Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation; Notice of Filing and Order Granting Accelerated Approval of a Proposed Rule Change Relating To Establishing a Market Loan Program, 5958-5965 [E9-2204]
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5958
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 21 / Tuesday, February 3, 2009 / Notices
the Exchange’s product from pricing
under the CTA Plan.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
In proposing and adopting Regulation
NMS, the Commission rescinded the
prior prohibition on SROs from
disseminating their trade reports
independently,11 subjecting that
distribution to the ‘‘fair and reasonable’’
and ‘‘not unreasonably discriminatory’’
standards that have historically
governed the distribution of
consolidated data.12 The Commission
stated, ‘‘Given that * * * SROs will
continue to transmit trades to the
Networks pursuant to the Plans * * *,
the Commission believe [SIC] that SROs
and their members also should be free
to distribute their trades
independently.’’ 13
The Commission rescinded the
prohibition in recognition of the fact
that competition in the realm of SRO
trade-report distribution would produce
market forces and innovation that
would benefit the investing public. The
NYSE ArcaBook Approval Order
enforces this finding. By means of NYSE
Arca Trades, the Exchange would
provide vendors and broker-dealers
with an alternative market data product
and fee structure that does not exist
today, without altering or rescinding
any existing market data fees or
products. If they believe that the
proposed product and fee structure are
useful and cost-effective to their
business model, they will embrace
them.
Given the existence of alternative
products containing NYSE Arca last sale
products, the Exchange 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.
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C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants or Others
The Exchange has discussed this
proposed rules change with those
entities that the Exchange believes
would be the most likely to take
advantage of the proposed NYSE Arca
Last Sale Information service by
becoming NYSE Arca-Only Vendors.
While those entities have not submitted
formal, written comments on the
proposal, the Exchange has incorporated
some of their ideas into the proposal
11 See
Rule 601 of Regulation NMS.
Rule 603(a) of regulation NMS.
13 See Footnote 638 to Regulation NMS (Release
No. 34–51808; File No. S7–10–04) (June 9, 2005).
12 See
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and this proposed rule change reflects
their input. The Exchange has not
received any unsolicited written
comments from members or other
interested parties.
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.
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–NYSEArca–2009–05 on the
subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSEArca–2009–05. 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
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provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for inspection and copying in
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room, on official business days between
the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies
of the filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. 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–
NYSEArca–2009–05 and should be
submitted on or before February 24,
2009.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.14
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–2225 Filed 2–2–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–59294; File No. SR–OCC–
2008–20]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Options Clearing Corporation; Notice
of Filing and Order Granting
Accelerated Approval of a Proposed
Rule Change Relating To Establishing
a Market Loan Program
January 23, 2009.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 notice is hereby given that on
December 23, 2008, The Options
Clearing Corporation (‘‘OCC’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I and II below, which items have
been prepared primarily by OCC. The
Commission is publishing this notice
and order to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested
persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The proposed rule change would
create a framework for OCC to provide
clearing services for stock loan and
borrow transactions effected through
electronic trading systems.
14 17
1 15
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CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
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II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
OCC 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 IV below. OCC has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections (A), (B),
and (C) below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.2
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
The purpose of this proposed rule
change is to revise OCC’s By-Laws and
Rules to create a framework (‘‘Market
Loan Program’’) that can accommodate
securities lending transactions proposed
to be executed through electronic
trading systems (‘‘Loan Markets’’), such
as the market to be operated by
Automated Equity Finance Markets, Inc.
(‘‘AQS’’), a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Quadriserv, Inc. The relationship
between OCC and AQS will be governed
by the Agreement for Clearing and
Settlement Services (‘‘AQS Agreement’’)
included as Exhibit 5 to Filing No. SR–
OCC–2008–20.
Securities lending contributes to the
overall liquidity and efficiency of the
equity and equity options markets. For
options market participants, securities
lending supports market making,
arbitrage trading, and equity financing
and assists participants in meeting
deliveries resulting from options
exercises and assignments. OCC’s Stock
Loan/Hedge Program, which allows
approved Clearing Members to register
their privately negotiated securities
lending transactions with OCC, benefits
OCC’s Clearing Members and the
industry by reducing the cost of credit,
increasing operational efficiency, and
providing stability through a central
counterparty guarantee. OCC believes
that it is important to keep pace with
innovations in the securities lending
markets and therefore proposes to
launch the Market Loan Program.
The bulk of the proposed changes are
based on procedures and protections
that OCC has utilized in the operation
of the Stock Loan/Hedge Program, with
necessary modifications to account for
those aspects of the Market Loan
Program that are different from the
Stock Loan/Hedge Program. OCC
2 The Commission has modified parts of these
statements.
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intends the provisions of its By-Laws
and Rules governing the Market Loan
Program and the provisions governing
the Stock Loan/Hedge Program to be the
same substantively except where
differences were clearly intended or
where the context requires a different
interpretation. For example, under the
Market Loan Program OCC would create
a process by which it will accept
anonymously matched stock loan
transactions from a Loan Market and
then send instructions to The
Depository Trust Company (‘‘DTC’’) to
settle the transactions. In comparison,
under the Stock Loan/Hedge Program
OCC does not participate in a stock loan
transaction until after two clearing
members have transferred the securities
and required collateral between
themselves through the facilities of
DTC. See below for a discussion of such
differences.
B. Overview of the Proposed Market
Loan Program
The Loan Market operated by AQS
would be the first market supported by
the proposed Market Loan Program.
Additional markets that are operated in
a manner similar to the AQS Loan
Market could be included in the Market
Loan Program in the future.
A Loan Market would provide a
centralized source for price discovery
and trade matching of stock loan
transactions, for example, by
implementing periodic auctions
throughout the trading day. In the case
of an auction-based market, participant
lenders would provide the Loan Market
with available inventory for auction,
and participant borrowers would
ordinarily compete on rebate rates with
the lowest rate earning the trade.
Lenders and borrowers would ordinarily
be matched based on the Loan Market’s
trade-matching algorithm. A Loan
Market could also provide, as does AQS,
for submission of privately negotiated
transactions for processing through the
Loan Market, including clearance and
settlement through OCC. Such
transactions will not be separately
identified to OCC and will be treated by
OCC like any other matched loan
transactions submitted by the Loan
Market.
Clearing Members would need to
meet certain requirements in order to be
approved for participation in the Market
Loan Program. For example, Clearing
Members would need to be active
subscribers to a Loan Market that is
supported by the Market Loan Program.
Clearing Members would also be
required to set their ‘‘Receiver
Authorized Delivery’’ (‘‘RAD’’) Limits at
DTC in respect of transactions with OCC
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as the counterparty to the highest limit
permitted under DTC rules.3 For taxrelated reasons, OCC presently intends
to permit only U.S. Clearing Members to
participate in the Market Loan Program,
at least initially. Clearing Members
approved for participation in the Market
Loan Program would be referred to as
‘‘Market Loan Clearing Members.’’
When additional markets are included
in the Market Loan Program in the
future, a separate designation will be
required for a Clearing Member’s
participation in each Loan Market.
The Loan Market would submit
matched loan transactions to OCC for
clearance and settlement. OCC would
then conduct routine validation
processes before passing electronic
instructions to DTC to move securities
and cash between the Market Loan
Clearing Members’ accounts at DTC.
Because a Loan Market may, as does
AQS, match lenders and borrowers on
an anonymous basis, OCC and DTC
would establish an account structure
involving the transfer of securities and
cash between the lender and the
borrower through a DTC account owned
by OCC (‘‘OCC Account’’), thereby
permitting stock loan transactions
originated through a Loan Market to be
settled in a manner that preserves
anonymity to both the lender and
borrower.
Because OCC would substitute itself
as the counterparty to all such DTC
transactions, it is essential to OCC, from
a risk management perspective, that
there would never be a net settlement
obligation against the OCC Account at
the end of any day (i.e., OCC’s
obligations with respect to all
completed DTC transactions to which
the OCC Account was a party should net
to zero both with respect to securities
and cash). Avoidance of any net
settlement obligation is essential both
because OCC has no mechanism for
funding such settlement obligations and
for other operational reasons. In order to
provide reasonable assurance that OCC
will have no net settlement obligations,
DTC will implement procedures
intended to ensure that if one side of a
loan transaction does not settle, the
other side will be blocked as well. In
addition, under current DTC rules, a
3 The RAD Limit is a risk control mechanism
which allows the DTC participant to set individual
dollar limits against each contra participant so that
deliveries with a settlement value exceeding the
specified limit are not processed until the
participant has reviewed and approved them.
Clearing Members participating in the Market Loan
Program are expected to comply with the
requirement of setting their RAD Limits against
OCC to the highest level permissible under DTC
rules. However, DTC will not be asked to monitor
or enforce this requirement.
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DTC participant can return a delivery of
securities (‘‘Reclaim’’) to the original
delivering party. DTC will block
Reclaims against the OCC Account in
order to prevent such Reclaims from
resulting in a net settlement obligation
in that account.4
Upon receiving the end of the day
stock loan activity file from DTC
showing settled stock loans (i.e., transfer
of the loaned securities against the
specified collateral) originated through a
Loan Market, OCC would perform
additional validation processes to
confirm that the transactions match the
instructions given by OCC before
affirmatively accepting settled stock
loans and substituting itself as
counterparty to these transactions (such
accepted stock loan transactions are
defined as ‘‘Market Loans’’). Upon
OCC’s acceptance of a Market Loan, the
lending Market Loan Clearing Member
would be a ‘‘Lending Clearing Member’’
and the borrowing Market Loan Clearing
Member would be a ‘‘Borrowing
Clearing Member’’ in respect of that
Market Loan for all purposes of the ByLaws and Rules. Any stock loan
transactions identified as originated
through a Loan Market that are not
ultimately confirmed and accepted by
OCC would be rejected by OCC.
Upon acceptance of a Market Loan,
OCC would create the stock loan
position in the designated account of
the Lending Clearing Member and the
stock borrow position in the designated
account of the Borrowing Clearing
Member. Positions resulting from
Market Loans would be maintained in
the same manner as positions resulting
from stock loans accepted by OCC under
the Stock Loan/Hedge program (the
latter are defined as ‘‘Hedge Loans’’ in
the By-Laws and Rules 5). However,
positions resulting from Market Loans
would be separately identified from,
and would not be fungible with,
positions resulting from Hedge Loans.
As with stock borrow or stock loan
positions resulting from Hedge Loans,
OCC would guarantee the daily mark-tomarket payments generated by the open
positions resulting from Market Loans.
In addition, OCC would also provide a
limited guaranty of payments in lieu of
cash dividends and distributions
4 DTC filed a proposed rule change (File No. SR–
DTC–2008–15) with the Commission to describe
proposed changes in its rules for purposes of
supporting the Market Loan Program that is being
approved simultaneously with this proposed rule
change.
5 OCC proposes to introduce the term ‘‘Hedge
Loan’’ to refer to stock loans accepted by OCC
under the Stock Loan/Hedge Program. OCC
proposes to amend the term ‘‘Stock Loan’’ to mean
either a ‘‘Hedge Loan’’ or a ‘‘Market Loan’’ or both
as the context requires.
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(‘‘dividend equivalent payments’’) and
stock loan rebates, in each case limited
to the amount for which the Corporation
has collected margins from the
responsible Market Loan Clearing
Member(s) prior to the payment date.
The amount of these payments would be
calculated by the relevant Loan Market,
and OCC would effect the payments
only as instructed by the Loan Market.
OCC would have no responsibility to
verify the accuracy of the Loan Market’s
calculations and would not be liable to
Clearing Members for any errors in such
calculations. A Market Loan Clearing
Member would be required to maintain
margin with the Corporation in respect
of any scheduled dividend equivalent
payments and accrued rebate payments
that such Clearing Member is obligated
to make.
Termination of a Market Loan, in
whole or in part, could be initiated by
the Lending Clearing Member calling for
the return of the loaned securities (a
‘‘recall’’), or by the Borrowing Clearing
Member indicating its intention to
return the loaned securities (a ‘‘return’’).
The Loan Market would assign
(randomly or by some other method) the
recall to a participant who borrowed the
same securities or the return to a
participant who lent the same securities.
Recalls/returns would be submitted to
OCC and would be processed by OCC in
the same manner as new stock loan
transactions except that (i) the Loan
Market would distinguish recalls/
returns from new stock loan
transactions; and (ii) if a recall/return
were not settled by DTC and confirmed
by OCC after a specified period of time,
the Loan Market would instruct an
independent broker to initiate the ‘‘buyin’’ or ‘‘sell-out’’ process (described in
more detail in Part C below), as
applicable, in order to complete such
recall/return.
A Loan Market would have the
authority to direct OCC to terminate all
or a portion of the outstanding Market
Loans carried in the account(s) of a
Clearing Member that were originated
through that Loan Market. In addition,
OCC would have the authority under
Rule 305(a) to require a Clearing
Member to reduce or eliminate stock
loan or stock borrow positions,
including positions resulting from
Market Loans, upon a determination
that circumstances warrant such action.
In either case, OCC would give written
notice to all affected Clearing Members
specifying the date on which such
termination would become effective. If
any such termination were not settled
by the specified time, the relevant Loan
Market would instruct an independent
broker to initiate the ‘‘buy-in’’ or ‘‘sell-
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out’’ process, as applicable, in order to
complete the termination. Any such
buy-in or sell-out would be for the
account and liability of OCC, which
would in turn have rights against the
defaulting Market Loan Clearing
Member.
In the event that OCC, a Loan Market,
or DTC suspends a Market Loan
Clearing Member, OCC would not
accept any settled stock loan transaction
to which the suspended Clearing
Member is a party as a Market Loan after
the time at which the Clearing Member
was suspended. Finally, OCC would
take action under proposed Rule 2211A
and Chapter XI of the rules to close out
the open stock loan and stock borrow
positions carried in the suspended
Clearing Member’s account(s), using the
‘‘buy-in’’ or ‘‘sell-out’’ process or
exercising setoff rights as appropriate.
Temporary hedging transactions would
also be permitted under the Chapter XI
rules.
If a Market Loan Clearing Member
were to believe that a Market Loan was
executed on such Clearing Member’s
behalf in error or that a material term of
the loan was erroneous, the Clearing
Member would contact the relevant
Loan Market to seek correction. Every
determination as to whether a Market
Loan was entered into in error would be
within the sole discretion of the relevant
Loan Market and would not be subject
to review by OCC. OCC would have no
liability to Clearing Members for any
action taken, or any delay or failure to
take any action, in reasonable reliance
on information that OCC receives from
a Loan Market or DTC.
C. Proposed Changes to the By-Laws
and Rules
In order to provide clearing services
for Market Loans, OCC proposes to (i)
add a new Article XXIA to the By-Laws
and a new Chapter XXIIA to the Rules
that would govern the clearance of
Market Loans, (ii) introduce new terms
and amend the definitions of existing
terms, and (iii) amend a few other
provisions of the By-Laws and Rules in
connection with the introduction of
Market Loans.
Changes in Terminology—Article I,
Section 1; Article XXI, Section 1; Article
XXIA, Section 1
In Article I, Section 1, OCC proposes
to introduce the terms ‘‘Hedge Loan,’’
‘‘Loan Market,’’ ‘‘Market Loan,’’ ‘‘Market
Loan Clearing Member’’ and ‘‘Market
Loan Program.’’ The definition of
‘‘Eligible Stock’’ would be amended so
that it will be applicable to the Market
Loan Program. OCC also proposes to
amend the term ‘‘Stock Loan’’ to refer to
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a Hedge Loan or a Market Loan or both,
as the context requires, except that the
term ‘‘Stock Loan’’ is redefined in
Article XXI of the By-Laws so that, as
used there and in Chapter XXII of the
Rules, the term refers only to ‘‘Hedge
Loans’’ and not to ‘‘Market Loans.’’
The terms ‘‘Borrowing Clearing
Member’’ and ‘‘Lending Clearing
Member’’ are amended to encompass
Market Loan Clearing Members that
borrow or lend Eligible Stocks in Market
Loans. The terms ‘‘stock borrow
position,’’ and ‘‘stock loan position’’
will, where appropriate, apply to
positions resulting from Market Loans
without amendment.
In Article XXIA, Section 1, OCC
proposes to introduce the terms
‘‘dividend equivalent payment,’’
‘‘recall’’ and ‘‘return.’’ The terms
‘‘Collateral,’’ ‘‘Loaned Stock,’’ ‘‘mark-tomarket payment’’ and ‘‘settlement
price,’’ which are defined in Article XXI
in the context of the Stock Loan/Hedge
Program, would be redefined in Article
XXIA to reflect their specific application
in the context of a Market Loan. Finally,
OCC proposes to introduce the term
‘‘rebate,’’ which refers to a periodic
payment payable by the Lending
Clearing Member or the Borrowing
Clearing Member (depending on
whether the rebate rate is positive or
negative) in respect of a Market Loan.
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Article XXI, Section 5
Paragraph (b) of Section 5 is being
deleted to eliminate the existing
requirement that a Clearing Member
represent that the Loaned Stock does
not constitute customer fully paid or
excess margin securities. The
Commission’s Rule 15c3–3 requires a
broker-dealer to maintain possession
and control of customer fully-paid and
excess margin securities. Paragraph
(b)(3) of Rule 15c3–3 sets forth
conditions (which include customer
consent, provision of specified collateral
to the customer, etc.) under which a
broker-dealer may borrow fully paid or
excess margin securities from customers
for its own use without violating the
rule’s possession or control
requirement. The deletion of paragraph
(b) will maintain consistency between
the existing Stock/Loan Hedge rules and
the Market Loan rules, where no such
representation is proposed to be
required. Rules 2202(e) and 2202A(f)
require Clearing Members to represent
that each stock loan is in compliance
with Rule 15c3–3 and other customer
protection rules, and OCC believes that
this representation is sufficient without
further specificity.
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Qualifications for Designation as a
Market Loan Clearing Member—Article
V, Section 1
Interpretation .03(e) of Article V,
Section 1 would be amended to clarify
that a Clearing Member must be
approved as a Market Loan Clearing
Member before it can participate in the
Market Loan Program. OCC proposes to
add a new interpretation .06A which
will set out the conditions that a
Clearing Member must meet in order to
be approved as a Market Loan Clearing
Member.
OCC’s Role With Respect to Market
Loans—Article XXIA, Section 2
Upon acceptance of a Market Loan,
OCC’s role with respect to such Market
Loan would be that of a principal and
OCC would have the position of
borrower to the Lending Clearing
Member and the position of lender to
the Borrowing Clearing Member. All
rights and/or obligations of a Clearing
Member in respect of a Market Loan
would be against OCC, including the
right and/or obligation to receive or
make mark-to-market payments,
dividend equivalent payments, and
rebate payments and to deliver or
receive the Loaned Stock or Collateral.
Agreement of the Borrowing Clearing
Member and the Lending Clearing
Member in Respect of Market Loans—
Article XXIA, Sections 3 and 4
Under Section 3, the Borrowing
Clearing Member would represent that it
would fulfill its obligations to OCC in
respect of a Market Loan, including
making required margin deposits, markto-market payments, dividend
equivalent payments, rebate payments
(in the case of a negative rebate), and
delivering the Loaned Stock against
Collateral upon the termination of the
Market Loan, all in accordance with the
By-Laws and Rules. The Lending
Clearing Member would make
reciprocal representations under
Section 4.
Maintaining Stock Loan and Stock
Borrow Positions Resulting From
Market Loans in Accounts—Article
XXIA, Section 5; Rule 2201A
Under Article XXIA, Section 5, upon
the acceptance of a Market Loan, OCC
would create the stock loan position in
the Lending Clearing Member’s
designated account and the stock
borrow position in the Borrowing
Clearing Member’s designated account.
OCC would aggregate, separately for
Market Loans effected through each
Loan Market, all stock loan positions
and stock borrow positions of a Clearing
Member resulting from such Market
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5961
Loans relating to the same Eligible Stock
for position reporting purposes and
would also net all such stock loan
positions against such stock borrow
positions for purposes of determining
the Clearing Member’s margin
obligations to OCC (referring to the
margin that a Clearing Member would
be required to be deposited with OCC to
cover OCC’s risk that the market might
move against a stock loan position or a
stock borrow position on any day and
that the Clearing Member might fail
before making the required mark-tomarket payment to OCC on the next
business day). Positions resulting from
Market Loans would be maintained in
Clearing Members’ accounts in the same
manner as positions resulting from
Hedge Loans. However, OCC would
separately identify stock loan and stock
borrow positions resulting from Market
Loans, and would not deem such
positions to be fungible with positions
resulting from Hedge Loans.
Rule 2201A would require each
Market Loan Clearing Member to give
OCC standing instructions in respect of
Market Loans similar to the way in
which Rule 2201 requires a Clearing
Member participating in the Stock Loan/
Hedge Program to give standing
instructions in respect of Hedge Loans,
the differences being that Rule 2201A:
(i) Would not include any references to
margin-ineligible accounts because all
positions resulting from Market Loans
would be carried on a fully margined
basis 6, (ii) would not require a Market
Loan Clearing Member to specify the
Collateral requirement that will be
applicable to its stock loan positions
because such requirement will be
specified by the relevant Loan Market
when it submits the matched trades to
OCC, and (iii) would not include any
references to stock loan baskets or stock
borrow baskets because such concepts
will not apply to positions resulting
from Market Loans.
Initiation of Market Loans—Rule 2202A
As described in Part B above, a
Market Loan would be initiated when
the Loan Market submits a matched
trade to OCC. If the matched trade
passes OCC’s validation processes, OCC
would instruct DTC to effect the transfer
of Eligible Stock against Collateral
between the accounts of two Market
Loan Clearing Members, provided that
such transfers would flow through
6 The Commission has approved in a separate rule
change OCC’s proposal to eliminate Clearing
Members’ ability to carry stock loan and stock
borrow positions on a margin-eligible basis.
However, the proposal will not be fully
implemented until February 1, 2009. See Securities
Exchange Act Release 58901 (December 1, 2008).
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OCC’s account at DTC in order to
maintain anonymity between the lender
and borrower.
Only those settled stock loan
transactions that are affirmatively
accepted by OCC following receipt of
the end-of-day stock loan activity file
from DTC and OCC’s validation
processes would be deemed Market
Loans. OCC would substitute itself as
counterparty to the Borrowing Clearing
Member and the Lending Clearing
Member, respectively, in respect of each
Market Loan. Any stock loan
transactions purported to have
originated through a Loan Market that
are not accepted by OCC would be
rejected by OCC and would have no
further effect as regards OCC.
Paragraphs (d) and (e) of Rule 2202A
would clarify the Lending Clearing
Member’s rights and obligations with
respect to the Collateral posted and the
Borrowing Clearing Member’s rights and
obligations with respect to the Loaned
Stock. Under paragraph (f), a Market
Loan Clearing Member would be
required to represent to OCC that the
Clearing Member’s participation in each
Market Loan is in compliance, and will
continue to comply, with all applicable
laws and regulations.
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Margin Deposited With OCC in Respect
of Market Loans—Rule 2203A
As mentioned in the description of
proposed Article XXIA, Section 5 above,
a Market Loan Clearing Member would
be required to meet its margin
obligations to OCC with respect to its
stock loan and stock borrow positions
resulting from Market Loans. Rule
2203A would reiterate this obligation
and clarify that margin calculation shall
be determined pursuant to Rule 601.
Mark-to-Market Payments in Respect of
Market Loans—Rule 2204A
Rule 2204A would govern the
calculation and payment of mark-tomarket payments in respect of Market
Loans. Using the same calculation
method and collection/payment
procedures that OCC practices with
respect to Stock Loans, OCC would
calculate on a daily basis the net
amount owed by or to each Market Loan
Clearing Member in respect of stock
loan and stock borrow positions
resulting from Market Loans carried in
a Clearing Member’s accounts and
collect such net amount from, or deposit
such net amount to, as applicable, the
Clearing Member’s designated bank
account.
Daily Reports—Rule 2205A
As mentioned in the description of
proposed Article XXIA, Section 5 above,
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OCC would aggregate, separately for
Market Loans effected through each
Loan Market, all stock loan positions
and stock borrow positions of a Clearing
Member resulting from such Market
Loans relating to the same Eligible Stock
for position reporting purposes.
Pursuant to Rule 2205A, OCC would
make these position reports available to
each Market Loan Clearing Member on
a daily basis.
Dividends, Distributions and Rebates in
Respect of Market Loans—Rule 2206A
Paragraph (a) of Rule 2206A would
clarify that a Lending Clearing Member
will be entitled to receive all dividends
and distributions made in respect of
Loaned Stock on the record dates that
occur during the term of a Market Loan
and the Borrowing Clearing Member
will be obligated to pay or deliver all
such dividends and distributions.
Because a Market Loan Clearing
Member generally would not know the
identity of the counterparty to a Market
Loan, the Loan Market and OCC would
facilitate the payment of dividend
equivalents between Market Loan
Clearing Members. The Loan Market
would be solely responsible for
calculating the dividend equivalent
amounts that each Market Loan Clearing
Member is entitled to receive or
obligated to pay. On the expected
payment date, OCC would guarantee
and effect such payments between
Market Loan Clearing Members as
instructed by the Loan Market, in each
instance up to the amount for which the
Corporation has collected margins from
the responsible Market Loan Clearing
Member(s) prior to the expected
payment date. However, OCC would not
be responsible for any errors in the Loan
Market’s calculations or instructions.
OCC would add non-cash dividends
and distributions to the Loaned Stock
and transfer them to the Lending
Clearing Member upon termination of
the Market Loan if OCC determines in
its sole discretion that such transfer is
legally permissible and can be made
through DTC. The Loan Market could
also determine to fix a cash settlement
value with respect to any non-cash
dividends and/or distributions that are
not added to the Loaned Stock, in which
case the Loan Market would instruct
OCC to effect collection and payment of
such cash settlement. With respect to
any other non-cash dividend or
distribution, the Lending Clearing
Member would receive the benefit of the
dividend or distribution only if it recalls
the Loaned Stock in time to receive such
dividend or distribution directly.
Paragraph (b) of Rule 2206A would
govern the periodic payments of rebates
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to Market Loan Clearing Members. As in
the case of dividend equivalent
payments, the Loan Market would be
solely responsible for calculating the
amount of rebate payments that each
Market Loan Clearing Member is
entitled to receive or obligated to pay.
On the specified settlement date, OCC
would guarantee and effect such
payments and collections as instructed
by the Loan Market, in each instance up
to the amount for which the Corporation
has collected margin from the
responsible Market Loan Clearing
Member(s) prior to the specified
settlement date. Again, OCC would not
be responsible for any errors in the Loan
Market’s calculations or instructions.
Rebate payments would be paid on at
least a monthly basis. If a Market Loan
Clearing Member were to be suspended,
OCC would have the discretion to
accelerate settlement of accrued rebate
payments with respect to such
suspended Clearing Member.
Correction of Erroneous Market Loans—
Rule 2207A
If a Market Loan Clearing Member
were to believe that a Market Loan was
executed on such Clearing Member’s
behalf in error or that a material term of
the loan was erroneous, the remedy
available to the Clearing Member would
be to contact the relevant Loan Market
to request correction. The decision to
void a Market Loan would be in the
Loan Market’s sole discretion and
would not be subject to review by OCC.
Furthermore, interpretation .01 to Rule
2207A would clarify that in carrying out
OCC’s role with respect to Market
Loans, OCC would be entitled to rely on
information provided by a Loan Market
or DTC and would not be liable to
Clearing Members for any actions taken
in reliance of such information.
Indemnification by Borrowing Clearing
Member—Rule 2208A
Rule 2208A would require a
Borrowing Clearing Member in respect
of a Market Loan to indemnify, defend,
and hold harmless OCC from any
consequences resulting from the
Borrowing Clearing Member’s use of the
Loaned Stock.
Termination of Market Loans—Rule
2209A
Rule 2209A would govern the
different ways that a Market Loan may
be terminated. In the case of a recall or
a return that is the subject of paragraph
(a) of Rule 2209A, the transaction would
be submitted by the Loan Market to OCC
and would be processed by OCC in
basically the same manner as a new
stock loan transaction. The Loan Market
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would distinguish a recall/return from a
new stock loan transaction so that upon
OCC’s confirmation that a recall/return
was settled by DTC, OCC would
extinguish the corresponding stock loan
and stock borrow positions instead of
creating new positions on its books.
If a recall fails to settle because the
Borrowing Clearing Member fails to
return the Loaned Stock within the
timeframe specified in Rule 2209A, the
relevant Loan Market would instruct an
independent broker to initiate the ‘‘buyin’’ process on the morning of the
following stock loan business day. The
broker would be instructed to purchase
the Loaned Stock in a commercially
reasonable manner as promptly as
practicable (and in any event, at or prior
to the time when a buy-in would be
required under applicable regulatory
requirements). The buy-in would be for
OCC’s account and liability because of
OCC’s role as the principal to each
Market Loan.
The buy-in procedures are intended to
facilitate compliance by the Clearing
Member with buy-in requirements
under applicable rules of the
Commission and self-regulatory
organizations, including the
requirements imposed by Regulation
SHO. The ultimate responsibility for
compliance with Regulation SHO rests
with the Clearing Member, and OCC
would not be liable for any Clearing
Member’s failure to comply with its
obligations.
The bought-in Loaned Stock would
ultimately be delivered to the Lending
Clearing Member’s account at DTC in
exchange for the Collateral. Any
difference between (i) the amount of the
Collateral and (ii) the price paid on the
buy-in plus any other costs, fees or
interest incurred by the broker in
connection with such buy-in and any
penalties or charges that the Loan
Market may assess against the
Borrowing Clearing Member would be
credited to or debited from the
Borrowing Clearing Member’s
designated bank account.
If a return fails to settle because the
Lending Clearing Member fails to return
the Collateral within the timeframe
specified in Rule 2209A, the relevant
Loan Market would instruct an
independent broker to initiate the ‘‘sellout’’ process on the morning of the
following stock loan business day. The
sell-out process is essentially the
inverse of the buy-in process. The
broker would be instructed to sell the
Loaned Stock for OCC’s account and
liability. The sale proceeds would
ultimately be delivered to the Borrowing
Clearing Member’s account at DTC
against delivery of the Loaned Stock.
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12:52 Feb 02, 2009
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Any difference between (i) the sale
proceeds and (ii) the amount of the
Collateral plus any other costs, fees or
interest incurred by the broker in
connection with such sell-out, and any
penalties or charges that the Loan
Market may assess against the Lending
Clearing Member would be credited to
or collected from the Lending Clearing
Member’s designated bank account.
Paragraph (c) of Rule 2009A would
provide that OCC would have the
authority to terminate Market Loans in
circumstances where a Loan Market so
directs OCC or where OCC deems such
action warranted. In either case, OCC
would give written notice to all affected
Clearing Members specifying the date
on which such termination would
become effective. As with a recall or a
return, if a Market Loan termination
initiated by a Loan Market or OCC fails
to settle by the specified time set forth
in paragraph (c), the relevant Loan
Market would instruct an independent
broker to initiate the ‘‘buy-in’’ or ‘‘sellout’’ process, as applicable, in order to
complete the termination.
Suspension of Market Loan Clearing
Members—Rule 2210A and 2211A
Under Rule 2210A, OCC would not
accept any stock loans to which the
suspended Clearing Member is a party
as a Market Loan after the time at which
the Clearing Member was suspended,
and would instruct DTC to unwind any
such transaction. Open stock loan and
stock borrows positions of the
suspended Clearing Member would be
liquidated in accordance with Rule
2211A by an independent broker
designated by OCC for such purposes.
Collection of Fees and Charges on
Behalf of a Loan Market—Rule 209
OCC proposes to amend paragraph (b)
of Rule 209 so that OCC would have the
authority to withdraw from a Market
Clearing Member’s bank account the
amount of any fees or charges that the
Clearing Member owes to a Loan
Market.
Certain Conforming Changes in the ByLaws and Rules—Article XXI, Section 2
and 5; Rule 1103, 2201, 2202, 2204,
2205 and 2210
Sections 2 and 5 of Article XXI of the
By-Laws and Rule 1103, 2201, 2202,
2204, 2205 and 2210 would be amended
to conform to the new Market Loan
rules as appropriate.
D. Summary of Certain Provisions of the
AQS Agreement
In connection with providing clearing
and settlement services to AQS, OCC
will enter into the AQS Agreement,
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5963
which is similar in form to clearing
agreements that OCC has entered into
with futures markets. In addition to (i)
defining each party’s obligations in
connection with the clearance and
settlement of Market Loans, as
discussed in Part B above, and (ii)
identifying aspects of OCC’s services
that will be provided in accordance
with the provisions of OCC’s By-Laws
and Rules, as discussed in Part C above,
the AQS Agreement will set forth other
terms and conditions that will govern
the parties’ relationship, including the
following:
Regulatory Requirements
AQS will represent that (i) it will have
obtained all necessary registrations,
memberships, approvals or other
consents that are required to have been
obtained by it from any federal or state
regulatory agencies or any selfregulatory organizations, (ii) it will have
procedures (as amended from time to
time, the ‘‘Market Procedures’’) that
comply with the provisions of all
applicable regulations and will have
filed with the Commission the necessary
information with respect to the Market
Procedures, and (iii) it will have all
requisite power and authority, whether
arising under applicable federal or state
law or the rules and regulations of any
regulatory or self-regulatory
organization to which AQS is subject, to
enter into and perform its obligations
under the AQS Agreement. OCC will
make similar representations, and in
addition will clarify that OCC’s
provision of clearing services in respect
of Market Loans will depend on the
Commission’s approval of this proposed
rule change.
AQS and OCC will each be required
to notify the other party of any action
taken by any regulatory body or agency
that, in the judgment of the relevant
party, has or will have a material
adverse effect on such party’s
performance of its obligations under the
AQS Agreement.
Fees for Clearing Services
OCC will establish fee structures for
the services it performs for Clearing
Members consistent with the provisions
of its By-Laws. Fees charged to
subscribers of AQS for services
performed by OCC under the AQS
Agreement shall not be greater than the
fees charged by OCC in respect of
substantially similar services performed
for other markets in connection with
Market Loan transactions; provided that
OCC may offer alternative fee structures
to such markets so long as it offers the
same alternatives to AQS on
substantially the same terms and so long
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as the alternative fee structure provides
for the equitable allocation of reasonable
dues, fees, and other charges among
Clearing Members.
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Indemnification
AQS will indemnify and hold
harmless OCC and each of its directors,
officers, committee members, agents,
employees and any person or entity who
controls OCC (as the term ‘‘control’’ is
defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended) from and against
any and all losses, damages, liabilities,
judgments, claims, expenses and
amounts incurred and/or paid in
settlement (collectively referred to as
‘‘Losses’’) arising out of or based on (i)
any violation or alleged violation by
AQS of any of the terms of the AQS
Agreement or (ii) any violation or
alleged violation by AQS of any law
(including patent infringement or other
intellectual property law violation) or
governmental regulation. OCC will
indemnify and hold harmless AQS and
each of its directors, officers, committee
members, agents, employees and any
person or entity who controls the
Market from and against any and all
Losses arising out of or based on (i) any
violation or alleged violation by OCC of
any of the terms of the AQS Agreement,
(ii) any alleged default by OCC in
performing its obligations in accordance
with its By-Laws and Rules in respect of
any Market Loans it has accepted for
clearing, or (iii) any violation or alleged
violation by OCC of any law (including
patent infringement or other intellectual
property law violation) or governmental
regulation. The indemnifications
provided by each party will include
indemnification against any Losses
arising out of or based on any allegation
that any termination of a Market Loan
transaction initiated by the
indemnifying party was wrongful.
Term and Termination
The AQS Agreement may be
terminated (i) by either party at any time
upon giving a specified number of days’
prior written notice to the other party,
(ii) by a party upon giving notice to the
other party if the other party has
breached in any material respect the
provisions of the AQS Agreement, or
(iii) by OCC upon giving notice to AQS
if, among other grounds, AQS has
ceased to effect stock loan transactions
or OCC’s By-Laws or Rules have ceased
to be in effect in a material respect.
From the time that any notice of
termination is given or any event of
termination occurs until such time as all
stock loan and borrow positions
resulting from Market Loans have been
closed or transferred to an alternative
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12:52 Feb 02, 2009
Jkt 217001
clearing organization, OCC and AQS
will continue to provide all services and
perform all of their respective
obligations under the AQS Agreement
and OCC’s By-Laws and Rules to the
extent necessary or appropriate to
service open stock loan and borrow
positions. Finally, in the event of a
voluntary termination of the AQS
Agreement, OCC will use reasonable
efforts to effect transfer of the open
positions to AQS’s successor clearing
organization subject to reasonable
agreements with such successor clearing
organization, AQS and/or Clearing
Members whose positions are being
transferred, as appropriate, that protect
the interests of OCC.
Dispute Resolution
If a dispute arises between AQS and
OCC relating to the clearing services in
respect of Market Loans, the AQS
Agreement will provide that senior
officers of AQS and OCC will endeavor
in good faith to resolve the dispute and
to mitigate its deleterious effects and
will confer with each other to those
ends.
Certain Loan Market Obligations
Schedule B of the AQS Agreement
sets forth certain specific services that
the Loan Market is required to perform
to facilitate the performance by OCC of
its obligations under its By-Laws and
Rules. With respect to such obligations,
the AQS Agreement provides that the
Loan Market will be bound by the
provisions of OCC’s By-Laws and Rules
to the extent that they impose
obligations on the Market.
The proposed changes to OCC’s Rules
are consistent with the purposes and
requirements of Section 17A of the Act
because they are designed to promote
the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of stock loan transactions
executed on an electronic marketplace,
and to foster cooperation and
coordination with persons engaged in
the clearance and settlement of such
transactions, to remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a national
system for the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of such
transactions, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest. The
proposed rule change accomplishes
these purposes by expanding the
number of securities lending
transactions that will be cleared and
settled by OCC, which, in turn, benefits
OCC’s Clearing Members and the
industry by reducing the cost of credit,
increasing operational efficiency, and
providing stability through a central
counterparty guarantee by applying
many of the same rules and procedures
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to these transactions as OCC applies to
the Hedge Loan transactions. The
proposed rule change is not inconsistent
with the existing rules of OCC,
including any rules proposed to be
amended.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
OCC does not believe that the
proposed rule change would impose any
burden on competition.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
Written comments were not and are
not intended to be solicited with respect
to the proposed rule change, and none
have been received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The Commission finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the requirements of the Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder and
particularly with the requirements of
Section 17A(b)(3)(F).7 Section
17A(b)(3)(F) requires, among other
things, that the rules of a clearing
agency be designed to remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism for a national system for the
prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions and
to assure the safeguarding of securities
and funds which are in the custody or
control of the clearing agency or for
which it is responsible. The proposed
rule change is consistent with these
requirements because while it allows
OCC to expand its existing Stock Loan/
Hedge Program to accommodate
securities lending transactions executed
through electronic trading systems, it
addresses the differences between the
Stock Loan/Hedge Program and the new
Market Loan program by amending
several provisions of OCC’s Rules and
entering into the AQS Agreement, both
of which are designed to assure that
OCC and its members comply with
Commission rules and to reduce the risk
of operational disruption or financial
loss to OCC or to its members.
OCC has requested that the
Commission approve this rule change
prior to the thirtieth day after the date
of publication of notice of the filing. The
Commission finds good cause for
approving the proposed rule change
prior to the thirtieth day after
publication of notice because by so
approving, OCC may begin providing
7 15
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U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(I).
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clearing services for stock loan and
borrow transactions effected through the
AQS Loan Market in time for its
anticipated launch date of January 31,
2008.
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:
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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–OCC–2008–20 on the
subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–OCC–2008–20. 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
Section, 100 F Street, NE., Washington,
DC 20549, on official business days
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Copies of such filing also will be
available for inspection and copying at
the principal office of OCC and on
OCC’s Web site at https://
www.theocc.com/publications/rules/
proposed_changes/sr_occ_08_20.pdf.
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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12:52 Feb 02, 2009
Jkt 217001
Number SR–OCC–2008–20 and should
be submitted on or before February 24,
2009.
V. Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
requirements of the Act and in
particular with the requirements of
Section 17A of the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable.8
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act, that the
proposed rule change (File No. SR–
OCC–2008–20) be, and hereby is,
approved.
For the Commission by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.9
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–2204 Filed 2–2–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
[Disaster Declaration #11605 and #11606]
New Hampshire Disaster Number NH–
00010
AGENCY: U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Amendment 1.
SUMMARY: This is an amendment of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for Public Assistance Only for
the State of New Hampshire ( FEMA–
1812–DR) , dated 01/02/2009.
Incident: Severe Winter Storm.
Incident Period: 12/11/2008 through
12/23/2008.
Effective Date: 01/23/2009.
Physical Loan Application Deadline
Date: 03/03/2009.
Economic Injury (EIDL) Loan
Application Deadline Date: 10/02/2009.
ADDRESSES: Submit completed loan
applications to: U.S. Small Business
Administration, Processing and
Disbursement Center, 14925 Kingsport
Road, Fort Worth, TX 76155.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
A. Escobar, Office of Disaster
Assistance, U.S. Small Business
Administration, 409 3rd Street, SW.,
Suite 6050, Washington, DC 20416.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The notice
of the President’s major disaster
declaration for Private Non-Profit
8 In approving the proposed rule changes, the
Commission considered the proposal’s impact on
efficiency, competition and capital formation. 15
U.S.C. 78c(f).
9 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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5965
organizations in the State of NEW
HAMPSHIRE, dated 01/02/2009, is
hereby amended to establish the
incident period for this disaster as
beginning 12/11/2008 and continuing
through 12/23/2008.
All other information in the original
declaration remains unchanged.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Numbers 59002 and 59008)
Herbert L. Mitchell,
Associate Administrator for Disaster
Assistance.
[FR Doc. E9–2246 Filed 2–2–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
National Women’s Business Council
Notice of Meeting
AGENCY: U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Notice of open Federal advisory
committee meeting.
SUMMARY: The SBA is issuing this notice
to announce the location, date, time,
and agenda for the next meeting of the
National Women’s Business Council
(NWBC). The meeting will be open to
the public.
DATES: The meeting will be held on
February 27, 2009 from approximately
8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. est.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
the U.S. Small Business Administration,
409 Third Street, SW., Eisenhower
Conference Room, Washington, DC
20416.
Pursuant
to section 10(a)(2) of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C.,
Appendix 2), SBA announces the
meeting of the National Women’s
Business Council. The National
Women’s Business Council is tasked
with providing policy recommendations
on issues of importance to women
business owners to the President,
Congress, and the SBA Administrator.
The purpose of the meeting is to
introduce the NWBC’s agenda and
action items for fiscal year 2009
included but not limited to
procurement, access to capital, access to
training and technical assistance, and
affordable health care. The topics to be
discussed will include: the 2009
Women’s Business Summit: The
Economy Through a Different Lens;
update on FY 2009 projects and budget;
upcoming Town Hall Meeting on April
29, in Atlanta, GA and future town hall
locations.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 21 (Tuesday, February 3, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5958-5965]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-2204]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-59294; File No. SR-OCC-2008-20]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation;
Notice of Filing and Order Granting Accelerated Approval of a Proposed
Rule Change Relating To Establishing a Market Loan Program
January 23, 2009.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ notice is hereby given that on December 23, 2008, The
Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC'') filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the proposed rule change as
described in Items I and II below, which items have been prepared
primarily by OCC. The Commission is publishing this notice and order to
solicit comments on the proposed rule change from interested persons.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The proposed rule change would create a framework for OCC to
provide clearing services for stock loan and borrow transactions
effected through electronic trading systems.
[[Page 5959]]
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, OCC 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 IV below. OCC has prepared summaries, set forth in sections (A),
(B), and (C) below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.\2\
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\2\ The Commission has modified parts of these statements.
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
The purpose of this proposed rule change is to revise OCC's By-Laws
and Rules to create a framework (``Market Loan Program'') that can
accommodate securities lending transactions proposed to be executed
through electronic trading systems (``Loan Markets''), such as the
market to be operated by Automated Equity Finance Markets, Inc.
(``AQS''), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Quadriserv, Inc. The
relationship between OCC and AQS will be governed by the Agreement for
Clearing and Settlement Services (``AQS Agreement'') included as
Exhibit 5 to Filing No. SR-OCC-2008-20.
Securities lending contributes to the overall liquidity and
efficiency of the equity and equity options markets. For options market
participants, securities lending supports market making, arbitrage
trading, and equity financing and assists participants in meeting
deliveries resulting from options exercises and assignments. OCC's
Stock Loan/Hedge Program, which allows approved Clearing Members to
register their privately negotiated securities lending transactions
with OCC, benefits OCC's Clearing Members and the industry by reducing
the cost of credit, increasing operational efficiency, and providing
stability through a central counterparty guarantee. OCC believes that
it is important to keep pace with innovations in the securities lending
markets and therefore proposes to launch the Market Loan Program.
The bulk of the proposed changes are based on procedures and
protections that OCC has utilized in the operation of the Stock Loan/
Hedge Program, with necessary modifications to account for those
aspects of the Market Loan Program that are different from the Stock
Loan/Hedge Program. OCC intends the provisions of its By-Laws and Rules
governing the Market Loan Program and the provisions governing the
Stock Loan/Hedge Program to be the same substantively except where
differences were clearly intended or where the context requires a
different interpretation. For example, under the Market Loan Program
OCC would create a process by which it will accept anonymously matched
stock loan transactions from a Loan Market and then send instructions
to The Depository Trust Company (``DTC'') to settle the transactions.
In comparison, under the Stock Loan/Hedge Program OCC does not
participate in a stock loan transaction until after two clearing
members have transferred the securities and required collateral between
themselves through the facilities of DTC. See below for a discussion of
such differences.
B. Overview of the Proposed Market Loan Program
The Loan Market operated by AQS would be the first market supported
by the proposed Market Loan Program. Additional markets that are
operated in a manner similar to the AQS Loan Market could be included
in the Market Loan Program in the future.
A Loan Market would provide a centralized source for price
discovery and trade matching of stock loan transactions, for example,
by implementing periodic auctions throughout the trading day. In the
case of an auction-based market, participant lenders would provide the
Loan Market with available inventory for auction, and participant
borrowers would ordinarily compete on rebate rates with the lowest rate
earning the trade. Lenders and borrowers would ordinarily be matched
based on the Loan Market's trade-matching algorithm. A Loan Market
could also provide, as does AQS, for submission of privately negotiated
transactions for processing through the Loan Market, including
clearance and settlement through OCC. Such transactions will not be
separately identified to OCC and will be treated by OCC like any other
matched loan transactions submitted by the Loan Market.
Clearing Members would need to meet certain requirements in order
to be approved for participation in the Market Loan Program. For
example, Clearing Members would need to be active subscribers to a Loan
Market that is supported by the Market Loan Program. Clearing Members
would also be required to set their ``Receiver Authorized Delivery''
(``RAD'') Limits at DTC in respect of transactions with OCC as the
counterparty to the highest limit permitted under DTC rules.\3\ For
tax-related reasons, OCC presently intends to permit only U.S. Clearing
Members to participate in the Market Loan Program, at least initially.
Clearing Members approved for participation in the Market Loan Program
would be referred to as ``Market Loan Clearing Members.'' When
additional markets are included in the Market Loan Program in the
future, a separate designation will be required for a Clearing Member's
participation in each Loan Market.
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\3\ The RAD Limit is a risk control mechanism which allows the
DTC participant to set individual dollar limits against each contra
participant so that deliveries with a settlement value exceeding the
specified limit are not processed until the participant has reviewed
and approved them. Clearing Members participating in the Market Loan
Program are expected to comply with the requirement of setting their
RAD Limits against OCC to the highest level permissible under DTC
rules. However, DTC will not be asked to monitor or enforce this
requirement.
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The Loan Market would submit matched loan transactions to OCC for
clearance and settlement. OCC would then conduct routine validation
processes before passing electronic instructions to DTC to move
securities and cash between the Market Loan Clearing Members' accounts
at DTC. Because a Loan Market may, as does AQS, match lenders and
borrowers on an anonymous basis, OCC and DTC would establish an account
structure involving the transfer of securities and cash between the
lender and the borrower through a DTC account owned by OCC (``OCC
Account''), thereby permitting stock loan transactions originated
through a Loan Market to be settled in a manner that preserves
anonymity to both the lender and borrower.
Because OCC would substitute itself as the counterparty to all such
DTC transactions, it is essential to OCC, from a risk management
perspective, that there would never be a net settlement obligation
against the OCC Account at the end of any day (i.e., OCC's obligations
with respect to all completed DTC transactions to which the OCC Account
was a party should net to zero both with respect to securities and
cash). Avoidance of any net settlement obligation is essential both
because OCC has no mechanism for funding such settlement obligations
and for other operational reasons. In order to provide reasonable
assurance that OCC will have no net settlement obligations, DTC will
implement procedures intended to ensure that if one side of a loan
transaction does not settle, the other side will be blocked as well. In
addition, under current DTC rules, a
[[Page 5960]]
DTC participant can return a delivery of securities (``Reclaim'') to
the original delivering party. DTC will block Reclaims against the OCC
Account in order to prevent such Reclaims from resulting in a net
settlement obligation in that account.\4\
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\4\ DTC filed a proposed rule change (File No. SR-DTC-2008-15)
with the Commission to describe proposed changes in its rules for
purposes of supporting the Market Loan Program that is being
approved simultaneously with this proposed rule change.
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Upon receiving the end of the day stock loan activity file from DTC
showing settled stock loans (i.e., transfer of the loaned securities
against the specified collateral) originated through a Loan Market, OCC
would perform additional validation processes to confirm that the
transactions match the instructions given by OCC before affirmatively
accepting settled stock loans and substituting itself as counterparty
to these transactions (such accepted stock loan transactions are
defined as ``Market Loans''). Upon OCC's acceptance of a Market Loan,
the lending Market Loan Clearing Member would be a ``Lending Clearing
Member'' and the borrowing Market Loan Clearing Member would be a
``Borrowing Clearing Member'' in respect of that Market Loan for all
purposes of the By-Laws and Rules. Any stock loan transactions
identified as originated through a Loan Market that are not ultimately
confirmed and accepted by OCC would be rejected by OCC.
Upon acceptance of a Market Loan, OCC would create the stock loan
position in the designated account of the Lending Clearing Member and
the stock borrow position in the designated account of the Borrowing
Clearing Member. Positions resulting from Market Loans would be
maintained in the same manner as positions resulting from stock loans
accepted by OCC under the Stock Loan/Hedge program (the latter are
defined as ``Hedge Loans'' in the By-Laws and Rules \5\). However,
positions resulting from Market Loans would be separately identified
from, and would not be fungible with, positions resulting from Hedge
Loans.
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\5\ OCC proposes to introduce the term ``Hedge Loan'' to refer
to stock loans accepted by OCC under the Stock Loan/Hedge Program.
OCC proposes to amend the term ``Stock Loan'' to mean either a
``Hedge Loan'' or a ``Market Loan'' or both as the context requires.
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As with stock borrow or stock loan positions resulting from Hedge
Loans, OCC would guarantee the daily mark-to-market payments generated
by the open positions resulting from Market Loans. In addition, OCC
would also provide a limited guaranty of payments in lieu of cash
dividends and distributions (``dividend equivalent payments'') and
stock loan rebates, in each case limited to the amount for which the
Corporation has collected margins from the responsible Market Loan
Clearing Member(s) prior to the payment date. The amount of these
payments would be calculated by the relevant Loan Market, and OCC would
effect the payments only as instructed by the Loan Market. OCC would
have no responsibility to verify the accuracy of the Loan Market's
calculations and would not be liable to Clearing Members for any errors
in such calculations. A Market Loan Clearing Member would be required
to maintain margin with the Corporation in respect of any scheduled
dividend equivalent payments and accrued rebate payments that such
Clearing Member is obligated to make.
Termination of a Market Loan, in whole or in part, could be
initiated by the Lending Clearing Member calling for the return of the
loaned securities (a ``recall''), or by the Borrowing Clearing Member
indicating its intention to return the loaned securities (a
``return''). The Loan Market would assign (randomly or by some other
method) the recall to a participant who borrowed the same securities or
the return to a participant who lent the same securities. Recalls/
returns would be submitted to OCC and would be processed by OCC in the
same manner as new stock loan transactions except that (i) the Loan
Market would distinguish recalls/returns from new stock loan
transactions; and (ii) if a recall/return were not settled by DTC and
confirmed by OCC after a specified period of time, the Loan Market
would instruct an independent broker to initiate the ``buy-in'' or
``sell-out'' process (described in more detail in Part C below), as
applicable, in order to complete such recall/return.
A Loan Market would have the authority to direct OCC to terminate
all or a portion of the outstanding Market Loans carried in the
account(s) of a Clearing Member that were originated through that Loan
Market. In addition, OCC would have the authority under Rule 305(a) to
require a Clearing Member to reduce or eliminate stock loan or stock
borrow positions, including positions resulting from Market Loans, upon
a determination that circumstances warrant such action. In either case,
OCC would give written notice to all affected Clearing Members
specifying the date on which such termination would become effective.
If any such termination were not settled by the specified time, the
relevant Loan Market would instruct an independent broker to initiate
the ``buy-in'' or ``sell-out'' process, as applicable, in order to
complete the termination. Any such buy-in or sell-out would be for the
account and liability of OCC, which would in turn have rights against
the defaulting Market Loan Clearing Member.
In the event that OCC, a Loan Market, or DTC suspends a Market Loan
Clearing Member, OCC would not accept any settled stock loan
transaction to which the suspended Clearing Member is a party as a
Market Loan after the time at which the Clearing Member was suspended.
Finally, OCC would take action under proposed Rule 2211A and Chapter XI
of the rules to close out the open stock loan and stock borrow
positions carried in the suspended Clearing Member's account(s), using
the ``buy-in'' or ``sell-out'' process or exercising setoff rights as
appropriate. Temporary hedging transactions would also be permitted
under the Chapter XI rules.
If a Market Loan Clearing Member were to believe that a Market Loan
was executed on such Clearing Member's behalf in error or that a
material term of the loan was erroneous, the Clearing Member would
contact the relevant Loan Market to seek correction. Every
determination as to whether a Market Loan was entered into in error
would be within the sole discretion of the relevant Loan Market and
would not be subject to review by OCC. OCC would have no liability to
Clearing Members for any action taken, or any delay or failure to take
any action, in reasonable reliance on information that OCC receives
from a Loan Market or DTC.
C. Proposed Changes to the By-Laws and Rules
In order to provide clearing services for Market Loans, OCC
proposes to (i) add a new Article XXIA to the By-Laws and a new Chapter
XXIIA to the Rules that would govern the clearance of Market Loans,
(ii) introduce new terms and amend the definitions of existing terms,
and (iii) amend a few other provisions of the By-Laws and Rules in
connection with the introduction of Market Loans.
Changes in Terminology--Article I, Section 1; Article XXI, Section 1;
Article XXIA, Section 1
In Article I, Section 1, OCC proposes to introduce the terms
``Hedge Loan,'' ``Loan Market,'' ``Market Loan,'' ``Market Loan
Clearing Member'' and ``Market Loan Program.'' The definition of
``Eligible Stock'' would be amended so that it will be applicable to
the Market Loan Program. OCC also proposes to amend the term ``Stock
Loan'' to refer to
[[Page 5961]]
a Hedge Loan or a Market Loan or both, as the context requires, except
that the term ``Stock Loan'' is redefined in Article XXI of the By-Laws
so that, as used there and in Chapter XXII of the Rules, the term
refers only to ``Hedge Loans'' and not to ``Market Loans.''
The terms ``Borrowing Clearing Member'' and ``Lending Clearing
Member'' are amended to encompass Market Loan Clearing Members that
borrow or lend Eligible Stocks in Market Loans. The terms ``stock
borrow position,'' and ``stock loan position'' will, where appropriate,
apply to positions resulting from Market Loans without amendment.
In Article XXIA, Section 1, OCC proposes to introduce the terms
``dividend equivalent payment,'' ``recall'' and ``return.'' The terms
``Collateral,'' ``Loaned Stock,'' ``mark-to-market payment'' and
``settlement price,'' which are defined in Article XXI in the context
of the Stock Loan/Hedge Program, would be redefined in Article XXIA to
reflect their specific application in the context of a Market Loan.
Finally, OCC proposes to introduce the term ``rebate,'' which refers to
a periodic payment payable by the Lending Clearing Member or the
Borrowing Clearing Member (depending on whether the rebate rate is
positive or negative) in respect of a Market Loan.
Article XXI, Section 5
Paragraph (b) of Section 5 is being deleted to eliminate the
existing requirement that a Clearing Member represent that the Loaned
Stock does not constitute customer fully paid or excess margin
securities. The Commission's Rule 15c3-3 requires a broker-dealer to
maintain possession and control of customer fully-paid and excess
margin securities. Paragraph (b)(3) of Rule 15c3-3 sets forth
conditions (which include customer consent, provision of specified
collateral to the customer, etc.) under which a broker-dealer may
borrow fully paid or excess margin securities from customers for its
own use without violating the rule's possession or control requirement.
The deletion of paragraph (b) will maintain consistency between the
existing Stock/Loan Hedge rules and the Market Loan rules, where no
such representation is proposed to be required. Rules 2202(e) and
2202A(f) require Clearing Members to represent that each stock loan is
in compliance with Rule 15c3-3 and other customer protection rules, and
OCC believes that this representation is sufficient without further
specificity.
Qualifications for Designation as a Market Loan Clearing Member--
Article V, Section 1
Interpretation .03(e) of Article V, Section 1 would be amended to
clarify that a Clearing Member must be approved as a Market Loan
Clearing Member before it can participate in the Market Loan Program.
OCC proposes to add a new interpretation .06A which will set out the
conditions that a Clearing Member must meet in order to be approved as
a Market Loan Clearing Member.
OCC's Role With Respect to Market Loans--Article XXIA, Section 2
Upon acceptance of a Market Loan, OCC's role with respect to such
Market Loan would be that of a principal and OCC would have the
position of borrower to the Lending Clearing Member and the position of
lender to the Borrowing Clearing Member. All rights and/or obligations
of a Clearing Member in respect of a Market Loan would be against OCC,
including the right and/or obligation to receive or make mark-to-market
payments, dividend equivalent payments, and rebate payments and to
deliver or receive the Loaned Stock or Collateral.
Agreement of the Borrowing Clearing Member and the Lending Clearing
Member in Respect of Market Loans--Article XXIA, Sections 3 and 4
Under Section 3, the Borrowing Clearing Member would represent that
it would fulfill its obligations to OCC in respect of a Market Loan,
including making required margin deposits, mark-to-market payments,
dividend equivalent payments, rebate payments (in the case of a
negative rebate), and delivering the Loaned Stock against Collateral
upon the termination of the Market Loan, all in accordance with the By-
Laws and Rules. The Lending Clearing Member would make reciprocal
representations under Section 4.
Maintaining Stock Loan and Stock Borrow Positions Resulting From Market
Loans in Accounts--Article XXIA, Section 5; Rule 2201A
Under Article XXIA, Section 5, upon the acceptance of a Market
Loan, OCC would create the stock loan position in the Lending Clearing
Member's designated account and the stock borrow position in the
Borrowing Clearing Member's designated account. OCC would aggregate,
separately for Market Loans effected through each Loan Market, all
stock loan positions and stock borrow positions of a Clearing Member
resulting from such Market Loans relating to the same Eligible Stock
for position reporting purposes and would also net all such stock loan
positions against such stock borrow positions for purposes of
determining the Clearing Member's margin obligations to OCC (referring
to the margin that a Clearing Member would be required to be deposited
with OCC to cover OCC's risk that the market might move against a stock
loan position or a stock borrow position on any day and that the
Clearing Member might fail before making the required mark-to-market
payment to OCC on the next business day). Positions resulting from
Market Loans would be maintained in Clearing Members' accounts in the
same manner as positions resulting from Hedge Loans. However, OCC would
separately identify stock loan and stock borrow positions resulting
from Market Loans, and would not deem such positions to be fungible
with positions resulting from Hedge Loans.
Rule 2201A would require each Market Loan Clearing Member to give
OCC standing instructions in respect of Market Loans similar to the way
in which Rule 2201 requires a Clearing Member participating in the
Stock Loan/Hedge Program to give standing instructions in respect of
Hedge Loans, the differences being that Rule 2201A: (i) Would not
include any references to margin-ineligible accounts because all
positions resulting from Market Loans would be carried on a fully
margined basis \6\, (ii) would not require a Market Loan Clearing
Member to specify the Collateral requirement that will be applicable to
its stock loan positions because such requirement will be specified by
the relevant Loan Market when it submits the matched trades to OCC, and
(iii) would not include any references to stock loan baskets or stock
borrow baskets because such concepts will not apply to positions
resulting from Market Loans.
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\6\ The Commission has approved in a separate rule change OCC's
proposal to eliminate Clearing Members' ability to carry stock loan
and stock borrow positions on a margin-eligible basis. However, the
proposal will not be fully implemented until February 1, 2009. See
Securities Exchange Act Release 58901 (December 1, 2008).
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Initiation of Market Loans--Rule 2202A
As described in Part B above, a Market Loan would be initiated when
the Loan Market submits a matched trade to OCC. If the matched trade
passes OCC's validation processes, OCC would instruct DTC to effect the
transfer of Eligible Stock against Collateral between the accounts of
two Market Loan Clearing Members, provided that such transfers would
flow through
[[Page 5962]]
OCC's account at DTC in order to maintain anonymity between the lender
and borrower.
Only those settled stock loan transactions that are affirmatively
accepted by OCC following receipt of the end-of-day stock loan activity
file from DTC and OCC's validation processes would be deemed Market
Loans. OCC would substitute itself as counterparty to the Borrowing
Clearing Member and the Lending Clearing Member, respectively, in
respect of each Market Loan. Any stock loan transactions purported to
have originated through a Loan Market that are not accepted by OCC
would be rejected by OCC and would have no further effect as regards
OCC.
Paragraphs (d) and (e) of Rule 2202A would clarify the Lending
Clearing Member's rights and obligations with respect to the Collateral
posted and the Borrowing Clearing Member's rights and obligations with
respect to the Loaned Stock. Under paragraph (f), a Market Loan
Clearing Member would be required to represent to OCC that the Clearing
Member's participation in each Market Loan is in compliance, and will
continue to comply, with all applicable laws and regulations.
Margin Deposited With OCC in Respect of Market Loans--Rule 2203A
As mentioned in the description of proposed Article XXIA, Section 5
above, a Market Loan Clearing Member would be required to meet its
margin obligations to OCC with respect to its stock loan and stock
borrow positions resulting from Market Loans. Rule 2203A would
reiterate this obligation and clarify that margin calculation shall be
determined pursuant to Rule 601.
Mark-to-Market Payments in Respect of Market Loans--Rule 2204A
Rule 2204A would govern the calculation and payment of mark-to-
market payments in respect of Market Loans. Using the same calculation
method and collection/payment procedures that OCC practices with
respect to Stock Loans, OCC would calculate on a daily basis the net
amount owed by or to each Market Loan Clearing Member in respect of
stock loan and stock borrow positions resulting from Market Loans
carried in a Clearing Member's accounts and collect such net amount
from, or deposit such net amount to, as applicable, the Clearing
Member's designated bank account.
Daily Reports--Rule 2205A
As mentioned in the description of proposed Article XXIA, Section 5
above, OCC would aggregate, separately for Market Loans effected
through each Loan Market, all stock loan positions and stock borrow
positions of a Clearing Member resulting from such Market Loans
relating to the same Eligible Stock for position reporting purposes.
Pursuant to Rule 2205A, OCC would make these position reports available
to each Market Loan Clearing Member on a daily basis.
Dividends, Distributions and Rebates in Respect of Market Loans--Rule
2206A
Paragraph (a) of Rule 2206A would clarify that a Lending Clearing
Member will be entitled to receive all dividends and distributions made
in respect of Loaned Stock on the record dates that occur during the
term of a Market Loan and the Borrowing Clearing Member will be
obligated to pay or deliver all such dividends and distributions.
Because a Market Loan Clearing Member generally would not know the
identity of the counterparty to a Market Loan, the Loan Market and OCC
would facilitate the payment of dividend equivalents between Market
Loan Clearing Members. The Loan Market would be solely responsible for
calculating the dividend equivalent amounts that each Market Loan
Clearing Member is entitled to receive or obligated to pay. On the
expected payment date, OCC would guarantee and effect such payments
between Market Loan Clearing Members as instructed by the Loan Market,
in each instance up to the amount for which the Corporation has
collected margins from the responsible Market Loan Clearing Member(s)
prior to the expected payment date. However, OCC would not be
responsible for any errors in the Loan Market's calculations or
instructions.
OCC would add non-cash dividends and distributions to the Loaned
Stock and transfer them to the Lending Clearing Member upon termination
of the Market Loan if OCC determines in its sole discretion that such
transfer is legally permissible and can be made through DTC. The Loan
Market could also determine to fix a cash settlement value with respect
to any non-cash dividends and/or distributions that are not added to
the Loaned Stock, in which case the Loan Market would instruct OCC to
effect collection and payment of such cash settlement. With respect to
any other non-cash dividend or distribution, the Lending Clearing
Member would receive the benefit of the dividend or distribution only
if it recalls the Loaned Stock in time to receive such dividend or
distribution directly.
Paragraph (b) of Rule 2206A would govern the periodic payments of
rebates to Market Loan Clearing Members. As in the case of dividend
equivalent payments, the Loan Market would be solely responsible for
calculating the amount of rebate payments that each Market Loan
Clearing Member is entitled to receive or obligated to pay. On the
specified settlement date, OCC would guarantee and effect such payments
and collections as instructed by the Loan Market, in each instance up
to the amount for which the Corporation has collected margin from the
responsible Market Loan Clearing Member(s) prior to the specified
settlement date. Again, OCC would not be responsible for any errors in
the Loan Market's calculations or instructions. Rebate payments would
be paid on at least a monthly basis. If a Market Loan Clearing Member
were to be suspended, OCC would have the discretion to accelerate
settlement of accrued rebate payments with respect to such suspended
Clearing Member.
Correction of Erroneous Market Loans--Rule 2207A
If a Market Loan Clearing Member were to believe that a Market Loan
was executed on such Clearing Member's behalf in error or that a
material term of the loan was erroneous, the remedy available to the
Clearing Member would be to contact the relevant Loan Market to request
correction. The decision to void a Market Loan would be in the Loan
Market's sole discretion and would not be subject to review by OCC.
Furthermore, interpretation .01 to Rule 2207A would clarify that in
carrying out OCC's role with respect to Market Loans, OCC would be
entitled to rely on information provided by a Loan Market or DTC and
would not be liable to Clearing Members for any actions taken in
reliance of such information.
Indemnification by Borrowing Clearing Member--Rule 2208A
Rule 2208A would require a Borrowing Clearing Member in respect of
a Market Loan to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless OCC from any
consequences resulting from the Borrowing Clearing Member's use of the
Loaned Stock.
Termination of Market Loans--Rule 2209A
Rule 2209A would govern the different ways that a Market Loan may
be terminated. In the case of a recall or a return that is the subject
of paragraph (a) of Rule 2209A, the transaction would be submitted by
the Loan Market to OCC and would be processed by OCC in basically the
same manner as a new stock loan transaction. The Loan Market
[[Page 5963]]
would distinguish a recall/return from a new stock loan transaction so
that upon OCC's confirmation that a recall/return was settled by DTC,
OCC would extinguish the corresponding stock loan and stock borrow
positions instead of creating new positions on its books.
If a recall fails to settle because the Borrowing Clearing Member
fails to return the Loaned Stock within the timeframe specified in Rule
2209A, the relevant Loan Market would instruct an independent broker to
initiate the ``buy-in'' process on the morning of the following stock
loan business day. The broker would be instructed to purchase the
Loaned Stock in a commercially reasonable manner as promptly as
practicable (and in any event, at or prior to the time when a buy-in
would be required under applicable regulatory requirements). The buy-in
would be for OCC's account and liability because of OCC's role as the
principal to each Market Loan.
The buy-in procedures are intended to facilitate compliance by the
Clearing Member with buy-in requirements under applicable rules of the
Commission and self-regulatory organizations, including the
requirements imposed by Regulation SHO. The ultimate responsibility for
compliance with Regulation SHO rests with the Clearing Member, and OCC
would not be liable for any Clearing Member's failure to comply with
its obligations.
The bought-in Loaned Stock would ultimately be delivered to the
Lending Clearing Member's account at DTC in exchange for the
Collateral. Any difference between (i) the amount of the Collateral and
(ii) the price paid on the buy-in plus any other costs, fees or
interest incurred by the broker in connection with such buy-in and any
penalties or charges that the Loan Market may assess against the
Borrowing Clearing Member would be credited to or debited from the
Borrowing Clearing Member's designated bank account.
If a return fails to settle because the Lending Clearing Member
fails to return the Collateral within the timeframe specified in Rule
2209A, the relevant Loan Market would instruct an independent broker to
initiate the ``sell-out'' process on the morning of the following stock
loan business day. The sell-out process is essentially the inverse of
the buy-in process. The broker would be instructed to sell the Loaned
Stock for OCC's account and liability. The sale proceeds would
ultimately be delivered to the Borrowing Clearing Member's account at
DTC against delivery of the Loaned Stock. Any difference between (i)
the sale proceeds and (ii) the amount of the Collateral plus any other
costs, fees or interest incurred by the broker in connection with such
sell-out, and any penalties or charges that the Loan Market may assess
against the Lending Clearing Member would be credited to or collected
from the Lending Clearing Member's designated bank account.
Paragraph (c) of Rule 2009A would provide that OCC would have the
authority to terminate Market Loans in circumstances where a Loan
Market so directs OCC or where OCC deems such action warranted. In
either case, OCC would give written notice to all affected Clearing
Members specifying the date on which such termination would become
effective. As with a recall or a return, if a Market Loan termination
initiated by a Loan Market or OCC fails to settle by the specified time
set forth in paragraph (c), the relevant Loan Market would instruct an
independent broker to initiate the ``buy-in'' or ``sell-out'' process,
as applicable, in order to complete the termination.
Suspension of Market Loan Clearing Members--Rule 2210A and 2211A
Under Rule 2210A, OCC would not accept any stock loans to which the
suspended Clearing Member is a party as a Market Loan after the time at
which the Clearing Member was suspended, and would instruct DTC to
unwind any such transaction. Open stock loan and stock borrows
positions of the suspended Clearing Member would be liquidated in
accordance with Rule 2211A by an independent broker designated by OCC
for such purposes.
Collection of Fees and Charges on Behalf of a Loan Market--Rule 209
OCC proposes to amend paragraph (b) of Rule 209 so that OCC would
have the authority to withdraw from a Market Clearing Member's bank
account the amount of any fees or charges that the Clearing Member owes
to a Loan Market.
Certain Conforming Changes in the By-Laws and Rules--Article XXI,
Section 2 and 5; Rule 1103, 2201, 2202, 2204, 2205 and 2210
Sections 2 and 5 of Article XXI of the By-Laws and Rule 1103, 2201,
2202, 2204, 2205 and 2210 would be amended to conform to the new Market
Loan rules as appropriate.
D. Summary of Certain Provisions of the AQS Agreement
In connection with providing clearing and settlement services to
AQS, OCC will enter into the AQS Agreement, which is similar in form to
clearing agreements that OCC has entered into with futures markets. In
addition to (i) defining each party's obligations in connection with
the clearance and settlement of Market Loans, as discussed in Part B
above, and (ii) identifying aspects of OCC's services that will be
provided in accordance with the provisions of OCC's By-Laws and Rules,
as discussed in Part C above, the AQS Agreement will set forth other
terms and conditions that will govern the parties' relationship,
including the following:
Regulatory Requirements
AQS will represent that (i) it will have obtained all necessary
registrations, memberships, approvals or other consents that are
required to have been obtained by it from any federal or state
regulatory agencies or any self-regulatory organizations, (ii) it will
have procedures (as amended from time to time, the ``Market
Procedures'') that comply with the provisions of all applicable
regulations and will have filed with the Commission the necessary
information with respect to the Market Procedures, and (iii) it will
have all requisite power and authority, whether arising under
applicable federal or state law or the rules and regulations of any
regulatory or self-regulatory organization to which AQS is subject, to
enter into and perform its obligations under the AQS Agreement. OCC
will make similar representations, and in addition will clarify that
OCC's provision of clearing services in respect of Market Loans will
depend on the Commission's approval of this proposed rule change.
AQS and OCC will each be required to notify the other party of any
action taken by any regulatory body or agency that, in the judgment of
the relevant party, has or will have a material adverse effect on such
party's performance of its obligations under the AQS Agreement.
Fees for Clearing Services
OCC will establish fee structures for the services it performs for
Clearing Members consistent with the provisions of its By-Laws. Fees
charged to subscribers of AQS for services performed by OCC under the
AQS Agreement shall not be greater than the fees charged by OCC in
respect of substantially similar services performed for other markets
in connection with Market Loan transactions; provided that OCC may
offer alternative fee structures to such markets so long as it offers
the same alternatives to AQS on substantially the same terms and so
long
[[Page 5964]]
as the alternative fee structure provides for the equitable allocation
of reasonable dues, fees, and other charges among Clearing Members.
Indemnification
AQS will indemnify and hold harmless OCC and each of its directors,
officers, committee members, agents, employees and any person or entity
who controls OCC (as the term ``control'' is defined in Rule 405 of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended) from and against any and all
losses, damages, liabilities, judgments, claims, expenses and amounts
incurred and/or paid in settlement (collectively referred to as
``Losses'') arising out of or based on (i) any violation or alleged
violation by AQS of any of the terms of the AQS Agreement or (ii) any
violation or alleged violation by AQS of any law (including patent
infringement or other intellectual property law violation) or
governmental regulation. OCC will indemnify and hold harmless AQS and
each of its directors, officers, committee members, agents, employees
and any person or entity who controls the Market from and against any
and all Losses arising out of or based on (i) any violation or alleged
violation by OCC of any of the terms of the AQS Agreement, (ii) any
alleged default by OCC in performing its obligations in accordance with
its By-Laws and Rules in respect of any Market Loans it has accepted
for clearing, or (iii) any violation or alleged violation by OCC of any
law (including patent infringement or other intellectual property law
violation) or governmental regulation. The indemnifications provided by
each party will include indemnification against any Losses arising out
of or based on any allegation that any termination of a Market Loan
transaction initiated by the indemnifying party was wrongful.
Term and Termination
The AQS Agreement may be terminated (i) by either party at any time
upon giving a specified number of days' prior written notice to the
other party, (ii) by a party upon giving notice to the other party if
the other party has breached in any material respect the provisions of
the AQS Agreement, or (iii) by OCC upon giving notice to AQS if, among
other grounds, AQS has ceased to effect stock loan transactions or
OCC's By-Laws or Rules have ceased to be in effect in a material
respect. From the time that any notice of termination is given or any
event of termination occurs until such time as all stock loan and
borrow positions resulting from Market Loans have been closed or
transferred to an alternative clearing organization, OCC and AQS will
continue to provide all services and perform all of their respective
obligations under the AQS Agreement and OCC's By-Laws and Rules to the
extent necessary or appropriate to service open stock loan and borrow
positions. Finally, in the event of a voluntary termination of the AQS
Agreement, OCC will use reasonable efforts to effect transfer of the
open positions to AQS's successor clearing organization subject to
reasonable agreements with such successor clearing organization, AQS
and/or Clearing Members whose positions are being transferred, as
appropriate, that protect the interests of OCC.
Dispute Resolution
If a dispute arises between AQS and OCC relating to the clearing
services in respect of Market Loans, the AQS Agreement will provide
that senior officers of AQS and OCC will endeavor in good faith to
resolve the dispute and to mitigate its deleterious effects and will
confer with each other to those ends.
Certain Loan Market Obligations
Schedule B of the AQS Agreement sets forth certain specific
services that the Loan Market is required to perform to facilitate the
performance by OCC of its obligations under its By-Laws and Rules. With
respect to such obligations, the AQS Agreement provides that the Loan
Market will be bound by the provisions of OCC's By-Laws and Rules to
the extent that they impose obligations on the Market.
The proposed changes to OCC's Rules are consistent with the
purposes and requirements of Section 17A of the Act because they are
designed to promote the prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of
stock loan transactions executed on an electronic marketplace, and to
foster cooperation and coordination with persons engaged in the
clearance and settlement of such transactions, to remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a national system for the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of such transactions, and, in
general, to protect investors and the public interest. The proposed
rule change accomplishes these purposes by expanding the number of
securities lending transactions that will be cleared and settled by
OCC, which, in turn, benefits OCC's Clearing Members and the industry
by reducing the cost of credit, increasing operational efficiency, and
providing stability through a central counterparty guarantee by
applying many of the same rules and procedures to these transactions as
OCC applies to the Hedge Loan transactions. The proposed rule change is
not inconsistent with the existing rules of OCC, including any rules
proposed to be amended.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
OCC does not believe that the proposed rule change would impose any
burden on competition.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
Written comments were not and are not intended to be solicited with
respect to the proposed rule change, and none have been received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The Commission finds that the proposed rule change is consistent
with the requirements of the Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder and particularly with the requirements of Section
17A(b)(3)(F).\7\ Section 17A(b)(3)(F) requires, among other things,
that the rules of a clearing agency be designed to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism for a national system for the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of securities transactions and to
assure the safeguarding of securities and funds which are in the
custody or control of the clearing agency or for which it is
responsible. The proposed rule change is consistent with these
requirements because while it allows OCC to expand its existing Stock
Loan/Hedge Program to accommodate securities lending transactions
executed through electronic trading systems, it addresses the
differences between the Stock Loan/Hedge Program and the new Market
Loan program by amending several provisions of OCC's Rules and entering
into the AQS Agreement, both of which are designed to assure that OCC
and its members comply with Commission rules and to reduce the risk of
operational disruption or financial loss to OCC or to its members.
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\7\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(I).
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OCC has requested that the Commission approve this rule change
prior to the thirtieth day after the date of publication of notice of
the filing. The Commission finds good cause for approving the proposed
rule change prior to the thirtieth day after publication of notice
because by so approving, OCC may begin providing
[[Page 5965]]
clearing services for stock loan and borrow transactions effected
through the AQS Loan Market in time for its anticipated launch date of
January 31, 2008.
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 rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-OCC-2008-20 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-OCC-2008-20. 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 Section, 100 F Street,
NE., Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours
of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of such filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal office of OCC and on OCC's Web
site at https://www.theocc.com/publications/rules/proposed_changes/sr_
occ_08_20.pdf. 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-OCC-
2008-20 and should be submitted on or before February 24, 2009.
V. Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the Commission finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with the requirements of the Act and
in particular with the requirements of Section 17A of the Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder applicable.\8\
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\8\ In approving the proposed rule changes, the Commission
considered the proposal's impact on efficiency, competition and
capital formation. 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
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It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,
that the proposed rule change (File No. SR-OCC-2008-20) be, and hereby
is, approved.
For the Commission by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\9\
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\9\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9-2204 Filed 2-2-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P