On May 24, 2005, the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) approved amendments to Rule G-21, on
advertising, establishing specific requirements with respect to advertisements
by brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers (“dealers”) relating to
municipal fund securities.[1]
The amendments include specific requirements regarding the calculation and
display of performance data for municipal fund securities in a manner
consistent with Rule 482 adopted by the SEC under the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended (the “Securities Act”), in connection with the advertisement of
mutual fund performance. The amendments also include general disclosure
requirements regarding municipal fund securities that are similar in most
respects to generalized disclosures currently required for mutual fund
advertisements under SEC rules. Finally, the amendments incorporate certain
prior interpretations relating to municipal fund securities. The provisions of
the amendments, and the dates by which dealers must comply with the amendments,
are described below.
General Disclosures
New section (e)(i)(A) of Rule G-21 requires that
all dealer advertisements relating to municipal fund securities include
generalized disclosure that: (1) advises investors to consider the investment
objectives, risks, and charges and expenses associated with municipal fund
securities before investing; (2) explains that more information about municipal
fund securities is available in the issuer’s official statement; (3) if the
advertisement identifies a source from which an investor may obtain an official
statement and the dealer that publishes the advertisement is the underwriter
for the municipal fund securities for which such official statement may be
supplied, states that such dealer is the underwriter for such municipal fund
securities; and (4) states that the official statement should be read carefully
before investing.
New section (e)(i)(B) of Rule G-21
requires that all dealer advertisements that refer by name (including marketing
name) to any municipal fund security, issuer of municipal fund securities,
governmental entity that sponsors the issuance of municipal fund securities, or
to any securities held as assets of municipal fund securities or to any issuer
of such securities held as assets, must include additional disclosure that:
(1) identifies a source from which an investor may obtain an official
statement; (2) if the advertisement relates to municipal fund securities issued
through a 529 college savings plan, advises an investor to consider, before
investing, whether the investor’s or designated beneficiary’s home state offers
any state tax or other benefits that are only available for investments in such
state’s 529 college savings plan; and (3) if the advertisement is for a
municipal fund security that the issuer holds out as having the characteristics
of a money market fund, states that an investment in the security is not
insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other
government agency (unless such guarantee is provided by or on behalf of such
issuer) and that, if the security is held out as maintaining a stable net asset
value, although the issuer seeks to preserve the value of the investment at a
fixed share price, it is possible to lose money by investing in the security.
New section (e)(i)(D) of
Rule G-21 requires that these general disclosures be presented in the same
format required under SEC Rule 482.
Historical Performance Data
The amendments
establish in new section (e)(ii) of Rule G-21 specific requirements with
respect to the inclusion of performance data in municipal fund security
advertisements.
Calculation
and Display of Performance Data. Advertisements of municipal fund
securities that include performance data must comply with the method of
computing and displaying performance data for mutual funds as prescribed in
section (d) or (e) of SEC Rule 482, with certain modifications described below.
In effect, for municipal fund securities other than those that are held out by
the issuer as having the characteristics of a money market fund, quotations of
performance in an advertisement are limited to the average annual total return,
current yield (but only if accompanied by average annual total return),
tax-equivalent yield (but only if accompanied by average annual total return
and current yield), after-tax return (but only if accompanied by average annual
total return), or other non-prescribed performance measures (but only if
accompanied by average annual total return and, if adjusted to reflect the
effects of taxes, after-tax return), as provided in SEC Rule 482(d). In the
case of municipal fund securities that are held out by the issuer as having the
characteristics of a money market fund, quotations of performance in an
advertisement are limited to the current yield, effective yield (but only if
accompanied by current yield), tax-equivalent yield or tax-equivalent effective
yield (but only if accompanied by current yield), or total return (but only if
accompanied by current yield), as provided in SEC Rule 482(e).[2]
Clauses (A) through (E) of Rule
G-21(e)(ii) modify the basic performance data calculation methods established
for mutual funds. Rule G-21(e)(ii) provides that: (A) a dealer can use
information provided in the issuer’s official statement, otherwise made
available by the issuer, or otherwise obtained from other reliable sources to
calculate performance to the extent such information is not available from a
balance sheet in a registration statement or from a prospectus; (B) the life of
a municipal fund securities issue should be measured from when the issuer first
issues the securities; (C) performance data in advertisements must be calculated
as of the most recent calendar quarter ended prior to the submission of the
advertisement for publication for which such performance data, or all
information required for the calculation of such performance data, is available
to the dealer; (D) expenses having the same characteristics as those permitted
to be paid under Rule 12b-1 adopted by the SEC under the Investment Company Act
but not technically accrued under a 12b-1 plan must be treated as 12b-1
expenses for purposes of calculating performance;[3] and (E) in calculating
tax-equivalent yields or after-tax returns, the dealer shall assume that any
unreinvested distributions are used in a manner that qualifies for any federal
tax-exemption or other federally tax-advantaged treatment with respect to such
distributions, provided that: (1) the advertisement also provides a general
description of how federal law intends such distributions be used and discloses
that such yield or return would be lower if distributions are not used in this
manner; and (2) if the federal income tax treatment upon which such yield or
return is based is subject to lapse or other adverse change without extension
or change of federal law, the advertisement must disclose this fact and that
such yield or return would be lower if the federal income tax treatment is not
extended or otherwise change.
Performance data included in
municipal fund security advertisements are required to be displayed in the
manner provided in section (d) or (e) of SEC Rule 482, as appropriate, with
respect to prominence and positioning of information.
Disclosures
Accompanying Performance Data. New Section (e)(i)(C) of Rule G-21
requires that advertisements that include performance data for municipal fund
securities also include certain related legends and disclosures modeled after
those required under SEC Rule 482 for mutual funds advertisements that display
performance information. These disclosures emphasize that the performance data
is historical and does not guarantee future results, that the value of holdings
is subject to fluctuation (except where the municipal fund security is held out
as having the characteristics of a money market fund and as maintaining a
stable net asset value), and that current performance may be different from the
performance data included in the advertisement. Advertisements containing
performance data also are required to include the maximum amount of any sales
load or other nonrecurring fee and, if such load or fee is not reflected in the
performance data, to disclose that the load or fee is not so reflected and that
performance would be lower if it had been reflected. These nonrecurring fees
that are subject to disclosure include such fees imposed not only by the dealer
but also by the issuer or any other party to the issuance of the municipal fund
securities or the maintenance of investments therein.
New Section
(e)(i)(D) requires that these legends and disclosures be presented in the same
format required under SEC Rule 482.
Additional Requirements
The amendments include in new
paragraphs (iii) through (vi) of Rule G-21(e) additional requirements with
respect to municipal fund security advertisements, based largely on prior interpretive
guidance.
Nature of
Issuer and Security. New paragraph (iii) requires that an advertisement:
(1) for a specific municipal fund security provide sufficient information to
identify the security in a manner that is not false or misleading; (2) that
identifies a specific municipal fund security include the name of the issuer
(or its marketing name, including state), presented in a manner no less
prominent than any other entity identified in the advertisement, and not imply
that a different entity is the issuer; (3) not raise an inference that, because
municipal fund securities are issued under a government-sponsored plan,
investors are guaranteed against investment losses if no such guarantee exists;
and (4) that concerns a specific class or category municipal fund
securities (e.g., A shares versus B shares; direct sale shares versus
advisor shares; in-state shares versus national shares; etc.) clearly disclose
this fact in a manner no less prominent than the information provided with
respect to such class or category.
Capacity of
Dealer and Other Parties. New paragraph (iv) requires an advertisement
about services provided with respect to municipal fund securities to clearly
indicate the entity providing such services. If any person or entity
other than the dealer is named in the advertisement, it must reflect any
relationship between the dealer and such other person or entity. An
advertisement soliciting purchases that would be effected by any party other
than the dealer that publishes the advertisement (i.e., the issuer or
another dealer) must identify which entity would effect the transaction,
provided that it may identify one or more such entities in general descriptive
terms but must specifically name any such other entity if it is the issuer, an
affiliate of the issuer, or an affiliate of the dealer that publishes the
advertisement.
Tax
Consequences and Other Features. New paragraph (v) requires that
any discussion of tax implications or other benefits or features of investments
in municipal fund securities included in an advertisement not be false or
misleading. If an advertisement includes statements regarding tax or
other benefits offered in connection with such municipal fund securities or
otherwise offered under state or federal law, it must also state that the
availability of such tax or other benefits may be conditioned on meeting
certain requirements. If the advertisement describes the nature of specific
benefits, such advertisement must also briefly name the factors that may
materially limit the availability of such benefits (such as residency, purpose
for or timing of distributions, or other factors, as applicable).[4]
Such statements of conditions or limitations must be presented in close
proximity to, and in a manner no less prominent than, the description of such
benefits.
Underlying Registered
Securities. New paragraph (vi) requires that, if an advertisement
for a municipal fund security provides specific details of a security held as
an underlying asset of the municipal fund security, the details included in the
advertisement relating to such underlying security be presented in a manner
that would be in compliance with any SEC or NASD advertising rules that would
be applicable if the advertisement related solely to such underlying security.
Details of the underlying security included in the advertisement must be accompanied
by any further statements necessary to ensure that the inclusion of such
details does not cause the advertisement to be false or misleading with respect
to the municipal fund securities advertised. This provision does not limit the
applicability of any rule of the SEC, NASD or any other regulatory body
relating to advertisements of securities other than municipal fund securities,
including advertisements that contain information about such other securities
together with information about municipal fund securities.
Exemption
from New Issue Price/Yield Requirement
The amendments exempt municipal fund security
advertisements from the provision of Rule G-21(d) relating to advertisements of
initial reoffering prices or yields of new issue municipal securities.
Compliance Dates
All advertisements of municipal fund securities
submitted or caused to be submitted for publication by a dealer on or after
September 1, 2005 must comply with section (e) of Rule G-21, except for
paragraphs (e)(i)(C) and (e)(ii) relating to calculation and presentation of
performance data and those provisions of paragraph (e)(i)(D) pertaining to
paragraph (e)(i)(C). In any event, all advertisements of municipal fund
securities submitted or caused to be submitted for publication by a dealer on
or after December 1, 2005 must comply with all provisions of Rule G-21(e).
May 27, 2005
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TEXT OF AMENDMENTS TO
RULE G-21[5]
Rule G-21. Advertising.
(a)-(c) No change.
(d) New Issue Advertisements. In addition to the
requirements of section (c), all advertisements for new issue municipal
securities (other than municipal fund securities) shall [also]
be subject to the following requirements:
(i)-(ii) No change.
(e) [NEW SECTION] Municipal Fund Security
Advertisements. In addition to the requirements of section (c), all
advertisements for municipal fund securities shall be subject to the following
requirements:
(i) Required disclosures. Each advertisement for municipal fund securities:
(A) must include a
statement that:
(1) advises an
investor to consider the investment objectives, risks, and charges and expenses
associated with municipal fund securities before investing;
(2) explains that
more information about municipal fund securities is available in the issuer’s
official statement;
(3) if the
advertisement identifies a source from which an investor may obtain an official
statement and the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer that publishes
the advertisement is the underwriter for one or more of the issues of municipal
fund securities for which any such official statement may be supplied, states
that such broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer is the underwriter for
one or more issues (as appropriate) of such municipal fund securities; and
(4) states that
the official statement should be read carefully before investing.
(B) that refers by
name (including marketing name) to any municipal fund security, issuer of
municipal fund securities, state or other governmental entity that sponsors the
issuance of municipal fund securities, or to any securities held as assets of
municipal fund securities or to any issuer thereof, must include the following
disclosures, as applicable:
(1) unless the
offer of such municipal fund securities is exempt from Exchange Act Rule 15c2-12
and the issuer thereof has not produced an official statement, a source from
which an investor may obtain an official statement;
(2) if the
advertisement relates to municipal fund securities issued by a qualified
tuition program under Internal Revenue Code Section 529, a statement that
advises an investor to consider, before investing, whether the investor’s or
designated beneficiary’s home state offers any state tax or other benefits that
are only available for investments in such state’s qualified tuition program;
and
(3) if the
advertisement is for a municipal fund security that the issuer holds out as
having the characteristics of a money market fund, statements to the effect
that an investment in the security is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency (unless such
guarantee is provided by or on behalf of such issuer) and, if the security is
held out as maintaining a stable net asset value, that although the issuer
seeks to preserve the value of the investment at $1.00 per share or such other
applicable fixed share price, it is possible to lose money by investing in the
security.
(C) that includes
performance data must include:
(1) a legend
disclosing that the performance data included in the advertisement represents
past performance; that past performance does not guarantee future results; that
the investment return and the value of the investment will fluctuate so that an
investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original
cost (provided that the disclosure with respect to investment value fluctuation
is not required for municipal fund securities that the issuer holds out as
having the characteristics of a money market fund and as maintaining a stable
net asset value); and that current performance may be lower or higher than the
performance data included in the advertisement; and
(2) if a sales
load or any other nonrecurring fee is charged, the maximum amount of the load
or fee and, if the sales load or fee is not reflected in the performance data
included in the advertisement, a statement that the performance data does not
reflect the deduction of the sales load or fee and that the performance data
would be lower if such load or fee were included.
(D) must present
the statements required by clauses (A), (B) and (C) of this paragraph, when in
a print advertisement, in a type size at least as large as and of a style
different from, but at least as prominent as, that used in the major portion of
the advertisement, provided that when performance data is presented in a type
size smaller than that of the major portion of the advertisement, the
statements required by clause (C) of this paragraph may appear in a type size
no smaller than that of the performance data. If an advertisement is delivered
through an electronic medium, the legibility requirements for the statements
required by clauses (A), (B) and (C) of this paragraph relating to type size
and style may be satisfied by presenting the statements in any manner
reasonably calculated to draw investor attention to them. In a radio or
television advertisement, the statements required by clauses (A), (B) and (C)
of this paragraph must be given emphasis equal to that used in the major
portion of the advertisement. The statements required by clause (C) of this
paragraph must be presented in close proximity to the performance data and, in
a print advertisement, must be presented in the body of the advertisement and
not in a footnote unless the performance data appears only in such footnote.
(ii) Performance data. Each
advertisement that includes performance data relating to municipal fund
securities must present performance data in the format, and calculated pursuant
to the methods, prescribed in paragraph (d) of Securities Act Rule 482 (or, in
the case of a municipal fund security that the issuer holds out as having the
characteristics of a money market fund, paragraph (e) of Securities Act Rule
482), provided that:
(A) to the extent
that information necessary to calculate performance data is not available from
an applicable balance sheet included in a registration statement, or from a
prospectus, the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer shall use
information derived from the issuer’s official statement, otherwise made
available by the issuer or its agents, or (when unavailable from the official
statement, the issuer or the issuer’s agents) derived from such other sources
which the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer reasonably believes are
reliable;
(B) if the issuer
first began issuing the municipal fund securities fewer than one, five, or ten
years prior to the date of the submission of the advertisement for publication,
such shorter period shall be substituted for any otherwise prescribed longer
period in connection with the calculation of average annual total return or any
similar returns;
(C) performance
data shall be calculated as of the most recent calendar quarter ended prior to
the submission of the advertisement for publication for which such performance
data, or all information required for the calculation of such performance data,
is available to the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer as described
in clause (A) of this paragraph;
(D) where such
calculation is required to include expenses accrued under a plan adopted under
Investment Company Act Rule 12b-1, the broker, dealer or municipal securities
dealer shall include all such expenses as well as any expenses having the same
characteristics as expenses under such a plan where such a plan is not required
to be adopted under said Rule 12b-1 as a result of Section 2(b) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940;
(E) in calculating
tax-equivalent yields or after-tax returns, the broker, dealer or municipal
securities dealer shall assume that any unreinvested distributions are used in
the manner intended with respect to such municipal fund securities in order to
qualify for any federal tax-exemption or other federally tax-advantaged
treatment with respect to such distributions, provided that:
(1) the
advertisement must also provide a general description of how federal law
intends that such distributions be used and disclose that such yield or return
would be lower if distributions are not used in this manner; and
(2) if the
then-effective federal income tax treatment upon which such yield or return was
based is subject to lapse or other adverse change without extension or change
of federal law, the advertisement must disclose this fact and that such yield
or return would be lower if the then-effective federal income tax treatment is
not extended or otherwise changed.
(F)
notwithstanding any of the foregoing, this paragraph shall apply solely to the
calculation of performance relating to municipal fund securities and does not
apply to, or limit the applicability of any rule of the Commission, NASD or any
other regulatory body relating to, the calculation of performance for any
security held as an underlying asset of the municipal fund securities.
(iii) Nature of
issuer and security. An advertisement for a specific municipal fund
security must provide sufficient information to identify such specific security
in a manner that is not false or misleading. An advertisement that
identifies a specific municipal fund security must include the name of the
issuer (or the issuer’s marketing name for its issuance of municipal fund
securities, together with the state of the issuer), presented in a manner no
less prominent than any other entity identified in the advertisement, and must
not imply that a different entity is the issuer of the municipal fund
security. An advertisement must not raise an inference that, because
municipal fund securities are issued under a government-sponsored plan,
investors are guaranteed against investment losses if no such guarantee
exists. If an advertisement concerns a specific class or category of an
issuer’s municipal fund securities (e.g., A shares versus B shares;
direct sale shares versus advisor shares; in-state shares versus national
shares; etc.), this must clearly be disclosed in a manner no less prominent
than the information provided with respect to such class or category.
(iv) Capacity
of dealer and other parties. An advertisement that relates to or
describes services provided with respect to municipal fund securities must
clearly indicate the entity providing those services. If any person or entity
other than the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer is named in the
advertisement, the advertisement must reflect any relationship between the broker,
dealer or municipal securities dealer and such other person or entity. An
advertisement soliciting purchases of municipal fund securities that would be
effected by a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer or any other entity
other than the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer that publishes the
advertisement must identify which entity would effect the transaction, provided
that the advertisement may identify one or more such entities in general
descriptive terms but must specifically name any such other entity if it is the
issuer, an affiliate of the issuer, or an affiliate of the broker, dealer or
municipal securities dealer that publishes the advertisement.
(v) Tax
consequences and other features. Any discussion of tax implications or
other benefits or features of investments in municipal fund securities included
in an advertisement must not be false or misleading. In the case of an
advertisement that includes statements regarding tax or other benefits offered
in connection with such municipal fund securities or otherwise offered under
state or federal law, the advertisement also must state that the availability
of such tax or other benefits may be conditioned on meeting certain
requirements. If the advertisement describes the nature of specific benefits,
such advertisement must also briefly name the factors that may materially limit
the availability of such benefits (such as residency, purpose for or timing of
distributions, or other factors, as applicable). Such statements of conditions
or limitations must be presented in close proximity to, and in a manner no less
prominent than, the description of such benefits.
(vi) Underlying
registered securities. If an advertisement for a municipal fund
security provides specific details of a security held as an underlying asset of
the municipal fund security, the details included in the advertisement relating
to such underlying security must be presented in a manner that would be in
compliance with any Commission or NASD advertising rules that would be
applicable if the advertisement related solely to such underlying security;
provided that details of the underlying security must be accompanied by any
further statements relating to such details as are necessary to ensure that the
inclusion of such details does not cause the advertisement to be false or
misleading with respect to the municipal fund securities advertised. This
paragraph does not limit the applicability of any rule of the Commission, NASD
or any other regulatory body relating to advertisements of securities other
than municipal fund securities, including advertisements that contain
information about such other securities together with information about
municipal securities. [END NEW SECTION]
(f) [(e)] No change.