Citadel Securities LLC v. SEC

45 F.4th 27
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 29, 2022
Docket20-1424
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 F.4th 27 (Citadel Securities LLC v. SEC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citadel Securities LLC v. SEC, 45 F.4th 27 (D.C. Cir. 2022).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Argued October 25, 2021 Decided July 29, 2022

No. 20-1424

CITADEL SECURITIES LLC, PETITIONER

v.

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, RESPONDENT

INVESTORS EXCHANGE LLC, INTERVENOR

On Petition for Review of an Order of the Securities and Exchange Commission

Jeffrey B. Wall argued the cause for petitioner. On the briefs were Jeffrey B. Korn, Patricia O. Haynes, Mark T. Stancil, and Kristin Bender.

Christina M. Carroll, Kristen C. Rodriguez, Douglas W. Henkin, and Richard M. Zuckerman were on the brief for amici curiae New York Stock Exchange, LLC, et al. in support of petitioner. 2 Alexandra A.E. Shapiro and Daniel J. O=Neill were on the brief for amicus curiae Andrew N. Vollmer in support of petitioner.

Emily True Parise, Senior Litigation Counsel, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, argued the cause for respondent. With her on the brief were Michael A. Conley, Acting General Counsel, Dominick V. Freda, Assistant General Counsel, and Brooke Wagner, Attorney.

Catherine E. Stetson argued the cause for intervenor. With her on the brief were Katherine B. Wellington and Reedy C. Swanson. Sundeep Iyer and Neal K. Katyal entered appearances.

Dennis M. Kelleher, Stephen W. Hall, and Jason R. Grimes were on the brief for amicus curiae Better Markets, Inc. in support of respondent.

Daniel A. Rubens and Alexandra Bursak were on the brief for amicus curiae XTX Markets, LLC in support of respondent.

Thomas A. Burns was on the brief for amicus curiae Healthy Markets Association in support of respondent.

Before: RAO and WALKER, Circuit Judges, and SENTELLE, Senior Circuit Judge.

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALKER. 3

WALKER, Circuit Judge: The Securities and Exchange Commission approved a recent attempt by a securities exchange to prevent investors from buying and selling securities before other investors can know that market prices have changed.

We deny the petition challenging the SEC’s decision.

I

Gone are the days of stock traders who yelled out orders from crowded trading floors as they stared at a scrolling tickertape. Today, securities exchanges are electronic, and orders move at the speed of light.

This section describes (A) a few basics about those securities exchanges; (B) some of the rules governing them; (C) the concept of “latency arbitrage”; (D) an exchange’s new strategy to protect investors from latency arbitrage; and (E) the SEC’s approval of that strategy.

A

Securities traders can play two roles: liquidity provider or liquidity taker. A taker seeks to accept a provider’s “bid” to buy or “offer” to sell. When all goes well, the trade executes, meaning the taker either buys what the provider offered or sells what the provider bid for. A single trader can don and doff a provider or taker hat at any time.

The trades between providers and takers happen through orders, which are instructions sent from traders to exchanges. There are many types of orders. For example, orders can be 4 either “displayed” or “non-displayed,” meaning publicly viewable or not publicly viewable. And certain orders called “limit orders” stipulate that a security must trade for a pre- specified price or better from the provider’s perspective.

Here’s an example that combines some of what we’ve covered so far: A liquidity provider posts a displayed limit order on the New York Stock Exchange. The order bids to “buy 10 shares of Apple stock at $10.00 per share or lower.” A liquidity taker then sees that bid and sends its own order to the New York Stock Exchange that accepts the bid and sells the 10 shares of Apple stock for $10.00 per share.

B

In 2005, the SEC promulgated a series of initiatives dubbed “Regulation NMS,” which stands for National Market System. One of those initiatives established the concept of the “[n]ational best bid and national best offer,” which are the best bid and best offer for a security, from the taker’s point of view, across all U.S. securities exchanges. 17 C.F.R. § 242.600(b)(50). In other words, the national best bid or offer is the highest-priced bid to buy or the lowest-priced offer to sell a security on any U.S. exchange.

Regulation NMS also classifies some providers’ orders as “protected” bids or offers (collectively “protected quotations”). Protected quotations are “automated,” publicly displayed, and the national best bid or offer. Id. § 242.600(b)(70).

That classification matters because Rule 611 of Regulation NMS requires exchanges to implement policies that prevent the execution of trades for protected quotations that are worse for the taker than the national best bid or offer. Id. § 242.611(a)(1). So if a security’s national best bid or offer changes, then the 5 correct execution price for protected quotations of that security changes as well. As a result, exchanges must constantly communicate to keep abreast of securities’ nationwide prices. See Nasdaq Stock Market LLC v. SEC, No. 21-1167, 2022 WL 2431638, at *2 (D.C. Cir. July 5, 2022) (“At the heart of the national market system is the collection, consolidation and dissemination of securities market data from the various securities exchanges.” (cleaned up)).

C

Now speed enters the picture. When a security’s national best bid or offer changes, providers must update their orders to reflect that change.

To do so, providers send electronic messages to the exchanges. Those messages often arrive faster than the blink of an eye. Still, the updates are not instantaneous. It takes a moment for an update to reach exchanges all over the country. That moment is called “latency.”

During that latency, certain high-frequency traders can take securities at old, stale prices — just before updated prices reach the exchanges — and then turn around and trade those securities at the newly updated national best bid or offer. That practice is called “latency arbitrage.”

The high-frequency traders that engage in such latency arbitrage are extreme short-term investors. That’s because they seek to end each trading day with the same investments that they had at the beginning of the day. See Concept Release on Equity Market Structure, Exchange Act Release No. 34-61358, 75 Fed. Reg. 3,594, 3,606 (Jan. 21, 2010) (“characteristics often attributed to proprietary firms engaged in” high- frequency trading include “ending the trading day in as close 6 to a flat position as possible”). Indeed, they immediately seek to either (a) sell what they’ve just bought or (b) buy back what they’ve just sold. For example, according to the Intervenor:

A stock price may be in the process of changing from $10.00 to $10.01 across different exchanges. A high- speed trader might swoop in and buy at $10.00 from an investor that cannot update its quote fast enough, and then sell at $10.01 – the price the investor could have received microseconds later if the arbitrageur had not intervened. That penny that would have gone to the investor goes instead to the arbitrageur.

Intervenor’s Brief 5-6 (cleaned up).

For ease, we will refer to such extreme short-term investors simply as “short-term investors.”1 By contrast, we will call traders that don’t engage in latency arbitrage “long- term investors.”

D

Investors Exchange LLC — commonly called IEX — began to operate as a securities exchange in 2016. From the beginning, IEX has sought to attract business from liquidity providers by combating latency arbitrage on its exchange.

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45 F.4th 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citadel-securities-llc-v-sec-cadc-2022.