Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change and Amendment No. 1 Thereto To Expand TRACE To Include Agency Debt Securities and Primary Market Transactions, 17709-17716 [E9-8656]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 72 / Thursday, April 16, 2009 / Notices
17709
system. NYSE Amex notes that the
Exchange officer can adjust or nullify a
transaction under the authority granted
by this new provision only if the
transaction meets the objective criteria
for an obvious error under NYSE Amex
rules.
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
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.14
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–8657 Filed 4–15–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
• 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–NYSEAmex–2009–10 on
the subject line.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
Paper Comments
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The Exchange has filed the proposed
rule change pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act 10 and Rule
19b–4(f)(6) thereunder.11 Because the
proposed rule change does not: (i)
Significantly affect the protection of
investors or the public interest; (ii)
impose any significant burden on
competition; and (iii) become operative
prior to 30 days from the date on which
it was filed, or such shorter time as the
Commission may designate, if
consistent with the protection of
investors and the public interest, the
proposed rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)
of the Act 12 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6)(iii)
thereunder.13
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission may summarily abrogate
such rule change if it appears to the
Commission that such action is
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, for the protection of investors,
or otherwise in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSEAmex–2009–10. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for inspection and copying in
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington,
DC 20549, 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–NYSEAmex–2009–10 and
should be submitted on or before
May 7, 2009.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
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10 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
11 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6).
12 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
13 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6). In addition, Rule 19b–
4(f)(6)(iii) requires the Exchange to give the
Commission written notice of the Exchange’s intent
to file the proposed rule change along with a brief
description and text of the proposed rule change,
at least five business days prior to the date of filing
of the proposed rule change, or such shorter time
as designated by the Commission. The Exchange
has satisfied the pre-filing requirement.
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• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–59733; File No. SR–FINRA–
2009–010]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of
Proposed Rule Change and
Amendment No. 1 Thereto To Expand
TRACE To Include Agency Debt
Securities and Primary Market
Transactions
April 8, 2009.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on March 18,
2009, the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc. (‘‘FINRA’’) (f/k/a
National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. (‘‘NASD’’)) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed
rule change as described in Items I, II,
and III below, which Items have been
prepared by FINRA. On April 8, 2009,
FINRA submitted Amendment No. 1 to
the proposed rule change.3 The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change, as amended, from interested
persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to amend the
FINRA Rule 6700 Series (except for
Rules 6720 and 6740) and FINRA Rule
7730 as follows:
(1) In Rule 6710, to amend the defined
terms (A) ‘‘TRACE-eligible security’’ in
paragraph (a) to include securities
issued or guaranteed by an agency or a
government-sponsored enterprise
(except securities issued by the U.S.
14 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 Amendment No. 1 was a partial amendment
that: (i) Revised the definition of ‘‘Asset-backed
security’’ set forth in the purpose section to
accurately reflect the proposed rule text; (ii)
amended the definition of ‘‘TRACE-eligible
security’’ in both the purpose section and the rule
text to remove a parenthetical that was
inadvertently included in the original proposal; and
(iii) made minor technical edits to the purposed
rule text.
1 15
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Treasury) as TRACE-eligible debt
securities under the Rule 6700 Series
(the Trade Reporting and Compliance
Engine (‘‘TRACE’’) rules), to delete
certain criteria for TRACE-eligibility,
and to restate the definition, including
incorporating technical changes; (B)
‘‘Reportable TRACE transaction’’ in
paragraph (c) to include primary market
transactions as reportable to TRACE and
to incorporate technical changes; and
(C) ‘‘Investment Grade’’ in paragraph (h)
and ‘‘Non-Investment Grade’’ in
paragraph (i) to classify unrated Agency
debt securities, as defined herein, as
Investment Grade securities for
purposes of dissemination and to
incorporate technical changes;
(2) in Rule 6710, to add the defined
terms, ‘‘Agency,’’ ‘‘Agency debt
security,’’ ‘‘Asset-backed security,’’
‘‘Government-sponsored enterprise,’’
‘‘Money market instrument,’’ ‘‘U.S.
Treasury security,’’ ‘‘List or fixed
offering price transaction’’ and
‘‘Takedown transaction,’’ as
respectively, new paragraphs (k)
through (r);
(3) in Rule 6710, to make technical
changes to the defined terms, ‘‘Trade
Reporting and Compliance Engine,’’
‘‘Time of execution,’’ ‘‘Party to the
transaction,’’ ‘‘TRACE Participant,’’
‘‘Introducing Broker,’’ and ‘‘Split-rated,’’
in respectively, paragraphs (b), (d), (e),
(f), (g) and (j);
(4) in Rule 6730, to establish end-ofday reporting requirements for primary
market transactions that are List or fixed
offering price transactions and
Takedown transactions, to require
indicators in transaction reports to
distinguish secondary market
transactions from primary market
transactions and to further distinguish
primary market transactions that are List
or fixed offering price transactions and
Takedown transactions from those that
are not, and to incorporate other
technical changes;
(5) in Rule 6750, to provide that
transaction information for List or fixed
offering price transactions and
Takedown transactions will not be
disseminated, and to incorporate other
technical changes;
(6) in Rule 6760, to modify the
information and notification
requirements for newly issued TRACEeligible securities to provide for more
timely notice from members to FINRA
and to incorporate technical and
clarifying changes; and
(7) in Rule 7730, to establish reporting
and market data fees for Agency debt
securities transactions and primary
market transactions at the same rates in
effect for corporate bonds, to provide an
exception for certain primary market
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transactions, and to incorporate
technical changes.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on FINRA’s Web site at
(https://www.finra.org), at the principal
office of FINRA, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
FINRA 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. FINRA has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
I. Introduction
FINRA believes that TRACE has had
a positive impact on the corporate bond
market and proposes to expand the
scope of securities reportable to TRACE
to increase transparency, enhance
investor protection and foster market
integrity across a larger portion of the
debt market. For debt securities that
currently are TRACE-eligible, TRACE
has contributed to better pricing, more
precise valuations and reduced investor
costs. In addition, TRACE data has
enhanced surveillance of the corporate
bond market.
The proposed rule change will
expand TRACE to include Agency debt
securities, as defined herein, and
primary market transactions. FINRA
proposes to add such securities to
provide additional transparency and to
foster the development of improvements
observed in corporate bonds—improved
pricing, narrower bid-ask spreads,
reduced investor costs, and more
precise valuations—across a broader
portion of the debt market. Also, FINRA
believes that the proposed expansion of
TRACE, including certain primary
market transactions that will not be
disseminated, will enhance market
surveillance. Many bonds have an
intense period of trading during the
primary offering and shortly thereafter,
and the reporting of such transactions
will permit FINRA to obtain
information, observe patterns of trading,
and otherwise engage in more in-depth
surveillance of the debt market.
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The proposed rule change amends
FINRA Rule 6700 Series (except for
Rules 6720 and 6740) and FINRA Rule
7730. The amendments to FINRA Rule
6700 Series add to TRACE securities
that are issued or guaranteed by a
Government-sponsored enterprise or a
U.S. government agency (except the U.S.
Department of the Treasury or Assetbacked securities issued or guaranteed
by an Agency or a Governmentsponsored enterprise) (collectively
‘‘Agency debt securities’’) and primary
market transactions. Certain primary
market transactions that are defined as
List or fixed offering price transactions
and Takedown transactions will be
subject to more flexible end-of-day
reporting requirements, will not be
disseminated, and will not be subject to
reporting fees, if timely and accurately
reported.
In connection with the proposed
expansion, FINRA amends the defined
term ‘‘TRACE-eligible security’’ in Rule
6710(a) to add Agency debt securities as
TRACE-eligible securities, to delete
certain criteria, and to restate the
definition to clarify its scope and the
exceptions. In addition, FINRA
proposes amendments to other defined
terms in Rule 6710, the most important
of which are the amendments to the
term ‘‘Reportable TRACE transaction’’ to
permit reporting of primary market
transactions to TRACE and their
dissemination. Also, FINRA proposes to
add several defined terms to Rule 6710
that are related to the incorporation of
Agency debt securities and primary
market transactions in TRACE. Finally,
FINRA will amend various currently
defined terms in Rule 6710 to
incorporate minor technical, stylistic or
conforming changes.
The proposed rule change includes
amendments to Rule 6730, Rule 6750
and Rule 6760. Rule 6730 contains
reporting requirements and Rule 6750
addresses the dissemination of
transaction information and the
exceptions thereto. Rule 6760 requires
members to provide notice to FINRA of
new TRACE-eligible securities. In Rule
6730 and Rule 6750, generally, the
proposed amendments address issues
raised by the inclusion of primary
market transactions. Certain primary
market transactions—List or fixed
offering price transactions and
Takedown transactions—will be subject
to end-of-day reporting under amended
Rule 6730 and not subject to
dissemination under amended Rule
6750. The proposed amendments to
Rule 6760 incorporate changes in the
notification requirements and the
notification deadlines to facilitate
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members’ timely reporting of TRACEeligible securities.
Regarding market data fees, FINRA
will distinguish TRACE transaction data
as data sets for organizational purposes
only, one comprised solely of corporate
bond transaction information (the
‘‘Corporate Bonds Data Set’’) and a
second comprised solely of Agency debt
securities transaction information
(‘‘Agency Data Set’’). The fee schedule
currently in effect in Rule 7730 also will
apply to Agency debt securities
transactions and primary market
transactions. However, members will
not be charged a reporting fee when
reporting a List or fixed offering price
transaction or a Takedown transaction
on a timely and accurate basis.
In addition to the amendments
discussed above, the proposed rule
change includes additional proposed
technical or clarifying amendments to
FINRA Rule 6700 Series (except for
Rules 6720 and 6740) and FINRA Rule
7730.
II. Agency Debt Securities
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A. ‘‘TRACE-Eligible Security’’ and
Related Rule 6710 Amendments
Under Rule 6710(a), a ‘‘TRACEeligible security’’ is a U.S. dollar
denominated bond, note or other debt
instrument that is issued by a U.S. or
foreign private issuer. The definition
also requires that the debt security be
registered under the Securities Act (or
issued pursuant to Section 4(2) and
purchased or sold in a transaction in
compliance with Securities Act Rule
144A transaction (‘‘Rule 144A
transaction’’)); depository eligible under
NASD Rule 11310(d); and Investment
Grade or Non-Investment Grade as
defined, respectively, in Rules 6710(h)
and 6710(i).4
U.S. Treasury securities, foreign
sovereign debt and securities issued by
U.S. government agencies or similar
entities, such as government
corporations, are not TRACE-eligible
securities. In addition, the defined term
expressly excludes securities that are
issued by a government-sponsored
enterprise, or are asset-backed
securities, mortgage-backed securities,
collateralized mortgage obligations and
4 On February 11, 2009, FINRA filed SR–FINRA–
2009–004 to amend the definition of ‘‘TRACEeligible security’’ to eliminate the requirement that
a TRACE-eligible security be registered under the
Securities Act. In addition, FINRA also proposed to
eliminate, with respect to transactions in TRACEeligible securities effected under Securities Act
Rule 144A, the requirement that such securities be
initially issued under Securities Act Section 4(2).
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59519
(March 5, 2009), 74 FR 10630 (March 11, 2009)
(notice requesting comment on SR–FINRA–2009–
004).
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money market instruments that at
issuance have a maturity of one year or
less.
FINRA proposes to amend and restate
the definition of ‘‘TRACE-eligible
security’’ in Rule 6710(a). The most
significant amendment expands the
definition to include ‘‘Agency debt
securities’’ as defined below as TRACEeligible securities. In addition, FINRA
proposes to delete two criteria in the
defined term as discussed below.
1. Amendments to ‘‘TRACE–Eligible
Security’’ To Include Agency Debt
Securities
FINRA proposes to expand the scope
of the defined term, ‘‘TRACE-eligible
security’’ to include Agency debt
securities. Specifically, restated Rule
6710(a) will include a debt security that
‘‘is U.S. dollar denominated and issued
or guaranteed by an Agency as defined
in paragraph (k) or a Governmentsponsored enterprise as defined in
paragraph (n)’’ as a TRACE-eligible
security. The proposed inclusion of
Agency debt securities as ‘‘TRACEeligible securities’’ does not require that
such securities be registered under the
Securities Act or issued pursuant to
Securities Act Section 4(2) and
purchased and sold pursuant to Rule
144A.
In connection with this amendment,
FINRA also proposes to add the
following defined terms to Rule 6710:
‘‘Agency debt security,’’ ‘‘Agency,’’
‘‘Asset-backed security,’’ ‘‘Governmentsponsored enterprise,’’ and ‘‘U.S.
Treasury security.’’
The proposed term ‘‘Agency debt
security’’ is used to refer, collectively, to
two types of securities that will be
TRACE-eligible securities. ‘‘Agency debt
security’’ as defined in proposed Rule
6710(l) means:
a debt security (i) issued or guaranteed by an
Agency as defined in paragraph (k); or (ii)
issued or guaranteed by a Governmentsponsored enterprise as defined in paragraph
(n). The term excludes a U.S. Treasury
security as defined in paragraph (p) and an
Asset-backed security as defined in
paragraph (m) where an Agency or a
Government-sponsored enterprise is the
sponsor of the trust or other entity that issues
the Asset-backed security, or is the guarantor
of the Asset-backed security.
The two issuers (or guarantors)
referenced in the term ‘‘Agency debt
securities’’ are ‘‘Agencies’’ and
‘‘Government-sponsored enterprises.’’
Under proposed Rule 6710(n),
‘‘ ‘Government-sponsored enterprise’
(‘GSE’) has the same meaning as defined
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17711
in 2 U.S.C. 622(8).’’ 5 Some of the most
well-known GSEs include the Federal
National Mortgage Association (‘‘Fannie
Mae’’ or ‘‘FNMA’’), the Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation (‘‘FHLMC’’
or ‘‘Freddie Mac’’) and the various
Federal Home Loan Banks. For purposes
of the TRACE rules, securities issued or
guaranteed by GSEs are included under
the collective term, ‘‘Agency debt
securities’’ although technically GSEs
are instrumentalities of the U.S.
government, and not agencies.
The collective term, ‘‘Agency debt
security,’’ also includes securities
issued or guaranteed by an Agency. For
purposes of the TRACE rules, under
proposed Rule 6710(k), ‘‘Agency’’
means: a U.S. ‘‘executive agency’’ 6 as
5 The term ‘‘government-sponsored enterprise’’ is
defined in 2 U.S.C. 622(8) as: a corporate entity
created by a law of the United States that—
(A) (i) has a Federal charter authorized by law;
(ii) is privately owned, as evidenced by capital
stock owned by private entities or individuals;
(iii) is under the direction of a board of directors,
a majority of which is elected by private owners;
(iv) is a financial institution with power to—
(I) make loans or loan guarantees for limited
purposes such as to provide credit for specific
borrowers or one sector; and
(II) raise funds by borrowing (which does not
carry the full faith and credit of the Federal
Government) or to guarantee the debt of others in
unlimited amounts; and
(B) (i) does not exercise powers that are reserved
to the Government as sovereign (such as the power
to tax or to regulate interstate commerce);
(ii) does not have the power to commit the
Government financially (but it may be a recipient
of a loan guarantee commitment made by the
Government); and
(iii) has employees whose salaries and expenses
are paid by the enterprise and are not Federal
employees subject to title 5.
Congress defined GSEs for purposes of the
budgetary treatment of such entities in the Omnibus
Reconciliation Act of 1990, Pub. L. No. 101–508,
104 Stat. 1388, 607; 2 U.S.C. 622(8).
6 5 U.S.C. 105 defines ‘‘executive agency’’ as:
For purposes of this title (5 U.S.C. 101 et seq.)
‘‘Executive agency’’ means an Executive
department, a Government corporation, and an
independent establishment.
‘‘Executive department’’ is defined in U.S.C. 101
as any of the major agencies or departments (e.g.,
The Department of State, the Department of the
Treasury, the Department of Homeland Security,
etc. The Secretaries of such agencies comprise the
President’s Cabinet). ‘‘Government Corporation’’ is
defined in 5 U.S.C. 103 as ‘‘a corporation owned or
controlled by the Government of the United States.
* * *’’ (e.g., the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation is a wholly owned government
corporation). ‘‘Independent establishment’’ is
defined in 5 U.S.C. 104 as (1) an establishment in
the executive branch (other than the United States
Postal Service or the Postal Regulatory Commission)
which is not an Executive department, military
department, Government corporation, or part
thereof, or part of an independent establishment;
and (2) the General Accounting Office.’’ (e.g., the
Federal Reserve Banks are independent
establishments).
(The Departments of the Army, Navy and Air
Force, which are defined as military departments,
are not executive agencies, 5 U.S.C. 102.)
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defined in 5 U.S.C. 105 that is
authorized to issue debt directly or
through a related entity, such as a
government corporation, or to guarantee
the repayment of principal and/or
interest of a debt security issued by
another. The term excludes the U.S.
Department of the Treasury
(‘‘Treasury’’) in the exercise of its
authority to issue U.S. Treasury
securities as defined in paragraph (p).
Two examples of such Agencies are the
Commodity Credit Corporation and the
Export-Import Bank of the United States
(issuing debt securities through its
affiliate, the Private Export Funding
Corporation, or ‘‘PEFCO’’).
As noted previously, TRACE
currently does not include U.S.
Treasury securities, and this is not
changed by the proposal to add Agency
debt securities to TRACE. For purposes
of TRACE, the defined term, ‘‘Agency,’’
‘‘excludes the U.S. Treasury (‘Treasury’)
in the exercise of its authority to issue
U.S. Treasury securities * * * .’’ In
addition, the defined term, ‘‘Agency
debt security,’’ specifically excludes
U.S. Treasury securities.
Certain Asset-backed securities are
the second type of security that is
excluded explicitly from the definition
of Agency debt security. For purposes of
TRACE, under proposed Rule 6710(l),
Agency debt securities do not include
Asset-backed securities ‘‘where an
Agency or a Government-sponsored
enterprise is the sponsor of the trust or
other entity that issues the Asset-backed
security, or is the guarantor of the Assetbacked security.’’ Instead, such a
security is included as an ‘‘Asset-backed
security’’ as defined in proposed Rule
6710(m).7
For purposes of TRACE, ‘‘Assetbacked security’’ is defined broadly.
Proposed Rule 6710(m) defines ‘‘Assetbacked security’’ to mean:
asset-backed security as used in Securities
Act Regulation AB, Section 1101(c), and
other debt securities that are structured
securities, synthetic asset-backed securities
and/or instruments involving or based on the
securitization of mortgages or other credits or
assets. The term includes but is not limited
to mortgage-backed securities, collateralized
mortgage obligations, collateralized debt
obligations, collateralized bond obligations,
collateralized debt obligations of assetbacked securities and collateralized debt
obligations of collateralized debt obligations.
7 The exclusion of such securities from the term
‘‘Agency debt security’’ is consistent with the
current limitations in the definition of TRACEeligible security, which excludes mortgage-backed,
and asset-backed securities, and collateralized
mortgage obligations.
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2. Other Amendments to ‘‘TRACE–
Eligible Security’’
FINRA also proposes two
amendments to Rule 6710(a), the
definition of TRACE-eligible security,
which are not specifically related to the
expansion of TRACE to include Agency
debt securities. Currently, the definition
of a ‘‘TRACE-eligible security’’ includes
criteria that such securities be
‘‘Investment Grade or Non-Investment
Grade’’ and ‘‘depository eligible
securities under NASD Rule 11310(d).’’
When TRACE became effective in 2002,
the reference to the credit quality in
Rule 6710(a) made clear that TRACE
applied to debt securities of any credit
quality in contrast to the FIPS system,
which TRACE replaced.8 Under FIPS,
members were required to report limited
transaction information for transactions
in Non-Investment Grade securities
only. FINRA proposes to delete
‘‘Investment Grade or Non-Investment
Grade’’ in Rule 6710(a) because it is no
longer needed to clarify the scope of
TRACE.
FINRA also required that TRACEeligible securities be ‘‘depository
eligible securities under NASD Rule
11310(d)’’ when TRACE was
implemented to assure that such
securities would have CUSIPs to
identify them clearly and easily within
the TRACE system. Operational
enhancements now permit FINRA to
receive, store and retrieve transaction
information for securities that are not
assigned CUSIPs. FINRA proposes to
delete the unnecessary criterion in Rule
6710(a), which will permit FINRA to
capture information on the few
securities that are not assigned CUSIPs,
but otherwise meet TRACE eligibility
standards.
FINRA proposes to restate the
definition of ‘‘TRACE-eligible security’’
to incorporate all the changes discussed
above and certain technical
amendments. Among other things,
FINRA proposes to delete the definition
of a money market instrument, which is
embedded in the term, ‘‘TRACE-eligible
security,’’ and add it as a separately
defined term in new proposed Rule
6710(o) for stylistic consistency. The
meaning of the term does not change.
Proposed Rule 6710(a), as amended,
will read as follows:
‘‘TRACE-eligible security’’ means a debt
security that is U.S. dollar-denominated,
issued by a United States (‘‘U.S.’’) or foreign
private issuer, and either registered under the
Securities Act or issued pursuant to Section
4(2) of the Securities Act and purchased or
8 FIPS stands for Fixed Income Pricing System.
The FIPS rules were rescinded and the FIPS system
was dismantled shortly after TRACE began.
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sold pursuant to Securities Act Rule 144A; or
is a debt security that is U.S. dollar
denominated and issued or guaranteed by an
Agency as defined in paragraph (k) or a
Government-sponsored enterprise as defined
in paragraph (n). ‘‘TRACE-eligible security’’
does not include a debt security that is:
(1) Issued by a foreign sovereign or is a
U.S. Treasury security as defined in
paragraph (p);
(2) A restricted security as defined in
Securities Act Rule 144(a)(3), except a
restricted security that is issued pursuant to
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and
purchased or sold in a transaction that is
effected under Securities Act Rule 144A;
(3) A Money market instrument as defined
in paragraph (o); or
(4) An Asset-backed security as defined in
paragraph (m).9
B. Reporting and Dissemination
Rule 6730 contains the reporting
requirements, including information
that must be reported, deadlines for
timely reporting, certain reporting
modifiers and exceptions to the
reporting requirement. Agency debt
securities will be subject to the
reporting requirements currently set
forth in Rule 6730. Under Rule 6730,
members will be required to report
transactions in Agency debt securities
within 15 minutes of execution of the
transactions, subject to the standard
exceptions currently set forth in the
Rule.10
Information on transactions in Agency
debt securities will be disseminated by
FINRA immediately upon receipt of
transaction reports, which is the current
requirement for corporate bond
transactions under Rule 6750, subject to
one exception for Securities Act Rule
144A transactions.11 In addition, FINRA
will continue to apply the current
protocols that determine how volume
information is disseminated.12
However, FINRA proposes to amend
the defined term, ‘‘Investment Grade,’’
9 Additional proposed amendments to Rule 6710
are discussed, infra, at II.B., ‘‘Reporting and
Dissemination’’ (regarding dissemination
protocols), III. ‘‘Primary Market Transactions’’
(regarding primary market transactions), and IV.
‘‘Other Changes’’ (regarding technical
amendments).
10 Rule 6730(a)(1) through (4) provide exceptions
to the 15-minute reporting requirement if a member
executes a transaction while the TRACE system is
closed or less than 15 minutes before the TRACE
system will close.
11 Under Rule 6750, FINRA does not disseminate
transactions in TRACE-eligible securities that are
Securities Act Rule 144A transactions.
12 Under the protocols: (1) For Investment Grade
transactions in sizes less than or equal to $5 million
(by par value), actual volume is disseminated; and
in sizes exceeding $5 million, a ‘‘$5 million+’’
capped volume indicator is disseminated; and, (2)
for Non-Investment Grade transactions in sizes less
than or equal to $1 million, actual volume is
disseminated; and in sizes exceeding $1 million, a
‘‘$1 million+’’ capped volume indicator is
disseminated.
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in Rule 6710(h) to treat unrated Agency
debt securities as Investment Grade
securities for purposes of the abovereferenced dissemination protocols.
FINRA also proposes conforming
amendments regarding the treatment of
such unrated securities in the term,
‘‘Non-Investment Grade,’’ as defined in
Rule 6710(i), and technical, stylistic
amendments in both provisions.
Specifically, in Rule 6710(h), FINRA
proposes to add a final sentence and
amend the penultimate sentence, both
as set forth below to provide:
FINRA recognizes that extending
TRACE reporting to Agency debt
securities may result in certain trading
desks having to report transactions to
TRACE for the first time. As has been
the case since TRACE inception, FINRA
plans to implement TRACE reporting
requirements and dissemination of
Agency debt securities in a deliberate,
yet efficient manner. FINRA has worked
regularly with, and will continue to
work with, broker-dealers and third
party vendors to ensure effective and
efficient TRACE implementation.
If a TRACE-eligible security is unrated,
FINRA may classify the TRACE-eligible
security as an Investment Grade security.
FINRA will classify an unrated Agency debt
security as defined in paragraph (l) as an
Investment Grade security for purposes of the
dissemination of transaction volume.
III. Primary Market Transactions
Currently, broker-dealers are required
to report only secondary market
transactions to TRACE. To provide a
more comprehensive audit trail, FINRA
proposes amendments to FINRA Rule
6700 Series to require broker-dealers to
report all primary market transactions
and designate such transactions with an
identifier. FINRA proposes that all
primary market transactions be reported
because, for many bonds, the most
active period of trading occurs during
the primary offering and immediately
afterward. To improve market
surveillance of the debt markets, FINRA
proposes that TRACE be expanded to
include such transactions.
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The other proposed change to Rule
6710(h) is a technical, stylistic
amendment to the first sentence,
changing the first clause from, ‘‘The
term ‘Investment Grade’ shall mean a
TRACE-eligible security that, * * *’’ to
‘‘ ‘Investment Grade’ means a TRACEeligible security that, * * * .’’
The proposed amendments to the
defined term, ‘‘Non-Investment Grade,’’
will cross-reference in Rule 6710(i) the
amendment regarding the treatment of
unrated Agency debt securities
proposed to Rule 6710(h). Also, FINRA
proposes: (i) to make technical stylistic
amendments to the first clause of Rule
6710(i) similar to such amendments to
be incorporated in Rule 6710(h) as
described above; and (ii) to delete
certain detailed rule text in Rule 6710(i)
that is no longer necessary.13
13 FINRA proposes to delete text in Rule 6710(i)
that was used to classify certain Non-Investment
Grade corporate bonds to determine when
dissemination of transaction information would
occur. The text is no longer necessary because
transaction information on such bonds began to be
disseminated several years ago. FINRA proposes to
delete the following rule text, including the
footnote text set forth in the second paragraph
below:
and further classify it as being in one of the
generic rating categories below the four highest
such categories. If FINRA does not have sufficient
information to make a judgment regarding the
classification of an unrated TRACE-eligible
security, for purposes of TRACE, FINRA will
classify the TRACE-eligible security as having been
rated B (or the equivalent rating of one or more
NRSROs).
‘‘B’’ is a rating of Standard & Poor’s, a division
of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. (‘‘S&P’’). S&P
is a nationally recognized statistical rating
organization. S&P’s ratings are proprietary to S&P
and are protected by copyright and other
intellectual property laws. S&P’s licenses ratings to
FINRA. Ratings may not be copied or otherwise
reproduced, repackaged, further transmitted,
transferred, disseminated, redistributed or resold, or
stored for subsequent use for any such purpose in
whole or in part, in any form or manner or by any
means whatsoever, by any person without S&P’s
prior written consent.
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A. Amendments To Add Primary Market
Transactions
FINRA proposes two rule
amendments that will require members
to report primary market transactions to
TRACE. FINRA proposes to amend Rule
6710(c) to delete the words ‘‘secondary
market’’ in the defined term ‘‘Reportable
TRACE transaction’’ and make technical
conforming amendments. Deleting the
words ‘‘secondary market’’ in Rule
6710(c) will delete the limitation that
currently does not allow the reporting of
primary market transactions.
The other proposed amendments to
Rule 6710(c) will: (i) Incorporate
technical and stylistic changes to the
first clause of Rule 6710(c); 14 and (ii)
conform a phrase in Rule 6710(c) with
Rule 6730(e) by deleting the phrase,
‘‘transactions exempt from reporting’’
As amended, FINRA Rule 6710(i) will provide:
‘‘Non-Investment Grade’’ means a TRACE-eligible
security that, if rated by only one NRSRO, is rated
lower than one of the four highest generic rating
categories; or if rated by more than one NRSRO, is
rated lower than one of the four highest generic
rating categories by all or a majority of such
NRSROs. Except as provided in paragraph (h), if a
TRACE-eligible security is unrated, for purposes of
TRACE, FINRA may otherwise classify the TRACEeligible security as a Non-Investment Grade
security.
14 In Rule 6710(c), the first phrase, ‘‘The term
‘reportable TRACE transaction’ shall mean * * *’’
will be amended to read, ‘‘‘Reportable TRACE
transaction’ means. * * *’’
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and substituting ‘‘transactions that are
not reported.’’ 15
An amendment to Rule 6730(e)(1) is
also required to include primary market
transactions in TRACE. FINRA proposes
to amend paragraph (1) of Rule 6730(e)
to delete the current exclusion from
reporting for ‘‘[T]ransactions that are
part of a primary distribution by an
issuer.’’
B. Reporting Requirements
Members will be required to report
primary market transactions, except
primary market transactions that are
‘‘List or fixed offering price
transactions’’ and ‘‘Takedown
transactions,’’ within 15 minutes of the
time of execution, in accordance with
Rule 6730(a).16 However, FINRA
proposes to liberalize the reporting
requirements for List or fixed offering
price transactions and Takedown
transactions.
List or fixed offering price transaction
and Takedown transaction refer to two
types of sale transactions that may occur
during a primary offering: those
executed at a previously fixed price,
from a broker-dealer acting as an
underwriter to a purchaser; and certain
sale transactions among certain market
professionals involved in the placement
of the offered securities. For purposes of
the TRACE rules, such transactions
must occur on the first day of the
offering.
The terms ‘‘List or fixed offering price
transaction’’ and ‘‘Takedown
transaction’’ are defined for purposes of
TRACE in, respectively, proposed Rule
6710(q) and (r). ‘‘List or fixed offering
price transaction’’ is defined in Rule
6710(q) to mean:
a primary market sale transaction sold on the
first day of trading of a new issue: (i) by a
sole underwriter, syndicate manager,
syndicate member or selling group member at
the published or stated list or fixed offering
price, or (ii) in the case of a primary market
sale transaction effected pursuant to
Securities Act Rule 144A, by an initial
purchaser, syndicate manager, syndicate
member or selling group member at the
published or stated fixed offering price.
‘‘Takedown transaction’’ is defined in
Rule 6710(r) to mean:
a primary market sale transaction sold on the
first day of trading of a new issue: (i) by a
sole underwriter or syndicate manager to a
syndicate or selling group member at a
15 As amended, Rule 6710(c) will provide:
‘‘ ‘Reportable TRACE transaction’ means any
transaction in a TRACE-eligible security except
transactions that are not reported as specified in
Rule 6730(e).’’
16 As noted, supra, at n. 9, exceptions to 15minute reporting are provided in Rule 6730(a)(1)
through (4) for trades that occur outside of TRACE
system hours or immediately prior to its closing.
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discount from the published or stated list or
fixed offering price, or (ii) in the case of a
primary market sale transaction effected
pursuant to Securities Act Rule 144A, by an
initial purchaser or syndicate manager to a
syndicate or selling group member at a
discount from the published or stated fixed
offering price.
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Under proposed Rule 6730(a)(5),
members executing such List or fixed
offering price transactions or Takedown
transactions will have until the end of
the business day—until the TRACE
system closes—to report such
transactions. If a primary offering prices
after 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time and
thereafter broker-dealers execute
transactions that qualify as List or fixed
offering price transactions or Takedown
transactions, broker-dealers will have
until the end of the next business day
to report such transactions under Rule
6730(a)(5)(B)(i). In addition, if brokerdealers execute transactions that are List
or fixed offering price transactions or
Takedown transactions at any time
outside of the TRACE system hours,
broker-dealers will have until the close
of the TRACE system on the next
business day to report such transactions
under Rule 6730(a)(5)(B)(ii) and (iii).17
Price discovery is the most significant
reason underlying the TRACE
requirement for the reporting of
transactions within 15 minutes of
execution and thereafter, the immediate
dissemination of such information.
FINRA proposes to liberalize the
reporting requirements for List or fixed
offering price transactions and
Takedown transactions, because, in
most cases, the prices of such
transactions will be the same, or subject
to only minor differences based on the
underwriting structure, and will not
contribute meaningfully to price
discovery. FINRA proposes end-of-day
reporting for the two types of primary
market transactions because FINRA
does not believe that price transparency
will be adversely affected. Moreover, the
proposed end-of-day requirement will
provide broker-dealers operational
flexibility and will ease compliance
burdens, particularly during the
implementation of the proposed
changes.18
17 Under proposed Rule 6730(a)(5)(B)(iii), the
reporting requirements for List or fixed price
offering transactions or Takedown transactions that
a broker-dealer executes on a Saturday, Sunday, or
a federal or religious holiday when the TRACE
system is closed include specific information
requirements and have certain parallels to the
reporting requirements for transactions reported
under Rule 6730(a)(4).
18 The proposed amendments will harmonize
substantially the TRACE reporting rules with
current requirements under Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board (‘‘MSRB’’) Rule G–14 for
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All other primary market transactions,
such as those that are effected at prices
other than a fixed (or list) offering price
and those that are effected at a fixed
price other than on the first day of new
issue trading, will be subject to the 15minute reporting requirements and the
exceptions thereto currently set forth in
Rule 6730(a)(1) through (4).
Currently, the TRACE data collected
for surveillance, review, and research
contains information on secondary
market transactions only. With the
inclusion of primary market transaction
data, FINRA will require broker-dealers
to assign one of three indicators in their
trade reports under proposed
subparagraph (D) of Rule 6730(d)(4).
The indicators will distinguish primary
market transactions from secondary
market transactions and further
distinguish List or fixed offering price
transactions and Takedown transactions
from other primary market transactions.
C. Dissemination
Generally, dissemination of
transaction information for primary
market transactions will be
implemented at the same time FINRA
implements reporting of such
transactions. Dissemination will occur
immediately upon receipt of transaction
reports in primary market transactions
as provided in Rule 6750(a), with one
exception. Proposed Rule 6750(b)(2)
provides that primary market
transactions that are List or fixed
offering price transactions or Takedown
transactions will not be disseminated.
FINRA will study the reported data for
these primary market transactions for a
period of time after reporting begins
and, at a later date, determine if
dissemination of the information is
appropriate, and if appropriate, develop
a dissemination strategy.
In contrast, primary market
transactions that are not List or fixed
offering price transactions or Takedown
transactions will be disseminated as
soon as primary market transaction
reporting begins. These transactions,
such as certain ‘‘at-the-market’’
transactions, provide transparency
about current market pricing that is
otherwise not available to the public
and many market participants.
IV. Other Changes
A. FINRA Rule 6760
Currently, Rule 6760 requires
members to notify FINRA regarding
reporting primary market transactions in municipal
securities, and should reduce operational burdens
to firms. For primary market transactions, as with
Agency debt securities, FINRA will work with
broker-dealers and third party vendors to ensure
effective and cost efficient implementation.
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securities that are about to be offered in
a primary offering if such securities are
TRACE-eligible. In most cases, members
must notify FINRA Operations by 5 p.m.
Eastern Time on the business day before
an offering begins, although for some
types of offerings, the deadlines
currently extend to 5 p.m. of the
business day following the first offer
date. FINRA must have this information
in the TRACE system to facilitate timely
transaction reporting by all members
that have effected transactions in a
newly issued TRACE-eligible security.
FINRA proposes to amend the notice
and information requirements in Rule
6760 to facilitate members’ timely
reporting of TRACE-eligible securities in
both primary and secondary market
transactions. Under Rule 6760(b), a
broker-dealer providing notice will be
required to include ‘‘the time the new
issue is priced,’’ among other
information requirements. In addition,
the amendment requires that the
information be provided ‘‘prior to the
commencement of primary market
transactions.’’ The amendment also
recognizes that FINRA may require
information not specifically listed in
Rule 6760(b) if, among other things, a
security will not be assigned a CUSIP.
FINRA also proposes a series of minor
clarifying changes to the Rule. The
proposed amendments require that the
notice be provided to FINRA Operations
by the managing underwriter, or if a
managing underwriter is not appointed,
an underwriter, or, if there are no
underwriters, an initial purchaser.
When multiple underwriters or initial
purchasers participate in the offering
and there is no lead, all are liable under
Rule 6760 to provide notice to FINRA
Operations, but the parties may agree to
submit a single notice. Also, the
proposed rule change includes
amendments to delete the word
‘‘secondary’’ in the first line of
paragraph Rule 6760 (a)(1), delete
references to ‘‘TRACE Operations
Center’’ in the rule and substitute the
term ‘‘FINRA Operations,’’ and amend
the rule title to read, ‘‘Obligation To
Provide Notice.’’
B. Technical and Conforming
Amendments
FINRA also proposes several minor
technical, stylistic, or conforming
changes as follows. In Rule 6710, in the
first paragraph, after the sentence, ‘‘The
terms used in this Rule 6700 Series shall
have the same meaning as those defined
in the FINRA By-Laws and rules unless
otherwise specified.,’’ FINRA will add
the following sentence: ‘‘For the
purposes of this Rule 6700 Series, the
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mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
following terms have the following
meaning:’’
In Rule 6710, in paragraphs (b), (d),
(e), (f), (g) and (j), which set forth
various defined terms, FINRA proposes
to incorporate conforming technical and
stylistic changes to the first line of text
of each defined term. The amendments
to each defined term reflect the stylistic
changes shown as follows for Rule
6710(b). The initial phrase of Rule
6710(b), which provides, ‘‘The term
‘Trade Reporting and Compliance
Engine’ or ‘TRACE’ shall mean * * *’’
will be amended to read, ‘‘ ‘Trade
Reporting and Compliance Engine’ or
‘TRACE’ means. * * *’’ 19
In Rule 6710(e), the phrase, ‘‘[F]or
purposes of this Rule,’’ will be deleted.
In Rule 6730(a), FINRA will add a new
first sentence providing, ‘‘Each member
that is a party to a transaction in a
TRACE-eligible security must report the
transaction.’’ Other minor technical
changes are also proposed in the same
paragraph, including clarifying the term
‘‘TRACE system hours.’’ 20 Paragraphs
(5) and (6) of Rule 6730(a) are
renumbered as paragraphs (6) and (7),
and, in paragraph (7), a cross reference
to new paragraph (a)(5) is added. Also,
in Rule 6750, FINRA proposes minor
technical changes to paragraph (b),
including revising the header by
deleting ‘‘Securities Act Rule 144A
Transactions’’ and substituting the new
19 As noted above, FINRA proposes to incorporate
the same technical and stylistic changes to
paragraphs (d), (e), (f), (g) and (j) of Rule 6710. The
initial phrase of Rule 6710(d), which provides,
‘‘The term ‘time of execution’ for a transaction in
a TRACE-eligible security shall be * * *’’ will be
amended to read, ‘‘ ‘Time of execution’ for a
transaction in a TRACE-eligible security means.
* * *’’ The initial phrase of Rule 6710(e), which
provides, ‘‘The term ‘party to a transaction’ shall
mean * * *’’ will be amended to read, ‘‘ ‘Party to
a transaction’ means. * * *’’ The initial phrase of
Rule 6710(f), which provides, ‘‘The term ‘TRACE
Participant’ shall mean * * *’’ will be amended to
read, ‘‘ ‘TRACE Participant’ means. * * *’’ The
initial phrase of Rule 6710(g) will be amended to
read, ‘‘The term ‘Introducing Broker’ shall mean
* * *’’ will be amended to read, ‘‘ ‘Introducing
Broker’ means. * * *’’ The initial phrase of Rule
6710(j), which provides, ‘‘The term ‘split-rated’
shall mean * * *’’ will be amended to read,
‘‘ ‘Split-rated’ means. * * *’’
As discussed previously, FINRA proposes the
same technical and stylistic amendments to
paragrahs (c), (h) and (i) of Rule 6710.
20 As amended, Rule 6730(a) will provide:
Each member that is a Party to a transaction in
a TRACE-eligible security must report the
transaction. A member must report transaction
information within 15 minutes of the time of
execution, except as otherwise provided below, or
the transaction report will be ‘‘late.’’ The member
must transmit the report to TRACE during the hours
the TRACE system is open, which are 8 a.m. Eastern
Time through 6:29:59 p.m. Eastern Time, unless
otherwise announced by FINRA (‘‘TRACE system
hours’’). Specific trade reporting obligations during
a 24-hour cycle are set forth below.
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header, ‘‘Transaction Information Not
Disseminated.’’
IV. Fees
FINRA proposes to amend Rule 7730
to establish reporting and market data
fees for Agency debt securities
transactions and primary market
transactions. Generally, the fees
proposed for Agency debt securities are
equivalent to the fees charged for
corporate bonds. Primary market
transactions, whether in corporate
bonds or Agency debt securities, will be
subject to the same reporting fees
currently in effect, with one exception.
FINRA proposes not to charge a
reporting fee for the timely and accurate
reporting of primary market transactions
that are List or fixed offering price
transactions or Takedown transactions
as provided in amendments to Rule
7730(b)(1). However, the fees that are
currently in effect for late reports and
corrections will apply to such
transactions. Eliminating the standard
reporting fee for such transactions
should reduce the cost of compliance
for firms as they implement changes to
report such transactions.
FINRA will distinguish TRACE
transaction data as two data sets, one
comprised solely of corporate bond
transaction information (the ‘‘Corporate
Bonds Data Set’’) and a second data set
comprised solely of Agency debt
securities transaction information
(‘‘Agency Data Set’’) for organizational
purposes only. Market data fees will be
charged for each Data Set, as provided
in amended Rule 7730(c)(1)(A), (B) and
(C).21 Each Data Set will include the
relevant transaction data, including
primary market transactions in such
securities, provided that the primary
market transactions are subject to
dissemination.22
Generally, the proposed fees for the
Agency Data Set will be set at the same
rates currently in effect for corporate
bond market data (to be sold in the
future as the Corporate Bonds Data Set).
For example, in Rule 7730(c)(1)(B), the
21 Such proposed changes will be incorporated in
Rule 7730(c)(1)(A), the Bond Trade Dissemination
Service (‘‘BTDS’’) Professional Real-Time Data
Display Fee; Rule 7730(c)(1)(B), the Vendor RealTime Data Feed Fee and Snapshot Real-Time
TRACE Data Fee; and Rule 7730(c)(1)(C), the
Vendor Real-Time Data Feed Fee (for certain TaxExempt Organizations).
22 By definition, market data does not include
information on transactions that are required to be
reported but are not subject to dissemination.
Currently, Securities Act Rule 144A transactions are
accorded this treatment and under the proposed
rule change, primary market transactions that are
List or fixed offering price transactions and
Takedown transactions also will not be
disseminated, and, thus, will not be included in
data packages.
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current Vendor Real-Time Data Feed
Fee is $1500 per month for receipt of
continuous Real-Time TRACE
transaction data for internal, nondisplay use for corporate bonds for
persons or organizations other than
qualifying Tax-Exempt Organizations.
FINRA proposes to charge $1500 per
month for the same data package for the
Agency Data Set. A vendor that desires
to obtain a real-time data feed for both
Data Sets will pay $3,000 per month
($1500 for the Corporate Bonds Data Set
and $1500 for the Agency Data Set).
One ‘‘System Related Fee,’’ for ‘‘Web
Browser Access,’’ as set forth in FINRA
Rule 7730(a)(1), provides access for
reporting, but also includes an
embedded charge for access to market
data. FINRA proposes to amend the
‘‘Web Browser Access’’ fee in FINRA
Rule 7730(a)(1) to set one fee for
professionals that want a reporting
system plus access to one Data Set and
a second, higher fee for those desiring
a reporting system plus access to both
Data Sets.
FINRA proposes to continue its policy
to provide Non-Professionals access at
no charge to all or any portion of any
data, whether from one or both Data
Sets, under proposed amendments to
Rule 7730(c)(2).
Finally, FINRA also proposes minor
technical and clarifying amendments to
Rule 7730.
FINRA will announce the effective
date of the proposed rule change in a
Regulatory Notice to be published no
later than 60 days following
Commission approval. The effective
date will be no later than 180 days
following publication of the Regulatory
Notice announcing Commission
approval.
2. Statutory Basis
FINRA believes that the proposed rule
change is consistent with the provisions
of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,23 which
requires, among other things, that
FINRA rules must be designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest and Section 15(A)(b)(5)
of the Act,24 which requires, among
other things, that FINRA rules provide
for the equitable allocation of reasonable
dues, fees and other charges among
members and issuers and other persons
using any facility or system that FINRA
operates or controls in that: (i) The
proposed rule change will increase
transparency in the debt market
23 15
24 15
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U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(6).
U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(5).
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significantly, will enhance the ability of
institutional investors, retail investors
and broker-dealers to compare and
negotiate prices in Agency debt
securities transactions, and will
enhance FINRA’s surveillance of the
debt market in connection with primary
market transactions and Agency debt
securities generally; and (ii) the
proposed fee proposal provides for
reporting and market data fees that are
reasonable and mirror the fees currently
in effect for corporate bonds, and
provides for the equitable allocation of
such fees and charges among members
and other professional market
participants, qualifying Tax-Exempt
Organizations and public data
consumers.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
FINRA does not believe that the
proposed rule change will result in any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants or Others
Written comments were neither
solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 35 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the self regulatory
organization consents, the Commission
will:
(A) By order approve such proposed
rule change, or
(B) Institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
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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:
Number SR–FINRA–2009–010 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–FINRA–2009–010. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for inspection and copying in
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington,
DC 20549, on official business days
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Copies of the filing will also be available
for inspection and copying at the
principal office of FINRA. 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 No. SR–FINRA–
2009–010 and should be submitted on
or before May 7, 2009.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.25
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–8656 Filed 4–15–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
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
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:47 Apr 15, 2009
Jkt 217001
25 17
PO 00000
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
Frm 00085
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DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 6581]
Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs (ECA) Request for Grant
Proposals (RFGP): Congressionally
Mandated—One-Time Grants
Program—Competition B—
Professional, Cultural, and Youth OneTime Grants Program
Announcement Type: New Grant.
Funding Opportunity Number: ECA/
PE/C–09–One-time-Comp. B
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Number: 00.000.
Key Dates:
Application Deadline: May 14, 2009.
Executive Summary: This competition
is one of two competitions that the
Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs is conducting as directed in the
FY–2009 Omnibus Appropriation (Pub.
L. 111–8) under Division H of the
Department of State, Foreign
Operations, and Related Programs
Appropriations Act, under ‘‘Educational
and Cultural Exchange Programs’’ in
support of a $6 million ‘‘competitive
one-time grants program.’’ All
applications must be submitted by
public or private non-profit
organizations, meeting the provisions
described in Internal Revenue code
section 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3). Total
funding for this ‘‘one-time grants
program’’ is $6 million dollars. $3.9
million will be dedicated to this
competition, (Competition B—
Professional, Cultural and Youth Onetime Grants Program—reference number
ECA/PE/C–09–One-time-Comp. B), and
$2.1 million will be dedicated to and
announced simultaneously in a separate
RFGP, (Competition A—Academic
Programs One-time Grants Program—
reference number ECA/A–09–One-timeComp. A). Please note: The Bureau
reserves the right to reallocate funds it
has initially allocated to each of these
two competitions, based upon factors
such as the number of applications
received and responsiveness to the
review criteria outlined in each of the
solicitations.
Applicants may submit only one
proposal (TOTAL) to one of the two
competitions referenced above. In
addition, applicants under this
competition (either ECA/PE/C–09–Onetime-Comp.B or ECA/A–09–One-timeComp. A) may only apply to administer
one of the listed activities (total). If
multiple proposals are received from the
same applicant, all submissions will be
declared technically ineligible and will
be given no further consideration in the
review process. Eligible applicants are
strongly encouraged to read both RFGPs
E:\FR\FM\16APN1.SGM
16APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 72 (Thursday, April 16, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17709-17716]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-8656]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-59733; File No. SR-FINRA-2009-010]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change and Amendment
No. 1 Thereto To Expand TRACE To Include Agency Debt Securities and
Primary Market Transactions
April 8, 2009.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(the ``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given
that on March 18, 2009, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority,
Inc. (``FINRA'') (f/k/a National Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc. (``NASD'')) filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``SEC'' or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items have been prepared by FINRA. On
April 8, 2009, FINRA submitted Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change.\3\ The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments
on the proposed rule change, as amended, from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ Amendment No. 1 was a partial amendment that: (i) Revised
the definition of ``Asset-backed security'' set forth in the purpose
section to accurately reflect the proposed rule text; (ii) amended
the definition of ``TRACE-eligible security'' in both the purpose
section and the rule text to remove a parenthetical that was
inadvertently included in the original proposal; and (iii) made
minor technical edits to the purposed rule text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to amend the FINRA Rule 6700 Series (except for
Rules 6720 and 6740) and FINRA Rule 7730 as follows:
(1) In Rule 6710, to amend the defined terms (A) ``TRACE-eligible
security'' in paragraph (a) to include securities issued or guaranteed
by an agency or a government-sponsored enterprise (except securities
issued by the U.S.
[[Page 17710]]
Treasury) as TRACE-eligible debt securities under the Rule 6700 Series
(the Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine (``TRACE'') rules), to
delete certain criteria for TRACE-eligibility, and to restate the
definition, including incorporating technical changes; (B) ``Reportable
TRACE transaction'' in paragraph (c) to include primary market
transactions as reportable to TRACE and to incorporate technical
changes; and (C) ``Investment Grade'' in paragraph (h) and ``Non-
Investment Grade'' in paragraph (i) to classify unrated Agency debt
securities, as defined herein, as Investment Grade securities for
purposes of dissemination and to incorporate technical changes;
(2) in Rule 6710, to add the defined terms, ``Agency,'' ``Agency
debt security,'' ``Asset-backed security,'' ``Government-sponsored
enterprise,'' ``Money market instrument,'' ``U.S. Treasury security,''
``List or fixed offering price transaction'' and ``Takedown
transaction,'' as respectively, new paragraphs (k) through (r);
(3) in Rule 6710, to make technical changes to the defined terms,
``Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine,'' ``Time of execution,''
``Party to the transaction,'' ``TRACE Participant,'' ``Introducing
Broker,'' and ``Split-rated,'' in respectively, paragraphs (b), (d),
(e), (f), (g) and (j);
(4) in Rule 6730, to establish end-of-day reporting requirements
for primary market transactions that are List or fixed offering price
transactions and Takedown transactions, to require indicators in
transaction reports to distinguish secondary market transactions from
primary market transactions and to further distinguish primary market
transactions that are List or fixed offering price transactions and
Takedown transactions from those that are not, and to incorporate other
technical changes;
(5) in Rule 6750, to provide that transaction information for List
or fixed offering price transactions and Takedown transactions will not
be disseminated, and to incorporate other technical changes;
(6) in Rule 6760, to modify the information and notification
requirements for newly issued TRACE-eligible securities to provide for
more timely notice from members to FINRA and to incorporate technical
and clarifying changes; and
(7) in Rule 7730, to establish reporting and market data fees for
Agency debt securities transactions and primary market transactions at
the same rates in effect for corporate bonds, to provide an exception
for certain primary market transactions, and to incorporate technical
changes.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on FINRA's Web
site at (https://www.finra.org), at the principal office of FINRA, and
at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, FINRA 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. FINRA has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A,
B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
I. Introduction
FINRA believes that TRACE has had a positive impact on the
corporate bond market and proposes to expand the scope of securities
reportable to TRACE to increase transparency, enhance investor
protection and foster market integrity across a larger portion of the
debt market. For debt securities that currently are TRACE-eligible,
TRACE has contributed to better pricing, more precise valuations and
reduced investor costs. In addition, TRACE data has enhanced
surveillance of the corporate bond market.
The proposed rule change will expand TRACE to include Agency debt
securities, as defined herein, and primary market transactions. FINRA
proposes to add such securities to provide additional transparency and
to foster the development of improvements observed in corporate bonds--
improved pricing, narrower bid-ask spreads, reduced investor costs, and
more precise valuations--across a broader portion of the debt market.
Also, FINRA believes that the proposed expansion of TRACE, including
certain primary market transactions that will not be disseminated, will
enhance market surveillance. Many bonds have an intense period of
trading during the primary offering and shortly thereafter, and the
reporting of such transactions will permit FINRA to obtain information,
observe patterns of trading, and otherwise engage in more in-depth
surveillance of the debt market.
The proposed rule change amends FINRA Rule 6700 Series (except for
Rules 6720 and 6740) and FINRA Rule 7730. The amendments to FINRA Rule
6700 Series add to TRACE securities that are issued or guaranteed by a
Government-sponsored enterprise or a U.S. government agency (except the
U.S. Department of the Treasury or Asset-backed securities issued or
guaranteed by an Agency or a Government-sponsored enterprise)
(collectively ``Agency debt securities'') and primary market
transactions. Certain primary market transactions that are defined as
List or fixed offering price transactions and Takedown transactions
will be subject to more flexible end-of-day reporting requirements,
will not be disseminated, and will not be subject to reporting fees, if
timely and accurately reported.
In connection with the proposed expansion, FINRA amends the defined
term ``TRACE-eligible security'' in Rule 6710(a) to add Agency debt
securities as TRACE-eligible securities, to delete certain criteria,
and to restate the definition to clarify its scope and the exceptions.
In addition, FINRA proposes amendments to other defined terms in Rule
6710, the most important of which are the amendments to the term
``Reportable TRACE transaction'' to permit reporting of primary market
transactions to TRACE and their dissemination. Also, FINRA proposes to
add several defined terms to Rule 6710 that are related to the
incorporation of Agency debt securities and primary market transactions
in TRACE. Finally, FINRA will amend various currently defined terms in
Rule 6710 to incorporate minor technical, stylistic or conforming
changes.
The proposed rule change includes amendments to Rule 6730, Rule
6750 and Rule 6760. Rule 6730 contains reporting requirements and Rule
6750 addresses the dissemination of transaction information and the
exceptions thereto. Rule 6760 requires members to provide notice to
FINRA of new TRACE-eligible securities. In Rule 6730 and Rule 6750,
generally, the proposed amendments address issues raised by the
inclusion of primary market transactions. Certain primary market
transactions--List or fixed offering price transactions and Takedown
transactions--will be subject to end-of-day reporting under amended
Rule 6730 and not subject to dissemination under amended Rule 6750. The
proposed amendments to Rule 6760 incorporate changes in the
notification requirements and the notification deadlines to facilitate
[[Page 17711]]
members' timely reporting of TRACE-eligible securities.
Regarding market data fees, FINRA will distinguish TRACE
transaction data as data sets for organizational purposes only, one
comprised solely of corporate bond transaction information (the
``Corporate Bonds Data Set'') and a second comprised solely of Agency
debt securities transaction information (``Agency Data Set''). The fee
schedule currently in effect in Rule 7730 also will apply to Agency
debt securities transactions and primary market transactions. However,
members will not be charged a reporting fee when reporting a List or
fixed offering price transaction or a Takedown transaction on a timely
and accurate basis.
In addition to the amendments discussed above, the proposed rule
change includes additional proposed technical or clarifying amendments
to FINRA Rule 6700 Series (except for Rules 6720 and 6740) and FINRA
Rule 7730.
II. Agency Debt Securities
A. ``TRACE-Eligible Security'' and Related Rule 6710 Amendments
Under Rule 6710(a), a ``TRACE-eligible security'' is a U.S. dollar
denominated bond, note or other debt instrument that is issued by a
U.S. or foreign private issuer. The definition also requires that the
debt security be registered under the Securities Act (or issued
pursuant to Section 4(2) and purchased or sold in a transaction in
compliance with Securities Act Rule 144A transaction (``Rule 144A
transaction'')); depository eligible under NASD Rule 11310(d); and
Investment Grade or Non-Investment Grade as defined, respectively, in
Rules 6710(h) and 6710(i).\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ On February 11, 2009, FINRA filed SR-FINRA-2009-004 to amend
the definition of ``TRACE-eligible security'' to eliminate the
requirement that a TRACE-eligible security be registered under the
Securities Act. In addition, FINRA also proposed to eliminate, with
respect to transactions in TRACE-eligible securities effected under
Securities Act Rule 144A, the requirement that such securities be
initially issued under Securities Act Section 4(2). See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 59519 (March 5, 2009), 74 FR 10630 (March
11, 2009) (notice requesting comment on SR-FINRA-2009-004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S. Treasury securities, foreign sovereign debt and securities
issued by U.S. government agencies or similar entities, such as
government corporations, are not TRACE-eligible securities. In
addition, the defined term expressly excludes securities that are
issued by a government-sponsored enterprise, or are asset-backed
securities, mortgage-backed securities, collateralized mortgage
obligations and money market instruments that at issuance have a
maturity of one year or less.
FINRA proposes to amend and restate the definition of ``TRACE-
eligible security'' in Rule 6710(a). The most significant amendment
expands the definition to include ``Agency debt securities'' as defined
below as TRACE-eligible securities. In addition, FINRA proposes to
delete two criteria in the defined term as discussed below.
1. Amendments to ``TRACE-Eligible Security'' To Include Agency Debt
Securities
FINRA proposes to expand the scope of the defined term, ``TRACE-
eligible security'' to include Agency debt securities. Specifically,
restated Rule 6710(a) will include a debt security that ``is U.S.
dollar denominated and issued or guaranteed by an Agency as defined in
paragraph (k) or a Government-sponsored enterprise as defined in
paragraph (n)'' as a TRACE-eligible security. The proposed inclusion of
Agency debt securities as ``TRACE-eligible securities'' does not
require that such securities be registered under the Securities Act or
issued pursuant to Securities Act Section 4(2) and purchased and sold
pursuant to Rule 144A.
In connection with this amendment, FINRA also proposes to add the
following defined terms to Rule 6710: ``Agency debt security,''
``Agency,'' ``Asset-backed security,'' ``Government-sponsored
enterprise,'' and ``U.S. Treasury security.''
The proposed term ``Agency debt security'' is used to refer,
collectively, to two types of securities that will be TRACE-eligible
securities. ``Agency debt security'' as defined in proposed Rule
6710(l) means:
a debt security (i) issued or guaranteed by an Agency as defined in
paragraph (k); or (ii) issued or guaranteed by a Government-
sponsored enterprise as defined in paragraph (n). The term excludes
a U.S. Treasury security as defined in paragraph (p) and an Asset-
backed security as defined in paragraph (m) where an Agency or a
Government-sponsored enterprise is the sponsor of the trust or other
entity that issues the Asset-backed security, or is the guarantor of
the Asset-backed security.
The two issuers (or guarantors) referenced in the term ``Agency
debt securities'' are ``Agencies'' and ``Government-sponsored
enterprises.'' Under proposed Rule 6710(n), `` `Government-sponsored
enterprise' (`GSE') has the same meaning as defined in 2 U.S.C.
622(8).'' \5\ Some of the most well-known GSEs include the Federal
National Mortgage Association (``Fannie Mae'' or ``FNMA''), the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (``FHLMC'' or ``Freddie Mac'') and the
various Federal Home Loan Banks. For purposes of the TRACE rules,
securities issued or guaranteed by GSEs are included under the
collective term, ``Agency debt securities'' although technically GSEs
are instrumentalities of the U.S. government, and not agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The term ``government-sponsored enterprise'' is defined in 2
U.S.C. 622(8) as: a corporate entity created by a law of the United
States that--
(A) (i) has a Federal charter authorized by law;
(ii) is privately owned, as evidenced by capital stock owned by
private entities or individuals;
(iii) is under the direction of a board of directors, a majority
of which is elected by private owners;
(iv) is a financial institution with power to--
(I) make loans or loan guarantees for limited purposes such as
to provide credit for specific borrowers or one sector; and
(II) raise funds by borrowing (which does not carry the full
faith and credit of the Federal Government) or to guarantee the debt
of others in unlimited amounts; and
(B) (i) does not exercise powers that are reserved to the
Government as sovereign (such as the power to tax or to regulate
interstate commerce);
(ii) does not have the power to commit the Government
financially (but it may be a recipient of a loan guarantee
commitment made by the Government); and
(iii) has employees whose salaries and expenses are paid by the
enterprise and are not Federal employees subject to title 5.
Congress defined GSEs for purposes of the budgetary treatment of
such entities in the Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1990, Pub. L. No.
101-508, 104 Stat. 1388, 607; 2 U.S.C. 622(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The collective term, ``Agency debt security,'' also includes
securities issued or guaranteed by an Agency. For purposes of the TRACE
rules, under proposed Rule 6710(k), ``Agency'' means: a U.S.
``executive agency'' \6\ as
[[Page 17712]]
defined in 5 U.S.C. 105 that is authorized to issue debt directly or
through a related entity, such as a government corporation, or to
guarantee the repayment of principal and/or interest of a debt security
issued by another. The term excludes the U.S. Department of the
Treasury (``Treasury'') in the exercise of its authority to issue U.S.
Treasury securities as defined in paragraph (p). Two examples of such
Agencies are the Commodity Credit Corporation and the Export-Import
Bank of the United States (issuing debt securities through its
affiliate, the Private Export Funding Corporation, or ``PEFCO'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 5 U.S.C. 105 defines ``executive agency'' as:
For purposes of this title (5 U.S.C. 101 et seq.) ``Executive
agency'' means an Executive department, a Government corporation,
and an independent establishment.
``Executive department'' is defined in U.S.C. 101 as any of the
major agencies or departments (e.g., The Department of State, the
Department of the Treasury, the Department of Homeland Security,
etc. The Secretaries of such agencies comprise the President's
Cabinet). ``Government Corporation'' is defined in 5 U.S.C. 103 as
``a corporation owned or controlled by the Government of the United
States. * * *'' (e.g., the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation is a
wholly owned government corporation). ``Independent establishment''
is defined in 5 U.S.C. 104 as (1) an establishment in the executive
branch (other than the United States Postal Service or the Postal
Regulatory Commission) which is not an Executive department,
military department, Government corporation, or part thereof, or
part of an independent establishment; and (2) the General Accounting
Office.'' (e.g., the Federal Reserve Banks are independent
establishments).
(The Departments of the Army, Navy and Air Force, which are
defined as military departments, are not executive agencies, 5
U.S.C. 102.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted previously, TRACE currently does not include U.S. Treasury
securities, and this is not changed by the proposal to add Agency debt
securities to TRACE. For purposes of TRACE, the defined term,
``Agency,'' ``excludes the U.S. Treasury (`Treasury') in the exercise
of its authority to issue U.S. Treasury securities * * * .'' In
addition, the defined term, ``Agency debt security,'' specifically
excludes U.S. Treasury securities.
Certain Asset-backed securities are the second type of security
that is excluded explicitly from the definition of Agency debt
security. For purposes of TRACE, under proposed Rule 6710(l), Agency
debt securities do not include Asset-backed securities ``where an
Agency or a Government-sponsored enterprise is the sponsor of the trust
or other entity that issues the Asset-backed security, or is the
guarantor of the Asset-backed security.'' Instead, such a security is
included as an ``Asset-backed security'' as defined in proposed Rule
6710(m).\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The exclusion of such securities from the term ``Agency debt
security'' is consistent with the current limitations in the
definition of TRACE-eligible security, which excludes mortgage-
backed, and asset-backed securities, and collateralized mortgage
obligations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For purposes of TRACE, ``Asset-backed security'' is defined
broadly. Proposed Rule 6710(m) defines ``Asset-backed security'' to
mean:
asset-backed security as used in Securities Act Regulation AB,
Section 1101(c), and other debt securities that are structured
securities, synthetic asset-backed securities and/or instruments
involving or based on the securitization of mortgages or other
credits or assets. The term includes but is not limited to mortgage-
backed securities, collateralized mortgage obligations,
collateralized debt obligations, collateralized bond obligations,
collateralized debt obligations of asset-backed securities and
collateralized debt obligations of collateralized debt obligations.
2. Other Amendments to ``TRACE-Eligible Security''
FINRA also proposes two amendments to Rule 6710(a), the definition
of TRACE-eligible security, which are not specifically related to the
expansion of TRACE to include Agency debt securities. Currently, the
definition of a ``TRACE-eligible security'' includes criteria that such
securities be ``Investment Grade or Non-Investment Grade'' and
``depository eligible securities under NASD Rule 11310(d).'' When TRACE
became effective in 2002, the reference to the credit quality in Rule
6710(a) made clear that TRACE applied to debt securities of any credit
quality in contrast to the FIPS system, which TRACE replaced.\8\ Under
FIPS, members were required to report limited transaction information
for transactions in Non-Investment Grade securities only. FINRA
proposes to delete ``Investment Grade or Non-Investment Grade'' in Rule
6710(a) because it is no longer needed to clarify the scope of TRACE.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ FIPS stands for Fixed Income Pricing System. The FIPS rules
were rescinded and the FIPS system was dismantled shortly after
TRACE began.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA also required that TRACE-eligible securities be ``depository
eligible securities under NASD Rule 11310(d)'' when TRACE was
implemented to assure that such securities would have CUSIPs to
identify them clearly and easily within the TRACE system. Operational
enhancements now permit FINRA to receive, store and retrieve
transaction information for securities that are not assigned CUSIPs.
FINRA proposes to delete the unnecessary criterion in Rule 6710(a),
which will permit FINRA to capture information on the few securities
that are not assigned CUSIPs, but otherwise meet TRACE eligibility
standards.
FINRA proposes to restate the definition of ``TRACE-eligible
security'' to incorporate all the changes discussed above and certain
technical amendments. Among other things, FINRA proposes to delete the
definition of a money market instrument, which is embedded in the term,
``TRACE-eligible security,'' and add it as a separately defined term in
new proposed Rule 6710(o) for stylistic consistency. The meaning of the
term does not change. Proposed Rule 6710(a), as amended, will read as
follows:
``TRACE-eligible security'' means a debt security that is U.S.
dollar-denominated, issued by a United States (``U.S.'') or foreign
private issuer, and either registered under the Securities Act or
issued pursuant to Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and purchased
or sold pursuant to Securities Act Rule 144A; or is a debt security
that is U.S. dollar denominated and issued or guaranteed by an
Agency as defined in paragraph (k) or a Government-sponsored
enterprise as defined in paragraph (n). ``TRACE-eligible security''
does not include a debt security that is:
(1) Issued by a foreign sovereign or is a U.S. Treasury security
as defined in paragraph (p);
(2) A restricted security as defined in Securities Act Rule
144(a)(3), except a restricted security that is issued pursuant to
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and purchased or sold in a
transaction that is effected under Securities Act Rule 144A;
(3) A Money market instrument as defined in paragraph (o); or
(4) An Asset-backed security as defined in paragraph (m).\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Additional proposed amendments to Rule 6710 are discussed,
infra, at II.B., ``Reporting and Dissemination'' (regarding
dissemination protocols), III. ``Primary Market Transactions''
(regarding primary market transactions), and IV. ``Other Changes''
(regarding technical amendments).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Reporting and Dissemination
Rule 6730 contains the reporting requirements, including
information that must be reported, deadlines for timely reporting,
certain reporting modifiers and exceptions to the reporting
requirement. Agency debt securities will be subject to the reporting
requirements currently set forth in Rule 6730. Under Rule 6730, members
will be required to report transactions in Agency debt securities
within 15 minutes of execution of the transactions, subject to the
standard exceptions currently set forth in the Rule.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Rule 6730(a)(1) through (4) provide exceptions to the 15-
minute reporting requirement if a member executes a transaction
while the TRACE system is closed or less than 15 minutes before the
TRACE system will close.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information on transactions in Agency debt securities will be
disseminated by FINRA immediately upon receipt of transaction reports,
which is the current requirement for corporate bond transactions under
Rule 6750, subject to one exception for Securities Act Rule 144A
transactions.\11\ In addition, FINRA will continue to apply the current
protocols that determine how volume information is disseminated.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Under Rule 6750, FINRA does not disseminate transactions in
TRACE-eligible securities that are Securities Act Rule 144A
transactions.
\12\ Under the protocols: (1) For Investment Grade transactions
in sizes less than or equal to $5 million (by par value), actual
volume is disseminated; and in sizes exceeding $5 million, a ``$5
million+'' capped volume indicator is disseminated; and, (2) for
Non-Investment Grade transactions in sizes less than or equal to $1
million, actual volume is disseminated; and in sizes exceeding $1
million, a ``$1 million+'' capped volume indicator is disseminated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, FINRA proposes to amend the defined term, ``Investment
Grade,''
[[Page 17713]]
in Rule 6710(h) to treat unrated Agency debt securities as Investment
Grade securities for purposes of the above-referenced dissemination
protocols. FINRA also proposes conforming amendments regarding the
treatment of such unrated securities in the term, ``Non-Investment
Grade,'' as defined in Rule 6710(i), and technical, stylistic
amendments in both provisions. Specifically, in Rule 6710(h), FINRA
proposes to add a final sentence and amend the penultimate sentence,
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
both as set forth below to provide:
If a TRACE-eligible security is unrated, FINRA may classify the
TRACE-eligible security as an Investment Grade security. FINRA will
classify an unrated Agency debt security as defined in paragraph (l)
as an Investment Grade security for purposes of the dissemination of
transaction volume.
The other proposed change to Rule 6710(h) is a technical, stylistic
amendment to the first sentence, changing the first clause from, ``The
term `Investment Grade' shall mean a TRACE-eligible security that, * *
*'' to `` `Investment Grade' means a TRACE-eligible security that, * *
* .''
The proposed amendments to the defined term, ``Non-Investment
Grade,'' will cross-reference in Rule 6710(i) the amendment regarding
the treatment of unrated Agency debt securities proposed to Rule
6710(h). Also, FINRA proposes: (i) to make technical stylistic
amendments to the first clause of Rule 6710(i) similar to such
amendments to be incorporated in Rule 6710(h) as described above; and
(ii) to delete certain detailed rule text in Rule 6710(i) that is no
longer necessary.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ FINRA proposes to delete text in Rule 6710(i) that was used
to classify certain Non-Investment Grade corporate bonds to
determine when dissemination of transaction information would occur.
The text is no longer necessary because transaction information on
such bonds began to be disseminated several years ago. FINRA
proposes to delete the following rule text, including the footnote
text set forth in the second paragraph below:
and further classify it as being in one of the generic rating
categories below the four highest such categories. If FINRA does not
have sufficient information to make a judgment regarding the
classification of an unrated TRACE-eligible security, for purposes
of TRACE, FINRA will classify the TRACE-eligible security as having
been rated B (or the equivalent rating of one or more NRSROs).
``B'' is a rating of Standard & Poor's, a division of the
McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. (``S&P''). S&P is a nationally
recognized statistical rating organization. S&P's ratings are
proprietary to S&P and are protected by copyright and other
intellectual property laws. S&P's licenses ratings to FINRA. Ratings
may not be copied or otherwise reproduced, repackaged, further
transmitted, transferred, disseminated, redistributed or resold, or
stored for subsequent use for any such purpose in whole or in part,
in any form or manner or by any means whatsoever, by any person
without S&P's prior written consent.
As amended, FINRA Rule 6710(i) will provide:
``Non-Investment Grade'' means a TRACE-eligible security that,
if rated by only one NRSRO, is rated lower than one of the four
highest generic rating categories; or if rated by more than one
NRSRO, is rated lower than one of the four highest generic rating
categories by all or a majority of such NRSROs. Except as provided
in paragraph (h), if a TRACE-eligible security is unrated, for
purposes of TRACE, FINRA may otherwise classify the TRACE-eligible
security as a Non-Investment Grade security.
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FINRA recognizes that extending TRACE reporting to Agency debt
securities may result in certain trading desks having to report
transactions to TRACE for the first time. As has been the case since
TRACE inception, FINRA plans to implement TRACE reporting requirements
and dissemination of Agency debt securities in a deliberate, yet
efficient manner. FINRA has worked regularly with, and will continue to
work with, broker-dealers and third party vendors to ensure effective
and efficient TRACE implementation.
III. Primary Market Transactions
Currently, broker-dealers are required to report only secondary
market transactions to TRACE. To provide a more comprehensive audit
trail, FINRA proposes amendments to FINRA Rule 6700 Series to require
broker-dealers to report all primary market transactions and designate
such transactions with an identifier. FINRA proposes that all primary
market transactions be reported because, for many bonds, the most
active period of trading occurs during the primary offering and
immediately afterward. To improve market surveillance of the debt
markets, FINRA proposes that TRACE be expanded to include such
transactions.
A. Amendments To Add Primary Market Transactions
FINRA proposes two rule amendments that will require members to
report primary market transactions to TRACE. FINRA proposes to amend
Rule 6710(c) to delete the words ``secondary market'' in the defined
term ``Reportable TRACE transaction'' and make technical conforming
amendments. Deleting the words ``secondary market'' in Rule 6710(c)
will delete the limitation that currently does not allow the reporting
of primary market transactions.
The other proposed amendments to Rule 6710(c) will: (i) Incorporate
technical and stylistic changes to the first clause of Rule 6710(c);
\14\ and (ii) conform a phrase in Rule 6710(c) with Rule 6730(e) by
deleting the phrase, ``transactions exempt from reporting'' and
substituting ``transactions that are not reported.'' \15\
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\14\ In Rule 6710(c), the first phrase, ``The term `reportable
TRACE transaction' shall mean * * *'' will be amended to read,
```Reportable TRACE transaction' means. * * *''
\15\ As amended, Rule 6710(c) will provide: `` `Reportable TRACE
transaction' means any transaction in a TRACE-eligible security
except transactions that are not reported as specified in Rule
6730(e).''
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An amendment to Rule 6730(e)(1) is also required to include primary
market transactions in TRACE. FINRA proposes to amend paragraph (1) of
Rule 6730(e) to delete the current exclusion from reporting for
``[T]ransactions that are part of a primary distribution by an
issuer.''
B. Reporting Requirements
Members will be required to report primary market transactions,
except primary market transactions that are ``List or fixed offering
price transactions'' and ``Takedown transactions,'' within 15 minutes
of the time of execution, in accordance with Rule 6730(a).\16\ However,
FINRA proposes to liberalize the reporting requirements for List or
fixed offering price transactions and Takedown transactions.
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\16\ As noted, supra, at n. 9, exceptions to 15-minute reporting
are provided in Rule 6730(a)(1) through (4) for trades that occur
outside of TRACE system hours or immediately prior to its closing.
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List or fixed offering price transaction and Takedown transaction
refer to two types of sale transactions that may occur during a primary
offering: those executed at a previously fixed price, from a broker-
dealer acting as an underwriter to a purchaser; and certain sale
transactions among certain market professionals involved in the
placement of the offered securities. For purposes of the TRACE rules,
such transactions must occur on the first day of the offering.
The terms ``List or fixed offering price transaction'' and
``Takedown transaction'' are defined for purposes of TRACE in,
respectively, proposed Rule 6710(q) and (r). ``List or fixed offering
price transaction'' is defined in Rule 6710(q) to mean:
a primary market sale transaction sold on the first day of trading
of a new issue: (i) by a sole underwriter, syndicate manager,
syndicate member or selling group member at the published or stated
list or fixed offering price, or (ii) in the case of a primary
market sale transaction effected pursuant to Securities Act Rule
144A, by an initial purchaser, syndicate manager, syndicate member
or selling group member at the published or stated fixed offering
price.
``Takedown transaction'' is defined in Rule 6710(r) to mean:
a primary market sale transaction sold on the first day of trading
of a new issue: (i) by a sole underwriter or syndicate manager to a
syndicate or selling group member at a
[[Page 17714]]
discount from the published or stated list or fixed offering price,
or (ii) in the case of a primary market sale transaction effected
pursuant to Securities Act Rule 144A, by an initial purchaser or
syndicate manager to a syndicate or selling group member at a
discount from the published or stated fixed offering price.
Under proposed Rule 6730(a)(5), members executing such List or
fixed offering price transactions or Takedown transactions will have
until the end of the business day--until the TRACE system closes--to
report such transactions. If a primary offering prices after 5:00 p.m.
Eastern Time and thereafter broker-dealers execute transactions that
qualify as List or fixed offering price transactions or Takedown
transactions, broker-dealers will have until the end of the next
business day to report such transactions under Rule 6730(a)(5)(B)(i).
In addition, if broker-dealers execute transactions that are List or
fixed offering price transactions or Takedown transactions at any time
outside of the TRACE system hours, broker-dealers will have until the
close of the TRACE system on the next business day to report such
transactions under Rule 6730(a)(5)(B)(ii) and (iii).\17\
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\17\ Under proposed Rule 6730(a)(5)(B)(iii), the reporting
requirements for List or fixed price offering transactions or
Takedown transactions that a broker-dealer executes on a Saturday,
Sunday, or a federal or religious holiday when the TRACE system is
closed include specific information requirements and have certain
parallels to the reporting requirements for transactions reported
under Rule 6730(a)(4).
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Price discovery is the most significant reason underlying the TRACE
requirement for the reporting of transactions within 15 minutes of
execution and thereafter, the immediate dissemination of such
information. FINRA proposes to liberalize the reporting requirements
for List or fixed offering price transactions and Takedown
transactions, because, in most cases, the prices of such transactions
will be the same, or subject to only minor differences based on the
underwriting structure, and will not contribute meaningfully to price
discovery. FINRA proposes end-of-day reporting for the two types of
primary market transactions because FINRA does not believe that price
transparency will be adversely affected. Moreover, the proposed end-of-
day requirement will provide broker-dealers operational flexibility and
will ease compliance burdens, particularly during the implementation of
the proposed changes.\18\
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\18\ The proposed amendments will harmonize substantially the
TRACE reporting rules with current requirements under Municipal
Securities Rulemaking Board (``MSRB'') Rule G-14 for reporting
primary market transactions in municipal securities, and should
reduce operational burdens to firms. For primary market
transactions, as with Agency debt securities, FINRA will work with
broker-dealers and third party vendors to ensure effective and cost
efficient implementation.
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All other primary market transactions, such as those that are
effected at prices other than a fixed (or list) offering price and
those that are effected at a fixed price other than on the first day of
new issue trading, will be subject to the 15-minute reporting
requirements and the exceptions thereto currently set forth in Rule
6730(a)(1) through (4).
Currently, the TRACE data collected for surveillance, review, and
research contains information on secondary market transactions only.
With the inclusion of primary market transaction data, FINRA will
require broker-dealers to assign one of three indicators in their trade
reports under proposed subparagraph (D) of Rule 6730(d)(4). The
indicators will distinguish primary market transactions from secondary
market transactions and further distinguish List or fixed offering
price transactions and Takedown transactions from other primary market
transactions.
C. Dissemination
Generally, dissemination of transaction information for primary
market transactions will be implemented at the same time FINRA
implements reporting of such transactions. Dissemination will occur
immediately upon receipt of transaction reports in primary market
transactions as provided in Rule 6750(a), with one exception. Proposed
Rule 6750(b)(2) provides that primary market transactions that are List
or fixed offering price transactions or Takedown transactions will not
be disseminated. FINRA will study the reported data for these primary
market transactions for a period of time after reporting begins and, at
a later date, determine if dissemination of the information is
appropriate, and if appropriate, develop a dissemination strategy.
In contrast, primary market transactions that are not List or fixed
offering price transactions or Takedown transactions will be
disseminated as soon as primary market transaction reporting begins.
These transactions, such as certain ``at-the-market'' transactions,
provide transparency about current market pricing that is otherwise not
available to the public and many market participants.
IV. Other Changes
A. FINRA Rule 6760
Currently, Rule 6760 requires members to notify FINRA regarding
securities that are about to be offered in a primary offering if such
securities are TRACE-eligible. In most cases, members must notify FINRA
Operations by 5 p.m. Eastern Time on the business day before an
offering begins, although for some types of offerings, the deadlines
currently extend to 5 p.m. of the business day following the first
offer date. FINRA must have this information in the TRACE system to
facilitate timely transaction reporting by all members that have
effected transactions in a newly issued TRACE-eligible security.
FINRA proposes to amend the notice and information requirements in
Rule 6760 to facilitate members' timely reporting of TRACE-eligible
securities in both primary and secondary market transactions. Under
Rule 6760(b), a broker-dealer providing notice will be required to
include ``the time the new issue is priced,'' among other information
requirements. In addition, the amendment requires that the information
be provided ``prior to the commencement of primary market
transactions.'' The amendment also recognizes that FINRA may require
information not specifically listed in Rule 6760(b) if, among other
things, a security will not be assigned a CUSIP.
FINRA also proposes a series of minor clarifying changes to the
Rule. The proposed amendments require that the notice be provided to
FINRA Operations by the managing underwriter, or if a managing
underwriter is not appointed, an underwriter, or, if there are no
underwriters, an initial purchaser. When multiple underwriters or
initial purchasers participate in the offering and there is no lead,
all are liable under Rule 6760 to provide notice to FINRA Operations,
but the parties may agree to submit a single notice. Also, the proposed
rule change includes amendments to delete the word ``secondary'' in the
first line of paragraph Rule 6760 (a)(1), delete references to ``TRACE
Operations Center'' in the rule and substitute the term ``FINRA
Operations,'' and amend the rule title to read, ``Obligation To Provide
Notice.''
B. Technical and Conforming Amendments
FINRA also proposes several minor technical, stylistic, or
conforming changes as follows. In Rule 6710, in the first paragraph,
after the sentence, ``The terms used in this Rule 6700 Series shall
have the same meaning as those defined in the FINRA By-Laws and rules
unless otherwise specified.,'' FINRA will add the following sentence:
``For the purposes of this Rule 6700 Series, the
[[Page 17715]]
following terms have the following meaning:''
In Rule 6710, in paragraphs (b), (d), (e), (f), (g) and (j), which
set forth various defined terms, FINRA proposes to incorporate
conforming technical and stylistic changes to the first line of text of
each defined term. The amendments to each defined term reflect the
stylistic changes shown as follows for Rule 6710(b). The initial phrase
of Rule 6710(b), which provides, ``The term `Trade Reporting and
Compliance Engine' or `TRACE' shall mean * * *'' will be amended to
read, `` `Trade Reporting and Compliance Engine' or `TRACE' means. * *
*'' \19\
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\19\ As noted above, FINRA proposes to incorporate the same
technical and stylistic changes to paragraphs (d), (e), (f), (g) and
(j) of Rule 6710. The initial phrase of Rule 6710(d), which
provides, ``The term `time of execution' for a transaction in a
TRACE-eligible security shall be * * *'' will be amended to read, ``
`Time of execution' for a transaction in a TRACE-eligible security
means. * * *'' The initial phrase of Rule 6710(e), which provides,
``The term `party to a transaction' shall mean * * *'' will be
amended to read, `` `Party to a transaction' means. * * *'' The
initial phrase of Rule 6710(f), which provides, ``The term `TRACE
Participant' shall mean * * *'' will be amended to read, `` `TRACE
Participant' means. * * *'' The initial phrase of Rule 6710(g) will
be amended to read, ``The term `Introducing Broker' shall mean * *
*'' will be amended to read, `` `Introducing Broker' means. * * *''
The initial phrase of Rule 6710(j), which provides, ``The term
`split-rated' shall mean * * *'' will be amended to read, `` `Split-
rated' means. * * *''
As discussed previously, FINRA proposes the same technical and
stylistic amendments to paragrahs (c), (h) and (i) of Rule 6710.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Rule 6710(e), the phrase, ``[F]or purposes of this Rule,'' will
be deleted. In Rule 6730(a), FINRA will add a new first sentence
providing, ``Each member that is a party to a transaction in a TRACE-
eligible security must report the transaction.'' Other minor technical
changes are also proposed in the same paragraph, including clarifying
the term ``TRACE system hours.'' \20\ Paragraphs (5) and (6) of Rule
6730(a) are renumbered as paragraphs (6) and (7), and, in paragraph
(7), a cross reference to new paragraph (a)(5) is added. Also, in Rule
6750, FINRA proposes minor technical changes to paragraph (b),
including revising the header by deleting ``Securities Act Rule 144A
Transactions'' and substituting the new header, ``Transaction
Information Not Disseminated.''
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\20\ As amended, Rule 6730(a) will provide:
Each member that is a Party to a transaction in a TRACE-eligible
security must report the transaction. A member must report
transaction information within 15 minutes of the time of execution,
except as otherwise provided below, or the transaction report will
be ``late.'' The member must transmit the report to TRACE during the
hours the TRACE system is open, which are 8 a.m. Eastern Time
through 6:29:59 p.m. Eastern Time, unless otherwise announced by
FINRA (``TRACE system hours''). Specific trade reporting obligations
during a 24-hour cycle are set forth below.
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IV. Fees
FINRA proposes to amend Rule 7730 to establish reporting and market
data fees for Agency debt securities transactions and primary market
transactions. Generally, the fees proposed for Agency debt securities
are equivalent to the fees charged for corporate bonds. Primary market
transactions, whether in corporate bonds or Agency debt securities,
will be subject to the same reporting fees currently in effect, with
one exception.
FINRA proposes not to charge a reporting fee for the timely and
accurate reporting of primary market transactions that are List or
fixed offering price transactions or Takedown transactions as provided
in amendments to Rule 7730(b)(1). However, the fees that are currently
in effect for late reports and corrections will apply to such
transactions. Eliminating the standard reporting fee for such
transactions should reduce the cost of compliance for firms as they
implement changes to report such transactions.
FINRA will distinguish TRACE transaction data as two data sets, one
comprised solely of corporate bond transaction information (the
``Corporate Bonds Data Set'') and a second data set comprised solely of
Agency debt securities transaction information (``Agency Data Set'')
for organizational purposes only. Market data fees will be charged for
each Data Set, as provided in amended Rule 7730(c)(1)(A), (B) and
(C).\21\ Each Data Set will include the relevant transaction data,
including primary market transactions in such securities, provided that
the primary market transactions are subject to dissemination.\22\
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\21\ Such proposed changes will be incorporated in Rule
7730(c)(1)(A), the Bond Trade Dissemination Service (``BTDS'')
Professional Real-Time Data Display Fee; Rule 7730(c)(1)(B), the
Vendor Real-Time Data Feed Fee and Snapshot Real-Time TRACE Data
Fee; and Rule 7730(c)(1)(C), the Vendor Real-Time Data Feed Fee (for
certain Tax-Exempt Organizations).
\22\ By definition, market data does not include information on
transactions that are required to be reported but are not subject to
dissemination. Currently, Securities Act Rule 144A transactions are
accorded this treatment and under the proposed rule change, primary
market transactions that are List or fixed offering price
transactions and Takedown transactions also will not be
disseminated, and, thus, will not be included in data packages.
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Generally, the proposed fees for the Agency Data Set will be set at
the same rates currently in effect for corporate bond market data (to
be sold in the future as the Corporate Bonds Data Set). For example, in
Rule 7730(c)(1)(B), the current Vendor Real-Time Data Feed Fee is $1500
per month for receipt of continuous Real-Time TRACE transaction data
for internal, non-display use for corporate bonds for persons or
organizations other than qualifying Tax-Exempt Organizations. FINRA
proposes to charge $1500 per month for the same data package for the
Agency Data Set. A vendor that desires to obtain a real-time data feed
for both Data Sets will pay $3,000 per month ($1500 for the Corporate
Bonds Data Set and $1500 for the Agency Data Set).
One ``System Related Fee,'' for ``Web Browser Access,'' as set
forth in FINRA Rule 7730(a)(1), provides access for reporting, but also
includes an embedded charge for access to market data. FINRA proposes
to amend the ``Web Browser Access'' fee in FINRA Rule 7730(a)(1) to set
one fee for professionals that want a reporting system plus access to
one Data Set and a second, higher fee for those desiring a reporting
system plus access to both Data Sets.
FINRA proposes to continue its policy to provide Non-Professionals
access at no charge to all or any portion of any data, whether from one
or both Data Sets, under proposed amendments to Rule 7730(c)(2).
Finally, FINRA also proposes minor technical and clarifying
amendments to Rule 7730.
FINRA will announce the effective date of the proposed rule change
in a Regulatory Notice to be published no later than 60 days following
Commission approval. The effective date will be no later than 180 days
following publication of the Regulatory Notice announcing Commission
approval.
2. Statutory Basis
FINRA believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with the
provisions of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,\23\ which requires, among
other things, that FINRA rules must be designed to prevent fraudulent
and manipulative acts and practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, and, in general, to protect investors and the
public interest and Section 15(A)(b)(5) of the Act,\24\ which requires,
among other things, that FINRA rules provide for the equitable
allocation of reasonable dues, fees and other charges among members and
issuers and other persons using any facility or system that FINRA
operates or controls in that: (i) The proposed rule change will
increase transparency in the debt market
[[Page 17716]]
significantly, will enhance the ability of institutional investors,
retail investors and broker-dealers to compare and negotiate prices in
Agency debt securities transactions, and will enhance FINRA's
surveillance of the debt market in connection with primary market
transactions and Agency debt securities generally; and (ii) the
proposed fee proposal provides for reporting and market data fees that
are reasonable and mirror the fees currently in effect for corporate
bonds, and provides for the equitable allocation of such fees and
charges among members and other professional market participants,
qualifying Tax-Exempt Organizations and public data consumers.
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\23\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
\24\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(5).
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B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
FINRA does not believe that the proposed rule change will result in
any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants or Others
Written comments were neither solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 35 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the self regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve such proposed rule change, or
(B) Institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
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-FINRA-2009-010 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-FINRA-2009-010. This
file number should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used.
To help the Commission process and review your comments more
efficiently, please use only one method. The Commission will post all
comments on the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments,
all written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that
are filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating
to the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person,
other than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance
with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for inspection
and copying in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street,
NE., Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours
of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of the filing will also be available for
inspection and copying at the principal office of FINRA. 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 No. SR-FINRA-2009-010 and should be
submitted on or before May 7, 2009.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\25\
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\25\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9-8656 Filed 4-15-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010-01-P