The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (“MSRB”) is
publishing this notice to remind brokers, dealers and municipal securities
dealers (“dealers”) of their customer protection obligations -- specifically
the application of Rule G-17, on fair dealing, and Rule G-19, on suitability --
in connection with their municipal securities sales activities, including but
not limited to situations in which dealers offer sales incentives.[1]
Basic Customer Protection
Obligation
At the core of the MSRB’s customer
protection rules is Rule G-17 which provides that, in the conduct of its
municipal securities activities, each dealer shall deal fairly with all persons
and shall not engage in any deceptive, dishonest or unfair practice. The
rule encompasses two basic principles: an anti-fraud prohibition similar
to the standard set forth in Rule 10b-5 adopted by the Securities and Exchange
Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and a general duty to
deal fairly even in the absence of fraud. All activities of dealers must
be viewed in light of these basic principles, regardless of whether other MSRB
rules establish specific requirements applicable to such activities.
Disclosure
The MSRB has interpreted Rule G-17
to require a dealer, in connection with any transaction in municipal
securities, to disclose to its customer, at or prior to the sale of the
securities to the customer, all material facts about the transaction known by
the dealer, as well as material facts about the security that are reasonably
accessible to the market.[2]
This duty applies to any transaction in a municipal security regardless of
whether the dealer has recommended the transaction. Dealers should make
certain that information they provide to their customers, whether provided
under an affirmative disclosure obligation imposed by MSRB rules or in response
to questions from customers, is correct and not misleading. Further, dealers
are reminded that disclosures made to customers as required under MSRB rules do
not relieve dealers of their suitability obligations – including the obligation
to consider the customer’s financial status, tax status and investment
objectives – if they have recommended transactions in municipal securities.
Suitability
Under Rule G-19, a dealer that
recommends to a customer a transaction in a municipal security must have
reasonable grounds for believing that the recommendation is suitable, based
upon information available from the issuer of the security or otherwise and the
facts disclosed by or otherwise known about the customer.[3] To assure that a dealer effecting a
recommended transaction with a non-institutional customer has the information
needed about the customer to make its suitability determination, Rule G-19
requires the dealer to make reasonable efforts to obtain information concerning
the customer’s financial status, tax status and investment objectives, as well
as any other information reasonable and necessary in making the recommendation.[4]
Dealers are reminded that the obligation arising under Rule G-19 in connection
with a recommended transaction requires a meaningful analysis, taking
into consideration the information obtained about the customer and the security,
which establishes the reasonable grounds for believing that the recommendation
is suitable. Such suitability determinations should be based on the
appropriately weighted factors that are relevant in any particular set of facts
and circumstances, which factors may vary from transaction to transaction. Pursuant to Rule G-27, on supervision, dealers must
have written supervisory procedures in place that are reasonably designed to
ensure compliance with the Rule G-19 obligation to undertake a suitability analysis
in connection with every recommended transaction, and dealers must enforce
these procedures to ensure that such meaningful analysis does in fact occur in
connection with the dealer’s recommended transactions.
Other Sales Practice Principles
Dealers must keep in mind the
requirements under Rule G-17 – that they deal fairly with all persons and that
they not engage in any deceptive, dishonest or unfair practice – when
considering the appropriateness of day-to-day sales-related activities with
respect to municipal securities. In some cases, certain sales-related
activities are governed in part by specific MSRB rules, such as Rule G-19 (as
described above), Rule G-18 on execution of transactions, and Rule G-30 on
prices and commissions. Other activities may not be explicitly addressed by a
specific MSRB rule. In either case, the general principles of Rule G-17
always apply.
In particular, dealers must ensure
that they do not engage in transactions that are unfair to customers under Rule
G-17. This principle applies in the case of an individual transaction to
ensure that the dealer does not unfairly attempt to increase its own revenue or
otherwise advance its interests without due regard to the customer’s interests.
In addition, where a dealer consistently recommends that customers invest in
the municipal securities that offer the dealer the highest compensation, such pattern
or general practice may, depending on the facts and circumstances, constitute a
violation of Rule G-17 if the recommendation of such municipal securities over
the other municipal securities offered by the dealer does not reflect a
legitimate investment-based purpose.
With respect to sales incentives,
the MSRB has previously interpreted Rule G-20, relating to gifts, gratuities
and non-cash compensation, to require a dealer that sponsors a sales contest
involving representatives who are not employed by the sponsoring dealer to have
in place written agreements with these representatives.[5] Dealers are also reminded that Rule
G-20(d) establishes standards regarding non-cash incentives for sales of
municipal securities that are substantially similar to those currently
applicable to the public offering of corporate securities under NASD Rule
2710(i) but also include “total production” and “equal weighting” requirements
for internal sales contests. Dealers should be mindful that financial
incentives may cause an associated person (whether an associated person of the
dealer offering the sales incentive or an associated person of another dealer)
to favor one municipal security over another and thereby potentially compromise
the dealer’s obligations under MSRB rules, including Rules G-17 and G-19. Rule
G-17 may be violated if a dealer or any of its associated persons engages in
any marketing activities that result in a customer being treated unfairly, or
if the dealer or any of its associated persons engages in any deceptive,
dishonest or unfair practice in connection with such marketing
activities. The MSRB also believes that, depending upon the specific
facts and circumstances, a dealer may violate Rule G-17 if it acts in a manner
that is reasonably likely to induce another dealer or such other dealer’s
associated persons to violate the principles of Rule G-17 or other MSRB
customer protection rules, such as Rule G-18, G-19 or Rule G-30.
May 30, 2007
[4] Rule G-8(a)(x)(F) requires that dealers
maintain records for each customer of such information about the customer used
in making recommendations to the customer.
Rule G-19(e), on churning, also prohibits a dealer
from recommending transactions to a customer that are excessive in size or
frequency, in view of information known to such dealer concerning the
customer’s financial background, tax status and investment objectives.