In preparation for the Consolidated Audit Trail and to help detect spoofing and layering, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission recently approved shrinking its one-second server-clock synchronization tolerance to a 50-millisecond window that will be measured against the time kept by the National Institute of Standards and Technologys atomic clocks.
The SEC first announced its intention to tighten the window in late April when it discussed the next steps needed to advance the CAT rollout.
Weve been proponents of the 50-millisecond standard because it is sufficiently granular for regulatory agencies to improve their ability to root out disruptive trading, said Jock Percy, founder and CEO of Perseus.
The 50-millisecond threshold also is a reasonable performance requirement for those market participants who outsource a portion of their existing trading infrastructure, he said.
The SECs move is seen by many as a step in the right direction, but several more steps are needed if the SEC truly wants to achieve its goals of accurately detecting spoofing and layering, i.e., bad behavior on the part of the shortest-term market participants
Rightly or wrongly, this is abouthigh-frequency trading, said David Weiss, senior analyst at research firm Aite Group. That largely is what people are discussing; that is what is in Michael Lewiss book; and that is what IEX is about.
A 50-millisecond synchronization window will do little in detecting high-frequency trades that occur at sub-millisecond, and even sub-100 microseconds, according to Weiss.
There is a brouhaha over IEXs 350-microsecond speed bump and the regulator is taking its clock-synchronization window down to 50 milliseconds, he added. I just dont know.
Instead of regulating a fixed performance threshold for clock synchronization, Weiss proposed scaling the performance windows in proportion to a firms fastest orders.
If a firm is sending an order that takes 500 microseconds, maybe scale the window to 10 times that, or 5 milliseconds, he explained. If a firm is not involved in HFT oralgorithmic trading, such as a block trader, maybe there should be a floor of 50 milliseconds.
Meanwhile across the Atlantic, the European Securities and Markets Authority has taken a much more granular approach in its clock-synchronization requirements.
In the latest draft of ESMAs regulatory technical standard for MiFID II/MiFIR, the regulator plans to require firms that have gateway-to-gateway latency times between their trading systems and trading venues of a millisecond or less synchronize their server clocks to within 100 microseconds of UTC. For firms with whose gateway-to-gateway latency is longer than a millisecond, they will need to synchronize their server clocks to within a millisecond of UTC.
For those who fall under SEC jurisdiction, the new requirement goes into effect on August 15. Systems that already capture NMS andOTCequitiestransactions in milliseconds must be incomplianceby February 20, 2017. Those systems that do not capture transactions in milliseconds have until February 19, 2018, to be compliant.