CFTC wants proximity-based advantages available to all |
Date: Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Author: Investment Executive
U.S. derivatives regulators are proposing rules that
require exchanges that offer co-location services to provide equal
access to those services so that certain market players can't gain an
unfair advantage.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission
proposed a rule Friday that specifies requirements for exchanges that
offer co-location and/or proximity hosting services to market
participants, which includes provisions relating to equal access, fees,
latency transparency and third party proximity hosting service
providers.
Specifically, the provision relating to equal access
would require that co-location and proximity hosting services be
available to all qualified market participants willing to pay for the
services, the CFTC reports. The provision relating to fees “would ensure
that cost is not used as a means to deny access to some market
participants by pricing them out of the market”, it adds.
Additionally,
the rule would mandate disclosure of the “longest, shortest and average
latencies” for each connectivity option. And, the provision relating to
third-party providers would ensure that they can continue to provide
hosting services and that exchanges could obtain information about
market participants, their systems and their transactions from
third-party providers sufficient to carry out self-regulatory
obligations.
The issue of co-location services and whether that
can give some traders an unfair advantage is one that is preoccupying
many securities regulators. At a conference of international securities
regulators in Montreal Thursday, Mary Schapiro, chairman of the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, indicated that regulators are
examining the use of co-location, along with the proliferation of dark
pools, and the rise of high-frequency traders, as critical elements of
its work to bolster investor confidence by ensuring that the equity
market structure is as fair as possible.
The CFTC said that it continues to study
other issues related to high frequency trading, including evaluating
the impact of high frequency trading on regulated markets and firms and
on price discovery and risk management functions.