Notice2026-07263

Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend Its Rules To Enable the Exchange To Offer Trading in Equity Securities and Exchange Traded Products 23 Hours per Day, Five Days per Week

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 15, 2026

Issuing agencies

Securities and Exchange Commission

Full Text

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<title>Federal Register, Volume 91 Issue 72 (Wednesday, April 15, 2026)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 91, Number 72 (Wednesday, April 15, 2026)]
[Notices]
[Pages 20213-20222]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2026-07263]


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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. 34-105206; File No. SR-CboeEDGX-2026-019]


Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc.; Notice 
of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend Its Rules To Enable the 
Exchange To Offer Trading in Equity Securities and Exchange Traded 
Products 23 Hours per Day, Five Days per Week

April 10, 2026.
    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 31, 2026, Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or 
``EDGX'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the 
``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

    Cboe EDGX Exchange, Inc. (the ``Exchange'' or ``EDGX'') proposes to 
amend its rules to enable the Exchange to offer trading in equity 
securities and exchange traded products 23 hours per day, five days per 
week. The text of the proposed rule change is in Exhibit 5.
    The text of the proposed rule change is also available on the 
Commission's website (<a href="https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml">https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml</a>), the 
Exchange's website (<a href="https://www.cboe.com/us/equities/regulation/rule_filings/edgx/">https://www.cboe.com/us/equities/regulation/rule_filings/edgx/</a>), and at the principal office of the Exchange.

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.

[[Page 20214]]

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 its rules to permit the trading of 
equity securities and Derivative Securities \3\ on the Exchange 23 
hours per day, five days per week (``23x5 Trading'').\4\
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    \3\ See Exchange Rule 1.5(ff).
    \4\ The Exchange initially submitted the proposed rule change on 
March 13, 2026 (SR-CboeEDGX-2026-013). On March 24, 2026, the 
Exchange withdrew that filing and on March 31, 2026, the Exchange 
submitted this proposal.
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Background
    The Exchange's proposal to offer 23x5 Trading is driven both by the 
growth in the volume during the Exchange's existing Early Trading 
Session, as well as the growing demand for access to the U.S. markets, 
particularly by retail investors in the Asia Pacific (``APAC'') region. 
The Exchange has consistently heard from APAC broker-dealers that their 
retail investors--particularly those in Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, 
Singapore, and Australia--want greater access to the U.S. equities 
market and that they desire trusted venues that offer transparency, 
robust liquidity, and efficient price discovery.\5\
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    \5\ See ``What Does it Take to Offer Around the Clock Equities 
Trading?''--Cboe Insights, February 2, 2025, available at: <a href="https://www.cboe.com/insights/posts/what-does-it-take-to-offer-around-the-clock-equities-trading/">https://www.cboe.com/insights/posts/what-does-it-take-to-offer-around-the-clock-equities-trading/</a>.
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    The average daily volume (``ADV'') during the Early Trading Session 
\6\ across Cboe's U.S. equities exchanges increased 110% from January 
2023 to February 2026, and increased 404% between January 2022 and 
February 2026.\7\ Cboe's U.S. equities exchanges have also increased 
their market share during the Early Trading Session since 2022, with 
Early Trading Session ADV increasing 258%\8\ between January 2023 and 
February 2026 alone.\9\ The Exchange believes that 23x5 Trading will 
further benefit investors and the national market system by increasing 
market accessibility, promoting capital formation, and facilitating 
portfolio management.
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    \6\ See Exchange Rule 1.5(jj).
    \7\ Source: Internal Cboe Data.
    \8\ Cboe's market share for the Early Trading Session (i.e., 
4:00 to 7:00 a.m.) trading increased by 305 basis points (``bps'') 
from January 2023 to February 2026. Source: Internal Cboe Data.
    \9\ Market share increased 33 bps from January 2022 to February 
2026. Looking at the full year 2022 against the full year 2025, 
market share increased 336 bps. Source: Internal Cboe Data.
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    Currently, Users \10\ may enter orders into the System \11\ from 
2:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time (``ET'').\12\ The Exchange 
currently offers five trading sessions on each day it is open for 
trading: (1) the Early Trading Session \13\ (4:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m.); 
(2) the Pre-Opening Session \14\ (8:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.); (3) the 
Regular Session \15\ (the time between the completion of the Opening 
Process or Contingent Open, as defined in Rule 11.7, and 4:00 p.m.); 
(4) Regular Trading Hours \16\ (9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.); and (5) the 
Post-Closing Session \17\ (4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.). During each 
session, orders may be entered, executed, or routed away.\18\
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    \10\ The term ``User'' shall mean any Member or Sponsored 
Participant who is authorized to obtain access to the System 
pursuant to Rule 11.3. See Rule 1.5(ee).
    \11\ The term ``System'' shall mean the electronic 
communications and trading facility designated by the Board through 
which securities orders of Users are consolidated for ranking, 
execution and, when applicable, routing away. See Rule 1.5(cc).
    \12\ See Exchange Rule 11.1(a). All times stated herein are in 
ET.
    \13\ See Rule 1.5(jj).
    \14\ See Rule 1.5(s).
    \15\ See Rule 1.5(ii).
    \16\ The term Regular Trading Hours'' means the time between 
9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time. See Rule 1.5(y).
    \17\ See Rule 1.5(r).
    \18\ See Exchange Rule 11.1(a).
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    Under current Rule 11.1(a)(1), the Exchange will not accept the 
following orders prior to 4:00 a.m., or prior to 7:00 a.m. for orders 
eligible for a ``7:00 a.m. Start'': \19\
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    \19\ An order designated as eligible for execution during the 
Early Trading Session beginning at 7:00 a.m. is referred to as a 
``7:00 a.m. Start.''
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    <bullet> orders with a Post Only \20\ instruction;
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    \20\ ``Post Only Orders'' refers to an instruction that may be 
attached to an order that is to be ranked and executed on the 
Exchange pursuant to Rule 11.9 and Rule 11.10(a)(4) or cancelled, as 
appropriate, without routing away to another trading center except 
that the order will not remove liquidity from the EDGX Book, except 
as described below. An order with a Post Only instruction will 
remove contra-side liquidity from the EDGX Book if the order is an 
order to buy or sell a security priced below $1.00 or if the value 
of such execution when removing liquidity equals or exceeds the 
value of such execution if the order instead posted to the EDGX Book 
and subsequently provided liquidity, including the applicable fees 
charged or rebates provided. To determine at the time of a potential 
execution whether the value of such execution when removing 
liquidity equals or exceeds the value of such execution if the order 
instead posted to the EDGX Book and subsequently provided liquidity, 
the Exchange will use the highest possible rebate paid and highest 
possible fee charged for such executions on the Exchange. See 
Exchange Rule 11.6(n)(4).
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    <bullet> intermarket sweep orders (``ISOs''); \21\
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    \21\ ``Intermarket Sweep Orders'' or ``ISO'' are orders The 
System will accept ISOs (as such term is defined in Regulation NMS). 
To be eligible for treatment as an ISO, the order must be: (i) a 
Limit Order; (ii) marked ``ISO''; and (iii) the User entering the 
order must simultaneously route one or more additional Limit Orders 
marked ``ISO,'' if necessary, to away Trading Centers to execute 
against the full displayed size of any Protected Quotation for the 
security with a price that is superior to the limit price of the ISO 
entered in the System. Such orders, if they meet the requirements of 
the foregoing sentence, may be executed at one or multiple price 
levels in the System without regard to Protected Quotations at away 
Trading Centers consistent with Regulation NMS (i.e., may trade 
through such quotations). See Exchange Rule 11.8(c).
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    <bullet> Market Orders \22\ other than those with a time-in-force- 
(``TIF'') \23\ instruction of Regular Hours Only (``RHO'') \24\ or a 
Stop Price; \25\
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    \22\ ``Market Orders'' are orders to buy or sell a stated amount 
of a security that is to be executed at the NBBO or better when the 
order reaches the Exchange. See Exchange Rule 11.8(c).
    \23\ The term ``Time in Force'' means the period of time that 
the System will hold an order. See Rule 2.1(f).
    \24\ The term ``Regular Hours Only'' (``RHO'') means an 
instruction a User may attach to an order designating it for 
execution only during Regular Trading Hours, which includes the 
Opening Process and Re-Opening Process following a halt suspension 
or pause. See Rule 11.6(q)(6).
    \25\ An order may include a ``Stop Price'' which will convert 
the order into a Market Order when the Stop Price is triggered. An 
order to buy converts to a Market Order when the consolidated last 
sale in the security occurs at, or above, the specified Stop Price. 
An order to sell converts into a Market Order when the consolidated 
last sale in the security occurs at, or below, the specified Stop 
Price. See Rule 11.8(a)(1).
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    <bullet> orders with a Minimum Execution Quantity \26\ instruction 
that also include a TIF instruction of RHO, and all orders with a TIF 
instruction of Immediate-or-Cancel (``IOC'') \27\ or Fill-or-kill 
(``FOK'').\28\
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    \26\ ``Minimum Execution Quantity'' is an instruction a User may 
attach to an order with a Non-Displayed instruction or a Time-in-
Force of Immediate-or-Cancel requiring the System to execute the 
order only to the extent that a minimum quantity can be satisfied. 
See Rule 11.6(h)
    \27\ ``Immediate Or Cancel'' or ``IOC'' refers to an instruction 
the User may attach to an order stating the order is to be executed 
in whole or in part as soon as such order is received. The portion 
not executed immediately on the Exchange or another trading center 
is treated as cancelled and is not posted to the EDGX Book. An order 
with an IOC instruction that does not include a Book Only 
instruction and that cannot be executed in accordance with Rule 
11.10(a)(4) on the System when reaching the Exchange will be 
eligible for routing away pursuant to Rule 11.11. See Rule 
11.6(q)(1).
    \28\ ``Fill-or-Kill'' or ``FOK'' refers to an instruction the 
User may attach to an order stating that the order is to be executed 
in its entirety as soon as it is received and, if not so executed, 
cancelled. An order with a FOK instruction is not eligible for 
routing away pursuant to Rule 11.11. See Rule 11.6(q)(3).
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    Certain order types are also subject to session-specific 
restriction. For example, orders with a Post Only instruction and ISOs 
are not accepted for queueing during the Pre-Opening Session if 
designated with a TIF instruction of RHO. To accommodate 23x5 Trading, 
the Exchange proposes to

[[Page 20215]]

extend the order entry window and introduce a new Overnight Trading 
Session, along with conforming amendments to its session-specific order 
handling rules, as described below.
Proposal
    The Exchange proposes to amend its rules to enable 23x5 Trading by 
expanding the Pre-Opening Session and replacing the Early Trading 
Session with a new Overnight Trading Session.
Definitions
    The Exchange proposes to amend and adopt certain definitions 
provided in Exchange Rule 1.5.
    First, the Exchange proposes to expand the Pre-Opening Session 
under Rule 1.5(s) from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 a.m., covering the period from 
4:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. Because this expansion absorbs the period 
currently covered by the Early Trading Session under Rule 1.5(jj), the 
Exchange also proposes to delete the ``Early Trading Session'' 
definition and replace it with a new defined term, ``Overnight Trading 
Session.''
    As proposed, the Overnight Trading Session shall mean the time 
between 9:00 p.m. on any night preceding a business day \29\ and 4:00 
a.m. on the following calendar day. Rather than defining the Overnight 
Trading Session by reference to specific calendar days of the week 
(e.g., Sunday through Thursday), the proposed definition is anchored to 
the concept of a ``night preceding a business day.'' This approach 
provides that the Overnight Trading Session is triggered by the 
existence of an upcoming trading day rather than by enumeration of 
calendar days, providing a more durable and flexible framework that is 
consistent with the Exchange's proposed Order Acceptance Queueing Time 
definition in proposed Rule 1.5(kk), as discussed below, and that 
accommodates changes to the Exchange's trading calendar (including 
holidays and other non-business days) without requiring conforming 
amendments to the session definition itself. For example, when a 
holiday falls on a Monday, there is no night preceding a business day 
on the prior Sunday and therefore no Overnight Trading Session will 
commence that Sunday evening, consistent with the Exchange's proposed 
holiday schedule under Rule 11.1(b). As discussed further below under 
``Contingency on Industry Readiness,'' the Exchange shall not commence 
operation of the Overnight Trading Session until specified Equity Data 
Plan readiness conditions have been satisfied. The proposed term would 
provide ``Overnight Trading Session'' shall mean the time between 9:00 
p.m. on any night preceding a business day, as provided in Rule 
11.1(b), and 4:00 a.m. Eastern Time on the following calendar day. For 
the avoidance of doubt, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in 
these Rules, the Exchange shall not commence operation of the Overnight 
Trading Session unless the Equity Data Plans (1) have established a 
mechanism to collect, consolidate, process and disseminate quotation 
and transaction information at all times during the Overnight Trading 
Session that is equivalent to the mechanism established for Exchange 
trading hours during Regular Trading Hours, and (2) have provided the 
Exchange with notification that they are prepared to collect, 
consolidate, process and disseminate quotation and transaction 
information to accommodate the Overnight Trading Session. Prior to 
commencing operation during the Overnight Trading Session, the Exchange 
will file a proposed rule change pursuant to Section 19(b) of the 
Exchange Act and the rules thereunder to amend its rules confirming 
that the Exchange is able to comply with its obligations under the 
Exchange Act and the rules thereunder during the Overnight Trading 
Session and that such Equity Data Plans are prepared to collect, 
consolidate, process and disseminate quotation and transaction 
information at all times during the Overnight Trading Session 
(``Overnight Trading Session Proposed Rule Change''). If the Overnight 
Trading Session Proposed Rule Change is not filed within 18 months of 
the SEC's approval of this proposed rule change, the Exchange will 
promptly file a proposed rule change to remove the rules that apply to 
the Overnight Trading Session.
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    \29\ See proposed Rule 11.1(b). A business day is any day the 
Exchange is open for trading, which includes any Monday, Tuesday, 
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, other than a holiday listed below, 
and shall be deemed to begin at 9:00 p.m. on the preceding calendar 
day.
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    Second, proposed Rule 1.5(kk) would define ``Order Acceptance 
Queueing Time'' to mean 8:55 p.m., the time at which orders may be 
entered into the System on each night preceding a business day as 
specified in Rule 11.1(b). The Order Acceptance Queueing Time marks the 
point at which the System begins accepting orders each night in advance 
of the Overnight Trading Session. Orders entered during the Order 
Acceptance Queueing Time will queue until the official start of the 
session designated in the order instruction.
    Third, proposed Rule 1.5(ll) would define ``Equity Data Plans'' to 
mean the effective national market system plan(s) governing the 
collection, consolidation, processing, and dissemination of 
consolidated equity market data via the exclusive securities 
information processors (``SIPs''), including: (1) the Consolidated Tape 
Association Plan (``CTA Plan''); (2) the Consolidated Quotation Plan 
(``CQ Plan''); (3) the Joint Self-Regulatory Organization Plan 
Governing the Collection, Consolidation and Dissemination of Quotation 
and Transaction Information for Nasdaq-Listed Securities Traded on 
Exchanges on an Unlisted Trading Privileges Basis (``UTP Plan''); (4) 
the CT Plan established by the Limited Liability Company Agreement of 
CT Plan LLC; and (5) any successor to the named Plan(s).
    Finally, the Exchange proposes a non-substantive amendment to Rule 
1.5(ii) to correct a typographical error, changing the word 
``Continent'' to ``Contingent.'' As amended, Rule 1.5(ii) would define 
the Regular Session as ``the time between the completion of the Opening 
Process or Contingent Open as defined in Rule 11.7 and 4:00 p.m. 
Eastern Time.''
Trading Rules
    The Exchange proposes to amend Rules 11.1 (Hours of Trading and 
Trading Days), 11.6 (Definitions), 11.7 (Opening Process), 11.8 (Order 
Types), 11.10 (Order Execution), 11.15 (Clearly Erroneous Executions) 
and to adopt Rule 11.25 (Weekday Trading Pauses) to reflect necessary 
updates to provide for 23x5 trading functionality.
a. Rule 11.1--Hours of Trading and Trading Days
    The Exchange proposes to amend Rule 11.1(a) to replace reference to 
the Early Trading Session with the Overnight Trading Session, and to 
amend Rule 11.1(a)(1) to update the order entry window and session 
eligibility framework to accommodate 23x5 Trading.
    Under current Rule 11.1(a)(1), Users may enter orders into the 
System beginning at 2:30 a.m. Orders entered between 2:30 a.m. and 4:00 
a.m. are not eligible for execution until the start of the Early 
Trading Session, Pre-Opening Session, or Regular Trading Hours, 
depending on the TIF instruction selected. The current rule also 
provides for two start times within the Early Trading Session (a 4:00 
a.m. Start and a 7:00 a.m. Start) each with distinct order acceptance 
restrictions.

[[Page 20216]]

    The Exchange proposes to replace this framework with a streamlined 
structure that reflects the introduction of the Overnight Trading 
Session and the expanded order entry window. As proposed, Users may 
enter orders into the System beginning at the Order Acceptance Queueing 
Time (8:55 p.m.) on each night preceding a business day through 8:00 
p.m. on the following calendar day, provided that the following 
calendar day is a business day. Orders entered during the Order 
Acceptance Queueing Time will queue until the official start of the 
session designated in the order instruction. This approach applies 
uniformly across all trading sessions (i.e., the Overnight Trading 
Session, Pre-Opening Session, Regular Session, and Post-Closing 
Session) providing Members with a consistent and simplified order entry 
experience. The 4:00 a.m. Start and 7:00 a.m. Start construct is 
removed, as these designations are no longer necessary under the 
proposed framework.
    Proposed Rule 11.1(a)(2) would provide that an order is eligible to 
participate in the designated trading session(s) only and may remain in 
effect for one or more consecutive trading sessions on a particular 
day. An order designated for a session that has not yet begun will be 
accepted into the System but will not be eligible to trade until that 
session commences. An order designated solely for a session that has 
already ended will be rejected. An order entered without a trading 
session designation will default to a Day \30\ order, making it 
eligible to participate from the Overnight Trading Session through the 
end of Regular Trading Hours. Proposed Rule 11.1(a)(2) also permits 
Members to designate a specific Start Time for their orders in thirty-
minute increments prior to the start of Regular Trading Hours, 
replacing the 4:00 a.m. Start and 7:00 a.m. Start designations with a 
more flexible and uniform framework. Start Times must be set to a time 
prior to the commencement of Regular Trading Hours and may not be 
designated during Regular Trading Hours. At each Start Time, orders 
will be handled in time sequence beginning with the oldest time stamp, 
and will be placed on the EDGX Book, routed, cancelled, or executed in 
accordance with the terms of the order.
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    \30\ An instruction the User may attach to an order stating that 
an order to buy or sell which, if not executed, expires at the end 
of Regular Trading Hours. Any Day Order entered into the System 
before the opening for business on the Exchange as determined 
pursuant to Rule 11.1, or after the closing of Regular Trading 
Hours, will be rejected. See Exchange Rule 11.6(q)(2).
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    Proposed Rule 11.1(a)(3) would specify the orders the Exchange will 
not accept during the Order Acceptance Queueing Time: (i) orders with a 
Post Only instruction; (ii) ISOs; (iii) Market Orders, other than those 
with a TIF instruction of RHO or a Stop Price; \31\ (iv) orders with a 
Minimum Execution Quantity instruction that also include a TIF 
instruction of RHO; and (v) orders with a TIF instruction of IOC or 
FOK. These restrictions are consistent with the order type limitations 
currently applicable prior to the pre-market sessions and are intended 
to ensure orderly trading prior to the commencement of the Overnight 
Trading Session.
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    \31\ Once the trigger price is reached during Regular Trading 
Hours, the order will be elected (activated). Election results in a 
Market order sent to the book. See Cboe Titanium U.S. Equities FIX 
Specification, at 61, available at <a href="https://cdn.cboe.com/resources/membership/Cboe_US_Equities_FIX_Specification.pdf">https://cdn.cboe.com/resources/membership/Cboe_US_Equities_FIX_Specification.pdf</a>.
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    The Exchange also proposes to amend Rule 11.1(b) to define 
``business day'' and to specify the days on which the Exchange will be 
open for trading under the proposed 23x5 framework. A business day is 
any day the Exchange is open for trading, which includes any Monday, 
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, other than a holiday listed 
below, and shall be deemed to begin at 9:00 p.m. on the preceding 
calendar day. The Exchange will not be open for business on the 
following holidays: New Year's Day, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day, 
Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Juneteenth National 
Independence Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and 
Christmas Day. When a holiday falls on a Saturday, the Exchange will 
not be open for business on the preceding Friday. When a holiday falls 
on a Sunday, the Exchange will not be open for business on the 
following Monday, unless otherwise indicated by the Exchange. On days 
when the Exchange closes early (``Early Market Close''), Regular 
Trading Hours will be from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and the Post-Closing 
Session will be from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Trading shall resume with 
the Overnight Trading Session on any night preceding a business day.
    Under the proposed 23x5 framework, the trading day will be 
structured as follows. The Overnight Trading Session will run from 9:00 
p.m. to 4:00 a.m., followed by the Pre-Opening Session from 4:00 a.m. 
to 9:30 a.m., Regular Trading Hours from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., and 
the Post-Closing Session from 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Between 8:00 p.m. 
and 9:00 p.m. each weekday, the Exchange will pause trading to conduct 
maintenance, testing, and processing of corporate actions (such as 
mergers, stock splits, and dividends) that become effective the 
following trading day. This pause also provides market participants 
with time to process and clear trades before the start of a new trading 
day. For dates on which the Exchange is not open for business under 
Rule 11.1(b), the market closure will be effective at 8:00 p.m. on the 
calendar day preceding the closure date. For Early Market Close 
days,\32\ the closure will instead be effective at 5:00 p.m. on the 
calendar day preceding the closure date. In either case, the Exchange 
will re-open at 9:00 p.m. on the closure date, unless the closure date 
is immediately followed by a non-business day, in which case the 
Exchange will re-open at 9:00 p.m. on the day preceding the next 
business day.
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    \32\ Regular trading hours for days when the markets close early 
are typically 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. See e.g., Thanksgiving Early 
Close and Christmas Early Close at <a href="https://www.cboe.com/about/hours">https://www.cboe.com/about/hours</a>.
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b. Rule 11.6(q)(2)--TIF Day Instructions
    The Exchange does not propose any changes to its existing TIF 
instructions in connection with the Overnight Trading Session, with one 
exception described below. The Exchange believes the existing TIF 
framework otherwise accommodates the proposed 23x5 structure without 
modification.
    The Exchange proposes a conforming amendment to the Day order TIF 
definition to permit acceptance of Day Orders during the Overnight 
Trading Session. Under the current definition, a Day Order entered 
``after the closing of Regular Trading Hours'' is rejected. Because the 
Overnight Trading Session commences at 9:00 p.m. the current definition 
would, as written, result in the rejection of Day Orders entered during 
the Overnight Trading Session or during the Order Acceptance Queueing 
Time preceding it. This outcome is inconsistent with the proposed 23x5 
framework, under which Day Orders should be eligible for entry 
beginning at the Order Acceptance Queueing Time and should remain 
eligible for execution throughout the Overnight Trading Session, Pre-
Opening Session, and Regular Trading Hours. Accordingly, the Exchange 
proposes to amend the Day order TIF definition to provide that a Day 
Order entered during the Overnight Trading Session or during the Order 
Acceptance Queueing Time will be accepted by the Exchange and, if not 
executed, will expire at the end of Regular Trading Hours on the 
following business day. This amendment is limited to conforming the Day 
order

[[Page 20217]]

definition to the expanded order entry window introduced by the 
proposed 23x5 framework and does not alter any other aspect of the Day 
order TIF instruction. For the avoidance of doubt, orders will expire 
on the business day for which they are entered; as described above, a 
business day is deemed to begin at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time on the 
preceding calendar day.
    As amended, a Day Order entered at 9:00 p.m. on a day preceding a 
business day will remain eligible for execution throughout the 
Overnight Trading Session, Pre-Opening Session, and Regular Trading 
Hours on that business day, expiring at 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time that 
day.
c. Rule 11.7--Opening Process
    The Exchange proposes a conforming amendment to Rule 11.7 to 
replace the reference to the Early Trading Session with the Overnight 
Trading Session in the provision governing re-openings after a halt. As 
amended, during the Overnight Trading Session, Pre-Opening Session, or 
Post-Closing Session, the Re-Opening Process will occur at the midpoint 
of the NBBO after one second has passed following the applicable 
resumption trigger. This change is non-substantive and is intended 
solely to reflect the replacement of the Early Trading Session with the 
Overnight Trading Session under the proposed 23x5 framework.
d. Rule 11.8--Order Types
    The Exchange proposes conforming amendments to Rule 11.8 to replace 
references to the Early Trading Session with the Overnight Trading 
Session across each order type that currently specifies session 
eligibility, including Limit Orders, ISOs, MidPoint Peg Orders,\33\ 
Market Maker Peg Orders,\34\ Supplemental Peg Orders,\35\ and MidPoint 
Discretionary Orders.\36\
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    \33\ See Exchange Rule 11.8(d).
    \34\ See Exchange Rule 11.8(e).
    \35\ See Exchange Rule 11.8(f).
    \36\ See Exchange Rule 11.8(g). A Market Order is only eligible 
for execution by the System during the Regular Session. See Exchange 
Rule 11.8(a)(5).
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    Outside of Regular Trading Hours, only Limit Orders are eligible 
for execution. Under proposed Rule 11.8(a)(6), a Limit Order may be 
eligible for execution during the Overnight Trading Session, Pre-
Opening Session, Regular Session, Regular Trading Hours, and the Post-
Closing Session. This is consistent with the other order types eligible 
outside of Regular Trading Hours; ISOs must be Limit Orders by 
definition, and Market Maker Peg Orders, Supplemental Peg Orders, and 
MidPoint Discretionary Orders are each expressly defined as or 
characterized as Limit Orders under their respective provisions.
    Limit MidPoint Peg Orders, which are capped with respect to price, 
may be executed during the Overnight Trading Session, Pre-Opening 
Session, Regular Trading Hours, and the Post-Closing Session, while 
Market MidPoint Peg Orders, which are uncapped with respect to price, 
may only be executed during Regular Trading Hours. Because a Market 
MidPoint Peg Order carries no price cap, it presents heightened 
execution risk in extended hours sessions where liquidity conditions 
may differ materially from those present during Regular Trading Hours 
and where the NBBO may be wider or less reliable. Without a limit price 
to constrain execution, a Market MidPoint Peg Order could execute at a 
price that is disadvantageous to the submitting party in a manner that 
is less likely to occur during Regular Trading Hours. By contrast, 
Limit MidPoint Peg Orders have a price cap and are non-displayed, which 
the Exchange views as sufficient safeguards to make them suitable for 
execution outside of Regular Trading Hours, consistent with the broader 
principle that only Limit Orders are eligible for execution outside of 
Regular Trading Hours under the proposed 23x5 framework. Proposed Rule 
11.8(d)(4) also provides that a Minimum Execution Quantity instruction 
on a MidPoint Peg Order will not be applied during the Opening Process. 
Additionally, proposed Rule 11.8(d)(4) replaces the reference to the 
Early Trading Session with the Overnight Trading Session, conforming 
MidPoint Peg Order session eligibility to the proposed 23x5 framework.
    The Exchange also proposes to amend Rule 11.8(e)(7) to replace the 
reference to the Early Trading Session with the Overnight Trading 
Session for Market Maker Peg Orders. As amended, Users may submit 
Market Maker Peg Orders to the Exchange starting at the beginning of 
the Overnight Trading Session, though such orders will not be 
executable or automatically priced until after the commencement of 
Regular Session. All remaining amendments to Rule 11.8 (including those 
applicable to ISOs, Supplemental Peg Orders, and MidPoint Discretionary 
Orders) are non-substantive and are intended solely to conform existing 
session eligibility provisions to the proposed 23x5 framework by 
replacing references to the Early Trading Session with the Overnight 
Trading Session.
e. Rule 11.10--Order Execution
    The Exchange proposes a conforming amendment to Rule 11.10 to 
replace the reference to the Early Trading Session with the Overnight 
Trading Session in the provision governing compliance with Regulation 
NMS. As amended, for any execution to occur during the Overnight 
Trading Session, Pre-Opening Session, or Post-Closing Session, the 
price must be equal to or better than the highest bid or lowest offer 
in the EDGX Book or as disseminated by the responsible single plan 
processor, unless the order is marked ISO or a Protected Bid is 
crossing a Protected Offer. This amendment is non-substantive and 
preserves the existing execution standard applicable outside of Regular 
Trading Hours.
f. Rule 11.15--Clearly Erroneous Executions
    The Exchange proposes conforming amendments to Rule 11.15 to 
replace all references to the Early Trading Session with the Overnight 
Trading Session throughout the clearly erroneous execution framework. 
These amendments appear in the provisions governing review of 
transactions occurring outside of Regular Trading Hours, including the 
numerical guidelines table, the Multi-Stock Event provisions, the 
additional factors provision, the Outlier Transaction provision, the 
Reference Price provision, and the Officer Acting On Own Motion 
provision. In each case, the amendment substitutes ``Overnight Trading 
Session'' for ``Early Trading Session'' without altering the 
substantive standards or procedures applicable to clearly erroneous 
execution reviews. The Exchange notes that the numerical guidelines 
applicable to the Overnight Trading Session, Pre-Opening Session, and 
Post-Closing Session will remain the same as those currently applicable 
to the Early Trading Session, Pre-Opening Session, and Post-Closing 
Session, reflecting the Exchange's view that the same heightened 
thresholds appropriate for extended hours trading remain appropriate 
for the Overnight Trading Session.
g. Rule 11.25--Weekday Trading Pause
    The Exchange proposes to adopt new Rule 11.25 to govern the daily 
trading pause that will occur between the close of the Post-Closing 
Session and the commencement of the Overnight Trading Session on each 
weekday. As proposed, the Exchange will pause trading at the conclusion 
of the Post-Closing Session at 8:00 p.m. and resume

[[Page 20218]]

trading with the commencement of the Overnight Trading Session at 9:00 
p.m. on the day preceding the next business day. This one-hour pause is 
intended to provide the Exchange with time to conduct necessary 
maintenance and testing, and to process corporate actions, such as 
mergers, stock splits, and dividends, that become effective the 
following trading day. The pause also provides market participants with 
time to process and clear trades before the start of a new trading day.
    Proposed Rule 11.25(a)(1) provides that all orders outstanding on 
the EDGX Book as of 8:00 p.m. at the end of the Post-Closing Session 
will be cancelled. The Exchange believes it is appropriate to cancel 
all resting orders at the close of the Post-Closing Session each 
weekday to ensure that orders are not carried over into the next 
trading day without an explicit order instruction by a Member. This 
approach provides Members with a clean start to each trading day and 
reduces the risk of unintended executions based on stale order 
instructions.
    Proposed Rule 11.25(a)(2) provides that the Exchange will begin 
accepting orders again at the Order Acceptance Queueing Time (i.e., 
8:55 p.m.) and will continue accepting orders through 8:00 p.m. on the 
following calendar day, provided the next calendar day is a business 
day. Orders entered during the Order Acceptance Queueing Time will 
queue until the commencement of the Overnight Trading Session at 9:00 
p.m. Proposed Rule 11.25(a)(2) also provides that trades occurring at 
or after the commencement of the Overnight Trading Session at 9:00 p.m. 
will be assigned a trade date of the following calendar day, reflecting 
that the Overnight Trading Session economically belongs to the next 
trading day even though it commences the prior evening.
    The Exchange notes that while the Order Acceptance Queueing Time 
applies on Sunday prior to the commencement of the Overnight Trading 
Session at 9:00 p.m., the one-hour trading pause described in Rule 
11.25(a) does not apply on Sunday. Unlike Monday through Thursday, 
where trading pauses at 8:00 p.m. following the close of the Post-
Closing Session and resumes at 9:00 p.m., Sunday does not follow a 
Post-Closing Session and therefore there is no intervening pause 
period. The Exchange will begin accepting orders at the Order 
Acceptance Queueing Time on Sunday evening and the Overnight Trading 
Session will commence at 9:00 p.m., marking the start of the trading 
week. The Exchange believes this distinction is appropriate because the 
operational and processing considerations that necessitate a pause 
between the Post-Closing Session and the Overnight Trading Session on 
weekdays, such as processing corporate actions and clearing end-of-day 
positions, are not present on Sunday.
Unlisted Trading Privileges
    The Exchange proposes conforming amendments to Rule 14.1 to replace 
references to the Early Trading Session with the Overnight Trading 
Session. Specifically, the Exchange proposes to amend Rule 14.1(c)(1) 
to replace the reference to the ``Early Trading Session (7:00 a.m.-8:00 
a.m. Eastern Time)'' with the ``Overnight Trading Session (9:00 p.m.-
4:00 a.m. Eastern Time).'' The Exchange also proposes conforming 
amendments to Interpretations and Policies .01(a) and .01(b)(2) to 
replace each reference to the ``Early Trading Session'' with the 
``Overnight Trading Session.'' These amendments are non-substantive and 
are intended solely to conform the unlisted trading privileges 
framework to the proposed 23x5 session structure by updating the 
applicable session nomenclature and hours.
Risk Disclosures
    The Exchange proposes to adopt new Rule 3.21(h) to establish 
tailored customer disclosure obligations specific to the Overnight 
Trading Session and Pre-Opening Session. The existing customer 
disclosure framework under Rule 3.21 requires Members to disclose the 
material trading risks associated with extended hours trading prior to 
accepting an order for execution in those sessions. The Exchange 
believes that the unique characteristics of the Overnight Trading 
Session and Pre-Opening Session (including the hours during which they 
operate, the market conditions that may be present, and the novel 
nature of overnight exchange trading) warrant additional disclosures 
beyond those currently required for other extended hours sessions. 
Proposed Rule 3.21(h) sets forth seven categories of risks that Members 
must disclose to customers in connection with trading during the 
Overnight Trading Session and Pre-Opening Session.
    First, proposed Rule 3.21(h)(1) addresses the risk of trading 
during hours in which primary listing markets may not be open. Unlike 
the Post-Closing Session, which occurs in close proximity to Regular 
Trading Hours, the Overnight Trading Session and Pre-Opening Session 
operate during hours in which primary listing exchanges may not be 
conducting their own trading, regulatory surveillance, or other 
regulatory functions with respect to their listed securities. The 
Exchange believes it is important that customers understand that the 
regulatory infrastructure ordinarily provided by primary listing 
exchanges may not be available during these sessions.
    Second, proposed Rule 3.21(h)(2) addresses the risk that regulatory 
protections available during the Overnight Trading Session and Pre-
Opening Session may be more limited or different than those available 
during Regular Trading Hours. For example, certain volatility control 
mechanisms applicable to individual symbols and the broader equities 
market may not be available during the Overnight Trading Session and 
Pre-Opening Session. The Exchange believes customers should be informed 
of these potential gaps in regulatory protections before trading during 
these sessions.
    Third, proposed Rule 3.21(h)(3) addresses the risk arising from 
limited trading alternatives during the Overnight Trading Session and 
Pre-Opening Session. Because the Exchange may be the only exchange 
trading certain securities during these hours, customers may face 
greater exposure to losses in the event of systems failures or other 
operational issues on the Exchange, as alternative execution venues may 
not be available.
    Fourth, proposed Rule 3.21(h)(4) addresses the risks associated 
with near-continuous trading under the 23x5 framework. With the 
implementation of the Overnight Trading Session, trading on the 
Exchange will occur on a near-continuous basis throughout the week, 
with only limited breaks. This structure may present heightened risks 
related to system maintenance and testing, as well as the pausing and 
resumption of trading, as there will be fewer extended breaks during 
which such activities can be conducted without impacting market 
participants.
    Fifth, proposed Rule 3.21(h)(5) addresses the risk of trading 
during hours in which financial market infrastructure companies are 
closed. Certain important financial market infrastructure providers, 
including other markets, banks, Fedwire Funds Service, and certain 
other providers of settlement services, may be closed during the 
Overnight Trading Session and Pre-Opening Session. Trading during hours 
in which the relevant clearing agency and other settlement service 
providers are closed may result in an increased passage of time between 
the execution of a transaction and its final settlement, which may 
expose customers to additional counterparty and settlement risk.

[[Page 20219]]

    Sixth, proposed Rule 3.21(h)(6) addresses the risk arising from the 
novel nature of overnight exchange trading. Exchange-facilitated 
trading during overnight hours is a relatively new development in the 
U.S. equities market, and as such, the Overnight Trading Session may 
present unforeseen risks that are not yet fully understood or 
anticipated. The Exchange believes it is appropriate to specifically 
call out the novelty of the Overnight Trading Session so that customers 
can make informed decisions about whether overnight trading is 
appropriate for them.
    Seventh, proposed Rule 3.21(h)(7) provides a general catch-all 
disclosure acknowledging that the Overnight Trading Session and Pre-
Opening Session may present additional unforeseen risks beyond those 
specifically enumerated in proposed Rule 3.21(h)(1) through (6). The 
Exchange believes this provision is appropriate given the evolving 
nature of extended hours trading and the potential for market 
conditions or operational circumstances that cannot be fully 
anticipated at this time.
    The Exchange believes that the proposed disclosures under Rule 
3.21(h) are necessary and appropriate to ensure that customers are 
fully informed of the unique risks presented by the Overnight Trading 
Session and Pre-Opening Session prior to participating in trading 
during those hours. The proposed disclosures are consistent with the 
customer protection principles underlying the existing Rule 3.21 
framework and reflect the Exchange's commitment to investor protection 
in connection with the expansion of its trading hours under the 
proposed 23x5 framework.
Protections
    The implementation of 23x5 Trading represents an extension of 
trading hours rather than a fundamental restructuring of Exchange 
operations or rules. With the exception of the specific amendments 
discussed above, the Exchange's operational processes, rule text, and 
surveillance programs will continue to apply in the same manner as they 
do today. The following EDGX rules and system features will remain 
unchanged and will apply in full during the Overnight Trading Session: 
Order Types and Order Execution; Membership Rules and Rules of Fair 
Practice; Market Maker Obligations and Priority of Orders; Trading 
Practice Rules and Disciplinary Rules and Enforcement; Opening and 
Closing Crosses; Clearly Erroneous Execution Protections; and Risk 
Settings and Fat Finger Protections.
    With respect to trading halts, the Exchange's existing halt rules 
will apply during the Overnight Trading Session. Consistent with 
current practice during other extended hours sessions, the Exchange 
will halt trading in a security during the Overnight Trading Session to 
the extent required to follow a halt imposed by the primary listing 
exchange for that security. To the extent a security is subject to a 
regulatory halt, news dissemination halt, or other trading pause 
imposed by the primary listing exchange or a national securities 
regulator, the Exchange will halt trading in that security consistent 
with applicable rules and regulatory requirements.
    The Exchange's clearly erroneous execution rules under Rule 11.15 
will apply in full during the Overnight Trading Session, as they 
currently apply during the Early Trading Session and other extended 
hours sessions. No substantive changes to those rules are proposed in 
connection with this filing. As such, the Exchange's Clearly Erroneous 
rules will continue to mirror those adopted by each national security 
exchange and will continue to ensure that there are consistent 
standards across each exchange for breaking trades, and continuing to 
promote the orderly and efficient operation of the equities markets.
    The Exchange's existing surveillance programs and compliance 
infrastructure will likewise apply fully to trading in the Overnight 
Trading Session and the modified Pre-Opening Session. The Exchange 
currently operates a comprehensive regulatory program applicable to the 
Early Trading Session, Pre-Opening Session, Regular Trading Hours, and 
Post-Closing Session, encompassing a suite of automated trade 
surveillance tools, routine Member examinations, and an exam-based 
regulatory program. This regulatory program will extend to the 
Overnight Trading Session without modification, ensuring that Members 
trading during overnight hours are subject to the same level of 
oversight applicable to trading in other sessions.
    Similarly, the Exchange's existing risk settings and controls 
(including single-order price and size protections and other fat finger 
safeguards) will remain available and operative during the Overnight 
Trading Session. The Exchange believes that these existing protections, 
taken together, provide a robust framework for managing risk during 
overnight trading that is consistent with the protections available 
during other extended hours sessions.
Contingency on Industry Readiness
    As noted above, the Exchange will not implement its proposed rule 
changes or commence operation of the Overnight Trading Session until 
the Equity Data Plan readiness conditions set forth in proposed Rule 
1.5(jj) have been satisfied. Prior to commencing operation of the 
Overnight Trading Session, the Exchange will file a proposed rule 
change pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange Act and the rules 
thereunder confirming that: (i) the Exchange is able to comply with its 
obligations under the Exchange Act and the rules thereunder during the 
Overnight Trading Session; and (ii) the Equity Data Plans are prepared 
to collect, consolidate, process, and disseminate quotation and 
transaction information at all times during the Overnight Trading 
Session. Upon satisfaction of the foregoing conditions, the Exchange 
will announce via Exchange notice the implementation date for its 
proposed rule changes and the go-live date for 23x5 Trading. If the 
Overnight Trading Session Proposed Rule Change is not filed within 18 
months of the SEC's approval of this proposed rule change, the Exchange 
will promptly file a proposed rule change to remove the rules 
applicable to the Overnight Trading Session.
Impact on Fees
    Any impact of the Exchange's 23x5 proposal on its fee schedule will 
be addressed in a subsequent fee filing.
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.\37\ Specifically, the 
Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with the 
Section 6(b)(5) \38\ 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.
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    \37\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
    \38\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).

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[[Page 20220]]

23x5 Trading Framework
    The Exchange believes the proposed rule change is consistent with 
the Act because it would remove impediments to and perfect the 
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system by 
providing a rules framework to support 23x5 Trading. As described 
above, the Exchange has observed sustained and significant growth in 
Early Trading Session volume, with average daily volume across Cboe's 
U.S. equities exchanges increasing 404% between January 2022 and 
February 2026. The Exchange has also received consistent feedback from 
APAC broker-dealers that their retail investors desire greater access 
to the U.S. equities market during their local business hours. The 
Exchange believes that 23x5 Trading will benefit investors and the 
national market system by increasing market accessibility, promoting 
capital formation, and facilitating portfolio management, including for 
the growing number of retail investors in the Asia-Pacific region whose 
local business hours do not coincide with U.S. Regular Trading Hours.
    The Exchange further believes the proposal is consistent with the 
Act because the proposed Overnight Trading Session and the modified 
Pre-Opening Session will operate in substantially the same manner as 
the Exchange's existing extended hours sessions. All order types, 
execution processes, membership rules, market maker obligations, 
priority rules, disciplinary rules, clearly erroneous execution 
protections, risk settings, and fat finger safeguards applicable to the 
Exchange's existing sessions will continue to apply in full during the 
Overnight Trading Session and the expanded Pre-Opening Session. The 
Exchange believes that applying its existing operational and regulatory 
framework to the Overnight Trading Session is consistent with the Act's 
goals of ensuring market integrity, investor protection, and fair and 
orderly trading. The Exchange represents that its systems have the 
capacity to accommodate the proposed 23x5 Trading functionality.
Session Definitions and Order Entry Framework
    The Exchange believes that the proposed new definitions, including 
the Overnight Trading Session, Order Acceptance Queueing Time, and 
Equity Data Plans, would remove impediments to and perfect the 
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system by 
adding clarity and transparency to the Exchange's rules. The proposed 
Overnight Trading Session definition, anchored to the concept of a 
``night preceding a business day'' rather than enumerated calendar 
days, provides a durable and flexible framework that accommodates the 
Exchange's trading calendar without requiring recurring conforming 
amendments. The proposed Order Acceptance Queueing Time definition 
similarly adds clarity by establishing a defined, consistent time at 
which the System begins accepting orders ahead of the Overnight Trading 
Session each weekday evening and on Sunday nights. The Exchange 
believes these definitional additions facilitate the understanding of 
and compliance with Exchange rules, thereby removing potential 
confusion and promoting just and equitable principles of trade.
    The Exchange believes the proposed streamlined order entry 
framework under Rule 11.1(a) similarly removes impediments to the 
mechanism of a free and open market by replacing the existing 4:00 a.m. 
Start and 7:00 a.m. Start construct with a uniform structure applicable 
across all trading sessions. The proposed trading session designation 
requirement under Rule 11.1(a)(2) promotes transparency and investor 
protection by ensuring that each order is clearly designated for the 
session(s) in which it will remain eligible to participate, consistent 
with the approach taken by other national securities exchanges that 
have adopted or sought to adopt extended overnight trading 
frameworks.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ See NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-E(T); Nasdaq Rule Equity 1, Section 
1(a)(19).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Exchange believes that the proposed introduction of a defined 
term ``business day'' in Rule11.1(b), together with the codification of 
the concept of an Early Market Close and the corresponding adjustments 
to the Exchange's trading calendar, is consistent with Section6(b)(5) 
of the Act because these amendments remove impediments to and perfect 
the mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system. 
As proposed, a ``business day'' is any day the Exchange is open for 
trading, including Sunday evenings beginning at 9:00p.m. through Monday 
and each Tuesday through Friday that is not a holiday, thereby 
providing a clear and predictable foundation for determining when the 
Overnight Trading Session will operate. This definition, which does not 
rely on enumerated calendar days, enhances transparency and flexibility 
by ensuring that the commencement of the Overnight Trading Session is 
tied to whether the following day is a trading day rather than to fixed 
days of the week. This structure accommodates holiday closures, 
holiday-observed weekends, and unforeseen non-business days without 
requiring further amendments to the session definition. Likewise, the 
proposal's integration of Early Market Close days (under which Regular 
Trading Hours conclude at 1:00 p.m. and the Post-Closing Session ends 
at 5:00 p.m., with the market closure becoming effective on the 
calendar day preceding the closure date) provides that the transition 
into the Overnight Trading Session remains orderly, predictable, and 
aligned with the modified market-wide trading schedule. Together, these 
provisions provide Members with a uniform, rules-based mechanism for 
determining when the Exchange will commence and pause trading under the 
proposed 23x5 framework, promote just and equitable principles of trade 
by reducing uncertainty and the risk of misaligned order entry during 
session transitions, and foster cooperation and coordination with other 
market participants and infrastructure providers by grounding the 
Overnight Trading Session in a clear and durable trading-day framework. 
Accordingly, the Exchange believes the proposed amendments are 
consistent with the protection of investors and the public interest 
because they provide predictable and transparent operational parameters 
for the launch and operation of the Overnight Trading Session.
Contingency on Equity Data Plan Readiness
    The Exchange believes that conditioning commencement of the 
Overnight Trading Session on satisfaction of the Equity Data Plan 
readiness requirements set forth in proposed Rule 1.5(jj) is consistent 
with the Act and, in particular, with the Act's requirements that 
exchange rules be designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts 
and practices, foster cooperation and coordination with persons engaged 
in regulating, clearing, settling, and processing information with 
respect to securities transactions, and perfect the mechanism of a free 
and open market and a national market system. As the Commission has 
recognized in approving similar conditions for other exchanges seeking 
to operate overnight sessions, this requirement is designed to 
reasonably ensure that consolidated quotation and transaction data are 
provided in a manner consistent with existing extended hours sessions, 
and that trading will not occur until the infrastructure necessary to 
support fair and orderly markets during overnight

[[Page 20221]]

hours is in place.\40\ Prior to commencing operation of the Overnight 
Trading Session, the Exchange will confirm via a subsequent Section 
19(b) filing that the Equity Data Plans are prepared to collect, 
consolidate, process, and disseminate quotation and transaction 
information at all times during the Overnight Trading Session and that 
the Exchange is able to comply with its obligations under the Act 
during those hours. The Exchange believes this approach promotes 
transparency because trading will not commence until these conditions 
are verified and publicly filed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 101777 (November 
27, 2024), 89 FR 97092, 97105 (December 6, 2024) (approving 
application of 24X National Exchange, LLC); Securities Exchange Act 
Release No. 102400 (February 11, 2025), 90 FR 9794 (February 18, 
2025) (approving SR-NYSEArca-2024-89).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Order Type Eligibility
    The Exchange believes the proposed conforming amendments to its 
order type rules are consistent with the Act because they apply the 
same limitations on order type availability outside of Regular Trading 
Hours that exist today to the Overnight Trading Session, thereby 
ensuring a consistent and investor-protective trading environment 
across all extended hours sessions. Restricting order eligibility 
during the Overnight Trading Session and Pre-Opening Session to Limit 
Orders reflects the reduced liquidity conditions characteristic of 
extended hours trading and is consistent with the approach taken by 
other national securities exchanges.\41\ The Exchange believes 
restricting MidPoint Peg Orders that are uncapped with respect to price 
to Regular Trading Hours only further protects investors by limiting 
unpriced execution risk to the session in which price discovery 
mechanisms and liquidity conditions are most robust.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \41\ See NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-E(T)(c); Nasdaq Rule 4702.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weekday Trading Pause
    The Exchange believes the proposed Weekday Trading Pause under new 
Rule 11.25 is consistent with the Act because it promotes the 
protection of investors and the public interest by providing the 
Exchange and market participants with a defined period each weekday to 
conduct maintenance and testing, process pending corporate actions, and 
clear end-of-day positions before a new trading day commences. The 
cancellation of all resting orders at the end of the Post-Closing 
Session at 8:00 p.m. each weekday promotes investor protection by 
ensuring that Members must affirmatively re-enter orders for the 
following trading day, reducing the risk of unintended executions based 
on stale order instructions.
Customer Disclosures
    The Exchange believes proposed Rule 3.21(h) is consistent with the 
Act and, in particular, with the Section 6(b)(5) requirement that 
exchange rules be designed to promote just and equitable principles of 
trade, 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 seven categories of risk disclosure required by 
proposed Rule 3.21(h) (addressing the absence of primary listing market 
oversight during overnight hours, the potential for more limited 
regulatory protections, limited trading alternatives, risks associated 
with near-continuous trading, the closure of financial market 
infrastructure companies during overnight hours, the novel nature of 
overnight exchange trading, and potential unforeseen risks) are 
tailored to the specific characteristics of the Overnight Trading 
Session and the expanded Pre-Opening Session, and are substantially 
similar to the disclosures required by the Commission in approving the 
rules of other national securities exchanges operating on an extended 
overnight basis.\42\ The Exchange believes that requiring these 
disclosures will enhance transparency and enable investors to make 
informed decisions about whether participating in the Overnight Trading 
Session or the Pre-Opening Session is appropriate for them, consistent 
with the investor protection objectives of the Act. These proposed 
disclosures are also consistent with FINRA Rule 2265, which separately 
requires brokers to affirmatively disclose to investors that extended 
hours trading carries greater risks than trading during Regular Trading 
Hours.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ See 24X Rule 3.21(g) & (i)(1)-(5); NYSE Arca Rule 7.34-
E(T)(d)(3)(viii)-(xiii); Nasdaq Rule Equity 2, Section 20(8)(A)-(G).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Market Surveillance
    The Exchange believes that extending its existing surveillance 
programs and compliance infrastructure to the Overnight Trading Session 
is consistent with the Act because it provides that trading during 
overnight hours is subject to the same comprehensive regulatory 
oversight applicable to trading during other sessions, including 
automated trade surveillance, routine Member examinations, and an exam-
based regulatory program. Exchange staff will be available during the 
Overnight Trading Session to maintain a fair and orderly market, issue 
necessary rulings, implement trading halts, and take any other action 
that may be necessary, consistent with the Exchange's obligations under 
the Act and its rules.
Competitive Considerations
    The Exchange also believes the proposal is consistent with the Act 
because it will foster competition by providing investors with access 
to another regulated national securities exchange that offers trading 
during overnight hours, consistent with similar proposals approved by 
the Commission for other national securities exchanges.\7\ The Exchange 
operates in a highly competitive market in which investors seeking 
overnight access to U.S. equities currently resort to alternative 
trading systems, foreign securities markets, and other venues. Enabling 
23x5 Trading on the Exchange will allow it to compete for order flow 
from these investors, which the Exchange believes will increase market 
accessibility, promote capital formation, and facilitate portfolio 
management.

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 believes the 
proposed rule change will, in fact, enhance competition by providing 
investors with access to an additional regulated national securities 
exchange offering trading during overnight hours.
    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. The Overnight 
Trading Session will be available to all Members on an equal and non-
discriminatory basis. All Members will have the same opportunity to 
enter orders, access liquidity, and participate in trading during the 
Overnight Trading Session under the same rules, order type eligibility 
requirements, and session designation framework applicable to all other 
Exchange trading sessions. The proposed customer disclosure 
requirements under Rule 3.21(h) will similarly apply uniformly to all 
Members that accept orders for execution during the Overnight Trading 
Session and Pre-Opening Session, ensuring that all customers receive

[[Page 20222]]

consistent information about the risks associated with trading during 
those hours regardless of which Member they use. The proposed rule 
change does not create any special rights, preferences, or advantages 
for any particular class of Member or market participant.
    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. To the contrary, 
the Exchange believes the proposed rule change will promote intermarket 
competition by enabling the Exchange to compete with other national 
securities exchanges and trading venues that currently offer, or are in 
the process of offering, extended overnight trading in U.S. equity 
securities. Investors currently seeking overnight access to U.S. 
equities may resort to alternative trading systems, foreign securities 
markets, or other off-exchange venues. By enabling 23x5 Trading on a 
regulated national securities exchange, the Exchange's proposal 
provides investors with a regulated, transparent, and competitive 
alternative to these venues, which the Exchange believes will benefit 
the national market system.
    The Exchange notes that its proposal is substantively consistent 
with similar overnight trading proposals that the Commission has 
previously approved for other national securities exchanges. The 
Exchange does not believe that its proposal confers any competitive 
advantage on EDGX relative to other exchanges that have received or are 
seeking approval for similar frameworks. Rather, the Exchange's 
proposal places it on equal competitive footing with those venues, 
which the Exchange believes is necessary and appropriate in furtherance 
of the purposes of the Act.
    Furthermore, the Exchange's proposal to condition commencement of 
the Overnight Trading Session on satisfaction of the Equity Data Plan 
readiness requirements provides that 23x5 Trading will not commence 
until the consolidated data infrastructure necessary to support a fair, 
transparent, and competitive overnight trading market is in place. The 
Exchange believes this condition serves the interests of the national 
market system as a whole and does not impose any burden on competition 
that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of 
the Act.

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 up to 90 days (i) as the 
Commission may designate 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 will:
    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:

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#85f7f0e9e0a8e6eae8e8e0ebf1f6c5f6e0e6abe2eaf3"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="4634332a236b25292b2b232832350635232568212930">[email&#160;protected]</span></a>. Please include 
file number SR-CboeEDGX-2026-019 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-CboeEDGX-2026-019. 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 filing 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-CboeEDGX-2026-019 and should be 
submitted on or before May 6, 2026.

    For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets, 
pursuant to delegated authority.\43\
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    \43\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2026-07263 Filed 4-14-26; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P


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Indexed from Federal Register on April 15, 2026.

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