FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facilities
FINRA Rule 7200A is the series marker for the technical participation, reporting, and processing rules governing the FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility.
The underlying facility itself was established through NASD Rule 6100 Series, and its substantive quoting and trading rules, now found in the Rule 6300A Series, were adopted by SR-NASD-2005-087, effective August 1, 2006. As part of FINRA's Consolidated FINRA Rulebook initiative, the NASD Rule 6100 Series was split and relocated by SR-FINRA-2008-021, effective December 15, 2008: the technical participation and processing provisions became the new Rule 7200A Series, applicable specifically to the FINRA/Nasdaq TRF, while a parallel set of provisions from the same NASD Rule 6100 Series became the Rule 7300 Series, applicable to FINRA's OTC Reporting Facility.
This shared ancestry explains why the two series, though governing different facilities, follow such closely parallel structures.
Candidates should understand the structural distinction that separates the FINRA/Nasdaq TRF from the ADF and ORF covered elsewhere in this dictionary: while the ADF and ORF are facilities FINRA operates directly, the FINRA/Nasdaq TRF is operated by Nasdaq, Inc. pursuant to a Limited Liability Company Agreement between FINRA and Nasdaq. Under that LLC Agreement, FINRA serves as the "SRO Member" with sole regulatory responsibility for the facility, while Nasdaq serves as the "Business Member," primarily responsible for managing the facility's business affairs, including establishing pricing for its use, to the extent those affairs are not inconsistent with FINRA's regulatory and oversight functions. The Business Member is obligated to pay the cost of regulation and is entitled to the profits and losses derived from the facility's operation, and FINRA's oversight of the Business Member's performance is conducted through recurring assessment and review by an outside independent audit firm.
There are, in fact, two physically and legally distinct FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facilities operating under this single rule series: FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility Carteret and FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility Chicago. As used throughout the Rule 7200A Series, the term "FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility" refers to either facility, depending on which one the Participant elects to report to, and the two are separate and distinct for operational purposes: the correction, cancellation, or reversal of a trade can only be reported to the specific facility to which that trade was originally reported. That said, the forms of agreement required under the series, including the Participant Application Agreement required under Rule 7220A and the transaction-fee-transfer agreement required under Rule 7230A(h), are identical for both facilities, and a single agreement can serve both. Any FINRA determination to grant, deny, suspend, terminate, limit, prohibit, restore, or reinstate a Participant's access to one facility applies automatically to the other.
The series consists of Rule 7210A, Definitions; Rule 7220A, Trade Reporting Participation Requirements; Rule 7230A, Trade Report Input; Rule 7240A, Trade Report Processing; Rule 7250A, Obligation to Honor Trades; Rule 7260A, Audit Trail Requirements; Rule 7270A, Violation of Reporting Rules; and Rule 7280A, Termination of Access.
Definitions
Rule 7210A defines the "System" as the FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility for purposes of trades in designated securities as defined in Rule 6320A. "Trade Reporting Participant" or "Participant" means any member of FINRA in good standing that uses the System. The remaining defined terms, including Clearing Broker-Dealer, Correspondent Executing Broker-Dealer, Introducing Broker-Dealer, and Parties to the Transaction, mirror the corresponding definitions found in Rule 7110 for the ADF.
Trade Reporting Participation Requirements
Rule 7220A establishes mandatory participation for any member with an obligation to report an over-the-counter transaction to FINRA, unless the member has an alternative electronic mechanism for reporting and clearing that transaction. Participation is conditioned on execution of a Participant Application Agreement, membership in a clearing agency registered under the Exchange Act, compliance with applicable FINRA and SEC rules, maintenance of physical security over equipment to prevent unauthorized entry of information into the System, and acceptance and settlement of each trade the System identifies as having been effected by the Participant or its correspondents. A distinguishing feature of Rule 7220A relative to the ADF's Rule 7120 is its accommodation of Non-Member Clearing Organizations, which may access the System solely to operate as a service bureau for their own qualifying members upon executing a Non-Member Clearing Organization Participation Application Agreement and satisfying related conditions.
Trade Report Input
Rule 7230A governs the content and mechanics of trade reports submitted to the FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility, closely paralleling the ADF's Rule 7130. Where the System is used to transfer a transaction fee between two FINRA members under Rule 7230A(h), the trade report must reflect a total price inclusive of the transaction fee for clearance and settlement purposes, distinct from the price exclusive of the transaction fee that is publicly disseminated. Firms have 20 minutes from the time of execution to accept or reject trade information submitted by a contra party; where a trade is executed during hours the facility is closed, that window instead runs from the facility's reopening, specifically until 4:20 a.m. Eastern Time for the FINRA/Nasdaq TRF, reflecting its earlier operational reopening relative to the ADF and ORF, both of which reopen at 8:20 a.m. Eastern Time for this purpose.
Trade Report Processing
Rule 7240A governs how the System matches and locks in reported trades, through both a trade acceptance and comparison method and a batch-type comparison run at the end of the trade date that aggregates the volume of previously entered, uncompared trade reports where all other matching fields agree.
Obligation to Honor Trades
Rule 7250A requires that if a Participant is reported by the System as a party to a trade treated as locked-in and sent to DTCC, that party must honor the trade on the scheduled settlement date, notwithstanding any other agreement to the contrary.
Audit Trail Requirements
Rule 7260A imposes an ongoing obligation on member firms using the FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility to input the data elements specified in Rule 7230A(d) accurately and completely.
Violation of Reporting Rules
Rule 7270A provides that failure of a Participant, or a person associated with a Participant, to comply with any rule or requirement of the System may be considered conduct inconsistent with high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade, in violation of Rule 2010.
Termination of Access
Rule 7280A grants FINRA authority, upon notice, to terminate a Participant's access to the trade reporting service where the Participant fails to abide by any rule or operating procedure, fails to honor contractual agreements, or fails to pay promptly for services rendered.
Enforcement Context and Examination Priorities
Because Nasdaq, as Business Member, bears responsibility for the facility's pricing and business affairs, FINRA's own enforcement focus under this series concentrates on the participation, input, and audit trail obligations that fall within FINRA's retained regulatory responsibility as SRO Member, rather than on pricing disputes, which are addressed instead through the fee dispute mechanisms tied to Rule 7620A. FINRA's oversight of Nasdaq's performance as Business Member is itself conducted through recurring assessment and review by an outside independent audit firm, a structural safeguard distinct from ordinary member-level enforcement. At the member level, enforcement under Rule 7270A follows the same Rule 2010 bridge used throughout FINRA's trade reporting rules, and firms are expected to maintain Rule 3110 supervisory procedures addressing accurate MPID usage and correct facility selection, particularly given that a firm suspended from one FINRA/Nasdaq TRF facility, Carteret or Chicago, remains automatically suspended from the other until FINRA restores access to both.
Examination Relevance and Key Takeaways
Candidates should retain that the FINRA/Nasdaq TRF is operated by Nasdaq under an LLC Agreement with FINRA, with FINRA holding sole regulatory responsibility as SRO Member and Nasdaq responsible for business affairs and pricing as Business Member, a structure that does not exist for the ADF or ORF, both of which are operated directly by FINRA. Candidates should also retain that FINRA/Nasdaq TRF Carteret and FINRA/Nasdaq TRF Chicago are two separate, legally distinct facilities under a single rule series, that trade corrections must be directed to the originating facility, and that FINRA disciplinary action against a Participant in one automatically extends to the other. The 20-minute trade acceptance window, and its facility-specific reopening deadlines, 4:20 a.m. Eastern Time for the FINRA/Nasdaq TRF versus 8:20 a.m. Eastern Time for the ADF and ORF, is a frequently tested mechanical detail. Finally, candidates should recognize that the eight-rule functional template found here is structurally identical to the Rule 7100 Series and recurs again in the Rule 7200B Series governing the FINRA/NYSE Trade Reporting Facility, both series tracing back to the same 2008 split of the original NASD Rule 6100 Series.
