On March 18, 2002, the Securities and Exchange
Commission approved rule changes concerning official communications
filed by the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (“MSRB”).
[1]
The rule changes consist of an amendment to
Rule G-15, on confirmation, clearance, settlement and other
uniform practice requirements with respect to transactions with
customers, and an amendment to Rule G-8, on books and records
to be made by brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers.
The rule changes became effective upon approval by the
SEC.
The Rule G-15 amendment
requires brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers (collectively
“dealers”) who serve as safekeeping agents to undertake “reasonable
efforts” to retransmit “official communications” to their safekeeping
clients when requested to do so.
This amendment allows dealers in certain circumstances
to send to the party requesting an official communication retransmittal
a list of beneficial owners who do not object to the disclosure
of their name, contact information and security positions (“non-objecting
beneficial owners”) in lieu of retransmitting documents. The amendment to Rule G-8 requires dealers
to retain as an official record a customer’s written authorization,
if any, as to the customer’s status as a non-objecting beneficial
owner.
The MSRB realizes that some dealers today
retransmit documents to their customers voluntarily, or under
specific terms of their safekeeping agreements, and in many
cases do so without compensation from the party requesting retransmission. It is not the intent of the rule change
to discourage retransmissions of official communications in
these cases. Rather, the purpose of the rule change
is to help ensure that parties needing to transmit official
communications to beneficial owners would be able to depend
on dealers undertaking reasonable efforts, under the explicit
terms of the Rule G-15 amendment, to retransmit such official
communications to the parties for whom those dealers safekeep
municipal securities.
Official Communications
The rule change
defines an “official communication” as a document or collection
of documents addressed to beneficial owners that was prepared
or authorized by an issuer of municipal securities, a trustee
for an issue of municipal securities, a state or federal tax
authority or a custody agent for a stripped coupon municipal
securities program in its capacity as custody agent.
These official communications may include notices of
technical default or default as to payment of interest or principal,
requests for votes by bondholders, update memoranda from the
trustee of a defaulted issue, as well as other official communications
to owners of municipal securities that are not in default.
[2]
Reasonable
Efforts
The Rule G-15 amendment
addresses six topics to help clarify what would constitute “reasonable
efforts” to be made by a dealer in retransmitting an official
communication in specific situations.
These provisions are discussed below.
Compensation. The Rule G-15 amendment requires dealers
to retransmit official communications only if compensation is
offered. This is the same principle used in the
regulations governing retransmittal of notices of proxy and
other material in NASD Conduct Rule 2260 on Forwarding of Proxy
and Other Materials.
[3]
Since the types of communications a dealer may
receive and the amount of work a dealer may have to perform
to retransmit notices probably will vary greatly from case to
case, there is no attempt in the Rule G-15 amendment to specify
exactly what adequate compensation would be in each possible
case. However,
to give some guidance on this issue, the Rule G-15 amendment
references the rates of compensation for transmittal of documents
detailed in NASD interpretation IM-2260, on Suggested Rates
of Reimbursement, relating to forwarding of proxy and other
materials. Dealers
may reference this interpretation in determining reasonable
clerical expenses and other expenses incurred in retransmitting
an official communication.
[4]
The Rule G-15 amendment also includes a “compensation
threshold.” It
states that, for retransmittals where the total compensation
sought will be less than $500, the dealer should begin retransmitting
immediately and ask for the calculated compensation concurrently. For retransmittals where compensation
sought will be greater than $500, the dealer either follows
the general rule, or may instead promptly contact the party
offering compensation, inform it of the amount of compensation
required, obtain specific agreement on the amount of compensation
and wait for receipt of such compensation prior to proceeding
with the retransmission.
CUSIP numbers. An official communication may relate to
many different issues of municipal securities and it may be
unclear from the document exactly which issues are involved. If CUSIP numbers are included with the
official communication, the dealer can use these issue identifiers
to determine which of its safekeeping clients should receive
the document. However, official communications may in
some cases be disseminated without CUSIP numbers and, in these
cases, it may be difficult to determine exactly which CUSIP
numbers are involved. The Rule G-15 amendment states that, if
CUSIP numbers are not included with the document, the dealer
must use reasonable efforts to determine the CUSIP numbers so
that the appropriate safekeeping clients can be identified.
However, if these efforts do not result in a correct
identification of CUSIP numbers, the failure to retransmit to
those safekeeping clients who were not identified would not
be considered a violation of the rule.
Sufficient copies of official communications.
The Rule G-15 amendment does not require dealers to provide
duplication services for official communications.
If a dealer does not receive enough copies of official
communications for the investors for whom it safekeeps securities,
the dealer may elect to provide duplication services or else
must request the sufficient number of copies from the party
requesting the official communications retransmittal.
Non-objecting beneficial owners.
A non-objecting beneficial owner is a beneficial owner
of municipal securities that does not object to the disclosure
of its name, contact information and security positions and
that has provided this notice to the dealer in writing. For safekeeping clients who are non-objecting
beneficial owners, dealers have the option of sending to the
party requesting an official communication retransmittal a list
of non-objecting beneficial owners along with these owners’
contact information in lieu of retransmitting documents.
The Rule G-15 amendment requires that dealers obtain
an investor’s non-objecting status in writing.
The Rule G-8 amendment requires that dealers maintain
such record as customer account information, which must be retained
for a period of at least six years following the closing of
an account pursuant to Rule G-9.
Beneficial owners residing outside of the
United States. The
Rule G-15 amendment does not require dealers to retransmit official
communications to investors residing outside of the United States.
Investment advisors.
Some investors designate investment advisors to act on
their behalf in submission of orders and other investment-related
decisions. In these cases, it would be important
for the investment advisor to receive the official communication. Consequently, the Rule G-15 amendment
states that dealers shall send official communications to the
investment advisor for a beneficial owner, rather than to the
beneficial owner, when the dealer has on file a written authorization
for such documents to be sent to the investment advisor in lieu
of the beneficial owner.
March 25, 2002
*
*
*
TEXT OF AMENDMENTS
[5]
Rule G-15. Confirmation, Clearance, and
Settlement of and Other Uniform Practice Requirements
With Respect to Transactions with Customers
(a)
through (e) No change.
(f) *Reserved for
future use*
(g) Forwarding
Official Communications
(i)
If a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer receives
an official communication to beneficial owners applicable to
an issue of municipal securities that the broker, dealer or
municipal securities dealer has in safekeeping along with a
request to forward such official communication to the applicable
beneficial owners, the broker, dealer or municipal securities
dealer shall use reasonable efforts to promptly retransmit the
official communication to the parties for whom it is safekeeping
the issue.
(ii)
In determining whether reasonable efforts have been made
to retransmit official communications, the following considerations
are relevant:
(A)
CUSIP Numbers. If CUSIP numbers are included
on or with the official communication to beneficial owners,
the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer shall use
such CUSIP numbers in determining the issue(s) to which the
official communication applies. If CUSIP numbers are not included
on or with the official communication, the broker, dealer or
municipal securities dealer shall use reasonable efforts to
determine the issue(s) to which the official communication applies;
provided however, that it shall not be a violation of this rule
if, after reasonable efforts are made, the issue(s) to which
the official communication applies are not correctly identified
by the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer.
(B)
Compensation. A broker, dealer or municipal
securities dealer shall not be required by this rule to retransmit
official communications without an offer of adequate compensation.
If compensation is explicitly offered in or with the official
communication, the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer
shall effect the retransmission and seek compensation concurrently;
provided, however, that if total compensation would be more
than $500.00, the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer
may, in lieu of this procedure, promptly contact the party offering
compensation, inform it of the amount of compensation required,
obtain specific agreement on the amount of compensation and
wait for receipt of such compensation prior to proceeding with
the retransmission. In determining whether compensation is adequate,
the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer shall make
reference to the suggested rates for similar document transmission
services found in “Suggested Rates of Reimbursement” for expenses
incurred in forwarding proxy material, annual reports, information
statements and other material referenced in NASD Conduct Rule
2260(g), taking into account revisions or amendments to such
suggested rates as may be made from time to time.
(C)
Sufficient Copies of Official Communications.
A broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer is not required
to provide duplication services for official communications
but may elect to do so. If sufficient copies of official communications
are not received, and the broker, dealer or municipal securities
dealer elects not to offer duplication services, the broker,
dealer or municipal securities dealer shall promptly request
from the party requesting the forwarding of the official communication
the correct number of copies of the official communication.
(D)
Non-Objecting Beneficial Owners. In lieu of
retransmitting official communications to beneficial owners
who have indicated in writing that they do not object to the
disclosure of their names and security positions, a broker,
dealer or municipal securities dealer may instead promptly provide
a list of such non-objecting beneficial owners and their addresses.
(E)
Beneficial Owners Residing Outside of the United States.
A broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer shall not be
required to send official communications to persons outside
of the United States of America, although brokers, dealers and
municipal securities dealers may voluntarily do so.
(F)
Investment Advisors. A broker, dealer or municipal
securities dealer shall send official communications to the
investment advisor for a beneficial owner, rather than to the
beneficial owner, when the broker, dealer or municipal securities
dealer has on file a written authorization for such documents
to be sent to the investment advisor in lieu of the beneficial
owner.
(iii)
Definitions
(A)
The terms “official communication to beneficial owners” and
“official communication,” as used in this section (g), mean
any document or collection of documents pertaining to a specific
issue or issues of municipal securities that both:
(1)
is addressed to beneficial owners and was prepared or authorized
by: (a) an issuer of municipal securities; (b) a trustee for
an issue of municipal securities in its capacity as trustee;
(c) a state or federal tax authority; or (d) a custody agent
for a stripped coupon municipal securities program in its capacity
as custody agent; and
(2)
contains official information about such issue or issues
including, but not limited to, notices concerning monetary or
technical defaults, financial reports, material event notices,
information statements, or status or review of status as to
taxability.
*
*
*
Rule G-8. Books and Records to be
Made by Brokers, Dealers and Municipal Securities Dealers
(a) Description of Books and Records Required
to be Made.
(i) through (x)
No change.
(xi) Customer Account Information.
A record for each customer, other than an institutional account,
setting forth the following information to the extent applicable
to such customer:
(A) through (K) No change.
(L) with
respect to official communications, customer’s written authorization,
if any, that the customer does not object to the disclosure
of its name, security position(s) and contact information to
a party identified in G-15(g)(iii)(A)(1) for purposes of transmitting
official communications under G-15(g).