On August 3, 2007, the Securities and Exchange
Commission approved a change to MSRB rules on transaction reporting relating to
reporting special condition indicators for certain special trading situations.[1]
The rule change consists of an amendment to Rule G-14, Reports of Sales or
Purchases, and an interpretation of Rule G-14 that: (i) clarify transaction
reporting requirements and require use of the existing M9c0 special condition
indicator on trade reports of three types of transactions arising in certain
special trading situations that do not represent typical arms-length
transactions negotiated in the secondary market; (ii) provide an end-of-day
exception from real-time transaction reporting for trade reports containing the
M2c0 or M9c0 special condition indicator; and (iii) create two new special
condition indicators for purposes of reporting certain inter-dealer
transactions “late.” The rule change becomes effective on January 2, 2008.
(Click here to access a redline copy of relevant portions of Version 2.0 Specifications
for Real-Time Reporting of Municipal Securities Transactions reflecting the
rule change.) For a more detailed discussion of the rule change, see MSRB
Notice 2007-20 (June 13, 2007).
Questions about this notice may be directed to
Justin R. Pica, Uniform Practice Policy Advisor, or Sara K. Pranio, Uniform
Practice Assistant.
August 13, 2007
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TEXT OF RULE CHANGE[2]
Rule G-14 Reports of Sales or
Purchases
(a) – (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) – (C) No Change.
(D) A dealer reporting an “away from market” trade as described in Section
4.3.2 of the Specifications for Real-Time Reporting of Municipal Securities
Transactions shall report such trade by the end of the day on which the trade
is executed.
(E) A dealer reporting an inter-dealer “VRDO ineligible on trade date” as
described in Section 4.3.2 of the Specifications for Real-Time Reporting of
Municipal Securities Transactions shall report such trade by the end of the day
on which the trade becomes eligible for automated comparison by a clearing
agency registered with the Commission.
(F) A dealer reporting an inter-dealer “resubmission of an RTTM cancel” as
described in Section 4.3.2 of the Specifications for Real-Time Reporting of
Municipal Securities Transactions shall resubmit identical information about
the trade cancelled by the end of the RTRS Business Day following the day the
trade was cancelled.
(iii) – (vi) No change.
(b) No change.
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Reporting of Transactions in Certain Special Trading
Situations: Rule G-14
The MSRB Real-Time Transaction
Reporting System (RTRS) serves the dual purposes of price transparency and
market surveillance. Because a comprehensive database of transactions is
needed for the surveillance function of RTRS, MSRB Rule G-14, on transaction
reporting, with limited exceptions, requires dealers to report all of their
purchase-sale transactions to RTRS within fifteen minutes. All reported
transactions are entered into the RTRS surveillance database used by market
regulators and enforcement agencies. However, the special nature of some
transactions effects their value for price transparency and the ability of
dealers to meet the fifteen minute reporting deadline. To address these
issues, RTRS was designed so that a dealer can code a specific transaction
report with a “special condition indicator” to designate the transaction as
being subject to a special condition.1
TRANSACTIONS EXECUTED WITH
SPECIAL PRICING CONDITIONS
Three trading
scenarios recently have generated questions from dealers and users of the MSRB
price transparency products. Each of the three trading scenarios
described below represents situations where the transaction executed is not a
typical arms-length transaction negotiated in the secondary market and thus may
be a misleading indicator of the market value of a security. To clarify
transaction reporting requirements and to prevent publication of a potentially
misleading price, dealers are required to report these transactions with the M9c0
special condition indicator.2 Transactions reported with this
special condition indicator are entered into the surveillance database but
suppressed from price dissemination to ensure that transparency products do not
include prices that might be confusing or misleading.
Customer Repurchase Agreement
Transactions
Some dealers have
programs allowing customers to finance municipal securities positions with
repurchase agreements (“repos”). Typically, a bona fide repo consists of
two transactions whereby a dealer will sell securities to a customer and agree
to repurchase the securities on a future date at a pre-determined price that
will produce an agreed-upon rate of return. Both the sale and purchase
transactions resulting from a customer repo do not represent typical
arms-length transactions negotiated in the secondary market and are therefore
required to be reported with the M9c0 special condition indicator.
UIT-Related Transactions
Dealers sponsoring
Unit Investment Trusts (“UIT”) or similar programs sometimes purchase
securities through several transactions and deposit such securities into an
“accumulation” account. After the accumulation account contains the
necessary securities for the UIT, the dealer transfers the securities from the
accumulation account into the UIT. Purchases of securities for an
accumulation account are presumably done at market value and are required to be
reported normally. The transfer of securities out of the accumulation
account and into the UIT, however, does not represent a typical arms-length
transaction negotiated in the secondary market. Dealers are required to
report the subsequent transfer of securities from the accumulation account to
the UIT with the M9c0 special condition indicator.
TOB Program-Related Transactions
Dealers sponsoring
tender option bond programs (“TOB Programs”) for customers sometimes transfer
securities previously sold to a customer into a derivative trust from which
derivative products are created. If the customer sells the securities
held in the derivative trust, the trust is liquidated and the securities are
reconstituted from the derivative products and transferred back to the
customer. The transfer of securities into the derivative trust and the
transfer of securities back to the customer upon liquidation of the trust do
not represent typical arms-length transactions negotiated in the secondary
market. Such transactions are required to be reported using the M9c0
special condition indicator.3
INTER-DEALER TRANSACTIONS
REPORTED “LATE”
Inter-dealer
transaction reporting is accomplished by both the purchasing and selling
dealers submitting the trade to the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation’s
(DTCC) automated comparison system (RTTM) following DTCC’s procedures.
RTTM forwards information about the transaction to RTRS. The inter-dealer
trade processing situations described below are the subject of dealer questions
and currently result in dealers being charged with “late” reporting or
reporting of a trade date and time that differs from the date and time of trade
execution. To allow dealers to report these types of transactions without
receiving a late error and to allow enforcement agencies to identify these
trades as reported under special circumstances, the MSRB has added two new special
condition indicators.4 New special condition indicator Mc40 is
used to identify certain inter-dealer transactions that are ineligible for
comparison on trade date, and new special condition indicator Mc50 is used to
identify resubmissions of certain uncompared inter-dealer transactions that
have been cancelled by RTTM. Described below are the procedures for
reporting transactions arising in three inter-dealer transaction reporting
scenarios using the new special condition indicators.
Inter-Dealer Ineligible on
Trade Date
Certain
inter-dealer transactions are not able to be submitted to RTTM on trade date or
with the accurate trade date either because all information necessary for
comparison is not available or because the trade date is not a “valid” trade
date in RTTM. The two inter-dealer trading scenarios described below are
required to be reported using the new Mc40 special condition indicator.
VRDO Ineligible
on Trade Date
On occasion,
inter-dealer secondary market transactions are effected in variable rate demand
obligations (VRDOs) in which the interest rate reset date occurs between trade
date and the time of settlement. Since dealers in this scenario cannot
calculate accrued interest or final money on trade date, they cannot process
the trade through RTTM until the interest rate reset has occurred. To
report such transactions, both dealers that are party to the transaction are
required to report the transaction by the end of the day that the interest rate
reset occurs, including the trade date and time that the original trade was
executed. Both dealers are required to include the new Mc40 special
condition indicator that causes RTRS not to score either dealer late.
Transactions reported using this procedure are disseminated without a special
condition indicator and the trade reports reflect the original trade date and
time.
Invalid RTTM
Trade Dates
Dealers sometimes
execute inter-dealer transactions on weekends and on certain holidays that are
not valid RTTM trade dates. Such trades cannot be reported to RTRS using
the actual trade date if they occur on a weekend or holiday. To
accomplish automated comparison and transaction reporting of such transactions,
dealers are required to submit these inter-dealer transactions to RTTM no later
than fifteen minutes after the start of the next RTRS Business Day and to
include a trade date and time that represents the next earliest “valid” values
that can be submitted.5 Dealers also are required to include
the new Mc40 special condition indicator that allows RTRS to identify these
transactions so that enforcement agencies can be alerted to the fact that the
trade reports were made under special circumstances using a special trade date
and time. RTRS disseminates these trade reports without a special
condition indicator and the trade report includes the trade date and time
reflecting the next earliest “valid” values that can be submitted.6
Resubmission of an RTTM Cancel
A dealer may submit
an inter-dealer trade to RTTM and find that the contra-party fails to report
its side of the trade. Such “uncompared” trades are not disseminated by
RTRS on price transparency products. After two days, RTTM removes the
uncompared trade report from its system and the dealer originally submitting
the trade must resubmit the transaction in a second attempt to obtain a
comparison with its contra-party, which currently results in RTRS scoring the
resubmitted trade report “late.”
The dealer that
originally submitted information to RTTM is required to resubmit identical
information about the transaction in the second attempt to compare and report
the trade by the end of the day after RTTM cancels the trade. The
resubmitting dealer also is required to include the new Mc50 special condition
indicator that causes RTRS to not score the resubmitting dealer late. The
indicator may only be used by a dealer resubmitting the exact same trade
information for the same trade.7 For example, the contra-party that
failed to submit its side to the trade accurately, thus preventing comparison
of the transaction, is not allowed to use the indicator. RTRS
disseminates trade reports made under this procedure without a special
condition indicator once RTTM compares the trade and the trade report reflects
the original trade date and time.
Questions about
this notice may be directed to Justin R. Pica, Uniform Practice Policy Advisor,
or Sara K. Pranio, Uniform Practice Assistant.
1 See Specifications for Real-Time Reporting of Municipal Securities Transactions Section 4.3.2.
2 In
addition to the special trading situations identified in this notice, the M9c0
special condition indicator, “away from market – other reason,” is required to
be included on a trade report if the transaction price differs substantially
from the market price for multiple reasons or for a reason not covered by
another special condition indicator.
3 In
some cases, the transfer of securities into the derivative trust and the
transfer of securities back to the customer upon liquidation of the trust do
not represent purchase-sale transactions due to the terms of the trust
agreement. MSRB rules on transaction reporting do not require a dealer to
report a transfer of securities to RTRS that is not a purchase-sale transaction
in municipal securities.
4 See
MSRB Notice 2007-25 (August 13, 2007).
5 The
MSRB previously provided an example of a trade date and time that would be
included on a trade report using this procedure. See “Reporting of
Inter-Dealer Transactions That Occur Outside of RTRS Business Day Hours or on
Invalid RTTM Trade Dates,” MSRB Notice 2007-12 (March 23, 2007).
6 Using
this procedure will result in transactions reported with a trade date and time
that differs from what is recorded in a dealer’s books and records.
Dealers are reminded that books and records are required to reflect the date
and time of trade execution.
7 The
resubmitting dealer would not be required to resubmit the same reference number
or preparation time on the resubmitted transaction; however, other information
about the transaction, such as price, quantity, trade date and time, would be
required to be identical to information included in the original trade
submission.