effect with regard to Industry Members in
accordance with Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.
Proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(A)(II) of the CAT NMS provides that
during each year, the Operating Committee will calculate a new Fee Rate
by dividing the reasonably budgeted CAT costs for the remainder of the
year by the reasonably projected total executed equivalent share volume
of all transactions in Eligible Securities for the remainder of the
year. Once the Operating Committee has approved the new Fee Rate, the
Participants shall be required to file with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act CAT Fees to be charged to Industry
Members calculated using the new Fee Rate. Participants and Industry
Members will be required to pay CAT Fees calculated using this new Fee
Rate once such CAT Fees are in effect with regard to Industry Members
in accordance with Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act. CAT LLC also
proposes to add Section 11.3(a)(i)(A)(III) to the CAT NMS Plan to state
that CAT Fees related to Prospective CAT Costs do not sunset
automatically; such CAT Fees would remain in place until new CAT Fees
are in place with a new Fee Rate. The Executed Share Model is designed
to collect CAT fees continuously to provide uninterrupted revenue to
pay CAT bills.\47\
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\47\ CAT LLC proposes to add proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(A)(IV)
to the CAT NMS Plan. This provision would state that ``[f]or the
avoidance of doubt, the first CAT Fee may commence at the beginning
of the year or during the year. If it were to commence during the
year, the CAT Fee would be calculated as described in paragraph (II)
of this Section.''
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b. Executed Equivalent Shares
CAT LLC proposes to describe in proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(B) of
the CAT NMS Plan how executed equivalent shares would be counted for
purposes of calculating CAT Fees. The Executed Share Model uses the
concept of executed equivalent shares as the transactions subject to a
CAT Fee involve NMS Stocks, Listed Options and OTC Equity Securities,
each of which have different trading characteristics.
NMS Stocks. Under the Executed Share Model, each executed share for
a transaction in NMS Stocks would be counted as one executed equivalent
share.
Listed Options. Recognizing that Listed Options trade in contracts
rather than shares, each executed contract for a transaction in Listed
Options will be counted using the contract multiplier applicable to the
specific Listed Option in the relevant transaction. Typically, a Listed
Option contract represents 100 shares; however, it may also represent
another designated number of shares.
OTC Equity Securities. Similarly, in recognition of the different
trading characteristics of OTC Equity Securities as compared to NMS
Stocks, the Executed Share Model would discount
[[Page 41147]]
the share volume of OTC Equity Securities when calculating CAT Fees. To
address this potential concern, the Executed Share Model would count
each executed share for a transaction in OTC Equity Securities as 0.01
executed equivalent shares.
c. Budgeted CAT Costs
The calculation of the Fee Rate for CAT Fees related to Prospective
CAT Costs requires the determination of the budgeted CAT costs for the
year or other relevant period. Proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(C) of the
CAT NMS Plan would state that the budgeted CAT costs for the year shall
be comprised of all reasonable fees, costs and expenses reasonably
budgeted to be incurred by or for the Company in connection with the
development, implementation and operation of the CAT as set forth in
the annual operating budget approved by the Operating Committee
pursuant to Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan, or as adjusted during
the year by the Operating Committee.
In addition, proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(C) of the CAT NMS Plan
would provide that the budgeted CAT costs for the year shall be
comprised of all reasonable fees, costs and expenses reasonably
budgeted to be incurred by or for the Company in connection with the
development, implementation and operation of the CAT as set forth in
the annual operating budget approved by the Operating Committee
pursuant to Section 11.1(a) of the CAT NMS Plan, or as adjusted during
the year by the Operating Committee.
d. Projected Total Executed Equivalent Share Volume
The calculation of the Fee Rate for CAT Fees also requires the
determination of the projected total executed equivalent share volume
of transactions in Eligible Securities for each relevant period.
Pursuant to proposed Section 11.3(a)(i)(D) of the CAT NMS Plan, each
year, the Operating Committee would reasonably determine this
projection based on the total executed equivalent share volume of
transactions in Eligible Securities from the prior twelve months. As
set forth in proposed Section 11.3(a)(iii)(B), Participants will be
required to provide a description of the calculation of the projection
in their fee filings pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.
Furthermore, CAT LLC intends to calculate the CAT Fees based on a
reasonable determination of the projected total executed equivalent
share volume of transactions in Eligible Securities.
e. Participant CAT Fees for Prospective CAT Costs
CAT LLC proposes to add paragraph (A) to proposed Section
11.3(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan to describe the CAT Fee obligation of
the Participants. Each Participant that is a national securities
exchange will be required to pay the CAT Fee for each transaction in
Eligible Securities executed on the exchange in the prior month based
on CAT Data. Each Participant that is a national securities association
will be required to pay the CAT Fee for each transaction in Eligible
Securities executed otherwise than on an exchange in the prior month
based on CAT Data. The CAT Fee for each transaction in Eligible
Securities will be calculated by multiplying the number of executed
equivalent shares in the transaction by one-third and by the Fee Rate
determined pursuant to paragraph (a)(i) of Section 11.3.
CAT LLC also proposes to include proposed paragraph (B) of proposed
Section 11.3(a)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan to clarify that Participants
would only be required to pay CAT Fees when Industry Members are
required to pay CAT Fees. Under the Executed Share Model, CAT Fees are
designed to cover 100% of CAT costs by allocating costs between and
among Participants and Industry Members. However, the CAT Fees charged
to Participants are implemented via a different process than CAT Fees
charged to Industry Members. CAT Fees charged to Participants are
implemented via an approval of the CAT Fees by the Operating Committee
in accordance with the requirements of the CAT NMS Plan. In contrast,
CAT Fees charged to Industry Members may only become effective in
accordance with the requirements of Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.
f. Industry Member CAT Fees for Prospective CAT Costs
CAT LLC proposes to describe the CAT Fees related to Prospective
CAT Costs that would be charged to Industry Members in proposed Section
11.3(a)(iii)(A) of the CAT NMS Plan. Each Industry Member that is the
CEBB in a transaction in Eligible Securities and each Industry Member
that is the CEBS in a transaction in Eligible Securities) will be
required to pay a CAT Fee for each such transaction in Eligible
Securities in the prior month based on CAT Data. The CEBB's CAT Fee or
CEBS's CAT Fee (as applicable) for each transaction in Eligible
Securities will be calculated by multiplying the number of executed
equivalent shares in the transaction by one-third and by the Fee Rate
reasonably determined pursuant to paragraph (a)(i) of this Section
11.3.
Proposed paragraph (B) of proposed Section 11.3(a)(iii) of the CAT
NMS Plan would require the fee filings to be made pursuant to Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 19b-4 thereunder \48\ for Industry
Member CAT Fees to include with regard to the CAT Fee: (A) the Fee
Rate; (B) the budget for the upcoming year (or remainder of the year,
as applicable), including a brief description of each line item in the
budget, including (1) technology line items of cloud hosting services,
operating fees, CAIS operating fees, change request fees and
capitalized developed technology costs, (2) legal, (3) consulting, (4)
insurance, (5) professional and administration, and (6) public
relations costs, a reserve and/or such other categories as reasonably
determined by the Operating Committee to be included in the budget and
the reason for changes in each such line item from the prior CAT Fee
filing; \49\ (C) a discussion of how the budget is reconciled to the
collected fees; and (D) the projected total executed equivalent share
volume of all transactions in Eligible Securities for the year (or
remainder of the year, as applicable), and a description of the
calculation of the projection. This detail would describe how the Fee
Rate is calculated and explain how the budget used in the calculation
is reconciled to the collected fees.\50\
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\48\ CAT LLC expects the fee filings required to be made by the
Participants pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act with
regard to CAT Fees to be filed pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) of
the Exchange Act and Rule 19b-(f)(2) thereunder. In accordance with
Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Exchange Act and Rule 19b-4(f)(2)
thereunder, such fee filings would be effective upon filing.
\49\ CAT LLC intends to include any other categories as
reasonably determined by the Operation Committee. Accordingly, this
provision refers to ``such other categories as reasonably determined
by the Operating Committee to be included in the budget.''
\50\ As a practical matter, the fee filing would provide the
exact fee per executed equivalent share to be paid for the CAT Fees,
by multiplying the Fee Rate by one-third and describing the relevant
number of decimal places for the fee.
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In addition, in proposed Section 11.3(a)(iii)(B), CAT LLC proposes
to state that the budgeted CAT costs described in the fee filings must
provide sufficient detail to demonstrate that the CAT budget used in
calculating the CAT Fees is reasonable and appropriate.
The collection of CAT Fees from Industry Members is subject to
Section 11.6 of the CAT NMS Plan regarding the Financial Accountability
Milestones. Accordingly, CAT LLC proposes to state in proposed
paragraph (C) to proposed
[[Page 41148]]
Section 11.3(a)(iii) that Participants will not make fee filings
pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act regarding CAT Fees until
the Financial Accountability Milestone related to Period 4 described in
Section 11.6 of the CAT NMS Plan has been satisfied.
g. CAT Fee Details
CAT LLC proposes to add proposed Section 11.3(a)(iv)(A) to the CAT
NMS Plan to state that details regarding the calculation of a
Participant or CAT Executing Broker's CAT Fees will be provided upon
request to such Participant or CAT Executing Broker. At a minimum, such
details would include each Participant or CAT Executing Broker's
executed equivalent share volume and corresponding fee by (1) Listed
Options, NMS Stocks and OTC Equity Securities, (2) by transactions
executed on each exchange and transactions executed otherwise than on
an exchange, and (3) by buy-side transactions and sell-side
transactions.''
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to make certain aggregate statistics
regarding the CAT Fees publicly available, which would include, at a
minimum, the aggregate executed equivalent share volume and
corresponding aggregate fee by (1) Listed Options, NMS Stocks and OTC
Equity Securities, (2) by transactions executed on each exchange and
transactions executed otherwise than on an exchange, and (3) by buy-
side transactions and sell-side transactions.\51\
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\51\ See proposed Section 11.3(a)(iv)(B) of the CAT NMS Plan.
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4. Historical CAT Assessment
CAT LLC proposes to revise Section 11.3(b) of the CAT NMS Plan to
provide that the Operating Committee will establish one or more
Historical CAT Assessments to be payable by Industry Members with
regard to Past CAT Costs.\52\
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\52\ There may be one or more Historical CAT Assessments,
depending upon the timing of any approval of the amendment to the
CAT NMS Plan and the completion of the Financial Accountability
Milestones. For a discussion of the Financial Accountability
Milestones, see Section 11.6 of the CAT NMS Plan.
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a. Historical Fee Rate for Historical CAT Assessments
Proposed paragraph (A) of proposed Section 11.3(b)(i) of the CAT
NMS Plan would state that the Operating Committee will calculate the
Historical Fee Rate for each Historical CAT Assessment by dividing the
Historical CAT Costs for each Historical CAT Assessment by the
reasonably projected total executed equivalent share volume of all
transactions in Eligible Securities for the Historical Recovery Period
for each Historical CAT Assessment. Once the Operating Committee has
approved such Historical Fee Rate, the Participants shall be required
to file with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange
Act such Historical CAT Assessment to be charged Industry Members
calculated using such Historical Fee Rate. Industry Members will be
required to pay such Historical CAT Assessment calculated using such
Historical Fee Rate once such Historical CAT Assessment is in effect in
accordance with Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.
b. Executed Equivalent Shares
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(B) of the CAT NMS Plan would state that
the Historical CAT Assessment would be calculated based on the same
executed equivalent share calculation as CAT Fees related to
Prospective CAT Costs.
c. Historical CAT Costs
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(C) of the CAT NMS Plan would describe
the Historical CAT Costs for calculating Historical CAT Assessments and
would state that ``[t]he Operating Committee will reasonably determine
the Historical CAT Costs sought to be recovered by each Historical CAT
Assessment, where the Historical CAT Costs will be Past CAT Costs minus
Past CAT Costs reasonably excluded from Historical CAT Costs by the
Operating Committee.''
CAT LLC proposes to further clarify the amount to be collected by
the Historical CAT Assessments by adding a clarifying statement in
proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(C) that ``[e]ach Historical CAT Assessment
will seek to recover from CAT Executing Brokers two-thirds of
Historical CAT Costs incurred during the period covered by the
Historical CAT Assessment.'' Each CEBS and CEBB pays one-third, and,
therefore, two-thirds of the Historical CAT Costs would be collected
from CAT Executing Brokers.
CAT LLC also proposes to add the term ``reasonably'' to the
following sentence in Section 11.1(c) of the CAT NMS Plan before the
word ``incurred'': ``In determining fees on Participants and Industry
Members the Operating Committee shall take into account fees, costs and
expenses (including legal and consulting fees) reasonably incurred by
the Participants on behalf of the Company prior to the Effective Date
in connection with the creation and implementation of the CAT.''
d. Historical Recovery Period
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(D)(I) of the CAT NMS Plan would
describe the Historical Recovery Period used in calculating the
Historical Fee Rate. This proposed provision would state that ``[t]he
length of the Historical Recovery Period used in calculating each
Historical Fee Rate will be reasonably established by the Operating
Committee based upon the amount of the Historical CAT Costs to be
recovered by the Historical CAT Assessment.'' This proposed provision,
however, would state that ``no Historical Recovery Period used in
calculating the Historical Fee Rate shall be less than 24 months or
more than five years.''
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(D)(II) of the CAT NMS Plan would
describe the length of the time that the Historical CAT Assessment
would be in effect, which may be greater than or less than the
Historical Recovery Period, depending on the amount of the Historical
CAT Assessments collected based on the actual volume during the time
that the Historical Assessment is in effect. Any Historical CAT
Assessment would remain in effect until the relevant Historical CAT
Costs are collected, whether that time is shorter or longer than the
Historical Recovery Period used in calculating the Historical Fee Rate.
e. Projected Total Executed Equivalent Share Volume
The Historical Fee Rate for a Historical CAT Assessment would be
calculated by using the projected total executed equivalent share
volume of all transactions in Eligible Securities for the Historical
Recovery Period for such Historical CAT Assessment. As set forth in
proposed Section 11.3(b)(i)(E) of the CAT NMS Plan, ``[t]he Operating
Committee shall reasonably determine the projected total executed
equivalent share volume of all transactions in Eligible Securities for
each Historical Recovery Period based on the executed equivalent share
volume of all transactions in Eligible Securities for the prior twelve
months.'' In addition, CAT LLC proposes to allow the Operating
Committee to base its projection on the prior twelve months, but to use
its discretion to analyze the likely volume for the upcoming year. As
set forth in proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(II) of the CAT NMS Plan,
Participants will be required to provide a description of the
calculation of the projection in their fee filings pursuant to Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act for Historical CAT Assessments.
[[Page 41149]]
f. Past CAT Costs and Participants
Proposed Section 11.3(b)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan would clarify that
the Participants would not be required to pay the Historical CAT
Assessment as the Participants previously have paid all Past CAT Costs.
In addition, proposed Section 11.3(b)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan would
state that ``[i]n lieu of a Historical CAT Assessment, the
Participants' one-third share of Historical CAT Costs and such other
additional Past CAT Costs as reasonably determined by the Operating
Committee will be paid by the cancellation of loans made to the Company
on a pro rata basis based on the outstanding loan amounts due under the
loans.'' Furthermore, proposed Section 11.3(b)(ii) of the CAT NMS Plan
would emphasize that ``[t]he Historical CAT Assessment is designed to
recover two-thirds of the Historical CAT Costs.''
g. Historical CAT Assessment for Industry Members
CAT LLC proposes to describe the Historical CAT Assessment charged
to Industry Members in proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(A) of the CAT NMS
Plan. Each month in which a Historical CAT Assessment is in effect,
each CEBB and each CEBS shall pay a fee for each transaction in
Eligible Securities executed by the CEBB or CEBS from the prior month
as set forth in CAT Data, where the Historical CAT Assessment for each
transaction will be calculated by multiplying the number of executed
equivalent shares in the transaction by one-third and by the Historical
Fee Rate reasonably determined pursuant to paragraph (b)(i) of this
Section 11.3.
CAT LLC proposes to provide additional details regarding the fee
filings to be filed by the Participants regarding each Historical CAT
Assessment pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act in proposed
Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B) of the CAT NMS Plan.\53\ Specifically, CAT LLC
proposes to state that each Participant will be required to file a fee
filing pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act to describe each
Historical CAT Assessment.\54\
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\53\ CAT LLC expects the fee filings required to be made by the
Participants pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act with
regard to Historical CAT Assessments to be filed pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A) of the Exchange Act. In accordance with Section
19(b)(3)(A) of the Exchange Act, fee filings made pursuant to
Section 19(b)(3)(A) of the Exchange Act would be effective upon
filing.
\54\ See proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAT LLC also proposes to provide additional detail about the
information that Participants would be required to include in their fee
filings to be made pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange and Rule
19b-4(f)(2) for Historical CAT Assessments in proposed paragraph
(b)(iii)(B)(II) of proposed Section 11.3 of the CAT NMS Plan.
Specifically, such filings would be required to include: (A) the
Historical Fee Rate; (B) a brief description of the amount and type of
Historical CAT Costs, including (1) the technology line items of cloud
hosting services, operating fees, CAIS operating fees, change request
fees and capitalized developed technology costs, (2) legal, (3)
consulting, (4) insurance, (5) professional and administration, and (6)
public relations costs; (C) the Historical Recovery Period and the
reasons for its length; and (D) the projected total executed equivalent
share volume of all transactions in Eligible Securities for the
Historical Recovery Period, and a description of the calculation of the
projection.\55\
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\55\ As a practical matter, the fee filing would provide the
exact fee per executed equivalent share to be paid for the
Historical CAT Assessment, by multiplying the Historical Fee Rate by
one-third and describing the relevant number of decimal places for
the fee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to clarify in proposed Section
11.3(b)(iii)(B)(II) that the Historical CAT Costs described in the fee
filings must provide sufficient detail to demonstrate that such costs
are reasonable and appropriate.
The collection of Historical CAT Assessments from Industry Members
is subject to Section 11.6 of the CAT NMS Plan regarding the Financial
Accountability Milestones. Accordingly, CAT LLC proposes to clarify in
proposed Section 11.3(b)(iii)(B)(III) that Participants will not make
CAT fee filings pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act regarding
a Historical CAT Assessment until any applicable Financial
Accountability Milestone has been satisfied.
h. Historical CAT Assessment Details
CAT LLC proposes to add proposed Section 11.3(b)(iv)(A) to the CAT
NMS Plan to state that details regarding the calculation of a CAT
Executing Broker's Historical CAT Assessments will be provided upon
request to such CAT Executing Broker. At a minimum, such details would
include each CAT Executing Broker's executed equivalent share volume
and corresponding fee by (1) Listed Options, NMS Stocks and OTC Equity
Securities, (2) by transactions executed on each exchange and
transactions executed otherwise than on an exchange, and (3) by buy-
side transactions and sell-side transactions.
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to make certain aggregate statistics
regarding Historical CAT Assessments publicly available, which would
include, at a minimum, the aggregate executed equivalent share volume
and corresponding aggregate fee by (1) Listed Options, NMS Stocks and
OTC Equity Securities, (2) by transactions executed on each exchange
and transactions executed otherwise than on an exchange, and (3) by
buy-side transactions and sell-side transactions.\56\
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\56\ See proposed Section 11.3(b)(iv)(B) of the CAT NMS Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Additional Changes From Original Funding Model
CAT LLC proposes certain revisions to Article XI of the CAT NMS
Plan to implement the Executed Share Model. CAT LLC proposes to make
the following changes to the CAT NMS Plan in addition to the proposed
changes to the CAT NMS Plan discussed above.
a. Elimination of Definition of ``Execution Venue''
Section 1.1 of the CAT NMS Plan defines the term ``Execution
Venue'' to mean ``a Participant or an alternative trading system
(`ATS') (as defined in Rule 300 of Regulation ATS) that operates
pursuant to Rule 301 of Regulation ATS (excluding any such ATS that
does not execute orders).'' Currently, the term ``Execution Venue'' is
used in Sections 11.2 and 11.3 of the CAT NMS Plan to describe how CAT
costs would be allocated among CAT Reporters under the Original Funding
Model. The Original Funding Model would have imposed fees based on
market share to CAT Reporters that are Execution Venues, including
ATSs, and fees based on message traffic for Industry Members' non-ATS
activities. In contrast, the Executed Share Model would impose fees
based on the executed equivalent shares of transactions in Eligible
Securities for three categories of CAT Reporters: Participants, CEBBs
and CEBSs. Accordingly, as the concept for an ``Execution Venue'' would
not be relevant for the Executed Share Model, CAT LLC proposes to
delete this term and its definition from Section 1.1 of the CAT NMS
Plan.
b. Use of Executed Equivalent Share Volume Under Executed Share Model
The Original Funding Model set forth in the CAT NMS Plan requires
Participants and Execution Venue ATSs to pay CAT fees based on market
share and Industry Members (other than Execution Venue ATSs) to pay CAT
fees based on message traffic. The CAT NMS Plan also describes how the
market
[[Page 41150]]
share-based fee would be calculated for Participants and other
Execution Venue ATSs and how the message traffic-based fee would be
calculated for Industry Members (other than Execution Venue ATSs). CAT
LLC proposes to amend the CAT NMS Plan to require Participants, CEBBs
and CEBSs to pay CAT fees based on the number of executed equivalent
shares in a transaction in Eligible Securities, rather than based on
market share and message traffic. Accordingly, the Operating Committee
proposes to amend Section 11.2(b) and (c) and Section 11.3(a) and (b)
of the CAT NMS Plan to reflect the proposed use of the number of
executed equivalent shares in transactions in Eligible Securities in
calculating CAT fees.
Section 11.2(b) of the CAT NMS Plan states that ``[i]n establishing
the funding of the Company, the Operating Committee shall seek . . .
(b) to establish an allocation of the Company's related costs among
Participants and Industry Members that is consistent with the Exchange
Act, taking into account the timeline for implementation of the CAT and
distinctions in the securities trading operations of Participants and
Industry Members and their relative impact upon Company resources and
operations.'' CAT LLC proposes to delete the requirement to take into
account ``distinctions in the securities trading operations of
Participants and Industry Members and their relative impact upon
Company resources and operations.'' CAT LLC represents that this
requirement related to using message traffic and market share in the
calculation of CAT fees, as message traffic and market share were
metrics related to the impact of a CAT Reporter on the Company's
resources and operations. CAT LLC represents that with the proposed
move to the use of the executed equivalent shares metric instead of
message traffic and market share, the requirement is no longer
relevant.
Section 11.2(c) of the CAT NMS Plan states that ``[i]n establishing
the funding of the Company, the Operating Committee shall seek . . .
(c) to establish a tiered fee structure in which the fees charged to:
(i) CAT Reporters that are Execution Venues, including ATSs, are based
upon the level of market share; (ii) Industry Members' non-ATS
activities are based upon message traffic.'' CAT LLC proposes to delete
subparagraphs (i) and (ii) and replace these subparagraphs with the
requirement that the fee structure in which the fees charged to
``Participants and Industry Members are based upon the executed
equivalent share volume of transactions in Eligible Securities.''
In addition, CAT LLC proposes to amend the CAT funding principles
to clarify that CAT Fees and the Historical CAT Assessments are
intended to be cost-based fees--that is, the fees are designed to
recover the cost of the creation, implementation and operation of the
CAT. CAT LLC proposes to amend the funding principle set forth in
Section 11.2(c) by making a specific reference to the costs of the CAT.
CAT LLC proposes to delete Section 11.3(a) of the CAT NMS Plan,
which provides additional detail regarding the market share-based fees
to be paid by Participants and Execution Venue ATSs under the Original
Funding Model, and replace it with a description of the CAT Fees
related to Prospective CAT Costs, as described above.
CAT LLC proposes to delete Section 11.3(b) of the CAT NMS Plan,
which provides additional detail regarding the message traffic-based
CAT fees to be paid by Industry Members (other than Execution Venue
ATSs) under the Original Funding Model, and replace it with a
description of the Historical CAT Assessments, as described above.
c. Elimination of Tiered Fees
CAT LLC proposes to eliminate the use of tiered fees that were
included in the Original Funding Model. Instead, under the Executed
Share Model, each Participant, CEBB or CEBS would pay a fee based
solely on its transactions in Eligible Securities. The Operating
Committee therefore proposes to amend Sections 11.1(d), 11.2(c),
11.3(a) and 11.3(b) of the CAT NMS Plan to eliminate tiered fees and
related concepts.
Section 11.1(d) of the CAT NMS Plan states that ``[c]onsistent with
this Article XI, the Operating Committee shall adopt policies,
procedures, and practices regarding the budget and budgeting process,
assignment of tiers, resolution of disputes, billing and collection of
fees, and other related matters.'' With the elimination of tiered fees,
the reference to the ``assignment of tiers'' would no longer be
relevant for the Executed Share Model. Therefore, CAT LLC proposes to
delete the reference to ``assignment of tiers'' from Section 11.1(d).
Similarly, CAT LLC also proposes to delete the following sentences from
Section 11.1(d) because the Executed Share Model would not use tiered
fees:
For the avoidance of doubt, as part of its regular review of
fees for the CAT, the Operating Committee shall have the right to
change the tier assigned to any particular Person in accordance with
fee schedules previously filed with the Commission that are
reasonable, equitable and not unfairly discriminatory and subject to
public notice and comment, pursuant to this Article XI. Any such
changes will be effective upon reasonable notice to such Person.
CAT LLC also proposes to delete the references to ``tiered'' fees
from Section 11.2(c) of the CAT NMS Plan and paragraph (iii) of Section
11.2(c) of the CAT NMS Plan, which relates to the establishment of a
tiered fee structure.
As discussed above, the Operating Committee proposes to replace the
language in Sections 11.3(a) and (b) of the CAT NMS Plan with language
implementing the Executed Share Model. These proposed changes would
remove the references to tiers in Sections 11.3(a)(i) and (ii) and
11.3(b) of the CAT NMS Plan, along with the other proposed changes.
d. No Fixed Fees
As discussed above, CAT LLC proposes to replace the language in
Sections 11.3(a) and (b) of the CAT NMS Plan with language implementing
the Executed Share Model. These proposed changes also would remove the
references to ``fixed fees'' in Sections 11.3(a), 11.3(a)(i),
11.3(a)(ii) and 11.3(b) and replaced them with references to ``fees.''
Under the Executed Share Model, the CAT fees to be paid by
Participants, CEBBs and CEBSs will vary in accordance with their
executed equivalent share volume of transactions in Eligible
Securities, although the Fee Rate will be fixed for a relevant period.
6. Plan Amendment Process for Fee Rate Changes
Under the Executed Share Model, once any Fee Rate has been
established by a majority vote of the Operating Committee in accordance
with the Executed Share Model set forth in the CAT NMS Plan,\57\ each
Participant would be required to pay the applicable CAT Fee calculated
in accordance with the requirements set forth in the CAT NMS Plan
(subject to the requirement for the Industry Member CAT Fee to be in
effect). CAT LLC does not plan to submit an amendment to the CAT NMS
Plan each time that the Fee Rate for the CAT Fee is established or
adjusted because of the length of time and burden required to amend the
CAT NMS Plan for each adjustment to the Fee Rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ Participants would be required to pay the CAT Fee once the
CAT Fee is in effect with regard to Industry Members in accordance
with Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.
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[[Page 41151]]
B. CAT Fee Schedule for Participants
To implement the Participant CAT fees, CAT LLC proposes to add a
fee schedule, entitled ``Consolidated Audit Trail Funding Fees,'' to
Appendix B of the CAT NMS Plan. Proposed paragraph (a) of the fee
schedule would describe the CAT Fees to be paid by the Participants
under the Executed Share Model. Specifically, paragraph (a) of the
Participant fee schedule would state that ``[e]ach Participant shall
pay the CAT Fee set forth in Section 11.3(a) of the CAT NMS Plan to
Consolidated Audit Trail, LLC in the manner prescribed by Consolidated
Audit Trail, LLC on a monthly basis based on the Participant's
transactions in Eligible Securities in the prior month.''
IV. Summary of Comments
A. Allocation of Fee Among Participants and Industry Members
Under the Executed Share Model, CAT fees would be allocated one-
third to the applicable Participant, one-third to the CEBS and one-
third to the CEBB of a transaction. Two commenters opposed the proposed
allocation.\58\ One commenter stated that, while the Proposed Amendment
justified the fairness of the Executed Share Model because it would
operate like other fees, like FINRA's TAF, Section 31 fees, and the
options regulatory fee,\59\ the Proposed Amendment did not support why
those fee frameworks should be used as a model in this context.\60\ For
example, the commenter stated that the TAF is designed to recover the
costs of FINRA's regulatory activities, while the CAT fees are intended
to align with the costs to build, operate and administer the CAT.\61\
Further, the commenter stated that the Proposed Amendment has
insufficiently explained the connection between the TAF and CAT fees,
merely stating that they are similar fees because they are transaction-
based fees to provide funding for regulatory costs.\62\ The commenter
stated that ``CAT LLC's observations superficially focus on the fact
that these fees also use transaction-based metrics (and may be assessed
on members) and neglects other factors relevant to the analysis
including, for example, that these fees are used in combination with
other funding mechanisms and metrics to support an overall funding
framework.'' \63\
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\58\ See Letters to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission,
from Marcia E. Asquith, Corporate Secretary, EVP, Board and External
Relations, FINRA, dated May 25, 2023 (``FINRA May 2023 Letter'');
April 11, 2023 (``FINRA April 2023 Letter''); and June 22, 2022
(``FINRA June 2022 Letter'') (the FINRA June 2022 Letter was
submitted in response to the prior funding proposal and was attached
and incorporated by reference in the FINRA April 2023 Letter);
Letters to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission, from Ellen
Greene, Managing Director, Equities & Options Market Structure, and
Joseph Corcoran, Managing Director, Associate General Counsel,
SIFMA, dated June 5, 2023 (``SIFMA June 2023 Letter''); May 2, 2023
(``SIFMA May 2023 Letter''); January 12, 2023 (``SIFMA January 2023
Letter''); December 14, 2022 (``SIFMA December 2022 Letter'');
October 7, 2022 (``SIFMA October 2022 Letter''); and June 22, 2022
(``SIFMA June 2022 Letter'') (the SIFMA June 2022 Letter, SIFMA
October 2022 Letter, SIFMA December 2022 Letter and SIFMA January
2023 Letter were submitted in response to the prior funding proposal
and incorporated by reference in the SIFMA May 2023 Letter).
\59\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17122.
\60\ See FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4.
\61\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 8.
\62\ Id. The commenter also stated that ``it is unclear how
assessing on FINRA the largest allocation of the SRO portion of CAT
expenses `provides funding for regulatory costs' in any reasonable
and equitable sense comparable to the TAF . . .'' Id.
\63\ FINRA May 2023 Letter at 3.
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Another commenter disagreed with the Participants' statement that
the Executed Share Model's similarity to other transaction-based fees
approved by the Commission is adequate justification for consistency
with the Exchange Act.\64\ The commenter stated that similarity to
other transaction-based fees is not an adequate basis to show that the
Executed Share Model is consistent with relevant standards; each
proposed fee must be individually supported.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4.
\65\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also questioned the Participants' justifications for the
one-third allocation methodology. One commenter argued that the
Proposed Amendment did not justify why the proposed allocation by
thirds to the Participant, buy-side and sell-side is equitable in the
context of the CAT NMS Plan.\66\ The commenter also argued that the
Proposed Amendment did not consider alternatives suggested by
commenters on a prior proposed funding model,\67\ such as a model
similar to Section 31 fees and a CAT funding model based on the ``Cost
Recovery Principle'' and the ``Benefits Received Principle.'' \68\ The
commenter urged that the Commission require those alternatives to be
analyzed.\69\
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\66\ See FINRA June 2022 Letter at 3.
\67\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 94984 (May 25,
2022), 87 FR 33226 (June 1, 2022); 96394 (Nov. 28, 2022), 87 FR
74183 (Dec. 2, 2022); and Letter from Michael Simon, Chair Emeritus,
CAT NMS Plan Operating Committee, to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Commission (Feb. 15, 2023).
\68\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 5.
\69\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter stated that the Participants have not met their
burden to demonstrate the proposed allocation is consistent with the
Exchange Act fee standards and not arbitrary.\70\ The commenter stated
that because FINRA is funded by Industry Members, Industry Members
would pay over 80% of CAT costs since they must pay not only their own
share but FINRA's as well; therefore, the Commission should disapprove
the proposal.\71\ The commenter also argued that the Proposed Amendment
fails to explain how allocating 80% of total CAT costs to the industry
in perpetuity without a mechanism to limit the budget \72\ is
consistent with the Exchange Act and guidance on SRO filings related to
fees when the industry has no role in the governance, oversight or
design of CAT and does not benefit from the CAT.\73\ The commenter
quoted a Commission release stating that the Participants are
potentially conflicted in allocating CAT fees to themselves and the
Industry Members.\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 6; SIFMA June 2023 Letter at
1-2. The commenter also stated that the Proposed Amendment provides
unsupported conclusory statements that it meets the requirements of
the Exchange Act. See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2; see also id. at n
11.
\71\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2. See also SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 1-2 (stating that the proposed cost allocation methodology
is inconsistent with Exchange Act fee standards because most costs
would be imposed on Industry Members).
\72\ The commenter noted that the CAT annual budget increased
over 30% in the last year. See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4.
\73\ SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 3, 4. The commenter also stated
that approving such a proposal would ``directly threaten[ ]
efficiency, competition, and capital formation in U.S. securities
markets.'' Id.
\74\ Id. at 4. See also Securities Exchange Act Release No.
89618 (Aug. 19, 2020), 85 FR 65470, 65482 (Oct. 15, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, this commenter stated that the Participants do not
account for ``the time and expense Industry Members have devoted to
developing and maintaining internal systems to be able to report the
[sic] CAT, as well as the time and expense Industry Members have
devoted to assisting the Operating Committee with its job of developing
reporting specifications that allow the CAT to achieve its regulatory
purpose.'' \75\ The commenter stated that the Participants have not
taken Industry Members' time and expenses into account when deciding to
allocate two-thirds of the CAT costs to Industry Members and that
``this omission is a flaw with the Participants' decision to allocate
two-thirds of the CAT costs to Industry Members and its inclusion would
demonstrate that the Participants' Executed Share Model
[[Page 41152]]
does not provide for the equitable allocation of reasonable fees.''
\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA January 2023
Letter at 4.
\76\ SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4-5. See also SIFMA January 2023
Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter also objected to statements made in the Proposed
Amendment that the complexity of Industry Member business models
contributes substantially to the costs of the CAT.\77\ The commenter
stated that the proposed allocation of two-thirds of CAT costs to
Industry Members is unfair, unreasonable and arbitrary because the
Participants are equally responsible for the complexity of trading
activity in the markets.\78\ The commenter contested the Participants'
argument that the allocation satisfies Exchange Act fee standards
because Industry Members and the complexity of their business models
drive the costs of the CAT, by stating that the examples provided of
complexities were developed to address order types, activities and fee
structures (such as the maker-taker fee structure) established by the
Participant exchanges.\79\ The commenter argued that the Participants
are just as responsible for such cost-driving complex trading activity
in the equity and options markets as Industry Members due to the
``large number of equity and options exchanges established by the
exchange families with fundamentally different execution models and
order types.'' \80\ The commenter argued that the Participant exchanges
have not analyzed how their own business decisions have resulted in the
complexity of Industry Member order routing practices and CAT
costs.\81\ The commenter also dismissed other justifications made in
the Proposed Amendment for the proposed allocation; specifically, that
there are more Industry Members than Participants and that Industry
Members receive more in revenue than the Participants,\82\ stating that
these assertions are not relevant in demonstrating that the proposed
allocation is fair and reasonable.\83\ The commenter argued that the
Participants are justifying the allocation based on the ability to pay
rather than cost generation, which the commenter believes is
inconsistent ``with the Participant Exchanges' proposed approach. . .
of allocating CAT costs based on approximate responsibility for
generating them. . .'' and ``with the historical CAT decision to
allocate costs to the parties responsible for generating them.'' \84\
The commenter suggested an alternative allocation that would equally
split CAT costs between Participant exchanges and Industry Members,
while FINRA would be subject only to a nominal regulatory user fee to
access CAT Data.\85\
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\77\ See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17104.
\78\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3. See also SIFMA January 2023
Letter at 2, 3-4.
\79\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 6-7. See also SIFMA January
2023 Letter at 3; Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17104.
\80\ SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 3.
\81\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7.
\82\ Id. See also Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17104.
\83\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7. See also SIFMA January 2023
Letter at 4.
\84\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7. The commenter cited to the
funding principles in Section 11.2 of the CAT NMS Plan.
\85\ See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA May 2023
Letter at 8; SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 5; SIFMA October 2022 Letter
at 4. This commenter also suggested another alternative allocation
in which costs would be allocated to those Participants and Industry
Members most directly responsible for the costs. Under this
alternative, Industry Members would be responsible for the cost
associated with initial ingestion of the data into the CAT system.
The commenter explained that Participants would be responsible for
the costs associated with the stages after the data is initially
ingested into the CAT system because the regulators directly control
and benefit from these stages of the CAT system after ingestion. See
SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 5-6.
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Commenters also argued against statements in the Proposed Amendment
that CAT costs would be passed on to investors.\86\ One commenter
stated, ``[s]uch an assertion is inaccurate because it is almost
certain that there will be scenarios faced by Industry Members in which
they will not be able to figure out who was responsible for generating
certain Historical CAT Costs.'' \87\ The commenter warned that such
assertions would minimize the Participants' obligation to allocate fees
consistent with Exchange Act fee standards and could result in the
inequitable allocation of CAT fees to Industry Members under the
assumption that such fees would be passed down to investors.\88\
Another commenter objected to statements in the Proposed Amendment that
Industry Members can pass through to their customers their CAT cost
allocation and additional costs resulting from an increase in FINRA
fees.\89\ The commenter stated that ``[s]ummarily stating that
investors can be made to bear the costs resulting from the Funding
Model without a detailed description of and transparency into how these
fees would be determined or passed on to customers is inadequate, and
does not provide interested parties sufficient information to consider
the costs and benefits related to the Fee Proposal.'' \90\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8; FINRA April 2023 Letter at
6-7.
\87\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8.
\88\ Id.
\89\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6-7.
\90\ Id. at 7.
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In response to the comment noting that the Participants had not
analyzed a suggested Section 31-style approach to a funding model,\91\
CAT LLC stated that the CAT fee approach is similar to the Section 31
fee approach in how an exchange would be obligated to pay a transaction
fee based on transactions occurring on that exchange, and that FINRA
would be obligated to pay a transaction fee based on transactions in
the over-the-counter market.\92\ CAT LLC argued that the approaches are
also similar because, in both, an exchange would be able to determine
to pass the fee onto its members, as would FINRA.\93\ CAT LLC stated
that if the Section 31 approach would comply with the Exchange Act,
then the proposed CAT fee approach should also comply with the Exchange
Act and CEBBs and CEBSs could determine whether to pass such fees onto
their clients.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ Id. at 5.
\92\ See Letter to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission,
from Brandon Becker, Chair, CAT NMS Plan Operating Committee, dated
May 18, 2023 (``CAT LLC Response Letter''), at 9.
\93\ Id.
\94\ Id.
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In response, the commenter stated that the CAT LLC Response Letter
misrepresented the commenter's letter by incorrectly stating that the
commenter's letter recommended an approach similar to Section 31
fees.\95\ The commenter clarified that it was noting that the
Commission had received comments suggesting a model like the Section 31
fees, that the Participants had not ``meaningfully analyzed'' the
suggested alternatives in the Proposed Amendment, and that the
Commission should require the Participants to analyze the
alternatives.\96\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ See FINRA May 2023 Letter at 3, n.8.
\96\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the comments on whether Participants' models are
equally to blame for the complexity of the markets,\97\ CAT LLC stated
that its analysis of the complexity of the industry's business models
is based on the effects of those models on the costs of the CAT, which
it stated are more profound than those of Participants, not on
complexity of the market in general.\98\ CAT LLC explained that the
complexity of the Industry Members' business models results in
significant data processing and storage costs, which Participants do
not contribute to as they do not originate market activity or
[[Page 41153]]
orders.\99\ CAT LLC also stated that the Participants would pay the
same amount as the CEBB and CEBS in each transaction.\100\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\97\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3. See also SIFMA January 2023
Letter at 2, 3-4.
\98\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 6.
\99\ Id. at 7.
\100\ Id. at 6.
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CAT LLC also disagreed with one commenter's dismissal of CAT LLC's
consideration of the Industry Members' relative ability to pay,\101\
stating that the Exchange Act specifically requires that the fees be
fair and reasonable, which necessitates consideration of the relative
ability to pay.\102\ Additionally, CAT LLC objected to the commenter's
statement that the proposed allocation is ``inconsistent with the
historical CAT decision to allocate costs to the parties responsible
for generating them.'' \103\ CAT LLC stated that, while the CAT NMS
Plan does not require CAT costs to be allocated to the parties
responsible for generating such costs, the proposed allocation
addresses cost burden on the CAT by (i) taking into account the impact
of Industry Member activity on CAT costs, and (ii) using trading
activity, which CAT LLC believes is a ``reasonable proxy for cost
burden on the CAT,'' \104\ as the metric for cost allocation.\105\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\101\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7. See also SIFMA January
2023 Letter at 4.
\102\ CAT LLC Response Letter at 7.
\103\ Id.; SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 7.
\104\ CAT LLC Response Letter at 7.
\105\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, CAT LLC responded to the commenter's suggested
alternative proposal that would equally allocate CAT costs to
Participant exchanges and Industry Members, stating that the commenter
did not explain why the alternative would satisfy the Exchange Act
standards, and noting that CAT LLC had previously considered such an
allocation but believed that it would not result in a fair and
equitable allocation due to the greater number of Industry Members than
Participants, the greater financial resources of Industry Members, and
the failure of the suggested allocation to take into account how the
complexity of Industry Member business models contributes substantially
to CAT costs.\106\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, the commenter stated that the CAT LLC Response Letter
did not meaningfully address the concerns it raised about the
allocation of CAT costs between Participants and Industry Members.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Executed Equivalent Shares
a. Executed Equivalent Share Volume
One commenter stated that the Participants failed to justify why
the Executed Share Model would appropriately treat high-volume trades
in low-priced stocks, arguing that Section 31 fees are charged only on
the sell-side of a transaction and are based on the notional value of a
trade.\108\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another commenter argued that the Proposed Amendment does not
explain why the use of executed share volume as the basis of the cost
allocation methodology, instead of message traffic, is equitable.\109\
The commenter explained that in prior models, message traffic was the
key proxy for cost generation used to align CAT fees with CAT costs,
but the Executed Share Model would base its cost allocation methodology
entirely on executed share volume.\110\ The commenter stated that the
Participants' argument that executed share volume is related to cost
generation is not enough to demonstrate that its use is reasonable and
equitable.\111\ This commenter further stated that the Executed Share
Model is inconsistent with the ``cost alignment'' funding principle in
Section 11.2(b) of the CAT NMS Plan, which requires the Participants to
seek to establish an allocation of costs that takes into account
distinctions in the securities trading operations of Participants and
Industry Members and their relative impact upon Company resources and
operations.\112\ The commenter stated that ``the Proposal fails to
establish a sufficient nexus between executed share volume and the
technology burdens that generate CAT costs and fails to relate each
reporter group's allocation to the burden that each reporter group
imposes on CAT.'' \113\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ See FINRA June 2022 Letter at 3.
\110\ Id.
\111\ Id. at 4.
\112\ Id. See also FINRA April 2023 Letter at 7-9.
\113\ FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAT LLC responded to the commenter's statement that the proposed
allocation is inconsistent with the cost alignment principles of the
CAT NMS Plan by noting that the Proposed Amendment incorporates the
concept of cost burden in at least two ways.\114\ Specifically, CAT LLC
stated that it does so because ``the allocation of CAT costs
contemplates the effect of Industry Member activity on the cost of the
CAT. . . and because trading activity provides a reasonable proxy for
cost burden on the CAT, trading activity is an appropriate metric for
allocating CAT costs among CAT Reporters.'' \115\ CAT LLC added that
because there are other examples of trading activity-based fees, the
Executed Share Model would not be novel or unique.\116\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\114\ CAT LLC Response Letter at 7.
\115\ Id.
\116\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to the deletion in Section 11.2(b) of the requirement
that, when establishing the funding of the CAT, the Operating Committee
must take into account ``distinctions in the securities trading
operations of Participants and Industry Members and their relative
impact upon Company resources and operations,'' the same commenter
argued that the Participants have proposed to delete the language in
Section 11.2(b) because the proposed Executed Share Model is
inconsistent with the language.\117\ This commenter stated that the
Proposed Amendment ``seeks to amend the core funding principles to
align with an unjustified allocation methodology.'' \118\ The commenter
stated that any changes to the funding principles ``must be well-
reasoned and transparent and must continue to support the achievement
of a fair and equitable outcome.'' \119\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\117\ See FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4; see also FINRA April 2023
Letter at 7.
\118\ FINRA June 2022 Letter at 4. The commenter states that the
Executed Share Model instead places the greatest emphasis on the
funding principle relating to the ``ease of billing and other
administrative functions,'' favoring that principle over cost
alignment. Id. at 5.
\119\ Id.; FINRA April 2023 Letter at 8-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the commenter objected to the statement in the
Proposed Amendment that ``trading activity provides a reasonable proxy
for cost burden on the CAT, and therefore is an appropriate metric for
allocating CAT costs among CAT Reporters.'' \120\ The commenter stated
that this statement is inconsistent with information that demonstrates
that volume from FINRA trading facilities (``TRF'') contributes ``a
very small percentage of annual CAT compute and storage costs.'' \121\
The commenter stated, ``. . . despite the minimal data compute and
storage costs for transactions reported to the TRF, FINRA would be
assessed an estimated 34% of the total CAT costs to be borne amongst
the 25 Participants, and more than all options exchanges combined.''
\122\ The commenter stated that as a result, it cannot support the
Participants' assertion that trading activity is a reasonable proxy for
cost burden.\123\ The commenter stated that the Proposed Amendment
``fails to provide for reasonable fees that are equitably allocated and
not unfairly discriminatory, does not reflect a reasonable approach to
allocating costs
[[Page 41154]]
amongst the Participants, nor does it transparently or accurately
present information regarding the true sources of cost burdens on the
CAT.'' \124\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\120\ Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17103.
\121\ FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2.
\122\ Id.
\123\ See id. See also FINRA April 2023 Letter at 8.
\124\ FINRA May 2023 Letter at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. FINRA Allocation
Two commenters objected to the proposed allocation of Participant
CAT fees to FINRA.\125\ Both commenters objected to the allocation to
FINRA of 34% of the total CAT costs \126\ to be borne by the
Participants.\127\ One commenter argued that this amount was a
``disproportionate share of CAT costs,'' \128\ especially as FINRA does
not operate a market,\129\ and that the Proposed Amendment would place
an undue burden on FINRA.\130\ The commenter stated that FINRA's share
was ``more than double that of the next highest Participant and $4
million more than all option exchanges combined.'' \131\ The commenter
also stated that FINRA's allocation would largely be based on
transaction volume reported to the TRF; however, the commenter stated
that TRF transactions generate fewer costs for the CAT,\132\ as opposed
to options activity, but that only 25% of total Participant CAT fees
would be assessed for options activity, while the remaining 75% would
be assessed for equities activity.\133\ The commenter stated that ``. .
. FINRA would be assessed an estimated 34% of the total CAT costs to be
borne amongst the 25 Participants, and more than all options exchanges
combined.'' \134\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\125\ See FINRA May 2023 Letter; FINRA April 2023 Letter; FINRA
June 2022 Letter; SIFMA May 2023 Letter; SIFMA June 2022 Letter;
SIFMA October 2022 Letter. One of the commenters supported the
points raised in the FINRA April 2023 Letter that argued that the
Proposed Amendment would result in the inequitable allocation of
fees and should be disapproved. See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2.
\126\ One commenter stated that this estimate is based on 2021
data and urged the Commission to require the Participants to amend
the Proposed Amendment to include the 2022 data and fee allocation
estimates, stating that the CAT budget has grown significantly from
2021. See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 3, 4-5. In its response to
comments, CAT LLC provided the Historical CAT Costs for 2022. See
Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17111; CAT LLC Response Letter at 13.
\127\ See FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2; FINRA April 2023 Letter at
3; SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2.
\128\ FINRA April 2023 Letter at 3.
\129\ Id.
\130\ FINRA June 2022 Letter at 6.
\131\ FINRA April 2023 Letter at 4; see also FINRA June 2022
Letter at 5.
\132\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 8, n.23.
\133\ Id.; FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2.
\134\ FINRA May 2023 Letter at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter argued that, unlike the exchange Participants,
transactions are not executed on a FINRA marketplace and FINRA does not
receive commercial revenue for those transactions.\135\ The commenter
explained that ``while the NMS stock allocation to FINRA under the
Funding Model is based on transactions that are reported to FINRA
[TRFs], these transactions are not executed on a FINRA marketplace and
FINRA does not retain commercial revenues from those transactions''
\136\ unlike the exchanges that operate each FINRA TRF, which retain
the market data and trade reporting revenue of the TRF.\137\ The
commenter stated that, unlike FINRA, these exchanges would thus have a
revenue stream related to the transactions that would be assessed a CAT
fee, and that also, unlike FINRA, exchanges generate revenue from
listings and proprietary data feeds in NMS securities.\138\ The
commenter also stated that FINRA members can report over-the-counter
transactions in listed stocks to the FINRA Alternative Display
Facility, although most transactions are reported to a TRF.\139\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\135\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 3.
\136\ Id.
\137\ Id.
\138\ Id. at 4.
\139\ Id. at 3, n.8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter further stated that FINRA cannot necessarily recoup
its costs through regulatory services agreements (``RSAs'') that it has
entered into with certain exchanges \140\ because the exchanges must
first agree to be charged CAT costs under the RSAs; therefore, RSAs
would not be a reliable source of CAT funding for FINRA.\141\
Additionally, the commenter questioned CAT LLC's statement that the
Proposed Amendment ``reflects a reasonable effort to allocate costs
based on the extent to which different CAT Reporters participate in and
benefit from the equities and options markets.'' \142\ Specifically,
the commenter asked how CAT LLC's statement explains the size of
FINRA's allocation \143\ and noted that this statement ``conflates the
costs to create and operate the CAT with the usage of CAT data.'' \144\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\140\ This statement was made in response to a statement in the
Proposed Amendment that FINRA, like the exchange Participants, has
revenue sources other than membership fees, giving as an example the
RSAs. See Notice, supra note 6, 88 FR at 17107.
\141\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 4.
\142\ Id. at 7.
\143\ Id.
\144\ Id.; see also FINRA June 2022 Letter at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two commenters expressed concern about alleged arbitrary treatment
of FINRA by the other Participants of the CAT NMS Plan.\145\ One
commenter believes that FINRA's ``outsized allocation'' \146\ was
because of its limited voting power, only having one out of 25 votes on
the Operating Committee as it does not control, nor is under common
control with, any other Participant.\147\ Another commenter stated that
the current CAT NMS Plan voting structure results in the unfair and
inequitable treatment of FINRA.\148\ Both commenters believe that the
exchange Participants treat FINRA arbitrarily to benefit themselves,
treating FINRA as a market center in the CAT NMS Plan while not as a
market center under the National Market System Plan Regarding
Consolidated Equity Market Data (``CT Plan''),\149\ which governs the
public dissemination of real-time consolidated market data for national
market system stocks.\150\ One commenter argued that the Participants
do not treat FINRA as a market center under the CT Plan in order to
limit FINRA's voting power and therefore its ability to decide how to
allocate market data revenue.\151\ The commenter stated that this
example demonstrates the ``. . . inherent conflicts of interest that
for-profit exchanges have in operating as SROs . . .'' \152\ The
commenter suggested that the Commission issue an order soliciting
comment on whether the Operating Committee should be reorganized
consistent with the CT
[[Page 41155]]
Plan.\153\ This commenter further stated, ``[w]e believe such a
governance structure for the CAT would help facilitate a fairer
structure for the views of the SROs and industry to be heard and
incorporated into any further CAT funding proposal by reducing the
ability of the largest exchange groups to dictate the terms of any CAT
funding proposal over the objections of other SRO Participants and the
industry.'' \154\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\145\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6, n.16; SIFMA October 2022
Letter at 3. See also SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 6, n.11.
\146\ FINRA April 2023 Letter at 7; FINRA June 2022 Letter at 6.
\147\ FINRA April 2023 Letter at 4, 8. See also FINRA June 2022
Letter at 8.
\148\ See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 3, n.7.
\149\ See Joint Industry Plan; Order Approving, as Modified, a
National Market System Plan Regarding Consolidated Equity Market
Data; Securities Exchange Act Release No. 92586 (Aug. 6, 2021), 86
FR 44142 (Aug. 11, 2021) (File No. 4-757) (``Order Approving the CT
Plan''). The Order Approving the CT Plan was vacated by the D.C.
Circuit on July 5, 2022. See The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC et al. v.
SEC, Case No. 21-1167, D.C. Cir. (July 5, 2022). See also Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 88827; File No. 4-757 (May 6, 2020), 85 FR
28702 (May 13, 2020) (Order Directing the Exchanges and the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority to Submit a New National
Market System Plan Regarding Consolidated Equity Market Data).
\150\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6; SIFMA October 2022
Letter at 3. See also SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 6, n.11. One
commenter argued that the Participants treat FINRA in ways that are
financially beneficial to them without considering FINRA's role in
the marketplace ``. . . as the not-for-profit self-regulator for the
entire brokerage industry . . .'' SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 3.
See also SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4; SIFMA October 2022 Letter
at 4; SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8 (recommending that FINRA be treated
differently from the Participant exchanges due to its unique role).
\151\ See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 3-4. See also SIFMA May
2023 Letter at 6, n.11.
\152\ SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 3. See also SIFMA June 2023
Letter at 4 (quoting a Commission release stating that the
Participants are potentially conflicted in allocating CAT fees to
themselves and the Industry Members); supra note 74.
\153\ SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 2.
\154\ Id. The commenter also argued that the Industry Members
are not voting members of the Operating Committee and have no way to
direct the cost control efforts of the Participants or change their
course if the cost control efforts prove to be unsuccessful. See
SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Both commenters also believe the allocation to FINRA would increase
the allocation to Industry Members.\155\ One commenter stated that
FINRA, which relies on regulatory fees from its members for funding,
must increase its member fees in order to fund CAT costs that it cannot
recover from contractual arrangements with TRF business members.\156\
The commenter stated that the Proposed Amendment does not adequately
analyze the allocation's impact, including whether the allocation would
increase Industry Members' allocation of total costs beyond two-
thirds.\157\ The commenter dismissed as inadequate the Participants'
argument that Industry Members can pass through their costs, stating
that the Proposed Amendment lacks a detailed description of and
transparency into how the fees may be passed on to customers.\158\
Another commenter argued that the Participants ``do not address the
fact that the Executed Share Model for Prospective CAT Costs allocates
two-thirds of CAT costs to Industry Members for exchange transactions
and more for off-exchange transactions'' \159\ because they cannot
demonstrate that the proposed allocation results in an equitable
allocation of reasonable fees.\160\ The commenter stated that Industry
Members, who would be subject to two-thirds of Prospective CAT Costs
under the Executed Share Model, already pay FINRA's operating costs
through regulatory fines and fees; therefore, Industry Members would
additionally be indirectly assessed FINRA's one-third CAT fee for off-
exchange transactions.\161\ The commenter suggested an alternative
allocation \162\ that would subject FINRA only to a nominal regulatory
user fee to access CAT Data.\163\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\155\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 5-7; SIFMA June 2022 Letter
at 4. See also SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 2, 3.
\156\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 5-6; see also FINRA June
2022 Letter at 7.
\157\ See FINRA April 2023 Letter at 6.
\158\ Id. at 6-7.
\159\ SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA October 2022
Letter at 3 (``. . . we believe the proposal is flawed because it
fails to appropriately consider that Industry Members pay the full
costs of operating FINRA.'').
\160\ See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 4.
\161\ Id. The commenter also stated that the proposed allocation
would result in two-thirds of CAT costs for exchange transactions
being imposed on Industry Members, and that this amount would be
higher for off-exchange transactions as FINRA would be assessed one-
third as the venue fee and Industry Members would be indirectly
assessed FINRA's portion of CAT costs as they pay the entire costs
of operating FINRA. Id. See also SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 2.
\162\ See supra notes 84-85 and accompanying text.
\163\ See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA May
2023 Letter at 8; SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 5; SIFMA October 2022
Letter at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter requested that if the Commission were to approve the
Proposed Amendment, that it acknowledge ``FINRA's need and ability to
cover CAT costs that are not recovered through contractual arrangements
through member fee increases, so as not to jeopardize FINRA's ability
to carry out its critical regulatory mission.'' \164\ The commenter
stated that FINRA would file a rule change to increase its member fees
with the filing of any proposed rule change to effectuate the Funding
Model.\165\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\164\ FINRA April 2023 Letter at 7.
\165\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAT LLC disagreed with one commenter's proposal to charge FINRA
only a nominal regulatory fee.\166\ CAT LLC stated that the proposed
transaction-based CAT fee is purposely agnostic as to the location of
where a trade occurs, and an intent of this design is to avoid
influencing whether or where any trading activity would take place.
Moreover, CAT LLC stated that FINRA is no different from the exchanges
in terms of its regulatory obligations regarding the CAT.\167\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\166\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 8.
\167\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. CAT Executing Broker
Two commenters objected to the proposed definition of ``CAT
Executing Broker.'' \168\ One commenter argued that the term ``CAT
Executing Broker'' ``does not appear to be universally defined or
accepted by Option Industry Members or Participants'' and that such
lack of acceptance ``present[s] a challenge when firms try to assess
the impact the `Funding Proposal' will have on their respective
businesses.'' \169\ Accordingly, the commenter advocated that the
Executed Share Model follow the ``structure already in place for
[collecting] Regulatory Fees,'' such as charging Clearing Brokers.\170\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\168\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter; Letter from Timothy Miller,
Chief Operating Officer, DASH Financial Technologies, LLC to Vanessa
Countryman, Secretary, Commission (April 11, 2023) (``DASH April
2023 Letter''), at 1-2. The DASH April 2023 Letter also incorporated
by reference a separate letter submitted by the commenter on the
prior funding proposal (stating that the concerns expressed in the
prior letter concerning the operating and competitive burdens of the
proposed funding model are unchanged). See Letter from Timothy
Miller, Chief Operating Officer, DASH Financial Technologies LLC, to
Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission (Jan. 3, 2023) (``DASH
January 2023 Letter'').
\169\ DASH April 2023 Letter at 1.
\170\ Id. at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another commenter argued that the proposed definition of executing
broker would result in the inequitable allocation of fees.\171\ While
the commenter supported the change from having clearing firms be
assessed Industry Member CAT fees to executing brokers having this
obligation,\172\ because clearing firms would have been unfairly
burdened with CAT costs and could have been placed in situations in
which they would have been unable to identify the client responsible
for the costs,\173\ the commenter expressed concerns with how the
Participants determined which entities would be considered executing
brokers.\174\ In comment letters on the prior proposal, which was
amended to require executing brokers instead of clearing firms to be
assessed CAT fees, the commenter requested additional detail on how an
executing broker would be defined.\175\ The commenter subsequently
stated that the definition in the current Proposed Amendment suffers
from the same problems as the prior proposal in which CAT fees were
allocated to clearing firms and would result in the inequitable
allocation of CAT fees among Industry Members.\176\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\171\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3.
\172\ Id. See also SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 7-8.
\173\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3-4. See also SIFMA October
2022 Letter at 5. The commenter also argued against the assessment
of CAT fees on clearing firms because clearing firms would be
required to collect fees and thus would have to develop new systems
and processes under the Executed Share Model, and because a clearing
firm for a buyer or seller would not always be a party to a trade as
it could be the clearer of a trade on behalf of an executing broker.
See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 9; SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 7.
\174\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 4.
\175\ See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2, 8; SIFMA December 2022
Letter at 3. See also SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 4.
\176\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 4. See also SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 9-10; SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter explained that CAT operates on a cost-recovery basis,
with costs resulting from the number of messages that Participants and
Industry Members report to the CAT, the processing and linking of such
[[Page 41156]]
messages, and the costs of providing tools to regulators to analyze CAT
data.\177\ The commenter stated that the use of message traffic as the
basis of fees, in the Original Funding Model, would have ensured that
all CAT Reporters would contribute to CAT's funding.\178\ However, the
commenter stated that, since the Proposed Amendment would not impose
fees on all CAT Reporters, instead imposing fees on executing brokers,
it would result in an inequitable allocation of fees as the executing
brokers would be the last broker among many other brokers handling an
order.\179\ The commenter stated that any analysis of such a funding
model must evaluate whether (i) the executing brokers would pass-
through or absorb the CAT fees and any negative impacts on competition,
noting that the Proposed Amendment would require executing brokers to
incur expenses that other Industry Members would not incur since they
would be required to collect the Industry Member portion of CAT fees on
behalf of the Participants,\180\ and (ii) Industry Members that
executed trades for introducing brokers and acting as order
consolidators and ATSs would be responsible for CAT fees for
transactions they did not originate and would have to either pay the
fee for their clients or develop software and processes to collect the
fees from their clients as they often are not capable of passing
through fees to the clients that sent them the orders.\181\ The
commenter stated that the Proposed Amendment would subject executing
brokers to unfair burdens and require them to ``shoulder CAT costs in
scenarios in which they could not determine which client firm was
responsible for creating the CAT costs by initiating the transaction.''
\182\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\177\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 4.
\178\ Id.
\179\ Id. at 4-5.
\180\ Id. at 5.
\181\ Id.
\182\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter argued instead in favor of an allocation in which the
Industry Member that originated an order would be treated as an
``executing broker'' and therefore be responsible for Industry Member
CAT fees.\183\ Under this alternative, ``the Industry Member who
originates a new principal order or the Industry Member who initially
receives and routes a customer order for execution on an agency basis
would be directly assessed CAT Fees.'' \184\ The commenter stated that
this would be the most reasonable way to allocate CAT costs among
Industry Members \185\ and that it would be ``relatively easy to
accommodate this approach.'' \186\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\183\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 5.
\184\ Id. at 6.
\185\ Id. at 5.
\186\ Id. at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter expressed concerns about the imposition of CAT fees
on CAT Executing Brokers.\187\ The commenter argued that charging CAT
Executing Brokers ``inordinately burdens Broker Dealers, especially
small to medium-sized firms.'' \188\ This commenter recommended using
instead the existing structure for regulatory fees, including ``the
efficiencies afforded by the current structure, and the resulting
alleviation of risk.'' \189\ In this regard, the commenter stated that
``Clearing Firms are best suited to process the collection of fees as
it can occur at trade settlement and the cost is ultimately borne by
the end beneficiary of each transaction.'' \190\ The commenter also
stated that small and medium-sized executing brokers could expect a
significant negative impact on their net capital as a result of the
proposal, stating, ``. . . the firms will be forced to recoup these
costs by passing them on to their clients, either in the form of higher
commission rates or as a separate transactional fee. Using [Clearing
Member Trade Agreement] commission invoicing and/or SEC 31(b) fees in a
broker-to-broker relationship as a proxy, these invoices are generally
paid well after the 60-day milestone to qualify the receivable as `good
capital.' '' \191\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\187\ See DASH April 2023 Letter.
\188\ Id. at 1; see also DASH January 2023 Letter at 1.
\189\ DASH January 2023 Letter at 3; see also DASH April 2023
Letter at 1-2.
\190\ DASH April 2023 Letter at 1; see also DASH January 2023
Letter at 1.
\191\ DASH January 2023 Letter at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the comment about the definition of CAT Executing
Broker and the billing and collection process being better suited for
clearing firms, CAT LLC stated that the proposed assessment of CAT fees
on CAT Executing Brokers only addresses the party obligated to pay the
CAT fee.\192\ CAT LLC stated that a CAT Executing Broker can decide to
enter into an arrangement with its clearing broker for the clearing
broker to collect and pass-through the CAT fees like it does in other
contexts.\193\ With respect to alternatives to the proposed definition
of the CAT Executing Broker, CAT LLC stated that the ``originating
broker'' suggestion was from a commenter who had previously recommended
charging executing brokers in comment letters on the prior proposed
funding model.\194\ CAT LLC stated that the commenter's objection to
charging executing brokers in the Executed Share Model was an attempt
to further delay the approval of a funding model and the resultant
payment of CAT fees by its members, rather than expressing a concern
about the merits of charging executing brokers.\195\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\192\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 12.
\193\ Id.
\194\ Id. at 2.
\195\ Id. at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, the commenter stated that the CAT Operating Committee
mischaracterized the commenter's position on the assessment of CAT fees
to executing brokers by stating in the CAT LLC Response Letter that the
commenter changed its position on this proposed change to delay
adoption of a CAT funding model.\196\ The commenter represented that it
stated in comment letters it submitted on the prior funding model that
initially proposed the use of executing brokers that (1) the
Participants did not define who would be an executing broker in a
transaction, (2) a clear definition is necessary for Industry Members
to understand when they would be assessed costs under the Executed
Share Model, and (3) its understanding was that the concept of
executing broker generally refers to the Industry Member that initiates
an order.\197\ The commenter stated that the Participants only provided
a definition of executing broker in the Proposed Amendment.\198\ The
commenter stated that it provided concerns about the proposed
definition in its May 2023 comment letter which the commenter argued
were mischaracterized by the CAT Operating Committee in the CAT LLC
Response Letter.\199\ The commenter stated that the CAT Operating
Committee mischaracterized the commenter's position to rush the
Commission to a decision on the Proposed Amendment.\200\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\196\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 5.
\197\ Id.
\198\ Id.
\199\ Id. at 5-6.
\200\ Id. at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the comment that imposing fees on executing brokers
would result in an inequitable allocation of fees and the suggestion
that the use of message traffic as the basis of fees would have ensured
that all CAT Reporters would contribute to CAT's funding, CAT LLC
disagreed and stated that because the message traffic is separate from
whether or not a transaction occurs, fees based on message traffic may
not correlate with common revenue or fee models.\201\ CAT
[[Page 41157]]
LLC stated that, as a result, CAT fees based on message traffic could
impose an outsized adverse financial impact on certain Industry
Members, raising this same issue of an inequitable allocation of
fees.\202\ Further, in response to the commenter's criticism that in
charging executing brokers, the fee would be charged to a subset of
Industry Members and, as a result, that subset of Industry Members
would incur expenses that other Industry Members would not incur, CAT
LLC stated that it continues to believe that charging CAT Executing
Brokers would satisfy the requirements of the Exchange Act.\203\ CAT
LLC stated that in the past, the Commission has approved fees that are
charged to some, but not all, broker-dealers.\204\ CAT LLC noted that,
for example, FINRA's trading activity fee is assessed to a subset of
FINRA members--that is, it is assessed on the sell side of member
transactions.\205\ CAT LLC also stated that the options exchanges
charge options regulatory fees per executed contract side, and, for
both options and equities, Section 31-related fees are charged to the
sell-side in a transaction.\206\ CAT LLC recognized that, under the
proposal to charge CAT Executing Brokers, the CAT Executing Broker, but
not other Industry Members involved in a given order lifecycle, would
be required to pay the CAT fees, and that Industry Members that sought
to recoup such fees would have to develop processes to collect such
fees from their clients.\207\ CAT LLC stated that this regulatory
requirement would have a similar effect as other types of regulatory
fees, such as the FINRA trading activity fee, the options regulatory
fee and Section 31-related sales value pass-through fees because,
``[i]n each such case, a subset of broker-dealers is required to pay a
transaction-based regulatory fee, and those broker-dealers seeking to
recover such fees from other broker-dealers or non-broker-dealers have
established processes with regard to the pass-through of such fees.''
\208\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\201\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 4.
\202\ Id.
\203\ Id. at 3.
\204\ Id.
\205\ Id.
\206\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 3.
\207\ Id. at 4.
\208\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAT LLC further stated that it disagrees with charging an
originating broker instead of an executing broker because there are
already several existing examples of transaction-based fees being
assessed to executing brokers as opposed to the originating broker, and
it disagrees with the assertion that charging originating brokers would
be easier.\209\ CAT LLC stated that charging the originating Industry
Member would be difficult to implement and would increase the costs of
implementing CAT fees, whereas charging CAT Executing Brokers is
simple, straightforward and in line with existing fee and business
models because for any given trade (buy or sell), there is only one CAT
Executing Broker to which shares can be allocated.\210\ As such, CAT
LLC stated that ``charging the CAT Executing Broker is simple and
straightforward, and leverages a one-to-one relationship between
billable events (trades) and billable parties.'' \211\ CAT LLC argued
that, for a single trade event, there may be many originating brokers,
and each trade must be broken down on a pro-rata basis to ``account[]
for one or more layers of aggregation, disaggregation, and
representation of the underlying orders.'' \212\ Therefore, CAT LLC
stated that the commenter's ``suggestion of a model that begins the
funding analysis with new order events (e.g., MENO or MONO events) and
then looks for any execution or fulfillment that is directly associated
with that event does not reduce or mitigate the complexity associated
with aggregation.'' \213\ Further, CAT LLC argued that the commenter's
recommendation would not work with the design of the CAT system,
stating that ``[w]hile CAT is indeed designed to capture and unwind
complex aggregation scenarios, the data and linkages are structured to
facilitate regulatory use, and not a billing mechanism that assesses
fees on a distinct set of executed trades; it is not simply a matter of
using existing CAT linkages.'' \214\ Finally, CAT LLC stated that
charging originating brokers would implicate issues related to
lifecycle linkage rates, and issues related to corrections,
cancellations and allocations, but charging CAT Executing Brokers would
avoid such complications.\215\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\209\ Id. at 5.
\210\ Id.
\211\ Id.
\212\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 5.
\213\ Id.
\214\ Id.
\215\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Prospective CAT Fees
a. Budgeted CAT Costs
One commenter argued that the budget line item categories are too
high level.\216\ The commenter urged the inclusion of much greater
detail and specificity on the budget spending choices, especially in
technology,\217\ to allow Industry Members and the public to understand
and evaluate CAT spending decisions.\218\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\216\ See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 6.
\217\ The commenter stated that CAT spending on technology
should be broken into further refined cost breakdowns of the
following categories: cloud hosting services, operating fees, CAIS
operating fees and change request fees. Id.
\218\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter also stated that an independent cost review mechanism
is necessary to ensure future CAT fees are fair and reasonable and to
safeguard against unchecked spending.\219\ The commenter urged the
inclusion of a mechanism to allow the public to review the annual CAT
budget before it is finalized, since, as proposed, the public would
only have the opportunity to review the CAT budget when the
Participants submit proposed rule changes, pursuant to Section 19(b) of
the Exchange Act,\220\ to implement CAT fees on Industry Members.\221\
The commenter also stated that it is unlikely that the Commission would
decide that a proposed CAT fee does not meet Exchange Act fee standards
and require the Participants to modify the CAT budget because it would
be a lengthy, time-consuming process and due to ``the regulatory value
of CAT data and the CAT system to the Commission.'' \222\ The commenter
stated that the Commission is ``directly conflicted in its role as the
user and beneficiary of the CAT system for regulatory functions and its
role as the reviewer of the CAT budget and fee filings, a conflict that
is only heightened due to a lack of a Commission funding obligation for
CAT.'' \223\ As a result, the commenter urged the adoption of an
independent cost review mechanism to ensure that CAT spending will be
appropriate and consistent with the Exchange Act.\224\ The commenter
also requested that ``the Participants' proposed budget include as a
separate line-item projected usage costs and system change costs
related to the Commission's use and design of the CAT system.'' \225\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\219\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 3, 8-10. See also SIFMA
October 2022 Letter at 5-6; SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2, 5-6;
SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2, n.10, 4.
\220\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
\221\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8-9. See also SIFMA June 2022
Letter at 8-9; SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 6; SIFMA January 2023
Letter at 5, 6.
\222\ SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 9.
\223\ Id. at 9-10.
\224\ Id. at 10.
\225\ Id. See also SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, CAT LLC stated that such an independent cost review is
not necessary, because such a review process would go beyond what is
required by either Rule 613 or the CAT
[[Page 41158]]
NMS Plan, and would be superfluous since any CAT fees must, prior to
being implemented, undergo the review process detailed in Rule 608 and
Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act.\226\ CAT LLC also noted that the
Commission is entitled to request additional budget or cost information
it views as necessary to better evaluate those fees.\227\ CAT LLC also
stated that it already provides significant cost transparency through
the public disclosure of its quarterly budget information and its
financials, and that it is already actively engaged in cost discipline
efforts, including through a designated cost-management working
group.\228\ CAT LLC further explained that Participants are subject to
regulatory requirements to implement CAT and oversee their members and
cannot have their compliance subject to a third party without such
restrictions.\229\ CAT LLC added that the Commission itself could have
its ability to oversee the securities markets undermined if CAT is
subject to review by a third party without regulatory
restrictions.\230\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\226\ CAT LLC Response Letter at 10.
\227\ Id.
\228\ Id.
\229\ Id.
\230\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, the commenter stated that the CAT LLC Response Letter
did not meaningfully address its concerns about the lack of a cost
control mechanism.\231\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\231\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the suggested inclusion of the Commission's line
item costs associated with its usage and design of the CAT in the
budget,\232\ CAT LLC responded that, because all costs related to CAT
are a result of the Commission's adoption of Rule 613 and the total
costs are reflected in the budget, it would be impractical to break out
Commission-specific costs and would not be useful as a practical
matter.\233\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\232\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 10.
\233\ CAT LLC Response Letter at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Reserve
One commenter argued that the proposed reserve of not more than 25%
of the CAT budget is excessive.\234\ The commenter noted that the
support provided for the proposed change was the Participants'
difficulty in forecasting CAT costs, which the commenter stated
demonstrates a need for an independent cost review mechanism.\235\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\234\ See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 6, n.15.
\235\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Historical CAT Assessment
One commenter disagreed with the proposed method of calculating the
Historical CAT Assessment using current transaction activity ``due to
difficulty of using current volumes and trading activity by individual
Industry Members as a mechanism for assessing costs in the past where
the trading volumes and individual Industry Member trading activity
likely were different.'' \236\ The commenter also argued that the
proposed assessment of Past CAT Costs on current Industry Members based
on their current trading activity is not fair or reasonable because new
Industry Members would be assessed a share of Past CAT Costs even if
they were not in operation when those costs were incurred, and that
such costs would be attributable to Industry Members that are no longer
in business.\237\ The commenter added that the Proposed Amendment has
not explained how allocating ``approximately $350 million in historical
costs . . . to a small group of executing broker firms based on current
market volumes'' is consistent with the Exchange Act or how it would
impact liquidity and competition.\238\ The commenter stated that since
the proposed allocation would be based on current market share and
unrelated to the firms or activity that contributed to historical
costs, there would be little ability for executing brokers to pass on
such costs.\239\ The commenter also stated that the assessment of
``retroactive liability for monies spent that private parties had no
control over'' for public purposes would violate the Fifth Amendment
Takings Clause.\240\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\236\ SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5.
\237\ See SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 7.
\238\ SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4.
\239\ See id.
\240\ Id. at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter recommended a reevaluation of the use of transaction
fees to assess Past CAT Costs,\241\ and suggested an alternative
approach in which Past CAT Costs would be assigned to Industry Members
``based on the lesser of (i) the CAT Fees that would be assessed on an
Industry Member under the Participants' proposed approach of using
current trading activity or (ii) the CAT Fees that would be assessed on
such member based on their prior trading activity in the years since
2016 when the CAT was being built and then operationalized . . .''
\242\ The commenter stated that the share of Past CAT Costs belonging
to Industry Members that are no longer in business could be calculated
using this approach and then divided equally among the current Industry
Members, while Industry Members that entered into business after
certain Past CAT Costs were incurred would be assessed Past CAT Costs
starting in the year after which they started operating based on the
above approach.\243\ The commenter acknowledged that, while this
approach would require more effort by the Participants, it would be
``significantly closer to the fair and reasonable standard in the
Exchange Act than the approach set forth by the Participants in the
Executed Share Model.'' \244\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\241\ See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5.
\242\ SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 7.
\243\ Id.
\244\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the commenter stated that the Participants have
failed to justify the allocation of Past CAT Costs to Industry Members
during the period when only Participants were reporting to the
CAT.\245\ The commenter argued that Industry Members should not be
assessed any fees related to the decision to employ Thesys
Technologies, LLC as the Plan Processor or legal or consulting fees
incurred by the Participants in the creation of the CAT NMS Plan.\246\
The commenter stated that the Proposed Amendment fails to provide how
of much of the allocation to Industry Members is related to Thesys
Technologies, LLC, and, therefore, the Participants have not
demonstrated how the Executed Share Model is consistent with the
Exchange Act.\247\ The commenter also argued that Industry Members were
not subject to CAT obligations before the CAT NMS Plan's approval, had
no input into the selection of the service providers, and that ``it is
difficult to envision how the Participants could demonstrate that such
an allocation provides for the equitable allocation of reasonable fees
due to the fact that the CAT NMS Plan did not exist during the period
prior to its approval.'' \248\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\245\ See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 7.
\246\ See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 7; SIFMA January 2023 Letter
at 6-7.
\247\ See SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 7.
\248\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter also argued that the Participants have not analyzed
different alternatives to collecting Past CAT Costs and the costs
associated with such alternatives or the costs associated with the
proposed approach.\249\ The commenter urged collaboration between the
Participants and Industry Members on the allocation of Past CAT
Costs.\250\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\249\ See SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 5.
\250\ Id. See also SIFMA October 2022 Letter at 2 (``[w]e also
reiterate our call for the Participants to work with SIFMA and the
industry in a collaborative manner to establish a viable CAT funding
model.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 41159]]
With respect to the commenter's criticisms of the calculation and
assessment of the Historical CAT Assessment,\251\ CAT LLC stated that
the commenter had a ``persistent misunderstanding'' of the Historical
CAT Assessment, explaining that, contrary to the commenter's assertions
in its comment letters, the Historical CAT Assessment would be assessed
based on current market activity, not past market activity.\252\ While
the fee rate would be calculated based on Historical CAT Costs, the fee
rate would be applied to current market transactions.\253\ CAT LLC
stated that the process of assessing fees for the Historical CAT
Assessment would be exactly the same as with CAT Fees related to
Prospective CAT Costs, and could be passed through in the same manner
if a CEBB or CEBS so chooses.\254\ CAT LLC also stated that it would
provide CAT Executing Brokers with details of their CAT fees to
facilitate this process.\255\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\251\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 8; SIFMA October 2022 Letter
at 4-5; supra notes 87-88 and accompanying text.
\252\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 9.
\253\ Id.
\254\ Id.
\255\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, the commenter stated that the CAT LLC Response Letter
did not meaningfully address the concerns it raised about ``the
inability of firms defined as `executing brokers' to transfer fees to
those who may be more appropriate to bear certain historical CAT costs
in the first place.'' \256\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\256\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Other Comments
a. Lack of Industry Input
Two commenters argued that the Proposed Amendment lacks input from
the industry.\257\ One commenter stated that the Participants did not
meaningfully solicit input from the industry when developing the
Executed Share Model.\258\ Another commenter stated that the Proposed
Amendment reflects a lack of representation by executing brokers and
offered its participation in future discussions and advisory committees
on the topic of CAT funding.\259\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\257\ See DASH April 2023 Letter at 2; DASH January 2023 Letter
at 3; SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4; SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2; SIFMA
June 2022 Letter at 2; SIFMA January 2023 Letter at 2. See also
FINRA June 2022 Letter at 8, 9 (advocating for a more inclusive
development process that would include input from the industry).
\258\ See SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2; see also SIFMA June 2023
Letter at 4, 5; SIFMA June 2022 Letter at 2; SIFMA January 2023
Letter at 2.
\259\ See DASH April 2023 Letter at 2; DASH January 2023 Letter
at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, CAT LLC stated that it has engaged with the industry
on the funding model over the past seven years, explaining that it has
discussed funding model issues with the CAT Advisory Committee, which
includes representation from the industry, as well as with industry
associations such as SIFMA and the Financial Information Forum, and
with individual Industry Members; analyzed and responded to comment
letters on the prior proposals; and hosted webinars for the industry on
funding issues.\260\ CAT LLC stated that it welcomes industry input on
the funding model but believes a decision on the model is overdue.\261\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\260\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 12.
\261\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, one commenter stated that Industry Members are willing
to work with the Commission and the Participants to develop a CAT
funding model.\262\ The commenter urged collaboration and dialogue
between the Participants and the Industry Members before the filing of
a formal proposal with the Commission.\263\ The commenter stated that
limiting industry input to the notice and comment process for NMS plan
amendments is an inefficient process resulting in significant
delays.\264\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\262\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 4.
\263\ Id.
\264\ Id. at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Implementation
One commenter suggested that upon approval of any CAT funding
model, Industry Members should be given at least a year ``to implement
any necessary changes to systems and processes for them to be able to
capture their portion of CAT costs.'' \265\ CAT LLC responded that it
was unlikely to take Industry Members a year to implement any needed
changes, particularly given the relatively small fees likely to be
incurred by most small Industry Members that would not require
extensive new processes to pay.\266\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\265\ SIFMA May 2023 Letter at 2.
\266\ See CAT LLC Response Letter at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Rule 613 and the CAT NMS Plan
One commenter stated that the Proposed Amendment is not what was
originally envisioned by the Commission in Rule 613 of Regulation NMS
and in the CAT NMS Plan as approved in 2016,\267\ and recommended that
the Commission come up with a new structure for the CAT.\268\ The
commenter argued that Rule 613 and the 2016 CAT NMS Plan do not support
CAT as it is currently structured \269\ and provided examples where it
believes that subsequent changes to the CAT requested by the Commission
have caused the CAT to become inconsistent with the requirements of
Rule 613 and the 2016 CAT NMS Plan.\270\ The commenter stated that the
changes resulted from discussions between the Commission and the
Participants, that such changes ``significantly increased CAT costs,''
and that Industry Members with ``no voice and little transparency''
into the building of the CAT system would be allocated most of the
increased CAT costs.\271\ The commenter stated that the Commission
cannot approve a funding proposal for a system that is not consistent
with Rule 613 and the CAT NMS Plan, stating that this would be
arbitrary and capricious action.\272\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\267\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2, 6.
\268\ Id. at 6.
\269\ Id. at 6-7.
\270\ Id. at 6.
\271\ Id. at 7.
\272\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Funding in the Appropriation Process
The commenter stated that the Proposed Amendment would ``evade''
\273\ the separation of powers established by the Constitution, arguing
that since the CAT is a ``Commission system used for enforcement''
\274\ and that law enforcement ``is an executive prerogative,'' \275\
Congress must approve public funds to build the CAT through the
appropriations process.\276\ The commenter stated ``[t]he Constitution
does not permit the Commission to fund its own enforcement apparatus
through the backdoor--to require the SROs to raise and spend hundreds
of millions of dollars to build a new law enforcement tool for the
Commission.'' \277\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\273\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 8.
\274\ Id.
\275\ Id.
\276\ Id.
\277\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Rule 608 of Regulation NMS and Rule 19b-4
One commenter preliminarily believes the assessment of CAT fees
through filings submitted by each exchange under Rule 19b-4 is likely
inconsistent with Rule 608.\278\ The commenter stated that the
Commission amended Rule 608 in 2020 to remove the effective-upon-filing
procedure for NMS plan fees by requiring that NMS plan fees be subject
to notice and comment and Commission approval
[[Page 41160]]
prior to becoming effective.\279\ The commenter stated that Rule 608
was amended by the Commission due to concerns about the assessment of
SIP market data fees by the SROs without a meaningful review
opportunity.\280\ The commenter also stated that the 2020 amendment
specifically contemplates that CAT fees would be subject to Rule
608.\281\ The commenter stated that the Commission was considering
approving a process for CAT fees that would not permit a meaningful
review opportunity, contrary to the Rule 608 amendment.\282\ The
commenter acknowledged that the CAT NMS Plan provides for Section 19(b)
fee filings but also stated that the CAT NMS Plan is silent about
whether Section 19(b) fee filings would need to be made after the CAT
Operating Committee receives approval to assess the fees under Rule
608.\283\ The commenter suggested that the CAT Operating Committee
create a new funding process consistent with Rule 608 and stated that
the Commission cannot find that the Proposed Amendment is consistent
with the Exchange Act.\284\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\278\ Id. at 4, 9.
\279\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 9.
\280\ Id.
\281\ Id.
\282\ Id.
\283\ Id. at 9, n.45.
\284\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
f. Miscellaneous
One commenter stated that the Commission failed to address data
security concerns associated with the CAT,\285\ and that the Commission
is rushing to approve the Proposed Amendment without careful
consideration.\286\ The commenter also argued that the Commission is
prematurely moving forward with the Proposed Amendment while
simultaneously considering revisions of the rules governing equity and
options market structure and proceeding with other proposals that will
impose costs on Industry Members.\287\ The commenter stated that
``[t]he unequitable distribution of CAT costs contemplated by the
Funding Proposal will exacerbate these problems, harming the
functioning of U.S. securities markets.'' \288\ The commenter argued
that the Commission cannot determine whether the proposed allocation of
costs is equitable without assessing the distribution of costs and
benefits under the other pending proposals.\289\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\285\ See SIFMA June 2023 Letter at 2.
\286\ Id. at 3.
\287\ Id.
\288\ Id.
\289\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Proceedings to Determine Whether To Approve or Disapprove the
Proposed Amendment
The Commission is instituting proceedings pursuant to Rule
608(b)(2)(i) of Regulation NMS,\290\ and Rules 700 and 701 of the
Commission's Rules of Practice,\291\ to determine whether to disapprove
the Proposed Amendment or to approve the Proposed Amendment with any
changes or subject to any conditions the Commission deems necessary or
appropriate. The Commission is instituting proceedings to have
sufficient time to consider the complex issues raised by Proposed
Amendment, including comments received. 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 Amendment to inform the Commission's analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\290\ 17 CFR 242.608.
\291\ 17 CFR 201.700; 17 CFR 201.701.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 608(b)(2) of Regulation NMS provides that the Commission
``shall approve a national market system plan or proposed amendment to
an effective national market system plan, with such changes or subject
to such conditions as the Commission may deem necessary or appropriate,
if it finds that such plan or amendment is necessary or appropriate in
the public interest, for the protection of investors and the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets, to remove impediments to, and
perfect the mechanisms of, a national market system, or otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act.'' \292\ Rule 608(b)(2)
further provides that the Commission shall disapprove a national market
system plan or proposed amendment if it does not make such a
finding.\293\ In the Notice, the Commission sought comment on the
Proposed Amendment, including whether the Proposed Amendment is
consistent with the Exchange Act.\294\ In this order, pursuant to Rule
608(b)(2)(i) of Regulation NMS,\295\ the Commission is providing notice
of the grounds for disapproval under consideration:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\292\ 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2).
\293\ Id.
\294\ See Notice, supra note 6.
\295\ 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whether, consistent with Rule 608 of Regulation NMS, the
Participants have demonstrated how the Proposed Amendment is necessary
or appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors
and the maintenance of fair and orderly markets, to remove impediments
to, and perfect the mechanisms of, a national market system, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act; \296\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\296\ 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whether the Participants have demonstrated how the
Proposed Amendment is consistent with Section 6(b)(4) \297\ and Section
15A(b)(5),\298\ of the Exchange Act, which require that the rules of a
national securities exchange ``provide for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees, and other charges among its members and issuers
and other persons using its facilities'' and that the rules of a
national securities association ``provide for the equitable allocation
of reasonable dues, fees, and other charges among members and issuers
and other persons using any facility or system which the association
operates or controls;''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\297\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
\298\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whether the Participants have demonstrated how the
Proposed Amendment is consistent with Section 6(b)(5) \299\ and Section
15A(b)(6),\300\ of the Exchange Act, which require that the rules of a
national securities exchange or national securities association
``promote just and equitable principles of trade. . . protect investors
and the public interest; and [to be] not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers;''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\299\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\300\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whether the Participants have demonstrated how the
Proposed Amendment is consistent with Section 6(b)(8) \301\ and Section
15A(b)(9) \302\ of the Exchange Act, which require that the rules of a
national securities exchange or national securities association ``do
not impose any burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of [the Exchange Act];'' and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\301\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
\302\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(9).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whether the Participants have demonstrated how the
Proposed Amendment is consistent with the funding principles of the CAT
NMS Plan that are not proposed to be amended by the Proposed Amendment,
which principles state that the Operating Committee shall seek, among
other things, ``to create transparent, predictable revenue streams for
the Company that are aligned with the anticipated costs to build,
operate and administer the CAT and the other costs of the Company,''
\303\ ``to provide for ease of billing and other administrative
[[Page 41161]]
functions,'' \304\ ``to avoid any disincentives such as placing an
inappropriate burden on competition and a reduction in market
quality,'' \305\ and ``to build financial stability to support the
Company as a going concern.'' \306\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\303\ See CAT NMS Plan, supra note 1, at Section 11.2(a).
\304\ Id. at Section 11.2(d).
\305\ Id. at Section 11.2(e).
\306\ Id. at Section 11.2(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Commission's Rules of Practice, the ``burden to
demonstrate that a NMS plan filing is consistent with the Exchange Act
and the rules and regulations issued thereunder. . . is on the plan
participants that filed the NMS plan filing.'' \307\ The description of
the NMS plan filing, its purpose and operation, its effect, and a legal
analysis of its consistency with applicable requirements must all be
sufficiently detailed and specific to support an affirmative Commission
finding.\308\ Any failure of the plan participants that filed the NMS
plan filing to provide such detail and specificity may result in the
Commission not having a sufficient basis to make an affirmative finding
that the NMS plan filing is consistent with the Exchange Act and the
applicable rules and regulations thereunder.\309\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\307\ 17 CFR 201.701(b)(3)(ii).
\308\ Id.
\309\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. Commission's Solicitation of 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 Proposed Amendment. In particular, the Commission invites the
written views of interested persons concerning whether the Proposed
Amendment is consistent with Section 11A, Section 6(b)(4), Section
6(b)(5), Section 6(b)(8), Section 15A(b)(5), Section 15A(b)(6), Section
15A(b)(9), or any other provision of the Exchange Act, or the rules and
regulations thereunder, or the funding principles of the CAT NMS Plan.
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
608(b)(2)(i) of Regulation NMS,\310\ any request for an opportunity to
make an oral presentation.\311\ The Commission asks that commenters
address the sufficiency and merit of the Participants' statements in
support of the Proposed Amendment,\312\ in addition to any other
comments they may wish to submit about the proposed rule changes. In
addition, the Commission seeks comment on the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\310\ 17 CFR 242.608(b)(2)(i).
\311\ Rule 700(c)(ii) of the Commission's Rules of Practice
provides that ``[t]he Commission, in its sole discretion, may
determine whether any issues relevant to approval or disapproval
would be facilitated by the opportunity for an oral presentation of
views.'' 17 CFR 201.700(c)(ii).
\312\ See Notice, supra note 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Commenters' views on any questions in the Solicitation of
Comments Section of the Order Instituting Proceedings related to a
prior funding model amendment that are relevant to the Proposed
Amendment; \313\
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\313\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 95634 (Aug. 30,
2022), 87 FR 54558, 54577-79 (Sept. 6, 2022).
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2. Commenters' views on whether the proposed definition of ``CAT
Executing Broker'' is clear and whether identification of those brokers
who meet the definition is easily available through CAT Data; and
3. Commenters' views on the incentives of the Participants to
control Prospective CAT Costs.
The Commission also requests that commenters provide analysis to
support their views, if possible.
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments regarding whether the Proposed Amendment should be approved
or disapproved by July 14, 2023. Any person who wishes to file a
rebuttal to any other person's submission must file that rebuttal by
July 28, 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
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
file number 4-698 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to: Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to file number 4-698. 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 a.m. and 3
p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of the Exchange. Do not include
personal identifiable information in submissions; you should submit
only information that you wish to make available publicly. We may
redact in part or withhold entirely from publication submitted material
that is obscene or subject to copyright protection. All submissions
should refer to file number 4-698 and should be submitted on or before
July 14, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\314\
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\314\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(85).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023-13340 Filed 6-22-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P