On May 19, 2003, the Securities and
Exchange Commission (“Commission” or “SEC”) approved proposed rule change
SR-MSRB-2003-02 regarding the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board’s (“MSRB”)
Transaction Reporting Program.[1] This change enhances the Daily Transaction
Report Service (the “T+1 Daily Report” or “Service”) to provide a greater
amount of price information to the public on the day after trade date.
Currently, the Service provides a
daily public report by 7:00 am on the morning of the day after trade date
(“T+1”). The report shows details of
each transaction in a municipal security that was reported on the previous day
as having traded two or more times. The
enhanced T+1 Daily Report will make public all trade prices reported by dealers
the previous trading day. The enhanced
T+1 Daily Report also includes a change in the display of trade size in the
report. Currently, the exact par value
is given for all trades. The enhanced
T+1 Daily Report will display exact par value for all trades with a par value
of one million dollars and under and display “$1MM+” for those transactions
that have a par value greater than one million dollars.
Background
Since the implementation of the
inter-dealer trade reporting system in 1995, the MSRB has been increasing price
transparency in the municipal securities market in measured steps.[2] The first price transparency report was a
T+1 report that summarized high, low and average inter-dealer prices for issues
that met a trading threshold of four or more trades in the inter-dealer
market. In 1998, the MSRB implemented
the customer transaction reporting system and customer transaction data was added
to the T+1 summary report. The trading
threshold of four trades was retained, but since it applied regardless of
whether the trades were inter-dealer or customer, many more issues met the
trading threshold and were subject to price reporting. In January 2000, the MSRB further enhanced
the T+1 report by publishing individual transaction data (rather than high, low
and average prices) for each issue contained in the report.
In October 2000 the MSRB began offering a comprehensive transaction report,
which lists all municipal securities transactions (regardless
of frequency of trading) and includes late-reported trades,
inter-dealer trades compared after trade date, and transaction
data corrected by dealers after trade date. The Comprehensive
Report began with a minimum one-month delay in trade publication.
That delay has gradually been reduced such that the report currently
is disseminated on a daily basis one week after trade date.
To make more trade data available on a T+1 basis, in 2002, the
MSRB began the process of lowering the trading threshold in
the T+1 Daily Report. In May 2002, the MSRB changed the trading
threshold to three trades.[3]
In November 2002, the trading threshold was lowered to two trades.[4]
The T+1 Daily Report and the Comprehensive Report
have been well received by market professionals seeking information on market
price levels and trading activity for individual securities.[5] The reports have garnered greater and
greater use over time, both with market professionals and through free,
customer-oriented outlets such as “InvestingInBonds.com” operated by The Bond
Market Association. At this time, in
preparation for the move to real-time price transparency in mid-2004, the MSRB
believes that the trading threshold in the T+1 Daily Reports should be
eliminated to further increase the price transparency that is available on
T+1.
Changes to the T+1 Daily Report
The MSRB has noted since the outset
of its transparency initiative that, as the market obtains experience with
price transparency, price reports eventually would need to occur on a more
contemporaneous and comprehensive basis, culminating with real-time transaction
reporting.[6] The enhanced T+1 Daily Report is part of the
MSRB’s longstanding plan to introduce transparency in measured steps, allowing
the market time to adjust to new situations presented by each new level of
price transparency. As an example, when
price reports were first introduced in 1995, the MSRB was concerned that an
observer might be misled if he or she considered an isolated transaction or
pair of transactions as providing the same indicator of “market price” as a
stock exchange quotation. The MSRB
believes that, considering the unique nature of the municipal securities
market, the market has adapted very well to price transparency. The MSRB is not
aware of any problems occurring similar to the concerns expressed in 1995. The reception of the Comprehensive Report
and the previous lowering of trading thresholds on the T+1 Daily Report has
been positive and the use of the data in those reports by market professionals
and pricing services has increased the efficiency and accuracy with which
issues are priced in the secondary market.
The enhanced T+1 Daily Report
increases substantially the number of trades and issues made transparent the
day after trade date. On a typical
trading day, dealers report approximately 26,000 transactions in 10,000 issues,
with a total par value traded of about $9.5 billion. [7] The present T+1 Daily Report, with a trading
threshold of two or more trades per day, includes an average of 19,760 trades
in 5,600 issues, with a total par value of about $7.7 billion. Currently, only about 76% of transactions
reported on trade date are shown on the report. With the enhanced T+1 Daily Report, all trades reported by
dealers on trade date would be made visible on T+1.
Although the MSRB believes it is appropriate to increase T+1 transparency at
this time, and to move forward with its plans for real-time
trade reporting in mid-2004, the MSRB also is mindful of concerns
expressed by dealers that further increases in transparency
on a more contemporaneous basis could have an effect on liquidity.
One concern sometimes noted is that because of the nature of
the municipal securities market, including the prevalence of
thinly traded issues, it sometimes is possible to identify institutional
investors and dealers by the exact par value given on trade
reports. For example, it might be common market knowledge that
a $4.25 million position in an issue initially was purchased
in the primary market by a specific institution. Trade reports
in the secondary market showing this exact par value later being
sold then could reveal the identity of that party as well as
the price received. Where the market for a specific security
is thin and only one or two dealers are active, revealing the
exact par amount also may convey information about a dealer’s
inventory (i.e., size of position and acquisition cost).
Other dealers may use this information to trade against the
dealer’s position, reducing the incentive for a dealer to take
large positions in these circumstances.
In response to these concerns, the enhanced T+1 Daily Report
will incorporate a mechanism similar to that used by the NASD’s
“TRACE” system in the corporate bond market and will display
par value of large trades with a large trade indicator rather
than the exact par value.[8]
While this will result in less information being made visible
on T+1 about par value traded, the MSRB believes that it will
help to preserve the anonymity of trading parties and will not
detract in a substantial way from the benefits of the price
transparency it provides.
The enhanced T+1 Daily Report replaces the current T+1 Daily Report and would
be made available each day to subscribers via the Internet.
Subscribers to the current Service receive the report free of
charge, and their subscriptions will continue. New subscriptions
will continue to be available free to parties who sign a subscription
agreement. In addition, recent reports will continue to be
available for examination, also free of charge, at the MSRB’s
Public Access Facility in Alexandria, VA.
The MSRB will continue to produce
its Comprehensive Report on a one-week delay basis with details about all
transactions traded one-week prior. The
Comprehensive Report will continue to provide information on the size of each
transaction including the exact par amount reported to the MSRB on transactions
in amounts greater than one million dollars.
The Comprehensive Report also will continue to be useful since it will
include details of transactions reported to the MSRB late, inter-dealer trades
compared after trade date, and any transaction data corrected by dealers after
trade date.
Implementation Schedule
The MSRB plans to make the enhanced
T+1 Daily Report available beginning June 23, 2003.
May 21, 2003
[1] See Release No.
34-47888 (May 19, 2003).
[2] This plan has been discussed in many notices since
1994. See, e.g., “Board to
Proceed with Pilot Program to Disseminate Inter-Dealer Transaction Information,”
MSRB Reports, Vol. 14, No. 1 (January 1994).
[3] See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 45861 (May
1, 2002).
[4] See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 46819
(November 12, 2002).
[5] Currently, the MSRB has twenty-four subscribers to the
T+1 Daily Report and fifty-one to Comprehensive Report.
[6] See, e.g., “Board to Proceed with Pilot Program to
Disseminate Inter-Dealer Transaction Information,” MSRB Reports, Vol.
14, No. 1 (January 1994).
[7] This baseline data is based upon market activity from April
1, 2001 through July 31, 2001.
[8] See NASD Notice to Members 01-18, “Fixed Income
Transaction Reporting and Dissemination,” March 2001.