The Municipal Securities Rulemaking
Board (the “MSRB” or “Board”) Real-Time Transaction Reporting System (“RTRS”)
serves the dual role of providing real-time transaction price transparency to
the marketplace, as well as supporting market surveillance by the enforcement
agencies. To assist that effort, the MSRB is seeking comment on whether a
broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer’s (“dealer”) proprietary desk
transactions should be reported to RTRS as customer transactions under MSRB
Rule G-14.[1] Comments should be submitted no later than May 30, 2008 and may be directed
to Catherine A. Courtney, Assistant General Counsel.
REPORTING OF PROPRIETARY DESK TRANSACTIONS UNDER MSRB
RULE G-14
Under Rule G-14, each dealer is
required to report information about each purchase and sale transaction
effected in municipal securities to RTRS.[2] Currently, internal movements of securities within a dealer organization are
not considered to be reportable under Rule G-14. This is because the dealer is
not effecting a purchase or sale transaction with or for any external entity
and there is no transfer of ownership. Therefore, a transaction between a
dealer’s proprietary desk and another desk within the same firm (e.g.,
between the proprietary desk and the syndicate desk) is an internal movement of
securities within the firm and is not a reportable transaction under Rule G-14.[3] In certain dealer firms, a proprietary desk may look and function like any other institutional customer from the viewpoint of the syndicate or trading
desk. However, because it operates from within a dealer organization, it is
currently considered to be part of that dealer for trade reporting purposes.
When a proprietary desk transacts directly with another dealer, such a
transaction with an external entity is currently required to be reported to the
MSRB as an inter-dealer transaction.[4]
REQUEST FOR COMMENT
The MSRB is
soliciting comments on whether Rule G-14 should be amended to require all
transactions with proprietary desks, both internal and external, to be reported
pursuant to Rule G-14 as customer transactions.[5] Commentators are asked to discuss the following:
- Do dealer proprietary desks generally function separately
from underwriting/trading desks? Are transactions between the trading and
proprietary desks generally subject to informational or other barriers? Are
there ever situations in which the two desks do (or could) act in a
concerted manner (either explicitly or implicitly)? For example, is it
possible that a trading or syndicate desk could, in effect, use the firm’s
proprietary desk for an inventory function?
- Are there reasons to believe that trades between proprietary
desks and trading desks ever represent something other than an arms-length
negotiated price? Are there ever situations in which the sale price (or
purchase price) in an “internal” transaction differs from the price that
might have been received from an external customer? How should an
“internal” customer be defined?
- Does the description of a proprietary desk transaction as
a “customer trade” reflect the actual character of the trade from the
viewpoint of a syndicate or trading desk that services a related proprietary
desk account?
- Are proprietary desk transactions categorized separately
from other municipal securities transactions in a dealer’s books and
records?
- MSRB guidance under Rule G-17, on fair dealing, specifies
that customer orders must have priority over similar dealer orders or
certain dealer-related account orders to the extent that it is feasible
and consistent with the orderly distribution of new issue securities. Are
proprietary desk transactions treated as related portfolio trades? If proprietary
desk transactions are treated as customer trades, how should they be
separately identifiable from “external” customer trades in order not to
run afoul of the G-17 interpretation giving such customers priority
allocations?
- Are there any potential operational difficulties created
by the reporting of proprietary desk transactions as customer trades?
April 11, 2008