The OCC and the U.S. Options Exchanges have come together in an effort to reduce the risk of errors or unintended activity that could cause or contribute to a financial loss to market participants.

Today they announced the adoption of new risk control standards that include:

1) Price reasonability checks designed to prevent the display and execution of quotes and orders at extreme prices;

2) Drill-through protections that restrict the prices at which orders may be executed and prevent marketable orders from improperly trading through many price increments in a short period of time;

3) Activity-based protections designed to address risk beyond price such as a high frequency of trades in a set period of time;

4) Kill switches to enable the termination of access to an options exchange?s trading system under certain defined circumstances.

OCC will impose an additional $.02 charge per contract side on clearing members for transactions that have been executed at exchanges that have not demonstrated compliance with exchange risk control standards. Subject to regulatory approval, it will begin on June 30, 2016.

Craig Donohue, OCC Executive?Chairman, states:??Working with all of the U.S. options exchanges, we have adopted principles-based exchange risk control standards that are critical to protecting market participants and OCC against financial loss. These comprehensive risk control standards, and the incentives that we have designed to encourage their adoption by all U.S. options exchanges, further our collective goal of enhancing industry protections.??