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On January 27, 2016 the applicable securities regulatory authorities approved an amendment to UMIR (the “Amendment”) to broaden the definition of a short-marking exempt order1 (“SME order”) to include an order for an Exempt Exchange-traded Fund1 (ETF) or one of its underlying securities for the principal account of a Participant that:
and the account used for this purpose at the end of each trading day has no more than a “minimal exposed risk”.
The expansion of the SME order definition will:
The text of the Amendment is set out in Appendix “A” and a black-line of the change is set out in Appendix “B”. Included as Appendix “C” is a summary of comments recived in response to the request for comments and IIROC’s response to each comment. The Amendment comes into force on April 11, 2016.
The Amendment will permit the expansion of SME marking to orders in the underlying securities of the ETF for the account of a person with Marketplace Trading Obligations. In addition, for consistency, the Amendment permits the same ETF market making activity under a Participant’s agreement with an ETF issuer for continuous distribution of an ETF to be marked SME, although this activity is not pursuant to Marketplace Trading Obligations. The ETF market maker’s account used for this purpose at the end of each trading day is required to have no more than a “minimal exposed risk”.2
Since the SME order designation was implemented, certain Participants with Marketplace Trading Obligations and certain Participants which act as ETF “market makers” by having entered into a Continuous Distribution Dealer Agreement (“agreement”) with an ETF issuer have generally not been applying the SME designation for transactions in ETFs and their underlying securities in a manner that conforms to IIROC’s existing guidance.3 Participants have either been “over-marking” or “under-marking” orders related to ETF market making transactions depending on their interpretation of the SME order definition. ETF market makers have generally not separately marked non-SME orders for underlying securities of an ETF from orders for the ETF security for which they have Marketplace Trading Obligations which qualify for SME marking. Also, orders related to ETF market making under an agreement for continuous distribution of the ETF with the ETF issuer have not generally been entered in a separate non-SME account. In some cases, Participants incorrectly considered that the accounts in which ETF market making activity took place qualified as “arbitrage accounts” for which the SME marker should be used.
Prior to this Amendment, the SME order definition was too narrow to capture practices generally referred to as ETF “market making” that commonly involve transactions in a single principal account with minimal exposed risk. Hedged positions in an account with minimal exposed risk were not permitted to be designated SME since the account is not “directionally neutral” at end of day.4 Except for orders for an ETF security for which a person has Marketplace Trading Obligations, related ETF market making activity did not qualify for SME order marking.
IIROC consulted with certain Participants engaged in ETF market making to discuss IIROC’s interpretation of the SME order definition. These Participants expressed concern that restricting SME order marking to an account of a person with Marketplace Trading Obligations in respect of an ETF security and not permitting SME marking for the same ETF market making activity undertaken under an agreement with the ETF issuer for continuous distribution of an ETF leads to an arbitrary application of the SME marker. The Participants further indicated that both orders for an ETF and its underlying securities should be marked SME at the account level as all the activity in the account relates to ETF market making. Certain Participants noted that it would also be costly to operationalize the application of the SME designation to orders for the ETF security only and to mark those orders for the underlying securities short in the account.
IIROC acknowledges the costs and operational impracticalities that result when orders related to the same ETF market making activity are required to be marked differently and we recognize that the ETF market maker has the ability to create or redeem the ETF units in order to become flat at the end of the day.
The Amendment appropriately broadens the definition of a SME order in order to simplify and promote uniform SME marking standards for ETF market makers, to assist in preserving the integrity of short selling data used and published by IIROC, and to avoid unnecessary administrative burden for the ETF market making function, without conferring any regulatory advantage.
IIROC has not extended SME order marking generally to all hedging or other strategies that hold positions and are not flat. Participants are expected to continue to engage in other traditional “directional” trading ideally using a separate account in which short sales are properly designated. IIROC has also clarified in the updated guidance5 , that an account used for hedging activity, whether involving an ETF security and the underlying securities, or any other convertible or exchangeable security, is not an arbitrage account. An arbitrage account requires the account holder to make a usual practice of buying and selling securities which are or may become convertible or exchangeable by the terms of the securities or operation of law into other securities in order to take advantage of differences in prices between the securities. The result of the arbitrage activity requires that the account not have more than a nominal position at the end of the day or is effectively flat.
Effective October 15, 2012, the SME order designation was implemented for use with a SME order as defined in UMIR, for the purchase or sale of a security by certain accounts that adopt a “directionally neutral” strategy in the trading of securities.6
UMIR defines a “short-marking exempt order” as an order for the purchase or sale of a security from an account that is:
The definition of a SME order was associated with “directionally neutral” activity in order to segregate true short positions. The SME order definition did not allow for a hedging strategy with minimally exposed risk as significant short selling in a security may remain “open” for an extended period of time due to the acquisition of a convertible or exchangeable security or other related security. Thus an account which is “fully-hedged” which holds a long position in an ETF security that is hedged with a short position in the underlying securities was not considered to be “directionally neutral” at the end of a trading day as short sales of the underlying security on that trading day are not covered by purchases of the underlying security.
IIROC expected that Participants would be able to readily identify SME accounts and trading activity given that they were, in part, to match those accounts identified for the purposes of exemptions existing under UMIR available to arbitrage accounts and accounts with Marketplace Trading Obligations for particular securities.8
Under the SME order definition prior to the Amendement, an order for an ETF security was a SME order only if for the account of a person with Marketplace Trading Obligations for that ETF security. Related ETF transactions were not eligible for SME order marking since the SME order definition did not include:
an account used for hedging activity which does not adopt a “directionally neutral” strategy where each security in the account is flat at end of day;
ETFs trade on a marketplace but are comprised of a fixed basket of underlying securities. Market makers facilitate the trading of ETFs, in part, by participating in the ETF issuer’s process of creating and redeeming ETF units. In response to demand, the market maker will buy the underlying securities to create baskets to deliver to the ETF issuer and in exchange receive ETF units to sell in the market, or conversely will sell into the market the underlying securities received in exchange for ETF units delivered to the ETF issuer when an investor redeems the ETF units. Market makers may hold positions since ETF units are generally created and redeemed only in a prescribed number of units established by the ETF issuer.
In addition, since an ETF’s market price may trade at a premium or at a discount to its underlying value, the ETF market maker will undertake hedge transactions to minimize exposed risk and help keep the ETF price in line with its Net Asset Value (NAV) per unit. If the ETF is trading at a premium, the market maker short sells the ETF security while buying the fund’s underlying component securities. If the ETF is trading at a discount, the market maker will buy the ETF units while at the same time short selling the fund’s underlying component securities.
With the Amendments, Participants that engage in ETF market making are able to apply the SME marker to all orders for an ETF security and its underlying securities in a principal account that maintains a minimal exposed risk, whether the Participant has Marketplace Trading Obligations for the ETF security or has entered into an agreement with the ETF issuer for continuous distribution of the ETF security. Participants are required to identify the accounts in which ETF market making activity occurs, for the purpose of SME order designation, and apply the SME marker consistently to all orders in the identified accounts.
It is IIROC’s understanding that implementation of the Proposed Amendment will not impose a burden as most Participants engaged in ETF market making requested that IIROC make the Proposed Amendment, in part to facilitate order marking at the account level which is consistent with the operations that exist for ETF market makers. Participants indicated that the prior narrower SME order definition was too onerous to comply with if strictly enforced, given the costs and operational issues associated with it.
IIROC does not believe that the Amendment will impact marketplaces as they already support the SME order marker.
IIROC publishes a bi-monthly Short Sale Trading Summary Report (“Report”) which shows the aggregate proportion of short selling in the total trading activity of a particular security, based on data for trades marked “short sale”. We would expect a change in the short sale statistics published in the Report once the Amendment is implemented. IIROC will provide an explanation of the changes to the use of SME order marking for reviewers of the Report and the impact on short sale statistics following implementation of the Amendment.
The Amendments become effective on April 11, 2016.
Appendix A – UMIR Amendment
Appendix B – Text of UMIR to Reflect Amendment to the Short- marking Exempt Order Definition
Appendix C – Comments Received