FINRA Files to Allow TRACE to Be Corporate Bond Hub

If the SEC approves, TRACE will become a centralized source of comprehensive and timely information about new issues.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority filed Thursday with the Securities and Exchange Commission a proposal to expand its collection and dissemination of new-issue reference data for corporate bonds.

The proposal calls for FINRA’s Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine, or TRACE, to serve as a centralized source for market participants to receive more comprehensive and timely security description information about new issues.

“Making TRACE the common source for reference data about new-issue corporate bonds will provide market participants with more comprehensive, consistent and timely information they can rely on for the efficient trading and settlement of the bonds,” said Thomas Gira, FINRA’s executive vice president of Market Regulation and Transparency Services, in a statement.

FINRA’s proposal aligns with a recommendation by the SEC’s Fixed Income Market Structure Advisory Committee (FIMSAC), which said “the implementation of its recommendation would make the valuation, trading, settlement and trade reporting of new-issue corporate bonds more efficient by reducing trading errors and enhancing competition among data vendors, trading platforms and investors.”

Added Gira: “As the FIMSAC noted, access to accurate and timely reference data is increasingly important as market participants rely more on electronic trading platforms. Using TRACE to collect and disseminate this data demonstrates once again TRACE’s value as a central utility that serves the interests of a well-informed, well-functioning marketplace.”

FINRA currently collects and disseminates a limited amount of new-issue reference data about corporate bonds, such as the name of the issuer and the coupon of the bonds, for the purpose of supporting trade reporting, FINRA explains.

“Electronic trading platforms generally require more information to make new issues available for trading, and rely on providers that collect data from different sources and at speeds that vary from a few hours to several days,” the broker-dealer self-regulator said.

— Check out Former Vanguard CEO Calls for More Price Transparency in Bond Market on ThinkAdvisor.