Browse: Departments Dates Agencies
DOCUMENT ID: [Release No. 34-48884; File No. SR-PHLX-2003-66]
SUBJECT CATEGORY: Self-Regulatory Organizations; Order Approving Proposed Rule Change and Amendment Nos. 1 and 2 and Notice of Filing Order Granting Accelerated Approval to Amendment No. 3 by the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Inc., Relating to the Listing and Trading of Options on the Nasdaq Composite Index[reg]
DOCUMENT SUMMARY: December 5, 2003.
On September 29, 2003, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Inc.
(``PHLX'' or ``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (``Commission'' or ``SEC''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b4
thereunder,\2\ a proposal to list and trade cashsettled, European
style options on the Nasdaq Composite Index[reg] (the ``Nasdaq
Composite Index'' or ``Index''), a capitalizationweighted, A.M.
settled index comprised of approximately 3,400 stocks listed and traded
on The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. (``Nasdaq''). The PHLX filed Amendment
Nos. 1 and 2 to the proposal on October 17, 2003.\3\ and filed Amendment No. 3 to the proposal on November 13, 2003.\4\
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b4.
\3\ See letter from Mark I. Salvacion, Director and Counsel,
PHLX, to Kelly Riley, Senior Special Counsel, Division of Market
Regulation (``Division''), Commission, dated October 17, 2003
(``Amendment No. 1''); and letter from Mark I. Salvacion, Director
and Counsel, PHLX, to Yvonne Fraticelli, Special Counsel, Division,
Commission, dated October 17, 2003 (``Amendment No. 2''). In
Amendments No. 1, the PHLX revises the position and exercise limits
for the proposed options. In Amendments No. 2, the PHLX proposes to
list miniFLEX options on the Nasdaq Composite Index and provides an
example of how the proposed miniFLEX options could be used.
\4\ See letter from Mark I. Salvacion, Director and Counsel,
PHLX, to Kelly Riley, Senior Special Counsel, Division. Commission,
dated November 12, 2003 (``Amendment No. 3''). In Amendment No. 3,
the PHLX represents that the PHLX will notify the staff of the
Commission if: (1) Less than 80% of the weight of the Index is
options eligible; (2) 10% of the weight of the Index is represented
by stocks trading less than 20,000 shares per day; or (3) the
largest component of the Index comprises 15% of the weight of the
Index, or the top five components comprise 50% of the weight of the Index.
The proposed rule change and Amendment Nos. 1 and 2 were published
for comment in the Federal Register on October 24, 2003.\5\ The
Commission received two comment letters regarding the proposal.\6\ On
November 21, 2003, the PHLX submitted a letter responding to the issues
raised in the comment letters.\7\ This order approves the proposed rule
change, as amended. In addition, the Commission is publishing notice to
solicit comments on and is simultaneously approving, on an accelerated basis, Amendment No. 3.
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 48663 (October 20, 2003), 68 FR 61029.
\6\ See letter from Kathryn L. Beck, Senior Vice President,
General Counsel, Corporate Secretary, and Chief Regulatory Officer,
Pacific Exchange, Inc. (``PCX''), to Margaret H. McFarland, Deputy
Secretary, Commission, dated October 24, 2003 (``PCX Letter''); and
letter from Michael J. Simon, Senior Vice President and Secretary,
International Securities Exchange, Inc. (``ISE''), to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated November 10, 2003 (``ISE Letter'').
\7\ See letter from Mark Salvacion, Director and Counsel, PHLX,
to Kelly Riley, Senior Special Counsel, Division, Commission, dated November 21, 2003 (``PHLX Letter'').
The PHLX proposes to list and trade cashsettled options on the
Index. In addition trading fullsize options on the Index (``FullSize
Index Options''), the PHLX proposes to trade mini Index options that
are \1/10\th the size of FullSize Index Options (``Mini Index
Options''), Flexible Exchange Index (``FLEX[reg]'') options on the
Index (``FLEX Index Options''), and miniFLEX Index Options (``Mini
Flex Index Options'') (the FullSize Index Options, Mini Index Options,
FLEX Index Options, and MiniFlex Index Options may be referred to,
collectively, as the ``Index Options'').\8\ The PHLX will trade the
Index Options pursuant to current PHLX rules governing the trading of
index options.\9\ The PHLX's current rules applicable to the trading of
FLEX index options, including the requirement that the minimum size of a RequestforQuote (``RFQ'') be $10
[[Page 69754]]
million, will apply to MiniFlex Index Options.\10\
\8\ The FullSize Index Options and the Mini Index Options will
feature Europeanstyle exercise. The FLEX Index Options and the
MiniFlex Index Options may feature Americanstyle exercise or Europeanstyle exercise. See PHLX Rule 1079(a)(5).
\9\ See, particularly, PHLX Rules 1000A through 1102A (Rules
Applicable to Trading of Options on Indices) and, generally, PHLX Rules 1000 through 1090 (Options Rules of the PHLX).
\10\ Telephone conversation between Kelly Riley, Senior Special
Counsel, Division, Commission, and Mark Salvacion, Director and Counsel, PHLX, on November 25, 2003.
The Index is a capitalizationweighted index comprised of approximately 3,400 stocks listed and traded on Nasdaq. The Index includes Nasdaq National Market and Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities. To be eligible for inclusion in the Index, a security must be listed on Nasdaq and must be one of the following types of securities: an American Depositary Receipt (``ADR''), common stock, ordinary share, real estate investment trust (``REIT''), share of beneficial interest, of tracking stock. The Index is comprised of all of the foreign and domestic ADRs, common stocks, ordinary shares, REITs, shares of beneficial interest, and tracking stocks listed on Nasdaq. Convertible debentures, preferred stocks, rights, warrants, units, closedend funds, exchangetraded funds (``ETFs''), and derivative securities are not included in the Index.
The Index includes most of the stocks listed and traded on the
Nasdaq SmallCap Market. Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities are
``reported securities'' for purposes of Rule 11Aa31 under the Act.\11\
According to the PHLX, Nasdaq SmallCap Market stocks comprised 1.3% of the capitalization of the Index as of July 31, 2003.
\11\ See 17 CFR 240.11Aa31. A ``reported security'' is defined
in Rule 11Aa31(a)(4) under the Act as ``any listed equity security
or Nasdaq security for which transaction reports are required to be
made on a realtime basis pursuant to an effective transaction
reporting plan.'' In 2001, the Commission approved the extension of the Joint SelfRegulatory Organization Plan Governing the
Collection, Consolidation and Dissemination of Quotation and
Transaction Information for Nasdaq Listed Securities Traded on
Exchanges on an Unlisted Trading Privileges Basis (``Nasdaq UTP
Plan'') to include Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities. Accordingly,
Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities became securities reported
pursuant to an effective transaction reporting plan approved by the Commission.
The Index includes ten industry groups. As of July 31, 2003, the top five industry groups and their weights in the Index were: (1) computer software and hardware, 52%; (2) healthcare, 14%; (3) financials, 11%; (4) consumer discretionary, 8%; and (5)
As of July 31, 2003, the capitalization of the Index's components ranged from $284 billion to $55,000,\12\ and the market capitalization of the Index totaled $2.6 trillion. The largest Index component accounted for 11.12% of the weight of the Index and the smallest component accounted for less than 1% of the weight of the Index. The median capitalization of the Index's components was $110 million. \12\ For companies that list American Depositary Shares, these values represent only the value of the outstanding American Depositary Shares and not the global market capitalization of the issuer, which is the basis for listing on Nasdaq. Nasdaq's minimum listing and maintenance standard for global market capitalization is $50 million.
During the period from January 1, 2003, through July 31, 2003, the average daily trading volume of the component securities representing 95% of the weight of the Index was 850,000 shares, and the average daily trading volume for all of the Index's components was 485,000 shares. The top 100 components accounted for 64% of the weight of the Index and the bottom 100 stocks accounted for 0.01% of the weight of the Index. The prices of the Index's components ranged from $0.11 per share to $780.00 per share. The average share price was $14.15. The share outstanding for each of the Index's components ranged from 10,000 shares to 11 billion shares, with an average of 43 million shares outstanding. According to the PHLX, options eligible securities represented 95% of the weight of the Index.
The value of the Index equals the aggregate value of the Total Shares Outstanding (``TSO'') of each Index component security multiplied by each security's respective price on Nasdaq, divided by the Adjusted Base Period Market (``ABPMV''), and multiplied by the Base Value. The Index began on February 5, 1971, at a Base Value of 100.00.
The Index is disseminated every 15 seconds through the Nasdaq Index
Dissemination Services SM (``NIDS'') during normal Nasdaq
trading hours (9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET).\13\ According to the PHLX, all major market data vendors carry the NIDS data feed.
\13\ NIDS is a Nasdaq data feed carrying intraday index values and valuation data for ETFs listed on Nasdaq.
The Index is calculated using Nasdaq prices (not consolidated) during the day and the Nasdaq Official Closing Price (``NOCP'') for the close.\14\ Although the Index is calculated until 4:00 p.m. ET, the Index's closing value may change up until 5:15 p.m. ET due to changes or corrections to the last sale in the Index's component securities. \14\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 47517 (March 18, 2003), 68 FR 14446 (March 25, 2003) (File No. SRNASD2002158) (approving the establishment of the NOCP).
Nasdaq will maintain the Index, and the PHLX represented that it will not influence any Nasdaq decisions concerning maintenance of the Index.
An Indexeligible security (either an initial public offering or a seasoned security) is added to the Index on the business day immediately after a last sale is established (usually day two of listing on Nasdaq). A component security that is no longer traded on Nasdaq or no longer meets the securitytype eligibility criteria is removed from the Index. The Index is updated on a daily basis and there is no periodic rebalancing of Index components.
Changes in the number of shares outstanding driven by corporate events, including stock dividends, splits, and certain spinoffs and rights issuances are adjusted on the exdate. A change in the TSO arising from other corporate actions including secondary offerings, stock repurchases, conversions, and acquisitions is ordinarily made to the Index on the evening prior to the effective date of the corporate action or as soon as practicable thereafter. Changes are made after the market close and are reflected on http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/asp/nasdaqcomp.asp the following morning.
To ensure that there is no discontinuity in the value of the Index, Nasdaq ordinarily adjusts the ABPMV when there is a change in a component security's TSO, a component addition or deletion, or changes due to certain spinoffs and rights offerings.
Although the PHLX is not involved in the maintenance of the Index,
it has represented that it will monitor the Index on a semiannual
basis and will notify Commission staff if and when: (1) 10% of the
capitalization of the Index comprises securities with a market
capitalization of less than $100 million; (2) 10% of the capitalization
of the Index is made up of components with an average daily trading
volume of less than 10,000 shares over the previous six months; (3)
less than 80% of the weight of the Index is options eligible; (4) 10%
of the weight of the Index is represented by stocks trading less than
20,000 shares per day; or (5) the largest component of the Index
comprises 15% of the weight of the Index, or the top five components
comprise 50% of the weight of the Index.\15\ According to the PHLX, as
of July 31, 2003, component securities representing 2.56% of the capitalization of the Index had market capitalizations
[[Page 69755]]
of less than $100 million, and securities representing 2.19% of the
capitalization of the Index had average daily trading volumes of less than 10,000 shares over the previous six months.
\15\ See Amendment No. 3, note 4 supra.
As noted above, the Exchange proposes to trade FullSize Index Options, Mini Index Options, FLEX Index Options, and MiniFlex Index Options. The contract multiplier for FullSize Index Options will be $100 and the contract multiplier for Mini Index Options will be $10. Each contract will trade under separate ticker symbols and will not be fungible with the other. The size of the underlying Index will remain the same for each contract (i.e., Mini Index Options will not overlie a separate index calculation reduced by 1/10th) and the PHLX represents that it will list similar strikes for each and the settlement values will be uniform.
The Exchange will list strike prices in $5.00 intervals for the Index Options. The minimum tick size for series quoted below $3.00 (i.e., $300 in premium after factoring in the $100 contract multiplier for FullSize Index Options and $30 in premium after factoring in the $10 contract multiplier for Mini Index Options) will be $.05 (i.e., $5.00 for FullSize Index Options, and $.50 for Mini Index Options), and for the series quoted above $3.00 the minimum tick size will be $.10 (i.e. $10.00 for FullSize Index Options and $1.00 for Mini Index Options).
The PHLX represents that it has adequate system capacity to trade
the Index Options.\16\ In addition, the PHLX represents that the
Options Price Reporting Authority (``OPRA'') informed the Exchange that
trading in the Index Options will have minimal impact on OPRA's current quoting capacity.\17\
\16\ See letter from Thomas A. Wittman, Senior Vice President,
Trading Floor Development, PHLX, to Yvonne Fraticelli, Division, Commission, dated October 7, 2003.
\17\ See letter from Joseph P. Corrigan, Executive Director,
OPRA, to Matthew Holm, Director, PHLX, dated September 16, 2003. Settlement of Index Options
The FullSize Index Options and Mini Index Options will expire on
the Saturday following the third Friday of the expiration month.\18\
Trading in the expiring contract month will normally cease at 4:15 p.m.
ET on the immediately preceding Thursday. Nasdaq will calculate the
exercise settlement value of the Index at option expiration based on
the volumeweighted opening price (``Nasdaq VWOP'') of the component
securities in the first four minutes of trading (the ``Extraction
Period'') on the business day prior to expiration, which normally will
be a Friday. Each Index component will have a trade extraction history
independently maintained beginning with the receipt of the first day's
trade in that issue and continuing for four continuous minutes. Nasdaq
will record and reflect trade adjustments during the Extraction Period
for each component until the fourminute window for the last component
stock closes or 10:30 a.m., whichever is sooner. Nasdaq will then
calculate the Nasdaq VWOP for each security based on the extracted
trades and aggregate the Nasdaq VWOPs of the Index's components to
calculate the Index settlement value. If a stock fails to open for
trading, the last available price on the stock will be used to
calculate the Index, as is done for currently listed indexes. A stock
will be deemed to have failed to open for trading when it does not open for trading prior to 10:30 a.m. on such trading day.
\18\ Under PHLX Rule 1079(a)(6), a FLEX option on the Index may
not expire on any day that falls on or within two business days
prior to or subsequent to an expiration day for a nonFLEX option on the Index.
To monitor trading in the Index Options, the Exchange will use the same surveillance procedures it uses currently for the Exchange's sector index options. These procedures include complete access to trading activity in the underlying securities. The Intermarket Surveillance Group (``ISG'') Agreement, dated July 14, 1983, as amended, will be applicable to the trading of the Index Options. According to the PHLX, as of July 31, 2003, 315 Index components representing 3.27% of the weight of the Index are the securities of entities incorporated outside the United States. Of those securities, only 125, or 0.64% of the capitalization of the Index, are the securities of companies incorporated in countries whose domestic equity exchange is not a member of ISG.
The PHLX proposes to amend PHLX Rule 1001A, ``Position Limits,'' to establish position limits of 50,000 contracts for FullSize Index Options, with 30,000 contracts in the nearest expiration month, and 500,000 contracts for Mini Index Options on either side of the market, with 300,000 contracts total in the nearest expiration month. Exercise limits will be set at the same level as position limits. The proposed amendment to PHLX Rule 1001A will require that the position limits in FullSize Index Options and Mini Index Options be aggregated for the purpose of determining compliance with position and exercise limits. The PHLX proposes to establish the position limit of the index hedge exemption at 150,000 contracts for FullSize Index Options and 1,500,000 contracts for Mini Index Options.
The Exchange proposes to amend PHLX Rule 1079, ``FLEX Index and Equity Options,'' to establish a separate position limit of 50,000 contracts on the same side of the market for FLEX Index Options, with 30,000 contracts on the same side of the market in the nearest expiration month. For MiniFlex Index Options, the PHLX proposes to establish a position limit of 500,000 contracts on the same side of the market, with 300,000 contracts on the same side of the market in the nearest expiration month.
The Commission received two comment letters \19\ regarding the
proposal, which raise several concerns with respect to the exclusive
licensing agreement PHLX entered into with Nasdaq, the Index licensor,
to list and trade the Index Options.\20\ The commenters maintain that
the PHLX's proposal fails to explain why, in light of the exclusive
licensing agreement, the proposal does not impose a burden on
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act as required in Form 19b4. One commenter also
expresses concern that the terms of the exclusive licensing agreement
could create a conflict between the PHLX's financial interests and its
obligation to fairly monitor trading in the Index Options, because,
according to the commenter, the licensing agreement might impose
financial penalties on the PHLX if trading in the Index Options fails
to meet specified volume thresholds.\21\ In addition, the commenter
asserts that the exclusive licensing agreement could lead to order routing biases.\22\
\19\ See note 6 supra.
\20\ The Commission notes that ISE specifically stated that it
did not object to the PHLX's proposal to trade the Index Options. See ISE Letter, note 6 supra.
\21\ See PCX Letter, note 6, supra.
In response, the PHLX argues that its exclusive licensing agreement
with Nasdaq will not inhibit competition.\23\ Specifically, the PHLX
maintains that the Index Options will compete with other index options
and other investment products, such as equity options and options on ETFs. Further,
[[Page 69756]]
PHLX argued that the Commission should consider comments relating to
its exclusive licensing agreement in light of other similar investment
products, such as the Nasdaq 100 Index Tracking Stock, Nasdaq 100 Index
Tracking Stock options, and the Fidelity Nasdaq Composite Index
Tracking Stock. PHLX believes that the existence of these similar
competing products negates the argument that the exclusive licensing
agreement imposes a burden on competition. In addition, the PHLX states
that Nasdaq and the PHLX have limited the term of exclusively to three
years, thereby preserving the PHLX's incentives to promote and
facilitate the sale of the Index Options while allowing Nasdaq to seek
other promoters of its intellectual property if the PHLX's performance
fails to meet expectations. The PHLX believes that its exclusive
licensing agreement with Nasdaq increases the PHLX's incentive to
promote the Index Options, which should enhance competition. \23\ See PHLX Letter, note 7, supra.
In response to the commenter's concerns about potential conflicts
of interest, the PHLX argues that the Exchange has no conflict of
interest because it intends to pass on the licensing fees in pays
Nasdaq to the specialist to whom the PHLX allocates the Index
Options.\24\ Because the PHLX will pass on the licensing fees to the
specialist, the PHLX will not experience any financial penalty as a
result of a disappointing performance in the licensed product. In
addition, the PHLX maintains that its executive licensing agreement
with Nasdaq eliminates any conflict of interest between the PHLX's
regulatory and financial obligations because the agreement imposes no
financial penalties of the PHLX if it fails to reach certain volume
thresholds. The PHLX also states that the exclusing licensing agreement
provides no incentive for the PHLX to inflate trading volumes artifically.
\24\ See PHLX Rule 511(b)(ii). According to PHLX, it may
condition the allocation of an options book on the specialist's
undertaking to pay the Exchange and/or any third party any amounts
related to the licensing of the product or any amounts related to the use of intellectual property.
After careful review, the Commission finds that the proposed rule
change, as amended, is consistent with the requirements of the Act and
the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national
securities exchange and, in particular, the requirements of Section
6(b)(5) of the Act.\25\ The Commission finds that the trading of Full
Size Index Options, Mini Index Options, FLEX Index Options, and Mini
Flex Options will permit investors to participate in the price
movements of the securities listed and traded on Nasdaq. The Commission
also believes that the trading of the Index Options will allow
investors holding positions in some or all of the securities underlying
the Index to hedge the risks associated with their portfolios, and that
the trading of FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options will
provide investors with additional flexiblity in hedging the risks
associated with holding some or all of the Index's component
securities.\26\ Accordingly, the Commission believes that Index Options
will provide investors with an important trading and hedging mechanism.
By broadening the hedging and investment opportunities of investors,
the Commission believes that the trading of Index Options will serve to
protect investors, promote the public interest, and contribute to the maintenance of fair and orderly markets.\27\
\25\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5). In approving this proposal, the
Commission has considered the proposed rule's impact on efficiency, competition, and capital formation. 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\26\ The Commission previously has approved the listing and
trading by the PHLX of FLEX equity and index options. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 39549 (January 14, 1998), 63 FR 3601 (January 23, 1998) (order approving File No. SRPHLX9638)
(``January 23, 1998'') (order approving File No. SRPHLX9638)
(``FLEX Order''). The Commission's findings and discussion in the
FLEX Order with respect to FLEX index options are incorporated by reference herein.
\27\ Pursuant to Section 6(b)(5) of the Act, the Commission must
predicate approval of any new option or warrant proposal upon a
finding that the introduction of such new derivative instrument is
in the public interest. Such a finding would be difficult for a
derivative instrument that served no hedging or other economic
function, because any benefits that might be derived by market
participants likely would be outweighted by the potential for
manipulation, diminished public confidence in the integrity of the
markets, and other valid regulatory concerns. In this regard, the
trading of Index Options will provide investors with a hedging
vehicle that should reflect the overall movement of the Nasdaq
market. The Commission also believes that the Index Options will
provide investors with a means by which to make investment decisions
in the Nasdaq market, allowing them to establish positions or
increase positions in Nasdaq market stocks in a cost effective manner.
The trading of Index Options, however, raises several issues, including issues related to index design, customer protection, surveillance, and market impact. For the reasons discussed below, the Commission believes that the PHLX has adequately addressed these issues.
The Commission finds that it is appropriate and consistent with the
Act to classify the Index as broadbased for purposes of index option
trading, and therefore appropriate to permit PHLIX rules applicable to
the trading of broadbased options to apply to the Index Options.
Specifically, the Commission believes that the Index is broadbased
because it reflects a substantial segement of the U.S. equities market.
First, as described more fully above, the Index is comprised of
approximately 3,400 securities and includes all of the foreign and
domestic ADRs, common stocks, ordinary shares, REITs, shares of
beneficial interest, and tracking stocks listed and traded on Nasdaq.
According to the PHLX, as of July 31, 2003, component securities
representing 95% of the weight of the Index were options eligible.\28\
Second, the Index includes ten industry groups, with the top five
industry groups weighted in the Index as of July 31, 2003, as follows:
(1) computer software and hardware, 52%; (2) healthcare, 14%; (3) financials, 11%; (4) consumer discretionary, 8%; and (5)
telecommunications and media, 6%. Third, as of July 31, 2003, the total
capitalization of the Index was $2.6 trillion, the capitalization of
the Index's components ranged from $284 billion to $55,000,\29\ and the
medium capitalization of the Index's components was $110 million. As of
July 31, 2003, the largest Index component accounted for 11.12% of the
weight of the Index, and the five highest weighted securities accounted
for 29.76% of the weight of the Index. Fourth, the selection and
maintenance criteria for the Index's components should serve to ensure
that the Index maintains its broad representative sample of stocks.
\28\ The option listing standards, which are uniform among the
U.S. options exchanges, provide that a security underlying an option
must, among other things, meet the following requirements: (1) the
public float must be at least 7 million shares; (2) there must be a
minimum of 2,000 holders of the underlying security; (3) trading
volume must have been at least 2.4 million shares over the preceding
12 months; and (4) the market price per share must meet specified
levels. See, e.g., PHLX Rule 1009, ``Criteria for Underlying Securities,'' Commentary .01.
\29\ For companies that list American Depository Shares, these
values represent only the value of the outstanding American
Depository Shares and not the global market capitalization of the
issuer, which is the basis for listing on Nasdaq. Nasdaq's minimum
listing and maintenance standard for global market capitalization is $50 million. See note 12 supra.
The Commission also believes that the general broad
diversification, capitalizations, liquidity, and relative weighting of
the Index's component securities minimize the potential for
manipulation of the Index. First, the Index is comprised of
approximately 3,400 securities listed and traded on Nasdaq, and no
single security dominates the Index. Second, as of July 31, 2003, the total Index capitalization
[[Page 69757]]
was $2.6 trillion, the median capitalization of the Index's components
was $110 million, the capitalizations of the Index's ten most heavily
weighted components (representing 37.68% of the weight of the Index)
ranged from approximately $32 billion to approximately $284 billion,
and only 2.56% of the capitalization of the Index was comprised of
securities with a market capitalization of less than $100 million.
Third, during the period from January 1, 2003, through July 31, 2003,
the average daily trading volume of the component securities
representing 95% of the weight of the Index was 850,000 shares and only
2.19% of the capitalization of the Index was comprised of components
with an average daily trading volume of less than 10,000 shares.
Fourth, as of July 31, 2003, component securities representing 95% of
the weight of the Index were options eligible.\30\ Fifth, the PHLX has
represented that it will monitor the Index on a semiannual basis and
will notify Commission staff if and when: (1) 10% of the capitalization
of the Index comprises securities with a market capitalization of less
than $100 million; (2) 10% of the capitalization of the Index is made
up of components with an average daily trading volume of less than
10,000 shares over the previous six months; (3) less than 80% of the
weight of the Index is options eligible; (4) 10% of the weight of the
index is represented by securities trading less than 20,000 shares per
day; or (5) the largest component of the Index comprises 15% of the
weight of the Index, or the top five components comprise 50% of the
weight of the Index.\31\ In the event the Index fails to satisfy any of
these criteria, the PHLX will notify the Commission to determine the appropriate regulatory response.\32\
\30\ See note 28 supra for a description of the PHLX's options eligibility standards.
\31\ See Amendment No. 3, note 4 supra.
\32\ If the composition of the Index's underlying securities
were to change substantially, the Commission's decision regarding
the appropriateness of the Index's current maintenance standards
would be reevaluated, and additional approval under Section 19(b) of
the Act might be necessary to continue to trade the Index Options.
The Commission believes that these factors minimize the potential for manipulation because it is unlikely that attempted manipulations of the prices of the Index's components would affect significantly the Index's value. Moreover, the surveillance procedures discussed below should detect as well as deter potential manipulations and other trading abuses.
Finally, the Commission believes that the position and exercise limits for the Index Options are designed to minimize the potential for manipulation and other market impact concerns. The position and exercise limits for the Index Options are comparable to the position and exercise limits approved for other broadbased index options.\33\ \33\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 48591 (October 2, 2003), 68 FR 58728 (October 10, 2003) (File No. SRCBOE 200317) (approving options on 11 broadbased Russell Indexes, with position limits for each index option of 50,000 contracts on either side of the market and no more than 30,000 contracts in the series in the nearest expiration month).
The Commission believes that a regulatory system designed to
protect public customers must be in place before the trading of
sophisticated financial instruments, such as the Index Options, can
commence on a national securities exchange. The Commission notes that
the trading of standardized, exchangetraded options occurs in an
environment that is designed to ensure, among other things, that: (1)
the special risks of options are disclosed to public customers; (2)
only investors capable of evaluating and bearing the risks of options
trading are engaged in such trading; and (3) special compliance
procedures are applicable to options accounts. Accordingly, because the
Index Options, including FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index
Options, will be subject to the same regulatory regime as the other
standardized options traded currently on the PHLX, the Commission
believes that adequate safeguards are in place to ensure the protection of investors in Index Options.\34\
\34\ The Commission previously has designated FLEX index options
as standardized options for the purposes of the options disclosure
framework established under Rule 9b1 of the Act. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 31910 (February 23, 1993), 58 FR 12056 (March 2, 1993) (File Nos. SRCBOE9217; SROCC9233; ODD931).
The Commission generally believes that a surveillance sharing
agreement between an exchange proposing to list a stock index
derivative product and the market(s) trading the stocks underlying the
derivative product is an important measure for the surveillance of the
derivative and underlying securities markets. Such agreements ensure
the availability of information necessary to detect and deter potential
manipulations and other trading abuses, thereby making the stock index
product less readily susceptible to manipulation. In this regard, the
PHLX and the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
(``NASD'') are members of the ISG and the ISG Agreement will apply to
the trading of Index Options.\35\ In addition, the PHLX will apply to
the Index Options the same surveillance procedures it uses currently for existing index options trading on the PHLX.
\35\ The ISG was formed on July 14, 1983, to, among other
things, coordinate more effectively surveillance and investigative
information sharing arrangements in the stock and options markets.
All of the registered national securities exchanges and the NASD are
members of the ISG. In addition, futures exchanges and nonU.S.
exchanges and associations are affiliate members of ISG. As noted
above, the PHLX represents that Index component securities
comprising only 0.64% of the weight of the Index are incorporated in
countries where the domestic equity exchange is not a member of the ISG.
The Commission believes that the listing and trading of Index Options will not adversely impact the underlying securities markets.\36\ First, the Index is broadbased and comprised of approximately 3,400 securities, no one of which dominates the Index. Second, as described above, the Index components representing a significant portion of the weight of the Index are highly capitalized and actively traded. Third, the position and exercise limits should serve to minimize potential manipulation and market impact concerns. Fourth, the risk to investors of contraparty nonperformance will be minimized because the Index Options, like other standardized options traded in the U.S., will be issued and guaranteed by the Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC''). Fifth, existing PHLX index options rules and surveillance procedures will apply to the Index Options. \36\ As noted above, both the PHLX and OPRA have represented that they have the necessary systems capacity to support the new series of index options that would result from the introduction of the Index Options. See notes 16 and 17, supra, and accompanying text.
The Commission also believes that settling expiring FullSize
Options and Mini Index Options based on the opening prices of component
securities is reasonable and consistent with the Act. As noted in other
contexts, valuing options for exercise settlement on expiration based
on opening prices rather than on closing prices may help to reduce
adverse effects on markets for securities underlying FullSize Index Options and Mini Index Options.\37\
\37\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 30944 (July
21, 1992), 57 FR 33376 (July 28, 1992) (order approving File No. SR CBOE9209) (``1992 Order'').
The Commission believes that the listing and trading of FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options
[[Page 69758]]
should provide investors with more tailored options on the Index and
extend to investors the benefits of a listed, exchange market in
customized index options.\38\ The benefits of the PHLX's options market
include, but are not limited to, a centralized market center, an
auction market with posted transparent market quotations and
transaction reporting, parameters and procedures for clearance and
settlement, and the guarantee of OCC for all contracts traded on the
PHLX. In addition, the Commission believes that the proposal to list
and trade FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options could help the
PHLX to compete with the overthecounter (``OTC'') market in
customized index options and help the PHLX to meet the demands of
portfolio managers and other institutional investors who may use the
OTC market to meet their hedging needs. The Commission notes that the
PHLX rules governing the trading of FLEX index options, including the
minimum size requirement for an RFQ, will apply to MiniFlex Index Options.\39\
\38\ FLEX options allow investors to customize certain terms,
including size, term to expiration, exercise style, exercise price, and exercise settlement value.
Under the PHLX's rules, FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index
Options can be constructed with expiration exercise settlement based on
the closing values of the Index's component securities, which
potentially could result in adverse effects for the markets in these
securities.\40\ Although the Commission continues to believe that
basing the settlement of index products on opening as opposed to
closing prices on Expiration Friday helps to alleviate stock market
volatility,\41\ these market impact concerns are reduced in the case of
FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options because the expiration
of these options will not correspond to the normal expiration of any
nonFLEX options (including options overlying the Index), stock index
futures, and options on stock index futures. In particular, FLEX
options may never expire on any ``Expiration Friday'' because under the
PHLX's rules the expiration date of a FLEX option may not occur on a
day that is on, or within, two business days of the expiration date of
a nonFLEX option.\42\ The Commission believes that this should reduce
the possibility that the exercise of FLEX Index Options or MiniFlex
Index Options at expiration will cause any additional pressure on the
market for the underlying securities at the same time nonFLEX Index Options expire.
\40\ See 1992 Order.
\41\ See 1992 Order.
\42\ See PHLX Rule 1079(a)(6).
As noted above, both commenters raised concerns about the PHLX's
exclusive licensing agreement with Nasdaq to trade the Index Options.
The Commission notes that the ISE has filed a petition for rulemaking
to amend Rule 19c5 under the Act \43\ to prohibit options exchanges
from entering into exclusive licensing agreements with respect to index
option products.\44\ The Commission believes that the issues raised by
the commenters and by ISE in its petition for rulemaking regarding the
exclusive licensing of index option products should be considered
comprehensively rather than on an ad hoc basis in the context of a
particular index option product or products, such as the Index Options.
In addition, the Commission believes that investors will benefit from
the availability of the Index Options because, as described above, they
will provide investors with additional hedging and trading vehicles.
Accordingly, the Commission believes that it is appropriate in the
public interest to approve the current proposal in order to make the
Index Options available to investors while the Commission considers the
issues presented by the exclusive licensing of index option products in the context of the ISE's petition for rulemaking.
\43\ 17 CFR 240.19c5.
\44\ See letter from David Krell, President and Chief Executive
Officer, ISE, to Jonathan Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated November 1, 2002.
The Commission finds good cause to approve Amendment No. 3 prior to
the thirtieth day after the date of publication of notice of filing
thereof in the Federal Register. Amendment No. 3 strengthens the
proposal by representing that the PHLX will notify the Commission staff
upon the occurrence of certain changes in the Index. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that there is good cause, consistent with Sections
6(b)(5) and 19(b)(2) of the Act,\45\ to approve Amendment 3 on an accelerated basis.
\45\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5) and 78s(b)(2).
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and arguments concerning Amendment No. 3, including whether Amendment No. 3 is consistent with the Act. Persons making written submissions should file six copies thereof with the Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street NW., Washington, DC 205490609. Comments may also be submitted electronically at the following email address: rulecomments@sec.gov. All comment letters should refer to File No. SR PHLX200366. This file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To help the Commission process and review comments more efficiently, your comments should be sent in hardcopy or by email but not by both methods. Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for inspection and copying in the Commission's Public Reference Room. Copies of such filing will also be available for inspection and copying at the principal office of the PHLX. All submissions should refer to File No. SRPHLX200366 and should be submitted by January 5, 2004.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,\46\ that Amendment No. 3 be approved on an accelerated basis and that the proposed rule change (SRPHLX200366), as amended, is approved.
For the Commission, by the Division of Market Regulation, pursuant to delegated authority.\47\
\47\ 17 CFR 200.303(a)(12).
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 0330837 Filed 121203; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 801001M
SUMMARY: Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Inc.,
DOCUMENT BODY 2: December 5, 2003.
On September 29, 2003, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Inc.
(``PHLX'' or ``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (``Commission'' or ``SEC''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b4
thereunder,\2\ a proposal to list and trade cashsettled, European
style options on the Nasdaq Composite Index[reg] (the ``Nasdaq
Composite Index'' or ``Index''), a capitalizationweighted, A.M.
settled index comprised of approximately 3,400 stocks listed and traded
on The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. (``Nasdaq''). The PHLX filed Amendment
Nos. 1 and 2 to the proposal on October 17, 2003.\3\ and filed Amendment No. 3 to the proposal on November 13, 2003.\4\
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b4.
\3\ See letter from Mark I. Salvacion, Director and Counsel,
PHLX, to Kelly Riley, Senior Special Counsel, Division of Market
Regulation (``Division''), Commission, dated October 17, 2003
(``Amendment No. 1''); and letter from Mark I. Salvacion, Director
and Counsel, PHLX, to Yvonne Fraticelli, Special Counsel, Division,
Commission, dated October 17, 2003 (``Amendment No. 2''). In
Amendments No. 1, the PHLX revises the position and exercise limits
for the proposed options. In Amendments No. 2, the PHLX proposes to
list miniFLEX options on the Nasdaq Composite Index and provides an
example of how the proposed miniFLEX options could be used.
\4\ See letter from Mark I. Salvacion, Director and Counsel,
PHLX, to Kelly Riley, Senior Special Counsel, Division. Commission,
dated November 12, 2003 (``Amendment No. 3''). In Amendment No. 3,
the PHLX represents that the PHLX will notify the staff of the
Commission if: (1) Less than 80% of the weight of the Index is
options eligible; (2) 10% of the weight of the Index is represented
by stocks trading less than 20,000 shares per day; or (3) the
largest component of the Index comprises 15% of the weight of the
Index, or the top five components comprise 50% of the weight of the Index.
The proposed rule change and Amendment Nos. 1 and 2 were published
for comment in the Federal Register on October 24, 2003.\5\ The
Commission received two comment letters regarding the proposal.\6\ On
November 21, 2003, the PHLX submitted a letter responding to the issues
raised in the comment letters.\7\ This order approves the proposed rule
change, as amended. In addition, the Commission is publishing notice to
solicit comments on and is simultaneously approving, on an accelerated basis, Amendment No. 3.
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 48663 (October 20, 2003), 68 FR 61029.
\6\ See letter from Kathryn L. Beck, Senior Vice President,
General Counsel, Corporate Secretary, and Chief Regulatory Officer,
Pacific Exchange, Inc. (``PCX''), to Margaret H. McFarland, Deputy
Secretary, Commission, dated October 24, 2003 (``PCX Letter''); and
letter from Michael J. Simon, Senior Vice President and Secretary,
International Securities Exchange, Inc. (``ISE''), to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated November 10, 2003 (``ISE Letter'').
\7\ See letter from Mark Salvacion, Director and Counsel, PHLX,
to Kelly Riley, Senior Special Counsel, Division, Commission, dated November 21, 2003 (``PHLX Letter'').
The PHLX proposes to list and trade cashsettled options on the
Index. In addition trading fullsize options on the Index (``FullSize
Index Options''), the PHLX proposes to trade mini Index options that
are \1/10\th the size of FullSize Index Options (``Mini Index
Options''), Flexible Exchange Index (``FLEX[reg]'') options on the
Index (``FLEX Index Options''), and miniFLEX Index Options (``Mini
Flex Index Options'') (the FullSize Index Options, Mini Index Options,
FLEX Index Options, and MiniFlex Index Options may be referred to,
collectively, as the ``Index Options'').\8\ The PHLX will trade the
Index Options pursuant to current PHLX rules governing the trading of
index options.\9\ The PHLX's current rules applicable to the trading of
FLEX index options, including the requirement that the minimum size of a RequestforQuote (``RFQ'') be $10
[[Page 69754]]
million, will apply to MiniFlex Index Options.\10\
\8\ The FullSize Index Options and the Mini Index Options will
feature Europeanstyle exercise. The FLEX Index Options and the
MiniFlex Index Options may feature Americanstyle exercise or Europeanstyle exercise. See PHLX Rule 1079(a)(5).
\9\ See, particularly, PHLX Rules 1000A through 1102A (Rules
Applicable to Trading of Options on Indices) and, generally, PHLX Rules 1000 through 1090 (Options Rules of the PHLX).
\10\ Telephone conversation between Kelly Riley, Senior Special
Counsel, Division, Commission, and Mark Salvacion, Director and Counsel, PHLX, on November 25, 2003.
The Index is a capitalizationweighted index comprised of approximately 3,400 stocks listed and traded on Nasdaq. The Index includes Nasdaq National Market and Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities. To be eligible for inclusion in the Index, a security must be listed on Nasdaq and must be one of the following types of securities: an American Depositary Receipt (``ADR''), common stock, ordinary share, real estate investment trust (``REIT''), share of beneficial interest, of tracking stock. The Index is comprised of all of the foreign and domestic ADRs, common stocks, ordinary shares, REITs, shares of beneficial interest, and tracking stocks listed on Nasdaq. Convertible debentures, preferred stocks, rights, warrants, units, closedend funds, exchangetraded funds (``ETFs''), and derivative securities are not included in the Index.
The Index includes most of the stocks listed and traded on the
Nasdaq SmallCap Market. Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities are
``reported securities'' for purposes of Rule 11Aa31 under the Act.\11\
According to the PHLX, Nasdaq SmallCap Market stocks comprised 1.3% of the capitalization of the Index as of July 31, 2003.
\11\ See 17 CFR 240.11Aa31. A ``reported security'' is defined
in Rule 11Aa31(a)(4) under the Act as ``any listed equity security
or Nasdaq security for which transaction reports are required to be
made on a realtime basis pursuant to an effective transaction
reporting plan.'' In 2001, the Commission approved the extension of the Joint SelfRegulatory Organization Plan Governing the
Collection, Consolidation and Dissemination of Quotation and
Transaction Information for Nasdaq Listed Securities Traded on
Exchanges on an Unlisted Trading Privileges Basis (``Nasdaq UTP
Plan'') to include Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities. Accordingly,
Nasdaq SmallCap Market securities became securities reported
pursuant to an effective transaction reporting plan approved by the Commission.
The Index includes ten industry groups. As of July 31, 2003, the top five industry groups and their weights in the Index were: (1) computer software and hardware, 52%; (2) healthcare, 14%; (3) financials, 11%; (4) consumer discretionary, 8%; and (5)
As of July 31, 2003, the capitalization of the Index's components ranged from $284 billion to $55,000,\12\ and the market capitalization of the Index totaled $2.6 trillion. The largest Index component accounted for 11.12% of the weight of the Index and the smallest component accounted for less than 1% of the weight of the Index. The median capitalization of the Index's components was $110 million. \12\ For companies that list American Depositary Shares, these values represent only the value of the outstanding American Depositary Shares and not the global market capitalization of the issuer, which is the basis for listing on Nasdaq. Nasdaq's minimum listing and maintenance standard for global market capitalization is $50 million.
During the period from January 1, 2003, through July 31, 2003, the average daily trading volume of the component securities representing 95% of the weight of the Index was 850,000 shares, and the average daily trading volume for all of the Index's components was 485,000 shares. The top 100 components accounted for 64% of the weight of the Index and the bottom 100 stocks accounted for 0.01% of the weight of the Index. The prices of the Index's components ranged from $0.11 per share to $780.00 per share. The average share price was $14.15. The share outstanding for each of the Index's components ranged from 10,000 shares to 11 billion shares, with an average of 43 million shares outstanding. According to the PHLX, options eligible securities represented 95% of the weight of the Index.
The value of the Index equals the aggregate value of the Total Shares Outstanding (``TSO'') of each Index component security multiplied by each security's respective price on Nasdaq, divided by the Adjusted Base Period Market (``ABPMV''), and multiplied by the Base Value. The Index began on February 5, 1971, at a Base Value of 100.00.
The Index is disseminated every 15 seconds through the Nasdaq Index
Dissemination Services SM (``NIDS'') during normal Nasdaq
trading hours (9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET).\13\ According to the PHLX, all major market data vendors carry the NIDS data feed.
\13\ NIDS is a Nasdaq data feed carrying intraday index values and valuation data for ETFs listed on Nasdaq.
The Index is calculated using Nasdaq prices (not consolidated) during the day and the Nasdaq Official Closing Price (``NOCP'') for the close.\14\ Although the Index is calculated until 4:00 p.m. ET, the Index's closing value may change up until 5:15 p.m. ET due to changes or corrections to the last sale in the Index's component securities. \14\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 47517 (March 18, 2003), 68 FR 14446 (March 25, 2003) (File No. SRNASD2002158) (approving the establishment of the NOCP).
Nasdaq will maintain the Index, and the PHLX represented that it will not influence any Nasdaq decisions concerning maintenance of the Index.
An Indexeligible security (either an initial public offering or a seasoned security) is added to the Index on the business day immediately after a last sale is established (usually day two of listing on Nasdaq). A component security that is no longer traded on Nasdaq or no longer meets the securitytype eligibility criteria is removed from the Index. The Index is updated on a daily basis and there is no periodic rebalancing of Index components.
Changes in the number of shares outstanding driven by corporate events, including stock dividends, splits, and certain spinoffs and rights issuances are adjusted on the exdate. A change in the TSO arising from other corporate actions including secondary offerings, stock repurchases, conversions, and acquisitions is ordinarily made to the Index on the evening prior to the effective date of the corporate action or as soon as practicable thereafter. Changes are made after the market close and are reflected on http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/asp/nasdaqcomp.asp the following morning.
To ensure that there is no discontinuity in the value of the Index, Nasdaq ordinarily adjusts the ABPMV when there is a change in a component security's TSO, a component addition or deletion, or changes due to certain spinoffs and rights offerings.
Although the PHLX is not involved in the maintenance of the Index,
it has represented that it will monitor the Index on a semiannual
basis and will notify Commission staff if and when: (1) 10% of the
capitalization of the Index comprises securities with a market
capitalization of less than $100 million; (2) 10% of the capitalization
of the Index is made up of components with an average daily trading
volume of less than 10,000 shares over the previous six months; (3)
less than 80% of the weight of the Index is options eligible; (4) 10%
of the weight of the Index is represented by stocks trading less than
20,000 shares per day; or (5) the largest component of the Index
comprises 15% of the weight of the Index, or the top five components
comprise 50% of the weight of the Index.\15\ According to the PHLX, as
of July 31, 2003, component securities representing 2.56% of the capitalization of the Index had market capitalizations
[[Page 69755]]
of less than $100 million, and securities representing 2.19% of the
capitalization of the Index had average daily trading volumes of less than 10,000 shares over the previous six months.
\15\ See Amendment No. 3, note 4 supra.
As noted above, the Exchange proposes to trade FullSize Index Options, Mini Index Options, FLEX Index Options, and MiniFlex Index Options. The contract multiplier for FullSize Index Options will be $100 and the contract multiplier for Mini Index Options will be $10. Each contract will trade under separate ticker symbols and will not be fungible with the other. The size of the underlying Index will remain the same for each contract (i.e., Mini Index Options will not overlie a separate index calculation reduced by 1/10th) and the PHLX represents that it will list similar strikes for each and the settlement values will be uniform.
The Exchange will list strike prices in $5.00 intervals for the Index Options. The minimum tick size for series quoted below $3.00 (i.e., $300 in premium after factoring in the $100 contract multiplier for FullSize Index Options and $30 in premium after factoring in the $10 contract multiplier for Mini Index Options) will be $.05 (i.e., $5.00 for FullSize Index Options, and $.50 for Mini Index Options), and for the series quoted above $3.00 the minimum tick size will be $.10 (i.e. $10.00 for FullSize Index Options and $1.00 for Mini Index Options).
The PHLX represents that it has adequate system capacity to trade
the Index Options.\16\ In addition, the PHLX represents that the
Options Price Reporting Authority (``OPRA'') informed the Exchange that
trading in the Index Options will have minimal impact on OPRA's current quoting capacity.\17\
\16\ See letter from Thomas A. Wittman, Senior Vice President,
Trading Floor Development, PHLX, to Yvonne Fraticelli, Division, Commission, dated October 7, 2003.
\17\ See letter from Joseph P. Corrigan, Executive Director,
OPRA, to Matthew Holm, Director, PHLX, dated September 16, 2003. Settlement of Index Options
The FullSize Index Options and Mini Index Options will expire on
the Saturday following the third Friday of the expiration month.\18\
Trading in the expiring contract month will normally cease at 4:15 p.m.
ET on the immediately preceding Thursday. Nasdaq will calculate the
exercise settlement value of the Index at option expiration based on
the volumeweighted opening price (``Nasdaq VWOP'') of the component
securities in the first four minutes of trading (the ``Extraction
Period'') on the business day prior to expiration, which normally will
be a Friday. Each Index component will have a trade extraction history
independently maintained beginning with the receipt of the first day's
trade in that issue and continuing for four continuous minutes. Nasdaq
will record and reflect trade adjustments during the Extraction Period
for each component until the fourminute window for the last component
stock closes or 10:30 a.m., whichever is sooner. Nasdaq will then
calculate the Nasdaq VWOP for each security based on the extracted
trades and aggregate the Nasdaq VWOPs of the Index's components to
calculate the Index settlement value. If a stock fails to open for
trading, the last available price on the stock will be used to
calculate the Index, as is done for currently listed indexes. A stock
will be deemed to have failed to open for trading when it does not open for trading prior to 10:30 a.m. on such trading day.
\18\ Under PHLX Rule 1079(a)(6), a FLEX option on the Index may
not expire on any day that falls on or within two business days
prior to or subsequent to an expiration day for a nonFLEX option on the Index.
To monitor trading in the Index Options, the Exchange will use the same surveillance procedures it uses currently for the Exchange's sector index options. These procedures include complete access to trading activity in the underlying securities. The Intermarket Surveillance Group (``ISG'') Agreement, dated July 14, 1983, as amended, will be applicable to the trading of the Index Options. According to the PHLX, as of July 31, 2003, 315 Index components representing 3.27% of the weight of the Index are the securities of entities incorporated outside the United States. Of those securities, only 125, or 0.64% of the capitalization of the Index, are the securities of companies incorporated in countries whose domestic equity exchange is not a member of ISG.
The PHLX proposes to amend PHLX Rule 1001A, ``Position Limits,'' to establish position limits of 50,000 contracts for FullSize Index Options, with 30,000 contracts in the nearest expiration month, and 500,000 contracts for Mini Index Options on either side of the market, with 300,000 contracts total in the nearest expiration month. Exercise limits will be set at the same level as position limits. The proposed amendment to PHLX Rule 1001A will require that the position limits in FullSize Index Options and Mini Index Options be aggregated for the purpose of determining compliance with position and exercise limits. The PHLX proposes to establish the position limit of the index hedge exemption at 150,000 contracts for FullSize Index Options and 1,500,000 contracts for Mini Index Options.
The Exchange proposes to amend PHLX Rule 1079, ``FLEX Index and Equity Options,'' to establish a separate position limit of 50,000 contracts on the same side of the market for FLEX Index Options, with 30,000 contracts on the same side of the market in the nearest expiration month. For MiniFlex Index Options, the PHLX proposes to establish a position limit of 500,000 contracts on the same side of the market, with 300,000 contracts on the same side of the market in the nearest expiration month.
The Commission received two comment letters \19\ regarding the
proposal, which raise several concerns with respect to the exclusive
licensing agreement PHLX entered into with Nasdaq, the Index licensor,
to list and trade the Index Options.\20\ The commenters maintain that
the PHLX's proposal fails to explain why, in light of the exclusive
licensing agreement, the proposal does not impose a burden on
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act as required in Form 19b4. One commenter also
expresses concern that the terms of the exclusive licensing agreement
could create a conflict between the PHLX's financial interests and its
obligation to fairly monitor trading in the Index Options, because,
according to the commenter, the licensing agreement might impose
financial penalties on the PHLX if trading in the Index Options fails
to meet specified volume thresholds.\21\ In addition, the commenter
asserts that the exclusive licensing agreement could lead to order routing biases.\22\
\19\ See note 6 supra.
\20\ The Commission notes that ISE specifically stated that it
did not object to the PHLX's proposal to trade the Index Options. See ISE Letter, note 6 supra.
\21\ See PCX Letter, note 6, supra.
In response, the PHLX argues that its exclusive licensing agreement
with Nasdaq will not inhibit competition.\23\ Specifically, the PHLX
maintains that the Index Options will compete with other index options
and other investment products, such as equity options and options on ETFs. Further,
[[Page 69756]]
PHLX argued that the Commission should consider comments relating to
its exclusive licensing agreement in light of other similar investment
products, such as the Nasdaq 100 Index Tracking Stock, Nasdaq 100 Index
Tracking Stock options, and the Fidelity Nasdaq Composite Index
Tracking Stock. PHLX believes that the existence of these similar
competing products negates the argument that the exclusive licensing
agreement imposes a burden on competition. In addition, the PHLX states
that Nasdaq and the PHLX have limited the term of exclusively to three
years, thereby preserving the PHLX's incentives to promote and
facilitate the sale of the Index Options while allowing Nasdaq to seek
other promoters of its intellectual property if the PHLX's performance
fails to meet expectations. The PHLX believes that its exclusive
licensing agreement with Nasdaq increases the PHLX's incentive to
promote the Index Options, which should enhance competition. \23\ See PHLX Letter, note 7, supra.
In response to the commenter's concerns about potential conflicts
of interest, the PHLX argues that the Exchange has no conflict of
interest because it intends to pass on the licensing fees in pays
Nasdaq to the specialist to whom the PHLX allocates the Index
Options.\24\ Because the PHLX will pass on the licensing fees to the
specialist, the PHLX will not experience any financial penalty as a
result of a disappointing performance in the licensed product. In
addition, the PHLX maintains that its executive licensing agreement
with Nasdaq eliminates any conflict of interest between the PHLX's
regulatory and financial obligations because the agreement imposes no
financial penalties of the PHLX if it fails to reach certain volume
thresholds. The PHLX also states that the exclusing licensing agreement
provides no incentive for the PHLX to inflate trading volumes artifically.
\24\ See PHLX Rule 511(b)(ii). According to PHLX, it may
condition the allocation of an options book on the specialist's
undertaking to pay the Exchange and/or any third party any amounts
related to the licensing of the product or any amounts related to the use of intellectual property.
After careful review, the Commission finds that the proposed rule
change, as amended, is consistent with the requirements of the Act and
the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national
securities exchange and, in particular, the requirements of Section
6(b)(5) of the Act.\25\ The Commission finds that the trading of Full
Size Index Options, Mini Index Options, FLEX Index Options, and Mini
Flex Options will permit investors to participate in the price
movements of the securities listed and traded on Nasdaq. The Commission
also believes that the trading of the Index Options will allow
investors holding positions in some or all of the securities underlying
the Index to hedge the risks associated with their portfolios, and that
the trading of FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options will
provide investors with additional flexiblity in hedging the risks
associated with holding some or all of the Index's component
securities.\26\ Accordingly, the Commission believes that Index Options
will provide investors with an important trading and hedging mechanism.
By broadening the hedging and investment opportunities of investors,
the Commission believes that the trading of Index Options will serve to
protect investors, promote the public interest, and contribute to the maintenance of fair and orderly markets.\27\
\25\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5). In approving this proposal, the
Commission has considered the proposed rule's impact on efficiency, competition, and capital formation. 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\26\ The Commission previously has approved the listing and
trading by the PHLX of FLEX equity and index options. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 39549 (January 14, 1998), 63 FR 3601 (January 23, 1998) (order approving File No. SRPHLX9638)
(``January 23, 1998'') (order approving File No. SRPHLX9638)
(``FLEX Order''). The Commission's findings and discussion in the
FLEX Order with respect to FLEX index options are incorporated by reference herein.
\27\ Pursuant to Section 6(b)(5) of the Act, the Commission must
predicate approval of any new option or warrant proposal upon a
finding that the introduction of such new derivative instrument is
in the public interest. Such a finding would be difficult for a
derivative instrument that served no hedging or other economic
function, because any benefits that might be derived by market
participants likely would be outweighted by the potential for
manipulation, diminished public confidence in the integrity of the
markets, and other valid regulatory concerns. In this regard, the
trading of Index Options will provide investors with a hedging
vehicle that should reflect the overall movement of the Nasdaq
market. The Commission also believes that the Index Options will
provide investors with a means by which to make investment decisions
in the Nasdaq market, allowing them to establish positions or
increase positions in Nasdaq market stocks in a cost effective manner.
The trading of Index Options, however, raises several issues, including issues related to index design, customer protection, surveillance, and market impact. For the reasons discussed below, the Commission believes that the PHLX has adequately addressed these issues.
The Commission finds that it is appropriate and consistent with the
Act to classify the Index as broadbased for purposes of index option
trading, and therefore appropriate to permit PHLIX rules applicable to
the trading of broadbased options to apply to the Index Options.
Specifically, the Commission believes that the Index is broadbased
because it reflects a substantial segement of the U.S. equities market.
First, as described more fully above, the Index is comprised of
approximately 3,400 securities and includes all of the foreign and
domestic ADRs, common stocks, ordinary shares, REITs, shares of
beneficial interest, and tracking stocks listed and traded on Nasdaq.
According to the PHLX, as of July 31, 2003, component securities
representing 95% of the weight of the Index were options eligible.\28\
Second, the Index includes ten industry groups, with the top five
industry groups weighted in the Index as of July 31, 2003, as follows:
(1) computer software and hardware, 52%; (2) healthcare, 14%; (3) financials, 11%; (4) consumer discretionary, 8%; and (5)
telecommunications and media, 6%. Third, as of July 31, 2003, the total
capitalization of the Index was $2.6 trillion, the capitalization of
the Index's components ranged from $284 billion to $55,000,\29\ and the
medium capitalization of the Index's components was $110 million. As of
July 31, 2003, the largest Index component accounted for 11.12% of the
weight of the Index, and the five highest weighted securities accounted
for 29.76% of the weight of the Index. Fourth, the selection and
maintenance criteria for the Index's components should serve to ensure
that the Index maintains its broad representative sample of stocks.
\28\ The option listing standards, which are uniform among the
U.S. options exchanges, provide that a security underlying an option
must, among other things, meet the following requirements: (1) the
public float must be at least 7 million shares; (2) there must be a
minimum of 2,000 holders of the underlying security; (3) trading
volume must have been at least 2.4 million shares over the preceding
12 months; and (4) the market price per share must meet specified
levels. See, e.g., PHLX Rule 1009, ``Criteria for Underlying Securities,'' Commentary .01.
\29\ For companies that list American Depository Shares, these
values represent only the value of the outstanding American
Depository Shares and not the global market capitalization of the
issuer, which is the basis for listing on Nasdaq. Nasdaq's minimum
listing and maintenance standard for global market capitalization is $50 million. See note 12 supra.
The Commission also believes that the general broad
diversification, capitalizations, liquidity, and relative weighting of
the Index's component securities minimize the potential for
manipulation of the Index. First, the Index is comprised of
approximately 3,400 securities listed and traded on Nasdaq, and no
single security dominates the Index. Second, as of July 31, 2003, the total Index capitalization
[[Page 69757]]
was $2.6 trillion, the median capitalization of the Index's components
was $110 million, the capitalizations of the Index's ten most heavily
weighted components (representing 37.68% of the weight of the Index)
ranged from approximately $32 billion to approximately $284 billion,
and only 2.56% of the capitalization of the Index was comprised of
securities with a market capitalization of less than $100 million.
Third, during the period from January 1, 2003, through July 31, 2003,
the average daily trading volume of the component securities
representing 95% of the weight of the Index was 850,000 shares and only
2.19% of the capitalization of the Index was comprised of components
with an average daily trading volume of less than 10,000 shares.
Fourth, as of July 31, 2003, component securities representing 95% of
the weight of the Index were options eligible.\30\ Fifth, the PHLX has
represented that it will monitor the Index on a semiannual basis and
will notify Commission staff if and when: (1) 10% of the capitalization
of the Index comprises securities with a market capitalization of less
than $100 million; (2) 10% of the capitalization of the Index is made
up of components with an average daily trading volume of less than
10,000 shares over the previous six months; (3) less than 80% of the
weight of the Index is options eligible; (4) 10% of the weight of the
index is represented by securities trading less than 20,000 shares per
day; or (5) the largest component of the Index comprises 15% of the
weight of the Index, or the top five components comprise 50% of the
weight of the Index.\31\ In the event the Index fails to satisfy any of
these criteria, the PHLX will notify the Commission to determine the appropriate regulatory response.\32\
\30\ See note 28 supra for a description of the PHLX's options eligibility standards.
\31\ See Amendment No. 3, note 4 supra.
\32\ If the composition of the Index's underlying securities
were to change substantially, the Commission's decision regarding
the appropriateness of the Index's current maintenance standards
would be reevaluated, and additional approval under Section 19(b) of
the Act might be necessary to continue to trade the Index Options.
The Commission believes that these factors minimize the potential for manipulation because it is unlikely that attempted manipulations of the prices of the Index's components would affect significantly the Index's value. Moreover, the surveillance procedures discussed below should detect as well as deter potential manipulations and other trading abuses.
Finally, the Commission believes that the position and exercise limits for the Index Options are designed to minimize the potential for manipulation and other market impact concerns. The position and exercise limits for the Index Options are comparable to the position and exercise limits approved for other broadbased index options.\33\ \33\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 48591 (October 2, 2003), 68 FR 58728 (October 10, 2003) (File No. SRCBOE 200317) (approving options on 11 broadbased Russell Indexes, with position limits for each index option of 50,000 contracts on either side of the market and no more than 30,000 contracts in the series in the nearest expiration month).
The Commission believes that a regulatory system designed to
protect public customers must be in place before the trading of
sophisticated financial instruments, such as the Index Options, can
commence on a national securities exchange. The Commission notes that
the trading of standardized, exchangetraded options occurs in an
environment that is designed to ensure, among other things, that: (1)
the special risks of options are disclosed to public customers; (2)
only investors capable of evaluating and bearing the risks of options
trading are engaged in such trading; and (3) special compliance
procedures are applicable to options accounts. Accordingly, because the
Index Options, including FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index
Options, will be subject to the same regulatory regime as the other
standardized options traded currently on the PHLX, the Commission
believes that adequate safeguards are in place to ensure the protection of investors in Index Options.\34\
\34\ The Commission previously has designated FLEX index options
as standardized options for the purposes of the options disclosure
framework established under Rule 9b1 of the Act. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 31910 (February 23, 1993), 58 FR 12056 (March 2, 1993) (File Nos. SRCBOE9217; SROCC9233; ODD931).
The Commission generally believes that a surveillance sharing
agreement between an exchange proposing to list a stock index
derivative product and the market(s) trading the stocks underlying the
derivative product is an important measure for the surveillance of the
derivative and underlying securities markets. Such agreements ensure
the availability of information necessary to detect and deter potential
manipulations and other trading abuses, thereby making the stock index
product less readily susceptible to manipulation. In this regard, the
PHLX and the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
(``NASD'') are members of the ISG and the ISG Agreement will apply to
the trading of Index Options.\35\ In addition, the PHLX will apply to
the Index Options the same surveillance procedures it uses currently for existing index options trading on the PHLX.
\35\ The ISG was formed on July 14, 1983, to, among other
things, coordinate more effectively surveillance and investigative
information sharing arrangements in the stock and options markets.
All of the registered national securities exchanges and the NASD are
members of the ISG. In addition, futures exchanges and nonU.S.
exchanges and associations are affiliate members of ISG. As noted
above, the PHLX represents that Index component securities
comprising only 0.64% of the weight of the Index are incorporated in
countries where the domestic equity exchange is not a member of the ISG.
The Commission believes that the listing and trading of Index Options will not adversely impact the underlying securities markets.\36\ First, the Index is broadbased and comprised of approximately 3,400 securities, no one of which dominates the Index. Second, as described above, the Index components representing a significant portion of the weight of the Index are highly capitalized and actively traded. Third, the position and exercise limits should serve to minimize potential manipulation and market impact concerns. Fourth, the risk to investors of contraparty nonperformance will be minimized because the Index Options, like other standardized options traded in the U.S., will be issued and guaranteed by the Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC''). Fifth, existing PHLX index options rules and surveillance procedures will apply to the Index Options. \36\ As noted above, both the PHLX and OPRA have represented that they have the necessary systems capacity to support the new series of index options that would result from the introduction of the Index Options. See notes 16 and 17, supra, and accompanying text.
The Commission also believes that settling expiring FullSize
Options and Mini Index Options based on the opening prices of component
securities is reasonable and consistent with the Act. As noted in other
contexts, valuing options for exercise settlement on expiration based
on opening prices rather than on closing prices may help to reduce
adverse effects on markets for securities underlying FullSize Index Options and Mini Index Options.\37\
\37\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 30944 (July
21, 1992), 57 FR 33376 (July 28, 1992) (order approving File No. SR CBOE9209) (``1992 Order'').
The Commission believes that the listing and trading of FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options
[[Page 69758]]
should provide investors with more tailored options on the Index and
extend to investors the benefits of a listed, exchange market in
customized index options.\38\ The benefits of the PHLX's options market
include, but are not limited to, a centralized market center, an
auction market with posted transparent market quotations and
transaction reporting, parameters and procedures for clearance and
settlement, and the guarantee of OCC for all contracts traded on the
PHLX. In addition, the Commission believes that the proposal to list
and trade FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options could help the
PHLX to compete with the overthecounter (``OTC'') market in
customized index options and help the PHLX to meet the demands of
portfolio managers and other institutional investors who may use the
OTC market to meet their hedging needs. The Commission notes that the
PHLX rules governing the trading of FLEX index options, including the
minimum size requirement for an RFQ, will apply to MiniFlex Index Options.\39\
\38\ FLEX options allow investors to customize certain terms,
including size, term to expiration, exercise style, exercise price, and exercise settlement value.
Under the PHLX's rules, FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index
Options can be constructed with expiration exercise settlement based on
the closing values of the Index's component securities, which
potentially could result in adverse effects for the markets in these
securities.\40\ Although the Commission continues to believe that
basing the settlement of index products on opening as opposed to
closing prices on Expiration Friday helps to alleviate stock market
volatility,\41\ these market impact concerns are reduced in the case of
FLEX Index Options and MiniFlex Index Options because the expiration
of these options will not correspond to the normal expiration of any
nonFLEX options (including options overlying the Index), stock index
futures, and options on stock index futures. In particular, FLEX
options may never expire on any ``Expiration Friday'' because under the
PHLX's rules the expiration date of a FLEX option may not occur on a
day that is on, or within, two business days of the expiration date of
a nonFLEX option.\42\ The Commission believes that this should reduce
the possibility that the exercise of FLEX Index Options or MiniFlex
Index Options at expiration will cause any additional pressure on the
market for the underlying securities at the same time nonFLEX Index Options expire.
\40\ See 1992 Order.
\41\ See 1992 Order.
\42\ See PHLX Rule 1079(a)(6).
As noted above, both commenters raised concerns about the PHLX's
exclusive licensing agreement with Nasdaq to trade the Index Options.
The Commission notes that the ISE has filed a petition for rulemaking
to amend Rule 19c5 under the Act \43\ to prohibit options exchanges
from entering into exclusive licensing agreements with respect to index
option products.\44\ The Commission believes that the issues raised by
the commenters and by ISE in its petition for rulemaking regarding the
exclusive licensing of index option products should be considered
comprehensively rather than on an ad hoc basis in the context of a
particular index option product or products, such as the Index Options.
In addition, the Commission believes that investors will benefit from
the availability of the Index Options because, as described above, they
will provide investors with additional hedging and trading vehicles.
Accordingly, the Commission believes that it is appropriate in the
public interest to approve the current proposal in order to make the
Index Options available to investors while the Commission considers the
issues presented by the exclusive licensing of index option products in the context of the ISE's petition for rulemaking.
\43\ 17 CFR 240.19c5.
\44\ See letter from David Krell, President and Chief Executive
Officer, ISE, to Jonathan Katz, Secretary, Commission, dated November 1, 2002.
The Commission finds good cause to approve Amendment No. 3 prior to
the thirtieth day after the date of publication of notice of filing
thereof in the Federal Register. Amendment No. 3 strengthens the
proposal by representing that the PHLX will notify the Commission staff
upon the occurrence of certain changes in the Index. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that there is good cause, consistent with Sections
6(b)(5) and 19(b)(2) of the Act,\45\ to approve Amendment 3 on an accelerated basis.
\45\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5) and 78s(b)(2).
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and arguments concerning Amendment No. 3, including whether Amendment No. 3 is consistent with the Act. Persons making written submissions should file six copies thereof with the Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street NW., Washington, DC 205490609. Comments may also be submitted electronically at the following email address: rulecomments@sec.gov. All comment letters should refer to File No. SR PHLX200366. This file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To help the Commission process and review comments more efficiently, your comments should be sent in hardcopy or by email but not by both methods. Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for inspection and copying in the Commission's Public Reference Room. Copies of such filing will also be available for inspection and copying at the principal office of the PHLX. All submissions should refer to File No. SRPHLX200366 and should be submitted by January 5, 2004.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,\46\ that Amendment No. 3 be approved on an accelerated basis and that the proposed rule change (SRPHLX200366), as amended, is approved.
For the Commission, by the Division of Market Regulation, pursuant to delegated authority.\47\
\47\ 17 CFR 200.303(a)(12).
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 0330837 Filed 121203; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 801001M
14 CFR Part 39 40 CFR Part 52 14 CFR Part 71 33 CFR Part 165 50 CFR Part 679 47 CFR Part 73 26 CFR Part 1 40 CFR Part 180 33 CFR Part 117 50 CFR Part 17 44 CFR Part 67 50 CFR Part 648 14 CFR Part 97 33 CFR Part 100 40 CFR Part 63 50 CFR Part 622 44 CFR Part 65 50 CFR Part 660 26 CFR Part 301 39 CFR Part 111 40 CFR Part 300 6 CFR Part 5 40 CFR Part 271 47 CFR Part 64 40 CFR Parts 52 and 81 50 CFR Part 665 44 CFR Part 64 10 CFR Part 50 49 CFR Part 571 47 CFR Part 76