Self-Regulatory Organizations; Nasdaq BX, Inc.; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Set Fees for the Purchase of Field-Programmable Gate Array Technology as an Optional Delivery Mechanism for BX Totalview, 57505-57508 [2023-18104]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 162 / Wednesday, August 23, 2023 / Notices
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include file number SR–
CboeBZX–2023–058 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.
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All submissions should refer to file
number SR–CboeBZX–2023–058. 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–CboeBZX–2023–058 and should be
submitted on or before September 13,
2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.76
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–18103 Filed 8–22–23; 8:45 am]
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–98158; File No. SR–BX–
2023–020]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Nasdaq
BX, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change To Set Fees for the
Purchase of Field-Programmable Gate
Array Technology as an Optional
Delivery Mechanism for BX Totalview
August 17, 2023.
Pursuant to section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on August 9,
2023, Nasdaq BX, Inc. (‘‘BX’’ or
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III, below, which Items have been
prepared by the Exchange. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to set fees for
the purchase of field-programmable gate
array (‘‘FPGA’’) technology as an
optional delivery mechanism for BX
TotalView.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/
rulebook/bx/rules, at the principal office
of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
1 15
76 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to establish a fee schedule for
the purchase of field-programmable gate
array (‘‘FPGA’’) technology as an
optional delivery mechanism for BX
TotalView (‘‘BX FPGA Service’’).3 This
follows a recently-filed proposal to offer
FPGA technology as an optional
delivery mechanism for BX TotalView.4
FPGA
FPGA is a hardware-based delivery
mechanism that utilizes an integrated
circuit that is programmed to reduce
‘‘jitter’’—a technical term of art referring
to the deviation in amplitude, phase
timing or width of a signal pulse in a
digital signal—that will allow data to be
processed in a more predictable, or
‘‘deterministic,’’ fashion. Reducing jitter
can be useful for certain customers due
to the variability in the timing of market
data packets transmitted by an exchange
over the course of the trading day.
Orders, and therefore market data
packets, typically accumulate in larger
numbers at the beginning and end of the
trading day, as well as during the peaks
of activity that occur at random
intervals during the day. These bursts of
activity may alter the time interval
between the delivery of data packets
because software processes information
at variable rates depending on load to
the system. Processing times may
increase at higher loads, and decrease
during periods of lesser activity. FPGA
technology processes data packets at a
constant time interval, without regard to
the number of packets processed. Higher
levels of determinism mean less variable
queuing, which improves the
predictability of data transfer,
particularly during times of peak market
activity.
3 This Proposal was initially filed by the
Exchange on May 23, 2023. See Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 97627 (May 31, 2023), 88 FR 37112
(June 6, 2023) (SR–BX–2023–014). On July 7, 2023,
that filing was withdrawn and replaced to provide
supplemental information. See Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 97946 (July 19, 2023), 88 FR 47937
(July 25, 2023) (SR–BX–2023–016). On August 9,
2023, the second filing was withdrawn and
replaced with the instant filing, which provides
additional information without changing the
Proposal in substance.
4 See SR–BX–2023–011 (‘‘A proposal to offer
field-programmable gate array (‘FPGA’) technology
as an optional delivery mechanism for BX
TotalView.’’), available at https://listingcenter.
nasdaq.com/rulebook/BX/rulefilings. A proposal to
establish a fee schedule for the use of FPGA
technology for the Phlx exchange is being filed
concurrently with this proposal.
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The benefits of determinism depend
on the use case of the customer, as well
as the customer’s specific system
architecture.
Higher determinism does not
necessarily mean lower latency. The
concepts of determinism and latency are
related, but distinct. Determinism refers
to predictability in the rate of data
transmission; latency refers to the time
required to process data or transport it
from one location to another. Low
latency is not necessarily deterministic,
and higher determinism does not
necessarily mean low latency. As such,
use of FPGA technology will increase
determinism, but does not guarantee
lower latency at all times.5
Among customers that seek a higher
degree of determinism, the benefits of
FPGA technology vary, as FPGA
technology is one possible solution,
among a catalog of possible solutions,
for increasing the consistency and
predictability of message throughput
over the course of the trading day. Some
customers are able to adequately control
jitter without using FPGA technology;
other customers address jitter using
specialized software, coding or other
design solutions in conjunction with
FPGA; still others use FPGA alone. The
specific choice depends on a complex
analysis of the customer’s information
technology systems in the context of
their particular use cases.
FPGA is a broadly-available,
commonly-used type of programmable
circuit that can be modified to suit
different use cases. It is used in a wide
spectrum of industries, including the
consumer electronics, automotive, and
aerospace, as well as in a variety of
industrial applications. It is not unique
to the financial services industry,6 or to
the Exchange.
FPGA technology has been offered by
the Nasdaq Stock Exchange for over a
decade, and the Nasdaq Options Market
for nearly as long,7 and has been cited
5 Because software can be impacted by workload,
FPGA technology in general can provide lower
latency during periods of peak activity. The same
FPGA technology that will support the BX FPGA
Service is also broadly commercially available for
purchase from third-party sellers unrelated to the
Exchange.
6 See, e.g., Contrive Datum Insights, ‘‘FieldProgrammable Gate Array (FPGA) Market is
expected to reach around USD 22.10 Billion by
2030, Grow at a CAGR of 15.12% during Forecast
Period 2023 to 2030,’’ (February 21, 2023), available
at https://www.globenewswire.com/en/newsrelease/2023/02/21/2612772/0/en/FieldProgrammable-Gate-Array-FPGA-Market-IsExpected-To-Reach-around-USD-22-10-Billion-by2030-Grow-at-a-CAGR-Of-15-12-during-ForecastPeriod-2023-To-2030-Data-By-Contrive-DatumI.html (describing the general size and state of the
FPGA market in 2023).
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67297
(June 28, 2012), 77 FR 39752 (July 5, 2012) (SR–
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by the SEC as an example of a
technology useful in the distribution of
market data products.8
The Exchange proposes to offer the
BX FPGA Service in conjunction with
the Exchange’s depth of book feed, BX
TotalView. BX TotalView is a real-time
market data product that provides full
order depth using a series of order
messages to track the life of customer
orders in the BX market, as well as trade
data for BX executions and
administrative messages such as
Trading Action messages, Symbol
Directory, and Event Control messages.9
Customers that choose to purchase BX
TotalView without the BX FPGA
Service will receive the same data as
customers that elect to purchase BX
TotalView with the BX FPGA Service.
Proposed Fees
BX proposes internal distribution fees
of $3,500 per month and external
distribution fees of $350 for the BX
FPGA Service; customers that elect to
use the BX FPGA Service for both
internal and external distribution will
pay both fees.10 These fees are in
addition to Market Data Distributor
Fees,11 fees for BX TotalView,12 and
other fees for Distribution Models.13
Customers that elect to receive BX depth
of book data without using the BX FPGA
Service will pay no fee in addition to
the underlying fees listed above.
The proposed fees for the BX FPGA
Service are substantially lower than fees
for the Nasdaq FPGA Service, which are
set at $25,000 per Distributor for
internal only distribution, $2,500 for
Nasdaq–2012–063) (introducing FPGA technology);
see also Nasdaq Data News 2012–13, available at
https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/TraderNews.
aspx?id=dn2012-13 (introducing TotalView FPGA
service as of August 1, 2012); Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 74745 (April 16, 2015), 80 FR
22588 (April 22, 2015) (SR–Nasdaq–2015–035)
(establishing FPGA for the Nasdaq Options Market);
The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC Rules, Equity 7,
Section 126(c) (Hardware-Based Delivery of Nasdaq
Depth data).
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90610,
86 FR 18596, 18647 (April 9, 2021) (File No. S7–
03–20) (listing field programmable gate array
services as an example of a technological
innovation that could be employed by competing
consolidators as part of the Market Data
Infrastructure rule).
9 See Nasdaq BX, Inc. Rules, Equity 7, Section 123
(BX TotalView); see also Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 59307 (January 28, 2009), 74 FR 6069
(February 4, 2009) (establishing fees for BX
TotalView).
10 The difference in amount for external and
external distribution reflects Nasdaq’s experience
that the Exchange’s FPGA hardware is best
employed at the point of ingestion, as the utility of
FPGA technology falls as the data moves farther
from the source.
11 See Nasdaq BX, Inc. Rules, Equity 7, Section
119.
12 See Id., Section 123.
13 See Id., Section 126.
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external only, and $27,500 for internal
and external distribution.14 The
difference is based, in part, on a
comparison of peak activity at the two
exchanges. As noted above, high levels
of determinism are particularly valuable
during periods of peak activity.
Although there is considerable
variation in the number of messages at
various peaks, as well as the duration of
peak activity, the proposed fees are
roughly comparable to the differences in
average peak activity at the BX exchange
relative to the Nasdaq exchange.
Exchange staff have also discussed the
proposed fees with customers, and
believe, based on those discussions and
their own business judgment, that the
proposed fees fairly reflect the value of
the BX FPGA Service. A number of
customers provisionally agree with this
assessment, and have indicated that
they are interested in testing it.
No other exchange currently offers
FPGA technology as a separate service
in conjunction with the delivery of a
proprietary data feed, and therefore
there are no other fees for comparison.
If BX is incorrect in its determination
that the proposed fees reflect the
underlying value of the BX FPGA
Service, customers will not purchase the
product. The BX FPGA Service is not
necessary for a customer to ingest and
process depth of book information, and
those customers that seek a higher
degree of determinism have a number of
options at their disposal to reduce jitter
without using the BX FPGA Service.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with section 6(b)
of the Act,15 in general, and furthers the
objectives of sections 6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5)
of the Act,16 in particular, in that it
provides for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees and other charges
among members and issuers and other
persons using any facility, and is not
designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers.
The Proposal is reasonable and
unlikely to burden the market because
the purchase of the BX FPGA Service is
optional for all categories of customers.
No customer and no category of
customers (such as, for example,
vendors, proprietary trading firms,
banks, hedge funds, market makers, or
high frequency trading firms) are
required to purchase the BX FPGA
14 See The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC Rules,
Equity 7 (Pricing Schedule), Section 126(c)
(Hardware-based delivery of Nasdaq depth data).
15 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
16 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4) and (5).
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 162 / Wednesday, August 23, 2023 / Notices
Service for either legal or technological
reasons—even a customer that seeks to
reduce jitter.17
The Nasdaq exchange has over ten
years of experience in selling the
Nasdaq FPGA Service. That experience
has shown that the vast majority of
Nasdaq depth customers do not find
value in the Nasdaq FPGA Service. The
Exchange expects customers that do not
find value in the Nasdaq FPGA Service
to make a similar decision with respect
to the BX FPGA Service, and continue
to ingest BX TotalView as they do now.
For those customers that may seek to
increase determinism, the purchase of
FPGA technology from the BX exchange
will be only one of several options
available. FPGA technology is not
unique to the Exchange or even the
financial services industry. Third-party
data vendors offer FPGA technology
services. Customers may also install
their own FPGA hardware for internal
use. All of these are viable options; the
benefits of any particular option will
depend on the particular customer’s
systems and use cases.
Customers may also choose not to
address jitter using FPGA technology at
all. As noted above, FPGA technology
processes the data at a consistently
predictable rate relative to software.
This predictability in the rate of
processing may not be advantageous or
optimal for all systems receiving the
exchange data feed.
The design of data processing
architecture is complex. The ingestion
of data from an exchange is just one step
in the life-cycle of trading. Customers
must also generate and submit orders,
evaluate trades, and then generate new
orders while interacting with multiple
exchanges. All of these steps are part of
a single trading system. Changing any
one step in the process—by, for
example, purchasing the BX FPGA
Service when other exchanges may not
offer FPGA—often results in the need
for changes to other aspects of the
process. As such, the decision to buy
the BX FPGA Service will be based on
whether the service is compatible with
the customer’s trading system as a
whole, not just on whether it may
facilitate the processing of data from a
single exchange. The appropriateness of
any particular solution will depend on
the customer’s system architecture, and
the specific use cases for the market
data consumed.
To illustrate the choice faced by
exchange customers, consider the
17 Not all customers of depth of book information
process at sufficiently high speeds for jitter to
become a concern. Neither FPGA hardware nor its
substitutes are required to ingest depth of book
information.
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decisions made by the two consolidated
data processors, the UTP and CTA
Plans, two different systems that use
dissimilar means to achieve an optimal
solution. Both perform the same task—
combining quotes and trades from all
U.S. exchanges into a consolidated data
feed with relatively low jitter. Yet only
one processor—the CTA Plan—uses
FPGA hardware, while the other—the
UTP Plan—does not.
This is because the UTP Plan’s design,
coding and hardware achieve the
desired level of determinism without
FPGA technology. The CTA Plan, by
contrast, elected to incorporate FPGA
technology into its system design.
Notwithstanding these different design
decisions, both plans achieve broadly
similar levels of performance. FPGA
technology is therefore not essential to
addressing jitter, but rather is one
option among many to address the
issue.
Market data customers face an array of
choices to optimize determinism, much
like the UTP and CTA Plans. For
example, a customer may purchase and
deploy its own FPGA hardware, without
purchasing the proposed FPGA
technology service from the Exchange,
after receiving data from the Exchange.
Another customer may find use of the
BX FPGA Service, which lowers the
level of jitter prior to the customer’s
receipt of the data, to be a better fit for
its system architecture. The solution
chosen will vary based on the needs and
design choices of the customer.
The experience of the Nasdaq
exchange in offering the Nasdaq FPGA
Service shows that customers sensitive
to jitter often avail themselves of
substitutes for FPGA technology, a
decision that can change over time.
Over the past decade, a total of 21
current or potential users of the Nasdaq
FPGA Service—all of which sought a
higher degree of determinism—
substituted the Nasdaq FPGA Service
with an alternative solution. Six of these
customers were in the process of
developing and testing the Nasdaq
FPGA Service, but ultimately decided
not to purchase it before completing this
process. The remaining 15 customers
purchased the Nasdaq FPGA Service,
only to cancel it after using it. Because
all of these customers continued to
utilize the underlying data, these
cancelations demonstrate that the BX
FPGA Service, like the Nasdaq FPGA
Service, will be an optional service,
even for those customers that seek to
reduce jitter.
Moreover, as noted above, no other
exchange currently offers FPGA
technology in conjunction with their
proprietary data feeds as a separate
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57507
service, notwithstanding the fact that it
is a widely available technology,
providing further evidence that
customers have multiple options at their
disposal to address jitter.
In the experience of the Nasdaq
exchange, the Nasdaq FPGA Service is
purchased by vendors, proprietary
trading firms, banks, high-frequency
trading firms, hedge funds, and market
makers. The Nasdaq exchange is aware
of no systematic differences within any
of these categories among market
participants that choose to use or not to
use the Nasdaq FPGA Service.
Few customers of Nasdaq TotalView
purchase the Nasdaq FPGA Service.
This is because the bulk of customers
consume Nasdaq TotalView for display
(i.e., human) usage. FPGA technology
impacts performance at a speed that a
human cannot process, and there is no
need for FPGA technology for such
usage.
Of the customers that receive Nasdaq
TotalView from Nasdaq (either through
a direct feed or an extranet connection),
and are in a position to utilize the
Nasdaq FPGA Service, only about 15
percent purchase it.
Most strikingly, only approximately
3% of market makers at Nasdaq
purchase the Nasdaq FPGA Service.18
This may seem a surprising result, given
that market makers, by definition, trade
throughout the day and during periods
of peak activity, but, as noted above,
customers have several options:
purchase FPGA services from a thirdparty vendor, implement FPGA
technology on their own, or configure
their systems to process data during
peaks without the use of FPGA. The fact
that only about 3% of market makers at
the Nasdaq exchange purchase the
Nasdaq FPGA Service demonstrates that
most customers make use of alternative
solutions. As such, the determining
factor in whether to purchase the
Nasdaq FPGA Service is not the
category of customer, but rather the
compatibility of that service with the
customer’s specific systems architecture
and technical requirements, which can
and do change over time as systems are
modified, replaced or updated.
For all of these reasons, customers can
discontinue the use of the BX FPGA
Service at any time, or decide not to
purchase it, for any reason, including
the level of fees.
18 The 3% figure represents the percentage of
designated market makers by market participant
identifier (‘‘MPID’’) that currently purchase the
Nasdaq FPGA Service relative to all MPIDs on the
Nasdaq Market Center. The MPID is a unique fourletter mnemonic assigned to each Participant in the
Nasdaq Market Center. A Participant may have one
or more than one MPID. See The Nasdaq Stock
Market LLC Rules, Equity 1, Section 1(a)(11).
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Customers that choose not to
purchase the BX FPGA Service are not
impacted by the proposal.
The BX FPGA Service will be
available to all customers on a nondiscriminatory basis, and therefore the
proposed fees are not designed to permit
unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
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The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
This Proposal, a response to customer
demand, is a product of a competitive
marketplace. To date, lower levels of
peak activity at the BX Exchange
relative to the Nasdaq exchange have
been associated with low levels of
customer interest in this product.
Recently, however, BX has heard from
customers interested in using FPGA
technology for BX TotalView. To
address this customer demand, and to
drive liquidity to the BX Exchange by
making it a more attractive trading
venue, BX has decided to offer this
product.
Approval of this Proposal will further
promote competition by providing
market participants additional choices
in the transmission of depth of book
data.
Nothing in the Proposal burdens
inter-market competition (the
competition among self-regulatory
organizations) because approval of the
Proposal does not impose any burden
on the ability of other exchanges to
compete. As noted above, FPGA
technology is generally available and
any exchange has the ability to offer it
if it so chooses.
Nothing in the Proposal burdens
intra-market competition (the
competition among consumers of
exchange data) because the BX FPGA
Service will be available to any
customer under the same fee schedule
as any other customer, and any market
participant that wishes to purchase the
BX FPGA Service can do so on a nondiscriminatory basis.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either
solicited or received.
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III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act.19
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is: (i) necessary or appropriate in
the public interest; (ii) for the protection
of investors; or (iii) otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
If the Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include file number SR–
BX–2023–020 on the subject line.
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–BX–2023–020 and should be
submitted on or before September 13,
2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.20
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–18104 Filed 8–22–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–98169; File No. SR–
NYSENAT–2023–17]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
National, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change To Amend Rule 7.44
August 18, 2023.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–BX–2023–020. 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,
Pursuant to section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on August 8,
2023, NYSE National, Inc. (‘‘NYSE
National’’ or the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘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 amend
Rule 7.44 to provide for a Retail
Liquidity Program. 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.
20 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
19 15
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 162 (Wednesday, August 23, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57505-57508]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-18104]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-98158; File No. SR-BX-2023-020]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Nasdaq BX, Inc.; Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Set Fees for the
Purchase of Field-Programmable Gate Array Technology as an Optional
Delivery Mechanism for BX Totalview
August 17, 2023.
Pursuant to section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on August 9, 2023, Nasdaq BX, Inc. (``BX'' or ``Exchange'') filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or ``Commission'') the
proposed rule change as described in Items I, II, and III, below, which
Items have been prepared by the Exchange. The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change from
interested persons.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to set fees for the purchase of field-
programmable gate array (``FPGA'') technology as an optional delivery
mechanism for BX TotalView.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/bx/rules, at the
principal office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public
Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The purpose of the proposed rule change is to establish a fee
schedule for the purchase of field-programmable gate array (``FPGA'')
technology as an optional delivery mechanism for BX TotalView (``BX
FPGA Service'').\3\ This follows a recently-filed proposal to offer
FPGA technology as an optional delivery mechanism for BX TotalView.\4\
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\3\ This Proposal was initially filed by the Exchange on May 23,
2023. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97627 (May 31, 2023),
88 FR 37112 (June 6, 2023) (SR-BX-2023-014). On July 7, 2023, that
filing was withdrawn and replaced to provide supplemental
information. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97946 (July 19,
2023), 88 FR 47937 (July 25, 2023) (SR-BX-2023-016). On August 9,
2023, the second filing was withdrawn and replaced with the instant
filing, which provides additional information without changing the
Proposal in substance.
\4\ See SR-BX-2023-011 (``A proposal to offer field-programmable
gate array (`FPGA') technology as an optional delivery mechanism for
BX TotalView.''), available at https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/BX/rulefilings. A proposal to establish a fee schedule for
the use of FPGA technology for the Phlx exchange is being filed
concurrently with this proposal.
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FPGA
FPGA is a hardware-based delivery mechanism that utilizes an
integrated circuit that is programmed to reduce ``jitter''--a technical
term of art referring to the deviation in amplitude, phase timing or
width of a signal pulse in a digital signal--that will allow data to be
processed in a more predictable, or ``deterministic,'' fashion.
Reducing jitter can be useful for certain customers due to the
variability in the timing of market data packets transmitted by an
exchange over the course of the trading day. Orders, and therefore
market data packets, typically accumulate in larger numbers at the
beginning and end of the trading day, as well as during the peaks of
activity that occur at random intervals during the day. These bursts of
activity may alter the time interval between the delivery of data
packets because software processes information at variable rates
depending on load to the system. Processing times may increase at
higher loads, and decrease during periods of lesser activity. FPGA
technology processes data packets at a constant time interval, without
regard to the number of packets processed. Higher levels of determinism
mean less variable queuing, which improves the predictability of data
transfer, particularly during times of peak market activity.
[[Page 57506]]
The benefits of determinism depend on the use case of the customer,
as well as the customer's specific system architecture.
Higher determinism does not necessarily mean lower latency. The
concepts of determinism and latency are related, but distinct.
Determinism refers to predictability in the rate of data transmission;
latency refers to the time required to process data or transport it
from one location to another. Low latency is not necessarily
deterministic, and higher determinism does not necessarily mean low
latency. As such, use of FPGA technology will increase determinism, but
does not guarantee lower latency at all times.\5\
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\5\ Because software can be impacted by workload, FPGA
technology in general can provide lower latency during periods of
peak activity. The same FPGA technology that will support the BX
FPGA Service is also broadly commercially available for purchase
from third-party sellers unrelated to the Exchange.
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Among customers that seek a higher degree of determinism, the
benefits of FPGA technology vary, as FPGA technology is one possible
solution, among a catalog of possible solutions, for increasing the
consistency and predictability of message throughput over the course of
the trading day. Some customers are able to adequately control jitter
without using FPGA technology; other customers address jitter using
specialized software, coding or other design solutions in conjunction
with FPGA; still others use FPGA alone. The specific choice depends on
a complex analysis of the customer's information technology systems in
the context of their particular use cases.
FPGA is a broadly-available, commonly-used type of programmable
circuit that can be modified to suit different use cases. It is used in
a wide spectrum of industries, including the consumer electronics,
automotive, and aerospace, as well as in a variety of industrial
applications. It is not unique to the financial services industry,\6\
or to the Exchange.
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\6\ See, e.g., Contrive Datum Insights, ``Field-Programmable
Gate Array (FPGA) Market is expected to reach around USD 22.10
Billion by 2030, Grow at a CAGR of 15.12% during Forecast Period
2023 to 2030,'' (February 21, 2023), available at https://www.globenewswire.com/en/news-release/2023/02/21/2612772/0/en/Field-Programmable-Gate-Array-FPGA-Market-Is-Expected-To-Reach-around-USD-22-10-Billion-by-2030-Grow-at-a-CAGR-Of-15-12-during-Forecast-Period-2023-To-2030-Data-By-Contrive-Datum-I.html (describing the
general size and state of the FPGA market in 2023).
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FPGA technology has been offered by the Nasdaq Stock Exchange for
over a decade, and the Nasdaq Options Market for nearly as long,\7\ and
has been cited by the SEC as an example of a technology useful in the
distribution of market data products.\8\
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\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67297 (June 28,
2012), 77 FR 39752 (July 5, 2012) (SR-Nasdaq-2012-063) (introducing
FPGA technology); see also Nasdaq Data News 2012-13, available at
https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/TraderNews.aspx?id=dn2012-13
(introducing TotalView FPGA service as of August 1, 2012);
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 74745 (April 16, 2015), 80 FR
22588 (April 22, 2015) (SR-Nasdaq-2015-035) (establishing FPGA for
the Nasdaq Options Market); The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC Rules,
Equity 7, Section 126(c) (Hardware-Based Delivery of Nasdaq Depth
data).
\8\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90610, 86 FR 18596,
18647 (April 9, 2021) (File No. S7-03-20) (listing field
programmable gate array services as an example of a technological
innovation that could be employed by competing consolidators as part
of the Market Data Infrastructure rule).
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The Exchange proposes to offer the BX FPGA Service in conjunction
with the Exchange's depth of book feed, BX TotalView. BX TotalView is a
real-time market data product that provides full order depth using a
series of order messages to track the life of customer orders in the BX
market, as well as trade data for BX executions and administrative
messages such as Trading Action messages, Symbol Directory, and Event
Control messages.\9\
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\9\ See Nasdaq BX, Inc. Rules, Equity 7, Section 123 (BX
TotalView); see also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59307
(January 28, 2009), 74 FR 6069 (February 4, 2009) (establishing fees
for BX TotalView).
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Customers that choose to purchase BX TotalView without the BX FPGA
Service will receive the same data as customers that elect to purchase
BX TotalView with the BX FPGA Service.
Proposed Fees
BX proposes internal distribution fees of $3,500 per month and
external distribution fees of $350 for the BX FPGA Service; customers
that elect to use the BX FPGA Service for both internal and external
distribution will pay both fees.\10\ These fees are in addition to
Market Data Distributor Fees,\11\ fees for BX TotalView,\12\ and other
fees for Distribution Models.\13\ Customers that elect to receive BX
depth of book data without using the BX FPGA Service will pay no fee in
addition to the underlying fees listed above.
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\10\ The difference in amount for external and external
distribution reflects Nasdaq's experience that the Exchange's FPGA
hardware is best employed at the point of ingestion, as the utility
of FPGA technology falls as the data moves farther from the source.
\11\ See Nasdaq BX, Inc. Rules, Equity 7, Section 119.
\12\ See Id., Section 123.
\13\ See Id., Section 126.
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The proposed fees for the BX FPGA Service are substantially lower
than fees for the Nasdaq FPGA Service, which are set at $25,000 per
Distributor for internal only distribution, $2,500 for external only,
and $27,500 for internal and external distribution.\14\ The difference
is based, in part, on a comparison of peak activity at the two
exchanges. As noted above, high levels of determinism are particularly
valuable during periods of peak activity.
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\14\ See The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC Rules, Equity 7 (Pricing
Schedule), Section 126(c) (Hardware-based delivery of Nasdaq depth
data).
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Although there is considerable variation in the number of messages
at various peaks, as well as the duration of peak activity, the
proposed fees are roughly comparable to the differences in average peak
activity at the BX exchange relative to the Nasdaq exchange. Exchange
staff have also discussed the proposed fees with customers, and
believe, based on those discussions and their own business judgment,
that the proposed fees fairly reflect the value of the BX FPGA Service.
A number of customers provisionally agree with this assessment, and
have indicated that they are interested in testing it.
No other exchange currently offers FPGA technology as a separate
service in conjunction with the delivery of a proprietary data feed,
and therefore there are no other fees for comparison.
If BX is incorrect in its determination that the proposed fees
reflect the underlying value of the BX FPGA Service, customers will not
purchase the product. The BX FPGA Service is not necessary for a
customer to ingest and process depth of book information, and those
customers that seek a higher degree of determinism have a number of
options at their disposal to reduce jitter without using the BX FPGA
Service.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with section
6(b) of the Act,\15\ in general, and furthers the objectives of
sections 6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5) of the Act,\16\ in particular, in that it
provides for the equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees and
other charges among members and issuers and other persons using any
facility, and is not designed to permit unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
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\15\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\16\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4) and (5).
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The Proposal is reasonable and unlikely to burden the market
because the purchase of the BX FPGA Service is optional for all
categories of customers. No customer and no category of customers (such
as, for example, vendors, proprietary trading firms, banks, hedge
funds, market makers, or high frequency trading firms) are required to
purchase the BX FPGA
[[Page 57507]]
Service for either legal or technological reasons--even a customer that
seeks to reduce jitter.\17\
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\17\ Not all customers of depth of book information process at
sufficiently high speeds for jitter to become a concern. Neither
FPGA hardware nor its substitutes are required to ingest depth of
book information.
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The Nasdaq exchange has over ten years of experience in selling the
Nasdaq FPGA Service. That experience has shown that the vast majority
of Nasdaq depth customers do not find value in the Nasdaq FPGA Service.
The Exchange expects customers that do not find value in the Nasdaq
FPGA Service to make a similar decision with respect to the BX FPGA
Service, and continue to ingest BX TotalView as they do now.
For those customers that may seek to increase determinism, the
purchase of FPGA technology from the BX exchange will be only one of
several options available. FPGA technology is not unique to the
Exchange or even the financial services industry. Third-party data
vendors offer FPGA technology services. Customers may also install
their own FPGA hardware for internal use. All of these are viable
options; the benefits of any particular option will depend on the
particular customer's systems and use cases.
Customers may also choose not to address jitter using FPGA
technology at all. As noted above, FPGA technology processes the data
at a consistently predictable rate relative to software. This
predictability in the rate of processing may not be advantageous or
optimal for all systems receiving the exchange data feed.
The design of data processing architecture is complex. The
ingestion of data from an exchange is just one step in the life-cycle
of trading. Customers must also generate and submit orders, evaluate
trades, and then generate new orders while interacting with multiple
exchanges. All of these steps are part of a single trading system.
Changing any one step in the process--by, for example, purchasing the
BX FPGA Service when other exchanges may not offer FPGA--often results
in the need for changes to other aspects of the process. As such, the
decision to buy the BX FPGA Service will be based on whether the
service is compatible with the customer's trading system as a whole,
not just on whether it may facilitate the processing of data from a
single exchange. The appropriateness of any particular solution will
depend on the customer's system architecture, and the specific use
cases for the market data consumed.
To illustrate the choice faced by exchange customers, consider the
decisions made by the two consolidated data processors, the UTP and CTA
Plans, two different systems that use dissimilar means to achieve an
optimal solution. Both perform the same task--combining quotes and
trades from all U.S. exchanges into a consolidated data feed with
relatively low jitter. Yet only one processor--the CTA Plan--uses FPGA
hardware, while the other--the UTP Plan--does not.
This is because the UTP Plan's design, coding and hardware achieve
the desired level of determinism without FPGA technology. The CTA Plan,
by contrast, elected to incorporate FPGA technology into its system
design. Notwithstanding these different design decisions, both plans
achieve broadly similar levels of performance. FPGA technology is
therefore not essential to addressing jitter, but rather is one option
among many to address the issue.
Market data customers face an array of choices to optimize
determinism, much like the UTP and CTA Plans. For example, a customer
may purchase and deploy its own FPGA hardware, without purchasing the
proposed FPGA technology service from the Exchange, after receiving
data from the Exchange. Another customer may find use of the BX FPGA
Service, which lowers the level of jitter prior to the customer's
receipt of the data, to be a better fit for its system architecture.
The solution chosen will vary based on the needs and design choices of
the customer.
The experience of the Nasdaq exchange in offering the Nasdaq FPGA
Service shows that customers sensitive to jitter often avail themselves
of substitutes for FPGA technology, a decision that can change over
time. Over the past decade, a total of 21 current or potential users of
the Nasdaq FPGA Service--all of which sought a higher degree of
determinism--substituted the Nasdaq FPGA Service with an alternative
solution. Six of these customers were in the process of developing and
testing the Nasdaq FPGA Service, but ultimately decided not to purchase
it before completing this process. The remaining 15 customers purchased
the Nasdaq FPGA Service, only to cancel it after using it. Because all
of these customers continued to utilize the underlying data, these
cancelations demonstrate that the BX FPGA Service, like the Nasdaq FPGA
Service, will be an optional service, even for those customers that
seek to reduce jitter.
Moreover, as noted above, no other exchange currently offers FPGA
technology in conjunction with their proprietary data feeds as a
separate service, notwithstanding the fact that it is a widely
available technology, providing further evidence that customers have
multiple options at their disposal to address jitter.
In the experience of the Nasdaq exchange, the Nasdaq FPGA Service
is purchased by vendors, proprietary trading firms, banks, high-
frequency trading firms, hedge funds, and market makers. The Nasdaq
exchange is aware of no systematic differences within any of these
categories among market participants that choose to use or not to use
the Nasdaq FPGA Service.
Few customers of Nasdaq TotalView purchase the Nasdaq FPGA Service.
This is because the bulk of customers consume Nasdaq TotalView for
display (i.e., human) usage. FPGA technology impacts performance at a
speed that a human cannot process, and there is no need for FPGA
technology for such usage.
Of the customers that receive Nasdaq TotalView from Nasdaq (either
through a direct feed or an extranet connection), and are in a position
to utilize the Nasdaq FPGA Service, only about 15 percent purchase it.
Most strikingly, only approximately 3% of market makers at Nasdaq
purchase the Nasdaq FPGA Service.\18\ This may seem a surprising
result, given that market makers, by definition, trade throughout the
day and during periods of peak activity, but, as noted above, customers
have several options: purchase FPGA services from a third-party vendor,
implement FPGA technology on their own, or configure their systems to
process data during peaks without the use of FPGA. The fact that only
about 3% of market makers at the Nasdaq exchange purchase the Nasdaq
FPGA Service demonstrates that most customers make use of alternative
solutions. As such, the determining factor in whether to purchase the
Nasdaq FPGA Service is not the category of customer, but rather the
compatibility of that service with the customer's specific systems
architecture and technical requirements, which can and do change over
time as systems are modified, replaced or updated.
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\18\ The 3% figure represents the percentage of designated
market makers by market participant identifier (``MPID'') that
currently purchase the Nasdaq FPGA Service relative to all MPIDs on
the Nasdaq Market Center. The MPID is a unique four-letter mnemonic
assigned to each Participant in the Nasdaq Market Center. A
Participant may have one or more than one MPID. See The Nasdaq Stock
Market LLC Rules, Equity 1, Section 1(a)(11).
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For all of these reasons, customers can discontinue the use of the
BX FPGA Service at any time, or decide not to purchase it, for any
reason, including the level of fees.
[[Page 57508]]
Customers that choose not to purchase the BX FPGA Service are not
impacted by the proposal.
The BX FPGA Service will be available to all customers on a non-
discriminatory basis, and therefore the proposed fees are not designed
to permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or
dealers.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
This Proposal, a response to customer demand, is a product of a
competitive marketplace. To date, lower levels of peak activity at the
BX Exchange relative to the Nasdaq exchange have been associated with
low levels of customer interest in this product. Recently, however, BX
has heard from customers interested in using FPGA technology for BX
TotalView. To address this customer demand, and to drive liquidity to
the BX Exchange by making it a more attractive trading venue, BX has
decided to offer this product.
Approval of this Proposal will further promote competition by
providing market participants additional choices in the transmission of
depth of book data.
Nothing in the Proposal burdens inter-market competition (the
competition among self-regulatory organizations) because approval of
the Proposal does not impose any burden on the ability of other
exchanges to compete. As noted above, FPGA technology is generally
available and any exchange has the ability to offer it if it so
chooses.
Nothing in the Proposal burdens intra-market competition (the
competition among consumers of exchange data) because the BX FPGA
Service will be available to any customer under the same fee schedule
as any other customer, and any market participant that wishes to
purchase the BX FPGA Service can do so on a non-discriminatory basis.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either solicited or received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act.\19\
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\19\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
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At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is: (i)
necessary or appropriate in the public interest; (ii) for the
protection of investors; or (iii) otherwise in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. If the Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
file number SR-BX-2023-020 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to file number SR-BX-2023-020. 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-BX-2023-020 and should be
submitted on or before September 13, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\20\
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\20\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023-18104 Filed 8-22-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P