Retention of records: syndicate records.
I am writing in response to your letters of October 2 and October
19, 1981 concerning a particular recordkeeping arrangement used
by an NASD-member firm in connection with its underwriting activities.
In your letters you indicate that the firm conducts its underwriting
activities from its main office and four regional branch office
"commitment centers," with the committing branch offices authorized
to commit to underwriting new issues on the firm's behalf. You
inquire whether the firm is in compliance with the Board's recordkeeping
and record retention rules if it maintains only part of the records
on its underwritings in the main office. Correspondence from a
field examiner attached to your letters indicates that the committing
branch office originating a particular underwriting maintains
all of the records with respect to such underwriting. The majority
of these records are the original copies; the copies of confirmations,
good faith checks, and syndicate settlement checks maintained
at the committing branch office are duplicates of original records
maintained at the firm's main office.
Rule G-9(d) requires that books and records shall be maintained
and preserved in an easily accessible place for two years and
shall be available for ready inspection by the proper regulatory
authorities. The fact that the member firm does not maintain all
records with respect to all of its underwriting activities in
a single location does not contravene these provisions of Board
rule G-9. Rule G-9 would permit the arrangement described in your
letters, whereby a firm maintains copies of all of the records
pertaining to a particular underwriting in the office responsible
for that underwriting.
Thank you for your prompt assistance in providing the additional
information we needed in order to respond to your inquiry. MSRB
interpretation of October 21, 1981.
Microfilming of records. I am writing in response
to your letter of May 20, 1983 regarding our previous conversations
about the requirements of Board rules G-1 and G-9 as they would
apply to the bank's retention of dealer department records on
microfilm. In your letter and our previous conversations you indicated
that the bank wishes to retain all of the records required to
be maintained by its municipal securities dealer department on
microfilm, with the hard copy of each record destroyed immediately
after it has been microfilmed. You inquired as to the circumstances
under which this method of record retention could be used. You
also inquired about the extent to which municipal securities dealer
department records could be commingled with records of other departments
on the same strips of microfilm.
As you are aware, Board rule G-9(e) provides that
a record...required to be preserved by this rule...may be retained...on
microfilm, electronic or magnetic tape, or by the other similar
medium of record retention, provided that [the] municipal securities
broker or municipal securities dealer shall have available adequate
facilities for ready retrieval and inspection of any such record
and for production of easily readable facsimile copies thereof
and, in the case of records retained on microfilm, electronic
or magnetic tape, or other similar medium of record retention,
duplicates of such records shall be stored separately from each
other for the periods of time required by this rule.
Therefore, the following three conditions must be met, if records
are to be retained on microfilm:
- facilities for ready retrieval and inspection of the records
(such as a microfilm reader or other similar piece of equipment)
must be available;
- facilities for the reproduction of a hard copy facsimile of
a particular record must also be available; and
- duplicate copies of the microfilm must be made and stored
separately for the necessary time periods.
If these conditions are met, the retention of records by means
of microfilm is satisfactory for purposes of the Board's rules,
and hard copy records need not be retained after the microfilming
is completed.
With respect to the establishment of a separately identifiable
municipal securities dealer department of a bank, Board rule G-1
provides that all of the records relating to the municipal securities
activities of such department must be
separately maintained in or separately extractable from such
[department's] own facilities or the facilities of the bank...[and
must be] so maintained or otherwise accessible as to permit
independent examination thereof and enforcement of applicable
provisions of the Act, the rules and regulations thereunder
and the rules of the Board.
These requirements would not preclude you from maintaining the
required records on microfilm which also contained other bank
records, as long as the required records were "separately extractable."
The course of action you propose, maintaining all municipal securities
dealer department records together as the first items on a roll
of microfilm, would seem to be an appropriate way of complying
with these requirements. MSRB interpretation of June 6, 1983.
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