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9.1 Regulatory Halts, Delays and Suspensions of Trading
This Rules Notice provides guidance relating to the imposition, on and after April 8, 2013, of a general regulatory halt in the trading of securities in co‑ordination with the application of market‑wide “circuit breakers” on markets in the United States. This Rules Notice also provides guidance relating to the imposition of a general regulatory halt based on movement in the S&P/TSX Composite Index (in place of the S&P 500 Index) on a trading day or a portion of a trading day when U.S. markets are not scheduled to be open for trading.
Rule 9.1 of UMIR allows IIROC to impose a trading halt or suspension for regulatory purposes. Such a regulatory halt or suspension may apply to a particular security traded on a marketplace, a range of securities or to trading of all securities generally. By the terms of Rule 9.1, no order for the purchase or sale of security shall be executed on a marketplace or over-the-counter at any time while the regulatory halt applicable to that security remains in effect. If the regulatory halt has been imposed for reasons other than the issuance of a cease trade order by an applicable securities regulatory authority, a trade may be executed outside of Canada on a foreign organized regulated market1 if such a trade is permitted by applicable securities legislation.
Effective Monday, April 8, 2013, trading halts will be triggered when the S&P 500 Index declines below its closing value on the previous trading day by:
The length of the regulatory halts at each level is as follows:
Level 1:
Level 2:
Level 3:
In the event that marketplaces in Canada are open for trading on a trading day or a portion of a trading day2 that markets in the United States are not scheduled to be open for trading, trading halts will be triggered on those trading days or portions of trading days when the S&P/TSX Composite Index declines below its closing value on the previous trading day by:
In all other respects, the timing and duration of the market-wide trading halt will be in accordance with the requirements established in the United States (as set out in section 2 – Co-ordination of Market-wide Halts with the United States).
If there is a market-wide halt in trading as a result of a Level 3 market-wide circuit breaker, the general provision is that trading will not resume on marketplaces for the remainder of the trading day. IIROC recognizes that this restriction may cause practical problems in connection with index rebalancing and other transactions driven off the closing price, particularly the expiry of listed derivatives.
As set out in Rule 10.9 of UMIR, the power of a Market Integrity Official to halt trading is discretionary “at any time and for such period of time as such Market Integrity Official may consider appropriate in the interest of a fair and order market”. At the time of a regulatory halt as a result of a Level 3 market-wide circuit breaker, IIROC will consider:
Based on this consideration, IIROC may provide notice, as soon as practicable following the imposition of the Level 3 halt, that it will permit4 trading on marketplaces in:
9.1 Regulatory Halts, Delays and Suspensions of Trading
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