The
possible changes are aimed at making it easier to trade illiquid
stocks, making more trading information available to investors,
and improving the speed and quality of public data feeds needed
for trading.
The SEC in 2005 adopted a broad framework called Regulation
National Market System that was largely aimed at ensuring retail
investors get the best price possible and preventing trades from
being executed at prices that are inferior to bids and offers
displayed on other trading venues.
Since then, faster, more sophisticated technology has put a
bigger focus on rapid-fire, high-speed trading. There has also
been an influx of new electronic stock exchanges, fragmenting
liquidity and increasing costs for brokers around exchange
connectivity and market data needed to fuel algorithmic trading.
"It is clear that the market challenges we faced in the early
2000s are not the same as the issues that we confront over a
decade later," Jay Clayton, chairman of the SEC, said at an
event in New York.
To get a better grasp of current market issues, the SEC held a
series of roundtable discussions with industry experts last year
that led to potential rule-making recommendations around
thinly-traded securities, combating retail fraud, and market
data and market access, Clayton said.
Some areas the SEC is looking at include:
- Increasing the speed of, and adding more stock price
information to, public data feeds to help make them more
competitive against the more expensive, private data feeds sold
by most stock exchanges.
- Allowing thinly-traded securities to trade only on their
listing market, rather than on all 13 U.S. stock exchanges.
- Improving disclosure around reverse mergers.
- Adjusting the quote size of some high-priced stocks.
The 2019 review follows an active 2018 for the SEC.
The regulator adopted rules to increase transparency around
broker-dealer stock order routing and private off-exchange
trading venues. It also ordered a pilot program to test banning
lucrative rebate payments that exchanges make to brokers for
liquidity-adding stock orders.
(Reporting by John McCrank; Editing by Tom Brown)
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