Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change To Adopt FINRA Rules 2210 (Communications With the Public), 2212 (Use of Investment Companies Rankings in Retail Communications), 2213 (Requirements for the Use of Bond Mutual Fund Volatility Ratings), 2214 (Requirements for the Use of Investment Analysis Tools), 2215 (Communications With the Public Regarding Security Futures), and 2216 (Communications With the Public About Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs)) in the Consolidated FINRA Rulebook, 46870-46889 [2011-19645]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 149 / Wednesday, August 3, 2011 / Notices
the protection of investors or the public
interest; (ii) impose any significant
burden on competition; and (iii) become
operative for 30 days from the date on
which it was filed, or such shorter time
as the Commission may designate, it has
become effective pursuant to 19(b)(3)(A)
of the Act 10 and Rule 19b–4(f)(6) 11
thereunder.
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend 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. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
to determine whether the proposed rule
should be approved or 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:
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 Web site viewing and
printing 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 such 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–
NASDAQ–2011–098 and should be
submitted on or before August 24, 2011.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.12
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
Electronic Comments
[FR Doc. 2011–19612 Filed 8–2–11; 8:45 am]
• 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–NASDAQ–2011–098 on the
subject line.
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–64984; File No. SR–FINRA–
2011–035]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Financial Industry Regulatory
• Send paper comments in triplicate
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Proposed Rule Change To Adopt
Securities and Exchange Commission,
FINRA Rules 2210 (Communications
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
With the Public), 2212 (Use of
20549–1090.
Investment Companies Rankings in
All submissions should refer to File
Retail Communications), 2213
Number SR–NASDAQ–2011–098. This
(Requirements for the Use of Bond
file number should be included on the
Mutual Fund Volatility Ratings), 2214
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the (Requirements for the Use of
Commission process and review your
Investment Analysis Tools), 2215
comments more efficiently, please use
(Communications With the Public
only one method. The Commission will Regarding Security Futures), and 2216
post all comments on the Commission’s (Communications With the Public
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
About Collateralized Mortgage
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
Obligations (CMOs)) in the
submission, all subsequent
Consolidated FINRA Rulebook
amendments, all written statements
July 28, 2011.
with respect to the proposed rule
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
10 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
11 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6). In addition, Rule 19b–
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
4(f)(6) requires a self-regulatory organization to give
notice is hereby given that on July 14,
the Commission written notice of its intent to file
2011, Financial Industry Regulatory
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Paper Comments
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. NASDAQ has satisfied this
requirement.
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CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
Authority, Inc. (‘‘FINRA’’) 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. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD
Rules 2210 and 2211 and NASD
Interpretive Materials 2210–1 and 2210–
3 through 2210–8 as FINRA Rules 2210
and 2212 through 2216, and to delete
paragraphs (a)(1), (i), (j) and (l) of
Incorporated NYSE Rule 472,
Incorporated NYSE Rule Supplementary
Material 472.10(1), (3), (4) and (5), and
472.90, and Incorporated NYSE Rule
Interpretations 472/01 and 472/03
through 472/11. The proposed rule
change would renumber NASD Rules
2210 and 2211 and NASD Interpretive
Materials 2210–1 and 2210–4 as FINRA
Rule 2210, NASD Interpretive Material
2210–3 as FINRA Rule 2212, NASD
Interpretive Material 2210–5 as FINRA
Rule 2213, NASD Interpretive Material
2210–6 as FINRA Rule 2214, NASD
Interpretive Material 2210–7 as FINRA
Rule 2215, and NASD Interpretive
Material 2210–8 as FINRA Rule 2216.
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
As part of the process of developing
a new consolidated rulebook
(‘‘Consolidated FINRA Rulebook’’),3
12 17
1 15
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3 The current FINRA rulebook consists of (1)
FINRA Rules; (2) NASD Rules; and (3) rules
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FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD
Rules 2210 and 2211 and NASD
Interpretive Materials 2210–1 and 2210–
3 through 2210–8 as FINRA Rules 2210
and 2212 through 2216, and to delete
paragraphs (a)(1), (i), (j) and (l) of
Incorporated NYSE Rule 472,
Incorporated NYSE Rule Supplementary
Material 472.10(1), (3), (4) and (5), and
472.90, and Incorporated NYSE Rule
Interpretations 472/01 and 472/03
through 472/11.
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Current Rules Governing
Communications With the Public
NASD Rules 2210 and 2211, and the
Interpretive Materials that follow Rule
2210, generally govern all FINRA
members’ communications with the
public. Incorporated NYSE Rule 472
governs communications with the
public of members that also are
members of the New York Stock
Exchange.
NASD Rule 2210 divides
communications into six separate
categories, as follows:
➢ Advertisement generally includes
written (including electronic) retail
communications that do not have a
limited audience, such as newspaper,
magazine, television and radio
advertisements, billboards and Web
sites.
➢ Sales literature generally includes
written (including electronic) retail
communications that have a more
targeted audience, such as brochures,
performance reports, telemarketing
scripts, seminar scripts and form letters.
➢ Correspondence includes written
letters, electronic mail, instant messages
and market letters sent to: (i) One or
more existing retail customers; and (ii)
fewer than 25 prospective retail
customers within a 30 calendar-day
period.
➢ Institutional sales material
includes communications that are
distributed or made available only to
institutional investors. NASD Rule 2211
defines the term ‘‘institutional investor’’
generally to include registered
investment companies, insurance
companies, banks, registered brokerdealers, registered investment advisers,
certain retirement plans, governmental
incorporated from NYSE (‘‘Incorporated NYSE
Rules’’) (together, the NASD Rules and Incorporated
NYSE Rules are referred to as the ‘‘Transitional
Rulebook’’). While the NASD Rules generally apply
to all FINRA members, the Incorporated NYSE
Rules apply only to those members of FINRA that
are also members of the NYSE (‘‘Dual Members’’).
The FINRA Rules apply to all FINRA members,
unless such rules have a more limited application
by their terms. For more information about the
rulebook consolidation process, see Information
Notice, March 12, 2008 (Rulebook Consolidation
Process).
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entities, and individual investors and
other entities with at least $50 million
in assets.
➢ Independently prepared reprint
includes reprints of articles from
independent publications, as well as
reports published by independent
research firms.
➢ Public appearance includes
unscripted participation in live events,
such as interviews, seminars and call-in
television and radio shows.
These definitions are important
because the principal approval, filing
and content standards apply differently
to each category. For example, members
generally must have a principal approve
all advertisements, sales literature and
independently prepared reprints prior
to use. This pre-use approval
requirement does not apply to: (1)
Institutional sales material or (2)
correspondence, unless it is sent to 25
or more existing retail customers within
a 30 calendar-day period and includes
an investment recommendation or
promotes a product or service of the
member. While such communications
do not require principal pre-use
approval, members still must establish
and maintain policies and procedures to
supervise them for compliance with
applicable standards.
Members must file with the FINRA
Advertising Regulation Department
(‘‘Department’’) for review certain
advertisements and sales literature. For
example, advertisements and sales
literature concerning investment
companies, variable insurance products
and public direct participation
programs, and advertisements
concerning government securities, must
be filed within 10 business days of first
use, but members are not required to file
independently prepared reprints,
correspondence or institutional sales
material. The filing requirements also
differ based on the member using the
material and its content.
Members that previously have not
filed advertisements with the
Department must file all advertisements
at least 10 business days prior to first
use for a one-year period following the
date the first advertisement was filed.
Additionally, under NASD Rule 2210
and related Interpretive Materials, all
members must file advertisements
concerning collateralized mortgage
obligations (‘‘CMOs’’) and security
futures, and advertisements and sales
literature concerning registered
investment companies that include
unpublished or self-created rankings or
performance comparisons, at least 10
business days prior to first use, and
must withhold them from publication
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46871
until any changes specified by the
Department have been made.
Incorporated NYSE Rule 472 requires
an ‘‘allied member, supervisory analyst
or qualified person’’ to approve prior to
use each advertisement, sales literature
or other similar type of
communication.4 The NYSE Rule 472
definitions of ‘‘advertisement’’ and
‘‘sales literature’’ are similar to those
used in NASD Rule 2210.
The communications rules include
both general and specific content
standards. Certain general standards
apply to all communications, such as
requirements that communications be
fair and balanced, and provide a sound
basis for evaluating the facts in regard
to any particular security, industry or
service, and prohibitions on omitting
material facts whose absence would
make the communication misleading.
More particular content standards apply
to specific issues or securities.
Proposed Rule Change
Reorganization of Rules
The proposed rule change would
create a new FINRA Rule 2210 that
would encompass, subject to certain
changes, the provisions of current
NASD Rules 2210 and 2211, NASD
Interpretive Materials 2210–1 and 2210–
4, and the provisions of Incorporated
NYSE Rule 472 that do not pertain to
research analysts and research reports.
Each of the other Interpretive Materials
that follow NASD Rule 2210 would
receive its own FINRA rule number and
would adopt the same communication
categories used in FINRA Rule 2210.5
Communication Categories
The proposed rule change would
reduce the number of current
communication categories from six to
three, as follows:
➢ Institutional communication would
include communications that fall within
the current definition of ‘‘institutional
sales material’’ under NASD Rule
2211(a)(2): Written (including
electronic) communications that are
distributed or made available only to
institutional investors. ‘‘Institutional
investor’’ generally would have the
same definition as under NASD Rule
2211(a)(3).6
4 NYSE
Rule 472(a)(1).
FINRA Rule 2211 (Communications
with the Public About Variable Insurance Products),
which would replace NASD Interpretive Material
2210–2, is the subject of a separate proposed rule
change. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
61107 (December 3, 2009), 74 FR 65180 (December
9, 2009) (Notice of Filing File No. SR–FINRA–2009–
070).
6 FINRA has modified the definition of
‘‘institutional investor’’ in proposed FINRA Rule
5 Proposed
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➢ Retail communication would
include any written (including
electronic) communication that is
distributed or made available to more
than 25 retail investors within any 30
calendar-day period. ‘‘Retail investor’’
would include any person other than an
institutional investor, regardless of
whether the person has an account with
the member.
➢ Correspondence would include any
written (including electronic)
communication that is distributed or
made available to 25 or fewer retail
investors within any 30 calendar-day
period.
The proposal would eliminate the
current definitions of ‘‘advertisement,’’
‘‘sales literature,’’ ‘‘institutional sales
material,’’ ‘‘public appearance’’ and
‘‘independently prepared reprint’’ in
NASD Rule 2210, as well as all of the
definitions in NASD Rule 2211.7 The
proposal also would eliminate the
definitions of ‘‘communication,’’
‘‘advertisement,’’ ‘‘market letter’’ and
‘‘sales literature’’ in Incorporated NYSE
Rule 472.
Communications that currently
qualify as advertisements and sales
literature generally would fall under the
definition of ‘‘retail communication.’’ In
addition, to the extent that a member
distributed or made available a
communication that currently qualifies
as an independently prepared reprint to
more than 25 retail investors within a 30
calendar-day period, the
communication also would fall under
the definition of ‘‘retail
communication.’’ Communications that
currently qualify as ‘‘institutional sales
material’’ would fall within the
definition of ‘‘institutional
communication.’’ Some
communications that currently qualify
as ‘‘correspondence’’ would continue to
2210 to clarify that the term includes multiple
employee benefit plans and multiple qualified
plans offered to employees of the same employer,
provided that the plans in the aggregate have at
least 100 participants. FINRA also has added a
Supplementary Material to clarify that a member’s
internal written (including electronic)
communications that are intended to educate or
train registered persons about the products or
services offered by a member are considered
institutional communications pursuant to
paragraph (a)(3) of proposed FINRA Rule 2210. See
proposed FINRA Rule 2210.01. Accordingly, such
internal communications are subject to both the
provisions of proposed FINRA Rule 2210 and
NASD Rule 3010(d) (Review of Transactions and
Correspondence). See also Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 64736 (June 23, 2011), 76 FR 38245
(June 29, 2011) (Notice of Filing File No. SR–
FINRA–2011–028) (proposing, among other things,
to adopt NASD Rule 3010(d) as FINRA Rule
3110(b)(4), subject to certain changes).
7 NASD Rule 2211 currently defines the terms
‘‘correspondence,’’ ‘‘institutional sales material,’’
‘‘institutional investor,’’ ‘‘existing retail customer,’’
‘‘prospective retail customer’’ and ‘‘market letter.’’
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fall within that definition. However,
communications sent to more than 25
retail investors within a 30 calendar-day
period in all cases would be considered
retail communications.8
Although the proposal would
eliminate the terms ‘‘public
appearance’’ and ‘‘independently
prepared reprint,’’ as discussed below,
the proposal would retain with respect
to these communication categories
much of the substance of the exceptions
from the filing requirements and limited
application of the content standards.
Approval, Review and Recordkeeping
Requirements
Currently NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(A)
requires a registered principal of the
member to approve each advertisement,
item of sales literature and
independently prepared reprint before
the earlier of its use or filing with the
Department. Proposed FINRA Rule
2210(b)(1)(A) would require an
appropriately qualified registered
principal of the member to approve each
retail communication before the earlier
of its use or filing with the Department.
The principal registration required to
approve particular communications
would depend upon the permissible
activities for each principal registration
category.9 The proposed rule change
would eliminate Incorporated NYSE
Rule 472(a)(1), which requires an
8 The definition of ‘‘correspondence’’ in NASD
Rule 2211 currently includes market letters as well
as written letters and electronic mail messages that
are sent to one or more existing retail customers and
fewer than 25 prospective retail customers within
a 30 calendar-day period. ‘‘Market letter’’ is defined
to include any communication excepted from the
definition of ‘‘research report’’ pursuant to NASD
Rule 2711(a)(9)(A). See NASD Rule 2211(a)(5).
FINRA revised the definition of ‘‘correspondence’’
to include market letters in February 2009 in order
to allow members to send market letters to traders
and other investors who base their decisions on
timely market analysis without having to have a
principal approve them in advance. Previously,
members were required to approve market letters
prior to use. See Regulatory Notice 09–10 (February
2009). Proposed FINRA Rule 2210 would continue
to allow members to send retail communications
that are excepted from the definition of ‘‘research
report’’ pursuant to NASD Rule 2711(a)(9)(A)
without having a registered principal approve the
communication prior to use, provided that a
member supervises and reviews such
communications in the same manner as
correspondence. See proposed FINRA Rule
2210(b)(1)(D).
9 Currently NASD Rule 1022(g) permits a General
Securities Sales Supervisor to approve sales
literature as defined in NASD Rule 2210, but does
not permit persons within this category to approve
advertisements. FINRA separately sought comment
on a proposal that would amend the General
Securities Sales Supervisor registration category to
remove the restriction on approving advertisements,
and to permit persons within this registration
category to approve retail communications as
defined in proposed FINRA Rule 2210. See
Regulatory Notice 09–70 (December 2009).
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‘‘allied member, supervisory analyst, or
qualified person’’ to approve in advance
each advertisement, sales literature or
other similar type of communication by
an NYSE member firm.10
NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(B) permits a
Series 16 supervisory analyst approved
pursuant to Incorporated NYSE Rule
344 to approve research reports on debt
and equity securities.11 Proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(B) would
continue this provision without
substantive change.12
NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(D) provides an
exception from the principal approval
requirements of NASD Rule
2210(b)(1)(A) for an advertisement, item
of sales literature, or independently
prepared reprint, if at the time that a
member intends to publish or distribute
it: (i) another member has filed it with
the Department and has received a letter
from the Department stating that it
appears to be consistent with applicable
standards; and (ii) the member using the
communication in reliance on this
exception has not materially altered it
and will not use it in a manner that is
inconsistent with the conditions of the
Department’s letter. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(b)(1)(C) would preserve this
exception for retail communications.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D)
would except from the principal
approval requirements of proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) three
additional categories of retail
communications, provided that the
member supervises and reviews such
communications in the same manner as
required for supervising and reviewing
correspondence pursuant to NASD Rule
3010(d). These communications
include: (i) Any retail communication
that is excepted from the definition of
‘‘research report’’ pursuant to NASD
Rule 2711(a)(9)(A); (ii) any retail
communication that is posted on an
online interactive electronic forum; and
(iii) any retail communication that does
not make any financial or investment
10 The term ‘‘allied member’’ was largely deleted
from the Incorporated NYSE Rules in 2008, and
thus is not being carried over as part of proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A). See Regulatory Notice
08–64 (October 2008).
11 FINRA separately sought comment on a
proposal that would adopt a stand-alone permissive
registration category for Supervisory Analysts. See
Regulatory Notice 09–70 (December 2009).
12 NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(C) currently requires a
registered principal qualified to supervise security
futures activities to approve each advertisement or
item of sales literature concerning security futures.
This requirement would continue going forward
with respect to retail communications concerning
security futures. Nevertheless, this provision is
being eliminated as redundant given the
requirement under proposed FINRA Rule
2210(b)(1)(A) that an appropriately qualified
principal approve each retail communication.
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srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
recommendation or otherwise promote a
product or service of the member.
The first category generally carries
forward a current exception from the
principal pre-use approval requirements
for market letters.13 The second category
codifies a current interpretation of the
rules governing communications with
the public that allows members to
supervise communications posted on
interactive electronic forums in the
same manner as is required for
supervising correspondence.14 The third
category broadens a current principal
pre-use approval exception for
correspondence that is sent to 25 or
more existing retail customers within
any 30 calendar-day period and that
does not make any financial or
investment recommendation or
otherwise promote a product or service
of the member.15 Unlike the current
principal pre-use approval exception,
this exception would apply to all retail
communications.16
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(E)
would allow FINRA, pursuant to the
FINRA Rule 9600 Series, to grant an
exemption from the principal approval
requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(A) for
good cause shown after taking into
consideration all relevant factors,
provided that the exemption is
consistent with the purposes of FINRA
Rule 2210, the protection of investors,
and the public interest.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(F)
would provide that, notwithstanding
any other provision of FINRA Rule
2210, a registered principal must
approve a communication prior to the
member filing it with the Department.
Currently NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(A)
requires a principal to approve an
advertisement, item of sales literature or
independently prepared reprint before
the earlier of its use or filing with the
Department. Proposed FINRA
2210(b)(1)(F) is intended to clarify that
13 See NASD Rules 2211(a)(1), (a)(5) and (b)(1)(A);
see also Regulatory Notice 09–10 (February 2009).
14 See Regulatory Notice 10–06 (January 2010).
15 See NASD Rule 2211(b)(1)(A).
16 Thus, the current rules require firms to make
the determination of whether correspondence that
is sent to 25 or more existing retail customers
within a 30 calendar-day period requires principal
pre-use approval because it makes a financial or
investment recommendation or otherwise promotes
a product or service of the member. FINRA would
expect firms to apply the same analysis going
forward regarding principal pre-use approval with
respect to all retail communications. FINRA
generally considers this exception to cover
communications that are more administrative or
informational in nature, such as communications
that inform investors that their account statement
is available online, or the date on which a security
in an investor’s portfolio is expected to pay a
dividend. Communications that are intended to
educate investors about products or services,
however, do not fall within this exception.
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an appropriately qualified principal
must approve any communication that
is filed with the Department, even if a
communication otherwise would come
under an exception to the principal
approval requirements of proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A).
NASD Rule 2211(b)(1) and NASD
Rule 3010(d) impose certain supervisory
and review requirements with regard to
a member’s correspondence and
institutional sales material.17 Proposed
FINRA Rules 2210(b)(2) and (3)
generally would maintain the
supervision and review standards for
correspondence and institutional
communications that are currently
found in NASD Rules 2211 and 3010(d).
Currently NASD Rule 2210(b)(2)
requires members to maintain all
advertisements, sales literature and
independently prepared reprints in a
separate file for a period beginning on
the date of first use and ending three
years from the date of last use. The file
must include: (i) A copy of the
communication and the dates of first
and last use; (ii) the name of the
registered principal who approved the
communication and the date approval
was given, unless such approval was not
required pursuant to NASD Rule
2210(b)(1)(D);18 and (iii) for any
communication for which principal
approval was not required pursuant to
NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(D), the name of
the member that filed the
communication with the Department
and a copy of the corresponding
Department review letter. NASD Rule
2211(b)(2) requires members to maintain
records of institutional sales material for
a period of three years from the date of
17 These rules require each member to establish
written procedures that are appropriate to its
business, size, structure and customers for the
review by a registered principal of correspondence
and institutional sales material. The procedures
must be in writing and be designed to reasonably
supervise each registered representative. Where
such procedures do not require review of all such
communications prior to use or distribution, they
must include provision for the education and
training of associated persons as to the member’s
procedures, documentation of such education and
training, and surveillance and follow-up to ensure
that such procedures are implemented and adhered
to. Evidence of such implementation must be
maintained and made available to FINRA upon
request.
18 As noted above, NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(D)
creates an exception from the principal approval
requirements of NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) for any
advertisement, item of sales literature or
independently prepared reprint if, at the time that
a member intends to publish or distribute it: (i)
Another member has filed it with the Department
and has received a letter from the Department
stating that it appears to be consistent with
applicable standards; and (ii) the member using it
in reliance on this exception has not materially
altered it and will not use it in a manner that is
inconsistent with the conditions of the
Department’s letter.
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last use, including the name of the
person who prepared each such
communication. NASD Rules
3010(d)(3)19 and 3110(a)20 require
members to retain correspondence of
registered representatives as prescribed
by SEA Rule 17a–4.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(A)
would set forth the record-keeping
requirements for retail and institutional
communications; generally, these
requirements would mirror current
record-keeping requirements. This
provision incorporates by reference the
record-keeping format, medium and
retention period requirements of SEA
Rule 17a–4.21
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(A)
specifies that such records would have
to include:
• A copy of the communication and
the dates of first and (if applicable) last
use;
• The name of any registered
principal who approved the
communication and the date that
approval was given;
• In the case of a retail
communication or institutional
communication that is not approved
prior to first use by a registered
principal, the name of the person who
prepared or distributed the
communication;22
19 FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD Rule
3010(d)(3) as FINRA Rule 3110.11 (Retention of
Correspondence and Internal Communications),
subject to certain changes, in the Consolidated
FINRA Rulebook. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 64736 (June 23, 2011), 76 FR 38245
(June 29, 2011) (Notice of Filing File No. SR–
FINRA–2011–028 (Proposed Rule Change to Adopt
the Consolidated FINRA Supervision Rules).
20 The SEC has approved the adoption of the
general recordkeeping requirements of NASD Rule
3110(a) as FINRA Rule 4511, subject to certain
changes. FINRA Rule 4511 becomes effective on
December 5, 2011. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 63784 (January 27, 2011), 76 FR 5850
(February 2, 2011) (Order Approving File No. SR–
FINRA–2010–052); Regulatory Notice 11–19 (April
2011).
21 SEA Rule 17a–4(b) requires broker-dealers to
preserve certain records for a period of not less than
three years, the first two in an easily accessible
place. Among these records, pursuant to SEA Rule
17a–4(b)(4), are ‘‘[o]riginals of all communications
received and copies of all communications sent
(and any approvals thereof) by the member, broker
or dealer (including inter-office memoranda and
communications) relating to its business as such,
including all communications which are subject to
rules of a self-regulatory organization of which the
member, broker or dealer is a member regarding
communications with the public. As used in this
paragraph (b)(4), the term communications includes
sales scripts.’’ SEA Rule 17a–4(f) permits brokerdealers to maintain and preserve these records on
‘‘micrographic media’’ or by means of ‘‘electronic
storage media,’’ as defined in the rule and subject
to a number of conditions.
22 To the extent clerical staff is employed in the
preparation or distribution of the communication,
the records should include the name of the person
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• Information concerning the source
of any statistical table, chart, graph or
other illustration used in the
communication; and
• For retail communications that rely
on the exception under proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(b)(1)(C), the name of the
member that filed the retail
communication with the Department
and a copy of the Department’s review
letter.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(B)
cross-references NASD Rules
3010(d)(3) 23 and 3110(a) 24 with respect
to correspondence record-keeping
requirements.
Filing Requirements and Review
Procedures
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)
generally incorporates the filing
requirements in NASD Rule 2210(c),
subject to certain changes.
NASD Rule 2210(c)(5)(A) currently
requires a member that previously has
not filed advertisements with the
Department or another self-regulatory
organization to file its initial
advertisement with the Department at
least 10 business days prior to use. This
filing requirement continues for a year
after the initial filing. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(c)(1)(A) would trigger the
new member one-year filing
requirement beginning on the date
reflected in the Central Registration
Depository (CRD®) system that the
firm’s FINRA membership became
effective, rather than on the date a
member first files an advertisement with
the Department. Although proposed
FINRA Rule 2210 no longer defines the
term ‘‘advertisement,’’ this new member
filing requirement would only apply to
retail communications that currently fall
under the ‘‘advertisement’’ definition,
such as generally accessible Web sites,
print media communications, and
television and radio commercials.
NASD Rule 2210(c)(5)(B) currently
authorizes the Department to require a
member to file all of its advertisements
and/or sales literature, or the portion of
the member’s material relating to
specific types or classes of securities or
services, with the Department at least 10
business days prior to use, if the
Department determines that the member
has departed from NASD Rule 2210’s
standards. Proposed FINRA Rule
2210(c)(1)(B) would carry forward this
authority and apply it to all of a
member’s communications (rather than
just advertisements or sales literature).
on whose behalf the communication was prepared
or distributed.
23 See supra note 18.
24 See supra note 19.
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NASD Rule 2210(c)(4) currently
requires members to file certain
communications at least 10 business
days prior to first use and to withhold
them from use until any changes
specified by the Department have been
made. These communications include
advertisements and sales literature for
certain registered investment companies
that include self-created rankings,
advertisements concerning CMOs, and
advertisements concerning security
futures.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(2)
would revise the categories of
communications that fall within this
pre-use filing requirement. These
include retail communications
concerning any registered investment
company that include self-created
rankings, retail communications
concerning security futures, and retail
communications that include bond
mutual fund volatility ratings. The
requirement to file retail
communications concerning security
futures prior to first use would not
apply to: (i) Retail communications that
are submitted to another self-regulatory
organization having comparable
standards pertaining to such
communications, and (ii) retail
communications in which the only
reference to security futures is
contained in a listing of the services of
a member.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)
would revise the categories of
communications that must be filed
within 10 business days of first use or
publication. Similar to NASD Rule
2210(c)(2), proposed FINRA Rule
2210(c)(3) would require retail
communications concerning registered
investment companies and public direct
participation programs to be filed
within 10 business days of first use.
However, the proposal for the first time
would require that all retail
communications concerning closed-end
registered investment companies be
filed with FINRA. Currently NASD Rule
2210 requires members to file within 10
business days of first use advertisements
and sales literature concerning closedend funds that are distributed during
the fund’s initial public offering (‘‘IPO’’)
period, as well as all advertisements and
sales literature concerning continuously
offered (interval) closed-end funds.25
The proposed filing requirement also
would apply to retail communications
that are distributed after a closed-end
fund’s IPO period. FINRA believes that
investors deserve the same protections
concerning retail communications about
closed-end funds that are distributed
after the IPO period as those that are
distributed during the IPO period.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(C)
would require members to file within 10
business days of first use all retail
communications concerning
government securities. Currently this
requirement only applies to
advertisements concerning such
securities.26 Consistent with current
requirements, proposed FINRA Rule
2210(c)(3)(D) would require members to
file within 10 business days of first use
templates for written reports produced
by, or retail communications concerning
an investment analysis tool, as such
term is defined in proposed FINRA Rule
2214.27
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(E)
would require members to file within 10
business days of first use retail
communications concerning CMOs that
are registered under the Securities Act
of 1933 (‘‘Securities Act’’). Currently
members are required only to file
advertisements concerning CMOs, but
must file them at least 10 business days
prior to first use.28
Under proposed FINRA Rule
2210(c)(3)(F), members would have to
file within 10 business days of first use
all retail communications concerning
any security that is registered under the
Securities Act and that is derived from
or based on a single security, a basket
of securities, an index, a commodity, a
debt issuance or a foreign currency, not
included within the requirements of
paragraphs (c)(1), (c)(2) or subparagraphs (A) through (E) of paragraph
(c)(3). The purpose of this provision is
to require the filing of retail
communications concerning publicly
offered structured products, such as
exchange-traded notes or registered
grantor trusts that currently are not
required to be filed. This provision
excludes retail communications that are
already subject to a separate filing
requirement found elsewhere in
proposed paragraph (c), such as retail
communications concerning registered
investment companies or public direct
participation programs.
Consistent with current rules,
proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(4)
provides that, if a member has filed a
draft version or ‘‘story board’’ of a
television or video retail
communication pursuant to a filing
requirement, then the member also must
file the final filmed version within 10
business days of first use or broadcast.29
26 See
NASD Rule 2210(c)(2)(C).
NASD Rule 2210(c)(2)(D).
28 See NASD Rule 2210(c)(4)(B).
29 See NASD Rule 2210(c)(6).
27 See
25 See ‘‘Ask the Analyst,’’ Regulatory &
Compliance Alert (Winter 1999) p. 13.
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Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(5)
specifies that a member must provide
with each filing the actual or anticipated
date of first use, the name, title and
CRD® number of the registered
principal who approved the
communication, and the date of
approval. These requirements generally
carry forward the current requirements
of NASD Rule 2210(c)(1).
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(6)
provides that each member’s written
communications may be subject to a
spot-check procedure, and that members
must submit requested material within
the time frame specified by the
Department. This provision is consistent
with current rules.30
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7)
generally duplicates the current
exclusions from the filing requirements
under NASD Rule 2210(c)(8), with
certain modifications. Proposed
paragraph (c)(7)(A) would continue the
current filing exclusion for retail
communications that previously have
been filed with the Department and that
are to be used without material
change.31 Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(B)
would add an exclusion for retail
communications that are based on
templates that were previously filed
with the Department, the changes to
which are limited to updates of more
recent statistical or other non-narrative
information.32 Proposed paragraph
(c)(7)(C) would exclude retail
communications that do not make any
financial or investment
recommendation or otherwise promote a
product or service of the member.33
Proposed paragraphs (c)(7)(D), (E), (G)
and (H) would preserve for retail
communications the current filing
exclusions for advertisements and sales
literature that do no more than identify
a national securities exchange symbol of
the member or identify a security for
which the member is a registered market
maker; advertisements and sales
literature that do no more than identify
the member or offer a specific security
30 See
NASD Rule 2210(c)(7).
NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(A).
32 This exclusion is based in part on an earlier
staff interpretation concerning how NASD Rule
2210’s approval, record-keeping and filing
requirements apply to statistical updates contained
in pre-existing templates. See Letter from Thomas
M. Selman, NASD, to Forrest R. Foss, T. Rowe Price
Associates, Inc., dated January 28, 2002. If a
member changed the template’s presentation in any
material respect, however, this exclusion would not
apply.
33 This filing exception would have the same
scope as the proposed exception from the principal
pre-use approval requirements for retail
communications that do not make any financial or
investment recommendation or otherwise promote
a product or service of the member. See proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D)(iii).
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31 See
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at a stated price; certain ‘‘tombstone’’
advertisements governed by Securities
Act Rule 134 and press releases that are
made available only to members of the
media.34
Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(F) would
modify the current filing exclusion for
prospectuses and other documents that
have been filed with the SEC or any
state.35 The current filing exclusion
does not cover investment company
omitting prospectuses published
pursuant to Securities Act Rule 482. As
modified, this filing exclusion also
would not cover free writing
prospectuses that are filed with the SEC
pursuant to Securities Act Rule
433(d)(1)(ii).36 As discussed in
Regulatory Notice 10–52, FINRA is
concerned that broadly disseminated
free writing prospectuses present the
same investor protection concerns as
communications regulated by NASD
Rules 2210 and 2211. Accordingly,
FINRA interprets NASD Rules 2210 and
2211 to apply to free writing
prospectuses distributed by a brokerdealer in a manner reasonably designed
to lead to broad unrestricted
dissemination.37 This proposed
modification would codify the guidance
provided in that Regulatory Notice.
Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(I) would
maintain the filing exclusion for
reprints of independently prepared
articles or reports currently found in
NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(H).38
Proposed paragraphs (c)(7)(J) and (K)
would maintain the current filing
exclusions for correspondence and
institutional sales material.39 Proposed
paragraph (c)(7)(L) would exclude from
filing communications that refer to
types of investments solely as part of a
listing of products or services offered by
the member.40
34 See
NASD Rules 2210(c)(8)(C), (D), (F) and (G).
NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(E).
36 Securities Act Rule 433(d)(1)(ii) requires any
offering participant, other than the issuer, to file
with the SEC a free writing prospectus if it is used
or referred to by such offering participant and
distributed by or on behalf of such person in a
manner reasonably designed to lead to its broad
unrestricted dissemination.
37 See Regulatory Notice 10–52 (October 2010).
38 The filing exclusion for reprints of
independently prepared articles or reports
incorporates the conditions currently included in
the definition of ‘‘independently prepared reprint.’’
See NASD Rule 2210(a)(6)(A). This filing exclusion
would also cover independently prepared
investment company reports described in NASD
Rule 2210(a)(6)(B).
39 See NASD Rules 2210(c)(8)(I) and (J).
40 NASD Rule 2210(c)(9) similarly excludes from
the filing requirements material that refers to
investment company securities, direct participation
programs, or exempted securities solely as part of
a listing of products or services offered by the
member.
35 See
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Proposed paragraph (c)(8) would
provide that communications excluded
from the filing requirements pursuant to
paragraphs (c)(7)(H) through (K) would
be deemed filed with FINRA for
purposes of Section 24(b) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and
Rule 24b–3 thereunder. This provision
is consistent with NASD Rule
2210(c)(8).
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(9)(A)
would allow FINRA to exempt pursuant
to the FINRA Rule 9600 Series, a
member from the pre-use filing
requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(A) for
good cause shown.41 Proposed
paragraph (c)(9)(B) would allow FINRA
to grant an exemption from the filing
requirements of paragraph (c)(3) for
good cause shown after taking into
consideration all relevant factors,
provided that the exemption is
consistent with the purposes of Rule
2210, the protection of investors, and
the public interest. Generally this relief
would be limited to the same extent as
in proposed paragraph (b)(1)(E), which
would authorize FINRA to grant
exemptive relief from the principal
approval requirements in proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) for retail
communications, subject to the same
standards.
Content Standards
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)
reorganizes but largely incorporates the
current content standards applicable to
communications with the public that
are found in NASD Rule 2210(d), NASD
IM–2210–1, NASD IM–2210–4 and
Incorporated NYSE Rules 472(i) and (j),
subject to certain changes. Content
standards that currently apply to
advertisements and sales literature
generally would apply to retail
communications.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(A)
incorporates the current standards of
NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(A) without
substantive change.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(B)
incorporates the current standards of
NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(B) largely
without change, except that it would
expressly prohibit promissory
statements or claims. The Department
staff already interprets NASD Rule
2210(d)(1)(B) to prohibit promissory
language in member communications,
and Incorporated NYSE Rule 472(i)
specifically prohibits promissory
statements.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(C)
incorporates the current standards of
41 This provision is consistent with NASD Rule
2210(c)(10).
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NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(C) without
change.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(D)
generally incorporates the standards
currently found in NASD IM–2210–1(1),
with only minor, non-substantive
changes.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(E)
generally incorporates the standards
currently found in NASD IM–2210–1(2),
although in a more abbreviated fashion.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(D) currently
prohibits communications from
predicting or projecting performance,
implying that past performance will
recur or making any exaggerated or
unwarranted claim, opinion or forecast.
This provision permits, however, a
hypothetical illustration of
mathematical principles, provided that
it does not predict or project the
performance of an investment or
investment strategy.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(F)
would carry forward the current
prohibition of performance predictions
and projections, as well as, the
allowance for hypothetical illustrations
of mathematical principles. The
proposal also would clarify that FINRA
allows two additional types of
projections of performance in
communications with the public that
are not reflected in the text of NASD
Rule 2210(d)(1)(D). First, FINRA allows
projections of performance in reports
produced by investment analyst tools
that meet the requirements of NASD
IM–2210–6.42 Second, FINRA has
permitted research reports on debt or
equity securities to include price targets
under certain circumstances.43
Accordingly, proposed FINRA Rule
2210(d)(1)(F) would clarify that it does
not prohibit an investment analysis tool,
or a written report produced by such a
tool that meets the requirements of
FINRA Rule 2214. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(d)(1)(F) also would clarify
that it does not prohibit a price target
contained in a research report on debt
or equity securities, provided that the
price target has a reasonable basis, the
report discloses the valuation methods
used to determine the price target, and
the price target is accompanied by
disclosure concerning the risks that may
impede achievement of the price
target.44
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(2)
incorporates the standards currently
42 See NASD IM–2210–6 (Requirements for the
Use of Investment Analysis Tools). NASD IM–
2210–6 would be codified as FINRA Rule 2214
under the proposed rule change.
43 See NASD Rule 2711(h)(7).
44 These standards mirror those required for price
targets contained in research reports on equity
securities under NASD Rule 2711(h)(7).
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found in NASD Rule 2210(d)(2)(B)
without substantive change.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(2)(C) requires all
advertisements and sales literature to: (i)
prominently disclose the name of the
member, and allows a fictional name by
which the member is commonly
recognized or which is required by any
state or jurisdiction; (ii) reflect any
relationship between the member and
any non-member or individual who is
also named in the communication; and
(iii) if the communication includes
other names, reflect which products and
services are offered by the member.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(3) would
apply these standards to
correspondence as well as to retail
communications. Members would be
permitted to use the name under which
a member’s broker-dealer business is
conducted as disclosed on the member’s
Form BD, as well as a fictional name by
which a member is commonly
recognized or which is required by any
state or jurisdiction.
NASD IM–2210–1(5) specifies that in
advertisements and sales literature,
references to tax-free or tax-exempt
income must indicate which income
taxes apply, or which do not, unless
income is free from all applicable taxes,
and provides an example of income
from an investment company investing
in municipal bonds that is free from
federal income tax but subject to state or
local income taxes. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(d)(4)(A) would carry forward
this rule for all retail communications
and correspondence.
NASD IM 2210–1(4) prohibits
communications with the public from
characterizing income or investment
returns as tax-free or exempt from
income tax when tax liability is merely
postponed or deferred, such as when
taxes are payable upon redemption.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(4)(B)
would carry forward this prohibition for
all communications.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(4)(C)
would add new language concerning
comparative illustrations of the
mathematical principles of tax-deferred
versus taxable compounding.
First, the illustration would have to
depict both the taxable investment and
the tax-deferred investment using
identical investment amounts and
identical assumed gross investment
rates of return, which may not exceed
10 percent per annum. Second, the
illustration would have to use and
identify actual federal income tax rates.
Third, the illustration would be
permitted (but not required) to reflect an
actual state income tax rate, provided
that the communication prominently
discloses that the illustration is
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applicable only to investors that reside
in the identified state. Fourth, the tax
rates used in the illustration that is
intended for a target audience would
have to reasonably reflect its tax bracket
or brackets as well as the tax character
of capital gains and ordinary income.
Fifth, if the illustration covers an
investment’s payout period, the
illustration would have to reflect the
impact of taxes during this period.
Sixth, the illustration could not assume
an unreasonable period of tax deferral.
Seventh, the illustration would have
to include the following disclosures, as
applicable:
• The degree of risk in the
investment’s assumed rate of return,
including a statement that the assumed
rate of return is not guaranteed;
• The possible effects of investment
losses on the relative advantage of the
taxable versus tax-deferred investments;
• The extent to which tax rates on
capital gains and dividends would affect
the taxable investment’s return;
• Its underlying assumptions; 45
• The potential impact resulting from
federal or state tax penalties (e.g., for
early withdrawals or use on nonqualified expenses); and
• That an investor should consider
his or her current and anticipated
investment horizon and income tax
bracket when making an investment
decision, as the illustration may not
reflect these factors.
Much of this language reflects
previous guidance that FINRA has
provided regarding tax-deferral
illustrations.46 By placing this rule
language in proposed FINRA Rule 2210,
FINRA is clarifying that these standards
apply to any illustration of tax-deferred
versus taxable compounding, regardless
of whether it appears in a
communication promoting variable
insurance products or some other
communication, such as one discussing
the benefits of investing through a
401(k) retirement plan or individual
retirement account. Of course, any
communication concerning variable
insurance products also must comply
with standards specifically applicable to
such communications.47
45 These assumptions may include, for example,
the age at which an investor may begin
withdrawing funds from a tax-deferred account, the
actual federal tax rates applied in the hypothetical
taxable illustration, any state income tax rate
applied in the illustration, and the charges
associated with the hypothetical investment.
46 See ‘‘NASD Reminds Members of Their
Responsibilities Regarding Hypothetical TaxDeferral Illustrations in Variable Annuity
Illustrations,’’ NASD Member Alert (May 10, 2004).
47 See NASD IM–2210–2; see also Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 61107 (December 3,
2009), 74 FR 65180 (December 9, 2009) (Notice of
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NASD Rule 2210(d)(3) currently
requires communications with the
public, other than institutional sales
material and public appearances, that
present the performance of a non-money
market mutual fund, to disclose the
fund’s maximum sales charge and
operating expense ratio as set forth in
the fund’s current prospectus fee table.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(5) would
maintain this standard for retail
communications and correspondence.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(E) currently
provides that, if any testimonial in a
communication with the public
concerns a technical aspect of investing,
the person making the testimonial must
have the knowledge and experience to
form a valid opinion. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(d)(6)(A) carries forward this
standard for communications.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(2)(A) requires any
advertisement or sales literature that
includes a testimonial concerning the
investment advice or investment
performance of a member or its products
to prominently disclose: (i) The fact that
the testimonial may not be
representative of the experience of other
customers; (ii) the fact that the
testimonial is no guarantee of future
performance or success; and (iii) if more
than a nominal sum is paid, the fact that
it is a paid testimonial. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(d)(6)(B) carries forward these
disclosure requirements for retail
communications and correspondence,
and requires disclosure regarding
payment if more than $100 in value
(rather than a ‘‘nominal sum’’) is paid
for the testimonial.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)
would revise in several ways the
standards currently found in NASD IM–
2210–1(6) applicable to
communications that contain a
recommendation.
First, the proposal would apply these
standards to retail communications and
public appearances. Currently the
standards apply only to advertisements
and sales literature.
Second, NASD IM–2210–1(6)(A)
requires disclosure of certain specified
conflicts of interest to the extent
applicable. These disclosures include:
(i) If the member was making a market
in the recommended securities, or the
underlying security if the recommended
security is an option or security future,
or that the member or associated person
will sell to or buy from customers on a
principal basis; (ii) if the member and/
or its officers or partners have a
Filing File No. SR–FINRA–2009–070) (Proposed
Rule Change To Adopt FINRA Rule 2211
(Communications With the Public About Variable
Insurance Products)).
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financial interest in the securities of the
recommended issuer and the nature of
the financial interest, unless the extent
of the financial interest is nominal; and
(iii) if the member was manager or comanager of a public offering of any
securities of the recommended issuer in
the past 12 months. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(d)(7)(A) would carry forward
the first and third disclosures, but
would modify the second disclosure to
limit it to financial interests of the
member or any associated person with
the ability to influence the content of
the communication, unless the extent of
the financial interest is nominal. This
change would substantially narrow the
number of parties whose financial
interests have to be disclosed,
particularly for large members with
numerous officers and partners.48
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(B)
would require a member to provide, or
offer to furnish upon request, available
investment information supporting the
recommendation, and if the
recommendation is for an equity
security, to provide the price at the time
the recommendation is made. This
provision would carry forward the
current requirements of NASD IM–
2210–6(B).
Third, proposed FINRA Rule
2210(d)(7)(C) would amend the
provisions governing communications
that include past recommendations,
which are currently found in NASD IM–
2210–1(6)(C) and (D) and Incorporated
NYSE Rule 472(j)(2). The new proposed
standards mirror those found in Rule
206(4)–1(a)(2) under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, which apply to
investment adviser advertisements that
contain past recommendations.49
Fourth, proposed FINRA Rule
2210(d)(7)(D) expressly would exclude
from its coverage communications that
meet the definition of ‘‘research report’’
or that are public appearances by a
48 FINRA has found that the current rules
governing disclosures of financial interests in
connection with recommendations contained in
advertisements and sales literature, which apply to
financial interests of all officers and partners, do
not lead to useful disclosure when a firm has a large
number of officers or partners. See NASD IM–2210–
1(6)(A)(ii).
49 Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(C), like Rule
206(4)–1(a)(2), generally would prohibit retail
communications from referring to past specific
recommendations of the member that were or
would have been profitable to any person. The rule
would allow, however, a retail communication or
correspondence to set out or offer to furnish a list
of all recommendations as to the same type, kind,
grade or classification of securities made by the
member within the immediately preceding period
of not less than one year. The list would have to
provide certain information regarding each
recommended security and include a prescribed
cautionary legend warning investors not to assume
that future recommendations will be profitable.
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research analyst for purposes of NASD
Rule 2711 and that include all of the
applicable disclosures required by that
rule. Proposed FINRA Rule
2210(d)(7)(D) also would exclude any
communication that recommends only
registered investment companies or
variable insurance products.50
Currently, a ‘‘public appearance’’ is
defined as ‘‘participation in a seminar,
forum (including an interactive
electronic forum), radio or television
interview, or other public appearance or
public speaking activity.’’ 51 Public
appearances are a separate category of
communications within the broader
term ‘‘communications with the
public.’’ As such, public appearances
must meet the same standards that
apply to all communications with the
public, such as the requirements that
they be fair and balanced and not
include false or misleading statements.
However, public appearances are not
subject to the principal pre-use approval
requirements of NASD Rule
2210(b)(1)(A), nor must a member file a
public appearance with the Department.
In the interest of simplification, the
term ‘‘public appearance’’ is no longer
a separate communication category.
Nevertheless, proposed FINRA Rule
2210(f) sets forth many of the same
general standards that would apply to
public appearances that exist currently.
Public appearances would have to meet
the general ‘‘fair and balanced’’
standards of proposed paragraph (d)(1).
Unlike the current rules governing
public appearances, the disclosure
requirements applicable to
recommendations in proposed
paragraph (d)(7) also would apply if the
public appearance included a
recommendation of a security. The
proposal also would require members to
establish appropriate written policies
and procedures to supervise public
appearances, and makes clear that
scripts, slides, handouts or other written
(including electronic) materials used in
connection with public appearances are
50 FINRA is proposing to exclude
communications that recommend only registered
investment companies or variable insurance
products because it believes that recommendations
of these products do not raise the same kinds of
conflicts of interest as recommendations of other
types of securities, since they are pooled investment
vehicles rather than securities of a single issuer.
Nevertheless, there may be other types of salesrelated conflicts of interest raised when members
recommend such securities. FINRA has addressed
these types of conflicts through its rules governing
sales of these products. See NASD Rule 2830
(Investment Companies Securities) and FINRA Rule
2320 (Variable Contracts of an Insurance Company);
see also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 64386
(May 3, 2011), 76 FR 26779 (May 9, 2011) (Notice
of Filing File No. SR–FINRA–2011–018).
51 NASD Rule 2210(a)(5).
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considered communications for
purposes of proposed FINRA Rule
2210.52
Use of Investment Company Rankings in
Retail Communications
Proposed FINRA Rule 2212 would
replace NASD IM–2210–3 with regard to
standards applicable to the use of
investment company rankings in
communications. The standards
generally would remain the same.
FINRA has revised the standards
applicable to investment company
rankings for more than one class of an
investment company with the same
portfolio. Such rankings also must be
accompanied by prominent disclosure
of the fact that the investment
companies or classes have different
expense structures. The proposal would
add a new paragraph (h) that would
exclude from the proposed rule’s
coverage reprints or excerpts of articles
or reports that are excluded from the
Department’s filing requirements
pursuant to proposed FINRA Rule
2210(c)(7)(I).
Requirements for the Use of Bond
Mutual Fund Volatility Ratings
Proposed FINRA Rule 2213 would
replace NASD IM–2210–5 with regard to
standards applicable to the use of bond
mutual fund volatility ratings in
communications. The standards would
remain the same as in NASD IM–
2210–5.
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Requirements for the Use of Investment
Analysis Tools
Proposed FINRA Rule 2214 would
replace NASD IM–2210–6 with regard to
standards applicable to the use of
investment analysis tools. The standards
generally would remain the same with
some minor changes. Currently NASD
IM–2210–6 requires a member that
offers or intends to offer an investment
analysis tool, within 10 days of first use,
to provide the Department access to the
tool and file with the Department any
template for written reports produced
by, or advertisements and sales
literature concerning, the tool. Proposed
FINRA Rule 2214(a) would require
members to provide the Department
with access to the tool and to file any
template for written reports produced
by, or any retail communication
concerning, the tool within 10 business
days of first use. This revision makes
the access and filing requirement time
frame consistent with other filing
52 The requirement to establish supervisory
policies and procedures for public appearances is
consistent with NASD Rule 3010(b) and
Incorporated NYSE Rule 472(l).
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requirements under proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(c).
The proposal also would move some
language that is currently contained
either in NASD IM–2210–6’s text or in
footnotes to Supplementary Material
that follows the Rule. Proposed
Supplementary Material 2214.06 would
provide that a retail communication that
contains only an incidental reference to
an investment analysis tool would not
have to include the disclosures
otherwise required for retail
communications that advertise an
investment analysis tool, and would not
have to be filed with FINRA unless
otherwise required by FINRA Rule
2210.53 In addition, the Supplementary
Material would provide that, if a retail
communication refers to an investment
analysis tool in more detail but does not
provide access to the tool or the results
generated by the tool, the
communication would only have to
include the disclosures required by
paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(4) of proposed
Rule 2214. Proposed Supplementary
Material 2214.07 provides additional
detail regarding disclosure required by
paragraph (c)(3) of Rule 2214. This
language is currently found in footnote
4 to IM–2210–6. However, FINRA has
added a specific requirement to disclose
whether the investment analysis tool is
limited to searching, analyzing or in any
way favoring securities in which the
member serves as an underwriter.
Communications With the Public
Regarding Security Futures
Proposed FINRA Rule 2215 would
replace NASD IM–2210–7 with regard to
standards applicable to communications
concerning security futures. Proposed
FINRA Rule 2215 would revise the
current standards in several respects.
First, portions of NASD IM–2210–7
apply only to advertisements. Proposed
FINRA Rule 2215 would apply these
provisions to all retail communications.
Second, NASD IM–2210–7(a)(1)
requires members to submit all
advertisements concerning security
futures to the Department at least 10
days prior to use. Proposed FINRA Rule
2215(a)(1) would require members to
submit all retail communications
concerning security futures to the
Department at least 10 business days
prior to first use. Both the current and
the proposed filing provisions would
require a member to withhold the
communication from publication or
circulation until any changes specified
by the Department have been made.
53 This provision is consistent with footnote 3 to
NASD IM–2210–6.
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Third, the proposal would amend the
provisions that require communications
concerning security futures to be
accompanied or preceded by the
security futures risk disclosure
document under certain
circumstances.54 As revised, a
communication concerning security
futures would have to be accompanied
or preceded by the risk disclosure
document if it contained the names of
specific securities.
Fourth, proposed FINRA Rule
2214(b)(4)(D) would clarify that
communications that contain the
historical performance of security
futures must disclose all relevant costs,
which must be reflected in the
performance.
Communications With the Public About
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations
Proposed FINRA Rule 2216 would
replace NASD IM–2210–8 with regard to
standards applicable to retail
communications concerning CMOs. The
standards would remain the same as in
IM–2210–8.
As noted above, FINRA will announce
the implementation date of the
proposed rule change in a Regulatory
Notice to be published no later than
90 days following Commission
approval. The implementation date will
be no later than 365 days following
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,55 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. FINRA believes that the
proposed rule change will help ensure
that investors are protected from
potentially false or misleading
communications with the public
distributed by FINRA member firms.
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.
54 See
55 15
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NASD IM–2210–7(b).
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C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
In September 2009, FINRA published
Regulatory Notice 09–55 (the ‘‘Notice’’,
requesting comment on the rules as
proposed therein (the ‘‘Notice
proposal’’). A copy of the Notice was
filed with the Commission as Exhibit 2a.
The comment period expired on
November 20, 2009. FINRA received
23 comments in response to the Notice.
A list of the commenters in response to
the Notice was filed with the
Commission as Exhibit 2b, and copies of
the comment letters received in
response to the Notice were filed with
the Commission as Exhibit 2c.56 The
text of Exhibits 2a, 2b and 2c are
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. A summary of the
comments and FINRA’s response is
provided below.
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Communication Categories
Interactive Electronic Communications
Cornell, Cutter, PIABA, SIFMA,
StockCross, Vanguard and Wells Fargo
generally supported the proposed
consolidation of the six current
communication categories under NASD
Rule 2210 into three categories under
proposed FINRA Rule 2210(a). Fidelity
and the ICI suggested that FINRA add a
new separate communication category
for ‘‘interactive electronic
communications,’’ which would include
real-time interactive electronic
communications made through social
media Web sites, and that FINRA allow
this communication to be supervised in
a manner similar to the supervision of
correspondence.
FINRA does not believe adding a
fourth communication category for
interactive electronic communication
categories is necessary. However, as
discussed below, FINRA has modified
the principal review and approval
requirements under proposed paragraph
(b) to allow retail communications that
are posted on online interactive
electronic forums to be supervised in
the same manner as correspondence.57
FINRA believes that this modification of
the principal review and approval
requirements achieves the same result
sought by Fidelity and the ICI.
Definition of Correspondence
The Notice proposal defined
‘‘correspondence’’ as any written
56 See Exhibit 2b for a list of abbreviations
assigned to commenters.
57 See proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D)(ii).
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(including electronic) communication
that is distributed or made available to
25 or fewer retail investors. The Notice
proposal likewise defined ‘‘retail
communication’’ as any written
(including electronic) communication
that is distributed or made available to
more than 25 retail investors.
The proposed definition of
‘‘correspondence’’ generated a number
of comments. The CAI, the ICI, TLGI,
MBSC, NPHI, TD Ameritrade, Vanguard
and WilmerHale objected to treating
communications to more than 25 retail
investors as retail communications
rather than correspondence. These
commenters argued that the 25-investor
cutoff is arbitrary, and that given the
challenges in monitoring whether a
communication is limited to 25 or fewer
recipients, members would be forced to
treat all letters and emails as retail
communications. These commenters
recommended that FINRA revise the
proposal to include within the
definition of ‘‘correspondence’’ emails
to existing retail customers, regardless
of the number of recipients.
NASD Rule 2211(a)(1) defines
‘‘correspondence’’ as ‘‘any written letter
or electronic mail message and any
market letter distributed by a member
to: (A) One or more of its existing retail
customers; and (B) fewer than 25
prospective retail customers within any
30 calendar-day period.’’ However,
NASD Rule 2211 also requires a member
to have a registered principal approve
prior to use correspondence that is
distributed to 25 or more existing retail
customers within any 30 calendar-day
period and makes any financial or
investment recommendation or
otherwise promotes a product or service
of the member.58
FINRA is not revising the definition of
‘‘correspondence’’ to include e-mails or
written letters to existing retail
customers without limit as to the
number of recipients. However, to
address the concern raised by the
commenters, FINRA has revised the
proposed principal approval
requirements to exclude
communications to retail investors that
do not make any financial or investment
recommendation or otherwise promotes
a product or service of the member.59
This revision will continue to allow
members to distribute non-promotional
e-mails and other communications to
retail investors without having a
principal approve them prior to use.
Unlike the current definition of
‘‘correspondence’’ under NASD Rule
2211, the Notice proposal’s definition of
‘‘correspondence’’ did not reference a 30
calendar-day window within which to
count the number of recipients. Cutter,
the ICI, Morgan, SIFMA, WGSI and
WilmerHale all objected to the
elimination of the 30 calendar-day
period. In response to these comments,
FINRA has revised the definition of
‘‘correspondence’’ to include written
communications distributed or made
available to 25 or fewer retail investors
within any 30 calendar-day period.
FINRA likewise has revised the
definition of ‘‘retail communication’’ to
include written communications that
are distributed or made available to
more than 25 retail investors within any
30 calendar-day period.
The current definition of
‘‘correspondence’’ includes ‘‘market
letters,’’ which are defined as ‘‘any
written communication excepted from
the definition of ‘research report’
pursuant to NASD Rule
2711(a)(9)(A).’’ 60 The Notice proposal’s
definition of ‘‘correspondence’’ did not
include market letters. Forefield and
Wells Fargo opposed the elimination of
market letters from the definition of
correspondence. These commenters
requested that FINRA either revise the
definition to include market letters, or
provide an exception from the principal
approval requirements for market
letters.
In the interest of keeping the
definition of ‘‘correspondence’’ as
straightforward as possible, FINRA is
not revising the definition to include
market letters. However, FINRA has
revised the principal approval
requirements to allow members to
supervise any retail communication that
is excepted from the definition of
‘‘research report’’ pursuant to NASD
Rule 2711(a)(9)(A) in the same manner
as correspondence.61 FINRA believes
that the same rationale it used to
provide members with more flexibility
in supervising market letters continues
to exist, and thus has made this change
to the principal approval
requirements.62
Definitions of Institutional
Communication and Institutional
Investor
The Notice proposal defined
‘‘institutional communication’’ as ‘‘any
written (including electronic)
communication that is distributed or
made available only to institutional
investors.’’ TD Ameritrade commented
that ‘‘or made available to’’ should be
deleted from the definition and replaced
60 See
58 See
NASD Rule 2211(b)(1)(A).
59 See proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D)(iii).
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NASD Rule 2211(a)(5).
proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D)(i).
62 See Notice to Members 09–10 (February 2009).
61 See
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with ‘‘intended for an audience of.’’
With this change, TD Ameritrade noted
that members could post to Web sites
that are intended for institutional
investors without having to make it
password-protected.
FINRA disagrees with this comment.
If members were merely required to
‘‘intend’’ that a communication reach
institutional investors, they could
effectively distribute the
communication to anyone simply by
including a disclaimer regarding its
intended audience. This rule change
would make the distinction between
institutional communications and retail
communications virtually meaningless.
The Notice proposal defined
‘‘institutional investor’’ to include
persons described in NASD Rule
3110(c)(4) (definition of ‘‘institutional
account’’), government entities and
subdivisions, certain employee benefit
and qualified plans that have at least
100 participants, members and their
registered personnel, and persons acting
on behalf of institutional investors.
Fidelity requested that FINRA clarify
that if an employer offers multiple
employee benefit plans, the plans may
be aggregated for purposes of calculating
the number of participants. FINRA has
revised the definition of ‘‘institutional
investor’’ to allow aggregation of
multiple plans offered by a single
employer.
Fidelity, SIFMA and WilmerHale
argued for expanding the definition of
‘‘institutional investor’’ to include nonretail entities with assets under $50
million.63 FINRA believes that the
definition is already sufficiently broad,
and that entities that have assets of less
than $50 million often require the same
investor protections regarding sales
material as a retail investor.
SIFMA and TD Ameritrade argued
that the rule should make clear that if
a member provides an institutional
communication to another member, the
first member is not responsible if the
second member forwards the
communication to retail investors.
FINRA believes that, while one member
generally is not responsible for the
actions of another, such a determination
will be subject to the facts and
circumstances. Moreover, a member
63 Under NASD Rule 3110(c)(4), a person who
does not fall within one of the enumerated
categories must have total assets of at least $50
million to be considered an institutional account.
The SEC recently approved the adoption of NASD
Rule 3110(c)(4) as FINRA Rule 4512(c) without
material change. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 63784 (January 27, 2011), 76 FR 5850
(February 2, 2011) (Order Approving File No. SR–
FINRA–2010–052). FINRA Rule 4512 becomes
effective on December 5, 2011. See Regulatory
Notice 11–19 (April 2011).
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may not provide an institutional
communication to another if the
member has reason to believe that it will
be forwarded to retail investors.
Accordingly, FINRA declines to make
this change.
FINRA has added a Supplementary
Material to FINRA Rule 2210 to clarify
the extent to which a member’s internal
communications would be considered
institutional communications. The
Supplementary Material provides that a
member’s internal written (including
electronic) communications that are
intended to educate or train registered
persons about the products or services
offered by a member are considered
institutional communications pursuant
to paragraph (a)(3) of proposed FINRA
Rule 2210. Accordingly, such internal
communications are subject to both the
provisions of proposed FINRA Rule
2210 and NASD Rule 3010(d).
Definition of Retail Communication
The Notice proposal defined ‘‘retail
communication’’ as ‘‘any written
(including electronic) communication
that is distributed or made available to
more than 25 retail investors.’’ ‘‘Retail
investor’’ was defined as ‘‘any person
other than an institutional investor.’’
Generally ‘‘retail communication’’
would include communications that
currently fall under the definitions of
‘‘advertisement’’ and ‘‘sales literature.’’
The CAI and NPHI both expressed
concern that combining advertisements
and sales literature into a single
category might lead FINRA staff to
apply the same standards to all retail
communications regardless of the
intended audience. These commenters
recommended that FINRA provide
guidance that it will continue to take
into account the anticipated audience
for a proposed retail communication
when determining what disclosures and
other content standards to apply.
FINRA notes that proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(d)(1)(E) provides that
‘‘[m]embers must consider the nature of
the audience to which the
communication will be directed and
must provide details and explanations
appropriate to the audience.’’ While
proposed FINRA Rule 2210’s content
standards apply to all retail
communications, the level of detail and
explanation required for a particular
retail communication will depend on
the audience to which it is directed.
It may be unclear whether the
definition of ‘‘retail investor’’ includes
persons who are not customers of a
member. Accordingly, FINRA has
revised the definition to add at its end
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‘‘regardless of whether the person has
an account with a member.’’ 64
Approval and Recordkeeping
Review and Approval of Retail
Communications
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) in the
Notice proposal provided that ‘‘an
appropriately qualified registered
principal’’ must approve each retail
communication before the earlier of its
use or filing with the Department.
SIFMA and Wells Fargo commented
that the proposal should provide greater
guidance as to which principal
registration category is required to
approve different categories of retail
communications. FINRA believes that
this issue is already addressed in the
registration rules for principals and
supervisors.65 Accordingly, FINRA does
not believe that it would be appropriate
or useful to restate those rules’
provisions in the rules governing
communications with the public.
In a similar vein, Morgan, SIFMA and
WilmerHale requested clarification as to
whether a Series 9/10 general securities
sales supervisor would be permitted to
review and approve retail
communications and correspondence.
Currently, Series 9/10 supervisors are
qualified to review and approve
correspondence and sales literature, but
are not qualified to approve
advertisements as defined in NASD
Rule 2210.66 While the scope of a Series
9/10 supervisor’s activities are not part
of this rule proposal, FINRA notes that
it has separately proposed to adopt new
FINRA rules that would allow a general
securities sales supervisor to approve
both correspondence and retail
communications.67
The ICI requested confirmation that
the principal approval requirements do
not apply to the updating of templates
contained in retail communications.
FINRA does not intend to revise its
earlier interpretive position with regard
to the updating of templates as stated in
a 2002 interpretive letter to T. Rowe
Price Associates, Inc.68 Moreover,
proposed paragraph (c)(7)(B) would add
an exclusion from the filing
64 As noted above, FINRA also revised the
definition of ‘‘retail communication’’ to add at its
end ‘‘within any 30 calendar-day period.’’
65 See NASD Rules 1020 et seq.
66 See NASD Rule 1022(g)(2)(C)(iii).
67 See Regulatory Notice 09–70 (December 2009),
Attachment B (proposed FINRA Rule 1230(a)(10))
(eliminates current restriction on Series 9/10
supervisors approving advertisements).
68 See Letter from Thomas M. Selman, NASD, to
Forrest Foss, T. Rowe Price Associates Inc., dated
January 28, 2002 (interpreting the approval, filing
and recordkeeping requirements of NASD Rule
2210 as generally not applying to statistical updates
contained in pre-existing templates).
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requirements for retail communications
that are based on templates that were
previously filed with the Department,
the changes to which are limited to
updates of more recent statistical or
other non-narrative information.
SIFMA recommended that FINRA
reiterate its previous interpretive
guidance regarding the supervision of
electronic communications as set forth
in Regulatory Notice 07–59.69 FINRA is
separately addressing the staff guidance
contained in Regulatory Notice 07–59
regarding the supervision of electronic
communications as part of its proposal
to adopt new FINRA Rule 3110.70
The CAI, Cornell, Fidelity, the FSI,
MBSC, NPHI, SIFMA, Vanguard, and
WGSI commented that FINRA should
address the supervision requirements
for social networking sites and include
them in the revised proposal filed with
the SEC. After Regulatory Notice 09–55
was published for comment, but before
this filing with the SEC, FINRA
published Regulatory Notice 10–06,
which provides guidance on blogs and
social networking Web sites.71 Among
other things, that Notice addressed the
supervision of social media sites and
specified that members may adopt
supervisory procedures similar to those
outlined for electronic correspondence
in Regulatory Notice 07–59. FINRA is
now codifying this guidance as part of
proposed FINRA Rule 2210. Proposed
paragraph (b)(1)(D)(ii) specifies that the
requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(A),
which require a principal to approve
retail communications prior to use, will
not apply to retail communications that
are posted on an online interactive
electronic forum, provided that the
member supervises and reviews such
communications in the same manner as
required for supervising and reviewing
correspondence pursuant to NASD Rule
3010(d).
In addition, given the rapid changes
to technology used to communicate
with customers, FINRA believes it will
be useful going forward to have
exemptive authority with regard to the
principal pre-use approval requirements
applicable to retail communications in
certain circumstances. Accordingly,
FINRA has added a new proposed
paragraph (b)(1)(E) that would authorize
FINRA to grant an exemption from the
principal approval requirements of
paragraph (b)(1)(A) for good cause
shown and to the extent that such
exemption is consistent with the
69 See
Regulatory Notice 07–59 (December 2007).
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 64736
(June 23, 2011), 76 FR 38245 (June 29, 2011) (Notice
of Filing File No. SR–FINRA–2011–028).
71 See Regulatory Notice 10–06 (January 2010).
70 See
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purposes of Rule 2210, the protection of
investors, and the public interest.
Review and Approval of ResearchRelated Retail Communications
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(B) in the
Notice proposal provided that, ‘‘[w]ith
respect to research reports on debt and
equity securities, the requirements of
paragraph (b)(1)(A) may be met by a
Supervisory Analyst approved pursuant
to NYSE Rule 344.’’ This language
duplicated an identical provision in
NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(B). SIFMA and
WilmerHale requested that FINRA
clarify that a supervisory analyst also
may review and approve researchrelated communications that are not
research reports, such as market letters,
research notes and economic analyses.
FINRA does not believe such a
clarification is necessary. Proposed
paragraph (b)(1)(D)(i) would except from
the requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(A)
any retail communication that is
excepted from the definition of
‘‘research report’’ pursuant to NASD
Rule 2711(a)(9)(A), provided that the
member supervises and reviews such
communications in the same manner as
required for supervising and reviewing
correspondence. NASD Rule
2711(a)(9)(A) excludes from the
definition of ‘‘research report’’ a broad
range of research-related
communications, such as discussions of
broad-based indices, commentaries on
economic, political or market
conditions, and certain other researchrelated communications.72 By allowing
firms to supervise and review these
communications in the same manner as
firms supervise and review
correspondence, FINRA believes that
firms will have sufficient flexibility to
address the concerns raised by SIFMA
and WilmerHale.
Administrative Communications
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D) in the
Notice proposal excluded from the
principal approval requirements of
paragraph (b)(1)(A) ‘‘any retail
communication that is solely
administrative in nature.’’ The CAI,
Cutter, Fidelity, the FSI, Invesco, the
ICI, MBSC, Morgan and SIFMA noted
that currently NASD Rule 2211 does not
require principal pre-use approval of
e-mails and written letters to existing
retail customers (without limit) as long
72 Currently NASD Rule 2211(a)(1) includes
within the definition of ‘‘correspondence’’ any
‘‘market letter.’’ ‘‘Market letter’’ is defined as any
written communication excepted from the
definition of ‘‘research report’’ pursuant to NASD
Rule 2711(a)(9)(A). See NASD Rule 2211(a)(5).
Thus, the proposal would allow members to
continue to supervise market letters in the same
manner as they supervise correspondence.
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46881
as the communication does not make an
investment recommendation or promote
a product or service of the member.73
These commenters argued that FINRA
should make clear that these
communications are included within
the ‘‘solely administrative’’ exception.
PIABA expressed concern that this
exception could be used by members as
a loophole to avoid principal review,
and recommended that FINRA better
define which communications fall
within this exception.
In response to these comments,
FINRA has revised paragraph (b)(1)(D)
to eliminate the reference to ‘‘solely
administrative’’ retail communications,
and instead to exclude ‘‘any retail
communication that does not make any
financial or investment
recommendation or otherwise promote a
product or service of the member.’’ This
language is currently used in NASD
Rule 2211(b)(1)(A) with regard to the
requirements for supervising
correspondence that is sent to 25 or
more existing retail clients, and thus
maintains the same standard members
face today with regard to such
correspondence. In addition, FINRA
believes the revised text better defines
the scope of this exclusion. Members
would still be required to supervise
such retail communications in the same
manner as required for supervising and
reviewing correspondence pursuant to
NASD Rule 3010(d).
FINRA is also adding a new paragraph
(b)(1)(F) to clarify that, notwithstanding
any other provision of proposed FINRA
Rule 2210, an appropriately qualified
principal must approve a
communication prior to a member filing
the communication with the
Department.
Recordkeeping Requirements
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4) in the Notice
proposal set forth members’
recordkeeping obligations with respect
to each communication category.
Proposed paragraph (b)(4)(A)(ii)
provided that, with respect to
institutional communications, records
must include ‘‘the name of the person
who prepared or distributed the
communication.’’ Fidelity, the ICI and
MBSC supported the requirement to
maintain records of the person who
prepared a communication, but opposed
a requirement to keep records of the
person who distributed the
communication, which they believed
would be difficult to implement. TD
Ameritrade recommended that members
be required to keep records of the
person who prepared an institutional
73 See
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NASD Rule 2211(b)(1)(A).
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communication only where a registered
principal has not approved it.
In response to these comments,
FINRA has revised the recordkeeping
provisions. As revised, a member’s
records must include the name of any
registered principal who approved a
communication and the date approval
was given.74 In the case of a retail
communication or institutional
communication that is not approved
prior to first use by a registered
principal, the records must include the
name of the person who prepared or
distributed the communication. Thus, a
member would not have to keep records
of the person who distributed a retail
communication or institutional
communication, if the records included
either the registered principal who
approved the communication, or the
person who prepared the
communication.
FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(A)(iv) in the
Notice proposal required records to
include ‘‘the source of any statistical
table, chart, graph or other illustration
used in the communication.’’ Fidelity
and the FSI requested that FINRA
clarify what is required regarding
sources of statistical tables or charts. For
example, is it sufficient to have a
citation to a study, or must a record
include a copy of the study itself? In
response to these comments, FINRA has
revised proposed FINRA Rule
2210(b)(4)(A)(iv) to require ‘‘information
concerning’’ the source of the table or
chart. This revision reflects the current
recordkeeping requirements for sources
of statistical tables or charts.75
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Filing Requirements
Filing Requirements for New Members
and Certain Rule Violators
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(1)(A) in the
Notice proposal required a new member
to file with the Department all of its
retail communications for a one-year
period beginning on the effective date a
member becomes registered with
FINRA. This new member filing
requirement differs from NASD Rule
2210(c)(5)(A), which applies only to
advertisements and commences on the
first date a new member files an
advertisement with the Department.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(B) provided
that, if the Department determines that
a member has departed from proposed
FINRA Rule 2210’s standards, it may
require the member to file all or part of
its communications at least 10 business
days prior to use.
Cornell opposed the commencement
date of the new member filing period,
74 See
75 See
proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(A)(ii).
NASD Rule 2210(b)(2)(B).
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arguing that this will decrease the time
during which the Department will
monitor a new member’s
communications. FINRA disagrees that
the new filing period is insufficient.
Members are still subject to a filing
requirement during their first year of
operation and are required to file certain
retail communications thereafter. In
addition, members are always subject to
spot-check procedures. Nevertheless, to
ensure that the starting date for this
filing requirement is clear, FINRA has
revised this provision to specify that the
one-year filing period begins on the date
reflected in the CRD® system as the date
the firm’s FINRA membership became
effective.
WilmerHale opposed the breadth of
this expanded filing requirement, which
would cover communications that
currently qualify as sales literature and
thus do not have to be filed. WilmerHale
argued that this expanded filing
requirement would substantially hinder
new firms’ operations. SIFMA similarly
argued that this filing requirement
should exclude password-protected
Web sites, since they are considered
sales literature rather than
advertisements under current rules.
FINRA recognizes that it may be
burdensome for new firms to file all of
their retail communications, including
form letters and group e-mails sent to 25
or more retail investors within a 30
calendar-day period. Accordingly,
FINRA has narrowed the scope of this
filing requirement to cover only retail
communications that are published or
used in any electronic or other public
media, including any generally
accessible Web site, newspaper,
magazine or other periodical, radio,
television, telephone or audio recording,
video display, signs or billboards,
motion pictures or telephone directories
(other than routine listings). This
narrowing of the filing requirement
would require new firms to file only
retail communications that currently fall
within the definition of ‘‘advertisement’’
under NASD Rule 2210, thus not
changing the scope of this filing
requirement as compared to current
standards. The filing requirements of
proposed paragraph (c)(1)(A) would not
apply to password-protected Web sites.
Fidelity commented that FINRA
should be required to delineate the
administrative process that must be
followed before it can impose a pre-use
filing requirement on members that
have violated the communications rules.
FINRA believes that proposed paragraph
(c)(1)(B) specifies the steps FINRA must
take before it may impose this
requirement. The paragraph states that
the Department must notify the member
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in writing of the types of
communications to be filed and the
length of time the requirement is to be
in effect. The paragraph also states that
any such filing requirement will take
effect 21 calendar days after service of
the written notice, during which time
the member may request a hearing
under FINRA Rules 9551 and 9559.
Retail Communications Concerning
Structured Products
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(2)(B) in the
Notice proposal required members to
file at least 10 business days prior to
use, retail communications concerning
publicly offered CMOs, options, security
futures, and any other publicly offered
securities derived from or based on a
single security, a basket of securities, an
index, a commodity, a debt issuance or
a foreign currency (‘‘structured
products’’). These pre-use filing
requirements would not apply to retail
communications concerning options or
security futures that are submitted to
another self-regulatory organization
having comparable standards, retail
communications in which the only
reference to options or security futures
is contained in a listing of the member’s
services, and retail communications that
are subject to a separate filing
requirement in paragraph (c) of the
proposed rule.
Cornell, the ICI, PIABA and Vanguard
supported the pre-use filing requirement
for retail communications concerning
structured products. Fidelity
commented that FINRA should list
which products fall within this
requirement, and clarify that investment
company products do not fall within
this requirement. Fidelity also
recommended that this filing
requirement exclude factual material
about structured products, such as
research reports and fact sheets, and
that FINRA should allow a member to
use retail communications that are filed
with the Department if the member does
not receive a response from FINRA
within 10 business days.
Invesco and SIFMA commented that
the proposal should be revised to
eliminate the pre-use filing requirement
for retail communications concerning
structured products, and instead allow
members to file such communications
within 10 business days of first use.
SIFMA also recommended that the
reference to retail communications
concerning options be stricken, since
these communications are separately
regulated under FINRA Rule 2220. In
addition, SIFMA requested that FINRA
exempt from this filing requirement
retail communications concerning
structured products for which there is a
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registration exemption under the
Securities Act.
StockCross argued that the pre-use
filing requirement for retail
communications concerning structured
products will hinder business since
often these products have a limited
offering period. Wells Fargo suggested
that retail investors will be put at a
disadvantage relative to institutional
investors since retail investors will not
be able to receive sales material
concerning structured products until
after the member receives Department
staff’s comments to filed
communications.
WilmerHale also opposed the pre-use
filing requirement for retail
communications concerning structured
products. WilmerHale argued that the
burdens on members will strongly
outweigh any benefit to investors. For
example, members would be prevented
from sending group e-mails to clients
reminding them that their options are in
the money without first filing such an
e-mail with FINRA at least 10 business
days prior to transmission. WilmerHale
and SIFMA both expressed concern that
FINRA lacks the resources necessary to
review such communications.
WilmerHale also recommended that
FINRA exclude all research from the
requirements of proposed FINRA Rule
2210 and address any specific concerns
under NASD Rule 2711.
In response to these comments,
FINRA is revising the filing
requirements for retail communications
concerning options, CMOs and
structured products. FINRA agrees that
FINRA Rule 2220 separately imposes a
filing requirement for advertisements
and sales literature concerning options;
accordingly, it is unnecessary to include
a separate filing requirement for retail
communications concerning options
under proposed FINRA Rule 2210.
Thus, the reference to retail
communications concerning options has
been deleted.
FINRA also agrees that there may be
situations in which a pre-use filing
requirement would prevent members
from distributing time-sensitive retail
communications concerning CMOs and
structured products in a timely manner.
Accordingly, FINRA has revised the
proposal to permit members to file retail
communications concerning CMOs and
structured products within 10 business
days of first use, instead of at least 10
business days prior to use.76
FINRA does not believe it is
appropriate to attempt to list all
products that are derived from or based
76 See
on a single security, a basket of
securities, an index, a commodity, a
debt issuance or a foreign currency.
Members frequently develop new types
of retail structured products that would
not be included in any list that FINRA
created today. Thus, FINRA believes
that it is better to leave open the
possibility that retail communications
concerning new products also will fall
under this filing requirement.
FINRA agrees that retail
communications concerning registered
investment companies are not subject to
the filing requirement covering
structured products communications,
since they are already subject to a
separate filing requirement under
proposed paragraphs (c)(2)(A), (c)(2)(C)
and (c)(3)(A). FINRA has added
language to proposed paragraph (c)(3)(F)
to make this more clear.
FINRA does not agree that retail
communications that only present
‘‘factual information’’ about structured
products should be excluded. Arguably
all sales material is ‘‘factual,’’ and the
determination of which
communications are not factual would
be highly subjective. In addition, the
proposal already excludes from filing
retail communications whose only
reference to investments is solely as part
of a listing of products and services
offered by the member.77
FINRA agrees that the filing
requirement should not apply to retail
communications concerning structured
products that are not registered under
the Securities Act. As a general matter,
the filing requirements under NASD
Rule 2210 do not apply to
communications concerning privately
placed securities, since typically these
securities are not widely advertised.
Accordingly, FINRA has added language
to proposed paragraph (c)(3)(F) to clarify
that the filing requirement only applies
to retail communications concerning
structured products that are registered
under the Securities Act.
FINRA disagrees with the assertion
that it lacks the resources to review
retail communications concerning
structured products. FINRA will ensure
that the Department has the necessary
staffing to review such material in a
timely manner. Additionally, by
allowing members to file such
communications concurrent with use,
this revision takes some of the time
pressure off members that seek to
distribute retail communications prior
to receiving staff comments.
FINRA also disagrees that proposed
FINRA Rule 2210 should not apply to
research. While NASD Rule 2711 does
proposed FINRA Rules 2210(c)(3)(E) and
77 See
(F).
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Frm 00163
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46883
impose some content standards on
research reports, it does not include the
more general standards of proposed
FINRA Rule 2210 that require
communications to be fair and balanced.
In addition, proposed FINRA Rule 2210
requires certain non-independent
research, such as research prepared by
a member or its affiliate on mutual
funds or exchange-traded funds
(‘‘ETFs’’), to be filed with the
Department.
Retail Communications Concerning
Closed-End Funds
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(A) in the
Notice proposal required members to
file all retail communications
concerning registered closed-end
investment companies. Currently,
FINRA only requires members to file
such communications during a closedend fund’s IPO period.
Cornell, the ICI, PIABA and Vanguard
supported this expanded filing
requirement. The ICI requested that
FINRA clarify that its rules only reach
members that prepare closed-end fund
communications, and not the fund itself
or its adviser. The ICI also requested
that FINRA clarify that a fund
underwriter is not responsible for
communications concerning a closedend fund prepared by an unaffiliated
member.
FINRA rules apply to
communications used by FINRA
member firms. While its rules do not
apply to non-member firms, such as
investment companies and investment
advisers that are not registered as
broker-dealers, they do apply to any
communications used by a member,
regardless of which entity prepared the
communications. Generally, FINRA
does not hold one member responsible
for the actions of another member, but
considers each case separately based on
the facts and circumstances.
Wells Fargo opposed the requirement
to file retail communications concerning
closed-end funds after the IPO period
has expired, arguing that trading closedend funds on the secondary market does
not raise the same concerns as during
the IPO period. FINRA disagrees with
this argument. FINRA currently requires
members to file retail communications
concerning other types of investment
company securities that are traded on
the secondary market, such as ETFs. In
addition, FINRA believes that investor
protection concerns can arise from any
retail communication concerning a
closed-end fund, regardless of when it is
distributed.
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Filing Exclusions for Non-Material
Changes and Templates
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7)(A) in the
Notice proposal excluded from the filing
requirements of proposed paragraphs
(c)(1) through (c)(4) ‘‘retail
communications that previously have
been filed and that are used without
material change, including retail
communications that are based on
templates that were previously filed
with the Department the changes to
which are limited to updates of more
recent statistical or other non-narrative
information.’’ NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(A)
includes the same filing exclusion for
previously filed advertisements and
sales literature that are used without
material change, but does not contain
any express filing exclusion for
templates.
The CAI, Fidelity, the ICI and MBSC
expressed concern that proposed
paragraph (c)(7)(A) would narrow the
current filing exclusion for
communications used without material
change. By including the template filing
exclusion in the same paragraph, these
commenters feared that this filing
exception would not allow non-material
changes to narrative information. FINRA
did not intend to narrow the current
filing exclusion for retail
communications that are used without
material change. Accordingly, FINRA
has separated the filing exclusion for
previously filed retail communications
that are used without material change
from the exclusion for certain
previously filed templates.78
Filing Exclusion for Administrative
Communications
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(1)(B) in the
Notice proposal excluded from the filing
requirements retail communications
‘‘that are solely administrative in
nature.’’ This filing exclusion replaced a
current exclusion for advertisements
and sales literature ‘‘solely related to
recruitment or changes in a member’s
name, personnel, electronic or postal
address, ownership, offices, business
structure, officers or partners, telephone
or teletype numbers, or concerning a
merger with, or acquisition by, another
member.’’ 79
SIFMA requested that FINRA clarify
that this exclusion covers generic
documents or excerpts describing a
member’s products or services, even if
they reference a product subject to the
filing requirements. Vanguard requested
that this filing exclusion specifically
reference the list of items that is
78 See
proposed FINRA Rules 2210(c)(7)(A) and
(B).
79 See
NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(B).
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excluded under current rules. Wells
Fargo argued that this exclusion should
not be limited to the administrative
items that are excluded under current
rules.
SIFMA’s interpretation of this filing
exclusion is broader than FINRA
intended. However, FINRA
acknowledges that ‘‘solely
administrative in nature’’ may be
unclear to some members. Accordingly,
FINRA is revising this exclusion to
cover retail communications that do not
make any financial or investment
recommendation or otherwise promote a
product or service of the member. In
this regard, the filing exclusion covers
the same retail communications that are
excepted from the principal approval
requirements under proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(b)(1)(D).
Other Filing Exclusions
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7)(G) of the
Notice proposal excluded from the filing
requirements reprints and excerpts of
certain articles and reports produced by
independent third parties. SIFMA
requested that FINRA clarify whether
that filing exclusion covered
independent third-party research
reports concerning registered
investment companies, which are
currently excluded from filing under
NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(H). FINRA does
intend this filing exclusion also to cover
independent research reports on
registered investment companies which
are excluded from filing under the
current rules.
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7)(J) of the Notice
proposal excluded from the filing
requirements communications that refer
to investment company securities, direct
participation programs or exempted
securities solely as part of a listing of
products or services offered by the
member. TD Ameritrade requested that
FINRA expand this exclusion to allow
members to discuss the types of
securities that can be traded through a
member, to include general descriptions
of these securities, to explain the
functionality of online tools and trading
platforms, and to present related fees
and commissions, as long as no actual
security is named. Cutter requested that
this exclusion permit a listing of any
type of investment a member offers, not
just the securities described in the
paragraph.
FINRA does not believe TD
Ameritrade’s proposed expansion
would be appropriate, since it would
cover many types of retail
communications that normally require
review by Department staff. FINRA
agrees, however, that a communication
that refers to an investment solely as
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part of a listing of a member’s products
and services should be excluded from
filing. FINRA has modified this filing
exclusion accordingly.80
The Notice proposal would have
eliminated a current filing exclusion for
press releases that are made available
only to members of the media.81 The
Notice proposal stated that FINRA staff
found that members almost always post
press releases on their Web sites, thus
making them available to the general
public, and making this filing exclusion
inapplicable. Fidelity, the ICI and MBSC
commented that members still rely on
this filing exclusion, and thus objected
to its elimination. Based on these
representations, FINRA has reinstated
the filing exclusion for press releases
made available only to members of the
media.82
In 2006, FINRA published an
interpretive letter stating that free
writing prospectuses are excluded from
the provisions of NASD Rules 2210 and
2211.83 Based on this 2006 letter,
Morgan, SIFMA and WilmerHale
requested that FINRA include a filing
exclusion for free writing prospectuses.
In October 2010, FINRA published a
Regulatory Notice that withdrew, in
part, the guidance provided in the 2006
interpretive letter.84 In the 2010 Notice,
FINRA stated that broadly disseminated
free writing prospectuses present the
same investor protection concerns as
communications governed by NASD
Rules 2210 and 2211. Accordingly,
FINRA announced that it now interprets
FINRA Rules 2210 and 2211 to apply to
free writing prospectuses distributed by
a broker-dealer in a manner reasonably
designed to lead to broad unrestricted
dissemination. Based on this new
guidance, rather than exclude free
writing prospectuses, FINRA is
modifying the current filing exclusion
for SEC-filed documents not to cover
broadly disseminated free writing
prospectuses filed with the SEC
pursuant to Securities Act Rule
433(d)(1)(ii).85 Thus, such free writing
prospectuses must be filed with FINRA
to the extent that they constitute a retail
communication covered by another
filing requirement (such as a free
writing prospectus concerning a
structured product registered under the
Securities Act).
80 See
proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7)(L).
NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(G).
82 See proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7)(H).
83 See Letter from Lisa C. Horrigan, Assistant
General Counsel, NASD, to Eileen Ryan, Securities
Industry Association, and Sarah Starkweather, The
Bond Market Association, dated August 1, 2006.
84 See Regulatory Notice 10–52 (October 2010).
85 See proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7)(F).
81 See
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SIFMA recommended that FINRA add
a filing exclusion for general investment
pieces that discuss an investment
strategy but do not recommend or
promote a particular product or service
of a member. FINRA has revised the
proposal to exclude retail
communications that do not make
investment recommendations or
promote a member’s products or
services. However, depending on the
facts and circumstances, a retail
communication that discusses
investment strategies may in fact be
making investment recommendations or
promoting a member’s products or
services.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Filing Exemptions
NASD Rule 2210(c)(10) and FINRA
Rule 2210(c)(9) of the Notice proposal
permitted FINRA to exempt a member
from the pre-use filing requirements of
paragraph (c)(1)(A) for good cause
shown. As discussed above, FINRA has
revised the principal review and
approval requirements to authorize
FINRA to grant an exemption from the
principal approval requirements of
paragraph (b)(1)(A) for retail
communications for good cause shown
after taking into consideration all
relevant factors, to the extent such
exemption is consistent with the
purposes of Rule 2210, the protection of
investors, and the public interest.
FINRA is similarly revising proposed
paragraph (c)(9) to authorize FINRA to
exempt a specific category of retail
communications from the filing
requirements under the same
circumstances described with respect to
the principal approval exemptive
authority.
Other Filing Issues
NPHI requested that FINRA revise its
filing requirements to be triggered off
the date a registered principal approves
a communication, rather than the date a
member first uses the communication,
since a member may not know the exact
date of first use. FINRA disagrees with
this recommendation since such a
standard would allow members to delay
filing a communication indefinitely
until a principal approved it. Moreover,
FINRA believes that it is important for
members to keep records of when a
communication is used.
T. Rowe commented that members
should be allowed to file retail
communications within 15 business
days of first use, rather than 10 business
days. FINRA disagrees with this
recommendation since allowing
members to file 15 business days after
the date of first use would create too
long a period between the first date a
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member distributes its communication
and the first date FINRA has an
opportunity to review the
communication.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(A)
requires a member that files a retail
communication that includes an
investment company performance
ranking or comparison to include a copy
of the ranking or comparison used in the
communication. T. Rowe recommended
that members be allowed to submit one
performance ranking backup document
and refer to that document in future
filings. FINRA does not agree with this
comment, since Department staff need
the ranking or comparison used in a
retail communication when conducting
their review, and reference to a ranking
document contained in a prior filing
would slow the process.
Content Standards
General Comments
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(F) in the
Notice proposal generally prohibited
communications from predicting or
projecting performance, but permitted a
hypothetical illustration of
mathematical principles as long as it
does not predict or project performance.
TD Ameritrade commented that this
provision should be revised to permit
examples of hypothetical transactions
(such as the maximum gain or loss that
would occur based on an assumed
change in market price), as long as the
assumptions are disclosed. FINRA does
not believe the provisions should be
changed in this regard. If a hypothetical
example is an illustration of
mathematical principles, it would be
permitted. If, however, it is really a
projection of performance of a particular
investment, FINRA believes this
practice should not be allowed.
FINRA does believe, however, that
proposed paragraph (d)(1)(F) needs to be
clarified to indicate the circumstances
under which a projection of
performance is permitted: in an
investment analysis tool, or a written
report produced by such a tool, as
permitted under proposed FINRA Rule
2214, and a price target in a research
report on debt or equity securities,
subject to certain conditions. FINRA has
revised proposed paragraph (d)(1)(F) to
reflect these exceptions.
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(3)(B) in the
Notice proposal required all retail
communications and correspondence to
reflect any relationship between the
member and any non-member or
individual who is also named. TD
Ameritrade recommended that this
provision be revised to require such a
disclosure only where a relationship
PO 00000
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46885
exists. FINRA believes no change is
necessary, since the paragraph requires
a communication to ‘‘reflect any
relationship between the member and
any non-member or individual who is
also named.’’ If no relationship exists,
no disclosure is required.
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(4)(C)(iii) in the
Notice proposal provided that, in a
comparative illustration of the
mathematical principles of tax-deferred
versus taxable compounding, the
illustration may reflect an actual state
income tax rate, provided that the
communication is used only with
investors that reside in the identified
state. TD Ameritrade commented that
this provision should be revised to
allow the use of an actual state income
tax rate as long as the material clearly
discloses that the rate only applies to
residents of a particular state. FINRA
has revised this provision to allow
illustrations to reflect an actual state
income tax rate if it prominently
discloses that the illustration is
applicable only to investors that reside
in the identified state.
FINRA also has revised the disclosure
requirements in proposed FINRA Rule
2210(d)(4)(vii) for such comparative
illustrations. Illustrations additionally
must disclose the degree of risk in the
investment’s assumed rate of return,
including a statement that the assumed
rate of return is not guaranteed, and the
possible effect of investment losses on
the relative advantage of the taxable
versus tax-deferred investments.
Disclosure of Expenses in Fund
Performance Advertising
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(5) in the Notice
proposal required retail
communications that present nonmoney market fund performance data to
disclose, among other things, the fund’s
maximum front-end or back-end sales
charges and total annual fund operating
expense ratio, gross of any fee waivers
or expense reimbursements, as stated in
the fee table of the fund’s prospectus or
annual report, whichever is more
current. Currently NASD Rule
2210(d)(3) requires the sales charges and
expense ratio simply to reflect the
current prospectus, and not a fund’s
annual report.
Fidelity, the ICI and MBSC opposed
the requirement to show the expense
ratio from either the prospectus or
annual report, whichever is more
current. These commenters argued such
a requirement would be too burdensome
and confusing to investors. American
Funds argued that a fund should be
allowed to show current expenses based
on a fund’s annualized monthly expense
ratio, and not have to refer to the
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prospectus. Vanguard supported the
proposed change, but recommended
that the rule allow members to show the
expense ratio from a fund’s prospectus
if it reflects the fund’s reasonable
expectation of the current year’s
expenses.
FINRA had made this proposed
change based on earlier industry input
that members should be allowed to
show expenses from an annual report if
it is more current than the prospectus.
However, in light of comments received
on the Notice proposal and the
importance for expense disclosure to be
comparable among funds, FINRA is
retaining the standard reflected in
NASD Rule 2210(d)(3), and requiring
sales charges and expense ratios to
reflect a fund’s current prospectus.
The CAI requested confirmation that
this disclosure requirement does not
apply to the presentation of
performance of an underlying
investment option contained in a
variable insurance product
communication. FINRA agrees the
provision does not apply to such
communications.
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(5)(B) in the
Notice proposal required a print
advertisement to disclose standardized
performance and expense-related
information in a prominent text box.
Fidelity, the ICI and MBSC requested
confirmation that this requirement only
applies to print advertisements and not
other forms of retail communications,
such as Web sites. The ICI and MBSC
also recommended that FINRA
eliminate the text box requirement and
replace it with a prominence
requirement applicable to all retail
communications.
Consistent with its application of
NASD Rule 2210(d)(3), FINRA confirms
that the text box requirement only
applies to print advertisements. FINRA
disagrees however, with the
recommendation to eliminate the text
box requirement for print
advertisements. FINRA created this
requirement due to past abuses in which
non-standardized performance was
prominently displayed in print
advertisements, while disclosures
regarding standardized performance and
expenses were placed in footnotes.
FINRA believes that this requirement
has helped to prevent this kind of
misleading presentation since the rule
was adopted.
Recommendations
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(A) in the
Notice proposal required retail
communications, correspondence and
public appearances to contain certain
disclosures if the communication
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included a recommendation of
securities. The communication would
have to disclose if the member was
making a market in the security (or an
underlying option or future), if the
member or its associated person will
sell or buy the security from customers
on a principal basis, that the member or
any associated person with the ability to
influence the substance of the
communication has a financial interest
in the recommended security, and if the
member was manager or co-manager of
a public offering of any securities of the
recommended issuer in the past 12
months.
Cornell and PIABA both opposed
limiting disclosures of financial
interests to the member and associated
persons with the ability to influence the
substance of the communication. These
commenters felt the associated person
standard was too narrow and vague.
Fidelity recommended that the
disclosure standard for associated
persons should be limited to persons
who are direct employees of the member
or are registered with the member, and
who are directly and materially
involved in the preparation of the
communication. Fidelity and Morgan
commented that disclosure should not
be required unless an employee has a
direct and material financial interest in
the recommended security. This would
exclude small investments and
investments through mutual funds.
Morgan, SIFMA and WilmerHale
commented that it would be impossible
for a member to track which associated
persons have the ability to influence the
substance of a communication, and that
FINRA must provide more guidance as
to which associated persons the
disclosure requirements would apply.
The FSI inquired as to whether the
disclosure standard would apply to a
supervisor of a registered representative
who emails a securities
recommendation to a customer. SIFMA
commented that the disclosure
requirement should be limited to the
member and its officers and partners,
and that the rule permit generic, nonspecific disclosures regarding financial
interests, market making and
underwriting activities.
Morgan, SIFMA and WilmerHale
commented that the provision not apply
to correspondence. WilmerHale also
urged that the proposed rule exclude
retail communications and public
appearances by research analysts, since
these situations are already covered by
NASD Rule 2711.
In response to these comments,
FINRA has revised proposed paragraph
(d)(7)(A). First, paragraph (d)(7)(A) no
longer applies to correspondence. Given
PO 00000
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that correspondence may not be
delivered to more than 25 retail
investors within a 30-calendar-day
period, FINRA believes that it is not
necessary to include the extensive
disclosure required for retail
communications in communications
sent to a more limited audience.
Second, FINRA has added a
requirement that a recommendation of
securities have a reasonable basis. This
requirement is consistent with NASD
IM–2210–1(6)(A).
Third, FINRA has modified the
requirement to disclose the financial
interests of any associated person with
the ability to influence the substance of
the communication. Instead, the
disclosure requirement will apply to
any associated person with the ability to
influence the ‘‘content’’ of the
communication. While this
modification is minor, FINRA believes
that it will help clarify which associated
persons must disclose their financial
interests. FINRA continues to believe
that persons who influence the content
of a communication that includes a
recommendation have a material
conflict of interest that should be
disclosed if the person also has a
financial interest in the recommended
security.
Fourth, the disclosure requirement
excludes financial interests that are
‘‘nominal.’’ This revision makes the rule
consistent with the current disclosure
requirements for advertisements and
sales literature that include securities
recommendations under NASD IM
2210–1(6)(A)(ii).
Fifth, FINRA has excluded from this
disclosure requirement public
appearances by research analysts, since
they are already covered under NASD
Rule 2711. The proposed language also
excludes research reports for the same
reason.
Proposed FINRA Rules 2210(d)(7)(C)
revised the current disclosure
requirements for communications that
contain past specific
recommendations.86 The revised
provisions more closely reflect the
disclosure standards applicable to
advertisements of investment advisers
that contain past specific
recommendations. Wells Fargo
supported this change, but urged FINRA
also to adopt the SEC’s interpretations
of the Investment Advisers Act
regarding recommendations. While
FINRA may look to past SEC
interpretations of its rules for guidance,
FINRA declines to adopt any of the SEC
interpretations of the Investment
Advisers Act regarding
86 See
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NASD IM–2210–6(C) and (D).
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recommendations for purposes of this
filing.
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Other Comments
Fidelity, the ICI and Vanguard
requested clarification as to whether a
member is responsible for content
posted by third parties on a member’s
Web site. These commenters also
recommended that FINRA develop
interpretive guidance concerning the
principles that members should follow
when developing communications
intended for customers’ mobile
electronic devices. For example, FINRA
should address how members may meet
various disclosure requirements, such as
the requirement to disclose a member’s
name, fees, expenses and standardized
performance information.
FINRA previously addressed the issue
of third-party content in Regulatory
Notice 10–06. FINRA also agrees that
issues related to communications
intended for mobile electronic devices
is important and will consider further
guidance or rulemaking as issues arise,
but does not believe this proposed
rulemaking is the appropriate vehicle to
address all issues raised by new
technologies. In the past, when FINRA
has reviewed a member’s advertisement
or sales literature that includes a bond
fund’s 30-day yield, and the fund’s
affiliates have subsidized or reimbursed
the fund’s expenses, FINRA staff has
required the member also to disclose the
fund’s yield that would have occurred
had expenses not been subsidized (the
‘‘unsubsidized yield’’). FINRA has
imposed this requirement based on
language contained in the SEC’s 1988
adopting release for Rule 482 under the
Securities Act.87 The ICI and T. Rowe
both objected to this requirement and
requested that FINRA clarify that
disclosure of the unsubsidized yield is
unnecessary in such circumstances.
Because this issue involves an
interpretation of Rule 482 under the
Securities Act, FINRA declines to
provide guidance through the proposed
rule change.
Public Appearances
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(f) in the
Notice proposal sets forth the content
and supervision requirements for
members and associated persons that
participate in seminars, forums or radio
or television interviews. Paragraph (f)(1)
specifies that the member or associated
person must follow the content
standards of paragraph (d)(1), and if the
member or associated person
87 See Securities Act Release No. 6753 (February
2, 1988), 53 FR 3868 (February 10, 1988) (Order
Approving File No. S7–23–86), p. 37.
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recommends a security, paragraph
(d)(7).
Fidelity, Invesco, the ICI and Morgan
opposed requiring associated persons
that make recommendations in public
appearances to meet the content
standards of paragraph (d)(7). These
commenters argued that it would be
impossible to monitor or supervise.
Invesco also argued that this
requirement creates an uneven playing
field between broker-dealers and
investment advisers, since investment
advisers do not have a similar
disclosure requirement.
FINRA disagrees with the comments
that the disclosure requirements
regarding recommendations would be
impossible to monitor or supervise.
Members that employ research analysts
already must meet similar requirements
under NASD Rule 2711. Members could
impose similar policies and procedures
for their associated persons who intend
to recommend securities in public
appearances. The ICI requested
clarification that, if a member sponsors
a seminar or forum, the member is
responsible only for its own
presentation and not those of others.
This issue will be a matter of facts and
circumstances, but generally a member
is only responsible for the
communications of the member or its
associated persons, unless the member
or its associated persons are entangled
with or adopt others’ communications.
NPHI requested clarification as to
whether a discussion of a general
product category constitutes a
recommendation for purposes of the
public appearance disclosure
requirements. If a member or associated
person merely discusses a general
product category without
recommending a particular security, the
disclosure requirements would not
apply. Similarly, T. Rowe asked
whether the mere reference to a security
is a recommendation. Generally the
mere reference to a security is not a
recommendation, but this issue will be
a matter of facts and circumstances.
Under NASD Rule 2210, ‘‘public
appearance’’ is a separate category of
communications with the public.88
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210 does not
retain ‘‘public appearance’’ as a separate
category of ‘‘communications with the
public.’’ T. Rowe suggested that FINRA
retain its definition of ‘‘public
appearance,’’ since otherwise an email
to a member of the media or private
conversation might be viewed as a
public appearance. FINRA does not
believe this is necessary. Proposed
paragraph (f)(1) makes clear that it
88 See
PO 00000
NASD Rule 2210(a)(5).
Frm 00167
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46887
applies only to ‘‘a seminar, forum, radio
or television interview or * * * public
appearances or speaking activities
* * *’’ An email or private
conversation would not fall within this
description.89 In addition, the language
used to describe a public appearance in
proposed paragraph (f)(1) is similar to
the current definition of ‘‘public
appearance’’ under NASD Rule
2210(a)(5).
Proposed paragraph (f)(2) would
require members to adopt written
procedures that are appropriate to a
member’s business, size, structure, and
customers to supervise its associated
persons’ public appearances. The
procedures must include, among other
things, surveillance and follow-up to
ensure that such procedures are
implemented and adhered to. T. Rowe
requested clarification as to what level
of surveillance and follow-up is
required, particularly for one-time
appearances. T. Rowe also commented
that there should be an exception if a
member approves appearances in
advance. FINRA does not believe it
would be appropriate to pre-determine
how a member must supervise its
associated persons’ public appearances,
since this will vary depending on a
member’s business model, size, and the
type of public appearance involved.
FINRA also does not agree that a
member should have no obligation to
review public appearances after the fact
for compliance with applicable rules as
long as it approves the appearance in
advance.
FINRA is making one additional
change to the proposed paragraph (f) in
light of other changes to the proposed
rule. Paragraph (f)(1) of the Notice
proposal also covered ‘‘interactive
electronic forums’’ within its
description of a public appearance. To
the extent participation in an interactive
electronic forum takes the form of a
written communication disseminated
through an interactive Web site, FINRA
considers such a communication to be
a retail communication rather than a
public appearance. However, as
discussed above, proposed FINRA Rule
2210(b)(1)(D)(ii) allows a member to
supervise and review retail
communications that are posted on
online interactive electronic forums in
the same manner as required for
supervising and reviewing
correspondence. Accordingly, FINRA
has deleted ‘‘(including an interactive
electronic forum)’’ from proposed
paragraph (f)(1).
89 Moreover, proposed paragraph (f)(1) expressly
excludes correspondence from the description of a
public appearance.
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srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Investment Analysis Tools
Proposed FINRA Rule 2214 of the
Notice proposal codifies largely without
change current NASD IM–2210–6
(Requirements for the Use of Investment
Analysis Tools).90 Fidelity, the ICI,
MBSC and T. Rowe commented that
Rule 2214 should be revised to allow
members to present projections of
performance in retail communications
even in cases where the tool is not
interactive with customers. These
commenters argue that a firm should be
permitted to show projected
performance of an investment in a
communication that is not based on
information provided by a customer
independently or with the assistance of
the member firm. T. Rowe also
commented that members should be
allowed to use the data generated by an
investment analysis tool in sales
material for target date funds provided
that these illustrations are limited to a
discussion of a fund’s investment
strategy and not used to project
performance.
FINRA disagrees with the comment
that proposed Rule 2214 should be
revised to eliminate the requirement
that an investment analysis tool be
interactive. The purpose of NASD IM–
2210–6 and proposed FINRA Rule 2214
is to allow members to use interactive
tools with customers to show the
likelihood of various investment
outcomes under different scenarios,
thereby serving as an additional
resource to investors to evaluate their
specific investment choices. It is not to
allow the use of performance
projections in retail communications in
all circumstances as long as an
investment analysis tool is used to
create the projections. In the case of
retail communications concerning target
date funds that do not include
projections, reliance on the proposed
rule is unnecessary, since it only applies
to retail communications that contain
projections.
Supplementary Material 2214.06
provides that a retail communication
that contains only an incidental
reference to an investment analysis tool
need not include the disclosures
required by the proposed rule and
would not need to be filed with the
Department. Vanguard commented that
proposed Rule 2214 should be revised
to allow members not to include all of
the proposed rule’s required disclosures
as long as the communication does not
90 Certain of NASD IM–2210–6’s text that appears
either in the Interpretive Material itself or in
footnotes to the Interpretive Material have been
moved to Supplementary Material.
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include the tool itself or any data or
results produced by the tool.
FINRA agrees that, under these
circumstances, some of the proposed
rule’s required disclosures, such as
those required by paragraph (c)(1) (a
description of the tool’s methodology)
or paragraph (c)(3) (certain disclosures
in situations in which the tool analyzes
only a limited range of investments), are
unnecessary. FINRA believes however,
that a retail communication that refers
to an investment analysis tool in more
detail than an incidental reference but
does not provide access to the tool or
the results generated by the tool must
disclose that results may vary with each
use (as required by paragraph (c)(2)) and
the warning required by paragraph (c)(4)
that the projections generated by the
tool are hypothetical and are not
guarantees of future results. FINRA has
revised proposed Rule 2214.06
accordingly.
Security Futures
Proposed FINRA Rule 2215
(Guidelines for Communications with
the Public Regarding Security Futures)
is the successor to current NASD IM–
2210–7. TD Ameritrade commented that
paragraph (b)(1)(A)(iii), which prohibits
projections of performance in
communications used prior to the
delivery of a security futures risk
disclosure statement, should be
modified to permit examples of
hypothetical transactions. This
comment is similar to another TD
Ameritrade comment on proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(F) (which also
prohibits performance projections), and
FINRA’s response is the same as
discussed above.
Proposed paragraph (b)(2)(A)(iv)
requires any communication concerning
a security future to include a statement
that supporting documentation for any
claims, comparisons, recommendations,
statistics or other technical data will be
supplied upon request. TD Ameritrade
commented that FINRA should clarify
that this disclosure requirement only
applies if a communication actually
includes a claim, comparison,
recommendation, statistics or other
technical data. While this issue will be
a matter of facts and circumstances,
FINRA agrees that no such disclosure
would be required if a communication
does not contain any statement or data
that requires supporting documentation.
Transition Period
Fidelity, Invesco and NPHI requested
that FINRA allow members at least six
months before having to comply with
the new rules. The ICI suggested a
compliance date of 10 business days
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after the second quarter ending
following adoption of the final rule
changes. PSD requested nine months’
lead time, and suggested that members
should be permitted to ‘‘grandfather’’
and continue to use communications
that were filed under the current rules.
Alternatively, members should have a
minimum of two years from the date the
new rules become effective to continue
to use communications filed under the
existing rules.
FINRA plans on publishing a
Regulatory Notice no later than 90 days
following SEC approval of the rule
changes. The implementation date will
be no later than 365 days following SEC
approval. In establishing the
implementation schedule, FINRA will
consider members’ need to adopt and
implement new policies and procedures
necessary to comply with the new rules.
In most cases, FINRA expects that
communications that are in compliance
with the current communication rules
will continue to be in compliance with
the new rules, and thus
‘‘grandfathering’’ of past filed material
will be unnecessary. To the extent a
member has questions about whether a
previously filed communication
continues to be compliant under the
new rules, the member should discuss
this issue with its assigned Department
advertising analyst.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period
up to 90 days (i) as the Commission may
designate 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 or disapprove
such proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 149 / Wednesday, August 3, 2011 / Notices
Number SR–FINRA–2011–035 on the
subject line.
to the U.S. Section of the North Pacific
Anadromous Fish Commission (NPAFC)
for another two years.
Paper Comments
The NPAFC was established by the
• Send paper comments in triplicate
Convention for the Conservation of
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Anadromous Stocks in the North Pacific
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Ocean, signed on February 12, 1992, by
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
Canada, Japan, the Russian Federation,
20549–1090.
and the United States, and entered into
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–FINRA–2011–035. This file force on February 16, 1993. The U.S.
Advisory Panel will continue to work
number should be included on the
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the with the U.S. Section to promote the
conservation of anadromous fish stocks,
Commission process and review your
particularly salmon, throughout their
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will migratory range in the North Pacific
post all comments on the Commission’s Ocean, as well as ecologically related
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
species.
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
The U.S. Section of the Commission
submission, all subsequent
is composed of three Commissioners
amendments, all written statements
who are appointed by the President.
with respect to the proposed rule
Each Commissioner is appointed for a
change that are filed with the
term not to exceed 4 years, but is
Commission, and all written
eligible for reappointment. The
communications relating to the
Secretary of State, in consultation with
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than the Secretary of Commerce, may
designate alternate commissioners. The
those that may be withheld from the
Advisory Panel to the U.S. Section is
public in accordance with the
composed of 14 members, 11 of whom
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
are appointed by the Secretary in
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
consultation with the Secretary of
Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE.,
Commerce. Advisory Panel members
Washington, DC 20549, on official
serve for a term not to exceed 4 years,
business days between the hours of
and may not serve more than two
10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of such filing consecutive terms.
also will be available for inspection and
The Advisory Panel will continue to
copying at the principal office of
follow the procedures prescribed by the
FINRA. All comments received will be
posted without change; the Commission Federal Advisory Committee Act
(FACA). Meetings will continue to be
does not edit personal identifying
open to the public unless a
information from submissions. You
determination is made in accordance
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All with Section 10 of the FACA, 5 U.S.C.
552b(c)(1) and (4), that a meeting or a
submissions should refer to File
portion of the meeting should be closed
Number SR–FINRA–2011–035 and
to the public. Notice of each meeting
should be submitted on or before
will continue to be provided for
August 24, 2011.
publication in the Federal Register as
For the Commission, by the Division of
far in advance as possible prior to the
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
meeting.
authority.91
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
For further information on the
Secretary.
renewal of the Advisory Panel, please
[FR Doc. 2011–19645 Filed 8–2–11; 8:45 am]
contact John Field, Office of Marine
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
Conservation in the Department of State,
(202) 647–3263.
Dated: July 8, 2011.
David A. Balton,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Oceans and
Fisheries, Department of State.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
[Public Notice 7476]
U.S. Advisory Panel to the U.S. Section
of the North Pacific Anadromous Fish
Commission; Notice of Renewal
[FR Doc. 2011–19655 Filed 8–2–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–09–P
The Department of State has renewed
the Charter of the U.S. Advisory Panel
91 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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46889
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Notice of Final Federal Agency Actions
on Proposed Highway in Alaska
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of limitation on claims
for judicial review of actions by FHWA.
AGENCY:
This notice announces actions
taken by the FHWA that are final within
the meaning of 23 U.S.C. 139(l)(1). The
action relates to a proposed highway
project in Hyder, State of Alaska. Those
actions grant approval for the project.
DATES: By this notice, the FHWA is
advising the public of final agency
actions subject to 23 U.S.C. 139(l)(1). A
claim seeking judicial review of the
Federal agency actions on the listed
highway project will be barred unless
the claim is filed on or before January
30, 2012. If the Federal law that
authorizes judicial review of a claim
provides a time period of less than 180
days for filing such claim, then that
shorter time period still applies.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Alex Viteri, Senior Transportation
Engineer, FHWA Alaska Division, P.O.
Box 21648, Juneau, Alaska 99802–1648;
office hours 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (AST),
phone (907) 586–7544; e-mail
Alex.Viteri@dot.gov. You may also
contact Jane Gendron, DOT&PF
Southeast Region, Regional
Environmental Manager, Alaska
Department of Transportation and
Public Facilities, 6860 Glacier Highway,
P.O. Box 112506, Juneau, Alaska 99811–
2506; office hours 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
(AST), phone (907) 465–4499, e-mail
jane.gendron@alaska.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that the FHWA has taken
final agency actions subject to 23 U.S.C.
139(l)(1) by issuing approvals for the
following highway project in the State
of Alaska: Project No. MGS–0003(113)/
69070; Project Location: The project
begins on Premier Avenue in the town
of Hyder, Alaska and continues along
the Hyder Causeway and trestle to
Harbor Island in Portland Canal, a
distance of 0.7 miles. Hyder is 75 air
miles northeast of Ketchikan, Alaska
and about 640 air miles northwest of
Seattle, Washington. Project type: The
project would reconstruct the surface
approach (Premier Avenue and filled
causeway) and replace the wooden
trestle linking Hyder, Alaska to its
marine transportation facility on Harbor
Island.
The actions by the Federal agency on
the project, and the laws under which
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\03AUN1.SGM
03AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 149 (Wednesday, August 3, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46870-46889]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-19645]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-64984; File No. SR-FINRA-2011-035]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change To Adopt
FINRA Rules 2210 (Communications With the Public), 2212 (Use of
Investment Companies Rankings in Retail Communications), 2213
(Requirements for the Use of Bond Mutual Fund Volatility Ratings), 2214
(Requirements for the Use of Investment Analysis Tools), 2215
(Communications With the Public Regarding Security Futures), and 2216
(Communications With the Public About Collateralized Mortgage
Obligations (CMOs)) in the Consolidated FINRA Rulebook
July 28, 2011.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on July 14, 2011, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(``FINRA'') 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. The Commission
is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD Rules 2210 and 2211 and NASD
Interpretive Materials 2210-1 and 2210-3 through 2210-8 as FINRA Rules
2210 and 2212 through 2216, and to delete paragraphs (a)(1), (i), (j)
and (l) of Incorporated NYSE Rule 472, Incorporated NYSE Rule
Supplementary Material 472.10(1), (3), (4) and (5), and 472.90, and
Incorporated NYSE Rule Interpretations 472/01 and 472/03 through 472/
11. The proposed rule change would renumber NASD Rules 2210 and 2211
and NASD Interpretive Materials 2210-1 and 2210-4 as FINRA Rule 2210,
NASD Interpretive Material 2210-3 as FINRA Rule 2212, NASD Interpretive
Material 2210-5 as FINRA Rule 2213, NASD Interpretive Material 2210-6
as FINRA Rule 2214, NASD Interpretive Material 2210-7 as FINRA Rule
2215, and NASD Interpretive Material 2210-8 as FINRA Rule 2216.
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
As part of the process of developing a new consolidated rulebook
(``Consolidated FINRA Rulebook''),\3\
[[Page 46871]]
FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD Rules 2210 and 2211 and NASD
Interpretive Materials 2210-1 and 2210-3 through 2210-8 as FINRA Rules
2210 and 2212 through 2216, and to delete paragraphs (a)(1), (i), (j)
and (l) of Incorporated NYSE Rule 472, Incorporated NYSE Rule
Supplementary Material 472.10(1), (3), (4) and (5), and 472.90, and
Incorporated NYSE Rule Interpretations 472/01 and 472/03 through 472/
11.
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\3\ The current FINRA rulebook consists of (1) FINRA Rules; (2)
NASD Rules; and (3) rules incorporated from NYSE (``Incorporated
NYSE Rules'') (together, the NASD Rules and Incorporated NYSE Rules
are referred to as the ``Transitional Rulebook''). While the NASD
Rules generally apply to all FINRA members, the Incorporated NYSE
Rules apply only to those members of FINRA that are also members of
the NYSE (``Dual Members''). The FINRA Rules apply to all FINRA
members, unless such rules have a more limited application by their
terms. For more information about the rulebook consolidation
process, see Information Notice, March 12, 2008 (Rulebook
Consolidation Process).
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Current Rules Governing Communications With the Public
NASD Rules 2210 and 2211, and the Interpretive Materials that
follow Rule 2210, generally govern all FINRA members' communications
with the public. Incorporated NYSE Rule 472 governs communications with
the public of members that also are members of the New York Stock
Exchange.
NASD Rule 2210 divides communications into six separate categories,
as follows:
[rtarr8] Advertisement generally includes written (including
electronic) retail communications that do not have a limited audience,
such as newspaper, magazine, television and radio advertisements,
billboards and Web sites.
[rtarr8] Sales literature generally includes written (including
electronic) retail communications that have a more targeted audience,
such as brochures, performance reports, telemarketing scripts, seminar
scripts and form letters.
[rtarr8] Correspondence includes written letters, electronic mail,
instant messages and market letters sent to: (i) One or more existing
retail customers; and (ii) fewer than 25 prospective retail customers
within a 30 calendar-day period.
[rtarr8] Institutional sales material includes communications that
are distributed or made available only to institutional investors. NASD
Rule 2211 defines the term ``institutional investor'' generally to
include registered investment companies, insurance companies, banks,
registered broker-dealers, registered investment advisers, certain
retirement plans, governmental entities, and individual investors and
other entities with at least $50 million in assets.
[rtarr8] Independently prepared reprint includes reprints of
articles from independent publications, as well as reports published by
independent research firms.
[rtarr8] Public appearance includes unscripted participation in
live events, such as interviews, seminars and call-in television and
radio shows.
These definitions are important because the principal approval,
filing and content standards apply differently to each category. For
example, members generally must have a principal approve all
advertisements, sales literature and independently prepared reprints
prior to use. This pre-use approval requirement does not apply to: (1)
Institutional sales material or (2) correspondence, unless it is sent
to 25 or more existing retail customers within a 30 calendar-day period
and includes an investment recommendation or promotes a product or
service of the member. While such communications do not require
principal pre-use approval, members still must establish and maintain
policies and procedures to supervise them for compliance with
applicable standards.
Members must file with the FINRA Advertising Regulation Department
(``Department'') for review certain advertisements and sales
literature. For example, advertisements and sales literature concerning
investment companies, variable insurance products and public direct
participation programs, and advertisements concerning government
securities, must be filed within 10 business days of first use, but
members are not required to file independently prepared reprints,
correspondence or institutional sales material. The filing requirements
also differ based on the member using the material and its content.
Members that previously have not filed advertisements with the
Department must file all advertisements at least 10 business days prior
to first use for a one-year period following the date the first
advertisement was filed. Additionally, under NASD Rule 2210 and related
Interpretive Materials, all members must file advertisements concerning
collateralized mortgage obligations (``CMOs'') and security futures,
and advertisements and sales literature concerning registered
investment companies that include unpublished or self-created rankings
or performance comparisons, at least 10 business days prior to first
use, and must withhold them from publication until any changes
specified by the Department have been made.
Incorporated NYSE Rule 472 requires an ``allied member, supervisory
analyst or qualified person'' to approve prior to use each
advertisement, sales literature or other similar type of
communication.\4\ The NYSE Rule 472 definitions of ``advertisement''
and ``sales literature'' are similar to those used in NASD Rule 2210.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ NYSE Rule 472(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The communications rules include both general and specific content
standards. Certain general standards apply to all communications, such
as requirements that communications be fair and balanced, and provide a
sound basis for evaluating the facts in regard to any particular
security, industry or service, and prohibitions on omitting material
facts whose absence would make the communication misleading. More
particular content standards apply to specific issues or securities.
Proposed Rule Change
Reorganization of Rules
The proposed rule change would create a new FINRA Rule 2210 that
would encompass, subject to certain changes, the provisions of current
NASD Rules 2210 and 2211, NASD Interpretive Materials 2210-1 and 2210-
4, and the provisions of Incorporated NYSE Rule 472 that do not pertain
to research analysts and research reports. Each of the other
Interpretive Materials that follow NASD Rule 2210 would receive its own
FINRA rule number and would adopt the same communication categories
used in FINRA Rule 2210.\5\
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\5\ Proposed FINRA Rule 2211 (Communications with the Public
About Variable Insurance Products), which would replace NASD
Interpretive Material 2210-2, is the subject of a separate proposed
rule change. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61107 (December
3, 2009), 74 FR 65180 (December 9, 2009) (Notice of Filing File No.
SR-FINRA-2009-070).
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Communication Categories
The proposed rule change would reduce the number of current
communication categories from six to three, as follows:
[rtarr8] Institutional communication would include communications
that fall within the current definition of ``institutional sales
material'' under NASD Rule 2211(a)(2): Written (including electronic)
communications that are distributed or made available only to
institutional investors. ``Institutional investor'' generally would
have the same definition as under NASD Rule 2211(a)(3).\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ FINRA has modified the definition of ``institutional
investor'' in proposed FINRA Rule 2210 to clarify that the term
includes multiple employee benefit plans and multiple qualified
plans offered to employees of the same employer, provided that the
plans in the aggregate have at least 100 participants. FINRA also
has added a Supplementary Material to clarify that a member's
internal written (including electronic) communications that are
intended to educate or train registered persons about the products
or services offered by a member are considered institutional
communications pursuant to paragraph (a)(3) of proposed FINRA Rule
2210. See proposed FINRA Rule 2210.01. Accordingly, such internal
communications are subject to both the provisions of proposed FINRA
Rule 2210 and NASD Rule 3010(d) (Review of Transactions and
Correspondence). See also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 64736
(June 23, 2011), 76 FR 38245 (June 29, 2011) (Notice of Filing File
No. SR-FINRA-2011-028) (proposing, among other things, to adopt NASD
Rule 3010(d) as FINRA Rule 3110(b)(4), subject to certain changes).
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[[Page 46872]]
[rtarr8] Retail communication would include any written (including
electronic) communication that is distributed or made available to more
than 25 retail investors within any 30 calendar-day period. ``Retail
investor'' would include any person other than an institutional
investor, regardless of whether the person has an account with the
member.
[rtarr8] Correspondence would include any written (including
electronic) communication that is distributed or made available to 25
or fewer retail investors within any 30 calendar-day period.
The proposal would eliminate the current definitions of
``advertisement,'' ``sales literature,'' ``institutional sales
material,'' ``public appearance'' and ``independently prepared
reprint'' in NASD Rule 2210, as well as all of the definitions in NASD
Rule 2211.\7\ The proposal also would eliminate the definitions of
``communication,'' ``advertisement,'' ``market letter'' and ``sales
literature'' in Incorporated NYSE Rule 472.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ NASD Rule 2211 currently defines the terms
``correspondence,'' ``institutional sales material,''
``institutional investor,'' ``existing retail customer,''
``prospective retail customer'' and ``market letter.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Communications that currently qualify as advertisements and sales
literature generally would fall under the definition of ``retail
communication.'' In addition, to the extent that a member distributed
or made available a communication that currently qualifies as an
independently prepared reprint to more than 25 retail investors within
a 30 calendar-day period, the communication also would fall under the
definition of ``retail communication.'' Communications that currently
qualify as ``institutional sales material'' would fall within the
definition of ``institutional communication.'' Some communications that
currently qualify as ``correspondence'' would continue to fall within
that definition. However, communications sent to more than 25 retail
investors within a 30 calendar-day period in all cases would be
considered retail communications.\8\
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\8\ The definition of ``correspondence'' in NASD Rule 2211
currently includes market letters as well as written letters and
electronic mail messages that are sent to one or more existing
retail customers and fewer than 25 prospective retail customers
within a 30 calendar-day period. ``Market letter'' is defined to
include any communication excepted from the definition of ``research
report'' pursuant to NASD Rule 2711(a)(9)(A). See NASD Rule
2211(a)(5). FINRA revised the definition of ``correspondence'' to
include market letters in February 2009 in order to allow members to
send market letters to traders and other investors who base their
decisions on timely market analysis without having to have a
principal approve them in advance. Previously, members were required
to approve market letters prior to use. See Regulatory Notice 09-10
(February 2009). Proposed FINRA Rule 2210 would continue to allow
members to send retail communications that are excepted from the
definition of ``research report'' pursuant to NASD Rule
2711(a)(9)(A) without having a registered principal approve the
communication prior to use, provided that a member supervises and
reviews such communications in the same manner as correspondence.
See proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although the proposal would eliminate the terms ``public
appearance'' and ``independently prepared reprint,'' as discussed
below, the proposal would retain with respect to these communication
categories much of the substance of the exceptions from the filing
requirements and limited application of the content standards.
Approval, Review and Recordkeeping Requirements
Currently NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) requires a registered principal
of the member to approve each advertisement, item of sales literature
and independently prepared reprint before the earlier of its use or
filing with the Department. Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) would
require an appropriately qualified registered principal of the member
to approve each retail communication before the earlier of its use or
filing with the Department. The principal registration required to
approve particular communications would depend upon the permissible
activities for each principal registration category.\9\ The proposed
rule change would eliminate Incorporated NYSE Rule 472(a)(1), which
requires an ``allied member, supervisory analyst, or qualified person''
to approve in advance each advertisement, sales literature or other
similar type of communication by an NYSE member firm.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Currently NASD Rule 1022(g) permits a General Securities
Sales Supervisor to approve sales literature as defined in NASD Rule
2210, but does not permit persons within this category to approve
advertisements. FINRA separately sought comment on a proposal that
would amend the General Securities Sales Supervisor registration
category to remove the restriction on approving advertisements, and
to permit persons within this registration category to approve
retail communications as defined in proposed FINRA Rule 2210. See
Regulatory Notice 09-70 (December 2009).
\10\ The term ``allied member'' was largely deleted from the
Incorporated NYSE Rules in 2008, and thus is not being carried over
as part of proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A). See Regulatory Notice
08-64 (October 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(B) permits a Series 16 supervisory analyst
approved pursuant to Incorporated NYSE Rule 344 to approve research
reports on debt and equity securities.\11\ Proposed FINRA Rule
2210(b)(1)(B) would continue this provision without substantive
change.\12\
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\11\ FINRA separately sought comment on a proposal that would
adopt a stand-alone permissive registration category for Supervisory
Analysts. See Regulatory Notice 09-70 (December 2009).
\12\ NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(C) currently requires a registered
principal qualified to supervise security futures activities to
approve each advertisement or item of sales literature concerning
security futures. This requirement would continue going forward with
respect to retail communications concerning security futures.
Nevertheless, this provision is being eliminated as redundant given
the requirement under proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) that an
appropriately qualified principal approve each retail communication.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(D) provides an exception from the principal
approval requirements of NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) for an advertisement,
item of sales literature, or independently prepared reprint, if at the
time that a member intends to publish or distribute it: (i) another
member has filed it with the Department and has received a letter from
the Department stating that it appears to be consistent with applicable
standards; and (ii) the member using the communication in reliance on
this exception has not materially altered it and will not use it in a
manner that is inconsistent with the conditions of the Department's
letter. Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(C) would preserve this exception
for retail communications.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D) would except from the principal
approval requirements of proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) three
additional categories of retail communications, provided that the
member supervises and reviews such communications in the same manner as
required for supervising and reviewing correspondence pursuant to NASD
Rule 3010(d). These communications include: (i) Any retail
communication that is excepted from the definition of ``research
report'' pursuant to NASD Rule 2711(a)(9)(A); (ii) any retail
communication that is posted on an online interactive electronic forum;
and (iii) any retail communication that does not make any financial or
investment
[[Page 46873]]
recommendation or otherwise promote a product or service of the member.
The first category generally carries forward a current exception
from the principal pre-use approval requirements for market
letters.\13\ The second category codifies a current interpretation of
the rules governing communications with the public that allows members
to supervise communications posted on interactive electronic forums in
the same manner as is required for supervising correspondence.\14\ The
third category broadens a current principal pre-use approval exception
for correspondence that is sent to 25 or more existing retail customers
within any 30 calendar-day period and that does not make any financial
or investment recommendation or otherwise promote a product or service
of the member.\15\ Unlike the current principal pre-use approval
exception, this exception would apply to all retail communications.\16\
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\13\ See NASD Rules 2211(a)(1), (a)(5) and (b)(1)(A); see also
Regulatory Notice 09-10 (February 2009).
\14\ See Regulatory Notice 10-06 (January 2010).
\15\ See NASD Rule 2211(b)(1)(A).
\16\ Thus, the current rules require firms to make the
determination of whether correspondence that is sent to 25 or more
existing retail customers within a 30 calendar-day period requires
principal pre-use approval because it makes a financial or
investment recommendation or otherwise promotes a product or service
of the member. FINRA would expect firms to apply the same analysis
going forward regarding principal pre-use approval with respect to
all retail communications. FINRA generally considers this exception
to cover communications that are more administrative or
informational in nature, such as communications that inform
investors that their account statement is available online, or the
date on which a security in an investor's portfolio is expected to
pay a dividend. Communications that are intended to educate
investors about products or services, however, do not fall within
this exception.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(E) would allow FINRA, pursuant to
the FINRA Rule 9600 Series, to grant an exemption from the principal
approval requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(A) for good cause shown after
taking into consideration all relevant factors, provided that the
exemption is consistent with the purposes of FINRA Rule 2210, the
protection of investors, and the public interest.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(F) would provide that,
notwithstanding any other provision of FINRA Rule 2210, a registered
principal must approve a communication prior to the member filing it
with the Department. Currently NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) requires a
principal to approve an advertisement, item of sales literature or
independently prepared reprint before the earlier of its use or filing
with the Department. Proposed FINRA 2210(b)(1)(F) is intended to
clarify that an appropriately qualified principal must approve any
communication that is filed with the Department, even if a
communication otherwise would come under an exception to the principal
approval requirements of proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A).
NASD Rule 2211(b)(1) and NASD Rule 3010(d) impose certain
supervisory and review requirements with regard to a member's
correspondence and institutional sales material.\17\ Proposed FINRA
Rules 2210(b)(2) and (3) generally would maintain the supervision and
review standards for correspondence and institutional communications
that are currently found in NASD Rules 2211 and 3010(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ These rules require each member to establish written
procedures that are appropriate to its business, size, structure and
customers for the review by a registered principal of correspondence
and institutional sales material. The procedures must be in writing
and be designed to reasonably supervise each registered
representative. Where such procedures do not require review of all
such communications prior to use or distribution, they must include
provision for the education and training of associated persons as to
the member's procedures, documentation of such education and
training, and surveillance and follow-up to ensure that such
procedures are implemented and adhered to. Evidence of such
implementation must be maintained and made available to FINRA upon
request.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Currently NASD Rule 2210(b)(2) requires members to maintain all
advertisements, sales literature and independently prepared reprints in
a separate file for a period beginning on the date of first use and
ending three years from the date of last use. The file must include:
(i) A copy of the communication and the dates of first and last use;
(ii) the name of the registered principal who approved the
communication and the date approval was given, unless such approval was
not required pursuant to NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(D);\18\ and (iii) for any
communication for which principal approval was not required pursuant to
NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(D), the name of the member that filed the
communication with the Department and a copy of the corresponding
Department review letter. NASD Rule 2211(b)(2) requires members to
maintain records of institutional sales material for a period of three
years from the date of last use, including the name of the person who
prepared each such communication. NASD Rules 3010(d)(3)\19\ and
3110(a)\20\ require members to retain correspondence of registered
representatives as prescribed by SEA Rule 17a-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ As noted above, NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(D) creates an
exception from the principal approval requirements of NASD Rule
2210(b)(1)(A) for any advertisement, item of sales literature or
independently prepared reprint if, at the time that a member intends
to publish or distribute it: (i) Another member has filed it with
the Department and has received a letter from the Department stating
that it appears to be consistent with applicable standards; and (ii)
the member using it in reliance on this exception has not materially
altered it and will not use it in a manner that is inconsistent with
the conditions of the Department's letter.
\19\ FINRA is proposing to adopt NASD Rule 3010(d)(3) as FINRA
Rule 3110.11 (Retention of Correspondence and Internal
Communications), subject to certain changes, in the Consolidated
FINRA Rulebook. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 64736 (June
23, 2011), 76 FR 38245 (June 29, 2011) (Notice of Filing File No.
SR-FINRA-2011-028 (Proposed Rule Change to Adopt the Consolidated
FINRA Supervision Rules).
\20\ The SEC has approved the adoption of the general
recordkeeping requirements of NASD Rule 3110(a) as FINRA Rule 4511,
subject to certain changes. FINRA Rule 4511 becomes effective on
December 5, 2011. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 63784
(January 27, 2011), 76 FR 5850 (February 2, 2011) (Order Approving
File No. SR-FINRA-2010-052); Regulatory Notice 11-19 (April 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(A) would set forth the record-
keeping requirements for retail and institutional communications;
generally, these requirements would mirror current record-keeping
requirements. This provision incorporates by reference the record-
keeping format, medium and retention period requirements of SEA Rule
17a-4.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ SEA Rule 17a-4(b) requires broker-dealers to preserve
certain records for a period of not less than three years, the first
two in an easily accessible place. Among these records, pursuant to
SEA Rule 17a-4(b)(4), are ``[o]riginals of all communications
received and copies of all communications sent (and any approvals
thereof) by the member, broker or dealer (including inter-office
memoranda and communications) relating to its business as such,
including all communications which are subject to rules of a self-
regulatory organization of which the member, broker or dealer is a
member regarding communications with the public. As used in this
paragraph (b)(4), the term communications includes sales scripts.''
SEA Rule 17a-4(f) permits broker-dealers to maintain and preserve
these records on ``micrographic media'' or by means of ``electronic
storage media,'' as defined in the rule and subject to a number of
conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(A) specifies that such records would
have to include:
A copy of the communication and the dates of first and (if
applicable) last use;
The name of any registered principal who approved the
communication and the date that approval was given;
In the case of a retail communication or institutional
communication that is not approved prior to first use by a registered
principal, the name of the person who prepared or distributed the
communication;\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ To the extent clerical staff is employed in the preparation
or distribution of the communication, the records should include the
name of the person on whose behalf the communication was prepared or
distributed.
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[[Page 46874]]
Information concerning the source of any statistical
table, chart, graph or other illustration used in the communication;
and
For retail communications that rely on the exception under
proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(C), the name of the member that filed
the retail communication with the Department and a copy of the
Department's review letter.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(4)(B) cross-references NASD Rules
3010(d)(3) \23\ and 3110(a) \24\ with respect to correspondence record-
keeping requirements.
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\23\ See supra note 18.
\24\ See supra note 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Filing Requirements and Review Procedures
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c) generally incorporates the filing
requirements in NASD Rule 2210(c), subject to certain changes.
NASD Rule 2210(c)(5)(A) currently requires a member that previously
has not filed advertisements with the Department or another self-
regulatory organization to file its initial advertisement with the
Department at least 10 business days prior to use. This filing
requirement continues for a year after the initial filing. Proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(c)(1)(A) would trigger the new member one-year filing
requirement beginning on the date reflected in the Central Registration
Depository (CRD[reg]) system that the firm's FINRA membership became
effective, rather than on the date a member first files an
advertisement with the Department. Although proposed FINRA Rule 2210 no
longer defines the term ``advertisement,'' this new member filing
requirement would only apply to retail communications that currently
fall under the ``advertisement'' definition, such as generally
accessible Web sites, print media communications, and television and
radio commercials.
NASD Rule 2210(c)(5)(B) currently authorizes the Department to
require a member to file all of its advertisements and/or sales
literature, or the portion of the member's material relating to
specific types or classes of securities or services, with the
Department at least 10 business days prior to use, if the Department
determines that the member has departed from NASD Rule 2210's
standards. Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(1)(B) would carry forward this
authority and apply it to all of a member's communications (rather than
just advertisements or sales literature).
NASD Rule 2210(c)(4) currently requires members to file certain
communications at least 10 business days prior to first use and to
withhold them from use until any changes specified by the Department
have been made. These communications include advertisements and sales
literature for certain registered investment companies that include
self-created rankings, advertisements concerning CMOs, and
advertisements concerning security futures.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(2) would revise the categories of
communications that fall within this pre-use filing requirement. These
include retail communications concerning any registered investment
company that include self-created rankings, retail communications
concerning security futures, and retail communications that include
bond mutual fund volatility ratings. The requirement to file retail
communications concerning security futures prior to first use would not
apply to: (i) Retail communications that are submitted to another self-
regulatory organization having comparable standards pertaining to such
communications, and (ii) retail communications in which the only
reference to security futures is contained in a listing of the services
of a member.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3) would revise the categories of
communications that must be filed within 10 business days of first use
or publication. Similar to NASD Rule 2210(c)(2), proposed FINRA Rule
2210(c)(3) would require retail communications concerning registered
investment companies and public direct participation programs to be
filed within 10 business days of first use. However, the proposal for
the first time would require that all retail communications concerning
closed-end registered investment companies be filed with FINRA.
Currently NASD Rule 2210 requires members to file within 10 business
days of first use advertisements and sales literature concerning
closed-end funds that are distributed during the fund's initial public
offering (``IPO'') period, as well as all advertisements and sales
literature concerning continuously offered (interval) closed-end
funds.\25\ The proposed filing requirement also would apply to retail
communications that are distributed after a closed-end fund's IPO
period. FINRA believes that investors deserve the same protections
concerning retail communications about closed-end funds that are
distributed after the IPO period as those that are distributed during
the IPO period.
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\25\ See ``Ask the Analyst,'' Regulatory & Compliance Alert
(Winter 1999) p. 13.
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Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(C) would require members to file
within 10 business days of first use all retail communications
concerning government securities. Currently this requirement only
applies to advertisements concerning such securities.\26\ Consistent
with current requirements, proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(D) would
require members to file within 10 business days of first use templates
for written reports produced by, or retail communications concerning an
investment analysis tool, as such term is defined in proposed FINRA
Rule 2214.\27\
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\26\ See NASD Rule 2210(c)(2)(C).
\27\ See NASD Rule 2210(c)(2)(D).
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Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(E) would require members to file
within 10 business days of first use retail communications concerning
CMOs that are registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities
Act''). Currently members are required only to file advertisements
concerning CMOs, but must file them at least 10 business days prior to
first use.\28\
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\28\ See NASD Rule 2210(c)(4)(B).
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Under proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(3)(F), members would have to file
within 10 business days of first use all retail communications
concerning any security that is registered under the Securities Act and
that is derived from or based on a single security, a basket of
securities, an index, a commodity, a debt issuance or a foreign
currency, not included within the requirements of paragraphs (c)(1),
(c)(2) or sub-paragraphs (A) through (E) of paragraph (c)(3). The
purpose of this provision is to require the filing of retail
communications concerning publicly offered structured products, such as
exchange-traded notes or registered grantor trusts that currently are
not required to be filed. This provision excludes retail communications
that are already subject to a separate filing requirement found
elsewhere in proposed paragraph (c), such as retail communications
concerning registered investment companies or public direct
participation programs.
Consistent with current rules, proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(4)
provides that, if a member has filed a draft version or ``story board''
of a television or video retail communication pursuant to a filing
requirement, then the member also must file the final filmed version
within 10 business days of first use or broadcast.\29\
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\29\ See NASD Rule 2210(c)(6).
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[[Page 46875]]
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(5) specifies that a member must provide
with each filing the actual or anticipated date of first use, the name,
title and CRD[reg] number of the registered principal who approved the
communication, and the date of approval. These requirements generally
carry forward the current requirements of NASD Rule 2210(c)(1).
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(6) provides that each member's written
communications may be subject to a spot-check procedure, and that
members must submit requested material within the time frame specified
by the Department. This provision is consistent with current rules.\30\
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\30\ See NASD Rule 2210(c)(7).
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Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(7) generally duplicates the current
exclusions from the filing requirements under NASD Rule 2210(c)(8),
with certain modifications. Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(A) would continue
the current filing exclusion for retail communications that previously
have been filed with the Department and that are to be used without
material change.\31\ Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(B) would add an
exclusion for retail communications that are based on templates that
were previously filed with the Department, the changes to which are
limited to updates of more recent statistical or other non-narrative
information.\32\ Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(C) would exclude retail
communications that do not make any financial or investment
recommendation or otherwise promote a product or service of the
member.\33\
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\31\ See NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(A).
\32\ This exclusion is based in part on an earlier staff
interpretation concerning how NASD Rule 2210's approval, record-
keeping and filing requirements apply to statistical updates
contained in pre-existing templates. See Letter from Thomas M.
Selman, NASD, to Forrest R. Foss, T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.,
dated January 28, 2002. If a member changed the template's
presentation in any material respect, however, this exclusion would
not apply.
\33\ This filing exception would have the same scope as the
proposed exception from the principal pre-use approval requirements
for retail communications that do not make any financial or
investment recommendation or otherwise promote a product or service
of the member. See proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(D)(iii).
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Proposed paragraphs (c)(7)(D), (E), (G) and (H) would preserve for
retail communications the current filing exclusions for advertisements
and sales literature that do no more than identify a national
securities exchange symbol of the member or identify a security for
which the member is a registered market maker; advertisements and sales
literature that do no more than identify the member or offer a specific
security at a stated price; certain ``tombstone'' advertisements
governed by Securities Act Rule 134 and press releases that are made
available only to members of the media.\34\
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\34\ See NASD Rules 2210(c)(8)(C), (D), (F) and (G).
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Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(F) would modify the current filing
exclusion for prospectuses and other documents that have been filed
with the SEC or any state.\35\ The current filing exclusion does not
cover investment company omitting prospectuses published pursuant to
Securities Act Rule 482. As modified, this filing exclusion also would
not cover free writing prospectuses that are filed with the SEC
pursuant to Securities Act Rule 433(d)(1)(ii).\36\ As discussed in
Regulatory Notice 10-52, FINRA is concerned that broadly disseminated
free writing prospectuses present the same investor protection concerns
as communications regulated by NASD Rules 2210 and 2211. Accordingly,
FINRA interprets NASD Rules 2210 and 2211 to apply to free writing
prospectuses distributed by a broker-dealer in a manner reasonably
designed to lead to broad unrestricted dissemination.\37\ This proposed
modification would codify the guidance provided in that Regulatory
Notice.
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\35\ See NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(E).
\36\ Securities Act Rule 433(d)(1)(ii) requires any offering
participant, other than the issuer, to file with the SEC a free
writing prospectus if it is used or referred to by such offering
participant and distributed by or on behalf of such person in a
manner reasonably designed to lead to its broad unrestricted
dissemination.
\37\ See Regulatory Notice 10-52 (October 2010).
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Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(I) would maintain the filing exclusion
for reprints of independently prepared articles or reports currently
found in NASD Rule 2210(c)(8)(H).\38\
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\38\ The filing exclusion for reprints of independently prepared
articles or reports incorporates the conditions currently included
in the definition of ``independently prepared reprint.'' See NASD
Rule 2210(a)(6)(A). This filing exclusion would also cover
independently prepared investment company reports described in NASD
Rule 2210(a)(6)(B).
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Proposed paragraphs (c)(7)(J) and (K) would maintain the current
filing exclusions for correspondence and institutional sales
material.\39\ Proposed paragraph (c)(7)(L) would exclude from filing
communications that refer to types of investments solely as part of a
listing of products or services offered by the member.\40\
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\39\ See NASD Rules 2210(c)(8)(I) and (J).
\40\ NASD Rule 2210(c)(9) similarly excludes from the filing
requirements material that refers to investment company securities,
direct participation programs, or exempted securities solely as part
of a listing of products or services offered by the member.
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Proposed paragraph (c)(8) would provide that communications
excluded from the filing requirements pursuant to paragraphs (c)(7)(H)
through (K) would be deemed filed with FINRA for purposes of Section
24(b) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and Rule 24b-3 thereunder.
This provision is consistent with NASD Rule 2210(c)(8).
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(c)(9)(A) would allow FINRA to exempt
pursuant to the FINRA Rule 9600 Series, a member from the pre-use
filing requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(A) for good cause shown.\41\
Proposed paragraph (c)(9)(B) would allow FINRA to grant an exemption
from the filing requirements of paragraph (c)(3) for good cause shown
after taking into consideration all relevant factors, provided that the
exemption is consistent with the purposes of Rule 2210, the protection
of investors, and the public interest. Generally this relief would be
limited to the same extent as in proposed paragraph (b)(1)(E), which
would authorize FINRA to grant exemptive relief from the principal
approval requirements in proposed FINRA Rule 2210(b)(1)(A) for retail
communications, subject to the same standards.
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\41\ This provision is consistent with NASD Rule 2210(c)(10).
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Content Standards
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d) reorganizes but largely incorporates
the current content standards applicable to communications with the
public that are found in NASD Rule 2210(d), NASD IM-2210-1, NASD IM-
2210-4 and Incorporated NYSE Rules 472(i) and (j), subject to certain
changes. Content standards that currently apply to advertisements and
sales literature generally would apply to retail communications.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(A) incorporates the current
standards of NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(A) without substantive change.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(B) incorporates the current
standards of NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(B) largely without change, except
that it would expressly prohibit promissory statements or claims. The
Department staff already interprets NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(B) to prohibit
promissory language in member communications, and Incorporated NYSE
Rule 472(i) specifically prohibits promissory statements.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(C) incorporates the current
standards of
[[Page 46876]]
NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(C) without change.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(D) generally incorporates the
standards currently found in NASD IM-2210-1(1), with only minor, non-
substantive changes.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(E) generally incorporates the
standards currently found in NASD IM-2210-1(2), although in a more
abbreviated fashion.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(D) currently prohibits communications from
predicting or projecting performance, implying that past performance
will recur or making any exaggerated or unwarranted claim, opinion or
forecast. This provision permits, however, a hypothetical illustration
of mathematical principles, provided that it does not predict or
project the performance of an investment or investment strategy.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(F) would carry forward the current
prohibition of performance predictions and projections, as well as, the
allowance for hypothetical illustrations of mathematical principles.
The proposal also would clarify that FINRA allows two additional types
of projections of performance in communications with the public that
are not reflected in the text of NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(D). First, FINRA
allows projections of performance in reports produced by investment
analyst tools that meet the requirements of NASD IM-2210-6.\42\ Second,
FINRA has permitted research reports on debt or equity securities to
include price targets under certain circumstances.\43\
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\42\ See NASD IM-2210-6 (Requirements for the Use of Investment
Analysis Tools). NASD IM-2210-6 would be codified as FINRA Rule 2214
under the proposed rule change.
\43\ See NASD Rule 2711(h)(7).
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Accordingly, proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(F) would clarify that
it does not prohibit an investment analysis tool, or a written report
produced by such a tool that meets the requirements of FINRA Rule 2214.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(F) also would clarify that it does not
prohibit a price target contained in a research report on debt or
equity securities, provided that the price target has a reasonable
basis, the report discloses the valuation methods used to determine the
price target, and the price target is accompanied by disclosure
concerning the risks that may impede achievement of the price
target.\44\
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\44\ These standards mirror those required for price targets
contained in research reports on equity securities under NASD Rule
2711(h)(7).
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Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(2) incorporates the standards currently
found in NASD Rule 2210(d)(2)(B) without substantive change.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(2)(C) requires all advertisements and sales
literature to: (i) prominently disclose the name of the member, and
allows a fictional name by which the member is commonly recognized or
which is required by any state or jurisdiction; (ii) reflect any
relationship between the member and any non-member or individual who is
also named in the communication; and (iii) if the communication
includes other names, reflect which products and services are offered
by the member. Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(3) would apply these
standards to correspondence as well as to retail communications.
Members would be permitted to use the name under which a member's
broker-dealer business is conducted as disclosed on the member's Form
BD, as well as a fictional name by which a member is commonly
recognized or which is required by any state or jurisdiction.
NASD IM-2210-1(5) specifies that in advertisements and sales
literature, references to tax-free or tax-exempt income must indicate
which income taxes apply, or which do not, unless income is free from
all applicable taxes, and provides an example of income from an
investment company investing in municipal bonds that is free from
federal income tax but subject to state or local income taxes. Proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(d)(4)(A) would carry forward this rule for all retail
communications and correspondence.
NASD IM 2210-1(4) prohibits communications with the public from
characterizing income or investment returns as tax-free or exempt from
income tax when tax liability is merely postponed or deferred, such as
when taxes are payable upon redemption. Proposed FINRA Rule
2210(d)(4)(B) would carry forward this prohibition for all
communications.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(4)(C) would add new language concerning
comparative illustrations of the mathematical principles of tax-
deferred versus taxable compounding.
First, the illustration would have to depict both the taxable
investment and the tax-deferred investment using identical investment
amounts and identical assumed gross investment rates of return, which
may not exceed 10 percent per annum. Second, the illustration would
have to use and identify actual federal income tax rates. Third, the
illustration would be permitted (but not required) to reflect an actual
state income tax rate, provided that the communication prominently
discloses that the illustration is applicable only to investors that
reside in the identified state. Fourth, the tax rates used in the
illustration that is intended for a target audience would have to
reasonably reflect its tax bracket or brackets as well as the tax
character of capital gains and ordinary income. Fifth, if the
illustration covers an investment's payout period, the illustration
would have to reflect the impact of taxes during this period. Sixth,
the illustration could not assume an unreasonable period of tax
deferral.
Seventh, the illustration would have to include the following
disclosures, as applicable:
The degree of risk in the investment's assumed rate of
return, including a statement that the assumed rate of return is not
guaranteed;
The possible effects of investment losses on the relative
advantage of the taxable versus tax-deferred investments;
The extent to which tax rates on capital gains and
dividends would affect the taxable investment's return;
Its underlying assumptions; \45\
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\45\ These assumptions may include, for example, the age at
which an investor may begin withdrawing funds from a tax-deferred
account, the actual federal tax rates applied in the hypothetical
taxable illustration, any state income tax rate applied in the
illustration, and the charges associated with the hypothetical
investment.
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The potential impact resulting from federal or state tax
penalties (e.g., for early withdrawals or use on non-qualified
expenses); and
That an investor should consider his or her current and
anticipated investment horizon and income tax bracket when making an
investment decision, as the illustration may not reflect these factors.
Much of this language reflects previous guidance that FINRA has
provided regarding tax-deferral illustrations.\46\ By placing this rule
language in proposed FINRA Rule 2210, FINRA is clarifying that these
standards apply to any illustration of tax-deferred versus taxable
compounding, regardless of whether it appears in a communication
promoting variable insurance products or some other communication, such
as one discussing the benefits of investing through a 401(k) retirement
plan or individual retirement account. Of course, any communication
concerning variable insurance products also must comply with standards
specifically applicable to such communications.\47\
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\46\ See ``NASD Reminds Members of Their Responsibilities
Regarding Hypothetical Tax-Deferral Illustrations in Variable
Annuity Illustrations,'' NASD Member Alert (May 10, 2004).
\47\ See NASD IM-2210-2; see also Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 61107 (December 3, 2009), 74 FR 65180 (December 9, 2009)
(Notice of Filing File No. SR-FINRA-2009-070) (Proposed Rule Change
To Adopt FINRA Rule 2211 (Communications With the Public About
Variable Insurance Products)).
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[[Page 46877]]
NASD Rule 2210(d)(3) currently requires communications with the
public, other than institutional sales material and public appearances,
that present the performance of a non-money market mutual fund, to
disclose the fund's maximum sales charge and operating expense ratio as
set forth in the fund's current prospectus fee table. Proposed FINRA
Rule 2210(d)(5) would maintain this standard for retail communications
and correspondence.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(1)(E) currently provides that, if any testimonial
in a communication with the public concerns a technical aspect of
investing, the person making the testimonial must have the knowledge
and experience to form a valid opinion. Proposed FINRA Rule
2210(d)(6)(A) carries forward this standard for communications.
NASD Rule 2210(d)(2)(A) requires any advertisement or sales
literature that includes a testimonial concerning the investment advice
or investment performance of a member or its products to prominently
disclose: (i) The fact that the testimonial may not be representative
of the experience of other customers; (ii) the fact that the
testimonial is no guarantee of future performance or success; and (iii)
if more than a nominal sum is paid, the fact that it is a paid
testimonial. Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(6)(B) carries forward these
disclosure requirements for retail communications and correspondence,
and requires disclosure regarding payment if more than $100 in value
(rather than a ``nominal sum'') is paid for the testimonial.
Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7) would revise in several ways the
standards currently found in NASD IM-2210-1(6) applicable to
communications that contain a recommendation.
First, the proposal would apply these standards to retail
communications and public appearances. Currently the standards apply
only to advertisements and sales literature.
Second, NASD IM-2210-1(6)(A) requires disclosure of certain
specified conflicts of interest to the extent applicable. These
disclosures include: (i) If the member was making a market in the
recommended securities, or the underlying security if the recommended
security is an option or security future, or that the member or
associated person will sell to or buy from customers on a principal
basis; (ii) if the member and/or its officers or partners have a
financial interest in the securities of the recommended issuer and the
nature of the financial interest, unless the extent of the financial
interest is nominal; and (iii) if the member was manager or co-manager
of a public offering of any securities of the recommended issuer in the
past 12 months. Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(A) would carry forward
the first and third disclosures, but would modify the second disclosure
to limit it to financial interests of the member or any associated
person with the ability to influence the content of the communication,
unless the extent of the financial interest is nominal. This change
would substantially narrow the number of parties whose financial
interests have to be disclosed, particularly for large members with
numerous officers and partners.\48\
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\48\ FINRA has found that the current rules governing
disclosures of financial interests in connection with
recommendations contained in advertisements and sales literature,
which apply to financial interests of all officers and partners, do
not lead to useful disclosure when a firm has a large number of
officers or partners. See NASD IM-2210-1(6)(A)(ii).
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Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(B) would require a member to
provide, or offer to furnish upon request, available investment
information supporting the recommendation, and if the recommendation is
for an equity security, to provide the price at the time the
recommendation is made. This provision would carry forward the current
requirements of NASD IM-2210-6(B).
Third, proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(C) would amend the provisions
governing communications that include past recommendations, which are
currently found in NASD IM-2210-1(6)(C) and (D) and Incorporated NYSE
Rule 472(j)(2). The new proposed standards mirror those found in Rule
206(4)-1(a)(2) under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, which apply
to investment adviser advertisements that contain past
recommendations.\49\
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\49\ Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(C), like Rule 206(4)-
1(a)(2), generally would prohibit retail communications from
referring to past specific recommendations of the member that were
or would have been profitable to any person. The rule would allow,
however, a retail communication or correspondence to set out or
offer to furnish a list of all recommendations as to the same type,
kind, grade or classification of securities made by the member
within the immediately preceding period of not less than one year.
The list would have to provide certain information regarding each
recommended security and include a prescribed cautionary legend
warning investors not to assume that future recommendations will be
profitable.
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Fourth, proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(D) expressly would exclude
from its coverage communications that meet the definition of ``research
report'' or that are public appearances by a research analyst for
purposes of NASD Rule 2711 and that include all of the applicable
disclosures required by that rule. Proposed FINRA Rule 2210(d)(7)(D)
also would exclude any communication that recommends only registered
investment companies or variable insurance products.\50\
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\50\ FINRA is proposing to exclude communications that recommend
only registered investment companies or variable insurance products
because it believes that recommendations of these products do not
raise the same kinds of conflicts of interest as recommendations of
other types of securities, since they are pooled investment vehicles
rather than securities of a single issuer. Nevertheless, there may
be other types of sales-related conflicts of interest raised when
members recommend such securities. FINRA has addressed these types
of conflicts through its rules governing sales of these products.
See NASD Rule 2830 (Investment Companies Securities) and FINRA Rule
2320 (Variable Contracts of an Insurance Company); see also
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 64386 (May 3, 2011), 76 FR 26779
(May 9, 2011) (Notice of Filing File No. SR-FINRA-2011-018).
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Currently, a ``public appearance'' is defined as ``participation in
a seminar, forum (including an interactive electronic forum), radio or
television interview, or other public appearance or public speaking
activity.'' \51\ Public appearances are a separate category of
communications within the broader term ``communications with the
public.'' As such, public appearances must meet the same standards that
apply to all communications with the public, such as the requirements
that they be fair and balanced and not include false or misleading
statements. However, public appearances are not subject to the
principal pre-use approval requirements of NASD Rule 2210(b)(1)(A), nor
must a member file a public appearance with the Department.
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\51\ NASD Rule 2210(a)(5).
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In the interest of simplification, the term ``public appearance''
is no longer a separate communication category. Nevertheless, proposed
FINRA Rule 2210(f) sets forth many of the same general standards that
would apply to public appearances that exist currently. Public
appearances would have to meet the general ``fair and balanced''
standards of proposed paragraph (d)(1). Unlike the current rules
governing public appearances, the disclosure requirements applicable to
recommendations in proposed paragraph (d)(7) also would apply if the
public appearance included a recommendation of a security. The proposal
also would require members to establish appropriate written policies
and procedures to supervise public appearances, and makes c