On April 30, 2002, the Securities and Exchange Commission approved
an interpretive notice concerning the application of MSRB rules
to transactions with sophisticated municipal market professionals
(Rel. 34-45849). The text of the interpretive notice is provided
below.
* * * *
*
Introduction
Industry participants have suggested that the MSRB’s fair practice
rules should allow dealers[1] to recognize
the different capabilities of certain institutional customers
as well as the varied types of dealer-customer relationships.
Prior MSRB interpretations reflect that the nature of the dealer’s
counter-party should be considered when determining the specific
actions a dealer must undertake to meet its duty to deal fairly.
The MSRB believes that dealers may consider the nature of the
institutional customer in determining what specific actions
are necessary to meet the fair practice standards for a particular
transaction. This interpretive notice concerns only the manner
in which a dealer determines that it has met certain of its
fair practice obligations to certain institutional customers;
it does not alter the basic duty to deal fairly, which applies
to all transactions and all customers. For purposes of this
interpretive notice, an institutional customer shall be an entity,
other than a natural person (corporation, partnership, trust,
or otherwise), with total assets of at least $100 million invested
in municipal securities in the aggregate in its portfolio and/or
under management.
Sophisticated Municipal Market Professionals
Not all institutional customers are sophisticated regarding
investments in municipal securities. There are three important
considerations with respect to the nature of an institutional
customer in determining the scope of a dealer’s fair practice
obligations. They are:
· Whether
the institutional customer has timely access to all publicly
available material facts concerning a municipal securities transaction;
· Whether
the institutional customer is capable of independently evaluating
the investment risk and market value of the municipal securities
at issue; and
· Whether
the institutional customer is making independent investment
decisions about its investments in municipal securities.
When a dealer has reasonable grounds for concluding that an
institutional customer (i) has timely access to the publicly
available material facts concerning a municipal securities transaction;
(ii) is capable of independently evaluating the investment risk
and market value of the municipal securities at issue; and (iii)
is making independent decisions about its investments in municipal
securities, and other known facts do not contradict such a conclusion,
the institutional customer can be considered a sophisticated
municipal market professional (“SMMP”). While it is difficult
to define in advance the scope of a dealer’s fair practice obligations
with respect to a particular transaction, as will be discussed
later, by making a reasonable determination that an institutional
customer is an SMMP, then certain of the dealer’s fair practice
obligations remain applicable but are deemed fulfilled. In addition,
as discussed below, the fact that a quotation is made by an
SMMP would have an impact on how such quotation is treated under
rule G-13.
Considerations Regarding The Identification Of Sophisticated
Municipal Market Professionals
The MSRB has identified certain factors for evaluating an institutional
investor’s sophistication concerning a municipal securities
transaction and these factors are discussed in detail below.
Moreover, dealers are advised that they have the option of having
investors attest to SMMP status as a means of streamlining the
dealers’ process for determining that the customer is an SMMP.
However, a dealer would not be able to rely upon a customer’s
SMMP attestation if the dealer knows or has reason to know that
an investor lacks sophistication concerning a municipal securities
transaction, as discussed in detail below.
Access to Material Facts
A determination that an institutional customer has timely access
to the publicly available material facts concerning the municipal
securities transaction will depend on the customer’s resources
and the customer’s ready access to established industry sources
(as defined below) for disseminating material information concerning
the transaction. Although the following list is not exhaustive,
the MSRB notes that relevant considerations in determining that
an institutional customer has timely access to publicly available
information could include:
· the resources
available to the institutional customer to investigate the transaction
(e.g., research analysts);
· the institutional
customer’s independent access to the NRMSIR system, [2] and information generated by the MSRB’s
Municipal Securities Information Library ® (MSIL ®)
system [3] and Transaction Reporting
System (“TRS”), [4] either directly
or through services that subscribe to such systems; and
· the institutional
customer’s access to other sources of information concerning
material financial developments affecting an issuer’s securities
(e.g., rating agency data and indicative data sources).
Independent Evaluation of Investment Risks and Market Value
Second, a determination that an institutional customer is capable
of independently evaluating the investment risk and market value
of the municipal securities that are the subject of the transaction
will depend on an examination of the institutional customer's
ability to make its own investment decisions, including the
municipal securities resources available to the institutional
customer to make informed decisions. In some cases, the dealer
may conclude that the institutional customer is not capable
of independently making the requisite risk and valuation assessments
with respect to municipal securities in general. In other cases,
the institutional customer may have general capability, but
may not be able to independently exercise these functions with
respect to a municipal market sector or type of municipal security.
This is more likely to arise with relatively new types of municipal
securities and those with significantly different risk or volatility
characteristics than other municipal securities investments
generally made by the institution. If an institution is either
generally not capable of evaluating investment risk or lacks
sufficient capability to evaluate the particular municipal security,
the scope of a dealer’s fair practice obligations would not
be diminished by the fact that the dealer was dealing with an
institutional customer. On the other hand, the fact that a
customer initially needed help understanding a potential investment
need not necessarily imply that the customer did not ultimately
develop an understanding and make an independent investment
decision.
While the following list is not exhaustive, the MSRB notes
that relevant considerations in determining that an institutional
customer is capable of independently evaluating investment risk
and market value considerations could include:
· the use
of one or more consultants, investment advisers, research analysts
or bank trust departments;
· the general
level of experience of the institutional customer in municipal
securities markets and specific experience with the type of
municipal securities under consideration;
· the institutional
customer’s ability to understand the economic features of the
municipal security;
· the institutional
customer's ability to independently evaluate how market developments
would affect the municipal security that is under consideration;
and
· the complexity
of the municipal security or securities involved.
Independent Investment Decisions
Finally, a determination that an institutional customer is
making independent investment decisions will depend on whether
the institutional customer is making a decision based on its
own thorough independent assessment of the opportunities and
risks presented by the potential investment, market forces and
other investment considerations. This determination will depend
on the nature of the relationship that exists between the dealer
and the institutional customer. While the following list is
not exhaustive, the MSRB notes that relevant considerations
in determining that an institutional customer is making independent
investment decisions could include:
· any written
or oral understanding that exists between the dealer and the
institutional customer regarding the nature of the relationship
between the dealer and the institutional customer and the services
to be rendered by the dealer;
· the presence
or absence of a pattern of acceptance of the dealer’s recommendations;
· the use
by the institutional customer of ideas, suggestions, market
views and information relating to municipal securities obtained
from sources other than the dealer; and
· the extent
to which the dealer has received from the institutional customer
current comprehensive portfolio information in connection
with discussing potential municipal securities transactions
or has not been provided important information regarding the
institutional customer’s portfolio or investment objectives.
Dealers are reminded that these factors are merely guidelines
which will be utilized to determine whether a dealer has fulfilled
its fair practice obligations with respect to a specific institutional
customer transaction and that the inclusion or absence of any
of these factors is not dispositive of the determination. Such
a determination can only be made on a case-by-case basis taking
into consideration all the facts and circumstances of a particular
dealer/customer relationship, assessed in the context of a particular
transaction. As a means of ensuring that customers continue
to meet the defined SMMP criteria, dealers are required to put
into place a process for periodic review of a customer’s SMMP
status.
Application of SMMP Concept to Rule G-17’s Affirmative
Disclosure Obligations
The SMMP concept as it applies to rule G-17 recognizes that
the actions of a dealer in complying with its affirmative disclosure
obligations under rule G-17 when effecting non-recommended secondary
market transactions may depend on the nature of the customer.
While it is difficult to define in advance the scope of a dealer’s
affirmative disclosure obligations to a particular institutional
customer, the MSRB has identified the factors that define an
SMMP as factors that may be relevant when considering compliance
with the affirmative disclosure aspects of rule G-17.
When the dealer has reasonable grounds for concluding that
the institutional customer is an SMMP, the institutional customer,
by definition, is already aware, or capable of making itself
aware of, material facts and is able to independently understand
the significance of the material facts available from established
industry sources.[5]
When the dealer has reasonable grounds for concluding that the
customer is an SMMP then the dealer’s obligation when effecting
non-recommended secondary market transactions to ensure disclosure
of material information available from established industry
sources is fulfilled. There may be times when an SMMP is not
satisfied that the information available from established industry
sources is sufficient to allow it to make an informed investment
decision. In those circumstances, the MSRB believes that an
SMMP can recognize that risk and take appropriate action, be
it declining to transact, undertaking additional investigation
or asking the dealer to undertake additional investigation.
This interpretation does nothing to alter a dealer’s duty not
to engage in deceptive, dishonest, or unfair practices under
rule G-17 or under the federal securities laws. In essence,
a dealer’s disclosure obligations to SMMPs when effecting non-recommended
secondary market transactions would be on par with inter-dealer
disclosure obligations. This interpretation will be particularly
relevant to dealers operating electronic trading platforms,
although it will also apply to dealers who act as order takers
over the phone or in-person.[6] This interpretation recognizes
that there is no need for a dealer in a non-recommended secondary
market transaction to disclose material facts available from
established industry sources to an SMMP customer that already
has access to the established industry sources.[7]
As in the case of an inter-dealer transaction, in a transaction
with an SMMP, a dealer’s intentional withholding of a material
fact about a security, where the information is not accessible
through established industry sources, may constitute an unfair
practice violative of rule G-17. In addition, a dealer may
not knowingly misdescribe securities to the customer. A dealer’s
duty not to mislead its customers is absolute and is not dependent
upon the nature of the customer.
Application of SMMP Concept to Rule G-18 Interpretation—Duty
to Ensure That Agency Transactions Are Effected at Fair and
Reasonable Prices
Rule G-18 requires that each dealer, when executing a transaction
in municipal securities for or on behalf of a customer as agent,
make a reasonable effort to obtain a price for the customer
that is fair and reasonable in relation to prevailing market
conditions.[8] The actions that
must be taken by a dealer to make reasonable efforts to ensure
that its non-recommended secondary market agency transactions
with customers are effected at fair and reasonable prices may
be influenced by the nature of the customer as well as by the
services explicitly offered by the dealer.
If a dealer effects non-recommended secondary market agency
transactions for SMMPs and its services have been explicitly
limited to providing anonymity, communication, order matching
and/or clearance functions and the dealer does not exercise
discretion as to how or when a transaction is executed, then
the MSRB believes the dealer is not required to take further
actions on individual transactions to ensure that its agency
transactions are effected at fair and reasonable prices.[9]
By making the determination that the customer is an SMMP, the
dealer necessarily concludes that the customer has met the requisite
high thresholds regarding timely access to information, capability
of evaluating risks and market values, and undertaking of independent
investment decisions that would help ensure the institutional
customer’s ability to evaluate whether a transaction’s price
is fair and reasonable.
This interpretation will be particularly relevant to dealers
operating alternative trading systems in which participation
is limited to dealers and SMMPs. It clarifies that in such
systems rule G-18 does not impose an obligation upon the dealer
operating such a system to investigate each individual transaction
price to determine its relationship to the market. The MSRB
recognizes that dealers operating such systems may be merely
aggregating the buy and sell interest of other dealers or SMMPs.
This function may provide efficiencies to the market. Requiring
the system operator to evaluate each transaction effected on
its system may reduce or eliminate the desired efficiencies.
Even though this interpretation eliminates a duty to evaluate
each transaction, a dealer operating such system, under the
general duty set forth in rule G-18, must act to investigate
any alleged pricing irregularities on its system brought to
its attention. Accordingly, a dealer may be subject to rule
G-18 violations if it fails to take actions to address system
or participant pricing abuses.
If a dealer effects agency transactions for customers who are
not SMMPs, or has held itself out to do more than provide anonymity,
communication, matching and/or clearance services, or performs
such services with discretion as to how and when the transaction
is executed, it will be required to establish that it exercised
reasonable efforts to ensure that its agency transactions with
customers are effected at fair and reasonable prices.
Application of SMMP Concept to Rule G-19 Interpretation--Suitability
of Recommendations and Transactions
The MSRB’s suitability rule is fundamental to fair dealing
and is intended to promote ethical sales practices and high
standards of professional conduct. Dealers’ responsibilities
include having a reasonable basis for recommending a particular
security or strategy, as well as having reasonable grounds for
believing the recommendation is suitable for the customer to
whom it is made. Dealers are expected to meet the same high
standards of competence, professionalism, and good faith regardless
of the financial circumstances of the customer. Rule G-19,
on suitability of recommendations and transactions, requires
that, in recommending to a customer any municipal security transaction,
a dealer shall have reasonable grounds for believing that the
recommendation is suitable for the customer based upon information
available from the issuer of the security or otherwise and based
upon the facts disclosed by the customer or otherwise known
about the customer.
This guidance concerns only the manner in which a dealer determines
that a recommendation is suitable for a particular institutional
customer. The manner in which a dealer fulfills this suitability
obligation will vary depending on the nature of the customer
and the specific transaction. Accordingly, this interpretation
deals only with guidance regarding how a dealer will fulfill
such “customer-specific suitability obligations” under rule
G-19. This interpretation does not address the obligation related
to suitability that requires that a dealer have a “reasonable
basis” to believe that the recommendation could be suitable
for at least some customers. In the case of a recommended transaction,
a dealer may, depending upon the facts and circumstances, be
obligated to undertake a more comprehensive review or investigation
in order to meet its obligation under rule G-19 to have a “reasonable
basis” to believe that the recommendation could be suitable
for at least some customers.[10]
The manner in which a dealer fulfills its “customer-specific
suitability obligations” will vary depending on the nature of
the customer and the specific transaction. While it is difficult
to define in advance the scope of a dealer’s suitability obligation
with respect to a specific institutional customer transaction
recommended by a dealer, the MSRB has identified the factors
that define an SMMP as factors that may be relevant when considering
compliance with rule G-19. Where the dealer has reasonable
grounds for concluding that an institutional customer is an
SMMP, then a dealer’s obligation to determine that a recommendation
is suitable for that particular customer is fulfilled.
This interpretation does not address the facts and circumstances
that go into determining whether an electronic communication
does or does not constitute a “recommendation.”
Application of SMMP Concept to Rule G-13, on Quotations
New electronic trading systems provide a variety of avenues
for disseminating quotations among both dealers and customers.
In general, except as described below, any quotation disseminated
by a dealer is presumed to be a quotation made by such dealer.
In addition, any “quotation” of a non-dealer (e.g., an
investor) relating to municipal securities that is disseminated
by a dealer is presumed, except as described below, to be a
quotation made by such dealer.[11] The dealer is affirmatively
responsible in either case for ensuring compliance with the
bona fide and fair market value requirements with respect to
such quotation.
However, if a dealer disseminates a quotation that is actually
made by another dealer and the quotation is labeled as such,
then the quotation is presumed to be a quotation made by such
other dealer and not by the disseminating dealer. Furthermore,
if an SMMP makes a “quotation” and it is labeled as such, then
it is presumed not to be a quotation made by the disseminating
dealer; rather, the dealer is held to the same standard as if
it were disseminating a quotation made by another dealer.[12]
In either case, the disseminating dealer’s responsibility with
respect to such quotation is reduced. Under these circumstances,
the disseminating dealer must have no reason to believe that
either: (i) the quotation does not represent a bona fide bid
for, or offer of, municipal securities by the maker of the quotation
or (ii) the price stated in the quotation is not based on the
best judgment of the maker of the quotation of the fair market
value of the securities.
While rule G-13 does not impose an affirmative duty on the
dealer disseminating quotations made by other dealers or SMMPs
to investigate or determine the market value or bona fide nature
of each such quotation, it does require that the disseminating
dealer take into account any information it receives regarding
the nature of the quotations it disseminates. Based on this
information, such a dealer must have no reason to believe that
these quotations fail to meet either the bona fide or the fair
market value requirement and it must take action to address
such problems brought to its attention. Reasons for believing
there are problems could include, among other things, (i) complaints
received from dealers and investors seeking to execute against
such quotations, (ii) a pattern of a dealer or SMMP failing
to update, confirm or withdraw its outstanding quotations so
as to raise an inference that such quotations may be stale or
invalid, or (iii) a pattern of a dealer or SMMP effecting transactions
at prices that depart materially from the price listed in the
quotations in a manner that consistently is favorable to the
party making the quotation.[13]
In a prior MSRB interpretation stating that stale or invalid
quotations published in a daily or other listing must be withdrawn
or updated in the next publication, the MSRB did not consider
the situation where quotations are disseminated electronically
on a continuous basis.[14]
In such case, the MSRB believes that the bona fide requirement
obligates a dealer to withdraw or update a stale or invalid
quotation promptly enough to prevent a quotation from becoming
misleading as to the dealer’s willingness to buy or sell at
the stated price. In addition, although not required under
the rule, the MSRB believes that posting the time and date of
the most recent update of a quotation can be a positive factor
in determining whether the dealer has taken steps to ensure
that a quotation it disseminates is not stale or misleading.
April 30, 2002
[1]
The term “dealer” is used in this notice as shorthand for
“broker,” “dealer” or “municipal securities dealer,” as those
terms are defined in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
The use of the term in this notice does not imply that the
entity is necessarily taking a principal position in a municipal
security.
[2]
For purposes of this notice, the “NRMSIR system” refers to
the disclosure dissemination system adopted by the SEC in
Rule 15c2-12. Under Rule 15c2-12, as adopted in 1989, participating
underwriters provide a copy of the final official statement
to a Nationally Recognized Municipal Securities Information
Repository (“NRMSIR”) to reduce their obligation to provide
a final official statement to potential customers upon request.
In the 1994 amendments to Rule 15c2-12 the Commission determined
to require that annual financial information and audited financial
statements submitted in accordance with issuer undertakings
must be delivered to each NRMSIR and to the State Information
Depository (“SID”) in the issuer’s state, if such depository
has been established. The requirement to have annual financial
information and audited financial statements delivered to
all NRMSIRs and the appropriate SID was included in Rule 15c2-12
to ensure that all NRMSIRs receive disclosure information
directly. Under the 1994 amendments, notices of material
events, as well as notices of a failure by an issuer or other
obligated person to provide annual financial information,
must be delivered to each NRMSIR or the MSRB, and the appropriate
SID.
[3]
The MSIL® system collects and makes available to
the marketplace official statements and advance refunding
documents submitted under MSRB rule G-36, as well as certain
secondary market material event disclosures provided by issuers
under SEC Rule 15c2-12. Municipal Securities Information
Library® and MSIL® are registered trademarks
of the MSRB.
[4]
The MSRB’s TRS collects and makes available to the marketplace
information regarding inter-dealer and dealer-customer transactions
in municipal securities.
[5]
The MSRB has filed a related notice regarding the disclosure
of material facts under rule G-17 concurrently with this filing.
See SEC File No. SR-MSRB-2002-01. The MSRB’s rule
G-17 notice provides that a dealer would be responsible for
disclosing to a customer any material fact concerning a municipal
security transaction (regardless of whether such transaction
had been recommended by the dealer) made publicly available
through sources such as the NRMSIR system, the MSIL®
system, TRS, rating agency reports and other sources of information
relating to the municipal securities transaction generally
used by dealers that effect transactions in municipal securities
(collectively, “established industry sources”).
[6]
For example, if an SMMP reviewed an offering of municipal
securities on an electronic platform that limited transaction
capabilities to broker-dealers and then called up a dealer
and asked the dealer to place a bid on such offering at a
particular price, the interpretation would apply because the
dealer would be acting merely as an order taker effecting
a non-recommended secondary market transaction for the SMMP.
[7]
In order to meet the definition of an SMMP an institutional
customer must, at least, have access to established industry
sources.
[8]
This guidance only applies to the actions necessary for a
dealer to ensure that its agency transactions are effected
at fair and reasonable prices. If a dealer engages in principal
transactions with an SMMP, rule G-30(a) applies and the dealer
is responsible for a transaction-by-transaction review to
ensure that it is charging a fair and reasonable price. In
addition, rule G-30(b) applies to the commission or service
charges that a dealer operating an electronic trading system
may charge to effect the agency transactions that take place
on its system.
[9]
Similarly, the MSRB believes the same limited agency functions
can be undertaken by a broker’s broker toward other dealers.
For example, if a broker’s broker effects agency transactions
for other dealers and its services have been explicitly limited
to providing anonymity, communication, order matching and/or
clearance functions and the dealer does not exercise discretion
as to how or when a transaction is executed, then the MSRB
believes the broker’s broker is not required to take further
actions on individual transactions to ensure that its agency
transactions with other dealers are effected at fair and reasonable
prices.
[10]
See e.g., Rule G-19 Interpretation—Notice Concerning
the Application of Suitability Requirements to Investment
Seminars and Customer Inquiries Made in Response to a Dealer’s
Advertisement, May 7, 1985, MSRB Rule Book (July1,
2001) at 135; In re F.J. Kaufman and Company of Virginia,
50 S.E.C. 164, 168, 1989 SEC LEXIS 2376, *10 (1989).
The SEC, in its discussion of municipal underwriters’ responsibilities
in a 1988 Release, noted that “a broker-dealer recommending
securities to investors implies by its recommendation that
it has an adequate basis for the recommendation.” Municipal
Securities Disclosure, Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 26100 (September 22, 1988) (the “1988 SEC Release”) at
text accompanying note 72.
[11] A customer’s bid for,
offer of, or request for bid or offer is included within the
meaning of a “quotation” if it is disseminated by a dealer.
[12]
The disseminating dealer need not identify by name the maker
of the quotation, but only that such quotation was made by
another dealer or an SMMP, as appropriate.
[13]
The MSRB believes that, consistent with its view previously
expressed with respect to “bait-and-switch” advertisements,
a dealer that includes a price in its quotation that is designed
as a mechanism to attract potential customers interested in
the quoted security for the primary purpose of drawing such
potential customers into a negotiation on that or another
security, where the quoting dealer has no intention at the
time it makes the quotation of executing a transaction in
such security at that price, could be a violation of rule
G-17. See Rule G-21 Interpretive Letter – Disclosure
obligations, MSRB interpretation of May 21, 1998, MSRB
Rule Book (July 1, 2001) at p. 139.
[14]
See Rule G-13 Interpretation, Notice of Interpretation
of Rule G-13 on Published Quotations, April 21, 1988, MSRB
Rule Book (July 1, 2001) at 91.
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