Series 57 Syllabus — Blueprint & Learning Objectives

FINRA Series 57 syllabus mapped to the official job functions with clear learning objectives and quick links to targeted practice.

This syllabus is based on FINRA’s official Series 57 Content Outline (2 major job functions). Use it as a checklist: cover every objective, then drill questions until you can identify the compliant execution/reporting outcome quickly.

What’s covered

F1 — Trading Activities (82%)

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Market Making Status, Roles & Basic Requirements

  • Explain the role of the floor broker and how floor-based and electronic trading workflows can differ at a high level.
  • Explain what a market participant identifier (MPID) is and why firms may use multiple MPIDs for quoting and trading.
  • Differentiate qualified OTC market maker, qualified third market maker and qualified block positioner concepts at a high level.
  • Describe responsibilities and expectations for a qualified block positioner conceptually.
  • Identify what it means to register as a market maker and why quoting obligations and registration status matter.
  • Explain why net capital requirements matter to market making and trading activity (high level).
  • Recognize voluntary termination of registration concepts and when quotation withdrawal rules can apply (high level).
  • Identify why payments for market making can create conflicts and are regulated (high level).

Order Types, Modifiers & Time-in-Force

  • Differentiate market, limit, stop and stop-limit orders and match each to execution certainty vs price certainty tradeoffs.
  • Explain market-on-open (MOO) and market-on-close (MOC) orders at a high level and recognize their timing sensitivity.
  • Differentiate day vs good-til-canceled (GTC) orders and how time-in-force affects order handling responsibilities.
  • Explain reserve (iceberg) and pegged order concepts and why they can affect displayed liquidity.
  • Identify how order modifiers/stipulations can change execution behavior and why clear customer instructions matter.
  • Recognize that some order types are venue-specific and traders must follow the venue’s rules and definitions (high level).

Market Access (DMA/Sponsored Access) & Pre-Trade Risk Controls

  • Differentiate direct market access (DMA) and sponsored access concepts at a high level and identify why both require controls.
  • Explain the purpose of the SEC Market Access Rule (Rule 15c3-5) and why firms must implement risk management controls.
  • Identify examples of pre-trade risk controls, including automated blocks and supervisory alerts (conceptual).
  • Explain why firms set credit limits and capital limits for market access and how limits reduce systemic and firm risk.
  • Recognize that traders must not bypass risk controls and that violations can trigger supervisory escalation (exam style).

Clearly Erroneous Trades (Obvious Errors)

  • Identify factors used to determine whether a transaction may be clearly erroneous (high level).
  • Differentiate transaction nullification vs adjustment outcomes and when each can occur (conceptual).
  • Recognize that clearly erroneous reviews are process- and deadline-driven and require prompt escalation and documentation.
  • Identify why “obvious error” handling protects market integrity and customers (high level).

Display, Execution & Trading Systems (ADF/ATS) and Order Entry

  • Explain common order entry parameters at a high level (symbol, price, size, side, time-in-force, modifiers).
  • Describe trading rotations conceptually and how order matching can occur during specific auction/rotation periods (venue-driven).
  • Explain the Alternative Display Facility (ADF) purpose at a high level and identify what types of quoting/trading activity it supports.
  • Explain what an alternative trading system (ATS) is and how ATSs differ from exchanges (high level).
  • Recognize that locking/crossing restrictions can apply and that quoting must comply with applicable access and display rules (high level).
  • Identify the purpose of quote and order access requirements and how access issues can become compliance complaints (high level).

Prohibited Activities, Manipulation & Insider Trading Risk

  • Identify prohibited activities such as trading ahead of research reports and explain why rules restrict these practices.
  • Explain insider trading risk at a high level and recognize that misuse of material nonpublic information is prohibited.
  • Identify manipulative trading schemes such as prearranged trading, spoofing and pump-and-dump, and recognize typical fact patterns.
  • Recognize that conduct intended to intimidate or influence other market participants is prohibited and must be escalated.
  • Explain the purpose of Exchange Act anti-manipulation provisions and Rule 10b-5 at a high level.
  • Identify that firms must maintain policies and procedures to prevent misuse of MNPI and that traders must follow escalation protocols.

Quotes, IOIs, Trade Advertisements, Halts & Volatility Pauses

  • Explain quotation publication concepts and recognize that quoting can be restricted during trading halts (high level).
  • Differentiate trading halts and volatility trading pauses conceptually and identify why orders/quotes may be restricted.
  • Explain what an indication of interest (IOI) is at a high level and recognize restrictions on publication during halts.
  • Recognize halt and imbalance crosses conceptually and why they can affect execution prices.
  • Identify what trade volume advertising is and why published trade information must be accurate and compliant.
  • Explain what an offer at a stated price is conceptually and recognize relevant publication restrictions (high level).

IPOs, Secondary Offerings, Penalty Bids and Regulation M Safe Harbors

  • Identify permitted and prohibited trading activity around IPOs and secondary offerings (high level).
  • Explain penalty bid concepts and why notice and syndicate covering transaction rules can apply (high level).
  • Explain stabilizing bids conceptually and identify the purpose of stabilization rules in offerings.
  • Describe passive market making in offering contexts and identify why specific rules limit activity during distributions.
  • Recognize notification requirements and firm controls related to IPO trading activity (high level).
  • Explain the purpose of Regulation M and safe harbors for distribution participants and issuers/selling shareholders (high level).
  • Recognize that short sales in connection with public offerings are restricted under Regulation M and identify the compliance theme (fact pattern driven).

Non-Listed and Penny Stocks (OTC Quoting, Form 211 and Rule 15c2-11)

  • Define penny stock conceptually and identify characteristics that make penny stocks higher-risk.
  • Recognize disclosure requirements and compensation disclosures commonly associated with penny stock transactions (high level).
  • Explain OTC quoting and trading concepts and how they differ from exchange trading (high level).
  • Explain the purpose of SEC Rule 15c2-11 and what it means to initiate or resume quotations with specified information.
  • Recognize Form 211 as a FINRA process for initiating or resuming market making in OTC equity securities (high level).
  • Identify minimum quotation size and minimum pricing increment concepts for OTC equity securities (high level).
  • Recognize customer limit order display requirements in OTC contexts (high level).
  • Identify locking/crossing restrictions and multiple quotation medium issues as common compliance traps in OTC quoting.

Options Trading (Orders, Exercise/Assignment, Limits)

  • Differentiate common option strategies and order types at a high level, including spreads, straddles and combinations.
  • Recognize index option concepts (e.g., VIX options) and how index options can differ from equity options (high level).
  • Explain exercise and assignment concepts and how assignment risk affects short option writers.
  • Describe the tender of exercise notice conceptually and how exercise notices are allocated (high level).
  • Identify the purpose of position limits and exercise limits and why firms must monitor customer and firm positions.
  • Recognize reporting obligations related to position limits and why traders must escalate limit issues promptly.

Short Sales (Reg SHO: Locates, Price Test, Close-Outs, Marking)

  • Define a short sale at a high level and explain why short selling introduces borrowing and delivery risk.
  • Explain locate and borrow concepts and why firms must have procedures to prevent naked short selling.
  • Explain the Regulation SHO price test (circuit breaker) conceptually and identify when short sale restrictions apply.
  • Describe close-out requirement concepts and why failures-to-deliver can trigger mandatory close-outs.
  • Differentiate order marking requirements (long/short/short exempt) and recognize how marking supports compliance and reporting.
  • Identify short sale exemptions at a high level and recognize that fact patterns will signal when an exemption applies.
  • Recognize that short sales are reportable and that accurate reporting supports surveillance and market integrity (high level).

Handling Customer Orders and Best Execution

  • Differentiate regular market hours vs pre-market and after-hours trading and identify unique risks of extended-hours trading.
  • Explain best execution obligations and identify the key factors considered in execution quality (price, speed, likelihood, size/type, market conditions).
  • Describe stop order handling concepts and common risk scenarios (gaps, triggers, and execution uncertainty).
  • Explain order adjustment concepts for corporate actions such as stock splits and dividends (high level).
  • Explain fair prices and commissions concepts and recognize scenarios that can indicate unfair pricing.
  • Differentiate agency vs principal and recognize net transactions with customers and related disclosure themes (high level).
  • Explain order marking concepts in customer order handling and why accurate marking supports supervision and audit trails.

Trading Ahead and Other Prohibited Practices (Customer Order Protection)

  • Identify trading ahead of customer orders as a prohibited practice and recognize common front-running scenarios.
  • Explain why manipulative or deceptive devices are prohibited and how misleading trade practices can violate rules (high level).
  • Recognize prohibited transaction concepts for investment advisers at a high level and why they can intersect with trading activity.
  • Identify the compliance theme: protect customers, avoid misuse of information, and escalate conflicts or suspicious activity.

Regulation NMS (Order Protection, Limit Order Display, Sub-Penny)

  • Explain order protection and trade-through prevention concepts at a high level (protecting displayed quotes).
  • Describe customer limit order display requirements and why they support transparency and fair execution.
  • Explain the Sub-Penny Rule/minimum price increment conceptually and identify why quoting in sub-pennies is restricted.
  • Recognize that Regulation NMS rules interact with routing and best execution decisions and must be followed in execution workflows (high level).

F2 — Maintaining Books and Records, Trade Reporting and Clearance and Settlement (18%)

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Trade Reporting Facilities and Reporting Requirements

  • Differentiate common reporting facilities (e.g., ADF, TRFs, OTC reporting facilities) and identify why reporting venue depends on the security and execution context.
  • Explain trade reporting timing and accuracy expectations and why late or inaccurate reporting creates regulatory risk.
  • Recognize common report fields and modifiers conceptually and how modifiers affect trade acceptance and transparency.
  • Explain the purpose of timely transaction reporting requirements and how they support market surveillance.
  • Identify the purpose of audit trail requirements in trade reporting facilities (high level).
  • Recognize multiple MPID usage for trade reporting and why firms must control MPID assignment and reporting integrity.
  • Explain exemptions from trade reporting obligations for certain ATS scenarios at a high level (fact pattern driven).
  • Recognize that the obligation to honor trades is part of the trade reporting/processing workflow (high level).

Order and Transaction Records (CAT/COATS), Large Trader and Books & Records

  • Explain the Large Trader concept at a high level (Exchange Act Rule 13h-1) and why Large Trade ID reporting and monitoring exist.
  • Identify the types of order execution and routing information that firms must capture for supervision and regulatory reporting (conceptual).
  • Explain the purpose of Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT) reporting and why timing and required fields matter (high level).
  • Explain what COATS is at a high level and why options-related audit trail reporting exists.
  • Recognize books-and-records requirements under SEC Rule 17a-3 and how records support audits and investigations.
  • Explain pre-time stamping concepts and why timestamp integrity supports compliance and surveillance (high level).
  • Recognize clock synchronization requirements and why accurate timekeeping is essential for audit trails.
  • Explain ATS transparency concepts at a high level and why transparency rules exist for market structure oversight.
  • Differentiate order execution information vs order routing information disclosure concepts under Regulation NMS Rules 605 and 606 (high level).

Clearance and Settlement (Confirmations, OCC Assignment, Close-Outs)

  • Identify key customer confirmation content requirements at a high level and why confirmations support transparency and investor protection.
  • Differentiate standard settlement time frames for common products conceptually and recognize that cycles can vary by product and rule changes.
  • Explain Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) exercise and assignment concepts and how assignment procedures affect settlement obligations.
  • Describe close-out requirement concepts for various products and why fails-to-deliver must be resolved promptly.
  • Explain the role of the Uniform Practice Code conceptually and why standard settlement practice reduces operational risk.
  • Recognize when-issued, as-issued and if-issued trading concepts at a high level and identify why conditional trading creates settlement and cancellation risk.
  • Explain ex-dividend/ex-rights processing concepts and why due-bill style allocations can be required around distribution dates (high level).
  • Recognize delivery date concepts and why “good delivery” and proper documentation reduce settlement breaks.

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