Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Depository Trust Company; Notice of Filing of and Extension of Review Period of Advance Notice Relating to Processing of Transactions in Money Market Instruments, 78884-78890 [2016-27030]
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78884
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 217 / Wednesday, November 9, 2016 / Notices
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for 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 the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–
NYSEMKT–2016–90 and should be
submitted on or before November 30,
2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.34
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–27024 Filed 11–8–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–79224; File No. SR–DTC–
2016–802]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Depository Trust Company; Notice of
Filing of and Extension of Review
Period of Advance Notice Relating to
Processing of Transactions in Money
Market Instruments
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
November 3, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
entitled the Payment, Clearing, and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4(n)(1)(i) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’),2 notice is
hereby given that on September 23,
2016, The Depository Trust Company
(‘‘DTC’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
the advance notice SR–DTC–2016–802
(‘‘Advance Notice’’) as described in
34 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i).
1 12
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Items I and II below, which Items have
been prepared primarily by DTC.3 The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the Advance Notice
from interested persons and to extend
the review period of the Advance
Notice, for an additional 60 days under
Section 806(e)(1)(H) of the Clearing
Supervision Act.4
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This Advance Notice consists of
modifications to (i) the DTC Rules, Bylaws and Organization Certificate
(‘‘Rules’’),5 (ii) the DTC Settlement
Service Guide (‘‘Settlement Guide’’),6
and (iii) the DTC Distributions Service
Guide (‘‘Distributions Guide’’),7
annexed hereto as Exhibit 5
(‘‘Proposal’’). The Proposal would
modify the Rules, Settlement Guide, and
Distributions Guide to establish a
change in the processing of transactions
in money market instruments (‘‘MMI’’)
that are processed in DTC’s MMI
Program (‘‘MMI Securities’’).8 The
Proposal would affect DTC’s processing
of issuances of MMI Securities
(‘‘Issuances’’) by issuers of MMI
Securities (‘‘Issuers’’) as well as
Maturity Presentments, Income
Presentments, Principal Presentments,
and Reorganization Presentments
(collectively, ‘‘Presentments’’)
(Issuances and Presentments,
collectively ‘‘MMI Obligations’’). The
Proposal would amend the Rules and
Settlement Guide to (i) eliminate intraday reversals of processed but not yet
settled MMI Obligations resulting from
an Issuing and Paying Agent (‘‘IPA’’)
3 On September 23, 2016, DTC filed this Advance
Notice as a proposed rule change (SR–DTC–2016–
008) with the Commission pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), and Rule
19b–4, 17 CFR 240.19b–4. Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 34–79046 (October 5, 2016), 81 FR
70200 (October 11, 2016) (SR–DTC–2016–008).
4 See 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H).
5 Available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/rulesand-procedures.aspx.
6 Available at https://www.dtcc.com/∼/media/
Files/Downloads/legal/service-guides/
Settlement.pdf.
7 Available at https://www.dtcc.com/∼/media/
Files/Downloads/legal/service-guides/
Distributions%20Service%20Guide%20FINAL%20
November%202014.pdf.
8 Eligibility for inclusion in the MMI Program
covers MMI, which are short-term debt Securities
that generally mature 1 to 270 days from their
original issuance date. MMI include, but are not
limited to, commercial paper, banker’s acceptances
and short-term bank notes and are issued by
financial institutions, large corporations, or state
and local governments. Most MMI trade in large
denominations (typically, $250,000 to $50 million)
and are purchased by institutional investors.
Eligibility for inclusion in the MMI Program also
covers medium term notes that mature over a longer
term.
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notifying DTC of its refusal to pay
(‘‘RTP’’) for Presentments of an Issuer’s
maturing MMI Securities for a
designated Acronym; 9 (ii) eliminate the
Largest Provisional Net Credit (‘‘LPNC’’)
risk management control; (iii) provide
that the IPA must acknowledge its
funding obligations for Presentments
and that Receivers of Issuances must
approve their receipt of those Issuances
in DTC’s Receiver Authorized Delivery
(‘‘RAD’’) system before DTC would
process MMI Presentments; (iv)
implement an enhanced process to test
risk management controls under certain
conditions with respect to an Acronym
(to be referred to as MMI Optimization,
as defined below); (v) make updates and
revisions to the Settlement Processing
Schedule in the Settlement Guide
(‘‘Processing Schedule’’), as described
below, (vi) eliminate the ‘‘receive versus
payment NA’’ control (‘‘RVPNA’’), as
described below, and (vii) make other
technical and clarifying changes to the
text, as more fully described below. In
addition, the Proposal would amend the
Distributions Guide to make changes to
text relating to the processing of Income
Presentments so that it is consistent
with the changes proposed in the
Settlement Guide in that regard, as more
fully described below.10
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, the
clearing agency included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the Advance Notice and discussed any
comments it received on the Advance
Notice. The text of these statements may
be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The clearing agency has
prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A and B below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Advance Notice
Received From Members, Participants,
or Others
DTC has not solicited and does not
intend to solicit comments regarding the
Proposal. DTC has not received any
unsolicited written comments from
9 Rule 1, supra note 5. MMI of an Issuer are
designated by DTC using unique four-character
identifiers employed by DTC referred to as
Acronyms. An MMI Issuer can have multiple
Acronyms representing its Securities. MMI
Transactions and other functions relating to MMI
(e.g., confirmations and RTP) instructed and/or
performed by IPAs, Participants and/or DTC as
described herein are performed on an ‘‘Acronymby-Acronym’’ basis.
10 Capitalized terms not otherwise defined herein
have the respective meanings set forth in the Rules,
the Settlement Guide, and the Distributions Guide.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 217 / Wednesday, November 9, 2016 / Notices
interested parties. To the extent DTC
receives written comments on the
Proposal, DTC will forward such
comments to the Commission. DTC has
conducted industry outreach with
respect to the proposal including
discussion with industry associations
and IPAs.
(B) Advance Notice Filed Pursuant to
Section 806(e) of the Clearing and
Supervision Act
Nature of the Proposed Change
DTC is proposing to (i) mitigate risk
to DTC and Participants relating to
intra-day reversals of processed MMI
Obligations in the event of an IPA’s RTP
with respect to maturing obligations
(‘‘Maturing Obligations’’) 11 for an
Acronym and/or income payments 12
relating to Presentments for an
Acronym, and (ii) reduce blockage for
the completion of MMI Obligations by
eliminating the LPNC control, as more
fully described below.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Background
When an Issuer issues MMI Securities
at DTC, the IPA for that Issuer sends
issuance instructions to DTC
electronically, which results in crediting
the applicable MMI Securities to the
DTC Account of the IPA. These MMI
Securities are then Delivered to the
Accounts of applicable Participants that
are purchasing the Issuance in
accordance with their purchase
amounts. These purchasing Participants
typically include broker/dealers or
banks, acting as custodians for
institutional investors. The IPA Delivery
instructions may be free of payment or,
most often, Delivery Versus Payment.
Deliveries of MMI are processed
pursuant to the same Rules and the
applicable Procedures 13 set forth in the
Settlement Guide, as are Deliveries
generally, whether free or versus
payment. Delivery Versus Payment
transactions are subject to risk
management controls of the IPA and
Receiving Participants for Net Debit Cap
and Collateral Monitor sufficiency,14
11 A Maturing Obligation is a payment owed in
settlement by the IPA to the Participant on whose
behalf DTC presents the matured MMI Securities.
12 Principal and income for an Acronym are
distributed by an IPA according to a cycle
determined by the terms of the issue (e.g., monthly,
quarterly, and semi-annually). Such distributions
may be for interest only, principal only, or interest
and principal.
13 Pursuant to the Rules, the term ‘‘Procedures’’
means the Procedures, service guides, and
regulations of the Corporation adopted pursuant to
Rule 27, as amended from time to time. See Rule
1, Section 1, supra note 5, at 15. The Procedures
applicable to MMI settlement processing are set
forth in the Settlement Guide. Supra note 6.
14 Delivery Versus Payment transfers at DTC are
structured so that the completion of Delivery of
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and payment for Delivery Versus
Payment transactions is due from the
receiving Participants through DTC’s net
settlement process. To the extent, if any,
that the Participant has a Net Debit
Balance in its Settlement Account at
end-of-day, payment of that amount is
due to DTC.
When MMI Securities mature, the
Maturity Presentment process is
initiated automatically by DTC on
maturity date, starting at approximately
6:00 a.m. Eastern Time (‘‘ET’’), for
Delivery of matured MMI Securities
from the applicable DTC Participants’
Accounts to the applicable IPA
Accounts. This automated process
electronically sweeps all maturing
positions of MMI Securities from
Participant Accounts and debits the
Settlement Account of the applicable
IPA for the amount of the Maturing
Obligations for Presentments for the
Acronym and credits the Settlement
Accounts of the Deliverers. In
accordance with the Rules, payment is
due from the IPA for settlement to the
extent, if any, that the IPA has a Net
Debit Balance in its Settlement Account
at end-of-day.
With regard to DTC net settlement,
MMI Issuers and IPAs commonly
consider the primary source of
payments for Maturing Obligations of
MMI Securities to be funded by the
proceeds of Issuances of the same
Acronym by that Issuer on the same
Business Day. Because Presentments are
currently processed automatically at
DTC, IPAs have the option to refuse to
pay for Maturing Obligations to protect
against the possibility that an IPA may
not be able to fund settlement because
it has not received funds from the
relevant Issuer. An IPA that refuses
payment for a Presentment (i.e., refuses
to make payment for the Delivery of
matured MMI Securities for which it is
the designated IPA and/or pay interest
or dividend income on an MMI Security
Securities to a Participant in end-of-day settlement
is contingent on the receiving Participant satisfying
its end-of-day net settlement obligation, if any. The
risk of Participant failure to settle is managed
through risk management controls, structured so
that DTC may complete settlement despite the
failure to settle of the Participant, or Affiliated
Family of Participants, with the largest net
settlement obligation. The two principal controls
are the Net Debit Cap and Collateral Monitor. The
largest net settlement obligation of a Participant or
Affiliated Family of Participants cannot exceed DTC
liquidity resources, based on the Net Debit Cap, and
must be fully collateralized, based on the Collateral
Monitor. This structure is designed so that DTC
may pledge or liquidate Collateral of the defaulting
Participant in order to fund settlement among nondefaulting Participants. Liquidity resources,
including the Participants Fund and a committed
line of credit with a consortium of lenders, are
available to complete settlement among nondefaulting Participants.
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78885
for which it is the designated IPA) must
notify DTC of its RTP in the DTC
Settlement User Interface. An IPA may
enter an RTP until 3:00 p.m. ET on the
date of the affected Presentment.
Under the current Rules, the effect of
an RTP is to instruct DTC to reverse all
processed Deliveries of that Acronym,
including Issuances, related funds
credits and debits, and Presentments.
This late day reversal of processed (but
not yet settled) transactions may
override DTC’s risk management
controls (i.e., Collateral Monitor and Net
Debit Cap) and force a presenting
Participant into a Net Debit Balance;
this situation poses systemic risk with
respect to the Participant’s ability to
fund its settlement and, hence, DTC’s
ability to complete end-of-day net funds
settlement. Also, the possibility of intraday reversals of processed MMI
Obligations creates uncertainty for
Participants.
Currently, to mitigate the risks
associated with an RTP, DTC Rules and
the Settlement Guide provide for the
LPNC risk management control. DTC
withholds credit intra-day from each
Participant that has a Presentment in the
amount of the aggregate of the two
largest credits with respect to an
Acronym. The LPNC is not included in
the calculation of the Participant’s
Collateral Monitor or its Net Debit
Balance. This provides protection in the
event that MMI Obligations are reversed
by DTC as a result of an RTP.15
DTC’s Rules and Procedures relating
to settlement processing for the MMI
Program 16 were designed to limit credit,
liquidity, and operational risk for DTC
and Participants. In connection with
ongoing efforts by DTC to evaluate the
risk associated with the processing of
MMI Obligations, DTC has determined
that the risks presented by intra-day
reversals of processed MMI Obligations
should be eliminated to prevent the
possibility that a reversal could override
risk controls and heighten liquidity and
settlement risk. Eliminating intra-day
reversals of processed MMI Obligations
would also enhance intra-day finality
and allow for the elimination of the
LPNC which creates intra-day blockage
and affects liquidity through the
withholding of settlement credits.
15 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 71888
(April 7, 2014), 79 FR 20285 (April 11, 2014) (SR–
DTC–2014–02) (clarifying the LPNC Procedures in
the Settlement Guide) and Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 68983 (February 25, 2013), 78 FR 13924
(March 1, 2013) (SR–DTC–2012–10) (updating the
Rules related to LPNC).
16 The Procedures applicable to MMI settlement
processing are set forth in the Settlement Guide.
Supra note 6.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 217 / Wednesday, November 9, 2016 / Notices
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Proposal
The Proposal would amend the Rules
and the Settlement Guide to eliminate
provisions for intra-day reversals of
processed MMI Obligations based on an
IPA’s RTP or Issuer insolvency. In
addition, the Proposal would amend the
Distributions Guide to make changes to
text relating to the processing of Income
Presentments so that it is consistent
with the changes proposed in the
Settlement Guide in that regard, as more
fully described below.
Pursuant to the Proposal, DTC would
no longer automatically process
Presentments (and Issuances and related
deliveries). Rather, except as noted
below, DTC would only process these
transactions after an acknowledgment
(‘‘MMI Funding Acknowledgment’’) is
made by the IPA to DTC whereby either:
(i) The value of receiver-approved 17
Issuances alone,18 or a combination of
receiver-approved Issuances plus an
amount the IPA(s) has acknowledged
has been funded by the Issuer, exceeds
the Acronym’s Presentments; or (ii) the
IPA acknowledges it has been funded
for the entire amount of the gross value
of an Acronym, regardless of
Issuances.19
DTC anticipates that the Proposal
would generally maintain the volume of
transactions processed today in terms of
the total number and value of
transactions that have passed position
and risk controls throughout the
processing day. However, because of the
requirement for the IPA to provide an
MMI Funding Acknowledgement prior
to processing of an Acronym, the reason
why transactions do not complete
during the processing day would shift.
It is expected that the value and volume
17 DTC subjects certain transactions to receiver
approval in its RAD system.
18 An affirmative MMI Funding
Acknowledgement by the IPA would not be
required in the case that the aggregate amount of
RAD approved Issuances of an Acronym exceeds
the aggregate amount of Presentments since these
Issuances would provide the funding of the
maturing obligations versus an Issuer having to
fund the IPA. The Proposal would provide that in
this instance, the IPA is deemed to provide a
standing instruction to process transactions in the
Acronym, subject to risk management controls. Any
such instruction or deemed instruction by the IPA
would be irrevocable once given.
19 In the case where an affirmative MMI Funding
Acknowledgment by the IPA would be required for
Presentments to be processed, the MMI Funding
Acknowledgement would be a notification provided
by an IPA to DTC with respect to an Acronym that
the IPA acknowledges and affirms its funding
obligation for a maturing Acronym either (i) in the
entire amount of the Acronym or (ii) for an amount
at least equal to the difference between the value
of Issuances and the value of the Presentments. In
the case of (ii) above, the IPA may (later that day)
increase the funding amount it acknowledges, but
in no event may the IPA reduce the amount of its
obligation previously acknowledged that day.
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of MMI transactions recycling for risk
management controls during the late
morning and afternoon time periods
would be reduced as a result of MMI
transactions being held outside of the
processing system awaiting an MMI
Funding Acknowledgement decision.
The non-MMI transactions and fully
funded MMI transactions would also
likely have a reduction in blockage from
risk management controls as a result of
the elimination of the LPNC control.
The elimination of the LPNC control
would no longer withhold billions of
dollars of settlement credits until 3:05
p.m. ET as it does today, which would
in turn permit these transactions to
complete earlier in the day.
An IPA would make an MMI Funding
Acknowledgment using a new Decision
Making Application (‘‘DMA’’). When an
MMI Funding Acknowledgement has
occurred, it would constitute the IPA’s
instruction to DTC to attempt to process
transactions in the Acronym. At this
point, if the IPA has acknowledged that
it would fully fund the Acronym, then
the transactions would be sent to the
processing system and attempted
against position and risk management
controls. If the IPA provides an MMI
Funding Acknowledgement for only
partial funding of the entire amount of
Presentments for an Acronym, DTC
would test risk management controls of
Deliverers and Receivers with respect to
that Acronym to determine whether risk
management controls would be satisfied
by all Deliverers and Receivers of the
Acronym and determine whether all
parties maintain adequate position to
complete the applicable transactions,
i.e., ‘‘MMI Optimization’’. In the case
that the aggregate amount of RAD
approved Issuances of an Acronym
exceeds the aggregate amount of
Presentments, and thus an affirmative
acknowledgment by the IPA would not
be required, risk management controls
for all Deliverers and Receivers would
be tested using MMI Optimization as
well.
As indicated above, if partial funding
from the IPA is necessary, then
transactions would be routed to MMI
Optimization. Generally, in MMI
Optimization, all Deliverers and
Receivers of the Acronym must satisfy
risk management controls and
delivering Participants must hold
sufficient position, in order for the
transactions in that Acronym to be
processed. However, as long as the
Issuances that can satisfy Deliverer and
Receiver risk controls for that Acronym
are equal to or greater than the Maturing
Presentments of that Acronym, the
applicable transactions (i.e., those that
pass risk controls) would be processed.
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If there are multiple IPAs for an
Acronym, DTC would determine
funding based on the satisfaction of
conditions for all Receivers and
Deliverers with respect to all
Presentments, Issuances and applicable
Delivery Orders in the Acronym and
MMI Funding Acknowledgements for
all IPAs with Issuances and
Presentments in the Acronym. No
instruction of an IPA to DTC to process
the subject MMI transactions shall be
effective until MMI Optimization is
satisfied with respect to all transactions
in the Acronym.
If there is no MMI Funding
Acknowledgment for the IPA for an
Acronym for which Maturing
Obligations are due by 3:00 p.m. ET on
that day and/or DTC is aware that the
Issuer of an Acronym is insolvent
(‘‘Acronym Payment Failure’’), then
DTC would not process transactions in
the Acronym.20
In the event of an Acronym Payment
Failure, DTC would (i) prevent further
issuance and maturity activity for the
Acronym in DTC’s system, (ii) prevent
Deliveries of MMI Securities of the
Acronym on failure date and halt all
activity in that Acronym, (iii) set the
Collateral Value of the MMI Securities
in the Acronym to zero for purposes of
calculating the Collateral Monitor of any
affected Participant, and (iv) notify
Participants of the Acronym Payment
Failure. Notification would be made
through a DTC broadcast through the
current process.
Notwithstanding the occurrence of an
Acronym Payment Failure, the IPA
would remain liable for funding
pursuant to any MMI Funding
Acknowledgment previously provided
for that Business Day.
A ‘‘Temporary Acronym Payment
Failure’’ with respect to Income
Presentments would occur when an IPA
notifies DTC that it temporarily refuses
to pay Income Presentments for the
Acronym (typically due to an Issuer’s
inability to fund Income Presentments
on that day). A Temporary Acronym
Payment Failure would only be initiated
if there are no Maturity Presentments,
Principal Presentments and/or
Reorganization Presentments on that
Business Day. DTC expects the Issuer
and/or IPA to resolve such a situation
by the next Business Day. In the event
of a Temporary Acronym Payment
Failure, DTC would (i) temporarily
devalue to zero all of the Issuer’s MMI
Securities for purposes of calculating
20 DTC would automatically consider an
Acronym Payment Failure occurring due to an
IPA’s failure to provide timely MMI Funding
Acknowledgement (i.e., provide the
acknowledgment by 3:00 p.m. ET) as an RTP.
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the Collateral Monitor, unless and until
the IPA acknowledges funding with
respect to the Income Payments on the
following Business Day, (ii) notify
Participants of the delayed payment
through a DTC broadcast as is the
current process today, and (iii) block
from DTC’s systems all further Issuances
and maturities by that Issuer for the
remainder of the Business Day on which
notification of the Temporary Payment
Failure was received by DTC.
An IPA would not be able to avail
itself of a Temporary Acronym Payment
Failure for the same Acronym on
consecutive Business Days.
Also, in light of the proposed
elimination of intra-day reversals of
processed MMI Obligations, DTC would
also eliminate the RVPNA control. The
RVPNA control is provided for in the
Settlement Guide and implements
current Section 1(c) of Rule 9(B).
RVPNA is used to prevent a Participant
from Delivering free of value or
undervalued any MMI Securities
received versus payment on the same
Business Day.21 This protects DTC
against being unable to reverse
transactions for Deliveries Versus
Payment of MMI Securities in the event
of an RTP by the IPA.22 The elimination
of reversals of processed MMI
Obligations would eliminate the need
for the RVPNA control.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Proposed Changes to the Rules,
Settlement Guide, and Distributions
Guide
DTC would amend the text of Rule 1
(Definitions), Rule 9(A) (Transactions in
Securities and Money Payments), Rule
9(B) (Transactions in Eligible
Securities), Rule 9(C) (Transactions in
MMI Securities), the Settlement Guide
and the Distributions Guide to reflect
the proposed changes described above.
Specifically:
(i) Rule 1 would be amended to:
a. Delete the definition of LPNC; and
b. Add a cross-reference to indicate
that the terms MMI Funding
Acknowledgment and MMI
Optimization would be defined in
Section 1 of Rule 9(C).
(ii) Rule 9(A) would be amended to
add text providing that an instruction to
DTC from a Participant for Delivery
21 For purposes of RVPNA, MMI Securities are
considered undervalued if they are Delivered
Versus Payment for less than 10 percent below
market value.
22 For example, if A Delivers MMI Securities to
B versus payment and B Delivers the same MMI
Securities to C free of payment (subject to risk
management controls), under Rule 9(B), Section 1,
the Delivery to C is final when the securities are
credited to C. DTC would therefore be unable to
reverse the Delivery to C and thus it cannot reverse
the Delivery from B to A.
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Versus Payment of MMI Securities
pursuant to Rule 9(C) shall not be
effective unless and until applicable
conditions specified in Rule 9(C) as set
forth below have been satisfied.
(iii) Rule 9(B) would be amended to:
a. Eliminate text referencing the
LPNC;
b. Eliminate the provision precluding
DTC from acting on an instruction for
Delivery of MMI Securities subject of an
Incomplete Transaction if the
instruction involves a Free Delivery,
Pledge or Release of Securities or a
Delivery, Pledge or Release of Securities
substantially undervalued; and
c. Add text providing that an
instruction to DTC from a Participant for
Delivery Versus Payment of MMI
Securities pursuant to Rule 9(C) shall
not be effective unless and until the
applicable conditions specified in Rule
9(C) described below have been
satisfied.
(iv) Rule 9(C) would be amended to:
a. Add the definitions of MMI
Funding Acknowledgment and MMI
Optimization to reflect the meaning of
these terms as described above;
b. Add text that Delivery Versus
Payment of MMI Securities would be
affected in accordance with Rules 9(A),
9(B) and the Settlement Guide in
addition to Rule 9(C);
c. Add text indicating that
instructions by a Presenting Participant
for a Presentment or Delivery of MMI
Securities would be deemed to be given
only when any applicable MMI Funding
Acknowledgment has been received by
DTC;
d. Remove conditions and references
relating to reversals of processed MMI
Obligations;
e. Set forth conditions for the
processing of Presentments, including:
i. The requirement for the IPA to
provide an MMI Funding
Acknowledgment, except in the case
where the aggregate amount of Issuances
exceeds Presentments;
ii. Satisfaction of risk management
controls and RAD;
iii. That an instruction to DTC with
respect to an Issuance or Presentment
shall become effective upon satisfaction
of the provisions described in i. and ii.
immediately above;
iv. That DTC shall comply with an
effective instruction;
v. That the IPA acknowledges and
agrees that DTC would process
instructions with respect to Issuances
and Presentments as described above
and that the IPA’s obligations in this
regard are irrevocable; and
vi. That if the IPA notifies DTC in
writing of its insolvency, or if DTC
otherwise has notice, or if the IPA issues
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78887
a Payment Refusal for the Acronym,
then the IPA would not be required to
acknowledge its obligations and DTC
would not be required to process any
further instructions with respect to the
applicable Acronym;
f. Eliminate references to MMI
Securities being devalued in the event
of an RTP because in the event of any
payment failure by the IPA, DTC would
then revert to the Acronym Payment
Failure Process described below; and
g. Delete a reference indicating that
DTC’s Failure to Settle Procedure
includes special provisions for MMI
Securities.
(v) The Settlement Guide would be
amended to:
a. Delete the description of, and all
references and provisions related to,
LPNC;
b. Delete: (A) The definition of
RVPNA, (B) a provision that
transactions for MMI Securities that are
deemed RVPNA would recycle pending
release of the LPNC control at 3:05 p.m.
ET, and (C) a note that MMI Securities
received versus payment are not
allowed to be freely moved until the
LPNC control is released;
c. Add a description of ‘‘Unknown
Rate’’ to provide for a placeholder in the
Settlement Guide for references to an
interest rate where payment of interest
by an IPA to Receivers is scheduled but
the interest rate to be paid is not known
at the time;
d. Change the heading of the section
currently named ‘‘Establishing Your Net
Debit Cap’’ to ‘‘Limitation of Participant
Net Debit Caps by Settling Banks’’ to
reflect the context of that section more
specifically;
e. Revise the Settlement Processing
Schedule to:
i. Add a cutoff time of 2:30 p.m. ET
for an IPA to replace the Unknown Rate
with a final interest rate and state that
the IPA must successfully transmit the
final rate to DTC before 2:30 p.m. ET;
ii. Add a cutoff time of 2:55 p.m. ET
after which Issuances and Presentments
cannot be processed on the given
Business Day because the conditions
described above for processing of MMI
Obligations have not been met;
iii. Remove a reference for a cutoff
relating to reversals of MMI Obligations
since reversals would no longer occur as
described above;
iv. Define 3 p.m. ET as the cutoff time
for any required MMI Funding
Acknowledgements to be received in
order for DTC to be able to process for
a given Acronym that day;
v. Add at cutoff time of 3 p.m. ET for
an IPA to notify DTC of a Temporary
Acronym Payment Failure;
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vi. Delete a reference to the release of
LPNC controls as LPNC would no longer
exist; and
vii. Clarify that a 3:10 p.m. ET cutoff
after which CNS transactions that
cannot be completed would be dropped
from the system, also applies to valued
transactions in non-MMI Securities and
fully paid for and secondary MMI
Deliveries or Maturity Presentments;
f. Add a section describing MMI
Processing to include a description of
MMI Funding Acknowledgments and
the MMI Optimization process as
described above;
g. Revise the section referencing
provisions for ‘‘Issuer Failure
Processing’’ to instead describe
Acronym Payment Failure Processing
and Temporary Acronym Payment
Failure Process, as these processes are
described above, since the contingencies
for processing a payment failure hinge
on the failure of payment on an
Acronym by an IPA regardless of
whether it is ultimately caused by an
Issuer insolvency or otherwise;
h. Remove a duplicate reference to the
DTC contact number for Participants/
IPAs to call in the event of an Acronym
Payment Failure;
i. Remove the description of the
‘‘MMI IPA MP Pend’’ process which
was designed to allow IPAs to minimize
the impact of potential reversals of
processed MMI Obligations; as such
reversals would no longer occur; and
j. Change the name of the section
named ‘‘Calculating Your Net Debit
Cap’’ to ‘‘Calculation of Participant Net
Debit Caps’’.
(vi) The Distributions Guide would be
amended to (i) delete language reflecting
that Income Presentments are processed
at the start-of-day, and (ii) add a brief
description of the processing of
Presentments as proposed above and
provide a cross-reference to the
Settlement Guide relating to MMI
settlement processing.
(vii) The Proposal would also make
technical and clarifying changes to the
texts of the Rules and Settlement Guide
for consistency throughout the texts in
describing the concepts and terms set
forth above, make corrections to
grammar and spacing and edit text to
provide for enhanced readability.
Implementation
The Proposal would be implemented
in phases whereby Acronyms would be
migrated to be processed in accordance
with the Proposal over a period of five
months beginning in November 2016
and with all Acronyms expected to be
implemented by the end of March 2017,
except for the implementation of the
elimination of the Rule and Settlement
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Guide provisions relating to RVPNA
which elimination would not occur
until all other aspects of the Proposal
are implemented with respect to all
Acronyms. DTC would announce
phased implementation dates for the
Proposal via Important Notice upon all
applicable regulatory approval by the
Commission.
Expected Effect on Risks to DTC, Its
Participants, or the Market
As described above, the Proposal
would amend the Rules and the
Settlement Guide to: (i) Eliminate
provisions for intra-day reversals of
processed MMI Obligations based on an
IPA’s RTP or Issuer insolvency, (ii)
impose a new requirement on IPAs to
provide DTC an MMI Funding
Acknowledgment, (iii) remove the LPNC
risk management control; and (iv)
implement MMI Optimization.
Elimination of Intra-day Reversals
As noted above, under the current
DTC Rules, intraday reversals of MMI
Obligations may override DTC’s risk
management controls (i.e., Collateral
Monitor and Net Debit Cap) and force a
presenting Participant into an otherwise
unanticipated Net Debit Balance at the
end-of-day; this situation poses systemic
risk with respect to the Participant’s
ability to fund its settlement and, hence,
DTC’s ability to complete end-of-day net
funds settlement. The proposed
elimination of intra-day reversals of
processed MMI Obligations would
decrease risk to DTC, its Participants
and the marketplace by eliminating the
settlement risk associated with such
reversals, improving settlement finality.
IPAs’ Obligation To Provide an MMI
Funding Acknowledgment
Pursuant to the Proposal, DTC would
no longer automatically process
Presentments (and Issuances and related
deliveries). Rather, as applicable, DTC
would only process these transactions
after receiving an MMI Funding
Acknowledgment from the IPA. In this
regard, once an IPA provides an MMI
Funding Acknowledgment, its ability to
notify DTC of an RTP would be limited
as it would not be allowed to reduce the
amount of its obligation previously
acknowledged that day.23 This
23 As noted above, an affirmative MMI Funding
Acknowledgement by the IPA would not be
required in the case that the aggregate amount of
RAD approved Issuances of an Acronym exceeds
the aggregate amount of Presentments since these
Issuances would provide the funding of the
maturing obligations versus an Issuer having to
fund the IPA. The Proposal would provide that in
this instance, the IPA is deemed to provide a
standing instruction to process transactions in the
Acronym, subject to risk management controls. Any
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Sfmt 4703
provision of the Proposal would
facilitate the elimination of intra-day
reversals, as described above, and,
therefore, decrease settlement risk for
DTC and its Participants.
Removal of the LPNC Control
Currently, the LPNC control exists to
mitigate the risks associated with an
RTP by withholding credit intra-day
from each Participant in the amount of
the aggregate of the two largest credits
with respect to Presentment of an
Acronym. DTC expects that the
proposed elimination of the LPNC
control and the attendant intraday
withholding of credits would reduce the
risk of intraday liquidity blockages
within DTC’s system for Participant
activity, for both MMI and non-MMI
transactions, because at any point
intraday, Participants would have a true
view of their Net Debit Balances or Net
Credit Balances and be able to respond
accordingly.
MMI Optimization
As described above, as applicable,
DTC would test risk management
controls of Deliverers and Receivers
using the proposed MMI Optimization
process with respect to the Acronym to
determine whether risk management
controls would be satisfied by all
Deliverers and Receivers of the
Acronym and determine whether all
Deliverers maintain adequate position to
complete the applicable transactions. As
described above, the application of MMI
Optimization to MMI transactions, as
applicable, would facilitate timely
processing of transactions under the
proposal and reduce the risk to
Participants that transactions may not
settle due to failure to satisfy risk
controls.
Management of Identified Risks
The proposed requirement for an IPA
to provide DTC an MMI Funding
Acknowledgment prior to DTC’s
processing of affected MMI transactions,
as applicable, would replace DTC’s
current automatic processing of MMI
Transactions. The fact that such
transactions would not be processed
until an MMI Funding Acknowledgment
is provided by the IPA may create a risk
of blockage of MMI transactions by
Participants. However, DTC anticipates
that the various aspects of the Proposal
taken together would offset any such
risk and reduce the risk of blockage
overall for both MMI and non-MMI
transactions because of the effect of (i)
the removal of the LPNC control would
such instruction or deemed instruction by the IPA
would be irrevocable once given.
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sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
eliminate the attendant withholding of
settlement credits from Participants
intraday net settlement balances, and
(ii) increased efficiency in the testing of
risk controls through the MMI
Optimization process, as described
above, would reduce the volume of MMI
transactions that might otherwise
recycle pending passing of risk
management controls.
Consistency With the Clearing
Supervision Act
DTC believes that the Proposal is
consistent with Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act.24 The
objectives and principles of Section
805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act
are the promotion of robust risk
management, promotion of safety and
soundness, reduction of systemic risks,
and support of the stability of the
broader financial system.25
DTC believes that the Proposal is
consistent with the provisions of the
Clearing Supervision Act because the
elimination of reversals of MMI
transactions would promote intraday
settlement finality and protect end-of
day settlement from the risk of the
failure to settle by IPAs or affected
Participants by removing the risk
exposure due to the override of DTC’s
risk management controls (i.e.,
Collateral Monitor and Net Debit Cap) to
process reversals under current rules.
As such the Proposal would promote
the robustness of DTC’s risk
management controls.
DTC also believes that the Proposal is
consistent with the provisions of the
Clearing Supervision Act because the
elimination of the risk that a Participant
could incur a Net Debit Balance that
exceeds DTC’s risk controls caused by
an intra-day reversal of processed (but
not yet settled) MMI Obligations would
promote both the safety and soundness
of DTC’s system and reduce systemic
risks by (i) reducing the risk of a
shortfall in a defaulting Participant’s
collateral available for DTC to use to
satisfy the defaulting Participant’s
settlement obligations, and (ii) reducing
the risk that a Participant default could
impose a strain on DTC’s liquidity
resources and affect DTC’s ability to
complete system-wide settlement that
day.
In addition, DTC believes that the
Proposal would be consistent with Rule
17Ad–22(d)(12) promulgated under the
Act.26 Rule 17Ad–22(d)(12) requires
that each registered clearing agency
shall establish, implement, maintain
and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to, as
applicable, ensure that final settlement
occurs no later than the end of the
settlement day; and requires that
intraday or real-time finality be
provided where necessary to reduce
risks.27 The Proposal would eliminate
the intra-day reversals of processed
MMI transactions that are pending for
end of day system wide net settlement,
thus promoting settlement finality and
eliminating the possibility that an
intraday reversal could heighten
liquidity and settlement risk, as
discussed above. As such, DTC believes
the Proposal is consistent with Rule
17Ad–22(d)(12).
Taking each of the above points
collectively (i.e., the Proposal’s
promotion of robust risk management,
safety and soundness, reduced systemic
risk, and consistency with Rule 17Ad–
22(d)(12)). [sic] DTC believes the
Proposal supports the overall stability of
the broader financial system consistent
with the Clearing Supervision Act.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Advance
Notice and Timing for Commission
Action
The proposed change may be
implemented if the Commission does
not object to the proposed change
within 60 days of the later of (i) the date
that the proposed change was filed with
the Commission or (ii) the date that any
additional information requested by the
Commission is received,28 unless
extended as described below. The
clearing agency shall not implement the
proposed change if the Commission has
any objection to the proposed change.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(H) of the
Clearing Supervision Act,29 the
Commission may extend the review
period of an advance notice for an
additional 60 days, if the changes
proposed in the advance notice raise
novel or complex issues, subject to the
Commission providing the clearing
agency with prompt written notice of
the extension.
Here, as the Commission has not
requested any additional information,
the date that is 60 days after DTC filed
the Advance Notice with the
Commission is November 22, 2016.
However, the Commission finds it
appropriate to extend the review period
of the Advance Notice, for an additional
60 days under Section 806(e)(1)(H) of
the Clearing Supervision Act.30 The
Commission finds the Advance Notice
78889
is both novel and complex because the
material aspects of the proposed
changes to DTC’s processing of MMI are
detailed, substantial, a first for DTC, and
are interrelated with other risk
management practices at DTC.
Accordingly, the Commission,
pursuant to 806(e)(1)(H) of the Clearing
Supervision Act,31 extends the review
period for an additional 60 days so that
the Commission shall have until January
21, 2017 to issue an objection or nonobjection to the Advance Notice (File
No. SR–DTC–2016–802).
The clearing agency shall post notice
on its Web site of proposed changes that
are implemented.
The proposal shall not take effect
until all regulatory actions required
with respect to the proposal are
completed.32
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the Advance Notice
is consistent with the Clearing
Supervision 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–
DTC–2016–802 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–DTC–2016–802. 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 Advance Notice that
are filed with the Commission, and all
written communications relating to the
Advance Notice between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
27 Id.
24 12
U.S.C. 5464(b).
28 See
25 Id.
26 17
29 12
CFR 240.17Ad–22(d)(12).
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12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(G).
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H).
30 Id.
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31 Id.
32 See supra note 3 (regarding filing of related
proposed rule change).
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 217 / Wednesday, November 9, 2016 / Notices
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 the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of DTC and on DTCC’s Web site
(https://dtcc.com/legal/sec-rulefilings.aspx). 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–DTC–
2016–802 and should be submitted on
or before November 25, 2016.
By the Commission.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–27030 Filed 11–8–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
[Release No. 34–79228; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2016–144]
November 3, 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
20, 2016, The NASDAQ Stock Market
LLC (‘‘Nasdaq’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’)
the proposed rule change as described
in Items I, II, and III, below, which Items
have been prepared by the Exchange.
The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested
persons.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rule 7047 of the Exchange’s transaction
fees to institute a new fee for the
distribution of data derived from
Nasdaq Basic on third-party Web sites
or other electronic platforms, as
described further below.
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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Jkt 241001
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
1. Purpose
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change To Institute a
New Fee for the Distribution of Data
2 17
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
1 15
The changes are being filed for
immediate effectiveness and will
become operative on October 20, 2016.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s Web site
at https://nasdaq.cchwallstreet.com, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and
at the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to introduce a new pricing
model to keep pace with an evolving
practice. Distributors have increasingly
used Nasdaq Basic to make ‘‘Derived
Data’’ available on a Web site or other
electronic platform that is branded by a
third party, or co-branded by a
Distributor and a third party, and
available to external subscribers.
‘‘Derived Data’’ is pricing data or
other information that is created in
whole or in part from Nasdaq
information, but which cannot be
reverse engineered to recreate Nasdaq
information or be used to create other
data that is recognizable as a reasonable
substitute for Nasdaq information. The
type of Derived Data subject to the
proposed fee is taken from Nasdaq
Basic, a proprietary data product that
provides best bid and offer and last sale
information for all U.S. exchange-listed
stocks using data from the Nasdaq
Market Center and the FINRA/Nasdaq
Trade Reporting Facility.
The Derived Data subject to the
proposed fee is made available to
subscribers on a ‘‘Hosted Display
Solution’’: A product, solution or
capability provided by a Distributor in
which the Distributor makes the Derived
Data available on a platform that reflects
either a brand of a third party, or is cobranded with a third party and a
Distributor, and available for use by
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4703
external subscribers of the third party or
the Distributor. The Distributor
maintains control of the application’s
data, entitlements and display.
The Hosted Display Solution may take
a number of forms. For example, the
Distributor may host a ‘‘Widget,’’ such
as an iframe or applet, in which the
Hosted Display Solution is a part or a
subset of a Web site or platform. The
Hosted Display Solution may also take
the form of a ‘‘White Label,’’ in which
the Distributor hosts or maintains the
Web site or platform on behalf of a
third-party entity. Although the specific
forms may vary, Hosted Display
Solutions allow Distributors to make
Derived Data available on a platform
that is branded with a third-party brand,
or co-branded with a third party and a
Distributor, for the use of external
subscribers.
Derived Data on a Hosted Display
Solution may be used for a number of
different purposes, to be determined by
the Distributor. Possible uses include
the display of information or data, or the
creation of derivative instruments, such
as swaps,3 swaptions,4 binary options,5
or contracts for difference.6 The specific
use of the data will be determined by
the Distributor, as the proposed fee will
not depend on the purpose for placing
the Derived Data on a Hosted Display
Solution.
The Exchange proposes a flat fee of
$400 per month per Hosted Display
Solution for each Distributor that makes
Derived Data available on a Hosted
Display Solution. The monthly fee will
apply whenever such a Hosted Display
Solution is employed at any time during
the month. This fee will be in addition
to the distributor fee owed for the
distribution of Nasdaq Basic under Rule
7047(c)(1), as well as any fee that may
be owed under Rule 7047(c)(2). Any
Distributor that distributes Nasdaq data
that is not Derived Data—i.e., Nasdaq
Basic for Nasdaq, Nasdaq Basic for
NYSE, or Nasdaq Basic for NYSE
Market—on a Hosted Display Solution
would be liable for any applicable persubscriber or per-query fees set forth in
3 A swap is a derivative contract in which two
parties agree to exchange financial instruments.
4 A swaption, or swap option, is an option to
enter into a swap at a specified time.
5 A binary option is a type of contract in which
the return depends on the outcome of a true/false
proposition. If the proposition is true, the option
purchaser would be entitled to predetermined
compensation; otherwise, the purchaser would
receive no compensation.
6 A contract for difference is an agreement to
exchange the difference between the current value
of an asset and its future value. If the price
increases, the seller pays the buyer the amount of
the increase. If the price decreases, the buyer pays
the seller the amount of the decrease.
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 217 (Wednesday, November 9, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 78884-78890]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-27030]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-79224; File No. SR-DTC-2016-802]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Depository Trust Company;
Notice of Filing of and Extension of Review Period of Advance Notice
Relating to Processing of Transactions in Money Market Instruments
November 3, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act entitled the Payment,
Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act of 2010 (``Clearing
Supervision Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4(n)(1)(i) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act''),\2\ notice is hereby given that on
September 23, 2016, The Depository Trust Company (``DTC'') filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the advance
notice SR-DTC-2016-802 (``Advance Notice'') as described in Items I and
II below, which Items have been prepared primarily by DTC.\3\ The
Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the Advance
Notice from interested persons and to extend the review period of the
Advance Notice, for an additional 60 days under Section 806(e)(1)(H) of
the Clearing Supervision Act.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(n)(1)(i).
\3\ On September 23, 2016, DTC filed this Advance Notice as a
proposed rule change (SR-DTC-2016-008) with the Commission pursuant
to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), and Rule 19b-4,
17 CFR 240.19b-4. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 34-79046
(October 5, 2016), 81 FR 70200 (October 11, 2016) (SR-DTC-2016-008).
\4\ See 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This Advance Notice consists of modifications to (i) the DTC Rules,
By-laws and Organization Certificate (``Rules''),\5\ (ii) the DTC
Settlement Service Guide (``Settlement Guide''),\6\ and (iii) the DTC
Distributions Service Guide (``Distributions Guide''),\7\ annexed
hereto as Exhibit 5 (``Proposal''). The Proposal would modify the
Rules, Settlement Guide, and Distributions Guide to establish a change
in the processing of transactions in money market instruments (``MMI'')
that are processed in DTC's MMI Program (``MMI Securities'').\8\ The
Proposal would affect DTC's processing of issuances of MMI Securities
(``Issuances'') by issuers of MMI Securities (``Issuers'') as well as
Maturity Presentments, Income Presentments, Principal Presentments, and
Reorganization Presentments (collectively, ``Presentments'') (Issuances
and Presentments, collectively ``MMI Obligations''). The Proposal would
amend the Rules and Settlement Guide to (i) eliminate intra-day
reversals of processed but not yet settled MMI Obligations resulting
from an Issuing and Paying Agent (``IPA'') notifying DTC of its refusal
to pay (``RTP'') for Presentments of an Issuer's maturing MMI
Securities for a designated Acronym; \9\ (ii) eliminate the Largest
Provisional Net Credit (``LPNC'') risk management control; (iii)
provide that the IPA must acknowledge its funding obligations for
Presentments and that Receivers of Issuances must approve their receipt
of those Issuances in DTC's Receiver Authorized Delivery (``RAD'')
system before DTC would process MMI Presentments; (iv) implement an
enhanced process to test risk management controls under certain
conditions with respect to an Acronym (to be referred to as MMI
Optimization, as defined below); (v) make updates and revisions to the
Settlement Processing Schedule in the Settlement Guide (``Processing
Schedule''), as described below, (vi) eliminate the ``receive versus
payment NA'' control (``RVPNA''), as described below, and (vii) make
other technical and clarifying changes to the text, as more fully
described below. In addition, the Proposal would amend the
Distributions Guide to make changes to text relating to the processing
of Income Presentments so that it is consistent with the changes
proposed in the Settlement Guide in that regard, as more fully
described below.\10\
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\5\ Available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/rules-and-procedures.aspx.
\6\ Available at https://www.dtcc.com/~/media/Files/Downloads/
legal/service-guides/Settlement.pdf.
\7\ Available at https://www.dtcc.com/~/media/Files/Downloads/
legal/service-guides/
Distributions%20Service%20Guide%20FINAL%20November%202014.pdf.
\8\ Eligibility for inclusion in the MMI Program covers MMI,
which are short-term debt Securities that generally mature 1 to 270
days from their original issuance date. MMI include, but are not
limited to, commercial paper, banker's acceptances and short-term
bank notes and are issued by financial institutions, large
corporations, or state and local governments. Most MMI trade in
large denominations (typically, $250,000 to $50 million) and are
purchased by institutional investors. Eligibility for inclusion in
the MMI Program also covers medium term notes that mature over a
longer term.
\9\ Rule 1, supra note 5. MMI of an Issuer are designated by DTC
using unique four-character identifiers employed by DTC referred to
as Acronyms. An MMI Issuer can have multiple Acronyms representing
its Securities. MMI Transactions and other functions relating to MMI
(e.g., confirmations and RTP) instructed and/or performed by IPAs,
Participants and/or DTC as described herein are performed on an
``Acronym-by-Acronym'' basis.
\10\ Capitalized terms not otherwise defined herein have the
respective meanings set forth in the Rules, the Settlement Guide,
and the Distributions Guide.
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II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, the clearing agency included
statements concerning the purpose of and basis for the Advance Notice
and discussed any comments it received on the Advance Notice. The text
of these statements may be examined at the places specified in Item IV
below. The clearing agency has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A and B below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
(A) Clearing Agency's Statement on Comments on the Advance Notice
Received From Members, Participants, or Others
DTC has not solicited and does not intend to solicit comments
regarding the Proposal. DTC has not received any unsolicited written
comments from
[[Page 78885]]
interested parties. To the extent DTC receives written comments on the
Proposal, DTC will forward such comments to the Commission. DTC has
conducted industry outreach with respect to the proposal including
discussion with industry associations and IPAs.
(B) Advance Notice Filed Pursuant to Section 806(e) of the Clearing and
Supervision Act
Nature of the Proposed Change
DTC is proposing to (i) mitigate risk to DTC and Participants
relating to intra-day reversals of processed MMI Obligations in the
event of an IPA's RTP with respect to maturing obligations (``Maturing
Obligations'') \11\ for an Acronym and/or income payments \12\ relating
to Presentments for an Acronym, and (ii) reduce blockage for the
completion of MMI Obligations by eliminating the LPNC control, as more
fully described below.
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\11\ A Maturing Obligation is a payment owed in settlement by
the IPA to the Participant on whose behalf DTC presents the matured
MMI Securities.
\12\ Principal and income for an Acronym are distributed by an
IPA according to a cycle determined by the terms of the issue (e.g.,
monthly, quarterly, and semi-annually). Such distributions may be
for interest only, principal only, or interest and principal.
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Background
When an Issuer issues MMI Securities at DTC, the IPA for that
Issuer sends issuance instructions to DTC electronically, which results
in crediting the applicable MMI Securities to the DTC Account of the
IPA. These MMI Securities are then Delivered to the Accounts of
applicable Participants that are purchasing the Issuance in accordance
with their purchase amounts. These purchasing Participants typically
include broker/dealers or banks, acting as custodians for institutional
investors. The IPA Delivery instructions may be free of payment or,
most often, Delivery Versus Payment. Deliveries of MMI are processed
pursuant to the same Rules and the applicable Procedures \13\ set forth
in the Settlement Guide, as are Deliveries generally, whether free or
versus payment. Delivery Versus Payment transactions are subject to
risk management controls of the IPA and Receiving Participants for Net
Debit Cap and Collateral Monitor sufficiency,\14\ and payment for
Delivery Versus Payment transactions is due from the receiving
Participants through DTC's net settlement process. To the extent, if
any, that the Participant has a Net Debit Balance in its Settlement
Account at end-of-day, payment of that amount is due to DTC.
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\13\ Pursuant to the Rules, the term ``Procedures'' means the
Procedures, service guides, and regulations of the Corporation
adopted pursuant to Rule 27, as amended from time to time. See Rule
1, Section 1, supra note 5, at 15. The Procedures applicable to MMI
settlement processing are set forth in the Settlement Guide. Supra
note 6.
\14\ Delivery Versus Payment transfers at DTC are structured so
that the completion of Delivery of Securities to a Participant in
end-of-day settlement is contingent on the receiving Participant
satisfying its end-of-day net settlement obligation, if any. The
risk of Participant failure to settle is managed through risk
management controls, structured so that DTC may complete settlement
despite the failure to settle of the Participant, or Affiliated
Family of Participants, with the largest net settlement obligation.
The two principal controls are the Net Debit Cap and Collateral
Monitor. The largest net settlement obligation of a Participant or
Affiliated Family of Participants cannot exceed DTC liquidity
resources, based on the Net Debit Cap, and must be fully
collateralized, based on the Collateral Monitor. This structure is
designed so that DTC may pledge or liquidate Collateral of the
defaulting Participant in order to fund settlement among non-
defaulting Participants. Liquidity resources, including the
Participants Fund and a committed line of credit with a consortium
of lenders, are available to complete settlement among non-
defaulting Participants.
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When MMI Securities mature, the Maturity Presentment process is
initiated automatically by DTC on maturity date, starting at
approximately 6:00 a.m. Eastern Time (``ET''), for Delivery of matured
MMI Securities from the applicable DTC Participants' Accounts to the
applicable IPA Accounts. This automated process electronically sweeps
all maturing positions of MMI Securities from Participant Accounts and
debits the Settlement Account of the applicable IPA for the amount of
the Maturing Obligations for Presentments for the Acronym and credits
the Settlement Accounts of the Deliverers. In accordance with the
Rules, payment is due from the IPA for settlement to the extent, if
any, that the IPA has a Net Debit Balance in its Settlement Account at
end-of-day.
With regard to DTC net settlement, MMI Issuers and IPAs commonly
consider the primary source of payments for Maturing Obligations of MMI
Securities to be funded by the proceeds of Issuances of the same
Acronym by that Issuer on the same Business Day. Because Presentments
are currently processed automatically at DTC, IPAs have the option to
refuse to pay for Maturing Obligations to protect against the
possibility that an IPA may not be able to fund settlement because it
has not received funds from the relevant Issuer. An IPA that refuses
payment for a Presentment (i.e., refuses to make payment for the
Delivery of matured MMI Securities for which it is the designated IPA
and/or pay interest or dividend income on an MMI Security for which it
is the designated IPA) must notify DTC of its RTP in the DTC Settlement
User Interface. An IPA may enter an RTP until 3:00 p.m. ET on the date
of the affected Presentment.
Under the current Rules, the effect of an RTP is to instruct DTC to
reverse all processed Deliveries of that Acronym, including Issuances,
related funds credits and debits, and Presentments. This late day
reversal of processed (but not yet settled) transactions may override
DTC's risk management controls (i.e., Collateral Monitor and Net Debit
Cap) and force a presenting Participant into a Net Debit Balance; this
situation poses systemic risk with respect to the Participant's ability
to fund its settlement and, hence, DTC's ability to complete end-of-day
net funds settlement. Also, the possibility of intra-day reversals of
processed MMI Obligations creates uncertainty for Participants.
Currently, to mitigate the risks associated with an RTP, DTC Rules
and the Settlement Guide provide for the LPNC risk management control.
DTC withholds credit intra-day from each Participant that has a
Presentment in the amount of the aggregate of the two largest credits
with respect to an Acronym. The LPNC is not included in the calculation
of the Participant's Collateral Monitor or its Net Debit Balance. This
provides protection in the event that MMI Obligations are reversed by
DTC as a result of an RTP.\15\
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\15\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 71888 (April 7,
2014), 79 FR 20285 (April 11, 2014) (SR-DTC-2014-02) (clarifying the
LPNC Procedures in the Settlement Guide) and Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 68983 (February 25, 2013), 78 FR 13924 (March 1, 2013)
(SR-DTC-2012-10) (updating the Rules related to LPNC).
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DTC's Rules and Procedures relating to settlement processing for
the MMI Program \16\ were designed to limit credit, liquidity, and
operational risk for DTC and Participants. In connection with ongoing
efforts by DTC to evaluate the risk associated with the processing of
MMI Obligations, DTC has determined that the risks presented by intra-
day reversals of processed MMI Obligations should be eliminated to
prevent the possibility that a reversal could override risk controls
and heighten liquidity and settlement risk. Eliminating intra-day
reversals of processed MMI Obligations would also enhance intra-day
finality and allow for the elimination of the LPNC which creates intra-
day blockage and affects liquidity through the withholding of
settlement credits.
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\16\ The Procedures applicable to MMI settlement processing are
set forth in the Settlement Guide. Supra note 6.
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[[Page 78886]]
Proposal
The Proposal would amend the Rules and the Settlement Guide to
eliminate provisions for intra-day reversals of processed MMI
Obligations based on an IPA's RTP or Issuer insolvency. In addition,
the Proposal would amend the Distributions Guide to make changes to
text relating to the processing of Income Presentments so that it is
consistent with the changes proposed in the Settlement Guide in that
regard, as more fully described below.
Pursuant to the Proposal, DTC would no longer automatically process
Presentments (and Issuances and related deliveries). Rather, except as
noted below, DTC would only process these transactions after an
acknowledgment (``MMI Funding Acknowledgment'') is made by the IPA to
DTC whereby either: (i) The value of receiver-approved \17\ Issuances
alone,\18\ or a combination of receiver-approved Issuances plus an
amount the IPA(s) has acknowledged has been funded by the Issuer,
exceeds the Acronym's Presentments; or (ii) the IPA acknowledges it has
been funded for the entire amount of the gross value of an Acronym,
regardless of Issuances.\19\
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\17\ DTC subjects certain transactions to receiver approval in
its RAD system.
\18\ An affirmative MMI Funding Acknowledgement by the IPA would
not be required in the case that the aggregate amount of RAD
approved Issuances of an Acronym exceeds the aggregate amount of
Presentments since these Issuances would provide the funding of the
maturing obligations versus an Issuer having to fund the IPA. The
Proposal would provide that in this instance, the IPA is deemed to
provide a standing instruction to process transactions in the
Acronym, subject to risk management controls. Any such instruction
or deemed instruction by the IPA would be irrevocable once given.
\19\ In the case where an affirmative MMI Funding Acknowledgment
by the IPA would be required for Presentments to be processed, the
MMI Funding Acknowledgement would be a notification provided by an
IPA to DTC with respect to an Acronym that the IPA acknowledges and
affirms its funding obligation for a maturing Acronym either (i) in
the entire amount of the Acronym or (ii) for an amount at least
equal to the difference between the value of Issuances and the value
of the Presentments. In the case of (ii) above, the IPA may (later
that day) increase the funding amount it acknowledges, but in no
event may the IPA reduce the amount of its obligation previously
acknowledged that day.
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DTC anticipates that the Proposal would generally maintain the
volume of transactions processed today in terms of the total number and
value of transactions that have passed position and risk controls
throughout the processing day. However, because of the requirement for
the IPA to provide an MMI Funding Acknowledgement prior to processing
of an Acronym, the reason why transactions do not complete during the
processing day would shift. It is expected that the value and volume of
MMI transactions recycling for risk management controls during the late
morning and afternoon time periods would be reduced as a result of MMI
transactions being held outside of the processing system awaiting an
MMI Funding Acknowledgement decision. The non-MMI transactions and
fully funded MMI transactions would also likely have a reduction in
blockage from risk management controls as a result of the elimination
of the LPNC control. The elimination of the LPNC control would no
longer withhold billions of dollars of settlement credits until 3:05
p.m. ET as it does today, which would in turn permit these transactions
to complete earlier in the day.
An IPA would make an MMI Funding Acknowledgment using a new
Decision Making Application (``DMA''). When an MMI Funding
Acknowledgement has occurred, it would constitute the IPA's instruction
to DTC to attempt to process transactions in the Acronym. At this
point, if the IPA has acknowledged that it would fully fund the
Acronym, then the transactions would be sent to the processing system
and attempted against position and risk management controls. If the IPA
provides an MMI Funding Acknowledgement for only partial funding of the
entire amount of Presentments for an Acronym, DTC would test risk
management controls of Deliverers and Receivers with respect to that
Acronym to determine whether risk management controls would be
satisfied by all Deliverers and Receivers of the Acronym and determine
whether all parties maintain adequate position to complete the
applicable transactions, i.e., ``MMI Optimization''. In the case that
the aggregate amount of RAD approved Issuances of an Acronym exceeds
the aggregate amount of Presentments, and thus an affirmative
acknowledgment by the IPA would not be required, risk management
controls for all Deliverers and Receivers would be tested using MMI
Optimization as well.
As indicated above, if partial funding from the IPA is necessary,
then transactions would be routed to MMI Optimization. Generally, in
MMI Optimization, all Deliverers and Receivers of the Acronym must
satisfy risk management controls and delivering Participants must hold
sufficient position, in order for the transactions in that Acronym to
be processed. However, as long as the Issuances that can satisfy
Deliverer and Receiver risk controls for that Acronym are equal to or
greater than the Maturing Presentments of that Acronym, the applicable
transactions (i.e., those that pass risk controls) would be processed.
If there are multiple IPAs for an Acronym, DTC would determine funding
based on the satisfaction of conditions for all Receivers and
Deliverers with respect to all Presentments, Issuances and applicable
Delivery Orders in the Acronym and MMI Funding Acknowledgements for all
IPAs with Issuances and Presentments in the Acronym. No instruction of
an IPA to DTC to process the subject MMI transactions shall be
effective until MMI Optimization is satisfied with respect to all
transactions in the Acronym.
If there is no MMI Funding Acknowledgment for the IPA for an
Acronym for which Maturing Obligations are due by 3:00 p.m. ET on that
day and/or DTC is aware that the Issuer of an Acronym is insolvent
(``Acronym Payment Failure''), then DTC would not process transactions
in the Acronym.\20\
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\20\ DTC would automatically consider an Acronym Payment Failure
occurring due to an IPA's failure to provide timely MMI Funding
Acknowledgement (i.e., provide the acknowledgment by 3:00 p.m. ET)
as an RTP.
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In the event of an Acronym Payment Failure, DTC would (i) prevent
further issuance and maturity activity for the Acronym in DTC's system,
(ii) prevent Deliveries of MMI Securities of the Acronym on failure
date and halt all activity in that Acronym, (iii) set the Collateral
Value of the MMI Securities in the Acronym to zero for purposes of
calculating the Collateral Monitor of any affected Participant, and
(iv) notify Participants of the Acronym Payment Failure. Notification
would be made through a DTC broadcast through the current process.
Notwithstanding the occurrence of an Acronym Payment Failure, the
IPA would remain liable for funding pursuant to any MMI Funding
Acknowledgment previously provided for that Business Day.
A ``Temporary Acronym Payment Failure'' with respect to Income
Presentments would occur when an IPA notifies DTC that it temporarily
refuses to pay Income Presentments for the Acronym (typically due to an
Issuer's inability to fund Income Presentments on that day). A
Temporary Acronym Payment Failure would only be initiated if there are
no Maturity Presentments, Principal Presentments and/or Reorganization
Presentments on that Business Day. DTC expects the Issuer and/or IPA to
resolve such a situation by the next Business Day. In the event of a
Temporary Acronym Payment Failure, DTC would (i) temporarily devalue to
zero all of the Issuer's MMI Securities for purposes of calculating
[[Page 78887]]
the Collateral Monitor, unless and until the IPA acknowledges funding
with respect to the Income Payments on the following Business Day, (ii)
notify Participants of the delayed payment through a DTC broadcast as
is the current process today, and (iii) block from DTC's systems all
further Issuances and maturities by that Issuer for the remainder of
the Business Day on which notification of the Temporary Payment Failure
was received by DTC.
An IPA would not be able to avail itself of a Temporary Acronym
Payment Failure for the same Acronym on consecutive Business Days.
Also, in light of the proposed elimination of intra-day reversals
of processed MMI Obligations, DTC would also eliminate the RVPNA
control. The RVPNA control is provided for in the Settlement Guide and
implements current Section 1(c) of Rule 9(B). RVPNA is used to prevent
a Participant from Delivering free of value or undervalued any MMI
Securities received versus payment on the same Business Day.\21\ This
protects DTC against being unable to reverse transactions for
Deliveries Versus Payment of MMI Securities in the event of an RTP by
the IPA.\22\ The elimination of reversals of processed MMI Obligations
would eliminate the need for the RVPNA control.
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\21\ For purposes of RVPNA, MMI Securities are considered
undervalued if they are Delivered Versus Payment for less than 10
percent below market value.
\22\ For example, if A Delivers MMI Securities to B versus
payment and B Delivers the same MMI Securities to C free of payment
(subject to risk management controls), under Rule 9(B), Section 1,
the Delivery to C is final when the securities are credited to C.
DTC would therefore be unable to reverse the Delivery to C and thus
it cannot reverse the Delivery from B to A.
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Proposed Changes to the Rules, Settlement Guide, and Distributions
Guide
DTC would amend the text of Rule 1 (Definitions), Rule 9(A)
(Transactions in Securities and Money Payments), Rule 9(B)
(Transactions in Eligible Securities), Rule 9(C) (Transactions in MMI
Securities), the Settlement Guide and the Distributions Guide to
reflect the proposed changes described above. Specifically:
(i) Rule 1 would be amended to:
a. Delete the definition of LPNC; and
b. Add a cross-reference to indicate that the terms MMI Funding
Acknowledgment and MMI Optimization would be defined in Section 1 of
Rule 9(C).
(ii) Rule 9(A) would be amended to add text providing that an
instruction to DTC from a Participant for Delivery Versus Payment of
MMI Securities pursuant to Rule 9(C) shall not be effective unless and
until applicable conditions specified in Rule 9(C) as set forth below
have been satisfied.
(iii) Rule 9(B) would be amended to:
a. Eliminate text referencing the LPNC;
b. Eliminate the provision precluding DTC from acting on an
instruction for Delivery of MMI Securities subject of an Incomplete
Transaction if the instruction involves a Free Delivery, Pledge or
Release of Securities or a Delivery, Pledge or Release of Securities
substantially undervalued; and
c. Add text providing that an instruction to DTC from a Participant
for Delivery Versus Payment of MMI Securities pursuant to Rule 9(C)
shall not be effective unless and until the applicable conditions
specified in Rule 9(C) described below have been satisfied.
(iv) Rule 9(C) would be amended to:
a. Add the definitions of MMI Funding Acknowledgment and MMI
Optimization to reflect the meaning of these terms as described above;
b. Add text that Delivery Versus Payment of MMI Securities would be
affected in accordance with Rules 9(A), 9(B) and the Settlement Guide
in addition to Rule 9(C);
c. Add text indicating that instructions by a Presenting
Participant for a Presentment or Delivery of MMI Securities would be
deemed to be given only when any applicable MMI Funding Acknowledgment
has been received by DTC;
d. Remove conditions and references relating to reversals of
processed MMI Obligations;
e. Set forth conditions for the processing of Presentments,
including:
i. The requirement for the IPA to provide an MMI Funding
Acknowledgment, except in the case where the aggregate amount of
Issuances exceeds Presentments;
ii. Satisfaction of risk management controls and RAD;
iii. That an instruction to DTC with respect to an Issuance or
Presentment shall become effective upon satisfaction of the provisions
described in i. and ii. immediately above;
iv. That DTC shall comply with an effective instruction;
v. That the IPA acknowledges and agrees that DTC would process
instructions with respect to Issuances and Presentments as described
above and that the IPA's obligations in this regard are irrevocable;
and
vi. That if the IPA notifies DTC in writing of its insolvency, or
if DTC otherwise has notice, or if the IPA issues a Payment Refusal for
the Acronym, then the IPA would not be required to acknowledge its
obligations and DTC would not be required to process any further
instructions with respect to the applicable Acronym;
f. Eliminate references to MMI Securities being devalued in the
event of an RTP because in the event of any payment failure by the IPA,
DTC would then revert to the Acronym Payment Failure Process described
below; and
g. Delete a reference indicating that DTC's Failure to Settle
Procedure includes special provisions for MMI Securities.
(v) The Settlement Guide would be amended to:
a. Delete the description of, and all references and provisions
related to, LPNC;
b. Delete: (A) The definition of RVPNA, (B) a provision that
transactions for MMI Securities that are deemed RVPNA would recycle
pending release of the LPNC control at 3:05 p.m. ET, and (C) a note
that MMI Securities received versus payment are not allowed to be
freely moved until the LPNC control is released;
c. Add a description of ``Unknown Rate'' to provide for a
placeholder in the Settlement Guide for references to an interest rate
where payment of interest by an IPA to Receivers is scheduled but the
interest rate to be paid is not known at the time;
d. Change the heading of the section currently named ``Establishing
Your Net Debit Cap'' to ``Limitation of Participant Net Debit Caps by
Settling Banks'' to reflect the context of that section more
specifically;
e. Revise the Settlement Processing Schedule to:
i. Add a cutoff time of 2:30 p.m. ET for an IPA to replace the
Unknown Rate with a final interest rate and state that the IPA must
successfully transmit the final rate to DTC before 2:30 p.m. ET;
ii. Add a cutoff time of 2:55 p.m. ET after which Issuances and
Presentments cannot be processed on the given Business Day because the
conditions described above for processing of MMI Obligations have not
been met;
iii. Remove a reference for a cutoff relating to reversals of MMI
Obligations since reversals would no longer occur as described above;
iv. Define 3 p.m. ET as the cutoff time for any required MMI
Funding Acknowledgements to be received in order for DTC to be able to
process for a given Acronym that day;
v. Add at cutoff time of 3 p.m. ET for an IPA to notify DTC of a
Temporary Acronym Payment Failure;
[[Page 78888]]
vi. Delete a reference to the release of LPNC controls as LPNC
would no longer exist; and
vii. Clarify that a 3:10 p.m. ET cutoff after which CNS
transactions that cannot be completed would be dropped from the system,
also applies to valued transactions in non-MMI Securities and fully
paid for and secondary MMI Deliveries or Maturity Presentments;
f. Add a section describing MMI Processing to include a description
of MMI Funding Acknowledgments and the MMI Optimization process as
described above;
g. Revise the section referencing provisions for ``Issuer Failure
Processing'' to instead describe Acronym Payment Failure Processing and
Temporary Acronym Payment Failure Process, as these processes are
described above, since the contingencies for processing a payment
failure hinge on the failure of payment on an Acronym by an IPA
regardless of whether it is ultimately caused by an Issuer insolvency
or otherwise;
h. Remove a duplicate reference to the DTC contact number for
Participants/IPAs to call in the event of an Acronym Payment Failure;
i. Remove the description of the ``MMI IPA MP Pend'' process which
was designed to allow IPAs to minimize the impact of potential
reversals of processed MMI Obligations; as such reversals would no
longer occur; and
j. Change the name of the section named ``Calculating Your Net
Debit Cap'' to ``Calculation of Participant Net Debit Caps''.
(vi) The Distributions Guide would be amended to (i) delete
language reflecting that Income Presentments are processed at the
start-of-day, and (ii) add a brief description of the processing of
Presentments as proposed above and provide a cross-reference to the
Settlement Guide relating to MMI settlement processing.
(vii) The Proposal would also make technical and clarifying changes
to the texts of the Rules and Settlement Guide for consistency
throughout the texts in describing the concepts and terms set forth
above, make corrections to grammar and spacing and edit text to provide
for enhanced readability.
Implementation
The Proposal would be implemented in phases whereby Acronyms would
be migrated to be processed in accordance with the Proposal over a
period of five months beginning in November 2016 and with all Acronyms
expected to be implemented by the end of March 2017, except for the
implementation of the elimination of the Rule and Settlement Guide
provisions relating to RVPNA which elimination would not occur until
all other aspects of the Proposal are implemented with respect to all
Acronyms. DTC would announce phased implementation dates for the
Proposal via Important Notice upon all applicable regulatory approval
by the Commission.
Expected Effect on Risks to DTC, Its Participants, or the Market
As described above, the Proposal would amend the Rules and the
Settlement Guide to: (i) Eliminate provisions for intra-day reversals
of processed MMI Obligations based on an IPA's RTP or Issuer
insolvency, (ii) impose a new requirement on IPAs to provide DTC an MMI
Funding Acknowledgment, (iii) remove the LPNC risk management control;
and (iv) implement MMI Optimization.
Elimination of Intra-day Reversals
As noted above, under the current DTC Rules, intraday reversals of
MMI Obligations may override DTC's risk management controls (i.e.,
Collateral Monitor and Net Debit Cap) and force a presenting
Participant into an otherwise unanticipated Net Debit Balance at the
end-of-day; this situation poses systemic risk with respect to the
Participant's ability to fund its settlement and, hence, DTC's ability
to complete end-of-day net funds settlement. The proposed elimination
of intra-day reversals of processed MMI Obligations would decrease risk
to DTC, its Participants and the marketplace by eliminating the
settlement risk associated with such reversals, improving settlement
finality.
IPAs' Obligation To Provide an MMI Funding Acknowledgment
Pursuant to the Proposal, DTC would no longer automatically process
Presentments (and Issuances and related deliveries). Rather, as
applicable, DTC would only process these transactions after receiving
an MMI Funding Acknowledgment from the IPA. In this regard, once an IPA
provides an MMI Funding Acknowledgment, its ability to notify DTC of an
RTP would be limited as it would not be allowed to reduce the amount of
its obligation previously acknowledged that day.\23\ This provision of
the Proposal would facilitate the elimination of intra-day reversals,
as described above, and, therefore, decrease settlement risk for DTC
and its Participants.
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\23\ As noted above, an affirmative MMI Funding Acknowledgement
by the IPA would not be required in the case that the aggregate
amount of RAD approved Issuances of an Acronym exceeds the aggregate
amount of Presentments since these Issuances would provide the
funding of the maturing obligations versus an Issuer having to fund
the IPA. The Proposal would provide that in this instance, the IPA
is deemed to provide a standing instruction to process transactions
in the Acronym, subject to risk management controls. Any such
instruction or deemed instruction by the IPA would be irrevocable
once given.
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Removal of the LPNC Control
Currently, the LPNC control exists to mitigate the risks associated
with an RTP by withholding credit intra-day from each Participant in
the amount of the aggregate of the two largest credits with respect to
Presentment of an Acronym. DTC expects that the proposed elimination of
the LPNC control and the attendant intraday withholding of credits
would reduce the risk of intraday liquidity blockages within DTC's
system for Participant activity, for both MMI and non-MMI transactions,
because at any point intraday, Participants would have a true view of
their Net Debit Balances or Net Credit Balances and be able to respond
accordingly.
MMI Optimization
As described above, as applicable, DTC would test risk management
controls of Deliverers and Receivers using the proposed MMI
Optimization process with respect to the Acronym to determine whether
risk management controls would be satisfied by all Deliverers and
Receivers of the Acronym and determine whether all Deliverers maintain
adequate position to complete the applicable transactions. As described
above, the application of MMI Optimization to MMI transactions, as
applicable, would facilitate timely processing of transactions under
the proposal and reduce the risk to Participants that transactions may
not settle due to failure to satisfy risk controls.
Management of Identified Risks
The proposed requirement for an IPA to provide DTC an MMI Funding
Acknowledgment prior to DTC's processing of affected MMI transactions,
as applicable, would replace DTC's current automatic processing of MMI
Transactions. The fact that such transactions would not be processed
until an MMI Funding Acknowledgment is provided by the IPA may create a
risk of blockage of MMI transactions by Participants. However, DTC
anticipates that the various aspects of the Proposal taken together
would offset any such risk and reduce the risk of blockage overall for
both MMI and non-MMI transactions because of the effect of (i) the
removal of the LPNC control would
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eliminate the attendant withholding of settlement credits from
Participants intraday net settlement balances, and (ii) increased
efficiency in the testing of risk controls through the MMI Optimization
process, as described above, would reduce the volume of MMI
transactions that might otherwise recycle pending passing of risk
management controls.
Consistency With the Clearing Supervision Act
DTC believes that the Proposal is consistent with Section 805(b) of
the Clearing Supervision Act.\24\ The objectives and principles of
Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act are the promotion of
robust risk management, promotion of safety and soundness, reduction of
systemic risks, and support of the stability of the broader financial
system.\25\
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\24\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
\25\ Id.
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DTC believes that the Proposal is consistent with the provisions of
the Clearing Supervision Act because the elimination of reversals of
MMI transactions would promote intraday settlement finality and protect
end-of day settlement from the risk of the failure to settle by IPAs or
affected Participants by removing the risk exposure due to the override
of DTC's risk management controls (i.e., Collateral Monitor and Net
Debit Cap) to process reversals under current rules. As such the
Proposal would promote the robustness of DTC's risk management
controls.
DTC also believes that the Proposal is consistent with the
provisions of the Clearing Supervision Act because the elimination of
the risk that a Participant could incur a Net Debit Balance that
exceeds DTC's risk controls caused by an intra-day reversal of
processed (but not yet settled) MMI Obligations would promote both the
safety and soundness of DTC's system and reduce systemic risks by (i)
reducing the risk of a shortfall in a defaulting Participant's
collateral available for DTC to use to satisfy the defaulting
Participant's settlement obligations, and (ii) reducing the risk that a
Participant default could impose a strain on DTC's liquidity resources
and affect DTC's ability to complete system-wide settlement that day.
In addition, DTC believes that the Proposal would be consistent
with Rule 17Ad-22(d)(12) promulgated under the Act.\26\ Rule 17Ad-
22(d)(12) requires that each registered clearing agency shall
establish, implement, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to, as applicable, ensure that final
settlement occurs no later than the end of the settlement day; and
requires that intraday or real-time finality be provided where
necessary to reduce risks.\27\ The Proposal would eliminate the intra-
day reversals of processed MMI transactions that are pending for end of
day system wide net settlement, thus promoting settlement finality and
eliminating the possibility that an intraday reversal could heighten
liquidity and settlement risk, as discussed above. As such, DTC
believes the Proposal is consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(d)(12).
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\26\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(d)(12).
\27\ Id.
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Taking each of the above points collectively (i.e., the Proposal's
promotion of robust risk management, safety and soundness, reduced
systemic risk, and consistency with Rule 17Ad-22(d)(12)). [sic] DTC
believes the Proposal supports the overall stability of the broader
financial system consistent with the Clearing Supervision Act.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Advance Notice and Timing for
Commission Action
The proposed change may be implemented if the Commission does not
object to the proposed change within 60 days of the later of (i) the
date that the proposed change was filed with the Commission or (ii) the
date that any additional information requested by the Commission is
received,\28\ unless extended as described below. The clearing agency
shall not implement the proposed change if the Commission has any
objection to the proposed change.
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\28\ See 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(G).
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Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(H) of the Clearing Supervision
Act,\29\ the Commission may extend the review period of an advance
notice for an additional 60 days, if the changes proposed in the
advance notice raise novel or complex issues, subject to the Commission
providing the clearing agency with prompt written notice of the
extension.
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\29\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H).
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Here, as the Commission has not requested any additional
information, the date that is 60 days after DTC filed the Advance
Notice with the Commission is November 22, 2016. However, the
Commission finds it appropriate to extend the review period of the
Advance Notice, for an additional 60 days under Section 806(e)(1)(H) of
the Clearing Supervision Act.\30\ The Commission finds the Advance
Notice is both novel and complex because the material aspects of the
proposed changes to DTC's processing of MMI are detailed, substantial,
a first for DTC, and are interrelated with other risk management
practices at DTC.
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\30\ Id.
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Accordingly, the Commission, pursuant to 806(e)(1)(H) of the
Clearing Supervision Act,\31\ extends the review period for an
additional 60 days so that the Commission shall have until January 21,
2017 to issue an objection or non-objection to the Advance Notice (File
No. SR-DTC-2016-802).
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\31\ Id.
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The clearing agency shall post notice on its Web site of proposed
changes that are implemented.
The proposal shall not take effect until all regulatory actions
required with respect to the proposal are completed.\32\
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\32\ See supra note 3 (regarding filing of related proposed rule
change).
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IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the Advance
Notice is consistent with the Clearing Supervision 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-DTC-2016-802 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-DTC-2016-802. 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 Advance Notice that are filed
with the Commission, and all written communications relating to the
Advance Notice between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
[[Page 78890]]
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
the filing also will be available for inspection and copying at the
principal office of DTC and on DTCC's Web site (https://dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx). 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-DTC-2016-802 and should be submitted on or before November 25, 2016.
By the Commission.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-27030 Filed 11-8-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P