SEC Poised to Vote on Overhaul of Stock Pricing, Exchange Fees
The price increments at which thousands of stocks and ETFs are quoted look set for an overhaul Wednesday, when the US Securities and Exchange Commission votes on final rules to reduce them to less than 1 cent.
That might help trading venues such as the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Inc., among others, to better compete with wholesalers that can quote in finer increments outside of an exchange.
The changes could apply to about 2,400 securities, including stocks and exchange-traded funds, SEC officials said Tuesday during a press briefing. The number of so-called tick-constrained stocks affected by the new increments might change over time. Tick-constrained stocks include those with bid-offer spreads of less than a cent.
For years, market participants have complained that requiring exchanges to quote stocks at increments of at least 1 cent restricts liquidity and competition for order flow.
The rules would also lower the maximum amount of fees exchanges charge some brokers to access protected quotes on their platforms to $0.001 per share for stocks priced at $1 or more. Exchanges would be able to charge higher fees, as much as 0.1% of the quotation price per share for stocks under $1.
Those changes are largely in line with what the SEC first proposed in December 2022. Market participants have warned they may sue the agency over the lower access fee caps. Such fees help fund the rebates some exchanges offer brokers to entice order flow to their platforms.
Currently, a significant chunk of retail trades are handled by wholesale brokerages like Virtu Financial Inc. and Citadel Securities, which pay to process customer trades from firms such as Robinhood Markets Inc.