FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2014-126
Washington D.C., June 25, 2014 —
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that it has ordered the national securities exchanges and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) to act jointly to develop and file with the Commission a national market system plan to implement a targeted 12 month pilot program that will widen minimum quoting and trading increments (tick sizes) for certain small capitalization stocks. The Commission plans to use the program to assess whether these changes would enhance market quality to the benefit of U.S. investors, issuers, and other market participants.
“A robust pilot program will generate critical data for assessing the impact of wider tick sizes on the securities of smaller issuers,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White. “It is time for a careful assessment of the impact of decimalization on our equity market structure and the interests of investors and issuers.”
Decimalization of the U.S. equity markets occurred more than a decade ago.
Prior to decimalization, the minimum pricing increment had been 1/8 of a dollar
(12.5 cents) and 1/16 of a dollar (6.25 cents). Minimum pricing increments
are important because they affect the nature and extent of displayed liquidity
in a stock as well as the transaction costs of investors and others when they
seek to access displayed liquidity. Since decimalization, the nature of
trading, the structure of the markets, and the roles of market participants have
changed significantly. The pilot program should facilitate studies of the
effect of tick size on liquidity, execution quality for investors, volatility,
market maker profitability, competition, transparency, and institutional
ownership.
Pilot Design
The SEC’s order sets forth the basic terms of the pilot to be established by the exchanges and FINRA, which are designed so as to not cause excessive disruption to the market and to limit increases in transaction costs.
The pilot will last for one year and include stocks with: a market capitalization of $5 billion or less; an average daily trading volume of one million shares or less; and a share price of $2 per share or more. The pilot will consist of one control group and three test groups with 300 securities in each test group selected by stratified sampling.
The SEC’s order directs the exchanges and FINRA to collect and transmit
data to the Commission and make the data available to the public in an
agreed-upon format. After the end of the pilot period, the exchanges and
FINRA will complete an assessment of the impact of the pilot and submit their
assessment to the Commission.
Next Steps
The order requires the exchanges and FINRA to submit a national market
system plan detailing the pilot program by Aug. 25, 2014. The Commission
will then publish the plan in the Federal Register for public comment, and then
determine whether to approve it.