Industry slams market data fee filing
Jo struggles to see how the SEC could approve fee proposals for exchange market data fees.

In early 2020, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) kicked off a project to modernize securities information processors (Sips), the entities that pump out national markets system quote data to consumers. The current Sips, governed by the CTA/CQ and UTP plans, include top-of-book data in their feeds; in the commission’s new and improved world—made a reality by the Market Data Infrastructure (MDI) rule—that “core data” was expanded to also include depth-of-book and auctions information
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The regulator withdrew 14 Gensler-era proposals, including the controversial predictive data analytics proposal.
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Exchanges plead with SEC to trim CAT reporting requirements
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EU banks want the cloud closer to home amid tariff wars
Fears over US executive orders have prompted new approaches to critical third-party risk management.
Friendly fire? Nasdaq squeezes MTF competitors with steep fee increase
The stock exchange almost tripled the prices of some datasets for multilateral trading facilities, with sources saying the move is the latest effort by exchanges to offset declining trading revenues.
Europe is counting its vendors—and souring on US tech
Under DORA, every financial company with business in the EU must report use of their critical vendors. Deadlines vary, but the message doesn’t: The EU is taking stock of technology dependencies, especially upon US providers.