Data Security (Joint Trades)
SIFMA, The Bank Policy Institute (BPI), the American Bankers Association (ABA), and the Managed Funds Association (MFA) provided comments to…
June 6, 2025
Paul S. Atkins, Chairman
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
100 F Street, NE
Washington, DC 20549
Re: Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (“SIFMA”) Recommendations on Reforms to the Consolidated Audit Trail (“CAT”)
Dear Chairman Atkins:
SIFMA1 applauds your recent announcement that you have instructed Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission” or “SEC”) staff “to undertake a comprehensive review of the CAT,” and that in addition to examining CAT costs, you have asked the staff to “take a hard look at the reporting requirements and scope of what is collected.”2 You added that you are looking “forward to the agency engaging with the public on this important issue.” SIFMA wholeheartedly agrees with you that the time is right for such a public review of CAT now that the Commission and the self-regulatory organizations (“SROs) have had several years of experience operating and using it for regulatory purposes. To further this review, SIFMA is submitting this letter to provide the Commission with several high-level CAT reform recommendations. Overall, we agree with and support many of the recommendations in the recent joint letter from Nasdaq and Cboe (“Nasdaq/Cboe Letter”) and the separate letter from NYSE (“NYSE Letter”),3 and we encourage the Commission to act expeditiously on CAT reform recommendations with widespread agreement.4
As part of these reform efforts, SIFMA also recommends that the SEC fund the CAT through its standard budget process, as it does with other tools and technology used by the Commission. Importantly, this would make CAT costs—which would ultimately be funded through the regular Section 31 process—subject to Congressional review and oversight. Without a funding obligation for CAT, the SEC currently has no meaningful incentive to consider, let alone reduce, the costs associated with the scope of the information the SEC requires to be reported to CAT because these costs are borne by Industry Members and, to a lesser extent, the SROs. As part of its review of the CAT, SIFMA also urges the Commission to focus on increasing the CAT’s data security, an issue that the Commission previously proposed to address through a rulemaking in 2020 that has not progressed.5
Moreover, notwithstanding SIFMA’s agreement with and support of many of the recommendations in the Nasdaq/Cboe Letter and the NYSE Letter (discussed below), given the lack of Industry Member representation on the CAT Operating Committee, SIFMA urges the SEC to lead all CAT reform efforts through a public process that includes Industry Members. In leading these efforts, SIFMA notes that the SEC has direct authority under Rule 608 of Regulation NMS to amend the CAT NMS Plan.6 As needed, the Commission should use its full authority to bring about changes it identifies as a result of its comprehensive review of the CAT.
Executive Summary
SIFMA strongly supports the Commission’s comprehensive review of the CAT and urges the Commission to lead all CAT reform efforts through a public process that includes Industry Members. As noted, we agree with and support many of the recommendations in the recent Nasdaq/Cboe Letter and NYSE Letter and encourage the Commission to act expeditiously on them. As set forth below, SIFMA provides high-level recommendations on CAT reforms that should be considered as part of this review. We would like to discuss these recommendations in greater detail with the Commission and the SROs as the Commission’s comprehensive CAT review progresses.
SIFMA’s Recommendations for CAT Reform
As the Commission is aware, Nasdaq and Cboe in their joint letter and NYSE in its letter recently called on the Commission to undertake CAT reforms to reduce its costs and provided recommendations in furtherance of this objective.7 SIFMA agrees with and supports many of these recommendations. SIFMA also has been discussing CAT reforms internally for several months, as SIFMA members have long been concerned about CAT costs. SIFMA notes that CAT funding and the CAT funding model currently are subject to litigation, and SIFMA continues to believe that the Commission’s order approving the funding model for the CAT is contrary to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and arbitrary and capricious.8
While CAT implementation took many years, the CAT was ultimately implemented under a tight timeframe during the period from 2020-2024. This was driven by the Commission’s frustrations with the SROs’ slow pace of CAT implementation and the Commission’s resulting imposition of the financial accountability milestones on the SROs to incentivize them to implement the CAT in a timely manner or face significant financial repercussions.9 These factors led to the development of the CAT without a significant focus on the total cost of the system, nor a proper mechanism for transparency and oversight thereof.10
Given the conditions under which CAT was developed, SIFMA agrees that the time is ripe to closely evaluate CAT’s operations and costs now that the Commission and the SROs have had several years of experience with a fully functional CAT. CAT has grown to include the collection of data that is well beyond what is needed for an effective regulatory audit trail. In some cases, this was due to SEC staff demands that strayed from the purposes of Rule 613. As a result, CAT has become very costly with an unsustainable trajectory of cost increases. CAT LLC’s 2025 operating “budget” is $272 million,11 an increase of 18% from 2024,12 and over five times the SEC’s estimated annual range of $36.5-$55 million when it approved the CAT NMS Plan in 2016.13 In addition to paying a majority of the CAT’s budgeted costs, the industry’s ongoing costs to comply with CAT reporting requirements are multiples of the CAT’s current budget and the SEC’s original estimate of $1.7 billion annually.
SIFMA also notes that the Commission has used CAT data to conduct economic research in connection with proposed rulemakings without any apparent budgeting or governance constraints and without any public visibility (subject to appropriate protections) of the data and methodology of such research.14 Ad-hoc queries of enormous data sets can potentially be far more expensive than routine reviews, and such use should be carefully monitored and metered.
As outlined below, many of SIFMA’s recommendations for CAT reforms are consistent with the recommendations from Nasdaq/Cboe and NYSE. In addition, as mentioned in SIFMA’s separate letter regarding the CAT CAIS Amendment, SIFMA urges the SEC to provide further guidance to market participants regarding how it plans to proceed with the CAIS database.
SIFMA recognizes that the SROs through the CAT Operating Committee have sought to address this question,15 but the Commission has not yet directly addressed it.
Subject to the Commission’s further review and consideration, SIFMA has concerns regarding the recommendation in the Nasdaq/Cboe Letter and NYSE Letter calling for the removal of Appendix D from the CAT NMS Plan. SIFMA recognizes that Appendix D may include certain items that are unreasonably prescriptive and costly, and welcomes additional information and dialogue regarding these items. However, certain items that are currently a part of Appendix D should be retained in the CAT NMS Plan in some form. For example, Appendix D includes an entire section (Section 4) on Data Security requirements that operationalize the general provision in Rule 613 that the Plan Processor “[e]nsure the security and confidentiality of all information reported to” the CAT.16 Appendix D also contains a requirement that the SROs maintain a test environment for CAT Reporters “that is functionally equivalent to the production environment,” which has been beneficial to SIFMA members over the years. SIFMA also does not support the last recommendation in the NYSE Letter calling for the Commission to rescind its 2020 data security proposal, because, as discussed, SIFMA continues to believe that there are aspects of that proposal that would enhance CAT security.17
SIFMA supports many of the recommendations in the Nasdaq/Cboe Letter and NYSE Letter and believes the Commission should act on them expeditiously. Specifically, SIFMA supports the following recommendations in the letters: