On November 15, 2004, the Municipal
Securities Rulemaking Board (“MSRB”) filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (“SEC”) the transition details for the January 2005 implementation
of the MSRB’s real-time transaction reporting and price dissemination system.[1] The plan includes a January 31, 2005
effective date for previously approved amendments to Rule G-12(f) and Rule G-14
requiring real-time comparison and trade reporting.[2] The plan also describes how the transition
will be made to the real-time trade reporting system during January, including
the start of real-time price dissemination on January 31. A concurrently dated reminder notice
describes dealer system testing requirements that must be completed by in
December to ensure a successful implementation of the new system in January.[3]
JANUARY IMPLEMENTATION PLAN
As announced in
December 2003, the MSRB is implementing its real-time transaction reporting
requirements for brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers
(collectively, “dealers”) in January 2005.[4] The conversion to real-time transaction
reporting requires dealers and the MSRB to implement new systems and procedures
for transaction reporting. Trade
reporting will be accomplished through a new MSRB system -- the Real-Time
Transaction Reporting System (“RTRS”).
The two major components of RTRS with which dealers will interface are:
(i) the RTRS Web Portal for inputting trade data and reviewing the status of
trade reports within RTRS; and (ii) the message-based trade input and feedback
facility operated by National Securities Clearing Corporation (the “Message
Portal”). These are described in the RTRS Operational Plan contained in MSRB
Notice 2003-44 and in the RTRS Message Specifications and other explanatory
documents subsequently published at www.msrb.org.
To facilitate a smooth transition to dealer use of
the Web Portal and the Message Portal, implementation will occur in two phases
on January 10 and January 31, 2005.
Dealers will be required to incorporate use of the RTRS Web Portal into
their transaction reporting procedures on January 10, on which date the MSRB
also will convert its internal production processing and dealer-feedback
systems to RTRS formats. Accomplishing
this transition on January 10 will allow the MSRB and dealers to resolve any
implementation issues associated with these system changes prior to the January
31 date for mandatory real-time trade reporting by all dealers. On January 31, the amendments to Rule
G-12(f) and Rule G-14 that require real-time inter-dealer comparison and
transaction reporting will become effective, use of the Message Portal will
become mandatory, and the MSRB will begin real-time dissemination of trades in
transparency reports.
Further details on the
system changes that will occur in January are described below.
January 10, 2005 -- On
this date, the MSRB will convert its own production system for processing
transaction reports to RTRS. Dealers
will not be required by rule to report in real-time on this date but will be
encouraged to do so to ease the transition when real-time reporting becomes
mandatory on January 31. On January 10,
the RTRS database will become the “database of record” and dealers will need to
employ the RTRS Web browser in their production environment. It should be noted that dealers that have
tested successfully can already convert to real-time comparison and trade
reporting procedures, although without all of the “feedback” functionally that
will become available in the production environment on January 10. The MSRB’s conversion to RTRS as the
production processing system on January 10will allow the MSRB to
give these dealers full RTRS “feedback” capability on that date.
There will be no change in the timing of
transparency reports on January 10.
However, subscribers to the existing transparency reports can begin
receiving T+1 reports in the RTRS revised record formats (including the new
fields of trade information offered by RTRS) on that date. The following features of the existing
transaction reporting system will be changed or terminated on January 10:
• The old “batch” style formats for reporting
inter-dealer and customer trades through NSCC will still be accepted, but the
deadline for reporting customer trades will be changed from midnight to 10:00
pm. The deadline for inter-dealer trade
reports will remain 8:00 p.m.
• Because of the MSRB’s change to RTRS as the production
processing system, dealers must use 16-digit (rather than 20-digit) control
numbers to identify trades, both in real-time and in batch trade reports. Only 16-digit control numbers will be returned
to dealers in message feedback.
• Regardless of whether a dealer is using the new RTRS
formats or old batch style formats, the MSRB will discontinue sending
“feedback” information in batch files and faxes for customer trades. Real-time system responses, e-mails and the
RTRS Web Portal instead will be available to provide feedback to dealers on
their trade reports.
• Dealers who submit their low-volume trade input through
the current “TRS dial-up” facility must convert to the RTRS Web Portal by
January 10.
January 31, 2005– On this date, the amendments to Rule G-14, on
transaction reporting, and Rule G-12(f), on automated comparison of
inter-dealer transactions, will become fully effective, requiring securities
transactions to be reported, in most cases, within 15 minutes of the time of
trade execution. Use of RTRS trade reporting formats and procedures will become
mandatory and the old “batch” style reporting formats will no longer be
compliant with Rules G-12(f) and G-14. (The MSRB will discontinue its support
of the non-compliant trade reporting methodology soon after January 31.) The
MSRB will make real-time transaction price data available to subscribers to its
Real-Time Transaction Price Service beginning on this date.
* * * * *
Questions concerning this notice should be directed
to Thomas A. Hutton, Chief Information Officer, at 703-797-6600.
November 17, 2004
[1] SR-MSRB-2004-07.
The plan sets the effective date for rule amendments previously approved
by the SEC in August. See Exchange Act
Release No 50294 (August 31, 2004). The
plan was filed for immediate effectiveness.
Comments on the implementation plan may be submitted to the SEC and
should reference file number SR-MSRB-2004-07.
[2] For additional details on the amendments and the
system for real-time transaction reporting, see “Approval by the SEC of
Real-Time Transaction Reporting and Price Dissemination: Rules G-12(f) and G-14,” MSRB Notice 2004-29
(September 2, 2004), and “Real-Time Transaction Reporting: Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change to
Rules G-14 and G-12(f),” MSRB Notice
2004-13 (June 1, 2004), both at www.msrb.org.
[3] “Notice of December 15 Deadline for Testing Real-Time Trade
Reporting Capabilities” (December 17, 2004), at www.msrb.org.
[4] See MSRB Notice 2003-44 (December 11, 2003), at
www.msrb.org.