[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 121 (Thursday, June 23, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41142-41170]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-14875]



[[Page 41141]]

Vol. 81

Thursday,

No. 121

June 23, 2016

Part V





Securities and Exchange Commission





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In the Matter of the Application of: Investors' Exchange, LLC for 
Registration as a National Securities Exchange; Findings, Opinion, and 
Order of the Commission; Notices

  Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 121 / Thursday, June 23, 2016 / 
Notices  

[[Page 41142]]


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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. 34-78101; File No. 10-222]


In the Matter of the Application of: Investors' Exchange, LLC for 
Registration as a National Securities Exchange; Findings, Opinion, and 
Order of the Commission

June 17, 2016.

I. Introduction and Procedural History

    On August 21, 2015, Investors' Exchange, LLC (``IEX'' or ``IEX 
Exchange'') submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission 
(``Commission'') a Form 1 application (``Form 1'') under the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act''), seeking registration as a national 
securities exchange pursuant to Section 6 of the Act.\1\ IEX has 
amended its Form 1 five times, as detailed below. The Commission has 
reviewed the exchange registration application, as amended, together 
with all comments received, in order to make a determination whether to 
grant the registration.\2\
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    \1\ 15 U.S.C. 78f.
    \2\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f and 15 U.S.C. 78s.
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    On September 9, 2015, IEX submitted Amendment No. 1 to its Form 
1.\3\ Notice of the application, as amended by Amendment No. 1, was 
published for comment in the Federal Register on September 22, 2015.\4\ 
On December 18, 2015, IEX consented to an extension of time to March 
21, 2016 for Commission consideration of its Form 1 application and the 
comments received thereon.\5\ In response to comments, IEX submitted an 
amendment to its Form 1 on February 29, 2016 to propose a new approach 
to outbound routing, which had been the subject of extensive public 
comment as originally proposed.\6\ IEX submitted a third amendment to 
its Form 1 on March 4, 2016.\7\ IEX submitted a fourth amendment to its 
Form 1 on March 7, 2016.\8\ IEX submitted a fifth amendment to its Form 
1 on May 27, 2016.\9\ All together, the Commission received 474 
comments regarding the IEX Exchange Form 1.\10\ IEX submitted several 
responses to comments.\11\
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    \3\ In Amendment No. 1, IEX submitted updated portions of its 
Form 1, including revised exhibits, a revised version of the 
proposed IEX Rule Book, and revised Addenda C-2, C-3, C-4, D-1, D-2, 
F-1, F-2, F-3, F-4, F-5, F-6, F-7, F-8, F-9, F-10, F-11, F-12, F-13.
    \4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 75925 (September 15, 
2015), 80 FR 57261 (``Notice'').
    \5\ See Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, to Brent 
J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated December 18, 2015.
    \6\ In Amendment No. 2, IEX proposed changes to its Form 1 to, 
among other things, redesign its outbound routing functionality to 
direct routable orders first to the IEX routing logic instead of 
directly to the IEX matching engine. See Letter from Sophia Lee, 
General Counsel, IEX, to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, 
dated February 29, 2016, at 1. In this manner, the IEX router would 
``interact with the IEX matching system over a 350 microsecond 
speed-bump in the same way an independent third party broker would 
be subject to a speed bump.'' Id.
    \7\ In Amendment No. 3, IEX proposed changes to its Form 1 to 
clarify and correct revisions to its rulebook that it made in 
Amendment No. 2. See Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, 
to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated March 4, 2016.
    \8\ In Amendment No. 4, IEX proposed changes to its Form 1 to 
update Exhibit E to reflect changes it proposed in Amendment No. 2. 
See Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, to Brent J. 
Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated March 7, 2016.
    \9\ In Amendment No. 5, IEX updated Exhibits J and K to reflect 
changes since its initial filing. See Letter from Sophia Lee, 
General Counsel, IEX, to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, 
dated May 27, 2016.
    \10\ See Appendix A (listing comments received on this matter).
    \11\ See Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, to Brent 
J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated November 13, 2015 (``IEX 
First Response''); Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, to 
Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated November 23, 2015 
(``IEX Second Response''); Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, 
IEX, to Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated February 9, 
2016 (``IEX Third Response''); Letter from Donald Bollerman, Head of 
Markets and Sales, IEX Group, Inc., to File No. 10-222, dated 
February 16, 2016 (``IEX Fourth Response''); Letter from IEX Group, 
Inc., to File No. 10-222, dated February 19, 2016 (``IEX Fifth 
Response''); and Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, to 
Brent J. Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated February 29, 2016 
(``IEX Sixth Response'').
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    On March 18, 2016, the Commission issued an order (``Order 
Instituting Proceedings'' or ``OIP'') that provided public notice of 
the significant changes IEX proposed to its application in Amendment 
Nos. 2, 3, and 4, and solicited comment on the amended Form 1, while 
simultaneously instituting proceedings under Section 19(a)(1)(B) of the 
Act \12\ to determine whether to grant or deny IEX's exchange 
registration application, as amended.\13\ By publishing notice of, and 
soliciting comment on, IEX's Form 1, as amended by Amendment Nos. 2, 3, 
and 4, and simultaneously instituting proceedings, the Commission 
sought public input in particular on whether IEX's proposed new 
outbound routing structure, as reflected by IEX's Form 1 and rules as 
amended by Amendment Nos. 2, 3, and 4 is consistent with the Act, and 
accordingly, whether IEX should be registered as a national securities 
exchange.\14\ The Order Instituting Proceedings extended until June 18, 
2016, the date by which the Commission shall grant or deny IEX's Form 
1, as amended, for registration as a national securities exchange. The 
Commission received additional comment on IEX's amended Form 1 
subsequent to the publication of the Order Instituting Proceedings. A 
list of the comments received on IEX's Form 1 is set forth in Appendix 
A.
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    \12\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(a)(1)(B).
    \13\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 77406, 81 FR 15765 
(March 24, 2016) (File No. 10-222) (``Order Instituting 
Proceedings'' or ``OIP''). Also on March 18, 2016, the Commission 
separately issued a notice of a proposed Commission interpretation 
regarding automated quotations under Regulation NMS. See Securities 
Exchange Act Release No. 77407, 81 FR 15660 (March 24, 2016) (File 
No. S7-03-16) (``Notice of Proposed Interpretation''). Separately, 
today, the Commission has adopted a final interpretation. See 
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78102 (June 17, 2016) (File No. 
S7-03-16) (``Final Interpretation'').
    \14\ While IEX's proposed outbound routing structure was one 
focus of the Commission's solicitation of comment in the Order 
Instituting Proceedings, it is but one of several aspects of IEX's 
Form 1 that the Commission must consider in determining whether to 
grant or deny IEX's exchange registration application. All such 
aspects are discussed below.
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    For the reasons set forth below, and based on the representations 
set forth in IEX's Form 1, as amended, as supplemented in IEX's 
responses to comments included in the public comment file, this order 
approves IEX's Form 1 application, as amended, for registration as a 
national securities exchange.

II. Statutory Standards

    Pursuant to Sections 6(b) and 19(a) of the Act,\15\ the Commission 
shall by order grant an application for registration as a national 
securities exchange if the Commission finds, among other things, that 
the proposed exchange is so organized and has the capacity to carry out 
the purposes of the Act and can comply, and can enforce compliance by 
its members and persons associated with its members, with the 
provisions of the Act, the rules and regulations thereunder, and the 
rules of the exchange.
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    \15\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b) and 15 U.S.C. 78s(a), respectively.
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    As discussed in greater detail below, the Commission finds that IEX 
Exchange's application, as amended, for exchange registration meets the 
requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder. 
Further, the Commission finds that the proposed rules of IEX Exchange 
are consistent with Section 6 of the Act in that, among other things, 
they are designed to: (1) Assure fair representation of the exchange's 
members in the selection of its directors and administration of its 
affairs and provide that, among other things, one or more directors 
shall be representative of investors and not be associated with the 
exchange, or with a

[[Page 41143]]

broker or dealer; \16\ (2) prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and 
practices, promote just and equitable principles of trade, foster 
cooperation and coordination with persons engaged in regulating, 
clearing, settling, processing information with respect to, and 
facilitating transactions in securities, and remove impediments to and 
perfect the mechanisms of a free and open market and a national market 
system; \17\ (3) not permit unfair discrimination between customers, 
issuers, or dealers; \18\ and (4) protect investors and the public 
interest.\19\ The Commission also finds that the rules of IEX Exchange 
are consistent with Section 11A of the Act.\20\ Finally, the Commission 
finds that IEX Exchange's proposed rules at this time do not impose any 
burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of 
the purposes of the Act.\21\
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    \16\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(3).
    \17\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
    \18\ See id.
    \19\ See id.
    \20\ 15 U.S.C. 78k-1.
    \21\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(8).
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III. Discussion

A. Governance of IEX Exchange \22\
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    \22\ The Commission did not receive any comments addressing the 
substance of the governance provisions.
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    IEX Group, Inc. (``IEXG''), a Delaware corporation, will own 100% 
of IEX Exchange as well as IEX Services LLC (``IEXS''), a registered 
broker-dealer that currently operates an alternative trading system 
(``IEX ATS''). Following the launch of operations of IEX Exchange, IEXS 
would be a facility of IEX Exchange and would provide outbound order 
routing services to IEX Exchange.\23\
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    \23\ See Form 1, Exhibit C. See also IEX Exchange Rule 2.220.
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1. IEX Exchange Board of Directors
    The board of directors of IEX Exchange (``Exchange Board'') will be 
its governing body and will possess all of the powers necessary for the 
management of its business and affairs, including governance of IEX 
Exchange as a self-regulatory organization (``SRO'').\24\
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    \24\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
1.
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    Under the Amended and Restated Operating Agreement of Investors' 
Exchange LLC (``IEX Exchange Operating Agreement''): \25\
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    \25\ See Form 1, Exhibit A-3.
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     The Exchange Board will initially be composed of seven 
directors; \26\
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    \26\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
2(a).
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     One director will be the Chief Executive Officer of IEX 
Exchange;\27\
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    \27\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
2(b).
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     The number of Non-Industry Directors,\28\ including at 
least two Independent Directors,\29\ will equal or exceed the sum of 
the number of Industry Directors \30\ and Member Representative 
Directors; \31\
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    \28\ ``Non-Industry Director'' means a Director who is an 
Independent Director or any other individual who would not be an 
Industry Director. See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article 
I(x).
    \29\ ``Independent Director'' means a ``Director who has no 
material relationship with the [IEX Exchange] or any affiliate of 
the [IEX Exchange], or any [IEX member] or any affiliate of any such 
[IEX member]; provided, however, that an individual who otherwise 
qualifies as an Independent Director shall not be disqualified from 
serving in such capacity solely because such Director is a Director 
of the [IEX Exchange] or [IEXG].'' See IEX Exchange Operating 
Agreement, Article I(n).
    \30\ Generally, an ``Industry Director'' is, among other things, 
a Director that is or has been within the prior three years an 
officer, director, employee, or owner of a broker or dealer, as well 
as any Director who has, or has had, a consulting or employment 
relationship with IEX Exchange or any affiliate of IEX Exchange 
within the prior three years. See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement 
Article I(p). This definition is consistent with what the Commission 
has approved for other exchanges. See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act 
Release Nos. 62716 (August 13, 2010), 75 FR 51295 (August 19, 2010) 
(``BATS Y Exchange Order''); and 68341 (December 3, 2012), 77 FR 
73065 (December 7, 2012) (``MIAX Exchange Order'').
    \31\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
2(b). ``Member Representative Director'' means a Director who has 
been appointed by IEXG as an initial Director pursuant to Article 
III, Section 4(g) of the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement to serve 
until the first annual meeting or who has been ``elected by the LLC 
Member after having been nominated by the Member Nominating 
Committee or by an Exchange Member pursuant to [the] Operating 
Agreement and confirmed as the nominee of Exchange Members after 
majority vote of Exchange Members, if applicable. A Member 
Representative Director must be an officer, director, employee, or 
agent of an Exchange Member that is not a Stockholder Exchange 
Member.'' See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article I(u). See 
also IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 4(g).
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     At least twenty percent of the directors on the Exchange 
Board will be Member Representative Directors; \32\ and
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    \32\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
2(b).
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     A majority of the Board of Directors will be Independent 
Directors.\33\
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    \33\ See id.
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    In addition, during such time as IEX Exchange operates a listings 
business, the Exchange Board must have one Director who is an officer 
or director of an issuer and one Director who is a representative of 
investors, and in each case, such Director must not be associated with 
a member.\34\
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    \34\ See id.
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    As discussed further below, the initial Directors of the Exchange 
Board shall be appointed by IEXG and shall serve until the first annual 
meeting of holders of LLC interests of Investors' Exchange LLC, of 
which IEX Group, Inc. is the sole holder (``LLC Member''). In its Form 
1 application, IEX committed to hold its first annual meeting as a 
registered exchange within 90 days after the date of final action by 
the Commission on IEX's application for registration as a national 
securities exchange (``Approval Date'').\35\ At the first annual 
meeting of the LLC Member and each annual meeting thereafter, IEXG, as 
the sole LLC Member of IEX Exchange, will elect the Exchange Board 
pursuant to the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement and consistent with 
the compositional requirements specified therein.\36\ In addition, IEXG 
will appoint the initial Nominating Committee \37\ and Member 
Nominating Committee,\38\ consistent with each committee's 
compositional requirements,\39\ to nominate candidates for election to 
the Exchange Board. Each of the Nominating Committee and Member 
Nominating Committee, after completion of its respective duties for 
nominating directors for election to the Board for that year, shall 
nominate candidates to serve on the succeeding year's Nominating 
Committee or Member Nominating Committee, as applicable, such 
candidates to be voted on by IEXG at the annual meeting of the LLC 
Member.\40\ IEX Exchange members have rights to nominate and elect 
additional candidates for the Member Nominating Committee pursuant to a 
petition process.\41\
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    \35\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
4(g). See also discussion of ``Interim Exchange Board'' infra.
    \36\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article IV, Section 
1(a).
    \37\ The number of Non-Industry members on the Nominating 
Committee must equal or exceed the number of Industry members. All 
Nominating Committee members must be Independent Directors. See IEX 
Exchange Operating Agreement Article VI, Section 2. See also IEX 
Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 2(a).
    \38\ Each member of the Member Nominating Committee shall be a 
Member Representative member. See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement 
Article VI, Section 3. See also IEX Exchange Operating Agreement 
Article V, Section 2(a). Pursuant to IEX Exchange Operating 
Agreement Article I(v), a ``Member Representative member'' is a 
member of any committee or hearing panel who is an officer, 
director, employee or agent of an Exchange Member that is not a 
Stockholder Exchange Member.
    \39\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article VI, Section 1.
    \40\ See id.
    \41\ See id. See also IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article 
III, Section 4.
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    The Nominating Committee will nominate candidates for each director 
position, and IEXG, as the sole LLC Member, will elect those directors. 
For Member Representative Director

[[Page 41144]]

positions, the Member Nominating Committee will solicit input from IEX 
members and members may submit petition candidates.\42\ If no 
candidates are nominated pursuant to a petition process, then the 
initial nominees submitted by the Member Nominating Committee will be 
nominated as Member Representative Directors by the Nominating 
Committee. If a petition process produces additional candidates, then 
the candidates nominated pursuant to the petition process, together 
with those nominated by the Member Nominating Committee, will be 
presented to IEX Exchange members for election to determine the final 
nominees for any open Member Representative Director positions.\43\ In 
the event of a contested election, the candidates who receive the most 
votes will be selected as the Member Representative Director nominees 
by the Nominating Committee.\44\
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    \42\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article III, Section 
4(c). The petition must be signed by executive representatives of 
10% or more of the IEX Exchange members. No IEX Exchange member, 
together with its affiliates, may account for more than 50% of the 
signatures endorsing a particular candidate. See id.
    \43\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
4(e) and (f). Each IEX Exchange Member shall have the right to cast 
one vote for each available Member Representative Director 
nomination, provided that any such vote must be cast for a person on 
the List of Candidates and that no IEX Exchange member, together 
with its affiliates, may account for more than 20% of the votes cast 
for a candidate. See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, 
Section 4(f).
    \44\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
4(f).
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    Thereafter, the Member Nominating Committee will nominate a final 
slate of candidates to the Nominating Committee, and the Nominating 
Committee must accept those candidates and submit them to the LLC 
Member.\45\ IEXG, as the sole LLC Member, is obligated to elect the 
Member Representative Director nominees that are nominated by the 
Nominating Committee.\46\
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    \45\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
4(a). The Member Nominating Committee will solicit comments from IEX 
Exchange members for the purpose of approving and submitting names 
of candidates for election to the position of Member Representative 
Director. See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
4(b).
    \46\ See id.
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    In addition, with respect to the requirement that the number of 
Non-Industry Directors, including at least two Independent Directors, 
will equal or exceed the sum of the number of Industry Directors and 
Member Representative Directors, the Commission believes that the 
proposed composition of the Exchange Board satisfies the requirements 
in Section 6(b)(3) of the Act,\47\ which requires in part that one or 
more directors be representative of issuers and investors and not be 
associated with a member of the exchange, or with a broker or dealer. 
The Commission previously has stated that the inclusion of public, non-
industry representatives on exchange oversight bodies is an important 
mechanism to support an exchange's ability to protect the public 
interest.\48\ Further, the presence of public, non-industry 
representatives can help to ensure that no single group of market 
participants has the ability to systematically disadvantage other 
market participants through the exchange governance process.\49\ The 
Commission believes that public directors can provide unbiased 
perspectives, which may enhance the ability of the Exchange Board to 
address issues in a non-discriminatory fashion and foster the integrity 
of IEX Exchange.\50\ For similar reasons, the Commission also believes 
that the additional compositional requirement that applies during such 
time as IEX Exchange operates a primary listings business (i.e., the 
requirement that one Director be an officer or director of an issuer 
and one Director be a representative of investors, in each case, not 
associated with a Member \51\) is consistent with the requirements of 
Section 6(b)(3) of the Act.
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    \47\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(3).
    \48\ See, e.g., Regulation of Exchanges and Alternative Trading 
Systems, Securities Exchange Act Release No. 40760 (December 8, 
1998), 63 FR 70844 (December 22, 1998) (``Regulation ATS Release'').
    \49\ See, e.g., MIAX Exchange Order, supra note 30, at 73067.
    \50\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53128 
(January 13, 2006), 71 FR 3550, 3553 (January 23, 2006) (granting 
the exchange registration of Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.) (``Nasdaq 
Exchange Order''); Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53382 
(February 27, 2006), 71 FR 11251, 11261 (March 6, 2006) (``NYSE/
Archipelago Merger Approval Order''); and BATS Y Exchange Order, 
supra note 30 at 51298.
    \51\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article III, Section 
2(b).
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    The Commission believes that the IEX Exchange governance provisions 
are consistent with the Act. In particular, the Commission believes 
that the requirement in the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement that 20% 
of the directors be Member Representative Directors and the means by 
which they will be chosen by IEX Exchange members provide for the fair 
representation of members in the selection of directors and the 
administration of IEX Exchange and therefore are consistent with 
Section 6(b)(3) of the Act.\52\ As the Commission has previously noted, 
this requirement helps to ensure that members have a voice in an 
exchange's self-regulatory program, and that an exchange is 
administered in a way that is equitable to all those who trade on its 
market or through its facilities.\53\
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    \52\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(3).
    \53\ See, e.g., Nasdaq Exchange Order, supra note 50; and BATS Y 
Exchange Order, supra note 30. See also NYSE/Archipelago Merger 
Approval Order, supra note 50.
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2. Interim Exchange Board
    IEXG will appoint an interim Exchange board of directors (``Interim 
Exchange Board'') at a special meeting, which will include interim 
Member Representative Directors. The interim Member Representative 
Directors will be selected by the Buy-Side Trading Advisory Committee 
(``TAC'') of IEXG from a list of potential candidates submitted by 
current subscribers of the IEX ATS.\54\ IEX represents that these IEX 
ATS subscribers are expected to become members of IEX Exchange through 
submission of and approval of an Exchange Waive-In Membership 
Application.\55\ IEX also represents that it currently expects that the 
Exchange's initial membership would consist substantially of the 
current group of IEX ATS subscribers, including, but not limited to, 
those IEX ATS subscribers that have submitted potential candidates to 
the TAC, and that it does not expect to receive a meaningful number of 
applications for Exchange membership from non-IEX ATS subscribers 
during the tenure of the Interim Exchange Board.\56\ Upon the 
appointment of the interim directors by IEXG, the Interim Exchange 
Board will meet the board composition requirements set forth in the IEX 
Exchange Operating Agreement.\57\
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    \54\ See Form 1, Exhibit J.
    \55\ See id.
    \56\ See id.
    \57\ See id.
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    The Interim Exchange Board will serve until the first annual 
meeting of the LLC Member, which will take place within 90 days after 
the Approval Date, when the Exchange Board will be elected pursuant to 
the full nomination, petition, and voting process set forth in the IEX 
Exchange Operating Agreement.\58\ IEX represents that it will complete 
the full nomination, petition, and voting process set forth in the IEX 
Exchange Operating Agreement as promptly as possible after the 
effective date of the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement and within 
ninety (90) days after the Approval Date.\59\
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    \58\ See id. See also IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article 
III, Section 4.
    \59\ See Form 1, Exhibit J.

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[[Page 41145]]

    The Commission believes that the process for electing the Interim 
Exchange Board, as proposed, is consistent with the requirements of the 
Act, including that the rules of the exchange assure fair 
representation of the exchange's members in the selection of its 
directors and administration of its affairs.\60\ As noted above, the 
interim Member Representative Directors will be selected by IEXG from a 
list of potential candidates submitted by a group of current 
subscribers of the IEX ATS. IEX expects its IEX ATS subscribers to 
become the initial members of IEX Exchange and does not expect 
significant numbers of new members initially, and therefore conducting 
the initial Member Representative Director process among these entities 
is an appropriate way to put in place promptly at IEX's launch as an 
exchange a board with Member Representative directors that represent 
the exchange's initial membership. The Commission notes that this 
Interim Exchange Board is only temporary, as IEX Exchange represents 
that it will complete the full nomination, petition, and voting process 
as set forth in the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, which will 
provide persons that are approved as members after the date of this 
Order with the opportunity to participate in the selection of the 
Member Representative Directors, within 90 days of when IEX Exchange's 
application for registration as a national securities exchange is 
granted.\61\ The Commission therefore believes that IEX Exchange's 
initial interim board process is consistent with the Act, including 
Section 6(b)(3), in that it is designed to provide representation among 
the persons and firms likely to become members when IEX commences 
operations as an exchange and is sufficient to allow IEX to commence 
operations as an exchange for an interim period prior to going through 
the regular process to elect a new Exchange Board pursuant to the full 
nomination, petition, and voting process set forth in the IEX Exchange 
Operating Agreement.
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    \60\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(3).
    \61\ IEX's proposed timeline for the interim board process 
follows a process similar to what the Commission recently approved 
for the MIAX Exchange. See MIAX Exchange Order, supra note 30.
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3. Exchange Committees
    In the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, IEX Exchange has proposed 
to establish several committees of the Exchange Board. Specifically, 
IEX Exchange has proposed to establish the following committees of the 
Exchange Board that would be appointed by the Chairman of the Exchange 
Board, with the approval of the Exchange Board: An Appeals Committee 
and a Regulatory Oversight Committee.\62\ In addition, IEX Exchange has 
proposed to establish a Nominating Committee and a Member Nominating 
Committee, which would be elected on an annual basis by IEXG, as the 
sole LLC Member.\63\ Further, the IEX Chairman, with approval of the 
Exchange Board, may appoint a Compensation Committee, an Audit 
Committee, an Executive Committee, and a Finance Committee of the 
Exchange Board.\64\
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    \62\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article V, Section 1.
    \63\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article VI, Section 1.
    \64\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 6.
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    The Appeals Committee will consist of two Independent Directors, 
and one Member Representative Director.\65\ Each member of the 
Regulatory Oversight Committee must be an Independent Director.\66\ If 
established, each voting member of the Compensation Committee must be a 
Non-Industry Director.\67\ If established, a majority of the Audit 
Committee members must be Non-Industry Directors, all Audit Committee 
Directors must be Independent Directors, and a Non-Industry Director 
will serve as Chairman.\68\
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    \65\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 
6(d).
    \66\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 
6(c).
    \67\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 
6(a).
    \68\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 
6(b).
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    Because the Executive Committee will have the powers and authority 
of the Exchange Board in the management of the business and affairs of 
the IEX Exchange between meetings of the Exchange Board, its 
composition must reflect that of the Exchange Board. Accordingly, if 
established, the number of Non-Industry Directors on the Executive 
Committee must equal or exceed the number of Industry Directors and the 
percentages of Independent Directors and Member Representative 
Directors must be at least as great as the corresponding percentages on 
the Exchange Board as a whole.\69\
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    \69\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 
6(e).
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    As discussed above, the Nominating and Member Nominating Committees 
will have responsibility for, among other things, nominating candidates 
for election to the Exchange Board. On an annual basis, the members of 
these committees will nominate candidates for the succeeding year's 
respective committees to be elected by IEXG, as the sole LLC 
Member.\70\
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    \70\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article VI, Section 1. 
Additional candidates for the Member Nominating Committee may be 
nominated and elected by IEX Exchange members pursuant to a petition 
process. See supra note 42 and accompanying text.
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    The Commission believes that IEX Exchange's proposed committees, 
which are similar to the committees maintained by other exchanges,\71\ 
are designed to help enable IEX Exchange to carry out its 
responsibilities under the Act and are consistent with the Act, 
including Section 6(b)(1), which requires, in part, an exchange to be 
so organized and have the capacity to carry out the purposes of the 
Act.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \71\ See, e.g., BATS Y Exchange Order and MIAX Exchange Order, 
supra note 30.
    \72\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. IEX Group and Regulation of IEX Exchange \73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ The Commission did not receive any comments addressing the 
substance of regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    When IEX Exchange commences operations as a national securities 
exchange, IEX Exchange will have all the attendant regulatory 
obligations under the Act. In particular, IEX Exchange will be 
responsible for the operation and regulation of its trading system and 
the regulation of its members. The Commission believes that certain 
provisions in the IEX Exchange and IEXG governance documents are 
designed to facilitate the ability of IEX Exchange and the Commission 
to fulfill their regulatory obligations. The discussion below 
summarizes some of these key provisions.
1. Ownership Structure; Ownership and Voting Limitations
    IEX Exchange will be structured as a Delaware limited liability 
company (``LLC''), which will be wholly owned by the sole member of the 
LLC, IEXG. The proposed Third Amended and Restated Certificate of 
Incorporation of IEX Group, Inc. (``IEXG Certificate'') includes 
restrictions on the ability to own and vote shares of capital stock of 
IEXG.\74\ These limitations are designed to prevent any IEXG 
shareholder from exercising undue control over the operation of IEX 
Exchange and to ensure that the IEX Exchange and the

[[Page 41146]]

Commission are able to carry out their regulatory obligations under the 
Act.
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    \74\ These provisions are consistent with ownership and voting 
limits approved by the Commission for other SROs. See e.g., BATS Y 
Exchange Order and MIAX Exchange Order, supra note 30. See also 
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 61698 (March 12, 2010), 75 FR 
13151 (March 18, 2010) (``DirectEdge Exchanges Order''); and 58375 
(August 18, 2008) 73 FR 49498 (August 21, 2008) (File No. 10-182) 
(``BATS Exchange Order'').
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    In particular, for so long as IEXG directly or indirectly controls 
IEX Exchange, no person, either alone or together with its related 
persons,\75\ may beneficially own more than 40% of any class of capital 
stock of IEXG.\76\ IEX will have a more restrictive condition for IEX 
Exchange members, wherein IEX Exchange members, either alone or 
together with their related persons, are prohibited from beneficially 
owning more than 20% of shares of any class of capital stock of 
IEXG.\77\ If any stockholder violates these ownership limits, IEXG 
would redeem the shares in excess of the applicable ownership limit at 
their par value.\78\ In addition, no person, alone or together with its 
related persons, may vote or cause the voting of more than 20% of the 
voting power of the then issued and outstanding capital stock of 
IEXG.\79\ If any stockholder purports to vote, or cause the voting of, 
shares that would violate this voting limit, IEXG would not honor such 
vote in excess of the voting limit.\80\
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    \75\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (A)(2) (defining ``related 
persons'').
    \76\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(1.1).
    \77\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(1.2).
    \78\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (E). Any shares which have been 
called for redemption shall not be deemed outstanding shares for the 
purpose of voting or determining the total number of shares entitled 
to vote. Once redeemed by IEXG, such shares shall become treasury 
shares and shall no longer be deemed to be outstanding. See id. 
Furthermore, if any redemption results in another stockholder owning 
shares in violation of the ownership limits described above, IEXG 
shall redeem such shares. See id.
    \79\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(1.3).
    \80\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (D).
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    Any person that proposes or attempts to own shares of capital stock 
in excess of the 40% ownership limitation, or vote or grant proxies or 
consents with respect to shares of capital stock in excess of the 20% 
voting limitation, must deliver written notice to the IEXG board of 
directors (``IEXG Board'') to notify the IEXG Board of its 
intention.\81\ The notice must be delivered to the IEXG Board not less 
than 45 days before the proposed ownership of such shares or proposed 
exercise of such voting rights or the granting of such proxies or 
consents.\82\ The IEXG Board may waive the 40% ownership limitation and 
the 20% voting limitation for non-members, pursuant to a resolution 
duly adopted by the IEXG Board, if it makes certain findings.\83\ The 
IEXG Board is specifically prohibited from waiving the voting and 
ownership limits above 20% for IEX Exchange members and their related 
persons.\84\ As required by the IEXG Certificate, any waiver for non-
members would not be effective unless and until approved by the 
Commission pursuant to Section 19 of the Act.\85\
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    \81\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(4).
    \82\ See id.
    \83\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(2.2). The required 
determinations are that (A) such waiver will not impair the ability 
of IEX Exchange to carry out its functions and responsibilities 
under the Act and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, 
(B) such waiver is otherwise in the best interests of IEXG, its 
stockholders, and IEX Exchange, (C) such waiver will not impair the 
ability of the Commission to enforce the Act and the rules and 
regulations promulgated thereunder, and (D) the transferee in such 
transfer and its related persons are not subject to any applicable 
``statutory disqualification'' (within the meaning of Section 
3(a)(39) of the Act). See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(2.2) and 
(B)(3). The Commission has previously approved identical rules of 
other exchanges that provide for the ability of the exchange to 
waive the ownership and voting limitations discussed above for non-
members of the exchange. See, e.g., BATS Y Exchange Order, supra 
note 30 at 51296; and MIAX Exchange Order, supra note 30 at 73069. 
See also Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of Miami 
International Holdings, Inc. Article Ninth(b)(ii)(B) and (iii); and 
Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of BATS Global 
Markets, Inc. Article Fifth(b)(ii)(B) and (iii) (containing 
identical provisions).
    \84\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(2.2) (``. . . and such 
resolution shall not be effective until it is filed with and 
approved by the Commission.''). These provisions are generally 
consistent with waiver of ownership and voting limits approved by 
the Commission for other SROs. See e.g., BATS Y Exchange Order and 
MIAX Exchange Order, supra note 30. See also BATS Exchange Order and 
DirectEdge Exchanges Order, supra note 74.
    \85\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH (B)(2.2).
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    The IEXG Certificate also contains provisions that are designed to 
further safeguard the ownership and voting limitations described above, 
or are otherwise related to direct and indirect changes in control. 
Specifically, any person that, either alone or together with its 
related persons owns, directly or indirectly, of record or 
beneficially, 5% or more of the capital stock of IEXG will be required 
to immediately notify the IEXG Board in writing upon acquiring 
knowledge of such ownership.\86\ Thereafter, such persons will be 
required to update IEXG of any increase or decrease of 1% or more in 
their previously reported ownership percentage.\87\
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    \86\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH(C)(1). The notice will require 
the person's full legal name; the person's title or status; the 
person's approximate ownership interest in IEXG; and whether the 
person has power, directly or indirectly, to direct the management 
or policies of IEXG. See id.
    \87\ See IEXG Certificate TENTH(C)(2). Changes of less than 1% 
must also be reported to IEXG if they result in such person crossing 
a 20% or 40% ownership threshold. See id. In addition, IEX Exchange 
rules also impose limits on affiliation between the IEX Exchange and 
a member of the IEX Exchange. See IEX Exchange Rule 2.210 (No 
Affiliation between Exchange and any Member).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The IEX Exchange Operating Agreement does not include change of 
control provisions that are similar to those in the IEXG Certificate; 
however the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement explicitly provides that 
IEXG is the sole LLC Member of IEX Exchange.\88\ Thus, if IEXG ever 
proposes to no longer be the sole LLC Member of IEX Exchange (and 
therefore no longer its sole owner), IEX Exchange would be required to 
amend the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement. Any changes to the IEX 
Exchange Operating Agreement, including any change in the provisions 
that identify IEXG as the sole owner of IEX Exchange, would be a rule 
change that must be filed with, or filed with and approved by, the 
Commission pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Act and Rule 19b-4.\89\ 
Further, pursuant to the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, IEXG may not 
transfer or assign, in whole or in part, its ownership interest in IEX 
Exchange, unless such transfer or assignment is filed with and approved 
by the Commission pursuant to Section 19 of the Act.\90\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \88\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article I(s).
    \89\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement, Article IX, Section 
1(b) and Section 4. See also 15 U.S.C. 78s(b) and 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
    \90\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article IV, Section 4 
and Article XI, Section 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Although IEXG is not directly responsible for regulation, its 
activities with respect to the operation of IEX Exchange must be 
consistent with, and must not interfere with, the self-regulatory 
obligations of IEX Exchange. As described above, the provisions 
applicable to direct and indirect changes in control of IEXG and IEX 
Exchange, as well as the voting limitation imposed on owners of IEXG 
who also are IEX Exchange members, are designed to help prevent any 
owner of IEXG from exercising undue influence or control over the 
operation of IEX Exchange and to help ensure that IEX Exchange retains 
a sufficient degree of independence to effectively carry out its 
regulatory obligations under the Act. In addition, these limitations 
are designed to address the conflicts of interests that might result 
from a member of a national securities exchange owning interests in the 
exchange. As the Commission has noted in the past, a member's ownership 
interest in an entity that controls an exchange could become so large 
as to cast doubt on whether the exchange may fairly and objectively 
exercise its self-regulatory responsibilities with respect to such 
member.\91\ A member that is a controlling shareholder of an exchange 
could seek to exercise that controlling influence by directing the 
exchange to refrain from, or the

[[Page 41147]]

exchange may hesitate to, diligently monitor and conduct surveillance 
of the member's conduct or diligently enforce the exchange's rules and 
the federal securities laws with respect to conduct by the member that 
violates such provisions. As such, the Commission believes that these 
requirements are designed to minimize the potential that a person or 
entity can improperly interfere with or restrict the ability of IEX 
Exchange to effectively carry out its regulatory oversight 
responsibilities under the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \91\ See, e.g., BATS Y Exchange Order and MIAX Exchange Order, 
supra note 30.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission believes that IEX's and IEXG's proposed governance 
provisions are consistent with the Act, including Section 6(b)(1), 
which requires, in part, an exchange to be so organized and have the 
capacity to carry out the purposes of the Act.\92\ In particular, these 
requirements are designed to minimize the potential that a person could 
improperly interfere with or restrict the ability of the Commission or 
IEX Exchange to effectively carry out their regulatory oversight 
responsibilities under the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Regulatory Independence and Oversight
    Although IEXG will not itself carry out regulatory functions, its 
activities with respect to the operation of IEX Exchange must be 
consistent with, and must not interfere with, IEX Exchange's self-
regulatory obligations. In this regard, IEX Exchange and IEXG propose 
to adopt certain provisions in their respective governing documents 
that are designed to help maintain the independence of the regulatory 
functions of IEX Exchange. These proposed provisions are substantially 
similar to those included in the governing documents of other exchanges 
that recently have been granted registration.\93\ Specifically:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \93\ See, e.g., MIAX Exchange Order and BATS Y Order, supra note 
30. See also DirectEdge Exchanges Order, supra note 74.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     The directors, officers, employees, and agents of IEXG 
must give due regard to the preservation of the independence of the 
self-regulatory function of IEX Exchange and to its obligations to 
investors and the general public and must not take actions that would 
interfere with the effectuation of decisions by the Exchange Board 
relating to its regulatory functions or that would interfere with IEX 
Exchange's ability to carry out its responsibilities under the Act.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \94\ See proposed Amended and Restated By-Laws of IEX Group, 
Inc. (``IEXG By-Laws''), Article VII, Section 34. Similarly, Article 
III, Section 1(d) of the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement requires 
the Exchange Board and each Director to, when managing the business 
and affairs of IEX Exchange, consider the requirements of Section 
6(b) of the Act. Article III, Section 1(e) also requires the 
Exchange Board, when evaluating any proposal to take into account 
(among other things and to the extent relevant), the potential 
impact on the integrity, continuity and stability of the national 
securities exchange operated by IEX Exchange and the other 
operations of IEX Exchange, on the ability to prevent fraudulent and 
manipulative acts and practices, and on investors and the public, 
and whether such would promote just and equitable principles of 
trade, foster cooperation and coordination with persons engaged in 
regulating, clearing, settling, processing information with respect 
to and facilitating transactions in securities or assist in the 
removal of impediments to or perfection of the mechanisms for a free 
and open market and a national market system.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     IEXG must comply with federal securities laws and the 
rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, and agrees to cooperate 
with the Commission and IEX Exchange pursuant to, and to the extent of, 
their respective regulatory authority. In addition, IEXG's officers, 
directors, employees, and agents must comply with federal securities 
laws and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder and are 
deemed to agree to cooperate with the Commission and IEX Exchange in 
respect of the Commission's oversight responsibilities regarding IEX 
Exchange and the self-regulatory functions and responsibilities of IEX 
Exchange and IEXG shall take reasonable steps necessary to cause its 
officers, directors, employees and agents to so cooperate.\95\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \95\ See IEXG By-Laws, Article VII, Section 37. Similarly, 
Article III, Section 1(d) of the IEX Exchange Operating Agreement 
requires IEX Exchange's directors, officers and employees, in 
discharging their duties, to comply with the federal securities laws 
and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder and to 
cooperate with the Commission and IEX Exchange pursuant to their 
respective regulatory authority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     IEXG, and its officers, directors, employees, and agents 
submit to the jurisdiction of the U.S. federal courts, the Commission, 
and IEX Exchange, for purposes of any action, suit, or proceeding 
pursuant to U.S. federal securities laws, and the rules and regulations 
thereunder, arising out of, or relating to, IEX Exchange 
activities.\96\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \96\ See IEXG By-Laws, Article VII, Section 38.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     All books and records of IEX Exchange reflecting 
confidential information pertaining to the self-regulatory function of 
IEX Exchange (including but not limited to disciplinary matters, 
trading data, trading practices, and audit information) shall be 
retained in confidence by IEX Exchange and its personnel, including its 
directors, officers, employees and agents, and will not be used by IEX 
Exchange for any non-regulatory purposes and shall not be made 
available to any person (including, without limitation, any IEX 
Exchange member) other than to personnel of the Commission, and those 
personnel of IEX Exchange, members of committees of the Exchange Board, 
members of the Exchange Board, or hearing officers and other agents of 
IEX Exchange, to the extent necessary or appropriate to properly 
discharge the self-regulatory responsibilities of IEX Exchange.\97\ 
Similar provisions apply to IEXG and its directors, officers, employees 
and agents.\98\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \97\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article XI, Section 4.
    \98\ The IEXG By-Laws also provide that all books and records of 
IEX Exchange reflecting confidential information pertaining to the 
self-regulatory function of IEX Exchange that come into the 
possession of IEXG, and the information contained in those books and 
records, will be subject to confidentiality restrictions and will 
not be used for any non-regulatory purposes. See IEXG By-Laws 
Article VII, Section 35. The IEXG governing documents acknowledge 
that requirements to keep such information confidential shall not 
limit or impede the rights of the Commission to access and examine 
such information or limit the ability of officers, directors, 
employees, or agents of IEX Exchange or IEXG to disclose such 
information to the Commission. See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement 
Article XI, Section 4 and IEXG By-Laws Article VII, Section 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     The books and records of IEX Exchange and IEXG must be 
maintained in the United States \99\ and, to the extent they are 
related to the operation or administration of IEX Exchange, IEXG's 
books and records will be subject at all times to inspection and 
copying by the Commission and IEX Exchange.\100\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \99\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article XI, Section 4; 
and IEXG By-Laws Article VII, Section 36.
    \100\ See IEXG By-Laws Article VII, Section 36.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Furthermore, to the extent they relate to the activities 
of IEX Exchange, the books, records, premises, officers, directors, 
employees, and agents of IEXG will be deemed to be the books, records, 
premises, officers, directors, employees, and agents of IEX Exchange, 
for purposes of, and subject to oversight pursuant to, the Act.\101\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \101\ See IEXG By-Laws Article VII, Section 36.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     IEXG will take reasonable steps necessary to cause its 
officers, directors, employees, and agents, prior to accepting a 
position as an officer, director, employee or agent (as applicable) to 
consent in writing to the applicability of provisions regarding books 
and records, confidentiality, jurisdiction, and regulatory obligations, 
with respect to their activities related to IEX Exchange.\102\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \102\ See IEXG By-Laws Article VII, Section 39.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     The IEXG Certificate and By-Laws require that, so long as 
IEXG controls IEX Exchange, any changes to those documents must be 
submitted to the

[[Page 41148]]

Exchange Board for approval, and, if such change is required to be 
filed with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Act and the 
rules and regulations thereunder, such change shall not be effective 
until filed with and effective by operation of law, or filed with, and 
approved by, the Commission.\103\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \103\ See IEXG Certificate Article NINTH; and IEXG By-Laws, 
Article XIV, Section 51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission believes that the provisions discussed in this 
section, which are designed to help ensure the independence of IEX 
Exchange's regulatory function and facilitate the ability of IEX 
Exchange to carry out its responsibility and operate in a manner 
consistent with the Act, are appropriate and consistent with the 
requirements of the Act, particularly with Section 6(b)(1), which 
requires, in part, an exchange to be so organized and have the capacity 
to carry out the purposes of the Act.\104\ Whether IEX Exchange 
operates in compliance with the Act, however, depends on how it and 
IEXG in practice implement the governance and other rules that are the 
subject of this Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \104\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Further, Section 19(h)(1) of the Act \105\ provides the Commission 
with the authority ``to suspend for a period not exceeding twelve 
months or revoke the registration of [an SRO], or to censure or impose 
limitations upon the activities, functions, and operations of [an SRO], 
if [the Commission] finds, on the record after notice and opportunity 
for hearing, that [the SRO] has violated or is unable to comply with 
any provision of the Act, the rules or regulations thereunder, or its 
own rules or without reasonable justification or excuse has failed to 
enforce compliance . . .'' with any such provision by its members 
(including associated persons thereof).\106\ If the Commission were to 
find, or become aware of, through staff review and inspection or 
otherwise, facts indicating any violations of the Act, including 
without limitation Sections 6(b)(1) and 19(g)(1), these matters could 
provide the basis for a disciplinary proceeding under Section 19(h)(1) 
of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \105\ See 15 U.S.C. 78s(h)(1).
    \106\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission also notes that, even in the absence of the 
governance provisions described above, under Section 20(a) of the Act 
any person with a controlling interest in IEX Exchange would be jointly 
and severally liable with and to the same extent that IEX Exchange is 
liable under any provision of the Act, unless the controlling person 
acted in good faith and did not directly or indirectly induce the act 
or acts constituting the violation or cause of action.\107\ In 
addition, Section 20(e) of the Act creates aiding and abetting 
liability for any person who knowingly provides substantial assistance 
to another person in violation of any provision of the Act or rule 
thereunder.\108\ Further, Section 21C of the Act authorizes the 
Commission to enter a cease-and-desist order against any person who has 
been ``a cause of'' a violation of any provision of the Act through an 
act or omission that the person knew or should have known would 
contribute to the violation.\109\ These provisions are applicable to 
all entities' dealings with IEX Exchange, including IEXG.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \107\ 15 U.S.C. 78t(a).
    \108\ 15 U.S.C. 78t(e).
    \109\ 15 U.S.C. 78u-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Regulatory Oversight Committee
    The regulatory operations of IEX Exchange will be monitored by the 
Regulatory Oversight Committee of the Exchange Board. The Regulatory 
Oversight Committee will consist of at least two members, all of whom 
must be Independent Directors. The Regulatory Oversight Committee will 
be responsible for overseeing the adequacy and effectiveness of IEX 
Exchange's regulatory and SRO responsibilities, assessing IEX 
Exchange's regulatory performance, and assisting the Exchange Board 
(and committees of the Exchange Board) in reviewing IEX Exchange's 
regulatory plan and the overall effectiveness of IEX Exchange's 
regulatory functions.\110\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \110\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 
6(c). The Regulatory Oversight Committee is responsible for 
reviewing IEX Exchange's regulatory budget, and also will meet 
regularly with the Chief Regulatory Officer. See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Further, a Chief Regulatory Officer (``CRO'') of IEX Exchange will 
have general supervision over IEX Exchange's regulatory operations, 
including responsibility for overseeing IEX Exchange's surveillance, 
examination, and enforcement functions and for administering any 
regulatory services agreements with another self-regulatory 
organization to which IEX Exchange is a party.\111\ The Regulatory 
Oversight Committee, in consultation with the Chief Executive Officer 
of IEX Exchange, will be responsible for establishing the goals, 
assessing the performance, and fixing the compensation of the Chief 
Regulatory Officer and for recommending personnel actions involving the 
Chief Regulatory Officer and senior regulatory personnel.\112\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \111\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article VII, Section 
9.
    \112\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article V, Section 
6(c). To the extent that the Chief Executive Officer of IEX Exchange 
has any indirect supervisory responsibility for the role or function 
of the CRO, including but not limited to, implementation of the 
budget for the regulatory function or regulatory personnel matters, 
the Regulatory Oversight Committee will take all steps reasonably 
necessary to ensure that the Chief Executive Officer does not 
compromise the regulatory autonomy and independence of the CRO or 
the regulatory function. See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. Regulatory Funding and Services
    As a prerequisite for the Commission's granting of an exchange's 
application for registration, an exchange must be organized and have 
the capacity to carry out the purposes of the Act.\113\ Specifically, 
an exchange must be able to enforce compliance by its members, and 
persons associated with its members, with the federal securities laws 
and rules thereunder and the rules of the exchange.\114\ The discussion 
below summarizes how IEX Exchange proposes to conduct and structure its 
regulatory operations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \113\ See Section 6(b)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(1).
    \114\ See id. See also Section 19(g) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 
78s(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

a. Regulatory Funding
    To help ensure that IEX has and will continue to have adequate 
funding to be able to meet its responsibilities under the Act, IEX 
Exchange represents that, if the Commission approves IEX's application 
for registration as a national securities exchange, IEXG will allocate 
sufficient assets to IEX Exchange to enable the exchange's 
operation.\115\ Specifically, IEX Exchange represents that IEXG will 
make a cash contribution to IEX Exchange of $5,000,000, in addition to 
any previously-provided in-kind contributions, such as legal, 
regulatory, and infrastructure-related services.\116\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \115\ See Form 1, Exhibit I.
    \116\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    IEX Exchange also represents that such cash and in-kind 
contributions from IEXG will be adequate to operate IEX Exchange, 
including the regulation of the exchange, and that IEXG and IEX 
Exchange will enter into an agreement that requires IEXG to provide 
adequate funding over time for the exchange's operations, including the 
regulation of IEX Exchange.\117\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \117\ See id. IEX Exchange represents that this agreement will 
provide that IEX Exchange receive all fees, including regulatory 
fees and trading fees, payable by IEX Exchange's members, as well as 
any funds received from any applicable market data fees and tape 
revenue, and will further provide that IEXG will reimburse IEX 
Exchange for its costs and expenses to the extent the exchange's 
assets are insufficient to meet its costs and expenses. Id.

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[[Page 41149]]

    Further, any ``Regulatory Funds'' received by IEX Exchange will not 
be used for non-regulatory purposes or distributed to IEXG, but rather 
will be applied to fund the regulatory operations of IEX Exchange, or, 
as applicable, used to pay restitution and disgorgement to customers as 
part of a regulatory proceeding.\118\ Any excess non-regulatory funds, 
as determined by IEX Exchange, may be remitted to IEXG.\119\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \118\ See IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article X, Section 4. 
IEX Exchange Operating Agreement Article I(zz) defines ``Regulatory 
Funds'' as ``fees, fines, or penalties derived from the regulatory 
operations of the [IEX Exchange],'' but such term does not include 
``revenues derived from listing fees, market data revenues, 
transaction revenues, or any other aspect of the commercial 
operations of the [IEX Exchange], even if a portion of such revenues 
are used to pay costs associated with the regulatory operations of 
the [IEX Exchange].'' This definition of is consistent with the 
rules of other SROs. See e.g., By-Laws of MIAX Exchange, Article 
1(ee); By-Laws of NASDAQ PHLX LLC, Article I(ii); and By-Laws of 
NASDAQ BX, Inc., Article I(ii).
    \119\ See Form 1, Exhibit I. See also IEX Exchange Operating 
Agreement, Article XI, Section 5. Further, IEX Exchange will not be 
required to make a distribution to IEXG if such distribution would 
violate the Act or any other applicable law. See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Regulatory Contract With FINRA
    Although IEX Exchange will be an SRO with all of the attendant 
regulatory obligations under the Act, it has represented to the 
Commission that it intends to enter into a Regulatory Services 
Agreement (``RSA'') with FINRA, under which FINRA will perform certain 
regulatory functions on IEX Exchange's behalf.\120\ Specifically, IEX 
Exchange represents that FINRA will perform certain regulatory 
surveillance of trading activity on IEX Exchange and conduct various 
regulatory services on behalf of IEX Exchange, which are expected to 
include performance of investigation, disciplinary, and hearing 
services.\121\ Notwithstanding the RSA, IEX Exchange will retain legal 
responsibility for the regulation of its members and its market and the 
performance of FINRA as its regulatory services provider. Because IEX 
Exchange anticipates entering into an RSA with FINRA, it has not made 
provisions to fulfill the regulatory services that would be undertaken 
by FINRA. Accordingly, the Commission is conditioning the operation of 
IEX Exchange on IEX Exchange and FINRA entering into a final RSA that 
specifies the services that FINRA will provide to IEX Exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \120\ See Form 1, Exhibits C and L. See also IEX Exchange Rules 
1.160(hh) and 6.170.
    \121\ See Form 1, Exhibit C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission believes that it is consistent with the Act for IEX 
Exchange to contract with FINRA to perform certain examination, 
enforcement, and disciplinary functions.\122\ These functions are 
fundamental elements of a regulatory program, and constitute core self-
regulatory functions. The Commission believes that FINRA has the 
expertise and experience to perform these functions for IEX 
Exchange.\123\ However, IEX Exchange, unless relieved by the Commission 
of its responsibility, bears the self-regulatory responsibilities and 
primary liability for self-regulatory failures, not the SRO retained to 
perform regulatory functions on IEX Exchange's behalf. \124\ In 
performing these regulatory functions, however, FINRA may nonetheless 
bear liability for causing or aiding and abetting the failure of IEX 
Exchange to perform its regulatory functions.\125\ Accordingly, 
although FINRA will not act on its own behalf under its SRO 
responsibilities in carrying out these regulatory services for IEX 
Exchange, FINRA may have secondary liability if, for example, the 
Commission finds that the contracted functions are being performed so 
inadequately as to cause a violation of the federal securities laws or 
rules thereunder by IEX Exchange.\126\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \122\ See, e.g., Regulation ATS Release, supra note 48. See also 
Nasdaq Exchange Order, supra note 50; and BATS Exchange Order and 
DirectEdge Exchanges Order, supra note 74.
    \123\ See, e.g., BATS Y Exchange Order, supra note 30; 
DirectEdge Exchanges Order, supra note 74; and Nasdaq Exchange 
Order, supra note 50. The Commission notes that the RSA is not 
before the Commission and, therefore, the Commission is not acting 
on it.
    \124\ See Section 19(g) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(g); and 
Section 17(d)(1) of the Act and Rule 17d-2 thereunder, 15 U.S.C. 
78q(d)(1) and 17 CFR 240.17d-2, respectively. See also infra notes 
127-135 and accompanying text.
    \125\ For example, if failings by FINRA have the effect of 
leaving IEX Exchange in violation of any aspect of IEX Exchange's 
self-regulatory obligations, IEX Exchange would bear direct 
liability for the violation, while FINRA may bear liability for 
causing or aiding and abetting the violation. See, e.g., Nasdaq 
Exchange Order, supra note 50; BATS Exchange Order, supra note 74; 
and DirectEdge Exchange Order, supra note 74.
    \126\ See, e.g., Nasdaq Exchange Order, supra note 50.
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c. 17d-2 Agreements
    Section 19(g)(1) of the Act,\127\ among other things, requires 
every SRO registered as either a national securities exchange or 
national securities association to examine for, and enforce compliance 
by, its members and persons associated with its members with the Act, 
the rules and regulations thereunder, and the SRO's own rules, unless 
the SRO is relieved of this responsibility pursuant to Section 17(d) or 
Section 19(g)(2) of the Act.\128\ Rule 17d-2 of the Act permits SROs to 
propose joint plans to allocate regulatory responsibilities amongst 
themselves for their common rules with respect to their common 
members.\129\ These agreements, which must be filed with and declared 
effective by the Commission, generally cover areas where each SRO's 
rules substantively overlap, including such regulatory functions as 
personnel registration and sales practices. Without this relief, the 
statutory obligation of each individual SRO could result in a pattern 
of multiple examinations of broker-dealers that maintain memberships in 
more than one SRO.\130\ Such regulatory duplication would add 
unnecessary expenses for common members and their SROs.\131\
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    \127\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(g)(1).
    \128\ 15 U.S.C. 78q(d) and 15 U.S.C. 78s(g)(2), respectively.
    \129\ See Section 17(d)(1) of the Act and Rule 17d-2 thereunder, 
15 U.S.C. 78q(d)(1) and 17 CFR 240.17d-2, respectively. Section 
17(d)(1) of the Act allows the Commission to relieve an SRO of 
certain responsibilities with respect to members of the SRO who are 
also members of another SRO (``common members''). Specifically, 
Section 17(d)(1) allows the Commission to relieve an SRO of its 
responsibilities to: (i) Receive regulatory reports from such 
members; (ii) examine such members for compliance with the Act and 
the rules and regulations thereunder, and the rules of the SRO; or 
(iii) carry out other specified regulatory responsibilities with 
respect to such members. Section 17(d) was intended, in part, to 
eliminate unnecessary multiple examinations and regulatory 
duplication with respect common members. See Securities Exchange Act 
Release No. 12935 (October 28, 1976), 41 FR 49091 (November 8, 1976) 
(``Rule 17d-2 Adopting Release'').
    \130\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 76998 
(January 29, 2016), 81 FR 6066, 6074 (ISE Mercury exchange order).
    \131\ See id.
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    A 17d-2 plan that is declared effective by the Commission relieves 
the specified SRO of those regulatory responsibilities allocated by the 
plan to another SRO.\132\ Many SROs have entered into Rule 17d-2 
agreements.\133\ IEX has represented to the Commission that IEX 
Exchange and FINRA intend to file a 17d-2 agreement with the Commission 
covering common members of IEX Exchange and FINRA.\134\ This agreement 
would allocate to FINRA

[[Page 41150]]

regulatory responsibility, with respect to common members, for 
specified regulatory and enforcement matters arising out of specified 
common rules and specified provisions of the Act and the rules and 
regulations thereunder. In addition, IEX Exchange has represented to 
the Commission that it intends to become a party to the existing 
multiparty Rule 17d-2 plan for the surveillance, investigation, and 
enforcement of common insider trading rules.\135\
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    \132\ See Rule 17d-2 Adopting Release, supra note 129.
    \133\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 59218 
(January 8, 2009), 74 FR 2143 (January 14, 2009) (File No. 4-575) 
(FINRA/Boston Stock Exchange, Inc.); 58818 (October 20, 2008), 73 FR 
63752 (October 27, 2008) (File No. 4-569) (FINRA/BATS Exchange, 
Inc.); 55755 (May 14, 2007), 72 FR 28057 (May 18, 2007) (File No. 4-
536) (National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (``NASD'') 
(n/k/a FINRA) and CBOE concerning the CBOE Stock Exchange); 55367 
(February 27, 2007), 72 FR 9983 (March 6, 2007) (File No. 4-529) 
(NASD/ISE); and 54136 (July 12, 2006), 71 FR 40759 (July 18, 2006) 
(File No. 4-517) (NASD/Nasdaq).
    \134\ See Form 1, Exhibit C.
    \135\ See id. See also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 65991 
(December 16, 2011), 76 FR 79714 (December 22, 2011) (File No. 4-
566) (notice of filing and order approving and declaring effective 
an amendment to the multiparty 17d-2 plan relating to the 
surveillance, investigation, and enforcement of insider trading 
rules).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Because IEX Exchange anticipates entering into these 17d-2 
agreements, it has not made provision to fulfill the regulatory 
obligations that would be undertaken by FINRA and other SROs under 
these agreements with respect to common members.\136\ Accordingly, the 
Commission is conditioning the operation of IEX Exchange on approval by 
the Commission of a 17d-2 agreement between IEX Exchange and FINRA that 
allocates the above specified matters to FINRA, and the approval of an 
amendment to the existing multiparty Rule 17d-2 agreement specified 
above to add IEX Exchange as a party.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \136\ The Commission notes that regulation that is to be covered 
by the 17d-2 agreement for common members will be carried out by 
FINRA under the RSA for IEX Exchange members that are not also 
members of FINRA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. IEX Trading System

    Numerous comment letters the Commission received on IEX's Form 1 
application focused on IEX's proposed trading rules and the operation 
of its system. Much of the public comment centered on issues related to 
specific features of IEX's proposed trading system--namely, its 
``Point-of-Presence'' (``POP'') and ``coil'' infrastructure (sometimes 
referred to as IEX's ``speed bump'') and the manner in which IEX 
originally proposed (prior to Amendment Nos. 2, 3, and 4) to provide 
outbound routing services through its affiliated routing broker-dealer. 
IEX submitted several response letters to address these issues before 
amending its Form 1 in Amendment Nos. 2, 3, and 4 to propose a 
fundamentally different approach to outbound routing. As detailed in 
the Order Instituting Proceedings, in these amendments IEX proposed a 
material change to its approach to outbound routing through its 
affiliated routing broker-dealer. In the Order Instituting Proceedings, 
the Commission provided public notice of IEX's amendments and solicited 
commenters' views as to whether IEX's proposed revisions, including the 
changes to its outbound routing functionality, were consistent with the 
Act. The outbound routing issue, other issues related to IEX's POP and 
coil infrastructure, and other issues that are relevant to IEX's 
proposed trading system in the context of the Commission's 
consideration of IEX's Form 1 are addressed below.
1. Public Comment Overview and Commission Discussion
    The Commission received letters in support,\137\ as well as letters 
opposing or criticizing in whole or part some of IEX's proposed 
features.\138\ Among the commenters who supported IEX's Form 1, most 
argued that IEX would offer a market solution to address certain market 
inefficiencies and conflicts of interest in a manner that is intended 
to protect the interests of retail and buy-side investors.\139\ In 
particular, though IEX did not propose any fees in its Form 1, 
commenters noted IEX's stated intent not to pursue ``maker-taker'' 
pricing and instead offer flat transaction fees.\140\ Some commenters 
praised IEX for offering fewer order types.\141\ Several commenters 
highlighted IEX's ``coil'' delay, discussed in detail below, and 
asserted that it may help counter latency arbitrage.\142\ In addition, 
one commenter

[[Page 41151]]

believed that the coil delay as initially proposed should not be 
grounds for denying IEX's exchange application, and suggested that IEX 
be phased into the national market system under a pilot program so that 
the effect of IEX's access delay on the wider market could be better 
assessed.\143\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \137\ See, e.g., Leuchtkafer First Letter; Leuchtkafer Second 
Letter; Verret Letter; Shatto Letters 1, 2, and 3; Simonelis Letter; 
Capital Group Letter; Southeastern Letter; Navari Letter; DV 
Advisors Letter; Cowen Letter; Themis First Letter; Themis Second 
Letter; Oppenheimer Funds Letter; Murphy Letter; Birch Bay Letter; 
Healthy Markets Letter; Keblish Letter; Bowcott Letter; Secrist 
Letter; Stevens Letter; Oltean Letter; Park Letter; Crespo Letter; 
Colbert Letter; Lewis Letter; Hovanec First Letter; Hovanec Second 
Letter; Meskill Letter; Brian S. Letter; Glennon Letter; Shaw 
Letter; Upson Letter; Goldman Sachs Letter; Robeson Letter; Lynch 
Letter; Budish Letter; Chen & Foley Letter; Liquidnet Letter; T. 
Rowe Price Letter; Sherman Letter; CALSTRS Letter; PSRS/PEERS 
Letter; Asset Owners/Investment Managers March 21 Letter; Maqbool 
Letter; Israel Letter.
    \138\ See, e.g., BATS First Letter; BATS Second Letter; BATS 
Third Letter; NYSE First Letter; NYSE Second Letter; NYSE Third 
Letter; Nasdaq First Letter; Nasdaq Second Letter; Nasdaq Third 
Letter; Citadel First Letter; Citadel Second Letter; Citadel Third 
Letter; Citadel Fourth Letter; Citadel Fifth Letter; FIA First 
Letter; FIA Second Letter; Hudson River Trading First Letter; Hudson 
River Trading Second Letter; Anonymous December 5 Letter; Hunsacker 
Letter; Modern Markets Initiative Letter; Tabb Letter; Weldon First 
Letter; Markit First Letter; Markit Second Letter; Direct Match 
Letter; Duffy Letter; Scott Letter; Loh Letter; Anonymous June 16 
Letter.
    \139\ See, e.g., Capital Group Letter at 1 (noting the 
``technologies and practices to discourage predatory behavior'' 
including the ``350 microsecond buffer,'' the lack of maker-taker 
pricing, and ``simple order types''); Southeastern Letter (submitted 
on behalf of a group of undersigned asset managers) (complimenting 
IEX's proposed benefits to investors in ``reducing structural 
inefficiencies in the market, and offering a more balanced and 
simplified market design''); Navari Letter at 1 (noting certain 
features that ``have great promise for the [r]etail [i]nvestor''); 
DV Advisors Letter; Cowen Letter; Themis First Letter (noting that 
IEX's ``unconflicted investor-friendly alternative'' will ``employ 
technology designed to even playing fields, rather than exploit 
information asymmetry'' and that IEX will be ``a stark alternative 
to other stock exchange models that seem to be more focused on 
selling speed and data,'' and noting that as an ATS, IEX allowed it 
and its customers ``to achieve best execution''); Oppenheimer Funds 
Letter; Murphy Letter (arguing that IEX's design should ``help to 
limit and even eliminate'' what it characterized as ``the electronic 
front running that is central to the problems in the market 
today''); Lewis Letter; Keblish Letter; Secrist Letter; Stevens 
Letter; Oltean Letter; Meskill Letter; fi360 Letter; TRS Letter; 
Lynch Letter; Jefferies Letter; T. Rowe Price Letter; Liquidnet 
Letter; Sherman Letter; Anonymous March 18 Letter (group of 
anonymous traders noting that they ``have empirically found IEX 
orders to lower transactions costs'' relative to other exchanges); 
Israel Letter (noting that IEX's 350 microsecond delay is 
``explicitly designed to . . . level the playing field for ordinary 
investors''). One supportive commenter focused on the fee structure 
for the IEX ATS, asserting that it is simple and thus favors 
investors and issuers rather than traders seeking arbitrage profits. 
See ModernIR Letter at 1-3. This commenter also asserts that trades 
in the IEX ATS generally are not ``offset by predatory activity,'' 
which ``offers a beneficial environment to the money public 
companies seek: long-term committed capital.'' See id. at 1. Some 
commenters questioned the motive of other commenters, including 
exchanges, who opposed the proposal. See Verret Letter at 2 (arguing 
that ``incumbent firms have long sought to utilize regulatory 
barriers to entry to minimize competition, and it would appear a 
number of firms are presently using the regulatory comment process 
regarding IEX's application as a venue to replicate that strategy 
here''); Shatto Letter 2 at 1 (noting that the critical commenters 
``do not represent investors or institutional investors'' in arguing 
that ``the SEC does not have to preserve market advantages for these 
people''); Shatto Letter 3; Stevens Letter; Crespo Letter; Meskill 
Letter; Brian S. Letter; Hovanec Third Letter; Hovanec Fourth 
Letter; Hovanec Sixth Letter; Hovanec Seventh Letter.
    \140\ See, e.g., Capital Group Letter; Southeastern Letter; 
Navari First Letter; Navari Second Letter; Themis First Letter; 
Oppenheimer Funds Letter; Healthy Markets Letter; Abel/Noser Letter; 
Goldman Sachs Letter; Liquidnet Letter; Franklin Templeton 
Investments Letter; TRS Letter. The Commission notes that IEX will 
be required to submit separate filings under Section 19(b) of the 
Act and Rule 19b-4 to establish fees that it will charge to members 
and others persons using its facilities. Nevertheless, in its Second 
Response Letter, IEX noted that, as an exchange, it intended to 
charge a flat transaction fee. See IEX Second Response at 9.
    \141\ See, e.g., Capital Group Letter; Southeastern Letter; 
Shatto First Letter; Navari First Letter; Oppenheimer Funds Letter; 
Healthy Markets Letter; Norges Bank Letter; Burgess Letter; fi360 
Letter; TRS Letter. But see NYSE First Letter at 9 (arguing that 
IEX's proposed menu of order types is not necessarily ``simple'' and 
the potential different combinations of instructions for limit 
orders is in the hundreds).
    \142\ See, e.g., T. Rowe Price Letter at 1-2; Navari Second 
Letter; Healthy Markets Letter at 2-4; Jefferies Letter at 3; Chen & 
Foley Letter at 2-3; Leuchtkafer Second Letter at 9; Budish Letter 
at 4. See also Burgess Letter; Capital Group Letter; Franklin 
Templeton Investments Letter; Schroeder M Letter; Leeson Letter; 
Lupinski Letter; Oorjitham Letter; Eric K Letter; Grey Letter; Spear 
Letter; Baggins Letter; Nixon Letter; Campbell Letter; Moses Letter; 
Huff Letter; Kaye Letter; Jean Letter; Gloy Letter; Givehchi Letter; 
Kara Letter; Hiester Letter; Benites Letter; Eustace Letter; Ramirez 
Letter; Luce Letter; Arnold Letter; Tidwell Letter; Doyle Letter; 
Long Letter; Kim Letter; Mannheim Letter; Oppenheimer Funds Letter; 
Israel Letter.
    \143\ See Angel Letter at 3-5. The pilot program suggested by 
this commenter would be to measure the effect on the market of 
protecting IEX's quotation notwithstanding the ``speed bump.'' See 
id. at 4-5. According to the commenter, if the pilot caused material 
harm, it could be halted, in which case IEX could still operate as 
an exchange but without having its quotes protected under Regulation 
NMS. See id. at 5. See also Wolfe Letter at 3 (agreeing with the 
pilot approach suggested in the Angel Letter). IEX has not proposed 
such an approach and therefore such an approach is not before the 
Commission. See Exchange Act Section 19(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Among the commenters who were critical of aspects of IEX's 
proposal, most focused on issues surrounding the coil, the operation of 
and advantages that IEX initially proposed to be provided to IEX's 
affiliated outbound router, and IEX's proposed order types, which are 
discussed in detail below.\144\ Some commenters suggested that retail 
orders would not receive better executions on IEX,\145\ and that IEX 
has not used historical data or other methods to support its investor 
protection claims.\146\ Other commenters did not express a view on 
whether the Commission should approve or disapprove IEX's 
application.\147\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \144\ See NYSE First Letter; Nasdaq First Letter; BATS First 
Letter; Citadel First Letter; Citadel Second Letter; Citadel Third 
Letter; Hudson River Trading First Letter; Hudson River Trading 
Second Letter; FIA First Letter. In addition, one commenter opposed 
to approval of IEX's exchange application asserted that IEX has not 
provided any data establishing the negative aspects of speed-based 
trading that IEX's intentional delay is meant to counteract or any 
data that quantifies how its intentional delay would protect 
investors from such speed-based trading in a way that existing 
exchanges do not. See Modern Markets Initiative Letter. Another 
commenter opposed to IEX's application believed it is highly 
probable that the potential marginal savings in execution costs for 
the ``limited population that use IEX would not exceed the wide 
increase in infrastructure costs for all market participants'' as a 
result of further fragmentation of the market. See Loh Letter. See 
discussion, infra Section III.C., of IEX's proposed POP/coil delay, 
including the comments thereon.
    \145\ See Markit Second Letter at 4-6; AK Financial Engineering 
Consultants First Letter; Anonymous June 16 Letter.
    \146\ See Anonymous March 14 Letter at 1-2. But see Anonymous 
March 18 Letter (group of anonymous traders noting that they ``have 
empirically found IEX orders to lower transactions costs'' relative 
to other exchanges).
    \147\ See, e.g., Virtu Letter; Healthy Markets Letter; Tabb 
Letter; Aesthetic Integration Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Trading System Overview
    IEX will operate a fully automated electronic order book, and will 
not maintain or operate a physical trading floor. Only broker-dealer 
members of IEX and entities that enter into market access arrangements 
with members (collectively, ``Users'') will have access to the IEX 
system.\148\ Users will be able to electronically submit market orders, 
limit orders, and numerous other types of orders to the Exchange from 
remote locations. IEX will allow firms to register as market makers 
with affirmative and negative market making obligations, but will not 
require market makers to be registered before IEX lists or trades a 
security.\149\ Non-marketable orders submitted to IEX could be 
displayed or non-displayed, depending on the instructions indicated by 
the IEX member submitting the order.\150\ Displayed orders will be 
displayed on an anonymous basis at a specified price. The IEX system 
will continuously and automatically match orders pursuant to price/time 
priority, provided that displayed orders and displayed portions of 
orders will have priority over non-displayed orders and non-displayed 
portions of orders at the same price without regard to time.\151\ For 
any portion of an order that does not execute on IEX, IEX will direct 
the unfilled portion to away markets for execution through IEX Services 
LLC (``IEXS''), IEX's wholly owned single-purpose outbound router, 
unless the terms of the order direct IEX not to route such order 
away.\152\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \148\ To obtain authorized access to the IEX System, each User 
must enter into a User Agreement with IEX. See IEX Rule 11.130(a).
    \149\ See IEX Rules 11.150 through 11.154. IEX's rules relating 
to market makers are similar to the rules of other national 
securities exchanges. See, e.g., BATS Exchange Rules 11.5 through 
11.8.
    \150\ See IEX Rule 11.220(a)(1).
    \151\ See IEX Rule 11.220(a)(1). The Commission notes that some 
commenters referenced a feature of the IEX ATS called ``broker 
priority.'' See Citadel First Letter at 8; Birch Bay Letter at 1-2; 
Loh Letter. IEX has not included as part of its Form 1 application a 
``broker priority'' feature and therefore that feature is not before 
the Commission as it considers IEX's Form 1 application.
    \152\ See IEX Rule 11.230(b). See also Amendment Nos. 2 and 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With respect to the price of executions that would occur on IEX, 
the IEX system is designed to comply with the order protection 
requirements of Rule 611 of Regulation NMS,\153\ commonly referred to 
as the ``Order Protection Rule,'' by requiring that, for any execution 
to occur on the IEX Exchange during regular trading hours, the price 
must be equal to, or better than, the ``protected quotation,'' unless 
an exception to Rule 611 applies.\154\ IEX also will protect the 
national protected best bid and offer during its pre-market and post-
market sessions.\155\ In addition, the Commission believes that IEX's 
rules address locked and crossed markets, as required by Rule 610(d) of 
Regulation NMS,\156\ in that they reflect that IEX is designed not to 
disseminate interest that locks or crosses a protected quote, require 
Users to reasonably avoid displaying interest that locks or crosses any 
protected quotation, and are reasonably designed to assure the 
reconciliation of locked or crossed interest.\157\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \153\ 17 CFR 242.611.
    \154\ See IEX Rule 11.230(a)(2). See also 17 CFR 242.611 
(defining ``protected quotation'').
    \155\ See IEX Rule 11.230(a)(2)(B).
    \156\ 17 CFR 242.610(d).
    \157\ See IEX Rule 11.310.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Non-Displayed Order Types and Processing
    Limit orders that a User marks as non-displayed will not be 
displayed to anyone and will be ranked in the IEX system at their 
specified price, subject to the ``Midpoint Price Constraint,'' which is 
a price sliding process that prevents non-displayed limit orders from 
being ranked in the IEX system at a price that is more aggressive than 
the midpoint of the NBBO.\158\ The Midpoint Price Constraint will 
prevent a non-displayed limit order on IEX's order book from resting at 
a price that locks or crosses the NBBO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \158\ See IEX Rule 11.190(h)(2). Specifically, a non-displayed 
order on IEX with a limit price more aggressive than the midpoint of 
the NBBO would be priced at the midpoint, and the price would 
automatically be adjusted in response to changes in the NBBO to be 
equal to the less aggressive of the order's limit price or the 
midpoint of the NBBO. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Due to IEX's Midpoint Price Constraint functionality, IEX has 
proposed a ``Book Recheck'' functionality that is activated in response 
to a change to the NBBO, the IEX order book, or when IEX receives 
inbound messages. When Book Recheck is activated, certain resting, non-
displayed orders become ``active'' \159\ and eligible to execute (as 
the remover of liquidity) against the updated contra-side in IEX's 
order book.\160\ As a result of the Book Recheck functionality, these 
resting, non-displayed orders may

[[Page 41152]]

execute against contra-side orders on the order book that were 
ineligible for execution, or did not satisfy the order's conditions 
(i.e., minimum quantity), when they were originally booked. Through 
such executions, Book Recheck also may help alleviate internal locks 
that may occur on IEX's order book at the midpoint of the NBBO in 
certain scenarios involving contra-side, non-displayed, minimum 
quantity orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \159\ The term ``active order'' is defined by IEX to mean an 
order checking against the IEX order book for contra-side interest 
against which to execute, and includes new incoming orders, orders 
posting to the order book after having been routed to away trading 
centers, and orders re-checking the order book pursuant to IEX Rule 
11.230(a)(4)(D).
    \160\ See IEX Rule 11.230(a)(4)(D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition, IEX proposed several pegged order types--primary peg, 
midpoint peg, and discretionary peg--all of which would be non-
displayed with prices that are automatically adjusted by the IEX system 
in response to changes in the national best bid and offer (``NBBO'') 
(subject to a limit price, if any).\161\ As noted below, updates to 
these types of non-displayed pegged orders would be processed within 
the IEX trading system without being subject to the proposed coil 
delay.\162\ Some commenters criticized IEX's proposed non-displayed 
order types, and in particular IEX's proposed handling of pegged 
orders.\163\ Some of these commenters also specifically criticized 
IEX's proposed discretionary peg order type.\164\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \161\ See IEX Rule 11.190(a)-(b).
    \162\ See note 206, infra, discussing how the proposed coil 
delay also does not apply to non-displayed limit orders subject to 
the Midpoint Price Constraint.
    \163\ See, e.g., FIA First Letter at 4; FIA Second Letter at 2; 
Citadel First Letter at 7-10; Citadel Fifth Letter at 2-5; NYSE 
First Letter at 9-10; NYSE Third Letter at 4-7; Hudson River Trading 
First Letter at 2-7; Jones C Letter at 2-3; Nasdaq Third Letter at 
2. These commenters argue that IEX's proposed handling of resting 
pegged orders--which, as detailed below, would occur without any 
delay from IEX's POP/coil--would incentivize dark liquidity over 
displayed liquidity on IEX. This argument is discussed in the 
section below that addresses the POP/coil.
    \164\ See NYSE First Letter at 10; NYSE Fourth Letter at 3-4; 
Citadel First Letter at 9-10; Citadel Fifth Letter at 5-7; Nasdaq 
Third Letter at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    IEX's proposed discretionary peg order type is a non-displayed, 
pegged order that, upon entry, is priced by the IEX system to be equal 
to the less aggressive of the midpoint of the NBBO or the order's limit 
price, if any. Any unexecuted portion of the order is posted non-
displayed on the order book and ranked at the less aggressive of the 
near-side primary quote (i.e., the NBB for buy orders, the NBO for sell 
orders) or the order's limit price, if any. The IEX system 
automatically adjusts the price and ranking of the order in response to 
changes in the NBB (NBO) for buy (sell) orders so that it remains 
pegged at the near-side primary quote, up (down) to the order's limit 
price, if any. Once posted to the IEX order book, a discretionary peg 
order can ``exercise discretion'' up to (for buy orders) or down to 
(for sell orders) the midpoint of the NBBO in order to meet the limit 
price of active orders on the order book, but only when the IEX system 
determines the near-side, primary quote to be ``stable,'' i.e., not in 
the process of moving down (up) in the case of buy (sell) orders. If 
the IEX system deems the near-side primary quote to be ``unstable'' 
(sometimes referred to as a ``crumbling quote'') and therefore in the 
process of moving down (up) in the case of buy (sell) orders, the 
discretionary peg order will not be permitted to exercise any 
discretion in order to meet the limit price of an active order, and 
will be executable only at its pegged price, i.e., the near-side 
primary quote.
    Quote ``stability'' or ``instability'' is an assessment that the 
IEX system makes in what IEX describes as real-time, based on a pre-
determined, objective set of conditions that are detailed in IEX's 
proposed rule.\165\ By not permitting resting discretionary peg orders 
to execute at a price that is more aggressive than the primary quote 
during periods of quote ``instability,'' the IEX system is intended to 
attempt to protect resting discretionary peg orders from unfavorable 
executions when the market is moving against them. Once the market has 
moved and the IEX system deems the near-side primary quote to be 
``stable,'' discretionary peg orders are re-ranked at the new near-side 
primary quote, and permitted to exercise discretion up to (for buy 
orders) or down to (for sell orders) the midpoint of the NBBO in order 
to meet the limit price of active orders on the order book and thereby 
potentially provide price improvement to such active orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \165\ See, e.g., IEX Rules 11.190(b)(10) (concerning the 
discretionary peg order type) and 11.190(g) (concerning quote 
stability). This functionality is also referred to as IEX's 
``crumbling quote'' indicator.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Certain commenters that criticized IEX's discretionary peg order 
assert that IEX's determination of quote stability and the resulting 
implications for resting discretionary peg orders amounts to IEX 
performing services that are typically performed by broker-dealers 
exercising discretion over customer orders.\166\ Two of these 
commenters claim that allowing IEX to offer its discretionary peg 
functionality would be inconsistent with the Commission's prior 
disapproval of a Nasdaq proposal to establish ``benchmark orders'' and 
suggests that the Commission articulate when it is and is not 
appropriate for an exchange to offer services that have traditionally 
been performed by broker-dealers.\167\ The other commenter contends 
that, due to what it refers to as ``the doctrine of regulatory 
immunity,'' IEX would be shielded from liability for any errors it 
makes in determining quote stability whereas broker-dealers can be 
liable to their customers for order handling errors.\168\ This 
commenter also asserts that IEX's discretionary peg order is overly 
complex and ``would potentially open the door to a virtually infinite 
range of exchange predictive order types.'' \169\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \166\ See, e.g., NYSE First Letter at 10; NYSE Fourth Letter at 
2-4; Citadel First Letter at 9-10; Citadel Fifth Letter at 5-7; 
Nasdaq Third Letter at 2-3.
    \167\ See NYSE First Letter at 10 (citing Securities Exchange 
Act Release No. 68629 (January 11, 2013), 78 FR 3928 (January 17, 
2013) (SR-NASDAQ-2012-059) (``Benchmark Order Disapproval''); NYSE 
Fourth Letter at 3-4; Nasdaq Third Letter at 2-3.
    \168\ See Citadel First Letter at 9-10.
    \169\ Citadel Fifth Letter at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With regard to its discretionary peg order, IEX states that any 
action taken with respect to such an order is based on system logic and 
entirely automated, like other pegged orders.\170\ IEX also represents 
that its rules set forth ``the precise mathematical formula'' that IEX 
uses to determine whether a ``crumbling quote'' situation exists.\171\ 
In addition, IEX notes that other exchanges offer non-displayed pegging 
and discretionary order types and asserts that IEX's discretionary peg 
order type does not raise any novel regulatory issues.\172\ Further, 
IEX argues that the Commission's disapproval of Nasdaq's proposal to 
offer ``benchmark orders'' was based on Nasdaq's failure to adequately 
explain ``how it would apply the controls required by Rule 15c3-5 under 
the Exchange Act to benchmark child orders'' and the fact that 
``benchmark orders would not initially be directed to the Nasdaq 
matching engine, raising potential competitive concerns in relation to 
Nasdaq members.'' \173\ IEX claims that the Commission's disapproval of 
Nasdaq's proposal ``clearly differentiates the proposed Nasdaq 
functionality from IEX's Discretionary Peg order type'' and that IEX's 
discretionary peg functionality ``is entirely different than the Nasdaq 
proposal to offer benchmark order routing strategies.'' \174\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \170\ See IEX First Response at 17.
    \171\ See IEX Second Response at 18.
    \172\ See IEX First Response at 17.
    \173\ See IEX Second Response at 13.
    \174\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission does not believe that its disapproval of the Nasdaq 
benchmark order proposal is apposite here. In contrast to IEX's 
proposed discretionary peg order, Nasdaq's proposed ``benchmark 
orders'' were not actually exchange orders that would

[[Page 41153]]

have been executable by the Nasdaq matching engine upon entry. Rather, 
the initial parent order would have been directed to a third-party 
application that operated a suite of order execution algorithms (i.e., 
Volume Weighted Average Price, Time Weighted Average Price, or Percent 
of Volume).\175\ The algorithm thereafter would have attempted to 
replicate the selected benchmark by generating and routing child orders 
to the Nasdaq matching engine or other trading centers.\176\ The 
Commission determined that there were inadequate assurances in Nasdaq's 
proposal as to how the child orders generated by the Nasdaq application 
would be subject to appropriate risk controls under the Market Access 
Rule, Rule 15c3-5 under the Act, and how Nasdaq's provision of such 
services would not impose an undue burden on competition.\177\ In 
contrast, IEX's discretionary peg order is an order type that is 
received directly into the IEX book and executable by the matching 
engine upon entry, and thus the same issues of whether child orders 
generated by an exchange facility are subject to appropriate risk 
controls under the Market Access Rule or would result in the exchange 
imposing an undue burden on competition are not implicated by IEX's 
discretionary peg order type.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \175\ See Benchmark Order Disapproval, supra note 167, at 3928.
    \176\ See id.
    \177\ 17 CFR 240.15c3-5. See also Benchmark Order Disapproval, 
supra note 167.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission also notes that existing exchanges offer both 
discretion and pegging functionalities, including the combination of 
both of those features in a single order type.\178\ Thus, an order type 
that offers both discretion and pegging features is not novel. 
Nevertheless, IEX's proposed discretionary peg order type is unique in 
the way that the discretion functionality will be turned ``on'' or 
``off'' depending on IEX's quote stability determination. With respect 
to this feature, IEX Rule 11.190(g) delineates the specific conditions 
under which IEX discretionary peg orders will or will not be eligible 
for execution up (down) to the midpoint by setting forth the 
mathematical formula that IEX uses to determine quote stability.\179\ 
IEX has thus encoded in its rule the totality of the discretionary 
feature of its proposed discretionary peg order type, which the 
Commission believes is a close variant on the discretion and pegging 
functionality that presently exists on other exchanges. Moreover, as a 
self-regulatory organization, IEX would be required to submit a 
proposed rule change to the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b) of the 
Act \180\ prior to implementing any change to the proposed 
discretionary peg order type, including the quote stability formula. 
Thus, contrary to the assertions of commenters critical of IEX's 
proposed ``discretionary'' peg order type,\181\ the Commission does not 
believe that the hardcoded conditionality of the IEX proposed 
``discretionary'' peg order type provides IEX with actual discretion or 
the ability to exercise individualized judgment when executing an 
order. Rather, if IEX's fixed formula determines the quote to be 
stable, the discretionary peg order can execute up to the midpoint; if 
it does not deem the quote to be stable, then it will hold the order to 
its pegged price. As such, IEX would not exercise discretion over the 
routing and execution of a resting order.\182\ The Commission 
reiterates that if, for any reason, IEX determines to alter or deviate 
from its quote stability formula set forth in its rule as it applies to 
determining quote stability when handling discretionary peg orders, IEX 
would need to file a proposed rule change with the Commission pursuant 
to Section 19(b) of the Act \183\ prior to implementing any such 
change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \178\ See, e.g., Nasdaq Rule 4703(g).
    \179\ See IEX Rule 11.190(g). One commenter asserted that IEX's 
crumbling quote determination is novel but also fully transparent, 
as IEX's rules disclose the full equation for determining whether 
there is a crumbling quote. See Healthy Markets Letter at 5.
    \180\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
    \181\ See supra note 166.
    \182\ Thus, the Commission believes that one commenter's 
concerns related to what it refers to as ``the doctrine of 
regulatory immunity'' (see supra note 168) does not present any 
novel issues. As discussed, the Commission does not believe that 
IEX's quote stability determination provides IEX with actual 
discretion or the ability to exercise individualized judgment when 
executing an order. IEX will have liability similar to other 
registered national securities exchanges with respect to its order 
types, including its ``discretionary'' peg order type. Further, in 
response to this commenter's additional concern that the 
discretionary peg order ``would potentially open the door to a 
virtually infinite range of exchange predictive order types'' (see 
supra note 169), the Commission notes that new exchange proposed 
order types are subject to the rule filing process of Section 19(b) 
of the Act and Rule 19b-4 and the standards in Exchange Act Section 
6(b), among other provisions. See also Form 19b-4, General 
Instructions.
    \183\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. Order Type Transparency and Complexity, and Odd Lots
    More generally, some commenters contend that IEX's order types are 
not adequately described in IEX's rulebook, or suggest that they are 
uniquely complex.\184\ In addition, one commenter argued that IEX 
should be required to add additional detail to its rules, including 
adding examples and a justification of the statutory basis for their 
consistency with the Exchange Act.\185\ In response, IEX asserts that 
it ``provides the same basic order types that are offered by all 
markets, along with the standard modifiers that are sought by investors 
and their brokers.'' \186\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \184\ See, e.g., NYSE First Letter at 9 (noting that certain of 
[IEX's] proposed order types, such as the discretionary pegged 
order, are even more complex than those of other exchanges'' and 
that the ``tally of potential different combinations of instructions 
for limit orders alone is in the hundreds''). See also Citadel First 
Letter at 8-9; Nasdaq First Letter at 1-2; Nasdaq Third Letter at 1-
2. Other commenters suggested the opposite though, and applauded IEX 
for offering a limited number of order types, which they assert 
simplifies trading and reduces risks for investors. See, e.g., 
Healthy Markets Letter at 4; Oppenheimer Letter at 2; Southeastern 
Letter at 1; Navari Letter at 1; Capital Group Letter at 2; fi360 
Letter at 3.
    \185\ See Nasdaq First Letter at 1-2.
    \186\ See IEX Second Response at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission believes that IEX constructed its proposed order 
type rules in a manner that is reasonably designed to present 
sufficient and comprehensive information on the available options and 
possible combinations. While IEX is responsible for ensuring that its 
rules fully and accurately reflect its systems capabilities and 
operations, the Commission believes that IEX has structured many of its 
rules using a template-like approach that is designed to provide basic 
information about fundamental combinations and system functionality. In 
addition, the Commission does not believe that IEX's order type rules 
are uniquely complex in light of existing exchange order type 
offerings. Accordingly, the Commission believes that IEX's order type 
rules are consistent with the Act and, in particular, the Section 
6(b)(5) requirement that an exchange's rules be designed to promote 
just and equitable principles of trade, remove impediments to and 
perfect the mechanisms of a free and open market and a national market 
system, and protect investors and the public interest.\187\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \187\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition, one commenter noted that IEX proposes not to display 
odd-lot orders and suggests that the Commission should consider whether 
this would systematically disadvantage smaller orders that might be 
submitted by retail investors.\188\ In response, IEX noted that current 
exchanges vary in how they handle odd-lots, and stated that IEX's 
approach ``is designed to ensure that the IEX proprietary market data 
feed does not include information

[[Page 41154]]

that cannot be reported to the SIPs.'' \189\ IEX also contends that the 
commenter's conflation of the treatment of odd-lots with the treatment 
of retail investors is improper because ``these do not necessarily go 
hand-in-hand.'' \190\ The Commission is not aware of any evidence that 
the non-display of odd lot orders through proprietary market data feeds 
would systematically disadvantage retail investors. The Commission does 
not believe this approach would unfairly discriminate against any type 
of investor, as any investor may use odd-lot orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \188\ See Nasdaq First Letter at 4.
    \189\ See IEX Second Response at 13.
    \190\ See id. (noting that ``one study found that `20-25% of 
trades initiated by HFTs are odd lots, and that trades initiated by 
HFTs are more likely to be odd lots than trades initiated by non-
HFTs.' '')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. The POP and the Coil
    IEX's Point-of-Presence (``POP'') and ``coil'' infrastructure 
(collectively referred to as the ``POP/coil delay'') is how IEX Users 
will connect to IEX, and is one of the most widely commented upon 
features of IEX. As described in the Order Instituting Proceedings, 
several commenters expressed concern, among other things, that IEX's 
initially-published Form 1 lacked specific detail about how the POP/
coil structure would work, including what messages and activity would--
and would not--be subject to the delay.\191\ IEX responded by 
supplementing the record through its first two response letters, and 
then amending its Form 1 in Amendment Nos. 2, 3, and 4.\192\ IEX did 
include additional detail in proposed new rules as part of Amendment 
Nos. 2, 3, and 4 and the Commission published notice of those changes 
and solicited comment on them.\193\ The POP/coil delay is material to 
the operation of IEX and so materially affects access of Users to the 
system that, as an exchange, IEX's rules must reflect with specificity 
the purpose, operation, and effect of the POP and coil. The Commission 
notes that IEX's two letters in response to comments provided the 
necessary detailed information on the POP and coil, and IEX's Amendment 
No. 2 contained, among other things, a proposed new rule to detail the 
POP and coil. The Commission believes that IEX has addressed the 
commenters' concern by adding a sufficiently detailed new rule to its 
rulebook to provide a description of the POP/coil structure. The 
Commission notes that commenters did not raise further concerns on this 
issue after publication of Amendment No. 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \191\ See, e.g., NYSE First Letter; Nasdaq First Letter; Citadel 
First Letter at 10-11; Citadel Second Letter at 2-3; BATS First 
Letter at 2; Weldon Letter. IEX noted that the POP/coil is described 
in its Form ATS, which has been published on IEX's Web site since it 
commenced operations as an ATS in October 2013, and has been 
``widely chronicled'' across numerous publications. See IEX Second 
Response at 17-18.
    \192\ See IEX First Response; IEX Second Response; Amendment 
Nos. 2, 3 and 4. Under IEX Rule 11.510, the IEX routing logic would 
be able to access the IEX book via an access delay that imposes 350 
microseconds of latency, identical to the POP/coil delay experienced 
by non-affiliated IEX users when they submit a non-routable order to 
the IEX book.
    \193\ See Order Instituting Proceedings, supra note 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Access to IEX by all Users will be obtained through a POP,\194\ 
which IEX represents is located in Secaucus, New Jersey.\195\ According 
to IEX, after entering through the POP, a User's electronic message 
sent to the IEX trading system must physically traverse the IEX 
``coil,'' which is a box of compactly coiled optical fiber cable 
equivalent to a prescribed physical distance of 61,625 meters 
(approximately 38 miles).\196\ After exiting the coil, the User's 
message travels an additional physical distance to the IEX trading 
system, located in Weehawken, New Jersey.\197\ According to IEX, when 
the length of coil is combined with the physical distance from the POP 
to the IEX trading system in Weehawken, it equates to an equivalent 350 
microseconds of latency.\198\ All incoming messages (e.g., orders to 
buy or sell and any modification to a previously sent open order) from 
any User would traverse the coil from the POP in order to initially 
reach IEX.\199\ In addition, all outbound messages from IEX back to a 
User (e.g., confirmations of an execution that occurred on IEX) would 
pass through the same route in reverse.\200\ IEX's direct proprietary 
market data feed, which is an optional data feed that IEX would make 
available to subscribers, also would traverse the coil before being 
accessible to Users at the POP.\201\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \194\ See IEX Rule 11.510; see also Amendment Nos. 2 and 3.
    \195\ See IEX First Response at 3.
    \196\ See IEX First Response at 3. The Commission notes, by way 
of analogy, that this is equivalent to a trading center locating its 
matching engine a certain distance (equivalent to the distance 
traversed during the POP/coil delay) from its nearest user or, 
alternatively, not permitting any user to be located closer than 
that distance to the matching engine.
    \197\ See Exhibit E to IEX's Form 1 submission, at 12. See also 
IEX First Response at 3.
    \198\ See IEX Rule 11.510 (``Communications with the System from 
the POP are subject to an equivalent 350 microseconds of latency 
between the network access point of the POP and the System at the 
primary data center (due to traversing the physical distance 
provided by coiled optical fiber and geographic distribution)''); 
see also IEX First Response at 3. A microsecond is one millionth of 
a second.
    \199\ See id.
    \200\ See id. As a result, a non-routable immediate-or-cancel 
(``IOC'') order, which is a type of order that IEX would permit 
Users to send to the IEX system, would traverse the proposed POP/
coil (and its attendant 350 microsecond delay) before arriving at 
the IEX system and potentially executing against a displayed 
quotation on IEX. Likewise, the response from the IEX system to the 
User indicating the action taken by the IEX system with respect to 
such IOC order also would traverse the POP/coil and experience a 350 
microsecond delay. See id. The POP/coil delay's consistency with the 
Act is discussed further below in this section. See also Final 
Interpretation, supra note 13.
    \201\ See IEX Rule 11.510; see also IEX First Response at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Further, under IEX's Form 1 as amended, there is one type of 
inbound message and one type of outbound message that would not 
traverse the POP/coil, specifically:

    1. Inbound proprietary market data feeds from other trading 
centers as well as the SIP feed to the IEX system would not traverse 
the POP/coil; and
    2. Outbound transaction and quote messages sent from IEX to the 
applicable securities information processor (``SIP'') would not pass 
through the POP/coil, but instead would be sent directly from the 
IEX system to the SIP processor for inclusion in the public 
consolidated market data feeds on the same basis as any other 
exchange.\202\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \202\ See IEX Rule 11.510(c)(2); see also IEX First Response at 
4. As explained in the Order Instituting Proceedings, under IEX's 
Form 1 as it existed prior to Amendment No. 2, orders routed 
outbound from IEX through IEXS to away trading centers for execution 
(as well as reports back to IEX from those away trading centers) 
also would not have traversed the POP/coil (though execution and 
transaction reports sent from IEX back to Users would traverse the 
POP/coil and thus would be delayed). This is because IEX would have 
initially directed the entirety of all orders, including routable 
orders, to the IEX matching engine and then routed away any excess 
shares via IEXS directly (and without having to first pass through 
the POP/coil delay as it routes shares outbound). In Amendment Nos. 
2, 3, and 4, IEX proposed to re-design the way the IEX system would 
handle routable orders, as described below, in order to place its 
outbound routing function on parity with competing broker-dealers.

    In addition, updates to resting pegged orders on IEX would be 
processed within the IEX trading system and would not require that 
separate messages be transmitted from outside the trading system, which 
would otherwise traverse the POP/coil, for each update.\203\ The effect 
of this, in connection with the fact that orders sent inbound to IEX 
must traverse the POP/coil while IEX's matching engine will take in 
direct market data feeds from other trading centers without any POP/
coil delay,\204\ is that IEX intentionally employs a methodology using 
physical path latency to affect how long it takes for a packet of 
information to travel from the User to its matching engine but

[[Page 41155]]

does not delay the IEX system's ability to detect and react to price 
changes at other trading centers.\205\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \203\ See IEX Rule 11.510(c)(1) (noting that order book 
processing occurs within the IEX system and does not traverse the 
POP); see also IEX First Response at 3-4.
    \204\ See IEX Rule 11.510; see also IEX First Response at 4.
    \205\ See IEX Rule 11.410 (detailing the direct feeds that IEX 
uses as the primary source of market data that it uses to inform its 
matching engine's view of the consolidated best prices in the 
marketplace).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Accordingly, IEX imposes an intentional delay on Users' ability to 
access IEX's matching engine but the delay does not apply to IEX's 
adjustment of resting pegged order prices on its book.\206\ This 
provides IEX's matching engine with a time advantage \207\ to allow it 
to more effectively manage the price update process for non-displayed 
pegged orders resting on its book when the market moves. However, as a 
by-product of delaying access to non-displayed pegged orders on its 
book, IEX necessarily delays access to all other interest on its book, 
including its displayed quotation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \206\ In addition, the POP/coil delay does not apply to the 
operation of IEX's Midpoint Price Constraint, discussed above, which 
affects resting non-displayed limit orders with limit prices that 
are more aggressive than the midpoint of the NBBO. See IEX Rule 
11.190(h)(2). References herein to ``pegged'' orders for purposes of 
discussing IEX's adjustment of resting order prices with no access 
delay includes non-displayed limit orders subject to the operation 
of the Midpoint Price Constraint, which are effectively pegged by 
IEX to the NBBO midpoint, subject to the order's limit price.
    \207\ See IEX Second Response at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In other words, the purpose of IEX's coil is to provide an 
intentional buffer that slows down incoming orders to allow IEX's 
matching engine to update the prices of resting ``pegged'' orders when 
away prices change to protect resting pegged orders from the 
possibility of adverse selection when the market moves to a new 
midpoint price.\208\ The allowable price of a ``pegged'' order will 
change whenever the best displayed price across all exchanges changes, 
but it takes time for IEX's system to receive other exchange data feeds 
and recalculate the price of each pegged order resting on its book. For 
various reasons, IEX's systems may not recalculate prices as fast as 
some of the fastest low-latency traders in the market are able to send 
orders accessing pegged orders resting on IEX at potentially ``stale'' 
prices. The Commission believes that the application of the POP/coil 
delay delays the ability of low-latency market participants to take a 
``stale''-priced resting pegged order on IEX (i.e., before IEX finishes 
its process of re-pricing the pegged order in response to changes in 
the NBBO) based on those market participants' ability to more 
effectively digest direct market data feeds and swiftly submit an order 
before IEX finishes its process of updating the prices of pegged orders 
resting on its book. According to IEX, this setup is designed to 
``ensure that no market participants can take action on IEX in reaction 
to changes in market prices before IEX is aware of the same price 
changes on behalf of all IEX members.'' \209\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \208\ However, as a byproduct of delaying access to non-
displayed pegged orders on its book, IEX necessarily delays access 
to all other interest on its book, including its displayed 
quotation.
    \209\ See IEX First Response at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Aside from whether the POP/coil delay affects IEX's ability to have 
an ``automated'' and thus ``protected'' quotation under Regulation NMS, 
discussed below,\210\ the Commission has considered whether it is 
consistent with the Act and the rules thereunder, in particular Section 
6 of the Act. Among other things, Section 6 requires that an exchange's 
rules be designed to protect investors and the public interest, not be 
designed to permit unfair discrimination among brokers, dealers, or 
customers, and not impose any unnecessary or inappropriate burden on 
competition. For IEX's POP/coil delay, discussed below, the Commission 
finds that IEX's proposed rules are designed to operate in a manner 
that is consistent with the Act in that they are designed to protect 
investors and the public interest, are not designed to permit unfair 
discrimination, and would not impose any unnecessary or inappropriate 
burden on competition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \210\ See infra Section III.C.7., Protected Quote Status, for a 
discussion of the status of IEX's quotation under Regulation NMS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission first considers IEX's POP/coil delay as applied to 
outbound data. The POP/coil delay applies to IEX's outbound proprietary 
market data, other than the data it sends to the SIP. Doing so allows 
market participants to execute on IEX while slightly delaying the news 
of that execution to IEX's proprietary market data feed and to the 
participants to the trade (through not to the applicable SIP), which in 
effect allows the order sender to avoid the potential for information 
leakage when subsequently accessing liquidity on other markets before 
news of its execution on IEX could affect resting liquidity on those 
markets (e.g., potentially resulting in cancellations or re-pricing of 
interest resting on away markets). Exchanges are not required to offer 
proprietary market data, but those that do must offer it to all market 
participants in a not unfairly discriminatory manner.\211\ Because IEX 
delays its proprietary market data feed uniformly to all IEX users, as 
well as to its routing logic, the Commission believes that the outbound 
delay of IEX market data is not unfairly discriminatory.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \211\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission similarly concludes that IEX's inbound POP/coil 
delay is not unfairly discriminatory and does not impose an unnecessary 
or inappropriate burden on competition. The delay imposed on inbound 
messages benefits resting pegged orders on IEX because that delay, 
together with the fact that IEX takes in direct data feeds from other 
exchanges unencumbered by the delay, allows IEX to update the prices of 
resting pegged orders in response to changes in the NBBO (which may 
include displayed orders on IEX) as quickly as IEX is able to receive 
data and calculate it before incoming messages, including incoming 
orders seeking to execute against pegged orders, reach the matching 
engine. At the same time, the POP/coil delay appears to provide no 
protection or benefits for displayed orders or non-displayed orders at 
fixed limit prices.\212\ Several commenters critiqued this aspect of 
IEX's design as treating resting pegged orders preferentially, which 
they assert will incentivize dark liquidity on IEX (in the form of 
pegged orders in particular) over displayed liquidity.\213\ Most of 
these commenters suggested that this is contrary to the central purpose 
of an exchange to provide price discovery through displayed liquidity, 
and that price discovery, and overall market quality, will deteriorate 
as a

[[Page 41156]]

result.\214\ Commenters on the Notice of Interpretation also criticized 
what they termed IEX's ``selective'' application of its POP/coil delay. 
One such commenter opined that geographic delays are ``inescapable'' 
but ``do, in fact, complicate the markets in the presence of Reg NMS'' 
and argued that the proposed interpretation should not apply to 
``intentional delays that are selective and therefore not equivalent to 
geographic latencies.'' \215\ Another commenter criticized a potential 
access delay that would ``treat dark orders more favorably than 
displayed orders,'' which it characterized as a ``significant departure 
from the way current exchanges operate'' and ``would lead to less 
transparent markets, wider spreads and higher costs for investors.'' 
\216\ These commenters' concern with the ``selective'' application of 
an access delay is not so much that an intentional delay is necessarily 
inconsistent with Rule 611, but that an exchange might impose the delay 
on others but not itself, thereby advantaging certain types of orders 
(i.e., pegged orders) or market participants over others.\217\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \212\ See, e.g., Budish Letter at 2, 4-5 (noting that IEX's POP/
coil structure would prevent latency arbitrage of non-displayed 
pegged orders on IEX but would not prevent latency arbitrage of 
standard displayed limit orders). The POP/coil, because it will 
delay all inbound message traffic from all members equally, will not 
provide any advantages for displayed and non-pegged orders. For 
example, if a displayed limit order to sell is resting on IEX at 
$10, and away markets all move to a higher price of $10.01 to sell, 
the User resting at IEX may also want to adjust the price of its 
order to track the market. However, pursuant to its rules, IEX 
cannot unilaterally adjust the price of a non-pegged limit order 
resting on its book at $10; rather, the User needs to send a message 
to IEX with instructions on what to do. As it is doing that, a low-
latency trader may be able to send in an order to buy against that 
$10 offer to sell, and may be able to reach the POP before the 
member that posted that order is able to send in a cancellation and 
replace it with an order to sell at $10.01. Since the low-latency 
trader's message to buy and the member's cancel message both must 
enter through the POP and traverse the coil, the race simply takes 
place at the POP and therefore the two market participants are in 
the same position on IEX as they would be on other markets without 
intentional access delays.
    \213\ See FIA First Letter at 4; FIA Second Letter at 2; Citadel 
First Letter at 7-10; Citadel Fifth Letter at 2-5; NYSE First Letter 
at 9-10; NYSE Third Letter at 4-7; Hudson River Trading First Letter 
at 2-7; Hudson River Trading Second Letter at 2-4; Jones C Letter at 
2-3; Nasdaq Third Letter at 2.
    \214\ See NYSE First Letter at 9-10 (stating that IEX would be 
unique ``in that all pegged orders would be dark and pegged orders 
would be provided advantages that other orders on IEX would not 
enjoy'' and that the POP/coil and Book Recheck combine to favor 
pegged orders to such an extent that ``it is likely that IEX's order 
book would be composed primarily, or entirely, of these dark, pegged 
orders and would not be performing one of the central functions of a 
registered exchange, which is to foster the price discovery process 
through the display of orders''); NYSE Third Letter at 4, 7; Citadel 
First Letter at 8 (suggesting that ``IEX's real aim is to create a 
dark pool on a lit venue to provide itself with regulatory immunity 
and other benefits afforded to national securities exchanges''); 
Hudson River Trading First Letter at 2-7 (expressing concern that 
IEX's POP would harm price discovery because it offers no protection 
to displayed limit orders, which ``provide the foundation for price 
discovery,'' but delays incoming limit orders and outgoing market 
data for the benefit of non-transparent pegged orders); Hudson River 
Trading Second Letter at 4; Jones C Letter at 2-3 (arguing that 
``IEX is effectively using the discriminatory delay to tilt the 
playing field, artificially attracting pegged orders from other 
venues'' which will ``force other exchanges to introduce similar 
disparities to avoid losing pegged orders to IEX'' and ``which will 
result in more dark liquidity and less timely price discovery 
market-wide''). One such commenter offered an analysis that 
attempted to quantify the purported economic advantages and 
disadvantages implicated by IEX's proposed handling of resting 
pegged orders (including the cost to market participants routing 
orders to IEX when resting pegged orders on IEX, due to the access 
delay, ``fade'' to worse prices before they can be accessed), while 
also noting the limitations of his analysis (including that ``[i]n 
reality, market participants may change their order submission 
behavior to substantially blunt IEX's pegged order repricing 
scheme'' by adjusting for the latency imposed by the POP/coil delay 
when routing to IEX). See Jones C Letter at 3-5. Other commenters 
criticized that commenter's analysis. See Themis Third Letter; 
Hovanec Seventh Letter. In particular, one of these commenters 
rebutted the analysis as ``just measuring transient effects on an 
NBBO after a trade and then attributing all of that fade as a 
`disadvantage' of the speed bump, which he puts at $400 million 
annually just for Nasdaq activity.'' See Themis Third Letter at 2.
    Another commenter recommended that IEX be approved as a 
``manual'' market without a protected quote, unless it developed and 
offered a ``bypass'' order type that ``that foregoes potential price 
improvement associated with interacting with hidden mid-point peg 
orders to by-pass the delay and interact with protected quotes.'' 
See Hudson River Trading Second Letter at 4. The Commission notes 
that midpoint pegged orders, by definition, would be priced more 
aggressively than IEX's displayed quotation, and thus by foregoing 
execution against such midpoint pegged orders in order to execute 
against less aggressively priced displayed quotations, the suggested 
``bypass'' order type would appear to violate the price priority of 
the resting midpoint pegged orders. In addition, if such an order 
type were able to execute against resting non-displayed primary 
pegged interest on IEX, the resting primary peg order would be 
subject to latency arbitrage as a result of the incoming order 
bypassing the POP/coil delay. The Commission further notes that the 
issue of permissible delays in accessing protection quotations is 
addressed in the Commission's Interpretation Regarding Automated 
Quotations Under Regulation NMS, which provides that, in the context 
of determining whether a trading center maintains an ``automated 
quotation'' for purposes of Rule 611 of Regulation NMS, the term 
``immediate'' used in Rule 600(b)(3) does not by itself prohibit a 
trading center from implementing an intentional access delay that is 
de minimis--i.e., a delay so short as to not frustrate the purposes 
of Rule 611 by impairing fair and efficient access to an exchange's 
quotations. See Final Interpretation, supra note 13.
    \215\ FIA PTG Comment Letter on Notice of Proposed 
Interpretation (``Interp Letter'') at 6. The commenter criticized 
the proposed interpretation for not distinguishing ``between 
geographic delays, which apply equally to all information 
communicated between remote locations, and selective delays like 
those proposed by IEX'' and argued that such delays, ``even very 
short ones, open the door for behaviors that are fundamentally 
inconsistent with Reg NMS'' and ``would make Reg NMS requirements 
around order protection and locked and crossed markets essentially 
unworkable.'' Id. at 2-3. Another commenter argued that an 
intentional delay can impair a market participant's ability to 
access a protected quotation as it could create an ``un-level 
playing field'' when ``an exchange could update certain orders 
before allowing members to update theirs.'' See MMI Interp Letter at 
1. The commenter noted that an investor selling to a resting pegged 
order that IEX updates while the customer is traversing the POP/coil 
delay would end up selling to the pegged order at a worse price than 
she would have sold at had IEX not been able to reprice the pegged 
order outside of the POP/coil delay. See MMI Interp Letter at 2. In 
other words, according to that commenter, IEX's POP/coil delay only 
protects certain investors (those with dark peg orders resting on 
IEX) and may harm other long-term investors who cannot compete 
``against the exchange's superior speed.'' See MMI Interp Letter at 
2. The commenter also argued that selective access delays may 
interfere with a broker's best execution obligation, and may distort 
order execution and routing. See MMI Interp Letter at 2-3. Another 
commenter opposed ``non-symmetrical'' delays and argued that they 
add complexity and reduce the likelihood of capturing visible 
liquidity in the equities markets, which can impact liquidity in the 
options markets. See Weldon Interp Letter at 1-2. While true that 
IEX's POP/coil delay benefits resting non-displayed orders, 
investors routing to displayed liquidity on IEX will not ``compete'' 
against IEX in the sense of racing to access a resting order before 
IEX can reprice it--because IEX will not reprice displayed orders, 
there is no such race. Further, the Commission does not believe that 
such a delay will interfere with best execution or distort routing 
so long as it is de minimis--i.e., a delay so short as to not 
frustrate the purposes of Rule 611 by impairing fair and efficient 
access to an exchange's protected quotations.
    \216\ See NYSE Interp Letter at 4 (arguing that IEX's 
``preferential treatment of resting dark orders'' is novel because 
``[w]hile other markets update pegged orders in the same way as IEX, 
they do not intentionally delay the ability to update displayed 
orders on their book or to enter or cancel interest''). See also 
Citadel Interp Letter at 8. One commenter opined that allowing an 
exchange to re-price displayed orders during and outside of an 
access delay ``would render such orders conditional'' and ``result 
in precisely the kind of `maybe' quotations Rule 611 was designed to 
prevent.'' Markit Interp Letter at 2-3. The commenter urged the 
Commission to explicitly preclude exchanges from ``utilizing the 
delay to re-price displayed orders.'' Id. at 2. The Commission notes 
that IEX will only reprice pegged orders, which are non-displayed. 
Non-displayed orders are not reflected in an exchange's quotations, 
and Rule 611 applies order protection to publicly displayed quotes 
only. Accordingly, an access delay that does not allow the repricing 
of displayed orders does not impact an exchange's displayed 
quotation, and cannot be said to lead to ``maybe'' quotations.
    \217\ See, e.g., Citadel Interp Letter at 10 (recommending that 
intentional delays should ``only be permissible where the 
intentional delay applies equally to all market participants and 
order types'' where ``no order type, such as pegged orders, would be 
permitted to circumvent access delays directly or indirectly by 
repricing without delay'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Other commenters believed that IEX's proposed re-pricing of resting 
pegged orders without any POP/coil delay would not be problematic.\218\ 
One commenter found no material distinction between pegged orders on 
IEX not being subject to the POP/coil delay and how existing exchanges 
reprice resting pegged orders, noting that existing exchanges reprice 
resting pegged orders without being subject to ``non-trivial'' latency 
associated with transiting the exchanges' order entry gateways.\219\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \218\ See Markit Second Letter at 3; Healthy Markets Letter at 
4-5. See also Trirogoff Letter (critiquing other commenters' 
arguments likening IEX's pegged order functionality to ``last look'' 
functionality).
    \219\ See Healthy Markets Letter at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In response, IEX represented that it will provide a ``powerful 
incentive'' for Users to submit displayed orders because displayed 
orders will have priority over non-displayed orders at the same 
price.\220\ IEX also noted that it seeks to ``bring the benefits of 
exchange oversight and regulation to more of the trading that currently 
happens off-exchange.'' \221\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \220\ See id.; see also IEX First Response at 17. The Commission 
notes that IEX represents that it intends to propose discount 
pricing for displayed orders. Any such proposal will be subject to 
the rule filing requirements of Section 19 of the Act and Rule 19b-4 
thereunder.
    \221\ See IEX Second Response at 12-13. IEX noted that as an 
ATS, 8.76% of IEX matched volume resulted from displayed orders and 
it expects that number to ``increase substantially'' if IEX becomes 
a registered exchange. See id. at 12.

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[[Page 41157]]

    The Commission does not believe that the advantage IEX provides to 
pegged orders is unfairly discriminatory or imposes an unnecessary or 
inappropriate burden on competition. Rather, it is designed to ensure 
that pegged orders on IEX operate as designed and as reflected in IEX's 
rules by accurately tracking the NBBO, and that users of pegged orders 
on IEX can better achieve their goals when their pegged orders operate 
efficiently. To accomplish this, IEX slows down incoming order messages 
by 350 microseconds to allow it to update resting pegged orders when 
the NBBO changes, so that the resting pegged orders are accurately 
pegged to current market prices. Without this protection, pegged orders 
resting on IEX have the potential to be subject to ``latency 
arbitrage'' by those market participants using very sophisticated 
latency-sensitive technology, who can rapidly aggregate market data 
feeds and react faster than IEX to NBBO updates. In such case, pegged 
orders on IEX could be executed at disadvantageous ``stale'' prices 
that have not been updated to reflect the new NBBO. Further, because 
non-displayed pegged order types will be available to all Users of IEX, 
all Users will be able to benefit from this order type on IEX and thus 
utilize the POP/coil delay.
    IEX's proposed POP/coil delay is thus narrowly designed to allow 
IEX to update the prices of non-displayed resting pegged orders so that 
they can achieve their intended purpose--pricing that is accurately 
benchmarked to the NBBO. Though the POP/coil delay does not benefit 
displayed limit orders or non-pegged non-displayed limit orders, such 
orders would not benefit from the symmetrical POP/coil delay because 
their purpose is to post or execute consistent with their fixed limit 
price. The Commission thus finds that IEX's ability to update the 
prices of resting pegged orders during the POP/coil delay is not 
designed to unfairly discriminate among members to the detriment of 
investors or the public interest and is intended to benefit investors 
that post pegged orders.
    The Commission is engaged in an ongoing broad-based review of 
equity market structure, including whether there are appropriate 
incentives to display trading interest and whether the level of 
undisplayed liquidity may be impairing price discovery.\222\ Through 
its POP/coil delay, IEX is seeking to address what it views as the 
detrimental effects of speed on pegged orders, and the Act does not 
foreclose reasonable and not unfairly discriminatory innovations that 
are designed to protect investors who seek to reliably place passive, 
non-displayed pegged orders on an exchange.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \222\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61358 (January 14, 
2010), 75 FR 3594 (January 21, 2010) (Concept Release on Equity 
Market Structure). While the Commission believes that IEX's 
application for exchange registration is consistent with the Act, 
the Commission notes that IEX's representation to propose and adopt 
additional incentives for placing resting displayed orders on IEX 
may further address commenters concerns, including execution 
priority for displayed orders at the same price as non-displayed 
orders (including pegged orders) and material pricing incentives to 
displayed orders. The Commission also notes that IEX would allow for 
registered market makers, who, if appointed, would need to maintain 
displayed quotes pursuant to IEX rules. See IEX Rule 11.150 
(Registration as a Market Maker) and Rule 11.151 (Market Maker 
Obligations). In addition, the Commission observes that non-
displayed order types, including pegged order types that are non-
displayed, exist across exchanges today. See, e.g., BATS BZX Rule 
11.9(c)(9) (mid-point peg order). While one commenter asserts that 
the repricing of pegged orders in response to market movements is 
``a traditional broker-dealer service'' (see Citadel Fifth Letter at 
5), the Commission notes that many exchanges offer pegged orders 
that are repriced in a substantively identical manner. See, e.g., 
BATS BZX Rule 11.19(c)(8) (pegged order); Nasdaq Rule 4703(d) 
(pegging). Lastly, while one commenter asserts that IEX is unique in 
that all of its pegged order types would be non-displayed (see NYSE 
First Letter at 9), the Commission does not believe that the design 
of IEX's proposed pegged order types is inconsistent with the Act 
for the reasons discussed in this order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, the Commission notes that the POP/coil delay applies to 
all IEX Users equally, and may not be bypassed, for a fee or 
otherwise.\223\ Accordingly, the Commission concludes that IEX's 
proposed POP/coil delay is designed to protect investors and the public 
interest in a manner that is not unfairly discriminatory and that does 
not impose an unnecessary or inappropriate burden on competition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \223\ A few commenters suggested that a 2012 proposed rule 
change from NASDAQ PHLX (``Phlx'') should preclude IEX's quotations 
from being protected. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67680 
(August 17, 2012), 77 FR 51073 (August 23, 2012) (SR-Phlx-2012-106) 
(``Phlx 5 Millisecond Proposal''). See also Nasdaq First Letter at 
2-3; NYSE First Letter at 7 n.14; FIA First Letter at 2-3; Citadel 
First Letter at 4. In that matter, Phlx proposed instituting a five 
millisecond delay in the time between the receipt of an order and 
the time when it would be presented for execution against the PSX 
order book. See Nasdaq First Letter at 2. In response, IEX noted 
that while this delay would have applied to inbound liquidity taking 
orders, no such delay would have applied to liquidity adding orders. 
See IEX First Response at 8; IEX Second Response at 5. The 
Commission notes that Phlx ultimately withdrew its proposal, and 
therefore the Commission has not ruled on the merits of the Phlx 
proposal or its consistency with the Act. Nevertheless, the 
Commission notes that the structure and implementation of the delay 
proposed in the Phlx proposal appears to differ in significant 
respects from IEX's POP/coil, particularly with respect to its 
differential application to members depending on whether they were 
providing or taking liquidity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. Outbound Routing through IEXS
    As noted above, IEXS, IEX's affiliated single-purpose outbound 
routing broker-dealer, will provide outbound routing services for IEX. 
As detailed in the Order Instituting Proceedings, under the initially 
published version of IEX's Form 1 (prior to Amendment No. 2), orders 
routed from IEX through IEXS to away trading centers for execution (as 
well as reports back to IEX from those away trading centers) would not 
have traversed the POP/coil (though reports communicated from IEX back 
to members would have traversed the coil). Several commenters expressed 
concern that this design would provide an unfair competitive advantage 
to IEXS over other routing brokers to most quickly and efficiently 
route to away markets,\224\ and might lead other exchanges to implement 
similar features that would add complexity to the markets and be 
detrimental to market structure.\225\ Some commenters recommended that 
orders sent from IEX to IEXS be subject to the same POP/coil delay as 
unaffiliated members.\226\ Other commenters supported IEX's initially 
proposed routing structure.\227\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \224\ See BATS First Letter at 4-5; BATS Second Letter at 3-6; 
BATS Third Letter at 3; NYSE First Letter at 3-5; NYSE Second Letter 
at 3; Citadel First Letter at 6-7; Citadel Second Letter at 5-6; 
Citadel Third Letter at 1-2; FIA First Letter at 4-5; Tabb Letter at 
2-3; Hudson River Trading First Letter at 3-7; Hudson River Trading 
Second Letter at 4-5; Markit First Letter at 1-3; Markit Second 
Letter at 3-4 and 6; Weldon First Letter.
    \225\ See Hudson River Trading First Letter at 6-7; BATS Second 
Letter at 4-5; Citadel Third Letter at 2; Hunsacker Letter; Weldon 
First Letter.
    \226\ See Markit First Letter at 3; BATS Second Letter at 5-6; 
Citadel First Letter at 6; Citadel Third Letter at 2; FIA First 
Letter at 5; Hunsacker Letter. IEX stated that, under its initially 
proposed approach to outbound routing through IEXS, IEXS would not 
receive market data from IEX (or any other market) or have any 
greater access to information than other IEX members. See IEX First 
Response at 14; see also IEX Second Response at 14. One commenter 
challenged IEX's claim and argued that IEX's purported argument 
concealed the fact that IEXS's competitive advantage does not 
involve or require IEXS receiving market data from IEX's own book. 
See Markit First Letter at 2.
    \227\ See Norges Bank Letter; Mannheim Letter; Sethi Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In response to these comments, IEX submitted Amendment Nos. 2, 3, 
and 4 to propose a complete redesign of the way its trading system will 
handle outbound routing by bifurcating its handling of non-routable and 
routable orders once they initially exit the coil and reach IEX.\228\ 
Specifically, IEX will

[[Page 41158]]

direct non-routable orders to the IEX matching engine, while it will 
direct routable orders to the IEX routing logic.\229\ According to IEX, 
the coil, when combined with the physical distance between the POP and 
the IEX trading system (herein referred to as the ``POP/coil''), 
provides IEX Users sending non-routable orders with 350 microseconds 
\230\ of one-way latency to the IEX book (hereinafter the ``POP/coil 
delay'').\231\ For routable orders, however, IEX explains that it would 
insert an additional POP/coil delay within the IEX system to delay 
routable orders' access to the IEX book from the IEX routing logic (for 
those routable orders that the IEX routing logic determines to send to 
the IEX book) by an additional 350 microseconds (for a total delay of 
700 microseconds before any portion of the routable order first reaches 
the IEX book).\232\ Likewise, messages from the IEX order book back to 
IEX's routing logic also would be subject to this POP/coil delay in 
order to effect a latency for its routing logic that is identical to 
the latency experienced by IEX's non-affiliated members when receiving 
messages back from the IEX order book.\233\ In addition, the routing 
logic would receive IEX exchange data products subject to the POP/coil 
delay.\234\ IEX represents that the extra POP/coil delay between the 
routing logic and the IEX book is intended to place IEX in the same 
position as a third-party routing broker in reaching IEX's book through 
a POP/coil delay, such that IEX's ability to submit a routable order to 
its own order book would be identical to any other routing broker-
dealer's ability to submit a routable order to the IEX order book 
despite the fact that the orders would traverse different paths in the 
system.\235\ As such, IEX represents that its routing functionality 
would have no information advantage (i.e., no special view of IEX's 
book, including displayed or non-displayed interest), and IEX 
represents that the proposal places its outbound routing functionality 
in an identical position to third-party routing broker-dealers when 
sending orders into the IEX matching engine and when receiving 
transaction information from the IEX matching engine.\236\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \228\ See IEX Sixth Response, at 1. The proposed revisions to 
accommodate the new routing process are primarily addressed in IEX 
Rule 11.510 (Connectivity), as well as in IEX Rules 2.220 (IEX 
Services LLC as Outbound Router), 11.130 (Access), 11.230(b)-(c) 
(Order Execution), 11.240 (Trade Execution, Reporting, and 
Dissemination of Quotations), 11.330 (Data Products), and 11.410 
(Use of Market Data Feeds and Calculations of Necessary Price 
Reference Points). IEX also proposed other changes in Amendment Nos. 
2 and 3, including changes to proposed Rule 2.160 (Restrictions on 
Membership) to reflect the Series 57 exam; proposed new Rule 2.250 
(Mandatory Participation in Testing of Backup Systems); proposed new 
Rule 9.217 (Expedited Client Suspension Proceeding); proposed new 
Rule 10.270 (Disruptive Quoting and Trading Activity Prohibited); 
changes to proposed Rule 11.190(a)(3) (Pegged Orders), (b)(8)-(10) 
(concerning pegged orders), and (g) (concerning quote stability for 
Discretionary Peg Orders); and changes to proposed Rule 11.260 
(LIMITATION OF LIABILITY).
    \229\ See IEX Rule 11.230 (stating that an incoming non-routable 
order will attempt to be matched for execution in the IEX order 
book, and that, upon receipt of a routable order, the IEX system 
will process it in accordance with one of the available routing 
options, which may include routing IOC or FOK orders to the IEX 
order book). See also IEX Sixth Response at 1; Amendment Nos. 2 and 
3; IEX Rule 2.220(a) (defining ``System routing logic'').
    \230\ A microsecond is one millionth of a second.
    \231\ See IEX First Response at 3; see also Amendment Nos. 2 and 
3.
    \232\ See IEX Rule 11.130(a) (noting that members' access to the 
IEX order book includes the IEX system routing members' routable 
orders to the order book via the IEX POP); IEX Rule 11.510(c)(1) 
(stating that ``when the System routes all or a portion of a 
routable order to the Order Book, in accordance with the System 
routing logic, all inbound and outbound communications (including, 
without limitation, order messages, cancel messages, and execution 
report messages found in the Exchange's FIX Specification) traverse 
an additional POP between the System routing logic and the Order 
Book''); see also IEX Sixth Response at 2 (``Please note that 
because of the speed bump introduced between the IEX Router and the 
IEX matching engine, IEX routing members independently choosing to 
use the IEX Router will experience an additional 350 microseconds of 
latency as compared to members sending non-routable orders to the 
IEX matching engine.'').
    \233\ See IEX Rule 11.510(c)(1); see also IEX Sixth Response at 
1-2 (noting that ``the IEX Router would receive fill information 
from the IEX matching engine by way of the speed bump, which would 
place the IEX Router's ability to receive information from the IEX 
matching engine on equal terms to an independent broker router'').
    \234\ See IEX Rule 11.510(c)(2)(A) (stating that ``[t]he System 
routing logic receives Exchange data products after traversing the 
POP'').
    \235\ See IEX Sixth Response at 1 (``In particular, this 
redesign eliminates any alleged advantage claimed by the commenters 
that the Router has over a third party broker routing to IEX.'').
    \236\ See IEX Sixth Response at 2 (noting that ``the IEX Router 
would receive IEX quote information (the IEX TOPS feed) over the 
speed bump, which would place the IEX Router's ability to receive 
IEX quote information on equal terms to an independent broker 
router'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Given the additional POP/coil delay, Users submitting routable 
orders to IEX and Users submitting non-routable orders to IEX would not 
be subject to the same cumulative POP/coil delay. Non-routable orders 
would remain subject to the 350 microsecond delay into and out of the 
IEX matching engine via the initial POP/coil. Routable orders, however, 
would be sent to IEX's system routing logic first, and, if routed to 
IEX, would traverse a new POP/coil delay (with an additional 350 
microsecond delay) when interacting with the IEX matching engine.\237\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \237\ See IEX Rule 11.230; see also IEX Sixth Response at 2. IEX 
believes that this additional delay should not be to the detriment 
of a User submitting a routable order, and notes that Users may 
avoid this additional delay by submitting non-routable orders. See 
IEX Sixth Response at 2. In addition, the trade confirmation report 
from the IEX matching engine back to the User that submitted the 
routable order would be subject to a 700 microsecond delay, whereas 
IEX's proprietary data feed would only be subject to a 350 
microsecond delay. See id. at 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the Order Instituting Proceedings, the Commission noted that it 
was particularly interested in commenters' views as to whether the 
changes to IEX's outbound routing process set forth in IEX's Form 1, as 
amended by Amendment Nos. 2, 3 and 4, are consistent with the Act, in 
light of commenters' concerns that, under IEX's Form 1 prior to 
Amendment No. 2, IEX's proposed routing functionality and IEXS would 
have an advantage over other routing broker-dealers that would be 
unfairly discriminatory and an inappropriate burden on competition. 
Several commenters stated the changes to IEX's proposed routing 
functionality have sufficiently addressed these concerns and eliminated 
the advantage IEXS would have had over other routing broker-dealers 
under the original proposal.\238\ One of these commenters questioned 
how the differing treatment of routable versus non-routable orders 
under IEX's amended proposal would be consistent with the Act, and in 
particular, how it would not be unfairly discriminatory or an 
inappropriate burden on competition.\239\ Another commenter questioned 
whether the revised routing functionality would operate as effectively 
as the original proposal, and suggested IEX further clarify how its 
redesigned functionality would achieve its investor protection goals in 
comparison to the initial proposal.\240\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \238\ See Nasdaq Third Letter at 1; Citadel Fifth Letter at 1; 
Gilliland and Goodlander Letter at 1-2; FIA Second Letter at 2; NYSE 
Third Letter at 8-9.
    \239\ See NYSE Third Letter at 8-9.
    \240\ See Anonymous March 14 Letter at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission notes that it carefully scrutinizes exchange-
affiliated routing brokers, and has scrutinized with particularity 
IEX's proposed operation of IEXS, both as initially proposed and as 
amended by Amendment Nos. 2, 3, and 4.\241\ As noted in the Order 
Instituting Proceedings, the Commission previously has stated that an 
exchange-affiliated outbound router, as a ``facility'' of the exchange, 
will be subject to the exchange's and the Commission's regulatory 
oversight, and that the exchange will be responsible for ensuring that 
the affiliated outbound routing function is operated consistent with 
Section 6 of the Act and the

[[Page 41159]]

exchange's rules.\242\ For example, in approving an exchange with an 
affiliated outbound routing broker, the Commission previously noted 
that ``[a] conflict of interest would arise if the national securities 
exchange (or an affiliate) provided advantages to its broker-dealer 
that are not available to other members.'' \243\ The Commission further 
explained that ``advantages, such as greater access to information, 
improved speed of execution, or enhanced operational capabilities in 
dealing with the exchange, might constitute unfair discrimination under 
the Act.'' \244\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \241\ See infra note 243 (citing to prior orders).
    \242\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62716 (Aug. 
13, 2010), 75 FR 51295 (August 19, 2010) (granting BATS Y Exchange's 
request to register as a national securities exchange).
    \243\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 44983 (October 25, 
2001), 66 FR 55225, 55233 (November 1, 2001) (PCX-00-25) (order 
approving Archipelago Exchange (``ArcaEx'') as the equities trading 
facility of PCX Equities, Inc.) (``ArcaEx Order''). In the 2001 PCX 
filing, two commenters expressed concerns regarding ArcaEx's 
affiliation with the Wave broker-dealer, which operated as the 
outbound routing broker-dealer for ArcaEx. Specifically, these 
commenters were concerned that the affiliation between ArcaEx and 
Wave would be anti-competitive and could create a conflict of 
interest. See also supra note 242, at 51304 (citing to the BATS Y 
order).
    \244\ ArcaEx Order, supra note 243, at 55233.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Thus, unique access or preferences that an exchange provides to its 
outbound order routing function must be taken into account in the 
analysis of whether an exchange provides outbound routing in a manner 
consistent with the Act, and in particular, the requirement that an 
exchange's rules be designed not to permit unfair discrimination and 
not impose an unnecessary or undue burden on competition.\245\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \245\ If an exchange provides its routing logic with a unique 
structural advantage, such as preferential access to information 
from the exchange's order book, that advantage could effectively be 
passed on to its affiliated routing broker in the form of faster or 
more informed routing instructions. For example, if an exchange were 
to provide its routing logic with exclusive access to information 
that it did not provide broadly to other routing brokers (e.g., to 
orders resting non-displayed on the exchange's book) that would, on 
its face, raise concerns under Sections 6(b)(5) and 6(b)(8) of the 
Act. Such an advantage, if not available on identical terms to 
routing brokers unaffiliated with the exchange, could unfairly 
discriminate against those unaffiliated brokers or place an 
inappropriate burden on their ability to compete with the exchange's 
outbound routing services, in contravention of the Act. As initially 
proposed, IEXS would functionally have benefitted from greater 
access to information compared to other routing brokers because it 
would have been able to route outbound (based on instructions from 
the IEX matching engine following an execution (or lack thereof) on 
IEX) before any other market participant would be in a similar 
position.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission believes that the revisions to IEX's outbound 
routing structure set forth in Amendment Nos. 2, 3, and 4 have 
eliminated any such improper advantage that may have been provided to 
IEXS under IEX's initial proposal. The Commission notes that, following 
these amendments, certain commenters that criticized IEX's initially-
proposed outbound routing structure expressed support for IEX's amended 
outbound routing structure.\246\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \246\ See, e.g., Citadel Fifth Letter; Nasdaq Third Letter; FIA 
Second Letter; NYSE Third Letter at 8-9. One commenter that was 
critical of IEX's initially proposed routing structure suggested 
that Nasdaq's simultaneous routing functionality would be a viable 
alternative, and noted that it ``did not have a negative impact on 
price discovery or market quality.'' See Hudson River Trading Second 
Letter at 5. See also Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 67246 
(June 25, 2012), 77 FR 38875 (June 29, 2012) (notice of proposed 
rule change) (notice of Nasdaq simultaneous routing proposal) and 
67639 (August 10, 2012), 77 FR 49034 (August 15, 2012) (SR-NASDAQ-
2012-071) (order approving proposed rule change).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission believes that IEX has directly responded to the 
comments on this point through the changes it proposed in Amendment 
Nos. 2, 3, and 4. Specifically, by inserting an additional POP/coil 
delay for routable orders between the IEX routing logic and IEX 
matching engine, the Commission believes that IEX's ability to provide 
outbound routing services will now be on substantively comparable terms 
to a third party routing broker that is a member of IEX. Both the IEX 
routing logic and a third-party routing broker-dealer would experience 
350 microseconds of latency in sending order messages to the IEX 
matching engine (assuming that the third-party routing broker-dealer 
sends a non-routable order, which would bypass the IEX routing logic 
and instead proceed to the IEX matching engine) and 350 microseconds of 
latency in receiving fill and quote information back from the IEX 
matching engine. Thus, if the IEX routing logic were to pursue a serial 
routing strategy, it would do so based on a view of the IEX book that 
is subject to the POP/coil delay, it would experience the same 350 
microsecond latency in the transmission of the order to the IEX book 
that a routing broker-dealer would experience with its non-routable 
order, and it would experience the same 350 microsecond latency in 
waiting to determine what, if any, remainder is left to be routed to 
away destinations. The Commission believes that these are the same 
conditions that a third-party routing broker-dealer would experience 
when pursuing a serial routing strategy involving IEX.
    IEX's new router design provides flexibility to its routing 
functionality to employ either a ``spray'' approach to routing or a 
``serial'' approach.\247\ If the IEX routing logic pursues a ``spray'' 
routing approach, which would entail the IEX routing logic 
simultaneously routing shares to destinations on the IEX routing table, 
including the IEX book, the Commission believes that IEX's new design 
will place it on the same footing as a third-party routing broker-
dealer choosing to ``spray'' route to multiple trading destinations, 
including IEX. Specifically, they both would have a view of the IEX 
book that is subject to the POP/delay, and thus would be in a similar 
position with respect to determining how many shares to send to the IEX 
book as part of the ``spray'' route. Moreover, the shares that are sent 
to the IEX book from the IEX routing logic or the third-party routing 
broker-dealer each would have to traverse the POP/coil before reaching 
the IEX book.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \247\ See IEX Sixth Response, at 1 (``Pursuant to the redesign, 
our Routing logic, when necessary, will have the ability to route to 
IEX and away exchanges simultaneously utilizing only public 
information, which will protect the IEX routing member from 
electronic front running to away exchanges.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Thus, under IEX's amended outbound routing rule, IEX's affiliated 
broker-dealer does not have any structural or informational advantages 
in its provision of routing services as compared to a third-party 
broker-dealer member of IEX performing a similar function for itself or 
others. Thus, the Commission believes that IEX's proposed routing 
structure, as amended, would not be unfairly discriminatory and would 
not impose an inappropriate burden on competition.\248\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \248\ In response to a commenter's questioning whether IEX's 
differential handling of non-routable orders and routable orders 
would be unfairly discriminatory or an inappropriate burden on 
competition (see NYSE Third Letter at 8-9), the Commission notes 
that while a User that sends a routable order to IEX would 
experience different latencies as compared to a User that sends a 
non-routable order to IEX, any User may choose to send either kind 
of order--routable or non-routable--to IEX. Thus, the Commission 
does not believe that there is any structural advantage in IEX's 
proposed handling of either kind of order that would be available to 
certain Users but not to others. In addition, the Commission notes 
that the design of IEX's system with respect to its handling of 
routable versus non-routable orders is similar to that of at least 
one existing exchange. See Nasdaq Third Letter at 3 (noting that 
``if a Nasdaq member does not wish to use Nasdaq's routing 
functionality, it has the ability to send an order directly to the 
Nasdaq matching engine, thereby bypassing the exchange system that 
handles orders designated for routing, and would receive an 
immediate confirmation of the order's execution on Nasdaq''). See 
also id. at 5 (noting that ``[u]sing Nasdaq's order management 
system is optional, and members opting against using Nasdaq's OMS 
are not disadvantaged in any way'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Accordingly, for the reasons stated above, the Commission believes 
that the outbound routing functionality of IEX, as amended by Amendment 
Nos. 2, 3,

[[Page 41160]]

and 4, and as described in IEX's Sixth Response, is consistent with 
Section 6(b) of the Act in that it is consistent with the goals of 
promoting just and equitable principles of trade, removing impediments 
to and perfecting the mechanism of a free and open market and a 
national market system, protecting investors and the public interest, 
and not permitting unfair discrimination between customer, issuers, 
brokers or dealers.\249\
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    \249\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

7. Protected Quote Status
    In light of the POP/coil delay, the issue of whether IEX would 
operate as an automated trading center, in compliance with Rule 
600(b)(4) of Regulation NMS,\250\ such that its quotations would be 
``automated'' under Rule 600(b)(3) and thus ``protected'' under Rule 
611 of Regulation NMS (the ``Order Protection Rule'' or ``Trade-Through 
Rule''),\251\ attracted considerable attention among commenters. 
Specifically, several commenters questioned whether IEX's operation of 
the POP/coil delay would be consistent with either the Order Protection 
Rule or the intent behind the Rule.\252\ Commenters mainly assert that 
the 350 microsecond latency caused by the POP and coil calls into 
question whether IEX quotations would be ``automated,'' and therefore 
whether they can be ``protected,'' under Regulation NMS.\253\
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    \250\ 17 CFR 242.600(b)(4).
    \251\ 17 CFR 242.611. Rule 611(a)(1) requires a trading center 
to establish, maintain and enforce written policies and procedures 
that are reasonably designed to prevent trade-throughs on the 
trading center of protection quotations. 17 CFR 242.611(a)(1).
    \252\ See NYSE First Letter at 5; BATS First Letter at 3; FIA 
First Letter at 2; Nasdaq First Letter at 2; Citadel First Letter at 
3. See also Gibson Dunn Letter at 6-7.
    \253\ See BATS First Letter at 2-4; FIA First Letter at 2; NYSE 
First Letter at 5-7; Nasdaq First Letter at 2; Citadel First Letter 
at 2-4. Commenters critical of IEX's proposed design cite to 
language from the Regulation NMS Adopting Release where the 
Commission elaborated on what it means for a quotation to be 
``automated,'' including an interpretation that the term 
``immediate,'' as it relates to the definition of an automated 
quotation, ``precludes any coding of automated systems or other type 
of intentional device that would delay the action taken with respect 
to a quotation'' (emphasis added). See BATS First Letter at 3; FIA 
First Letter at 2; Citadel First Letter at 3; Citadel Second Letter 
at 3; see also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9, 
2005) 70 FR 37496, 37534 (June 29, 2005) (``Regulation NMS Adopting 
Release''). Based on this language, the commenters contend that 
IEX's quotation cannot be considered automated, or at least question 
whether it can be so considered. Several commenters urged the 
Commission not to decide this question in the context of IEX's Form 
1. See, e.g., Citadel Second Letter at 4; Nasdaq Second Letter at 1-
4; Direct Match Letter at 2-4; Scott Letter. One commenter urged the 
Commission, should it disagree with the contention that IEX's 
quotation cannot be protected, to explain its reasoning in a 
rulemaking proceeding or exemptive order that is subject to public 
vetting. See Citadel Second Letter at 4. Other commenters urged the 
Commission to articulate clear standards regarding what constitutes 
a permissible access delay. See BATS First Letter at 3-4, 6; T. Rowe 
Price Letter at 2; Jon D. Letter. One of these commenters supported 
an interpretation of the definition of an automated quotation that 
would include the delay resulting from IEX's POP/coil, but further 
urged the Commission to articulate clear regulatory standards that 
would be applicable to all trading venues and market participants. 
See BATS Second Letter at 2. Other commenters offered support for 
IEX's proposed access delay, and challenged the assertion that IEX's 
quotation would not meet the definition of ``automated quotation'' 
under Regulation NMS. See, e.g., Leuchtkafer First Letter at 1-2; 
Leuchtkafer Second Letter at 1-2; Verret Letter at 4; Franklin 
Templeton Letter at 2; Upson Letter at 2. IEX asserted that the 
language of the Order Protection Rule and the Regulation NMS 
Adopting Release, when considered in light of the context in which 
the Order Protection Rule was adopted, do not compel the conclusion 
that IEX's quotes should be considered ``manual quotations'' instead 
of ``automated quotations.'' See IEX First Response at 5-7; IEX 
Second Response at 4; IEX Third Response at 1-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As noted above, according to IEX, all incoming messages (e.g., 
orders to buy or sell and any modification to a previously sent open 
order) from any User would traverse the proposed POP/coil delay.\254\ 
In addition, all outbound messages from IEX back to a User (e.g., 
confirmations of an execution that occurred on IEX) would pass through 
the same route in reverse.\255\ IEX's direct proprietary market data 
feed, which is an optional data feed that IEX would make available to 
subscribers, also would traverse the coil before exiting at the 
POP.\256\ As a result, a non-routable immediate-or-cancel (``IOC'') 
order, which is a type of order that IEX would permit Users to send to 
the IEX system, would traverse the proposed POP/coil (and its attendant 
350 microsecond delay) before arriving at the IEX system and 
potentially executing against a displayed quotation on IEX.\257\ 
Likewise, the response from the IEX system to the User indicating the 
action taken by the IEX system with respect to such IOC order also 
would traverse the POP/coil and experience a 350 microsecond delay, for 
a cumulative inbound and outbound intentional delay imposed on a non-
routable order of 700 microseconds.\258\
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    \254\ See IEX First Response at 3-4; see also IEX Rule 11.510.
    \255\ See IEX Rule 11.510.
    \256\ See id.
    \257\ IEX has designed its rules relating to orders, modifiers, 
and order execution to comply with the requirements of Regulation 
NMS, including Rule 600(b)(3) in particular by providing an 
immediate-or-cancel functionality. See IEX Rules 11.190 and 11.230; 
see also 17 CFR 242.600(b)(3). IEX permits immediate-or-cancel 
orders to be non-routable when designated as ``IEX Only,'' and thus 
unexecuted portions of immediate-or-cancel orders designated as such 
would be canceled without being routed elsewhere, in accordance with 
Rule 600(b)(3)(iii). See IEX Rule 11.190; see also 17 CFR 
242.600(b)(3)(iii). These proposed rules include accepting orders 
marked as intermarket sweep orders, which will allow orders so 
designated to be automatically matched and executed without 
reference to Protected Quotations at other trading centers, and 
routing orders marked as intermarket sweep orders by a User to a 
specific trading center for execution. See IEX Rule 11.190(b)(12); 
see also 17 CFR 242.600(b)(3) and 242.611.
    \258\ See IEX Rule 11.510; see also IEX First Response at 3. 
Outbound transaction and quote messages from IEX to the applicable 
securities information processor (``SIP'') would not pass through 
the POP/coil, but instead would be sent directly from the IEX system 
to the SIP processor without an intentional delay. See IEX Rule 
11.510(c); see also IEX First Response at 3-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Several commenters asserted that this 700 microsecond delay would 
not be de minimis or otherwise consistent with the Act and the rules 
thereunder. Some believed that if IEX's best bid and best offer were 
protected quotations in light of the latency attendant to IEX's POP/
coil structure, including the fact that IEX's proprietary market data 
feed would be subject to such latency as it leaves IEX, it would be 
detrimental to the market.\259\ Some commenters asserted that if IEX's 
quotation were protected, it would negatively affect the accuracy of 
the NBBO and the price discovery process, and could lead to market 
instability.\260\ Others were concerned that it would lead to confusion 
among market participants, and cause a higher incidence of locked or 
crossed markets.\261\ Some commenters contended that orders routed to 
IEX would experience lower fill rates and inferior executions because 
routed orders might miss out on better quotes on other markets if they 
need to route to a stale quote on IEX that had already traded but that 
fact has not yet

[[Page 41161]]

been communicated through IEX's proprietary data.\262\ In addition, 
some commenters argued that resting orders, including pegged orders, on 
away markets could be mispriced, and potentially executed against at a 
stale price, due to the fact that outgoing proprietary market data from 
IEX would be subject to the POP/coil latency.\263\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \259\ See, e.g., BATS First Letter at 3; Nasdaq First Letter at 
3; FIA First Letter at 3; Citadel First Letter at 4-5; NYSE First 
Letter at 7-9; Scott Letter; Anonymous December 5 Letter at 2; 
Hudson River Trading First Letter at 6; PDQ Enterprises Letter at 1-
2. See also Gibson Dunn Letter at 7.
    \260\ See BATS First Letter at 3; PDQ Enterprises Letter at 1-2 
(arguing that because of IEX's POP/coil delay, ``its quotes may not 
be truly actionable on an alarmingly regular basis'' and that, if 
other exchanges adopt access delays of their own, it will lead to 
order routers ``chasing ghost quotes through numerous speed bumps'' 
and, as a result, ``price discovery chaos''); Hudson River Trading 
First Letter at 7 (predicting that other exchanges will seek delays 
of their own, which would increase market structure complexity and, 
``during periods of high volatility, several quotes may be 
intentionally delayed, clouding the view of the NBBO and leading to 
greater uncertainty for market participants that could contribute to 
market instability''); Citadel First Letter at 5; see also Scott 
Letter (``While the changes proposed by IEX could potentially be 
positive for IEX and its owners, the changes accompanying the 
approach could negatively impact an investors' ability to execute a 
trade at the best price, the centerpiece of our national market 
system.'').
    \261\ See Nasdaq First Letter at 3; FIA First Letter at 3; 
Citadel First Letter at 4-5.
    \262\ See FIA First Letter at 3; Citadel First Letter at 4, 9; 
Citadel Fifth Letter at 2-4; PDQ Enterprises Letter at 1-2; Hudson 
River Trading First Letter at 5; Hudson River Trading Second Letter 
at 2-4.
    \263\ See NYSE First Letter at 7-9; Citadel First Letter at 5; 
FIA First Letter at 4; Hudson River Trading First Letter at 6; 
Anonymous December 5 Letter at 2. Some of these commenters contended 
that this would lead to the development of order types on other 
markets that are designed to bypass IEX protected quotations. See 
NYSE First Letter at 8 n.16; FIA First Letter at 4; see also Gibson 
Dunn Letter at 7 (expressing concern that intentional delays such as 
that proposed by IEX might ``open the floodgates to a new wave of 
complex order types''). Further, one commenter expressed concern 
that the POP/coil delay could be exploited for manipulative trading 
purposes. See Instinet Letter at 1 (expressing concern that an 
access delay might be used to ``place[] into the public data stream 
materially unexecutable quotes that persist for, on order, one 
millisecond''). The Commission believes there is no basis to 
conclude that concerns regarding manipulative and predatory quoting 
behavior should be more pronounced on IEX due to the POP/coil delay, 
than with respect to other exchanges. While the commenter discusses 
the hypothetical submission of quotes to IEX that are cancelled 
before any other market participant could react to them, but that 
linger in the public market data stream for longer durations because 
of the POP/coil delay on outbound proprietary data, the Commission 
notes that such quoting behavior, to the extent it constitutes 
manipulative trading behavior, would be prohibited by the federal 
securities laws and rules, including Section 10(b) of the Act and 
Rule 10b-5 thereunder, as well as exchange rules and FINRA rules. 
The Commission also notes that, in addition to IEX's surveillance 
procedures, and in addition to IEX's rules prohibiting certain 
trading practices (see the IEX Rule 10.100 series), IEX's rules, as 
amended, include proposed Rule 10.270, which specifically prohibits 
disruptive quoting and trading activity on IEX, as well as proposed 
Rule 9.217, which sets forth an expedited suspension proceeding for 
alleged violations of Rule 10.270. See Amendment No. 4 to IEX's Form 
1. The Commission believes that IEX's rules are appropriately 
designed to prevent and detect quoting behavior of the sort that the 
commenter is concerned about, as well as, generally, to prevent 
fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices in accordance with 
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act. IEX, like all registered national 
securities exchanges, must comply with the Act and the rules 
thereunder, and its own rules, and (subject to the provisions of 
Section 17(d) and the rules thereunder), absent reasonable 
justification or excuse, enforce compliance with such provisions by 
its members and persons associated with its members. See 15 U.S.C. 
78s(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Other commenters did not believe that protecting IEX's quotations 
despite IEX's POP/coil would have a detrimental impact on market 
quality,\264\ and noted that there is latency associated with the 
transmission of orders to protected quotations at existing market 
venues--and in some cases, those latencies are greater than that 
associated with transmitting orders to IEX even factoring in the 
proposed POP/coil delay.\265\ One commenter observed that the 350 
microsecond POP/coil delay is ``not much more than the normal latency 
that all trading platforms impose,'' and that an exchange could achieve 
the same delay by ``locat[ing] its primary data center 65 or more miles 
away from the other exchange data centers.'' \266\ Another commenter 
did not find the proposed POP/coil delay ``particularly problematic, as 
the time gap is minimal, and (even including the speed bump) IEX 
matches orders faster than a number of other markets.'' \267\ Another 
commenter contended that IEX's POP/coil delay will have little impact 
on the NBBO calculations of the consolidated tape.\268\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \264\ See Chen & Foley Letter at 5 (``Based on our empirical 
analysis of Alpha's speed bump in Canada, we believe that IEX's 
application will not result in detrimental impacts on overall market 
quality in the United States.'').
    \265\ See, e.g., BATS First Letter at 4; BATS Second Letter at 
2-3; Healthy Markets Letter at 4; Angel Letter at 2; Kim Letter; 
Mannheim Letter; Wilcox Letter. Because the POP/coil delay is not 
variable, market participants should be able to account for it when 
routing as they could any other known latency. See, e.g., Chen & 
Foley Letter at 4 (``The fixed nature of IEX's inbound speed bump 
enables individual marketable orders from a smart order router spray 
to be timed to arrive at IEX's speed bump point-of-presence 350 
microseconds prior to arrival at other markets, minimizing any 
potential for information leakage.''); Jones C Letter at 4 
(``[M]arket participants may change their order submission behavior 
to substantially blunt IEX's pegged order repricing scheme . . . 
[by] sending the order to IEX so that it arrives 350 microseconds 
earlier than it arrives at other venues.''). As noted above, in the 
Jones C Letter, the commenter attempted to quantify the purported 
cost that certain market participants would incur when IEX pegged 
orders ``fade'' before they can be accessed. See supra note 214. The 
Commission believes that market participants who adjust their 
routing strategies to account for IEX's access delay (which the 
commenter acknowledged market participants may do) should be able to 
mitigate the ``fade'' that they encounter when routing orders to IEX 
by calibrating the timing of their routed orders so that the orders 
destined for IEX arrive there 350 microseconds before the orders 
sent to other venues.
    \266\ Angel Letter at 3; see also Abel/Noser Letter at 2.
    \267\ Tabb Letter at 1. See also Jones C Letter at 2 (noting 
that ``from an economic point of view the 350-microsecond delay 
[proposed by IEX] per se should not be a particular cause for 
concern, as it is well within the bounds of the existing, 
geographically dispersed National Market System, and does not seem 
likely to contribute substantially to a phantom liquidity 
problem'').
    \268\ See Upson Letter at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In response to commenters that argued that the POP/coil delay would 
negatively affect market transparency, degrade the NBBO, or cloud price 
discovery, the Commission notes that Rule 600(b)(3)(v) requires trading 
centers to immediately update their displayed quotations to reflect 
material changes. Market participants today already experience very 
short delays in receiving updates to displayed quotations, as a result 
of geographic and technological latencies, similar to those experienced 
when accessing protected quotations. Indeed, the NBBO is an 
amalgamation of individual protected quotations from different markets 
located in different places, and is already subject to geographic, 
network, computational, and other technological latencies.\269\ For any 
market participant that chooses to use exchange proprietary data feeds, 
including IEX's feed with its attendant 350 microsecond one-way delay, 
and calculate the NBBO for itself, they will not experience an 
unprecedented delay in receiving IEX's data because the 350 microsecond 
delay on IEX's data is well within the range of geographic and 
technological latencies that market participants experience today. 
Thus, latency to and from IEX will be comparable to--and even less 
than--delays attributable to other markets that currently are included 
in the NBBO.\270\ For this reason, the Commission does not believe the 
introduction of a small intentional delay like the POP/coil delay will 
impair market transparency, lead to greater incidences of locked or 
crossed markets, or materially impact pegged orders on away markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \269\ See Final Interpretation, supra note 13.
    \270\ See Healthy Markets Letter at 4 (noting that ``[t]he NBBO 
already includes quotes with varied degrees of time lag'' and that 
the length of IEX's coiled cable ``is far less than the distance 
between NY and Chicago, and is remarkably similar to the distance 
between Carteret and Mahwah (36 miles)''). See also IEX First 
Response at 6 (stating that ``the amount of latency imposed by the 
POP is less than or not materially different than that currently 
involved in reaching various exchanges based on geographic 
factors,'' and referring, by way of example, to the geographic 
distance that an order from the Chicago Stock Exchange's Secaucus, 
New Jersey data center must physically traverse before reaching the 
Chicago Stock Exchange's trading system in Chicago); see also id. at 
9-10 (noting that the POP/coil latency is shorter than the latency 
associated with protected quotations published through FINRA's 
Alternative Display Facility and the National Stock Exchange's 
former order delivery product); IEX Second Response at 11 (noting 
that the distance between Nasdaq's Carteret facility and NYSE's 
Mahwah facility is 42.8 miles (compared to the IEX coil's 
approximately 38 mile equivalent)); IEX Third Response at 2. Other 
commenters similarly understood that the POP/coil latency is 
comparable to or shorter than natural and geographic latencies in 
today's market. See Angel Letter at 2; BATS First Letter at 4; BATS 
Second Letter at 2-3; Kim Letter; Mannheim Letter; T. Rowe Price 
Letter at 2-3; Wilcox Letter. Two commenters specifically suggested 
that such a delay would be inconsequential or de minimis. See Angel 
Letter at 3; Abel/Noser Letter at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition, the Commission published notice of a proposed 
interpretation regarding the permissibility of intentional access

[[Page 41162]]

delays.\271\ Today, the Commission is issuing a final interpretation 
that, when determining whether a trading center maintains an 
``automated quotation'' for purposes of Rule 611 of Regulation NMS, the 
term ``immediate'' in Rule 600(b)(3) precludes any coding of automated 
systems or other type of intentional device that would delay the action 
taken with respect to a quotation unless such delay is de minimis--
i.e., so short as to not frustrate the purposes of Rule 611 by 
impairing fair and efficient access to an exchange's quotations.\272\ 
In accordance with that interpretation and the Commission's findings, 
discussed above, that the application of IEX's POP/coil delay is not 
unfairly discriminatory and is otherwise consistent with the Act, the 
Commission does not believe that IEX's POP/coil delay precludes IEX 
from maintaining an automated quotation. Because the delay imposed by 
IEX's POP/coil is well within geographic and technological latencies 
experienced today that do not impair fair and efficient access to an 
exchange's quotations or otherwise frustrate the objectives of Rule 
611, the Commission believes that such intentional delay will not 
frustrate the purposes of Rule 611 by impairing fair and efficient 
access to IEX's quotations. Accordingly, the Commission finds that an 
intentional 700 microsecond delay is de minimis and thus IEX can 
maintain a protected quotation.\273\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \271\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 77407 (March 18, 
2016), 81 FR 15660 (March 24, 2016) (S7-03-16) (``Notice of Proposed 
Interpretation''). In particular, the Commission noted that the POP/
coil, because it delays inbound and outbound messages to and from 
IEX Users, raises a question as to whether, under the interpretation 
set forth in the Regulation NMS Adopting Release from 2005, IEX 
will, among other things, ``immediately'' execute IOC orders under 
Rule 600(b)(3)(ii), ``immediately'' transmit a response to an IOC 
order sender under Rule 600(b)(3)(iv), and ``immediately'' display 
information that updates IEX's displayed quotation under Rule 
600(b)(3)(v). See id.; see also 17 CFR 242.600(b)(3); Regulation NMS 
Adopting Release, supra note 253, at 37504.
    \272\ See Final Interpretation, supra note 13. One commenter 
argued that there is ``no evidence of a need for a de minimis 
exception or that planned delays will benefit investors in any 
meaningful way.'' Gibson Dunn Letter at 7. This comment pertains 
mainly to, and is addressed, in the Commission's Final 
Interpretation, being issued separately today. As stated in the 
Final Interpretation, the Commission believes that its updated 
interpretation allowing for de minimis intentional access delays in 
certain circumstances is warranted in light of technological and 
market developments and is consistent with the purposes of Rule 611.
    \273\ See Final Interpretation, supra note 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

8. Market Participants Required To Treat IEX's Quotations as Protected
    Consequently, IEX is a trading center whose quotations can be 
``automated quotations'' under Rule 600(b)(3). In turn, IEX is designed 
to be an ``automated trading center'' under Rule 600(b)(4) whose best-
priced, displayed quotation would be a ``protected quotation'' under 
Rules 600(b)(57) and 600(b)(58), and for purposes of Rule 611.\274\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \274\ The foregoing discussion of whether IEX can have an 
automated quote and operate as an automated trading center and 
therefore receive order protection under Rule 611 focuses on whether 
the IEX system can ``immediately and automatically'' execute an 
order against an IEX quotation within the meaning of the definition 
of ``automated quotation'' set forth in Rule 600(b)(3). Rule 
600(b)(3) sets forth additional requirements for a quotation to be 
automated. See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(3). Moreover, being capable of 
displaying ``automated quotations,'' as defined in Rule 600(b)(3), 
is just one of several requirements that a trading center must 
satisfy in order to be considered an ``automated trading center'' 
under Rule 600(b)(4). See 17 CFR 242.600(b)(4). In particular, as 
summarized above, IEX's trading rules are designed to satisfy the 
requirements of Rule 600(b)(3) by permitting orders to be marked as 
``immediate-or-cancel'' and providing for immediate and automatic 
execution of such incoming orders, cancelation of unexecuted 
portions, transmission of a response to the sender, and updates to 
its displayed quotation. See also IEX Rules 11.230 (Order Execution) 
and 11.240 (Trade Execution, Reporting, and Dissemination of 
Quotations). Further, to the extent IEX satisfies the conditions of 
Rule 600(b)(4), it will operate as an ``automated trading center.'' 
In such case, IEX can be an automated trading center with automated 
quotations that are protected under Rule 611.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As a result, following the issuance of this order and IEX having 
met the conditions to begin operating as an automated trading center in 
a particular symbol, market participants will be required to have 
reasonably designed policies and procedures to treat IEX's best bid and 
best offer in such symbol as a protected quotation.\275\ At the same 
time, to meet their regulatory responsibilities under Rule 611(a) of 
Regulation NMS, market participants must have sufficient notice of new 
Protected Quotations, as well as all necessary information (such as 
final technical specifications).\276\ The Commission believes that it 
would be a reasonable policy and procedure under Rule 611(a) to require 
that industry participants begin treating IEX's best bid and best offer 
as a Protected Quotation as soon as possible but no later than 90 days 
after the date of this order, or such later date as IEX begins 
operation as a national securities exchange. The Commission notes that 
it has taken the same position with other new equities exchanges.\277\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \275\ See 17 CFR 242.611(a).
    \276\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53829 (May 18, 
2006), 71 FR 30038, 30041 (May 24, 2006) (File No. S7-10-04) 
(extending the compliance dates for Rule 610 and Rule 611 of 
Regulation NMS under the Act).
    \277\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 58375 
(August 18, 2008), 73 FR 49498, 49505 (August 21, 2008) (approval of 
the BATS Exchange) and 61698 (March 12, 2010), 75 FR 13151, 13163 
(March 28, 2010) (approval of the EDGA and EDGX exchanges).
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D. Discipline and Oversight of Members

    As noted above, one prerequisite for the Commission's grant of an 
exchange's application for registration is that a proposed exchange 
must be so organized and have the capacity to be able to carry out the 
purposes of the Act.\278\ Specifically, an exchange must be able to 
enforce compliance by its members and persons associated with its 
members with federal securities laws and rules thereunder and the rules 
of the exchange.\279\ As also noted above, pursuant to the Regulatory 
Contract, FINRA will perform many of the initial disciplinary processes 
on behalf of IEX.\280\ For example, FINRA will investigate potential 
securities laws violations, issue complaints, and conduct hearings 
pursuant to IEX rules. Appeals from disciplinary decisions will be 
heard by the IEX Appeals Committee \281\ and the IEX Appeals 
Committee's decision shall be final.\282\ In addition, the Exchange 
Board may on its own initiative order review of a disciplinary 
decision.\283\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \278\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(1).
    \279\ See id.
    \280\ See supra notes 120-121 and accompanying text. See also 
IEX Rule 9.001 (noting that IEX and FINRA are parties to a 
regulatory contract, pursuant to which FINRA will perform certain 
functions).
    \281\ See IEX Rule 1.160(r).
    \282\ See IEX Rule 9.349(c) (providing, among other things, that 
if the Exchange Board does not call the disciplinary proceeding for 
review, the proposed written decision of the IEX Appeals Committee 
shall become final).
    \283\ See IEX Rule Series 9.350.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The IEX Amended and Restated Operating Agreement and IEX rules 
provide that the Exchange has disciplinary jurisdiction over its 
members so that it can enforce its members' compliance with its rules 
and the federal securities laws and rules.\284\ The Exchange's rules 
also permit it to sanction members for violations of its rules and 
violations of the federal securities laws and rules by, among other 
things, expelling or suspending members, limiting members' activities, 
functions, or operations, fining or censuring members, or suspending or 
barring a person from being associated with a member, or any other 
fitting sanction.\285\ IEX's rules also provide for the imposition of 
fines for certain minor rule violations in lieu of commencing 
disciplinary proceedings.\286\

[[Page 41163]]

Accordingly, as a condition to the operation of IEX, a Minor Rule 
Violation Plan (``MRVP'') filed by IEX under Act Rule 19d-1(c)(2) must 
be declared effective by the Commission.\287\
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    \284\ See generally IEX Amended and Restated Operating Agreement 
Article X and IEX Rules Chapters 8 and 9.
    \285\ See IEX Rule 2.120. See also BATS Rule 2.2 (containing a 
nearly identical provision).
    \286\ See IEX Rule 9.216(b).
    \287\ 17 CFR 240.19d-1(c)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission received one comment on this topic, from a commenter 
that encouraged IEX to adopt a rule similar to BATS Rule 8.17 
(Expedited Client Suspension Proceeding) concerning expedited 
suspension proceedings with respect to alleged violations of IEX's 
disruptive quoting and trading rule.\288\ IEX proposed a substantively 
similar rule in amendment Nos. 2 and 3.\289\ The Commission finds that 
IEX's Amended and Restated Operating Agreement and rules concerning its 
disciplinary and oversight programs are consistent with the 
requirements of Sections 6(b)(6) and 6(b)(7) \290\ of the Act in that 
they provide fair procedures for the disciplining of members and 
persons associated with members. The Commission further finds that the 
rules of IEX provide it with the ability to comply, and with the 
ability to enforce compliance by its members and persons associated 
with its members, with the provisions of the Act, the rules and 
regulations thereunder, and the rules of IEX.\291\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \288\ See Instinet Letter at 2.
    \289\ See IEX Rule 9.217.
    \290\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(6) and (b)(7).
    \291\ See Section 6(b)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(1).

E. Listing and Trading on the IEX Exchange \292\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \292\ The Commission did not receive any comments addressing the 
substance of the listing requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Registration Under Section 12(b) of the Act
    Once IEX begins operations as a national securities exchange, a 
security will be considered for listing on IEX only if such security is 
registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act \293\ or such security 
is subject to an exemption.\294\ An issuer may register a security 
pursuant to Section 12(b) by submitting to IEX a listing application 
that provides certain required information.\295\ The IEX Exchange will 
review the listing application and, if the listing application is 
approved, will certify to the Commission that it has approved the 
security for listing and registration.\296\ Registration of the 
security will become effective thirty days after the receipt of such 
certification by the Commission or within a shorter period of time as 
the Commission may determine.\297\ Once registration is effective the 
security is eligible for listing on IEX.\298\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \293\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(b).
    \294\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(c); IEX Rules 14.202 and 14.203.
    \295\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(b); IEX Rule 14.202. Prior to submitting a 
listing application to IEX, the issuer would be required to 
participate in a free confidential pre-application eligibility 
review, in which the IEX Exchange will determine whether the issuer 
meets its listing criteria and is eligible to submit a listing 
application. See IEX Rule 14.201.
    \296\ See IEX Rule 14.203(f); 15 U.S.C. 78l(d).
    \297\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(d).
    \298\ See IEX Rule 14.203(f); 15 U.S.C. 78l(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Initial and Continuing Listing Standards
    The Commission notes that IEX's proposed initial and continuing 
listing standards for securities to be listed and traded on the IEX 
Exchange are virtually identical to the current rules for the Nasdaq 
Global Select Market of The NASDAQ Stock Market.\299\ The Commission 
has previously determined that the initial and continuing listing 
standards of Nasdaq are consistent with the Act.\300\ The Commission 
believes that IEX's proposed initial and continuing listing standards 
are consistent with the requirements of the Act. With respect to the 
standards relating to the listing and delisting of companies, including 
procedures and prerequisites for initial and continued listing on IEX, 
obligations of security issuers listed on IEX, as well as rules 
describing the application and qualification process,\301\ IEX's 
proposed listing rules for securities are virtually identical to those 
of Nasdaq. With respect to IEX Rule 14.201, which is substantially 
similar to the analogous rule of NYSE,\302\ IEX requires a company 
seeking the initial listing of one or more classes of securities on IEX 
to participate in a free confidential pre-application eligibility 
review to determine whether the company meets the IEX Exchange's 
listing criteria and, if, upon completion of this review, IEX 
determines that a company is eligible for listing, IEX will notify that 
company in writing that it has been cleared to submit an original 
listing application. The Commission notes that, if, upon completion of 
this review, the Exchange determines that a company is ineligible for 
listing, the company may request a review of IEX's determination 
pursuant to the process set forth in IEX Rule 9.555. In addition, with 
respect to the standards relating to other securities, including 
securities of exchange-traded funds and other exchange-traded 
derivative securities products, the Commission notes that IEX's 
proposed listing rules are virtually identical to those of Nasdaq.\303\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \299\ See Nasdaq Rule 5000 series; IEX Rule Chapters 14 and 16. 
In addition, IEX proposed a Confidential Pre-Application Review of 
Eligibility for its proposed listing standards, which is based on 
the equivalent rule of the New York Stock Exchange. See IEX Rule 
14.201; see also NYSE Listed Company Manual Sections 101 and 104 
(providing for a free confidential review of the eligibility for 
listing of any company that requests such a review and provides the 
necessary documents).
    \300\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53128 (January 13, 
2006), 71 FR 3550 (January 23, 2006) (File No. 10-131) (approving 
the application of Nasdaq to become a registered national securities 
exchange). See also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 66648 (March 
23, 2012), 77 FR 19428 (March 30, 2012) (SR-NASDAQ-2012-013) 
(approving the adoption of listing rules relating to certain 
derivative securities products).
    \301\ See IEX Rules Chapter 14. IEX Rule 14.201 is the same as 
the NYSE rule, both of which relate to the confidential pre-
application review for eligibility for companies seeking to list on 
the Exchange. See IEX Rule 14.201; see also NYSE Listed Company 
Manual Sections 101 and 104. The Commission notes that, except for 
IEX Rule 14.201 (which is substantively similar to the rule of 
NYSE), all other requirements relating to the listing of companies 
are virtually identical to those of Nasdaq. See Nasdaq Rule 5000 
series
    \302\ See supra note 301 (referencing IEX Rule 14.201 and NYSE 
Listed Company Manual Sections 101 and 104).
    \303\ See IEX Rules Chapter 16. See also the Nasdaq Rule 5000 
series.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Corporate Governance Standards
    The Commission notes that IEX's proposed corporate governance 
standards in connection with securities to be listed and traded on the 
IEX Exchange are virtually identical to the current rules of Nasdaq and 
the NYSE.\304\ The Commission has previously determined that the 
corporate governance standards for listed issuers of Nasdaq and NYSE 
are consistent with the Act.\305\ The Commission finds that IEX's 
proposed corporate governance listing standards for listed issuers 
contained in IEX's proposed rules are consistent with Section 6(b)(5) 
of the Act and satisfy the requirements of Section 10A(m) of the

[[Page 41164]]

Act and Rule 10A-3 thereunder.\306\ The Commission believes that IEX's 
corporate governance standards for listed issuers are designed to 
promote independent and objective review and oversight of the 
accounting and auditing practices of listed issuers and to enhance 
audit committee independence, authority, and responsibility by 
implementing the standards set forth in Rule 10A-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \304\ See Nasdaq Rule 5600 et seq.; NYSE Listed Company Manual 
Section 303A.07(c) (requiring listed companies to maintain an 
internal audit function to provide management and the audit 
committee with ongoing assessments of the listed company's risk 
management processes and system of internal control). See also IEX 
Rule 14.414.
    \305\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53128 (January 13, 
2006), 71 FR 3550 (January 23, 2006) (File No. 10-131) (approving 
the application of Nasdaq to become a registered national securities 
exchange). The Commission notes that IEX proposed to adopt NYSE's 
requirement for listed issuers to have an internal audit function. 
See supra note 304 (referencing NYSE Listed Company Manual Section 
303A.07(c) and IEX Rule 14.414). See also Securities Exchange Act 
Release No. 48745 (November 4, 2003), 68 FR 64154 (November 12, 
2003) (SR-NYSE-2002-33, SR-NASD-2002-77, SR-NASD-2002-80, SR-NASD-
2002-138, SR-NASD-2002-139, and SR-NASD-2002-141) (order approving 
rules relating to corporate governance of listed companies, 
including rules relating to the internal audit function).
    \306\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5); 15 U.S.C. 78j-1(m); 17 CFR 
240.10A-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    While IEX does not intend to list securities upon becoming an 
exchange, it has expressed an intent to do so in the future.\307\ The 
Commission believes that the listings program is an important 
regulatory function of an exchange, and prior to becoming a primary 
listing market, the Commission expects IEX to ensure its effective 
compliance with, and enforcement of, its listing standards on an 
initial and continued basis.\308\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \307\ See Exhibit N to IEX's Form 1. Upon commencing operations 
as an exchange, IEX intends to initially trade only securities that 
have been admitted pursuant to unlisted trading privileges. See 
Exhibit H to IEX's Form 1.
    \308\ See 15 U.S.C. 78s(g)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. Trading Pursuant to Unlisted Trading Privileges
    As an exchange, IEX will be permitted by Section 12(f) of the Act 
\309\ to extend unlisted trading privileges to securities listed and 
registered on other national securities exchanges, subject to 
Commission rules. In particular, Rule 12f-5 under the Act requires an 
exchange that extends unlisted trading privileges to securities to have 
in effect a rule or rules providing for transactions in the class or 
type of security to which the exchange extends unlisted trading 
privileges.\310\ The Commission notes that IEX's proposed rules allow 
it to extend unlisted trading privileges to any security that is an NMS 
Stock (as defined in Rule 600 of Regulation NMS under the Act) that is 
listed on another national securities exchange.\311\ Accordingly, 
consistent with Rule 12f-5, IEX's proposed rules provide for 
transactions in the class or type of security to which the exchange 
intends to extend unlisted trading privileges.\312\ The Commission 
finds that IEX's proposed rules governing trading pursuant to unlisted 
trading privileges are therefore consistent with the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \309\ 15 U.S.C. 78l.
    \310\ See 17 CFR 240.12f-5. See also Securities Exchange Act 
Release No. 35737 (April 21, 1995), 60 FR 20891 (April 28, 1995) 
(File No. S7-4-95) (adopting Rule 12f-5 under the Act).
    \311\ See IEX Rules 11.120 and 16.160. Any such security will be 
subject to all IEX trading rules applicable to NMS Stocks, unless 
otherwise noted, including provisions of IEX Rule 11.280 and 
Chapters 14 and 16 of the IEX Rules. See IEX Rule 16.160.
    \312\ IEX's rules currently do not provide for the trading of 
options, security futures, or other similar instruments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

F. Section 11(a) of the Act

    Section 11(a)(1) of the Act \313\ prohibits a member of a national 
securities exchange from effecting transactions on that exchange for 
its own account, the account of an associated person, or an account 
over which it or its associated person exercises investment discretion 
(collectively, ``covered accounts'') unless an exception applies. Rule 
11a2-2(T) under the Act,\314\ known as the ``effect versus execute'' 
rule, provides exchange members with an exemption from the Section 
11(a)(1) prohibition. Rule 11a2-2(T) permits an exchange member, 
subject to certain conditions, to effect transactions for covered 
accounts by arranging for an unaffiliated member to execute 
transactions on the exchange. To comply with Rule 11a2-2(T)'s 
conditions, a member: (i) Must transmit the order from off the exchange 
floor; (ii) may not participate in the execution of the transaction 
once it has been transmitted to the member performing the execution; 
\315\ (iii) may not be affiliated with the executing member; and (iv) 
with respect to an account over which the member or an associated 
person has investment discretion, neither the member nor its associated 
person may retain any compensation in connection with effecting the 
transaction except as provided in the Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \313\ 15 U.S.C. 78k(a)(1).
    \314\ 17 CFR 240.11a2-2(T).
    \315\ This prohibition also applies to associated persons. The 
member may, however, participate in clearing and settling the 
transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In a letter to the Commission, IEX requested that the Commission 
concur with IEX's conclusion that IEX members that enter orders into 
the IEX trading system satisfy the requirements of Rule 11a2-2(T).\316\ 
For the reasons set forth below, the Commission believes that IEX 
members entering orders into the IEX trading system would satisfy the 
requirements of Rule 11a2-2(T).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \316\ See Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, to Brent 
Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated June 10, 2016 (``IEX 11(a) 
Letter'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Rule's first requirement is that orders for covered accounts be 
transmitted from off the exchange floor. In the context of automated 
trading systems, the Commission has found that the off-floor 
transmission requirement is met if a covered account order is 
transmitted from a remote location directly to an exchange's floor by 
electronic means.\317\ IEX has represented that the IEX Exchange does 
not have a physical trading floor, and the IEX trading system will 
receive orders from members electronically through remote terminals or 
computer-to-computer interfaces.\318\ The Commission believes that the 
IEX trading system satisfies this off-floor transmission requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \317\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 61419 
(January 26, 2010), 75 FR 5157 (February 1, 2010) (SR-BATS-2009-031) 
(approving BATS options trading); 59154 (December 23, 2008), 73 FR 
80468 (December 31, 2008) (SR-BSE-2008-48) (approving equity 
securities listing and trading on BSE); 57478 (March 12, 2008), 73 
FR 14521 (March 18, 2008) (SR-NASDAQ-2007-004 and SR-NASDAQ-2007-
080) (approving NOM options trading); 53128 (January 13, 2006), 71 
FR 3550 (January 23, 2006) (File No. 10-131) (approving The Nasdaq 
Stock Market LLC); 44983 (October 25, 2001), 66 FR 55225 (November 
1, 2001) (SR-PCX-00-25) (approving Archipelago Exchange); 29237 (May 
24, 1991), 56 FR 24853 (May 31, 1991) (SR-NYSE-90-52 and SR-NYSE-90-
53) (approving NYSE's Off-Hours Trading Facility); and 15533 
(January 29, 1979), 44 FR 6084 (January 31, 1979) (``1979 
Release'').
    \318\ See IEX 11(a) Letter, supra note 316.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Second, the Rule requires that the member and any associated person 
not participate in the execution of its order after the order has been 
transmitted. IEX represented that at no time following the submission 
of an order is a member or an associated person of the member able to 
acquire control or influence over the result or timing of the order's 
execution.\319\ According to IEX, the execution of a member's order is 
determined solely by what quotes and orders are present in the system 
at the time the member submits the order, and the order priority based 
on the IEX rules.\320\ Accordingly, the Commission believes that an IEX 
member and its associated persons do not participate in

[[Page 41165]]

the execution of an order submitted to the IEX trading system.\321\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \319\ See IEX 11(a) Letter, supra note 316. IEX notes that a 
member may cancel or modify the order, or modify the instructions 
for executing the order, after the order has been transmitted, 
provided that such cancellations or modifications are transmitted 
from off an exchange floor. The Commission has stated that the non-
participation requirement is satisfied under such circumstances so 
long as such modifications or cancellations are also transmitted 
from off the floor. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 14563 
(March 14, 1978), 43 FR 11542 (March 17, 1978) (``1978 Release'') 
(stating that the ``non-participation requirement does not prevent 
initiating members from canceling or modifying orders (or the 
instructions pursuant to which the initiating member wishes orders 
to be executed) after the orders have been transmitted to the 
executing member, provided that any such instructions are also 
transmitted from off the floor'').
    \320\ See IEX 11(a) Letter, supra note 316. The Commission notes 
that IEX has proposed rules for the registration, obligations, and 
operation of market makers on the IEX Exchange. IEX has represented 
that market makers, if any, would submit quotes in the form of 
orders in their assigned symbols.
    \321\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 58375 
(August 18, 2008), 73 FR 49498, 49505 (August 21, 2008) (approval of 
the BATS Exchange) and 61698 (March 12, 2010), 75 FR 13151, 13164 
(March 28, 2010) (approval of the EDGA and EDGX exchanges).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Third, Rule 11a2-2(T) requires that the order be executed by an 
exchange member who is unaffiliated with the member initiating the 
order. The Commission has stated that this requirement is satisfied 
when automated exchange facilities, such as the IEX trading system, are 
used, as long as the design of these systems ensures that members do 
not possess any special or unique trading advantages in handling their 
orders after transmitting them to the exchange.\322\ IEX has 
represented that the design of the IEX trading system ensures that no 
member has any special or unique trading advantage in the handling of 
its orders after transmitting its orders to IEX.\323\ Based on IEX's 
representation, the Commission believes that the IEX trading system 
satisfies this requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \322\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 58375 
(August 18, 2008), 73 FR 49498, 49505 (August 21, 2008) (approval of 
the BATS Exchange) and 61698 (March 12, 2010), 75 FR 13151, 13164 
(March 28, 2010) (approval of the EDGA and EDGX exchanges). In 
considering the operation of automated execution systems operated by 
an exchange, the Commission noted that, while there is not an 
independent executing exchange member, the execution of an order is 
automatic once it has been transmitted into the system. Because the 
design of these systems ensures that members do not possess any 
special or unique trading advantages in handling their orders after 
transmitting them to the exchange, the Commission has stated that 
executions obtained through these systems satisfy the independent 
execution requirement of Rule 11a2-2(T). See 1979 Release, supra 
note 317.
    \323\ See IEX 11(a) Letter, supra note 316.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Fourth, in the case of a transaction effected for an account with 
respect to which the initiating member or an associated person thereof 
exercises investment discretion, neither the initiating member nor any 
associated person thereof may retain any compensation in connection 
with effecting the transaction, unless the person authorized to 
transact business for the account has expressly provided otherwise by 
written contract referring to Section 11(a) of the Act and Rule 11a2-
2(T) thereunder.\324\ IEX members trading for covered accounts over 
which they exercise investment discretion must comply with this 
condition in order to rely on the rule's exemption.\325\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \324\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 58375 
(August 18, 2008), 73 FR 49498, 49505 (August 21, 2008) (approval of 
the BATS Exchange) and 61698 (March 12, 2010), 75 FR 13151, 13164 
(March 28, 2010) (approval of the EDGA and EDGX exchanges). In 
addition, Rule 11a2-2(T)(d) requires a member or associated person 
authorized by written contract to retain compensation, in connection 
with effecting transactions for covered accounts over which such 
member or associated persons thereof exercises investment 
discretion, to furnish at least annually to the person authorized to 
transact business for the account a statement setting forth the 
total amount of compensation retained by the member or any 
associated person thereof in connection with effecting transactions 
for the account during the period covered by the statement. See 17 
CFR 240.11a2-2(T)(d). See also 1978 Release, supra note 319 (stating 
``[t]he contractual and disclosure requirements are designed to 
assure that accounts electing to permit transaction-related 
compensation do so only after deciding that such arrangements are 
suitable to their interests'').
    \325\ IEX represented that it will advise its membership through 
the issuance of an Information Circular that those members trading 
for covered accounts over which they exercise investment discretion 
must comply with this condition in order to rely on the rule's 
exemption. See IEX 11(a) Letter, supra note 316.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

IV. Exemption From Section 19(b) of the Act With Regard to FINRA Rules 
Incorporated by Reference

    IEX Exchange proposes to incorporate by reference certain FINRA 
rules as IEX rules. Thus, for certain IEX rules, Exchange members will 
comply with an IEX rule by complying with the FINRA rule 
referenced.\326\ In connection with its proposal to incorporate FINRA 
rules by reference, IEX Exchange requested, pursuant to Rule 240.0-
12,\327\ an exemption under Section 36 of the Act from the rule filing 
requirements of Section 19(b) of the Act for changes to those IEX 
Exchange rules that are effected solely by virtue of a change to a 
cross-referenced FINRA rule.\328\ IEX Exchange proposes to incorporate 
by reference categories of rules (rather than individual rules within a 
category) that are not trading rules. IEX Exchange agrees to provide 
written notice to its members whenever a proposed rule change to a 
FINRA rule that is incorporated by reference is proposed and whenever 
any such proposed change is approved by the Commission or otherwise 
becomes effective.\329\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \326\ IEX Exchange proposes to incorporate by reference the 
12000 and 13000 Series of the FINRA Manual (Code of Arbitration 
Procedures for Customer Disputes and Code of Arbitration Procedures 
for Industry Disputes). See IEX Exchange Rule 12.110 (Arbitration). 
In addition, IEX Exchange proposes to incorporate by reference FINRA 
Rules 4360 (Fidelity Bonds), 2090 (Know Your Customer), 2111 
(Suitability), 2210 (Communications with the Public), 3230 
(Telemarketing), 4110 (Capital Requirements), 4120 (Regulatory 
Notification and Business Curtailment), 4140 (Audit), 4511 (General 
Requirements), 4512 (Customer Account Information), 4513 (Records of 
Written Customer Complaints), 3130 (Annual Certification of 
Compliance and Supervisory Procedures), 5270 (Front Running of Block 
Transactions), 7430 (Synchronization of Member Business Clocks), 
7440 (Recording of Order Information), and 7450 (Order Data 
Transmission Requirements) and NASD Rule 3050 (Transactions for or 
by Associated Persons). See IEX Exchange Rules 2.240 (Fidelity 
Bonds), 3.150 (Know Your Customer), 3.170 (Suitability), 3.280 
(Communications with Customers and the Public), 3.292 
(Telemarketing), 4.110 (Financial Condition), 4.120 (Regulatory 
Notification and Business Curtailment), 4.140 (Audit), 4.511 
(General Requirements), 4.512 (Customer Account Information), 4.513 
(Record of Written Customer Complaints), 5.130 (Annual Certification 
of Compliance and Supervisory Procedures), 10.260 (Front Running of 
Block Transactions), 11.420(c), (d) and (e) (Order Audit Trail 
System Requirements), and 5.170 (Transactions for or by Associated 
Persons), respectively.
    \327\ See 17 CFR 240.0-12.
    \328\ See Letter from Sophia Lee, General Counsel, IEX, to Brent 
Fields, Secretary, Commission, dated June 13, 2016.
    \329\ IEX Exchange will provide such notice through a posting on 
the same Web site location where IEX Exchange posts its own rule 
filings pursuant to Rule 19b-4 under the Act, within the required 
time frame. The Web site posting will include a link to the location 
on the FINRA Web site where FINRA's proposed rule change is posted. 
See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Using its authority under Section 36 of the Act,\330\ the 
Commission previously exempted certain SROs from the requirement to 
file proposed rule changes under Section 19(b) of the Act.\331\ The 
Commission is hereby granting IEX Exchange's request for exemption, 
pursuant to Section 36 of the Act, from the rule filing requirements of 
Section 19(b) of the Act with respect to the rules that IEX Exchange 
proposes to incorporate by reference. This exemption is conditioned 
upon IEX Exchange providing written notice to its members whenever 
FINRA proposes to change a rule that IEX Exchange has incorporated by 
reference. The Commission believes that this exemption is appropriate 
in the public interest and consistent with the protection of investors 
because it will promote more efficient use of Commission and SRO 
resources by avoiding duplicative rule filings based on simultaneous 
changes to identical rules sought by more than one SRO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \330\ 15 U.S.C. 78mm.
    \331\ See, e.g., BATS Y Exchange Order and MIAX Exchange Order, 
supra note 30; BATS Exchange Order and DirectEdge Exchanges Order, 
supra note 74.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

V. Conclusion

    It is ordered that the application of IEX Exchange for registration 
as a national securities exchange be, and it hereby is, granted.
    It is furthered ordered that operation of IEX Exchange is 
conditioned on the satisfaction of the requirements below:
    A. Participation in National Market System Plans. IEX Exchange must 
join the CTA Plan, the CQ Plan, the Nasdaq UTP Plan, the Order 
Execution Quality Disclosure Plan, the Plan to Address Extraordinary 
Market Volatility, the Plan to Implement a Tick Size Pilot

[[Page 41166]]

Program, and the Plan Governing the Process of Selecting a Plan 
Processor and Developing a Plan for the Consolidated Audit Trail.
    B. Intermarket Surveillance Group. IEX Exchange must join the 
Intermarket Surveillance Group.
    C. Minor Rule Violation Plan. A MRVP filed by IEX Exchange under 
Rule 19d-1(c)(2) must be declared effective by the Commission.\332\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \332\ 17 CFR 240.19d-1(c)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    D. 17d-2 Agreement. An agreement pursuant to Rule 17d-2 \333\ 
between FINRA and IEX Exchange that allocates to FINRA regulatory 
responsibility for those matters specified above \334\ must be approved 
by the Commission, or IEX Exchange must demonstrate that it 
independently has the ability to fulfill all of its regulatory 
obligations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \333\ 17 CFR 240.17d-2.
    \334\ See supra notes 134-135 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    E. Participation in Multiparty Rule 17d-2 Plans. IEX Exchange must 
become a party to the multiparty Rule 17d-2 agreement concerning the 
surveillance, investigation, and enforcement of common insider trading 
rules.
    F. RSA. IEX Exchange and FINRA must finalize the provisions in the 
RSA, as described above, that will specify the IEX Exchange and 
Commission rules for which FINRA will provide certain regulatory 
functions, or IEX Exchange must demonstrate that it independently has 
the ability to fulfill all of its regulatory obligations.
    It is further ordered, pursuant to Section 36 of the Act,\335\ that 
IEX Exchange shall be exempted from the rule filing requirements of 
Section 19(b) of the Act with respect to the FINRA rules that IEX 
proposes to incorporate by reference into IEX Exchange's rules, subject 
to the conditions specified in this Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \335\ 15 U.S.C. 78mm.

    By the Commission (Chair WHITE and Commissioner STEIN; 
Commissioner PIWOWAR concurring in part and dissenting with respect 
to Sections III.C.7 and III.C.8).
Robert W. Errett,
Deputy Secretary.

Exhibit A

    Comment Letters Received Regarding Investors' Exchange LLC's 
Application for Registration as a National Securities Exchange under 
Section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (File No. 10-222)

Abebe: Letter from Brook Abebe, Dec. 15, 2015.
Abel/Noser: Letter from Eugene Noser, Abel/Noser Corp., Dec. 17, 
2015.
Abfall: Letter from Jeffrey D. Abfall, Dec. 10, 2015.
Addy: Letter from Steven Addy, Dec. 11, 2015.
Aesthetic Integration: Letter from Denis A. Ignatovich and Grant 
Passmore, Co-Founders, Aesthetic Integration Ltd, Nov. 18, 2015.
Agne: Letter from Mike Agne, Dec. 10, 2015.
Ahlfeld: Letter from Ryan Ahlfeld, Dec. 14, 2015.
Akbar: Letter from Imran Akbar, Dec. 14, 2015.
Albert: Letter from Jean Albert, Dec. 15, 2015.
Angel: Letter from James J. Angel, Ph.D., Associate Professor, 
McDonough School of Business, Georgetown University, Dec. 5, 2015.
Anonymous December 5: Letter from Anonymous, Dec. 5, 2015.
Anonymous December 14: Letter from Anonymous, Dec. 14, 2015.
Anonymous Second December 14: Letter from Anonymous, Dec. 14, 2015.
Anonymous March 14: Letter from Anonymous, Mar. 14, 2016.
Anonymous March 18: Letter from Anonymous, Mar. 18, 2016.
Anonymous June 16: Letter from Anonymous, June 16, 2016.
Arens: Letter from Richard Arens, Dec. 10, 2015.
Armand: Letter from Barry Armand, Dec. 13, 2015.
Arnold: Letter from Lonnie Arnold, Jr., Feb. 2, 2016.
Asset Owners/Investment Managers March 21: Letter from Kevin 
McCreadie, President and CIO, AGF Investment Inc.; Steve Berexa, 
Global CIO Equity, Allianz Global Investors; Bryan Thomson, Senior 
Vice President, Public Equities, British Columbia Investment 
Management; Faith Ward, Chief Responsible Investment and Risk 
Officer, Environment Agency Pension Fund; Michelle de Cordova, 
Director, Corporate Engagement Public Policy, ESG Services, NEI 
Investments; Oyvind Schanke, CIO Asset Strategies, Norges Bank 
Investment Management; and David H. Zellner, Chief Investment 
Officer, Wespath Investment Management, Mar. 21, 2016.
Baggins: Letter from Roger Baggins, Feb. 2, 2016.
Baird: Letter from Ritchie Baird, Jan. 3, 2016.
Baker: Letter from Christopher Baker, Dec. 11, 2015.
Ballestrand: Letter from Bill Ballestrand, Dec. 14, 2015.
Bardini: Letter from Marguerite Bardini, Dec. 14, 2015.
Barry: Letter from Catherine Barry, Jan. 2, 2016.
Barth: Letter from Donald J. Barth, Mar. 4, 2016.
BATS First: Letter from Eric Swanson, EVP and General Counsel, BATS 
Global Markets, Inc., Nov. 3, 2015.
BATS Second: Letter from Eric Swanson, EVP and General Counsel, BATS 
Global Markets, Inc., Dec. 20, 2015.
BATS Third: Letter from Eric Swanson, EVP and General Counsel, BATS 
Global Markets, Inc., Feb. 11, 2016.
Bautista: Letter from Barry Bautista, June 17, 2016.
Ben D.: Letter from Ben D., Mar. 20, 2016.
Benites: Letter from Roger Benites, Dec. 13, 2015.
Bensky: Letter from Jonathan Bensky, Mar. 3, 2016.
Berrizbeitia: Letter from Luis Berrizbeitia, Dec. 14, 2015.
Bilyea: Letter from Robert Bilyea, Dec. 17, 2015.
Bingham: Letter from George B. Bingham, Jan. 8, 2016.
Birch Bay: Letter from Michael Jacejko, Chief Executive Manager, 
Birch Bay Capital, LLC, Nov. 6, 2015.
Black: Letter from Wade Black, Dec. 17, 2015.
Boatman: Letter from Peter L. Boatman, June 3, 2016.
Bodenstab: Letter from Jeffrey Bodenstab, Dec. 19, 2015.
Bogdan: Letter from Michael Bogdan, Dec. 15, 2015.
Bohr: Letter from Vincent Bohr, Dec. 11, 2015.
Boittiaux: Letter from Thomas Boittiaux, Apr. 22, 2016.
Borbridge: Letter from Harold Borbridge, Dec. 13, 2015.
Bova: Letter from Nicholas M. Bova, Dec. 14, 2015.
Bowcott: Letter from Mike Bowcott, Dec. 9, 2015.
Boyce: Letter from Edward J. Boyce, Dec. 14, 2015.
Brennan: Letter from Michael Brennan, Dec. 16, 2015.
Brenner: Letter from Daniel S. Brenner, Dec. 14, 2015.
Brian S.: Letter from Brian S., Dec. 10, 2015.
Broder: Letter from Michael K. Broder, Jan. 9, 2016.
Bruin: Letter from Eric Bruin, Dec. 16, 2015.
Buckingham: Letter from Mallory Buckingham, Dec. 15, 2015.
Budish: Letter from Eric Budish, Professor of Economics, University 
of Chicago Booth School of Business, Feb. 5, 2016.
Burger: Letter from Ronald J. Burger, Dec. 19, 2015.
Burgess: Letter from Jack M. Burgess, Dec. 26, 2015.
Byrnes: Letter from Jannette Byrnes, Dec. 13, 2015.
CalSTRS: Letter from Anne Sheehan, Director of Corporate Governance, 
California State Teachers' Retirement System, Mar. 10, 2016.
Campbell: Letter from Mike Campbell, Dec. 15, 2015.
Cantori: Letter from John Cantori, Dec. 11, 2015.
Capital Group: Letter from Timothy D. Armour, Chairman, The Capital 
Group Companies, Sep. 29, 2015.
Carper: Letter from Carol Carper, Dec. 27, 2015.
Chen & Foley: Letter from Haoming Chen and Sean Foley, Ph.D., Feb. 
24, 2016.
Chesler: Letter from Dan Chesler, Dec. 15, 2015.
Chilson: Letter from Cody J. Chilson, Dec. 10, 2015.
Chung and Jeon: Letter from Michael Chung and Jayoung Jeon, Apr. 10, 
2016.
Chung: Letter from Charles Chung, Dec. 15, 2015.

[[Page 41167]]

Citadel First: Letter from John C. Nagel, Esq., Managing Director 
and Sr. Deputy General Counsel, Citadel LLC, Nov. 6, 2015.
Citadel Second: Letter from John C. Nagel, Esq., Managing Director 
and Sr. Deputy General Counsel, Citadel LLC, Nov. 30, 2015.
Citadel Third: Letter from John C. Nagel, Esq., Managing Director 
and Sr. Deputy General Counsel, Citadel LLC, Dec. 7, 2015.
Citadel Fourth: Letter from John C. Nagel, Esq., Managing Director 
and Sr. Deputy General Counsel, Citadel LLC, Feb. 23, 2016.
Citadel Fifth: Letter from John C. Nagel, Esq., Managing Director 
and Sr. Deputy General Counsel, Citadel LLC, Apr. 14, 2016.
Clark B.: Letter from Bruce R. Clark, Ph.D., Dec. 22, 2015.
Clark J. First: Letter from James T. Clark, Jr., Dec. 11, 2015.
Clark J. Second: Letter from James T. Clark, Jr., Dec. 15, 2015.
Clark K.: Letter from Kyle Clark, Dec. 14, 2015.
Cobb: Letter from Jeffrey Cobb, Feb. 13, 2016.
Coe: Letter from Charles R. Coe, Dec. 10, 2015.
Colbert: Letter from Stephen Colbert, Dec. 10, 2015.
Cole: Letter from Rebecca A. Cole, Mar. 20, 2016.
Conklin: Letter from J.J. Conklin, Jan. 5, 2016.
Connolly: Letter from Francis A. Connolly, III, Feb. 2, 2016.
Cook: Letter from Aran Cook, Dec. 14, 2015.
Copelan: Letter from Julie Copelan, Feb. 22, 2016.
Cowen: Letter from Jeffrey M. Solomon, President, Daniel Charney, 
Managing Director and Head of Equities, and John Cosenza, Managing 
Director & Head of Electronic Trading, Cowen Group, Inc., Nov. 2, 
2015.
Cox First: Letter from Steven M. Cox, Dec. 10, 2015.
Cox Second: Letter from Steven M. Cox, Feb. 2, 2016.
CPMG: Letter from John E. Bateman, Chief Operating Officer, CPMG, 
Inc., Jan. 5, 2016.
Crespo: Letter from Pablo Crespo, Dec. 10, 2015.
Cull: Letter from Stephanie Cull, Mar. 31, 2016.
Curtin: Letter from Kim Ann Curtin, Jan. 15, 2016.
D.B.: Letter from D.B., Apr. 5, 2016.
Dall: Letter from Cindy Dall, May 11, 2016.
Daniels: Letter from Larry Daniels, Jan. 23, 2016.
Deccristifaro: Letter from Aj Deccristifaro, Feb. 21, 2016.
Delaney: Letter from Stephen W. Delaney, Jan. 1, 2016.
Demos: Letter from Mark Demos, Dec. 16, 2015.
DePoorter: Letter from Walter DePoorter, Dec. 14, 2015.
DeVito: Letter from David J. DeVito, Dec. 10, 2015.
Direct Match: Letter from Jim Greco, CEO, Direct Match, Feb. 24, 
2016.
Discepola: Letter from Domenico Discepola, Dec. 11, 2015.
Dole: Letter from William Dole, Dec. 14, 2015.
Doran: Letter from Brendan Doran, Dec. 13, 2015.
Dover: Letter from Roland Dover, Jan. 31, 2016.
Doyle L.: Letter from Larry Doyle , Dec. 14, 2015.
Doyle T.: Letter from Thomas Doyle, Jan. 21, 2016.
Duffy: Letter from Representative Sean P. Duffy, Jan. 21, 2016.
Dukelow: Letter from James S. Dukelow, Jr., Dec. 18, 2015.
Dwork: Letter from Nicholas Dwork, Jan. 27, 2016.
Eric K.: Letter from Eric K., Feb. 16, 2016.
Estate: Letter from Carlos J. Estate, Feb. 28, 2016.
Eustace: Letter from Mark Eustace, Dec. 13, 2015.
Farallon Capital Management: Letter from Andrew J.M. Spokes, 
Managing Partner, Farallon Capital Management, LLC, Mar. 2, 2016.
Feldscher: Letter from Stephen Feldscher, Mar. 22, 2016.
Ferber: Letter from William Ferber, May 7, 2016.
fi360: Letter from Blaine F. Aikin, Executive Chairman, J. Richard 
Lynch, Director, and Duane R. Thompson, Senior Policy Analyst, 
fi360, Inc., Jan. 5, 2016.
FIA First: Letter from Mary Ann Burns, Chief Operating Officer, FIA 
Principal Traders Group, Nov. 6, 2015.
FIA Second: Letter from Mary Ann Burns, Chief Operating Officer, FIA 
Principal Traders Group, Mar. 3, 2016.
Fields: Letter from Byron Fields, Jan. 13, 2016.
Filabi: Letter from Azish Filabi, Feb. 3, 2016.
Finley: Letter from Ted Finley, Dec. 14, 2015.
Franklin Templeton Investments: Letter from Madison S. Gulley, EVP, 
Head of Investment Management Strategic Services, William J. 
Stephenson IV, SVP, Global Head of Trading, David A. Lewis, SVP, 
Head of Americas Trading, Benjamin Batory, SVP, Head of U.S. 
Trading, and Craig S. Tyle, EVP, General Counsel, Franklin Templeton 
Investments, Feb. 12, 2016.
Franz: Letter from John P. Franz, Feb. 25, 2016.
Froehlich: Letter from Paul Froehlich, Dec. 10, 2015.
Gai: Letter from Robert Gai, Feb. 24, 2016.
Gannon: Letter from James Gannon, Dec. 10, 2015.
Geduld: Letter from E.E. Geduld, Dec. 18, 2015.
Gibbons P.: Letter from Peter Gibbons, Dec. 10, 2015.
Gibbons T.: Letter from Toni Gibbons, Dec. 14, 2015.
Gibson Dunn: Letter from Amir C. Tayrani, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher 
LLP, May 19, 2016.
Giguere: Letter from John Giguere, Dec. 14, 2015.
Gilliland and Goodlander: Letter from Jason Gilliland and Maggie 
Goodlander, Apr. 14, 2016.
Givehchi: Letter from Mehran Givehchi, Dec. 14, 2015.
Glatt: Letter from Alex Glatt, Dec. 14, 2015.
Glennon: Letter from Allan Glennon, Dec. 10, 2015.
Gloy First: Letter from Alexander Gloy, Dec. 10, 2015.
Gloy Second: Letter from Alexander Gloy, Dec. 15, 2015.
Godden: Letter from Daniel Godden, May 31, 2016.
Godonis: Letter from Anthony Godonis, Jan. 28, 2016.
Gold: Letter from James J. Gold, Jan. 9, 2016.
Goldman Sachs: Letter from Paul M. Russo, Managing Director, 
Equities, Goldman, Sachs & Co., Jan. 12, 2016.
Gordon: Letter from Doug Gordon, Dec. 13, 2015.
Goswami: Letter from Binoo Goswami, Jan. 24, 2016.
Gough: Letter from William S. Gough, Jan. 22, 2016.
Grant: Letter from John Grant, Dec. 13, 2015.
Green: Letter from Jordan Green, Feb. 9, 2016.
Grey: Letter from Richard M. Grey, Feb. 23, 2016.
Guertin: Letter from Robert Guertin, Dec. 11, 2015.
Hall: Letter from Lori Hall, Dec. 13, 2015.
Hamadyk: Letter from Zach Hamadyk, Dec. 19, 2015.
Hamlin: Letter from David Hamlin, Dec. 19, 2015.
Hammermill: Letter from Winston Hammermill, Jan. 22, 2016.
Hammond: Letter from Shaun Hammond, Feb. 21, 2016.
Hand: Letter from David A. Hand, Jan. 27, 2016.
Harbort: Letter from Timothy S. Harbort, Dec. 11, 2015.
Harrison: Letter from Daniel Harrison, Dec. 19, 2015.
Hartley: Letter from Kirk T. Hartley, Dec. 13, 2015.
Hasan: Letter from Nidal Hasan, Dec. 17, 2015.
Hawley: Letter from James Hawley, Dec. 14, 2015.
Haydel: Letter from Christopher J. Haydel, Dec. 11, 2015.
Healthy Markets: Letter from David Lauer, Chairman, Healthy Markets 
Association, Nov. 6, 2015.
Hedgepath: Letter from Brandon D. Hedgepath, Dec. 11, 2015.
Henderson First: Letter from Hazel Henderson, President and Founder, 
Ethical Markets Media, Jan. 5, 2016.
Henderson Second: Letter from Hazel Henderson, President and 
Founder, Ethical Markets Media, Jan. 5, 2016.
Henderson Third: Letter from Hazel Henderson, President and Founder, 
Ethical Markets Media, Jan. 5, 2016.
Henry: Letter from Patrick Henry, Dec. 19, 2015.
Hibernia: Letter from Emma Hibernia, Dec. 23, 2015.
Hiester: Letter from Christopher Hiester, Dec. 14, 2015.
Holden First: Letter from C.M. Holden, Dec. 13, 2015.
Holden Second: Letter from C.M. Holden, Dec. 14, 2015.
Hollinger: Letter from Nancy Hollinger, Feb. 8, 2016.
Hooper: Letter from Donald C. Hooper, Feb. 22, 2016.

[[Page 41168]]

Hovanec First: Letter from Ron Hovanec, Dec. 10, 2015.
Hovanec Second: Letter from Ron Hovanec, Dec. 14, 2015.
Hovanec Third: Letter from Ron Hovanec, Feb. 1, 2016.
Hovanec Fourth: Letter from Ron Hovanec, Feb. 2, 2016.
Hovanec Fifth: Letter from Ron Hovanec, Feb. 25, 2016.
Hovanec Sixth: Letter from Ron Hovanec, Feb. 26, 2016.
Hovanec Seventh: Letter from Ron Hovanec, Mar. 9, 2016.
Howarth: Letter from Charles Howarth, Dec. 10, 2015.
Hudson River Trading First: Letter from Adam Nunes, Head of Business 
Development, Hudson River Trading LLC, Dec. 4, 2015.
Hudson River Trading Second: Letter from Adam Nunes, Head of 
Business Development, Hudson River Trading LLC, Jan. 7, 2016.
Huff: Letter from TE Huff, Dec. 15, 2015.
Hunsacker: Letter from Derick Hunsacker, Dec. 11, 2015.
Ianni: Letter from Mike Ianni, Dec. 10, 2015.
Ierardo First: Letter from Mark Ierardo, Dec. 11, 2015.
Ierardo Second: Letter from Mark Ierardo, Dec. 16, 2015.
Instinet: Letter from John Comerford, Executive Managing Director, 
Global Head of Trading Research, Instinet Holdings Incorporated, 
Mar. 2, 2016.
Israel: Letter from Representative Steve Israel, June 16, 2016.
Iyer First: Letter from Sree Iyer, Dec. 14, 2015.
Iyer Second: Letter from Sree Iyer, Dec. 20, 2015.
Jacobson: Letter from Cameron Jacobson, Dec. 10, 2015.
James G.: Letter from James G., Dec. 15, 2015.
Janson: Letter from Susan C. Janson, Feb. 4, 2016.
Jefferies: Letter from Jefferies LLC, Jan. 14, 2016.
Jicmon: Letter from Laurentiu I. Jicmon, Ph.D., Dec. 10, 2015.
John J.: Letter from Jacob John, Mar. 17, 2016.
John M.: Letter from Mike John, Dec. 10, 2015.
John P.: Letter from Pramod John, Ph.D., Jan. 29, 2016.
Johnson: Letter from Robert S. Johnson, May 27, 2016.
Jon D.: Letter from Jon D., Dec. 23, 2015.
Jones C.: Letter from Charles M. Jones, Robert W. Lear Professor of 
Finance and Economics, Columbia Business School, Mar. 2, 2016.
Jones S.: Letter from Sam F. Jones, Dec. 15, 2015.
Joshi: Letter from Kishore A. Joshi, Feb. 5, 2016.
Julos: Letter from Jena A. Julos, Dec. 16, 2015.
Jurgens: Letter from Daniel T. Jurgens, Dec. 10, 2015.
Kaeuper: Letter from Steve Kaeuper, Dec. 19, 2015.
Kara: Letter from Faizal Kara, Dec. 14, 2015.
Katz: Letter from Sondra Katz, Dec. 17, 2015.
Kaye: Letter from Greg Kaye, Dec. 15, 2015.
Kearney: Letter from Michael Kearney, Dec. 14, 2015.
Keblish First: Letter from Peter Keblish, Dec. 9, 2015.
Keblish Second: Letter from Peter Keblish, Dec. 10, 2015.
Keenan: Letter from Chris Keenan, Dec. 18, 2015.
Kelly: Letter from John A. Kelly, Dec. 14, 2015.
Kendall: Letter from Jack R. Kendall, Feb. 4, 2016.
Kennedy First: Letter from Matthew Kennedy, Dec. 10, 2015.
Kennedy Second: Letter from Matthew Kennedy, Dec. 16, 2015.
Kenyon: Letter from Andrew Kenyon, Dec. 14, 2015.
Kiely: Letter from Philip Kiely, Mar. 17, 2016.
Kiessling: Letter from David Kiessling, Dec. 14, 2015.
Kim: Letter from Seong-Han Kim, Ph.D., Dec. 16, 2015.
King First: Letter from Toby King, Dec. 10, 2015.
King Second: Letter from Toby King, Dec. 13, 2015.
King Third: Letter from Toby King, Dec. 31, 2015.
AK Financial Engineering Consultants First: Letter from Abraham 
Kohen, President, AK Financial Engineering Consultants LLC, Mar. 11, 
2016.
AK Financial Engineering Consultants Second: Letter from Abraham 
Kohen, President, AK Financial Engineering Consultants LLC, Apr. 25, 
2016.
Lafayette: Letter from Marcus Lafayette, Dec. 28, 2015.
Lancastle: Letter from Neil M. Lancastle, Senior Lecturer, 
Accounting and Finance, De Montfort University, Dec. 21, 2015.
Landis Kenesaw: Letter from Kenesaw Landis, Feb. 9, 2016.
Landis Kenneth: Letter from Kenneth Landis, Jan. 1, 2016.
Lantry: Letter from Jackie Lantry, Dec. 14, 2015.
Larson: Letter from Brian C. Larson, Dec. 22, 2015.
Laub: Letter from Craig B. Laub, Dec. 18, 2015.
Lazarus: Letter from Steve Lazarus, Dec. 14, 2015.
Lee F.: Letter from Francis Lee, Jan. 8, 2016.
Lee S.: Letter from Sang Lee, Dec. 10, 2015.
Leeson: Letter from Brock Leeson, Jan. 15, 2016.
Leff: Letter from Bruce Leff, Dec. 26, 2015.
Leino: Letter from Scott Leino, Dec. 29, 2015.
Leuchtkafer First: Letter from R.T. Leuchtkafer, Nov. 20, 2015.
Leuchtkafer Second: Letter from R.T. Leuchtkafer, Feb. 19, 2016.
Levi: Letter from J.D. Levi, Dec. 11, 2015.
Levy: Letter from Steven A. Levy, Dec. 14, 2015.
Lewis: Letter from Michael Lewis, Dec. 12, 2015.
Lewkovich: Letter from Robert Lewkovich, Dec. 14, 2015.
Liquidnet: Letter from Seth Merrin, Founder and CEO, Liquidnet 
Holdings, Feb. 23, 2016.
Loh: Letter from Roger Loh, Jan. 11, 2016.
Long: Letter from Richard Long, Jan. 15, 2016.
Loomis: Letter from David Loomis, Dec. 16, 2015.
Luce First: Letter from Steve Luce, Dec. 10, 2015.
Luce Second: Letter from Steve Luce, Dec. 12, 2015.
Luoma: Letter from Jeremiah Luoma, Professor of Economics, Finlandia 
University, Dec. 17, 2015.
Lupinski: Letter from Ryan Lupinski, Jan. 22, 2016.
Lynch: Letter from Representative Stephen F. Lynch, Jan. 8, 2016.
Lysko: Letter from Greg Lysko, May 21, 2016.
Mack: Letter from Carol Mack, Jan. 31, 2016.
MacLeod: Letter from Neil MacLeod, Dec. 17, 2015.
Mannheim: Letter from Lou Mannheim, Dec. 12, 2015.
Manushi First: Letter from Ektrit Manushi, Dec. 24, 2015.
Manushi Second: Letter from Ektrit Manushi, Dec. 29, 2015.
Maqbool: Letter from Massoud Maqbool, May 26, 2016.
Markit First: Letter from David Weisberger, Managing Director, 
Markit, Dec. 23, 2015.
Markit Second: Letter from David Weisberger, Managing Director, 
Markit, Feb. 16, 2016.
Marquez: Letter from Thelma Marquez, Dec. 14, 2015.
McCannon: Letter from Xavier McCannon, Dec. 13, 2015.
McCarty: Letter from David McCarty, Dec. 16, 2015.
McCloskey: Letter from Michael J. McCloskey, Esq., Dec. 14, 2015.
McGeer: Letter from Jim McGeer, Dec. 10, 2015.
McGeorge: Letter from Don W. McGeorge, Jan. 4, 2016.
McGowan: Letter from D.S. McGowan, Dec. 10, 2015.
McHugh: Letter from James McHugh, Dec. 17, 2015.
Meeks: Letter from Thomas Meeks, Dec. 10, 2015.
Mehlmann: Letter from Tino Mehlmann, Dec. 10, 2015.
Melin: Letter from Mark H. Melin, Dec. 11, 2015.
Meskill: Letter from Duncan S. Meskill, Dec. 10, 2015.
Metzger: Letter from Andrew Metzger, Mar. 5, 2016.
Meyer: Letter from James Meyer, Dec. 10, 2015.
Michail: Letter from Theocharis Michail, Mar. 7, 2016.
Michel: Letter from Daniel Michel, Feb. 22, 2016.
Millard: Letter from Sean Millard, Dec. 10, 2015.
Milligan: Letter from Christopher Milligan, Dec. 23, 2015.
Modern Markets: Letter from William R. Harts, CEO, Modern Markets 
Initiative, Dec. 3, 2015.
ModernIR: Letter from Tim Quast , President, ModernNetworks IR LLC, 
Dec. 7, 2015.
Mollner: Letter from Terry Mollner, Jan. 7, 2016.
Montes: Letter from David J. Montes, Dec. 15, 2015.
Moore: Letter from Dylan Moore, Feb. 28, 2016.

[[Page 41169]]

Morgan: Letter from Daniel Morgan, Dec. 15, 2015.
Morris: Letter from Kelly Morris, Apr. 9, 2016.
Morrow: Letter from Benjamin B. Morrow, Jan. 22, 2016.
Moses: Letter from Matt Moses, Dec. 15, 2015.
Mulson: Letter from Danny Mulson, Dec. 15, 2015.
Murphy: Letter from Ann Murphy, Associate Dean, Undergraduate 
Studies, School of Business, Stevens Institute of Technology, Nov. 
6, 2015.
Murray: Letter from Lynn G. Murray, Dec. 29, 2015.
Nagel: Letter from Jeff Nagel, Jan. 8, 2016.
Nakamura: Letter from Tomohiko Nakamura, Feb. 20, 2016.
Nanex First: Letter from Eric S. Hunsader, CEO, Nanex, LLC, Dec. 14, 
2015.
Nanex Second: Letter from Eric S. Hunsader, CEO, Nanex, LLC, Jan. 
20, 2016.
Nanex Third: Letter from Eric S. Hunsader, CEO, Nanex, LLC, Jan. 25, 
2016.
Nasca: Letter from Mark J. Nasca, Jan. 8, 2016.
Nasdaq First: Letter from Joan C. Conley, Senior Vice President and 
Corporate Secretary, Nasdaq, Inc., Nov. 10, 2015.
Nasdaq Second: Letter from Joan C. Conley, Senior Vice President and 
Corporate Secretary, Nasdaq, Inc., Jan. 29, 2016.
Nasdaq Third: Letter from Joan C. Conley, Senior Vice President and 
Corporate Secretary, Nasdaq, Inc., Mar. 16, 2016.
Navari First: Letter from David Navari, Oct. 26, 2015.
Navari Second: Letter from David Navari, Dec. 15, 2015.
Navari Third: Letter from David Navari, Feb. 22, 2016.
Newman: Letter from Lance Newman, Dec. 15, 2015.
Nicholas: Letter from Patrick Nicholas, Apr. 20, 2016.
Nicolas F.: Letter from Nicolas F., Dec. 10, 2015.
Nispel First: Letter from Mark Nispel, Ph.D., Dec. 10, 2015.
Nispel Second: Letter from Mark Nispel, Ph.D, Dec. 14, 2015.
Nixon: Letter from Kasumi Nixon, Jan. 14, 2016.
Noack: Letter from Jared Noack, Dec. 12, 2015.
Noakes: Letter from Nate Noakes, Dec. 15, 2015.
Norges Bank: Letter from Oeyvind G. Schanke, CIO, Asset Strategies, 
and Simon Emrich, Lead Analyst, Norges Bank Investment Management, 
Dec. 16, 2015.
Nye: Letter from Joseph J. Nye, Dec. 15, 2015.
NYSE First: Letter from Elizabeth King, General Counsel and 
Corporate Secretary, New York Stock Exchange, Nov. 12, 2015.
NYSE Second: Letter from Elizabeth King, General Counsel and 
Corporate Secretary, New York Stock Exchange, Feb. 8, 2016.
NYSE Third: Letter from Elizabeth King, General Counsel & Secretary, 
New York Stock Exchange, Apr. 18, 2016.
NYSE Fourth: Letter from Elizabeth King, General Counsel & 
Secretary, New York Stock Exchange, Apr. 27, 2016.
NYSTRS: Letter from Thomas Lee, Executive Director and Chief 
Investment Officer, and Fred Herrmann, Managing Director of Public 
Equities, New York State Teachers' Retirement System, Feb. 26, 2016.
O'Connor Letter from Peter O'Connor, Dec. 14, 2015.
O'Malley: Letter from William J. O'Malley, Feb. 5, 2016.
O'Neill: Letter from Robert O'Neill, Dec. 19, 2015.
Odom: Letter from Terry Odom, Feb. 23, 2016.
Olson: Letter from Greg Olson, Dec. 14, 2015.
Oltean: Letter from Ieronim Oltean, Dec. 10, 2015.
Oorjitham: Letter from Jeyan D. Oorjitham, Jan. 30, 2016.
Oppenheimer Funds: Letter from Krishna Memant, Executive Vice 
President & Chief Investment Officer, George R. Evans, Senior Vice 
President & Chief Investment Officer of Equities, Keith Spencer, 
Head of Equity Trading & Senior Vice President, and John Boydell, 
Manager of Equity Trading & Vice President, OppenheimerFunds, Inc., 
Nov. 5, 2015.
Papas: Letter from Gregory P. Papas, Dec. 16, 2015.
Park: Letter from Danielle Park, Dec. 10, 2015.
Parks: Letter from Gaelle Parks, Dec. 14, 2015.
Patton C.: Letter from Charles D. Patton, Dec. 14, 2015.
Patton H.D.: Letter from H.D. Patton, Dec. 14, 2015.
Paulikot: Letter from Cameron F. Paulikot, Jan. 12, 2016.
Pavkovic: Letter from Ivan Pavkovic, Dec. 17, 2015.
PDQ Enterprises: Letter from D. Keith Ross, Jr., Chairman and CEO, 
PDQ Enterprises, LLC, Mar. 16, 2016.
Peck: Letter from Bob Peck, Dec. 30, 2015.
Penkman: Letter from David Penkman, Dec. 14, 2015.
Peppers: Letter from Emmet Peppers, Dec. 10, 2015.
Phelps: Letter from Robert C. Phelps, Dec. 13, 2015.
Philip: Letter from Richard Philip, Ph.D., Lecturer of Finance, 
University of Sydney, Feb. 9, 2016.
Phillips: Letter from Jeff Phillips, Dec. 17, 2015.
Pierce: Letter from William E. Pierce, Dec. 15, 2015.
Place: Letter from James C. Place, Mar. 16, 2016.
Plant: Letter from Phillip M. Plant, Jan. 8, 2016.
Poots: Letter from Emanuel Poots, Dec. 20, 2015.
Powell: Letter from David R. Powell, Jan. 5, 2016.
Pratt: Letter from William Pratt, Dec. 11, 2015.
Prihodka: Letter from Jonathan M. Prihodka, Feb. 8, 2016.
Prosser G.: Letter from Gabriel Prosser, Feb. 18, 2016.
Prosser W.: Letter from Warren Prosser, Feb. 2, 2016.
Proto: Letter from Paul E. Proto, Feb. 3, 2016.
PSRS/PEERS: Letter from Craig A. Husting, Chief Investment Officer, 
Public School & Education Employee Retirement Systems of Missouri, 
Mar. 22, 2016.
Punt: Letter from Ryan L. Punt, Dec. 10, 2015.
Quinlan: Letter from Michael Quinlan, Dec. 13, 2015.
Rademaker: Letter from Jaap Rademaker, Dec. 23, 2015.
Rainbeau: Letter from David Rainbeau, Dec. 10, 2015.
Raju: Letter from Muralidhara Raju, Mar. 1, 2016.
Ramirez First: Letter from Joe Ramirez, Dec. 10, 2015.
Ramirez Second: Letter from Joe Ramirez, Dec. 12, 2015.
Rayner: Letter from Geoff Rayner, Jan. 14, 2016.
Reich: Letter from Kyle Reich, Dec. 11, 2015.
Renterman: Letter from Lemco Renterman, Dec. 14, 2015.
Reynoso: Letter from J.W. Reynoso, Dec. 10, 2015.
Robeson: Letter from Paul Robeson, Jan. 8, 2016.
Romani: Letter from Marina Romani, Mar. 17, 2016.
Romer: Letter from Chris Romer, Mar. 25, 2016.
Rosson: Letter from Joseph C. Rosson, Sr., Dec. 14, 2015.
Rothschild: Letter from Evan Rothschild, Dec. 14, 2015.
Rowley: Letter from Robert P. Rowley, Jan. 5, 2016.
Rundle: Letter from John B. Rundle, Professor of Physics, University 
of California, Davis, Dec. 31, 2015.
Sadera: Letter from Ernest Sadera, Dec. 16, 2015.
Sakato: Letter from Stacius Sakato, Feb. 15, 2016.
Sanitate: Letter from Frank Sanitate, Dec. 14, 2015.
Sarly: Letter from Alex E. Sarly, Mar. 18, 2016.
Scalici: Letter from Giovanni Scalici, Dec. 11, 2015.
Schlinger: Letter from Charles M. Schlinger, Dec. 15, 2015.
Schroeder M.: Letter from Michael A. Schroeder, Jan. 8, 2016.
Schroeder R. First: Letter from Roy Schroeder, Dec. 11, 2015.
Schroeder R. Second: Letter from Roy Schroeder, Dec. 13, 2015.
Schroeder R. Third: Letter from Roy Schroeder, Dec. 14, 2015.
Schwarz: Letter from Robert Schwarz, Jan. 8, 2016.
Schwefel: Letter from Scott Schwefel, Dec. 11, 2015.
Scott: Letter from Representative David Scott, Feb. 1, 2016.
Seabolt: Letter from Louie H. Seabolt, Feb. 22, 2016.
Seal: Letter from Matthew Seal, Dec. 11, 2015.
Seals: Letter from Devin F. Seals, Dec. 19, 2015.
Secrist: Letter from Kyle Secrist, Dec. 9, 2015.
Sethi: Letter from Rajiv Sethi, Professor of Economics, Barnard 
College, Columbia University, Jan. 3, 2016.
Sevcik: Letter from Karel Sevcik, Dec. 14, 2015.
Seward: Letter from William Seward, Jan. 3, 2016.

[[Page 41170]]

Shamess: Letter from Albie Shamess, Dec. 11, 2015.
Shapurjee: Letter from Rohintan Shapurjee, Feb. 2, 2016.
Shatto First: Letter from Suzanne Shatto, Oct. 7, 2015.
Shatto Second: Letter from Suzanne Shatto, Nov. 16, 2015.
Shatto Third: Letter from Suzanne Shatto, Dec. 7, 2015.
Shatto Fourth: Letter from Suzanne Shatto, Jan. 26, 2016.
Shaw: Letter from Robert Shaw, Jan. 21, 2016.
Sherman: Letter from Representative Brad Sherman, Mar. 7, 2016.
Sillcox: Letter from Robert L. Sillcox, Dec. 14, 2015.
Silva: Letter from Lucas S. Silva, Dec. 14, 2015.
Silver: Letter from David Silver, Feb. 8, 2016.
Simonelis: Letter from Alex Simonelis, Sep. 22, 2015.
Sinclair: Letter from Karen Sinclair, Mar. 15, 2016.
Sjoding: Letter from David W. Sjoding, Mar. 8, 2016.
Slosberg: Letter from Daniel D. Slosberg, Dec. 13, 2015.
Smith C.: Letter from Cale Smith, Jan. 23, 2016.
Smith G.: Letter from Gennifer Smith, Feb. 7, 2016.
Smith J.: Letter from James S. Smith, Dec. 10, 2015.
Smith N.: Letter from Nate Smith, Mar. 10, 2016.
Southeastern: Letter from O. Mason Hawkins, Chairman & CEO, Richard 
W. Hussey, Principal & COO, Deborah L. Craddock, Principal & Head of 
Trading, Jeffrey D. Engelberg, Principal & Senior Trader, and W. 
Douglas Schrank, Principal & Senior Trader, Southeastern Asset 
Management, Inc., Sep. 30, 2015.
Spear: Letter from Thomas C. Spear, Feb. 2, 2016.
Squires: Letter from Anthony Squires, Dec. 18, 2015.
Stanton: Letter from Carol A. Stanton, Feb. 22, 2016.
Stearns: Letter from Ian Stearns, Dec. 14, 2015.
Stehura: Letter from Tom Stehura, Feb. 2, 2016.
Stein J.: Letter from Jonathan Stein, Dec. 31, 2015.
Stein N.: Letter from Nicholas C. Stein, Jan. 6, 2016.
Steinham: Letter from Jackson Steinham, Dec. 11, 2015.
Stephens: Letter from Barry Stephens, Dec. 10, 2015.
Stevenin: Letter from Cynthia Stevenin, Dec. 10, 2015.
Stevens E.: Letter from Eric J. Stevens, Dec. 13, 2015.
Stevens J.: Letter from John Stevens, Dec. 27, 2015.
Stevens X.: Letter from Xavier Stevens, Dec. 9, 2015.
Stoesser: Letter from James C. Stoesser, Dec. 14, 2015.
Stork: Letter from Benjamin M. Stork, Mar. 27, 2016.
Street: Letter from Carol Street, Feb. 10, 2016.
Strom: Letter from Marlys Strom, Dec. 18, 2015.
Strongilis: Letter from Ioannis D. Strongilis, Dec. 12, 2015.
Sullivan: Letter from Brian S. Sullivan, Jan. 3, 2016.
Summers: Letter from Timothy Summers, Dec. 13, 2015.
T. Rowe Price: Letter from Clive Williams, Vice President and Global 
Head of Trading, Andrew M. Brooks, Vice President and Head of U.S. 
Equity Trading, and Christopher P. Hayes, Vice President and Legal 
Counsel, T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., Dec. 24, 2015.
TABB: Letter from Larry Tabb, CEO, TABB Group, Nov. 23, 2015.
Themis First: Letter from Sal Arnuk and Joe Saluzzi, Themis Trading 
LLC, Nov. 3, 2015.
Themis Second: Letter from Sal Arnuk and Joe Saluzzi, Themis Trading 
LLC, Jan. 27, 2016.
Themis Third: Letter from Sal Arnuk and Joe Saluzzi, Themis Trading 
LLC, Mar. 10, 2016.
Thielmann: Letter from Todd Thielmann, Dec. 20, 2015.
Thomas: Letter from Jon Thomas, Dec. 19, 2015.
Thompson: Letter from Johnna S. Thompson, Dec. 18, 2015.
Tidwell: Letter from Leslie A. Tidwell, Jan. 22, 2016.
Tondreau: Letter from Claire L. Tondreau, Dec. 14, 2015.
Trainor: Letter from Daniel Trainor, Dec. 14, 2015.
Trirogoff: Letter from Ed Trirogoff, Mar. 28, 2016.
TRS: Letter from Britt Harris, Chief Investment Officer, and Bernie 
Bozzelli, Head Trader, The Teacher Retirement System of Texas, Jan. 
13, 2016.
Turner: Letter from Kyle Turner, Dec. 13, 2015.
Tyson: Letter from Jon Tyson, Ph.D., May 11, 2016.
Upson: Letter from James E. Upson, Ph.D., Associate Professor of 
Finance, University of Texas at El Paso, Jan. 14, 2016.
Vaughan: Letter from James Vaughan, Dec. 10, 2015.
Verchere: Letter from David Verchere, Dec. 10, 2015.
Verret: Letter from J.W. Verret, Assistant Professor of Law, George 
Mason University School of Law, Nov. 20, 2015.
Virtu: Letter from Douglas A. Cifu, Chief Executive Officer, Virtu 
Financial, Nov. 6, 2015.
Walworth: Letter from Andrew Walworth, Mar. 11, 2016.
Warneka: Letter from Patrick J. Warneka, Dec. 15, 2015.
Warren: Letter from Joseph Warren, Dec. 13, 2015.
Watson: Letter from Lane C. Watson, Dec. 15, 2015.
Wayne: Letter from Anthony Wayne, Dec. 18, 2015.
Weldon First: Letter from Kevin J. Weldon, Dec. 15, 2015.
Weldon Second: Letter from Kevin M. Weldon, Apr. 20, 2016.
Wichman: Letter from Paul K. Wichman, Dec. 17, 2015.
Wilcox: Letter from Richard C. Wilcox, Dec. 13, 2015.
Williams: Letter from Bruce A. Williams, Dec. 10, 2015.
Wills: Letter from Dennis Wills, Dec. 14, 2015.
Wolberg: Letter from Jay Wolberg, Dec. 11, 2015.
Wolfe: Letter from Brian A. Wolfe, Assistant Professor of Finance, 
The State University of New York, University at Buffalo School of 
Management, Feb. 12, 2016.
Workman: Letter from Michael R. Workman, Jan. 10, 2016.
Wright: Letter from Fred W. Wright, Dec. 16, 2015.
WSIB/OST: Letter from Marcie Frost, Chair, Washington State 
Investment Board and James L. McIntire, Washington State Treasurer/
Board Member, May 5, 2016.
Yeoumans: Letter from Dr. Jerry Yeoumans, Jan. 3, 2016.
Young P.: Letter from Patrick L. Young, Nov. 2, 2015.
Young R.: Letter from Robert Young, Apr. 2, 2016.
Zevin Asset Management: Letter from Robert Zevin, Chairman, Zevin 
Asset Management LLC, Jan. 8, 2016.
Zoeger: Letter from Linda Zoeger, Feb. 8, 2016.

[FR Doc. 2016-14875 Filed 6-22-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 8011-01-P