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MSRB NOTICE 2007-13 (MARCH 26, 2007)
REMINDER OF OBLIGATIONS UNDER RULE G-37 ON POLITICAL CONTRIBUTIONS AND
RULE G-27 ON SUPERVISION WHEN SPONSORING MEETINGS AND CONFERENCES INVOLVING
ISSUER OFFICIALS
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The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (“Board” or
“MSRB”) is publishing this notice to remind brokers, dealers and municipal securities
dealers (“dealers”) of the possible application of Rule G-37, on political
contributions and prohibitions on municipal securities business, when dealers
sponsor meetings and conferences where issuer officials are invited to attend
or are featured speakers. Dealers are responsible for ensuring that their
supervisory policies and procedures established under Rule G-27, on
supervision, are adequate to prevent and detect violations of MSRB rules.
Thus, it is incumbent on dealers to have appropriate supervisory procedures in
place to review the nature of, and activities surrounding, the types of events discussed
in this notice to ensure that Rule G-37 is not violated, directly or
indirectly.
Rule G-37, in general, prohibits
dealers from engaging in municipal securities business with issuers for a
two-year period if certain political contributions have been made to officials
of such issuers by the dealer or a municipal finance professional (“MFP”) (other than certain de minimis contributions),
and requires dealers to record and disclose certain political party payments
and municipal securities business to assist in severing the connection between
contributions and the awarding of municipal securities business. The rule also
includes, among other things, a prohibition on dealers and their MFPs from (1)
soliciting any person (including, but not limited to, any affiliated entity of
the dealer) or political action committee (“PAC”) to make any contribution, or
(2) coordinating any contributions to an official of an issuer with which the
dealer is engaging or seeking to engage in business. Dealers and MFPs are
prohibited from, directly or indirectly, through or by any other person or
means, doing any act which would result in violation of the rule’s ban on
business or prohibition on soliciting and coordinating (bundling) contributions.
A dealer sponsoring a meeting or conference where an issuer
official is invited to attend or is a featured speaker should be mindful of the
parameters of Rule G-37, including the prohibition on soliciting and
coordinating contributions. For example, if the issuer official (or his/her
staff) solicits contributions in connection with the event, or dealer personnel
solicit or coordinate contributions, such activities may constitute fundraising
activities. [1]
If a determination is made, based on the particular facts and circumstances, that
the event is a fundraising event for the issuer official, then expenses
incurred by the dealer for hosting the event may be deemed a contribution,
thereby triggering the two-year ban on municipal securities business with that
issuer. Such expenses may include, but are not limited to, the cost of the
facility; the cost of refreshments; any expenses paid for administrative staff;
and the payment or reimbursement of any of the issuer official’s expenses for
the event. [2]
The dollar amount of an expense incurred by the dealer for
hosting the event is not dispositive of whether that expense constitutes a
contribution and therefore triggers the ban on municipal securities business
under Rule G-37. If, depending on the particular facts and circumstances, the
event is a fundraising event, then any expense incurred by the dealer
may be deemed a contribution to the issuer official, thereby triggering the
two-year ban on municipal securities business with that issuer.
By publishing this notice, the MSRB is not suggesting that
dealers curtail their legitimate hosting or sponsoring of meetings or
conferences where issuer officials are invited to attend or are featured speakers.
However, dealers should consider carefully the true nature of such events and
the possible application of Rule G-37 if the meeting or conference involves
fundraising activities in support of an issuer official.
In addition to dealers’ Rule G-37 obligations, Rule G-27, on supervision,
requires that dealers supervise the conduct of their municipal securities
activities, and that of their associated persons, to ensure compliance with
MSRB rules, and that dealers adopt, maintain and enforce written supervisory
procedures reasonably designed to ensure such compliance. It is therefore
incumbent on dealers to have appropriate supervisory procedures in place to review
the nature of, and activities surrounding, the types of events discussed in
this notice to ensure that Rule G-37 is not violated, directly or indirectly.
Dealers should therefore take appropriate steps to ensure that such events are
not fundraising events by, among other things, ensuring that: (i) contributions
are not solicited by the issuer official or his/her staff; (ii) any attendee
contact information provided by the dealer is not used by the issuer official
or his/her staff to solicit contributions; and (iii) contributions are not
solicited, coordinated or made by dealer personnel in connection with the
event. [3]
March 26, 2007
[1]
The MSRB has previously stated that “Dealers may not engage in municipal securities business with
issuers if they or their municipal finance professionals engage in any kind of
fundraising activities for officials of such issuers….” See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 33868 (April 7, 1994), 59 FR 17621 (April 13, 1994). See
also Questions and Answers Concerning Political Contributions and
Prohibitions on Municipal Securities Business: Rule G-37 (May 24, 1994),
reprinted in MSRB Rule Book; MSRB Interpretation of November 7, 1994
(Solicitation of Contributions), reprinted in MSRB Rule Book; MSRB
Interpretation of May 31, 1995 (Campaign for Federal Office),
reprinted in MSRB Rule Book.
The MSRB has stated, however, that MFPs are “free to, among other things, solicit
votes or other assistance for such an issuer official so long as the
solicitation does not constitute a solicitation or coordination of
contributions for the official.” In upholding the constitutionality
of Rule G-37, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit observed that “municipal finance professionals are not in any way
restricted from engaging in the vast majority of political activities,
including making direct expenditures for the expression of their views, giving
speeches, soliciting votes, writing books, or appearing at fundraising events.”
Blount v. SEC, 61 F.3d 938, 948 (D.C. Cir. 1995), cert. denied,
116 S. Ct. 1351 (1996). However, the MSRB has stated that hosting or paying to
attend a fundraising event may constitute a contribution subject to section (b)
of the rule. See Question and Answers II.11 and II.18 (May 24, 1994; see
also MSRB Interpretation of May 31, 1995 (Campaign for Federal Office),
reprinted in MSRB Rule Book.
[2]
Other amounts paid to issuer officials
(such as honoraria) may be subject to Rule G-20 on gifts, gratuities and
non-cash compensation, to the extent such payments are in relation to the
issuer’s municipal securities activities.
[3]
Although Rule G-37(c) prohibits MFPs from soliciting or coordinating contributions, the
MSRB has previously stated that “Whether a municipal finance professional is
permitted by section (c) of the rule to indicate to third parties that someone
is a ‘great candidate’ or to provide a list of third parties for the candidate
to call would be dependent upon all the facts and circumstances surrounding
such action. The facts and circumstances that may be relevant for this purpose
may include, among any number of other factors, whether the municipal finance
professional has made an explicit or implicit reference to campaign
contributions in his or her conversations with third parties whom the candidate
may contact and whether the candidate contacts such third parties seeking
campaign contributions. However, the totality of the facts and circumstances
surrounding any particular activity must be considered in determining whether
such activity may constitute a solicitation of contributions for purposes of
section (c) of the rule. Therefore, the Board cannot prescribe an exhaustive
list of precautions that would assure that no violation of this section would
occur as a result of such activity.” See MSRB Interpretive Notice on
Solicitation of Contributions (May 21, 1999), reprinted in MSRB Rule
Book.
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