Rule 611 PRA Update Supporting Statement - Formatted

Rule 611 PRA Update Supporting Statement - Formatted.pdf

Order Protection Rule - Rule 611 of Regulation NMS

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PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT SUBMISSION
SUPPORTING STATEMENT
for the Paperwork Reduction Act Extension for
Rule 611

A.

Justification
1.

Necessity of Information Collection

On June 29, 2005, the Commission adopted Rule 611 as part of Regulation NMS.1
Rule 611 is designed to limit the incidence of trade executions at prices inferior to a price
displayed on another market. To achieve this goal, Rule 611 requires any national
securities exchange, national securities association, alternative trading system, exchange
market maker, over-the-counter market maker, and any other broker-dealer that executes
orders internally by trading as principal or crossing orders as agent, to establish, maintain,
and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably designed to prevent the execution
of a transaction in its market at a price that is inferior to a protected bid or offer displayed
in another market at the time of execution (a “trade-through”).
Rule 611 contains one collection of information. This collection of information is
found in Rule 611(b). Rule 611(a) requires any national securities exchange or national
securities association that operates an SRO trading facility, alternative trading system,
exchange market maker, over-the-counter market maker and any other broker-dealer that
executes orders internally by trading as principal or crossing orders as agent, to establish
and maintain written policies and procedures reasonably designed to prevent the
execution of a trade-through in its market, absent an applicable exception and, if relying
on an exception, that are reasonably designed to assure compliance with the terms of the
exception.
2.

Purpose and Use of the Information Collection

The purpose of the collection of information is to help ensure that national
securities exchanges, national securities associations, alternative trading systems,
exchange market makers, over-the-counter market makers and other broker-dealers that
execute orders internally and their customers, subscribers, members, and employees, as
applicable, generally avoid trade-throughs, as contemplated by Rule 611. Without this
collection of information, respondents would not have a means to enforce compliance
with the Commission’s intention to prevent trade-throughs pursuant to the Rule 611.

1

See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51808 (June 9, 2005), 70 FR 37496
(June 29, 2005).

3.

Consideration Given to Information Technology

Improved information technology would not reduce the burden because each
respondent would still be required to establish policies and procedures reasonably
designed to prevent trade-throughs suited to any available technology.
4.

Duplication

Not applicable; there is no duplication of information.
5.

Reducing the Burden on Small Entities

The rule’s requirements are not be unduly burdensome on smaller broker-dealers.
No other small entities are affected by the rule.
6.

Consequences of Not Conducting the Collection

Less frequent collection of information under the Rule 611 would undermine the
purpose of the rule.
7.

Inconsistencies with Guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2)

Not applicable; the information is collected in a manner consistent with 5 CFR
1320.5(d)(2).
8.

Consultations Outside the Agency

The Federal Register notice with a 60-day comment period soliciting comments on
this collection of information was published on March 18, 2011 (76 FR 15002). No
comments were received.

9.

Payment or Gift

The respondents receive no payments or gifts.

10.

Confidentiality

Not applicable.
11.

Sensitive Questions

Not applicable; no questions of a sensitive nature are asked.

2

12.

Burden of Information Collection

The Commission staff estimates that it would take approximately 60 hours
annually per respondent to ensure that the policies and procedures established are up-todate and remain in compliance with the Commission’s rule: two hours per month of
internal legal time and three hours per month of internal compliance time. The annual
aggregate burden for all respondents combined for this collection of information is
estimated to be 39,480 hours [658 respondents2 x 60 hours annually]. The estimated cost
for an in-house attorney is $354 per hour and the estimated cost for an assistant compliance
director in the securities industry is $320 per hour. Therefore the estimated total cost of
compliance for the annual hour burden is as follows: [(2 legal hours x 12 months x $354) x
658] + [(3 compliance hours x 12 months x $320) x 658] = $13,170,528.3
13.

Costs to Respondents

The annual cost burden, as required, will be zero.4
14.

Costs to Federal Government

Not applicable.
15.

Reason for Change

The one-time hour burden associated with developing the required policies and
procedures is no longer applicable. With respect to the estimated annual hour burden, the
number of respondents reflects a decrease in the number of firms that were registered
equity market makers or specialists at year-end 2009, as well as a decrease in alternative
trading systems, and an increase in the number of national securities exchanges that trade
NMS stocks. Additionally, the total cost of compliance for the annual hour burden has
been revised to reflect updated estimated cost figures for an in-house attorney and an
2

This estimate includes thirteen national securities exchanges and one national
securities association that trade NMS stocks. The estimate also includes the
approximately 601 firms that were registered equity market makers or specialists
at year-end 2009, as well as 43 alternative trading systems that operate trading
systems that trade NMS stocks.

3

The total cost of compliance for the annual hour burden has been revised to reflect
updated estimated cost figures for an in-house attorney and an assistant
compliance director. These figures are from SIFMA’s Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2010, modified by Commission
staff for an 1800-hour work-year and multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses,
firm size, employee benefits and overhead.

4

The cost burden originally consisted of one-time startup costs that are no longer
applicable.

3

assistant compliance director. The estimate of the annualized cost burden originally
consisted of one-time startup costs that are no longer applicable.
16.

Information Collection Planned for Statistical Purposes

Not applicable; there is no intention to publish the information for any purpose.
17.

Display of OMB Approval Date

The Commission is not seeking approval to not display the expiration date for OMB
approval.

18.

Exceptions to Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions

This collection complies with the requirements in 5 CFR 1320.9.

B.

Collection of Information Employing Statistical Methods

The collections of information do not employ statistical methods, nor would the
implementation of such methods reduce burden or improve accuracy of results.

4


File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleRule 611 PRA Update Supporting Statement - Formatted
File Modified2011-05-03
File Created2011-05-03

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