Self-Regulatory Organizations; National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Amendment No. 6 and Order Granting Accelerated Approval to Proposed Rule Change Relating to the Release of Information Through NASD's BrokerCheck, 3455-3462 [E7-1108]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 16 / Thursday, January 25, 2007 / Notices
balance between providing issuers with
flexibility to direct shares and
improving the capital raising process
while at the same time preserving the
objectives of the Rule.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
NASD does not believe that the
proposed rule change will result in any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
Written comments were neither
solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 35 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
As the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the self-regulatory
organization consents, the Commission
will:
(A) By order approve such proposed
rule change, or
(B) Institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for inspection and copying in
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room. Copies of such filing also will be
available for inspection and copying at
the principal office of NASD.
All comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASD–2006–074 and
should be submitted on or before
February 15, 2007.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Market Regulation, pursuant to delegated
authority.7
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–1060 Filed 1–24–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number SR–NASD–2006–074 on the
subject line.
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Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Nancy M. Morris, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASD–2006–074. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–55127; File No. SR–NASD–
2003–168]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc.; Notice of Filing of
Amendment No. 6 and Order Granting
Accelerated Approval to Proposed
Rule Change Relating to the Release of
Information Through NASD’s
BrokerCheck
January 18, 2007.
I. Introduction
On November 21, 2003, the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
(‘‘NASD’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
7 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
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3455
amend NASD Interpretive Material
(‘‘IM’’) 8310–2 (as proposed, ‘‘NASD
BrokerCheck Disclosure’’) and add IM–
8310–3 (‘‘Release of Disciplinary
Complaints, Decisions and Other
Information’’). NASD filed Amendment
Nos. 1, 2, and 3 to the proposed rule
change on September 28, 2004, March 8,
2005, and April 12, 2005, respectively.
The proposed rule change, as amended
by Amendment Nos. 1, 2 and 3, was
published for comment in the Federal
Register on June 30, 2005.3 In response
to the First Notice, the Commission
received eight comment letters.4 On
June 6, 2006, NASD submitted a
response to the comment letters 5 and
filed Amendment No. 4 to the proposed
rule change. On June 22, 2006, NASD
filed Amendment No. 5 to the proposed
rule change. The Commission published
the proposed rule change, as further
amended by Amendment Nos. 4 and 5,
for comment in the Federal Register on
July 5, 2006.6 In response to the Second
Notice, the Commission received four
comment letters.7 On August 30, 2006,
NASD submitted a response to the
additional comment letters 8 and filed
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51915
(June 23, 2005), 70 FR 37880 (‘‘First Notice’’).
4 See Letters from Barry Augenbraun, Senior Vice
President and Corporate Secretary, Raymond James
Financial, Inc., dated July 8, 2005 (‘‘Raymond James
Letter’’); Joseph D. Fleming, Managing Director and
Chief Compliance Officer, Piper Jaffray & Co., dated
July 13, 2005 (‘‘Piper Jaffray Letter’’); Ronald C.
Long, Senior Vice President, Regulatory Policy and
Administration, Wachovia Securities, LLC, dated
July 18, 2005 (‘‘Wachovia Letter’’); Mario Di
Trapani, President, Association of Registration
Management, dated July 19, 2005 (‘‘ARM Letter I’’);
John S. Simmers, CEO, ING Advisors Network,
dated July 19, 2005 (‘‘ING Letter’’); Coleman
Wortham III, President and CEO, Davenport &
Company LLC, dated July 20, 2005 (‘‘Davenport
Letter’’); Jill Gross, Director of Advocacy, and
Rosario M. Patane, Student Intern, Pace Investor
Rights Project, dated July 21, 2005 (‘‘Pace Letter);
and Ira Hammerman, Senior Vice President and
General Counsel, Securities Industry Association,
dated July 27, 2005 (‘‘SIA Letter I’’) to Jonathan G.
Katz, Secretary, Commission.
5 See Letter from Richard E. Pullano, Associate
Vice President and Chief Counsel, Registration and
Disclosure, NASD, to Katherine A. England,
Assistant Director, Division of Market Regulation
(‘‘Division’’), Commission, dated June 6, 2006
(‘‘NASD Response Letter I’’).
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 54053
(June 27, 2006), 71 FR 38196 (‘‘Second Notice’’).
7 See Letters from Pamela S. Fritz, Chief
Compliance Officer, MWA Financial Services, Inc.,
dated July 18, 2006 (‘‘MWA Financial Letter’’);
Eileen O’Connell Arcuri, Executive Committee
Member, ARM, dated July 20, 2006 (‘‘ARM Letter
II’’); Stuart J. Kaswell, Senior Vice President and
General Counsel, SIA, dated July 20, 2006 (‘‘SIA
Letter II’’); and Patricia D. Struck, NASAA
President, Wisconsin Securities Administrator,
North American Securities Administrators
Association, Inc. (‘‘NASAA’’), dated July 20, 2006
(‘‘NASAA Letter I’’) to Nancy M. Morris, Secretary,
Commission.
8 See Letter from Richard E. Pullano, Associate
Vice President and Chief Counsel, Registration and
Continued
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 16 / Thursday, January 25, 2007 / Notices
Amendment No. 6 to the proposed rule
change.9 The Commission received one
comment letter on NASD Response
Letter II.10
This order grants accelerated approval
to the proposed rule change, as
amended by Amendment Nos. 1 through
6 and solicits comments from interested
persons on the filing as amended by
Amendment No. 6.
II. Description of Proposed Rule Change
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A. Background
NASD established NASD BrokerCheck
(‘‘BrokerCheck’’) in 1988 to provide
investors with information on the
professional background, business
practices, and conduct of NASD
members and their associated persons.
In 1990, Congress passed legislation
requiring NASD to establish and
maintain a toll-free telephone number to
receive inquiries regarding its members
and their associated persons. In 1998,
NASD began providing certain
administrative information, such as
approved registrations and employment
history, online via NASD’s Web site. In
2000, NASD amended IM–8310–2(a)
which amendment: (1) Established a
two-year period for disclosure of
information about persons formerly
registered with NASD; (2) authorized
release of information about terminated
persons and firms that is provided on
the Form U6 (the form regulators use to
report disciplinary actions), if such
matters would be required to be
reported on Form U4 (‘‘Uniform
Application for Securities Industry
Registration or Transfer’’) or Form BD
(‘‘Uniform Application for BrokerDisclosure, NASD, to Katherine A. England,
Assistant Director, Division, Commission, dated
August 30, 2006 (‘‘NASD Response Letter II’’).
9 See Partial Amendment dated August 30, 2006.
In Amendment No. 6, NASD indicated that it is
amending its initial proposal which would have
changed the manner in which it will measure the
two-year time frame for customer complaint
disclosures to begin on the date on which the
member received the complaint. Accordingly, for
purposes of disclosure pursuant to IM–8310–2,
NASD will continue to disclose complaints through
BrokerCheck for 24 months, beginning on the date
that the complaint is reported to the Central
Registration Depository (‘‘CRD’’ or ‘‘CRD
System’’), regardless of the date on which the
member received the complaint. In addition, NASD
clarified that it currently releases summary
information concerning arbitration awards issued
by NASD arbitrators and will continue to work with
other regulators regarding disclosure of arbitration
awards issued in other forums. In conjunction with
this clarification, NASD proposed to amend the text
of proposed IM–8310–2(b)(3) to correct the
placement of the word ‘‘certain’’ so that it modifies
‘‘arbitration awards’’ rather than ‘‘summary
information.’’
10 See Letter from Patricia D. Struck, NASAA
President, Wisconsin Securities Administrator,
NASAA, to Nancy Morris, Secretary, Commission,
dated September 7, 2006.
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14:58 Jan 24, 2007
Jkt 211001
Dealer Registration’’); and (3) provided
for delivery of automated disclosure
reports, which include information as
reported by filers on the uniform forms.
In 2002, NASD initiated a
comprehensive review of the
information that NASD makes publicly
available under IM–8310–2, which
included an evaluation of BrokerCheck
from the perspective of public investors
regarding their experience in obtaining
information, as well as their assessment
of the value of the information they
received. NASD subsequently issued
Notice to Members 02–74 in November
2002, seeking comment on, among other
things, the possible expansion of
information that NASD makes available
to the public and Notice to Members 03–
76 in December 2003, seeking comment
on proposed enhancements to the
existing approach for the electronic
delivery of written reports used by
BrokerCheck.11
B. Proposed Rule Change
Information NASD Proposes To Release
While all disclosures would be
subject to certain exceptions as
described more fully below, NASD
proposes to release through
BrokerCheck certain information as
applicable regarding current or former
members, associated persons, or persons
who were associated with a member
within the preceding two years. Under
proposed IM–8310–2, NASD would
release any information reported on the
most recently filed Form U4, Form U5
(‘‘Uniform Termination Notice for
Securities Industry Registration’’), Form
U6, Form BD, and Form BDW
(‘‘Uniform Request for Broker-Dealer
Withdrawal’’) (collectively,
‘‘Registration Forms’’).
NASD also proposes to release
currently approved registrations,
summary information about certain
arbitration awards against a member
involving a securities or commodities
dispute with a public customer,12
information with respect to qualification
examinations passed by the person and
the date passed,13 and, in response to
telephonic inquiries via the
BrokerCheck toll-free telephone listing,
whether a member is subject to the
11 See First Notice for a discussion on the
comments received on Notice to Members 02–74
(November 2002) and Notice to Members 03–76
(December 2003).
12 NASD currently releases summary information
concerning arbitration awards issued by NASD
arbitrators and will continue to work with other
regulators regarding disclosure of arbitration awards
issued in other forums. See Amendment No. 6,
supra note 9.
13 NASD would not, however, release information
regarding examination scores or examinations that
the person failed.
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Fmt 4703
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provisions of NASD Rule 3010(b)(2), the
Taping Rule. In addition, NASD
proposes to release the name and
succession history for current or former
members.
The proposed rule change also would
address the reporting of Historic
Complaints, defined by NASD as the
information last reported on
Registration Forms relating to customer
complaints that are more than two years
old and that have not been settled or
adjudicated, and customer complaints,
arbitrations, or litigations that have been
settled for an amount less than $10,000
and which are no longer reported on a
Registration Form.14 NASD proposes to
release Historic Complaints only if all
three of the following conditions have
been met: (1) Any such matter became
a Historic Complaint on or after the
implementation date of this proposed
rule change; 15 (2) the most recent
Historic Complaint or currently reported
customer complaint, arbitration, or
litigation is less than ten years old; and
(3) the person has a total of three or
more currently disclosable regulatory
actions, currently reported customer
complaints, arbitrations, or litigations,
or Historic Complaints (subject to the
limitation that they became a Historic
Complaint on or after the
implementation date of this proposed
rule change), or any combination
thereof. Once all these conditions have
been met, NASD would release all
information regarding the person’s
Historic Complaints, again provided
they became Historic Complaints on or
after the implementation date of this
proposed rule change.
NASD also proposes to provide
persons with the opportunity to submit
a brief comment, in the form and in
accordance with procedures established
by NASD, which would be included in
the information NASD releases through
BrokerCheck. Only comments relating to
the information provided through
BrokerCheck would be included.16
Persons who were associated with a
member within the preceding two years
but who are no longer registered with a
member that wish to submit a comment
14 NASD does not currently make Historic
Complaints available to the public.
15 NASD has indicated that the implementation
date of this proposed rule change would be no later
than 90 days following Commission approval.
16 Consistent with current practice, NASD would
reserve the right to reject comments or redact
information from a comment or a report, on a caseby-case basis, that contains confidential customer
information, offensive or potentially defamatory
language or information that raises significant
identity theft, personal safety or privacy concerns,
which concerns are not outweighed by investor
protection concerns. NASD, in rare circumstances,
has excluded or redacted information in cases
involving stalking or terrorist threats.
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 16 / Thursday, January 25, 2007 / Notices
would be required to submit a signed,
notarized affidavit in the form specified
by NASD.17 Persons who are currently
registered with a member firm would
continue to be required to amend Form
U4, where possible, instead of
submitting a separate comment.18 These
comments also would be made available
through the CRD system to participating
regulators, and to any member firms that
the person who submitted the comment
is associated with or is seeking to be
associated with.19
NASD also proposes that, upon
written request, NASD could provide a
compilation of information about NASD
members, subject to terms and
conditions established by NASD, and
after execution of a licensing agreement
prepared by NASD. NASD expects to
charge commercial users of such
compilations reasonable fees as
determined by NASD.20 Such
compilations of information would
consist solely of information selected by
NASD from Forms BD and BDW and
would be limited to information that is
otherwise publicly available from the
Commission.
Information NASD Proposes Not To
Release
Notwithstanding information that
NASD proposes to release above, NASD
would not release Social Security
numbers, residential history
information, physical description
information, information that NASD is
otherwise prohibited from releasing
under Federal law or information
provided solely for use by regulators.
Additionally, NASD proposes to reserve
the right to exclude, on a case-by-case
basis, information that contains
confidential customer information,
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17 NASD
would publish instructions for
submitting comments on its Web site for such
persons. NASD would review the affidavit to
confirm relevance and compliance with the
established instructions and, if it met the criteria,
would add the comment to the written report
provided through BrokerCheck. The person
submitting the comment would be able to replace
or delete the comment in the same way.
18 NASD indicated that it would include
instructions on how firms could amend archived
disclosures in a Notice to Members announcing
approval of this proposed rule change and also
would post frequently asked questions and answers
about this process on NASD’s Web site. See NASD
Response Letter I.
19 The availability of comments submitted by
persons who were associated with a member within
the preceding two years but who are no longer
registered with a member through the CRD system
would parallel the availability of a report on a
broker through BrokerCheck. For example, such
comments would no longer be available through the
CRD system if the broker has been out of the
industry for more than two years.
20 The Commission notes that such proposed fees
would need to be filed with the Commission
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act.
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14:58 Jan 24, 2007
Jkt 211001
offensive or potentially defamatory
language, or information that raises
significant identity theft, personal
safety, or privacy concerns that are not
outweighed by investor protection
concerns.
NASD also proposes not to release
information about current or former
members, associated persons or persons
who were associated with a member
within the preceding two years that has
been reported on the Registration Forms
relating to regulatory investigations or
proceedings if the reported regulatory
investigation or proceeding was vacated
or withdrawn by the instituting
authority. Additionally, NASD proposes
not to release the most recent
information reported on the Registration
Forms if: (1) NASD has determined that
the information was reported in error by
a member, regulator, or other
appropriate authority; or (2) the
information has been determined by
regulators, through amendments to the
uniform Registration Forms, to be no
longer relevant to securities registration
or licensure, regardless of the
disposition of the event or the date the
event occurred.
With respect to information reported
on the Form U5, NASD proposes not to
release Form U5 information for 15 days
following the filing of such information
with NASD, in order to give persons on
whose behalf the Form U5 was
submitted an opportunity to file a Form
U4 or submit a separate comment to
NASD for inclusion with the
information released pursuant to
BrokerCheck, regarding disclosure
information reported on Form U5 and
any amendments thereto. NASD would
then release both the Form U5
disclosure and the person’s comment, if
any, to a requestor. However, NASD
proposes to continue its current practice
of not releasing ‘‘Internal Review
Disclosure’’ information reported by
members, associated persons, or
regulators on Section 7 of Form U5 21 or
the ‘‘Reason for Termination’’
information reported on Section 3 of
Form U5. Nonetheless, under IM–8310–
2, as proposed, information regarding
certain terminations for cause (i.e., those
that meet the criteria in current
Question 7F on Form U5) would be
disclosed through BrokerCheck. Finally,
NASD currently does not release
information reported on Schedule E of
21 Although the response to the internal review
question and related information reported on the
associated disclosure reporting page would not be
released, if the matter subject to the internal review
is or becomes reportable under the investigation,
termination, or other disclosure questions, the
disclosure made pursuant to these other disclosure
questions would be released.
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3457
the Form BD.22 Under the proposed rule
change, NASD would continue not to
release this information.
Electronic Delivery of Written Reports
Currently, NASD makes written
reports available to the public by U.S.
mail in printed form and by email in an
electronic format upon receipt of a
request via email or the established tollfree number. Due to a number of
practical issues that have arisen
regarding email delivery, NASD plans to
replace the current delivery approach
with a link to a controlled-access server
that would allow access to the requested
report through a secure Internet session
in response to inquiries via email or
through the established toll-free
number. Access to the information
would be limited to the written report
requested, and only the individual
making the request would be granted
access to the database. A requestor also
would be able to view investor
education materials that would aid him
or her in understanding the written
report. NASD also would continue to
provide hard copy reports to those
requesting hard copies.
Other Changes
NASD also proposes to make
conforming changes to IM–8310–2,
including making various numbering
and lettering changes, moving former
subsections (b) through (m) into new
IM–8310–3, and updating references to
‘‘the Association’’ and ‘‘NASD
Regulation, Inc.’’
III. Comment Summary and NASD’s
Response
As noted above, the Commission
received eight comment letters with
respect to the First Notice and four
comment letters with respect to the
Second Notice.23 After the First and
Second Notices, NASD filed two
response letters, respectively, to address
the concerns raised by the
commenters.24 The Commission then
22 The Commission notes the Division has granted
no-action relief indicating that it will not
recommend enforcement action to the Commission
under Rules 15b1–1, 15b3–1, 15Ba2–2, and 15Ca2–
1 under the Act for broker-dealers that file the
Uniform Branch Office Registration Form (‘‘Form
BR’’), and do not complete Schedule E, or file
amendments to Schedule E, of the Form BD, as of
the date on which the transition to the Form BR
began and the CRD no longer accepted Schedule
E filings, which occurred in October 2005. See
Letter from Catherine McGuire, Chief Counsel,
Division, Commission, to Patrice M. Gliniecki,
Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel,
NASD, dated September 30, 2005.
23 See supra notes 4 and 7.
24 See NASD Response Letters I and II.
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 16 / Thursday, January 25, 2007 / Notices
received a second comment letter
addressing NASD Response Letter II.25
Generally, the initial set of
commenters took issue with the portion
of the proposed rule change regarding
disclosure of an individual’s Historic
Complaints, which includes information
last reported on the Registration Forms
relating to customer complaints that are
more than two years old and that have
not been settled or adjudicated and
customer complaints, arbitrations, or
litigations that have been settled for an
amount less than $10,000 and are no
longer reported on a Registration Form.
Although one commenter suggested that
all Historic Complaints should be
disclosed to customers,26 most of the
commenters argued that the proposed
changes to NASD’s rules relating to
Historic Complaints would have
harmful effects on member firms and
investors, with several of the
commenters requesting that the
Commission not approve the proposed
rule change because of this provision.27
For instance, several of the commenters
believed that the release of a broker’s
Historic Complaints would give too
much weight to unproven allegations
and complaints and thereby could
unfairly harm the broker’s reputation.28
These commenters argued that
disclosure of all the complaints could be
misleading to investors and invite them
to form conclusions based on allegations
that may not have merit and are not
necessarily representative of a pattern of
misconduct.29 Two commenters also
argued that disclosing archived
complaints to the public would ignore
the fact that this type of information was
25 See
NASAA Letter II.
Pace Letter.
27 See, e.g., Davenport Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter,
Raymond James Letter, and Wachovia Letter. See
also SIA Letter I (objecting to the proposed release
of archived Historic Complaints).
28 See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING
Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter,
SIA Letter I, and Wachovia Letter. One commenter
believed this emphasis on unsubstantiated and
unadjudicated customer complaints to be
‘‘fundamentally unfair’’ and that NASD’s proposal
‘‘significantly erodes’’ due process and undermines
the customer arbitration process. This commenter
also asserted that registered representatives should
have the opportunity to defend against regulatory
allegations before such allegations are used as the
basis of expanded adverse disclosure. See
Davenport Letter. Another commenter argued that,
unlike the current system, NASD’s proposal would
make it possible for frivolous claims to remain
reportable as a Historic Complaint potentially for
years to come and could allow a ‘‘vexatious
complainant’’ to place a broker in the continuous
status of having all of its Historic Complaints
disclosed by repeatedly making frivolous claims to
meet the ‘‘three or more’’ standard. See Wachovia
Letter.
29 See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING
Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter,
SIA Letter I and Wachovia Letter. See also SIA
Letter II.
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26 See
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14:58 Jan 24, 2007
Jkt 211001
originally reported for regulatory
purposes in connection with registration
and licensing matters.30 Similarly,
another commenter indicated that since
the reporting process was ‘‘first and
foremost a regulatory tool and not a
public disclosure tool,’’ firms had often
reported events that were not clearly
reportable. This commenter believed
that the proposed rule change would
now have the effect of discouraging
firms from reporting questionable
matters.31
Furthermore, several commenters
expressed concern that NASD’s
proposal would inhibit firms from
settling minor claims, since these could
be publicly disclosed, and thereby
create an incentive for firms to litigate
customer complaints more often.32
Some of these commenters asserted that
the settlement of customer complaints
does not necessarily indicate an
acknowledgement of improper behavior
by the broker, but rather is frequently
the result of a cost/benefit analysis or an
effort to maintain client goodwill.33
Accordingly, several of the commenters
believed that the adverse impact on
settlements would not serve the interest
of investors or advance the public
interest.34 Additionally, believing that
the proposal would encourage a broker
to litigate customer complaints in order
to protect its record, some commenters
maintained that the increase in cost and
time spent on customer complaints
would adversely affect member firms
and investors alike.35
A few commenters also opposed
NASD’s proposed threshold which
would trigger the release of all Historic
Complaints, i.e., if the person has three
or more currently disclosable regulatory
actions, currently reported customer
complaint, arbitration, or litigation
disclosures, or Historic Complaint
disclosures, and the most recent
Historic Complaint or currently reported
30 See ARM Letter I and SIA Letter I (arguing that
the disclosure of Historic Complaints ignores the
inherent differences between the CRD system,
which is used by regulators, and the BrokerCheck
system, which discloses to the public a subset of the
information contained within the CRD system). See
also ING Letter.
31 See ING Letter.
32 See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING
Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter,
SIA Letters I and II, and Wachovia Letter. See also
ARM Letter II.
33 See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING
Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter,
SIA Letter I and Wachovia Letter.
34 See, e.g., ING Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter,
Raymond James Letter, SIA Letter I and Wachovia
Letter.
35 See, e.g., ARM Letter I, ING Letter and
Wachovia Letter. One commenter predicted that
NASD Dispute Resolution would be overwhelmed
by having to handle cases which otherwise would
have been settled. See SIA Letter I.
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customer complaint, arbitration, or
litigation is less than 10 years old.36
While most of these commenters
appeared to incorrectly understand
NASD’s proposed application of the tenyear condition,37 these commenters
generally believed that three disclosures
over ten years would not necessarily be
indicative of a pattern of conduct by the
registered representative because it
could include frivolous and baseless
complaints filed against the
representative.38 Three of these
commenters suggested that the
threshold for reporting Historic
Complaints should be amended to be
five reportable events within a threeyear period,39 with one commenter also
recommending that the look back for
Historic Complaints should be limited
to ten years.40 One commenter also
believed that certain types of complaints
should be excluded from the list of
disclosable events that would trigger
reporting of Historic Complaints, such
as certain complaints filed by joint or
related account holders, operational
complaints or those alleging primarily a
product failure or poor performance.41
Other commenters suggested that
denied or unsubstantiated claims 42 and
unadjudicated regulatory allegations 43
should not be counted towards the
threshold requirement for disclosing
Historic Complaints.
As part of their argument regarding
the proposed rule’s unfairness in
disclosing trivial or frivolous claims,
three commenters asserted that NASD’s
proposal to allow brokers to provide a
brief commentary in response to the
disclosed information would not
provide an adequate safeguard for
36 See, e.g., ING Letter, MWA Financial Letter,
SIA Letter I and Wachovia Letter. But see Pace
Letter (arguing that the ‘‘three or more’’ disclosed
incident threshold for reporting all Historic
Complaints was too high and that BrokerCheck
should disclose all Historic Complaints to
customers).
37 The Commission notes that most of these
commenters misunderstood NASD’s proposal,
believing that NASD would release all Historic
Complaint information, regardless of age, if the
registered person has a total of three of more
disclosures within a ten-year period. The
Commission clarifies that the ten-year condition of
NASD’s proposal would require that only the most
recent of the Historic Complaint or currently
reported customer complaint, arbitration, or
litigation must be less than ten years old, which
would trigger disclosure of all Historic Complaints,
if the other conditions are met.
38 See, e.g., ING Letter, MWA Financial Letter,
and SIA Letter I. See also Wachovia Letter.
39 See ING Letter, MWA Financial Letter, and SIA
Letter I.
40 See ING Letter.
41 See SIA Letter I.
42 See ARM Letter I.
43 See Davenport Letter.
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brokers.44 As evidence of the proposed
rule’s imbalance against brokers, these
commenters pointed to the procedural
obstacles that brokers would have to
overcome in order to submit a
comment.45
In addition, to address the harm of
disclosing potentially misleading
information to investors and to protect
against potential abuses by disgruntled
customers, a few commenters suggested
adding certain protections to the
proposal,46 including changing the
proposal so that Historic Complaints, by
default, would not be disclosed unless
NASD reviewed the matter to determine
whether to disclose the Historic
Complaints.47 To assist investors in
evaluating information regarding
unadjudicated claims and de minimis
settlements, the same commenter
suggested that NASD insert a clarifying
statement indicating that a matter may
have been unadjudicated because the
customer declined to pursue the matter
or that it was settled for a modest
amount to avoid litigation and should
not be considered an admission of
liability or responsibility.48 Another
commenter suggested that NASD require
customers and their counsel to attest
that they have a reasonable, good-faith
basis for naming a registered person and
that NASD provide to customers who
are preparing to file claims additional
investor education material explaining
the implications of naming a particular
registered person and the potential
damaging implications.49
To address these concerns, NASD
indicated that it has developed an
educational component to the proposed
BrokerCheck report and Web site that
NASD believes would put Historic
Complaints in the appropriate context
44 See Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter,
and Wachovia Letter. See also ARM Letter I and SIA
Letter I (criticizing the expungement process as a
viable remedy for a registered person to remove
meritless claims from its record).
45 For instance, two of these commenters believed
that the comment process would be administered
by a ‘‘skeptical NASD staff’’ that would have the
right to reject any brief comment. See Piper Jaffray
Letter and Raymond James Letter. The other
commenter criticized the signed, notarized affidavit
that certain brokers would have to provide in order
to submit a comment. See Wachovia Letter. But see
Pace Letter. This commenter supported NASD’s
proposed comment process for associated persons
to respond to disclosed material and believed it
provided an opportunity for them to explain any
information they perceive to be incomplete.
46 See, e.g., SIA Letter I and Wachovia Letter.
47 See Wachovia Letter. The commenter believed
that, if brokers were aware that NASD would
exercise discretion and judgment in determining
when Historic Complaints should be disclosed,
then brokers would have less of an incentive to
litigate. Id.
48 Id.
49 See SIA Letter I.
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and enable investors to give them
appropriate weight when evaluating a
particular firm or registered person.50
Specifically, NASD noted that there
would be an introductory section
preceding the BrokerCheck report
explaining that certain reported items
may involve pending actions or
allegations that may be contested and
not resolved or proven, and that these
items may be withdrawn or dismissed,
resolved in favor of the registered
person, or concluded through a
negotiated settlement with no admission
or conclusion of wrongdoing. In
addition, NASD noted that the
BrokerCheck report would include
certain status information for each
Historic Complaint that would indicate
whether or not the complaint was
settled. NASD also indicated that it
would advise readers through the
BrokerCheck report and its Web site that
they should not rely solely on the
information available through
BrokerCheck and should consult other
sources to the extent possible for
information about the registered person.
In response to commenter’s criticisms
against the brief commentary
mechanism that individuals can use to
respond to disclosed information, NASD
emphasized that registered persons
would be able to submit information
providing context and perspective about
any event, including Historic
Complaints. NASD noted that
individuals typically provide such
information in a comment section on
the Form U4 at the time the event is
reported, and that the registered
individual can add to its previously
submitted comment or comment for the
first time through its firm using the CRD
system.51 In addition, NASD noted that
individuals who are no longer registered
would be able to provide comment
through a signed affidavit to CRD.
NASD also represented that it would not
edit the comments, except that it
reserved the right to reject or redact
comments that contain confidential
customer information, offensive or
potentially defamatory language, or
information that raises significant
identity theft, personal safety or privacy
concerns that are not outweighed by
investor protection concerns.52
50 See
NASD Response Letter I.
the proposed rule change is approved by the
Commission, NASD represented that it will provide
instructions in a Notice to Members on how firms
may amend archived disclosures and will also post
frequently asked questions and answers about this
process on NASD’s Web site. See NASD Response
Letter I.
52 According to NASD, each person, whether
registered or formerly registered, will be responsible
for ensuring that a Historic Complaint that is not
currently disclosed through BrokerCheck
51 If
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3459
Furthermore, a few commenters
expressed concern over the fairness of
retroactively altering the rules regarding
the disclosure of Historic Complaints,
including the disclosure of settlements
after such settlements have been made,
since registered persons often agree to
settlements based on the assumption
that the settlement information would
not become part of the public record or
have long-term negative effects on their
reputations or business relationships.53
Two commenters suggested that NASD
should prospectively implement its
proposed rules regarding the disclosure
of Historic Complaints and only
disclose complaints reported after the
effective date of the proposed rule
change.54
In response to commenter’s concerns
that firms and registered persons may
have made certain decisions relating to
customer complaints, arbitrations, or
litigations based on the current rules
under which the CRD system and
BrokerCheck operate, NASD proposed
in Amendment Nos. 4 and 5 to provide
that only Historic Complaints that
become Historic Complaints on or after
the implementation date of the
proposed rule change (i.e., those that are
archived on or after the implementation
date) would be eligible for disclosure
through BrokerCheck.55 NASD stated
that such a change would be in the
public interest. Under this proposed
modification, NASD would disclose
through BrokerCheck all of an
individual’s Historic Complaints that
became Historic Complaints on or after
the implementation date of the
proposed rule change if: (1) The most
recent Historic Complaint or currently
reported customer complaint,
arbitration, or litigation is less than ten
years old, and (2) the person has a total
of three or more currently disclosable
regulatory actions, currently reported
customer complaints, arbitrations, or
litigations, or Historic Complaints
(subject to the limitation that they
became a Historic Complaint on or after
the implementation date of the
proposed rule) or any combination
thereof. According to NASD, the revised
approach would strike a fair balance
between public investors’ interests in
the background of the individuals with
adequately reflects its comment about the matter in
the event such matter becomes disclosed to the
public. Id.
53 See, e.g., ARM Letters I and II, ING Letter and
SIA Letters I and II.
54 See ING Letter and SIA Letter I. See also ARM
Letter II, discussed further below (requesting that
NASD not apply the new guidelines to any matters
that are currently pending as well).
55 See NASD Response Letter I. See also
Amendment No. 4.
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whom they do business and the
concerns of participants in the securities
industry.
In reaction to NASD’s proposed
changes in Amendment Nos. 4 and 5,
the Commission received four
additional comment letters. After the
Second Notice, two commenters
expressed support for this recent change
by NASD to provide that Historic
Complaints will not be eligible for
disclosure if the matter became a
Historic Complaint before the
implementation date of the proposed
rule change.56 Another commenter
wanted NASD to go even further by
recommending that the new
BrokerCheck program disclose only
those matters that commence following
the rule change and not include any
matters that are currently pending.57
According to this commenter, current
matters entered into before the rule
change should be archived after two
years as the current guidelines allow.58
However, one commenter expressed
serious reservations regarding the
proposed limitation on the disclosure of
Historic Complaints.59 Specifically, this
commenter argued that the effect of the
recent amendment is that Historic
Complaint information that currently
exists within CRD would never be
released to the public through
BrokerCheck, while the only Historic
Complaints that would be disclosed are
those that become Historic Complaints
after the proposal’s effective date. This
commenter was not persuaded by other
commenters’ arguments that the
proposed rule should be implemented
prospectively because firms and
registered persons might have relied on
the current rules under which CRD and
BrokerCheck operate when they decided
to settle certain customer complaints,
arbitrations, or litigations. First, the
commenter maintained that these other
commenters did not substantiate their
argument with any specific cases,
surveys, or studies in which registered
representatives actually settled
customer disputes because they would
not be publicly disclosed after two
years.60 Second, the commenter
disagreed with other commenters’
assertions that NASD members had
settled matters without the knowledge
that the rules might change in the
future. In support of its argument, the
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56 See
MWA Financial Letter and SIA Letter II.
57 See ARM Letter II.
58 Id.
59 See NASAA Letter I.
60 The commenter criticized NASD for agreeing
with other commenters that ‘‘stockbrokers would
rather litigate customer disputes than settle them
because the complaint would be publicly
disclosed.’’ Id.
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commenter indicated that NASD’s
Notice to Members 02–74 that was
issued in 2002 put NASD members on
notice that the rules regarding the
public disclosure of customer
complaints and, more specifically, the
rules regarding Historic Complaints
might be revised and modified.61 This
commenter asserted that if NASD
wanted to strike a balance between the
industry and investors, NASD should
have considered that its membership
was aware of the proposed changes to
BrokerCheck since its Notice to
Members in 2002 and should have
proposed the earlier date as the date for
measuring which complaints would fall
within the definition of Historic
Complaints under the proposed rule
change. Furthermore, this commenter
argued that, if the proposal were
implemented as proposed in
Amendment No. 4, more comprehensive
information could be available for the
same financial services professional in
the Investment Adviser Public
Disclosure—Individual (‘‘IAPDI’’)
system, which is currently being
developed, than in BrokerCheck. The
commenter maintained that this would
go against NASD’s original intent of
providing the same level of information
through BrokerCheck that the states
provide and could lead to investor
confusion.62 Finally, this commenter
took issue with NASD’s proposal to alter
the way it would measure the two-year
reporting and disclosure period for
customer complaints. While NASD
currently calculates the two-year period
for disclosure of customer complaints as
of the date the complaint was reported
on Forms U4 and U5, NASD had
proposed to consider this two-year
period to begin on the date on which the
member received the complaint, both
for purposes of reportability on Forms
U4 and U5 and for disclosure purposes.
This commenter believed this change
could encourage registered persons and
their firms to manipulate the amount of
time the complaint would be publicly
disclosed by delaying the reporting or
perhaps withholding the reporting of
customer complaints while the two-year
period is running.
In response to this commenter’s
objection to NASD’s proposal to
disclose a Historic Complaint only if the
61 The commenter cited to the 58 plus comment
letters that NASD received in response to this
Notice to Members as evidence that NASD’s
membership was aware that the rules regarding the
release of historic information might change. Id.
62 The commenter was concerned that the same
person would be treated differently for disclosure
purposes depending on which system, BrokerCheck
or IAPDI, an investor searches, and that the public
would have to check multiple sources for disclosure
on the same person. Id.
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item became a Historic Complaint on or
after the implementation date of the
proposal, NASD maintained that its
proposal is an evenhanded approach
that would provide investors with
additional information about brokers
who have demonstrated a pattern of
conduct of accumulating complaints,
regulatory actions, arbitrations, or
litigations, and that would also address
the fairness concerns of participants in
the securities industry by not
retroactively changing the rules
governing the disclosure of such
events.63 To address the commenter’s
concern over measuring the two-year
time period for disclosing customer
complaints through BrokerCheck from
the date the complaint is filed with the
firm, rather than the date the complaint
is reported to the CRD system, NASD
stated that, to the extent a firm may not
timely amend a registered person’s
Form U4 to report a customer
complaint, the event should still be
disclosed through BrokerCheck for two
years. Accordingly, NASD decided not
to amend the manner in which it
currently measures the two-year time
frame for complaint disclosures and
provided that complaints will continue
to be disclosed through BrokerCheck for
24 months beginning on the date that
the complaint is reported to the CRD
system.64
IV. Discussion and Commission’s
Findings
After careful consideration of the
proposal, the comment letters, and
NASD’s responses to the comment
letters, the Commission finds that the
proposed rule change, as amended, is
consistent with the requirements of the
Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to a national
securities association.65 The
Commission believes that the proposed
rule change, as amended, is consistent
with Section 15A(b) of the Act,66 in
general, and furthers the objectives of
Section 15A(b)(6),67 in particular, in
that it is designed to prevent fraudulent
and manipulative acts and practices, to
63 See NASD Response Letter II and Amendment
No. 6. But see NASAA Letter II. Continuing to
object to NASD’s proposal to disclose only those
items that become a Historic Complaint after the
implementation date, the commenter criticized
NASD Response Letter II in failing to specifically
respond to issues the commenter raised in its initial
comment letter and urged the Commission to not
approve the proposed rule change.
64 See NASD Response Letter II.
65 In approving this proposed rule change, the
Commission has considered the proposed rule’s
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
66 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b).
67 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(6).
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promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and in general, to protect
investors and the public interest. In
addition, the Commission believes that
the proposed rule change, as amended,
is consistent with Section 15A(i) of the
Act,68 which requires that NASD
establish and maintain a toll-free
telephone listing, and a readily
accessible electronic or other process, to
receive and promptly respond to
inquiries regarding registration
information on its members and their
associated persons.
The Commission believes that
investors must be given the information
necessary to make an informed decision
about whether or not to conduct
business with a particular broker-dealer
or associated person. At the same time,
the Commission recognizes that brokerdealers and their associated persons
have legitimate concerns related to the
harm their reputations could suffer from
inaccurate or misleading information
being made available to the public, as
well as from the release of confidential
personal information. The Commission
believes that the proposed rule change
would adequately balance the needs of
investors with the interests of brokerdealers and their associated persons by
increasing the amount of information
available through BrokerCheck, while
adopting certain protections for brokerdealers and their associated persons. For
instance, under the proposed rule
change, NASD would not release certain
confidential personal information or
other information about an associated
person or a member which is irrelevant
or misleading.
Many of the commenters expressed
concern regarding the release of Historic
Complaints. Commenters argued, among
other things, that the proposal would
give too much weight to unproven
allegations and complaints and could be
misleading to investors, that the
proposed threshold for disclosure of
Historic Complaints is too low and overinclusive, and that firms would be
inhibited from settling minor claims,
which are often settled as the result of
a cost/benefit analysis or in an effort to
maintain client goodwill, since they
could be publicly disclosed.
The Commission notes that NASD has
protections in place that should address
the issues raised by the commenters.
First, NASD would allow associated
persons to submit relevant comments
for inclusion with the information
provided by BrokerCheck. While some
68 15
U.S.C. 78o–3(i).
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of the commenters disputed the
protections that the ‘‘brief comment’’
process would provide, the Commission
notes that, as NASD reiterated in its
response to comments, NASD would
only reject or redact comments in very
limited circumstances and, furthermore,
would only do so if the concerns raised
by the comments are not outweighed by
investor protection concerns. In
addition, NASD will include an
introductory section preceding the
BrokerCheck report that would provide
a context within which to consider
complaints, status information in the
report that would make clear whether or
not a Historic Complaint was settled,
and advisories in the BrokerCheck
report and on the Web site that would
indicate that the reader should not rely
solely on the information available
through BrokerCheck.
Some commenters were concerned
that altering the rules regarding
disclosure of settlements after such
settlements had been made would be
unfair. The Commission believes
NASD’s decision to only release
information on Historic Complaints that
become Historic Complaints on or after
the implementation date of the
proposed rule change is a reasonable
response to that concern. For instance,
under the proposal, as amended,
persons entering into new settlements
would be fully aware that, if such
settlements were for less than $10,000
and are no longer reported on a
Registration Form, they would be
disclosed as Historic Complaints if the
threshold requirements for disclosure
were met.
One commenter argued strongly
against NASD’s proposal to only release
Historic Complaints that become
Historic Complaints on or after the
implementation date of the proposed
rule change. This commenter asserted,
among other things, that there had been
sufficient notice of this proposal since
November 2002 and that a better
approach would be to release Historic
Complaints that became Historic
Complaints on or after that date. The
Commission recognizes that differing
judgments could be made as to the
relevance of various Historic
Complaints and the appropriate balance
between the informational needs of
investors and the interests of brokerdealers and their associated persons in
assuring misleading information about
them is not disseminated. The
Commission believes NASD has struck
a reasonable balance, and notes that,
even using the implementation date as
the ‘‘cutoff’’ for disclosure of Historic
Complaints, the amount of information
that would be disclosed through
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3461
BrokerCheck would increase under this
proposed rule change.
The same commenter argued that
NASD should not change the way in
which it measures the two-year
disclosure period for customer
complaints, which currently begins on
the date the member reports the
complaint. This commenter was
concerned that, if complaints were only
disclosed for two years from the date
they were received by the member, there
would be an incentive to delay or even
withhold the reporting of customer
complaints in order to shorten the
disclosure period. The Commission
notes that in Amendment No. 6 NASD
has withdrawn this portion of its
proposal. Accordingly, customer
complaints will continue to be disclosed
for two years from the date on which
they are reported.
With regard to all other issues raised
by the commenters, the Commission is
satisfied that NASD has adequately
addressed the commenters’ concerns.
The Commission further notes NASD’s
planned electronic distribution system
should provide NASD with the
flexibility to provide a report delivery
solution that is more user-friendly, and
that more efficiently meets investors’
needs in light of changing technology,
while still providing safeguards against
data piracy.
While BrokerCheck is a valuable tool
for an investor to use to get information
about a firm or a registered person with
whom the investor is considering doing
business, the Commission would urge
investors to check with each state where
the firm has done business or where the
sales person has been registered to
obtain a complete picture of his or her
disciplinary history.
Accelerated Approval
The Commission finds good cause for
approving the proposed rule change
prior to the thirtieth day after the date
of publication in the Federal Register
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act.69 In Amendment No. 6, NASD: (i)
indicated that it was withdrawing its
original proposal to change the start
date of the two-year period for
disclosure of a customer complaint to
the date on which the member receives
the complaint; and (ii) clarified that it
currently releases summary information
concerning certain arbitration awards
issued by NASD arbitrators and will
continue to work with other regulators
regarding disclosure of arbitration
awards issued in other forums, and
made a corresponding change to the
proposed rule text. The Commission
69 15
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U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
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notes that NASD’s amendments were
largely in response to comments that the
Commission received. The Commission
believes that Amendment No. 6
adequately responds to commenters’
concerns and notes that the proposed
changes raise no new issues of
regulatory concern. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that granting
accelerated approval to the filing is
appropriate.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the filing,
including whether the filing is
consistent with the Act. Comments may
be submitted by any of the following
methods:
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Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number SR–NASD–2003–168 on the
subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Nancy M. Morris, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASD–2003–168. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for inspection and copying in
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room. Copies of the filing also will be
available for inspection and copying at
the principal office of the NASD. All
comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
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14:58 Jan 24, 2007
Jkt 211001
Number SR–NASD–2003–168 and
should be submitted on or before
February 15, 2007.
VI. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change, as amended, is consistent
with the requirements of the Act and
rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to a national securities
association, and, in particular, Section
15A(b)(6) of the Act 70 and 15A(i) of the
Act.71
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,72 that the
proposed rule change (SR–NASD–2003–
168) is hereby approved on an
accelerated basis.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Market Regulation, pursuant to delegated
authority.73
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–1108 Filed 1–24–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–55125; File No. SR–
NYSEArca–2006–87]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing and Order
Granting Accelerated Approval of
Proposed Rule Change as Modified by
Amendment No. 1 Thereto To Trade
Shares of 81 Funds of the ProShares
Trust Pursuant to Unlisted Trading
Privileges
January 18, 2007.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on November
13, 2006, NYSE Arca, Inc. (‘‘Exchange’’),
through its wholly owned subsidiary
NYSE Arca Equities, Inc. (‘‘NYSE Arca
Equities’’), filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
the proposed rule change as described
in Items I and II below, which Items
have been substantially prepared by the
Exchange. On January 11, 2007, the
Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the
proposed rule change. This order
provides notice of the proposed rule
change, as amended, and approves the
proposal on an accelerated basis.
70 15
U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(6).
71 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(i).
72 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
73 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4703
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange, through NYSE Arca
Equities, proposes to trade pursuant to
unlisted trading privileges (‘‘UTP’’)
shares (‘‘Shares’’) of 81 funds (‘‘Funds’’)
of the ProShares Trust (‘‘Trust’’) based
on numerous underlying securities
indexes.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s Web site
at (https://www.nysearca.com), at the
Exchange’s Office of the Secretary, and
at the Commission.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of, and basis for,
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item III below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in Sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to trade the
Shares of the 81 Funds pursuant to UTP
under NYSE Arca Equities Rule
5.2(j)(3).3 The Commission has
approved the original listing and trading
of the Shares on the American Stock
Exchange LLC (‘‘Amex’’).4
The Funds are referred to as the Ultra
Funds, Short Funds, and UltraShort
Funds, as described more fully below.
Each Fund would attempt, on a daily
basis, to achieve its investment objective
by corresponding to a specified multiple
of the performance, or the inverse
performance, of a particular equity
securities index that underlies that
Fund (each an ‘‘Underlying Index’’).
Ultra Funds:
Certain Funds seek daily investment
results, before fees and expenses, that
correspond to twice (200%) the daily
performance of the Underlying Indexes
(‘‘Ultra Funds’’).5 If such Funds meet
3 Under NYSE Arca Equities Rule 5.2(j)(3) the
Exchange may propose to list and/or trade pursuant
to UTP ‘‘Investment Company Units.’’
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 55117
(January 17, 2007) (SR–Amex–2006–101).
5 The Commission has previously approved
trading certain Ultra Funds, Short Funds, and
E:\FR\FM\25JAN1.SGM
25JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 16 (Thursday, January 25, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3455-3462]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-1108]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-55127; File No. SR-NASD-2003-168]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Amendment No. 6 and Order Granting
Accelerated Approval to Proposed Rule Change Relating to the Release of
Information Through NASD's BrokerCheck
January 18, 2007.
I. Introduction
On November 21, 2003, the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. (``NASD'') filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (``SEC'' or ``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4
thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule change to amend NASD Interpretive
Material (``IM'') 8310-2 (as proposed, ``NASD BrokerCheck Disclosure'')
and add IM-8310-3 (``Release of Disciplinary Complaints, Decisions and
Other Information''). NASD filed Amendment Nos. 1, 2, and 3 to the
proposed rule change on September 28, 2004, March 8, 2005, and April
12, 2005, respectively. The proposed rule change, as amended by
Amendment Nos. 1, 2 and 3, was published for comment in the Federal
Register on June 30, 2005.\3\ In response to the First Notice, the
Commission received eight comment letters.\4\ On June 6, 2006, NASD
submitted a response to the comment letters \5\ and filed Amendment No.
4 to the proposed rule change. On June 22, 2006, NASD filed Amendment
No. 5 to the proposed rule change. The Commission published the
proposed rule change, as further amended by Amendment Nos. 4 and 5, for
comment in the Federal Register on July 5, 2006.\6\ In response to the
Second Notice, the Commission received four comment letters.\7\ On
August 30, 2006, NASD submitted a response to the additional comment
letters \8\ and filed
[[Page 3456]]
Amendment No. 6 to the proposed rule change.\9\ The Commission received
one comment letter on NASD Response Letter II.\10\
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 51915 (June 23,
2005), 70 FR 37880 (``First Notice'').
\4\ See Letters from Barry Augenbraun, Senior Vice President and
Corporate Secretary, Raymond James Financial, Inc., dated July 8,
2005 (``Raymond James Letter''); Joseph D. Fleming, Managing
Director and Chief Compliance Officer, Piper Jaffray & Co., dated
July 13, 2005 (``Piper Jaffray Letter''); Ronald C. Long, Senior
Vice President, Regulatory Policy and Administration, Wachovia
Securities, LLC, dated July 18, 2005 (``Wachovia Letter''); Mario Di
Trapani, President, Association of Registration Management, dated
July 19, 2005 (``ARM Letter I''); John S. Simmers, CEO, ING Advisors
Network, dated July 19, 2005 (``ING Letter''); Coleman Wortham III,
President and CEO, Davenport & Company LLC, dated July 20, 2005
(``Davenport Letter''); Jill Gross, Director of Advocacy, and
Rosario M. Patane, Student Intern, Pace Investor Rights Project,
dated July 21, 2005 (``Pace Letter); and Ira Hammerman, Senior Vice
President and General Counsel, Securities Industry Association,
dated July 27, 2005 (``SIA Letter I'') to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, Commission.
\5\ See Letter from Richard E. Pullano, Associate Vice President
and Chief Counsel, Registration and Disclosure, NASD, to Katherine
A. England, Assistant Director, Division of Market Regulation
(``Division''), Commission, dated June 6, 2006 (``NASD Response
Letter I'').
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 54053 (June 27,
2006), 71 FR 38196 (``Second Notice'').
\7\ See Letters from Pamela S. Fritz, Chief Compliance Officer,
MWA Financial Services, Inc., dated July 18, 2006 (``MWA Financial
Letter''); Eileen O'Connell Arcuri, Executive Committee Member, ARM,
dated July 20, 2006 (``ARM Letter II''); Stuart J. Kaswell, Senior
Vice President and General Counsel, SIA, dated July 20, 2006 (``SIA
Letter II''); and Patricia D. Struck, NASAA President, Wisconsin
Securities Administrator, North American Securities Administrators
Association, Inc. (``NASAA''), dated July 20, 2006 (``NASAA Letter
I'') to Nancy M. Morris, Secretary, Commission.
\8\ See Letter from Richard E. Pullano, Associate Vice President
and Chief Counsel, Registration and Disclosure, NASD, to Katherine
A. England, Assistant Director, Division, Commission, dated August
30, 2006 (``NASD Response Letter II'').
\9\ See Partial Amendment dated August 30, 2006. In Amendment
No. 6, NASD indicated that it is amending its initial proposal which
would have changed the manner in which it will measure the two-year
time frame for customer complaint disclosures to begin on the date
on which the member received the complaint. Accordingly, for
purposes of disclosure pursuant to IM-8310-2, NASD will continue to
disclose complaints through BrokerCheck for 24 months, beginning on
the date that the complaint is reported to the Central Registration
Depository (``CRD[supreg]'' or ``CRD System''), regardless of the
date on which the member received the complaint. In addition, NASD
clarified that it currently releases summary information concerning
arbitration awards issued by NASD arbitrators and will continue to
work with other regulators regarding disclosure of arbitration
awards issued in other forums. In conjunction with this
clarification, NASD proposed to amend the text of proposed IM-8310-
2(b)(3) to correct the placement of the word ``certain'' so that it
modifies ``arbitration awards'' rather than ``summary information.''
\10\ See Letter from Patricia D. Struck, NASAA President,
Wisconsin Securities Administrator, NASAA, to Nancy Morris,
Secretary, Commission, dated September 7, 2006.
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This order grants accelerated approval to the proposed rule change,
as amended by Amendment Nos. 1 through 6 and solicits comments from
interested persons on the filing as amended by Amendment No. 6.
II. Description of Proposed Rule Change
A. Background
NASD established NASD BrokerCheck (``BrokerCheck'') in 1988 to
provide investors with information on the professional background,
business practices, and conduct of NASD members and their associated
persons. In 1990, Congress passed legislation requiring NASD to
establish and maintain a toll-free telephone number to receive
inquiries regarding its members and their associated persons. In 1998,
NASD began providing certain administrative information, such as
approved registrations and employment history, online via NASD's Web
site. In 2000, NASD amended IM-8310-2(a) which amendment: (1)
Established a two-year period for disclosure of information about
persons formerly registered with NASD; (2) authorized release of
information about terminated persons and firms that is provided on the
Form U6 (the form regulators use to report disciplinary actions), if
such matters would be required to be reported on Form U4 (``Uniform
Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer'') or Form
BD (``Uniform Application for Broker-Dealer Registration''); and (3)
provided for delivery of automated disclosure reports, which include
information as reported by filers on the uniform forms. In 2002, NASD
initiated a comprehensive review of the information that NASD makes
publicly available under IM-8310-2, which included an evaluation of
BrokerCheck from the perspective of public investors regarding their
experience in obtaining information, as well as their assessment of the
value of the information they received. NASD subsequently issued Notice
to Members 02-74 in November 2002, seeking comment on, among other
things, the possible expansion of information that NASD makes available
to the public and Notice to Members 03-76 in December 2003, seeking
comment on proposed enhancements to the existing approach for the
electronic delivery of written reports used by BrokerCheck.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See First Notice for a discussion on the comments received
on Notice to Members 02-74 (November 2002) and Notice to Members 03-
76 (December 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Proposed Rule Change
Information NASD Proposes To Release
While all disclosures would be subject to certain exceptions as
described more fully below, NASD proposes to release through
BrokerCheck certain information as applicable regarding current or
former members, associated persons, or persons who were associated with
a member within the preceding two years. Under proposed IM-8310-2, NASD
would release any information reported on the most recently filed Form
U4, Form U5 (``Uniform Termination Notice for Securities Industry
Registration''), Form U6, Form BD, and Form BDW (``Uniform Request for
Broker-Dealer Withdrawal'') (collectively, ``Registration Forms'').
NASD also proposes to release currently approved registrations,
summary information about certain arbitration awards against a member
involving a securities or commodities dispute with a public
customer,\12\ information with respect to qualification examinations
passed by the person and the date passed,\13\ and, in response to
telephonic inquiries via the BrokerCheck toll-free telephone listing,
whether a member is subject to the provisions of NASD Rule 3010(b)(2),
the Taping Rule. In addition, NASD proposes to release the name and
succession history for current or former members.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ NASD currently releases summary information concerning
arbitration awards issued by NASD arbitrators and will continue to
work with other regulators regarding disclosure of arbitration
awards issued in other forums. See Amendment No. 6, supra note 9.
\13\ NASD would not, however, release information regarding
examination scores or examinations that the person failed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change also would address the reporting of
Historic Complaints, defined by NASD as the information last reported
on Registration Forms relating to customer complaints that are more
than two years old and that have not been settled or adjudicated, and
customer complaints, arbitrations, or litigations that have been
settled for an amount less than $10,000 and which are no longer
reported on a Registration Form.\14\ NASD proposes to release Historic
Complaints only if all three of the following conditions have been met:
(1) Any such matter became a Historic Complaint on or after the
implementation date of this proposed rule change; \15\ (2) the most
recent Historic Complaint or currently reported customer complaint,
arbitration, or litigation is less than ten years old; and (3) the
person has a total of three or more currently disclosable regulatory
actions, currently reported customer complaints, arbitrations, or
litigations, or Historic Complaints (subject to the limitation that
they became a Historic Complaint on or after the implementation date of
this proposed rule change), or any combination thereof. Once all these
conditions have been met, NASD would release all information regarding
the person's Historic Complaints, again provided they became Historic
Complaints on or after the implementation date of this proposed rule
change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ NASD does not currently make Historic Complaints available
to the public.
\15\ NASD has indicated that the implementation date of this
proposed rule change would be no later than 90 days following
Commission approval.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NASD also proposes to provide persons with the opportunity to
submit a brief comment, in the form and in accordance with procedures
established by NASD, which would be included in the information NASD
releases through BrokerCheck. Only comments relating to the information
provided through BrokerCheck would be included.\16\ Persons who were
associated with a member within the preceding two years but who are no
longer registered with a member that wish to submit a comment
[[Page 3457]]
would be required to submit a signed, notarized affidavit in the form
specified by NASD.\17\ Persons who are currently registered with a
member firm would continue to be required to amend Form U4, where
possible, instead of submitting a separate comment.\18\ These comments
also would be made available through the CRD system to participating
regulators, and to any member firms that the person who submitted the
comment is associated with or is seeking to be associated with.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Consistent with current practice, NASD would reserve the
right to reject comments or redact information from a comment or a
report, on a case-by-case basis, that contains confidential customer
information, offensive or potentially defamatory language or
information that raises significant identity theft, personal safety
or privacy concerns, which concerns are not outweighed by investor
protection concerns. NASD, in rare circumstances, has excluded or
redacted information in cases involving stalking or terrorist
threats.
\17\ NASD would publish instructions for submitting comments on
its Web site for such persons. NASD would review the affidavit to
confirm relevance and compliance with the established instructions
and, if it met the criteria, would add the comment to the written
report provided through BrokerCheck. The person submitting the
comment would be able to replace or delete the comment in the same
way.
\18\ NASD indicated that it would include instructions on how
firms could amend archived disclosures in a Notice to Members
announcing approval of this proposed rule change and also would post
frequently asked questions and answers about this process on NASD's
Web site. See NASD Response Letter I.
\19\ The availability of comments submitted by persons who were
associated with a member within the preceding two years but who are
no longer registered with a member through the CRD system would
parallel the availability of a report on a broker through
BrokerCheck. For example, such comments would no longer be available
through the CRD system if the broker has been out of the industry
for more than two years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NASD also proposes that, upon written request, NASD could provide a
compilation of information about NASD members, subject to terms and
conditions established by NASD, and after execution of a licensing
agreement prepared by NASD. NASD expects to charge commercial users of
such compilations reasonable fees as determined by NASD.\20\ Such
compilations of information would consist solely of information
selected by NASD from Forms BD and BDW and would be limited to
information that is otherwise publicly available from the Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ The Commission notes that such proposed fees would need to
be filed with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information NASD Proposes Not To Release
Notwithstanding information that NASD proposes to release above,
NASD would not release Social Security numbers, residential history
information, physical description information, information that NASD is
otherwise prohibited from releasing under Federal law or information
provided solely for use by regulators. Additionally, NASD proposes to
reserve the right to exclude, on a case-by-case basis, information that
contains confidential customer information, offensive or potentially
defamatory language, or information that raises significant identity
theft, personal safety, or privacy concerns that are not outweighed by
investor protection concerns.
NASD also proposes not to release information about current or
former members, associated persons or persons who were associated with
a member within the preceding two years that has been reported on the
Registration Forms relating to regulatory investigations or proceedings
if the reported regulatory investigation or proceeding was vacated or
withdrawn by the instituting authority. Additionally, NASD proposes not
to release the most recent information reported on the Registration
Forms if: (1) NASD has determined that the information was reported in
error by a member, regulator, or other appropriate authority; or (2)
the information has been determined by regulators, through amendments
to the uniform Registration Forms, to be no longer relevant to
securities registration or licensure, regardless of the disposition of
the event or the date the event occurred.
With respect to information reported on the Form U5, NASD proposes
not to release Form U5 information for 15 days following the filing of
such information with NASD, in order to give persons on whose behalf
the Form U5 was submitted an opportunity to file a Form U4 or submit a
separate comment to NASD for inclusion with the information released
pursuant to BrokerCheck, regarding disclosure information reported on
Form U5 and any amendments thereto. NASD would then release both the
Form U5 disclosure and the person's comment, if any, to a requestor.
However, NASD proposes to continue its current practice of not
releasing ``Internal Review Disclosure'' information reported by
members, associated persons, or regulators on Section 7 of Form U5 \21\
or the ``Reason for Termination'' information reported on Section 3 of
Form U5. Nonetheless, under IM-8310-2, as proposed, information
regarding certain terminations for cause (i.e., those that meet the
criteria in current Question 7F on Form U5) would be disclosed through
BrokerCheck. Finally, NASD currently does not release information
reported on Schedule E of the Form BD.\22\ Under the proposed rule
change, NASD would continue not to release this information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Although the response to the internal review question and
related information reported on the associated disclosure reporting
page would not be released, if the matter subject to the internal
review is or becomes reportable under the investigation,
termination, or other disclosure questions, the disclosure made
pursuant to these other disclosure questions would be released.
\22\ The Commission notes the Division has granted no-action
relief indicating that it will not recommend enforcement action to
the Commission under Rules 15b1-1, 15b3-1, 15Ba2-2, and 15Ca2-1
under the Act for broker-dealers that file the Uniform Branch Office
Registration Form (``Form BR''), and do not complete Schedule E, or
file amendments to Schedule E, of the Form BD, as of the date on
which the transition to the Form BR began and the CRD[supreg] no
longer accepted Schedule E filings, which occurred in October 2005.
See Letter from Catherine McGuire, Chief Counsel, Division,
Commission, to Patrice M. Gliniecki, Senior Vice President and
Deputy General Counsel, NASD, dated September 30, 2005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Electronic Delivery of Written Reports
Currently, NASD makes written reports available to the public by
U.S. mail in printed form and by email in an electronic format upon
receipt of a request via email or the established toll-free number. Due
to a number of practical issues that have arisen regarding email
delivery, NASD plans to replace the current delivery approach with a
link to a controlled-access server that would allow access to the
requested report through a secure Internet session in response to
inquiries via email or through the established toll-free number. Access
to the information would be limited to the written report requested,
and only the individual making the request would be granted access to
the database. A requestor also would be able to view investor education
materials that would aid him or her in understanding the written
report. NASD also would continue to provide hard copy reports to those
requesting hard copies.
Other Changes
NASD also proposes to make conforming changes to IM-8310-2,
including making various numbering and lettering changes, moving former
subsections (b) through (m) into new IM-8310-3, and updating references
to ``the Association'' and ``NASD Regulation, Inc.''
III. Comment Summary and NASD's Response
As noted above, the Commission received eight comment letters with
respect to the First Notice and four comment letters with respect to
the Second Notice.\23\ After the First and Second Notices, NASD filed
two response letters, respectively, to address the concerns raised by
the commenters.\24\ The Commission then
[[Page 3458]]
received a second comment letter addressing NASD Response Letter
II.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See supra notes 4 and 7.
\24\ See NASD Response Letters I and II.
\25\ See NASAA Letter II.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Generally, the initial set of commenters took issue with the
portion of the proposed rule change regarding disclosure of an
individual's Historic Complaints, which includes information last
reported on the Registration Forms relating to customer complaints that
are more than two years old and that have not been settled or
adjudicated and customer complaints, arbitrations, or litigations that
have been settled for an amount less than $10,000 and are no longer
reported on a Registration Form. Although one commenter suggested that
all Historic Complaints should be disclosed to customers,\26\ most of
the commenters argued that the proposed changes to NASD's rules
relating to Historic Complaints would have harmful effects on member
firms and investors, with several of the commenters requesting that the
Commission not approve the proposed rule change because of this
provision.\27\ For instance, several of the commenters believed that
the release of a broker's Historic Complaints would give too much
weight to unproven allegations and complaints and thereby could
unfairly harm the broker's reputation.\28\ These commenters argued that
disclosure of all the complaints could be misleading to investors and
invite them to form conclusions based on allegations that may not have
merit and are not necessarily representative of a pattern of
misconduct.\29\ Two commenters also argued that disclosing archived
complaints to the public would ignore the fact that this type of
information was originally reported for regulatory purposes in
connection with registration and licensing matters.\30\ Similarly,
another commenter indicated that since the reporting process was
``first and foremost a regulatory tool and not a public disclosure
tool,'' firms had often reported events that were not clearly
reportable. This commenter believed that the proposed rule change would
now have the effect of discouraging firms from reporting questionable
matters.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See Pace Letter.
\27\ See, e.g., Davenport Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond
James Letter, and Wachovia Letter. See also SIA Letter I (objecting
to the proposed release of archived Historic Complaints).
\28\ See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING Letter,
Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter, SIA Letter I, and
Wachovia Letter. One commenter believed this emphasis on
unsubstantiated and unadjudicated customer complaints to be
``fundamentally unfair'' and that NASD's proposal ``significantly
erodes'' due process and undermines the customer arbitration
process. This commenter also asserted that registered
representatives should have the opportunity to defend against
regulatory allegations before such allegations are used as the basis
of expanded adverse disclosure. See Davenport Letter. Another
commenter argued that, unlike the current system, NASD's proposal
would make it possible for frivolous claims to remain reportable as
a Historic Complaint potentially for years to come and could allow a
``vexatious complainant'' to place a broker in the continuous status
of having all of its Historic Complaints disclosed by repeatedly
making frivolous claims to meet the ``three or more'' standard. See
Wachovia Letter.
\29\ See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING Letter,
Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter, SIA Letter I and
Wachovia Letter. See also SIA Letter II.
\30\ See ARM Letter I and SIA Letter I (arguing that the
disclosure of Historic Complaints ignores the inherent differences
between the CRD system, which is used by regulators, and the
BrokerCheck system, which discloses to the public a subset of the
information contained within the CRD system). See also ING Letter.
\31\ See ING Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, several commenters expressed concern that NASD's
proposal would inhibit firms from settling minor claims, since these
could be publicly disclosed, and thereby create an incentive for firms
to litigate customer complaints more often.\32\ Some of these
commenters asserted that the settlement of customer complaints does not
necessarily indicate an acknowledgement of improper behavior by the
broker, but rather is frequently the result of a cost/benefit analysis
or an effort to maintain client goodwill.\33\ Accordingly, several of
the commenters believed that the adverse impact on settlements would
not serve the interest of investors or advance the public interest.\34\
Additionally, believing that the proposal would encourage a broker to
litigate customer complaints in order to protect its record, some
commenters maintained that the increase in cost and time spent on
customer complaints would adversely affect member firms and investors
alike.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING Letter,
Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter, SIA Letters I and II,
and Wachovia Letter. See also ARM Letter II.
\33\ See, e.g., ARM Letter I, Davenport Letter, ING Letter,
Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter, SIA Letter I and
Wachovia Letter.
\34\ See, e.g., ING Letter, Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James
Letter, SIA Letter I and Wachovia Letter.
\35\ See, e.g., ARM Letter I, ING Letter and Wachovia Letter.
One commenter predicted that NASD Dispute Resolution would be
overwhelmed by having to handle cases which otherwise would have
been settled. See SIA Letter I.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A few commenters also opposed NASD's proposed threshold which would
trigger the release of all Historic Complaints, i.e., if the person has
three or more currently disclosable regulatory actions, currently
reported customer complaint, arbitration, or litigation disclosures, or
Historic Complaint disclosures, and the most recent Historic Complaint
or currently reported customer complaint, arbitration, or litigation is
less than 10 years old.\36\ While most of these commenters appeared to
incorrectly understand NASD's proposed application of the ten-year
condition,\37\ these commenters generally believed that three
disclosures over ten years would not necessarily be indicative of a
pattern of conduct by the registered representative because it could
include frivolous and baseless complaints filed against the
representative.\38\ Three of these commenters suggested that the
threshold for reporting Historic Complaints should be amended to be
five reportable events within a three-year period,\39\ with one
commenter also recommending that the look back for Historic Complaints
should be limited to ten years.\40\ One commenter also believed that
certain types of complaints should be excluded from the list of
disclosable events that would trigger reporting of Historic Complaints,
such as certain complaints filed by joint or related account holders,
operational complaints or those alleging primarily a product failure or
poor performance.\41\ Other commenters suggested that denied or
unsubstantiated claims \42\ and unadjudicated regulatory allegations
\43\ should not be counted towards the threshold requirement for
disclosing Historic Complaints.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See, e.g., ING Letter, MWA Financial Letter, SIA Letter I
and Wachovia Letter. But see Pace Letter (arguing that the ``three
or more'' disclosed incident threshold for reporting all Historic
Complaints was too high and that BrokerCheck should disclose all
Historic Complaints to customers).
\37\ The Commission notes that most of these commenters
misunderstood NASD's proposal, believing that NASD would release all
Historic Complaint information, regardless of age, if the registered
person has a total of three of more disclosures within a ten-year
period. The Commission clarifies that the ten-year condition of
NASD's proposal would require that only the most recent of the
Historic Complaint or currently reported customer complaint,
arbitration, or litigation must be less than ten years old, which
would trigger disclosure of all Historic Complaints, if the other
conditions are met.
\38\ See, e.g., ING Letter, MWA Financial Letter, and SIA Letter
I. See also Wachovia Letter.
\39\ See ING Letter, MWA Financial Letter, and SIA Letter I.
\40\ See ING Letter.
\41\ See SIA Letter I.
\42\ See ARM Letter I.
\43\ See Davenport Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As part of their argument regarding the proposed rule's unfairness
in disclosing trivial or frivolous claims, three commenters asserted
that NASD's proposal to allow brokers to provide a brief commentary in
response to the disclosed information would not provide an adequate
safeguard for
[[Page 3459]]
brokers.\44\ As evidence of the proposed rule's imbalance against
brokers, these commenters pointed to the procedural obstacles that
brokers would have to overcome in order to submit a comment.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See Piper Jaffray Letter, Raymond James Letter, and
Wachovia Letter. See also ARM Letter I and SIA Letter I (criticizing
the expungement process as a viable remedy for a registered person
to remove meritless claims from its record).
\45\ For instance, two of these commenters believed that the
comment process would be administered by a ``skeptical NASD staff''
that would have the right to reject any brief comment. See Piper
Jaffray Letter and Raymond James Letter. The other commenter
criticized the signed, notarized affidavit that certain brokers
would have to provide in order to submit a comment. See Wachovia
Letter. But see Pace Letter. This commenter supported NASD's
proposed comment process for associated persons to respond to
disclosed material and believed it provided an opportunity for them
to explain any information they perceive to be incomplete.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, to address the harm of disclosing potentially
misleading information to investors and to protect against potential
abuses by disgruntled customers, a few commenters suggested adding
certain protections to the proposal,\46\ including changing the
proposal so that Historic Complaints, by default, would not be
disclosed unless NASD reviewed the matter to determine whether to
disclose the Historic Complaints.\47\ To assist investors in evaluating
information regarding unadjudicated claims and de minimis settlements,
the same commenter suggested that NASD insert a clarifying statement
indicating that a matter may have been unadjudicated because the
customer declined to pursue the matter or that it was settled for a
modest amount to avoid litigation and should not be considered an
admission of liability or responsibility.\48\ Another commenter
suggested that NASD require customers and their counsel to attest that
they have a reasonable, good-faith basis for naming a registered person
and that NASD provide to customers who are preparing to file claims
additional investor education material explaining the implications of
naming a particular registered person and the potential damaging
implications.\49\
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\46\ See, e.g., SIA Letter I and Wachovia Letter.
\47\ See Wachovia Letter. The commenter believed that, if
brokers were aware that NASD would exercise discretion and judgment
in determining when Historic Complaints should be disclosed, then
brokers would have less of an incentive to litigate. Id.
\48\ Id.
\49\ See SIA Letter I.
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To address these concerns, NASD indicated that it has developed an
educational component to the proposed BrokerCheck report and Web site
that NASD believes would put Historic Complaints in the appropriate
context and enable investors to give them appropriate weight when
evaluating a particular firm or registered person.\50\ Specifically,
NASD noted that there would be an introductory section preceding the
BrokerCheck report explaining that certain reported items may involve
pending actions or allegations that may be contested and not resolved
or proven, and that these items may be withdrawn or dismissed, resolved
in favor of the registered person, or concluded through a negotiated
settlement with no admission or conclusion of wrongdoing. In addition,
NASD noted that the BrokerCheck report would include certain status
information for each Historic Complaint that would indicate whether or
not the complaint was settled. NASD also indicated that it would advise
readers through the BrokerCheck report and its Web site that they
should not rely solely on the information available through BrokerCheck
and should consult other sources to the extent possible for information
about the registered person.
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\50\ See NASD Response Letter I.
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In response to commenter's criticisms against the brief commentary
mechanism that individuals can use to respond to disclosed information,
NASD emphasized that registered persons would be able to submit
information providing context and perspective about any event,
including Historic Complaints. NASD noted that individuals typically
provide such information in a comment section on the Form U4 at the
time the event is reported, and that the registered individual can add
to its previously submitted comment or comment for the first time
through its firm using the CRD system.\51\ In addition, NASD noted that
individuals who are no longer registered would be able to provide
comment through a signed affidavit to CRD. NASD also represented that
it would not edit the comments, except that it reserved the right to
reject or redact comments that contain confidential customer
information, offensive or potentially defamatory language, or
information that raises significant identity theft, personal safety or
privacy concerns that are not outweighed by investor protection
concerns.\52\
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\51\ If the proposed rule change is approved by the Commission,
NASD represented that it will provide instructions in a Notice to
Members on how firms may amend archived disclosures and will also
post frequently asked questions and answers about this process on
NASD's Web site. See NASD Response Letter I.
\52\ According to NASD, each person, whether registered or
formerly registered, will be responsible for ensuring that a
Historic Complaint that is not currently disclosed through
BrokerCheck adequately reflects its comment about the matter in the
event such matter becomes disclosed to the public. Id.
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Furthermore, a few commenters expressed concern over the fairness
of retroactively altering the rules regarding the disclosure of
Historic Complaints, including the disclosure of settlements after such
settlements have been made, since registered persons often agree to
settlements based on the assumption that the settlement information
would not become part of the public record or have long-term negative
effects on their reputations or business relationships.\53\ Two
commenters suggested that NASD should prospectively implement its
proposed rules regarding the disclosure of Historic Complaints and only
disclose complaints reported after the effective date of the proposed
rule change.\54\
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\53\ See, e.g., ARM Letters I and II, ING Letter and SIA Letters
I and II.
\54\ See ING Letter and SIA Letter I. See also ARM Letter II,
discussed further below (requesting that NASD not apply the new
guidelines to any matters that are currently pending as well).
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In response to commenter's concerns that firms and registered
persons may have made certain decisions relating to customer
complaints, arbitrations, or litigations based on the current rules
under which the CRD system and BrokerCheck operate, NASD proposed in
Amendment Nos. 4 and 5 to provide that only Historic Complaints that
become Historic Complaints on or after the implementation date of the
proposed rule change (i.e., those that are archived on or after the
implementation date) would be eligible for disclosure through
BrokerCheck.\55\ NASD stated that such a change would be in the public
interest. Under this proposed modification, NASD would disclose through
BrokerCheck all of an individual's Historic Complaints that became
Historic Complaints on or after the implementation date of the proposed
rule change if: (1) The most recent Historic Complaint or currently
reported customer complaint, arbitration, or litigation is less than
ten years old, and (2) the person has a total of three or more
currently disclosable regulatory actions, currently reported customer
complaints, arbitrations, or litigations, or Historic Complaints
(subject to the limitation that they became a Historic Complaint on or
after the implementation date of the proposed rule) or any combination
thereof. According to NASD, the revised approach would strike a fair
balance between public investors' interests in the background of the
individuals with
[[Page 3460]]
whom they do business and the concerns of participants in the
securities industry.
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\55\ See NASD Response Letter I. See also Amendment No. 4.
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In reaction to NASD's proposed changes in Amendment Nos. 4 and 5,
the Commission received four additional comment letters. After the
Second Notice, two commenters expressed support for this recent change
by NASD to provide that Historic Complaints will not be eligible for
disclosure if the matter became a Historic Complaint before the
implementation date of the proposed rule change.\56\ Another commenter
wanted NASD to go even further by recommending that the new BrokerCheck
program disclose only those matters that commence following the rule
change and not include any matters that are currently pending.\57\
According to this commenter, current matters entered into before the
rule change should be archived after two years as the current
guidelines allow.\58\
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\56\ See MWA Financial Letter and SIA Letter II.
\57\ See ARM Letter II.
\58\ Id.
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However, one commenter expressed serious reservations regarding the
proposed limitation on the disclosure of Historic Complaints.\59\
Specifically, this commenter argued that the effect of the recent
amendment is that Historic Complaint information that currently exists
within CRD would never be released to the public through BrokerCheck,
while the only Historic Complaints that would be disclosed are those
that become Historic Complaints after the proposal's effective date.
This commenter was not persuaded by other commenters' arguments that
the proposed rule should be implemented prospectively because firms and
registered persons might have relied on the current rules under which
CRD and BrokerCheck operate when they decided to settle certain
customer complaints, arbitrations, or litigations. First, the commenter
maintained that these other commenters did not substantiate their
argument with any specific cases, surveys, or studies in which
registered representatives actually settled customer disputes because
they would not be publicly disclosed after two years.\60\ Second, the
commenter disagreed with other commenters' assertions that NASD members
had settled matters without the knowledge that the rules might change
in the future. In support of its argument, the commenter indicated that
NASD's Notice to Members 02-74 that was issued in 2002 put NASD members
on notice that the rules regarding the public disclosure of customer
complaints and, more specifically, the rules regarding Historic
Complaints might be revised and modified.\61\ This commenter asserted
that if NASD wanted to strike a balance between the industry and
investors, NASD should have considered that its membership was aware of
the proposed changes to BrokerCheck since its Notice to Members in 2002
and should have proposed the earlier date as the date for measuring
which complaints would fall within the definition of Historic
Complaints under the proposed rule change. Furthermore, this commenter
argued that, if the proposal were implemented as proposed in Amendment
No. 4, more comprehensive information could be available for the same
financial services professional in the Investment Adviser Public
Disclosure--Individual (``IAPDI'') system, which is currently being
developed, than in BrokerCheck. The commenter maintained that this
would go against NASD's original intent of providing the same level of
information through BrokerCheck that the states provide and could lead
to investor confusion.\62\ Finally, this commenter took issue with
NASD's proposal to alter the way it would measure the two-year
reporting and disclosure period for customer complaints. While NASD
currently calculates the two-year period for disclosure of customer
complaints as of the date the complaint was reported on Forms U4 and
U5, NASD had proposed to consider this two-year period to begin on the
date on which the member received the complaint, both for purposes of
reportability on Forms U4 and U5 and for disclosure purposes. This
commenter believed this change could encourage registered persons and
their firms to manipulate the amount of time the complaint would be
publicly disclosed by delaying the reporting or perhaps withholding the
reporting of customer complaints while the two-year period is running.
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\59\ See NASAA Letter I.
\60\ The commenter criticized NASD for agreeing with other
commenters that ``stockbrokers would rather litigate customer
disputes than settle them because the complaint would be publicly
disclosed.'' Id.
\61\ The commenter cited to the 58 plus comment letters that
NASD received in response to this Notice to Members as evidence that
NASD's membership was aware that the rules regarding the release of
historic information might change. Id.
\62\ The commenter was concerned that the same person would be
treated differently for disclosure purposes depending on which
system, BrokerCheck or IAPDI, an investor searches, and that the
public would have to check multiple sources for disclosure on the
same person. Id.
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In response to this commenter's objection to NASD's proposal to
disclose a Historic Complaint only if the item became a Historic
Complaint on or after the implementation date of the proposal, NASD
maintained that its proposal is an evenhanded approach that would
provide investors with additional information about brokers who have
demonstrated a pattern of conduct of accumulating complaints,
regulatory actions, arbitrations, or litigations, and that would also
address the fairness concerns of participants in the securities
industry by not retroactively changing the rules governing the
disclosure of such events.\63\ To address the commenter's concern over
measuring the two-year time period for disclosing customer complaints
through BrokerCheck from the date the complaint is filed with the firm,
rather than the date the complaint is reported to the CRD system, NASD
stated that, to the extent a firm may not timely amend a registered
person's Form U4 to report a customer complaint, the event should still
be disclosed through BrokerCheck for two years. Accordingly, NASD
decided not to amend the manner in which it currently measures the two-
year time frame for complaint disclosures and provided that complaints
will continue to be disclosed through BrokerCheck for 24 months
beginning on the date that the complaint is reported to the CRD
system.\64\
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\63\ See NASD Response Letter II and Amendment No. 6. But see
NASAA Letter II. Continuing to object to NASD's proposal to disclose
only those items that become a Historic Complaint after the
implementation date, the commenter criticized NASD Response Letter
II in failing to specifically respond to issues the commenter raised
in its initial comment letter and urged the Commission to not
approve the proposed rule change.
\64\ See NASD Response Letter II.
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IV. Discussion and Commission's Findings
After careful consideration of the proposal, the comment letters,
and NASD's responses to the comment letters, the Commission finds that
the proposed rule change, as amended, is consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to a national securities association.\65\ The Commission
believes that the proposed rule change, as amended, is consistent with
Section 15A(b) of the Act,\66\ in general, and furthers the objectives
of Section 15A(b)(6),\67\ in particular, in that it is designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to
[[Page 3461]]
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system, and in general, to protect investors and the public
interest. In addition, the Commission believes that the proposed rule
change, as amended, is consistent with Section 15A(i) of the Act,\68\
which requires that NASD establish and maintain a toll-free telephone
listing, and a readily accessible electronic or other process, to
receive and promptly respond to inquiries regarding registration
information on its members and their associated persons.
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\65\ In approving this proposed rule change, the Commission has
considered the proposed rule's impact on efficiency, competition,
and capital formation. 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\66\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b).
\67\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
\68\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(i).
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The Commission believes that investors must be given the
information necessary to make an informed decision about whether or not
to conduct business with a particular broker-dealer or associated
person. At the same time, the Commission recognizes that broker-dealers
and their associated persons have legitimate concerns related to the
harm their reputations could suffer from inaccurate or misleading
information being made available to the public, as well as from the
release of confidential personal information. The Commission believes
that the proposed rule change would adequately balance the needs of
investors with the interests of broker-dealers and their associated
persons by increasing the amount of information available through
BrokerCheck, while adopting certain protections for broker-dealers and
their associated persons. For instance, under the proposed rule change,
NASD would not release certain confidential personal information or
other information about an associated person or a member which is
irrelevant or misleading.
Many of the commenters expressed concern regarding the release of
Historic Complaints. Commenters argued, among other things, that the
proposal would give too much weight to unproven allegations and
complaints and could be misleading to investors, that the proposed
threshold for disclosure of Historic Complaints is too low and over-
inclusive, and that firms would be inhibited from settling minor
claims, which are often settled as the result of a cost/benefit
analysis or in an effort to maintain client goodwill, since they could
be publicly disclosed.
The Commission notes that NASD has protections in place that should
address the issues raised by the commenters. First, NASD would allow
associated persons to submit relevant comments for inclusion with the
information provided by BrokerCheck. While some of the commenters
disputed the protections that the ``brief comment'' process would
provide, the Commission notes that, as NASD reiterated in its response
to comments, NASD would only reject or redact comments in very limited
circumstances and, furthermore, would only do so if the concerns raised
by the comments are not outweighed by investor protection concerns. In
addition, NASD will include an introductory section preceding the
BrokerCheck report that would provide a context within which to
consider complaints, status information in the report that would make
clear whether or not a Historic Complaint was settled, and advisories
in the BrokerCheck report and on the Web site that would indicate that
the reader should not rely solely on the information available through
BrokerCheck.
Some commenters were concerned that altering the rules regarding
disclosure of settlements after such settlements had been made would be
unfair. The Commission believes NASD's decision to only release
information on Historic Complaints that become Historic Complaints on
or after the implementation date of the proposed rule change is a
reasonable response to that concern. For instance, under the proposal,
as amended, persons entering into new settlements would be fully aware
that, if such settlements were for less than $10,000 and are no longer
reported on a Registration Form, they would be disclosed as Historic
Complaints if the threshold requirements for disclosure were met.
One commenter argued strongly against NASD's proposal to only
release Historic Complaints that become Historic Complaints on or after
the implementation date of the proposed rule change. This commenter
asserted, among other things, that there had been sufficient notice of
this proposal since November 2002 and that a better approach would be
to release Historic Complaints that became Historic Complaints on or
after that date. The Commission recognizes that differing judgments
could be made as to the relevance of various Historic Complaints and
the appropriate balance between the informational needs of investors
and the interests of broker-dealers and their associated persons in
assuring misleading information about them is not disseminated. The
Commission believes NASD has struck a reasonable balance, and notes
that, even using the implementation date as the ``cutoff'' for
disclosure of Historic Complaints, the amount of information that would
be disclosed through BrokerCheck would increase under this proposed
rule change.
The same commenter argued that NASD should not change the way in
which it measures the two-year disclosure period for customer
complaints, which currently begins on the date the member reports the
complaint. This commenter was concerned that, if complaints were only
disclosed for two years from the date they were received by the member,
there would be an incentive to delay or even withhold the reporting of
customer complaints in order to shorten the disclosure period. The
Commission notes that in Amendment No. 6 NASD has withdrawn this
portion of its proposal. Accordingly, customer complaints will continue
to be disclosed for two years from the date on which they are reported.
With regard to all other issues raised by the commenters, the
Commission is satisfied that NASD has adequately addressed the
commenters' concerns. The Commission further notes NASD's planned
electronic distribution system should provide NASD with the flexibility
to provide a report delivery solution that is more user-friendly, and
that more efficiently meets investors' needs in light of changing
technology, while still providing safeguards against data piracy.
While BrokerCheck is a valuable tool for an investor to use to get
information about a firm or a registered person with whom the investor
is considering doing business, the Commission would urge investors to
check with each state where the firm has done business or where the
sales person has been registered to obtain a complete picture of his or
her disciplinary history.
Accelerated Approval
The Commission finds good cause for approving the proposed rule
change prior to the thirtieth day after the date of publication in the
Federal Register pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act.\69\ In
Amendment No. 6, NASD: (i) indicated that it was withdrawing its
original proposal to change the start date of the two-year period for
disclosure of a customer complaint to the date on which the member
receives the complaint; and (ii) clarified that it currently releases
summary information concerning certain arbitration awards issued by
NASD arbitrators and will continue to work with other regulators
regarding disclosure of arbitration awards issued in other forums, and
made a corresponding change to the proposed rule text. The Commission
[[Page 3462]]
notes that NASD's amendments were largely in response to comments that
the Commission received. The Commission believes that Amendment No. 6
adequately responds to commenters' concerns and notes that the proposed
changes raise no new issues of regulatory concern. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that granting accelerated approval to the filing is
appropriate.
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\69\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
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IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the filing, including whether the filing is
consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of the
following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an e-mail to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-NASD-2003-168 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Nancy M. Morris,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NASD-2003-168. This file
number should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/
sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other
than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for inspection and
copying in the Commission's Public Reference Room. Copies of the filing
also will be available for inspection and copying at the principal
office of the NASD. All comments received will be posted without
change; the Commission does not edit personal identifying information
from submissions. You should submit only information that you wish to
make available publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number
SR-NASD-2003-168 and should be submitted on or before February 15,
2007.
VI. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change, as amended, is consistent with the requirements of the Act
and rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national
securities association, and, in particular, Section 15A(b)(6) of the
Act \70\ and 15A(i) of the Act.\71\
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\70\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
\71\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(i).
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It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,\72\ that the proposed rule change (SR-NASD-2003-168) is hereby
approved on an accelerated basis.
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\72\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\73\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
For the Commission, by the Division of Market Regulation,
pursuant to delegated authority.\73\
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7-1108 Filed 1-24-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P