97-17938. Self-Regulatory Organizations; Notice of Filing and Order Granting Accelerated Approval of Proposed Rule Change by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. Relating to an Extension of the Effectiveness of the NASD's Excess ...  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 131 (Wednesday, July 9, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 36855-36858]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-17938]
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    [Release No. 34-38804; File No. SR-NASD-97-46]
    
    
    Self-Regulatory Organizations; Notice of Filing and Order 
    Granting Accelerated Approval of Proposed Rule Change by the National 
    Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. Relating to an Extension of the 
    Effectiveness of the NASD's Excess Spread Rule Until September 30, 1997
    
    July 1, 1997.
        Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 
    (``Exchange Act''), 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), notice is hereby given that on 
    July 1, 1997, the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. 
    (``NASD'' or ``Association'') filed with the Securities and Exchange 
    Commission (``Commission'' or ``SEC'') the proposed rule change as 
    described in Items I, II, and III below, which Items have been prepared 
    by the NASD. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit 
    comments on the proposed rule change from interested persons and is 
    approving the proposal on an accelerated basis.
    
    I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance 
    of the Proposed Rule Change
    
        The NASD proposes to amend NASD Rule 4613(d) to extend the 
    effectiveness of its current excess spread rule applicable to Nasdaq 
    National Market (``NNM'') securities through September 30, 1997. The 
    excess spread rule applicable to NNM securities provides that a 
    registered market maker in a security listed on The Nasdaq Stock Market 
    (``Nasdaq'') shall be precluded from being a registered market maker in 
    that issue for twenty (20) business days if its average spread in the 
    security over the course of any full calendar month exceeds 150 percent 
    of the average of all dealer spreads in such issue for the month. The 
    text of the proposed rule change is as follows. (Additions are 
    italicized; deletions are bracketed.)
    * * * * *
    NASD Rule 4613  Character of Quotations
    * * * * *
        (d) Reasonably Competitive Quotations
        A registered market maker in a Nasdaq National Market security will 
    be withdrawn as a registered market maker and precluded from re-
    registering as a market maker in such issue for 20 business days if its 
    average spread in the security over the course of any full
    
    [[Page 36856]]
    
    calendar month exceeds 150 percent of the average of all dealer spreads 
    in such issue for the month. This subparagraph shall not apply to 
    market makers in Nasdaq SmallCap securities.
        (1) If a registered market maker has not satisfied the average 
    spread requirement set forth in this subparagraph (d) for a particular 
    Nasdaq National Market security, its registration in such issue shall 
    be withdrawn commencing on the next business day following the business 
    day on which the market maker was sent notice of its failure to comply 
    with the requirement. A market maker may request reconsideration of the 
    withdrawal notification. Requests for reconsideration will be reviewed 
    by the Market Operations Review Committee, whose decisions are final 
    and binding on the members. A request for reconsideration shall not 
    operate as a stay of the withdrawal or toll the twenty business day 
    period noted in subparagraph (d) above.
        (2) Grounds for requests for reconsideration shall be limited to 
    claims that Nadsaq's calculation of the market maker's average spread 
    for the month was in error.
        (3) This subparagraph (d) shall be in effect until September 30, 
    1997 [July 1, 1997].
    
    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 NASD 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 NASD has prepared summaries, set forth in Sections 
    A, B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
    
    A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and 
    Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
    
        Prior to January 20, 1997, Nasdaq's Excess Spread Rule provided 
    that registered market makers in Nasdaq securities could not enter 
    quotations that exceeded 125 percent of the average of the three 
    narrowest market maker spreads in that issue, provided, however, that 
    the maximum allowable spread could never be less than \1/4\ of a point 
    (``125% Excess Spread Rule''). The Rule was originally designed to 
    bring a measure of quality to the Nasdaq market by preventing firms 
    from holding themselves out as market makers without having a 
    meaningful quote in the system. Despite the regulatory objectives 
    underlying the rule, however, many market participants believed the 
    rule produced a variety of unintended consequences that undermined the 
    integrity of Nasdaq. Most notably, the SEC found in its 21(a) Report on 
    the NASD and Nasdaq that ``the interdependence of quotes mandated by 
    the rule may deter market makers from narrowing their dealer spreads, 
    because, once the spread is tightened, the rule in some instances 
    precludes a market maker from widening the spread to earlier levels.\1\ 
    As a result the SEC found that the Excess Spread Rule created an 
    economic incentive for market makers to discourage one another from 
    narrowing their quotes, thereby interfering with the ``free flow of 
    prices in the market and imped[ing] attempts by the market to reach the 
    optimal competitive spread.'' \2\ Accordingly, the SEC requested that 
    the NASD ``modify the rule to eliminate its undesirable effects, or to 
    repeal it.'' \3\
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        \1\ See Appendix to Report Pursuant to Section 21(a) of the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Regarding the NASD and The Nasdaq 
    Stock Market (``21(a) Report''), SEC, August 8, 1996, at p. 98.
        \2\ Id. at p. 99.
        \3\ Id.
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        In response to the SEC's 21(a) Report, the NASD submitted a 
    proposal that was approved by the SEC that amended the Excess Spread 
    Rule on a pilot basis through July 1, 1997.\4\ Under the revised Excess 
    Spread Rule, a registered market maker in a Nasdaq security is 
    precluded from being a registered market maker in that issue for twenty 
    business days if its average spread in the security over the course of 
    any full calendar month exceeded 150 percent of the average of all 
    dealer spreads in such issue for the month (``150% Excess Spread 
    Rule'').\5\
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        \4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 38180 (January 16, 
    1997), 62 FR 3725 (``Pilot Program Approval Order'').
        \5\ On February 28, 1997, the SEC approved the NASD's proposal 
    to exclude Nasdaq Small-Cap Securities from the Excess Spread Rule. 
    This rule change was necessary because, unlike with Nasdaq National 
    Market securities, Nasdaq does not presently calculate and display 
    through the Nasdaq system the average spread of all market makers in 
    a particular issue or a comparison of the size of an individual 
    market maker's quoted spread relative to the average spread of all 
    market makers. Thus, Nasdaq does not presently afford market makers 
    in SmallCap securities with any indication as to whether they are 
    satisfying the requirements of the 150% Excess Spread Rule. Market 
    makers in Nasdaq National Market securities are able to assess 
    whether they are satisfying the 150% Excess Spread Rule on a daily 
    basis through use of the ``Primary Market Maker (PMM) Window'' of 
    Nasdaq Workstation II. Under the NASD's instant proposal, Nasdaq 
    SmallCap securities would continue to be excluded from the Excess 
    Spread Rule. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 38354 (February 
    28, 1997), 62 FR 11245.
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        In formulating the 150% Excess Spread Rule, Nasdaq Committees and 
    Nasdaq staff felt that it was important to strike a reasonable balance 
    between the need to eliminate any constraints that the Excess Spread 
    Rule places on firms to adjust their quotations and the need to avoid 
    fostering a market environment where registered market makers can 
    maintain inordinately wide spreads and still receive the benefits of 
    being a market maker (e.g., affirmative determination exemption and 
    preferential margin treatment). Nasdaq also believed it was critical to 
    transform the Excess Spread Rule into a performance standard used to 
    determine market maker eligibility, instead of a strict regulatory 
    requirement applicable to every quote update in a Nasdaq security, 
    violations of which were punishable by disciplinary action. In 
    addition, Nasdaq believed it was important to eliminate the 125% Excess 
    Spread Rule prior to implementation of the SEC's order handling rules. 
    Specifically, because Nasdaq believed that spreads would likely narrow 
    as a result of the display of customer limit orders, Nasdaq believed 
    that the average of the three narrowest market maker spreads would 
    commensurately narrow after implementation of the SEC's rules. As a 
    result, Nasdaq believed that concerns with the interdependence of 
    market maker quotations would be exacerbated unless the rule was 
    amended.
        While the Commission approved the 150% Excess Spread Rule on a 
    pilot basis, in its approval order for the new rule, the SEC states 
    that ``[a]lthough the amended excess spread rule may reduce some of the 
    anticompetitive concerns outlined in the 21(a) Report, the Commission 
    believes that the amendment * * * may not completely satisfy the NASD's 
    obligations under the Commission's Order with regard to the excess 
    spread rule. Specifically, it may not remove completely the 
    anticompetitive incentives for market makers to refrain from narrowing 
    quotes because the market makers' quotation obligation continues to be 
    dependent to some extent upon quotations of other market makers in the 
    stock.'' \6\
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        \6\ Pilot Program Approval Order, supra note 4, 62 FR at 3726.
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        Based on experience with the 150% Excess Spread Rule, the Nasdaq 
    Board recently concluded that the Rule has helped to ensure that market 
    makers maintain at least a minimal level of commitment to their issues, 
    without contributing to or fostering the same unintended consequences 
    created by the former 125% Excess Spread Rule.
    
    [[Page 36857]]
    
    Accordingly, the Nasdaq Board approved a resolution to implement the 
    150% Excess Spread Rule for all Nasdaq securities on a permanent basis. 
    On June 26, 1997, the Board of Governors of the NASD ratified the 
    resolution adopted by the Nasdaq Board. The NASD's filing requesting 
    permanent approval of the 150% Excess Spread Rule will be submitted to 
    the Commission in the very near future. Accordingly, in the interim 
    before the Commission has had an opportunity to solicit comment and 
    take action on the NASD's proposal for permanent approval of the Rule, 
    the NASD is proposing that the pilot program for the Rule be extended 
    until September 30, 1997.
        Nasdaq and the NASD believes that the proposed rule change is 
    consistent with Sections 15A(b)(6), 15A(b)(9), 15A(b)(11) and 
    11A(a)(1)(C) of the Exchange Act. Among other things, Section 15A(b)(6) 
    requires that the rules of a national securities association 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. Section 15A(b0(9) 
    provides that the rules of the Association may not impose any burden on 
    competition not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes 
    of the Exchange Act. Section 15A(b)(11) empowers the NASD to adopt 
    rules governing the form and content of quotations relating to 
    securities in the Nasdaq market. Such rules must be designed to produce 
    fair and informative quotations, prevent fictitious and misleading 
    quotations, and promote orderly procedures for collecting and 
    distributing quotations. Section 11A(a)(1)(C) provides that it is in 
    the public interest to, among other things, assure the economically 
    efficient execution of securities transactions and the availability to 
    brokers, dealers, and investors of information with respect to 
    quotations for and transactions in securities. Specifically, because 
    Nasdaq and the NASD believe the 150% Excess Spread Rule has helped to 
    ameliorate the adverse consequences that the former 125% Excess Spread 
    Rule had on the competitiveness and independence of quotations 
    displayed on the Nasdaq market, Nasdaq and the NASD believe the 
    proposal to extend the pilot program for the Rule for an additional 
    three months is consistent with the Exchange Act. In particular, Nasdaq 
    and the NASD believe that the 150% Excess Spread Rule promotes the 
    integrity of quotations on the Nasdaq market and enhances competition 
    among market makers, thereby contributing to greater market liquidity, 
    improved price discovery, and the best execution of customer orders. At 
    the same time, while Nasdaq and the NASD believe the 150% Excess Spread 
    Rule has removed a constraint on market maker quote movements, Nasdaq 
    and the NASD also believe that the Rule has helped to ensure that all 
    registered market makers are providing some threshold level of market 
    making support in their issues. Nasdaq and the NASD also believe that 
    the 150% Excess Spread Rule has helped to avoid fostering a market 
    environment where registered market makers can maintain inordinately 
    wide spreads and still receive the benefits of being a market maker. 
    Accordingly, the NASD and Nasdaq believe that it would be consistent 
    with all of the above-cited sections of the Act for the Commission to 
    approve an extension of the effectiveness of the 150% Excess Spread 
    Rule for an additional three months while the Commission considers 
    permanent approval of the Rule.
    
    B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
    
        The NASD believes that the proposed rule change will not result in 
    any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in 
    furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act.
    
    C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed 
    Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
    
        Comments were neither solicited nor received.
    
    III. Solicitation of Comments
    
        Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and 
    arguments concerning the foregoing. Persons making written submissions 
    should file six copies thereof with the Secretary, Securities and 
    Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549. 
    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 inspection and copying in the 
    Commission's Public Reference Room. Copies of such filing will also be 
    available for inspection and copying at the principal office of the 
    NASD. All submissions should refer to file number SR-NASD-97-46 and 
    should be submitted by July 30, 1997.
    
    IV. Commission's Findings and Order Granting Accelerated Approval of 
    Proposed Rule Change
    
        The Commission has determined to approve the extension of the 150% 
    Excess Spread Rule pilot until September 30, 1997. As noted previously, 
    the Commission had identified anticompetitive concerns associated with 
    the 125% Excess spread Rule in place prior to January 20, 1997. The 
    NASD has an obligation, pursuant to the 21(a) Report, to eliminate 
    these concerns on or before August 8, 1997. The Commission, in the 
    Pilot Program Approval Order, recognized that the 150% Excess Spread 
    Rule may reduce, to some degree, the Commission's concerns regarding 
    the 125% Excess Spread Rule. Although the Commission has not yet 
    considered whether the 150% Excess Spread Rule is sufficient to satisfy 
    the NASD's obligations under the Commission's Order on a permanent 
    basis, the Commission believes that the current rule should continue to 
    operate on a temporary basis while the issue is examined.\7\ 
    Consequently, an extension will ensure that the Rule remains in effect 
    on an uninterrupted basis until the Commission has had an opportunity 
    to fully evaluate the NASD's permanent solution regarding the excess 
    spread rule.\8\
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        \7\ As mentioned in the Pilot Program Approval Order, one of the 
    alternatives for a permanent solution could be elimination of the 
    excess spread rule in its entirety.
        \8\ As noted above, the NASD has until August 8, 1997, to comply 
    with this undertaking.
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        In addition, the Commission believes that the temporary rule can 
    remain limited to National Market securities. Due to Nasdaq's current 
    systems limitations, market makers in Nasdaq SmallCap securities are 
    unable to monitor compliance with the Rule. However, the NASD has 
    stated that it anticipates that market makers in Nasdaq SmallCap 
    securities will be subject to the same excess spread requirements, if 
    any, as market makers in Nasdaq National Market securities when a 
    permanent resolution is reach.
        Accordingly, the Commission finds that the NASD's proposal is 
    consistent with Sections 11A and 15A of the Exchange Act and the rules 
    and regulations thereunder applicable to the
    
    [[Page 36858]]
    
    NASD and, in particular, Sections 11A(a)(1)(C), 15A(b)(6), 15A(b)(9), 
    and 15A(b)(11). Further, the Commission finds good cause for approving 
    the proposed rule change prior to the thirtieth day after the day of 
    publication in the Federal Register. In addition to the reasons 
    discussed above, the Commission believes that accelerated approval of 
    the NASD's proposal is appropriate given the fact that the proposal is 
    a temporary extension of the 150% Excess Spread Rule that has been in 
    effect since January 1997. An uninterrupted application of the 150% 
    Excess Spread Rule for a short period of time should be less disruptive 
    to market makers while the NASD prepares its proposal regarding market 
    maker standards.\9\
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        \9\ The Commission notes that a failure to extend the 150% 
    Excess Spread Rule would result in no excess spread standard for 
    Nasdaq market makers. Without deciding that the 150% Excess Spread 
    Rule is preferable to no excess spread standard, the Commission 
    concludes that it is not unreasonable to continue the pilot 
    uninterrupted for a short period to allow the Commission to reach a 
    conclusion on this matter.
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    V. Conclusion
    
        It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the 
    Exchange Act, that the proposed rule change (SR-NASD-97-46) is approved 
    through September 30, 1997.
    
        For the Commission, by the Division of Market Regulation, 
    pursuant to delegated authority.\10\
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        \10\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 97-17938 Filed 7-8-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/09/1997
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
97-17938
Pages:
36855-36858 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release No. 34-38804, File No. SR-NASD-97-46
PDF File:
97-17938.pdf