Traditionally, dealers have underwritten
new issue municipal securities through syndicates in which one dealer
serves as the managing underwriter. In some cases, a single dealer
may serve as the sole underwriter for a new issue. Typically, these
underwritings are effected on an “all-or-none” basis, meaning that
the underwriters bid on the entire new issue. In addition, new issues
are occasionally sold to two or more underwriters that have not
formed a syndicate but instead each underwriter has purchased a
separate portion of the new issue (in effect, each underwriter serving
as the sole underwriter for its respective portion of the new issue).
Rule G-32: Disclosures in Connection
with New Issues
Rule G-32 generally requires that any dealer
(i.e., not just the underwriter) selling municipal securities
to a customer during the issue’s underwriting period must deliver
the official statement in final form, if any, to the customer by
settlement of the transaction. Any dealer selling a new issue municipal
security to another dealer is obligated to send such official statement
to the purchasing dealer within one business day of request. In
addition, the managing or sole underwriter for the new issue municipal
securities is obligated to send to any dealer purchasing such securities
(regardless of whether the securities were purchased from such managing
or sole underwriter or from another dealer), within one business
day of request, one official statement plus one additional copy
per $100,000 par value of the new issue municipal securities sold
by such dealer to customers. Where multiple underwriters underwrite
a new issue without forming an underwriting syndicate, each underwriter
is considered a sole underwriter for purposes of rule G-32 and therefore
each must undertake the official statement delivery obligation described
in the preceding sentence.
Rule G-36: Delivery of Official Statements,
Advance Refunding Documents and Forms G-36(OS) and G-36(ARD) to
the MSRB
Rule G-36 requires that the managing or sole underwriter for most
primary offerings send the official statement and Form G-36(OS)
to the MSRB within certain time frames set forth in the rule. In
addition, if the new issue is an advance refunding and an advance
refunding document has been prepared, the advance refunding document
and Form G-36(ARD) also must be sent to the MSRB by the managing
or sole underwriter. Where multiple underwriters underwrite an offering
without forming an underwriting syndicate, the MSRB has stated that
each underwriter would have the role of sole underwriter for purposes
of rule G-36 and therefore each would have a separate obligation
to send official statements, advance refunding documents and Forms
G-36(OS) and G-36(ARD) to the MSRB.
[20]
* *
*
REQUEST FOR COMMENT ON DRAFT INTERPRETIVE GUIDANCE
The MSRB requests comment on all aspects of the following draft
interpretive guidance.
DRAFT INTERPRETIVE GUIDANCE ON FAIR PRACTICE,
QUOTATION, UNIFORM PRACTICE AND NEW ISSUE SECURITIES RULES
The MSRB recognizes that the development of electronic trading
systems presents numerous questions concerning the application of
certain of the MSRB’s rules. In particular, the MSRB notes that
electronic trading systems present concerns about investor access
to material information, suitability, and the quality of electronic
municipal security transaction execution that differ from the equity
markets. Nevertheless, the MSRB believes that dealers can develop
screen-based systems that fulfill their obligations to customers
under MSRB rules.
Industry participants have suggested that the MSRB’s fair practice
rules should allow dealers to recognize the different needs of sophisticated
market professionals and retail customers. They have urged the
MSRB to consider issuing rule interpretations that will allow dealers
to consider the nature of the customer in determining what specific
actions are necessary in order to meet the fair practice standards
for a given transaction.
The MSRB has considered this approach and notes
that prior MSRB rule interpretations reflect that the nature of
the dealer’s counter-party should be considered when determining
the dealer’s duty to deal fairly.
[21] The MSRB has concluded that it is appropriate to issue
draft guidance for comment in this area. The MSRB believes that
dealers may consider the nature of the customer in determining what
specific actions are necessary to meet the fair practice standards
for a given transaction. In general, the specific actions necessary
for the dealer to assure that fair practice standards are met with
respect to retail customers and unsophisticated institutional customers
may be more comprehensive than the actions required when effecting
transactions with or for customers who are sophisticated market
professionals.
This draft interpretive guidance will be particularly
relevant to dealers operating electronic trading systems in which
participation is limited to dealers and other sophisticated market
professionals.
SOPHISTICATED MARKET PROFESSIONAL
The MSRB believes that, in the municipal securities
context, there are three important considerations with respect to
the nature of a dealer’s customer in determining the scope of such
dealer’s obligations.
[22] They are:
- Whether the customer has timely access to all publicly available
material facts concerning a transaction;
- Whether the customer is capable of independently evaluating
the investment risk and market value of the securities at issue;
and
- Whether the customer is making independent investment decisions.
When a dealer determines that a customer has
met all three criteria, the customer can be considered a “sophisticated
market professional.” As will be discussed later, by making a reasonable
determination that a customer is a sophisticated market professional,
a dealer would reduce the level of further actions necessary to
fulfill its fair practice obligations with respect to a transaction
with such sophisticated market professional. [23]
A determination that a customer has timely
access to all publicly available material facts concerning the transaction
will depend on the customer’s resources and the public availability/dissemination
of material information concerning the transaction. In essence,
this determination will mean that the customer is on an equal informational
footing with the transacting dealer. Although the following list
is not exhaustive, the MSRB notes that relevant considerations in
determining that a customer has timely access to publicly available
information could include:
· the resources available
to the customer to investigate the transaction (e.g., research
analysts);
· the customer’s independent
access to NRMSIRs, SIDs, and information generated by the MSRB’s
Municipal Securities Information Library® (MSIL®)
system and Transaction Reporting System,
[24] either directly or through services that subscribe to
such systems; and
· the customer’s access
to other sources of information concerning material financial developments
affecting an issuer’s securities (e.g., rating agency data).
Second, a determination that a customer is
capable of independently evaluating the investment risk and market
value of the securities that are the subject of the transaction
will depend on an examination of the customer's ability to make
its own investment decisions, including the resources available
to the customer to make informed decisions. In some cases, the
dealer may conclude that the customer is not capable of making the
requisite risk and valuation assessments with respect to municipal
securities in general. In other cases, the customer may have general
capability, but may not be able to exercise these functions with
respect to a particular type of instrument. This is more likely
to arise with relatively new types of instruments or those with
significantly different risk or volatility characteristics than
other investments generally made by the customer. While the following
list is not exhaustive, the MSRB notes that relevant considerations
in determining that a customer is capable of independently evaluating
investment risk and market value considerations could include:
· the use of one or
more consultants, investment advisers, research analysts or bank
trust departments;
· the general level
of experience of the customer in municipal securities markets and
specific experience with the type of municipal securities under
consideration;
· the customer’s ability
to understand the economic features of the security;
· the customer's ability
to independently evaluate how market developments would affect the
security that is under consideration; and
· the complexity of
the security or securities involved.
Finally, a determination that a customer is making independent
investment decisions will depend on the nature of the relationship
that exists between the dealer and the customer. While the following
list is not exhaustive, the MSRB notes that relevant considerations
in determining that a customer is making independent investment
decisions could include:
· any written or oral
understanding that exists between the dealer and the customer regarding
the nature of the relationship between the dealer and the customer
and the services to be rendered by the dealer;
· the presence or absence
of a pattern of acceptance of the dealer’s recommendations;
· the use by the customer
of ideas, suggestions, market views and information relating to
municipal securities obtained from sources other than the dealer;
and
· the extent to which
the dealer has received from the customer current comprehensive
portfolio information in connection with discussing potential transactions
or has not been provided important information regarding the customer’s
portfolio or investment objectives.
The actions of a dealer in complying with rule G-17’s obligation
to “deal fairly” may depend on the nature of the customer. The
MSRB believes that the dealer does not need to disclose all material
public facts concerning the transaction where the dealer has reasonable
grounds for concluding that the customer is a sophisticated market
professional. Where the dealer has concluded that a customer is
a sophisticated market professional, the dealer will necessarily
have determined that the customer has timely access to relevant
market information. This draft interpretation is consistent with
rule G-17’s goal of ensuring that dealers treat customers fairly.
It also provides a mechanism for more efficient transactions for
those customers that are already doing their own investigation and
do not want to pay a dealer to duplicate their research staff’s
efforts. In essence, a dealer’s disclosure obligations to sophisticated
market professionals are on par with inter-dealer disclosure obligations.
For example, a dealer that operates an electronic trading system
that effects transactions for multiple dealers and sophisticated
market professionals will not be responsible for providing system
participants with all material public facts concerning transactions
that are matched on the system. However, if the system allows customers
other than sophisticated market professionals to submit orders without
going through another dealer, the dealer operating the system will
have affirmative disclosure obligations to such customers. The
MSRB believes that dealers can design electronic trading systems
to fulfill the dealer’s affirmative disclosure obligations to customers
who are not sophisticated market professionals. It also recognizes,
however, that dealers’ access to current material public information
about the securities will impact their ability to design such systems,
and that certain types of municipal securities may lend themselves
more easily to such systems.
This draft interpretive guidance does nothing to alter a dealer’s
existing duty not to engage in deceptive, dishonest, or unfair practices
under rule G-17 or under the federal securities laws. Of course,
a dealer may not knowingly misdescribe securities to any customer
or any dealer. In addition, an intentional failure to disclose
an unusual feature of a security not accessible to the market (but
known by the dealer) may constitute an unfair practice violative
of rule G-17. A dealer’s duty not to mislead its customers is absolute
and is not dependent upon the nature of the customer.
Rule G-18: Execution of Transactions
The actions that must be taken by a dealer to make reasonable efforts
to ensure that its agency transactions with customers are effected
at fair and reasonable prices may be influenced by the nature of
the customer as well as by the services explicitly offered by the
dealer. If a dealer effects agency transactions for sophisticated
market professionals and its agency responsibilities have been explicitly
limited to providing anonymity, communication, matching and/or clearance
functions then the MSRB believes the dealer is not required to take
further actions on individual transactions to ensure that its agency
transactions with customers are effected at fair and reasonable
prices. [25] By
making the determination that the customer is a sophisticated market
professional, the dealer necessarily concludes that the customer
has met the requisite high thresholds regarding timely access to
information, capability of evaluating risks and market values, and
undertaking of independent investment decisions that would help
ensure the customer’s ability to evaluate whether a transaction’s
price is fair and reasonable. [26]
This draft interpretation will be particularly relevant to dealers
operating alternative trading systems in which participation is
limited to dealers and sophisticated market professionals. It clarifies
that in such systems rule G-18 does not impose an obligation upon
the dealer operating such a system to investigate each individual
transaction price to determine its relationship to the market.
The MSRB recognizes that dealers operating such systems may be merely
aggregating the buy and sell interest of other dealers or sophisticated
market professionals. This function may provide efficiencies to
the market. Requiring the system operator to evaluate each transaction
effected on its system may reduce or eliminate the desired efficiencies.
However, a dealer operating such system must act to investigate
any alleged pricing irregularities on its system brought to its
attention. A dealer may be subject to rule G-18 violations if it
fails to take actions to address system or participant pricing abuses.
If a dealer effects agency transactions for
customers who are not sophisticated market professionals, or has
held itself out to do more than provide anonymity, communication,
matching and/or clearance services within the scope of its agency
responsibilities to sophisticated market professionals, it will
be required to establish that it exercised reasonable efforts to
ensure that its agency transactions with customers are effected
at fair and reasonable prices.
Rule G-19: Suitability of Recommendations and
Transactions
The MSRB recognizes that the manner in which a dealer fulfills
its customer specific suitability obligations will vary depending
on the nature of the customer and the specific transaction. As
to whether a dealer is making a recommendation to customers, the
MSRB believes that the determination will depend upon the facts
and circumstances, specifically including the sophistication of
the customer and the nature of the relationship between the dealer
and the customer. For example, in evaluating the facts and circumstances
of the nature of the relationship between the dealer and customer,
the fact that the dealer is operating an alternative trading system
and has expressly limited its agency obligations may be significant.
As noted previously, because of the nature of the municipal securities
market, the SEC has noted that most situations in which a dealer
brings a municipal security to the attention of a customer involve
an implicit recommendation of the security to the customer. [27] For example, it is possible
that a retail customer will believe that a dealer that sends its
inventory listing to its customers is making a recommendation, while
a sophisticated market professional may recognize it as simply a
list of available inventory, without any recommendation having been
made or implied.
The MSRB believes that when recommendations are made, either implicitly
or explicitly, in an electronic context, dealers can fulfill their
suitability obligations through the use of appropriately designed
screen-based inquiries that will limit a customer’s access to suitable
investment choices. [28] The MSRB notes that dealers
should use a high degree of care in making initial determinations
regarding an investor’s financial qualifications and suitability
for the types of investments recommended on-line.
The MSRB also wishes to clarify dealers’ suitability
obligations for recommended transactions with sophisticated market
professionals. When the dealer has reasonable grounds for concluding
that the customer is a sophisticated market professional with respect
to a security, then the dealer is not required to take any further
action to ensure that a recommended transaction is suitable for
that particular customer. If a customer is either generally not
capable of evaluating investment risk or lacks sufficient capability
to evaluate the particular product in a recommended transaction,
the scope of a dealer’s customer-specific obligations under the
suitability rule would not be diminished. On the other hand, the
fact that a customer initially needed help understanding a potential
investment need not necessarily imply that the customer did not
ultimately develop an understanding and make an independent investment
decision.
The MSRB notes that this draft interpretation
for rule G-19 is similar to the guidance issued in 1996 by the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. to its members in connection
with their suitability obligations when making recommendations to
institutional customers.
[29] As in other securities markets, some customers in the
municipal securities markets have sufficient access to information
and possess the requisite degree of market sophistication to fully
and independently evaluate proposed transactions. In these cases,
the dealer’s determination that the customer is a sophisticated
market professional with respect to the security satisfies the purposes
of rule G-19 and obviates the need for the dealer to apply its own
judgment as to the suitability of a specific recommended transaction
in the security. While this draft interpretive guidance applies
both to electronic and non-electronic transactions, the MSRB believes
that the guidance facilitates the participation of sophisticated
market professionals on electronic systems in which dealers might
be considered to be making explicit or implicit recommendations
of transactions.
QUOTATION RULE
New electronic trading systems provide
a variety of avenues for disseminating quotations among both dealers
and customers. In general, except as described below, any quotation
disseminated by a dealer is presumed to be a quotation made by such
dealer. In addition, any “quotation” of a non-dealer (e.g.,
an investor) relating to municipal securities that is disseminated
by a dealer is presumed, except as described below, to be a quotation
made by such dealer. [30] The dealer is affirmatively responsible
in either case for ensuring compliance with the bona fide and fair
market value requirements with respect to such quotation.
However, if a dealer disseminates a quotation
that is actually made by another dealer and the quotation is labeled
as such, then the quotation is presumed to be a quotation made by
such other dealer and not by the disseminating dealer. Furthermore,
if a sophisticated market professional makes a “quotation” and it
is labeled as such, then it is presumed not to be a quotation made
by the disseminating dealer; rather, the dealer is held to the same
standard as if it were disseminating a quotation made by another
dealer. In either case, the disseminating dealer’s responsibility
with respect to such quotation is reduced. Under these circumstances,
the disseminating dealer must have no reason to believe that either:
(i) the quotation does not represent a bona fide bid for, or offer
of, municipal securities by the maker of the quotation or (ii) the
price stated in the quotation is not based on the best judgment
of the maker of the quotation of the fair market value of the securities.
While rule G-13 does not impose an affirmative
duty on the dealer disseminating quotations made by other dealers
or sophisticated market professionals to investigate or determine
the market value or bona fide nature of each such quotation, it
does require that the disseminating dealer take into account any
information it receives regarding the nature of the quotations it
disseminates. Based on this information, such a dealer must have
no reason to believe that these quotations fail to meet either the
bona fide or the fair market value requirement and it must take
action to address such problems brought to its attention. Reasons
for believing there are problems could include, among other things,
(i) complaints received from dealers and investors seeking to execute
against such quotations, (ii) a pattern of a dealer or sophisticated
market professional failing to update, confirm or withdraw its outstanding
quotations so as to raise an inference that such quotations may
be stale or invalid, or (iii) a pattern of a dealer or sophisticated
market professional effecting transactions at prices that depart
materially from the price listed in the quotations in a manner that
consistently is favorable to the party making the quotation. [31]
In the MSRB’s interpretation stating that
stale or invalid quotations published in a daily or other listing
must be withdrawn or updated in the next publication, the MSRB did
not consider the situation where quotations are disseminated electronically
on a continuous basis. [32] In such case, the MSRB believes
that the bona fide requirement obligates a dealer to withdraw or
update a stale or invalid quotation by no later than the next business
day, in any case, and may require such withdrawal or update to be
undertaken more rapidly if necessary to prevent a quotation from
becoming misleading as to the dealer’s willingness to buy or sell
at the stated price.
NEW ISSUE SECURITIES RULES
In the primary market in recent years,
some issuers have issued their new issue offerings through an electronic
“auction” process that permits the taking of bids from both dealers
and investors directly. In some cases, these bids may be taken on
other than an “all-or-none” basis, with bidders making separate
bids on each maturity of a new issue. Typically, issuers have engaged
a dealer as an auction agent to conduct the auction process on their
behalf. In addition, to effectuate the transfer of the securities
from the issuer to the winning bidders and for certain other purposes
connected with the auction process, issuers often have engaged a
dealer to serve in the role of settlement agent or in some other
intermediary role.
Although the MSRB has not examined all
forms that these auction agent, settlement agent or other intermediary
roles (collectively referred to as “dealer-intermediaries”) may
take, it believes that in most cases such dealer-intermediary is
effecting a transaction between the issuer and each of the winning
bidders. The MSRB also believes that in many cases such dealer-intermediary
may be acting as an underwriter, as such term is defined for purposes
of the Exchange Act.
[33] A dealer-intermediary that is effecting transactions in
connection with such an auction process has certain obligations
under rule G-32. If it is also an underwriter with respect to an
offering, it has certain additional obligations under rules G-32
and G-36.
Rule G-32: Disclosures in Connection
with New Issues
If a dealer-intermediary is involved in
an auction or similar process of primary offering of municipal securities
in which all or a portion of the securities are sold directly to
investors that have placed winning bids with the issuer, the dealer-intermediary
is obligated under rule G-32 to deliver an official statement to
such investors by settlement of their purchases. If all or a portion
of the securities are sold to other dealers that have placed winning
bids with the issuer, the dealer-intermediary is obligated to send
an official statement to such purchasing dealers within one business
day of a request. Further, to the extent that the dealer-intermediary
is an underwriter for purposes of the Exchange Act, such dealer-intermediary
typically would have the obligations of a sole underwriter under
rule G-32 (as would the dealers that have placed winning bids, to
the extent that they are underwriters for purposes of the Exchange
Act).
The MSRB views Rule G-32 as permitting
one or more dealer-intermediaries involved in an auction process
to enter into an agreement with one or more other dealers that have
purchased securities through a winning bid in which the parties
agree that one such dealer (i.e., a dealer-intermediary or
one of the winning bidders) will serve the role of managing underwriter
for purposes of rule G-32. In such a case, a single dealer (rather
than all dealers individually) would have the responsibility for
distribution of official statements to the marketplace typically
undertaken by the managing underwriter.[34]
Such an agreement may be entered into by less than all dealers
that have purchased securities. All dealers that agree to delegate
this duty to a single dealer may rely on such delegation to the
same extent as if such dealers had in fact formed an underwriting
syndicate.
Rule G-36: Delivery of Official Statements,
Advance Refunding Documents and Forms G-36 (OS) and G-36 (ARD) to
the MSRB
To the extent that the dealer-intermediary
in an auction or similar process of primary offering of municipal
securities is an underwriter for purposes of the Exchange Act, such
dealer-intermediary would have obligations under rule G-36. If
all or a portion of the securities are sold directly to investors
that have placed winning bids with the issuer, the dealer-intermediary
would be obligated to send the official statement and Form G-36(OS)
to the MSRB with respect to the issue or portion thereof purchased
by investors, as well as any applicable advance refunding document
and Form G-36(ARD). If all or a portion of the securities are sold
to other dealers that have placed winning bids with the issuer,
the dealer-intermediary and each of the purchasing dealers (to the
extent that they are underwriters for purposes of the Exchange Act)
also typically would be separately obligated to send the official
statement and Form G-36(OS) to the MSRB with respect to the issue
or portion thereof purchased by dealers, as well as any applicable
advance refunding document and Form G-36(ARD).
To avoid duplicative filings under rule
G-36, the MSRB believes that one or more dealer-intermediaries involved
in an auction process may enter into an agreement with one or more
other dealers that have purchased securities through a winning bid
in which the parties agree that one such dealer (i.e., a
dealer-intermediary or one of the winning bidders) will serve in
the role of managing underwriter for purposes of rule G-36. In
such a case, a single dealer (rather than all dealers individually)
would have the responsibility for sending the official statement,
advance refunding document and Forms G-36(OS) and G-36(ARD) to the
MSRB.[35] Such an agreement may be entered
into by less than all dealers that have purchased securities. All
dealers that agree to delegate this duty to a single dealer may
rely on such delegation to the same extent as if such dealers had
in fact formed an underwriting syndicate.
APPLICATION OF CERTAIN MSRB UNIFORM PRACTICE
RULES TO SPECIFIC ELECTRONIC TRADING SYSTEMS
The MSRB understands that, over time, the advent of new trading systems
will present novel situations in applying MSRB uniform practice
rules. The MSRB is prepared to provide interpretative guidance
in these situations as they arise, and, if necessary, implement
formal rule interpretations or rule changes to provide clarity or
prevent unintended results in novel situations. The MSRB has been
asked to provide guidance on the application of certain of its rules
to transactions effected on a proposed electronic trading system
with features similar to those described below.
Description of System
The system is an electronic trading system offering a variety of trading
services and operated by an entity registered as a dealer under
the Exchange Act. The system is qualified as an alternative trading
system under Regulation ATS. Trading in the system is limited to
dealers. Purchase and sale contracts are created in the system
through various types of electronic communications via the system,
including acceptance of priced offers, a bid-wanted process, and
through negotiation by system participants with each other. System
rules govern how the bid/offer process is conducted and otherwise
govern how contracts are formed between buyers and sellers.
Participants are, or may be, anonymous during the bid/offer/negotiation
process. After a sales contract is formed, the system immediately
sends an electronic communication to the buyer and seller, noting
the transaction details as well as the identity of the contra-party.
The transaction is then sent by the buyer and seller to a registered
securities clearing agency for comparison and is settled without
involvement of the system operator.
The system operator does not take a position in the securities traded
on the system, even for clearance purposes. Dealers trading on
the system are required by system rules to clear and settle transactions
directly with each other even though the parties do not know each
other at the time the sales contract is formed. If a dealer using
the system does not wish to do business with another specific contra-party
using the system, it may direct the system operator to adjust the
system so that contracts with that contra-party cannot be formed
through the system.
Application of Certain Uniform Practice Rules to System
It appears to the MSRB that the dealer
operating the system is effecting agency transactions for dealer
clients. [36] The
system operator does not have a role in clearing the transactions
and is not taking principal positions in the securities being traded.
However, the system operator is participating in the transactions
at key points by providing anonymity to buyers and sellers during
the formation of contracts and by setting system rules for the formation
of contracts. Consequently, all MSRB rules generally applicable
to inter-dealer transactions would apply except to the extent that
such rules explicitly, or by context, are limited to principal transactions.
Automated Comparison
One issue raised by the description of the system
above is the planned method of clearance and settlement. Rule G-12(f)(i)
requires that inter-dealer transactions be compared in an automated
comparison system operated by a clearing corporation registered
with the SEC. The purpose of rule G-12(f)(i) is to facilitate clearance
and settlement of inter-dealer transactions. In this case, the system
operator: (i) electronically communicates the transaction details
to the buyer and seller; (ii) requires the buyer and seller to compare
the transaction directly with each other in a registered securities
clearing corporation; and (iii) is not otherwise involved in clearing
or settling the transaction. The MSRB believes that under these
circumstances, it is unnecessary for the system operator to obtain
a separate comparison of its agency transactions with the buyer
and seller.
Although automated comparison is not required between the system
operator and the buyer and seller, the transaction details sent
to each party by the system must conform to the information requirements
for inter-dealer confirmations contained in rule G-12(c). Since
system participants implicitly agree to receive this information
in electronic form by participating in the system, a paper confirmation
is not necessary. Also, the system operator may have an agreement
with its participants that participants are not required to confirm
the transactions back to the system operator, which normally would
be required by rule G-12(c).
The system operator, which is subject to Regulation ATS, will be
governed by the recordkeeping requirements of Regulation ATS for
purposes of transaction records, including municipal securities
transactions. However, the system operator also must comply with
any applicable recordkeeping requirements in rule G-8(f), which
relate to records specific to effecting municipal securities transactions.
With respect to recordkeeping by dealers using the system, the specific
procedures associated with this system require that transactions
be recorded as principal transactions directly between buyer and
seller, with notations of the fact that the transactions were effected
through the system.
Transaction Reporting
Rule G-14 requires inter-dealer transactions
to be reported to the MSRB for the purposes of price transparency,
market surveillance and fee assessment. The mechanism for reporting
inter-dealer transactions is through National Securities Clearing
Corporation (“NSCC”). In the system described above, the buyer
and seller clear and settle transactions directly as principals
with each other, and without the involvement of the dealer operating
the system. The buyer and seller therefore will report transactions
directly to NSCC. No transaction or pricing information will be
lost if the system operator does not report the transaction. Consequently,
it is not necessary for the system operator separately to report
the transactions to the MSRB.
September 28, 2000
[3] Rule
15c2-12 provides that underwriters must ensure that issuers of
most new issues of municipal securities have undertaken (i) to
provide certain financial and operating information on an annual
basis to each NRMSIR and to any SID that may exist in the issuer’s
states and (ii) to provide either to each NRMSIR and any appropriate
SID or to the MSRB notice of certain specified events relating
to such issue, if material. The MSRB understands that there are
currently four NRMSIRs and three SIDs designated under Rule 15c2-12
by the SEC through no-action letters. See http://www.sec.gov/consumer/nrmsir.htm.
[16] The MSRB has previously
given guidance concerning the application of suitability requirements
to investment seminars and customer inquiries made in response
to a dealer’s advertisement. In May of 1985 the MSRB stated that:
[29] See NASD IM-2310-3, Suitability
Obligations to Institutional Customers.