DOMESTIC SECURITIES, INC., PETITIONER v. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, RESPONDENT NASDAQ STOCK MARKET, INC., INTERVENOR
No. 02-1308
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Argued April 10, 2003 Decided July 1, 2003
On Petition for Review of an Order of the Securities and Exchange Commission
Warren L. Dennis argued the cause for petitioner. With him on the briefs was Linda Lerner.
Susan S. McDonald, Senior Litigation Counsel, Securities & Exchange Commission, argued the cause for respondent. With her on the brief were Meyer Eisenberg, Deputy General Counsel, Jacob H. Stillman, Solicitor, and John W. Avery, Special Counsel.
Peter E. Greene argued the cause and filed the brief for intervenor.
Before: SENTELLE, ROGERS and GARLAND, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
Bills of costs must be filed within 14 days after entry of judgment. The court looks with disfavor upon motions to file bills of costs out of time.
I. Background
A. Statutory and Factual Background
In 1975, Congress enacted amendments to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, directing the SEC to “facilitate the establishment of a national market system.”
NASD has played an important role in the establishment of the national securities market. NASD is the only “national securities association” registered with the SEC pursuant to
Since 1971, NASD has operated an electronic automated quotation system—the NASD Automated Quotation system, or “Nasdaq,” which affords dealers the means to display and instantaneously update their “bid” and “ask” quotations for securities, for which they are registered with NASD as market makers. By 1984, the Nasdaq system had evolved from providing only price quotations to providing automatic execution of some trades.
To address this discrepancy, in 1996 the SEC adopted the “order handling rules” (OHR or the Rules), which require a market maker, or an ECN on its behalf, to publish in the national market the market maker‘s best-priced customer limit orders and to provide trading access to those orders. See 61 Fed. Reg. 48,290 (Sept. 12, 1996). The Rules brought market makers’ best-priced limit orders into the national market system and put ECNs in direct competition with market makers for the business of customer limit orders. Id. at 48,307. It also gave non-ECN subscribers access to the best-priced limit orders displayed on an ECN. Previously, the ECN had charged each side of a trade executed on its system—both of whom were subscribers—an execution fee. Recognizing this, the SEC allowed the network to continue to impose charges for access to its system, so long as the fee was “not structured to discourage access by non-subscriber broker-dealers.” Id. at 48,314 n.272.
After the adoption of the OHR, several companies began operating ECNs, including the petitioner, Domestic. In 1998, the Commission adopted Regulation ATS, which, inter alia, required each network to display all of its limit orders in the national market system and provide trading access to those orders. 63 Fed. Reg. 70,844, 70,865-73 (Dec. 22, 1998).
By the late 1990s, Nasdaq had become a virtual trading floor for the national OTC securities market, offering sophisticated computerized trade execution capabilities. ECNs’ limit orders were displayed alongside the quotations and limit orders of Nasdaq market makers. Nasdaq‘s trade execution system permitted market participants to enter only a single quotation on each side of the market for each security into the system at any one time. The quotations were arranged as a montage according to price and time. Two types of execution were available through Nasdaq: (1) SuperSOES, which allowed participants to execute small orders automatically against the quotation of a market maker; and (2) SelectNET, which allowed participants to route orders to a particular market maker or ECN for non-automatic execution. The automatic execution feature of SuperSOES created a risk of double liability for an ECN if its displayed quotation or limit order had been executed internally—e.g., on an ECN‘s internal network—shortly before the SuperSOES automatic execution occurred. To avoid this risk, the ECNs did not participate in SuperSOES, but participated only in SelectNet. Under SelectNet, ECNs received only order delivery, and could decline to execute the order if it had already been executed internally. Over time, some ECNs began declining to execute orders, not because of prior internal execution, but because the broker submitting the order had failed to pay the ECN‘S SEC-authorized access fees.
In 1999, Nasdaq proposed to implement SuperMontage, a new trade execution system, to consolidate SuperSOES and SelectNet and to completely integrate quote and limit order display with order execution. SuperMontage allows participants to enter multiple quotations and orders. Participants
Under SuperMontage, ECNs retain their ability to take order delivery rather than automatic execution. An order delivery ECN is electronically presented with an order and is given up to thirty seconds to indicate whether or not it will accept the order. If the ECN declines the trade, the system automatically re-routes the order to the next participant in the SuperMontage queue.
The feature of SuperMontage challenged by Domestic is known as “decrementation.” Under the decrementation feature, when an order delivery ECN declines a trade for any reason, the system treats the ECN‘s displayed limit order as no longer valid and automatically decrements it—or “zeroes it out“—removing it from the SuperMontage display. If an ECN still wishes to trade the shares over SuperMontage at the quoted price, it may immediately re-enter the limit order into the SuperMontage system. The re-entered order, however, will go to the end of the queue as the most recently entered quotation at that price.
The Commission claims that decrementation is necessary to avoid “locked” or “crossed” markets. A locked market occurs when the highest quoted bid price equals the lowest quoted ask price. A crossed market occurs when the highest bid price is greater than the lowest quoted ask price. According to the SEC, “continued locking and crossing of the market can negatively impact market quality” and requires manual, special handling of orders by all market participants until the quotations are unlocked or uncrossed. SuperMontage avoids locked and crossed markets by decrementing the limit order of an ECN that declines to execute a trade.
B. Proceedings Before the Commission
The SEC initially published the proposed SuperMontage rules in December 1999. See 64 Fed. Reg. 68,125 (Dec. 6, 1999). The proposed rules were amended and re-published several times between December 1999 and November 2000, and with each publication the SEC solicited and received public comments. See 65 Fed. Reg. 16,981 (Mar. 30, 2000); 65 Fed. Reg. 49,842 (Aug. 15, 2000); 65 Fed. Reg. 69,084 (Nov. 15, 2000). SuperMontage‘s decrementation feature was described in the initial notice of the proposed rules, 64 Fed. Reg. at 68,132, and remained essentially the same throughout the proposed rules’ several revisions, 65 Fed. Reg. at 16,986; 65 Fed. Reg. at 49,847; 65 Fed. Reg. at 69,090. Nonetheless, neither Domestic nor any other ECN raised any concerns about the decrementation feature while the SuperMontage rules were under consideration.
On January 19, 2001, the SEC issued an order approving the SuperMontage rules, including the decrementation feature. 66 Fed. Reg. 8020 (Jan. 26, 2001) (SuperMontage Approval Order). The SEC found the proposed rule to be in the public interest and in furtherance of the Exchange Act‘s goals of competition and efficiency. The SEC, however, delayed the implementation of SuperMontage. In response to several commenters’ concern that SuperMontage would allow Nasdaq to dominate the OTC market and “compete unfairly for market order flow,” the SEC conditioned the implementation of SuperMontage on NASD‘s provision of an Alternative Display Facility (ADF or Facility) that “[i]n effect, makes participation in SuperMontage voluntary” for market participants. The SEC required that the ADF permit NASD members to satisfy their obligation to display their best-priced quotes and limit orders without participating in SuperMontage and “provide a market neutral linkage to the Nasdaq and other marketplaces, but not an execution service.”
In December 2001, NASD submitted proposed rules governing the establishment and operation of an ADF. The SEC published the proposed rules for the first time on January 3, 2002. 67 Fed. Reg. 388. Thereafter, the proposed
On August 29, 2002, the SEC issued an order providing for the implementation of SuperMontage (Implementation Order). 67 Fed. Reg. 56,862 (Sept. 5, 2002). The Commission determined that the ADF Pilot Program satisfied the conditions set in the January 19, 2001 SuperMontage Approval Order. Consequently, the Commission ordered that SuperMontage be implemented on October 11, 2002.
On October 7, 2002, Domestic filed this petition for review of the Implementation Order.
II. Analysis
In its petition, Domestic raises two issues. First, Domestic challenges the decrementation feature of SuperMontage, claiming that the SEC did not provide adequate notice that decrementation would occur when an ECN declines an order because the firm entering the order has not paid the ECN‘s access fees. Domestic further contends that this application of decrementation discriminates against ECNs by harming ECNs’ ability to compete for order flow and impairing ECNs’ right to charge reasonable access fees for their services. In sum, Domestic claims that the SEC acted arbitrarily and capriciously and contrary to the Securities Exchange Act‘s pro-competitive mandate when it approved the decrementation aspect of the SuperMontage rules. Second, Domestic challenges as unsupported by substantial evidence the SEC‘s conclusion that the ADF satisfied the conditions laid out in the SuperMontage Approval order, and claims that the ADF does not provide an adequate alternative to SuperMontage. Specifically, Domestic asserts that the ADF is technologically deficient because it lacks a means by which ECNs can easily connect to it. We consider in turn Domestic‘s claims.
A. Decrementation
We need not examine the specifics of Domestic‘s challenge to SuperMontage‘s decrementation feature because its challenge is not timely. As explained above, the SEC approved the SuperMontage trade execution rules, including decrementation, in its January 19, 2001 SuperMontage Approval Order. Section 25(a)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act provides that a party aggrieved by a “final order” of the Commission may obtain judicial review by filing a petition for review “within sixty days after the entry of the order.”
First, Domestic contends that its petition for review of the decrementation feature is timely because the SuperMontage Approval Order was not a “final order” within the meaning of
The Supreme Court applies a two-part test for determining the finality of agency action. A final action: (1) “mark[s] the consummation of the agency‘s decisionmaking process—it must not be of a merely tentative or interlocutory nature“; and (2) the action “must be one by which rights or obligations have been determined or from which legal consequences will flow.” Bennett v. Spear, 520 U.S. 154, 177-78 (1997) (citations and quotations omitted); see also Fox Television Stations, Inc. v. FCC, 280 F.3d 1027, 1037 (D.C. Cir. 2002). The SuperMontage Approval Order meets both prongs of the Bennett test. The order plainly “mark[ed] the consummation of the agency‘s
Domestic contends that the SuperMontage Approval Order was non-final because SuperMontage could not be implemented until the ADF was approved. Furthermore, Domestic argues that the ADF approval proceedings reopened the consideration of SuperMontage‘s rules. By the latter argument, Domestic seeks to invoke our “reopener doctrine,” which “allows judicial review where an agency has—either explicitly or implicitly—undertaken to reexamine its former choice.” Nat‘l Min. Ass‘n v. United States Dep‘t of Interior, 70 F.3d 1345, 1351 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (quotations omitted). To be sure, the SEC did condition the implementation of SuperMontage on the approval of an adequate ADF. The existence of this condition to SuperMontage‘s implementation, however, does not affect the finality of the SuperMontage Approval Order because the condition was unrelated to the substance of the SuperMontage rules. In the ADF approval proceedings, the SEC considered the adequacy of the ADF, an entity wholly distinct from SuperMontage. It did not explicitly or implicitly reconsider the substance of the SuperMontage trade execution rules, nor did the SEC‘s consideration of the ADF‘s adequacy have any bearing on the SuperMontage rules. Thus, contrary to Domestic‘s contention, our reopener doctrine is inapplicable here. In short, the only issue regarding the SuperMontage rules remaining after the SuperMontage Approval Order was the timing of SuperMontage‘s implementation. There was no question that the substance of SuperMontage‘s trade execution rules, including the decre-
In the alternative, Domestic points to Raton Gas Transmission Co. v. FERC, 852 F.2d 612 (D.C. Cir. 1988), in which we noted “exceptional situations in which an objection to an agency regulation is considered timely even after the statutory review period has ended,” such as “when the agency‘s action did not reasonably put aggrieved parties on notice of the rule‘s content or clearly remained unripe for judicial review throughout the statutory review period.” Id. at 615 (quotation omitted). See also JEM Broad. Co. v. FCC, 22 F.3d 320, 326 (D.C Cir. 1994). Domestic contends that nothing in the SuperMontage Approval Order gave adequate notice that decrementation would occur when ECNs decline orders because of unpaid access fees. Domestic asserts that it only learned of this aspect of decrementation when SuperMontage was field-tested in the summer of 2002. Consequently, Domestic reasons that it is excused from failing to file a timely petition for review of the SuperMontage Approval Order. We disagree.
In the SuperMontage Approval Order, the SEC explained the operation of decrementation in depth:
If an order delivery ECN ... declines or partially fills an order, or fails to respond in any manner within thirty seconds of order delivery, Nasdaq will immediately re-route the order (or unexecuted portion thereof) to the next Nasdaq Quoting Market Participant or UTP Exchange in the queue. In addition, in the case of an order delivery ECN that has declined or partially filled an order without immediately transmitting a revised quote/order or that has failed to respond within 30 seconds, Nasdaq will zero out the ECN‘s quotes/orders at that price level on that side of the market.
66 Fed. Reg. at 8027 (emphasis added).
Accordingly, we dismiss Domestic‘s petition for lack of jurisdiction insofar as it challenges the decrementation aspect of SuperMontage.
B. ADF Approval
We have jurisdiction over Domestic‘s petition insofar as it challenges the SEC‘s approval of the ADF in the SuperMontage Implementation Order. We reject that challenge, and deny that portion of the petition for review.
As explained above, the Commission required, as a condition to SuperMontage‘s implementation, the creation of an ADF to ensure that participation in SuperMontage would be voluntary. Specifically, the SuperMontage Approval Order required that the ADF (1) permit NASD members to satisfy their obligation (under the OHR and Regulation ATS) to display their best-priced quotes and limit orders without participating in SuperMontage and (2) “provide a market neutral linkage to the Nasdaq and other marketplaces, but not an execution service.” In the Implementation Order, the Commission concluded that the ADF satisfied the conditions set forth in the SuperMontage Approval Order:
The ADF ... permits registered market makers and registered ECNs to display their best-priced quotes or customer limit orders ... through the NASD. ADF market participants are required to provide other ADF market participants with direct electronic access to their quote.... The ADF also serves as a trade reporting and trade comparison facility. The ADF will therefore allow market participants to satisfy their order display and execution access obligations under the Order Handling Rules and Regulation ATS.
67 Fed. Reg. at 56,862.
Domestic primarily challenges the Commission‘s factual determination that the ADF was technologically sound
We first note a crucial misconception that underlies—and ultimately undermines—Domestic‘s entire challenge to the Implementation Order. Domestic incorrectly assumes that the ADF was designed to ensure competition against SuperMontage in the trade execution market. Nothing in the SuperMontage Approval Order supports this contention. Indeed, the Commission explained that the sole purpose of the Facility was to provide an alternative outlet in which market participants that did not wish to use SuperMontage could fulfill their order display and trade reporting obligations under SEC regulations. 66 Fed. Reg. at 8024, 8049, 8053. The ADF is an “alternative display facility,” not an alternative execution facility. Stripped of this argument, Domestic is reduced to challenging the SEC‘s conclusions about the technological feasibility of the ADF.
We conclude that the SEC relied on substantial evidence in its determination that the ADF was technologically capable of providing a genuine alternative to SuperMontage, in which ECNs could fulfill their order display and trade reporting obligations. Domestic contends that the ADF was inadequate
In any event, NASD was obligated to provide the ADF, not to ensure that every market participant could link to the ADF and to each other without any cost to themselves. Domestic does not question the ADF‘s order display capacity, only its connectivity to market participants. While reasonable minds could differ as to whether these connectivity problems prevent the ADF from fulfilling its designated functions, the “possibility of drawing two inconsistent conclusions from the evidence does not prevent an administrative agency‘s finding
III. Conclusion
We lack jurisdiction over Domestic‘s petition insofar as it challenges the decrementation aspect of SuperMontage, because that portion of Domestic‘s petition is untimely. We deny Domestic‘s petition on the merits insofar as it challenges the Commission‘s approval of the ADF, because the Commission‘s order was supported by substantial evidence. For the foregoing reasons, the petition is dismissed in part and denied in part.
So ordered.
