A buy-side trader working a block order in an illiquid mid-cap stock scans the market. The spread has tightened to a penny, but the displayed size is barely there: 100 shares on each side. The trader knows that releasing too much of the order may reveal more information than it fills.
For many institutional traders, the challenge is not simply getting a fill at the displayed price. It is finding meaningful liquidity without signalling intent, moving the stock, or losing control of the order.
That gap sits at the center of the debate over rule 611 of Regulation NMS.
Back to the future
For nearly two decades, rule 611, better known as the order protection rule, has been one of the core organising principles of US equity market structure. Adopted in 2005, it was designed to prevent trades from occurring at prices inferior to protected quotations displayed on other trading centers. The logic was clear at the time: markets were moving from manual, floor-based trading toward automated, interconnected execution.
The question now is whether that framework fits the market it helped create.
Defenders of the rule have a real point: displayed quotes matter, and public price discovery depends on confidence that better-priced liquidity will be respected. Critics counter that the best displayed price, particularly for small size at a single point in time, does not always capture the full picture of execution quality.
The SEC has proposed not to replace rule 611, but to rescind it. In effect, the regulators are asking whether modern markets can rely more heavily on best-execution obligations, routing discretion, competition, and execution-quality review rather than a prescriptive trade-through prohibition.
That distinction matters. Rescinding rule 611 would not mean that price no longer matters or that best execution disappears. If anything, best execution could become more complex, more contextual, and more dependent on process.
NBBO: More of a question than the answer
For institutional traders, the most important change may be philosophical. The market could move from asking, “was the order prevented from trading through a protected quote?” toward asking, “was the order handled in a way that reasonably pursued the best overall outcome?”
That is a harder question. It is also a more realistic one. Large orders are rarely solved by NBBO compliance alone. A trader working institutional size must weigh whether displayed liquidity is real, whether counterparties are likely to respond, whether an interaction will expose trading intent, and whether a partial fill creates more cost than value.
In that environment, the best displayed price is an input, not the entire answer.
Fewer destinations, greater control
If rule 611 is rescinded or narrowed, execution tools will need to do more than provide access. They will need to show discipline. That starts with better liquidity discovery: not more destinations or feeds for their own sake, but a clearer way to identify trading interest that is relevant to size. It also means more controlled counterparty engagement, where traders can manage who sees interest, when they see it, and under what conditions. Finally, it means auditability: a record of what was available, what was shown, what controls applied, and what outcome resulted.
The next phase of innovations related to market structure will likely be driven by improving workflow. Institutional desks need a way to turn liquidity scattered across brokers, channels, and internal workflows into actionable opportunities without adding more noise or losing control of the execution process.
These platforms will not reject the NBBO. They will recognise its limits. Reference prices, limit controls, and displayed markets remain essential anchors. But institutional best execution increasingly requires tools that can operate around the displayed market, not only through it.
Same roadmap, new “route”
The debate over rule 611 will continue, and the final rulemaking path remains uncertain. But the direction of travel is clear enough: US equity market structure is reexamining whether protected quotes should remain the central organising principle of execution.
For traders, the takeaway is simple. Best execution is not becoming less important. It is becoming less mechanical. In that world, the winners will be the firms that combine liquidity intelligence, workflow control, price discipline, and documentation.
The protected quote may remain part of the map.
It may no longer be the whole route.