Notice on Application of Board Rules to Financial
Advisory Services Rendered to Corporate Obligors on Industrial
Development Bonds
May 23, 1983
In
a recent letter to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission has taken
the position that private placements of industrial development
bonds ("IDBs") constitute transactions in municipal
securities as defined in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
as amended. The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board has received
a number of inquiries concerning this letter. The Board is publishing
this notice for the purposes of: (1) reviewing the application
of its rules to private placements of municipal securities and
(2) expressing its views concerning whether certain Board rules
apply to financial advisory services rendered by municipal securities
dealers and brokers to corporate obligors on IDBs.
A. Private Placements of IDBs
The
Boards rules apply, of course, to all transactions in municipal
securities, including securities which are IDBs. The SEC letter
dealt in particular with the activities of commercial banks. That
letter pointed out that if a commercial bank has a registered
municipal securities dealer department, under Board rule G-1,
which defines the term "separately identifiable department
or division of a bank," any private placement activities
of the bank in securities which are IDBs must be conducted as
a part of the registered dealer department. The Board urges all
bank dealers which have registered as a separately identifiable
department or division to review their organizations and assure
that all departments or units which engage in the private placement
of IDBs are designated on the banks Form MSD registration
and other applicable bank records as part of its separately identifiable
department or division. The Board also notes that such activities
must be under the supervision of a person designated by the banks
board of directors as responsible for these activities. In addition,
under Board rule G-3, concerning professional qualifications,
persons who are engaged in privately placing municipal securities
must be qualified as municipal securities representatives and
be supervised with respect to that activity by a qualified municipal
securities principal.
B. Financial Advisory Services Rendered to Corporate
Obligors on IDBs
Board
rules G-1 and G-3 provide that rendering "financial advisory
or consultant services for issuers" is an activity
to which those rules are applicable (emphasis added). Similarly,
Board rule G-23, on the activities of financial advisors, applies
to brokers, dealers, and municipal securities dealers who agree
to render "financial advisory or consultant services to or
on behalf of an issuer" (emphasis added). Clearly these rules
are applicable to financial advisory services rendered to state
or local governments and their agencies, as well as to municipal
corporations. In the Boards view, however, rules G-1, G-3,
and G-23 do not apply to financial advisory services which are
provided to corporate obligors in connection with proposed IDB
financings.
The
Board wishes to emphasize that the scope of its definition of
financial advisory services is limited to "advice with respect
to the structure, timing, terms, and other similar matters"
concerning a proposed issue.[1] If
persons providing such advice to the corporate obligor on an IDB
issue also participate in negotiations with prospective purchasers
or are otherwise engaged in effecting placement of the issue,
then, as indicated above, rules G-1 and G-3 would apply to their
activities.
[Excerpts
of the Commission letter follow:]
This
is in response to your letter of December 1, 1981, requesting
our views concerning certain activities by commercial banks in
connection with industrial development bonds ("IDBs")[2]
Specifically, you asked (1) whether the private placement activities
of banks in IDBs involve transactions in municipal securities,
(2) whether involvement in such activities alone would require
such banks to register with the Commission under Section 15B of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the "Exchange Act")
as municipal securities dealers, (3) whether a bank that had registered
a separately identifiable department or division with the Commission
as a municipal securities dealer would be required to conduct
such activities through such separately identifiable department
or division, and (4) if such bank activities are required to be
conducted in the separately identifiable department or division,
whether the advisory services provided by those banks to the corporate
obligor on an IDB should be regarded as advisory services provided
to an issuer of municipal securities in connection with the issuance
of municipal securities. Pursuant to your letter and subsequent
telephone conversations, we understand the following facts to
be typical of the activities in question.
A
commercial bank offers private placement and financial advisory
services to corporate entities on a regular and continuous basis.
From time to time the bank recommends to the corporate entity
that IDBs be used to raise capital. The bank advises the corporate
entity regarding the terms and timing of the proposed IDB issuance,
prepares the Direct Placement Memorandum describing the terms
of the IDB, and contacts potential purchasers of the IDB. Such
purchasers then make independent reviews of the corporate entitys
financial status. The bank then obtains comments from the potential
buyers and relays such comments to the corporate entity. The bank
might also assist the corporate entity in subsequent negotiations
with the purchasers. An industrial development authority nominally
issues the IDB on behalf of the corporate entity which becomes
the economic obligor on the issue.
The
bank engages in these activities in order to assist the corporate
obligor in the sale of the IDBs. In return for its services, the
bank receives from the corporate entity either a fixed fee or
a percentage of the proceeds of the sale. The bank does not purchase
any of the IDBs. The bank could, however, supply "bridge
loans" to the corporate entity pending receipt of the proceeds
of the IDB sale. In addition, the bank might provide investors
with a letter of credit committing the bank to pay any interest
or principal not paid by the corporate issuer. The bank might
also act as trustee or paying agent for the nominal issuer of
the IDB, for which the bank would receive a set fee.
IDBs AS MUNICIPAL SECURITIES
Section
3(a)(10) of the Exchange Act defines a "security" as,
among other things, "any note
bond, debenture
investment contract,
or in general, any instrument commonly
known as a security
" Section 3(a)(29)
of the Exchange Act defines "municipal securities" to
include any security which is an industrial development bond as
defined in Section 103(b)(2) of the Code the interest on which
is tax-exempt under Sections 103(b)(4) or 103(b)(6) of the Code.
In our opinion, the private placement activities you have described
involve transactions in municipal securities as defined in the
Exchange Act.[3]
REGISTRATION AS MUNICIPAL SECURITIES DEALER
Section
15B(a) of the Exchange Act makes it unlawful for any municipal
securities dealer to use the mails or any instrumentality of interstate
commerce to "effect any transaction in, or to induce or attempt
to induce the purchase or sale of, any municipal security unless
such municipal securities dealer is registered" with the
Commission. Section 3(a)(30) of the Exchange Act defines "municipal
securities dealer" to include a bank or a separately identifiable
department or division of a bank if that bank is engaged in the
business of buying and selling municipal securities for its own
account other than in a fiduciary capacity, through a broker or
otherwise. Banks that engage solely in private placement activities
in IDBs as described by you would not be required to register
as municipal securities dealers since they do not appear to be
engaged in the business of buying and selling municipal securities
for their own accounts, but rather appear to be acting as brokers.
Section 3(a)(4) of the Exchange Act defines the term broker as
"any person engaged in the business of effecting transactions
in securities for the account of others, but does not include
a bank." Since they are excluded from the definition of broker,
banks that act solely as brokers need not register under the Exchange
Act.[4]
INCLUSION IN SEPARATELY IDENTIFIABLE DEPARTMENT
OR DIVISION
Section
15B(b)(2)(H) of the Exchange Act authorizes the Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board (the "MSRB") to make rules defining
the term "separately identifiable department or division"
("SID") of a bank as used in Section 3(a)(30) of the
Exchange Act. MSRB rule G-1 defines the SID as "that unit
of the bank which conducts all the activities of the bank relating
to the conduct of business as a municipal securities dealer
"
The rule defines municipal securities dealer activities to include
"sales of municipal securities" and "financial
advisory and consultant services for issuers in connection with
the issuance of municipal securities." Therefore, those banks
that have registered an SID with the Commission also must conduct
the private placement activities within the SID in accordance
with MSRB rules
Based
upon the facts and representations set forth in your letter, it
would appear that the private placement activities of banks involving
IDBs, as described in your example, constitute transactions in
municipal securities that, if done alone, would not require a
bank to register with the Commission as a municipal securities
dealer. However, such activities, when conducted by a bank municipal
securities dealer that had registered a separately identifiable
department or division, would be treated as municipal securities
dealer activities and, therefore, would be required to be conducted
in the banks dealer department
Endnotes
1 Rule G-23(b).
2 You have represented
that the IDBs involved would be primarily those defined in Section
103(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (the "Code"),
the interest on which is tax-exempt under Sections 103(b)(4) and
103(b)(6) of the Code.
3 This determination
is based on an analysis of the specific facts as described by
you. Different facts and circumstances could result in a transaction
involving municipal debt instruments being treated as loan participations
not subject to the federal securities laws. Such determinations
can only be made on a case by case basis after a thorough examination
of the context of the transaction.
4 See letter dated
February 17, 1977, from Anne E. Chafer, Attorney, Securities and
Exchange Commission, to Bruce F. Golden and letter dated January
11, 1982, from Thomas G. Lovett, Attorney, Securities and Exchange
Commission, to Harriet E. Munrett regarding Citytrust of Bridgeport,
Connecticut.
CROSS-REFERENCES
Rule D-12 Interpretive Notice – Interpretation Relating to Sales of Municipal Fund Securities in the Primary Market , January 18, 2001.
Rule G-32 Interpretive Notice – Notice Regarding Electronic Delivery and Receipt of Information by Brokers, Dealers and Municipal Securities Dealers , November 20, 1998.
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