Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Quote Protection Timer, 62612-62618 [2023-19593]
Download as PDF
62612
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 12, 2023 / Notices
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.9
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–19592 Filed 9–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–98304; File No. SR–CBOE–
2023–044]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a
Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a
Quote Protection Timer
September 6, 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
30, 2023, Cboe Exchange, Inc.
(‘‘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 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
Cboe Exchange, Inc. (the ‘‘Exchange’’
or ‘‘Cboe Options’’) proposes to amend
Rule 5.32. The text of the proposed rule
change is provided in Exhibit 5.
The text of the proposed rule change
is also available on the Exchange’s
website (https://www.cboe.com/
AboutCBOE/
CBOELegalRegulatoryHome.aspx), at
the Exchange’s Office of the Secretary,
and at the Commission’s Public
Reference Room.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
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
9 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(85).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rule 5.32 to adopt a passive quote
protection mechanism.
The options market is driven by
Market-Maker quotes, and thus MarketMaker quotes are critical to provide
liquidity to the market and contribute to
price discovery for investors. If MarketMakers do not have sufficient time to
refresh their resting quotes (the primary
source of liquidity for customers in the
market) in response to market updates
before executing against incoming
interest that has incorporated those
market updates, this increased risk of
execution at stale prices may cause
Market-Makers to widen their quotes to
the detriment of investors or otherwise
withhold liquidity. This reduced
liquidity may reduce execution
opportunities or cause executions to
occur at worse prices for customers.
Further, Market-Makers must comply
with various obligations, including to
provide continuous electronic quotes
and to update quotes in response to
market conditions.3 It takes time for
Market-Makers to update quotes in
series in their appointed classes, which
may not take effect until after faster
market participants have updated
orders. The Exchange believes it is
appropriate to provide Market-Maker
quotes with a reasonable amount of
protection to allow them to execute at
prices reflective of market updates given
not only the Exchange-imposed
requirements to provide and updates
such quotes but also the resources
Market-Makers expend to comply with
those requirements.
Market-Maker quotes are based
generally on pricing models that rely on
various factors, including the price of
the underlying security and that
security’s volatility. As these variables
change, a Market-Maker’s pricing model
automatically will enter updates to a
number of its bids and offers.
Additionally, a Market-Maker’s system
may also automatically enter orders in
response to changes in those variables
as part of their market-making activity,
such as hedging. As a result, there can
be a multitude of instances in which the
bids and offers of multiple MarketMakers attempting to update their
quotes and submit orders in response to
1 15
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:32 Sep 11, 2023
3 See
Jkt 259001
PO 00000
Rule 5.51.
Frm 00089
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
market changes inadvertently interact
with each other, which can lead to
significant risk and exposure. This may
occur, for example, when one MarketMaker’s price update system is faster
than systems used by other MarketMakers. In this respect, a MarketMaker’s system that updates options
prices microseconds, or even
nanoseconds, faster than another
Market-Maker’s system may lock or
cross its bids (offers) against the other
Market-Maker’s offers (bids) every time
its bid (offer) adjusts to the offer (bid) of
the second Market-Maker even if the
second Market-Maker’s system was also
in the process of updating that offer
(bid).
For example, suppose three MarketMakers for class XYZ have the following
displayed markets:
Market-Maker A: (10) 10.00–10.20 (10)
Market-Maker B: (5) 10.05–10.20 (5)
Market-Maker C: (5) 9.95–10.15 (5)
Each of the Market-Maker’s systems
identify an increase in the price of stock
XYZ, which causes those systems to
send updated quotes. However, MarketMaker A, as a result of its own
technological investment, has the fastest
system, which received the updated
price of stock XYZ three microseconds
before the systems of the other two
Market-Makers, and thus sent its
updated quotes to the Exchange three
microseconds before the systems of the
other two Market-Makers. Market-Maker
a sent a revised two-sided market of (10)
10.20–10.40 (10) based on the updated
price of XYZ. Because the quotes for
Market-Maker A’s updated market
reached the Exchange before the
updated markets of Market-Makers B
and C, Market-Maker A’s bid will
execute against Market-Maker C’s offer
of 10.15 and Market-Maker B’s offer of
10.20, which offers were based on a
lower stock price. Market-Maker B’s and
C’s updated markets of (5) 10.25–10.40
(5) and (5) 10.15–10.35 (5) reached the
Exchange after this execution, despite
those Market-Makers no longer being
interested in selling at the price of 10.15
or 10.20. Market-Maker A likely
submitted its updated market to display
liquidity available for customer prices at
an updated price, rather than remove
liquidity from other liquidity providers
at outdated prices. This could happen
contemporaneously in a large number of
series within the class, such that instead
of locking one quote, Market-Maker A
may lock 20 of Market-Maker B’s and
Market-Maker C’s quotes. This may
expose each Market-Maker to significant
risk due to these unintended executions
and prevent orders intended to provide
liquidity in the Book from doing so.
E:\FR\FM\12SEN1.SGM
12SEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 12, 2023 / Notices
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
The Exchange understands MarketMakers primarily use bulk message
quotes to input and update quote prices
for purposes of providing liquidity, as
bulk messages allow Market-Makers to
update efficiently quotes in multiple
series using a single message. To protect
these quotes—Market-Makers’ primary
liquidity source—from inadvertent
executions as well as executions at stale
prices due to technological disparities
between Market-Maker systems, the
Exchange adopted the functionality in
current Rules 5.6(c)(3) and 5.32(c)(6),
which prevents executions of incoming
Market-Maker interest against resting
Market-Maker interest. The purpose of
this functionality is to provide resting
Market-Maker quotes with time to
update before execution so that
executions occur at prices based on
then-current market, which the
Exchange believes encourages MarketMakers to provide competitive markets
on the Exchange. Specifically, Rule
5.32(c)(6) provides that the System
cancels or rejects a Cancel Back 4 Book
Only 5 bulk message bid (offer) or order
bid (offer) (or unexecuted portion)
submitted by a Market-Maker with an
appointment in the class through a bulk
port if it would execute against or lock
a resting offer (bid) with a Capacity of
M. In other words, a Cancel Back Book
Only Market-Maker quote or order
submitted through a bulk port will be
rejected if it would execute against
resting Market-Maker interest.
Additionally, pursuant to Rule 5.32(b),
the System adjusts the price of a Price
Adjust (i.e., an order designated Price
Adjust or not designated as Cancel
Back) Book Only bulk message quote
submitted through a bulk port if, at the
time of entry, would lock or cross a
resting order or quote with Capacity M.6
In other words, a Price Adjust Book
Only Market-Maker quote or order
submitted through a bulk port will rest
on the Book at one increment away from
a resting order or quote with Capacity
M. This functionality is designed to
4 A ‘‘Cancel Back’’ order is an order (including a
bulk message) designated to not be subject to the
price adjust process pursuant to Rule 5.32 (as
described below) that the System cancels or rejects
if displaying the order on the Book would create a
locked or crossed market or if the order cannot
otherwise be executed or displayed in the Book at
its limit price. See Rule 5.6(c) (definition of ‘‘Cancel
Back’’).
5 A ‘‘Book Only’’ order is an order the System
ranks and executes pursuant to Rule 5.32, subjects
to the price adjust process pursuant to Rule 5.32,
or cancels, as applicable (in accordance with User
instructions), without routing away to another
exchange. See Rule 5.6(c) (definition of ‘‘Book
Only’’).
6 Rule 5.32(b) describes additional price adjust
scenarios, but these scenarios are not relevant to the
proposed rule change.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:32 Sep 11, 2023
Jkt 259001
protect resting Market-Maker quotes
from executions at potentially stale
prices due to technology disparities (1)
rather than the intention of MarketMaker quote and order updates to trade
against resting Market-Maker quotes
(and thus eliminate displayed liquidity)
and (2) against incoming Market-Maker
orders (that may be submitted for the
purpose of providing liquidity or to
trade for other Market-Maker purposes,
such as hedging) with prices that have
incorporated market updates.
The protection in Rule 5.32(c)(6)
specifically prevents incoming
appointed Market-Maker interest (which
may be Book Only and thus otherwise
eligible for execution against resting
interest on the Book) from executing
against resting Market-Maker interest.
To further protect liquidity of MarketMakers in appointed classes (which
liquidity is subject to quoting
obligations, as noted above), Rule
5.6(c)(3) provides that bulk messages
used by Market-Makers in nonappointed classes may be Post Only
only, which would prevent executions
of these incoming quotes against resting
interest (including resting appointed
Market-Maker interest) in those classes.
This current functionality also
recognizes that resting Market-Maker
interest needs protection from orders (in
addition to quotes) of all users,
including non-Market-Makers, as orders
submitted through bulk ports by Users
other than appointed Market-Makers
may also only be Post Only, which again
would prevent executions of these
incoming orders against resting interest
(including resting appointed MarketMaker interest). Given the primary
purpose of bulk ports is to allow
Market-Makers and other users to
provide liquidity to the Book, the
Exchange adopted functionality to
prevent executions of interest submitted
through bulk ports against resting
Market-Maker interest due to
technological disparities (as
demonstrated in the example above to
protect the primary liquidity source to
the Exchange.
While this current functionality
protects resting Market-Maker interest
from execution at stale prices against
incoming Market-Maker and nonMarket-Maker interest submitted
through bulk ports, resting MarketMaker interest remains unprotected
from Market-Maker orders that may be
submitted through non-bulk ports. As
noted above, Market-Makers may submit
orders for other market-making
purposes, such as hedging, which orders
can be generated from the same systems
generating bulk message quotes. As a
result, resting Market-Maker interest
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
62613
remains subject to risk of execution at
stale prices against incoming MarketMaker non-bulk port orders due to
technological disparities. Given the
critical role Market-Makers play in the
options market, the Exchange believes it
is imperative to have the ability to
protect Market-Makers’ resting quotes
from execution at stale prices against
incoming Market-Maker interest
resulting from technological disparities
between Market-Makers. The Exchange
believes it should be able to extend this
protection to incoming interest from
Market-Makers, regardless of the type of
port through which it was submitted, as
it can expose Market-Makers to the same
level of risk. Ultimately, this exposure
may negatively impact liquidity to the
detriment of the entire market. Unlike
quotes and orders submitted through
bulk ports, the primary purpose of
which is generally to rest on the Book
and provide liquidity, it is likely the
intention of orders submitted through
non-bulk ports to execute against the
resting interest (including Market-Maker
quotes). As a result, the Exchange
believes it is important to balance the
need to protect resting Market-Maker
quotes from executions at stale prices
with the need to provide opportunities
for this incoming interest to execute
against those quotes.
The proposed rule change proposes to
adopt a quote protection timer (‘‘QPT’’)
to provide the Exchange with the ability
to provide Market-Maker quotes with
this additional protection. The purpose
of QPT is to provide Market-Makers
with opportunities to update the prices
of their resting quotes prior to execution
against aggressing non-bulk port
incoming Market-Maker interest while
still providing that incoming interest
with the opportunity to execute against
resting liquidity. Specifically, the
Exchange proposes to adopt Rule
5.32(h), which provides the Exchange
with the ability to determine on a class
basis to activate a QPT. In a class in
which the Exchange has activated the
QPT, if an incoming order (including an
incoming complex order legging into the
Book pursuant to Rule 5.33(g), but
excluding paired orders, orders (or
unexecuted portions) that routed to
another exchange(s), and orders routed
from PAR) enters the Book 7 in that class
7 This includes Immediate-or-Cancel (‘‘IOC’’)
orders and Intermarket Sweep Orders (‘‘ISOs’’). See
Rule 5.6(c). Contingent orders (i.e., stop, stop-limit,
market-on-close, and limit-on-close) are excluded
from the QPT (except for market-on-close and limiton-close orders submitted to the Exchange within
the specified amount of time set by the Exchange
pursuant to Rule 5.6(d), as they would just be
market or limit orders at that point), as by definition
these orders are not executable upon entry (they
E:\FR\FM\12SEN1.SGM
Continued
12SEN1
62614
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 12, 2023 / Notices
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
with Capacity M that a User submitted
through a non-bulk port (the ‘‘initial
aggressor order’’) and that is marketable
against a resting bulk message quote
(except for a quote offer a price equal to
the minimum increment for the class) 8
with Capacity M (the ‘‘initial protected
quote’’) at the time the initial aggressor
order enters the Book, the initial
aggressor order executes against any
resting orders and quotes with a
Capacity other than M at the same price
as the initial protected quote.9 After
that, as set forth in proposed Rule
5.32(h)(2), except for a non-ISO IOC
order for which the Trading Permit
Holder (‘‘TPH’’) opts out of QPT (in
which case the System cancels any
portion of the order not executed
pursuant to proposed subparagraph
(1)),10 the System initiates the QPT,11
become executable once the applicable contingency
is satisfied), so it is unnecessary to prevent from
immediate execution against resting Market-Maker
quotes. The Exchange believes the proposed
exclusions are appropriate, as they would by
definition provide resting quotes with time to
update before potential execution. For example,
paired orders would go through an auction (such as
pursuant to Rule 5.37 or 5.38 (the automated
improvement mechanism for simple and complex
orders)), during which Market-Maker quotes could
update before they would potentially execute
against those orders after the auction. Similarly, if
an order routes away to another exchange because
that exchange has better prices available than those
on the Exchange, by the time any portion of that
order comes back to the Exchange for execution
against the Book, any resting Market-Maker quotes
could have been updated before executing against
that returned order. Likewise, if an order routes
from PAR for electronic execution, it would have
first been handled by a person on the trading floor
after entry and before execution against interest in
the Book, giving quotes sufficient time for update
before potential execution against that order.
8 The Exchange believes this exclusion is
appropriate, as there would be no price at which
an incoming bid could adjust to and rest during the
quote protection period if the resting offer is equal
to the minimum increment for the class. For
example, if the minimum increment for a class is
$0.05, and the market is $0–$0.05 on the Exchange,
if an incoming order is priced at $0.05, as further
described below, during the quote protection
period, the price of the order is adjusted to one
increment below the offer to prevent a locked
market. However, that would make the adjusted
price of the incoming order $0, which is not a
permissible price for an order.
9 See proposed Rule 5.32(h)(1).
10 The Exchange believes it is appropriate to
permit TPHs to opt out of QPT for their non-ISO
IOC orders (and just have them execute against any
resting interest with a Capacity other than M,
cancelling any remainder) because it is consistent
with the IOC instruction, pursuant to which a user
desires execution in whole or in part as soon as the
System receives it. See Rule 5.6(d) (definition of
IOC time-in-force instruction).
11 The Exchange determines the length of the
timer in microseconds on a class basis, which may
not exceed five milliseconds. The Exchange
believes this flexibility is reasonable so it can apply
a timer length that appropriately reflects market
structure differences among classes, as discussed
above regarding why it is appropriate to provide the
Exchange with flexibility to determine whether to
apply QPT on a class basis. The Exchange has this
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:32 Sep 11, 2023
Jkt 259001
the start time of which is the time when
the initial aggressor order enters (or a
complex order 12 Legs into) the Book
(the ‘‘quote protection period’’),
provided if there is an ongoing QPT in
every leg of a complex order that Legs
into the Book, the length of the QPT for
the complex order equals the longest
remaining time of the leg QPTs.13
The Exchange believes it is reasonable
to permit the Exchange to determine
whether to activate QPT on a class basis
to address market structure differences
that apply to different classes. This is
consistent with other Exchange
functionality, such as auctions, which
the Exchange may activate on a class
basis.14 For example, in classes in
which there is high retail customer
order volume, the Exchange believes
Market-Makers may be willing to accept
additional execution risk for the
additional opportunities to execute
against a significant number of customer
orders, which may ultimately offset any
stale-priced executions against fasteracting professional customers. To the
contrary, in low volume classes or
classes comprised mostly of
professional investor volume, the
execution risk is greater as there are
fewer potential executions against
customers to offset the risk.
Additionally, in classes with smaller
minimum increments, the execution
risk is higher because Market-Maker
quote updates may be more granular
and thus more frequent. Therefore, in a
non-penny class, a ‘‘stale’’ execution
price may be wider than it might be in
a penny class and thus still within a
Market-Maker’s pricing parameters and
risk profile. The Exchange notes it does
not believe this class flexibility is
necessary for its current protection
functionality (which applies to all
classes), as the Exchange understands
Market-Makers primarily use bulk port
functionality to provide liquidity and
satisfy their quoting obligations. As
same flexibility for other Exchange functionality,
such as auction timers. See, e.g., Rule 5.37(c)(3)
(providing the Exchange with flexibility to
determine the length of an AIM auction period on
a class basis).
12 The Exchange understands complex orders
may similarly cause executions against protected
quotes due to technical disparities in the same
manner as simple orders.
13 The Exchange believes this is appropriate, as
the resting quotes in each leg of the complex order
that are intended to be protected by this proposed
functionality will be subject to the full length of the
quote protection period before the legs of the
complex order in this scenario can execute against
them.
14 See, e.g., Rule 5.37(a)(1) (permitting the
Exchange to determine in which classes orders may
be submitted into an automated improvement
mechanism (‘‘AIM’’) auction for potential price
improvement).
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
there are Market-Makers appointed to
all classes trading on the Exchange, the
Exchange believes it is appropriate to
prevent this interest (orders and bulk
messages) submitted through bulk ports
in all classes from executing against
resting Market-Maker interest, as much
of the incoming interest was likely
submitted to rest on the Book (and
satisfy quoting obligations to provide
liquidity to the market) rather than
execute upon entry.
The Exchange also believes limiting
the proposed rule change to orders of
Market-Makers (Capacity M) is
appropriate because it is consistent with
current and prior functionality, which
protected resting Market-Maker interest
from incoming Market-Maker interest.15
As noted above, Market-Maker systems
may automatically generate order and
quote updates in response to market
changes. The Exchange believes resting
Market-Maker interest should be
protected from stale execution against
all incoming Market-Maker interest
generated by those same systems,
regardless of the type of port through
which the interest is submitted.
Pursuant to proposed Rule 5.32(h)(3),
during the quote protection period,
neither the initial aggressor order (or
unexecuted portion) nor any other
incoming marketable orders with
Capacity M received during the quote
protection period (together with the
initial aggressor order, the ‘‘aggressor
orders’’) may execute against the
protected quote or any other contra-side
bulk message quotes with Capacity M
that enter the Book (together with the
initial protected quote, the ‘‘protected
quotes’’), and the System ranks (in time
priority) and displays the aggressor
orders at one minimum price variation
below (above) the price of the displayed
protected offer (bid).16 In other words,
during the quote protection period, no
aggressor orders may execute against
protected quotes resting in the Book.
Therefore, all aggressor orders in a
series that are entered during an
ongoing quote protection period are
similarly prevented from executing
against any protected quote (whether
15 The Exchange notes current functionality also
prevents execution of orders with Capacities other
than M against resting Market-Maker quotes. See
Rule 5.5(c)(3) (requiring users other than appointed
Market-Makers to submit orders through bulk ports
as Post Only, which cannot execute upon entry
against resting interest). If the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’) approves
the proposed rule change, the Exchange may
determine to submit a separate rule filing to
propose to extend QPT to other Capacities.
16 This is similar to the Exchange’s Price Adjust
functionality (see Rule 5.32(b)), which prevents the
Exchange from disseminating a locked or crossed
market.
E:\FR\FM\12SEN1.SGM
12SEN1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 12, 2023 / Notices
the initial protected quote or any
protected quote in that series that is
entered during the quote protection
period and rests on the Book).
Additionally, by having incoming
aggressor orders ‘‘join’’ the initial
aggressor order and incoming protected
quotes ‘‘join’’ the initial protected
quotes, a series with protected quotes
will be subject to a full quote protection
period for the protected quotes in that
series.
The TPH that submitted any aggressor
order during the quote protection
period, or the Market-Maker that
submitted any protected quote during
the quote protection period, may update
the price of its order or quote, as
applicable; however, those orders and
quotes remain firm at their displayed
prices in accordance with Rule 5.59
until updated. Therefore, aggressor
orders and protected quotes may
continue to execute at their resting
prices (which is an adjusted price with
respect to aggressor orders, as described
above) against incoming interest. This
provides other interest that enters the
Book during the quote protection period
with potential execution opportunities.
Specifically:
• an incoming order with a Capacity
other than M (‘‘non-aggressor order’’)
executes against resting contra-side
interest at its displayed price in
accordance with the allocation
algorithm applicable to the class;
• an incoming aggressor order
executes against resting non-protected
quote contra-side interest at its adjusted
price in accordance with the allocation
algorithm applicable to the class; and
• an incoming contra-side order or
quote executes against resting aggressor
and non-aggressor orders at their
displayed prices in accordance with the
allocation algorithm applicable to the
class.
If (a) for simple orders, there are no
more protected quotes at the initial
prices of any price-adjusted aggressor
orders, the System unadjusts the prices
of the aggressor buy (sell) orders to one
minimum price variation below (above)
the next lowest (highest) priced
protected quote (to their limit prices); or
(b) for complex orders, the SBO (SBB)
increases (decreases), the System
unadjusts the prices of the aggressor buy
(sell) complex orders to one minimum
variation below (above) the then-current
SBO (SBB) (to their limit prices).
Proposed Rule 5.32(h)(4) provides at
the conclusion of the quote protection
period, the System unadjusts the prices
of the aggressor orders (or unexecuted
portions) to their initial prices, which
then execute (in time priority) against
any remaining marketable contra-side
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:32 Sep 11, 2023
Jkt 259001
interest, including the protected quotes,
in accordance with the allocation
algorithm applicable to the class; 17 and
any unexecuted portions of aggressor
orders rest on the Book and unexecuted
portions of protected quotes remain on
the Book.18
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change to delay execution of resting
Market-Maker quotes against incoming
aggressor Market-Maker interest is
appropriate, rather than prevention of
execution (as occurs in current
functionality described above), because
as noted above, unlike interest
submitted through bulk ports (the
primary purpose of which is to provide
liquidity on the Book), the primary
purpose of orders submitted through
non-bulk ports is to execute against
interest resting on the Book.19
Therefore, the Exchange believes it is
important to provide this incoming
interest with execution opportunities,
after a slight delay, to provide MarketMakers with opportunities to effect their
quote updates. Additionally, execution
of bulk messages (which may only be
submitted through bulk ports) exposes
Market-Makers to increased risk
compared to order execution. For
example, the System will not determine
whether a Market-Maker’s risk monitor
mechanism 20 thresholds have been
exceeded until all quotes within a bulk
message have been processed, unlike
orders, which may result in execution in
only one series before the System
determines whether those thresholds
have been exceeded. The Exchange
believes the proposed rule change will
close a gap that currently exposes
Market-Maker liquidity resting on the
Book to executions at potentially stale
prices due to technology disparities
against the orders submitted by MarketMakers through non-bulk ports. The
quote protection timer will provide a
balance between protecting resting
Market-Maker quotes in order to
maintain liquidity and providing
17 See
Rule 5.33(a).
the market closes or the Exchange halts
trading in the affected series prior to the conclusion
of the quote protection period, the QPT concludes
without execution.
19 It is possible some liquidity providers,
including Market-Makers, are submitting orders
through non-bulk ports for the provision of
liquidity, but the Exchange believes this represents
a small portion of non-bulk port order flow.
20 See Rule 5.34(c)(4), pursuant to which a user’s
(including a Market-Maker’s) interest may be
cancelled after that user’s risk limits have been
exceeded. As a result, quotes in a bulk message will
complete executions before determination of
whether a user’s risk limits have been exceeded.
This makes execution risk of bulk message greater
than an order, which only has a bid or offer for one
series.
18 If
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
62615
incoming Market-Maker interest with
execution opportunities.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to the Exchange
and, in particular, the requirements of
Section 6(b) of the Act.21 Specifically,
the Exchange believes the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Section
6(b)(5) 22 requirements that the rules of
an exchange be designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged
in regulating, clearing, settling,
processing information with respect to,
and facilitating transactions in
securities, 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.
Additionally, the Exchange believes the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the Section 6(b)(5) 23 requirement that
the rules of an exchange not be designed
to permit unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
In particular, the Exchange believes
the proposed rule change will promote
just and equitable principles of trade,
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a national market system,
and protect investors. The proposed rule
change is intended to prevent incoming
Market-Maker orders submitted through
non-bulk ports from immediately
executing against resting Market-Maker
interest at potentially stale prices due to
technological disparities between
Market-Makers. The Exchange believes
the proposed functionality will reduce
execution of resting Market-Maker
interest at prices that do not reflect the
then-current market, which executions
may impede certain liquidity providers’
ability to competitively price their bids
and offers. Specifically, this increased
risk of execution at stale prices may
cause Market-Makers to widen their
quotes or otherwise withhold liquidity
to the detriment of investors. The
Exchange expects the proposed rule
change to increase liquidity and
enhance competition in the market,
because Market-Makers may be able to
quote more aggressively with less
concern about exposure to execution
risk due to technological disparities in
their quoting systems compared to other
21 15
22 15
U.S.C. 78f(b).
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
23 Id.
E:\FR\FM\12SEN1.SGM
12SEN1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
62616
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 12, 2023 / Notices
market participants’ order entry
systems. As a result, the Exchange
believes this protection for resting
Market-Maker interest, and resulting
increased liquidity and competition,
would ultimately remove impediments
to the market and benefit all investors.
Given the critical role Market-Makers
play in the options market, the
Exchange believes it is imperative to
have the ability to protect MarketMakers’ resting quotes from execution at
stale prices against incoming MarketMaker interest due to technological
disparities between Market-Makers. The
Exchange believes it should be able to
extend this protection to incoming
Market-Maker interest from non-bulk
ports, as technological disparities
between Market-Makers can expose
Market-Makers to the same level of risk
regardless of which type of port MarketMakers submit interest. Ultimately, this
exposure to risk from may negatively
impact liquidity to the detriment of the
entire market. Unlike quotes and orders
submitted through bulk ports, the
primary purpose of which is generally
to rest on the Book and provide
liquidity, it is likely the intention of
orders submitted through non-bulk
ports to execute against the resting
interest (including Market-Maker
quotes). As a result, the Exchange
believes it is important to balance the
need to protect resting Market-Maker
quotes from executions at stale prices
with the need to provide opportunities
for this incoming interest to execute
against those quotes. The Exchange
believes the proposed rule change to
slightly delay execution of certain
aggressing interest provides an equitable
balance between the need to protect
resting Market-Maker interest and
provide incoming interest with
execution opportunities.
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change is not designed to permit
unfair discrimination by providing the
Exchange with the ability to provide
Market-Maker quotes with additional
protection. The options market is driven
by Market-Maker quotes, and thus
Market-Maker quotes are critical to
provide liquidity to the market and
contribute to price discovery for
investors. If Market-Makers do not have
sufficient time to refresh their resting
quotes (the primary source of liquidity
for customers in the market) in response
to market updates before executing
against incoming interest that has
incorporated those market updates, this
increased risk of execution at stale
prices may cause Market-Makers to
widen their quotes to the detriment of
investors or otherwise withhold
liquidity. This reduced liquidity may
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:32 Sep 11, 2023
Jkt 259001
reduce execution opportunities or cause
executions to occur at worse prices for
customers. Further, Market-Makers must
comply with various obligations,
including to provide continuous
electronic quotes and to update quotes
in response to market conditions.24 It
takes time for Market-Makers to update
quotes in series in their appointed
classes, which may not take effect until
after faster market participants have
updated orders. The Exchange believes
it is appropriate to provide MarketMaker quotes with a reasonable amount
of protection (as the proposed rule
change would provide) to allow them to
execute at prices reflective of market
updates given the Market-Makers’ need
to comply with these obligations and
the resources they expend to comply
with these obligations.25 As described
above, the protected quotes and
aggressor orders will remain firm during
the quote protection period, and
executions will continue during that
period.
Further, the Exchange believes the
proposed rule change to provide the
Exchange with flexibility to determine
whether to enable QPT on a class basis,
and in such classes to provide the
Exchange with flexibility to determine
the length of the quote protection
period, is not designed to permit unfair
discrimination. The Exchange believes
this flexibility is appropriate to address
market structure differences, including
differences among market participants
and activity levels, within different
classes, which flexibility the Exchange
has with respect to other functionality,
such as auctions.26 For example, in
classes in which there is high retail
customer order volume, the Exchange
believes Market-Makers may be willing
to accept additional execution risk for
the additional opportunities to execute
against a significant number of customer
orders, which may ultimately offset any
stale-priced executions against fasteracting professional customers. To the
contrary, in low volume classes or
classes comprised mostly of
professional investor volume, the
execution risk is greater as there are
fewer potential executions against
customers to offset the risk.
Additionally, in classes with smaller
minimum increments, the execution
risk is higher because Market-Maker
quote updates may be more granular
24 See
Rule 5.51.
id.
26 See, e.g., Rule 5.37(a)(1) (permitting the
Exchange to determine in which classes orders may
be submitted into an AIM auction for potential
price improvement) and (c)(3) (permitting the
Exchange to determine the length of the AIM
auction period on a class basis).
25 See
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
and thus more frequent. Therefore, in a
non-penny class, a ‘‘stale’’ execution
price may be wider than it might be in
a penny class. The Exchange notes it
does not believe this class flexibility is
necessary for its current protection
functionality (which applies to all
classes), as the Exchange understands
Market-Makers primarily use bulk port
functionality to provide liquidity and
satisfy their quoting obligations. As
there are Market-Makers appointed to
all classes trading on the Exchange, the
Exchange believes it is appropriate to
prevent this interest (orders and bulk
messages) submitted through bulk ports
in all classes from executing against
resting Market-Maker interest, as much
of the incoming interest was likely
submitted to rest on the Book (and
satisfy quoting obligations to provide
liquidity to the market) rather than
execute upon entry.
The Exchange also believes limiting
the proposed rule change to orders of
Market-Makers (Capacity M) is
appropriate because it is consistent with
current and prior functionality, which
protected resting Market-Maker interest
from incoming Market-Maker interest.27
As noted above, Market-Maker systems
may automatically generate order and
quote updates in response to market
changes. The Exchange believes resting
Market-Maker interest should be
protected from stale execution against
all incoming Market-Maker interest
generated by those same systems,
regardless of the type of port through
which the interest is submitted.
Therefore, the Exchange believes the
proposed rule change to close this
current gap exposing resting MarketMaker interest to execution risk against
incoming Market-Maker interest
submitted through non-bulk ports due
to technological disparities will remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
and a national market system, and
protect investors and the public interest.
The Exchange notes the underlying
purpose of this proposed rule change,
which is to provide resting MarketMaker quotes with time to update in
response to market condition changes, is
the same as the primary purpose of
functionality and previously available
27 The Exchange notes current functionality also
prevents execution of orders with Capacities other
than M against resting Market-Maker quotes. See
Rule 5.5(c)(3) (requiring users other than appointed
Market-Makers to submit orders through bulk ports
as Post Only, which cannot execute upon entry
against resting interest). If the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’) approves
the proposed rule change, the Exchange may
determine to submit a separate rule filing to
propose to extend QPT to other Capacities.
E:\FR\FM\12SEN1.SGM
12SEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 12, 2023 / Notices
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
on the Exchange.28 The Exchange
believes the proposed rule change to
delay execution of resting Market-Maker
quotes against incoming aggressor
interest is appropriate, rather than
prevention of execution (as occurs in
current functionality described above),
because as noted above, unlike interest
submitted through bulk ports (the
primary purpose of which is to provide
liquidity on the Book), the primary
purpose of orders submitted through
non-bulk ports is to execute against
interest resting on the Book.29
Therefore, the Exchange believes it is
important to provide this incoming
interest with execution opportunities,
after a slight delay, to provide MarketMakers with opportunities to effect their
quote updates. Additionally, execution
of bulk messages (which may only be
submitted through bulk ports) exposes
Market-Makers to increased risk
compared to order execution. For
example, the System will not determine
whether a Market-Maker’s risk monitor
mechanism 30 thresholds have been
exceeded until all quotes within a bulk
message have been processed, unlike
orders, which may result in execution in
only one series before the System
determines whether those thresholds
have been exceeded. The Exchange
believes the proposed rule change will
close a gap that currently exposes
Market-Maker liquidity resting on the
Book to executions at potentially stale
prices due to technology disparities
against Market-Maker orders submitted
through non-bulk ports. The quote
protection timer will provide a balance
between protecting resting MarketMaker quotes in order to maintain
liquidity and providing incoming
interest with execution opportunities.
The proposed temporary adjustment
of aggressor order prices will further
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and national market
system, as it will prevent the display of
a locked or crossed market consistent
28 See Rules 5.5(c)(3) and 5.32(c)(6); see also
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 86374 (July
15, 2019), 84 FR 34963 (July 19, 2019) (SR–CBOE–
2019–033) (adoption of current Rules 5.5(c)(3) and
5.32(c)(6)); and 51822 (June 10, 2005), 70 FR 35321
(June 17, 2005) (SR–CBOE–2004–87) (adoption of
former Cboe Rule 6.45(c)).
29 It is possible some liquidity providers,
including Market-Makers, are submitting orders
through non-bulk ports for the provision of
liquidity, but the Exchange believes this represents
a small portion of non-bulk port order flow.
30 See Rule 5.34(c)(4), pursuant to which a user’s
(including a Market-Maker’s) interest may be
cancelled after that user’s risk limits have been
exceeded. As a result, quotes in a bulk message will
complete executions before determination of
whether a user’s risk limits have been exceeded.
This makes execution risk of bulk message greater
than an order, which only has a bid or offer for one
series.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:32 Sep 11, 2023
Jkt 259001
with the Linkage Plan.31 This proposed
handling of these orders is also
consistent with the Exchange’s current
Price Adjust functionality.32
As noted above, the options market is
driven by Market-Maker quotes, and
thus Market-Maker quotes are critical to
provide liquidity to the market and
contribute to price discovery for
investors. The proposed functionality is
designed to permit the Exchange to
provide Market-Makers with further
protection against executions at
potentially stale prices due to
technology disparities while still
providing incoming Market-Maker
orders submitted through non-bulk
ports with execution opportunities. The
Exchange believes the proposed
enhanced functionality will permit
liquidity providers to more efficiently
enter and update bids and offers. This
may cause Market-Makers to quote
tighter and deeper markets, which will
increase liquidity and enhance
competition to the ultimate benefit of all
market participants.
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 that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. The
Exchange does not believe the proposed
rule change will impose any burden on
intramarket competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act, because it
will apply in the same manner to all
incoming Market-Maker orders in nonbulk ports. The primary purpose of the
proposed rule change is to permit the
Exchange to provide additional
protection to resting Market-Maker
quotes from executions against
incoming Market-Maker interest at
potentially stale prices before they have
the opportunity to update in response to
market condition changes. The
Exchange believes it is reasonable to
provide additional protection to MarketMakers given their unique and critical
role in the options market and the
various obligations that Market-Makers
must satisfy, as discussed above.
Additionally, as noted above, the
proposed functionality supplements
similar functionality currently available
on the Exchange, which similarly
protects resting Market-Maker interest
against executions at potentially stale
prices.33 The Exchange does not believe
the proposed flexibility to apply QPT on
31 See
Rule 5.66.
Rule 5.32(g).
33 See Rule 5.32(c)(6).
a class basis, or determine the length of
the timer on a class basis, will impose
any burden on intramarket competition
that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act,
as such flexibility is reasonable to
address market structure differences
among classes, as discussed above.
The Exchange does not believe the
proposed rule change will impose any
burden on intermarket competition that
is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act,
because it applies solely to the timing of
executions against resting Market-Maker
quotes on the Exchange. As noted
above, the proposed rule change is
consistent with the Linkage Plan.34
Additionally, the Exchange believes
the proposed rule change will relieve
any burden on, or otherwise promote,
competition. As discussed above, the
Exchange believe the proposed rule
change may encourage the provision of
more aggressive liquidity, which may
result in more trading opportunities and
tighter spreads, which contributes to
price discovery. This may improve
overall market quality and enhance
competition on the Exchange.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange neither solicited nor
received comments on the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the Exchange consents,
the Commission shall: (a) by order
approve or disapprove such proposed
rule change, or (b) institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be 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:
32 See
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4703
34 See
Sfmt 4703
62617
E:\FR\FM\12SEN1.SGM
Rule 5.66.
12SEN1
62618
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 12, 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–
CBOE–2023–044 on the subject line.
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–CBOE–2023–044. 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–CBOE–2023–044 and should be
submitted on or before October 3, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.35
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–19593 Filed 9–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
17:32 Sep 11, 2023
[Disaster Declaration #18114 and #18115;
OREGON Disaster Number OR–00138]
Francisco Sa´nchez, Jr.,
Associate Administrator, Office of Disaster
Recovery & Resilience.
Presidential Declaration of a Major
Disaster for Public Assistance Only for
the Burns Paiute Tribe
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Notice.
[FR Doc. 2023–19561 Filed 9–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8026–09–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
This is a Notice of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for Public Assistance Only for
the Burns Paiute Tribe (FEMA–4733–
DR), dated 08/28/2023.
Incident: Severe Storm, Flooding,
Landslides, and Mudslides.
Incident Period: 06/11/2023 through
06/12/2023.
DATES: Issued on 08/28/2023.
Physical Loan Application Deadline
Date: 10/27/2023.
Economic Injury (EIDL) Loan
Application Deadline Date: 05/28/2024.
ADDRESSES: Submit completed loan
applications to: U.S. Small Business
Administration, Processing and
Disbursement Center, 14925 Kingsport
Road, Fort Worth, TX 76155.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: A.
Escobar, Office of Disaster Recovery &
Resilience, U.S. Small Business
Administration, 409 3rd Street SW,
Suite 6050, Washington, DC 20416,
(202) 205–6734.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that as a result of the
President’s major disaster declaration on
08/28/2023, Private Non-Profit
organizations that provide essential
services of a governmental nature may
file disaster loan applications at the
address listed above or other locally
announced locations.
The following areas have been
determined to be adversely affected by
the disaster:
Primary Area: Burns Paiute Tribe.
The Interest Rates are:
SUMMARY:
Percent
For Physical Damage:
Non-Profit Organizations with
Credit Available Elsewhere
Non-Profit Organizations without Credit Available Elsewhere ...................................
For Economic Injury:
Non-Profit Organizations without Credit Available Elsewhere ...................................
Jkt 259001
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
[Disaster Declaration #18061 and #18062;
HAWAII Disaster Number HI–00073]
Presidential Declaration of a Major
Disaster for the State of Hawaii
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Amendment 1.
This is an amendment to the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for the State of Hawaii (FEMA–
4724–DR), dated 08/10/2023.
Incident: Wildfires.
Incident Period: 08/08/2023 and
continuing.
SUMMARY:
Issued on 08/31/2023.
Physical Loan Application Deadline
Date: 10/10/2023.
Economic Injury (EIDL) Loan
Application Deadline Date: 05/10/2024.
DATES:
Submit completed loan
applications to: U.S. Small Business
Administration, Processing and
Disbursement Center, 14925 Kingsport
Road, Fort Worth, TX 76155.
ADDRESSES:
A.
Escobar, Office of Disaster Recovery &
Resilience, U.S. Small Business
Administration, 409 3rd Street SW,
Suite 6050, Washington, DC 20416,
(202) 205–6734.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Notice is
hereby given that the President’s major
disaster declaration for the state of
Hawaii, dated 08/10/2023, is hereby
amended to include the following areas
as adversely affected by the disaster:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Contiguous Counties (Economic Injury
Loans Only):
Hawaii: Hawaii, Honolulu, Kauai.
2.375
2.375
All other information in the original
declaration remains unchanged.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number 59008)
2.375
The number assigned to this disaster
for physical damage is 18114 B and for
economic injury is 18115 0.
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number 59008)
AGENCY:
Paper Comments
35 17
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Francisco Sa´nchez, Jr.,
Associate Administrator, Office of Disaster
Recovery & Resilience.
[FR Doc. 2023–19560 Filed 9–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8026–09–P
E:\FR\FM\12SEN1.SGM
12SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 175 (Tuesday, September 12, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 62612-62618]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-19593]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-98304; File No. SR-CBOE-2023-044]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe Exchange, Inc.; Notice of
Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Adopt a Quote Protection Timer
September 6, 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 30, 2023, Cboe Exchange, Inc. (``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 Exchange. The Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or ``Cboe Options'') proposes
to amend Rule 5.32. The text of the proposed rule change is provided in
Exhibit 5.
The text of the proposed rule change is also available on the
Exchange's website (https://www.cboe.com/AboutCBOE/CBOELegalRegulatoryHome.aspx), at the Exchange's Office of the
Secretary, 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 Exchange proposes to amend Rule 5.32 to adopt a passive quote
protection mechanism.
The options market is driven by Market-Maker quotes, and thus
Market-Maker quotes are critical to provide liquidity to the market and
contribute to price discovery for investors. If Market-Makers do not
have sufficient time to refresh their resting quotes (the primary
source of liquidity for customers in the market) in response to market
updates before executing against incoming interest that has
incorporated those market updates, this increased risk of execution at
stale prices may cause Market-Makers to widen their quotes to the
detriment of investors or otherwise withhold liquidity. This reduced
liquidity may reduce execution opportunities or cause executions to
occur at worse prices for customers. Further, Market-Makers must comply
with various obligations, including to provide continuous electronic
quotes and to update quotes in response to market conditions.\3\ It
takes time for Market-Makers to update quotes in series in their
appointed classes, which may not take effect until after faster market
participants have updated orders. The Exchange believes it is
appropriate to provide Market-Maker quotes with a reasonable amount of
protection to allow them to execute at prices reflective of market
updates given not only the Exchange-imposed requirements to provide and
updates such quotes but also the resources Market-Makers expend to
comply with those requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Rule 5.51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market-Maker quotes are based generally on pricing models that rely
on various factors, including the price of the underlying security and
that security's volatility. As these variables change, a Market-Maker's
pricing model automatically will enter updates to a number of its bids
and offers. Additionally, a Market-Maker's system may also
automatically enter orders in response to changes in those variables as
part of their market-making activity, such as hedging. As a result,
there can be a multitude of instances in which the bids and offers of
multiple Market-Makers attempting to update their quotes and submit
orders in response to market changes inadvertently interact with each
other, which can lead to significant risk and exposure. This may occur,
for example, when one Market-Maker's price update system is faster than
systems used by other Market-Makers. In this respect, a Market-Maker's
system that updates options prices microseconds, or even nanoseconds,
faster than another Market-Maker's system may lock or cross its bids
(offers) against the other Market-Maker's offers (bids) every time its
bid (offer) adjusts to the offer (bid) of the second Market-Maker even
if the second Market-Maker's system was also in the process of updating
that offer (bid).
For example, suppose three Market-Makers for class XYZ have the
following displayed markets:
Market-Maker A: (10) 10.00-10.20 (10)
Market-Maker B: (5) 10.05-10.20 (5)
Market-Maker C: (5) 9.95-10.15 (5)
Each of the Market-Maker's systems identify an increase in the price of
stock XYZ, which causes those systems to send updated quotes. However,
Market-Maker A, as a result of its own technological investment, has
the fastest system, which received the updated price of stock XYZ three
microseconds before the systems of the other two Market-Makers, and
thus sent its updated quotes to the Exchange three microseconds before
the systems of the other two Market-Makers. Market-Maker a sent a
revised two-sided market of (10) 10.20-10.40 (10) based on the updated
price of XYZ. Because the quotes for Market-Maker A's updated market
reached the Exchange before the updated markets of Market-Makers B and
C, Market-Maker A's bid will execute against Market-Maker C's offer of
10.15 and Market-Maker B's offer of 10.20, which offers were based on a
lower stock price. Market-Maker B's and C's updated markets of (5)
10.25-10.40 (5) and (5) 10.15-10.35 (5) reached the Exchange after this
execution, despite those Market-Makers no longer being interested in
selling at the price of 10.15 or 10.20. Market-Maker A likely submitted
its updated market to display liquidity available for customer prices
at an updated price, rather than remove liquidity from other liquidity
providers at outdated prices. This could happen contemporaneously in a
large number of series within the class, such that instead of locking
one quote, Market-Maker A may lock 20 of Market-Maker B's and Market-
Maker C's quotes. This may expose each Market-Maker to significant risk
due to these unintended executions and prevent orders intended to
provide liquidity in the Book from doing so.
[[Page 62613]]
The Exchange understands Market-Makers primarily use bulk message
quotes to input and update quote prices for purposes of providing
liquidity, as bulk messages allow Market-Makers to update efficiently
quotes in multiple series using a single message. To protect these
quotes--Market-Makers' primary liquidity source--from inadvertent
executions as well as executions at stale prices due to technological
disparities between Market-Maker systems, the Exchange adopted the
functionality in current Rules 5.6(c)(3) and 5.32(c)(6), which prevents
executions of incoming Market-Maker interest against resting Market-
Maker interest. The purpose of this functionality is to provide resting
Market-Maker quotes with time to update before execution so that
executions occur at prices based on then-current market, which the
Exchange believes encourages Market-Makers to provide competitive
markets on the Exchange. Specifically, Rule 5.32(c)(6) provides that
the System cancels or rejects a Cancel Back \4\ Book Only \5\ bulk
message bid (offer) or order bid (offer) (or unexecuted portion)
submitted by a Market-Maker with an appointment in the class through a
bulk port if it would execute against or lock a resting offer (bid)
with a Capacity of M. In other words, a Cancel Back Book Only Market-
Maker quote or order submitted through a bulk port will be rejected if
it would execute against resting Market-Maker interest. Additionally,
pursuant to Rule 5.32(b), the System adjusts the price of a Price
Adjust (i.e., an order designated Price Adjust or not designated as
Cancel Back) Book Only bulk message quote submitted through a bulk port
if, at the time of entry, would lock or cross a resting order or quote
with Capacity M.\6\ In other words, a Price Adjust Book Only Market-
Maker quote or order submitted through a bulk port will rest on the
Book at one increment away from a resting order or quote with Capacity
M. This functionality is designed to protect resting Market-Maker
quotes from executions at potentially stale prices due to technology
disparities (1) rather than the intention of Market-Maker quote and
order updates to trade against resting Market-Maker quotes (and thus
eliminate displayed liquidity) and (2) against incoming Market-Maker
orders (that may be submitted for the purpose of providing liquidity or
to trade for other Market-Maker purposes, such as hedging) with prices
that have incorporated market updates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ A ``Cancel Back'' order is an order (including a bulk
message) designated to not be subject to the price adjust process
pursuant to Rule 5.32 (as described below) that the System cancels
or rejects if displaying the order on the Book would create a locked
or crossed market or if the order cannot otherwise be executed or
displayed in the Book at its limit price. See Rule 5.6(c)
(definition of ``Cancel Back'').
\5\ A ``Book Only'' order is an order the System ranks and
executes pursuant to Rule 5.32, subjects to the price adjust process
pursuant to Rule 5.32, or cancels, as applicable (in accordance with
User instructions), without routing away to another exchange. See
Rule 5.6(c) (definition of ``Book Only'').
\6\ Rule 5.32(b) describes additional price adjust scenarios,
but these scenarios are not relevant to the proposed rule change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The protection in Rule 5.32(c)(6) specifically prevents incoming
appointed Market-Maker interest (which may be Book Only and thus
otherwise eligible for execution against resting interest on the Book)
from executing against resting Market-Maker interest. To further
protect liquidity of Market-Makers in appointed classes (which
liquidity is subject to quoting obligations, as noted above), Rule
5.6(c)(3) provides that bulk messages used by Market-Makers in non-
appointed classes may be Post Only only, which would prevent executions
of these incoming quotes against resting interest (including resting
appointed Market-Maker interest) in those classes.
This current functionality also recognizes that resting Market-
Maker interest needs protection from orders (in addition to quotes) of
all users, including non-Market-Makers, as orders submitted through
bulk ports by Users other than appointed Market-Makers may also only be
Post Only, which again would prevent executions of these incoming
orders against resting interest (including resting appointed Market-
Maker interest). Given the primary purpose of bulk ports is to allow
Market-Makers and other users to provide liquidity to the Book, the
Exchange adopted functionality to prevent executions of interest
submitted through bulk ports against resting Market-Maker interest due
to technological disparities (as demonstrated in the example above to
protect the primary liquidity source to the Exchange.
While this current functionality protects resting Market-Maker
interest from execution at stale prices against incoming Market-Maker
and non-Market-Maker interest submitted through bulk ports, resting
Market-Maker interest remains unprotected from Market-Maker orders that
may be submitted through non-bulk ports. As noted above, Market-Makers
may submit orders for other market-making purposes, such as hedging,
which orders can be generated from the same systems generating bulk
message quotes. As a result, resting Market-Maker interest remains
subject to risk of execution at stale prices against incoming Market-
Maker non-bulk port orders due to technological disparities. Given the
critical role Market-Makers play in the options market, the Exchange
believes it is imperative to have the ability to protect Market-Makers'
resting quotes from execution at stale prices against incoming Market-
Maker interest resulting from technological disparities between Market-
Makers. The Exchange believes it should be able to extend this
protection to incoming interest from Market-Makers, regardless of the
type of port through which it was submitted, as it can expose Market-
Makers to the same level of risk. Ultimately, this exposure may
negatively impact liquidity to the detriment of the entire market.
Unlike quotes and orders submitted through bulk ports, the primary
purpose of which is generally to rest on the Book and provide
liquidity, it is likely the intention of orders submitted through non-
bulk ports to execute against the resting interest (including Market-
Maker quotes). As a result, the Exchange believes it is important to
balance the need to protect resting Market-Maker quotes from executions
at stale prices with the need to provide opportunities for this
incoming interest to execute against those quotes.
The proposed rule change proposes to adopt a quote protection timer
(``QPT'') to provide the Exchange with the ability to provide Market-
Maker quotes with this additional protection. The purpose of QPT is to
provide Market-Makers with opportunities to update the prices of their
resting quotes prior to execution against aggressing non-bulk port
incoming Market-Maker interest while still providing that incoming
interest with the opportunity to execute against resting liquidity.
Specifically, the Exchange proposes to adopt Rule 5.32(h), which
provides the Exchange with the ability to determine on a class basis to
activate a QPT. In a class in which the Exchange has activated the QPT,
if an incoming order (including an incoming complex order legging into
the Book pursuant to Rule 5.33(g), but excluding paired orders, orders
(or unexecuted portions) that routed to another exchange(s), and orders
routed from PAR) enters the Book \7\ in that class
[[Page 62614]]
with Capacity M that a User submitted through a non-bulk port (the
``initial aggressor order'') and that is marketable against a resting
bulk message quote (except for a quote offer a price equal to the
minimum increment for the class) \8\ with Capacity M (the ``initial
protected quote'') at the time the initial aggressor order enters the
Book, the initial aggressor order executes against any resting orders
and quotes with a Capacity other than M at the same price as the
initial protected quote.\9\ After that, as set forth in proposed Rule
5.32(h)(2), except for a non-ISO IOC order for which the Trading Permit
Holder (``TPH'') opts out of QPT (in which case the System cancels any
portion of the order not executed pursuant to proposed subparagraph
(1)),\10\ the System initiates the QPT,\11\ the start time of which is
the time when the initial aggressor order enters (or a complex order
\12\ Legs into) the Book (the ``quote protection period''), provided if
there is an ongoing QPT in every leg of a complex order that Legs into
the Book, the length of the QPT for the complex order equals the
longest remaining time of the leg QPTs.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ This includes Immediate-or-Cancel (``IOC'') orders and
Intermarket Sweep Orders (``ISOs''). See Rule 5.6(c). Contingent
orders (i.e., stop, stop-limit, market-on-close, and limit-on-close)
are excluded from the QPT (except for market-on-close and limit-on-
close orders submitted to the Exchange within the specified amount
of time set by the Exchange pursuant to Rule 5.6(d), as they would
just be market or limit orders at that point), as by definition
these orders are not executable upon entry (they become executable
once the applicable contingency is satisfied), so it is unnecessary
to prevent from immediate execution against resting Market-Maker
quotes. The Exchange believes the proposed exclusions are
appropriate, as they would by definition provide resting quotes with
time to update before potential execution. For example, paired
orders would go through an auction (such as pursuant to Rule 5.37 or
5.38 (the automated improvement mechanism for simple and complex
orders)), during which Market-Maker quotes could update before they
would potentially execute against those orders after the auction.
Similarly, if an order routes away to another exchange because that
exchange has better prices available than those on the Exchange, by
the time any portion of that order comes back to the Exchange for
execution against the Book, any resting Market-Maker quotes could
have been updated before executing against that returned order.
Likewise, if an order routes from PAR for electronic execution, it
would have first been handled by a person on the trading floor after
entry and before execution against interest in the Book, giving
quotes sufficient time for update before potential execution against
that order.
\8\ The Exchange believes this exclusion is appropriate, as
there would be no price at which an incoming bid could adjust to and
rest during the quote protection period if the resting offer is
equal to the minimum increment for the class. For example, if the
minimum increment for a class is $0.05, and the market is $0-$0.05
on the Exchange, if an incoming order is priced at $0.05, as further
described below, during the quote protection period, the price of
the order is adjusted to one increment below the offer to prevent a
locked market. However, that would make the adjusted price of the
incoming order $0, which is not a permissible price for an order.
\9\ See proposed Rule 5.32(h)(1).
\10\ The Exchange believes it is appropriate to permit TPHs to
opt out of QPT for their non-ISO IOC orders (and just have them
execute against any resting interest with a Capacity other than M,
cancelling any remainder) because it is consistent with the IOC
instruction, pursuant to which a user desires execution in whole or
in part as soon as the System receives it. See Rule 5.6(d)
(definition of IOC time-in-force instruction).
\11\ The Exchange determines the length of the timer in
microseconds on a class basis, which may not exceed five
milliseconds. The Exchange believes this flexibility is reasonable
so it can apply a timer length that appropriately reflects market
structure differences among classes, as discussed above regarding
why it is appropriate to provide the Exchange with flexibility to
determine whether to apply QPT on a class basis. The Exchange has
this same flexibility for other Exchange functionality, such as
auction timers. See, e.g., Rule 5.37(c)(3) (providing the Exchange
with flexibility to determine the length of an AIM auction period on
a class basis).
\12\ The Exchange understands complex orders may similarly cause
executions against protected quotes due to technical disparities in
the same manner as simple orders.
\13\ The Exchange believes this is appropriate, as the resting
quotes in each leg of the complex order that are intended to be
protected by this proposed functionality will be subject to the full
length of the quote protection period before the legs of the complex
order in this scenario can execute against them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes it is reasonable to permit the Exchange to
determine whether to activate QPT on a class basis to address market
structure differences that apply to different classes. This is
consistent with other Exchange functionality, such as auctions, which
the Exchange may activate on a class basis.\14\ For example, in classes
in which there is high retail customer order volume, the Exchange
believes Market-Makers may be willing to accept additional execution
risk for the additional opportunities to execute against a significant
number of customer orders, which may ultimately offset any stale-priced
executions against faster-acting professional customers. To the
contrary, in low volume classes or classes comprised mostly of
professional investor volume, the execution risk is greater as there
are fewer potential executions against customers to offset the risk.
Additionally, in classes with smaller minimum increments, the execution
risk is higher because Market-Maker quote updates may be more granular
and thus more frequent. Therefore, in a non-penny class, a ``stale''
execution price may be wider than it might be in a penny class and thus
still within a Market-Maker's pricing parameters and risk profile. The
Exchange notes it does not believe this class flexibility is necessary
for its current protection functionality (which applies to all
classes), as the Exchange understands Market-Makers primarily use bulk
port functionality to provide liquidity and satisfy their quoting
obligations. As there are Market-Makers appointed to all classes
trading on the Exchange, the Exchange believes it is appropriate to
prevent this interest (orders and bulk messages) submitted through bulk
ports in all classes from executing against resting Market-Maker
interest, as much of the incoming interest was likely submitted to rest
on the Book (and satisfy quoting obligations to provide liquidity to
the market) rather than execute upon entry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See, e.g., Rule 5.37(a)(1) (permitting the Exchange to
determine in which classes orders may be submitted into an automated
improvement mechanism (``AIM'') auction for potential price
improvement).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also believes limiting the proposed rule change to
orders of Market-Makers (Capacity M) is appropriate because it is
consistent with current and prior functionality, which protected
resting Market-Maker interest from incoming Market-Maker interest.\15\
As noted above, Market-Maker systems may automatically generate order
and quote updates in response to market changes. The Exchange believes
resting Market-Maker interest should be protected from stale execution
against all incoming Market-Maker interest generated by those same
systems, regardless of the type of port through which the interest is
submitted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ The Exchange notes current functionality also prevents
execution of orders with Capacities other than M against resting
Market-Maker quotes. See Rule 5.5(c)(3) (requiring users other than
appointed Market-Makers to submit orders through bulk ports as Post
Only, which cannot execute upon entry against resting interest). If
the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') approves the
proposed rule change, the Exchange may determine to submit a
separate rule filing to propose to extend QPT to other Capacities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to proposed Rule 5.32(h)(3), during the quote protection
period, neither the initial aggressor order (or unexecuted portion) nor
any other incoming marketable orders with Capacity M received during
the quote protection period (together with the initial aggressor order,
the ``aggressor orders'') may execute against the protected quote or
any other contra-side bulk message quotes with Capacity M that enter
the Book (together with the initial protected quote, the ``protected
quotes''), and the System ranks (in time priority) and displays the
aggressor orders at one minimum price variation below (above) the price
of the displayed protected offer (bid).\16\ In other words, during the
quote protection period, no aggressor orders may execute against
protected quotes resting in the Book. Therefore, all aggressor orders
in a series that are entered during an ongoing quote protection period
are similarly prevented from executing against any protected quote
(whether
[[Page 62615]]
the initial protected quote or any protected quote in that series that
is entered during the quote protection period and rests on the Book).
Additionally, by having incoming aggressor orders ``join'' the initial
aggressor order and incoming protected quotes ``join'' the initial
protected quotes, a series with protected quotes will be subject to a
full quote protection period for the protected quotes in that series.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ This is similar to the Exchange's Price Adjust
functionality (see Rule 5.32(b)), which prevents the Exchange from
disseminating a locked or crossed market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The TPH that submitted any aggressor order during the quote
protection period, or the Market-Maker that submitted any protected
quote during the quote protection period, may update the price of its
order or quote, as applicable; however, those orders and quotes remain
firm at their displayed prices in accordance with Rule 5.59 until
updated. Therefore, aggressor orders and protected quotes may continue
to execute at their resting prices (which is an adjusted price with
respect to aggressor orders, as described above) against incoming
interest. This provides other interest that enters the Book during the
quote protection period with potential execution opportunities.
Specifically:
an incoming order with a Capacity other than M (``non-
aggressor order'') executes against resting contra-side interest at its
displayed price in accordance with the allocation algorithm applicable
to the class;
an incoming aggressor order executes against resting non-
protected quote contra-side interest at its adjusted price in
accordance with the allocation algorithm applicable to the class; and
an incoming contra-side order or quote executes against
resting aggressor and non-aggressor orders at their displayed prices in
accordance with the allocation algorithm applicable to the class.
If (a) for simple orders, there are no more protected quotes at the
initial prices of any price-adjusted aggressor orders, the System
unadjusts the prices of the aggressor buy (sell) orders to one minimum
price variation below (above) the next lowest (highest) priced
protected quote (to their limit prices); or (b) for complex orders, the
SBO (SBB) increases (decreases), the System unadjusts the prices of the
aggressor buy (sell) complex orders to one minimum variation below
(above) the then-current SBO (SBB) (to their limit prices).
Proposed Rule 5.32(h)(4) provides at the conclusion of the quote
protection period, the System unadjusts the prices of the aggressor
orders (or unexecuted portions) to their initial prices, which then
execute (in time priority) against any remaining marketable contra-side
interest, including the protected quotes, in accordance with the
allocation algorithm applicable to the class; \17\ and any unexecuted
portions of aggressor orders rest on the Book and unexecuted portions
of protected quotes remain on the Book.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See Rule 5.33(a).
\18\ If the market closes or the Exchange halts trading in the
affected series prior to the conclusion of the quote protection
period, the QPT concludes without execution.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change to delay execution
of resting Market-Maker quotes against incoming aggressor Market-Maker
interest is appropriate, rather than prevention of execution (as occurs
in current functionality described above), because as noted above,
unlike interest submitted through bulk ports (the primary purpose of
which is to provide liquidity on the Book), the primary purpose of
orders submitted through non-bulk ports is to execute against interest
resting on the Book.\19\ Therefore, the Exchange believes it is
important to provide this incoming interest with execution
opportunities, after a slight delay, to provide Market-Makers with
opportunities to effect their quote updates. Additionally, execution of
bulk messages (which may only be submitted through bulk ports) exposes
Market-Makers to increased risk compared to order execution. For
example, the System will not determine whether a Market-Maker's risk
monitor mechanism \20\ thresholds have been exceeded until all quotes
within a bulk message have been processed, unlike orders, which may
result in execution in only one series before the System determines
whether those thresholds have been exceeded. The Exchange believes the
proposed rule change will close a gap that currently exposes Market-
Maker liquidity resting on the Book to executions at potentially stale
prices due to technology disparities against the orders submitted by
Market-Makers through non-bulk ports. The quote protection timer will
provide a balance between protecting resting Market-Maker quotes in
order to maintain liquidity and providing incoming Market-Maker
interest with execution opportunities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ It is possible some liquidity providers, including Market-
Makers, are submitting orders through non-bulk ports for the
provision of liquidity, but the Exchange believes this represents a
small portion of non-bulk port order flow.
\20\ See Rule 5.34(c)(4), pursuant to which a user's (including
a Market-Maker's) interest may be cancelled after that user's risk
limits have been exceeded. As a result, quotes in a bulk message
will complete executions before determination of whether a user's
risk limits have been exceeded. This makes execution risk of bulk
message greater than an order, which only has a bid or offer for one
series.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Act'') and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to the Exchange and, in particular,
the requirements of Section 6(b) of the Act.\21\ Specifically, the
Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with the
Section 6(b)(5) \22\ requirements that the rules of an exchange be
designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing,
settling, processing information with respect to, and facilitating
transactions in securities, 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. Additionally,
the Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with the
Section 6(b)(5) \23\ requirement that the rules of an exchange not be
designed to permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers,
brokers, or dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\22\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
\23\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In particular, the Exchange believes the proposed rule change will
promote just and equitable principles of trade, remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a national market system, and protect
investors. The proposed rule change is intended to prevent incoming
Market-Maker orders submitted through non-bulk ports from immediately
executing against resting Market-Maker interest at potentially stale
prices due to technological disparities between Market-Makers. The
Exchange believes the proposed functionality will reduce execution of
resting Market-Maker interest at prices that do not reflect the then-
current market, which executions may impede certain liquidity
providers' ability to competitively price their bids and offers.
Specifically, this increased risk of execution at stale prices may
cause Market-Makers to widen their quotes or otherwise withhold
liquidity to the detriment of investors. The Exchange expects the
proposed rule change to increase liquidity and enhance competition in
the market, because Market-Makers may be able to quote more
aggressively with less concern about exposure to execution risk due to
technological disparities in their quoting systems compared to other
[[Page 62616]]
market participants' order entry systems. As a result, the Exchange
believes this protection for resting Market-Maker interest, and
resulting increased liquidity and competition, would ultimately remove
impediments to the market and benefit all investors.
Given the critical role Market-Makers play in the options market,
the Exchange believes it is imperative to have the ability to protect
Market-Makers' resting quotes from execution at stale prices against
incoming Market-Maker interest due to technological disparities between
Market-Makers. The Exchange believes it should be able to extend this
protection to incoming Market-Maker interest from non-bulk ports, as
technological disparities between Market-Makers can expose Market-
Makers to the same level of risk regardless of which type of port
Market-Makers submit interest. Ultimately, this exposure to risk from
may negatively impact liquidity to the detriment of the entire market.
Unlike quotes and orders submitted through bulk ports, the primary
purpose of which is generally to rest on the Book and provide
liquidity, it is likely the intention of orders submitted through non-
bulk ports to execute against the resting interest (including Market-
Maker quotes). As a result, the Exchange believes it is important to
balance the need to protect resting Market-Maker quotes from executions
at stale prices with the need to provide opportunities for this
incoming interest to execute against those quotes. The Exchange
believes the proposed rule change to slightly delay execution of
certain aggressing interest provides an equitable balance between the
need to protect resting Market-Maker interest and provide incoming
interest with execution opportunities.
The Exchange believes the proposed rule change is not designed to
permit unfair discrimination by providing the Exchange with the ability
to provide Market-Maker quotes with additional protection. The options
market is driven by Market-Maker quotes, and thus Market-Maker quotes
are critical to provide liquidity to the market and contribute to price
discovery for investors. If Market-Makers do not have sufficient time
to refresh their resting quotes (the primary source of liquidity for
customers in the market) in response to market updates before executing
against incoming interest that has incorporated those market updates,
this increased risk of execution at stale prices may cause Market-
Makers to widen their quotes to the detriment of investors or otherwise
withhold liquidity. This reduced liquidity may reduce execution
opportunities or cause executions to occur at worse prices for
customers. Further, Market-Makers must comply with various obligations,
including to provide continuous electronic quotes and to update quotes
in response to market conditions.\24\ It takes time for Market-Makers
to update quotes in series in their appointed classes, which may not
take effect until after faster market participants have updated orders.
The Exchange believes it is appropriate to provide Market-Maker quotes
with a reasonable amount of protection (as the proposed rule change
would provide) to allow them to execute at prices reflective of market
updates given the Market-Makers' need to comply with these obligations
and the resources they expend to comply with these obligations.\25\ As
described above, the protected quotes and aggressor orders will remain
firm during the quote protection period, and executions will continue
during that period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See Rule 5.51.
\25\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, the Exchange believes the proposed rule change to provide
the Exchange with flexibility to determine whether to enable QPT on a
class basis, and in such classes to provide the Exchange with
flexibility to determine the length of the quote protection period, is
not designed to permit unfair discrimination. The Exchange believes
this flexibility is appropriate to address market structure
differences, including differences among market participants and
activity levels, within different classes, which flexibility the
Exchange has with respect to other functionality, such as auctions.\26\
For example, in classes in which there is high retail customer order
volume, the Exchange believes Market-Makers may be willing to accept
additional execution risk for the additional opportunities to execute
against a significant number of customer orders, which may ultimately
offset any stale-priced executions against faster-acting professional
customers. To the contrary, in low volume classes or classes comprised
mostly of professional investor volume, the execution risk is greater
as there are fewer potential executions against customers to offset the
risk. Additionally, in classes with smaller minimum increments, the
execution risk is higher because Market-Maker quote updates may be more
granular and thus more frequent. Therefore, in a non-penny class, a
``stale'' execution price may be wider than it might be in a penny
class. The Exchange notes it does not believe this class flexibility is
necessary for its current protection functionality (which applies to
all classes), as the Exchange understands Market-Makers primarily use
bulk port functionality to provide liquidity and satisfy their quoting
obligations. As there are Market-Makers appointed to all classes
trading on the Exchange, the Exchange believes it is appropriate to
prevent this interest (orders and bulk messages) submitted through bulk
ports in all classes from executing against resting Market-Maker
interest, as much of the incoming interest was likely submitted to rest
on the Book (and satisfy quoting obligations to provide liquidity to
the market) rather than execute upon entry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See, e.g., Rule 5.37(a)(1) (permitting the Exchange to
determine in which classes orders may be submitted into an AIM
auction for potential price improvement) and (c)(3) (permitting the
Exchange to determine the length of the AIM auction period on a
class basis).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange also believes limiting the proposed rule change to
orders of Market-Makers (Capacity M) is appropriate because it is
consistent with current and prior functionality, which protected
resting Market-Maker interest from incoming Market-Maker interest.\27\
As noted above, Market-Maker systems may automatically generate order
and quote updates in response to market changes. The Exchange believes
resting Market-Maker interest should be protected from stale execution
against all incoming Market-Maker interest generated by those same
systems, regardless of the type of port through which the interest is
submitted. Therefore, the Exchange believes the proposed rule change to
close this current gap exposing resting Market-Maker interest to
execution risk against incoming Market-Maker interest submitted through
non-bulk ports due to technological disparities will remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system, and protect investors and the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ The Exchange notes current functionality also prevents
execution of orders with Capacities other than M against resting
Market-Maker quotes. See Rule 5.5(c)(3) (requiring users other than
appointed Market-Makers to submit orders through bulk ports as Post
Only, which cannot execute upon entry against resting interest). If
the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') approves the
proposed rule change, the Exchange may determine to submit a
separate rule filing to propose to extend QPT to other Capacities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange notes the underlying purpose of this proposed rule
change, which is to provide resting Market-Maker quotes with time to
update in response to market condition changes, is the same as the
primary purpose of functionality and previously available
[[Page 62617]]
on the Exchange.\28\ The Exchange believes the proposed rule change to
delay execution of resting Market-Maker quotes against incoming
aggressor interest is appropriate, rather than prevention of execution
(as occurs in current functionality described above), because as noted
above, unlike interest submitted through bulk ports (the primary
purpose of which is to provide liquidity on the Book), the primary
purpose of orders submitted through non-bulk ports is to execute
against interest resting on the Book.\29\ Therefore, the Exchange
believes it is important to provide this incoming interest with
execution opportunities, after a slight delay, to provide Market-Makers
with opportunities to effect their quote updates. Additionally,
execution of bulk messages (which may only be submitted through bulk
ports) exposes Market-Makers to increased risk compared to order
execution. For example, the System will not determine whether a Market-
Maker's risk monitor mechanism \30\ thresholds have been exceeded until
all quotes within a bulk message have been processed, unlike orders,
which may result in execution in only one series before the System
determines whether those thresholds have been exceeded. The Exchange
believes the proposed rule change will close a gap that currently
exposes Market-Maker liquidity resting on the Book to executions at
potentially stale prices due to technology disparities against Market-
Maker orders submitted through non-bulk ports. The quote protection
timer will provide a balance between protecting resting Market-Maker
quotes in order to maintain liquidity and providing incoming interest
with execution opportunities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See Rules 5.5(c)(3) and 5.32(c)(6); see also Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 86374 (July 15, 2019), 84 FR 34963 (July
19, 2019) (SR-CBOE-2019-033) (adoption of current Rules 5.5(c)(3)
and 5.32(c)(6)); and 51822 (June 10, 2005), 70 FR 35321 (June 17,
2005) (SR-CBOE-2004-87) (adoption of former Cboe Rule 6.45(c)).
\29\ It is possible some liquidity providers, including Market-
Makers, are submitting orders through non-bulk ports for the
provision of liquidity, but the Exchange believes this represents a
small portion of non-bulk port order flow.
\30\ See Rule 5.34(c)(4), pursuant to which a user's (including
a Market-Maker's) interest may be cancelled after that user's risk
limits have been exceeded. As a result, quotes in a bulk message
will complete executions before determination of whether a user's
risk limits have been exceeded. This makes execution risk of bulk
message greater than an order, which only has a bid or offer for one
series.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed temporary adjustment of aggressor order prices will
further perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and national
market system, as it will prevent the display of a locked or crossed
market consistent with the Linkage Plan.\31\ This proposed handling of
these orders is also consistent with the Exchange's current Price
Adjust functionality.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See Rule 5.66.
\32\ See Rule 5.32(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, the options market is driven by Market-Maker
quotes, and thus Market-Maker quotes are critical to provide liquidity
to the market and contribute to price discovery for investors. The
proposed functionality is designed to permit the Exchange to provide
Market-Makers with further protection against executions at potentially
stale prices due to technology disparities while still providing
incoming Market-Maker orders submitted through non-bulk ports with
execution opportunities. The Exchange believes the proposed enhanced
functionality will permit liquidity providers to more efficiently enter
and update bids and offers. This may cause Market-Makers to quote
tighter and deeper markets, which will increase liquidity and enhance
competition to the ultimate benefit of all market participants.
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 that is not necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The Exchange does not
believe the proposed rule change will impose any burden on intramarket
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act, because it will apply in the same manner to all
incoming Market-Maker orders in non-bulk ports. The primary purpose of
the proposed rule change is to permit the Exchange to provide
additional protection to resting Market-Maker quotes from executions
against incoming Market-Maker interest at potentially stale prices
before they have the opportunity to update in response to market
condition changes. The Exchange believes it is reasonable to provide
additional protection to Market-Makers given their unique and critical
role in the options market and the various obligations that Market-
Makers must satisfy, as discussed above. Additionally, as noted above,
the proposed functionality supplements similar functionality currently
available on the Exchange, which similarly protects resting Market-
Maker interest against executions at potentially stale prices.\33\ The
Exchange does not believe the proposed flexibility to apply QPT on a
class basis, or determine the length of the timer on a class basis,
will impose any burden on intramarket competition that is not necessary
or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act, as such
flexibility is reasonable to address market structure differences among
classes, as discussed above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See Rule 5.32(c)(6).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Exchange does not believe the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on intermarket competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act, because it
applies solely to the timing of executions against resting Market-Maker
quotes on the Exchange. As noted above, the proposed rule change is
consistent with the Linkage Plan.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See Rule 5.66.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the Exchange believes the proposed rule change will
relieve any burden on, or otherwise promote, competition. As discussed
above, the Exchange believe the proposed rule change may encourage the
provision of more aggressive liquidity, which may result in more
trading opportunities and tighter spreads, which contributes to price
discovery. This may improve overall market quality and enhance
competition on the Exchange.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
The Exchange neither solicited nor received comments on the
proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the Exchange consents, the Commission shall: (a) by order approve
or disapprove such proposed rule change, or (b) institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule change should be 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:
[[Page 62618]]
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-CBOE-2023-044 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-CBOE-2023-044. 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-CBOE-2023-044 and should be
submitted on or before October 3, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023-19593 Filed 9-11-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P