The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a conditional exemptive order that grants targeted relief from several requirements under the national market system plan governing the consolidated audit trail (CAT), SEC Rule 613 of Regulation NMS, and SEC Rule 17a-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The relief reduces CAT’s overall operational complexity and costs while preserving its surveillance role. The order shows the SEC’s effort to recalibrate the CAT’s balance between transparency and efficiency.

Implications for Market Participants

The SEC’s exemptive order demonstrates a willingness to address persistent industry concerns about the CAT’s scope and cost.[1] The exemptive relief refines operational requirements to make the system more practical and manageable and marks another phase in the SEC’s ongoing supervision of the CAT.

Market participants should be prepared for further changes to CAT requirements. The SEC’s recent order explicitly notes that additional reforms remain necessary to respond to recent judicial and regulatory developments appropriately.

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