The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (the
“MSRB”) is seeking comment on the implementation of an electronic system of
primary market disclosure in the municipal securities market. This new system
would be designed to promote significantly more effective and efficient
delivery of material information to new issue customers and the marketplace in
general than under existing requirements for physical delivery of official
statements. The system would be modeled in part on recent rule changes adopted
by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) that instituted an
“access equals delivery” model for prospectus dissemination for much of the
registered securities market.[1]
However, as a result of the unique nature of the municipal securities market,
including but not limited to the exemption of issuers from the registration and
prospectus requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 (the “Securities Act”)
and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”), the MSRB believes
that modifications to the SEC approach would be necessary.
This notice describes a potential framework for
instituting the “access equals delivery” standard under MSRB rules and poses a
number of questions related to its implementation. Comments are welcome from
all interested parties on the proposed framework and related questions, any
alternatives to this framework, and any other issues touching on the
application of this standard to the municipal securities market, including the
potential impact of this standard on investors and issuers, as well as on brokers,
dealers and municipal securities (“dealers”).
BACKGROUND
SEC’s
“Access Equals Delivery” Standard for Prospectuses in Registered Offerings. In the registered securities market, issuers
are required to file registration statements and prospectuses electronically
through the SEC’s EDGAR (Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval)
system prior to an offering. The EDGAR system then makes electronic versions
of filings available to the public at no charge on a “real-time” basis through
the SEC’s website. As a result, prospectuses are available free of charge at a
centralized site (as well as through other information services, in some cases
for a fee) throughout the selling process. The “access equals delivery”
standard is premised on, among other things, this immediate availability of
prospectuses and other filings through the EDGAR system and other electronic
sources.
The “access equals delivery” standard provides,
pursuant to Securities Act Rule 172, that a broker-dealer selling a security in
a registered offering need not deliver a final prospectus to the customer if
the registration statement is effective and the final prospectus is filed with
the SEC (or a good faith and reasonable effort to file it is made) within the
required timeframe. Under Securities Act Rule 173, a broker-dealer selling such
a security must provide to the customer a notice that the security was sold in
a registered offering within two business days after completion of the sale. Customers may request printed copies of the final
prospectus. The “access equals
delivery” standard also applies to aftermarket trades of newly issued
securities pursuant to Securities Act Rule 174. This standard is not available
to certain classes of registered securities, including but not limited to
mutual fund shares.[2]
Official Statement Deliveries
Under Current MSRB Rules. Under Rule G-32, a dealer selling a new
issue municipal security to a customer during the period ending 25 days after bond
closing (the “new issue disclosure period”) must deliver the official statement
to the customer on or prior to trade settlement.[3] The rule includes inter-dealer
delivery requirements for new issue municipal securities to assist selling
dealers to meet their customer delivery obligations.[4]
Rule G-36 requires underwriters to
submit official statements to the MSRB. For offerings subject to Exchange Act
Rule 15c2-12, the official statement must be sent within one business day after
receipt from the issuer but no later than ten business days after the bond sale.[5] With limited exceptions, official
statements for all other offerings must be sent by the later of one business
day after receipt from the issuer or one business day after bond closing. Submitted
official statements must be accompanied by completed Form G-36(OS). Official
statements may be submitted in either paper or electronic format. These
submissions are collected into a comprehensive library for the municipal
securities market. The MSRB makes these documents available to subscribers,
many of whom disseminate them (typically for a fee) or use them to obtain security-specific
information to include in their data files used by dealers, investors, pricing
services and others for their trading or other municipal securities market
activities.
A MODEL FOR IMPLEMENTATION
OF “ACCESS EQUALS DELIVERY” IN THE MUNICIPAL SECURITIES MARKET
The MSRB believes that the adoption
of a modified version of the SEC’s “access equals delivery” standard would greatly
enhance the timeliness and efficiency of official statement deliveries. Such a
model would provide the investing public with assured access to official
statements throughout the new issue disclosure period and, in most cases,
sooner than under the current physical delivery model. In addition, the
“access equals delivery” model would significantly decrease the burden and expense
of dealer deliveries of official statements, which should ultimately result in
reduced transaction costs for new issue customers. The need to print
significantly fewer official statements also should reduce issuance costs for
issuers.
The SEC noted the significant
benefits that the “access equals delivery” model would provide in the
registered market, stating in the SEC Release that the rules:
are
intended to facilitate effective access to information, while taking into
account advancements in technology and the practicalities of the offering
process. These changes are intended to alleviate timing difficulties that may
arise under the current securities clearance and settlement system, and also to
facilitate the successful delivery of, and payment for, securities in a
registered offering.… [G]iven that the final prospectus delivery obligations
generally affect investors only after they have made their purchase commitments
and that investors and the market have access to the final prospectus upon its
filing, we believe that delivery obligation should be able to be satisfied
through a means other than physical delivery…. At this time, we believe that Internet usage has increased sufficiently
to allow us to adopt a final prospectus delivery model for issuers and their intermediaries
that relies on timely access to filed information and documents.[6]
The MSRB believes that these considerations are equally
applicable to the municipal securities market.
In order to apply the “access
equals delivery” standard to the municipal securities market in an effective
manner, however, two critical factors would need to be addressed. First,
electronic versions of official statements would need to become the industry
standard. Second, such electronic versions would need to be made easily and
freely available to the investing public. These factors, as well as possible
MSRB rule changes needed to implement an “access equals delivery” standard, are
discussed below.
Electronic Official
Statements. The MSRB currently receives approximately half of all
official statement submissions under Rule G-36 in electronic format. These
electronic official statements are available nearly instantaneously for further
re-dissemination after the underwriter has made the submission. In contrast,
official statements submitted in paper form experience significant delays
before they can ultimately be re-disseminated by the MSRB, including but not
limited to the added delivery time for physical documents to be delivered from
the underwriter to the MSRB and the processing time for the MSRB to scan the
printed documents into digital form. The MSRB believes that it is in the best
interest of municipal securities investors and other participants in this
marketplace to eliminate such delays and to require that all submissions under
Rule G-36 be undertaken in electronic format by underwriters.
The MSRB believes that the
availability of electronic official statements for delivery to the MSRB will
continue to grow rapidly from the current level of approximately 50% through
the natural evolution of the marketplace. Indeed, it is likely that few if any
official statements are currently produced by means other than the creation of
electronic files. The MSRB cannot, of course, require issuers to produce
official statements in electronic format. However, the MSRB believes that, by
the time an “access equals delivery” model were to be fully implemented, the
level of offerings in the municipal securities market for which electronic
official statements are not already being produced by the issuer will have
decreased to such a low point that it would be reasonable for the MSRB to
require underwriters for such offerings to themselves image or otherwise
digitize those few paper-only official statements prior to submission to the MSRB.
In the MSRB’s view, the frequency of such imaging would be quite low, the ease
of such imaging will have increased, and the potential benefit to the municipal
securities market will be sufficiently high to counterbalance this rather low
burden imposed by such a requirement.
The MSRB seeks comment on the
current availability of electronic official statements from issuers and the
factors affecting future growth in such availability. The MSRB also seeks
comment on the nature and level of potential burdens of requiring that all
submissions under Rule G-36 be undertaken in electronic format. Further, the
MSRB currently requires that electronic official statement submissions be made
solely as portable document format (pdf) files. The MSRB requests comment on
the advisability of accepting other electronic formats, what such other formats
should be and whether such other formats create inappropriate risks for or burdens
on issuers, dealers or investors.
Centralized Access to
Electronic Official Statements. Electronic official statements would
need to be made readily available to the investing public, at no cost, for the
duration of the applicable new issue disclosure period, at a minimum. The MSRB
believes that investors would be best served if such official statements were
made available at a centralized Internet website, although other parties could
of course make all or portions of such collection available at other websites
or through other means as well. In the alternative, a central directory of
such official statements could be maintained, with the actual hosting of the
electronic official statement occurring by multiple parties (such as issuers, financial
advisors, underwriters, information vendors, printers, etc.) that have undertaken
to maintain free ready access to such documents throughout the new issue
disclosure period. However, the MSRB observes that this second alternative
would provide fewer assurances that electronic access to the official
statements will in fact be maintained in a uniform manner for the required
duration and likely would require third-party monitoring of these decentralized
sources.
The MSRB seeks comment on whether a
centralized website where all official statements for issues in their new issue
disclosure period are freely available to the public would be preferable to a
decentralized system in which issuers, financial advisors, underwriters,
information vendors, printers and others post their respective official
statements for the required period, with a central index providing hyperlinks to
the official statements. Should the MSRB itself undertake either centralizing
function, or are there other market participants or vendors who could undertake
such duties subject to appropriate supervision? The MSRB also seeks comment on
whether the current new issue disclosure period ending 25 days after the bond
closing would be the appropriate period for purposes of maintaining free
centralized access to official statements, or whether a longer period would be
more appropriate.
Potential
MSRB Rule Changes to Implement the “Access Equals Delivery” Model. Under an “access equals delivery” model for the
municipal securities market, Rule G-32 would be revised, eliminating the
current prohibition on settling a customer transaction in new issue municipal
securities if the customer has not physically received an official statement.[7] Instead, Rule G-32 would
require that a selling dealer provide notice to the customer that the official
statement is available electronically.[8]
The selling dealer would be required to provide a printed version of the
official statement upon request. The current requirements of Rule G-32
regarding disclosure to customers of initial offering prices for negotiated
sales would be deleted, such information to be provided to the entire
marketplace at an earlier time under revised Rule G-36, as described below. In
addition, the requirements in current Rule G-32 with respect to inter-dealer
distribution of official statements would be deleted as the official statements
would be readily available electronically. Finally, dealer financial advisors
that prepare official statements on behalf of issuers would be required to
provide electronic versions to the underwriters.
Rule G-36 also would be revised. The rule would require
underwriters of all primary offerings of municipal securities for which
official statements are prepared to submit the official statements
electronically to the MSRB under Rule G-36 (i.e., paper submissions
would no longer be permitted). The timeframe for submission of official
statements under Rule G-36 could be simplified to require the underwriter to
submit the official statement for any offering (regardless of its status under
Exchange Act Rule 15c2-12) by no later than the business day following receipt
from the issuer, but in no event later than the bond closing date.
Rule G-36 would continue to require underwriters to
submit much of the information currently included on Form G-36(OS) but would no
longer require that such information be provided simultaneously with the
official statement or in a single submission. Such information submission
would be accepted solely in electronic form, either through a web-based
interface or by upload or data stream using extensible markup language (xml) or
other appropriate format. In addition, underwriters would be permitted to
designate submission agents (such as information vendors, printers, etc.) for
both the official statement and required information submissions, although the underwriters
would remain responsible for accurate and timely submissions. The underwriter
would be required to make an initial submission of information, consisting of CUSIP
numbers and list offering prices of all maturities in the issue, on or prior to
the first execution of a transaction in such issue.[9] The underwriter would thereafter
submit further required information and the electronic official statement as
they become available. Information submissions under Rule G-36 would be
required for all new issues, even if no official statement is being produced.
If an official statement is not being produced, the underwriter would be
required to report that fact.
The MSRB seeks comment on whether the “access equals
delivery” model should be available on all new issues or whether certain
classes of new issues should continue to be subject to a physical delivery
requirement. For example, the SEC did not make the “access equals delivery”
model available for mutual fund sales. Should this model be made available in
connection with the sale of municipal fund securities, including interests in
529 college savings plans?[10]
Should issues exempt from Exchange Act Rule 15c2-12 be treated differently from
those that are subject to that rule? What responsibility should dealers have
to confirm that an issue qualifies for the “access equals delivery” standard?
Should dealers be able to assume that an electronic official statement is
available for a qualifying issue without inquiry, or should there be a duty to
inquire (e.g., check the central website or index)? MSRB Rule G-32
currently requires dealers to deliver official statements to customers by trade
settlement, whereas Securities Act Rule 173 merely requires that notice of a
registered offering must be provide to the customer within two business days of
trade settlement. Would it be appropriate to set a two-day post-settlement
deadline for delivering notices to customers that matches the SEC’s notice
requirement for registered offerings?
Under Rule G-36, the MSRB is seeking comment on
whether a single ultimate deadline for all issues, requiring that official
statements be submitted to the MSRB by no later than the bond closing, is
appropriate. In particular, is there any legitimate basis for an official
statement not to be available to the underwriter by the bond closing date? If
so, would it be appropriate for the MSRB to provide an alternative for those
offerings where an official statement may not be available in time, such as to
require the submission of a preliminary official statement (if one exists) by
settlement pending the availability from the issuer and the submission to the
MSRB of the final official statement? Does the current requirement under Rule
G-36 that official statements for offerings subject to Exchange Act Rule
15c2-12 must be submitted to the MSRB no later than 10 business days after the
bond sale influence the timing of issuer deliveries of official statements to
the underwriters?[11]
If so, would changing the deadline to the bond closing date have an impact on
the timing of such deliveries? Finally, where a dealer financial advisor
prepares the official statement, should such financial advisor be required to
submit the official statement directly to the MSRB on behalf of the
underwriter?
* * * * *
Comments should be submitted no
later than September 15, 2006, and may be directed to Ernesto A. Lanza, Senior
Associate General Counsel. Written comments will be available for public
inspection.
July 27, 2006