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Notice 2024-15 - Request for Comment
Publication date: | Comment due:
Information for:

Dealers, General Public, Investors, Issuers, Municipal Advisors

All Comments to Notice 2024-15

  1. ABLE Savings Plan Network: Letter from Bette Ann Mobley, Chair, dated April 10, 2025
  2. AKF Consulting Group: Letter from Andrea Feirstein, Managing Director, and Mark Chapleau, Senior Consultant, dated April 11, 2025
  3. Arizona State Treasurer’s Office: Letter from Kimberly Yee, Treasurer, dated April 10, 2025
  4. Ascensus: Letter from Christal Fenton, Associate General Counsel, dated April 10, 2025
  5. Bank of North Dakota: Email from James Barnhardt dated April 3, 2025
  6. College Savings Foundation: Letter from Chris McGee, Chair, dated April 9, 2025
  7. College Savings Plans Network: Letter from Mary G. Morris, Chair, dated April 2, 2025
  8. Commonwealth Savers Plan: Letter from Mary G. Morris, Chief Executive Officer, dated April 11, 2025
  9. First Public, LLC: Email from Bill Mastrodicasa dated April 11, 2025
  10. Government Finance Officers Association: Letter from Emily Brock, Director of Federal Liaison Center, dated June 3, 2025
  11. Illinois State Treasurer’s Office: Letter from Michael W. Frerichs, Treasurer, dated April 10, 2025; and Letter from Michael Frerichs, Treasurer, dated April 10, 2025
  12. Investment Company Institute:  Letter from Tara Buckley, Deputy General Counsel, Financial Regulation, and Shannon Salinas, Associate General Counsel, Retirement Policy, dated April 11, 2025
  13. Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority: Letter from Thomas M. Graf, Executive Director, dated April 9, 2025
  14. my529: Letter from Richard K. Ellis, Executive Director, dated March 31, 2025
  15. Nebraska State Treasurer’s Office: Letter from Rachel Biar, Deputy State Treasurer for Savings Programs, dated April 2, 2025
  16. Pennsylvania Treasury Department: Letter from Stacy Garrity, Treasurer, dated April 2, 2025
  17. Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association: Letter from Leslie M. Norwood, Managing Director and Associate General Counsel, and Gerald O’Hara, Vice President and Assistant General Counsel, dated April 11, 2025
  18. TIAA-CREF Tuition Financing, Inc: Letter from Christopher S. Lynch, President, dated April 10, 2025
  19. Vestwell: Letter from Aaron Schumm, Chief Executive Officer, dated April 11, 2025
Notice 2024-14 - Request for Comment
Publication date: | Comment due:
Information for:

Dealers, General Public, Municipal Advisors

All Comments to Notice 2024-14

  1. American Securities Association: Letter from Jessica R. Giroux, General Counsel and Head of Fixed Income Policy, dated January 28, 2025
  2. Bond Dealers of America: Letter from Michael Decker, Senior Vice President, dated January 28, 2025
  3. ICE Bonds Securities Corporation: Letter from Robert Laorno, General Counsel, dated January 21, 2025
  4. National Association of Municipal Advisors: Letter from Susan Gaffney, Executive Director, dated January 28, 2025
  5. Public Resources Advisory Group, Inc.: Letter from Thomas F. Huestis, Senior Managing Director, dated January 27, 2025
  6. Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association: Letter from Leslie M. Norwood, Managing Director and Associate General Counsel, and Gerald O’Hara, Vice President and Assistant General Counsel, dated January 28, 2025
Notice 2024-13 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Information for:

Dealers, General Public, Investors, Issuers, Municipal Advisors

Notice 2024-12 - Approval Notice
Publication date:
Notice 2024-09 - Request for Comment
Publication date: | Comment due:
Information for:

Bank Dealers, General Public, Investors

Rule Number:

Rule G-7, Rule A-12

All Comments to Notice 2024-09

  1. Association of Registration Management, Inc.: Letter from Richard Izzo, President, dated August 5, 2024
  2. Bond Dealers of America: Letter from Michael Decker, Senior Vice President, dated August 5, 2024
  3. Frost Bank Capital Markets Division: Letter from Jeff Beckel, SEVP and Director of Capital Markets, dated July 30, 2024
  4. Frost Bank Capital Markets Division: Email from Trevor Cross dated July 30, 2024
  5. Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association: Letter from Leslie M. Norwood, Managing Director and Associate General Counsel, Head of Municipal Securities, dated August 5, 2024
Notice 2024-08 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Notice 2024-07 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Information for:

Bank Dealers, Dealers, General Public, Investors

Rule Number:

Rule G-12, Rule G-15

Notice 2024-06 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Notice 2024-05 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Notice 2024-04 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Notice 2024-02 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Notice 2024-01 - Informational Notice
Publication date:
Interpretive Guidance - Interpretive Letters
Publication date:
Day Counting: Day Counts on Notes
Rule Number:

Rule G-33

Day counting: day counts on notes. As I indicated in my letter of October 4, your September 27 letter regarding the inclusion on a customer confirmation of information with respect to the day count method used on a transaction was referred to the Board for its consideration at the December meeting. In your letter you noted that Board rule G-33 on calculations requires that

[c]omputations under the requirements of [the] rule shall be made on the basis of a thirty-day month and a three-hundred-sixty-day year, or, in the case of computations on securities paying interest solely at redemption, on the day count basis selected by the issuer of the securities.

You indicated that your bank has recently experienced problems with transactions in municipal notes ("securities paying interest solely at redemption") on which the issuer has selected a day count basis other than the traditional "30/360" basis, with the problems resulting from one party to the transaction using an incorrect day count method. You suggested that this type of problem could be partially alleviated by requiring that a municipal securities dealer selling a security on which an unusual day count method is used specify the day count method on the confirmation of the transaction.

The Board shares your concern that a failure to identify the day count method used on a particular security may subsequently cause problems in completing a transaction. Therefore, the Board believes that the parties to a transaction should exchange information at the time of trade concerning any unusual day count method used on the securities involved in the transaction. Since the party selling the securities is more likely to be aware of the unusual day count, it would be desirable that sellers take steps to ensure that they advise the contra-parties on transactions of the method to be used.

The Board does not, however, believe that it would be appropriate to require that this information be stated on the confirmation. The Board reached this determination based on its perception that the space available on the confirmation for the details of the securities description is quite limited and its belief that information regarding the day count method may not be sufficiently material to warrant its inclusion in the securities description. MSRB interpretation of December 9, 1982.

Interpretive Guidance - Interpretive Letters
Publication date:
Securities Description: Securities Backed by Letters of Credit
Rule Number:

Rule G-12, Rule G-15

Securities description: securities backed by letters of credit. I am writing in connection with our previous telephone conversation of last June regarding the confirmation of a transaction in a municipal issue secured by an irrevocable letter of credit issued by a bank. In our conversation you noted that both rules G-12 and G-15 require confirmations to contain a:

description of the securities including at a minimum..., if necessary for a materially complete description of the securities, the name of any company or other person in addition to the issuer obligated, directly or indirectly, with respect to debt service...

You inquired whether the name of the bank issuing a letter of credit securing principal and interest payments on an issue, or securing payments under the exercise of a put option or tender option feature, need be stated on the confirmation.

At that time I indicated to you that the identity of the bank issuing the letter of credit would have to be disclosed on the confirmation if the letter of credit could be drawn upon to cover scheduled interest and principal payments when due, since the bank would be "obligated ... with respect to debt service." I am writing to advise that the committee of the Board which reviewed a memorandum of our conversation has concluded that a bank issuing a letter of credit which secures a put option or tender option feature on an issue is similarly "obligated ... with respect to debt service" on such issue. The identity of the bank issuing the letter of credit securing the put option must therefore also be indicated on the confirmation. MSRB interpretation of December 2, 1982.

Interpretive Guidance - Interpretive Letters
Publication date:
Securities Description: Revenue Securities

Securities description: revenue securities. I am writing in response to your letter of September 30, 1982 regarding the confirmation description of revenue securities. In your letter you note that the designation "revenue" is often not included in the title of the security, and you raise several questions concerning the method of deriving a proper confirmation description of revenue securities.

As you know, rule G-15(a)(v)[*] requires that customer confirmations set forth a description of the securities [involved in the transaction] including at a minimum the name of the issuer, interest rate, maturity date and if the securities are ... revenue bonds, an indication to such effect, including in the case of revenue bonds the type of revenue, if necessary for a materially complete description of the securities...[1] [emphasis added]


The rule requires, therefore, that revenue securities be designated as such, regardless of whether or not such designation appears in the formal title of the security. The dealer preparing the confirmation is responsible for ensuring that the designation is included in the securities description. In circumstances in which standard sources of descriptive information (e.g., official statements, rating agency and service bureau publications, and the like) do not include such a designation in the security title, therefore, the dealer must augment this title to include the requisite information.

In your letter you inquire as to who is responsible for providing this type of descriptive information to the facilities manager of the CUSIP system. Although the Board does not currently have any requirements concerning this matter, proposed rule G-34 will, when approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission, require that the managing underwriter of a new issue of municipal securities apply for the assignment of CUSIP numbers of such new issue if no other person (i.e., the issuer or a person acting on behalf of the issuer) has already applied for number assignment. In connection with such application, if one is necessary, the managing underwriter is required, under the proposed rule, to provide certain information about the new issue, including a designation of the "type of issue (e.g., general obligation, limited tax, or revenue)" and an indication of the "type of revenue, if the issue is a revenue issue."

In your letter you also ask for "the official definition of a 'revenue' issue." There is no "official definition" of what constitutes a revenue issue. Various publications include a definition of the term (e.g., the PSA's Fundamentals of Municipal Bonds, the State of Florida's Glossary of Municipal Securities Terms, etc.) and I would urge you to consult these for further information. MSRB interpretation of December 1, 1982.


[1] Rule G-12(c)(v)(E) sets forth the same requirement with respect to inter-dealer confirmations.

[*] [Currently codified at rules G-15(a)(i)(B) and G-15(a)(i)(C)]

Interpretive Guidance - Interpretive Letters
Publication date:
Confirmation: Mailing of WAII, "All or None" Confirmation
Rule Number:

Rule G-12

Confirmation: Mailing of WAII, "all or none" confirmation. I understand that certain ... firms ... have raised questions concerning the application of a recent Board interpretive letter to certain types of municipal securities underwritings. I am writing to advise that these questions were recently reviewed by the Board which has authorized my sending you the following response.

The letter in question, reprinted in the Commerce Clearing House Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board Manual at ¶ 3556.55 [*], discusses the timing of the mailing of initial "when, as and if issued" confirmations on "pre-sale" orders to which new issue municipal securities have been allocated. Among other matters, the letter states that such confirmations may not be sent out prior to the date of award of the new issue, in the case of an issue purchased at competitive bid, or the date of execution of a bond purchase agreement on the new issue, in the case of a negotiated issue. [Certain] ... firms have questioned whether this interpretation ... is intended to apply to "all or none" underwritings, in which confirmations have been, at times, sent out prior to the execution of a formal purchase agreement.

As the Board understands it, an "all or none" underwriting of a new issue of municipal securities is an underwriting in which the municipal securities dealer agrees to accept liability for the issue at a given price only under a stated contingency, usually that the entire issue is sold within a stated period. The dealer typically "presettles" with the purchasers of the securities, with the customers receiving confirmations and paying for the securities while the underwriting is taking place. Pursuant to SEC rule 15c2-4 all customer funds must be held in a special escrow account for the issue until such time as the contingency is met (e.g., the entire issue is sold) and the funds are released to the issuer; if the contingency is not met, the funds are returned to the purchasers and the securities are not issued. [1]

The Board is of the view that an initial "when, as and if issued" confirmation of a transaction in a security which is the subject of an "all or none" underwriting may be sent out prior to the time a formal bond purchase agreement is executed. This would be permissible, however, only if two conditions are met: (1) that such confirmations clearly indicate the contingent nature of the transaction, through a statement that the securities are the subject of an "all or none" underwriting or otherwise; and (2) that the dealer has established, or has arranged to have established, the escrow account for the issue as required pursuant to rule 15c2-4. MSRB interpretation of October 7, 1982.

 


 

 

[1] I note also that SEC rule 10b-9 sets forth certain conditions which must be met before a dealer is permitted to represent an underwriting as an "all or none" underwriting.

 

[*] [See Rule G-12 Interpretive Letter - Confirmation: mailing of WAII confirmation, MSRB interpretation of April 30, 1982.]

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