
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 109 (Wednesday, June 6, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 33522-33527]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-13638]


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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

[Release No. 34-67079; File No. SR-FINRA-2012-025]


Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory 
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change To Adopt 
FINRA Rule 5270 (Front Running of Block Transactions) in the 
Consolidated FINRA Rulebook

May 30, 2012.
    Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 
(``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that 
on May 17, 2012, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. 
(``FINRA'') (f/k/a National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. 
(``NASD'')) filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' 
or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I, II 
and III below, which Items have been prepared by FINRA. The Commission 
is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule 
change from interested persons.
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    \1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
    \2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance 
of the Proposed Rule Change

    FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD Interpretive Material (``IM'') 
2110-3 (Front Running Policy) as FINRA Rule 5270 with the changes 
described below.
    The text of the proposed rule change is available on FINRA's Web 
site at http://www.finra.org, at the principal office of FINRA and at 
the Commission's Public Reference Room.

II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and 
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change

    In its filing with the Commission, FINRA included statements 
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and 
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The 
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in 
Item IV below. FINRA has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A, 
B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.

A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and 
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change

1. Purpose
    As part of the process of developing a new consolidated rulebook 
(``Consolidated FINRA Rulebook''),\3\ FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD 
IM-2110-3 (``Front Running Policy'') as FINRA Rule 5270 with the 
changes described below.
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    \3\ The current FINRA rulebook consists of (1) FINRA Rules; (2) 
NASD Rules; and (3) rules incorporated from NYSE (``Incorporated 
NYSE Rules'') (together, the NASD Rules and Incorporated NYSE Rules 
are referred to as the ``Transitional Rulebook''). While the NASD 
Rules generally apply to all FINRA members, the Incorporated NYSE 
Rules apply only to those members of FINRA that are also members of 
the NYSE (``Dual Members''). The FINRA Rules apply to all FINRA 
members, unless such rules have a more limited application by their 
terms. For more information about the rulebook consolidation 
process, see Information Notice, March 12, 2008 (Rulebook 
Consolidation Process).
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    The Front Running Policy, which was adopted as interpretive 
material to

[[Page 33523]]

Article III, Section 1 of the NASD's Rules of Fair Practice \4\ in 
1987,\5\ states that it is considered conduct inconsistent with just 
and equitable principles of trade for a member or an associated person 
of a member to buy or sell security futures or certain options for 
accounts in which the member or associated person has an interest when 
the member or associated person has material, non-public market 
information concerning an imminent block transaction \6\ in the 
underlying security. Similarly, the same prohibition applies in the 
underlying security when the material, non-public market information 
regarding a block transaction concerns an option or security future on 
that underlying security.\7\ The Front Running Policy also prohibits 
providing material, non-public market information concerning an 
imminent block transaction to customers who then trade on the basis of 
the information. The Front Running Policy is limited to transactions in 
equity securities and options that are required to be reported on a 
last sale reporting system and to any transaction involving a security 
future, regardless of whether the transaction is reported. The 
prohibitions apply until the information concerning the block 
transaction has been made publicly available (i.e., ``when [the 
information] has been disseminated via the tape or high speed 
communications line of one of those systems, a similar system of a 
national securities exchange under Section 6 of the Act, an alternative 
trading system under Regulation ATS, or by a third-party news wire 
service'').
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    \4\ Article III, Section 1 of the NASD's Rules of Fair Practice 
was subsequently renumbered as NASD Rule 2110, and is now FINRA Rule 
2010. See Regulatory Notice 08-57 (October 2008).
    \5\ NASD adopted the Front Running Policy at the same time as 
several other self-regulatory organizations (``SROs'') filed their 
policies regarding front running of block transactions. See 
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 25233 (December 30, 1987), 53 FR 
296 (January 6, 1988). See also NASD Notice to Members 87-69 
(October 1987).
    \6\ The rule states that ``[a] transaction involving 10,000 
shares or more of an underlying security, or options or security 
futures covering such number of shares is generally deemed to be a 
block transaction, although a transaction of less than 10,000 shares 
could be considered a block transaction in appropriate cases.''
    \7\ The Front Running Policy initially applied only to certain 
options (either trading the option while in possession of material, 
non-public market information regarding an imminent block 
transaction in the underlying security or trading the underlying 
security while in possession of material, non-public market 
information regarding an imminent block transaction in the option). 
In 2002, the rule was broadened to include the same prohibitions 
with respect to security futures. See Securities Exchange Act 
Release No. 46663 (October 15, 2002), 67 FR 64944 (October 22, 
2002); see also NASD Notice to Members 02-73 (November 2002).
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    Finally, the Front Running Policy includes exceptions from the 
general prohibitions in the rule for ``transactions executed by member 
participants in automatic execution systems in those instances where 
participants must accept automatic executions'' as well as situations 
where a member receives a customer's block order relating to both an 
option or security future and the underlying security and the member, 
in furtherance of facilitating the customer's block order, positions 
the other side of one or both components of the order. In the latter 
case, a member is still prohibited from covering any resulting 
proprietary position by entering an offsetting order until information 
concerning the block transaction has been made publicly available.
    FINRA is proposing to adopt IM-2110-3 as FINRA Rule 5270 and amend 
the rule in several ways to broaden its scope and provide further 
clarity into activity that FINRA believes is inconsistent with just and 
equitable principles of trade. First, FINRA is proposing to extend the 
prohibitions in the rule to apply explicitly to all securities and 
other financial instruments and contracts (i.e., not only options and 
security futures) that overlay the security that is the subject of an 
imminent block transaction and that have a value that is materially 
related to, or otherwise acts as a substitute for, the underlying 
security. Specifically, FINRA is proposing to extend the front running 
prohibitions to cover trading in an option, derivative, or other 
financial instrument overlying a security that is the subject of an 
imminent block transaction if the value of the underlying security is 
materially related to, or otherwise acts as a substitute for, such 
security, as well as any contract that is the functional economic 
equivalent of a position in such security (individually or collectively 
a ``related financial instrument''). The reverse would also be true: 
When the imminent block transaction itself involves a related financial 
instrument, the proposed rule would prevent trading in the underlying 
security. The proposed rule change also extends the trading provisions 
in the rule to include explicitly trading in the same security or 
related financial instrument that is the subject of an imminent block 
transaction.\8\
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    \8\ The Commission noted in the release seeking comment on the 
SRO front running rules that, generally, ``the SROs define 
frontrunning as the practice of trading a security while in 
possession of material, non-public information regarding an imminent 
block transaction in the same or a related security.'' See 
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 25233 (December 30, 1987), 53 FR 
296 (January 6, 1988).
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    Although the proposed rule change would broaden the scope of 
trading covered by the front running rule, FINRA believes that the type 
of trading prohibited by the proposed rule change would generally 
already violate other existing FINRA rules, such as FINRA Rule 2010 
(Standards of Commercial Honor and Principles of Trade). As FINRA noted 
when it first adopted the Front Running Policy, the adoption of the 
rule was never intended to imply that other forms of trading activity 
not explicitly covered by the Front Running Policy could not violate 
FINRA rules.\9\ Because FINRA believes the Front Running Policy is 
unduly narrow in capturing the types of front running activity that are 
inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade, FINRA is 
proposing to broaden the language of the Front Running Policy to apply 
equally to all related financial instruments (e.g., stock options and 
futures, options futures, other derivatives, and security-based swaps) 
rather than be limited to equity securities, security futures, and 
certain options.\10\
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    \9\ FINRA has consistently noted that the Front Running Policy 
does not provide an exhaustive list of prohibited front running 
trading. See NASD Notice to Members 87-69 (October 1987) (``Although 
the Board believes it is important to provide guidelines describing 
the kind of [front running] conduct that will not be permitted, 
members and persons associated with a member should be aware that 
any conduct that is not consistent with their fiduciary 
responsibilities in this area would be a violation of [just and 
equitable principles of trade].''). See also NASD Notice to Members 
96-66 (October 1996) (noting that although the Front Running Policy 
applied only to equity securities, actions for similar conduct 
involving government securities would violate just and equitable 
principles of trade).
    \10\ Notwithstanding the amendments discussed in the proposed 
rule change, FINRA notes that, as amended, the rule is still not 
intended to provide an exhaustive list of prohibited trading 
activity. Proposed Supplementary Material .05, for example, states 
that front running orders not explicitly covered by the terms of 
Rule 5270 could nonetheless violate other FINRA rules.
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    As noted above, the trading restrictions imposed by the current 
Front Running Policy apply until information about the imminent 
customer block transaction ``has been made publicly available,'' which 
the rule defines as having been disseminated to the public in trade 
reporting data. The proposed rule change generally retains this 
standard for determining when information has become publicly 
available; however, because FINRA is proposing to expand the rule to 
include related financial instruments that may not result in publicly 
available trading information

[[Page 33524]]

being made available, FINRA is also proposing that the prohibitions in 
the rule be in place until the material, non-public market information 
is either publicly available or ``otherwise becomes stale or 
obsolete.''\11\
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    \11\ Whether information has become stale or obsolete will 
depend upon the particular facts and circumstances involved, 
including specific information the member has regarding the 
transaction, but could include factors such as the amount of time 
that has passed since the member learned of the block transaction, 
subsequent trading activity in the security, or a significant change 
in market conditions.
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    The proposed rule change also replaces several existing provisions 
in the Front Running Policy with Supplementary Material to FINRA Rule 
5270. Specifically, FINRA is proposing to replace the existing 
exceptions in the Front Running Policy for certain transactions in 
automatic execution systems and for positioning the other side of 
certain orders when a member receives a customer's block order relating 
to both an option and the underlying security or a security future and 
the underlying security with new Supplementary Material that identifies 
types of transactions that are permitted under the rule.
    Under the Supplementary Material, there are three broad categories 
of permitted transactions: Transactions that the member can demonstrate 
are unrelated to the customer block order, transactions that are 
undertaken to fulfill or facilitate the execution of the customer block 
order, and transactions that are executed, in whole or in part, on a 
national securities exchange and comply with the marketplace rules of 
that exchange.
    The first category of permitted transactions is [sic] those that 
the member can demonstrate are unrelated to the customer block order. 
Supplementary Material .04(a) recognizes that members may engage in 
such transactions provided that the member can demonstrate that the 
transactions are unrelated to the material, non-public market 
information received in connection with the customer order. The 
Supplementary Material includes an illustrative list of potentially 
permitted transactions as examples of transactions that, depending upon 
the circumstances, may be unrelated to the customer block order. These 
types of transactions could include transactions where the member has 
effective information barriers established to prevent internal 
disclosure of customer order information,\12\ transactions in the 
security that is the subject of the customer block order that are 
related to a prior customer order in that security, transactions to 
correct bona fide errors, and transactions to offset odd-lot orders.
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    \12\ In addition to more traditional information barriers, such 
as those in place to prevent communication between trading units, 
this provision could also include the use of automated systems 
(e.g., trades through a ``black box'') where the orders placed into 
the automated system are handled without the knowledge of a person 
associated with the member who may be trading in the same security. 
However, a person associated with a member who places an order into 
a ``black box'' or other automated system, or otherwise has 
knowledge of the order or the ability to access information in the 
system, may not then trade in the same security or a related 
financial instrument solely because the order ultimately was being 
handled by the automated system rather than by the person. Traders 
who have no knowledge of the order, due to the presence of an 
information barrier or otherwise, could continue to trade in the 
security or a related financial instrument. See infra note 23.
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    For each of these types of transactions, the member must be able to 
demonstrate that the transaction at issue was unrelated to the customer 
block order. Thus, for example, if the member can demonstrate that 
transactions occurring in a security (or a related financial 
instrument) that is the subject of an imminent customer block order 
were undertaken by a desk that is walled off from the desk handling the 
customer block order by the use of effective information barriers, the 
trading activity would be unrelated to the customer block order and, 
therefore, permitted.\13\
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    \13\ FINRA believes that this approach is compatible with the 
existing provisions concerning customer order protection in Rule 
5320 and its accompanying Supplementary Material concerning 
protection of customer limit and market orders and the 
implementation of effective information barriers.
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    Similarly, FINRA believes that transactions that a member can 
demonstrate are related to other customer orders in the same security, 
correct bona fide errors made in earlier transactions involving the 
security, or offset other odd-lot orders in the security are generally 
unrelated to the customer block order and therefore should be 
permitted.
    The second category of permitted transactions involves [sic] 
transactions that are undertaken to fulfill or facilitate the execution 
of the customer block order. FINRA has acknowledged that firms are 
permitted to trade ahead of a customer's block order when the purpose 
of such trading is to fulfill the customer order and when the customer 
has authorized such trading, including that the firm has disclosed to 
the customer that it may trade ahead of, or alongside of, the 
customer's order.\14\ Supplementary Material .04(b) thus makes clear 
that Rule 5270 does not preclude transactions undertaken for the 
purpose of fulfilling, or facilitating the execution of, a customer's 
block order.\15\ However, when engaging in trading activity that could 
affect the market for the security that is the subject of the customer 
block order, the member must minimize any potential disadvantage or 
harm in the execution of the customer's order, must not place the 
member's financial interests ahead of those of its customer, and must 
obtain the customer's consent to such trading activity. The 
Supplementary Material provides that a member may obtain its customers' 
consent through affirmative written consent or through means of a 
negative consent letter. The negative consent letter must clearly 
disclose to the customer the terms and conditions for handling the 
customer's orders, and if the customer does not object, then the member 
may reasonably conclude that the customer has consented and may rely on 
the letter. In addition, a member may provide clear and comprehensive 
oral disclosure to, and obtain consent from, the customer on an order-
by-order basis, provided the member documents who provided the consent 
and such consent evidences the customer's understanding of the terms 
and conditions for handling the customer's order.
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    \14\ See NASD Notice to Members 05-51 (August 2005); NASD Notice 
to Members 97-57 (September 1997). Hedging and positioning activity 
around a customer block order was discussed in coordinated guidance 
published by both NASD and NYSE in 2005 with respect to volume-
weighted average price transactions. See NASD Notice to Members 05-
51 (August 2005); NYSE Information Memo 05-52 (August 2005).
    \15\ These transactions may include, for example, hedging or 
other positioning activity undertaken in connection with the 
handling of the customer order.
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    The third, and final, category of permitted transactions is 
addressed in Supplementary Material .04(c) and concerns transactions 
that are executed, in whole or in part, on a national securities 
exchange and comply with the marketplace rules of that exchange. This 
provision, which is being proposed in response to comments received 
from exchanges, states that the prohibitions in Rule 5270 shall not 
apply if the member's trading activity is undertaken in compliance with 
the marketplace rules of a national securities exchange and at least 
one leg of the trading activity is executed on that exchange.\16\ This 
provision recognizes that it is not FINRA's intent to introduce 
conflicts with other existing SRO rules.
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    \16\ See infra note 21.
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    Finally, FINRA is proposing to adopt Supplementary Material .05 to 
the rule to reiterate that the front running of any customer order, not 
just imminent block transactions, that places the financial interests 
of the member ahead of those

[[Page 33525]]

of its customer or the misuse of knowledge of an imminent customer 
order may violate other FINRA rules, including FINRA Rules 2010 and 
5320, or the federal securities laws.\17\
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    \17\ Although ``not held'' orders are not subject to the 
restrictions in FINRA Rule 5320, front running a ``not held'' order 
that is not of block size may nonetheless violate FINRA Rule 2010. 
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63895 (February 11, 2011), 
76 FR 9386 (February 17, 2011). If the ``not held'' order is of 
block size, the proposed rule change would apply to trading activity 
ahead of the order.
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    FINRA will announce the implementation date of the proposed rule 
change in a Regulatory Notice to be published no later than 90 days 
following Commission approval. The implementation date will be no later 
than 90 days following publication of the Regulatory Notice announcing 
Commission approval.
2. Statutory Basis
    FINRA believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with the 
provisions of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,\18\ which requires, among 
other things, that FINRA rules must be designed to prevent fraudulent 
and manipulative acts and practices, to promote just and equitable 
principles of trade, and, in general, to protect investors and the 
public interest. The proposed rule change clarifies the types of front 
running trading activity that FINRA believes are inconsistent with just 
and equitable principles of trade while also ensuring that members may 
continue to engage in transactions that do not present the risk of 
abusive trading practices that the rule is intended to prevent. FINRA 
believes that expanding the terms of the rule beyond options and 
security futures will enhance the protection of customer orders by 
addressing more directly within the rule other types of abusive trading 
that may be intended to take advantage of customer orders. By 
broadening the scope of prohibited trading activity addressed in the 
rule, FINRA believes that imminent customer block orders will be better 
protected and that the proposed rule change will prevent fraudulent and 
manipulative acts and practices, promote just and equitable principles 
of trade, and better protect investors and the public interest.
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    \18\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
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    The proposed rule change also specifically identifies three 
categories of trading activity that are permitted so that the expanded 
rule will not hamper legitimate trading activity to the detriment of 
customers, firms, or the market: Transactions that the member can 
demonstrate are unrelated to the customer block order, transactions 
that are undertaken to fulfill or facilitate the execution of the 
customer block order, and transactions that are executed, in whole or 
in part, on a national securities exchange and comply with the 
marketplace rules of that exchange. FINRA believes that permitting the 
trading activity in each of these three categories is consistent with 
promoting just and equitable principles of trade and protecting 
investors and the public interest and will not result in fraudulent and 
manipulative acts and practices. As discussed in Section (a), FINRA 
believes that transactions that the member can demonstrate are 
unrelated to the customer block order do not present the potential for 
abusive trading practices that can disadvantage a customer's order in 
violation of the rule. FINRA believes that transactions that are 
undertaken to fulfill or facilitate the execution of the customer block 
order similarly do not present the potential for abuse the rule is 
designed to prohibit but also will allow trading activity that can 
enhance the execution of a customer block order, thus promoting just 
and equitable principles of trade and protecting investors. Finally, 
FINRA believes that permitting transactions that are executed, in whole 
or in part, on a national securities exchange and comply with the 
marketplace rules of that exchange is consistent with Section 15A(b)(6) 
of the Act.\19\ The marketplace rules of the exchanges that may 
otherwise conflict with the proposed rule change have been approved by 
the Commission and found consistent with the Act. Consequently, FINRA 
believes it promotes just and equitable principles of trade to permit 
specific trading activity allowed under other approved SRO rules that 
would otherwise be brought within the broader prohibitions of the 
proposed rule change.
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    \19\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
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B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition

    FINRA does not believe that the proposed rule change will result in 
any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in 
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.

C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed 
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others

    The proposed rule change was published for comment in Regulatory 
Notice 08-83 (December 2008). FINRA received three comment letters in 
response to the Regulatory Notice.\20\
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    \20\ Letter from International Association of Small Broker-
Dealers and Advisors (``IASBDA''), dated January 16, 2009; Letter 
from Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association 
(``SIFMA''), dated February 27, 2009; Letter from NYSE Regulation, 
Inc. (``NYSER''), dated July 22, 2009.
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    One commenter, NYSER, agreed with FINRA's proposals in Regulatory 
Notice 08-83 to broaden the scope of the rule by extending the 
prohibitions to include trading in the same security as well as other 
derivative securities and to add a consent provision for certain 
hedging or positioning activities in relation to a customer order. 
However, NYSER requested clarification on when information becomes 
``publicly available'' under the proposed rule. Specifically, NYSER 
wanted clarification regarding whether the proposed rule was intended 
to apply to trading activity conducted in compliance with certain NYSE, 
NYSE Arca, and NYSE Amex rules that permit trading based on information 
related to imminent block transactions when the information has not yet 
been disseminated via a last sale reporting system but, rather, has 
entered the market in other ways (e.g., through gapped quotes or 
disclosure to a trading crowd in the context of anticipatory hedging 
with respect to options, which is permitted by rule by the options 
exchanges).\21\
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    \21\ See NYSE Arca Rules 6.47A, 6.49(b); NYSE Amex Options Rules 
934.3NY; 935NY. FINRA notes that other options exchanges also have 
trading rules that may, in some scenarios, conflict with the 
proposed rule change. See CBOE Rule 6.9(e).
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    By extending the front running prohibitions to explicitly cover 
types of securities other than options and security futures, FINRA 
intends to make clear that misusing material, non-public market 
information concerning an imminent customer block order is 
impermissible, regardless of the type of security that is the subject 
of the order and/or the front running transaction. It is not FINRA's 
intent to prohibit legitimate trading activity or to supersede other 
existing SRO rules. Consequently, FINRA has amended the proposed rule 
change and added a paragraph to the Supplementary Material regarding 
permitted transactions to clarify that trading will not violate FINRA 
Rule 5270 if such trading activity is permitted pursuant to the rules 
of an exchange and at least one leg of the transaction is executed on 
that exchange.
    In its comment letter, SIFMA raises a number of concerns regarding 
the proposed changes. First, SIFMA opposes the proposed expansion of 
the rule beyond equity securities or to non-publicly-reported block 
trades because of the attenuated opportunity for firms to 
inappropriately benefit from the

[[Page 33526]]

trade, absent dissemination, and the practical issues of when knowledge 
of a non-reported block trade is ``stale and obsolete.'' FINRA 
disagrees and believes that the front running rule should be broadened 
to include all securities, including fixed income securities, and 
related financial instruments. The primary issue the proposed rule 
change is designed to address is straightforward: firms should not use 
their knowledge of imminent block transactions to benefit themselves at 
the expense of their customers. This fundamental obligation applies any 
time a firm misuses this type of information to gain a benefit, 
regardless of what specific securities or financial products are at 
issue. Consequently, FINRA has proposed to make clear that front 
running concerns are not limited to securities futures and options and 
encompass the trading of any security or related financial instrument 
under the circumstances outlined in the rule.
    FINRA recognizes, however, that because the terms of the front 
running rule are broad, it could capture trading activity that should 
otherwise be permitted. To balance this expansion, FINRA is also 
proposing Supplementary Material .04 that lays out the types of trading 
activity that would not violate the rule and would be permissible.\22\ 
The sole purpose of Supplementary Material .04 is to ensure that 
appropriate trading activity not be prohibited by the breadth of the 
rule. In response to comments by SIFMA, FINRA has modified portions of 
proposed Supplementary Material .04 as discussed above.\23\
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    \22\ As noted above, Supplementary Material .04 would replace 
the existing provisions in the Front Running Policy regarding 
exceptions for transactions executed in automatic execution systems 
and positioning activity when a member receives an order of block 
size relating to both an option or security future and the 
underlying security. Similarly, FINRA had proposed in its Regulatory 
Notice an exception for riskless principal trades; however, this 
exception is not separately included as it would fall within the 
scope of Supplementary Material .04. FINRA believes that proposed 
Supplementary Material .04 covers permissible trading activity under 
the proposed rule change. Any trading activity that falls within the 
current exceptions in the Front Running Policy would need to meet 
one of the exceptions in the proposed Supplementary Material in 
order to be excepted from the rule. See SIFMA.
    \23\ In addition to the modifications discussed above, FINRA has 
removed the general exception for ```black box' orders where the 
member has no actual knowledge that the customer order has been 
routed for execution,'' which was proposed as part of Supplementary 
Material .04 in Regulatory Notice 08-83. As discussed above in 
footnote 12, automated systems may serve as a means by which orders 
are handled and information regarding those orders is unavailable to 
other trading units; however, FINRA believes that the use of an 
automated system should not permit trading by those persons who may 
know the terms of the order placed into the automated system.
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    SIFMA also requested that FINRA provide guidance and/or objective 
standards concerning the scope of the term ``related financial 
instrument.'' For example, SIFMA suggested a rebuttable presumption 
with a more objective standard with respect to basket and index 
transactions and noted that some financial instruments, such as 
variable swaps and volatility swaps, are ``marginally linked to equity 
securities'' and are ``sufficiently complex'' that it is ``virtually 
impossible'' to determine on a trade-by-trade basis whether they would 
be considered to be ``related financial instruments.''
    The proposed rule change defines a ``related financial instrument'' 
as ``any option, derivative, security-based swap, or other financial 
instrument overlying a security, the value of which is materially 
related to, or otherwise acts as a substitute for, such security, as 
well as any contract that is the functional economic equivalent of a 
position in such security.'' FINRA believes that the materiality 
standard used in the proposed rule is a common and well-understood 
standard in the securities industry. FINRA acknowledges SIFMA's 
concerns about the increasing variety of financial products and the 
complex nature of the relationships across products. It is for that 
exact reason that FINRA believes a materiality standard is appropriate 
and necessary in the context of the front running rule to ensure each 
instrument and its impact across products is properly reviewed by 
members and evaluated with respect to the potential for front running. 
FINRA also notes that the proposed rule change would extend only to 
those swaps that are security-based swaps.
    SIFMA also commented on the continued use of the term ``block 
transaction'' in the proposed rule and recommended that FINRA replace 
the definition of ``block transaction'' and focus instead on ``material 
transactions.'' FINRA believes that the definition of ``block 
transaction,'' coupled with the proposed new supplementary material 
regarding non-block transactions, is sufficiently fluid to capture the 
appropriate transactions. The definition of ``block transaction'' makes 
clear that the 10,000-share threshold is not a strict standard and that 
transactions involving fewer shares could be considered a block 
transaction; moreover, a transaction more than 10,000 shares is only 
``generally'' deemed to be a block transaction for purposes of the 
rule. The addition of Supplementary Material .05 also clarifies that 
the front running of other types of orders that may not be ``imminent 
block transactions'' may nonetheless be considered conduct inconsistent 
with just and equitable principles of trade and may violate other FINRA 
rules or provisions of the federal securities laws because such 
transactions may have violated the animating purpose of the rule that 
firms should not use their knowledge of imminent customer orders to 
benefit themselves.
    SIFMA also suggested amending the definition of ``customer'' for 
purposes of the rule to exclude other institutions, such as banks and 
unregistered affiliates of broker-dealers. SIFMA's underlying concern 
is that a disclosure-based approach in the trading of OTC equity 
derivatives is more appropriate given that the counter-parties in such 
transactions are generally sophisticated institutional investors who 
are, nonetheless, included in the general FINRA definition of 
``customer'' since such investors are not broker-dealers.\24\ As an 
initial matter, FINRA believes that the amendment suggested by SIFMA to 
exclude banks, branches of foreign banks, or unregistered affiliates of 
a broker-dealer from the definition of ``customer'' for purposes of the 
rule is too broad. To exclude sophisticated institutional investors 
from the definition of ``customer'' is inappropriate given the use of 
the term throughout the rule for provisions that should include all 
customers, including sophisticated investors (e.g., prohibiting a 
member or an associated person of the member from providing material, 
non-public market information to ``customers'' to allow them to trade 
on the information). To address SIFMA's underlying concern regarding 
the proposed rule change's potential impact on the trading of OTC 
equity derivatives, FINRA notes that Supplementary Material .04 
recognizes that certain trading can be affected provided the firm has 
received its customer's consent, which can be through negative consent.
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    \24\ See FINRA Rule 0160(b)(4).
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    Two commenters also requested that FINRA provide guidance on the 
knowledge standard in Supplementary Material .01, which provides that 
the violative practices set forth in the rule ``may include 
transactions that are executed based upon knowledge of less than all of 
the terms of the block transaction, so long as there is knowledge that 
all of the material terms of the transaction have been or will be 
agreed upon imminently.'' \25\ This

[[Page 33527]]

provision, which remains substantively the same as the current standard 
in the Front Running Policy, is intended to make clear that a member 
need not know every detail of a potential block order for the front 
running prohibitions to attach. As SIFMA noted, FINRA has provided 
guidance in the past in the context of volume-weighted average price 
transactions. For example, in NASD Notice to Members 05-51, FINRA 
stated that a duty to refrain from trading may exist ``before a member 
is awarded an order for execution [and] will turn on, among other 
factors, the type of order and the specifics of the order known by the 
member,'' which may include the security, the size of the order, the 
side of the market, the weighting of a basket order, and the timing for 
completion of the order. As this guidance recognizes, exactly when the 
front running prohibitions may attach depends upon the facts and 
circumstances of the communications between the member and its 
customer.
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    \25\ See IASBDA, SIFMA.
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    Finally, SIFMA commented on the proposed rule change's potential 
effects on the trading of OTC equity derivatives. SIFMA believes the 
proposed rule change will require firms to substantially reorganize 
their OTC equity derivatives operations to set up unwarranted 
information barriers to accommodate their trading, given that customer-
facing OTC equity derivatives trading desks can be the same desks that 
manage the risk of the firm's overall OTC equity derivatives book. 
SIFMA asserts that the current regime of disclosure to sophisticated 
customers and counterparties works well for OTC equity derivatives 
(e.g., ISDA Master Agreements). FINRA does not believe that the 
proposed rule change would necessitate the imposition of unwarranted 
information barriers. FINRA believes that the provisions regarding 
permitted transactions in proposed Supplementary Material .04, as 
amended from the form proposed in Regulatory Notice 08-83 in response 
to comments, are broad enough to exclude appropriate trading activity 
from the scope of the rule, including trading activity that the member 
can demonstrate is unrelated to the material, non-public market 
information received in connection with an imminent customer block 
order.

III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for 
Commission Action

    Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the 
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may 
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to 
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to 
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
    (A) by order approve or disapprove such proposed rule change, or
    (B) institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule 
change should be disapproved.

IV. Solicitation of Comments

    Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and 
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule 
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of 
the following methods:

Electronic Comments

     Use the Commission's Internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
     Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include 
File Number SR-FINRA-2012-025 on the subject line.

Paper Comments

     Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy, 
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., 
Washington, DC 20549-1090.

All submissions should refer to File Number SR-FINRA-2012-025. This 
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To 
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently, 
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on 
the Commission's Internet Web site (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all 
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are 
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to 
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other 
than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the 
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site viewing and 
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE., 
Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours of 
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such filing also will be available 
for inspection and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. All 
comments received will be posted without change; the Commission does 
not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You should 
submit only information that you wish to make available publicly. All 
submissions should refer to File Number SR-FINRA-2012-025 and should be 
submitted on or before June 27, 2012.

    For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets, 
pursuant to delegated authority.\26\
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    \26\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Kevin M. O'Neill,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012-13638 Filed 6-5-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P


