The Municipal Securities Rulemaking
Board (MSRB) is requesting comment on proposed rule changes to improve the
trade reporting and price transparency of transactions effected in new issues of
municipal securities. The proposed rule changes include draft amendments to Rule
G-34, on CUSIP Numbers and New Issue Requirements, that would require
underwriters to follow certain procedures for disseminating new issue
information necessary for trade reporting in the issues. The notice also
includes a proposed requirement for a special indicator on reports of new issue
transactions that are based on priced trading commitments made prior to the formal
award of a new issue. This proposed requirement is a revised version of one
first proposed for comment in April 2006, and would apply to brokers, dealers
and municipal securities dealers (“dealers”) reporting trades under Rule G-14.
Although the proposed rule changes
are primarily operational in nature, they would affect basic underwriting
practices such as the scheduling and announcement of initial trade executions in
a new issue. The proposed rule changes also present important price transparency
issues relating to transactions that are priced at a time significantly prior
to the time that the transactions are executed and reported. Comment is
requested from market participants on all aspects of the proposed rule changes,
including other measures that could improve the timeliness and quality of price
transparency information for new issues.
Comments on the proposed rule
changes should be submitted to the MSRB by May 3, 2007 and may be directed to
Justin R. Pica, Uniform Practice Policy Advisor.
SUMMARY OF PROPOSED RULE CHANGES
The draft amendments to Rule G-34 would
require underwriters to utilize a new centralized electronic system for
improved dissemination of the new issue information necessary for trade
processing and trade reporting in new issues. The system, called the “New
Issue Information Dissemination System” (“NIIDS”), will be operated by Depository
Trust and Clearing Corporation (“DTCC”) and is the result of a broad-based
industry initiative that has taken place over the past two years. The system
is designed to serve as a central point for accepting standardized new issue
information from underwriters and immediately disseminating the data in electronic
form to information vendors for further re-dissemination.
The draft amendments would require
underwriters to submit certain new issue information to NIIDS, either directly or
through intermediaries. This information includes the securities data that is
typically required by the automated trade processing and reporting systems used
by dealers, and certain other new issue information defined in the draft
amendments. The draft amendments prescribe timetables for data submission and
other underwriter procedures that are intended to ensure that all dealers have timely
access to the new issue information that is needed for compliance with trade
reporting requirements.
Special Indicator for “CTC Transactions”
This notice also requests comment
on a revised version of a requirement to identify certain new issue transactions
called “Conditional Trading Commitment transactions” (“CTC transactions”) with
a special indicator in the trade reports made under Rule G-14. A “CTC
transaction” is defined as “any transaction that is based upon a priced trading
commitment made prior to the ‘Time of Formal Award’ for a new issue.” Because
dealers generally cannot execute a transaction in a new issue prior to the
formal award, these transactions may have prices that are significantly “stale”
in relation to the reported time of execution. Under existing transaction
reporting procedures, these are sometimes indistinguishable from other
transactions that reflect more current market pricing activity. The proposed
special condition indicator would allow identification of prices that are
associated with CTC transactions and that have the potential to be
significantly stale.
The special condition indicator for
CTC transactions initially was proposed for comment in April 2006. Among other
points, commentators noted that operational issues, including the lack of
timely and reliable information on “Time of Formal Award,” would make it
difficult or impossible for dealers to comply with the requirement until NIIDS becomes
operational. The draft amendments to Rule G-34 are designed to address operational
issues associated with the proposal by amending the definition of “Time of
Formal Award” and by requiring underwriters to disseminate that time through
NIIDS within two hours of its occurrence. The special indicator requirement
also has been revised to provide an end-of-day trade reporting deadline for CTC
transactions.
Although the proposed rule changes would
allow the identification of stale prices, they do not generally address the underlying
market practices that create stale-priced trade reports. The final section of
this notice discusses the factors that create CTC transactions and requests
comment on other measures that might improve price transparency of transactions
in new issues of municipal securities.
Draft Amendments to Rule G-34
The draft amendments to Rule G-34 contain a
general requirement for underwriters to ensure that certain new issue
information is submitted to NIIDS as soon as possible in the underwriting
process. The required information would include certain securities information
necessary for automated trade processing, the “Time of Formal Award” and the
“Time of First Execution.” Because CUSIP numbers are a prerequisite for
providing any of this information, the draft amendments would accelerate the
CUSIP application deadlines in Rule G-34, in most cases requiring that the application
be made within one business day after dissemination of a Preliminary Official
Statement.
The proposed outside deadline for
completing the submission of all required information to NIIDS is two hours
after the “Time of Formal Award.” This term is re-defined in the draft
amendments as: (i) for competitive issues, the later of the time the issuer
announces the award or the time the issuer notifies the underwriter of the
award; and (ii) for negotiated issues, the later of the time the contract to
purchase the securities from the issuer is executed or the time the issuer
notifies the underwriter of its execution.
The outside deadline for the NIIDS data submission would
help ensure that dealers in all cases can identify CTC transactions and be
prepared to process and report transactions within a reasonable period of time
after the underwriter becomes aware of the formal award of the issue.
The second major objective of the draft
amendments is to provide an “advance notification” requirement for underwriters.
Included in the information that the underwriter must submit to NIIDS within
two hours of the Time of Formal Award is the “Time of First Execution,” which is
defined as the time the underwriter plans to execute its first transactions in
the new issue. The draft amendments provide that an underwriter’s “Time of
First Execution” must be at least two hours after all necessary new issue
information has been submitted to NIIDS. The advance notice requirement is
intended to ensure that all dealers are aware of the time that an underwriter
intends to initiate its transactions in a new issue and have time to prepare
for trade processing and reporting in the issue.
The draft amendments propose
several provisions to address specific situations that may occur in the
underwriting process for municipal securities. Only the hours between 9:00
A.M. and 5:00 P.M. Eastern Time would be counted for purposes of the two-hour
requirements in the draft amendments to ensure that NIIDS submissions are not
required outside of normal business hours when the Time of Formal Award occurs
late in the day. Situations also are addressed in which the formal award of an
issue is a scheduled pro forma action by the issuing entity and the underwriter
is able to announce a reasonably firm anticipated Time of Formal Award.
Anticipated Implementation Schedule
The effective date for the draft
amendments to Rule G-34 is in part dependent upon the implementation of NIIDS,
which at this time is scheduled for August 2007. The MSRB anticipates that it
would be possible to implement the draft amendments immediately after the
planned date for implementation of NIIDS in September 2007. The effective date
for the revised CTC indicator is dependent both upon implementation of NIIDS
and the draft amendments to Rule G-34. The MSRB anticipates that the CTC
indicator could be implemented as early as January 2008. This notice requests
comment on the lead time that would be necessary to prepare for both of the
proposed rule changes.
BACKGROUND
Under MSRB Rule G-14, on
transaction reporting, all brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers
(“dealers”) are required, with limited exceptions, to report transactions in
municipal securities within 15 minutes of trade execution. The Real-Time
Transaction Reporting System (“RTRS”) receives these trade reports and
disseminates them immediately to provide market price transparency. The
transaction reporting procedures under Rule G-14 allow dealers to report
certain primary market transactions effected at the published list offering and
at syndicate takedown prices at the end of the day.[1]
However, the initial transactions that do not qualify for one of these
exceptions generally must be reported within 15 minutes of trade execution.[2]
This requirement is intended, among other things, to make secondary market
transactions in a new issue transparent within 15 minutes of trade execution
and thus to provide real-time information on current market pricing activity.[3]
Expiration of Three-Hour Exception in Trade Reporting
Rules
In connection with previous
rulemaking, the MSRB has received a number of comments noting that dealers
often lack timely access to electronically formatted securities information necessary
to process and report municipal securities transactions in a real-time
environment. Based on comments received in connection with the January 2005
implementation of real-time transaction reporting requirements, the MSRB included
a temporary “three-hour exception” in Rule G-14, giving a dealer extra time to
make a transaction report when the dealer does not have access to securities
information necessary to make a trade report at the time of execution.[4]
The MSRB noted that the exception was temporary and meant to allow the industry
time to improve systems for delivering necessary securities information to
dealers in time to meet the 15-minute reporting deadline.
In an October 2005 letter to the
MSRB, the Bond Market Association (“TBMA”)[5]
noted that problems continued in obtaining timely access to securities information
necessary for trade reporting, particularly the trade reporting of new issue
transactions. TBMA requested that the MSRB extend the temporary three-hour exception
and allow additional time for the industry to make improvements. The letter described
industry efforts to work with DTCC to create a central system for collecting
and disseminating securities information on new issues, which would allow more
timely reports of new issue transactions. The letter also suggested that there
would be a need for MSRB rules requiring underwriters to submit information to
the system within specified timeframes. Based on TBMA’s letter, the MSRB subsequently
filed a rule change extending the three-hour exception for when-issued
transactions through the end of 2007, noting that no further extensions would
be added.[6]
Proposed Indicator for Conditional Trading Commitment
Transactions
A second issue that has been
identified with respect to new issue price transparency is that some prices disseminated
by RTRS may be significantly “stale” with respect to the reported time of
execution. [7] The most
significant delays between the pricing and execution of new issue transactions
arise from trading commitments that are made by dealers in response to firm,
priced orders received prior to the formal award of a new issue. Under
existing MSRB rules, it is not possible for dealers to execute, confirm or
report transactions in a new issue until after the formal award. For this and
other reasons, the dealer’s commitment to execute such an order is
“conditional,” meaning that the order will not be executed, if at all, until
after the formal award of the issue is made. The MSRB accordingly has referred
to these trading commitments as “conditional trading commitments” or “CTCs.” As
many as two days may elapse between the time that CTCs begin in the market and
the time that the orders are ultimately executed as transactions. During this
time significant numbers of CTC’s may be pended for execution, including some
representing secondary market pricing activity in a new issue. Moreover, it is
not generally possible to distinguish these transaction reports from ones that
represent current secondary market pricing activity occurring in the market.
In April 2006, the MSRB requested comment
on a proposed special condition indicator to be used on trade reports of “CTC
transactions.” A “CTC transaction” was defined as any transaction priced prior
to the “Time of Formal Award.” The request for comment noted that the term
“Time of Formal Award” is defined in Rule G-34 as: “(i) for competitive
underwritings, the time that the issuer announces the award; and (ii) for
negotiated underwritings, the time the contract to purchase the securities from
the issuer is executed.”
Comments received on the April 2006
proposal strongly suggested that dealer compliance with the proposed indicator
requirement would be difficult or impossible due to the lack of any reliable
and timely source of information on “Time of Formal Award” for new issues. Commentators
also observed that, as a result of the time needed by an underwriter and other
dealers to prepare trade processing systems for a new issue, a delay may exist
between the Time of Formal Award and the time that an underwriter initiates the
initial trade executions in a new issue. It was noted that transactions priced
during this period also are stale, albeit to a lesser degree than CTC
transactions, and suggested that the underwriter’s time of first execution
should be used to identify stale-price transactions rather than the Time of
Formal Award. TBMA’s comment also suggested that solutions to the operational
problems in identifying stale-price transactions would depend on implementation
of a central system for collecting and disseminating new issue information, which
could provide a timely and reliable source of information such as the Time of
Formal Award and the underwriter’s anticipated time for initial trade executions.
The NIIDS Initiative
TBMA, industry members, securities
information vendors and other service providers in the municipal securities
market have worked extensively with DTCC over the past two years to develop a
centralized system for collecting and communicating new issue securities information.
As a result of this industry initiative, DTCC, a securities clearing agency
registered with the SEC, plans to implement the New Issue Information
Dissemination System or “NIIDS” in August 2007. In addition to providing an
improved mechanism for disseminating the new issue information necessary for
trade processing, the system also would use the information for purposes of
establishing depository eligibility for new issues. The MSRB has noted the
substantial progress that has been made on NIIDS and has alerted dealers to the
importance of the initiative.[8]
Under current practices in the
municipal securities market, each information vendor works separately to obtain
information from offering documents and underwriters and each vendor’s success
depends in large part on the voluntary cooperation of underwriters. It is not
unusual for information vendors to have inconsistent information or for some
information vendors to receive information before others. Consequently, critical
new issue information may be missing or inaccurate in the automated trade
processing systems used by dealers to report the initial trades in new issues.
This situation frequently results in late trade reports or trade reports with inaccurate
data that subsequently must be canceled and resubmitted or amended.
NIIDS is designed to improve the
process by which new issue information is provided by underwriters to
information vendors by collecting new issue information about a new issue from
underwriters or their representatives in an electronic format, and then making
that data immediately available to the information vendors that provide such
information to market participants. The electronic techniques that will be
used by NIIDS are designed to ensure that information is disseminated as
quickly and efficiently as possible after the information is made available by
underwriters
Although the amount of securities
information needed for trade reporting under Rule G-14 is limited,[9] many of the automated trade processing systems used to report trades currently
need more extensive securities information (essentially the information
necessary to produce a trade confirmation) before a trade can be reported. The
industry initiative on NIIDS has resulted in a relatively comprehensive list of
new issue securities data that will be collected and disseminated by NIIDS,
including Time of Formal Award and Time of First Execution. A listing of the
new issue securities data that will be collected and disseminated by NIIDS is
available on DTCC’s web site at: http://www.dtcc.com/reengineering/underwriting/specs.html.
DRAFT AMENDMENTS TO RULE G-34
Currently, Rule G-34 requires underwriters[10] to apply for CUSIP numbers within specific deadlines and to transmit a limited
amount of information about a new issue such as the coupons, maturities and
issue closing date to DTCC. The rule also contains a requirement for Time of Formal
Award to be disseminated to market participants that may trade the new issue. The
draft amendments to Rule G-34 would: (i) accelerate the timing for CUSIP number
assignment; (ii) require underwriters to submit certain new issue information
to the NIIDS system for re-dissemination to market participants; and (iii) require
underwriters to set and disseminate a “Time of First Execution” that allows
time for market participants to access necessary information in preparation for
trade reporting prior to beginning trade executions in the issue.
Timing of CUSIP Number Assignment
CUSIP numbers are a required data element for
automated trade processing and trade reporting systems and will be a
prerequisite for entry of new issue information into NIIDS. Timely processing
of new issue transactions requires that CUSIP numbers be assigned as early as
possible in the underwriting process. Rule G-34 contains various requirements
for underwriters, and for dealers acting as financial advisors on competitive
sales, to apply to the CUSIP Service Bureau for CUSIP number assignment. The current
deadlines are based on: the time the bond purchase agreement is executed (for
underwriters in negotiated sales); the time of the issuer’s award (for dealers
acting as financial advisors in competitive sales); and the time of the first
execution of a trade in the issue (for underwriters in competitive sales). The
draft amendments would set new deadlines designed to ensure CUSIP number
assignment occurs as soon as possible in the underwriting process, allowing for
the timely submission of new issue information to NIIDS.
The draft amendments would require the
underwriter in a negotiated sale and a dealer acting as financial advisor on a
competitive sale to make an initial application for CUSIP number assignment
within one business day of the dissemination of any Preliminary Official
Statement (POS) for the issue. The underwriter then would update the
application, if necessary, when the information required for final CUSIP number
assignment becomes available. Based on conversations with the CUSIP Service
Bureau, the MSRB understands that this process generally would speed the
assignment of final CUSIP numbers for a new issue even though maturity dates
and tentative CUSIP number assignments in some cases may need to be changed
after the initial application is filed.
For negotiated issues that are sold
without a POS, the draft amendments would require that an application must be
made no later than the time that the pricing information for the issue is
determined. For competitive deals sold without a POS, the draft amendments
would require a dealer acting as a financial advisor to make an application for
CUSIP number assignment within one business day of dissemination of a notice of
sale. The draft amendments also state a general requirement that the
underwriter on a negotiated underwriting and a dealer acting as a financial
advisor on a competitive deal ensure that final CUSIP number assignment occurs
prior to the formal award of the new issue.[11]
Rule G-34 currently requires the
underwriter in a competitive sale to apply for CUSIP numbers if an application
has not already been made by the issuer or the issuer’s representative. The
MSRB understands that CUSIP numbers for competitively sold issues generally are
assigned by the date of sale, but that on occasion this is not done.[12]
Dealers have noted that, in these situations, automated trade processing and
real-time trade reporting for the issue may be delayed because of the time
necessary for the underwriter to obtain CUSIP numbers after the formal award.
The draft amendments clarify the underwriter’s existing responsibility in such
situations to apply for CUSIP numbers immediately after receiving the award.
Underwriter Requirement to Provide Information to NIIDS
within Certain Deadlines
The draft amendments would require underwriters
to transmit new issue information to NIIDS within deadlines that are intended
to ensure that the information reaches information vendors and is further
re-disseminated for use in automated trade processing systems by the time that
trade executions begin in a new issue. The specific items of information
required to be submitted are those generally considered necessary for automated
trade processing in an issue and are designated in the NIIDS system as items
necessary for “Trade Eligibility.”
Underwriters would be required to
submit this information electronically in accordance with the methods and
formats stated for NIIDS system users. The information could be provided
through computer-to-computer links or through a web interface allowing manual
input of data.[13]
Although the underwriter would be ultimately responsible for timely,
comprehensive and accurate data submission, the draft amendments allow for use
of an intermediary to accomplish this function.[14]
DTCC has stated that it will not charge underwriters for accepting or
re-disseminating NIIDS data.[15]
NIIDS is designed so that, once CUSIP numbers
are assigned to a new issue, information about the issue can be submitted as it
becomes available. The draft amendments to Rule G-34 would require
underwriters to provide information specified by NIIDS as required for Trade
Eligibility as soon as it is available, with a final deadline for all such
information to be provided no later than two hours after the Time of Formal
Award, which would be redefined as discussed below. The draft amendments to
Rule G-34 also state that only the hours between 9:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.
Eastern on an RTRS Business Day are counted for purposes of the time tables listed
in the draft amendments. For example, if the Time of Formal Award occurs at
6:00 P.M. Eastern, the time tables listed in the draft amendments would not
commence until 9:00 A.M. Eastern on the next RTRS Business Day.
Revised Definition of “Time of Formal Award”
The Time of Formal Award represents the earliest
time that a dealer can execute transactions in a new issue and is used in Rule
G-34 and in the draft amendments to set certain deadlines. The draft amendments
to Rule G-34 propose a minor change to the current definition of “Time of
Formal Award” for purposes of Rule G-34 timetables. The MSRB understands that underwriters
are not always present at the time the issuer executes a bond purchase agreement
or formally confirms an award of a competitive issue. Some time may elapse
between this time and the time at which the underwriter becomes aware of the
issuer’s action and this delay may not be under the control of the
underwriter. To address this issue, the draft amendments state that for
purposes of Rule G-34, “Time of Formal Award” is defined as:
- for competitive issues, the later of the time the issuer formally awards the issue or the time the issuer
notifies the underwriter of the award; and,
- for negotiated issues, the later of the time the contract to purchase the securities from the issuer is
executed or the time the issuer notifies the underwriter of its execution
of the agreement.
The Time of Formal Award is one of the required
information items to be submitted to NIIDS. It is therefore subject to the
general requirement to be submitted as soon as it is available as well as the
ultimate deadline for submission of all required data, which is two hours after
the Time of Formal Award. These requirements should ensure that all
information necessary for trade reporting and identification of CTC
transactions is available through NIIDS no later than two hours after the Time
of Formal Award.
“Time of First Execution” and Advance Notification
Requirement
The second major component of the draft amendments
to Rule G-34 is an advance notification requirement that would ensure that all dealers
have advance notification of the underwriter’s planned time for first trade
executions and can be prepared to process trade executions by that time. Comments
received on the April 2006 CTC indicator proposal stated that, under current
industry practices, underwriters do not always disseminate the time that they
intend to begin trade executions. Consequently, dealers that are not in the
underwriting group sometimes do not know when their own transactions in the
issue should begin and this may negatively affect the ability of those dealers
to report their initial transactions in a timely and accurate manner or to
coordinate their reported time of trade execution on inter-dealer transactions
with members of the underwriting group.
To address this concern, the draft
amendments would require the underwriter of a new issue to disseminate the “Time
of First Execution,” which is the underwriter’s anticipated time for beginning trade
executions in a new issue. Once an underwriter has completed the submission of
all required information to NIIDS, the information then will need to be
re-disseminated to other dealers that may have trades in the issue and these
dealers (and service bureaus) will need to “set up” automated trade processing
systems with the new issue information. To allow time for this process to
occur, the underwriter would be required to provide a Time of First Execution
that is at least two hours after the time that all required information is
provided to NIIDS.
The draft amendments would
accommodate several situations that may occur in the underwriting of new issues
of municipal securities. For example, the underwriter would be allowed to submit
an anticipated Time of Formal Award rather than wait for the actual Time of
Formal Award if the underwriter and issuer have agreed in advance on a Time of
Formal Award. This may be the case if the formal award is a scheduled pro
forma requirement by an issuer’s governing body and all details necessary for
the formal award have been finalized and submitted to NIIDS in advance. The underwriters
could in these cases complete its submissions to NIIDS using the anticipated
Time of Formal Award. By doing this, the underwriter could schedule its Time of
First Execution to occur immediately after the formal award, rather than
waiting two hours. Any changes to these times would require correction in
NIIDS as soon as known. As long as the two-hour notification period has been
met once, however, it would not be necessary to start a new notification period
as a result of minor adjustments to the Time of Formal Award or Time of First
Execution.
Request for Comment on Draft Amendments
Comment is requested on all aspects of the
proposed changes to Rule G-34. Consideration of the following questions may be
helpful in providing comments:
- Underwriters on negotiated issues may begin entering
information into NIIDS as soon as CUSIP numbers are assigned, while
competitive underwriters will only begin to enter information after bids
are opened. Should the two-hour period after the Time of Formal Award for
completing the information submission to NIIDS be different for negotiated
and competitive underwritings? Would the underwriter that is awarded a
competitive deal for which CUSIP numbers have not been assigned be able to
apply for and obtain CUSIP numbers and transmit information necessary for
Trade Eligibility to NIIDS within two hours of the Time of Formal Award?
- The Time of Formal Award for a competitive issue is
currently defined with reference to the issuer’s “announcement” of the
award. Questions may exist on when the “formal award” should be deemed to
occur in certain circumstances, for example on such competitive
underwritings in which the quantities of individual maturities must be
determined after the lowest bid is accepted. Commentators are invited to
provide comments on alternative formulations of Time of Formal Award to
address special situations.
- Since electronically formatted information can be
retransmitted immediately, the MSRB believes that the two-hour advance notification
period prior to the Time of First Execution is sufficient for vendors and
dealers and service bureaus to receive and enter information disseminated
from NIIDS into their own systems. Is two hours a sufficient amount of
time? Could the advance notice requirement be shortened? Would it be
appropriate to provide different periods of advance notification for
competitive and negotiated underwritings?
- Only the hours between 9:00 A.M and 5:00 P.M. Eastern Time
on an RTRS Business Day are used for purposes of the time tables listed in
the draft amendments. If an underwriter does not obtain and transmit all
information necessary for Trade Eligibility to NIIDS by 3:00 P.M. Eastern
Time, the underwriter would not be able to set a Time of First Execution
until the following day. The MSRB is aware that this may affect West
Coast underwriters more than those on the East Coast, but does not believe
it would be possible to use “local time” in the rule given that dealers in
different time zones trade with each other. The MSRB, however, requests
comment on any suggestions for alternative approaches that would help
address time zone issues.
- The draft amendments would apply to all types of new
issues of municipal securities. Do certain types of new issues, such as issues
that have long forward delivery periods or short-term instruments, have
special characteristics or employ the use of different “bookrunning”
services that would present difficulty for underwriters to comply with the
draft amendments to Rule G-34?
- The schedule for implementing the proposed rule changes is
dependent on the operational start date for NIIDS, which at this time is
scheduled for August 2007. How much lead time would be necessary for
underwriters to implement changes required to use the NIIDS system?
CONDITIONAL TRADING COMMITMENT INDICATOR
The MSRB is requesting additional
comment on the proposed requirement for CTC transactions to be reported with a
special condition indicator. The definition of “CTC transaction” and other
technical requirements for the CTC indicator described in the April 2006 CTC
indicator proposal have not been changed, but an end-of-day reporting deadline
for CTC transactions has been added.[16]
In addition, the draft amendments to Rule G-34 address operational concerns that
were suggested by commentators on the April 2006 proposal.
Comments Received on April 2006 Proposal
Some of the comments on the April
2006 CTC indicator proposal focused on operational barriers to compliance,
particularly the lack of timely access to information necessary for dealers to accurately
identify CTC transactions in the initial trade reports made for a new issue.
The provisions relating to “Time of Formal Award” contained in the draft
amendments to Rule G-34 are intended to reduce these operational concerns by
ensuring that underwriters disseminate a “Time of Formal Award” for each new
issue as soon as possible and no later than two hours after its occurrence.
Other provisions in the draft amendments would re-define “Time of Formal Award”
to accommodate situations in which an underwriter may not be informed of the
formal award when it occurs.
Comments on the April 2006 CTC indicator
proposal noted that the prices for CTC transactions are generally “stale” with
respect to the reported time of trade execution. Several comments suggested,
in light of the general operational difficulties in reporting new issue
transactions within 15 minutes of execution and the marginal value of stale
prices in real-time transaction reporting, that CTC transactions should be
given an end-of-day reporting deadline. Based on current transaction reporting
procedures and market practices, the MSRB believes that these observations are accurate
and therefore has included an end-of-day exception from the fifteen minute reporting
requirement for all CTC transactions in the revised proposal.
The MSRB has not adopted the view
suggested by some commentators that the trading commitments formed in response
to firm orders between the Time of Formal Award and the Time of First Execution
also should be subject to an end-of-day reporting deadline. The MSRB
recognizes that the prices of these transactions also may be somewhat stale
with respect to the reported time of execution, but notes that such prices
generally will be much more current than those for CTC transactions. The draft
amendments to Rule G-34 proposed in this notice seek to ensure that the new
issue information necessary to execute, process and report transactions in new
issues is provided to the market as quickly as possible as a means to minimize
the time necessary for operational preparations between the Time of Formal
Award and the Time of First Execution.
The MSRB also has considered
comments that the CTC indicator is unnecessary, either because it is currently possible
to identify CTC transactions in RTRS trade data or because all transaction
prices reported on the initial day of trade executions should be considered
stale. Although many CTC transactions represent primary market activity in the
form of List Offering Price / Takedown transactions and already are subject to a
special indicator requirement, the MSRB understands that a significant number
of CTC transactions may represent secondary market pricing activity that has
occurred prior to the Time of Formal Award. In such situations, it is likely
that secondary market trading will also occur on the day that the initial trades
in the issue are executed and these trade reports will contain valuable
real-time price information. Under existing trade reporting requirements, however,
it is not possible to know if these secondary market prices are current market
prices or are stale prices that were determined earlier in conditional trading
commitments.
The MSRB continues to believe that,
under existing market practices and trade reporting rules, it is necessary to
adopt procedures allowing users of transparency information to identify the
stale prices represented by CTC transactions and distinguish them from those
that reflect current secondary market pricing activity.
Request for Additional Comment on CTC Indicator
Comment is requested on the revised
CTC indicator requirement and provisions in the draft amendments of Rule G-34.
Consideration of the following questions may be helpful in providing comments:
- Would the provisions in the draft amendments to Rule G-34
relating to “Time of Formal Award” be effective in allowing dealers to
identify and report CTC transactions?
- Based on current market practices, what degree of
“staleness” exists for transaction prices that are based on trading
commitments formed between the Time of Formal Award and the Time of First
Execution? Is there a need for a special indicator (not associated with
an end-of-day reporting deadline) to identify these trades?
- The MSRB anticipates that the CTC indicator could be
implemented by RTRS in January 2008 in conjunction with other changes such
as the expiration of the three-hour exception, assuming that the draft
amendments to Rule G-34 can be implemented by that time. What amount of
lead time would be necessary for dealers to implement the CTC indicator?
TRANSPARENCY OF NEW ISSUE TRANSACTION PRICES
Although the CTC indicator would
make it possible to identify trade reports with prices that may be
significantly stale, it does not generally address the underlying market
practices that cause CTC transactions and stale prices. The MSRB is requesting
comment on other measures that might improve the nature of price information
provided with respect to new issue transactions.
Reasons for Conditional Trading Commitments
Two basic factors contribute to the
creation of CTC transactions. First, a transaction in a new issue generally
cannot be finalized and executed until after the formal award of the issue. In
part, this is because of a longstanding interpretation of MSRB rules to the
effect that orders for a new issue may not be executed or confirmed until: (i)
in competitive underwritings, the award by the issuer; and (ii) in negotiated
underwritings, the execution of the bond purchase agreement.[17]
This interpretation reflects a general understanding that, prior to these times,
the terms and features of the securities and the nature of the commitment of
the issuer to issue the securities have not been reduced to writing in a
legally binding manner between the underwriter and issuer. Based on this understanding,
this concept of a “formal award” has been incorporated into the definition of
“Time of Formal Award” that currently exists in Rule G-34.[18]
The second factor that contributes
to the practice of forming conditional trading commitments is that, particularly
in the case of negotiated underwritings, the terms, features and offering
prices of a new issue often are concluded between an underwriter and issuer in
an “informal” or “oral” award well in advance of the time that a formal award
can be made. In these cases, the timing of the informal award is influenced by
market factors relating to the pricing of issue. The delays in completing the
bond purchase agreement may occur for several reasons, such as the time needed to
reduce the oral agreement to writing, the time needed obtain execution of the
document by the appropriate issuer personnel, or the need to obtain an official
action from the issuer’s governing body. An additional consideration, primarily
affecting advanced refunding issues, is that the quantity of securities to be
issued in specific maturities of the issue may need to be adjusted or finalized
after the informal award. This consideration is also relevant in explaining
why trading commitments made prior to the formal award are conditional in
nature.
Other Approaches to Addressing Transparency of New Issue
Prices
As discussed above, the delay in
obtaining the formal award for a new issue may extend for as long as two days.
During this time, market participants, including those that are not in the
underwriting group and subject to offering price agreements, are aware of the
terms of the oral award and sometimes effectively begin to “trade” the issue by
forming conditional trading commitments. In these cases, the pricing activity
represented by the conditional trading commitments is not made available in
real-time and will be stale when it is ultimately reported.
A primary objective of RTRS is to
allow market participants to monitor market price levels on a real-time basis.
The MSRB has stated that the information disseminated in price transparency
products is one of the factors dealers should use in pricing transactions in
municipal securities.[19]
One approach to address transparency issues associated with CTC transactions is
to require conditional trading commitments to be reported to RTRS as they are
formed rather than waiting for trade execution. This would represent a
substantial change in current transaction reporting procedures used by dealers
and would present a number of operational issues.[20] The impact of such a change, however, could be minimized to some extent if the
requirement were limited to CTCs that are not list offering price or takedown transactions.
Another possible approach to CTC transactions
might be to reduce existing delays between the informal and formal awards. In
effect, this would reduce the chance of the secondary market pricing activity
that occurs without being reported in real-time. As a possible example, the
MSRB could consider rules that provide for a maximum length of time (e.g.,
24 hours) between the formation of an informal agreement with an issuer on
pricing and the expected time of formal award. While this would reduce the
flexibility that currently exists to time new issue pricing independently of
the formal award, it would help reduce the potential for secondary market
activity prior to the formal award and thus reduce the number of stale prices
that are of the most concern.
Comment is requested on the
approaches suggested above and on any other measures that could be taken to
address stale prices and improve the transparency of new issue transaction
pricing.
Questions about this notice may be directed to
Justin R. Pica, Uniform Practice Policy Advisor.
March 5, 2007
* * *
Rule G-14: Reports of Sales or Purchases*
(a) through (b) No change.
Rule G-14 RTRS Procedures
(a) General Procedures.
(i) No change.
(ii) Transactions effected with a
Time of Trade during the hours of the RTRS Business Day shall be reported
within 15 minutes of Time of Trade to an RTRS Portal except in the following
situations:
(A) through (C) No change.
(D) A dealer effecting a
transaction that is the result of a “Conditional Trading Commitment” as
described in Section 4.3.2 of the Specifications for Real-Time Reporting of
Municipal Securities Transactions shall report such trades by the end of the
day on which the trade is executed.
(iii) through (vi) No change.
(b) through (d) No change.
Rule G-34: CUSIP Numbers and New Issue Requirements
(a) New Issue Securities.
(i) Assignment of CUSIP Numbers.
(A) Except as otherwise
provided in this section (a), each broker, dealer or municipal securities
dealer who acquires, whether as principal or agent, a new issue of municipal
securities from the issuer of such securities for the purpose of distributing
such new issue (“underwriter”) and each broker, dealer or municipal securities
dealer acting as a financial advisor in a competitive sale of a new issue
(“financial advisor”) shall apply in writing to the Board or its designee for
assignment of a CUSIP number or numbers to such new issue, as follows:
(A) Except as otherwise
provided in this section (a), each broker, dealer or municipal securities
dealer who acquires, whether as principal or agent, a new issue of municipal
securities from the issuer of such securities for the purpose of distributing
such new issue (“underwriter”) shall apply in writing to the Board or its
designee for assignment of a CUSIP number or numbers to such new issue. The
underwriter shall make such application as promptly as possible, but in no
event later than, in the case of negotiated sales, a time sufficient to ensure
assignment of a CUSIP number or numbers prior to the time the contract to
purchase the securities from the issuer is executed; or, in the case of
competitive sales, the time of the first execution of a transaction in the new
issue by the underwriter. A broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer
acting as a financial advisor to an issuer in connection with a competitive
sale of an issue shall ensure that application for a CUSIP number or numbers is
made in sufficient time to permit assignment of CUSIP numbers prior to the time
of award. In making an application for CUSIP number assignment, the following
information shall be provided:
(1) The underwriter in a
negotiated sale shall make an application by no later than one business day after
the dissemination of any Preliminary Official Statement (POS) for the issue,
and, if no POS is disseminated, shall make such application by no later than
the time that pricing information for the issue is finalized. Such application
for CUSIP number assignment shall be made at a time sufficient to ensure final
CUSIP numbers assignment occurs prior to the award of the issue.
(2) The underwriter in a
competitive sale for which no CUSIP numbers have been pre-assigned shall make
an application immediately after receiving notification of the award from the
issuer. The underwriter in a competitive sale shall ensure that CUSIP numbers are
assigned prior to disseminating the Time of First Execution required under paragraph
(a)(ii)(C) of this Rule G-34.
(3) A financial advisor shall
make an application by no later than one business day after the dissemination
of any POS for the issue, and, if no POS is disseminated, shall make such
application by no later than one business day after dissemination of a notice
of sale. Such application for CUSIP number assignment shall be made at a time
sufficient to ensure final CUSIP numbers assignment occurs prior to the award
of the issue.
(4) In making applications for
CUSIP number assignment, the following information shall be provided:
(a) (1) through (h) (8) No change.
(5) Any changes to information
identified in this paragraph (a)(i)(A) and included in an application for CUSIP
number assignment shall be provided to the Board or its designee as soon as
they are known but no later than a time sufficient to ensure final CUSIP number
assignment occurs prior to disseminating the Time of First Execution required
under paragraph (a)(ii)(C) of this Rule G-34.
(B) through (D) No Change.
(ii) Application for Depository
Eligibility, CUSIP Number Affixture and Initial Communications. Each
underwriter shall carry out the following functions:
(A) through (B) No change.
(C) The underwriter shall
communicate information about the new issue in accordance with the requirements
of this paragraph (a)(ii)(C) to ensure that other brokers, dealers and
municipal securities dealers have timely access to information necessary to
report, compare, confirm, and settle transactions in the new issue and to
ensure that registered securities clearing agencies receive information
necessary to provide comparison, clearance and depository services for the new
issue.
(C) The underwriter
shall as promptly as possible announce each item of information listed below in
a manner reasonably designed to reach market participants that may trade the
new issue. All information shall be announced no later than the time of the
first execution of a transaction in the new issue by the underwriter.
(1) The underwriter shall
ensure that the following information is submitted to a new issue information
dissemination system in the manner described in the written procedures for
system users and that changes to submitted information are made as soon as
possible:
(1) the CUSIP number or numbers
assigned to the issue and descriptive information sufficient to identify the
CUSIP number corresponding to each part of the issue assigned a specific CUSIP number;
and
(a)
the Time of Formal Award. For purposes of this paragraph (a)(ii)(C), the “Time
of Formal Award” means, for competitive issues, the later of the time the
issuer announces the award or the time the issuer notifies the underwriter of
the award, and, for negotiated issues, the later of the time the contract to
purchase the securities from the issuer is executed or the time the issuer
notifies the underwriter of its execution. If the underwriter and issuer have
agreed in advance on a Time of Formal Award, that time may be submitted to the
new issue information dissemination system in advance of the actual Time of
Formal Award.
(b) the Time of First
Execution. For purposes of this paragraph (a)(ii)(C), the “Time of First
Execution” means the time the underwriter plans to execute its first
transactions in the new issue. The underwriter shall designate a Time of First
Execution that is no less than two hours after all information required by paragraph
(a)(ii)(C) has been transmitted to the new issue information dissemination
system.
(c) All other information
identified as required for “Trade Eligibility” in the new issue information
dissemination system.
(2) The underwriter shall
ensure that all information identified in this paragraph (a)(ii)(C) is provided
no later than two hours of the Time of Formal Award. For purposes of this
paragraph (a)(ii)(C), the hours counted in determining the responsibilities of
an underwriter shall include only the hours of 9:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. Eastern
Time on an RTRS Business Day as defined in Rule G-14 RTRS Procedures section
(d)(ii).
(2) the time of formal award.
For purposes of this subparagraph (a)(ii)(C), time of formal award shall mean,
for competitive issues, the time the issuer announces the award, and, for
negotiated issues, the time the contract to purchase the securities from the
issuer is executed.
(3) The term “new issue
information dissemination system” means an automated, electronic system
operated by a securities clearing agency registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission providing depository services for municipal securities that
receives comprehensive new issue information on a market-wide basis for the
purposes of establishing depository eligibility and immediately re-disseminating
such information to information vendors supplying formatted municipal
securities information for use in automated trade processing systems.
(D) No change.
(iii) No change.
(b) No change.