2.8.5. Best Execution and Interpositioning
The best execution rule requires broker-dealers to make reasonable efforts to find as favorable a price as possible for a customer’s transaction, given the prevailing conditions of the market. However, best execution means more than getting the customer a favorable price. In deciding how and where to best execute a trade, a broker-dealer is expected to consider these factors:
• Character of the market for the security, determined by details such as its price, volatility, and liquidity
• Size and type of transaction
• Number of markets checked
• Accessibility of the quotation
• Terms and conditions of the transaction as communicated to the broker-dealer
When a member firm gets an order, it must go directly to a market maker. It cannot go through