Quotation, Order, and Transaction Reporting Facilities
SERIES 7 | SERIES 24 | FINANCIAL REGULATION COURSES
FINRA Rule 6000 is the top-level series marker for the Quotation, Order, and Transaction Reporting Facilities series — the organizational designation for the comprehensive framework governing how member firms quote securities, execute trades, and report those transactions through FINRA's various market transparency facilities. FINRA Rule 6000 has no operative text of its own.
Its FINRA.org page returns only the title with no rule text, no amendment history, and no selected notices. It serves exclusively as the organizational container for eight major sub-series, each addressing a distinct market facility or trading context.
FINRA Rule 6000 sits within the FINRA rulebook immediately following the 5000 Securities Offering and Trading Standards and Practices series and immediately preceding the 7000 Clearing, Transaction and Order Data Requirements, and Facility Charges series — together, the 6000 and 7000 series form FINRA's comprehensive market infrastructure framework.
The Eight Sub-Series and Their Functions
The FINRA Rule 6000 series organizes eight distinct sub-series, each with its own sub-marker and body of operative rules:
FINRA Rule 6100 — Quoting and Trading in NMS Stocks governs how member firms quote and trade in National Market System stocks — equity securities subject to SEC Regulation NMS — through FINRA's facilities, including trading halt procedures, IPO transaction restrictions, and the Alternative Display Facility and Trade Reporting Facility transaction reporting requirements.
FINRA Rule 6200 — Alternative Display Facility (ADF) governs the ADF — FINRA's quotation display and trade reporting facility for NMS stocks effected otherwise than on a national securities exchange. The ADF enables market makers and electronic communication networks (ECNs) to display quotations and report transactions outside of exchange venues.
FINRA Rule 6300 — Trade Reporting Facilities (TRFs) governs the two Trade Reporting Facilities through which members report OTC transactions in NMS stocks — the FINRA/Nasdaq TRF and the FINRA/NYSE TRF — providing the transaction reporting infrastructure for equity trades executed off-exchange.
FINRA Rule 6400 — Quoting and Trading in OTC Equity Securities governs member firms' quotation and trading activities in OTC equity securities — non-exchange-listed equity securities that trade in the over-the-counter market, including the requirements for initiating or resuming quotations, trading practice guidelines, and the OTC Reporting Facility transaction reporting requirements.
FINRA Rule 6500 — Securities Lending and Transparency Engine (SLATE) governs the SLATE facility — FINRA's securities lending transaction reporting infrastructure through which members report securities lending transactions for regulatory transparency purposes, reflecting the SEC's securities lending disclosure rules adopted in connection with the market infrastructure modernization initiatives of the early 2020s.
FINRA Rule 6600 — OTC Reporting Facility (ORF) governs the OTC Reporting Facility — the facility through which members report OTC transactions in OTC equity securities and restricted equity securities, as defined in FINRA Rule 6420, that are not reported through the TRFs.
FINRA Rule 6700 — Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine (TRACE) governs TRACE — FINRA's comprehensive fixed income transaction reporting facility through which members report transactions in corporate bonds, agency securities, asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities, and other TRACE-eligible securities, with FINRA then disseminating transaction information to provide price transparency in the fixed income markets.
FINRA Rule 6800 — Consolidated Audit Trail Compliance Rule governs member firms' obligations under the SEC's Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT) — the national market system plan requiring broker-dealers and exchanges to report comprehensive order lifecycle data to a centralized repository, enabling regulators to reconstruct market events and conduct surveillance across all trading venues.
The 6000 Series in the Market Infrastructure Context
The FINRA Rule 6000 series represents the regulatory infrastructure underlying the two fundamental mechanisms through which price discovery and transaction transparency are achieved in U.S. equity and fixed income markets — quotation systems (which display the prices at which buyers and sellers are willing to transact) and transaction reporting systems (which record and disseminate the prices at which transactions actually occurred).
For equity securities, the 6000 series addresses quotation and trading in two distinct market segments: NMS stocks (exchange-listed equities subject to Regulation NMS, covered by FINRA Rule 6100 through 6300) and OTC equity securities (non-exchange-listed equities, covered by FINRA Rule 6400 through 6600). For fixed income securities, the 6000 series addresses transaction reporting through TRACE (FINRA Rule 6700), which has transformed the fixed income markets by providing retail and institutional investors access to real-time bond transaction prices that were historically unavailable in the OTC dealer markets. The CAT compliance framework (FINRA Rule 6800) adds a comprehensive order-level data layer to both equity and fixed income markets.
Connection to FINRA Rules 5310, 6100, 6200, 6300, 6400, 6500, 6600, 6700, 6800, and 7000
FINRA Rule 6000 connects to FINRA Rule 5310 — whose best execution obligations require members to seek the most favorable terms reasonably available for customers' orders, with compliance dependent on the market transparency infrastructure the 6000 series facilities provide. It connects to each of its eight sub-series — FINRA Rules 6100, 6200, 6300, 6400, 6500, 6600, 6700, and 6800 — as the organizational container whose structure defines how the market transparency and transaction reporting framework is organized. And it connects to FINRA Rule 7000 — the immediately following series addressing clearing, transaction data requirements, and facility charges, which together with the 6000 series forms FINRA's comprehensive market infrastructure regulatory framework.
Examination Relevance and Key Takeaways
FINRA Rule 6000 is tested on the Series 7 and Series 24 examinations as the top-level series marker for FINRA's market transparency and transaction reporting framework — providing the organizational context for understanding how the specific quotation, trading, and reporting rules in the 6100 through 6800 sub-series relate to each other and to the broader market infrastructure.
The key points to retain are these: FINRA Rule 6000 has no operative text — it serves as the organizational marker for eight sub-series covering NMS stock trading (6100), the Alternative Display Facility (6200), Trade Reporting Facilities (6300), OTC equity quotation and trading (6400), SLATE securities lending reporting (6500), the OTC Reporting Facility (6600), TRACE fixed income reporting (6700), and the Consolidated Audit Trail (6800); the 6000 series collectively provides the market transparency infrastructure through which quotation and transaction information is collected, disseminated, and preserved; and the series divides conceptually between equity market facilities (6100 through 6600) and fixed income reporting (6700), with the CAT compliance framework (6800) spanning both.
