Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.; Order Approving a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt FINRA Rules 6151 (Disclosure of Order Routing Information for NMS Securities) and 6470 (Disclosure of Order Routing Information for OTC Equity Securities), 53560-53566 [2023-16886]
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proposed change to option position
limits would accomplish the goals of the
proposal without a corresponding
change to Exchange Rule 309(a)(1).71
Accordingly, the proposal does not
provide an adequate basis for the
Commission to conclude that the
proposal would be consistent with
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
IV. Procedure: Request for Written
Comments
The Commission requests that
interested persons provide written
submissions of their data, views, and
arguments with respect to the issues
identified above, as well as any other
concerns they may have with the
proposal. In particular, the Commission
invites the written views of interested
persons concerning whether the
proposed rule change is consistent with
Section 6(b)(5), or any other provision of
the Act, or the rules and regulations
thereunder. Although there do not
appear to be any issues relevant to
approval or disapproval which would
be facilitated by an oral presentation of
data, views, and arguments, the
Commission will consider, pursuant to
Rule 19b-4 under the Act,72 any request
for an opportunity to make an oral
presentation.73
The Commission asks that
commenters address the sufficiency and
merit of the Exchange’s statements in
support of the proposal in addition to
any other comments they may wish to
submit about the proposed rule change.
In particular, the Commission seeks
comment on its concerns expressed
above regarding the proposal’s
consistency with the Act, and seeks
commenters’ views as to whether the
proposal could have an adverse market
impact.
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments regarding whether the
proposed rule change should be
approved or disapproved by August 29,
2023. Any person who wishes to file a
rebuttal to any other person’s
submission must file that rebuttal by
71 Although Exchange Rule 309(c) states that
‘‘limits shall be determined in the manner
described in Rule 307,’’ Exchange Rule 309(a)(1)
establishes a maximum exercise limit of 250,000
contracts.
72 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
73 Section 19(b)(2) of the Act, as amended by the
Securities Acts Amendments of 1975, Pub. L. 94–
29 (June 4, 1975), grants to the Commission
flexibility to determine what type of proceeding—
either oral or notice and opportunity for written
comments—is appropriate for consideration of a
particular proposal by a self-regulatory
organization. See Securities Acts Amendments of
1975, Senate Comm. on Banking, Housing & Urban
Affairs, S. Rep. No. 75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 30
(1975).
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September 12, 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 rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File No. SR–
MIAX–2023–19 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–MIAX–2023–19. 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
SR–MIAX–2023–19 and should be
submitted on or before August 29, 2023.
Rebuttal comments should be submitted
September 12, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.74
Sherry R. Haywood.
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–16881 Filed 8–7–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–98047; File No. SR–FINRA–
2022–031]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Order Approving a
Proposed Rule Change To Adopt
FINRA Rules 6151 (Disclosure of Order
Routing Information for NMS
Securities) and 6470 (Disclosure of
Order Routing Information for OTC
Equity Securities)
August 2, 2023.
I. Introduction
On November 16, 2022, the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(‘‘FINRA’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’
or ‘‘SEC’’), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
require members to (i) publish order
routing reports for orders in OTC Equity
Securities,3 and (ii) submit their order
routing reports for both OTC Equity
Securities and NMS securities 4 to
FINRA for publication on the FINRA
website. The proposed rule change was
published for comment in the Federal
Register on December 6, 2022.5 On
January 18, 2023, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act,6 the
Commission designated a longer period
within which to approve the proposed
rule change, disapprove the proposed
rule change, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule change.7
On March 3, 2023, the Commission
instituted proceedings to determine
whether to approve or disapprove the
proposed rule change.8 On May 31,
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 FINRA Rule 6420(f) defines an ‘‘OTC Equity
Security’’ as any equity security that is not an NMS
stock, other than a Restricted Equity Security.
FINRA Rule 6420(k) defines a ‘‘Restricted Equity
Security’’ as any equity security that meets the
definition of ‘‘restricted security’’ as contained in
Rule 144(a)(3) under the Securities Act of 1933.
‘‘NMS stock’’ means any NMS security other than
an option. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(55).
4 ‘‘NMS securities’’ include any security or class
of securities for which transaction reports are
collected, processed, and made available to an
effective transaction reporting plan, or an effective
national market system plan for reporting
transactions in listed options. See 17 CFR
242.600(b)(54).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 96415
(November 30, 2022), 87 FR 74672 (‘‘Notice’’).
6 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 96699,
88 FR 4260 (January 24, 2023).
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97039,
88 FR 14653 (March 9, 2023).
2 17
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2023, the Commission designated a
longer period for Commission action on
proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule change.9 The Commission received
comment letters on the proposed rule
change and responses from FINRA.10
This order approves the proposed rule
change.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
II. Summary of the Proposed Rule
Change
As FINRA states in the Notice, Rule
606(a) of Regulation National Market
System (‘‘Regulation NMS’’) requires
broker-dealers to publicly disclose
specified information about their order
routing practices for NMS securities.11
In 2018, the Commission amended SEC
Rule 606(a) to enhance required
disclosures from broker-dealers about
their order routing practices for NMS
securities, including enhanced
disclosures for non-directed orders in
NMS stocks that are submitted on a
‘‘held’’ basis in order to better allow
‘‘customers—and retail investors in
particular—that submit orders to their
broker-dealers [to] be better able to
assess the quality of order handling
services provided by their brokerdealers’’ and to allow customers to
determine ‘‘whether their broker-dealers
are effectively managing potential
conflicts of interest.’’ 12
As described below and in more
detail in the Notice, FINRA proposes to
adopt FINRA Rule 6470 (Disclosure of
Order Routing Information for OTC
Equity Securities), which imposes
disclosure requirements for OTC Equity
Securities that are generally aligned
with the requirements of SEC Rule
606(a) disclosures but with
modifications to account for differences
between the over-the-counter (‘‘OTC’’)
markets and the market for NMS
securities. In addition, to improve the
accessibility of these new disclosures, as
well as SEC Rule 606(a) reports, FINRA
proposes to adopt FINRA Rule 6470(d)
and FINRA Rule 6151 (Disclosure of
Order Routing Information for NMS
Securities) to require members to send
both disclosures to FINRA for
9 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97629,
88 FR 37112 (June 6, 2023).
10 All comments received by the Commission on
the proposed rule change are available at: https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2022-031/
srfinra2022031.htm.
11 17 CFR 242.606(a) (‘‘SEC Rule 606(a)’’). See
also Notice, supra note 5, at 74672.
12 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 84528
(November 2, 2018), 83 FR 58338 (November 19,
2018) (‘‘SEC Rule 606 Adopting Release’’). A
broker-dealer must attempt to execute a ‘‘held’’
order immediately, while a ‘‘not held’’ order instead
provides a broker-dealer with price and time
discretion. Id. at 58344. See also Notice, supra note
5, at 74672 n.5.
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centralized publication on the FINRA
website.
Proposed FINRA Rule 6470 would
require the publication of order routing
disclosures for OTC Equity Securities.13
Specifically, proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a) would require every member to
make publicly available for each
calendar quarter a report on its routing
of non-directed orders in OTC Equity
Securities that are submitted on a held
basis during that quarter, broken down
by calendar month, and keep such
report posted on an internet website that
is free and readily accessible to the
public for a period of three years from
the initial date of posting on the internet
website (‘‘OTC Equity Security
reports’’).14 These reports would be
required to be separated into three
sections: (i) domestic OTC Equity
Securities; (ii) American Depository
Receipts and foreign ordinaries that are
OTC Equity Securities; and (iii)
Canadian-listed securities trading in the
United States as OTC Equity
Securities.15 In addition, proposed
FINRA Rule 6470(a) would specify that
the new OTC Equity Security reports
must be made available using the most
recent versions of the XML schema and
associated PDF renderer as published on
the FINRA website,16 and proposed
13 See
Notice, supra note 3, at 74672 n.8.
FINRA Rule 6470 would apply to
‘‘every member,’’ but FINRA notes that the focus of
the proposed disclosures is held orders from
customers in OTC Equity Securities, and some
members may not engage in any activities involving
held orders from customers in OTC Equity
Securities. See Notice, supra note 5 at 74673 n.9.
If a member does not accept any orders in OTC
Equity Securities from customers during a given
calendar quarter (whether held or not held), such
member would not be required to publish a report
under Rule 6470 for that quarter. Id. Similarly, a
member that accepted only not held orders in OTC
Equity Securities from customers—but no held
orders in OTC Equity Securities from customers—
during a given calendar quarter would not be
required to publish a report for that quarter. Id.
Further, FINRA states that if a member accepted
orders in OTC Equity Securities (whether held, not
held, or both) only from other broker-dealers, but
not from customers, during a given calendar
quarter, such member would not be required to
publish a report for that quarter. Id.
15 FINRA states that to provide for consistency
across member reports, FINRA will publish a list of
the OTC Equity Security symbols that fall under
each category, and members would be required to
publish reports in a manner consistent with such
list. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74673. FINRA
states that it will provide information in the
Regulatory Notice announcing the effective date
regarding where members may access the list of
OTC Equity Security symbols that FINRA will
maintain on its website. Id. at 74674 n.11. FINRA
also notes that these categories differ from the NMS
securities categories required to be reported for SEC
Rule 606(a) reports, which it believes are not
relevant to the OTC market. Id.
16 FINRA states that it will publish the technical
specifications for the XML schema and associated
PDF renderer on its website for member use in
generating the new reports. See Notice, supra note
14 Proposed
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FINRA Rule 6470(d) would require the
reports to be made publicly available
within one month after the end of the
quarter addressed in the report.17
Pursuant to proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a), the new OTC Equity Security
reports would be required to include the
information specified in paragraphs
(a)(1) through (4) of proposed FINRA
Rule 6470, specifically:
• the percentage of total orders 18 for
the section that were not held orders
and held orders, and the percentage of
held orders for the section that were
non-directed orders; 19
• the identity of the ten venues to
which the largest number of total nondirected held orders for the section were
5, at 74673 n.12. FINRA expects that, subject to the
differences between the SEC Rule 606(a) reports
and the OTC Equity Security reports, the XML
schema and associated PDF renderer published by
FINRA would be substantially similar to those
published by the SEC for the SEC Rule 606(a)
reports. Id. FINRA believes this requirement would
ensure that reports are generated and published in
standardized machine-readable and humanreadable forms, which would benefit investors by
permitting the public to more easily analyze and
compare the OTC Equity Security reports across
members, as well as to more easily perform
combined analysis of both SEC Rule 606(a) and
OTC Equity Security reports. Id. at 74763.
17 FINRA states that it understands that some
introducing firms route all of their orders in OTC
Equity Securities to one or more clearing firms for
further routing to other venues for execution. See
Notice, supra note 5 at 74673 n.10. FINRA states
that the Commission has provided guidance that,
where an introducing firm routes all of its covered
orders to one or more clearing firms for further
routing and execution and the clearing firm in fact
makes the routing decision, the introducing firm
generally may comply with the SEC Rule 606(a)
order routing disclosure requirements by: (i)
disclosing its relationship with the clearing firm(s)
on its website that includes any payment for order
flow received by the introducing firm, and (ii)
adopting the clearing firm’s disclosures by
reference, provided that the introducing firm has
examined the report and does not have reason to
believe it materially misrepresents the order routing
practices. Id. FINRA states that it intends to provide
parallel guidance with respect to proposed FINRA
Rule 6470. Id.
18 FINRA states that ‘‘total orders’’ would include
all orders from customers for the section, including
both directed and non-directed orders from
customers. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74673 n.14.
19 FINRA states that for purposes of the proposed
disclosures, a ‘‘non-directed order’’ would mean
any order from a customer other than a directed
order. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74673–74 n.15.
FINRA further states that consistent with the
definition of ‘‘directed order’’ under Regulation
NMS, a ‘‘directed order’’ would mean an order from
a customer that the customer specifically instructed
the member to route to a particular venue for
execution. See id.; 17 CFR 242.600(b). FINRA notes
that, similar to the definition of ‘‘customer’’ under
SEC Rule 600(b)(23) of Regulation NMS, a
‘‘customer’’ is defined under FINRA rules to
exclude a broker or dealer. See FINRA Rule
0160(b)(4). Orders from other broker-dealers would
therefore be excluded from the proposed
disclosures. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74673–74
n.15.
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routed for execution 20 and of any venue
to which five percent or more of nondirected held orders for the section were
routed for execution, and the percentage
of total non-directed held orders for the
section routed to the venue; 21
• for each identified venue, the net
aggregate amount of any payment for
order flow received, payment from any
profit-sharing relationship received,
transaction fees paid, and transaction
rebates received, both as a total dollar
amount and per order, for all nondirected held orders for the section; and
• a discussion of the material aspects
of the member’s relationship with each
identified venue, including, without
limitation, a description of any
arrangement for payment for order flow
and any profit-sharing relationship and
a description of any terms of such
arrangements, written or oral, that may
influence a member’s order routing
decision including, among other things:
(i) incentives for equaling or exceeding
an agreed upon order flow volume
threshold, such as additional payments
or a higher rate of payment;
disincentives for failing to meet an
agreed upon minimum order flow
threshold, such as lower payments or
the requirement to pay a fee; (ii)
volume-based tiered payment
schedules; and (iii) agreements
regarding the minimum amount of order
flow that the member would send to a
venue.22
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
20 FINRA
states that, consistent with the
Commission’s approach to SEC Rule 606(a), a
‘‘venue’’ would be defined broadly to cover any
market center or any other person or entity to which
a member routes orders for execution. See Notice,
supra note 5, at 74674 n.16. Accordingly, for
purposes of proposed FINRA Rule 6470, where an
alternative trading system (‘‘ATS’’) offers both
automatic order execution and order delivery
functionality, the ATS should be identified as the
venue only when the ATS provides order
execution. Conversely, for purposes of proposed
FINRA Rule 6470, in cases where the ATS instead
provides order delivery, the separate market center
to which the orders are delivered—e.g., a market
maker or other ATS—should be identified as the
venue where the order was routed for execution. Id.
21 Proposed FINRA Rule 6470(b) would provide
that a member is not required to identify execution
venues that received less than 5% of non-directed
held orders for a section of the member’s OTC
Equity Security report, provided that the member
has identified the top execution venues that in the
aggregate received at least 90% of the member’s
total non-directed held orders for the section.
FINRA states that this provision is consistent with
exemptive relief that the Commission has provided
with respect to SEC Rule 606(a) reports. See Notice,
supra note 5, at 74674 n.17.
22 FINRA states that the types of arrangements
referenced above are not an exhaustive list of terms
of payment for order flow arrangements or profitsharing relationships that may influence a brokerdealer’s order routing decision that would be
required to be disclosed. See Notice, supra note 5,
at 74674 n.18. For example, if a broker-dealer
receives a discount on executions in other securities
or some other advantage in directing order flow in
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To make both the existing SEC Rule
606(a) reports and the new OTC Equity
Security reports more accessible for
regulators, investors and others seeking
to analyze and compare the data, FINRA
is proposing to require that members
provide the reports to FINRA for central
publication on the FINRA website.
Proposed FINRA Rule 6151 would
require every member that is required to
publish a SEC Rule 606(a) report to
provide the report to FINRA, in a
manner prescribed by FINRA, within
the same time and in the same formats
that such report is required to be made
publicly available pursuant to SEC Rule
606(a). In combination with proposed
FINRA Rule 6470(d), which would
require members to provide the OTC
Equity Security report to FINRA within
one month after the end of the quarter
addressed in the report in such a
manner as may be prescribed by FINRA,
FINRA would be able to publish both
SEC Rule 606(a) and OTC Equity
Security reports on its public website,
free of charge and without usage
restrictions.23
FINRA states that it undertook an
‘‘economic impact assessment’’ to
analyze the potential economic impacts
of the proposed rule change, including
potential costs, benefits, and
distributional and competitive effects,
relative to the current baseline.24 In this
analysis, FINRA analyzed the number of
a specific security to a venue, or if a broker-dealer
receives equity rights in a venue in exchange for
directing order flow there, then all terms of those
arrangements would also be required to be
disclosed. Id. Similarly, if a broker-dealer receives
variable payments or discounts based on order
types and the number of orders sent to a venue,
such arrangements would be required to be
disclosed. Id. However, FINRA notes that these are
only examples, and a member would be required to
disclose any other material aspects of its
relationship with each identified venue regardless
of whether a particular example is listed in the
proposed rule text or otherwise discussed in this
proposed rule change. Id.
23 See Notice, supra note 5, at 74674–75. FINRA
states that the SEC has provided guidance that
introducing firms may comply with SEC Rule
606(a) by incorporating their clearing firm(s)’s
reports in specified circumstances, and FINRA
intends to provide similar guidance with respect to
the OTC Equity Security reports required under
proposed FINRA Rule 6470. Id. at 74675 n.25. To
facilitate centralized access to the reports, such
introducing firms must provide FINRA with a list
of their clearing firm(s) and the hyperlink to the
web page where they disclose their clearing firm
relationship(s) and adopt the clearing firm(s)’s
reports by reference. Id. Each introducing firm
relying on this guidance would be required to
provide this information to FINRA upon
implementation of the proposed rule change and to
update FINRA if the information previously
provided changes. Id. This information will enable
FINRA to provide investors with relevant
information for all firms, including introducing
firms incorporating clearing firm reports by
reference, on FINRA’s website. Id.
24 See Notice, supra note 5, at 74675–78.
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firms quoting, executing trades and
routing orders in OTC Equity Securities
over specific time periods, as well as the
number of symbols traded per firm and
average dollar volume of trading per
symbol and per firm. In addition,
FINRA published the proposed rule
change in Regulatory Notice 21–35
(October 2021) and received five
comments in response.25 FINRA
provided these comments, as well as a
summary of these comments and its
responses in its filing with the
Commission.26
III. Discussion and Commission
Findings
After careful review, the Commission
finds that the proposed rule change is
consistent with the requirements of the
Exchange Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to a
national securities association.27 In
particular, the Commission finds that
the proposed rule change is consistent
with Section 15A(b)(6) of the Exchange
Act,28 which requires, among other
things, that the association’s rules be
designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest, and
that the rules are not designed to permit
unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
The Commission received two
comment letters that were broadly
supportive of the proposed rule change
and greater transparency regarding the
routing of orders in OTC Equity
Securities in general.29 Another
commenter submitted three comment
letters, and was supportive of some
aspects of the proposal, but expressed
concerns about and opposed other
aspects of the proposal, as discussed
below.30
25 Comments received by FINRA are available on
FINRA’s website at https://www.finra.org/rulesguidance/notices/21-35#comments.
26 See Notice, supra note 5, at 74678–80.
27 In approving this proposed rule change, the
Commission has considered the proposed rule’s
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
28 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(6).
29 See letters to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Commission, from G.P., dated November 30, 2022;
and from Daniel Lambden, dated December 5, 2022.
30 See letters to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Commission, from Howard Meyerson, Managing
Director, Financial Information Forum, dated
December 20, 2022 (‘‘FIF Letter’’), dated February
3, 2023 (‘‘FIF Letter II’’), and dated April 13, 2023
(‘‘FIF Letter III’’). The commenter is supportive of
some aspects of the proposal, including: FINRA’s
proposal to maintain the same quarterly reporting
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
A. Disclosure in the Routing Firm
Scenario
Among other things, proposed FINRA
Rule 6470(a) requires a member to
disclose the identity of the ten venues
to which the largest number of total
non-directed held orders for the section
were routed for execution and of any
venue to which five percent or more of
non-directed held orders for the section
were routed for execution.31 The
commenter states that it opposes this
aspect of the proposal because the
proposed FINRA rule, like SEC Rule
606(a), would require a reporting firm
that receives and routes customer orders
to a second firm (‘‘routing firm’’) that
does not execute customer orders but
routes those orders to other venues for
execution (‘‘routing firm scenario’’), to
disclose the venue to which the routing
firm routes the customer orders for
execution.32 The commenter states that
this requires the reporting firm to report
the net fees paid and rebates received
between the routing firm and the
execution venue in the OTC Equity
Security report tables (i.e., the
disclosures required by proposed
timeframe for OTC Equity Security reports as
applies for SEC Rule 606(a) reporting; FINRA’s
chosen OTC Equity Security reporting categories;
FINRA’s assertion that it will publish and maintain
a file of which symbols are included in each OTC
Equity Security category and make this file
accessible to all industry members without charge;
FINRA’s approach of not requiring the OTC Equity
Security reports to be broken out by order type;
FINRA’s proposal to require reporting of payments
per executed order rather than per share; FINRA’s
decision to limit the OTC Equity Security reports
to non-directed held orders; and proposed FINRA
Rule 6470(b) which would provide a limited
exception to venue reporting requirements in
proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(2). See FIF Letter at
7–9. The commenter and FINRA both state that the
proposal to require reporting of payments per
executed order rather than per share is consistent
with current industry practice for OTC Equity
Securities. See id.; Notice, supra note 5, at 74674.
31 See proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(2).
32 See FIF Letter at 2. The commenter describes
what it believes is a ‘‘highly problematic ‘lookthrough’ approach’’ used by the Commission in its
application of SEC Rule 606(a) and its predecessor
rule, Rule 11Ac1–6, to the routing firm scenario.
See id. at 2; and FIF Letter III at 4–5. The
commenter states that this ‘‘look-through’’ approach
was not included in the text of Rule 606(a) nor
discussed in the 2018 amendments to Rule 606(a)
reporting. The Commission highlights that the
requirement in SEC Rule 606(a) to report the venues
to which orders were routed ‘‘for execution’’ has
been in place since Rule 11Ac1–6 was originally
adopted in 2000. In the Rule 11Ac1–6 adopting
release, the Commission stated that ‘‘[t]he term
‘venue’ is intended to be interpreted broadly to
cover ‘market centers’ within the meaning of Rule
11Ac1–5(a)(14), as well as any other person or
entity to which a broker routes non-directed orders
for execution. Consequently, the term excludes an
entity that is used merely as a vehicle to route an
order to a venue selected by the broker-dealer.’’
(emphasis in the original). See Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 43590 (November 17, 2000), 65 FR
75414, 75427 n.63 (December 1, 2000).
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FINRA Rule 6470(a)(3)) and material
aspects disclosures (i.e., the disclosures
required by proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a)(4)).33 The commenter states that
the proposed FINRA rule, like SEC Rule
606(a), does not require the reporting of
the net fees paid or rebates received
between the reporting firm and the
routing firm in the OTC Equity Security
report tables.34
The commenter states that this
approach obscures relevant information
from retail customers because, to
understand the financial inducements
faced by a reporting firm, the relevant
information is the payment between the
reporting firm and the routing firm. The
commenter also states that this results
in reported data that is not comparable
across broker-dealers.35 In addition, the
commenter states that the approach
results in reporting of arrangements that
are not relevant to investors and results
in relevant and important information
being excluded from the reports.36 The
commenter also states that this
approach requires firms to report on
financial arrangements to which they
might not be a party, that the rules do
not impose any obligation on the
routing firm to provide data to the
reporting firm, and a reporting firm
cannot effectively validate the data
received from routing firms, particularly
in situations where a foreign routing
firm routes to a foreign execution
venue.37 The commenter further states
that the rule filing does not explicitly
discuss the costs for this reporting.38
The commenter also suggests that if
FINRA adopts this reporting, then
proposed FINRA Rule 6470 should be
revised to address the routing firm
scenario, because the proposed rule
does not accurately describe what firms
are required to report.39
FINRA believes that the proposal is
clear concerning the execution venue
reporting requirement.40 FINRA states
that, as is the case with SEC Rule 606(a),
the plain language of proposed Rule
6470(a)(2) requires disclosure of venues
to which orders ‘‘were routed for
execution.’’ 41 FINRA highlights that,
consistent with SEC Rule 606(a), the
purpose of its proposed disclosures is to
provide information about members’
order routing practices and potential
conflicts of interest related to execution
venues and, therefore, FINRA believes
that the same types of venues should be
covered by its new OTC Equity Security
reports as are covered by SEC Rule
606(a) reports.42 FINRA also states that
members already have experience with
SEC Rule 606(a) and may be able to
utilize existing systems and
arrangements with routing firms to
provide the disclosures, and that
aligning the scope of the SEC Rule
606(a) and OTC Equity Security reports
may also reduce potential investor
confusion that could arise with similar
reports that do not provide information
about the same types of venues.43
FINRA states that it is appropriate to
require reporting firms to provide
information on the routing firm’s
arrangements with execution venues
because reporting firms are responsible
for their order handling choices, and
FINRA believes that it is reasonable to
require reporting firms to obtain and
disclose the required information from
broker-dealers they choose to use as
their routing firms, including where a
routing firm or an execution venue is
located abroad.44 In addition, FINRA
states that ‘‘requiring disclosure of
execution venues would make the
reports more easily comparable across
reporting firms, as the reports would all
include information about the financial
inducements that may influence a
member’s decision to route to
33 See FIF Letter at 2. See also proposed FINRA
Rule 6470(a)(3) and (4).
34 See FIF Letter at 2. See also proposed FINRA
Rule 6470(a)(3).
35 See id. at 3–4.
36 See FIF Letter III at 3–5. In FIF Letter III, the
commenter sets forth a scenario of order routing
reporting under SEC Rule 606(a) that inaccurately
reflects the requirements of such rule. In the
scenario, FIF incorrectly assumes reporting is based
on the number of orders routed by the reporting
broker-dealer instead of the number of orders
received by the reporting broker-dealer from the
customer as required by SEC Rule 606(a). See id.
at 4–5; see also letter to Vanessa Countryman,
Secretary, Commission, from Robert McNamee,
Vice President & Associate General Counsel,
FINRA, dated June 23, 2023 (‘‘FINRA Letter II’’) at
3 n.12.
37 See FIF Letter at 5.
38 See id. at 5.
39 See id. at 6; FIF Letter III at 6.
40 See letter to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Commission, from Robert McNamee, Associate
General Counsel, FINRA, dated March 29, 2023
(‘‘FINRA Letter’’) at 5 and FINRA Letter II at 2–4.
41 See FINRA Letter at 5. FINRA also states that,
if a member routes to another broker-dealer that
does not itself execute orders, that receiving brokerdealer would not be an execution venue under the
text of the proposed rule. See id. Additionally,
FINRA has undertaken an economic impact
assessment that analyzed, among other things, the
potential costs and benefits of the proposal as
described in the filing, which clearly contemplates
disclosure of execution venues rather than routing
brokers. See id. FINRA’s assessment of costs is
based on its experience with order routing reporting
and adequately describes the costs of producing the
report.
42 See FINRA Letter at 4.
43 See id.
44 See id.
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destinations where the order may be
executed by the recipient venue.’’ 45
Proposed FINRA Rule 6470, like SEC
Rule 606(a), requires the routing report
to cover venues to which orders are
‘‘routed for execution.’’ 46 If a routing
firm does not execute orders, then it
cannot be the venue to which orders
were ‘‘routed for execution,’’ and thus
the obligation of the reporting firm is to
report the relevant information for the
execution venues to which the routing
firm routes orders to for execution.47 In
response to comments challenging
reporting based on the venue to which
orders are routed for execution,
specifically that the proposed rule is not
clear and does not result in comparable
data, the Commission agrees with
FINRA that requiring the OTC Equity
Security report to cover venues to which
orders are ‘‘routed for execution’’ would
ensure that the reports include
information about the financial
inducements that may influence a
member’s decision to route to
destinations where the order may be
executed by the recipient venue
(whether routing orders itself or through
an agent routing firm).48 It is reasonable
and appropriate that the scope of
disclosures required by proposed
FINRA Rule 6470(a) aligns with the
scope of the requirements of SEC Rule
606(a) by requiring the reports to
include information for venues to which
orders are ‘‘routed for execution,’’
which would ensure consistency across
such reports. In addition, proposed
FINRA Rule 6470 clearly and
adequately addresses the application of
the rule to the routing firm scenario
raised by the commenter. The
Commission also agrees with FINRA
that requiring disclosure of execution
venues would make the reports more
easily comparable across reporting
firms, as the reports would all include
information about the financial
inducements that may influence a
45 See id. While the financial inducements
between a reporting firm and a routing firm are not
disclosed pursuant to proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a)(3), FINRA states that, consistent with SEC
Rule 606(a), such information may be disclosed in
the report’s discussion of the material aspects of the
member’s relationship with an execution venue
pursuant to proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(4). See
id. at 4–5 n.14; see also FINRA Letter II at 4.
46 17 CFR 242.606(a)(2); proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a)(2).
47 See supra notes 20–21 and accompanying text.
48 The Commission disagrees with commenter
concerns that this approach obscures relevant
information from retail customers, because, to the
extent that a reporting firm receives financial
inducements from a routing firm when routing
orders to an execution venue, such financial
inducements may be reported pursuant to FINRA
Rule 6470(a) as material aspects of the routing
firm’s relationship with the execution venue. See
Notice, supra note 5, at 74674 n.18.
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member’s decision to route to
destinations where the order may be
executed by the recipient venue. In
response to comments raising cost
concerns, FINRA has undertaken an
economic impact assessment that
analyzed, among other things, the
potential costs and benefits of the
proposal that was based on its
experience with order routing reporting.
B. OTC Equities With a Limited Number
of Available Execution Venues
The commenter states that there are a
significant number of OTC stocks that
have a limited number of available
execution venues (in many cases, only
one or two market centers), and states
that there is a potential risk that
investors viewing the report for these
stocks would see a high percentage of
order flow being routed to one or two
venues without appropriate context of
the limited choices available to the
reporting firm and that some firms with
lower trading volume in OTC Equity
Securities could have routing
relationships with a limited number of
market makers.49 The commenter
suggests that FINRA should identify this
as a factor for investors to consider
when reviewing a member’s OTC Equity
Security report.50 FINRA responds that,
while the OTC Equity Securities market
differs from the NMS securities market
in the number of available execution
venues, it intends to, as appropriate,
provide members, investors, and others
with information and otherwise engage
in investor education efforts about the
purpose, content, and potential
limitation of the reports.51 In addition,
FINRA states that members could also
provide additional explanatory context
regarding their OTC Equity Security
reports, provided that such information
is accurate, not misleading, and
otherwise complies with other
applicable SEC and FINRA
requirements.52
The Commission believes that the
proposed OTC Equity Security reports
are appropriately designed to provide
valuable information to customers and
others regarding a FINRA member’s
order routing practices in OTC Equity
Securities, which may elicit questions
regarding such practices, including
when a high percentage of order flow is
being routed to a small number of
venues. Among other things, the
proposed OTC Equity Security reports
should help facilitate and inform
customer dialogues with their broker49 See
FIF Letter at 8.
id.
51 See FINRA Letter at 6.
52 See id.
50 See
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dealers about the broker-dealers’ order
routing practices in OTC Equity
Securities. For example, if a customer
has questions about the number of
execution venues or frequency of use of
an execution venue, the customer
should discuss those questions with
their reporting broker. In those
conversations, or through other means,
the reporting broker could also provide
additional explanatory context
regarding their OTC Equity Security
reports, provided that such information
is accurate, not misleading, and
otherwise complies with other
applicable SEC and FINRA
requirements.53
C. Use of Consolidated Audit Trail
(‘‘CAT’’) Data
The commenter also states that FINRA
should consider whether certain
categories of data that firms are required
to report in the OTC Equity Security
reports could be obtained by FINRA
from the CAT.54 In the filing, FINRA
states that it is not proposing to use CAT
data because of restrictions on the use
of CAT data, and because FINRA
believes the most efficient and
comprehensive means of providing the
data included in the OTC Equity
Security order routing disclosures is for
members to generate the reports
directly.55 FINRA also states that not all
of the data required in the reports is also
reported to CAT.56 The Commission
agrees with FINRA that the most
efficient and comprehensive means of
obtaining the data included in the OTC
Equity Security report is from members
directly. The CAT does not contain all
of the data required on the OTC Equity
Security reports, while FINRA members
with reporting obligations under the
new rule will have the means of
collecting and reporting the required
data.
D. Implementation and Comment Period
The commenter also raises concerns
about implementation of the proposal,
stating that it is important to ensure that
industry members will have sufficient
time to properly implement the planned
53 See id. In addition, as described above, FINRA
has stated that as appropriate, it intends to provide
members, investors, and others with information
and otherwise engage in investor education efforts
about the purpose, content, and potential limitation
of the reports. See id.
54 FIF Letter at 6. The CAT is operated pursuant
a national market system plan approved by the
Commission pursuant to Section 11A of the
Exchange Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 79318 (November 15, 2016), 81 FR 84696
(November 23, 2016).
55 See Notice, supra note 5, at 74678–79.
56 See FINRA Letter at 3.
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reporting changes.57 The commenter
also states that the rule filing does not
provide clear guidance on reporting
scenarios relating to trading on OTC
Link ATS and raises several
hypothetical situations where it believes
OTC Link ATS should be reported as
the execution venue, as opposed to
where the execution actually took
place.58 In the proposal, FINRA states
that it intends to engage with members
and other interested parties prior to
implementation of the proposed rule
change, including specifically to discuss
order routing disclosures in scenarios
involving OTC Link ATS, as well as
provide guidance as appropriate on
other interpretative questions.59 FINRA
also provided responses to the specific
scenarios the commenter provided
demonstrating why the execution venue
and not OTC Link ATS should be
reported under the proposed rules.60
FINRA reiterates that, for purposes of
the proposed disclosures for OTC Equity
Securities, a ‘‘venue’’ would be defined
broadly to cover any market center or
any other person or entity to which a
member routes for execution, and
consequently would exclude an entity
that is used merely as a vehicle to route
an order to a venue selected by the
broker-dealer.61 Thus, FINRA states
that, for purposes of proposed Rule
6470, where an alternative trading
system (‘‘ATS’’) offers both automatic
order execution and order delivery
functionality, the ATS should be
identified as the venue only when the
ATS provides order execution.62 FINRA
believes identification of the ATS in
these circumstances is appropriate
because the ATS is the venue where the
order was routed ‘‘for execution,’’
consistent with SEC Rule 606(a).63
FINRA also believes that, for purposes
of proposed Rule 6470, in cases where
the ATS instead provides order
delivery, the separate market center to
57 FIF Letter at 9–10. The commenter specifically
requests that any implementation timetable should
run from the date that FINRA publishes technical
specifications, schemas, interpretive FAQs and
other applicable documentation. Id. at 9.
58 FIF Letter at 6 and FIF Letter II at 2–4.
59 See Notice, supra note 5, at 74680. See also
FINRA Letter at 7–8, stating that FINRA recognizes
that members will require sufficient time to
implement the new disclosure requirements,
intends to provide an appropriate amount of time
for implementation of the proposal, will work with
the industry to publish technical specifications
appropriately in advance of the implementation
date, and will also publish interpretive guidance to
the extent needed—including on routing scenarios
unique to certain platforms in the OTC Equity
Security market—with sufficient time allowed for
implementation.
60 See FINRA Letter II at 6–8.
61 See id. at 6.
62 Id.
63 Id.
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which the orders are delivered—e.g., a
market maker or other ATS—should be
identified as the venue where the order
was routed for execution.64
The Commission believes that
FINRA’s statements with respect to
implementation are reasonable and
appropriate. As stated above, FINRA
recognizes that members will require
sufficient time to implement the new
disclosure requirements, intends to
provide an appropriate amount of time
for implementation of the proposal, will
work with the industry to publish
technical specifications appropriately in
advance of the implementation date,
and will also publish interpretive
guidance to the extent needed—
including on routing scenarios unique
to certain platforms in the OTC Equity
Security market—with sufficient time
allowed for implementation. In
addition, FINRA has stated that it will
announce the effective date of the
proposed rule change in a Regulatory
Notice and the effective date will be no
later than 365 days following
publication of the Regulatory Notice.65
Also, some broker-dealers will have
familiarity and the ability to more easily
produce OTC Equity Security reports
due to experience in producing SEC
Rule 606(a) reports for NMS securities,
making the implementation reasonable
and appropriate.
Moreover, the commenter expresses
concern that there was not sufficient
time to comment on this proposal.66 The
Commission, however, published the
proposal for comment; designated a
longer period within which to approve
the proposed rule change, disapprove
the proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings; instituted proceedings; and
extended its time to act on the
proposal,67 during which time the
commenter submitted three comment
letters. Accordingly, there has been
sufficient opportunity for comment on
the proposal.
E. Centralized Hosting of Order Routing
Disclosures
The commenter states that its
members support centralized
publication of SEC Rule 606(a) reports
and the OTC Equity Security reports by
FINRA, but states that if FINRA will
publish these reports that firms should
no longer be required to separately
publish these reports on their own
websites, and instead firms should be
required to provide a link from its
public website to the applicable section
64 Id.
65 See
Notice, supra note 5, at 74675.
FIF Letter at 10.
67 See supra notes 7–9 and accompanying text.
66 See
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53565
of the FINRA website.68 The commenter
also suggests that FINRA create a
database with structured firm routing
report data that can be accessed through
automated queries.69 FINRA confirms
that a member would satisfy the
proposed requirement to publish the
new OTC Equity Security reports on the
member’s website by including a link
from its own website to the FINRA web
page hosting centralized publication of
OTC Equity Security reports.70 With
respect to the commenter’s
recommendation that FINRA create a
structured database that users may
query, FINRA states that it is not
contemplating such a database currently
but will continue to consider ways to
facilitate investor access to, and the
usefulness of, the OTC Equity Security
reports.71 In addition, FINRA states in
the proposal that it intends to engage in
investor education efforts regarding the
purpose, content, and potential
limitations of the disclosures.72
SEC Rule 606(a) reports are required
to be made publicly available within
one month after the end of the quarter
addressed in the report pursuant to
Commission rule and such requirement
is not affected by this proposal.73 With
respect to OTC Equity Security reports
required by proposed FINRA Rule 6470,
it is reasonable for the OTC Equity
Security reports to be required to be
disclosed publicly in a similar manner
to SEC Rule 606(a) reports. These
proposed changes are reasonably
designed to make order routing
disclosures more accessible to investors
and other relevant stakeholders.
Consolidating order routing reports onto
a single website could assist market
participants, investors and the public to
more easily compare order routing
disclosures and practices across
different firms and observe changes in
routing behaviors over time.74
68 FIF
Letter at 7.
69 Id.
70 See
FINRA Letter at 2.
71 Id.
72 See
Notice, supra note 5, at 74675 n.23.
CFR 242.606(a).
74 At the time it adopted amendments to SEC Rule
606 in 2018, the Commission declined to require a
centralized repository for SEC Rule 606(a) reports,
although it stated that a centralized repository
could help facilitate the goal of enabling customers
to more readily and meaningfully assess brokerdealers’ order handling practices. See SEC Rule 606
Adopting Release, supra note 12, at 58377–78 for
the Commission’s rationale for not adopting that
requirement. Here, FINRA has determined that it is
appropriate to centralize its members’ SEC Rule
606(a) and OTC Equity Security reports to make the
reports more accessible for regulators, investors,
and others seeking to analyze and compare the data.
73 17
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F. Symbol Categorization File
The commenter supports FINRA’s
proposal to publish and maintain a file
of which symbols are included in each
OTC Equity Security category without
charge, but recommends making this file
available prior to the first day of each
quarter for use in the upcoming
quarter.75 The commenter states that
requiring daily updates to the list would
significantly increase the reporting
burden without material impact on
aggregating data for the quarter.76
Consistent with the commenter’s
request, FINRA confirms that it will
make the symbol categorization file
available prior to the first day of each
calendar quarter for use during the
entirety of the following quarter.77 The
Commission believes that publishing
and maintaining a symbol categorization
file, which will be available prior to the
first day of each quarter, is appropriate
and would ease members’ reporting
burden.
G. Categorization of Held and Not Held
Orders
The commenter supports FINRA’s
proposal to limit the OTC Equity
Security disclosures to non-directed
held orders, but requests guidance on
the proposed requirement to report the
percentage of not held and held orders
as a percentage of all orders.78 FINRA
responds that it believes that all orders
are either held or not held because a
firm either has price and time discretion
to execute the order, or it does not.79
The Commission agrees with FINRA,
and has discussed the difference
between held and not held orders and
their separate reporting requirements
under Rule 606 of Regulation NMS.80
75 FIF
Letter at 7.
id.
77 FINRA Letter at 2.
78 See FIF Letter at 8.
79 See FINRA Letter at 6, also stating that
consistent with SEC guidance regarding the
categorization of held and not held orders for
purposes of SEC Rule 606(a), orders should be
categorized as held or not held for purposes of the
OTC Equity Security disclosures based on whether
the customer reasonably expects the firm to attempt
to execute its order immediately or instead
reasonably expects the firm to use its price and time
discretion to execute the order. FINRA Letter at 6
n.19, citing SEC Division of Trading and Markets,
Responses to Frequently Asked Questions
Concerning Rule 606 of Regulation NMS, Questions
15.01 through 15.04. The Commission notes that
these FAQs represent the views of the staff of the
Division of Trading and Markets. They are not a
rule, regulation, or statement of Commission. The
Commission has neither approved nor disapproved
their content. These FAQs, like all staff statements,
have no legal force or effect: they do not alter or
amend applicable law, and they create no new or
additional obligations for any person.
80 See SEC Rule 606 Adopting Release, supra note
12, at 58340–41 and 58372.
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76 See
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Overall, the proposed requirements
relating to the disclosure of order
routing information for OTC Equity
Securities are reasonably designed to
assist customers in evaluating the
quality of the order routing services of
their broker-dealers and how well their
broker-dealers manage potential
conflicts of interest with execution
venues. Customers would be better able
to assess indirect and previously
unobservable costs of trading OTC
Equity Securities, including, among
other things, payment for order flow and
transaction fees paid less rebates, which
should allow customers to assess the
performance of its broker-dealer(s) and
be better informed in making choices
among firms. The similarities in
reporting requirements between
proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a) and SEC
Rule 606(a) should reduce the burden of
reporting for broker-dealers that already
produce SEC Rule 606(a) reports, and
the proposed differences in reporting
requirements for OTC Equity Securities
under proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)
and SEC Rule 606(a) reports for NMS
securities are reasonable and
appropriate due to differences in the
nature of OTC Equity Securities and the
markets in which they trade.81
For the foregoing reasons, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section
15A(b)(6) 82 of the Exchange Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to a national securities
association.
IV. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act,83
that the proposed rule change (SR–
FINRA–2022–031) be, and hereby is,
approved.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.84
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–16886 Filed 8–7–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
81 See Notice, supra note 5, at 74674 (describing
the differences in reporting requirements for OTC
Equity Securities under proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a) and SEC Rule 606(a) reports for NMS
securities).
82 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
83 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
84 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–98043; File No. SR–
NYSEARCA–2023–51]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change To Modify the NYSE Arca
Options Fee Schedule
August 2, 2023.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that, on July 31,
2023, NYSE Arca, Inc. (‘‘NYSE Arca’’ 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 comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to modify the
NYSE Arca Options Fee Schedule (‘‘Fee
Schedule’’) regarding the Limit of Fees
on Options Strategy Executions (the
‘‘Strategy Cap’’). The Exchange proposes
to implement the fee change effective
August 1, 2023. The proposed rule
change is available on the Exchange’s
website at www.nyse.com, at the
principal office of the Exchange, and at
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of,
and basis for, the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
2 15
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 151 (Tuesday, August 8, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 53560-53566]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-16886]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-98047; File No. SR-FINRA-2022-031]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Order Approving a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt FINRA
Rules 6151 (Disclosure of Order Routing Information for NMS Securities)
and 6470 (Disclosure of Order Routing Information for OTC Equity
Securities)
August 2, 2023.
I. Introduction
On November 16, 2022, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority,
Inc. (``FINRA'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission'' or ``SEC''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4
thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule change to require members to (i) publish
order routing reports for orders in OTC Equity Securities,\3\ and (ii)
submit their order routing reports for both OTC Equity Securities and
NMS securities \4\ to FINRA for publication on the FINRA website. The
proposed rule change was published for comment in the Federal Register
on December 6, 2022.\5\ On January 18, 2023, pursuant to Section
19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act,\6\ the Commission designated a longer
period within which to approve the proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\7\ On March 3, 2023,
the Commission instituted proceedings to determine whether to approve
or disapprove the proposed rule change.\8\ On May 31,
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2023, the Commission designated a longer period for Commission action
on proceedings to determine whether to approve or disapprove the
proposed rule change.\9\ The Commission received comment letters on the
proposed rule change and responses from FINRA.\10\ This order approves
the proposed rule change.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ FINRA Rule 6420(f) defines an ``OTC Equity Security'' as any
equity security that is not an NMS stock, other than a Restricted
Equity Security. FINRA Rule 6420(k) defines a ``Restricted Equity
Security'' as any equity security that meets the definition of
``restricted security'' as contained in Rule 144(a)(3) under the
Securities Act of 1933. ``NMS stock'' means any NMS security other
than an option. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(55).
\4\ ``NMS securities'' include any security or class of
securities for which transaction reports are collected, processed,
and made available to an effective transaction reporting plan, or an
effective national market system plan for reporting transactions in
listed options. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(54).
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 96415 (November 30,
2022), 87 FR 74672 (``Notice'').
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 96699, 88 FR 4260
(January 24, 2023).
\8\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97039, 88 FR 14653
(March 9, 2023).
\9\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97629, 88 FR 37112
(June 6, 2023).
\10\ All comments received by the Commission on the proposed
rule change are available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-finra-2022-031/srfinra2022031.htm.
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II. Summary of the Proposed Rule Change
As FINRA states in the Notice, Rule 606(a) of Regulation National
Market System (``Regulation NMS'') requires broker-dealers to publicly
disclose specified information about their order routing practices for
NMS securities.\11\ In 2018, the Commission amended SEC Rule 606(a) to
enhance required disclosures from broker-dealers about their order
routing practices for NMS securities, including enhanced disclosures
for non-directed orders in NMS stocks that are submitted on a ``held''
basis in order to better allow ``customers--and retail investors in
particular--that submit orders to their broker-dealers [to] be better
able to assess the quality of order handling services provided by their
broker-dealers'' and to allow customers to determine ``whether their
broker-dealers are effectively managing potential conflicts of
interest.'' \12\
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\11\ 17 CFR 242.606(a) (``SEC Rule 606(a)''). See also Notice,
supra note 5, at 74672.
\12\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 84528 (November 2,
2018), 83 FR 58338 (November 19, 2018) (``SEC Rule 606 Adopting
Release''). A broker-dealer must attempt to execute a ``held'' order
immediately, while a ``not held'' order instead provides a broker-
dealer with price and time discretion. Id. at 58344. See also
Notice, supra note 5, at 74672 n.5.
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As described below and in more detail in the Notice, FINRA proposes
to adopt FINRA Rule 6470 (Disclosure of Order Routing Information for
OTC Equity Securities), which imposes disclosure requirements for OTC
Equity Securities that are generally aligned with the requirements of
SEC Rule 606(a) disclosures but with modifications to account for
differences between the over-the-counter (``OTC'') markets and the
market for NMS securities. In addition, to improve the accessibility of
these new disclosures, as well as SEC Rule 606(a) reports, FINRA
proposes to adopt FINRA Rule 6470(d) and FINRA Rule 6151 (Disclosure of
Order Routing Information for NMS Securities) to require members to
send both disclosures to FINRA for centralized publication on the FINRA
website.
Proposed FINRA Rule 6470 would require the publication of order
routing disclosures for OTC Equity Securities.\13\ Specifically,
proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a) would require every member to make publicly
available for each calendar quarter a report on its routing of non-
directed orders in OTC Equity Securities that are submitted on a held
basis during that quarter, broken down by calendar month, and keep such
report posted on an internet website that is free and readily
accessible to the public for a period of three years from the initial
date of posting on the internet website (``OTC Equity Security
reports'').\14\ These reports would be required to be separated into
three sections: (i) domestic OTC Equity Securities; (ii) American
Depository Receipts and foreign ordinaries that are OTC Equity
Securities; and (iii) Canadian-listed securities trading in the United
States as OTC Equity Securities.\15\ In addition, proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a) would specify that the new OTC Equity Security reports must be
made available using the most recent versions of the XML schema and
associated PDF renderer as published on the FINRA website,\16\ and
proposed FINRA Rule 6470(d) would require the reports to be made
publicly available within one month after the end of the quarter
addressed in the report.\17\
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\13\ See Notice, supra note 3, at 74672 n.8.
\14\ Proposed FINRA Rule 6470 would apply to ``every member,''
but FINRA notes that the focus of the proposed disclosures is held
orders from customers in OTC Equity Securities, and some members may
not engage in any activities involving held orders from customers in
OTC Equity Securities. See Notice, supra note 5 at 74673 n.9. If a
member does not accept any orders in OTC Equity Securities from
customers during a given calendar quarter (whether held or not
held), such member would not be required to publish a report under
Rule 6470 for that quarter. Id. Similarly, a member that accepted
only not held orders in OTC Equity Securities from customers--but no
held orders in OTC Equity Securities from customers--during a given
calendar quarter would not be required to publish a report for that
quarter. Id. Further, FINRA states that if a member accepted orders
in OTC Equity Securities (whether held, not held, or both) only from
other broker-dealers, but not from customers, during a given
calendar quarter, such member would not be required to publish a
report for that quarter. Id.
\15\ FINRA states that to provide for consistency across member
reports, FINRA will publish a list of the OTC Equity Security
symbols that fall under each category, and members would be required
to publish reports in a manner consistent with such list. See
Notice, supra note 5, at 74673. FINRA states that it will provide
information in the Regulatory Notice announcing the effective date
regarding where members may access the list of OTC Equity Security
symbols that FINRA will maintain on its website. Id. at 74674 n.11.
FINRA also notes that these categories differ from the NMS
securities categories required to be reported for SEC Rule 606(a)
reports, which it believes are not relevant to the OTC market. Id.
\16\ FINRA states that it will publish the technical
specifications for the XML schema and associated PDF renderer on its
website for member use in generating the new reports. See Notice,
supra note 5, at 74673 n.12. FINRA expects that, subject to the
differences between the SEC Rule 606(a) reports and the OTC Equity
Security reports, the XML schema and associated PDF renderer
published by FINRA would be substantially similar to those published
by the SEC for the SEC Rule 606(a) reports. Id. FINRA believes this
requirement would ensure that reports are generated and published in
standardized machine-readable and human-readable forms, which would
benefit investors by permitting the public to more easily analyze
and compare the OTC Equity Security reports across members, as well
as to more easily perform combined analysis of both SEC Rule 606(a)
and OTC Equity Security reports. Id. at 74763.
\17\ FINRA states that it understands that some introducing
firms route all of their orders in OTC Equity Securities to one or
more clearing firms for further routing to other venues for
execution. See Notice, supra note 5 at 74673 n.10. FINRA states that
the Commission has provided guidance that, where an introducing firm
routes all of its covered orders to one or more clearing firms for
further routing and execution and the clearing firm in fact makes
the routing decision, the introducing firm generally may comply with
the SEC Rule 606(a) order routing disclosure requirements by: (i)
disclosing its relationship with the clearing firm(s) on its website
that includes any payment for order flow received by the introducing
firm, and (ii) adopting the clearing firm's disclosures by
reference, provided that the introducing firm has examined the
report and does not have reason to believe it materially
misrepresents the order routing practices. Id. FINRA states that it
intends to provide parallel guidance with respect to proposed FINRA
Rule 6470. Id.
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Pursuant to proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a), the new OTC Equity
Security reports would be required to include the information specified
in paragraphs (a)(1) through (4) of proposed FINRA Rule 6470,
specifically:
the percentage of total orders \18\ for the section that
were not held orders and held orders, and the percentage of held orders
for the section that were non-directed orders; \19\
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\18\ FINRA states that ``total orders'' would include all orders
from customers for the section, including both directed and non-
directed orders from customers. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74673
n.14.
\19\ FINRA states that for purposes of the proposed disclosures,
a ``non-directed order'' would mean any order from a customer other
than a directed order. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74673-74 n.15.
FINRA further states that consistent with the definition of
``directed order'' under Regulation NMS, a ``directed order'' would
mean an order from a customer that the customer specifically
instructed the member to route to a particular venue for execution.
See id.; 17 CFR 242.600(b). FINRA notes that, similar to the
definition of ``customer'' under SEC Rule 600(b)(23) of Regulation
NMS, a ``customer'' is defined under FINRA rules to exclude a broker
or dealer. See FINRA Rule 0160(b)(4). Orders from other broker-
dealers would therefore be excluded from the proposed disclosures.
See Notice, supra note 5, at 74673-74 n.15.
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the identity of the ten venues to which the largest number
of total non-directed held orders for the section were
[[Page 53562]]
routed for execution \20\ and of any venue to which five percent or
more of non-directed held orders for the section were routed for
execution, and the percentage of total non-directed held orders for the
section routed to the venue; \21\
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\20\ FINRA states that, consistent with the Commission's
approach to SEC Rule 606(a), a ``venue'' would be defined broadly to
cover any market center or any other person or entity to which a
member routes orders for execution. See Notice, supra note 5, at
74674 n.16. Accordingly, for purposes of proposed FINRA Rule 6470,
where an alternative trading system (``ATS'') offers both automatic
order execution and order delivery functionality, the ATS should be
identified as the venue only when the ATS provides order execution.
Conversely, for purposes of proposed FINRA Rule 6470, in cases where
the ATS instead provides order delivery, the separate market center
to which the orders are delivered--e.g., a market maker or other
ATS--should be identified as the venue where the order was routed
for execution. Id.
\21\ Proposed FINRA Rule 6470(b) would provide that a member is
not required to identify execution venues that received less than 5%
of non-directed held orders for a section of the member's OTC Equity
Security report, provided that the member has identified the top
execution venues that in the aggregate received at least 90% of the
member's total non-directed held orders for the section. FINRA
states that this provision is consistent with exemptive relief that
the Commission has provided with respect to SEC Rule 606(a) reports.
See Notice, supra note 5, at 74674 n.17.
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for each identified venue, the net aggregate amount of any
payment for order flow received, payment from any profit-sharing
relationship received, transaction fees paid, and transaction rebates
received, both as a total dollar amount and per order, for all non-
directed held orders for the section; and
a discussion of the material aspects of the member's
relationship with each identified venue, including, without limitation,
a description of any arrangement for payment for order flow and any
profit-sharing relationship and a description of any terms of such
arrangements, written or oral, that may influence a member's order
routing decision including, among other things: (i) incentives for
equaling or exceeding an agreed upon order flow volume threshold, such
as additional payments or a higher rate of payment; disincentives for
failing to meet an agreed upon minimum order flow threshold, such as
lower payments or the requirement to pay a fee; (ii) volume-based
tiered payment schedules; and (iii) agreements regarding the minimum
amount of order flow that the member would send to a venue.\22\
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\22\ FINRA states that the types of arrangements referenced
above are not an exhaustive list of terms of payment for order flow
arrangements or profit-sharing relationships that may influence a
broker-dealer's order routing decision that would be required to be
disclosed. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74674 n.18. For example, if
a broker-dealer receives a discount on executions in other
securities or some other advantage in directing order flow in a
specific security to a venue, or if a broker-dealer receives equity
rights in a venue in exchange for directing order flow there, then
all terms of those arrangements would also be required to be
disclosed. Id. Similarly, if a broker-dealer receives variable
payments or discounts based on order types and the number of orders
sent to a venue, such arrangements would be required to be
disclosed. Id. However, FINRA notes that these are only examples,
and a member would be required to disclose any other material
aspects of its relationship with each identified venue regardless of
whether a particular example is listed in the proposed rule text or
otherwise discussed in this proposed rule change. Id.
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To make both the existing SEC Rule 606(a) reports and the new OTC
Equity Security reports more accessible for regulators, investors and
others seeking to analyze and compare the data, FINRA is proposing to
require that members provide the reports to FINRA for central
publication on the FINRA website. Proposed FINRA Rule 6151 would
require every member that is required to publish a SEC Rule 606(a)
report to provide the report to FINRA, in a manner prescribed by FINRA,
within the same time and in the same formats that such report is
required to be made publicly available pursuant to SEC Rule 606(a). In
combination with proposed FINRA Rule 6470(d), which would require
members to provide the OTC Equity Security report to FINRA within one
month after the end of the quarter addressed in the report in such a
manner as may be prescribed by FINRA, FINRA would be able to publish
both SEC Rule 606(a) and OTC Equity Security reports on its public
website, free of charge and without usage restrictions.\23\
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\23\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74674-75. FINRA states that
the SEC has provided guidance that introducing firms may comply with
SEC Rule 606(a) by incorporating their clearing firm(s)'s reports in
specified circumstances, and FINRA intends to provide similar
guidance with respect to the OTC Equity Security reports required
under proposed FINRA Rule 6470. Id. at 74675 n.25. To facilitate
centralized access to the reports, such introducing firms must
provide FINRA with a list of their clearing firm(s) and the
hyperlink to the web page where they disclose their clearing firm
relationship(s) and adopt the clearing firm(s)'s reports by
reference. Id. Each introducing firm relying on this guidance would
be required to provide this information to FINRA upon implementation
of the proposed rule change and to update FINRA if the information
previously provided changes. Id. This information will enable FINRA
to provide investors with relevant information for all firms,
including introducing firms incorporating clearing firm reports by
reference, on FINRA's website. Id.
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FINRA states that it undertook an ``economic impact assessment'' to
analyze the potential economic impacts of the proposed rule change,
including potential costs, benefits, and distributional and competitive
effects, relative to the current baseline.\24\ In this analysis, FINRA
analyzed the number of firms quoting, executing trades and routing
orders in OTC Equity Securities over specific time periods, as well as
the number of symbols traded per firm and average dollar volume of
trading per symbol and per firm. In addition, FINRA published the
proposed rule change in Regulatory Notice 21-35 (October 2021) and
received five comments in response.\25\ FINRA provided these comments,
as well as a summary of these comments and its responses in its filing
with the Commission.\26\
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\24\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74675-78.
\25\ Comments received by FINRA are available on FINRA's website
at https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/notices/21-35#comments.
\26\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74678-80.
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III. Discussion and Commission Findings
After careful review, the Commission finds that the proposed rule
change is consistent with the requirements of the Exchange Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national securities
association.\27\ In particular, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) of the Exchange
Act,\28\ which requires, among other things, that the association's
rules be designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove
impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and
a national market system, and, in general, to protect investors and the
public interest, and that the rules are not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
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\27\ In approving this proposed rule change, the Commission has
considered the proposed rule's impact on efficiency, competition,
and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\28\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
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The Commission received two comment letters that were broadly
supportive of the proposed rule change and greater transparency
regarding the routing of orders in OTC Equity Securities in
general.\29\ Another commenter submitted three comment letters, and was
supportive of some aspects of the proposal, but expressed concerns
about and opposed other aspects of the proposal, as discussed
below.\30\
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\29\ See letters to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission,
from G.P., dated November 30, 2022; and from Daniel Lambden, dated
December 5, 2022.
\30\ See letters to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission,
from Howard Meyerson, Managing Director, Financial Information
Forum, dated December 20, 2022 (``FIF Letter''), dated February 3,
2023 (``FIF Letter II''), and dated April 13, 2023 (``FIF Letter
III''). The commenter is supportive of some aspects of the proposal,
including: FINRA's proposal to maintain the same quarterly reporting
timeframe for OTC Equity Security reports as applies for SEC Rule
606(a) reporting; FINRA's chosen OTC Equity Security reporting
categories; FINRA's assertion that it will publish and maintain a
file of which symbols are included in each OTC Equity Security
category and make this file accessible to all industry members
without charge; FINRA's approach of not requiring the OTC Equity
Security reports to be broken out by order type; FINRA's proposal to
require reporting of payments per executed order rather than per
share; FINRA's decision to limit the OTC Equity Security reports to
non-directed held orders; and proposed FINRA Rule 6470(b) which
would provide a limited exception to venue reporting requirements in
proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(2). See FIF Letter at 7-9. The commenter
and FINRA both state that the proposal to require reporting of
payments per executed order rather than per share is consistent with
current industry practice for OTC Equity Securities. See id.;
Notice, supra note 5, at 74674.
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[[Page 53563]]
A. Disclosure in the Routing Firm Scenario
Among other things, proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a) requires a member
to disclose the identity of the ten venues to which the largest number
of total non-directed held orders for the section were routed for
execution and of any venue to which five percent or more of non-
directed held orders for the section were routed for execution.\31\ The
commenter states that it opposes this aspect of the proposal because
the proposed FINRA rule, like SEC Rule 606(a), would require a
reporting firm that receives and routes customer orders to a second
firm (``routing firm'') that does not execute customer orders but
routes those orders to other venues for execution (``routing firm
scenario''), to disclose the venue to which the routing firm routes the
customer orders for execution.\32\ The commenter states that this
requires the reporting firm to report the net fees paid and rebates
received between the routing firm and the execution venue in the OTC
Equity Security report tables (i.e., the disclosures required by
proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(3)) and material aspects disclosures (i.e.,
the disclosures required by proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(4)).\33\ The
commenter states that the proposed FINRA rule, like SEC Rule 606(a),
does not require the reporting of the net fees paid or rebates received
between the reporting firm and the routing firm in the OTC Equity
Security report tables.\34\
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\31\ See proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(2).
\32\ See FIF Letter at 2. The commenter describes what it
believes is a ``highly problematic `look-through' approach'' used by
the Commission in its application of SEC Rule 606(a) and its
predecessor rule, Rule 11Ac1-6, to the routing firm scenario. See
id. at 2; and FIF Letter III at 4-5. The commenter states that this
``look-through'' approach was not included in the text of Rule
606(a) nor discussed in the 2018 amendments to Rule 606(a)
reporting. The Commission highlights that the requirement in SEC
Rule 606(a) to report the venues to which orders were routed ``for
execution'' has been in place since Rule 11Ac1-6 was originally
adopted in 2000. In the Rule 11Ac1-6 adopting release, the
Commission stated that ``[t]he term `venue' is intended to be
interpreted broadly to cover `market centers' within the meaning of
Rule 11Ac1-5(a)(14), as well as any other person or entity to which
a broker routes non-directed orders for execution. Consequently, the
term excludes an entity that is used merely as a vehicle to route an
order to a venue selected by the broker-dealer.'' (emphasis in the
original). See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 43590 (November
17, 2000), 65 FR 75414, 75427 n.63 (December 1, 2000).
\33\ See FIF Letter at 2. See also proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a)(3) and (4).
\34\ See FIF Letter at 2. See also proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a)(3).
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The commenter states that this approach obscures relevant
information from retail customers because, to understand the financial
inducements faced by a reporting firm, the relevant information is the
payment between the reporting firm and the routing firm. The commenter
also states that this results in reported data that is not comparable
across broker-dealers.\35\ In addition, the commenter states that the
approach results in reporting of arrangements that are not relevant to
investors and results in relevant and important information being
excluded from the reports.\36\ The commenter also states that this
approach requires firms to report on financial arrangements to which
they might not be a party, that the rules do not impose any obligation
on the routing firm to provide data to the reporting firm, and a
reporting firm cannot effectively validate the data received from
routing firms, particularly in situations where a foreign routing firm
routes to a foreign execution venue.\37\ The commenter further states
that the rule filing does not explicitly discuss the costs for this
reporting.\38\ The commenter also suggests that if FINRA adopts this
reporting, then proposed FINRA Rule 6470 should be revised to address
the routing firm scenario, because the proposed rule does not
accurately describe what firms are required to report.\39\
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\35\ See id. at 3-4.
\36\ See FIF Letter III at 3-5. In FIF Letter III, the commenter
sets forth a scenario of order routing reporting under SEC Rule
606(a) that inaccurately reflects the requirements of such rule. In
the scenario, FIF incorrectly assumes reporting is based on the
number of orders routed by the reporting broker-dealer instead of
the number of orders received by the reporting broker-dealer from
the customer as required by SEC Rule 606(a). See id. at 4-5; see
also letter to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission, from
Robert McNamee, Vice President & Associate General Counsel, FINRA,
dated June 23, 2023 (``FINRA Letter II'') at 3 n.12.
\37\ See FIF Letter at 5.
\38\ See id. at 5.
\39\ See id. at 6; FIF Letter III at 6.
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FINRA believes that the proposal is clear concerning the execution
venue reporting requirement.\40\ FINRA states that, as is the case with
SEC Rule 606(a), the plain language of proposed Rule 6470(a)(2)
requires disclosure of venues to which orders ``were routed for
execution.'' \41\ FINRA highlights that, consistent with SEC Rule
606(a), the purpose of its proposed disclosures is to provide
information about members' order routing practices and potential
conflicts of interest related to execution venues and, therefore, FINRA
believes that the same types of venues should be covered by its new OTC
Equity Security reports as are covered by SEC Rule 606(a) reports.\42\
FINRA also states that members already have experience with SEC Rule
606(a) and may be able to utilize existing systems and arrangements
with routing firms to provide the disclosures, and that aligning the
scope of the SEC Rule 606(a) and OTC Equity Security reports may also
reduce potential investor confusion that could arise with similar
reports that do not provide information about the same types of
venues.\43\
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\40\ See letter to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary, Commission,
from Robert McNamee, Associate General Counsel, FINRA, dated March
29, 2023 (``FINRA Letter'') at 5 and FINRA Letter II at 2-4.
\41\ See FINRA Letter at 5. FINRA also states that, if a member
routes to another broker-dealer that does not itself execute orders,
that receiving broker-dealer would not be an execution venue under
the text of the proposed rule. See id. Additionally, FINRA has
undertaken an economic impact assessment that analyzed, among other
things, the potential costs and benefits of the proposal as
described in the filing, which clearly contemplates disclosure of
execution venues rather than routing brokers. See id. FINRA's
assessment of costs is based on its experience with order routing
reporting and adequately describes the costs of producing the
report.
\42\ See FINRA Letter at 4.
\43\ See id.
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FINRA states that it is appropriate to require reporting firms to
provide information on the routing firm's arrangements with execution
venues because reporting firms are responsible for their order handling
choices, and FINRA believes that it is reasonable to require reporting
firms to obtain and disclose the required information from broker-
dealers they choose to use as their routing firms, including where a
routing firm or an execution venue is located abroad.\44\ In addition,
FINRA states that ``requiring disclosure of execution venues would make
the reports more easily comparable across reporting firms, as the
reports would all include information about the financial inducements
that may influence a member's decision to route to
[[Page 53564]]
destinations where the order may be executed by the recipient venue.''
\45\
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\44\ See id.
\45\ See id. While the financial inducements between a reporting
firm and a routing firm are not disclosed pursuant to proposed FINRA
Rule 6470(a)(3), FINRA states that, consistent with SEC Rule 606(a),
such information may be disclosed in the report's discussion of the
material aspects of the member's relationship with an execution
venue pursuant to proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(4). See id. at 4-5
n.14; see also FINRA Letter II at 4.
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Proposed FINRA Rule 6470, like SEC Rule 606(a), requires the
routing report to cover venues to which orders are ``routed for
execution.'' \46\ If a routing firm does not execute orders, then it
cannot be the venue to which orders were ``routed for execution,'' and
thus the obligation of the reporting firm is to report the relevant
information for the execution venues to which the routing firm routes
orders to for execution.\47\ In response to comments challenging
reporting based on the venue to which orders are routed for execution,
specifically that the proposed rule is not clear and does not result in
comparable data, the Commission agrees with FINRA that requiring the
OTC Equity Security report to cover venues to which orders are ``routed
for execution'' would ensure that the reports include information about
the financial inducements that may influence a member's decision to
route to destinations where the order may be executed by the recipient
venue (whether routing orders itself or through an agent routing
firm).\48\ It is reasonable and appropriate that the scope of
disclosures required by proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a) aligns with the
scope of the requirements of SEC Rule 606(a) by requiring the reports
to include information for venues to which orders are ``routed for
execution,'' which would ensure consistency across such reports. In
addition, proposed FINRA Rule 6470 clearly and adequately addresses the
application of the rule to the routing firm scenario raised by the
commenter. The Commission also agrees with FINRA that requiring
disclosure of execution venues would make the reports more easily
comparable across reporting firms, as the reports would all include
information about the financial inducements that may influence a
member's decision to route to destinations where the order may be
executed by the recipient venue. In response to comments raising cost
concerns, FINRA has undertaken an economic impact assessment that
analyzed, among other things, the potential costs and benefits of the
proposal that was based on its experience with order routing reporting.
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\46\ 17 CFR 242.606(a)(2); proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a)(2).
\47\ See supra notes 20-21 and accompanying text.
\48\ The Commission disagrees with commenter concerns that this
approach obscures relevant information from retail customers,
because, to the extent that a reporting firm receives financial
inducements from a routing firm when routing orders to an execution
venue, such financial inducements may be reported pursuant to FINRA
Rule 6470(a) as material aspects of the routing firm's relationship
with the execution venue. See Notice, supra note 5, at 74674 n.18.
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B. OTC Equities With a Limited Number of Available Execution Venues
The commenter states that there are a significant number of OTC
stocks that have a limited number of available execution venues (in
many cases, only one or two market centers), and states that there is a
potential risk that investors viewing the report for these stocks would
see a high percentage of order flow being routed to one or two venues
without appropriate context of the limited choices available to the
reporting firm and that some firms with lower trading volume in OTC
Equity Securities could have routing relationships with a limited
number of market makers.\49\ The commenter suggests that FINRA should
identify this as a factor for investors to consider when reviewing a
member's OTC Equity Security report.\50\ FINRA responds that, while the
OTC Equity Securities market differs from the NMS securities market in
the number of available execution venues, it intends to, as
appropriate, provide members, investors, and others with information
and otherwise engage in investor education efforts about the purpose,
content, and potential limitation of the reports.\51\ In addition,
FINRA states that members could also provide additional explanatory
context regarding their OTC Equity Security reports, provided that such
information is accurate, not misleading, and otherwise complies with
other applicable SEC and FINRA requirements.\52\
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\49\ See FIF Letter at 8.
\50\ See id.
\51\ See FINRA Letter at 6.
\52\ See id.
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The Commission believes that the proposed OTC Equity Security
reports are appropriately designed to provide valuable information to
customers and others regarding a FINRA member's order routing practices
in OTC Equity Securities, which may elicit questions regarding such
practices, including when a high percentage of order flow is being
routed to a small number of venues. Among other things, the proposed
OTC Equity Security reports should help facilitate and inform customer
dialogues with their broker-dealers about the broker-dealers' order
routing practices in OTC Equity Securities. For example, if a customer
has questions about the number of execution venues or frequency of use
of an execution venue, the customer should discuss those questions with
their reporting broker. In those conversations, or through other means,
the reporting broker could also provide additional explanatory context
regarding their OTC Equity Security reports, provided that such
information is accurate, not misleading, and otherwise complies with
other applicable SEC and FINRA requirements.\53\
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\53\ See id. In addition, as described above, FINRA has stated
that as appropriate, it intends to provide members, investors, and
others with information and otherwise engage in investor education
efforts about the purpose, content, and potential limitation of the
reports. See id.
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C. Use of Consolidated Audit Trail (``CAT'') Data
The commenter also states that FINRA should consider whether
certain categories of data that firms are required to report in the OTC
Equity Security reports could be obtained by FINRA from the CAT.\54\ In
the filing, FINRA states that it is not proposing to use CAT data
because of restrictions on the use of CAT data, and because FINRA
believes the most efficient and comprehensive means of providing the
data included in the OTC Equity Security order routing disclosures is
for members to generate the reports directly.\55\ FINRA also states
that not all of the data required in the reports is also reported to
CAT.\56\ The Commission agrees with FINRA that the most efficient and
comprehensive means of obtaining the data included in the OTC Equity
Security report is from members directly. The CAT does not contain all
of the data required on the OTC Equity Security reports, while FINRA
members with reporting obligations under the new rule will have the
means of collecting and reporting the required data.
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\54\ FIF Letter at 6. The CAT is operated pursuant a national
market system plan approved by the Commission pursuant to Section
11A of the Exchange Act and the rules and regulations thereunder.
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 79318 (November 15, 2016),
81 FR 84696 (November 23, 2016).
\55\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74678-79.
\56\ See FINRA Letter at 3.
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D. Implementation and Comment Period
The commenter also raises concerns about implementation of the
proposal, stating that it is important to ensure that industry members
will have sufficient time to properly implement the planned
[[Page 53565]]
reporting changes.\57\ The commenter also states that the rule filing
does not provide clear guidance on reporting scenarios relating to
trading on OTC Link ATS and raises several hypothetical situations
where it believes OTC Link ATS should be reported as the execution
venue, as opposed to where the execution actually took place.\58\ In
the proposal, FINRA states that it intends to engage with members and
other interested parties prior to implementation of the proposed rule
change, including specifically to discuss order routing disclosures in
scenarios involving OTC Link ATS, as well as provide guidance as
appropriate on other interpretative questions.\59\ FINRA also provided
responses to the specific scenarios the commenter provided
demonstrating why the execution venue and not OTC Link ATS should be
reported under the proposed rules.\60\ FINRA reiterates that, for
purposes of the proposed disclosures for OTC Equity Securities, a
``venue'' would be defined broadly to cover any market center or any
other person or entity to which a member routes for execution, and
consequently would exclude an entity that is used merely as a vehicle
to route an order to a venue selected by the broker-dealer.\61\ Thus,
FINRA states that, for purposes of proposed Rule 6470, where an
alternative trading system (``ATS'') offers both automatic order
execution and order delivery functionality, the ATS should be
identified as the venue only when the ATS provides order execution.\62\
FINRA believes identification of the ATS in these circumstances is
appropriate because the ATS is the venue where the order was routed
``for execution,'' consistent with SEC Rule 606(a).\63\ FINRA also
believes that, for purposes of proposed Rule 6470, in cases where the
ATS instead provides order delivery, the separate market center to
which the orders are delivered--e.g., a market maker or other ATS--
should be identified as the venue where the order was routed for
execution.\64\
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\57\ FIF Letter at 9-10. The commenter specifically requests
that any implementation timetable should run from the date that
FINRA publishes technical specifications, schemas, interpretive FAQs
and other applicable documentation. Id. at 9.
\58\ FIF Letter at 6 and FIF Letter II at 2-4.
\59\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74680. See also FINRA Letter
at 7-8, stating that FINRA recognizes that members will require
sufficient time to implement the new disclosure requirements,
intends to provide an appropriate amount of time for implementation
of the proposal, will work with the industry to publish technical
specifications appropriately in advance of the implementation date,
and will also publish interpretive guidance to the extent needed--
including on routing scenarios unique to certain platforms in the
OTC Equity Security market--with sufficient time allowed for
implementation.
\60\ See FINRA Letter II at 6-8.
\61\ See id. at 6.
\62\ Id.
\63\ Id.
\64\ Id.
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The Commission believes that FINRA's statements with respect to
implementation are reasonable and appropriate. As stated above, FINRA
recognizes that members will require sufficient time to implement the
new disclosure requirements, intends to provide an appropriate amount
of time for implementation of the proposal, will work with the industry
to publish technical specifications appropriately in advance of the
implementation date, and will also publish interpretive guidance to the
extent needed--including on routing scenarios unique to certain
platforms in the OTC Equity Security market--with sufficient time
allowed for implementation. In addition, FINRA has stated that it will
announce the effective date of the proposed rule change in a Regulatory
Notice and the effective date will be no later than 365 days following
publication of the Regulatory Notice.\65\ Also, some broker-dealers
will have familiarity and the ability to more easily produce OTC Equity
Security reports due to experience in producing SEC Rule 606(a) reports
for NMS securities, making the implementation reasonable and
appropriate.
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\65\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74675.
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Moreover, the commenter expresses concern that there was not
sufficient time to comment on this proposal.\66\ The Commission,
however, published the proposal for comment; designated a longer period
within which to approve the proposed rule change, disapprove the
proposed rule change, or institute proceedings; instituted proceedings;
and extended its time to act on the proposal,\67\ during which time the
commenter submitted three comment letters. Accordingly, there has been
sufficient opportunity for comment on the proposal.
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\66\ See FIF Letter at 10.
\67\ See supra notes 7-9 and accompanying text.
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E. Centralized Hosting of Order Routing Disclosures
The commenter states that its members support centralized
publication of SEC Rule 606(a) reports and the OTC Equity Security
reports by FINRA, but states that if FINRA will publish these reports
that firms should no longer be required to separately publish these
reports on their own websites, and instead firms should be required to
provide a link from its public website to the applicable section of the
FINRA website.\68\ The commenter also suggests that FINRA create a
database with structured firm routing report data that can be accessed
through automated queries.\69\ FINRA confirms that a member would
satisfy the proposed requirement to publish the new OTC Equity Security
reports on the member's website by including a link from its own
website to the FINRA web page hosting centralized publication of OTC
Equity Security reports.\70\ With respect to the commenter's
recommendation that FINRA create a structured database that users may
query, FINRA states that it is not contemplating such a database
currently but will continue to consider ways to facilitate investor
access to, and the usefulness of, the OTC Equity Security reports.\71\
In addition, FINRA states in the proposal that it intends to engage in
investor education efforts regarding the purpose, content, and
potential limitations of the disclosures.\72\
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\68\ FIF Letter at 7.
\69\ Id.
\70\ See FINRA Letter at 2.
\71\ Id.
\72\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74675 n.23.
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SEC Rule 606(a) reports are required to be made publicly available
within one month after the end of the quarter addressed in the report
pursuant to Commission rule and such requirement is not affected by
this proposal.\73\ With respect to OTC Equity Security reports required
by proposed FINRA Rule 6470, it is reasonable for the OTC Equity
Security reports to be required to be disclosed publicly in a similar
manner to SEC Rule 606(a) reports. These proposed changes are
reasonably designed to make order routing disclosures more accessible
to investors and other relevant stakeholders. Consolidating order
routing reports onto a single website could assist market participants,
investors and the public to more easily compare order routing
disclosures and practices across different firms and observe changes in
routing behaviors over time.\74\
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\73\ 17 CFR 242.606(a).
\74\ At the time it adopted amendments to SEC Rule 606 in 2018,
the Commission declined to require a centralized repository for SEC
Rule 606(a) reports, although it stated that a centralized
repository could help facilitate the goal of enabling customers to
more readily and meaningfully assess broker-dealers' order handling
practices. See SEC Rule 606 Adopting Release, supra note 12, at
58377-78 for the Commission's rationale for not adopting that
requirement. Here, FINRA has determined that it is appropriate to
centralize its members' SEC Rule 606(a) and OTC Equity Security
reports to make the reports more accessible for regulators,
investors, and others seeking to analyze and compare the data.
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[[Page 53566]]
F. Symbol Categorization File
The commenter supports FINRA's proposal to publish and maintain a
file of which symbols are included in each OTC Equity Security category
without charge, but recommends making this file available prior to the
first day of each quarter for use in the upcoming quarter.\75\ The
commenter states that requiring daily updates to the list would
significantly increase the reporting burden without material impact on
aggregating data for the quarter.\76\ Consistent with the commenter's
request, FINRA confirms that it will make the symbol categorization
file available prior to the first day of each calendar quarter for use
during the entirety of the following quarter.\77\ The Commission
believes that publishing and maintaining a symbol categorization file,
which will be available prior to the first day of each quarter, is
appropriate and would ease members' reporting burden.
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\75\ FIF Letter at 7.
\76\ See id.
\77\ FINRA Letter at 2.
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G. Categorization of Held and Not Held Orders
The commenter supports FINRA's proposal to limit the OTC Equity
Security disclosures to non-directed held orders, but requests guidance
on the proposed requirement to report the percentage of not held and
held orders as a percentage of all orders.\78\ FINRA responds that it
believes that all orders are either held or not held because a firm
either has price and time discretion to execute the order, or it does
not.\79\ The Commission agrees with FINRA, and has discussed the
difference between held and not held orders and their separate
reporting requirements under Rule 606 of Regulation NMS.\80\
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\78\ See FIF Letter at 8.
\79\ See FINRA Letter at 6, also stating that consistent with
SEC guidance regarding the categorization of held and not held
orders for purposes of SEC Rule 606(a), orders should be categorized
as held or not held for purposes of the OTC Equity Security
disclosures based on whether the customer reasonably expects the
firm to attempt to execute its order immediately or instead
reasonably expects the firm to use its price and time discretion to
execute the order. FINRA Letter at 6 n.19, citing SEC Division of
Trading and Markets, Responses to Frequently Asked Questions
Concerning Rule 606 of Regulation NMS, Questions 15.01 through
15.04. The Commission notes that these FAQs represent the views of
the staff of the Division of Trading and Markets. They are not a
rule, regulation, or statement of Commission. The Commission has
neither approved nor disapproved their content. These FAQs, like all
staff statements, have no legal force or effect: they do not alter
or amend applicable law, and they create no new or additional
obligations for any person.
\80\ See SEC Rule 606 Adopting Release, supra note 12, at 58340-
41 and 58372.
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Overall, the proposed requirements relating to the disclosure of
order routing information for OTC Equity Securities are reasonably
designed to assist customers in evaluating the quality of the order
routing services of their broker-dealers and how well their broker-
dealers manage potential conflicts of interest with execution venues.
Customers would be better able to assess indirect and previously
unobservable costs of trading OTC Equity Securities, including, among
other things, payment for order flow and transaction fees paid less
rebates, which should allow customers to assess the performance of its
broker-dealer(s) and be better informed in making choices among firms.
The similarities in reporting requirements between proposed FINRA Rule
6470(a) and SEC Rule 606(a) should reduce the burden of reporting for
broker-dealers that already produce SEC Rule 606(a) reports, and the
proposed differences in reporting requirements for OTC Equity
Securities under proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a) and SEC Rule 606(a)
reports for NMS securities are reasonable and appropriate due to
differences in the nature of OTC Equity Securities and the markets in
which they trade.\81\
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\81\ See Notice, supra note 5, at 74674 (describing the
differences in reporting requirements for OTC Equity Securities
under proposed FINRA Rule 6470(a) and SEC Rule 606(a) reports for
NMS securities).
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For the foregoing reasons, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) \82\ of the Exchange
Act and the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national
securities association.
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\82\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
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IV. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Exchange Act,\83\ that the proposed rule change (SR-FINRA-2022-031) be,
and hereby is, approved.
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\83\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\84\
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\84\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023-16886 Filed 8-7-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P