Apprenticeship. This will acknowledge
receipt of your letter dated January 30, 1978 and will confirm
our recent telephone conversation.
In your letter you seek clarification of the applicability of
the requirements of rule G-3(i) relating to apprenticeship periods
to a municipal securities representative who has previously qualified
as a general securities representative. As I indicated in our
conversation, an individual who was previously qualified as a
general securities representative is not required to serve the
90-day apprenticeship period. MSRB interpretation of February
17, 1978.
Municipal securities principal. This will acknowledge
receipt of your letter of June 10, 1981. In your letter you indicate
that the dealer department of [the bank] has recently been inspected
by examiners from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
and that, during the course of such inspection, the examiners
indicated that they believed certain persons should be qualified
as municipal securities principals. You indicate your disagreement
with the examiners' conclusions, and request an opinion from the
Board concerning the need to qualify these personnel.
The two cases you describe are as follows:
(1) Mr. "X", as head of the Operations Division of
the bank's Financial Markets Group, is in charge of the operational
support services for the bank's securities activities, including
the Tax-Exempt Operations Department. The Tax-Exempt Operations
Department is under the immediate supervision of yourself. For
purposes of bank organizational structure you report to Mr. "X";
however, you also report to the head of the Tax-Exempt Securities
Division in connection with "supporting the Tax-Exempt business
operation." You are qualified as a municipal securities principal,
as is the head of the Tax-Exempt Securities Division; Mr. "X",
however, is not. The national bank examiners have expressed the
view that he should be.
(2) Two "senior traders" in the Municipal Dealer Department
act under the supervision of the department head with regard to
the trading and positioning of municipal securities. In connection
with these activities they "direct more junior traders"
in their municipal securities activities. These persons are not
qualified as municipal securities principals; the national bank
examiners contend that they should be.
As a general matter we would hesitate to disagree with the opinion
expressed by an on-site examiner in a matter of this sort. The
examiner is, of course, in direct contact with the matter in question,
and has access to the full details of the situation, rather than
an abstraction or summary of the particulars. Accordingly, we
are unable to express a view that the examiner's conclusions are
incorrect in the circumstances you describe.
With respect to the specific situations presented in your letter,
it is certainly not impossible to establish a reporting and supervisory
structure such that a person who is in charge of the division
which includes the operational aspects of a bank's municipal securities
dealer department need not be qualified as a municipal securities
principal. As is indicated in a Board interpretive notice concerning
qualifications matters, qualification as a municipal securities
principal is required of a person who supervises a bank dealer's
processing and clearance activities with respect to municipal
securities only to the extent that such person has policy-making
authority over such activities. If such person does not have policy-making
authority, or if such person's authority extends to the establishment
of general guidelines or an overall framework for activities,
with the specific function of making policy within that framework
reserved for other persons, then such person would not be deemed
to be a municipal securities principal.
Further, it is a not uncommon arrangement to have the policy-making
authority with respect to the municipal dealer operations activities
of a bank allocated between the immediate supervisor of the municipal
operations function and a principal in the dealer department itself.
In these circumstances the operation supervisor reports to the
principal in connection with the municipal dealer activities,
and also reports to other, non-qualified persons in connection
with bank organizational requirements.
Therefore, the arrangement which you describe would not necessarily
require that Mr. "X" be qualified as a municipal securities
principal. Whether he should, in fact, be qualified as a municipal
securities principal depends, of course, on the extent to which
he does exercise policy-making authority over the municipal dealer
operations functions; this is a determination that, we suggest,
is most appropriately made by yourselves and the national bank
examiners.
In the second situation you describe it appears to us clear that
the "senior traders" are functioning as municipal securities
principals and should be qualified as such. As you may know, the
Board's rule defines the term "municipal securities principal"
to include persons "who [are] directly engaged in the . .
. direction or supervision of . . . underwriting, trading or sales
of municipal securities. . ." Your description of the activities
of these "senior traders" indicates that they "direct"
other persons in trading activities. This certainly supports the
conclusion that they are functioning as municipal securities principals.
MSRB interpretation of June 24, 1981.
Municipal securities principal: numerical requirements.
This is in response to your letter of September 28, 1982 concerning
the numerical requirements for municipal securities principals
in Board rule G-3 . . .
Rule G-3(b)(i)(B) requires that
(B) every municipal securities broker or municipal securities
dealer having fewer than eleven persons associated with it in
whatever capacity on a full-time or full-time equivalent basis
who are engaged in the performance of its municipal securities
activities, or, in the case of a bank dealer, in the performance
of its municipal securities dealer activities, shall have at
least one municipal securities principal.
You inquired as to the meaning of "full-time equivalent
basis" in the reference language. This phrase is intended
to require the inclusion of individuals who should be considered
as full-time employees, but because of some distinctive employment
arrangement do not fit the norm of a full-time employee. For example,
a municipal securities representative who usually works out of
his home which is in a remote location might not fit the firm's
norm for "full-time employment" but should nevertheless
be counted for purposes of the rule as an associated person.
You also inquired as to whether a bank dealer is required to
have only one municipal securities principal even if it has fifteen
full-time persons working in the municipal securities business.
The provisions of the rule apply equally to securities firms and
to bank dealers. Therefore, a bank dealer with eleven or more
associated persons "engaged in the performance of its municipal
securities dealer activities" is required to have at least
two municipal securities principals.
Municipal securities principal: bank operations.
I am writing in response to your letter of April 26, 1983 concerning
the results of a recent examination of your bank's municipal securities
dealer department by examiners from the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency. In your letter you indicate that the examiners
expressed the view that the bank's present organizational structure
did not comport with the definition of a "separately identifiable
department or division of a bank" set forth in Board rule
G-1. You note that the examiners' basis for this conclusion was
their belief that the municipal securities processing functions
of the bank were not under the supervision of a qualified municipal
securities principal. You state that you disagree with the examiners'
conclusions, and you request that the Board indicate whether,
in its view, the organizational structure through which the bank
presently carries on its municipal securities activities is satisfactory
for purposes of compliance with Board rules.
As a general matter we would hesitate to disagree with the opinion
expressed by on-site examiners in a matter of this sort. The examiners
are, of course, in direct contact with the matter in question,
and have access to the full details of the situation, rather than
an abstraction or summary of the particulars. Accordingly, we
are unable to express a view that the examiners' conclusions are
incorrect in the circumstances you describe.
With respect to the specific issues which you raise, it is not
impossible for a bank to establish a "separately identifiable
department or division" for purposes of rule G-1 which includes
areas in the bank which, for other purposes (e.g., for
general bank organizational and reporting purposes), would be
considered separate. To the extent that such areas are engaged
in municipal securities dealer activities (as enumerated in rule
G-1), however, they must be under the supervision of the person
or persons designated by the bank's board of directors, in accordance
with rule G-1(a)(1), as responsible for the conduct of such activities.
As you are aware, the person or persons who are responsible for
the management and supervision of the day-to-day activities of
the municipal securities processing area need not be qualified
as municipal securities principals if they do not have policy-making
authority with respect to such activities. However, such activities
must be subject to the supervision of a municipal securities principal.
Therefore, if those directly involved in the day-to-day supervision
of the municipal securities processing activities do not have
policy-making authority over such activities and, as a consequence,
are not qualified as municipal securities principals, a person
who is qualified as a municipal securities principal (whether
that person designated by the bank's board of directors pursuant
to rule G-1(a)(1) or some other person who is subordinate to that
person) must be designated as having responsibility for the supervision
of the processing activities. The bank's supervisory procedures
should appropriately reflect such designation and set forth the
manner in which the designated person will carry out these responsibilities.
I hope this provides sufficient guidance as to the resolution
of the organizational questions raised in the examination. MSRB
interpretation of May 13, 1983.
Disqualification of municipal securities principals.
In our recent telephone conversation you asked whether the Board
has interpreted rule G-3(c)(iv)(1)
as to the qualification status of a municipal securities principal
in circumstances where the bank dealer, with which the individual
is associated, fails to effect a municipal security transaction
for a period of two or more years. You proposed that, if there
are no municipal securities transactions for the principal to
supervise, the individual would not be considered to be "acting
as a municipal securities principal" and, consequently, the
individual's qualification as a municipal securities principal
would lapse after a two-year period of such inactivity.
The Board has considered a similar situation and given an interpretation
in the matter. It reaffirmed the interpretation that an individual
whose responsibilities no longer include supervision of municipal
securities activities probably will not be able to remain adequately
informed in the supervisory and compliance matters of concern
to municipal securities principals, and that continuing association
with a municipal securities dealer, in a capacity other than that
of a municipal securities principal, is not sufficient to maintain
qualification as a municipal securities principal. However, the
Board also concluded that it did not intend this interpretation
of rule G-3(c)(iv) to mean that a dealer must necessarily effect
transactions in municipal securities in order for its municipal
securities principal to maintain such qualification. The Board
noted that the definition of a municipal securities principal(2)
not only includes supervision of trading or sales, but of other
municipal securities activities as well. Consequently, the Board
determined that the qualification of a municipal securities principal
should not automatically terminate because the individual is associated
with a municipal securities broker or dealer which has not effected
a municipal securities transaction in two or more years, but that
to maintain such qualification the individual must demonstrate
clearly that:
--the municipal securities broker or dealer was engaged in
municipal securities activity during this period (e.g.,
determinations of suitability involving municipal securities,
recommendations to customers, advertising, financial advisory
activity with respect to municipal issuers); and
--the individual in question had been designated with supervisory
responsibility for such municipal securities activities during
this period. MSRB interpretation of January 15, 1987.
"Municipal Securities Principal" defined.
This is in response to your letter of January 28, 1987, and subsequent
telephone conversations with the Board's staff, requesting an
interpretation of Board rule G-3(a)(i), the definition of the
term "Municipal Securities Principal". You ask whether
an individual, who has day-to-day responsibility for directing
the municipal underwriting activities of a firm, must be qualified
as a municipal securities principal. You suggest that such activity
seems to meet the definition of a municipal securities principal,
namely, an individual who is "directly engaged in the management,
direction or supervision of. . .underwriting . . .of municipal
securities."(3) You note that
this individual has the authority to make underwriting commitments
in the name of the firm, but that the firm's president is designated
with supervisory responsibility for this individual's underwriting
activity. Also, you indicated that this individual does not have
supervisory responsibility for any other representative.
Your request for an interpretation was referred to a Committee
of the Board which has responsibility for professional qualification
matters. The Committee concluded that the individual you describe
would not be required to qualify as a municipal securities principal,
provided that her responsibilities are limited to directing the
day-to-day underwriting activities of the dealer, and provided
that these responsibilities are carried out within policy guidelines
established by the dealer and under the direct supervision of
a municipal securities principal. The Committee is also of the
opinion that commitment authority alone is not indicative of principal
activity, but rather is inherent in the underwriting activities
of a municipal securities representative. MSRB interpretation
of February 27, 1987.
Municipal securities representative. Your letter
dated October 16, 1978, has been referred to me for response.
In your letter, you request clarification of whether personnel
in your firm will have to take and pass the Board's qualification
examination for municipal securities representatives, since they
only effect transactions with other municipal securities professionals.
Board rule G-3(a)(iii) defines the term "municipal securities
representative" to mean a natural person associated with
a municipal securities broker or municipal securities dealer who
performs certain specified functions, which include "trading
or sales of municipal securities." A person is deemed to
be a municipal securities representative under the rule whether
he or she engages in such activities with customers or only other
municipal securities professionals. Accordingly, personnel in
your firm who only trade with, or sell securities to other municipal
securities professionals will have to take and pass the examination
for municipal securities representatives, unless they are exempted
under the provisions of rule G-3(e)(ii). MSRB interpretation
of October 27, 1978.
Municipal securities representative: credit department
employees. This will acknowledge receipt of your letter
of October 18, 1979, concerning a proposed arrangement for the
performance of municipal credit analysis functions at your bank.
In your letter you indicate that the bank wishes to have certain
basic statistical and data gathering activities with respect to
proposed new issues of municipal securities performed by its Credit
Department. The Credit Department will provide the information
resulting from these activities to registered personnel in the
Investment Department, which will evaluate the credit of the issuer
and determine the appropriateness of the issue for the bank's
own investment activities and for the bank's customers. You inquire
whether the personnel in the Credit Department would be required
to register and qualify as municipal securities representatives
due to their performance of these activities.
Your question was referred to a committee of the Board which
has the responsibility for administering the professional qualifications
program on the Board's behalf. The Committee concluded that such
persons would not be required to register and qualify as representatives
if their functions are limited to information-gathering and performance
of basic statistical computations. However, if such persons engage
in any type of evaluative activity or if such persons make recommendations
or suggest conclusions with respect to the securities, registration
and qualification would be required. Further, should these persons
produce any documents or research products intended for distribution
or for use in the solicitation of customers, they would be required
to register and qualify. MSRB interpretation of December 10,
1979.
Clerical or ministerial duties. This will acknowledge
receipt of your letter in which you request advice concerning
whether certain persons employed by [Name deleted] must qualify
as municipal securities representatives under rule G-3.
In the case of one of the individuals, you state in your letter
that he is responsible for calculating coupon rates for new issue
securities, based on information provided to him by persons in
[Name deleted] underwriting department. According to your letter,
the individual has some discretion to "revise coupon rates
to a more marketable figure," but all of his activities are
subject to the approval of, and supervised by, municipal securities
professionals in the department. We understand that he does not
communicate with issuers, customers or other municipal securities
dealers.
Based upon the facts set forth in your letter, we are of the
view that the individual described performs only clerical or ministerial
functions in calculating the coupon scale, and he is therefore
not a municipal securities representative within the meaning of
rule G-3.
In your letter, you also request advice regarding certain individuals
whose only function is to receive telephonic orders for municipal
securities from municipal securities dealers. We understand that
these individuals do not solicit orders, negotiate prices or the
terms of transactions, or transmit offers to prospective purchasers,
nor do they communicate at any time with customers. Based upon
the facts you have provided, we are of the opinion that these
individuals perform only clerical or ministerial functions, and
they are therefore also not municipal securities representatives
within the meaning of rule G-3. MSRB interpretation of December
8, 1978.
Clerical or ministerial duties. I refer to your
letter of June 22, 1979, in which you request advice regarding
the applicability of rule G-3 on professional qualifications to
an employee of [Company name deleted]. According to your letter,
the activities of the employee in question are limited to checking
the mathematical accuracy of bids received by an issuer for which
[Company name deleted] acts as financial advisor and reporting
the results to the issuer.
Based on the facts stated in your letter, the employee is not
required to qualify as a municipal securities representative under
rule G-3. The Board does not intend the qualification requirements
of the rule to apply to persons performing solely clerical or
ministerial functions, such as in this case. MSRB interpretation
of July 24, 1979.
"Finder" of potential issuers. This
responds to your letter of May 14, 1981 requesting our advice
concerning the application of the qualification provisions of
rule G-3 to a person employed by a municipal securities broker
or dealer whose activities are limited solely to acting as a "finder"
of potential issuers. Based upon the facts contained in your letter,
and assuming that such person is not providing financial advisory
or consultant services for issuers, it would appear that he or
she is not performing functions, which are enumerated in rule
G-3(a), the performance of which would require qualification as
a municipal securities principal or a municipal securities representative.
MSRB interpretation of June 24, 1981.
Persons engaged in financial advisory activities.
I am writing to confirm our telephone conversation of this afternoon
concerning the registration and qualification requirements applicable
to persons in your firm's public finance department. In our conversation
you inquired whether persons who function as financial advisors
to municipal issuers, providing advice to such issuers regarding
the structure, timing and terms of new issues of municipal securities
to be sold by such issuers, are required to be qualified. As I
indicated, such persons are required to be registered and qualified
as municipal securities representatives. Furthermore, persons
who supervise representatives performing such financial advisory
services are required to be registered and qualified as municipal
securities principals.
For your information, the provision of financial advisory services
to municipal issuers is defined to be a municipal securities representative
function in Board rule G-3(a)(iii)(B). The requirement that persons
performing such function be qualified is set forth generally in
rules G-2 and G-3, and the specific qualification requirements
applicable to such persons are stated in rules G-3(e) and (i).
MSRB interpretation of June 10, 1982.
ENDNOTES
1. Rule G-3(c)(iv) states that [a]ny person
who ceases to act as a municipal securities principal for two
or more years at any time after having qualified as a municipal
securities principal in accordance with this section (c) shall
take and pass the Municipal Securities Principal Qualification
Examination and be qualified as a municipal securities representative
prior to being qualified as a municipal securities principal.
2. Rule G-3(a)(i) defines a municipal securities
principal as a natural person (other than a municipal securities
sales principal) associated with a municipal securities broker
or municipal securities dealer that has filed with the Board in
compliance with rule A-12 who is directly engaged in the management,
direction or supervision of one or more of the following activities:
(A) underwriting, trading or sales of municipal securities;
(B) financial advisory or consultant services for issuers in
connection with the issuance of municipal securities;
(C) processing, clearance, and in the case of municipal securities
brokers and municipal securities dealers other than bank dealers,
safekeeping of municipal securities;
(D) research or investment advice with respect to municipal
securities;
(E) any other activities which involve communication, directly
or indirectly, with public investors in municipal securities;
(F) maintenance of records with respect to the activities described
in subparagraphs (A) through (E); or
(G) training of municipal securities principals or municipal
securities representatives;
provided, however, that the activities enumerated in
subparagraphs (D) and (E) above shall be limited to such activities
as they relate to the activities enumerated in subparagraphs (A)
or (B) above.
3. Rule G-3(a)(i) reads as follows:
(a) Definitions. As used in the rules of the Board, the terms
"municipal securities principal," "financial and
operations principal," "municipal securities representative,"
and "municipal securities sales principal" shall have
the following respective meanings:
(i) Municipal Securities Principal. The term "municipal
securities principal" means a natural person (other than
a municipal securities sales principal) associated with a municipal
securities broker or municipal securities dealer that has filed
with the Board in compliance with rule A-12 who is directly
engaged in the management, direction or supervision of one or
more of the following activities:
provided, however, that the activities enumerated in
subparagraphs (D) and (E) above shall be limited to such activities
as they relate to the activities enumerated in subparagraphs (A)
or (B) above.
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