2016-01052. Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change Amending the Fees for NYSE OpenBook
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January 14, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) [1] of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Act”) [2] and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,[3] notice is hereby given that, on January 4, 2016, New York Stock Exchange LLC (“NYSE” or the “Exchange”) 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 self-regulatory organization. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend the fees for NYSE OpenBook to: (1) Establish a multiple data feed fee; (2) discontinue fees relating to managed non-display; (3) modify the application of the access fee; and (4) modify the application of the non-professional user fee cap. The proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's Web site at www.nyse.com,, at the principal office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the self-regulatory organization included statements concerning the purpose of, and basis for, the proposed rule change and discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The text of those statements may be examined at the places specified in Item IV below. The Exchange has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant parts of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and the Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend the fees for NYSE OpenBook,[4] as set forth on the NYSE Proprietary Market Data Fee Schedule (“Fee Schedule”). The Exchange proposes to make the following fee changes effective January 4, 2016:
- Establish a multiple data feed fee;
- Discontinue fees relating to managed non-display; and
- Modify the application of the access fee.
The Exchange also proposes to modify the application of the non-professional fee cap, effective April 1, 2016.
Multiple Data Feed Fee
The Exchange proposes to establish a new monthly fee, the “Multiple Data Feed Fee,” that would apply to data recipients that take a data feed for a market data product in more than two locations. Data recipients taking NYSE OpenBook in more than two locations would be charged $200 per additional location per month. No new reporting would be required.[5]
Start Printed Page 3507Managed Non-Display Fees
Non-Display Use of NYSE market data means accessing, processing, or consuming NYSE market data delivered via direct and/or Redistributor [6] data feeds for a purpose other than in support of a data recipient's display usage or further internal or external redistribution.[7] Managed Non-Display Services fees apply when a data recipient's non-display applications are hosted by a Redistributor that has been approved for Managed Non-Display Services.[8] A Redistributor approved for Managed Non-Display Services manages and controls the access to NYSE OpenBook and does not allow for further internal distribution or external redistribution of NYSE OpenBook by the data recipients. A Redistributor approved for Managed Non-Display Services is required to report to NYSE on a monthly basis the data recipients that are receiving NYSE market data through the Redistributor's managed non-display service and the real-time NYSE market data products that such data recipients are receiving through such service. Recipients of data through Managed Non-Display Service have no additional reporting requirements. Data recipients that receive NYSE OpenBook from an approved Redistributor of Managed Non-Display Services are charged an access fee of $2,500 per month and a Managed Non-Display Services Fee of $2,400 per month, for a total fee of $4,900 per month.
The Exchange proposes to discontinue the fees related to Managed Non-Display Services because of the limited number of Redistributors that have qualified for Managed Non-Display Services and the administrative burdens associated with the program in light of the limited number of Redistributors that have qualified for Managed Non-Display Services. As proposed, all data recipients currently using NYSE OpenBook on a managed non-display basis would be subject to the same access fee of $5,000 per month, and the same non-display services fees,[9] as other data recipients.[10]
Modification of the Application of the Access Fee
The Exchange proposes to make two changes to the application of the access fee for NYSE OpenBook.
First, each NYSE OpenBook data feed recipient currently pays a monthly $5,000 access fee for NYSE OpenBook. Recipients of NYSE OpenBook that also receive NYSE BBO and NYSE Order Imbalances do not currently pay an access fee for NYSE BBO and NYSE Order Imbalances.[11] The Exchange proposes to amend the NYSE OpenBook access fee so that recipients of NYSE OpenBook who also receive NYSE BBO or NYSE Order Imbalances would be required to pay a separate access fees for NYSE BBO ($1,500 per month) and/or NYSE Order Imbalances ($500 per month) in addition to the access fee for NYSE OpenBook. This change would have no impact on customers who do not receive NYSE OpenBook but who do receive NYSE BBO or NYSE Order Imbalances.
Second, NYSE OpenBook is currently available in two forms: NYSE OpenBook Aggregated (formerly known as NYSE OpenBook Realtime) and NYSE OpenBook Ultra. NYSE OpenBook Aggregated distributes the Exchange's limit order data in real-time at intervals of one second. NYSE OpenBook Ultra makes available limit order data in real-time upon receipt of each displayed limit order.[12]
When the Exchange introduced NYSE OpenBook Ultra, the Exchange represented that it would continue to support and make available NYSE OpenBook Aggregated as an optional alternative without additional or different fees or terms.[13] At that time, the Exchange stated that it anticipated reassessing its pricing for NYSE OpenBook, and that it might restructure or modify the charges applicable to the NYSE OpenBook Aggregated and NYSE OpenBook Ultra packages. Currently, recipients of NYSE OpenBook Aggregated and NYSE OpenBook Ultra pay an access of $5,000 per month whether they receive one or both products. The Exchange proposes to charge separate access fees for each of NYSE OpenBook Ultra and NYSE OpenBook Aggregated. As proposed, the Exchange would charge an access fee of $5,000 per month for NYSE OpenBook Aggregated and an access fee of $5,000 per month for NYSE OpenBook Ultra.[14]
Non-Professional User Fee Cap
For display use of the NYSE OpenBook data feed, the Fee Schedule sets forth a Professional User Fee of $60 per user per month and a Non-Professional User Fee of $15 per user per month. These user fees generally apply to each display device that has access to NYSE OpenBook.
For customers that are broker-dealers, these fees are subject to a $25,000 per month cap on non-professional user fees (the “Non-Professional User Fee Cap”).[15] In 2009, the Exchange adopted guidelines under which the broker-dealer would be eligible for the Non-Professional User Fee Cap notwithstanding the inclusion, temporarily or unintentionally, of a limited number of account-holding professional users (the “Professional User Exception”), subject to a complex set of conditions relating to the percentage of professional users, the relationship of those professional users to the broker-dealer, and the method of Start Printed Page 3508display and use of the data.[16] The Exchange proposed the Professional User Exception to the Non-Professional User Fee Cap to permit broker-dealers that primarily serve non-institutional brokerage account holders to offer an online client experience without undue administrative burdens while at the same time guarding against potential abuses by monitoring the use of the exception closely and reserving the right to deny application of the exception if a broker-dealer is determined to be misusing it, such as by opening up retail brokerage accounts to disseminate data to institutional clients.
The Exchange proposes to eliminate the Professional User Exception for NYSE OpenBook effective April 1, 2016. The Exchange notes the Professional User Exception was an accommodation, the benefits of which were, when implemented, outweighed by the complexity of the terms of the exception and the burdens on customers and on the Exchange that have to track compliance with the exception. In addition, the Exchange notes that the Professional User Exception has been used by a small number of customers since it was adopted.
Accordingly, as proposed, the Non-Professional User Fee Cap would no longer include any professional users that receive NYSE OpenBook data feed and the Professional User fee of $60 per user per month would apply with respect to all Professional Users.
Non-Substantive Change to the Fee Schedule
Non-Display Use fees for NYSE OpenBook include the Non-Display Use of NYSE BBO and NYSE Order Imbalances for customers paying NYSE OpenBook non-display fees that also pay access fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE Order Imbalances.[17] The Exchange proposes to describe this application of the Non-Display Use fees in note 1 to the Fee Schedule.[18]
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with the provisions of Section 6 of the Act,[19] in general, and Sections 6(b)(4) and 6(b)(5) of the Act,[20] in particular, in that it provides an equitable allocation of reasonable fees among users and recipients of the data and is not designed to permit unfair discrimination among customers, issuers, and brokers.
The fees are also equitable and not unfairly discriminatory because they will apply to all data recipients that choose to subscribe to NYSE OpenBook.
Multiple Data Feed Fee
The Exchange believes that it is reasonable to require data recipients to pay a modest additional fee [sic] taking a data feed for a market data product in more than two locations, because such data recipients can derive substantial value from being able to consume the product in as many locations as they want. In addition, there are administrative burdens associated with tracking each location at which a data recipient receives the product. The Multiple Data Feed Fee is designed to encourage data recipients to better manage their requests for additional data feeds and to monitor their usage of data feeds. The proposed fee is designed to apply to data feeds received in more than two locations so that each data recipient can have one primary and one backup data location before having to pay a multiple data feed fee. The Exchange notes that this pricing is consistent with similar pricing adopted in 2013 by the Consolidated Tape Association (“CTA”).[21] The Exchange also notes that the OPRA Plan imposes a similar charge of $100 per connection for circuit connections in addition to the primary and backup connections.[22]
Managed Non-Display Fees
The Exchange believes that it is reasonable to discontinue Managed Non-Display Fees. As the Exchange noted in the 2013 Non-Display Filing, the Exchange determined at that time that its fee structure, which was then based primarily on counting both display and non-display devices, was no longer appropriate in light of market and technology developments. Since then, the Exchange also modified its approach to display and non-display fees with changes to the fees as reflected in the 2014 Non-Display Filing.[23] Discontinuing the fees applicable to Managed Non-Display as proposed reflects the Exchange's continuing review and consideration of the application of non-display fees, and would harmonize and simplify the application of Non-Display Use fees by applying them consistently to all users. In particular, after further experience with the application of non-display use fees, the Exchange believes that it is more equitable and less discriminatory to discontinue the distinction for Managed Non-Display services because all data recipients using data on a non-display basis are using it in a comparable way and should be subject to similar fees regardless of whether or not they receive the data directly from the Exchange. The Exchange believes that applying the same non-display fees to all data recipients on the same basis better reflects the significant value of non-display data to data recipients and eliminates what is effectively a discount for certain data recipients, and as such is not unfairly discriminatory. The Exchange believes that the non-display fees directly and appropriately reflect the significant value of using non-display data in a wide range of computer-automated functions relating to both trading and non-trading activities and that the number and range of these functions continue to grow through innovation and technology developments.
Start Printed Page 3509Modifications To Access Fees
The Exchange believes that it is reasonable to make the changes proposed to the application of access fees for NYSE OpenBook. In both cases, the Exchange believes the proposed changes will make the application of the access fees to each of products so that an access fee entitles a customer to receive, for the applicable product, a data feed or feeds. Specifically, data recipients that take the NYSE OpenBook, NYSE BBO and/or NYSE Order Imbalances products receive value from each separate product they choose to take. A data recipient that chooses to take multiple products that contain overlapping data (no recipient is required to take any of these products, or any specific combination of them) uses each product in a different way and therefore obtains different value from each. Similarly, the Exchange believes that it is reasonable to apply separate access fees for each of NYSE OpenBook Ultra and NYSE OpenBook Aggregated. First, applying an access fee to each product would bring consistency to the Exchange's application of access. Second, because NYSE OpenBook Ultra and NYSE OpenBook Aggregated provide the Exchange's depth of book data in different forms, data recipients that choose to receive and utilize both forms get separate value from each. The Exchange believes that each product has a separate and distinct value that is appropriate to reflect in a separate access fee. Finally, the requirement to pay separate access fees for each market data product is equitable and not unfairly discriminatory because it would apply to all data recipients and appropriately reflects the value of each product to those who choose to use them.
Non-Professional User Fee Cap
The Exchange believes that it is reasonable to modify the application of the non-professional user fee cap by eliminating the Professional User Exception. The Exchange notes that the Professional User Exception was an accommodation, the benefits of which were, when implemented, outweighed by the complexity of the terms of, and tracking compliance with, the exception. Eliminating the Professional User Exception would make the application of the Non-Professional User Fee Cap simpler by removing an administrative exception that has had very limited use and application.
Non-Substantive Changes to the Fee Schedule
The Exchange believes that adding a note to the Fee Schedule to reflect that Non-Display Use fees for NYSE OpenBook include the Non-Display Use of NYSE BBO and NYSE Order Imbalances for customers paying NYSE OpenBook non-display fees that are also paying access fees for NYSE BBO and NYSE Order Imbalances will remove impediments to and help perfect a free and open market by providing greater transparency for the Exchange's customers regarding the application of non-display use fees that have been previously filed with the Commission and are applicable to the existing Fee Schedule.[24]
The Exchange notes that NYSE OpenBook is entirely optional. The Exchange is not required to make NYSE OpenBook available or to offer any specific pricing alternatives to any customers, nor is any firm required to purchase NYSE OpenBook. Firms that do purchase NYSE OpenBook do so for the primary goals of using it to increase revenues, reduce expenses, and in some instances compete directly with the Exchange (including for order flow); those firms are able to determine for themselves whether NYSE OpenBook or any other similar products are attractively priced or not.[25]
Firms that do not wish to purchase NYSE OpenBook at the new prices have a variety of alternative market data products from which to choose,[26] or if NYSE OpenBook does not provide sufficient value to firms as offered based on the uses those firms have or planned to make of it, such firms may simply choose to conduct their business operations in ways that do not use NYSE OpenBook or use it at different levels or in different configurations. The Exchange notes that broker-dealers are not required to purchase proprietary market data to comply with their best execution obligations.[27]
The decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in NetCoalition v. SEC, 615 F.3d 525 (D.C. Cir. 2010), upheld reliance by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission”) upon the existence of competitive market mechanisms to set reasonable and equitably allocated fees for proprietary market data:
In fact, the legislative history indicates that the Congress intended that the market system `evolve through the interplay of competitive forces as unnecessary regulatory restrictions are removed' and that the SEC wield its regulatory power `in those situations where competition may not be sufficient,' such as in the creation of a `consolidated transactional reporting system.'
Id. at 535 (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 94-229 at 92 (1975), as reprinted in 1975 U.S.C.C.A.N. 323). The court agreed with the Commission's conclusion that “Congress intended that `competitive forces should dictate the services and practices that constitute the U.S. national market system for trading equity securities.' ” [28]
As explained below in the Exchange's Statement on Burden on Competition, the Exchange believes that there is substantial evidence of competition in the marketplace for proprietary market data and that the Commission can rely upon such evidence in concluding that the fees established in this filing are the product of competition and therefore satisfy the relevant statutory standards. In addition, the existence of alternatives to these data products, such as consolidated data and proprietary data from other sources, as described below, further ensures that the Exchange cannot set unreasonable fees, or fees that are unreasonably discriminatory, when vendors and subscribers can select such alternatives.
As the NetCoalition decision noted, the Commission is not required to undertake a cost-of-service or ratemaking approach. The Exchange believes that, even if it were possible as a matter of economic theory, cost-based pricing for proprietary market data would be so complicated that it could not be done practically or offer any significant benefits.[29]
Start Printed Page 3510For these reasons, the Exchange believes that the proposed fees are reasonable, equitable, and not unfairly discriminatory.
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. An exchange's ability to price its proprietary market data feed products is constrained by actual competition for the sale of proprietary market data products, the joint product nature of exchange platforms, and the existence of alternatives to the Exchange's proprietary data.
The Existence of Actual Competition
The market for proprietary data products is currently competitive and inherently contestable because there is fierce competition for the inputs necessary for the creation of proprietary data and strict pricing discipline for the proprietary products themselves. Numerous exchanges compete with one another for listings and order flow and sales of market data itself, providing ample opportunities for entrepreneurs who wish to compete in any or all of those areas, including producing and distributing their own market data. Proprietary data products are produced and distributed by each individual exchange, as well as other entities, in a vigorously competitive market. Indeed, the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) (the primary antitrust regulator) has expressly acknowledged the aggressive actual competition among exchanges, including for the sale of proprietary market data. In 2011, the DOJ stated that exchanges “compete head to head to offer real-time equity data products. These data products include the best bid and offer of every exchange and information on each equity trade, including the last sale.” [30]
Moreover, competitive markets for listings, order flow, executions, and transaction reports provide pricing discipline for the inputs of proprietary data products and therefore constrain markets from overpricing proprietary market data. Broker-dealers send their order flow and transaction reports to multiple venues, rather than providing them all to a single venue, which in turn reinforces this competitive constraint. As a 2010 Commission Concept Release noted, the “current market structure can be described as dispersed and complex” with “trading volume . . . dispersed among many highly automated trading centers that compete for order flow in the same stocks” and “trading centers offer[ing] a wide range of services that are designed to attract different types of market participants with varying trading needs.” [31] More recently, SEC Chair Mary Jo White has noted that competition for order flow in exchange-listed equities is “intense” and divided among many trading venues, including exchanges, more than 40 alternative trading systems, and more than 250 broker-dealers.[32]
If an exchange succeeds in competing for quotations, order flow, and trade executions, then it earns trading revenues and increases the value of its proprietary market data products because they will contain greater quote and trade information. Conversely, if an exchange is less successful in attracting quotes, order flow, and trade executions, then its market data products may be less desirable to customers in light of the diminished content and data products offered by competing venues may become more attractive. Thus, competition for quotations, order flow, and trade executions puts significant pressure on an exchange to maintain both execution and data fees at reasonable levels.
In addition, in the case of products that are also redistributed through market data vendors, such as Bloomberg and Thompson Reuters, the vendors themselves provide additional price discipline for proprietary data products because they control the primary means of access to certain end users. These vendors impose price discipline based upon their business models. For example, vendors that assess a surcharge on data they sell are able to refuse to offer proprietary products that their end users do not or will not purchase in sufficient numbers. Vendors will not elect to make available NYSE OpenBook unless their customers request it, and customers will not elect to pay the proposed fees unless NYSE OpenBook can provide value by sufficiently increasing revenues or reducing costs in the customer's business in a manner that will offset the fees. All of these factors operate as constraints on pricing proprietary data products.
Joint Product Nature of Exchange Platform
Transaction execution and proprietary data products are complementary in that market data is both an input and a byproduct of the execution service. In fact, proprietary market data and trade executions are a paradigmatic example of joint products with joint costs. The decision of whether and on which platform to post an order will depend on the attributes of the platforms where the order can be posted, including the execution fees, data availability and quality, and price and distribution of data products. Without a platform to post quotations, receive orders, and execute trades, exchange data products would not exist.
The costs of producing market data include not only the costs of the data distribution infrastructure, but also the costs of designing, maintaining, and operating the exchange's platform for posting quotes, accepting orders, and executing transactions and the cost of regulating the exchange to ensure its fair operation and maintain investor confidence. The total return that a trading platform earns reflects the revenues it receives from both products and the joint costs it incurs.Start Printed Page 3511
Moreover, an exchange's broker-dealer customers generally view the costs of transaction executions and market data as a unified cost of doing business with the exchange. A broker-dealer will only choose to direct orders to an exchange if the revenue from the transaction exceeds its cost, including the cost of any market data that the broker-dealer chooses to buy in support of its order routing and trading decisions. If the costs of the transaction are not offset by its value, then the broker-dealer may choose instead not to purchase the product and trade away from that exchange. There is substantial evidence of the strong correlation between order flow and market data purchases. For example, in September 2015, more than 80% of the transaction volume on each of NYSE and NYSE's affiliates NYSE Arca, Inc. (“NYSE Arca”) and NYSE MKT LLC (“NYSE MKT”) was executed by market participants that purchased one or more proprietary market data products (the 20 firms were not the same for each market). A supra-competitive increase in the fees for either executions or market data would create a risk of reducing an exchange's revenues from both products.
Other market participants have noted that proprietary market data and trade executions are joint products of a joint platform and have common costs.[33] The Exchange agrees with and adopts those discussions and the arguments therein. The Exchange also notes that the economics literature confirms that there is no way to allocate common costs between joint products that would shed any light on competitive or efficient pricing.[34]
Analyzing the cost of market data product production and distribution in isolation from the cost of all of the inputs supporting the creation of market data and market data products will inevitably underestimate the cost of the data and data products because it is impossible to obtain the data inputs to create market data products without a fast, technologically robust, and well-regulated execution system, and system and regulatory costs affect the price of both obtaining the market data itself and creating and distributing market data products. It would be equally misleading, however, to attribute all of an exchange's costs to the market data portion of an exchange's joint products. Rather, all of an exchange's costs are incurred for the unified purposes of attracting order flow, executing and/or routing orders, and generating and selling data about market activity. The total return that an exchange earns reflects the revenues it receives from the joint products and the total costs of the joint products.
As noted above, the level of competition and contestability in the market is evident in the numerous alternative venues that compete for order flow, including 11 equities self-regulatory organization (“SRO”) markets, as well as various forms of alternative trading systems (“ATSs”), including dark pools and electronic communication networks (“ECNs”), and internalizing broker-dealers. SRO markets compete to attract order flow and produce transaction reports via trade executions, and two FINRA-regulated Trade Reporting Facilities compete to attract transaction reports from the non-SRO venues.
Competition among trading platforms can be expected to constrain the aggregate return that each platform earns from the sale of its joint products, but different trading platforms may choose from a range of possible, and equally reasonable, pricing strategies as the means of recovering total costs. For example, some platforms may choose to pay rebates to attract orders, charge relatively low prices for market data products (or provide market data products free of charge), and charge relatively high prices for accessing posted liquidity. Other platforms may choose a strategy of paying lower rebates (or no rebates) to attract orders, setting relatively high prices for market data products, and setting relatively low prices for accessing posted liquidity. For example, BATS Global Markets (“BATS”) and Direct Edge, which previously operated as ATSs and obtained exchange status in 2008 and 2010, respectively, provided certain market data at no charge on their Web sites in order to attract more order flow, and used revenue rebates from resulting additional executions to maintain low execution charges for their users.[35] In this environment, there is no economic basis for regulating maximum prices for one of the joint products in an industry in which suppliers face competitive constraints with regard to the joint offering.
Existence of Alternatives
The large number of SROs, ATSs, and internalizing broker-dealers that currently produce proprietary data or are currently capable of producing it provides further pricing discipline for proprietary data products. Each SRO, ATS, and broker-dealer is currently permitted to produce and sell proprietary data products, and many currently do, including but not limited to the Exchange, NYSE MKT, NYSE Arca, NASDAQ OMX, BATS, and Direct Edge.
The fact that proprietary data from ATSs, internalizing broker-dealers, and vendors can bypass SROs is significant in two respects. First, non-SROs can compete directly with SROs for the production and sale of proprietary data products. By way of example, BATS and NYSE Arca both published proprietary data on the Internet before registering as exchanges. Second, because a single order or transaction report can appear in an SRO proprietary product, a non-SRO proprietary product, or both, the amount of data available via proprietary products is greater in size than the actual number of orders and transaction reports that exist in the marketplace. With respect to NYSE OpenBook, competitors offer close substitute products.[36] Because market data users can find suitable substitutes for most proprietary market data products, a market that overprices its market data products stands a high risk that users Start Printed Page 3512may substitute another source of market data information for its own.
Those competitive pressures imposed by available alternatives are evident in the Exchange's proposed pricing.
In addition to the competition and price discipline described above, the market for proprietary data products is also highly contestable because market entry is rapid and inexpensive. The history of electronic trading is replete with examples of entrants that swiftly grew into some of the largest electronic trading platforms and proprietary data producers: Archipelago, Bloomberg Tradebook, Island, RediBook, Attain, TrackECN, BATS Trading and Direct Edge. As noted above, BATS launched as an ATS in 2006 and became an exchange in 2008, while Direct Edge began operations in 2007 and obtained exchange status in 2010.
In determining the proposed changes to the fees for the NYSE OpenBook, the Exchange considered the competitiveness of the market for proprietary data and all of the implications of that competition. The Exchange believes that it has considered all relevant factors and has not considered irrelevant factors in order to establish fair, reasonable, and not unreasonably discriminatory fees and an equitable allocation of fees among all users. The existence of numerous alternatives to the Exchange's products, including proprietary data from other sources, ensures that the Exchange cannot set unreasonable fees, or fees that are unreasonably discriminatory, when vendors and subscribers can elect these alternatives or choose not to purchase a specific proprietary data product if the attendant fees are not justified by the returns that any particular vendor or data recipient would achieve through the purchase.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited or received with respect to the proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for Commission Action
The foregoing rule change is effective upon filing pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A) [37] of the Act and subparagraph (f)(2) of Rule 19b-4 [38] thereunder, because it establishes a due, fee, or other charge imposed by the Exchange.
At any time within 60 days of the filing of such proposed rule change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. If the Commission takes such action, the Commission shall institute proceedings under Section 19(b)(2)(B) [39] of the Act to determine whether the proposed rule change should be approved or disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
- Use the Commission's Internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
- Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include File Number SR-NYSE-2016-02 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
- Send paper comments in triplicate to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NYSE-2016-02. 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 Web site (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site 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 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All comments received will be posted without change; the Commission does not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You should submit only information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NYSE-2016-02 and should be submitted on or before February 11, 2016.
Start SignatureFor the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated authority.[40]
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.
Footnotes
4. See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 57861 (May 23, 2008), 73 FR 31905 (June 4, 2008) (SR-NYSE-2008-42) (“2008 NYSE OpenBook Notice”), 59544 (Mar. 9, 2009), 74 FR 11162 (March 16, 2009) (SR-NYSE-2008-131) (“2009 NYSE OpenBook Order”) and 62038 (May 5, 2010), 75 FR 26825 (May 12, 2010) (SR-NYSE-2010-22). See also Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 69278 (April 2, 2013), 78 FR 20973 (April 8, 2013) (SR-NYSE-2013-25) (“2013 Non-Display Filing”), 72923 (Aug. 26, 2014), 79 FR 52079 (Sept. 2, 2014) (SR-NYSE-2014-43) (“2014 Non-Display Filing”) and 74027 (Jan. 9, 2015), 80 FR 2148 (Jan. 15, 2015) (SR-NYSE-2014-76) (“2015 NYSE OpenBook Notice”).
Back to Citation5. Data vendors currently report a unique Vendor Account Number for each location at which they provide a data feed to a data recipient. The Exchange considers each Vendor Account Number a location. For example, if a data recipient has five Vendor Account Numbers, representing five locations, for the receipt of the NYSE OpenBook product, that data recipient will pay the Multiple Data Feed fee with respect to three of the five locations.
Back to Citation6. “Redistributor” means a vendor or any other person that provides an NYSE data product to a data recipient or to any system that a data recipient uses, irrespective of the means of transmission or access.
Back to Citation7. See e.g. 2015 NYSE OpenBook Notice, supra note 4.
Back to Citation8. To be approved for Managed Non-Display Services, a Redistributor must manage and control the access to NYSE OpenBook for data recipients' non-display applications and not allow for further internal distribution or external redistribution of the information by data recipients. In addition, the Redistributor is required to (a) host the data recipients' non-display applications in equipment located in the Redistributor's data center and/or hosted space/cage and (b) offer NYSE OpenBook in the Redistributor's own messaging formats (rather than using raw NYSE message formats) by reformatting and/or altering NYSE OpenBook prior to retransmission without affecting the integrity of NYSE OpenBook and without rendering NYSE OpenBook inaccurate, unfair, uninformative, fictitious, misleading or discriminatory.
Back to Citation9. See Fee Schedule.
Back to Citation10. In order to harmonize its approach to fees for its market data products, the Exchange is simultaneously proposing to remove fees related to Managed Non-Display Services for NYSE BBO, NYSE Trades, and NYSE Order Imbalances. See SR-NYSE-2016-03 and SR-NYSE-2016-04. The fees applicable to the NYSE Integrated market data product effective as of January 4, 2016 do not include Managed Non-Display Services fees.
Back to Citation11. See 2009 NYSE OpenBook Order, supra note 4, at 11163.
Back to Citation12. See 2008 NYSE OpenBook Notice, supra note 4. NYSE OpenBook Ultra also includes information regarding the changes in limit order interest, provides more precise timestamp resolution (microseconds) and provides a format that is optimized for speed and recoverability.
Back to Citation13. See 2008 NYSE OpenBook Notice, supra note 4, at 31906.
Back to Citation14. All other fees applicable to NYSE OpenBook will continue to apply as they do currently, whether a data recipient receives one or both of NYSE OpenBook Aggregated and NYSE OpenBook Ultra.
Back to Citation15. See 2009 NYSE OpenBook Order, supra note 4. The 2009 NYSE OpenBook Order described the $25,000 fee cap as being subject to increase or decrease by the percentage increase or decrease in the annual cost-of-living adjustment (“COLA”) that the U.S. Social Security Administration applies to Supplemental Security Income for the calendar year preceding that subsequent calendar year. Although COLAs have represented increases in each year since this fee was adopted in 2009 (https://www.ssa.gov/oact/cola/colaseries.html,, last visited on November 30, 2015), the Exchange has waived its right to implement the increases it would have been entitled to implement and has not increased the fee cap commensurate with the intervening COLAs and hereby proposes to set the fee cap at a constant $25,000 per month that would not be subject to COLA adjustments.
Back to Citation16. See 2009 NYSE OpenBook Order, supra note 3 at 11164. The Professional User Exception provided that a broker-dealer could include professional Subscribers in the calculation of the monthly maximum amount for the Non-Professional User Fee Cap if: (i) Nonprofessional Subscribers comprise no less than 95 percent of the pool of Subscribers that are included in the calculation; (ii) each professional Subscriber included in the calculation maintains an active brokerage account directly with the broker-dealer (that is, with the broker-dealer rather than with a correspondent firm of the broker dealer); and (iii) each professional Subscriber that is included in the calculation is not affiliated with the broker-dealer or any of its affiliates; (iv) all Subscribers receive access to the identical service, regardless of whether the Subscribers are professional Subscribers or nonprofessional Subscribers; (v) upon discovery of the inclusion in the cap of an individual that does not qualify as a nonprofessional Subscriber, the broker-dealer takes reasonable action to reclassify and report that individual as a professional Subscriber during the immediately following reporting period. Notwithstanding (iii) and (v), the broker-dealer could include a professional Subscriber that is affiliated with the broker-dealer or its affiliates (subject to (i) and (ii)) if he or she accesses market data on-line through his or her personal account solely for the non-business purpose of managing his or her own portfolio. Notwithstanding (v), professional Subscribers may constitute up to five percent of the pool of Subscribers that the broker-dealer includes in the calculation of the monthly maximum amount if those professional Subscribers can only view data derived from through the Subscriber's online brokerage account and only in an inquiry/response per-quote display (i.e., not in a streaming display).
Back to Citation17. See 2013 Non-Display Filing, supra note 4, at 20976.
Back to Citation18. The Exchange added a similar note, Note 1(b), to the Fee Schedule in connection with the addition of fees for the NYSE Integrated Feed. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 76485 (Nov. 20, 2015), 80 FR 74158 (Nov. 27, 2015) (SR-NYSE-2015-57).
Back to Citation20. 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(4), (5).
Back to Citation21. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 70010 (July 19, 2013), 78 FR 44984 (July 25, 2013) (SR-CTA/CQ-2013-04).
Back to Citation22. See “Direct Access Fee,” Options Price Reporting Authority Fee Schedule Fee Schedule PRA Plan at http://www.opradata.com/pdf/fee_schedule.pdf.
Back to Citation23. See note 4, supra.
Back to Citation24. See 2013 Non-Display Filing, supra note 4, at 20976.
Back to Citation25. See, e.g. , Proposing Release on Regulation of NMS Stock Alternative Trading Systems, Securities Exchange Act Release No. 76474 (Nov. 18, 2015) (File No. S7-23-15). See also, “Brokers Warned Not to Steer Clients' Stock Trades Into Slow Lane,” Bloomberg Business, December 14, 2015 (Sigma X dark pool to use direct exchange feeds as the primary source of price data).
Back to Citation26. See NASDAQ Rule 7023 (Nasdaq Totalview) and BATS Rule 11.22(a) and (c) (BATS TCP Pitch and Multicast Pitch).
Back to Citation27. See FINRA Regulatory Notice 15-46, “Best Execution,” November 2015.
Back to Citation28. NetCoalition, 615 F.3d at 535.
Back to Citation29. The Exchange believes that cost-based pricing would be impractical because it would create enormous administrative burdens for all parties and the Commission to cost-regulate a large number of participants and standardize and analyze extraordinary amounts of information, accounts, and reports. In addition, and as described below, it is impossible to regulate market data prices in isolation from prices charged by markets for other services that are joint products. Cost-based rate regulation would also lead to litigation and may distort incentives, including those to minimize costs and to innovate, leading to further waste. Under cost-based pricing, the Commission would be burdened with determining a fair rate of return, and the industry could experience frequent rate increases based on escalating expense levels. Even in industries historically subject to utility regulation, cost-based ratemaking has been discredited. As such, the Exchange believes that cost-based ratemaking would be inappropriate for proprietary market data and inconsistent with Congress's direction that the Commission use its authority to foster the development of the national market system, and that market forces will continue to provide appropriate pricing discipline. See Appendix C to NYSE's comments to the Commission's 2000 Concept Release on the Regulation of Market Information Fees and Revenues, which can be found on the Commission's Web site at http://www.sec.gov/rules/concept/s72899/buck1.htm.
Back to Citation30. Press Release, U.S. Department of Justice, Assistant Attorney General Christine Varney Holds Conference Call Regarding NASDAQ OMX Group Inc. and IntercontinentalExchange Inc. Abandoning Their Bid for NYSE Euronext (May 16, 2011), available at http://www.justice.gov/iso/opa/atr/speeches/2011/at-speech-110516.html;; see also Complaint in U.S. v. Deutsche Borse AG and NYSE Euronext, Case No. 11-cv-2280 (DC Dist.) ¶ 24 (“NYSE and Direct Edge compete head-to-head . . . in the provision of real-time proprietary equity data products.”).
Back to Citation31. Concept Release on Equity Market Structure, Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358 (Jan. 14, 2010), 75 FR 3594 (Jan. 21, 2010) (File No. S7-02-10). This Concept Release included data from the third quarter of 2009 showing that no market center traded more than 20% of the volume of listed stocks, further evidencing the dispersal of and competition for trading activity. Id. at 3598. Data available on ArcaVision show that from June 30, 2013 to June 30, 2014, no exchange traded more than 12% of the volume of listed stocks by either trade or dollar volume, further evidencing the continued dispersal of and fierce competition for trading activity. See https://www.arcavision.com/Arcavision/arcalogin.jsp.
Back to Citation32. Mary Jo White, Enhancing Our Equity Market Structure, Sandler O'Neill & Partners, L.P. Global Exchange and Brokerage Conference (June 5, 2014) (available on the Commission Web site), citing Tuttle, Laura, 2014, “OTC Trading: Description of Non-ATS OTC Trading in National Market System Stocks,” at 7-8.
Back to Citation33. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72153 (May 12, 2014), 79 FR 28575, 28578 n.15 (May 16, 2014) (SR-NASDAQ-2014-045) (“[A]ll of the exchange's costs are incurred for the unified purposes of attracting order flow, executing and/or routing orders, and generating and selling data about market activity. The total return that an exchange earns reflects the revenues it receives from the joint products and the total costs of the joint products.”). See also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62907 (Sept. 14, 2010), 75 FR 57314, 57317 (Sept. 20, 2010) (SR-NASDAQ-2010-110), and Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62908 (Sept. 14, 2010), 75 FR 57321, 57324 (Sept. 20, 2010) (SR-NASDAQ-2010-111).
Back to Citation34. See generally Mark Hirschey, Fundamentals of Managerial Economics, at 600 (2009) (“It is important to note, however, that although it is possible to determine the separate marginal costs of goods produced in variable proportions, it is impossible to determine their individual average costs. This is because common costs are expenses necessary for manufacture of a joint product. Common costs of production—raw material and equipment costs, management expenses, and other overhead—cannot be allocated to each individual by-product on any economically sound basis. . . . Any allocation of common costs is wrong and arbitrary.”). This is not new economic theory. See, e.g., F. W. Taussig, “A Contribution to the Theory of Railway Rates,” Quarterly Journal of Economics V(4) 438, 465 (July 1891) (“Yet, surely, the division is purely arbitrary. These items of cost, in fact, are jointly incurred for both sorts of traffic; and I cannot share the hope entertained by the statistician of the Commission, Professor Henry C. Adams, that we shall ever reach a mode of apportionment that will lead to trustworthy results.”).
Back to Citation35. This is simply a securities market-specific example of the well-established principle that in certain circumstances more sales at lower margins can be more profitable than fewer sales at higher margins; this example is additional evidence that market data is an inherent part of a market's joint platform.
Back to Citation36. See note 26, supra.
Back to Citation[FR Doc. 2016-01052 Filed 1-20-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P
Document Information
- Published:
- 01/21/2016
- Department:
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Entry Type:
- Notice
- Document Number:
- 2016-01052
- Pages:
- 3506-3512 (7 pages)
- Docket Numbers:
- Release No. 34-76900, File No. SR-NYSE-2016-02
- EOCitation:
- of 2016-01-14
- PDF File:
- 2016-01052.pdf