Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change Related to Compliance With Section 871(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, 75867-75874 [2016-26382]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 1, 2016 / Notices
Conclusion
It is hereby ordered, pursuant to Rule
101(d) of Regulation M, that the Trust,
based on the representations and facts
presented in the Letter, is exempt from
the requirements of Rule 101 with
respect to the Fund, thus permitting
persons who may be deemed to be
participating in a distribution of Shares
of the Fund to bid for or purchase such
Shares during their participation in
such distribution.
It is further ordered, pursuant to Rule
102(e) of Regulation M, that the Trust,
based on the representations and the
facts presented in the Letter, is exempt
from the requirements of Rule 102 with
respect to the Fund, thus permitting the
Fund to redeem Shares of the Fund
during the continuous offering of such
Shares.
It is further ordered, pursuant to Rule
10b–17(b)(2), that the Trust, based on
the representations and the facts
presented in the Letter and subject to
the conditions below, is exempt from
the requirements of Rule 10b–17 with
respect to transactions in the shares of
the Fund.
This exemptive relief is subject to the
following conditions:
• The Trust will comply with Rule
10b–17, except for Rule 10b–
17(b)(1)(v)(a) and (b); and
• The Trust will provide the
information required by Rule 10b–
17(b)(1)(v)(a) and (b) to the Listing
Exchange as soon as practicable before
trading begins on the ex-dividend date,
but in no event later than the time when
the Listing Exchange last accepts
information relating to distributions on
the day before the ex-dividend date.
This exemptive relief is subject to
modification or revocation at any time
the Commission determines that such
action is necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act. This exemption is based
on the facts presented and the
representations made in the Letter. Any
different facts or representations may
require a different response. Persons
relying upon this exemptive relief shall
discontinue transactions involving the
Shares of the Fund, pending
presentation of the facts for the
Commission’s consideration, in the
event that any material change occurs
with respect to any of the facts or
representations made by the Requestors,
and, as is the case with all preceding
paid on a particular record date. Further, the
Commission finds, based upon the representations
of the Requestors in the Letter, that the provision
of the notices as described in the Letter and subject
to the conditions of this Order would not constitute
a manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance
comprehended within the purpose of Rule 10b–17.
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letters, particularly with respect to the
close alignment between the market
price of Shares and the Fund’s NAV. In
addition, persons relying on this
exemption are directed to the anti-fraud
and anti-manipulation provisions of the
Exchange Act, particularly Sections 9(a),
10(b), and Rule 10b–5 thereunder.
Responsibility for compliance with
these and any other applicable
provisions of the federal securities laws
must rest with the persons relying on
this exemption. This Order should not
be considered a view with respect to
any other question that the proposed
transactions may raise, including, but
not limited to, the adequacy of the
disclosure concerning, and the
applicability of other federal or state
laws to, the proposed transactions.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.6
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–26299 Filed 10–31–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
75867
and the Treasury Regulations
thereunder as they will apply to listed
options transactions. The proposed
amendments to OCC’s By-Laws and
Rules can be found on OCC’s public
Web site.4 All capitalized terms not
defined herein have the same meaning
as set forth in OCC’s By-Laws and
Rules.5
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission,
OCC included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. OCC has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections (A), (B),
and (C) below, of the most significant
aspects of these statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule Change
(1) Purpose
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–79172; File No. SR–OCC–
2016–014]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Options Clearing Corporation; Notice
of Filing of Proposed Rule Change
Related to Compliance With Section
871(m) of the Internal Revenue Code
October 27, 2016.
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 October
18, 2016, The Options Clearing
Corporation (‘‘OCC’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II and III
below, which Items have been prepared
by OCC. The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested
persons.
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Proposed
Rule Change
The purpose of this proposed rule
change is to amend OCC’s By-Laws and
Rules to address the implementation of
Section 871(m) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended (‘‘I.R.C.’’),3
6 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(6) and (9).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 26 U.S.C. 871(m).
1 15
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Background
OCC is proposing to modify its ByLaws and Rules to address the
application of I.R.C. Section 871(m)
(‘‘Section 871(m)’’) 6 to listed options
transactions commencing on January 1,
2017. The proposed modifications are
designed to ensure that OCC will not be
liable for U.S. withholding tax with
respect to certain options transactions
entered into by OCC’s Clearing Members
that are treated as non-U.S. persons for
federal income tax purposes.
Section 871(m), which was enacted in
2010, imposes a 30% withholding tax
on ‘‘dividend equivalent’’ payments that
are made or deemed to be made to nonU.S. persons with respect to certain
derivatives (such as total return swaps)
that reference equity of a U.S. issuer. In
enacting Section 871(m), Congress was
attempting to address the ability of
foreign persons to obtain the economics
of owning dividend-paying stock
through a derivative while avoiding the
withholding tax that would apply to
dividends paid on the stock if the
foreign person owned the stock
directly.7
In September 2015, the Treasury
Department adopted final regulations
(the ‘‘Final Section 871(m)
4 OCC’s By-Laws and Rules can be found on
OCC’s public Web site: https://optionsclearing.com/
about/publications/bylaws.jsp.
5 Id.
6 26 U.S.C. 871(m).
7 See 26 U.S.C. 871(a)(1)(A) (30% tax on
dividends paid to non-resident aliens).
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 1, 2016 / Notices
Regulations’’) 8 based on a proposal
issued in December 2013 expanding the
types of derivatives to which Section
871(m) applies to include certain listed
options transactions with an effective
date of January 1, 2017. While actual
dividends paid to foreign owners of U.S.
equities have been subject to
withholding tax for over 80 years,
transactions by foreign persons in listed
options referencing U.S. equities have
not previously given rise to withholding
tax. The application of Section 871(m)
to listed options, as provided in the
Final Section 871(m) Regulations, thus
introduces new tax obligations and
associated risks for OCC and its Clearing
Members.
Under the Final Section 871(m)
Regulations, any equity option entered
into by a non-U.S. person with an initial
delta of .8 or above is considered a
‘‘Section 871(m) Transaction’’ and can
potentially give rise to a dividend
equivalent subject to withholding tax.9
A dividend equivalent is deemed to
arise if a dividend is paid on the
underlying stock while such an option
is outstanding even though no
corresponding payment is made on the
option. A complex set of rules and
exceptions in the Final Section 871(m)
Regulations must be followed in order
for the withholding agent (as defined in
26 CFR 1.1441–7) to determine if the
withholding tax in fact applies, and, if
so, the amount of the dividend
equivalent subject to withholding tax.
Two separate but overlapping U.S.
withholding tax regimes will apply to
dividend equivalents on listed options
that are Section 871(m) Transactions.
The first regime, sometimes referred to
as ‘‘Chapter 3 Withholding,’’ is the basic
U.S. income tax withholding regime
under Chapter 3 subtitle A of the
Internal Revenue Code (‘‘Chapter 3’’),
which has existed for many years.10 The
second regime, known as ‘‘FATCA,’’ 11
8 See
T.D. 9734, 80 FR 56866 (Sept. 18, 2015).
the regulations, ‘‘delta’’ refers to the ratio
of the change in the fair market value of an option
to a small change in the fair market value of the
number of shares of the underlying security
referenced by the option. See 26 CFR 1.871–
15(g)(1). Individual options entered into ‘‘in
connection with each other’’ must generally be
combined and tested against the .8 delta threshold
on a combined basis (the ‘‘Combination Rule’’). See
26 CFR 1.871–15(n). For example, if a non-U.S.
person buys a call option and writes a put option
on the same stock, and the options are entered into
in connection with each other, the delta of the call
and the delta of the put are added together. If the
sum is .8 or higher, the two transactions are treated
as Section 871(m) Transactions.
10 See 26 U.S.C. 1441–1446.
11 See 26 U.S.C. 1471–1474. FATCA stands for
the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, which is
found in Chapter 4 of subtitle A of Title 26.
References in this filing to ‘‘Chapter 4’’ are
references to FATCA, and vice versa.
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9 Under
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was enacted in 2010 and, subject to
transition rules, first applied to
withholdable payments (such as
dividends and interest) made after June
30, 2014. The Treasury Department has
issued extensive regulations under
FATCA (the ‘‘FATCA Regulations’’).12
The two withholding tax regimes
serve very different purposes. Chapter 3
Withholding requires a withholding
agent to withhold 30% of a
withholdable payment and remit it to
the Internal Revenue Service (‘‘IRS’’).13
The withholding tax is the mechanism
by which the non-U.S. person receiving
the payment satisfies its tax liability to
the United States.
FATCA, on the other hand, was
enacted with the purpose of curbing tax
evasion by U.S. citizens and residents
through the use of offshore bank
accounts. FATCA imposes a 30%
withholding tax (‘‘FATCA
Withholding’’) on U.S.-source dividends
and other withholdable payments
(including dividend equivalents) 14
made by a U.S. withholding agent to a
foreign financial institution (‘‘FFI’’),
such as a bank or brokerage firm, unless
the financial institution agrees to
provide information to the IRS about its
U.S. account holders. The purpose of
FATCA Withholding is thus to force
FFIs to provide the required information
about U.S. account holders to the IRS.
FFIs that enter into the required
agreement with the IRS are referred to
as ‘‘Participating FFIs,’’ and those that
do not are referred to as
‘‘Nonparticipating FFIs.’’ The 30%
FATCA Withholding applies to
withholdable payments made to a
Nonparticipating FFI whether the
Nonparticipating FFI is the beneficial
owner of the payment or acting as a
broker, custodian or other intermediary
with respect to the payment. To the
extent that withholdable payments are
made to a Nonparticipating FFI in any
capacity, a U.S. withholding agent, such
as OCC or its U.S. Clearing Members,
transmitting these payments to the
Nonparticipating FFI will be liable to
the IRS for any amounts of FATCA
Withholding that the U.S. withholding
12 See
26 CFR 1.1471–0 through 1.1474–1.1474–
7.
13 Withholdable payments include U.S. source
dividends, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1441(b), and
dividend equivalents are treated as U.S. source
dividends for this purpose. 26 U.S.C. 871(m)(1).
14 The types of payments subject to FATCA
Withholding are generally the same as those subject
to Chapter 3 Withholding, although FATCA
Withholding also applies to gross proceeds from the
sale or other disposition of any instrument that
gives rise to such payments. See 26 U.S.C. 1473(1).
Gross proceeds withholding under FATCA is
scheduled to become effective in 2019.
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agent should, but does not, withhold
and remit to the IRS.
The Treasury Department has
provided alternative means of
complying with FATCA for FFIs that are
resident in foreign jurisdictions that
enter into an intergovernmental
agreement (‘‘IGA’’) with the United
States (each such foreign jurisdiction
being referred to as a ‘‘FATCA Partner’’).
An FFI resident in a FATCA Partner
jurisdiction must either transmit the
information required by FATCA to its
local tax authority, which in turn would
transmit the information to the IRS
pursuant to a tax treaty or information
exchange agreement (referred to as a
‘‘Model 1 IGA’’), or the FFI must be
authorized or required by FATCA
Partner law to enter into an FFI
agreement and to transmit FATCA
reporting directly to the IRS (referred to
as a ‘‘Model 2 IGA’’). Under both IGA
models, payments to such FFIs would
not be subject to FATCA Withholding so
long as the FFI complies with the
FATCA Partner’s laws as mandated in
the IGA. OCC currently has eight nonU.S. Clearing Members, all of which are
Canadian firms. Canada entered into a
Model 1 IGA with the United States on
February 5, 2014, as a result of which
OCC’s Canadian Clearing Members that
comply with the Canadian laws
mandated in such Model 1 IGA are
‘‘Reporting Model 1 FFIs’’ and are
exempt from FATCA Withholding.
Because OCC does not make
payments of U.S.-source interest and
dividends to its Clearing Members,
OCC’s transactions with its Clearing
Members have not to date given rise to
payments subject to Chapter 3
Withholding or to FATCA Withholding.
Both Chapter 3 Withholding and
FATCA Withholding will become
applicable to OCC and its Clearing
Members, however, once Section 871(m)
applies to listed options commencing
January 1, 2017.
Impact on OCC and its Clearing
Members
The application of Section 871(m) to
listed options transactions that are
Section 871(m) Transactions in
combination with Chapter 3
Withholding and FATCA Withholding
will have significant implications for
OCC and its Clearing Members. These
implications differ depending upon
whether the Clearing Member involved
in the transaction is a U.S. firm or a
non-U.S. firm. When a U.S. Clearing
Member is involved, Section 871(m) is
relevant if the Clearing Member is acting
(directly or indirectly) on behalf of a
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non-U.S. customer.15 When a U.S.
Clearing Member is acting for a foreign
customer, the U.S. Clearing Member
will need to determine whether the
transaction is a Section 871(m)
Transaction, and, if so, the amount of
any dividend equivalents subject to
withholding. Under Chapter 3 and
Chapter 4, withholding tax will need to
be collected by the U.S. Clearing
Member on any such dividend
equivalent and remitted to the IRS.16
Reporting by the U.S. Clearing Member
with respect to such amounts on IRS
Forms 1042 and 1042–S would also be
required.17
OCC will not be obligated to withhold
on any dividend equivalents associated
with listed options that are Section
871(m) Transactions when the Clearing
Member involved is a U.S. firm. Under
the applicable Treasury Regulations,
because OCC is treated as making such
payments to a U.S. financial institution,
OCC is not required to withhold. Rather,
the withholding obligation falls on the
U.S. Clearing Member if the member is
acting directly for a non-U.S. person, or
potentially on another broker or
custodian with a closer connection to
the non-U.S. person. Similarly, OCC
will not have any tax reporting
obligations. Those obligations will
typically fall on the broker that has the
obligation to withhold. In general terms,
OCC is relieved of the obligation to
withhold and to report dividend
equivalents in this situation because the
U.S. Clearing Member, and not OCC, is
the last U.S. person with custody or
control over the relevant payment or
funds before they leave the United
States. Without regard to the proposed
rule change described herein, therefore,
Section 871(m) will require OCC’s U.S.
Clearing Members with foreign
customers to develop and maintain
systems (i) to identify options
transactions that are Section 871(m)
Transactions (including under the
Combination Rule),18 (ii) to determine
the amount of any dividend equivalents,
and (iii) to effectuate withholding.
Developing these systems will be
challenging and costly.
The situation is very different when
the Clearing Member involved is a nonU.S. firm. (As noted above, OCC
15 Section 871(m) is not relevant if the U.S.
Clearing Member is acting on behalf of a U.S.
customer or for its own account.
16 The obligation to withhold arises under both
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 (i.e., FATCA), but
duplicate withholding is not required. Under
Section 1474(d) and 26 CFR 1.1474–6T(b)(1),
amounts withheld under FATCA are credited
against amounts required to be withheld under
chapter 3.
17 See 26 CFR 1.1461–1(c)(2)(i)(L).
18 See supra note 9.
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currently has eight non-U.S. clearing
members, all of which are Canadian
firms.) Under the Final Section 871(m)
Regulations, OCC itself is a withholding
agent when a non-U.S. Clearing Member
enters into a transaction on behalf of a
customer or for its own account.19 In
this situation, OCC is the last U.S.
person treated as having custody or
control over the payment or funds
before they leave the United States.
Unless the non-U.S. Clearing Members
enter into certain agreements with the
IRS (described below), under which
they assume primary responsibility for
Chapter 3 Withholding tax and are
FATCA Compliant, OCC would be
required to withhold on dividend
equivalents with respect to transactions
that are Section 871(m) Transactions.20
In order to carry out these
responsibilities, OCC would need to
develop and maintain systems (i) to
identify transactions that are Section
871(m) Transactions, (ii) to determine
the amount of any dividend equivalents,
(iii) to effectuate withholding, and (iv)
to remit the withheld tax to the IRS. The
non-U.S. Clearing Members in this
situation generally would not be
required to withhold or to report
because they already would have been
subject to withholding by OCC. Without
the proposed rule change, therefore,
Section 871(m) by default would impose
on the U.S. Clearing Members and
OCC—but not on the non-U.S. Clearing
Members—the responsibility for
withholding and reporting on dividend
equivalents. The proposed rule change
would transfer OCC’s obligations with
respect to the non-U.S. Clearing
Members to those members, so that they
would be treated in a manner analogous
to the U.S. Clearing Members, who
themselves will be required to withhold
and report on dividend equivalents
when Section 871(m) becomes effective
with respect to listed options.
To address OCC’s potential Chapter 3
Withholding and reporting obligations,
the agreements that non-U.S. Clearing
Members can enter into with the IRS to
relieve OCC of these obligations are as
follows:
• With respect to transactions that the
Clearing Member enters into on behalf
of customers (that is, as an
intermediary), the Clearing Member can
19 See
26 CFR 1.1441–7(a)(3) (Example 7).
proposed, the term ‘‘FACTA [sic]
Compliant’’ would mean that a FFI Clearing
Member has qualified under such procedures
promulgated by the IRS as are in effect from time
to time to establish an exemption from withholding
under FATCA such that OCC will not be required
to withhold any amount with respect to any
payment or deemed payment to such FFI Clearing
Member under FATCA.
20 As
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75869
enter into a ‘‘qualified intermediary
agreement’’ with the IRS under which
the Clearing Member assumes primary
withholding responsibility. If a Clearing
Member has such an agreement in place
(such member being a ‘‘Qualified
Intermediary Assuming Primary
Withholding Responsibility’’), OCC is
relieved of its obligation to withhold
under Chapter 3 with respect to the
Clearing Member’s customer
transactions.
• With respect to transactions the
Clearing Member enters into for its own
account (that is, as a principal), the
Clearing Member will be able to enter
into a qualified intermediary agreement
with the IRS (as described above) in
which it further agrees, inter alia, to
assume primary withholding
responsibility with respect to all
dividends and dividend equivalents it
receives and makes.21 Entities entering
into such agreements are referred to as
‘‘Qualified Derivatives Dealers.’’
The Treasury Regulations regarding
Qualified Derivatives Dealers are
currently in temporary form and are
subject to change. Treasury and the IRS
recently issued Notice 2016–42, which
has proposed changes to the ‘‘qualified
intermediary agreement’’ necessary to
expand the Qualified Derivatives Dealer
exception to include all transactions in
which a Qualified Derivatives Dealer
acts as a principal for its own account,
regardless of whether it does so in its
dealer capacity.22 If these changes are
incorporated into the final qualified
intermediary agreement, and if the
Clearing Members timely enter into
such agreements, OCC does not believe,
based on IRS Notice 2016–42, that OCC
will be obligated to withhold under
Chapter 3 on any transactions entered
into by the Clearing Member for its own
account.
With respect to FATCA Withholding,
OCC would not be required to withhold
if the non-U.S. Clearing Member has
entered into an agreement with the IRS
to provide information about its U.S.
account holders or if the Clearing
Member is a resident of a country that
has entered into an IGA and the member
complies with its reporting
responsibilities under the local
legislation implementing the IGA.
Even if OCC’s non-U.S. Clearing
Members enter into the agreements with
the IRS described above (or with respect
to FATCA are resident in a country with
21 See 26 CFR 1.1441–1T(e)(6); Notice 2016–42,
2016–29 I.R.B. (July 1, 2016).
22 The concept of dealer in the tax context is
different than in the securities regulatory context,
where dealer activity would include both principal
trading to facilitate customer activity as well as
principal trading solely on behalf of the firm.
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an IGA), OCC would still be required to
report to the IRS the amounts of
dividend equivalents it is treated as
paying to those Clearing Members.23
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Preparing for Implementation of Section
871(m) as Applied to Listed Options
Beginning on January 1, 2017, the
Final Section 871(m) Regulations would
treat OCC as paying dividend
equivalents subject to both Chapter 3
Withholding and FATCA
Withholding—even though no actual
payments are made—when a non-U.S.
Clearing Member enters into a listed
equity option with an initial delta of .8
or higher. OCC has evaluated its existing
systems and services to determine
whether and how it may comply with
such withholding obligations. As a
result of this evaluation, OCC has
determined that its existing systems are
not capable of effectuating withholding
with regard to the transactions
processed by OCC. OCC does not have
access to the necessary transactionspecific information to determine
whether a particular transaction triggers
withholding, nor the systems to obtain
such information. For example, OCC
cannot associate options transactions in
a Clearing Member’s customer account
with any particular customer. Similarly,
when an option contract in a Clearing
Member’s customer account is closed
out, OCC cannot determine the specific
contract that is closed out when there
are multiple identical contracts in the
Clearing Member’s customer account.24
Even if OCC had access to all
necessary information, the daily net
settlement process in which OCC
engages would not permit OCC to
effectuate withholding without
introducing significant settlement and
liquidity risk, particularly since
dividend equivalents on listed options
do not involve an actual cash payment
to the Clearing Member from which
amounts could be withheld. OCC nets
credits and debits per Clearing Member
for daily settlement. Given OCC’s
netting, effectuating withholding could
require OCC in certain circumstances to
apply its own funds in order to remit
withholding taxes to the IRS whenever
the net credit owed to a non-U.S.
Clearing Member is less than the
withholding tax. In addition, if a nonU.S. Clearing Member has dividend
23 See
26 CFR 1.1461–1(c)(2)(i)(L).
with identical terms but entered into
on different days or at different times will have
different initial deltas. As a result, some (those with
initial deltas above .8) may be Section 871(m)
Transactions, while others may not be. It is thus
critical to know which specific contract is closed
out for purposes of determining if dividend
equivalents arise with respect to a particular
contract that is a Section 871(m) Transaction.
24 Contracts
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equivalent payments aggregating $50
million, but the member is in a net debit
settlement position for that day because
of OCC’s daily net crediting and
debiting, there would be no payment to
this Clearing Member from which OCC
could withhold. In this example, OCC
would likely need to fund the $15
million withholding tax (30% of $50
million) until such time as the Clearing
Member could reimburse OCC.
Furthermore, the cost of implementing a
withholding system for the small
number of Clearing Members that are
non-U.S. firms (currently eight out of
115 Clearing Members) would be
substantial and disproportionate to the
related benefit. Since the cost of
developing and maintaining a complex
withholding system would be passed on
to OCC’s Clearing Members at large, it
would burden both U.S. Clearing
Members and non-U.S. Clearing
Members that have entered into the
requisite agreements with the IRS and
are FATCA Compliant.
Section 871(m) requires OCC’s U.S.
Clearing Members with foreign
customers to build and maintain
systems in order to carry out their
withholding responsibilities under
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 for dividend
equivalents in connection with
transactions with their foreign
customers. Absent the proposed rule
change, OCC’s non-U.S. Clearing
Members could decide not to develop
similarly appropriate systems. Such a
decision would force OCC to be in a
position to comply with withholding
obligations on Section 871(m)
Transactions under Chapter 3 and
Chapter 4 with regard to its non-U.S.
Clearing Members, which, as noted
above, OCC cannot do based on the way
its settlement process and systems work.
If such a situation were to theoretically
occur, the resulting compliance costs
would be shifted from the non-U.S.
Clearing Members to OCC, and would
cause such costs to be borne indirectly
by OCC’s U.S. Clearing Members, which
already would be bearing their own
compliance costs with regard to Section
871(m) Transactions. Moreover, as
noted, the non-U.S. Clearing Members
are in a better position than OCC to
comply with Chapter 3 and Chapter 4
reporting and withholding requirements
for Section 871(m) Transactions because
they have customer information that
OCC lacks. Under the proposed rule
change, the costs associated with
developing and maintaining the
required systems would be moved back
to the non-U.S. Clearing Members, who
would essentially be placed in the same
position as U.S. Clearing Members in
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terms of having to incur their own U.S.
tax compliance costs.
For the reasons explained above, OCC
is proposing amendments to its Rules,
as described below, to implement
prudent, preventive measures that
would require all of OCC’s non-U.S.
Clearing Members to enter into
agreements with the IRS under which
they assume primary withholding
responsibility, to become Qualified
Derivatives Dealers, and to be FATCA
Compliant, so as to permit OCC to make
payments (and deemed payments of
dividend equivalents) to such Clearing
Members free from U.S. withholding
tax. In preparation for the proposed rule
change and the implementation of
Section 871(m) as applied to listed
options, OCC has asked its non-U.S.
Clearing Members to provide OCC with
tax documentation certifying their tax
status for purposes of both FATCA and
Chapter 3 Withholding. All of these
Clearing Members are Canadian firms
and, in response to OCC’s request, each
of them has provided documentation
certifying that it is a Reporting Model 1
FFI under the IGA with Canada, and
therefore FATCA Compliant. Each has
also certified that for Chapter 3
Withholding purposes, it is a Qualified
Intermediary Assuming Primary
Withholding Responsibility. None of
these Clearing Members are currently
Qualified Derivatives Dealers because
the IRS has not yet finalized the relevant
regulations and the associated
agreement that must be entered into
with the IRS. The IRS is expected to
finalize the regulations and provide the
agreement language before January 1,
2017. If the IRS does not take any
further action before January 1, 2017,
then the regulations will go into effect,
as they are currently written, on January
1, 2017. In that case, FFI Clearing
Members would become subject to
withholding by OCC with respect to
Section 871(m) Transactions in which
the FFI Clearing Members are acting as
a principal (i.e., transactions for the
member’s own account). Because of the
practical difficulty OCC would
encounter in attempting to distinguish
dealer transactions in which the FFI
Clearing Member is acting as an
intermediary versus those in which it is
acting as a principal, OCC will not allow
the FFI Clearing Members to clear any
dealer trades in the absence of final
guidance or the ability of OCC’s FFI
Clearing Members to distinguish
intermediary versus principal
transactions in a manner that would
allow OCC to process intermediary
transactions free of any withholding
obligations under Section 871(m). As
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discussed above, however, OCC expects
the IRS to finalize the regulations and to
provide the relevant agreement language
before January 1, 2017.
Proposed Amendments to OCC’s ByLaws and Rules
For the reasons discussed above, OCC
is proposing a number of amendments
to its By-Laws and Rules designed to
require that, as a general requirement for
membership, all existing and future
Clearing Members that are treated as
non-U.S. entities for U.S. federal income
tax purposes must enter into
appropriate agreements with the IRS
and be FATCA Compliant, such that
OCC will not be responsible for
withholding on dividend equivalents
under Section 871(m). Specifically, OCC
proposes to amend Article I of its ByLaws to include the following defined
terms. The term ‘‘FFI Clearing Member’’
would mean any Clearing Member that
is treated as a non-U.S. entity for U.S.
federal income tax purposes. The term
‘‘Dividend Equivalent’’ would be
defined as having the meaning provided
in Section 871(m) of the I.R.C. and
related Treasury Regulations and other
official interpretations thereof. The term
‘‘FATCA’’ would be defined as meaning:
(i) the provisions of Sections 1471
through 1474 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended, which were
enacted as part of The Foreign Account
Tax Compliance Act (or any amendment
thereto or successor sections thereof),
and related Treasury Regulations and
other official interpretations thereof, as
in effect from time to time, and (ii) the
provisions of any intergovernmental
agreement to implement The Foreign
Account Tax Compliance Act as in
effect from time to time between the
United States and the jurisdiction of the
FFI Clearing Member’s residency. The
term ‘‘FATCA Compliant’’ would mean,
with respect to an FFI Clearing Member,
that such FFI Clearing Member has
qualified under such procedures
promulgated by the IRS as are in effect
from time to time to establish exemption
from withholding under FATCA such
that OCC will not be required to
withhold any amount with respect to
any payment or deemed payment to
such FFI Clearing Member under
FATCA. The term ‘‘Qualified
Intermediary Assuming Primary
Withholding Responsibility’’ would
mean an FFI Clearing Member that has
entered into an agreement with the IRS
to be a qualified intermediary and to
assume primary responsibility for
reporting and for collecting and
remitting withholding tax under
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 of subtitle A,
and Chapter 61 and Section 3406, of the
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00:01 Nov 01, 2016
Jkt 241001
I.R.C. with respect to any income
(including Dividend Equivalents)
arising from transactions entered into by
the Clearing Member with OCC as an
intermediary, including transactions
entered into on behalf of such Clearing
Member’s customers. The term
‘‘Qualified Derivatives Dealer’’ would be
defined as an FFI Clearing Member that
has entered into an agreement with IRS
that permits OCC to make Dividend
Equivalent payments to such clearing
member free from U.S. withholding tax
under Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 of
subtitle A, and Chapter 61 and Section
3406, of the I.R.C. with respect to
transactions entered into by such
clearing member with OCC as a
principal for such Clearing Member’s
own account. ‘‘Section 871(m) Effective
Date’’ would be defined as meaning
January 1, 2017, or, if later, the date on
which Section 871(m) and related
Treasury Regulations and other official
interpretations thereof, first apply to
listed options transactions. Finally,
‘‘Section 871(m) Implementation Date’’
would mean December 1, 2016, or, if
later, the date that is 30 days before the
Section 871(m) Effective Date.25
The proposed rule change also would
add Section 1(e) to Article V of OCC’s
By-Laws, which would require any
applicant, that if admitted to
membership would be an FFI Clearing
Member, to be a Qualified Intermediary
Assuming Primary Withholding
Responsibility and to be FATCA
Compliant beginning on the Section
871(m) Implementation Date. In
addition, if the applicant intends to
trade for its own account, the applicant
would be required to be a Qualified
Derivatives Dealer.
Furthermore, the proposed rule
change would impose additional
requirements on FFI Clearing Members.
Specifically, proposed Rule 310(d)(1)
would prohibit FFI Clearing Members
from conducting any transaction or
activity through OCC unless the
Clearing Member is a Qualified
Intermediary Assuming Primary
Withholding Responsibility and FATCA
Compliant, beginning on the Section
871(m) Effective Date. In addition, FFI
Clearing Members would not be
permitted to enter into a transaction for
their own accounts unless such Clearing
25 Although withholding with regard to Dividend
Equivalent payments to non-U.S. clearing members
is scheduled take effect beginning January 1, 2017,
the proposed amendments to the By-Laws and
Rules would require existing non-U.S. clearing
members to provide documentation certifying their
compliance with the requirements of Rule 310(d) 30
days prior to January 1, 2017, in order for OCC to
review the certification materials and to address in
a timely manner any potential non-compliance, in
accordance with its Rules.
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75871
Member is a Qualified Derivatives
Dealer and such transaction is within
the scope of the exemption from
withholding tax for Dividend
Equivalents paid to Qualified
Derivatives Dealers.
Proposed Rule 310(d)(2) would
require each FFI Clearing Member to
certify annually to OCC, beginning on
the Section 871(m) Implementation
Date, that it satisfies the above
requirements and also to update its
certification to OCC (viz., a completed
Form W–8IMY electing primary
withholding responsibility and
Qualified Derivatives Dealer status) if
required by applicable law or
administrative guidance or if its
certification is no longer accurate.
Proposed Rule 310(d)(3) also would
require each FFI Clearing Member to
provide OCC with the information it
needs relating to Dividend Equivalents,
in sufficient detail and in a sufficiently
timely manner, for OCC to comply with
its obligation under Chapters 3 and 4 to
make required reports to the IRS
regarding Dividend Equivalents and the
transactions giving rise to same between
OCC and the FFI Clearing Member.
Additionally, proposed Rule 310(d)(4)
would require each FFI Clearing
Member to inform OCC promptly if it is
not, or has reason to know that it will
not be, in compliance with Rule 310(d)
within 2 days of knowledge thereof This
rule ensures that OCC will be notified
in a timely manner in the event that an
FFI Clearing Member no longer
maintains the appropriate arrangements
described above to ensure that all
withholding and reporting obligations
with respect to Dividend Equivalents
under Section 871(m) and Chapter 3 and
4 are being fulfilled.
Finally, proposed Rule 310(d)(5)
would require each FFI Clearing
Member to indemnify OCC for any loss,
liability, or expense sustained by OCC
resulting from such member’s failure to
comply with proposed Rule 310(d). As
discussed above, a Dividend Equivalent
is deemed to arise if a dividend is paid
on the underlying stock while an option
is outstanding, even though no
corresponding payment is made on the
option. Due to the nature of OCC’s
settlement process, there may be no
actual payments to the FFI Clearing
Member from which OCC could
withhold in order to address a liability
or expense incurred by OCC arising
from a member’s failure to comply with
the proposed rules. As a result, if OCC
were required to satisfy any liability or
expense caused by such member’s
failure to comply out of OCC’s own
funds, OCC would look to the FFI
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Clearing Member to indemnify OCC for
such losses.
(2) Statutory Basis
OCC believes the proposed rule
change is consistent with Section 17A of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended (‘‘Act’’),26 and the rules
thereunder applicable to OCC. Section
17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act 27 requires,
among other things, that the rules of a
clearing agency: (i) Promote the prompt
and accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions and, to the extent
applicable, derivative agreements,
contracts, and transactions; (ii) assure
the safeguarding of securities and funds
which are in the custody or control of
the clearing agency or for which it is
responsible; (iii) in general, protect
investors and the public interest; and
(iv) are not designed to permit unfair
discrimination among participants in
the use of the clearing agency. OCC
believes that the proposed rule change
is designed to promote the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of
securities and derivatives transactions,
assure the safeguarding of securities and
funds at OCC, and protect investors and
the public interest because it would
eliminate the uncertainty in funds
settlement that otherwise would arise if
OCC were subject to withholding
obligations with respect to Dividend
Equivalents under Section 871(m). As
noted above, the daily net settlement
process in which OCC engages would
not permit OCC to effectuate the
necessary withholdings, particularly
since Dividend Equivalents on listed
options do not involve an actual cash
payment to the Clearing Member from
which amounts could be withheld. In
addition, OCC lacks the customer
information necessary determine the
correct amounts subject to withholding.
The introduction of withholding
responsibilities on OCC therefore would
introduce new complications and risks
into OCC’s clearance and settlement
process and could create uncertainty
around the settlement of funds at OCC.
For these reasons, OCC does not believe
that it is situated to accept the liability
associated with Dividend Equivalent
withholding responsibilities.
The proposed rule change would
implement prudent, preventive
measures to protect OCC against the
obligation for any such withholding
(and any resulting liability) by requiring
FFI Clearing Members to enter into
certain agreements with the IRS under
which the FFI Clearing Member
assumes primary withholding
26 15
27 15
U.S.C. 78q–1.
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
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00:01 Nov 01, 2016
responsibilities with respect to
transactions that it enters into on behalf
of customers (i.e., as an intermediary) or
for its own account (i.e., as a principal)
and to be FATCA Compliant. The
proposed rule change would eliminate
potential risks and uncertainty in the
daily settlement of funds at OCC
otherwise imposed by Section 871(m)’s
new mandate. Thus, OCC believes the
proposed rule change is designed to
promote the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of securities
and derivatives transactions, the
safeguarding of securities and funds at
OCC, and the protection of securities
investors and the public interest in
accordance with Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of
the Act.28
Moreover, OCC believes that the
proposed rule change does not unfairly
discriminate among participants in the
use of the clearing agency. While the
proposed rule change would impose
additional requirements and/or
restrictions on FFI Clearing Members,
the proposed rules are intended to
address specific issues and potential
risks to OCC arising from those FFI
Clearing Members whose membership
creates potential withholding
obligations for OCC. Additionally, as
described above, Section 871(m) will
impose similar withholding and
reporting obligations on OCC’s U.S.
Clearing Members with respect to their
foreign customers. Once Section 871(m)
withholding becomes effective, OCC’s
U.S. Clearing Members will be subject to
similar withholding and reporting
requirements under Chapters 3 and 4,
and they would need to develop and
maintain appropriate systems to
effectuate the required withholdings.
The proposed rule change by OCC
would require OCC’s non-U.S. Clearing
Members to develop and maintain
similar systems to effectuate the
necessary U.S. tax withholding.
OCC believes it is appropriate to
impose these additional requirements
on FFI Clearing Members because
providing clearing services for these FFI
Clearing Members would subject OCC to
the additional withholding obligations
discussed above, which do not arise
when OCC performs clearing services
for its U.S. Clearing Members. In the
absence of the proposed rules, OCC
would need to be in a position to
comply with withholding obligations on
Section 871(m) Transactions under
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 with regard to
its FFI Clearing Members, which as
noted above OCC cannot do based on
the way its settlement process and
systems work. If such a situation were
to theoretically occur, the resulting
compliance costs would be shifted from
the non-U.S. Clearing Members to OCC,
and would cause such costs to be borne
indirectly by OCC’s U.S. Clearing
Members, which already would be
bearing their own compliance costs with
regard to Section 871(m) Transactions.
Since the cost of developing and
maintaining a complex withholding
system would be passed on to OCC’s
Clearing Members at large, OCC believes
it would be an unfair burden on U.S.
Clearing Members, as well as any nonU.S. Clearing Members that have
entered into the requisite agreements
with the IRS and are FATCA Compliant.
Finally, OCC understands that its nonU.S. Clearing Members already have
agreed to act as Qualified Intermediaries
that accept primary withholding
responsibility for Chapter 3 and Chapter
4 purposes more generally, which may
limit to some degree the incremental
burden they would be required to
undertake as Qualified Derivatives
Dealers once the Section 871(m)
withholding rules take effect. Therefore,
OCC believes that the proposed rule
change is not unfairly discriminatory
among participants in the use of the
clearing agency and is therefore
consistent with Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of
the Act.29 The proposed rule change is
not inconsistent with any rules of OCC,
including those rules proposed to be
amended.
(B) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Burden on Competition
Section 17A(b)(3)(I) of the Act
requires that the rules of a clearing
agency not impose any burden on
competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act.30 The proposed
rule change could potentially impact or
burden competition by requiring any
applicant for clearing membership or
existing Clearing Member that would be
an FFI Clearing Member to be a
Qualified Intermediary Assuming
Primary Withholding Responsibility in
order to conduct any transaction or
activity through OCC. This requirement
could impose burdens on such an
applicant or member because it would
require them to develop systems and
processes to collect the information
necessary to determine which of its
cleared options transactions are Section
871(m) Transactions and to calculate
and effectuate the required
withholdings and reporting.
Additionally, the proposed rule change
would require such an applicant or
29 15
28 15
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30 15
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U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(I).
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member to be FATCA Compliant, which
would require it to develop processes
and procedures to gather information
from clients necessary to fulfill its
reporting obligations under FATCA.
Moreover, in order to engage in activity
for its own account, such applicant or
member would need to be a Qualified
Derivatives Dealer, which would entail
the development of additional systems
and processes for identifying any
residual Section 871(m) Transactions it
has entered into for its own account.
The development of these systems and
processes remain subject to some
uncertainty, due to remaining questions
regarding regulatory guidance under
Section 871(m).31 In the absence of the
proposed rule change, however, the
non-U.S. Clearing Members themselves
would become subject to withholding
by OCC on dividend equivalents. The
proposed rule thus reduces a direct
economic burden on transactions
between OCC and its non-U.S. Clearing
Members that would apply absent
compliance with the proposed rules.
Furthermore, OCC does not believe
the proposed rule change would impose
a significant burden on competition for
FFI Clearing Members as compared to
OCC’s U.S. Clearing Members. As
described above, Section 871(m)
imposes similar withholding and
reporting obligations on OCC’s U.S.
Clearing Members with foreign
customers. OCC’s U.S. Clearing
Members also will need to develop and
maintain appropriate systems to identify
Section 871(m) Transactions and to
effectuate the required withholding. The
proposed rule change by OCC would
impose comparable requirements on
OCC’s non-U.S. Clearing Members.
The proposed rule change also is
narrowly tailored. It addresses the
specific issues and potential risks to
OCC arising from those firms whose
membership creates potential
withholding obligations for OCC. The
proposed requirements for FFI Clearing
Members are designed to eliminate any
uncertainty in funds settlement that
would arise if OCC were subject to
withholding obligations with respect to
Dividend Equivalents under Section
31 OCC believes, however, that theses burdens
will be alleviated when the Treasury Department
and IRS issue further guidance and provide
additional clarity around outstanding questions and
issues concerning the Final Section 871(m)
Regulations. See generally Letter to the U.S.
Department of the Treasury and IRS from Craig S.
Donohue, Executive Chairman, OCC, on behalf of
the U.S. Securities Markets Coalition regarding
Final Section 871(m) Regulations Effective Date
available at https://www.optionsclearing.com/
components/docs/about/newsroom/commentletters/August-16-OCC-Request-for-Postponement871(m)-2016.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
00:01 Nov 01, 2016
Jkt 241001
871(m). As discussed further above,
OCC believes that the proposed rule
change is necessary to eliminate
potential complications and risk to its
clearance and settlement process that
would be presented by OCC’s potential
withholding responsibilities under
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 (and which
would be a direct consequence of
providing its clearance and settlement
services for these FFI Clearing
Members). OCC believes the proposed
rule change is necessary to promote the
prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities and derivatives
transactions, to assure the safeguarding
of securities and funds in the custody or
control of OCC or for which it is
responsible, and in general, to protect
investors and the public interest in
accordance with Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of
the Act.32 Any burden on competition
that this proposed change could be
regarded as imposing would not be
unreasonable or inappropriate under the
Act. Furthermore, as stated above, all of
OCC’s current non-U.S. Clearing
Members are already Qualified
Intermediaries Assuming Primary
Withholding Responsibility and FATCA
Compliant.
OCC does not believe that the ongoing
certification and reporting provisions of
proposed Rules 310(d)(2)–(4) would
have any impact on competition. As a
matter of standard practice, Clearing
Members are required to inform OCC of
material changes in, for example, their
formal organization, ownership
structure, or financial condition 33 and
are subject to ongoing financial
reporting requirements.34 OCC believes
the proposed rule change would impose
reasonable reporting and notification
requirements with respect to FFI
Clearing Members’ tax compliance
status similar to those rules referenced
above. Moreover, OCC does not believe
the indemnification provision in
proposed Rule 301(d)(5) would present
a burden on competition as it would
only be imposed in the event that an FFI
Clearing Member failed to comply with
the proposed rule change and such
failure resulted in a loss or expense to
OCC.
For the foregoing reasons, OCC
believes that the proposed rule change
is in the public interest, would be
consistent with the requirements of the
Act applicable to registered clearing
agencies, and would not impose a
burden on competition that is
unnecessary or inappropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
32 15
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
e.g., OCC Rules 201 and 303.
34 See OCC Rule 306.
33 See,
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75873
(C) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Proposed Rule
Change Received from Members,
Participants or Others
Written comments on the proposed
rule change were not and are not
intended to be solicited with respect to
the proposed rule change and none have
been received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
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
the 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 email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
OCC–2016–014 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–OCC–2016–014. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
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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
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such
filings also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of OCC and on OCC’s Web site at
https://www.theocc.com/components/
docs/legal/rules_and_bylaws/sr_occ_16_
014.pdf.
All comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–OCC–2016–014 and should
be submitted on or before November 22,
2016.
For the Commission, by the Division
of Trading and Markets, pursuant to
delegated authority.35
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meeting
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
[FR Doc. 2016–26506 Filed 10–28–16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Investment Company Act Release No.
32338; File No. 812–14652]
Hartford Mutual Funds Inc., et al.;
Notice of Application
Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’).
ACTION: Notice of an application for an
order pursuant to: (a) Section 6(c) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940
(‘‘Act’’) granting an exemption from
sections 18(f) and 21(b) of the Act; (b)
section 12(d)(1)(J) of the Act granting an
exemption from section 12(d)(1) of the
Act; (c) sections 6(c) and 17(b) of the
Act granting an exemption from sections
17(a)(1), 17(a)(2) and 17(a)(3) of the Act;
and (d) section 17(d) of the Act and rule
17d–1 under the Act to permit certain
joint arrangements and transactions.
Applicants request an order that would
permit certain registered open-end
management investment companies to
participate in a joint lending and
borrowing facility.
AGENCY:
[FR Doc. 2016–26382 Filed 10–31–16; 8:45 am]
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to
the provisions of the Government in the
Sunshine Act, Pub. L. 94–409, that the
Securities and Exchange Commission
will hold a closed meeting on Thursday,
November 3, 2016 at 2 p.m.
Commissioners, Counsel to the
Commissioners, the Secretary to the
Commission, and recording secretaries
will attend the closed meeting. Certain
staff members who have an interest in
the matters also may be present.
The General Counsel of the
Commission, or her designee, has
certified that, in her opinion, one or
more of the exemptions set forth in 5
U.S.C. 552b(c)(3), (5), (7), 9(B) and (10)
and 17 CFR 200.402(a)(3), (a)(5), (a)(7),
(a)(9)(ii) and (a)(10), permit
consideration of the scheduled matter at
the closed meeting.
Commissioner Stein, as duty officer,
voted to consider the items listed for the
closed meeting in closed session.
The subject matter of the closed
meeting will be:
Institution and settlement of
injunctive actions;
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Dated: October 27, 2016.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
October 26, 2016.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
35 17
Institution and settlement of
administrative proceedings;
Adjudicatory matters; and
Other matters relating to enforcement
proceedings.
At times, changes in Commission
priorities require alterations in the
scheduling of meeting items.
For further information and to
ascertain what, if any, matters have been
added, deleted or postponed; please
contact Brent J. Fields from the Office of
the Secretary at (202) 551–5400.
00:01 Nov 01, 2016
Jkt 241001
Applicants: The Hartford Mutual
Funds, Inc., The Hartford Mutual Funds
II, Inc., Hartford Series Fund, Inc. and
Hartford HLS Series Fund II, Inc. (each
a ‘‘Corporation’’ and collectively, the
‘‘Corporations’’), each a Maryland
corporation registered under the Act as
an open-end management investment
company with multiple series and
Hartford Funds Management Company,
LLC (the ‘‘Initial Adviser’’), a Delaware
limited liability company registered as
an investment adviser under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
Filing Dates: The application was
filed on May 20, 2016, and amended on
August 26, 2016.
Hearing or Notification of Hearing: An
order granting the requested relief will
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
be issued unless the Commission orders
a hearing. Interested persons may
request a hearing by writing to the
Commission’s Secretary and serving
applicants with a copy of the request,
personally or by mail.
Hearing requests should be received
by the Commission by 5:30 p.m. on
November 21, 2016 and should be
accompanied by proof of service on the
applicants, in the form of an affidavit,
or, for lawyers, a certificate of service.
Pursuant to Rule 0–5 under the Act,
hearing requests should state the nature
of the writer’s interest, any facts bearing
upon the desirability of a hearing on the
matter, the reason for the request, and
the issues contested. Persons who wish
to be notified of a hearing may request
notification by writing to the
Commission’s Secretary.
Secretary, U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549–1090;
Applicants: 5 Radnor Corporate Center,
100 Matsonford Road, Suite 300,
Radnor, PA 19087.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jessica Shin, Attorney-Adviser, at (202)
551–5921 or David J. Marcinkus, Branch
Chief, at (202) 551–6821 (Division of
Investment Management, Chief
Counsel’s Office).
The
following is a summary of the
application. The complete application
may be obtained via the Commission’s
Web site by searching for the file
number, or an applicant using the
Company name box, at https://
www.sec.gov/search/search.htm or by
calling (202) 551–8090.
Summary of the Application:
1. Applicants request an order that
would permit the applicants to
participate in an interfund lending
facility where each Fund could lend
money directly to and borrow money
directly from other Funds to cover
unanticipated cash shortfalls, such as
unanticipated redemptions or trade
fails.1 The Funds will not borrow under
the facility for leverage purposes and
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1 Applicants request that the order apply to the
applicants and to any existing or future registered
open-end management investment company or
series thereof for which the Initial Adviser or any
successor thereto or an investment adviser
controlling, controlled by, or under common
control with the Initial Adviser or any successor
thereto serves as investment adviser (each a ‘‘Fund’’
and collectively the ‘‘Funds’’ and each such
investment adviser an ‘‘Adviser’’). For purposes of
the requested order, ‘‘successor’’ is limited to any
entity that results from a reorganization into
another jurisdiction or a change in the type of a
business organization.
E:\FR\FM\01NON1.SGM
01NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 211 (Tuesday, November 1, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 75867-75874]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-26382]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-79172; File No. SR-OCC-2016-014]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation;
Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change Related to Compliance With
Section 871(m) of the Internal Revenue Code
October 27, 2016.
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 October 18, 2016, The Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC'') filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the
proposed rule change as described in Items I, II and III below, which
Items have been prepared by OCC. The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change from interested
persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the
Proposed Rule Change
The purpose of this proposed rule change is to amend OCC's By-Laws
and Rules to address the implementation of Section 871(m) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (``I.R.C.''),\3\ and the
Treasury Regulations thereunder as they will apply to listed options
transactions. The proposed amendments to OCC's By-Laws and Rules can be
found on OCC's public Web site.\4\ All capitalized terms not defined
herein have the same meaning as set forth in OCC's By-Laws and
Rules.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 26 U.S.C. 871(m).
\4\ OCC's By-Laws and Rules can be found on OCC's public Web
site: https://optionsclearing.com/about/publications/bylaws.jsp.
\5\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, OCC included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. OCC has prepared summaries, set forth in sections (A),
(B), and (C) below, of the most significant aspects of these
statements.
(A) Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Proposed Rule Change
(1) Purpose
Background
OCC is proposing to modify its By-Laws and Rules to address the
application of I.R.C. Section 871(m) (``Section 871(m)'') \6\ to listed
options transactions commencing on January 1, 2017. The proposed
modifications are designed to ensure that OCC will not be liable for
U.S. withholding tax with respect to certain options transactions
entered into by OCC's Clearing Members that are treated as non-U.S.
persons for federal income tax purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 26 U.S.C. 871(m).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 871(m), which was enacted in 2010, imposes a 30%
withholding tax on ``dividend equivalent'' payments that are made or
deemed to be made to non-U.S. persons with respect to certain
derivatives (such as total return swaps) that reference equity of a
U.S. issuer. In enacting Section 871(m), Congress was attempting to
address the ability of foreign persons to obtain the economics of
owning dividend-paying stock through a derivative while avoiding the
withholding tax that would apply to dividends paid on the stock if the
foreign person owned the stock directly.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See 26 U.S.C. 871(a)(1)(A) (30% tax on dividends paid to
non-resident aliens).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In September 2015, the Treasury Department adopted final
regulations (the ``Final Section 871(m)
[[Page 75868]]
Regulations'') \8\ based on a proposal issued in December 2013
expanding the types of derivatives to which Section 871(m) applies to
include certain listed options transactions with an effective date of
January 1, 2017. While actual dividends paid to foreign owners of U.S.
equities have been subject to withholding tax for over 80 years,
transactions by foreign persons in listed options referencing U.S.
equities have not previously given rise to withholding tax. The
application of Section 871(m) to listed options, as provided in the
Final Section 871(m) Regulations, thus introduces new tax obligations
and associated risks for OCC and its Clearing Members.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See T.D. 9734, 80 FR 56866 (Sept. 18, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Final Section 871(m) Regulations, any equity option
entered into by a non-U.S. person with an initial delta of .8 or above
is considered a ``Section 871(m) Transaction'' and can potentially give
rise to a dividend equivalent subject to withholding tax.\9\ A dividend
equivalent is deemed to arise if a dividend is paid on the underlying
stock while such an option is outstanding even though no corresponding
payment is made on the option. A complex set of rules and exceptions in
the Final Section 871(m) Regulations must be followed in order for the
withholding agent (as defined in 26 CFR 1.1441-7) to determine if the
withholding tax in fact applies, and, if so, the amount of the dividend
equivalent subject to withholding tax.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Under the regulations, ``delta'' refers to the ratio of the
change in the fair market value of an option to a small change in
the fair market value of the number of shares of the underlying
security referenced by the option. See 26 CFR 1.871-15(g)(1).
Individual options entered into ``in connection with each other''
must generally be combined and tested against the .8 delta threshold
on a combined basis (the ``Combination Rule''). See 26 CFR 1.871-
15(n). For example, if a non-U.S. person buys a call option and
writes a put option on the same stock, and the options are entered
into in connection with each other, the delta of the call and the
delta of the put are added together. If the sum is .8 or higher, the
two transactions are treated as Section 871(m) Transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two separate but overlapping U.S. withholding tax regimes will
apply to dividend equivalents on listed options that are Section 871(m)
Transactions. The first regime, sometimes referred to as ``Chapter 3
Withholding,'' is the basic U.S. income tax withholding regime under
Chapter 3 subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Code (``Chapter 3''),
which has existed for many years.\10\ The second regime, known as
``FATCA,'' \11\ was enacted in 2010 and, subject to transition rules,
first applied to withholdable payments (such as dividends and interest)
made after June 30, 2014. The Treasury Department has issued extensive
regulations under FATCA (the ``FATCA Regulations'').\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See 26 U.S.C. 1441-1446.
\11\ See 26 U.S.C. 1471-1474. FATCA stands for the Foreign
Account Tax Compliance Act, which is found in Chapter 4 of subtitle
A of Title 26. References in this filing to ``Chapter 4'' are
references to FATCA, and vice versa.
\12\ See 26 CFR 1.1471-0 through 1.1474-1.1474-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The two withholding tax regimes serve very different purposes.
Chapter 3 Withholding requires a withholding agent to withhold 30% of a
withholdable payment and remit it to the Internal Revenue Service
(``IRS'').\13\ The withholding tax is the mechanism by which the non-
U.S. person receiving the payment satisfies its tax liability to the
United States.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Withholdable payments include U.S. source dividends, as
defined in 26 U.S.C. 1441(b), and dividend equivalents are treated
as U.S. source dividends for this purpose. 26 U.S.C. 871(m)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FATCA, on the other hand, was enacted with the purpose of curbing
tax evasion by U.S. citizens and residents through the use of offshore
bank accounts. FATCA imposes a 30% withholding tax (``FATCA
Withholding'') on U.S.-source dividends and other withholdable payments
(including dividend equivalents) \14\ made by a U.S. withholding agent
to a foreign financial institution (``FFI''), such as a bank or
brokerage firm, unless the financial institution agrees to provide
information to the IRS about its U.S. account holders. The purpose of
FATCA Withholding is thus to force FFIs to provide the required
information about U.S. account holders to the IRS. FFIs that enter into
the required agreement with the IRS are referred to as ``Participating
FFIs,'' and those that do not are referred to as ``Nonparticipating
FFIs.'' The 30% FATCA Withholding applies to withholdable payments made
to a Nonparticipating FFI whether the Nonparticipating FFI is the
beneficial owner of the payment or acting as a broker, custodian or
other intermediary with respect to the payment. To the extent that
withholdable payments are made to a Nonparticipating FFI in any
capacity, a U.S. withholding agent, such as OCC or its U.S. Clearing
Members, transmitting these payments to the Nonparticipating FFI will
be liable to the IRS for any amounts of FATCA Withholding that the U.S.
withholding agent should, but does not, withhold and remit to the IRS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The types of payments subject to FATCA Withholding are
generally the same as those subject to Chapter 3 Withholding,
although FATCA Withholding also applies to gross proceeds from the
sale or other disposition of any instrument that gives rise to such
payments. See 26 U.S.C. 1473(1). Gross proceeds withholding under
FATCA is scheduled to become effective in 2019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Treasury Department has provided alternative means of complying
with FATCA for FFIs that are resident in foreign jurisdictions that
enter into an intergovernmental agreement (``IGA'') with the United
States (each such foreign jurisdiction being referred to as a ``FATCA
Partner''). An FFI resident in a FATCA Partner jurisdiction must either
transmit the information required by FATCA to its local tax authority,
which in turn would transmit the information to the IRS pursuant to a
tax treaty or information exchange agreement (referred to as a ``Model
1 IGA''), or the FFI must be authorized or required by FATCA Partner
law to enter into an FFI agreement and to transmit FATCA reporting
directly to the IRS (referred to as a ``Model 2 IGA''). Under both IGA
models, payments to such FFIs would not be subject to FATCA Withholding
so long as the FFI complies with the FATCA Partner's laws as mandated
in the IGA. OCC currently has eight non-U.S. Clearing Members, all of
which are Canadian firms. Canada entered into a Model 1 IGA with the
United States on February 5, 2014, as a result of which OCC's Canadian
Clearing Members that comply with the Canadian laws mandated in such
Model 1 IGA are ``Reporting Model 1 FFIs'' and are exempt from FATCA
Withholding.
Because OCC does not make payments of U.S.-source interest and
dividends to its Clearing Members, OCC's transactions with its Clearing
Members have not to date given rise to payments subject to Chapter 3
Withholding or to FATCA Withholding. Both Chapter 3 Withholding and
FATCA Withholding will become applicable to OCC and its Clearing
Members, however, once Section 871(m) applies to listed options
commencing January 1, 2017.
Impact on OCC and its Clearing Members
The application of Section 871(m) to listed options transactions
that are Section 871(m) Transactions in combination with Chapter 3
Withholding and FATCA Withholding will have significant implications
for OCC and its Clearing Members. These implications differ depending
upon whether the Clearing Member involved in the transaction is a U.S.
firm or a non-U.S. firm. When a U.S. Clearing Member is involved,
Section 871(m) is relevant if the Clearing Member is acting (directly
or indirectly) on behalf of a
[[Page 75869]]
non-U.S. customer.\15\ When a U.S. Clearing Member is acting for a
foreign customer, the U.S. Clearing Member will need to determine
whether the transaction is a Section 871(m) Transaction, and, if so,
the amount of any dividend equivalents subject to withholding. Under
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4, withholding tax will need to be collected by
the U.S. Clearing Member on any such dividend equivalent and remitted
to the IRS.\16\ Reporting by the U.S. Clearing Member with respect to
such amounts on IRS Forms 1042 and 1042-S would also be required.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Section 871(m) is not relevant if the U.S. Clearing Member
is acting on behalf of a U.S. customer or for its own account.
\16\ The obligation to withhold arises under both Chapter 3 and
Chapter 4 (i.e., FATCA), but duplicate withholding is not required.
Under Section 1474(d) and 26 CFR 1.1474-6T(b)(1), amounts withheld
under FATCA are credited against amounts required to be withheld
under chapter 3.
\17\ See 26 CFR 1.1461-1(c)(2)(i)(L).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OCC will not be obligated to withhold on any dividend equivalents
associated with listed options that are Section 871(m) Transactions
when the Clearing Member involved is a U.S. firm. Under the applicable
Treasury Regulations, because OCC is treated as making such payments to
a U.S. financial institution, OCC is not required to withhold. Rather,
the withholding obligation falls on the U.S. Clearing Member if the
member is acting directly for a non-U.S. person, or potentially on
another broker or custodian with a closer connection to the non-U.S.
person. Similarly, OCC will not have any tax reporting obligations.
Those obligations will typically fall on the broker that has the
obligation to withhold. In general terms, OCC is relieved of the
obligation to withhold and to report dividend equivalents in this
situation because the U.S. Clearing Member, and not OCC, is the last
U.S. person with custody or control over the relevant payment or funds
before they leave the United States. Without regard to the proposed
rule change described herein, therefore, Section 871(m) will require
OCC's U.S. Clearing Members with foreign customers to develop and
maintain systems (i) to identify options transactions that are Section
871(m) Transactions (including under the Combination Rule),\18\ (ii) to
determine the amount of any dividend equivalents, and (iii) to
effectuate withholding. Developing these systems will be challenging
and costly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See supra note 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The situation is very different when the Clearing Member involved
is a non-U.S. firm. (As noted above, OCC currently has eight non-U.S.
clearing members, all of which are Canadian firms.) Under the Final
Section 871(m) Regulations, OCC itself is a withholding agent when a
non-U.S. Clearing Member enters into a transaction on behalf of a
customer or for its own account.\19\ In this situation, OCC is the last
U.S. person treated as having custody or control over the payment or
funds before they leave the United States. Unless the non-U.S. Clearing
Members enter into certain agreements with the IRS (described below),
under which they assume primary responsibility for Chapter 3
Withholding tax and are FATCA Compliant, OCC would be required to
withhold on dividend equivalents with respect to transactions that are
Section 871(m) Transactions.\20\ In order to carry out these
responsibilities, OCC would need to develop and maintain systems (i) to
identify transactions that are Section 871(m) Transactions, (ii) to
determine the amount of any dividend equivalents, (iii) to effectuate
withholding, and (iv) to remit the withheld tax to the IRS. The non-
U.S. Clearing Members in this situation generally would not be required
to withhold or to report because they already would have been subject
to withholding by OCC. Without the proposed rule change, therefore,
Section 871(m) by default would impose on the U.S. Clearing Members and
OCC--but not on the non-U.S. Clearing Members--the responsibility for
withholding and reporting on dividend equivalents. The proposed rule
change would transfer OCC's obligations with respect to the non-U.S.
Clearing Members to those members, so that they would be treated in a
manner analogous to the U.S. Clearing Members, who themselves will be
required to withhold and report on dividend equivalents when Section
871(m) becomes effective with respect to listed options.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See 26 CFR 1.1441-7(a)(3) (Example 7).
\20\ As proposed, the term ``FACTA [sic] Compliant'' would mean
that a FFI Clearing Member has qualified under such procedures
promulgated by the IRS as are in effect from time to time to
establish an exemption from withholding under FATCA such that OCC
will not be required to withhold any amount with respect to any
payment or deemed payment to such FFI Clearing Member under FATCA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To address OCC's potential Chapter 3 Withholding and reporting
obligations, the agreements that non-U.S. Clearing Members can enter
into with the IRS to relieve OCC of these obligations are as follows:
With respect to transactions that the Clearing Member
enters into on behalf of customers (that is, as an intermediary), the
Clearing Member can enter into a ``qualified intermediary agreement''
with the IRS under which the Clearing Member assumes primary
withholding responsibility. If a Clearing Member has such an agreement
in place (such member being a ``Qualified Intermediary Assuming Primary
Withholding Responsibility''), OCC is relieved of its obligation to
withhold under Chapter 3 with respect to the Clearing Member's customer
transactions.
With respect to transactions the Clearing Member enters
into for its own account (that is, as a principal), the Clearing Member
will be able to enter into a qualified intermediary agreement with the
IRS (as described above) in which it further agrees, inter alia, to
assume primary withholding responsibility with respect to all dividends
and dividend equivalents it receives and makes.\21\ Entities entering
into such agreements are referred to as ``Qualified Derivatives
Dealers.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See 26 CFR 1.1441-1T(e)(6); Notice 2016-42, 2016-29 I.R.B.
(July 1, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Treasury Regulations regarding Qualified Derivatives Dealers
are currently in temporary form and are subject to change. Treasury and
the IRS recently issued Notice 2016-42, which has proposed changes to
the ``qualified intermediary agreement'' necessary to expand the
Qualified Derivatives Dealer exception to include all transactions in
which a Qualified Derivatives Dealer acts as a principal for its own
account, regardless of whether it does so in its dealer capacity.\22\
If these changes are incorporated into the final qualified intermediary
agreement, and if the Clearing Members timely enter into such
agreements, OCC does not believe, based on IRS Notice 2016-42, that OCC
will be obligated to withhold under Chapter 3 on any transactions
entered into by the Clearing Member for its own account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The concept of dealer in the tax context is different than
in the securities regulatory context, where dealer activity would
include both principal trading to facilitate customer activity as
well as principal trading solely on behalf of the firm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to FATCA Withholding, OCC would not be required to
withhold if the non-U.S. Clearing Member has entered into an agreement
with the IRS to provide information about its U.S. account holders or
if the Clearing Member is a resident of a country that has entered into
an IGA and the member complies with its reporting responsibilities
under the local legislation implementing the IGA.
Even if OCC's non-U.S. Clearing Members enter into the agreements
with the IRS described above (or with respect to FATCA are resident in
a country with
[[Page 75870]]
an IGA), OCC would still be required to report to the IRS the amounts
of dividend equivalents it is treated as paying to those Clearing
Members.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See 26 CFR 1.1461-1(c)(2)(i)(L).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Preparing for Implementation of Section 871(m) as Applied to Listed
Options
Beginning on January 1, 2017, the Final Section 871(m) Regulations
would treat OCC as paying dividend equivalents subject to both Chapter
3 Withholding and FATCA Withholding--even though no actual payments are
made--when a non-U.S. Clearing Member enters into a listed equity
option with an initial delta of .8 or higher. OCC has evaluated its
existing systems and services to determine whether and how it may
comply with such withholding obligations. As a result of this
evaluation, OCC has determined that its existing systems are not
capable of effectuating withholding with regard to the transactions
processed by OCC. OCC does not have access to the necessary
transaction-specific information to determine whether a particular
transaction triggers withholding, nor the systems to obtain such
information. For example, OCC cannot associate options transactions in
a Clearing Member's customer account with any particular customer.
Similarly, when an option contract in a Clearing Member's customer
account is closed out, OCC cannot determine the specific contract that
is closed out when there are multiple identical contracts in the
Clearing Member's customer account.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Contracts with identical terms but entered into on
different days or at different times will have different initial
deltas. As a result, some (those with initial deltas above .8) may
be Section 871(m) Transactions, while others may not be. It is thus
critical to know which specific contract is closed out for purposes
of determining if dividend equivalents arise with respect to a
particular contract that is a Section 871(m) Transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Even if OCC had access to all necessary information, the daily net
settlement process in which OCC engages would not permit OCC to
effectuate withholding without introducing significant settlement and
liquidity risk, particularly since dividend equivalents on listed
options do not involve an actual cash payment to the Clearing Member
from which amounts could be withheld. OCC nets credits and debits per
Clearing Member for daily settlement. Given OCC's netting, effectuating
withholding could require OCC in certain circumstances to apply its own
funds in order to remit withholding taxes to the IRS whenever the net
credit owed to a non-U.S. Clearing Member is less than the withholding
tax. In addition, if a non-U.S. Clearing Member has dividend equivalent
payments aggregating $50 million, but the member is in a net debit
settlement position for that day because of OCC's daily net crediting
and debiting, there would be no payment to this Clearing Member from
which OCC could withhold. In this example, OCC would likely need to
fund the $15 million withholding tax (30% of $50 million) until such
time as the Clearing Member could reimburse OCC. Furthermore, the cost
of implementing a withholding system for the small number of Clearing
Members that are non-U.S. firms (currently eight out of 115 Clearing
Members) would be substantial and disproportionate to the related
benefit. Since the cost of developing and maintaining a complex
withholding system would be passed on to OCC's Clearing Members at
large, it would burden both U.S. Clearing Members and non-U.S. Clearing
Members that have entered into the requisite agreements with the IRS
and are FATCA Compliant.
Section 871(m) requires OCC's U.S. Clearing Members with foreign
customers to build and maintain systems in order to carry out their
withholding responsibilities under Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 for dividend
equivalents in connection with transactions with their foreign
customers. Absent the proposed rule change, OCC's non-U.S. Clearing
Members could decide not to develop similarly appropriate systems. Such
a decision would force OCC to be in a position to comply with
withholding obligations on Section 871(m) Transactions under Chapter 3
and Chapter 4 with regard to its non-U.S. Clearing Members, which, as
noted above, OCC cannot do based on the way its settlement process and
systems work. If such a situation were to theoretically occur, the
resulting compliance costs would be shifted from the non-U.S. Clearing
Members to OCC, and would cause such costs to be borne indirectly by
OCC's U.S. Clearing Members, which already would be bearing their own
compliance costs with regard to Section 871(m) Transactions. Moreover,
as noted, the non-U.S. Clearing Members are in a better position than
OCC to comply with Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 reporting and withholding
requirements for Section 871(m) Transactions because they have customer
information that OCC lacks. Under the proposed rule change, the costs
associated with developing and maintaining the required systems would
be moved back to the non-U.S. Clearing Members, who would essentially
be placed in the same position as U.S. Clearing Members in terms of
having to incur their own U.S. tax compliance costs.
For the reasons explained above, OCC is proposing amendments to its
Rules, as described below, to implement prudent, preventive measures
that would require all of OCC's non-U.S. Clearing Members to enter into
agreements with the IRS under which they assume primary withholding
responsibility, to become Qualified Derivatives Dealers, and to be
FATCA Compliant, so as to permit OCC to make payments (and deemed
payments of dividend equivalents) to such Clearing Members free from
U.S. withholding tax. In preparation for the proposed rule change and
the implementation of Section 871(m) as applied to listed options, OCC
has asked its non-U.S. Clearing Members to provide OCC with tax
documentation certifying their tax status for purposes of both FATCA
and Chapter 3 Withholding. All of these Clearing Members are Canadian
firms and, in response to OCC's request, each of them has provided
documentation certifying that it is a Reporting Model 1 FFI under the
IGA with Canada, and therefore FATCA Compliant. Each has also certified
that for Chapter 3 Withholding purposes, it is a Qualified Intermediary
Assuming Primary Withholding Responsibility. None of these Clearing
Members are currently Qualified Derivatives Dealers because the IRS has
not yet finalized the relevant regulations and the associated agreement
that must be entered into with the IRS. The IRS is expected to finalize
the regulations and provide the agreement language before January 1,
2017. If the IRS does not take any further action before January 1,
2017, then the regulations will go into effect, as they are currently
written, on January 1, 2017. In that case, FFI Clearing Members would
become subject to withholding by OCC with respect to Section 871(m)
Transactions in which the FFI Clearing Members are acting as a
principal (i.e., transactions for the member's own account). Because of
the practical difficulty OCC would encounter in attempting to
distinguish dealer transactions in which the FFI Clearing Member is
acting as an intermediary versus those in which it is acting as a
principal, OCC will not allow the FFI Clearing Members to clear any
dealer trades in the absence of final guidance or the ability of OCC's
FFI Clearing Members to distinguish intermediary versus principal
transactions in a manner that would allow OCC to process intermediary
transactions free of any withholding obligations under Section 871(m).
As
[[Page 75871]]
discussed above, however, OCC expects the IRS to finalize the
regulations and to provide the relevant agreement language before
January 1, 2017.
Proposed Amendments to OCC's By-Laws and Rules
For the reasons discussed above, OCC is proposing a number of
amendments to its By-Laws and Rules designed to require that, as a
general requirement for membership, all existing and future Clearing
Members that are treated as non-U.S. entities for U.S. federal income
tax purposes must enter into appropriate agreements with the IRS and be
FATCA Compliant, such that OCC will not be responsible for withholding
on dividend equivalents under Section 871(m). Specifically, OCC
proposes to amend Article I of its By-Laws to include the following
defined terms. The term ``FFI Clearing Member'' would mean any Clearing
Member that is treated as a non-U.S. entity for U.S. federal income tax
purposes. The term ``Dividend Equivalent'' would be defined as having
the meaning provided in Section 871(m) of the I.R.C. and related
Treasury Regulations and other official interpretations thereof. The
term ``FATCA'' would be defined as meaning: (i) the provisions of
Sections 1471 through 1474 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, which were enacted as part of The Foreign Account Tax
Compliance Act (or any amendment thereto or successor sections
thereof), and related Treasury Regulations and other official
interpretations thereof, as in effect from time to time, and (ii) the
provisions of any intergovernmental agreement to implement The Foreign
Account Tax Compliance Act as in effect from time to time between the
United States and the jurisdiction of the FFI Clearing Member's
residency. The term ``FATCA Compliant'' would mean, with respect to an
FFI Clearing Member, that such FFI Clearing Member has qualified under
such procedures promulgated by the IRS as are in effect from time to
time to establish exemption from withholding under FATCA such that OCC
will not be required to withhold any amount with respect to any payment
or deemed payment to such FFI Clearing Member under FATCA. The term
``Qualified Intermediary Assuming Primary Withholding Responsibility''
would mean an FFI Clearing Member that has entered into an agreement
with the IRS to be a qualified intermediary and to assume primary
responsibility for reporting and for collecting and remitting
withholding tax under Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 of subtitle A, and
Chapter 61 and Section 3406, of the I.R.C. with respect to any income
(including Dividend Equivalents) arising from transactions entered into
by the Clearing Member with OCC as an intermediary, including
transactions entered into on behalf of such Clearing Member's
customers. The term ``Qualified Derivatives Dealer'' would be defined
as an FFI Clearing Member that has entered into an agreement with IRS
that permits OCC to make Dividend Equivalent payments to such clearing
member free from U.S. withholding tax under Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 of
subtitle A, and Chapter 61 and Section 3406, of the I.R.C. with respect
to transactions entered into by such clearing member with OCC as a
principal for such Clearing Member's own account. ``Section 871(m)
Effective Date'' would be defined as meaning January 1, 2017, or, if
later, the date on which Section 871(m) and related Treasury
Regulations and other official interpretations thereof, first apply to
listed options transactions. Finally, ``Section 871(m) Implementation
Date'' would mean December 1, 2016, or, if later, the date that is 30
days before the Section 871(m) Effective Date.\25\
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\25\ Although withholding with regard to Dividend Equivalent
payments to non-U.S. clearing members is scheduled take effect
beginning January 1, 2017, the proposed amendments to the By-Laws
and Rules would require existing non-U.S. clearing members to
provide documentation certifying their compliance with the
requirements of Rule 310(d) 30 days prior to January 1, 2017, in
order for OCC to review the certification materials and to address
in a timely manner any potential non-compliance, in accordance with
its Rules.
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The proposed rule change also would add Section 1(e) to Article V
of OCC's By-Laws, which would require any applicant, that if admitted
to membership would be an FFI Clearing Member, to be a Qualified
Intermediary Assuming Primary Withholding Responsibility and to be
FATCA Compliant beginning on the Section 871(m) Implementation Date. In
addition, if the applicant intends to trade for its own account, the
applicant would be required to be a Qualified Derivatives Dealer.
Furthermore, the proposed rule change would impose additional
requirements on FFI Clearing Members. Specifically, proposed Rule
310(d)(1) would prohibit FFI Clearing Members from conducting any
transaction or activity through OCC unless the Clearing Member is a
Qualified Intermediary Assuming Primary Withholding Responsibility and
FATCA Compliant, beginning on the Section 871(m) Effective Date. In
addition, FFI Clearing Members would not be permitted to enter into a
transaction for their own accounts unless such Clearing Member is a
Qualified Derivatives Dealer and such transaction is within the scope
of the exemption from withholding tax for Dividend Equivalents paid to
Qualified Derivatives Dealers.
Proposed Rule 310(d)(2) would require each FFI Clearing Member to
certify annually to OCC, beginning on the Section 871(m) Implementation
Date, that it satisfies the above requirements and also to update its
certification to OCC (viz., a completed Form W-8IMY electing primary
withholding responsibility and Qualified Derivatives Dealer status) if
required by applicable law or administrative guidance or if its
certification is no longer accurate. Proposed Rule 310(d)(3) also would
require each FFI Clearing Member to provide OCC with the information it
needs relating to Dividend Equivalents, in sufficient detail and in a
sufficiently timely manner, for OCC to comply with its obligation under
Chapters 3 and 4 to make required reports to the IRS regarding Dividend
Equivalents and the transactions giving rise to same between OCC and
the FFI Clearing Member.
Additionally, proposed Rule 310(d)(4) would require each FFI
Clearing Member to inform OCC promptly if it is not, or has reason to
know that it will not be, in compliance with Rule 310(d) within 2 days
of knowledge thereof This rule ensures that OCC will be notified in a
timely manner in the event that an FFI Clearing Member no longer
maintains the appropriate arrangements described above to ensure that
all withholding and reporting obligations with respect to Dividend
Equivalents under Section 871(m) and Chapter 3 and 4 are being
fulfilled.
Finally, proposed Rule 310(d)(5) would require each FFI Clearing
Member to indemnify OCC for any loss, liability, or expense sustained
by OCC resulting from such member's failure to comply with proposed
Rule 310(d). As discussed above, a Dividend Equivalent is deemed to
arise if a dividend is paid on the underlying stock while an option is
outstanding, even though no corresponding payment is made on the
option. Due to the nature of OCC's settlement process, there may be no
actual payments to the FFI Clearing Member from which OCC could
withhold in order to address a liability or expense incurred by OCC
arising from a member's failure to comply with the proposed rules. As a
result, if OCC were required to satisfy any liability or expense caused
by such member's failure to comply out of OCC's own funds, OCC would
look to the FFI
[[Page 75872]]
Clearing Member to indemnify OCC for such losses.
(2) Statutory Basis
OCC believes the proposed rule change is consistent with Section
17A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (``Act''),\26\
and the rules thereunder applicable to OCC. Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the
Act \27\ requires, among other things, that the rules of a clearing
agency: (i) Promote the prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions and, to the extent applicable, derivative
agreements, contracts, and transactions; (ii) assure the safeguarding
of securities and funds which are in the custody or control of the
clearing agency or for which it is responsible; (iii) in general,
protect investors and the public interest; and (iv) are not designed to
permit unfair discrimination among participants in the use of the
clearing agency. OCC believes that the proposed rule change is designed
to promote the prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of
securities and derivatives transactions, assure the safeguarding of
securities and funds at OCC, and protect investors and the public
interest because it would eliminate the uncertainty in funds settlement
that otherwise would arise if OCC were subject to withholding
obligations with respect to Dividend Equivalents under Section 871(m).
As noted above, the daily net settlement process in which OCC engages
would not permit OCC to effectuate the necessary withholdings,
particularly since Dividend Equivalents on listed options do not
involve an actual cash payment to the Clearing Member from which
amounts could be withheld. In addition, OCC lacks the customer
information necessary determine the correct amounts subject to
withholding. The introduction of withholding responsibilities on OCC
therefore would introduce new complications and risks into OCC's
clearance and settlement process and could create uncertainty around
the settlement of funds at OCC. For these reasons, OCC does not believe
that it is situated to accept the liability associated with Dividend
Equivalent withholding responsibilities.
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\26\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
\27\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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The proposed rule change would implement prudent, preventive
measures to protect OCC against the obligation for any such withholding
(and any resulting liability) by requiring FFI Clearing Members to
enter into certain agreements with the IRS under which the FFI Clearing
Member assumes primary withholding responsibilities with respect to
transactions that it enters into on behalf of customers (i.e., as an
intermediary) or for its own account (i.e., as a principal) and to be
FATCA Compliant. The proposed rule change would eliminate potential
risks and uncertainty in the daily settlement of funds at OCC otherwise
imposed by Section 871(m)'s new mandate. Thus, OCC believes the
proposed rule change is designed to promote the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of securities and derivatives transactions,
the safeguarding of securities and funds at OCC, and the protection of
securities investors and the public interest in accordance with Section
17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act.\28\
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\28\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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Moreover, OCC believes that the proposed rule change does not
unfairly discriminate among participants in the use of the clearing
agency. While the proposed rule change would impose additional
requirements and/or restrictions on FFI Clearing Members, the proposed
rules are intended to address specific issues and potential risks to
OCC arising from those FFI Clearing Members whose membership creates
potential withholding obligations for OCC. Additionally, as described
above, Section 871(m) will impose similar withholding and reporting
obligations on OCC's U.S. Clearing Members with respect to their
foreign customers. Once Section 871(m) withholding becomes effective,
OCC's U.S. Clearing Members will be subject to similar withholding and
reporting requirements under Chapters 3 and 4, and they would need to
develop and maintain appropriate systems to effectuate the required
withholdings. The proposed rule change by OCC would require OCC's non-
U.S. Clearing Members to develop and maintain similar systems to
effectuate the necessary U.S. tax withholding.
OCC believes it is appropriate to impose these additional
requirements on FFI Clearing Members because providing clearing
services for these FFI Clearing Members would subject OCC to the
additional withholding obligations discussed above, which do not arise
when OCC performs clearing services for its U.S. Clearing Members. In
the absence of the proposed rules, OCC would need to be in a position
to comply with withholding obligations on Section 871(m) Transactions
under Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 with regard to its FFI Clearing Members,
which as noted above OCC cannot do based on the way its settlement
process and systems work. If such a situation were to theoretically
occur, the resulting compliance costs would be shifted from the non-
U.S. Clearing Members to OCC, and would cause such costs to be borne
indirectly by OCC's U.S. Clearing Members, which already would be
bearing their own compliance costs with regard to Section 871(m)
Transactions. Since the cost of developing and maintaining a complex
withholding system would be passed on to OCC's Clearing Members at
large, OCC believes it would be an unfair burden on U.S. Clearing
Members, as well as any non-U.S. Clearing Members that have entered
into the requisite agreements with the IRS and are FATCA Compliant.
Finally, OCC understands that its non-U.S. Clearing Members already
have agreed to act as Qualified Intermediaries that accept primary
withholding responsibility for Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 purposes more
generally, which may limit to some degree the incremental burden they
would be required to undertake as Qualified Derivatives Dealers once
the Section 871(m) withholding rules take effect. Therefore, OCC
believes that the proposed rule change is not unfairly discriminatory
among participants in the use of the clearing agency and is therefore
consistent with Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act.\29\ The proposed rule
change is not inconsistent with any rules of OCC, including those rules
proposed to be amended.
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\29\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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(B) Clearing Agency's Statement on Burden on Competition
Section 17A(b)(3)(I) of the Act requires that the rules of a
clearing agency not impose any burden on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.\30\ The proposed
rule change could potentially impact or burden competition by requiring
any applicant for clearing membership or existing Clearing Member that
would be an FFI Clearing Member to be a Qualified Intermediary Assuming
Primary Withholding Responsibility in order to conduct any transaction
or activity through OCC. This requirement could impose burdens on such
an applicant or member because it would require them to develop systems
and processes to collect the information necessary to determine which
of its cleared options transactions are Section 871(m) Transactions and
to calculate and effectuate the required withholdings and reporting.
Additionally, the proposed rule change would require such an applicant
or
[[Page 75873]]
member to be FATCA Compliant, which would require it to develop
processes and procedures to gather information from clients necessary
to fulfill its reporting obligations under FATCA. Moreover, in order to
engage in activity for its own account, such applicant or member would
need to be a Qualified Derivatives Dealer, which would entail the
development of additional systems and processes for identifying any
residual Section 871(m) Transactions it has entered into for its own
account. The development of these systems and processes remain subject
to some uncertainty, due to remaining questions regarding regulatory
guidance under Section 871(m).\31\ In the absence of the proposed rule
change, however, the non-U.S. Clearing Members themselves would become
subject to withholding by OCC on dividend equivalents. The proposed
rule thus reduces a direct economic burden on transactions between OCC
and its non-U.S. Clearing Members that would apply absent compliance
with the proposed rules.
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\30\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(I).
\31\ OCC believes, however, that theses burdens will be
alleviated when the Treasury Department and IRS issue further
guidance and provide additional clarity around outstanding questions
and issues concerning the Final Section 871(m) Regulations. See
generally Letter to the U.S. Department of the Treasury and IRS from
Craig S. Donohue, Executive Chairman, OCC, on behalf of the U.S.
Securities Markets Coalition regarding Final Section 871(m)
Regulations Effective Date available at https://www.optionsclearing.com/components/docs/about/newsroom/comment-letters/August-16-OCC-Request-for-Postponement-871(m)-2016.pdf.
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Furthermore, OCC does not believe the proposed rule change would
impose a significant burden on competition for FFI Clearing Members as
compared to OCC's U.S. Clearing Members. As described above, Section
871(m) imposes similar withholding and reporting obligations on OCC's
U.S. Clearing Members with foreign customers. OCC's U.S. Clearing
Members also will need to develop and maintain appropriate systems to
identify Section 871(m) Transactions and to effectuate the required
withholding. The proposed rule change by OCC would impose comparable
requirements on OCC's non-U.S. Clearing Members.
The proposed rule change also is narrowly tailored. It addresses
the specific issues and potential risks to OCC arising from those firms
whose membership creates potential withholding obligations for OCC. The
proposed requirements for FFI Clearing Members are designed to
eliminate any uncertainty in funds settlement that would arise if OCC
were subject to withholding obligations with respect to Dividend
Equivalents under Section 871(m). As discussed further above, OCC
believes that the proposed rule change is necessary to eliminate
potential complications and risk to its clearance and settlement
process that would be presented by OCC's potential withholding
responsibilities under Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 (and which would be a
direct consequence of providing its clearance and settlement services
for these FFI Clearing Members). OCC believes the proposed rule change
is necessary to promote the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities and derivatives transactions, to assure the
safeguarding of securities and funds in the custody or control of OCC
or for which it is responsible, and in general, to protect investors
and the public interest in accordance with Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the
Act.\32\ Any burden on competition that this proposed change could be
regarded as imposing would not be unreasonable or inappropriate under
the Act. Furthermore, as stated above, all of OCC's current non-U.S.
Clearing Members are already Qualified Intermediaries Assuming Primary
Withholding Responsibility and FATCA Compliant.
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\32\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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OCC does not believe that the ongoing certification and reporting
provisions of proposed Rules 310(d)(2)-(4) would have any impact on
competition. As a matter of standard practice, Clearing Members are
required to inform OCC of material changes in, for example, their
formal organization, ownership structure, or financial condition \33\
and are subject to ongoing financial reporting requirements.\34\ OCC
believes the proposed rule change would impose reasonable reporting and
notification requirements with respect to FFI Clearing Members' tax
compliance status similar to those rules referenced above. Moreover,
OCC does not believe the indemnification provision in proposed Rule
301(d)(5) would present a burden on competition as it would only be
imposed in the event that an FFI Clearing Member failed to comply with
the proposed rule change and such failure resulted in a loss or expense
to OCC.
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\33\ See, e.g., OCC Rules 201 and 303.
\34\ See OCC Rule 306.
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For the foregoing reasons, OCC believes that the proposed rule
change is in the public interest, would be consistent with the
requirements of the Act applicable to registered clearing agencies, and
would not impose a burden on competition that is unnecessary or
inappropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
(C) Clearing Agency's Statement on Comments on the Proposed Rule Change
Received from Members, Participants or Others
Written comments on the proposed rule change were not and are not
intended to be solicited with respect to the proposed rule change and
none have been received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
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 the 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 email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-OCC-2016-014 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-OCC-2016-014. This file
number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To help
the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other
than
[[Page 75874]]
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
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such filings also will be available
for inspection and copying at the principal office of OCC and on OCC's
Web site at https://www.theocc.com/components/docs/legal/rules_and_bylaws/sr_occ_16_014.pdf.
All comments received will be posted without change; the Commission
does not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You
should submit only information that you wish to make available
publicly.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-OCC-2016-014 and
should be submitted on or before November 22, 2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\35\
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\35\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-26382 Filed 10-31-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P