The expectation and the reason it's a pilot is that in these names liquidity has a price. In a world of pennies you might see three MMs a showing a hundred or two hundred shares and $.01 wide. Go try to buy 500 or a 1000 shares and you discover the real liquidity is at a price away from the $.01 wise quote. If liquidity and volume in these names doesn't benefit over the period of the pilot then it's a failure and they go back. The "hope" is more liquidity in these names will generate more interest and liquidity begets liquidity.
If it works expect to see it in less liquid products across the board.
BTW the SEC had this out for comment for the better part of this year. In the future if you want to gripe about a proposal - write a comment back to the SEC. The working groups actually go through all of the comments.
I know none of the exchanges are excited about it as the data collection costs for the pilot are going to add up to mega bucks.
Price is the equilibrium of liquidity.
If it works expect to see it in less liquid products across the board.
BTW the SEC had this out for comment for the better part of this year. In the future if you want to gripe about a proposal - write a comment back to the SEC. The working groups actually go through all of the comments.
I know none of the exchanges are excited about it as the data collection costs for the pilot are going to add up to mega bucks.
Price is the equilibrium of liquidity.