Notice Regarding the Disclosure
Obligations of Brokers, Dealers and Municipal Securities Dealers
in Connection with New Issue Municipal
Securities Under Rule
G-32
November 19, 1998
In July 1998, the
Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) approved two sets
of amendments to rule G-32, on disclosures in connection with
new issues. The first set of amendments permits brokers, dealers
and municipal securities dealers (“dealers”) that sell new issue
variable rate demand obligations qualifying for the exemption
provided under subparagraph (d)(1)(iii) of Securities Exchange
Act Rule 15c2-12 to deliver the preliminary official statement,
rather than the final official statement, to customers by settlement.[1]
The second set of amendments strengthens the rule’s existing
requirements regarding dissemination of official statements
to dealers purchasing new issue municipal securities and incorporates
a longstanding Board interpretation regarding disclosure to
customers of initial offering prices in negotiated underwritings.[2]
In view of these recent amendments and the continuing concerns
of the Board and the enforcement agencies that some dealers
may have inadequate procedures in place to ensure compliance
with rule G-32,[3] the Board is publishing this notice
to review the requirements of the rule and to emphasize the
importance of full and timely compliance.
Purpose and Structure
of Rule G-32
Rule G-32 is designed to ensure that
a customer who purchases new issue municipal securities is provided
with all available information relevant to his or her investment
decision by settlement of the transaction. The rule obligates
all dealers selling new issue municipal securities to provide
to their customers purchasing the securities certain disclosure
materials by settlement. To effectuate this primary obligation,
the rule further obligates all dealers that sell new issue municipal
securities to other dealers, as well as the managing or sole
underwriter for such securities, to provide to such purchasing
dealers these disclosure materials so as to permit the purchasing
dealers to comply with their primary delivery obligations to
their own customers. Finally, the rule provides that a dealer
that prepares an official statement in final form on behalf
of an issuer while serving in the capacity of financial advisor
to such issuer must make the official statement available to
the underwriters promptly after the issuer approves its distribution.
Compliance with each prong of the rule is crucial to ensure
that the primary purpose of the rule is fulfilled. The full
text of rule G-32, as amended, appears at the end of this notice.
New
Issue Municipal Securities and the Underwriting Period
Rule G-32 applies to the sale of all
new issue municipal securities. These are defined in section
(c)(i)[*] as any municipal securities (other than
commercial paper[4]) that are sold by any dealer during
the issue’s underwriting period. Once the underwriting period
has ended for an issue of municipal securities, the requirements
of rule G-32 no longer apply to transactions in such municipal
securities.
The underwriting period for an issue
of municipal securities begins with the first submission to
the underwriters of an order from a potential customer to purchase
the securities or the purchase by the underwriters of the securities
from the issuer (i.e., the execution of the purchase
contract in a negotiated sale or the award of the securities
in a competitive sale), whichever occurs first. The underwriting
period ends upon delivery by the issuer of the securities to
the underwriters (i.e., the bond closing) if the underwriters
no longer retain an unsold balance at such time. If, however,
the issue is not sold out by the bond closing, the underwriting
period continues until the underwriters no longer retain an
unsold balance; provided that, in the case of an issue underwritten
by a sole underwriter, if the bond closing has occurred and
the underwriter retains an unsold balance 21 calendar days after
the first submission of an order, the underwriting period nonetheless
ends after such 21[st] day.[5]
delivery
obligationS to customers
A dealer selling
new issue municipal securities to a customer is required to
deliver (not merely send) certain information to such customer
prior to settlement of the transaction. The Board has previously
noted that the required information will be presumed to have
been delivered to the customer if it was sent at least three
business days prior to settlement.[6]
Official Statements.
With only two exceptions, a dealer violates section (a) of rule
G-32 if it sells, either as principal or agent, a new issue
municipal security to a customer but fails to deliver an official
statement in final form[7]
to such customer by no later than settlement of that transaction.
Dealers should note that this obligation differs from the obligation
imposed by SEC Rule 15c2-12(b)(4) in that rule G-32 mandates
that any dealer selling new issue municipal securities (not
just participating underwriters of the offering) must deliver
(not just send) the official statement to the customer by settlement,
regardless of whether the customer has requested a copy of the
official statement.[8]
The first exception
under rule G-32 arises where the issuer is not preparing an
official statement in final form. In that case, the dealer must
deliver to the customer by no later than settlement a written
notice that an official statement in final form is not being
prepared, together with a copy of a preliminary official statement,
if one has been prepared.[9] This exception is not
available in cases where the official statement in final form
is in the process of being prepared but is not yet available
at the time that a dealer wishes to settle a transaction with
a customer. Thus, in such a case, a dealer would violate rule
G-32(a) by settling a customer transaction without delivery
of the official statement in final form, even if a preliminary
official statement is delivered by settlement and the official
statement in final form is delivered to the customer as soon
as it becomes available.
The
exemption set forth for SEC Rule 15c2-12(d)(1)(iii) (“Exempt VRDOs”), in second exception applies solely to municipal securities issued a primary offering that qualifies[10]
but only if an official statement in final form is being prepared.[11]
This exception permits a dealer to deliver a preliminary official
statement to a customer by settlement in substitution for the
official statement in final form so long as (1) the dealer provides
written notice to the customer by settlement that the official
statement in final form will be sent within one business day
following its receipt by the dealer and (2) the dealer sends
the official statement in final form to the customer within
one business day of its receipt.[12] The Board believes,
however, that if the official statement in final form is available
in sufficient time to permit delivery to the customer by settlement,
it would be in the dealer’s best interest to make such delivery
by settlement, as it would be required to do for any other new
issue municipal securities. This would permit the dealer to
satisfy its delivery obligation with a single delivery of the
official statement in final form, rather than two separate deliveries
of the preliminary and final official statements, thereby reducing
the dealer’s compliance burden.[13]
Additional
Disclosures for Negotiated Underwritings. Where the
underwriters have purchased an issue of municipal securities
from the issuer in a negotiated sale, any dealer (not just syndicate
or selling group members) selling such securities to a customer
during the underwriting period is required to deliver to such
customer prior to settlement, in addition to the official statement,
information concerning (A) the underwriting spread;[14]
(B) the amount of any fee received by such dealer as agent for
the issuer in the distribution of the securities, if applicable;[15]
and (C) the initial offering price for each maturity in the
issue, including the initial offering price of maturities that
are not reoffered.[16] The obligation to make these
further disclosures may be satisfied by inclusion by the issuer
of such information in the official statement in final form
and the delivery of such official statement to the customer
by settlement. However, should the issuer elect not to include
any such information in the official statement or if an official
statement that includes this information is not delivered to
the customer by settlement, a dealer selling such securities
during the underwriting period must nevertheless provide such
information in writing to the customer by settlement (for example,
in a confirmation or other writing delivered to the customer
by settlement). For example, if a dealer delivers a preliminary
official statement to a customer at settlement for a new issue
Exempt VRDO and any of the required disclosure information is
left blank or is noted as preliminary and subject to change
(with the expectation of the information being completed or
finalized in the official statement in final form to be delivered
after settlement), then disclosure of such information would
be required in a separate writing delivered at or prior to settlement.
DELIVERY OBLIGATIONS TO PURCHASING
DEALERS
Dealers selling new issue municipal
securities to other dealers, and dealers serving as managing
or sole underwriters for such new issues, are also required
to deliver the official statement and the additional disclosures
for negotiated underwritings, if applicable, to dealers purchasing
such securities during the underwriting period.
Obligations of Selling Dealers.
If a dealer sells a new issue municipal security to another
dealer, the selling dealer is obligated under rule G-32(a)[†]
to send to the purchasing dealer, upon request, (i) the official
statement in final form (or if no official statement in final
form is being prepared, a written notice to that effect, together
with a copy of a preliminary official statement, if one has
been prepared) and (ii) if the underwriters originally purchased
the securities from the issuer in a negotiated sale, the additional
disclosures described above required in connection with a negotiated
underwriting. The official statement and the additional disclosures
related to negotiated underwritings, if applicable, must be
sent by the selling dealer to the purchasing dealer within one
business day of the purchasing dealer’s request, provided that,
if the official statement in final form is being prepared but
has not yet been received from the issuer or its agent, then
the official statement in final form and the additional disclosures
must be sent no later than the business day following such receipt.[17]
These items must be sent by first class mail or other equally
prompt means, unless the purchasing dealer arranges some other
method of delivery and pays or agrees to pay for such alternate
delivery method. This obligation applies with respect to all
requests to a selling dealer made by a dealer purchasing new
issue municipal securities from such selling dealer during the
underwriting period, even where the selling dealer did not participate
as a syndicate or selling group member for the underwriting
of the new issue municipal securities.
Obligations of Managing and
Sole Underwriters. If an official statement in final
form is prepared in connection with an issue of municipal securities,
the dealer serving as managing underwriter or sole underwriter
for such issue is obligated under rule G-32(b)(i)[‡]
to send to any dealer purchasing such securities during the
underwriting period, upon request, (i) one copy of the official
statement in final form plus one additional copy per $100,000
par value purchased by such purchasing dealer for resale to
customers and (ii) if the underwriters originally purchased
the securities from the issuer in a negotiated sale, the required
additional disclosures. Managing and sole underwriters also
are required to provide purchasing dealers, upon request, with
instructions on how to order copies of the official statement
in final form from the printer. The official statement and the
additional disclosures related to negotiated underwritings,
if applicable, must be sent by the managing or sole underwriter
to the purchasing dealer within one business day of the purchasing
dealer’s request, provided that, if the official statement in
final form is being prepared but has not yet been received from
the issuer or its agent,[18] then the official statement
in final form and the additional disclosures must be sent no
later than the business day following such receipt. These items
must be sent by first class mail or other equally prompt means,
unless the purchasing dealer arranges some other method of delivery
and pays or agrees to pay for such alternate delivery method.
This obligation applies with respect to all requests to the
managing or sole underwriter made by purchasing dealers during
the underwriting period, even where the managing or sole underwriter
did not sell the new issue municipal securities to the purchasing
dealer.
Obligations
of Dealers Acting as Financial Advisors. Rule G-32(b)(ii)[#]
provides that, if a dealer that acts as financial advisor to
an issuer prepares an official statement in final form on behalf
of such issuer, such dealer must make that official statement
available to the managing or sole underwriter promptly after
the issuer approves distribution of the official statement in
final form. This provision is designed to ensure that, once
the official statement is completed and approved by the issuer
for distribution, dealers acting as financial advisors will
be obligated to commence the dissemination process promptly.[19]
Implications for Inter-Dealer
Dissemination. The provisions of rule G-32 relating
to dissemination among dealers of official statements and the
additional disclosures related to negotiated underwritings is
designed to ensure that a dealer selling a new issue municipal
security to a customer has a reliable and timely source for
obtaining such items for delivery to the customer by settlement.
In the case of a syndicate member that purchases a new issue
municipal security in an underwriting, the rule, in conjunction
with The Bond Market Association’s Standard Agreement Among
Underwriters, will effectively obligate the managing underwriter
to send the official statement in final form (in the required
quantity) and the additional disclosures to the syndicate member
within one business day of its receipt from the issuer.[20]
If for any reason such syndicate member needs to obtain a copy
of the official statement more rapidly than by means of first
class mail, it may arrange with the managing underwriter for
delivery of the official statement by an alternate means so
long as the requesting syndicate member covers the cost of such
delivery.
For a non-syndicate member that purchases
a new issue municipal security from the syndicate or from any
other dealer, both the dealer that sold the security to the
non-syndicate member and the managing or sole underwriter is
obligated, if requested by such non-syndicate member, to send
the official statement in final form and the additional disclosures
within one business day of such request. If for any reason such
non-syndicate member needs to obtain a copy of the official
statement more rapidly than by means of first class mail, it
may arrange with the dealer that is fulfilling the request for
delivery of the official statement by an alternate means so
long as the requesting non-syndicate member covers the cost
of such delivery. Dealers purchasing new issue municipal securities
from another dealer are advised that the obligation of the selling
dealer or of the managing or sole underwriter to send an official
statement to such purchasing dealer only takes effect upon the
request of the purchasing dealer. Therefore, unless the purchasing
dealer already has a copy of the official statement or has an
alternate source for receiving it and the additional disclosures,
such dealer will need to take the affirmative step of requesting
such items from the selling dealer or the managing or sole underwriter.
A dealer that sells a new issue municipal
security to a customer is not relieved of its obligation to
deliver by settlement the official statement in final form and
the additional disclosures related to negotiated underwriters
because either the dealer from which it acquired the security
or the managing or sole underwriter for the issue fails to fulfill
its obligation to send these items to such dealer upon request.
Such dealer may need to obtain the official statement in final
form from other available sources. Such other sources of official
statements include, but are not limited to, the nationally recognized
municipal securities information repositories, other information
vendors, or the Board’s Municipal Securities Information Library[®]
(MSIL[®]) system.[21] Similarly, a managing
or sole underwriter or a dealer selling a new issue municipal
security cannot fulfill its obligation to send the official
statement in final form and the additional disclosures to a
purchasing dealer upon request by referring such dealer to such
other sources of official statements.
RECORDKEEPING
Rule G-8(a)(xiii) requires that each
dealer make and keep a record of all deliveries of official
statements and of the additional disclosures related to negotiated
underwritings made to purchasers of new issue municipal securities.[22]
Although the rule does not obligate a dealer to maintain such
records in any given manner, such records must provide an adequate
basis for the audit of such information. To this end, NASD Regulation,
Inc. has noted:
Some
firms establish a file containing a copy of the customer’s new
issue municipal purchase confirmation and/or a mailing label
to demonstrate compliance with Rule G-8. However, NASD Regulation
does not view this approach as adequately demonstrating compliance
with MSRB Rule G-8. Instead, an adequate record of the delivery
of new issue municipal securities disclosure information should,
at a minimum, contain the following:
-
customer name;
-
security description;
-
settlement date(s);
-
type of disclosure sent (preliminary or final Official Statement);
-
date the required disclosure was sent;
-
and
name of person(s) sending the disclosures.
At
times, a firm assigns the new issue municipal securities disclosure
function to a third party vendor. As a result, the member [dealer]
does not maintain “a record of delivery” of the new issue disclosure.
Nevertheless, from a regulatory perspective, the firm remains
fully responsible for disclosure. When firms have assigned the
new issue disclosure function to a third party, NASD Regulation
expects that the compliance review process will include, at
a minimum, periodic test to assure that the new issue disclosures
are being made at or before settlement.[23]
Dealers should consult with the applicable enforcement agency
regarding the adequacy of their recordkeeping under rule G-8(a)(xiii).
ENDNOTES
1 See MSRB Reports, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Aug. 1998)
at 15-17.
See MSRB Reports, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Aug. 1998) at
19-21.
See MSRB Reports, Vol. 17, No. 2 (June 1997) at
23-24; see also NASD Regulation, Inc., “Municipal Securities
Update – Disclosure to Purchasers of New Issue Securities,”
Regulatory & Compliance Alert, Vol. 12, No. 3 (Sept.
1998) at 19-20.
The exception for commercial paper applies solely to true commercial
paper issues (i.e., not to variable rate demand obligations
with a nominal long maturity and having a so-called “commercial
paper” mode).
SEC Rule 15c2-12(b)(4) provides that an underwriter participating
in an offering subject to the Rule must send a copy of the final
official statement to a potential customer within one business
day of a request until the earlier of (i) 90 days from the end
of the underwriting period or (ii) the time when the official
statement is available from a nationally recognized municipal
securities information repository, but in no case less than
25 days following the end of the underwriting period.
Since SEC Rule 15c2-12(3) provides that an underwriter participating
in an offering subject to the Rule must contract with the issuer
to receive final official statements, the Board expects that
a final official statement will be prepared for all such offerings
and therefore delivery of preliminary official statements for
such issues would never satisfy the delivery obligation under
rule G-32(a).
A primary offering qualifies for this exemption if the municipal
securities are in authorized denominations of $100,000 or more
and, at the option of the holder thereof, may be tendered to
the issuer or its designated agent for redemption or purchase
at par value or more at least as frequently as every nine months
until maturity, earlier redemption or purchase by the issuer
or its designated agent.
See MSRB Reports, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Aug. 1998) at
15-17. If no preliminary official statement is prepared for
such issue, then the dealer must still provide written notice
by settlement that an official statement in final form will
be sent within one business day of receipt.
In addition, ensuring that the official statement in final form,
rather than merely the preliminary official statement, is in
the possession of the customer by settlement may help to avoid
potential liabilities that could result if there are any material
differences between the preliminary official statement and the
official statement in final form. The fact that rule G-32 permits
a dealer to deliver the preliminary official statement, rather
than the official statement in final form, to a customer by
settlement in this specific situation does not in any way limit
or reduce the dealer’s disclosure obligations under the federal
securities laws, including in particular the dealer’s obligation
under rule G-17 to disclose, at or before execution of a transaction,
all material facts concerning the transaction which could affect
the customer’s investment decision and not omit any material
facts which would render other statements misleading.
This provision obligates a dealer to disclose the gross spread
(i.e., the difference between the initial offering price
and the amount paid to the issuer), expressed either in dollars
or points per bond. The underwriting spread may be shown either
as a total amount or as a listing of the components of the gross
spread. If components of the gross spread are listed, that portion
of the proceeds which represents compensation to the underwriters
must be clearly identified as such. For example, the Board believes
that use of the terms “underwriters’ discount” or “net to underwriters”
would be acceptable but that the term “bond discount” is confusing
and, therefore, inappropriate. See MSRB Reports, Vol.
7, No. 2 (March 1987) at 13.
If no fee is received by the dealer for acting as an agent for
the issuer in the distribution of the securities, the dealer
need not affirmatively state that no such fee was received but
may instead omit any statement regarding such fee.
The initial offering price may be expressed either in terms
of dollar price or yield.
Thus, if a purchasing dealer requests a copy of the official
statement in final form from a selling dealer before the issuer
has delivered the official statement to the underwriters, then
the obligation of the selling dealer to send the official statement
is deferred until the business day after the underwriters receive
the official statement from the issuer.
The Board is of the view that an underwriter that prepares an
official statement on behalf of an issuer would be deemed to
have received the official statement from the issuer immediately
upon such issuer approving the distribution of the completed
official statement in final form (i.e., when the issuer
releases the completed official statement for distribution).
The Board urges issuers that utilize the services of non-dealer
financial advisors to hold such financial advisors to the same
standards for prompt delivery of official statements to the
underwriters.
The Bond Market Association’s Standard Agreement Among Underwriters
provides that syndicate members must place orders for the official
statement by the business day following the date of execution
of the purchase contract and states that any syndicate member
that fails to place such an order will be assumed to have requested
the quantity required under rule G-32(b)(i) [currently codified
at rule G-32(c)(i)]. See The Bond Market Association,
Agreement Among Underwriters – Instructions, Terms and Acceptance
(Oct. 1, 1997) at ¶ 3. Thus, except in the rare instances where
an official statement in final form is completed and available
for distribution on the date of sale, syndicate members will
have made or have been deemed to have made their requests for
official statements by the time the managing underwriter receives
the official statement from the issuer, thereby obligating the
managing underwriter to send the official statement to syndicate
members within one business day of receipt.
Municipal Securities Information Library and MSIL are registered
trademarks of the Board.
Rule G-9(b)(x) provides that these records must be preserved
for a period of not less than 3 years.
NASD Regulation, Inc., “Municipal Securities Update –
Disclosure to Purchasers of New Issue Securities,” Regulatory
& Compliance Alert, Vol. 12, No. 3 (Sept. 1998) at 19-20.
The views of the bank regulatory agencies regarding adequacy
of any particular recordkeeping practice for the purpose of
demonstrating compliance with rule G-8 may differ.
*
[Currently codified at rule G-32(d)(i).]
†
[Currently codified at rule G-32(b).]
‡
[Currently codified at rule G-32(c)(i).]
#
[Currently codified at rule G-32(c)(ii).]
Notice
Regarding Electronic Delivery and Receipt of Information by
Brokers, Dealers and Municipal Securities Dealers
November 20, 1998
On May 9, 1996,
the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) issued an
interpretative release expressing its views on the use of electronic
media for delivery of information by, among others, brokers
and dealers.[1] The SEC stated that brokers, dealers
and others may satisfy their delivery obligations under federal
securities laws by using electronic media as an alternative
to paper-based media within the framework established in the
SEC’s October 1995 interpretive release on the use of electronic
media for delivery purposes.[2] The SEC also indicated
that an electronic communication from a customer to a broker
or dealer generally would satisfy the requirements for written
consent or acknowledgment under the federal securities laws.
The Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board (the “Board”) is publishing this notice to
address the use by brokers, dealers and municipal securities
dealers (“dealers”) of electronic media to deliver and receive
information under Board rules.[3] The Board will permit
dealers to transmit documents electronically that they are required
or permitted to furnish to customers under Board rules provided
that they adhere to the standards set forth in the SEC Releases
and summarized below.[4] Dealers also may receive consents
and acknowledgments from customers electronically in satisfaction
of required written consents and acknowledgments. Furthermore,
the Board believes that the standards applied by the SEC to
communications with customers should also apply to communications
among dealers and between dealers and issuers. However, although
it is the Board’s goal ultimately to permit dealers to make
required submissions of materials to the Board electronically
if possible, this notice does not affect existing requirements
for the submission of materials to the Board, its designees
and certain other entities to which information is required
to be delivered under Board rules.[5]
Dealers are urged
to review the SEC Releases in their entirety to ensure that
they comply with all aspects of the SEC’s electronic delivery
requirements. Although the examples provided in the SEC Releases
are based on SEC rules, the examples nonetheless provide important
guidance as to the intended application of the standards set
out by the SEC with respect to electronic communications.
Electronic Communications from Dealers to Customers
General.
According to the standards established by the SEC, dealers may
use electronic media to satisfy their delivery obligations to
customers under Board rules, provided that the electronic communication
satisfies the following principles:[6]
1. Notice
– The electronic communication should provide timely and adequate
notice to customers that the information is available electronically.[7]
Since certain forms of electronic delivery may not always provide
a likelihood of notice that recipients have received information
that they may wish to review, dealers should consider supplementing
such forms of electronic communication with a separate communication,
providing notice similar to that provided by delivery in paper
through the postal mail, that information has been sent electronically
that the recipients may wish to review.[8]
2. Access
– Customers who are provided information through electronic
delivery should have access to that information comparable to
the access that would be provided if the information were delivered
in paper form.[9] The use of a particular electronic
medium should not be so burdensome that intended recipients
cannot effectively access the information provided.[10]
A recipient should have the opportunity to retain the information
through the selected medium (e.g., by downloading or
printing the information) or have ongoing access equivalent
to personal retention.[11] Also, as a matter of policy,
the SEC believes that a person who has a right to receive a
document under the federal securities laws and chooses to receive
it electronically should be provided with a paper version of
the document upon specific request or if consent to receive
documents electronically is revoked.[12]
3. Evidence
to Show Delivery – Dealers must have reason to believe
that electronically delivered information will result in the
satisfaction of the delivery requirements under the federal
securities laws. Dealers should consider the need to establish
procedures to ensure that applicable delivery obligations are
met, including recordkeeping procedures to evidence such satisfaction.[13]
Such procedures should also be designed to ensure the integrity
and security of information being delivered so as to ensure
that it is the information that was intended to be delivered.[14]
Dealers may be able to evidence satisfaction of delivery obligations,
for example, by:
(1) obtaining the
intended recipient’s informed consent [15] to delivery
through a specified electronic medium and ensuring that the
recipient has appropriate notice and access;
(2) obtaining evidence
that the intended recipient actually received the information,
such as by an electronic mail return-receipt [16] or
by confirmation that the information was accessed, downloaded,
or printed; or
(3) disseminating
information through certain facsimile methods (e.g.,
faxing information to a customer who has requested the information
and has provided the telephone number for the fax machine).
Personal Financial Information. The SEC has noted, and the Board agrees, that special precautions
are appropriate when dealers are delivering information to customers
that is specific to that particular customer’s personal financial
information, including but not limited to information contained
on confirmations and account statements.[17] In transmitting
such personal financial information, dealers should consider
the following factors:
1. Confidentiality
and Security – Dealers sending personal financial information
through electronic means or in paper form should take reasonable
precautions to ensure the integrity, confidentiality, and security
of that information. Dealers transmitting personal financial
information electronically must tailor those precautions to
the medium used in order to ensure that the information is reasonably
secure from tampering or alteration.
2. Consent
– Unless a dealer is responding to a request for information
that is made through electronic media or the person making the
request specifies delivery through a particular electronic medium,
the dealer should obtain the intended recipient’s informed consent
prior to delivering personal financial information electronically.
The customer’s consent may be made either by a manual signature
or by electronic means.
Electronic Communications from Customers to Dealers
Consistent with the position taken
by the SEC, dealers may rely on consents and acknowledgments
received from customers by electronic means for purposes of
Board rules. In relying on such communications from customers,
dealers must be cognizant of their responsibilities to prevent,
and the potential liability associated with, unauthorized transactions.
In this regard, the SEC states, and the Board agrees, that dealers
should have reasonable assurance that the communication from
a customer is authentic.
Electronic
Transmission of Non-Required Communications
The 1996 SEC Release states that the
above standards are intended to permit dealers to comply with
their delivery obligations under federal securities laws when
using electronic media. While compliance with the guidelines
is not mandatory for the electronic delivery of non-required
information that, in some cases, is being provided voluntarily
to customers, the Board believes adherence to the guidelines
should be considered, especially with respect to delivery of
personal financial information.
Electronic
Communications Among Dealers and Between Dealers and Issuers
The Board believes that the standards
applied by the SEC to communications with customers should also
apply to mandated communications among dealers and between dealers
and issuers. Thus, a dealer that undertakes communications required
under Board rules with other dealers and with issuers in a manner
that conforms with the principles stated above relating to customer
communications will have met its obligations with respect to
such communications. In addition, a dealer may rely on consents
and acknowledgments received from other dealers or issuers by
electronic means for purposes of Board rules, provided that
the dealer should have reasonable assurance that the communication
from such other party is authentic. However, any Board rule
that explicitly requires that a dealer enter into a written
agreement with another party will continue to require that such
agreement be in written form.[18] Financial information,
as well as other privileged or confidential information, relating
to another dealer or an issuer (or relating to another person
or entity contained in a transmission between a dealer and another
dealer or an issuer) should be transmitted using precautions
similar to those used by a dealer in transmitting personal financial
information to a customer.
Rules to
Which this Notice Applies
Set forth below is a list of current
Board rules to which dealers may apply the guidance provided
in this notice. The Board believes that the list sets forth
all of the rules that require or permit communications among
dealers and between dealers and customers and issuers.[19]
The summaries provided of the delivery obligations under the
listed rules is intended for ease of reference only and are
not intended to be complete statements of all the requirements
under such rules.
-
Rule G-8, on books and records to be made by dealers, prohibits
dealers from obtaining or submitting for payment a check, draft
or other form of negotiable paper drawn on a customer’s checking,
savings, share or similar account without the customer’s express
written authorization.
-
Rule G-10, on delivery of investor brochure, requires dealers
to deliver a copy of the investor brochure to a customer upon
receipt of a complaint by the customer.
-
Rule G-11, on sales of new issue municipal securities during
the underwriting period, requires certain communications between
senior syndicate managers and other members of the syndicate.[20]
-
Rule G-12, on uniform practice, provides for confirmation of
inter-dealer transactions and certain other inter-dealer communications.[21]
-
Rule G-15, on confirmation, clearance and settlement of transactions
with customers, provides for confirmation of transactions with
customers and the provision of additional information to customers
upon request.[22]
-
Rule G-19, on suitability of recommendations and transactions
and discretionary accounts, requires that dealers obtain certain
information from their customers in connection with transactions
and recommendations and also receive customer authorizations
with respect to discretionary account transactions.
-
Rule G-22, on control relationships, requires certain disclosures
from a dealer effecting a transaction for a customer in municipal
securities with respect to which such dealer has a control relationship
and customer authorization of such transaction with respect
to discretionary accounts.
-
Rule G-23, on activities of financial advisors, requires that,
under certain circumstances, dealers acting as financial advisors
to issuers provide various disclosures to issuers and customers
and receive certain consents and acknowledgments from issuers.[23]
-
Rule G-24, on use of ownership information obtained in fiduciary
or agency capacity, requires a dealer seeking to use for its
own purposes information obtained while acting in a fiduciary
or agency capacity for an issuer or other dealer to receive
consents to the use of such information.
-
Rule G-25, on improper use of assets, provides that put options
and repurchase agreements will not be deemed to be guaranties
against loss if their terms are provided in writing to customers
with or on the transaction confirmation.
-
Rule G-26, on customer account transfers, provides for written
notice from customers requesting account transfers between dealers
and the use of Form G-26 to effect such transfer.[24]
-
Rule G-28, on transactions with employees and partners of other
municipal securities professionals, requires that a dealer opening
an account for a customer who is an employee or partner of another
dealer must provide notice and copies of confirmations to such
other dealer and permits such other dealers to provide instructions
for handling of transactions with such customer.
-
Rule G-29, on availability of Board rules, provides that dealers
must make available to customers for examination promptly upon
request a copy of the Board’s rules required to be kept in their
offices.[25]
-
Rule G-32, on disclosures in connection with new issues, requires
dealers selling new issue municipal securities to customers
to deliver official statements[26] and certain other
information by settlement and requires selling dealers, managing
underwriters and certain dealers acting as financial advisors
to deliver such materials to dealers purchasing new issue municipal
securities, upon request.[27]
-
Rule G-34, on CUSIP numbers and new issue requirements, requires
underwriters to communicate information regarding CUSIP numbers
and initial trade date to syndicate and selling group members.[28]
-
Rule G-38, on consultants, requires dealers to provide certain
information to issuers regarding consulting arrangements.[29]
-
Rule G-39, on telemarketing, prohibits certain telemarketing
calls without the prior consent of the person being called.[30]
ENDNOTES
1 See Securities Act Release No. 7288, Exchange Act Release
No. 37182 (May 9, 1996), 61 FR 24644 (May 15, 1996) (the “1996
SEC Release”).
See Securities Act Release No. 7233, Exchange Act
Release No. 36345 (October 6, 1995), 60 FR 53458 (October 13,
1995) (the “1995 SEC Release” and, together with the 1996 SEC
Release, the “SEC Releases”).
This notice has been filed with the SEC as File No. SR-MSRB-98-12.
The Board also reminds dealers that the SEC indicated
in the 1996 SEC Release that dealers may fulfill their obligation
to deliver to customers, upon request, preliminary official
statements and final official statements in connection with
primary offerings of municipal securities subject to SEC Rule
15c2-12 by electronic means, subject to the guidelines set forth
in the 1996 SEC Release. See 1996 SEC Release at note
47.
For example, this notice does not apply to any requirements
that dealers supply the Board with written information pursuant
to Board rules A-12, A-14, A-15, G-36, G-37 and G-38. The Board
has begun the planning process for electronic submission of
information required under rule A-15 and of Form G-37/G-38 under
rules G-37 and G-38. At such time as electronic submission becomes
available, the Board will publish notice thereof and of the
procedures to be used for such submission. Although submission
of Forms G-36(OS) and G-36(ARD) under rule G-36 could also be
made electronically by means similar to those which the Board
may develop for Form G-37/G-38, such electronic submission is
complicated by the requirement that Forms G-36(OS) and G-36(ARD)
be accompanied by an official statement or advance refunding
document, as appropriate. Given the current debate and lack
of consensus among the various sectors of the municipal securities
industry regarding electronic formatting of disclosure materials,
and since the Board does not have the authority to dictate the
format of issuer documents, the Board believes that any further
action regarding electronic submissions under rule G-36 should
await resolution of these issues. Finally, the Board does not
at this time anticipate permitting electronic submission of
information required under rules A-12 and A-14 since such information
must be accompanied by payment of certain required fees.
Electronic submission of information under rule G-14 will continue
to be governed by rule G-14 and associated Transaction Reporting
Procedures. In addition, this notice does not alter the current
submission standards applicable to the Board’s Continuing Disclosure
Information (CDI) System of the Municipal Securities Information
Library[®] (MSIL[®]) system. The Municipal
Securities Information Library and MSIL are registered trademarks
of the Board.
Furthermore, submission of
information to the Board’s designees or certain other designated
entities under Board rules must continue to be done in accordance
with the procedures established by such designees or other entities.
Board rules in which such requirements currently appear include
rules G-7 (with respect to information required to be filed
with the appropriate enforcement agencies), G-12 and G-15 (with
respect to information to be submitted to registered clearing
agencies and registered securities depositories),G-26 (with
respect to customer account transfer instructions (other than
Form G-26) required by registered clearing agencies), G-34 (with
respect to information to be submitted to the Board’s designee
for assignment of CUSIP numbers and to registered securities
depositories) and G-37 (with respect to application to the appropriate
enforcement agencies for exemptions from the ban on municipal
securities business).
Dealers that structure their deliveries
in accordance with the principles set forth in this notice can
be assured, except where otherwise noted, that they have satisfied
their delivery obligations under Board rules. However, as the
SEC stated in the 1995 SEC Release, the three enumerated principles
are not the only factors relevant to determining whether the
legal requirements pertaining to delivery of documents have
been satisfied. Consistent with the SEC’s view, the Board believes
that, if a dealer develops a method of electronic delivery that
differs from the principles discussed herein, but provides assurance
comparable to paper delivery that the required information will
be delivered, that method may satisfy delivery obligations.
See 1995 SEC Release, text following note 22. For example,
a dealer can satisfy its obligation to send a confirmation to
a customer under rule G-15 by electronic means in a manner that
meets the principles set forth in this notice. In addition,
dealers may continue to deliver confirmations electronically
through the OASYS Global system established by Thomson Financial
Services, Inc. on the conditions described in the Board’s Notice
Concerning Use of the OASYS Global Trade Confirmation System
to Satisfy Rule G-15(a), dated June 6, 1994, without specifically
complying with the principles described in this notice. See
MSRB Reports, Vol. 14, No. 3 (June 1994) at 37. See
also 1996 SEC Release, note 38, and 1995 SEC Release, note
12. Also, rule G-29 provides that dealers must make available
to customers for examination promptly upon request a copy of
the Board’s rules required to be kept in their offices. Dealers
may continue to comply with such requirement by giving customers
access to the rules either in printed form or by viewing the
rules on screen from the Board’s Internet web site (www.msrb.org)
or from software products produced by other companies. See
Interpretive Notice on Availability of Board Rules, dated
May 20, 1998, in MSRB Reports, Vol. 18, No. 2 (August
1998) at 37.
See 1996 SEC Release, text at note 20.
See
1996 SEC Release, text at note 21, and 1995 SEC Release, text
at note 23. The SEC notes, for example, that if information
is provided by physically delivering material (such as a diskette
or CD-ROM) or by electronic mail, such communication itself
generally should be sufficient notice. However, if information
is made available electronically through a passive delivery
system, such as an Internet web site, separate notice would
be necessary to satisfy the delivery requirements unless the
dealer can otherwise evidence that delivery to the customer
has been satisfied. 1996 SEC Release, note 21.
The SEC states that, regardless of whether information
is delivered in paper form or by electronic means, it should
convey all material and required information. For example, if
a paper document is required to present information in a certain
order, then the information delivered electronically should
be in substantially the same order. 1996 SEC Release, text at
note 14.
The SEC notes, for example, that if a customer must proceed
through a confusing series of ever-changing menus to access
a required document so that it is not reasonable to expect that
access would generally occur, this procedure would likely be
viewed as unduly burdensome. In that case, the SEC would deem
delivery not to have occurred unless delivery otherwise could
be shown. 1995 SEC Release, note 24.
See 1996 SEC Release, note 22 and accompanying
text, and 1995 SEC Release, notes 25-26 and accompanying text.
See 1996 SEC Release, note 17 and accompanying
text, and 1995 SEC Release, note 27 and accompanying text.
See 1996 SEC Release, text following note 22, and
1995 SEC Release, note 22 and text at note 28. The Board is
of the view that dealers that choose to deliver information
to customers electronically should consider establishing systems
and procedures for providing paper copies or using alternate
electronic means in a timely manner should the primary electronic
media fail for any reason.
See 1996 SEC Release, text at note 25, and 1995
SEC Release, note 22. Dealers also should consider the need
for systems and procedures to deter or detect misconduct by
firm personnel in connection with the delivery of information,
whether by electronic or paper means. 1996 SEC Release, text
at note 16.
In order for a consent to be an informed consent, the
SEC has stated that the consent should specify the electronic
medium or source through which the information will be delivered
and the period during which the consent will be effective, describe
the information that will be delivered using such means, and
disclose the potential for the customer to incur costs in accessing
the information. See 1996 SEC Release, note 23, and 1995
SEC Release, note 29.
16
To the extent that material is distributed as an attachment
to an electronic mail transmission, dealers must have a reasonable
basis for believing that the attachment will in fact be transmitted
along with the electronic mail transmission and that the attachment
will be received by the recipient in an accessible format.
In addition, the Board believes that other information
that is privileged or confidential, regardless of whether such
information is financial in nature, should be accorded the same
precautions as is personal financial information.
18
For example, the written agreements required under rules G-20(c),
G-23(c) and G-38(b) must continue to be entered into in paper
form.
Unless otherwise provided in connection with the adoption by
the Board of any new rules or amendments to existing rules that
require or permit communications among dealers and between dealers
and customers, issuers and others, the guidance provided in
this notice would also apply to any such communications.
Rule G-11 also requires that syndicate members furnish certain
information to others, upon request. The Board believes that,
solely for purposes of this requirement under rule G-11, such
information may be provided to others by electronic means so
long as the standards established in this notice with respect
to electronic deliveries to customers are met.
See, however, note 5 above with respect to information
to be submitted to registered clearing agencies and registered
securities depositories.
See, however, note 5 above with respect to information
to be submitted to registered clearing agencies and registered
securities depositories. See also note 6 above regarding
alternate electronic means previously reviewed by the Board.
See, however, note 18 above and accompanying text regarding
the written agreement to be entered into between a dealer acting
as financial advisor and the issuer.
See, however, note 5 above with respect to use of customer
account transfer instructions (other than Form G-26).
See note 6 above regarding alternate electronic means
previously reviewed by the Board.
The Board believes that dealers must be particularly cautious
in delivering official statements by electronic means since
they may present special challenges in ensuring that they are
received by customers and other dealers without material omissions
or distortions in formatting (for example, tables in which data
is more than negligibly misaligned) that may cause such materials
not to meet the standard for electronically transmitted information
comparable to information delivered in paper form. See
note 9 above and accompanying text.
The Board believes that, to the extent that rule G-32(b)(i)
[currently codified at rule G-32(c)(i)] obligates a managing
or sole underwriter to provide, upon request, multiple copies
of the official statement to a dealer with respect to new issue
municipal securities sold by such dealer to customers, such
obligation must continue to be met with paper copies of the
official statement unless the purchasing dealer has consented
to electronic delivery of the official statement in lieu of
delivery of multiple paper copies. Compare 1995 SEC Release,
example 11.
See, however, note 5 above with respect to information
to be submitted to the Board’s designee with respect to CUSIP
number assignment and to registered securities depositories.
See, however, note 18 above and accompanying text regarding
the written agreement to be entered into between a dealer and
its consultant and note 5 above with respect to submission of
Form G-37/G-38 to the Board.
Although the person receiving such telemarketing call may in
many cases not be a customer, the Board believes that, solely
for purposes of this provision of rule G-39, such consent may
be accepted by the dealer by electronic means so long as the
standards established in this notice with respect to electronic
communications from customers to dealers are met.