On September 1, 2005,
amendments to Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (“MSRB”) 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 become effective.[1] The amendments include general
disclosure requirements regarding municipal fund securities that are similar in
most respects to generalized disclosures currently required for mutual fund
advertisements under rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”).
In addition, the amendments incorporate certain prior interpretations relating
to municipal fund securities.[2]
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 the amendments summarized below.[3]
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 by Rule 482 relating to mutual fund advertisements adopted by
the SEC under the Securities Act of 1933.
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 of 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.
* * * * *
Questions regarding this notice and
amended Rule G-21 may be directed to Ernesto A. Lanza, Senior Associate General
Counsel, or Ghassan Hitti, Assistant General Counsel.
September 1, 2005