Select regulatory documents by category:
Dealers, General Public, Investors, Issuers, Municipal Advisors
All Comments to Notice 2024-15
- ABLE Savings Plan Network: Letter from Bette Ann Mobley, Chair, dated April 10, 2025
- AKF Consulting Group: Letter from Andrea Feirstein, Managing Director, and Mark Chapleau, Senior Consultant, dated April 11, 2025
- Arizona State Treasurer’s Office: Letter from Kimberly Yee, Treasurer, dated April 10, 2025
- Ascensus: Letter from Christal Fenton, Associate General Counsel, dated April 10, 2025
- Bank of North Dakota: Email from James Barnhardt dated April 3, 2025
- College Savings Foundation: Letter from Chris McGee, Chair, dated April 9, 2025
- College Savings Plans Network: Letter from Mary G. Morris, Chair, dated April 2, 2025
- Commonwealth Savers Plan: Letter from Mary G. Morris, Chief Executive Officer, dated April 11, 2025
- First Public, LLC: Email from Bill Mastrodicasa dated April 11, 2025
- Government Finance Officers Association: Letter from Emily Brock, Director of Federal Liaison Center, dated June 3, 2025
- 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
- Investment Company Institute: Letter from Tara Buckley, Deputy General Counsel, Financial Regulation, and Shannon Salinas, Associate General Counsel, Retirement Policy, dated April 11, 2025
- Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority: Letter from Thomas M. Graf, Executive Director, dated April 9, 2025
- my529: Letter from Richard K. Ellis, Executive Director, dated March 31, 2025
- Nebraska State Treasurer’s Office: Letter from Rachel Biar, Deputy State Treasurer for Savings Programs, dated April 2, 2025
- Pennsylvania Treasury Department: Letter from Stacy Garrity, Treasurer, dated April 2, 2025
- 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
- TIAA-CREF Tuition Financing, Inc: Letter from Christopher S. Lynch, President, dated April 10, 2025
- Vestwell: Letter from Aaron Schumm, Chief Executive Officer, dated April 11, 2025
Dealers, General Public, Municipal Advisors
All Comments to Notice 2024-14
- American Securities Association: Letter from Jessica R. Giroux, General Counsel and Head of Fixed Income Policy, dated January 28, 2025
- Bond Dealers of America: Letter from Michael Decker, Senior Vice President, dated January 28, 2025
- ICE Bonds Securities Corporation: Letter from Robert Laorno, General Counsel, dated January 21, 2025
- National Association of Municipal Advisors: Letter from Susan Gaffney, Executive Director, dated January 28, 2025
- Public Resources Advisory Group, Inc.: Letter from Thomas F. Huestis, Senior Managing Director, dated January 27, 2025
- 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
Dealers, General Public, Investors, Issuers, Municipal Advisors
Dealers, General Public, Investors
Dealers, General Public, Investors
All Comments to Notice 2024-09
- Association of Registration Management, Inc.: Letter from Richard Izzo, President, dated August 5, 2024
- Bond Dealers of America: Letter from Michael Decker, Senior Vice President, dated August 5, 2024
- Frost Bank Capital Markets Division: Letter from Jeff Beckel, SEVP and Director of Capital Markets, dated July 30, 2024
- Frost Bank Capital Markets Division: Email from Trevor Cross dated July 30, 2024
- 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
Dealers, General Public, Investors, Issuers
Bank Dealers, Dealers, General Public, Investors
Dealers, General Public, Investors, Issuers
Municipal Advisors
Dealers, Municipal Advisors
Dealers, Municipal Advisors
Syndicate Manager Selling Short for Own Account to Detriment of Syndicate Account
The Board has received an inquiry concerning a situation in which a municipal securities dealer that is acting as a syndicate manager sells bonds "short" for its own account to the detriment of the syndicate account. In particular, the Board has been made aware of allegations that certain syndicate managers, with knowledge that the syndicate account on a particular new issue of securities is not successful, have sold securities of the new issue "short" for their own accounts and then required syndicate members to take their allotments of unsold bonds. The syndicate managers allegedly have subsequently covered their short positions when the syndicate members attempt to sell their allotments at the lower market price.
Rule G-17, the Board’s fair dealing rule, provides:
In the conduct of its municipal securities business, each broker, dealer, and municipal securities dealer shall deal fairly with all persons and shall not engage in any deceptive, dishonest, or unfair practice.
Syndicate managers act in a fiduciary capacity in relation to syndicate accounts. Therefore they may not use proprietary information about the account obtained solely as a result of acting as manager to their personal advantage over the syndicate’s best interests. The Board is of the view that a syndicate manager that uses information on the status of the syndicate account which is not available to syndicate members to its own benefit and to the detriment of the syndicate account (e.g., by effecting "short sale" transactions for its own account against the interests of other syndicate members) appears to be acting in violation of the fair dealing provisions of rule G-17.
Use of Nonqualified Individuals to Solicit New Account Business
The Board has received inquiries whether individuals who solicit new account business on behalf of municipal securities dealers must be qualified under the Board’s rules. In particular, it has come to the Board’s attention that nonqualified individuals are making "cold calls" to individuals and, by reading from prepared scripts, introduce the services offered by a municipal securities dealer, prequalify potential customers, or suggest the purchase of specific securities currently being offered by a municipal securities dealer.
Board rule G-3(a) defines municipal securities representative activities to include any activity which involves communication with public investors regarding the sale of municipal securities but exempts activities that are solely clerical or ministerial. In the past, the Board has permitted nonqualified individuals, under the clerical or ministerial exemption, to contact existing customers in very limited circumstances. In an interpretive notice on rule G-3, the Board permitted certain ministerial and clerical functions to be performed by nonqualified individuals when municipal securities representatives and principals who normally handle the customers' accounts are unavailable, subject to strict supervisory requirements. These functions are: the recording and transmission in customary channels of orders, the reading of approved quotations, and the giving of reports of transactions. In this notice, the Board added that solicitation of orders by clerical personnel is not permitted. The Board is of the view that individuals who solicit new account business are not engaging in clerical or ministerial activities but rather are communicating with public investors regarding the sale of municipal securities and thus are engaging in municipal securities representative activities which require such individuals to be qualified as representatives under the Board’s rules.
Finally, under rule G-3(i)[*], a person serving an apprenticeship period prior to qualification as a municipal securities representative may not communicate with public investors regarding the sale of municipal securities. The Board sees no reason to allow nonqualified individuals to contact public investors, except for the limited functions noted above, when persons training to become qualified municipal securities representatives may not do so.
[*] [Currently codified at rule G-3(a)(iii)]
Agency Transactions: Yield Disclosures
Agency transactions: yield disclosures. I am writing in connection with your previous conversations with Christopher Taylor of the Board's staff concerning the application of the yield disclosure requirements of Board rule G-15 to certain types of transactions in municipal securities. In your conversations you noted that dealers occasionally effect transactions in municipal securities on an "agency" basis. In these transactions the customer's confirmation would typically show as the dollar price of the transaction the price paid by the dealer to the person from whom it acquired the securities; the dealer's remuneration, received in the form of a commission paid by the customer, is typically shown separately, as a charge included in the summing of the total dollar amount due from (or to) the customer in connection with the transaction. You inquired whether, in such a transaction, the yield to the customer disclosed on the confirmation should be derived from the price shown as the dollar price of the transaction or from the total dollar amount of the transaction (i.e., whether the yield should show the effect of the commission charged).
This will confirm Mr. Taylor's advice to you that the yield shown on the confirmation of such a transaction should be derived from the total dollar amount of the transaction, and therefore should show the effect of the commission charged to the customer on the transaction. As the Board has previously stated, the yield disclosure on customer confirmations is intended to provide customers with a means of assessing the merits of alternative investment strategies and the merits of the transaction being confirmed. The disclosure of the yield after giving effect to the commission charged the customer best serves these purposes. MSRB interpretation of July 13, 1984.
Recently Effective Changes in Calculations Rule
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board has recently received a number of inquiries from members of the municipal securities industry and others concerning certain of the provisions of rule G-33 on calculations. In particular, such persons have inquired concerning the acceptability under the rule of the practice of interpolation as a method of determining dollar price from yield. Such persons have also asked whether the rule permits a dealer effecting a transaction at a yield price equal to the interest rate on the securities to presume that the dollar price on the transaction is "100."
The Board wishes to remind members of the industry that both of these practices are no longer permissible. Board rule G-33 generally requires that yields and dollar prices on transactions effected by municipal securities brokers and dealers be computed in accordance with the formulas prescribed in the rule directly to the settlement date of the transaction. Subparagraph (b)(i)(C) of the rule permitted, until January 1, 1984, the use of the dollar price "100" as the presumed result on transactions in securities with a redemption value of par effected at a yield price equal to the interest rate on the securities. Subparagraph (b)(i)(D) of the rule permitted, until January 1, 1984, the use of interpolation as a method of deriving a dollar price. Since the effectiveness of both of these provisions lapsed as of January 1, 1984, therefore, these practices are no longer in compliance with the requirements of the rule; dollar prices on all transactions effected on a yield basis (including transactions effected on a yield basis equal to the interest rate) should therefore be computed directly to the settlement date of the transaction.
The Board notes that the rule continues to permit a municipal securities broker or dealer to effect a transaction in dollar price terms. Therefore, a dealer wishing to offer or sell a security at par may continue to effect the transaction on a direct dollar price basis at a price of "100."