BACKGROUND
The MSRB is publishing a revised version of the RTRS test
plan. Publishing a second version of
the test plan became necessary for technical reasons that have arisen during
the initial testing period. The changes
impact only certain test trades included in the overall test plan. No changes have been made to the requirement
to test, the parties required to test or the testing schedule.
The changes to the
certification test plan were made for the following reasons. RTTM Web will not be used for RTRS
certification testing, and so test scenarios involving that interface have been
removed. In addition, an effort has
been made to improve the test plan in light of experience gained in the first
few weeks of testing. For these reasons
several of the testing scenarios were revised or dropped from the test
plan. To review the revised test plan,
please select this link.
All
brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers (collectively, “dealers”)
will be required to report municipal securities trades in real-time by January
2005, the planned effective date of revised Rule G-14, and to submit
inter-dealer trades for real-time comparison beginning on the same date, as
required by revised Rule G-12(f).[1] Before real-time reporting and comparison
rules become effective, every dealer that effects transactions subject to Rule
G-14 must be certified to report trades to the MSRB.[2]
The plan provides that each
clearing broker that has a direct telecommunications connection to NSCC’s
Real-Time Trade Matching (RTTM) system, which is the vehicle for reporting data
to RTRS, must conduct the full certification test.[3] If all of a dealer’s transaction
reports are submitted and updated by an agent (a clearing broker or service
bureau), then the dealer will be certified when its agent is certified.
SUMMARY OF TEST
In summary, the major steps in
certification testing are:
Complete
Form RTRS. Form RTRS informs the MSRB of the dealer’s trade reporting
method. Every dealer registered with
the MSRB must complete this form. Form
RTRS is described separately.[4]
Determine
the dealer’s role and the role of its agent (if any) in testing. A determination is
made as to what parts of the certification test the dealer must conduct itself
and what parts its agent may conduct on its behalf. Many relationships are possible in addition to the “clearing
broker” and “certified by agent” relationship outlined above. MSRB staff, in a telephone conversation with
the dealer staff, will assist in this determination.
Customize
and plan a dealer’s test. The dealer and the MSRB will
jointly
determine which test messages plan and scenarios
are appropriate to the dealer’s municipal securities business. If the dealer has any question about which test
plan they should complete, or which optional scenarios the dealer should
complete, call the MSRB and speak with a transaction reporting assistant.
Schedule
test.
The dealer will have provided a preferred date for testing on Form
RTRS. The MSRB will call the dealer and schedule
an actual date.
Construct
test trades. From the general list of test trades in the appropriate test plan, the dealer
will construct test messages or prepare to enter trades using the RTRS Web
interface.
Set up
telecommunications connection. The dealer will set up the necessary
connection, if this is not already in place.
Obtain
RTTM certification. NSCC participants must obtain RTTM
certification before proceeding with RTRS certification. Correspondents must verify that their
clearing broker has obtained RTTM certification before proceeding with RTRS
testing.
Submit
test trades to RTRS. If the dealer is conducting the test itself,
it will submit the test trades.
Receive
RTRS feedback. RTRS will provide feedback indicating whether the test trades
have errors or are satisfactory. If the
submissions are other than “Satisfactory,” the dealer makes the necessary
modifications by providing further input.
Certification. The dealer will
send the control numbers of “Satisfactory” trades to the MSRB by e-mail of the messages in the test
plan that
satisfy the scenarios. The MSRB
will verify the trades and notify the dealer that it is certified or that there
are deficiencies in the input.
MILESTONES
Certification testing with dealers
began on July 1, 2004. Dealers must be
certified by January 2005, the expected date of effectiveness of the real-time
reporting requirement. The
Certification Test Plan provides further details.
RTRS SYSTEM DOCUMENTATION
To access RTRS documentation,
click here. This link to the MSRB
web site leads to a description of the proposed change to Rules G-14 and
G-12(f), RTRS system specifications, questions and answers on real-time
reporting, and all related MSRB notices.
July 28, 2004