Letters of credit. This is in response to your April 9,
1981, letter asking whether Board rule G-22, regarding control
relationships, and G-23, regarding financial advisory agreements,
would apply if a banks issuance of a letter of credit were
contingent upon its being named underwriter or manager for the
issue, or if a bank issuing a letter of credit retained authority
to require an issuer, in effect, to call the securities.
Rule G-22 provides that
a control relationship with respect to a municipal security
shall be deemed to exist if a broker, dealer, or municipal
securities dealer (or a bank or other person of which the
broker, dealer, or municipal securities dealer is a department
or division) controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with the issuer of the security or a person other
than the issuer who is obligated, directly or indirectly,
with respect to debt service on the security.
The existence of a control relationship is a question of fact
to be determined from the entire situation. Most recently, the
Securities and Exchange Commission suggested that, for purposes
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, a registered broker-dealer
would be deemed to be controlled by a person or entity who, among
other things, has the ability to direct or cause the direction
of management or the policies of the broker-dealer. Based upon
the above, it is questionable whether a bank that conditions the
issuance of a letter of credit upon being named an underwriter
or upon a tie-in deposit arrangement should be deemed to control
the issuer. Similarly, it does not appear that a bank that retains
discretion under a letter of credit to cause the trustee to call
the whole issue has a control relationship with the issuer.
You also ask whether under Board rule G-23 a financial advisory
relationship is created if a bank conditions the issuance of a
letter of credit upon being named an underwriter or upon obtaining
a tie-in deposit arrangement. Under rule G-23, a financial advisory
relationship is deemed to exist when a municipal securities professional
provides, or enters into an agreement to provide, financial advisory
services to, or on behalf of, an issuer with respect to a new
issue of securities regarding such matters as the structure, timing
or terms of the issue, in return for compensation or for the expectation
of compensation. It does not appear that rule G-23 would apply
in your example since the bank is not providing financial advisory
or consulting services with respect to the structure, timing or
other substantive terms of the issue. MSRB interpretation
of July 27, 1981.
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