Notice2024-07227
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To Encourage Members To Contribute Liquidity to the Exchange by Offering Those That Maintain a Particular Minimum Trading Volume Lower Fees for Specified Market Data and Connectivity Products
Primary source
Metadata and text below are from the Federal Register, a public-domain U.S. government work. Always verify the official published version before relying on it for any legal matter.
Published
April 5, 2024
Issuing agencies
Securities and Exchange Commission
Full Text
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 89 Issue 67 (Friday, April 5, 2024)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 67 (Friday, April 5, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 24070-24075]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2024-07227]
[[Page 24070]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-99879; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2024-016]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC;
Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change To
Encourage Members To Contribute Liquidity to the Exchange by Offering
Those That Maintain a Particular Minimum Trading Volume Lower Fees for
Specified Market Data and Connectivity Products
April 1, 2024.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(the ``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given
that on March 22, 2024, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq'' or
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``SEC'' or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II and III, below, which Items have been prepared by the
Exchange. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments
on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to encourage members to contribute liquidity
to the Exchange by offering those that maintain a particular minimum
trading volume lower fees for specified market data and connectivity
products.
While these amendments are effective upon filing, the Exchange has
designated the proposed amendments to be operative on September 1,
2024.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at <a href="https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/nasdaq/rules">https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/nasdaq/rules</a>, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public
Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The purpose of the proposed rule change is to reward firms that
meet a minimum average daily displayed volume with lower fees for Non-
Display Usage and the Exchange's 40Gb and 10Gb Ultra high-speed
connection to the Exchange.\3\
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\3\ This proposal was initially filed on March 6, 2024, as SR-
Nasdaq-2024-011. On March 20, 2024, that filing was withdrawn and
replaced with SR-Nasdaq-2024-015. On March 22, 2024, SR-Nasdaq-2024-
015 was withdrawn and replaced with the instant filing due to a
technical error.
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Non-Display Usage
Non-Display Usage is any method of accessing Nasdaq U.S.
information that involves access or use by a machine or automated
device without access or use of a display by a natural person. Examples
of Non-Display Usage include, but are not limited to:
<bullet> Automated trading;
<bullet> Automated order/quote generation and/or order/quote
pegging;
<bullet> Price referencing for use in algorithmic trading;
<bullet> Price referencing for use in smart order routing;
<bullet> Program trading and high frequency trading;
<bullet> Order verification;
<bullet> Automated surveillance programs;
<bullet> Risk management;
<bullet> Automatic order cancellation, or automatic error
discovery;
<bullet> Clearing and settlement activities;
<bullet> Account maintenance (e.g., controlling margin for a
customer account); and
<bullet> ``Hot'' disaster recovery.
Although either top-of-book or depth-of-book data can be used for
Non-Display Usage, the proposal modifies fees for depth-of-book data
only.\4\
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\4\ See Equity 7, Section 123 (Nasdaq Depth-of-Book data).
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Non-Display fees are currently assessed on a per-subscriber \5\ or
per-firm basis. Monthly fees are $375 per Subscriber for 1-39
subscribers; $15,000 per firm for 40-99 subscribers; $30,000 per firm
for 100-249 subscribers; and $75,000 per firm for 250 or more
subscribers.
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\5\ ``Subscriber'' is defined as a device or computer terminal
or an automated service which is entitled to receive information.
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Under the proposed rule change, a member firm that meets the
minimum ADV threshold discussed below would continue to pay those fees.
Firms that do not meet the minimum ADV threshold, however, as well
as non-member firms, would pay the new monthly fees of $500 per
subscriber for 1-39 subscribers; $20,000 per firm for 40-99
subscribers; $40,000 per firm for 100-249 subscribers; and $100,000 per
firm for 250 or more subscribers.
Fiber Connections to the Exchange (40Gb and 10Gb Ultra)
Nasdaq offers customers the opportunity to co-locate their servers
and equipment within the Nasdaq Data Center,\6\ allowing participants
an opportunity to reduce latency and network complexity. Nasdaq offers
a variety of connectivity options to fit a firm's specific networking
needs, including the high-speed 40Gb and 10Gb Ultra networks.
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\6\ See Nasdaq Co-Location (CoLo) Services, available at <a href="https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/trader.aspx?id=colo">https://www.nasdaqtrader.com/trader.aspx?id=colo</a>; Stock Exchange Data
Center & Trading, available at <a href="https://www.nasdaq.com/solutions/nasdaq-co-location">https://www.nasdaq.com/solutions/nasdaq-co-location</a>.
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All of Nasdaq's colocation and connectivity options offer customers
access to any or all Nasdaq exchanges through a single connection.\7\
For example, a firm that is a member of all six Nasdaq exchanges that
purchases services in the Nasdaq Data Center such as a 40G fiber
connection, cabinet space, cooling fans, and patch cables only
purchases these products or services once to use them for all six
Nasdaq exchanges.
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\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 84571 (November 9,
2018), 83 FR 57758 (November 16, 2018) (SR-Nasdaq-2018-086).
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Nasdaq currently charges members an ongoing monthly fee of $21,100
for the 40Gb fiber connection and $15,825 for the 10Gb Ultra connection
to the Nasdaq exchanges. Under the proposed rule change, a firm that
meets the minimum ADV threshold would continue to pay those fees.
Member firms that do not meet the minimum ADV threshold discussed
below, as well as non-member firms, would pay the new monthly fee of
$23,700 for the 40Gb fiber connection and $17,800 for the 10Gb Ultra
connection.
Minimum ADV
The proposal introduces the new term ``Minimum ADV,'' which will
mean the introduction by a member of at least one million shares of
added executed displayed liquidity on average per trading day in all
securities through one or more of the member's market participant
identifiers (``MPIDs'') on the Nasdaq Market Center. Average daily
volume is calculated as the total volume of shares executed for all
added
[[Page 24071]]
displayed orders in all securities during the trading month divided by
the number of trading days in that month, averaged over the six-month
period preceding the billing month, or the date the firm became a
member, whichever is shorter. New members will be deemed to meet the
Minimum ADV for the first month of operation. Minimum ADV excludes
sponsored access by a member on behalf of a third party. The minimum
ADV threshold was designed to be accessible to all members to promote
wide engagement with the Exchange.
Nasdaq does not expect any member to be disadvantaged by the
proposal. Nasdaq is a maker-taker platform and, as such, offers rebates
to members that offer displayed liquidity. With these rebates, no
member should have any difficulty posting and executing sufficient
displayed liquidity to meet the ADV threshold. The threshold is,
moreover, set at a level that Nasdaq believes any member--even smaller
members--should be able to meet without significant effort. Because the
threshold applies to displayed liquidity only, the proposal should not
impact the Best Execution obligations of any member. If all members
were to meet this threshold, the proposal would add an incremental 60-
80 million shares to Nasdaq's accessible liquidity.
Non-members that, by definition, do not post displayed liquidity to
the market would pay the higher fees. This is because the non-members
do not directly contribute order flow to the Exchange, but nevertheless
benefit from that order flow through tighter spreads, better prices,
and the other advantages of a more liquid platform, as discussed in
further detail under Statutory Basis.
The Proposal Will Promote Competition Among Trading Venues
Exchanges, like all trading venues, compete as platforms. All
elements of the platform--trade executions, market data, connectivity,
membership, and listings--operate in concert. Trade executions increase
the value of market data; market data functions as an advertisement for
on-exchange trading; listings increase the value of trade executions
and market data; and greater liquidity on the exchange enhances the
value of ports and colocation services.
As discussed under Statutory Basis, we have attached a data-based
analysis demonstrating how platform competition works entitled ``How
Exchanges Compete: An Economic Analysis of Platform Competition'' as
Exhibit 3. The paper explains that exchanges are multi-sided platforms,
whose value is dependent on attracting users to multiple sides of the
platform. Issuers need investors, and every trade requires two sides to
trade. To make its platform attractive to multiple constituencies, an
exchange must consider inter-side externalities, meaning demand for one
set of platform services depends on the demand for other services. This
proposal is designed to promote competition by providing an incentive
for members to provide liquidity (therefore attracting investors and
increasing the overall value of the platform) through charging lower
fees for other platform services (i.e., market data and connectivity).
This will lead to more displayed liquidity on the Exchange, enhancing
and enriching the market data distributed to the industry, which then
increases the amount of interest in the platform. This will also enable
the Exchange to offer investors a more robust, lower cost-trading
experience through tighter spreads and more efficient trading as
discussed in Exhibit 3, placing it in a better competitive position
relative to other exchanges and trading venues.\8\
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\8\ To the degree that the additional liquidity is moved from
off-exchange venues to on-exchange platforms, overall market
transparency will improve as well.
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2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with Section
6(b) of the Act,\9\ in general, and furthers the objectives of Sections
6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5) of the Act,\10\ in particular, in that it provides
for the equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and other
charges among members and issuers and other persons using any facility,
and is not designed to permit unfair discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers.
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\9\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\10\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4) and (5).
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Fees Produced in a Competitive Environment Are an Equitable Allocation
of Reasonable Dues, Fees, and Other Charges
Reliance on competitive solutions is fundamental to the Act. Where
significant competitive forces constrain fees, fee levels meet the
Act's standard for the ``equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees,
and other charges among members and issuers and other persons using its
facilities,'' \11\ unless there is a substantial countervailing basis
to find that a fee does not meet some other requirement of the Act.\12\
Evidence of platform competition demonstrates that each exchange
product is sold in a competitive environment, and its fees will be an
equitable allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and other charges,
provided that nothing about the product or its fee structure impairs
competition.\13\
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\11\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
\12\ See U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, ``Staff
Guidance on SRO Rule filings Relating to Fees'' (May 21, 2019),
available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/tm/staff-guidance-sro-rule-filings-fees">https://www.sec.gov/tm/staff-guidance-sro-rule-filings-fees</a> (``Fee Guidance'') (``If significant competitive forces
constrain the fee at issue, fee levels will be presumed to be fair
and reasonable, and the inquiry is whether there is a substantial
countervailing basis to find that the fee terms nevertheless fail to
meet an applicable requirement of the Exchange Act (e.g., that fees
are equitably allocated, not unfairly discriminatory, and not an
undue burden on competition).'').
\13\ Nothing in the Act requires proof of product-by-product
competition.
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Congress directed the Commission to ``rely on `competition,
whenever possible, in meeting its regulatory responsibilities for
overseeing the SROs and the national market system.' '' \14\ Following
this mandate, the Commission and the courts have repeatedly expressed
their preference for competition over regulatory intervention to
determine prices, products, and services in the securities markets.
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\14\ NetCoalition v. SEC, 715 F.3d 342, 534-35 (D.C. Cir. 2013);
see also H.R. Rep. No. 94-229 at 92 (1975) (``[I]t is the intent of
the conferees that the national market system evolve through the
interplay of competitive forces as unnecessary regulatory
restrictions are removed.'').
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In Regulation NMS, the Commission highlighted the importance of
market forces in determining prices and SRO revenues and recognized
that regulation of the national market system ``has been remarkably
successful in promoting market competition in its broader forms that
are most important to investors and listed companies.'' \15\
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\15\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9,
2005), 70 FR 37496, 37499 (June 29, 2005) (``Regulation NMS Adopting
Release'').
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As a result, the Commission has long relied on competitive forces
to determine whether a fee proposal is equitable, fair, reasonable, and
not unreasonably or unfairly discriminatory. In 2008, the Commission
explained that ``[i]f competitive forces are operative, the self-
interest of the exchanges themselves will work powerfully to constrain
unreasonable or unfair behavior.'' \16\ In 2019, Commission Staff
reaffirmed that ``[i]f significant competitive forces constrain the fee
at issue, fee levels will be presumed to be fair and reasonable . . .
.'' \17\
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\16\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59039 (December 2,
2008), 73 FR 74770 (December 9, 2008) (SR-NYSEArca-2006-21).
\17\ See Fee Guidance, supra n.10.
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Accordingly, ``the existence of significant competition provides a
substantial basis for finding that the terms of an exchange's fee
proposal are equitable, fair, reasonable, and not
[[Page 24072]]
unreasonably or unfairly discriminatory.'' \18\ Consistent with the
Commission's longstanding focus on competition, Commission Staff have
indicated that they would only look at factors outside of the
competitive market if a ``proposal lacks persuasive evidence that the
proposed fee is constrained by significant competitive forces.'' \19\
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\18\ See id.
\19\ See id. In the Fee Guidance, the Staff indicated that
``[w]hen reviewing rule filing proposals . . . [it] is mindful of
recent opinions by the D.C. Circuit,'' including Susquehanna
International Group, LLP v. SEC, 866 F.3d 442 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
However, the D.C. Circuit's decision in Susquehanna is irrelevant to
the Commission's review of immediately effective SRO fee filings.
Susquehanna involved the Commission's approval of a rule proposed
under Section 19(b)(2) of the Act, not its evaluation of whether to
temporarily suspend an SRO's immediately effective fee filing under
Section 19(b)(3). A comparison of Sections 19(b)(2) and 19(b)(3) of
the Act makes clear that the Commission is not required to undertake
the same independent review, and make the same findings and
determinations, for Section 19(b)(3) filings that it must for
Section 19(b)(2) filings. In particular, Section 19(b)(2) requires
the Commission to ``find[ ] that [a] proposed rule change is
consistent with the'' Act before approving the rule. 15 U.S.C.
78s(b)(2)(C)(i). Section 19(b)(3), by contrast, imbues the
Commission with discretion, stating that it ``may temporarily
suspend'' an immediately effective rule filing where ``it appears to
the Commission that such action is necessary or appropriate.'' As
the Supreme Court has explained, statutes stating that an agency
``may''--but need not--take certain action are ``written in the
language of permission and discretion.'' S. Ry. Co. v. Seaboard
Allied Milling, 442 U.S. 444, 455 (1979); see also Crooker v. SEC,
161 F.2d 944, 949 (1st Cir. 1947) (per curiam). The ``contrast''
between Sections 19(b)(2) and 19(b)(3), the Commission itself has
explained, ``reflects the fundamental difference in the way Congress
intended for different types of rules to be treated.'' Brief of
Respondent SEC, NetCoalition v. SEC, 715 F.3d 342 (D.C. Cir. 2013)
(Nos. 10-1421 et al.); see also id. at 42-43 (``[W]hile the
Commission's authority to suspend a fee under Subsection (3)(C) is
permissive, its duties under Subsection (2) are stated in mandatory
terms.''). Thus, neither Susquehanna, nor Section 19(b)(3) of the
Act, requires the Commission to make independent findings that an
immediately effective SRO fee filing such as this one is consistent
with the Act. To the degree that the Susquehanna decision is
applicable to any Commission action, however, the court held that
the Commission is required to ``itself find or determine'' that a
proposal meets statutory requirements, explaining that the
Commission is ``obligated to make an independent review'' of an
SRO's proposal, and not rely solely on the work of the SRO. See 866
F.3d at 446.
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Nothing in the Act Requires an Examination of Fees in Isolation
The Act mandates the ``equitable allocation of reasonable dues,
fees, and other charges among members and issuers and other persons
using its facilities.'' \20\ This provision refers generally to
``reasonable dues, fees, and other charges'' as a whole, not individual
fees. Nothing in the Act requires the individual examination of
specific product fees in isolation. Provided that a proposed rule
change does not in and of itself undermine competition, evidence of
platform competition is sufficient to show that the product operates in
a competitive environment.
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\20\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4).
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A determination of whether a proposal permits unfair discrimination
between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers remains a separate
product-specific inquiry.
The Commission Has Recognized That Exchanges Are Subject to Significant
Competitive Forces in the Market for Order Flow
The fact that the market for order flow is competitive has long
been recognized by the courts. In NetCoalition v. Securities and
Exchange Commission, the D.C. Circuit stated, ``[n]o one disputes that
competition for order flow is `fierce.' . . . As the SEC explained,
`[i]n the U.S. national market system, buyers and sellers of
securities, and the broker-dealers that act as their order-routing
agents, have a wide range of choices of where to route orders for
execution'; [and] `no exchange can afford to take its market share
percentages for granted' because `no exchange possesses a monopoly,
regulatory or otherwise, in the execution of order flow from broker
dealers.' '' \21\
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\21\ See NetCoalition, 615 F.3d at 539 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (quoting
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59039 (December 2, 2008), 73 FR
74770, 74782-83 (December 9, 2008) (SR-NYSEArca-2006-21)).
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All Exchange Products Are Subject to Competition--Not Just Those
Directly Related to Order Flow
As discussed more fully in our analysis, ``How Exchanges Compete:
An Economic Analysis of Platform Competition'' (Exhibit 3), competition
is not limited to order flow. Data shows that the combination of
explicit all-in costs to trade and other implicit costs has largely
equalized the cost to trade across venues.\22\ This is a function of
the fact that, if the all-in cost to the user of interacting with an
exchange exceeds market price, customers can and do shift their
purchases and trading activity to other exchanges, and therefore the
exchange must adjust one or more of its fees to attract customers.
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\22\ Competition across platforms constrains platform fees and
results in ``all-in'' costs becoming equal across platforms. The
Staff Guidance on SRO Rule Filings Relating to Fees, however, states
that platform competition requires that the ``overall return of the
platform, rather than the return of any particular fees charged to a
type of customer, . . . be used to assess the competitiveness of the
platform's market,'' and that ``[a]n SRO that wishes to rely on
total platform theory must provide evidence demonstrating that
competitive forces are sufficient to constrain the SRO's aggregate
return across the platform.'' See Fee Guidance, supra n.10 (emphasis
added). We do not know, and cannot determine, whether returns (as
opposed to fees) are equalized across platforms, because we do not
have detailed cost information from other exchanges. An analysis of
returns, however, is unnecessary to show that competition constrains
fees given that, as we demonstrate below, platform competition can
be demonstrated solely by examining costs to users.
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This conclusion is particularly striking given that different
exchanges engage in a variety of business models and offer an array of
pricing options to appeal to different customer types. The largest
exchanges operate maker-taker platforms, offering rebates to attract
trading liquidity, which allows them to maintain actionable quotes with
high liquidity and offer high-quality market data. The negative price
charged to liquidity providers through rebates is part of the platform
because it serves to create features attractive to other participants,
including oftentimes tight spreads, actionable and lit quotes, and more
valuable market data.
Inverted venues, in contrast, have the opposite price structure--
liquidity providers pay to add liquidity, while liquidity takers earn a
rebate. These platforms offer less liquidity, but better queue
priority, faster fills, and lower effective spreads for investors.
There are a wide range of other pricing models and product offerings
among the dozens of lit and unlit trading venues that compete in the
marketplace in addition to these examples.
The different strategies among exchanges also manifest in the
pricing of other services, such as market data and connectivity. Some
exchanges charge for such services, while others charge little or
nothing (typically because the exchange is new or has little
liquidity), just as some exchanges charge a fee per trade, while others
pay rebates.
In assessing competition for exchange services, we must consider
not only explicit costs, such as fees for trading, market data, and
connectivity, but also the implicit costs of trading on an exchange.
The realized spread, or markout, captures the implicit cost to trade on
a platform.
The concept of markout was created by market makers trying to
capture the spread while providing a two-sided (bid and offer) market.
For market makers, being filled on the bid or the offer can cause a
loss if the fill changes market prices. For example, a fill on a market
maker's bid just as the stock price falls results in a ``virtual
loss,'' because the market maker has a long position with a new bid
lower than the fill.
Negative markouts can be beneficial. For example, if an
institutional investor is working a large buy order, negative markouts
represent fills as the market
[[Page 24073]]
falls, allowing later orders to be placed sooner, and likely at a
better price, reducing the opportunity costs as well as explicit cost
of building the position.
Data suggests that market participants employ sophisticated
analytic tools to weigh the cost of immediate liquidity and lower
opportunity costs against better spread capture (lower markouts) and
explicit trading costs. As discussed in greater detail in Exhibit 3,
the venues with the highest explicit costs--typically inverted and fee-
fee venues--have the lowest implicit costs from markouts and vice
versa. Higher positive markouts mean more spread capture, but those
venues also tend to have the highest explicit costs, and provide the
least liquidity, and positive externalities, to the market.
Considering both the explicit costs charged by exchanges for their
various joint products and the implicit costs incurred by traders to
trade on various exchanges, the data show that all-in trading costs
across exchanges are largely equalized, regardless of different trading
strategies offered by each platform for each individual service.
As such, platform competition has resulted in a competitive
environment in the market for exchange services, in which trading
platforms are constrained by other platforms' offerings, taking into
consideration the all-in cost of interacting with the platform. This
constraint is a natural consequence of competition and demonstrates
that no exchange platform can charge excessive fees and expect to
remain competitive, thereby constraining fees on all products sold as
part of the platform. The existence of platform-level competition also
explains why some consumers route orders to the exchange with the
highest explicit trading costs even though other exchanges offer free
or a net rebate for trading.\23\
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\23\ Empirical evidence also shows that market data is more
valuable from exchanges with more liquidity. Many customers decide
not to take data from smaller markets, even though they are free or
much lower cost than larger markets.
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Exchanges Compete at Both the Platform and Product Level
Exchange customers are differentiated in the value they place on
the different products offered by exchanges and in their willingness to
pay for those products. This occurs both on a firm-wide and a
transaction basis; for example, individual customers ``multi-home'' on
various platforms, and are thus able to route different trades to
different platforms to take advantage of favorable economics offered on
a trade-to-trade basis.
Exchanges compete by offering differentiated packages of pricing
and products to attract different categories of customer. As in any
competitive market, consumers will ``vote with their feet,''
incentivizing platforms to supply an array of pricing and product
offerings that suit diverse consumer needs far more effectively than a
uniform, one-size-fits-some rigid product offering. If an exchange's
pricing for a particular product gets out of line, such that its total
return is boosted above competitive levels, market forces will
discipline that approach because competing exchanges will quickly
attract customer volume through more attractive all-in trading costs.
In addition, if a particular package of pricing and products is not
attractive to a sufficient volume of customers in a particular
category, those customers may elect not to purchase the service. This
is why exchanges compete at a product level, as well as based on all-in
trading costs.
Exchanges Compete With Off-Exchange Trading Platforms in Addition to
Other Exchanges
As the SEC recently noted in its market infrastructure
proposal,\24\ the number of transactions completed on non-exchange
venues has been growing. Allowing exchanges to compete as platforms
will help exchanges compete against non-exchange venues, and, to the
degree order flow is shifted from non-exchange to exchange venues,
overall market transparency will improve.\25\
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\24\ See Regulation NMS: Minimum Pricing Increments, Access
Fees, and Transparency of Better Price Orders, Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 96494 (File No. S7-30-22), available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2022/34-96494.pdf">https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2022/34-96494.pdf</a>.
\25\ Non-exchange venues rely on market data distributed by
exchanges to set prices. Greater transparency allows both exchange
and non-exchange venues to operate more effectively and efficiently.
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Exchanges have a unique role to play in market transparency because
they publish an array of pre- and post-trade data that non-exchange
venues, almost entirely, do not. Greater transparency benefits non-
exchange venues by enabling them to provide more accurate pricing to
their customers, and by helping such venues set their own prices,
benchmark, analyze the total cost of ownership, and assess their own
trading strategies.
Allowing exchanges to compete effectively as platforms has other
positive network effects. Larger trading platforms offer lower average
trading costs. As trading platforms attract more liquidity, bid-ask
spreads tighten, search costs fall (by limiting the number of venues
that a customer needs to check to assess the market), and connection
costs decrease, as customers have no need to connect to all venues.\26\
The whole is therefore greater (in the sense that it is more efficient)
than the sum of the parts.
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\26\ In addition, Nasdaq's experience shows that fewer customers
connect with smaller trading venues than with larger venues.
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This is not to say that smaller established trading platforms do
not have a role to play. They provide specialized services that cater
to individual customer needs. These specialized services help the
smaller exchanges grow by driving liquidity to their platforms, and, if
they are successful, achieve the economies of scale that benefit the
larger enterprises. Because the total costs of interacting with an
exchange are roughly equal, smaller exchanges offset higher trading
costs with lower connectivity, market data, or other fees. While the
mix of fees will change as exchanges grow, the all-in cost of
interacting with the exchange remains roughly the same.
Acknowledging that exchanges compete as platforms and approving
fees expeditiously on that basis will improve the ability of exchanges
to compete against non-exchange venues, and, to the degree order flow
is shifted to exchanges, both transparency and efficiency will improve.
The Proposed Fees Are Equitable and Reasonable Because They Will Be
Subject to Competition
This proposal offers member firms an incentive to display liquidity
through lower non-display and connectivity fees. The intent is to
generate a ``virtuous cycle,'' in which the proposed fee structure will
attract more liquidity to the Exchange, making it a more attractive
trading venue, and thereby attracting more liquidity.
Incentive programs have been widely adopted by exchanges, and are
reasonable, equitable, and non-discriminatory because they are open on
an equal basis to similarly situated members and provide additional
benefits or discounts that are reasonably related to the value to an
exchange's market quality and activity.\27\
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\27\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 92493 (July
26, 2021), 86 FR 41129 (July 30, 2021) (SR-CboeEDGX-2021-034)
(proposal to provide discount to new members that meet certain
volume thresholds, noting that ``relative volume-based incentives
and discounts have been widely adopted by exchanges . . . and are
reasonable, equitable and non-discriminatory because they are open
on an equal basis to similarly situated members and provide
additional benefits or discounts that are reasonably related to (i)
the value to an exchange's market quality and (ii) associated higher
levels of market activity . . . .'') (not suspended by Commission);
see also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53790 (May 11, 2006),
71 FR 28738 (May 17, 2006) (SR-Phlx-2006-04) (``The Commission
recognizes that volume-based discounts of fees are not uncommon, and
where the discount can be applied objectively, it is consistent with
Rule 603. For the same reasons noted above, the Commission believes
that the fee structure meets the standard in section 6(b)(4) of the
Act in that the proposed rule change provides for the equitable
allocation of reasonable dues, fees, and other charges among the
Exchange's members and issuers and other persons using its
facilities.'').
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[[Page 24074]]
The proposal will contribute to market quality because it will help
bring new order flow to the Exchange. Greater displayed liquidity on
the Exchange offers investors deeper, more liquid markets and execution
opportunities.
Increased order flow benefits investors by deepening the Exchange's
liquidity pool, potentially providing greater execution incentives and
opportunities, offering additional flexibility for all investors to
enjoy cost savings, supporting the quality of price discovery,
promoting market transparency, and lowering spreads between bids and
offers and thereby lowering investor costs. To the degree that
liquidity is attracted from dark venues, that liquidity also increases
transparency for the market overall, providing investors with more
information about market trends.
The proposal will help members that meet the minimum ADV threshold
maintain lower costs and will benefit them through the many positive
externalities associated with a more liquid exchange.
The competition among exchanges as trading platforms, as well as
the competition between exchanges and alternative trading venues,
constrain exchanges from charging excessive fees for any exchange
products, including trading, listings, ports, and market data. Indeed,
the fees that arise from the competition among trading platforms may be
too low because they fail to reflect the benefits to the market as a
whole of exchange products and services, allowing other venues to free-
ride on these investments by the exchange platforms, increasing
fragmentation and search costs.
As long as total returns are constrained by competitive forces--as
demonstrated in detail by the report provided as Exhibit 3--there is no
regulatory basis to be concerned with pricing of particular elements
offered on a platform. Indeed, regulatory constraints in this
environment are likely to reduce consumer welfare by constraining
certain exchanges from offering packages of pricing and products that
would be attractive to certain sets of consumers, thus impeding
competition with venues that are not subject to the same regulatory
limitations and reducing the benefits of competition to customers.
The Proposal Is Not Unfairly Discriminatory
The proposal is not unfairly discriminatory. Non-Display Usage and
the Exchange's 40Gb and 10Gb Ultra high-speed connections will be
offered to all members and non-members on like terms. It is also not
unfair to charge more to firms that do not directly contribute order
flow to the Exchange, but nevertheless benefit from that order flow
through tighter spreads, better prices, and the other advantages of a
more liquid platform.
Specifically, the proposal is not unfairly discriminatory with
respect to either members or non-members.
With respect to members, all members that meet the ADV threshold
will be charged lower fees. With respect to smaller members, Nasdaq
offers rebates to members that offer displayed liquidity. With these
rebates, any member--even smaller members--should have the ability to
post sufficient displayed liquidity to meet the ADV threshold.
The proposal is not unfairly discriminatory with respect to non-
members broker-dealers, which include brokers routing trades through
members and off-exchange trading platforms that use exchange data to
execute trades, because they have the option of becoming members to
obtain lower fees under the proposal, and because they realize the
benefits of higher liquidity--including tighter spreads and better
prices--and it is not unfair discrimination to charge a higher fee for
that benefit.
The proposal is not unfairly discriminatory with respect to non-
member firms that are not broker-dealers, such as market data vendors
and index providers, because they also benefit from the value that the
additional liquidity generated by this proposal will provide to the
trading platform. As noted above, incentivizing higher levels of
liquidity enhances and enriches the market data distributed to the
industry, and increases the overall value of platform. It is not unfair
for such parties to pay a higher fee to reflect the greater value of
the platform.
Discounts for specific categories of market participants are well-
established; examples include non-professional fees, broker-dealer
enterprise licenses, and a media enterprise license.\28\
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\28\ See, e.g., The Nasdaq Stock Market, Price List--U.S.
Equities, available at <a href="http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/Trader.aspx?id=DPUSData">http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/Trader.aspx?id=DPUSData</a> (providing discounts for Non-Professional
subscribers for Nasdaq TotalView and other market data products,
enterprise licenses for broker-dealers for multiple market data
products, and a digital media enterprise license for Nasdaq Basic).
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For all of the foregoing reasons, the Exchange believes that the
proposal is consistent with the Act.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
In accordance with Section 6(b)(8) of the Act,\29\ the Exchange
believes that the proposed rule change will not impose any burden on
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act.
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\29\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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Rather, as discussed above, the Exchange believes that the proposed
changes would increase competition by attracting additional liquidity
to the Exchange, which the Exchange believes will enhance market
quality, thereby promoting market depth, price discovery, and
transparency and enhancing order execution opportunities for member
organizations. As a result, the Exchange believes that the proposed
change furthers the Commission's goal in adopting Regulation NMS of
fostering integrated competition among orders, which promotes ``more
efficient pricing of individual stocks for all types of orders, large
and small.'' \30\
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\30\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808, 70 FR 37496,
37498-99 (June 29, 2005) (Regulation NMS).
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Intra-market Competition. Nothing in the proposal burdens intra-
market competition (the competition among consumers of exchange data)
because the proposed fee structure would be available to all similarly
situated market participants, and, as such, the proposed change would
not impose a disparate burden on different market participants.
Intermarket Competition. Nothing in the proposal burdens
intermarket competition (the competition among self-regulatory
organizations) because competitors are free to modify their own fees in
response.
As previously discussed, the Exchange operates in a highly
competitive market. Members have numerous alternative venues that they
may participate on and direct their order flow to, including other
equities exchanges, off-exchange venues, and alternative trading
systems. Participants can readily choose to send their orders to other
exchange and off-exchange venues if they deem fee levels at those
[[Page 24075]]
other venues to be more favorable. In such an environment, the Exchange
must continually adjust its fees and rebates to remain competitive with
other exchanges and with off-exchange venues.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either solicited or received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act.\31\
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\31\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
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At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is: (i)
necessary or appropriate in the public interest; (ii) for the
protection of investors; or (iii) otherwise in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. If the Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings to determine whether the
proposed rule should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
<bullet> Use the Commission's internet comment form (<a href="https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml">https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml</a>); or
<bullet> Send an email to <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#fb898e979ed6989496969e958f88bb889e98d59c948d"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="6311160f064e000c0e0e060d1710231006004d040c15">[email protected]</span></a>. Please include
file number SR-NASDAQ-2024-016 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
<bullet> 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-NASDAQ-2024-016. 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 (<a href="https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml">https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml</a>). 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-NASDAQ-2024-016 and should
be submitted on or before April 26, 2024.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\32\
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\32\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024-07227 Filed 4-4-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P
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