SEC Trading and Markets Deputy Director Offers Remarks on Decimalization (with Lofchie Comment)
On February 5, the SEC held a roundtable (webcast available here as Part 1 and Part 2) to evaluate the impact of tick sizes on the securities markets. The roundtable consisted of three panels:
- The first panel addressed the impact of tick sizes on small and mid-sized companies, the economic consequences of increasing or decreasing minimum tick sizes, and whether other policy alternatives might better address concerns related to Section 106(b) of the JOBS Act.
- The second panel addressed the impact of tick sizes on the securities market in general, including what benefits may have been achieved and what, if any, negative effects have resulted.
- The third panel addressed potential methods for analysis of the issues, including whether and how to conduct a pilot for alternative minimum tick sizes.
In his opening remarks, Deputy Director of Trading and Markets, James Burns, suggested that a data-driven approach can be developed that will "prove fruitful for addressing tick sizes and that this type of data-driven approach provides a useful template for addressing many of the other complex and pressing market structure issues."
Lofchie Comment: I am certainly in favor of a data-driven approach.
Click here to view speech in full (links externally to SEC website).