Proposed Exemptive Order Granting a Conditional Exemption From the Broker Registration Requirements of Section 15(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for Certain Activities of Registered Municipal Advisors, 54062-54067 [2019-21882]
Download as PDF
54062
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2019 / Proposed Rules
(DINP), diisobutyl phthalate (DIBP), din-pentyl phthalate (DPENP), di-n-hexyl
phthalate (DHEXP), or dicyclohexyl
phthalate (DCHP). Materials used in
children’s toys and child care articles
subject to section 108(a) of the CPSIA
and 16 CFR part 1307 must comply with
the third party testing requirements of
section 14(a)(2) of the Consumer
Product Safety Act (CPSA), unless listed
in § 1253.2.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 1253.2 Determinations for unfinished
manufactured fibers.
(a) The following definition for an
unfinished manufactured fiber applies
for this part 1253. An unfinished
manufactured fiber is one that has no
chemical additives beyond those
required to manufacture the fiber. For
unfinished manufactured fibers as
defined in this rule, the unfinished
manufactured fiber is free of any
chemical additives added to impart
color or some desirable performance
property, such as flame retardancy.
(b) The following unfinished
manufactured fibers do not exceed the
ASTM F963 elements solubility limits
set forth in 16 CFR part 1250 with a
high degree of assurance as that term is
defined in 16 CFR part 1107:
(1) Nylon;
(2) Polyurethane (Spandex);
(3) Viscose Rayon;
(4) Acrylic and Modacrylic; and
(5) Natural Rubber Latex.
(c) The following unfinished
manufactured fibers do not exceed the
phthalates content limits set forth in 16
CFR part 1307 with a high degree of
assurance as that term is defined in 16
CFR part 1107:
(1) Polyester (polyethylene
terephthalate, PET);
(2) Nylon;
(3) Polyurethane (Spandex);
(4) Viscose Rayon;
(5) Acrylic and Modacrylic; and
(6) Natural Rubber Latex.
(d) Accessible component parts of
children’s toys and child care articles
made with the unfinished manufactured
fibers, listed in paragraphs (b) and (c) of
this section are not required to be thirdparty tested pursuant to section 14(a)(2)
of the CPSA and 16 CFR part 1107.
(e) Accessible component parts of
children’s toys and child care articles
made with manufactured fibers not
listed in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this
section are required to be third party
tested pursuant to section 14(a)(2) of the
CPSA and 16 CFR part 1107.
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2019–21517 Filed 10–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Oct 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 240
[Release No. 34–87204; File No. S7–16–19]
Proposed Exemptive Order Granting a
Conditional Exemption From the
Broker Registration Requirements of
Section 15(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 for Certain
Activities of Registered Municipal
Advisors
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Notification of proposed
exemptive order; request for comment.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to Section 15(a)(2) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’) and Section 36(a)(1)
of the Exchange Act, the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’) is proposing to grant
exemptive relief, subject to certain
conditions, to permit municipal
advisors registered with the
Commission under Section 15B of the
Exchange Act to engage in certain
limited activities in connection with the
direct placement of municipal securities
without registering as a broker under
Section 15 of the Exchange Act.
DATES: Comments should be received by
December 9, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
SUMMARY:
Electronic Comments
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments to Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number S7–16–19. This file number
should be included on the subject line
if email is used. To help us process and
review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The
Commission will post all comments on
the Commission’s internet website
(https://www.sec.gov/rules/
proposed.shtml). Comments are also
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. All comments
Frm 00019
Fmt 4702
I. Background
A. Municipal Advisor Registration
Framework
Section 975 of Title IX of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act amended the Exchange
Act to create a new class of regulated
persons, ‘‘municipal advisors.’’ 1 The
Commission subsequently adopted
registration rules for municipal advisors
in 2013.2 Exchange Act Section
15B(e)(4)(A) defines the term
‘‘municipal advisor’’ to include a person
that provides advice to or on behalf of
a municipal entity 3 or obligated
person 4 (together, ‘‘Municipal Issuers’’)
1 See
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/other.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov.
PO 00000
received will be posted without change.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that the Commission does not
redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions.
Commenters should submit only
information that they wish to make
available publicly.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Emily Westerberg Russell, Chief
Counsel, Joanne Rutkowski, Assistant
Chief Counsel, or Kelly Shoop, Special
Counsel, at 202–551–5550, in the
Division of Trading and Markets;
Rebecca Olsen, Director, or Adam
Wendell, Senior Special Counsel, at
202–551–5680, in the Office of
Municipal Securities; Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Sfmt 4702
15 U.S.C. 78o–4(a)(1)(B).
Registration of Municipal Advisors,
Exchange Act Rel. No. 70462 (Sept. 30, 2013), 78
FR 67468, 67483 n.200 (Nov. 12, 2013) (‘‘Municipal
Advisor Adopting Release’’).
3 Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(8) defines
‘‘municipal entity’’ as ‘‘any State, political
subdivision of a State, or municipal corporate
instrumentality of a State, including (A) any agency,
authority, or instrumentality of the State, political
subdivision, or municipal corporate
instrumentality; (B) any plan, program, or pool of
assets sponsored or established by the State,
political subdivision, or municipal corporate
instrumentality or any agency, authority, or
instrumentality thereof; and (C) any other issuer of
municipal securities.’’ 15 U.S.C. 78o–4(e)(8); see
also 17 CFR 240.15Ba1–1(g).
4 Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(10) defines
‘‘obligated person’’ as ‘‘any person, including an
issuer of municipal securities, who is either
generally or through an enterprise, fund, or account
of such person, committed by contract or other
arrangement to support the payment of all or part
of the obligations on the municipal securities to be
sold in an offering of municipal securities.’’ 15
U.S.C. 78o–4(e)(10). Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1–1(k)
generally provides that obligated person has the
same meaning as in Exchange Act Section
15B(e)(10), ‘‘provided, however, the term obligated
person shall not include: (1) A person who provides
municipal bond insurance, letters of credit, or other
liquidity facilities; (2) a person whose financial
information or operating data is not material to a
municipal securities offering, without reference to
2 See
E:\FR\FM\09OCP1.SGM
09OCP1
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2019 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
with respect to municipal financial
products or the issuance of municipal
securities, including advice with respect
to the structure, timing, terms, and other
similar matters concerning such
financial products or issues.5
In adopting the municipal advisor
registration rules, the Commission
stated that ‘‘ ‘advice with respect to the
issuance of municipal securities’ should
be construed broadly from a timing
perspective to include advice
throughout the life of an issuance of
municipal securities, from the preissuance planning stage . . . to the
repayment stage for those municipal
securities.’’ 6 The Commission noted
that, in connection with the issuance of
municipal securities, a municipal
advisor ‘‘may assist municipal entities
in developing a financing plan, assist
municipal entities in evaluating
different financing options and
structures, assist in the selection of
other parties to the financing (such as
bond counsel and underwriters),
coordinate the rating process, ensure
adequate disclosure, and/or evaluate
and negotiate the financing terms.’’ 7
Unless otherwise excluded or
exempted, a person who engages in
municipal advisory activities is required
to register with the Commission as a
municipal advisor 8 and comply with
the rules of the Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board (‘‘MSRB’’).9
Exchange Act Section 15B(b)(2) requires
the MSRB to develop rules that, among
other things, prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices,
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, and protect investors, municipal
entities, obligated persons, and the
public interest.10
any municipal bond insurance, letter of credit,
liquidity facility, or other credit enhancement; or
(3) the federal government.’’ 17 CFR 240.15Ba1–
1(k). Obligated persons can include entities acting
as conduit borrowers, such as private universities,
non-profit hospitals, and private corporations. See
Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at
67483 n.200.
5 Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(4)(A)(i).
6 Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at
67490.
7 Id. at 67472.
8 Exchange Act Section 15B(a)(2).
9 Exchange Act Section 15B(c)(1).
10 See Exchange Act Section 15B(b)(2)(C). The
MSRB has developed a regulatory framework that
imposes requirements regarding, among other
things, registration of municipal advisors with the
MSRB (MSRB Rule A–12); professional
qualification requirements (MSRB Rules G–2 and
G–3); fair dealing obligations (MSRB Rule G–17);
supervisory and compliance obligations (MSRB
Rule G–44); restrictions on gifts, gratuities, and noncash compensation (MSRB Rule G–20); restrictions
on political contributions (MSRB Rule G–37);
standards for advertising (MSRB Rule G–40);
application for a CUSIP number when advising on
a competitive sale of new issue municipal securities
(MSRB Rule G–34); and books and records
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Oct 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
Exchange Act Section 15B includes
certain statutory exclusions from
municipal advisor registration, which
the Commission interpreted and
provided certain additional regulatory
exemptions when it adopted the
municipal advisor registration rules.11
For example, Exchange Act Section
15B(e)(4)(C) provides a statutory
exclusion from the requirement to
register as a municipal advisor for
brokers, dealers, and municipal
securities dealers serving as
underwriters,12 which was further
interpreted by the Commission in
adopting the municipal advisor rules.13
The statute is otherwise silent with
respect to whether, and under what
circumstances, municipal advisors
would be required to register as brokers.
B. Direct Placements of Municipal
Securities
Since 2009, municipal entities have
increasingly relied on direct
placements, that is, direct purchases of
municipal securities and direct loans
from banks and other lenders, as an
alternative to public offerings of
municipal securities.14 The demand for
requirements (MSRB Rules G–8 and G–9). In
addition, MSRB Rule G–42 establishes certain
standards of conduct consistent with the fiduciary
duty owed by a municipal advisor to its municipal
entity clients, including, without limitation, a duty
of care and loyalty as well as standards of conduct
and duties owed by a municipal advisor to its
obligated person clients.
11 See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78
FR at 67503–37; 17 CFR 240.15Ba1–1(d)(2).
12 The statutory definition of ‘‘municipal advisor’’
excludes a broker, dealer, or municipal securities
dealer serving as an underwriter (as defined in
Section 2(a)(11) of the Securities Act of 1933). 15
U.S.C. 78o–4(e)(4)(C).
13 See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78
FR at 67511–67517. A broker cannot rely on the
exclusion and provide advice to a municipal entity
on an issuance of municipal securities until it has
been engaged to serve as the underwriter for a
particular issuance of municipal securities. See id.
at 67512–13.
14 See Amendments to Municipal Securities
Disclosure, Exchange Act Rel. No. 83885 (Aug. 20,
2018), 83 FR 44700, 44702 (Aug. 31, 2018)
(‘‘Amendments to Municipal Securities
Disclosure’’). See also MSRB Notice 2015–03, Bank
Loan Disclosure Market Advisory (Jan. 29, 2015)
(noting that ‘‘[direct placements] as an alternative
to a public offering could provide potential
advantages for issuers, among other things, lower
interest and transaction costs, reduced exposure to
bank regulatory capital requirements, simpler
execution process, greater structuring flexibility, no
requirement for a rating or offering document, and
direct interaction with the lender instead of
multiple bondholders.’’), available at https://
msrb.org/∼/media/Files/Regulatory-Notices/
Announcements/2015-03.ashx?n=1; and Municipal
Market Bank Loan Disclosure Task Force,
Considerations Regarding Voluntary Secondary
Market Disclosure about Bank Loans (May 1, 2013),
available at https://www.nfma.org/assets/
documents/position.stmt/wp.direct.bank.
loan.5.13.pdf. The Task Force comprised
representatives of the American Bankers
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
54063
these direct placements has grown
substantially over the past several years,
as the involvement of commercial banks
in the municipal capital markets has
increased in terms of both purchases of
municipal securities and extensions of
loans to state and local governments and
their instrumentalities.15
As noted above, the Municipal
Advisor Adopting Release identifies a
wide range of activities in which a
registered municipal advisor may
engage on behalf of its Municipal Issuer
clients. Since the issuance of the
Municipal Advisor Adopting Release,
the Commission has received questions
and requests that it clarify the
application of the broker regulatory
framework to registered municipal
advisors with respect to their activities
in facilitating direct placements of
municipal securities.16
Association, Bond Dealers of America, Government
Finance Officers Association, Investment Company
Institute, National Association of Bond Lawyers,
National Association of Health and Educational
Facilities Finance Authorities, National Association
of Independent Public Finance Advisors, National
Federation of Municipal Analysts, and Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association. See
also National Association of Bond Lawyers, Direct
Purchases of State or Local Obligations by
Commercial Banks and Other Financial Institutions
(July 2017), at 2, available at https://
www.chapman.com/media/publication/783_
Chapman_NABL_Direct_Purchases_State_LocalObligations_Banks_Financial_Institutions_
072617.pdf.
15 See Amendments to Municipal Securities
Disclosure, 83 FR at 44731. Direct placements may
be structured as either loans or municipal
securities. See id. at 44702. The relief requested
would apply (and would be needed) only with
respect to direct placements structured as
municipal securities.
16 The Commission has received a number of
letters on this topic over the past few years. See
Letter to Chair Mary Jo White, Commission from
Mike Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, Bond
Dealers of America (‘‘BDA’’) (Oct. 17, 2014); Letter
to Chair Mary Jo White, Commission from Terri
Heaton, President, National Association of
Municipal Advisors (‘‘NAMA’’) (Dec. 15, 2014);
Letter to Chair Mary Jo White, Commission from
Leslie Norwood, Managing Director and Associate
General Counsel, Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association (‘‘SIFMA’’) (Mar. 12, 2015).
More recently, Commission staff has received
additional letters on this topic with more specific
requests for guidance, including a request from a
registered municipal advisor. See Letter to Brett
Redfearn and Joanne C. Rutkowski, Division of
Trading and Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office of
Municipal Securities, from Cheryl Maddox, General
Counsel, and Leo Karwejna, Chief Compliance
Officer, Public Financial Management, Inc. (Oct. 30,
2018) (‘‘PFM Letter’’); Letter to Brett Redfearn and
Joanne C. Rutkowski, Division of Trading and
Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office of Municipal
Securities, from Leslie M. Norwood, Managing
Director and Associate General Counsel, SIFMA
(June 12, 2019); Letter to Brett Redfearn and Joanne
C. Rutkowski, Division of Trading and Markets and
Rebecca Olsen, Office of Municipal Securities, from
Mike Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, BDA (June
28, 2019); Letter to Brett Redfearn, Division of
Trading and Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office of
Municipal Securities, from Susan Gaffney,
E:\FR\FM\09OCP1.SGM
Continued
09OCP1
54064
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2019 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
II. Discussion of Proposed Relief
The Commission is proposing to grant
exemptive relief pursuant to Sections
15(a)(2) 17 and 36(a)(1) 18 of the
Exchange Act to permit a registered
municipal advisor,19 acting on behalf of
a Municipal Issuer client, to solicit
specified institutional investors in
connection with the direct placement of
municipal securities without registering
as a broker under Section 15 of the
Exchange Act, where certain conditions
are met.
Congress, in enacting the municipal
advisor provisions, established a
framework for comprehensive
regulation of those entities in
connection with their business of
providing advice to or on behalf of a
municipal entity or obligated person
with respect to municipal financial
products or the issuance of municipal
securities, including advice with respect
to the structure, timing, terms, and other
similar matters concerning such
financial products or issues. Registered
municipal advisors are subject to a
comprehensive regulatory framework,
including rules that, among other
things, are designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and
practices as well as protect investors,
municipal entities, obligated persons,
and the public interest.20 The
Commission, as noted above, has
Executive Director, NAMA (July 18, 2019); Letter to
Brett Redfearn and Joanne C. Rutkowski, Division
of Trading and Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office
of Municipal Securities, from Mike Nicholas, Chief
Executive Officer, BDA (Sept. 9, 2019); Letter to
Commissioner Robert J. Jackson Jr. from Mike
Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, BDA (Sept. 25,
2019); Letter to Brett Redfearn and Joanne C.
Rutkowski, Division of Trading and Markets and
Rebecca Olsen, Office of Municipal Securities, from
Mike Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, BDA (Sept.
25, 2019). All of the letters are available on the
Commission’s Office of Municipal Securities
homepage.
17 Section 15(a)(2) of the Exchange Act authorizes
the Commission to conditionally or unconditionally
exempt from the registration requirements of
Section 15(a)(1) any broker or class of brokers, by
rule or order, as it deems consistent with the public
interest and the protection of investors. See 15
U.S.C. 78o(a)(2).
18 Section 36(a)(1) of the Exchange Act authorizes
the Commission to conditionally or unconditionally
exempt any person, security, or transaction, or any
class or classes of persons, securities, or
transactions, from any provision or provisions of
the Exchange Act or any rule or regulation
thereunder, by rule, regulation, or order, to the
extent that such exemption is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, and is consistent
with the protection of investors. See 15 U.S.C.
78mm.
19 For purposes of the proposed exemption, the
term ‘‘registered municipal advisor’’ means a
municipal advisor that is registered in accordance
with Section 15B(a) of the Exchange Act and Rule
15Ba1–2 thereunder. See 17 CFR 240.15Ba1–2.
20 See Exchange Act Sections 15B(a)(5) and (c)(1)
and supra note 10 for a description of the
applicable MSRB rules.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Oct 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
described the role of a municipal
advisor as assisting municipal entities
in developing a financing plan, assisting
in evaluating different financing options
and structures, assisting in selecting
other parties to the financing (such as
bond counsel and underwriters),
coordinating the rating process,
ensuring adequate disclosure, and/or
evaluating and negotiating the financing
terms. The Commission has not
previously addressed, however, whether
and under what circumstances a
registered municipal advisor may
interact or negotiate with potential
investors on behalf of its municipal
entity client without being required to
register as a broker, with respect to
direct placements or other issuances of
municipal securities.
Because the definition in the
Exchange Act of the term ‘‘broker’’ and
the registration requirements under
Section 15(a) of the Exchange Act were
drawn by Congress to encompass a wide
range of activities involving investors
and securities markets,21 a municipal
advisor that identifies and assesses
potential providers for direct
placements by a Municipal Issuer client
could be viewed as engaging in
solicitation, a factor relevant to a
determination of broker status.22 This is
21 See, e.g., Registration Requirements for Foreign
Broker-Dealers, Exchange Act Release No. 27017
(Jul. 11, 1989), 54 FR 30013, at 30014–15 (Jul. 18,
1989). Section 15(a)(1) of the Exchange Act
prohibits any broker or dealer from making ‘‘use of
the mails or any means or instrumentality of
interstate commerce to effect any transactions in, or
to induce or attempt to induce the purchase or sale
of, any security [] unless such broker or dealer is
registered in accordance with’’ Section 15(b) of the
Exchange Act. 15 U.S.C. 78o(a)(1). Section
3(a)(4)(A) of the Exchange Act defines broker
generally as ‘‘any person engaged in the business
of effecting transactions in securities for the account
of others.’’ 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(4)(A).
22 See, e.g., SEC v. Century Inv. Transfer Corp., et
al., No. 71–cv–3384, 1971 WL 297, at *5 (S.D.N.Y.
Oct. 5, 1971) (Century ‘‘engaged in the brokerage
business by soliciting customers through ads in the
Wall Street Journal, and engaging in sales activities
designed to bring about mergers between private
corporations and publically held shells controlled
by’’ a co-defendant); SEC v. Hansen, No. 83–cv–
3692, 1984 WL 2413, at *4 (Apr. 6, 1984) (defendant
engaged in unregistered broker activity when he
‘‘sold or attempted to sell interest in the five
[securities] by use of the mails, the telephone,
advertisements in publications distributed
nationally and by other interstate means of
communication’’); SEC v. National Executive
Planners, Ltd., et al., 503 F. Supp. 1066, 1072–73
(M.D.N.C. 1980) (defendant engaged in unregistered
broker activity by using the mails and telephone to
‘‘solicit[] clients actively’’ in the offer and sale of
securities); SEC v. Earthly Mineral Solutions, Inc.,
No. 2:07–cv–1057, 2011 WL 1103349, at *2 (D. Nev.
Mar. 23, 2011) (defendant engaged in unregistered
broker activity when, among other things, he
‘‘conducted general solicitations through
newspaper advertisements’’); SEC v. Deyon, 977 F.
Supp. 510, 518 (D. Maine 1997) (defendants
engaged in unregistered broker activity when they
‘‘solicited investors by phone and in person,’’
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
particularly true in light of the fact that
service providers in municipal
securities transactions, including
municipal advisors, typically are paid
from the proceeds of the securities
offering and thus routinely receive
transaction-based compensation. The
receipt of transaction-based
compensation has been considered by
courts as a factor indicating that
registration as a broker may be
required.23 Absent an exception or
exemption, a municipal advisor
engaging in this activity could be
required to register under Section 15(a)
of the Exchange Act.24 There is
currently no exception or exemption
promulgated by the Commission
applicable to these situations and as
noted above, the Commission has not
previously addressed this issue.
The Commission is mindful that the
municipal advisor regulatory scheme
established a framework for
comprehensive regulation of those
entities in connection with their
business of providing advice to or on
behalf of a municipal entity or obligated
person with respect to municipal
financial products or the issuance of
municipal securities, including advice
with respect to the structure, timing,
terms, and other similar matters
concerning such financial products or
issues. The Commission, as noted
above, has described the role of a
municipal advisor as assisting
municipal entities in developing a
financing plan, assisting in evaluating
different financing options and
structures, assisting in selecting other
parties to the financing (such as bond
counsel and underwriters), coordinating
the rating process, ensuring adequate
disclosure, and/or evaluating and
negotiating the financing terms. The
Commission has not previously
addressed, however, whether and under
what circumstances a registered
municipal advisor may interact or
negotiate with potential investors on
behalf of its municipal entity client
without being required to register as a
‘‘distributed documents and . . . prepared and
distributed sales circulars’’).
23 See, e.g., SEC v. Helms, No. 13–cv–01036, 2015
WL 5010298, at *17 (W.D. Tex. Aug. 21, 2015) (‘‘In
determining whether a person ‘effected transactions
[for purposes of the Exchange Act registration
requirements],’ courts consider several factors, such
as whether the person: (1) Solicited investors to
purchase securities, (2) was involved in
negotiations between the issuer and the investor,
and (3) received transaction-related
compensation.’’) (citing cases initiated by the
Commission).
24 Although Section 15(a) applies to both brokers
and dealers, the proposed exemption would apply
only to activities that historically have been
associated with broker activity; that is, effecting
securities transactions for the account of others.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP1.SGM
09OCP1
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2019 / Proposed Rules
broker, with respect to direct
placements or other issuances of
municipal securities.
The Commission preliminarily
believes that there are certain limited
circumstances in which a registered
municipal advisor should be permitted
to solicit investors in connection with
the direct placement of municipal
securities by its Municipal Issuer client,
without registering as a broker under
Section 15 of the Exchange Act.
Accordingly, the Commission is
proposing to grant exemptive relief
pursuant to Sections 15(a)(2) and
36(a)(1) of the Exchange Act 25 to permit
such activity without registration as a
broker, subject to certain conditions
described below. For purposes of this
exemption, ‘‘Municipal Issuer’’ would
be defined as either a municipal entity
or an obligated person, consistent with
Exchange Act Sections 15B(e)(8) and
15B(e)(10), respectively.26
The proposed exemption would apply
only to a registered municipal advisor’s
activities in connection with the ‘‘direct
placement’’ by a Municipal Issuer of an
entire issuance of municipal securities
with a single ‘‘Qualified Provider,’’
which we propose to define as (i) a
bank, savings and loan association,
insurance company, or registered
investment company; or (ii) an
investment adviser registered with the
Commission or with a state; or (iii) any
other institution with total assets of at
least $50 million.27 The proposed
exemption thus would not be available
in transactions involving retail
investors, including public offerings of
municipal securities.
The Commission is proposing to limit
the universe of Qualified Providers to
entities that otherwise would be
‘‘institutional investors’’ for purposes of
FINRA rules or ‘‘sophisticated
municipal market professionals’’ (other
than natural persons) under MSRB
rules, a status that is equated with a
certain level of investor
sophistication.28 The Commission
25 See
15 U.S.C. 78o(a)(2); 15 U.S.C. 78mm.
supra n. 3 and 4.
27 The Commission’s proposed definition of
Qualified Provider tracks the definition of
Institutional Accounts under FINRA rules and the
definition of Sophisticated Municipal Market
Professionals under MSRB rules, with the exception
that a Qualified Provider could not be a natural
person. This is consistent with the Commission’s
preliminary view that for purposes of the
exemption permitted transaction participants
should be limited to an institutional investor
purchasing the entire issuance for its own
investment purposes. See FINRA Rule 4512(c) and
MSRB Rule D–15(a).
28 See FINRA Rule 2111(b), which provides an
exemption to customer-specific suitability for
institutional investors if certain conditions are met.
MSRB Rule G–48(c) provides a similar exemption.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
26 See
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Oct 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
recognizes that there may be an inherent
conflict between the interests of a
municipal advisor on one hand, acting
on behalf of its Municipal Issuer client,
and those of a potential investor on the
other. As discussed below, the proposed
exemption is subject to conditions,
including the requirement that the
investor be a Qualified Provider, that are
intended to mitigate investor protection
concerns.29 Further, nothing in the
proposed relief would preclude a
Qualified Provider (or any other
transaction participant) from engaging a
registered broker or other intermediary
for the transaction. The condition that
the entire issuance be placed with a
single Qualified Provider also reflects
the Commission’s understanding of how
these transactions are structured
currently.30
As noted above, the proposed
exemption would permit registered
municipal advisors to solicit investors
so long as (1) those investors meet the
definition of Qualified Provider and (2)
the solicitation is in connection only
with a potential direct placement of an
entire issuance of municipal securities
with a single Qualified Provider by the
registered municipal advisor’s
Municipal Issuer client. The proposed
exemption does not prescribe the means
of solicitation. Permitted solicitation
could take a variety of forms. For
example, Qualified Providers could be
identified and assessed in several ways:
Based upon the Municipal Issuer’s or
registered municipal advisor’s prior
knowledge and experience, the use of
publicly-available information sources,
or identification of Qualified Providers
through broader solicitation activities.31
29 See infra pp. 14–15 (describing required
disclosures to the Qualified Provider) and 16
(describing the municipal advisor’s duty of fair
dealing and the Commission’s antifraud
protections). The Commission is seeking comment
on questions related to potential investor protection
concerns associated with this proposed exemption.
Among other things, it is the Commission’s
understanding that in a direct placement the
institutional investor—often a bank—performs its
own due diligence on the issuer subject to the
institution’s own underwriting standards and
generally does not rely on a broker to perform that
service.
30 See MSRB Regulatory Notice 2016–12, Direct
Purchases and Bank Loans as Alternatives to Public
Financing in the Municipal Securities Market (April
4, 2016) (‘‘The MSRB and FINRA are aware of the
increasing practice of privately placing municipal
securities directly with a single purchaser
(sometimes referred to as ‘‘direct purchases’’) and
of the use of bank loans as alternatives to traditional
public offerings in the municipal securities
market.’’) (emphasis added).
31 The solicitation activities would be in addition
to the core advisory activities in which a registered
municipal advisor might otherwise engage,
identified by the Commission in the Municipal
Advisor Adopting Release as typical of municipal
advisory activities with respect to the issuance of
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
54065
A registered municipal advisor
wishing to rely on the proposed
exemption would be subject to certain
conditions:
First, the registered municipal advisor
would be required to make written
disclosures to the Qualified Provider
stating that the registered municipal
advisor represents solely the interests of
the Municipal Issuer and not the
Qualified Provider. The registered
municipal advisor would also be
required to obtain from the Qualified
Provider written acknowledgment of
receipt of those disclosures.
Second, the registered municipal
advisor would also need to obtain a
written representation from the
Qualified Provider that the Qualified
Provider is capable of independently
evaluating the investment risks of the
transaction. This condition is consistent
with the established framework for the
institutional investor exemption from a
broker’s customer-specific suitability
obligations under FINRA rules as well
as the analogous exemption under
MSRB rules.32
Finally, the proposed exemption
would apply only with respect to the
limited activities, and subject to the
conditions described above, including
that the entire issuance of municipal
securities be placed with a single
Qualified Provider and that the
municipal advisor comply with all
applicable Commission and MSRB
rules. A registered municipal advisor
that complies with the conditions of the
exemption would be permitted to solicit
Qualified Providers on behalf of its
Municipal Issuer client and receive
transaction-based compensation for
municipal securities, namely assisting municipal
entities and/or obligated person clients in: (i)
Developing a financing plan; (ii) assisting in
evaluating different financing options and
structures; (iii) assisting in selecting other parties to
the financing, such as bond counsel; (iv)
coordinating the rating process, if applicable; (v)
ensuring adequate disclosure; and/or (vi) evaluating
and negotiating the financing terms with other
parties to the financing, including the provider of
the direct placement. See Municipal Advisor
Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67472.
32 See FINRA Rule 2111(b) and Supplementary
Material .07 (deeming a broker’s customer-specific
suitability obligation fulfilled in instances where
the member or associated person has a reasonable
basis to believe that the institutional customer is
capable of evaluating investment risks
independently, both in general and with regard to
particular transactions and investment strategies
involving a security or securities and the
institutional customer affirmatively indicates that it
is exercising independent judgment in evaluating
the member’s or associated person’s
recommendations). See also MSRB Rule G–48(c)
(eliminating the broker, dealer, or municipal
securities dealer’s obligation to perform a customerspecific suitability analysis if it reasonably
concludes the customer is a Sophisticated
Municipal Market Professional as defined in MSRB
Rule D–15).
E:\FR\FM\09OCP1.SGM
09OCP1
54066
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2019 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
services provided in connection with a
direct placement as described above
without being required to register as a
broker under Section 15(a) of the
Exchange Act.33 These functions are
some of the most relevant to a
determination of broker status, which
may therefore require registration.34
Accordingly, if any of the conditions are
not met—for example, the municipal
advisor fails to comply with the
disclosure conditions described above—
the municipal advisor could not rely on
the exemption and would need to
consider whether it is required to
register with the Commission as a
broker under Section 15(a) of the
Exchange Act. The exemption would
apply only with respect to the defined
activities. A registered municipal
advisor could not rely on this proposed
exemption to engage in broker activity
relating to municipal securities offerings
beyond the scope of the proposed
exemption, such as facilitating a public
offering or the sale of securities to a
retail investor. Further, a registered
municipal advisor seeking to rely on the
exemption would need to make and
keep the records required by Exchange
Act Rule 15Ba1–8(a)(1). Finally,
consistent with the narrow scope of
activities contemplated by the proposed
33 The Commission preliminarily believes that
this exemption will also benefit firms that are
dually registered as municipal advisors and brokers.
A dually-registered firm that is acting in a
municipal advisory capacity advising a Municipal
Issuer client on a direct placement of municipal
securities would be permitted as well to engage in
limited solicitation activities in accordance with the
terms and conditions of the proposed exemption
without being required to comply with broker
requirements, such as books and records
requirements, with respect to those activities.
Instead, so long as the terms and conditions of the
exemption are met, the municipal advisor will be
acting in the municipal advisory capacity through
the completion of the transaction. The Commission
believes disclosure clarifying the role of the
municipal advisor is particularly critical for dual
registrants to avoid confusion on the part of
potential Qualified Providers as to the capacity in
which the firm is acting with respect to a direct
placement.
34 See, e.g., Definition of Terms in and Specific
Exemptions for Banks, Savings Associations, and
Savings Banks Under Section 3(a)(4) and 3(a)(5) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Exchange Act
Rel. No. 44291, 66 FR 27760, 27772–73 at n.124
(May 18, 2001) (‘‘Solicitation is one of the most
relevant factors in determining whether a person is
effecting transactions.’’), cited in Registration
Process for Security-Based Swap Dealers and Major
Security-Based Swap Participants, Exchange Act
Rel. No. 75611 (Aug. 5, 2015), 80 FR 48964, 48976
(Aug. 14, 2015) (‘‘The Commission has previously
interpreted the term ‘effecting transactions’ in the
context of securities transactions to include a
number of activities, ranging from identifying
potential purchasers to settlement and confirmation
of a transaction.’’); Cornhusker Energy Lexington,
LLC v. Prospect Street Ventures, No. 8:04CV586,
2006 WL 2620985, at *6 (D. Neb. Sept. 12, 2006)
(‘‘Transaction-based compensation, or commissions
are one of the hallmarks of being a broker-dealer.’’).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Oct 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
exemption, a registered municipal
advisor seeking to rely on this proposed
exemption could not bind the
Municipal Issuer client, or handle funds
or securities in connection with the
direct placement. The Commission
preliminarily believes that these types
of activities would implicate the
policies underlying the broker
regulatory framework.
The Commission preliminarily
believes that the proposed conditions
with respect to transaction participants,
disclosure requirements, and
transaction type—in combination with
applicable regulatory protections—
should sufficiently restrict the scope of
the proposed exemption such that
permitting solicitation activities in this
limited context would not implicate the
need for additional regulation of these
activities under the broker regulatory
framework. For example, like brokers,
registered municipal advisors have an
obligation to deal fairly with all
persons—which, as relevant here,
includes any potential Qualified
Providers.35 Also, the antifraud
provisions of the Exchange Act as well
as the Securities Act of 1933 apply
equally to any person, including
registered municipal advisors and
brokers.36 The Commission
preliminarily believes these are
important safeguards that operate as a
constraint on the conduct of registered
municipal advisors, independent of
whether they are registered as a broker.
Additionally, as stated above, the
proposed exemption would be limited
to dealings with Qualified Providers,
which are entities that meet an
established threshold of investor
sophistication, and the required
disclosures include an affirmative
representation by the Qualified Provider
that it is capable of independently
evaluating the risks, which is consistent
with the institutional suitability
exemption under existing FINRA
rules.37 Finally, the Commission notes
that the proposed conditional
exemption would not preclude any
transaction participant in a direct
placement from engaging a registered
35 See, e.g., MSRB Rule G–17 (requiring
municipal advisors to ‘‘deal fairly with all persons
and . . . not engage in any deceptive, dishonest, or
unfair practice’’); FINRA Rule 2010 (prohibiting
brokers from effecting transactions in, or inducing
the purchase or sale of, securities ‘‘by means of any
manipulative, deceptive or other fraudulent device
or contrivance’’); FINRA Rule 2111 Supplementary
Material .01 (‘‘Implicit in all member and associated
person relationships with customers and others is
the fundamental responsibility for fair dealing.’’)
36 See 15 U.S.C. 78j and 17 CFR 240.10b–5; see
also 15 U.S.C. 77q.
37 See FINRA Rule 2111(b) and Supplementary
Material .07.
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
broker or other intermediary for the
transaction.
Accordingly, for the reasons
discussed above, the Commission
preliminarily believes that the proposed
conditional exemption would be
consistent with the public interest and
the protection of investors and would be
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest.
III. Request for Comments
The Commission is seeking comment
on all aspects of the proposed
exemption. In particular, the
Commission requests comment on the
following questions. When responding
to the request for comment, please
explain your reasoning.
1. Has the Commission appropriately
identified the activities in which a
registered municipal advisor would be
able to engage when representing a
municipal entity or obligated person in
connection with direct placements
pursuant to the exemption? Please
explain.
2. Should any of the identified
activities proposed to be included be
eliminated or modified? Please explain.
3. Has the Commission appropriately
defined Qualified Provider? If not, what
would be a more appropriate definition
and why?
4. Should the definition of Qualified
Provider be edited to add ‘‘credit
unions’’? If so, please explain.
5. Does the definition of Qualified
Provider, together with the required
conditions, provide adequate assurance
that the potential investors included in
such definition will be sufficiently able
to evaluate the creditworthiness of the
Municipal Issuer and the relevant terms
of the direct placement offering, among
other things? If not, please explain.
6. Should the Commission limit the
exemption to direct placements of a
specific size threshold—e.g., limited by
aggregate principal amount or by
Municipal Issuers with a limited
aggregate amount of municipal
securities outstanding? If so, why and
how should the Commission define
such thresholds?
7. Should the exemption for
municipal advisors with respect to
direct placements be conditioned on
municipal advisors being precluded
from engaging in solicitation activities
on behalf of their Municipal Issuer
clients? If so, which activities and why?
Please explain.
8. Has the Commission appropriately
defined the conditions that should
apply to the proposed exemption?
Please explain.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP1.SGM
09OCP1
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2019 / Proposed Rules
9. Should any of the proposed
conditions be eliminated or modified?
Please explain.
10. Are there other or different
conditions that should apply to the
proposed exemption? Please explain.
11. Are there any specific written
disclosures to Qualified Providers that
should be required, beyond those that
are a condition of the proposed
exemption? For example, should the
municipal advisor be required to
provide a written disclosure to the
Qualified Provider that it may elect to
engage a registered broker or other
intermediary for the transaction? Please
explain.
12. Should the exemption be
expanded to include transactions in
which multiple Qualified Providers
purchase portions of the entire
municipal securities offering directly
from the Municipal Issuer? What are the
relevant issues for the Commission to
consider in determining whether such
an expansion is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, and
consistent with the protection of
investors? For example, would the
participation of multiple purchasers
necessitate additional or different
conditions or present heightened
investor protection concerns? Please
explain.
13. Is the type of direct placement
contemplated by this proposed
exemptive order typically resold into
the secondary market? If so, how often
and to what type of investor? Does the
possibility of such a resale raise any
investor protection concerns? If so,
please explain. How should the
Commission address those concerns?
14. Under the proposed definition of
‘‘Municipal Issuers,’’ the exemption
would apply to conduit transactions
involving obligated persons—i.e., the
issuance of municipal securities by a
municipal entity to finance a project to
be used primarily by a third-party
obligated person, such as a non-profit
hospital or private university. Are there
reasons the exemption should not apply
with respect to obligated persons? If so,
why not? If the exemption should apply,
should the Commission impose
additional or different conditions
concerning those transactions? Should
the exemption be conditioned on
additional or different disclosure
requirements for transactions involving
obligated persons? Please explain.
15. Should the Commission, instead
of granting the conditional exemption,
require municipal advisors wishing to
solicit Qualified Providers for direct
placements on behalf of their Municipal
Issuer clients to also register as brokers?
For example, would a broker
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:30 Oct 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
registration requirement provide
necessary protections for investors, and
if so, what specific protections would
result from broker registration with
respect to direct placement
transactions? What would be the impact
of such a requirement on municipal
advisors operating in this space, in
terms of both cost and competitive
considerations? Please explain.
16. With respect only to direct
placement transactions described above,
what are the practical implications of
the requirements resulting from broker
registration, for example those related to
any due diligence or other investor
protection obligations, that are not
applicable to municipal advisors? What
are the practical implications of the
differences between broker obligations
and municipal advisors’ fair dealing
obligations? Please be specific and limit
the context of the response to direct
placements in which a single
institutional investor purchases the
entire issuance.
17. Would the proposed exemption
have a competitive impact—either
positive or negative—on municipal
advisors and/or brokers? For example,
would this proposed exemption
facilitate capital formation for smaller
Municipal Issuers? Are the costs of
engaging a broker for direct placements
burdensome for smaller Municipal
Issuers? Please explain.
By the Commission.
Dated: October 2, 2019.
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–21882 Filed 10–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–106282–18]
RIN 1545–BP35
Limitation on Deduction for Dividends
Received From Certain Foreign
Corporations and Amounts Eligible for
Section 954 Look-Through Exception;
Hearing
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of hearing.
AGENCY:
This document provides a
notice of public hearing on proposed
regulations which cross-references
temporary regulations under section
245A of the Internal Revenue Code (the
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
54067
‘‘Code’’) that limit the dividends
received deduction available for certain
dividends received from current or
former controlled foreign corporations.
DATES: The public hearing is being held
on Friday, November 22, 2019, at 10:00
a.m. The IRS must receive speakers’
outlines of the topics to be discussed at
the public hearing by Monday,
November 11, 2019. If no outlines are
received by November 11, 2019, the
public hearing will be cancelled.
ADDRESSES: The public hearing is being
held in the IRS Auditorium, Internal
Revenue Service Building, 1111
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20224. Due to building security
procedures, visitors must enter at the
Constitution Avenue entrance. In
addition, all visitors must present a
valid photo identification to enter the
building.
Send Submissions to CC:PA:LPD:PR
(REG–106282–18), Room 5205, Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben
Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044. Submissions may be handdelivered Monday through Friday to
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–106282–18),
Couriers Desk, Internal Revenue
Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20224 or sent
electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (IRS REG–106282–
18).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
Logan M. Kincheloe, (202) 317–6937;
concerning submissions of comments,
the hearing and/or to be placed on the
building access list to attend the
hearing, Regina Johnson at (202) 317–
6901 (not toll-free numbers),
fdms.database@irscounsel.treas.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
subject of the public hearing is the
notice of proposed rulemaking (REG–
106282–18) that was published in the
Federal Register on Tuesday, June 18,
2019 (84 FR 28426).
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3)
apply to the hearing. Persons who wish
to present oral comments at the hearing
that submitted written comments by
September 16, 2019, must submit an
outline of the topics to be addressed and
the amount of time to be devoted to
each topic by Monday, November 11,
2019.
A period of 10 minutes is allotted to
each person for presenting oral
comments. After the deadline for
receiving outlines has passed, the IRS
will prepare an agenda containing the
schedule of speakers. Copies of the
agenda will be made available, free of
charge, at the hearing or by contacting
E:\FR\FM\09OCP1.SGM
09OCP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 196 (Wednesday, October 9, 2019)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 54062-54067]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-21882]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 240
[Release No. 34-87204; File No. S7-16-19]
Proposed Exemptive Order Granting a Conditional Exemption From
the Broker Registration Requirements of Section 15(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 for Certain Activities of Registered Municipal
Advisors
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Notification of proposed exemptive order; request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to Section 15(a)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (``Exchange Act'') and Section 36(a)(1) of the Exchange Act, the
Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or ``Commission'') is
proposing to grant exemptive relief, subject to certain conditions, to
permit municipal advisors registered with the Commission under Section
15B of the Exchange Act to engage in certain limited activities in
connection with the direct placement of municipal securities without
registering as a broker under Section 15 of the Exchange Act.
DATES: Comments should be received by December 9, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/other.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected].
Paper Comments
Send paper comments to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number S7-16-19. This file number
should be included on the subject line if email is used. To help us
process and review your comments more efficiently, please use only one
method. The Commission will post all comments on the Commission's
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Comments
are also available for website viewing and printing in the Commission's
Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090 on
official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
All comments received will be posted without change. Persons submitting
comments are cautioned that the Commission does not redact or edit
personal identifying information from comment submissions. Commenters
should submit only information that they wish to make available
publicly.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Emily Westerberg Russell, Chief
Counsel, Joanne Rutkowski, Assistant Chief Counsel, or Kelly Shoop,
Special Counsel, at 202-551-5550, in the Division of Trading and
Markets; Rebecca Olsen, Director, or Adam Wendell, Senior Special
Counsel, at 202-551-5680, in the Office of Municipal Securities;
Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Municipal Advisor Registration Framework
Section 975 of Title IX of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act amended the Exchange Act to create a new class
of regulated persons, ``municipal advisors.'' \1\ The Commission
subsequently adopted registration rules for municipal advisors in
2013.\2\ Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(4)(A) defines the term ``municipal
advisor'' to include a person that provides advice to or on behalf of a
municipal entity \3\ or obligated person \4\ (together, ``Municipal
Issuers'')
[[Page 54063]]
with respect to municipal financial products or the issuance of
municipal securities, including advice with respect to the structure,
timing, terms, and other similar matters concerning such financial
products or issues.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o-4(a)(1)(B).
\2\ See Registration of Municipal Advisors, Exchange Act Rel.
No. 70462 (Sept. 30, 2013), 78 FR 67468, 67483 n.200 (Nov. 12, 2013)
(``Municipal Advisor Adopting Release'').
\3\ Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(8) defines ``municipal entity''
as ``any State, political subdivision of a State, or municipal
corporate instrumentality of a State, including (A) any agency,
authority, or instrumentality of the State, political subdivision,
or municipal corporate instrumentality; (B) any plan, program, or
pool of assets sponsored or established by the State, political
subdivision, or municipal corporate instrumentality or any agency,
authority, or instrumentality thereof; and (C) any other issuer of
municipal securities.'' 15 U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(8); see also 17 CFR
240.15Ba1-1(g).
\4\ Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(10) defines ``obligated person''
as ``any person, including an issuer of municipal securities, who is
either generally or through an enterprise, fund, or account of such
person, committed by contract or other arrangement to support the
payment of all or part of the obligations on the municipal
securities to be sold in an offering of municipal securities.'' 15
U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(10). Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1-1(k) generally provides
that obligated person has the same meaning as in Exchange Act
Section 15B(e)(10), ``provided, however, the term obligated person
shall not include: (1) A person who provides municipal bond
insurance, letters of credit, or other liquidity facilities; (2) a
person whose financial information or operating data is not material
to a municipal securities offering, without reference to any
municipal bond insurance, letter of credit, liquidity facility, or
other credit enhancement; or (3) the federal government.'' 17 CFR
240.15Ba1-1(k). Obligated persons can include entities acting as
conduit borrowers, such as private universities, non-profit
hospitals, and private corporations. See Municipal Advisor Adopting
Release, 78 FR at 67483 n.200.
\5\ Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(4)(A)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In adopting the municipal advisor registration rules, the
Commission stated that `` `advice with respect to the issuance of
municipal securities' should be construed broadly from a timing
perspective to include advice throughout the life of an issuance of
municipal securities, from the pre-issuance planning stage . . . to the
repayment stage for those municipal securities.'' \6\ The Commission
noted that, in connection with the issuance of municipal securities, a
municipal advisor ``may assist municipal entities in developing a
financing plan, assist municipal entities in evaluating different
financing options and structures, assist in the selection of other
parties to the financing (such as bond counsel and underwriters),
coordinate the rating process, ensure adequate disclosure, and/or
evaluate and negotiate the financing terms.'' \7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67490.
\7\ Id. at 67472.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unless otherwise excluded or exempted, a person who engages in
municipal advisory activities is required to register with the
Commission as a municipal advisor \8\ and comply with the rules of the
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (``MSRB'').\9\ Exchange Act
Section 15B(b)(2) requires the MSRB to develop rules that, among other
things, prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, promote
just and equitable principles of trade, and protect investors,
municipal entities, obligated persons, and the public interest.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Exchange Act Section 15B(a)(2).
\9\ Exchange Act Section 15B(c)(1).
\10\ See Exchange Act Section 15B(b)(2)(C). The MSRB has
developed a regulatory framework that imposes requirements
regarding, among other things, registration of municipal advisors
with the MSRB (MSRB Rule A-12); professional qualification
requirements (MSRB Rules G-2 and G-3); fair dealing obligations
(MSRB Rule G-17); supervisory and compliance obligations (MSRB Rule
G-44); restrictions on gifts, gratuities, and non-cash compensation
(MSRB Rule G-20); restrictions on political contributions (MSRB Rule
G-37); standards for advertising (MSRB Rule G-40); application for a
CUSIP number when advising on a competitive sale of new issue
municipal securities (MSRB Rule G-34); and books and records
requirements (MSRB Rules G-8 and G-9). In addition, MSRB Rule G-42
establishes certain standards of conduct consistent with the
fiduciary duty owed by a municipal advisor to its municipal entity
clients, including, without limitation, a duty of care and loyalty
as well as standards of conduct and duties owed by a municipal
advisor to its obligated person clients.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exchange Act Section 15B includes certain statutory exclusions from
municipal advisor registration, which the Commission interpreted and
provided certain additional regulatory exemptions when it adopted the
municipal advisor registration rules.\11\ For example, Exchange Act
Section 15B(e)(4)(C) provides a statutory exclusion from the
requirement to register as a municipal advisor for brokers, dealers,
and municipal securities dealers serving as underwriters,\12\ which was
further interpreted by the Commission in adopting the municipal advisor
rules.\13\ The statute is otherwise silent with respect to whether, and
under what circumstances, municipal advisors would be required to
register as brokers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67503-37;
17 CFR 240.15Ba1-1(d)(2).
\12\ The statutory definition of ``municipal advisor'' excludes
a broker, dealer, or municipal securities dealer serving as an
underwriter (as defined in Section 2(a)(11) of the Securities Act of
1933). 15 U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(4)(C).
\13\ See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67511-
67517. A broker cannot rely on the exclusion and provide advice to a
municipal entity on an issuance of municipal securities until it has
been engaged to serve as the underwriter for a particular issuance
of municipal securities. See id. at 67512-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Direct Placements of Municipal Securities
Since 2009, municipal entities have increasingly relied on direct
placements, that is, direct purchases of municipal securities and
direct loans from banks and other lenders, as an alternative to public
offerings of municipal securities.\14\ The demand for these direct
placements has grown substantially over the past several years, as the
involvement of commercial banks in the municipal capital markets has
increased in terms of both purchases of municipal securities and
extensions of loans to state and local governments and their
instrumentalities.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See Amendments to Municipal Securities Disclosure, Exchange
Act Rel. No. 83885 (Aug. 20, 2018), 83 FR 44700, 44702 (Aug. 31,
2018) (``Amendments to Municipal Securities Disclosure''). See also
MSRB Notice 2015-03, Bank Loan Disclosure Market Advisory (Jan. 29,
2015) (noting that ``[direct placements] as an alternative to a
public offering could provide potential advantages for issuers,
among other things, lower interest and transaction costs, reduced
exposure to bank regulatory capital requirements, simpler execution
process, greater structuring flexibility, no requirement for a
rating or offering document, and direct interaction with the lender
instead of multiple bondholders.''), available at https://msrb.org/~/
media/Files/Regulatory-Notices/Announcements/2015-03.ashx?n=1; and
Municipal Market Bank Loan Disclosure Task Force, Considerations
Regarding Voluntary Secondary Market Disclosure about Bank Loans
(May 1, 2013), available at https://www.nfma.org/assets/documents/position.stmt/wp.direct.bank.loan.5.13.pdf. The Task Force comprised
representatives of the American Bankers Association, Bond Dealers of
America, Government Finance Officers Association, Investment Company
Institute, National Association of Bond Lawyers, National
Association of Health and Educational Facilities Finance
Authorities, National Association of Independent Public Finance
Advisors, National Federation of Municipal Analysts, and Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association. See also National
Association of Bond Lawyers, Direct Purchases of State or Local
Obligations by Commercial Banks and Other Financial Institutions
(July 2017), at 2, available at https://www.chapman.com/media/publication/783_Chapman_NABL_Direct_Purchases_State_Local-Obligations_Banks_Financial_Institutions_072617.pdf.
\15\ See Amendments to Municipal Securities Disclosure, 83 FR at
44731. Direct placements may be structured as either loans or
municipal securities. See id. at 44702. The relief requested would
apply (and would be needed) only with respect to direct placements
structured as municipal securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, the Municipal Advisor Adopting Release identifies a
wide range of activities in which a registered municipal advisor may
engage on behalf of its Municipal Issuer clients. Since the issuance of
the Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, the Commission has received
questions and requests that it clarify the application of the broker
regulatory framework to registered municipal advisors with respect to
their activities in facilitating direct placements of municipal
securities.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The Commission has received a number of letters on this
topic over the past few years. See Letter to Chair Mary Jo White,
Commission from Mike Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, Bond Dealers
of America (``BDA'') (Oct. 17, 2014); Letter to Chair Mary Jo White,
Commission from Terri Heaton, President, National Association of
Municipal Advisors (``NAMA'') (Dec. 15, 2014); Letter to Chair Mary
Jo White, Commission from Leslie Norwood, Managing Director and
Associate General Counsel, Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association (``SIFMA'') (Mar. 12, 2015). More recently, Commission
staff has received additional letters on this topic with more
specific requests for guidance, including a request from a
registered municipal advisor. See Letter to Brett Redfearn and
Joanne C. Rutkowski, Division of Trading and Markets and Rebecca
Olsen, Office of Municipal Securities, from Cheryl Maddox, General
Counsel, and Leo Karwejna, Chief Compliance Officer, Public
Financial Management, Inc. (Oct. 30, 2018) (``PFM Letter''); Letter
to Brett Redfearn and Joanne C. Rutkowski, Division of Trading and
Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office of Municipal Securities, from
Leslie M. Norwood, Managing Director and Associate General Counsel,
SIFMA (June 12, 2019); Letter to Brett Redfearn and Joanne C.
Rutkowski, Division of Trading and Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office
of Municipal Securities, from Mike Nicholas, Chief Executive
Officer, BDA (June 28, 2019); Letter to Brett Redfearn, Division of
Trading and Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office of Municipal
Securities, from Susan Gaffney, Executive Director, NAMA (July 18,
2019); Letter to Brett Redfearn and Joanne C. Rutkowski, Division of
Trading and Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office of Municipal
Securities, from Mike Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, BDA (Sept.
9, 2019); Letter to Commissioner Robert J. Jackson Jr. from Mike
Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, BDA (Sept. 25, 2019); Letter to
Brett Redfearn and Joanne C. Rutkowski, Division of Trading and
Markets and Rebecca Olsen, Office of Municipal Securities, from Mike
Nicholas, Chief Executive Officer, BDA (Sept. 25, 2019). All of the
letters are available on the Commission's Office of Municipal
Securities homepage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 54064]]
II. Discussion of Proposed Relief
The Commission is proposing to grant exemptive relief pursuant to
Sections 15(a)(2) \17\ and 36(a)(1) \18\ of the Exchange Act to permit
a registered municipal advisor,\19\ acting on behalf of a Municipal
Issuer client, to solicit specified institutional investors in
connection with the direct placement of municipal securities without
registering as a broker under Section 15 of the Exchange Act, where
certain conditions are met.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Section 15(a)(2) of the Exchange Act authorizes the
Commission to conditionally or unconditionally exempt from the
registration requirements of Section 15(a)(1) any broker or class of
brokers, by rule or order, as it deems consistent with the public
interest and the protection of investors. See 15 U.S.C. 78o(a)(2).
\18\ Section 36(a)(1) of the Exchange Act authorizes the
Commission to conditionally or unconditionally exempt any person,
security, or transaction, or any class or classes of persons,
securities, or transactions, from any provision or provisions of the
Exchange Act or any rule or regulation thereunder, by rule,
regulation, or order, to the extent that such exemption is necessary
or appropriate in the public interest, and is consistent with the
protection of investors. See 15 U.S.C. 78mm.
\19\ For purposes of the proposed exemption, the term
``registered municipal advisor'' means a municipal advisor that is
registered in accordance with Section 15B(a) of the Exchange Act and
Rule 15Ba1-2 thereunder. See 17 CFR 240.15Ba1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Congress, in enacting the municipal advisor provisions, established
a framework for comprehensive regulation of those entities in
connection with their business of providing advice to or on behalf of a
municipal entity or obligated person with respect to municipal
financial products or the issuance of municipal securities, including
advice with respect to the structure, timing, terms, and other similar
matters concerning such financial products or issues. Registered
municipal advisors are subject to a comprehensive regulatory framework,
including rules that, among other things, are designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices as well as protect
investors, municipal entities, obligated persons, and the public
interest.\20\ The Commission, as noted above, has described the role of
a municipal advisor as assisting municipal entities in developing a
financing plan, assisting in evaluating different financing options and
structures, assisting in selecting other parties to the financing (such
as bond counsel and underwriters), coordinating the rating process,
ensuring adequate disclosure, and/or evaluating and negotiating the
financing terms. The Commission has not previously addressed, however,
whether and under what circumstances a registered municipal advisor may
interact or negotiate with potential investors on behalf of its
municipal entity client without being required to register as a broker,
with respect to direct placements or other issuances of municipal
securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See Exchange Act Sections 15B(a)(5) and (c)(1) and supra
note 10 for a description of the applicable MSRB rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the definition in the Exchange Act of the term ``broker''
and the registration requirements under Section 15(a) of the Exchange
Act were drawn by Congress to encompass a wide range of activities
involving investors and securities markets,\21\ a municipal advisor
that identifies and assesses potential providers for direct placements
by a Municipal Issuer client could be viewed as engaging in
solicitation, a factor relevant to a determination of broker
status.\22\ This is particularly true in light of the fact that service
providers in municipal securities transactions, including municipal
advisors, typically are paid from the proceeds of the securities
offering and thus routinely receive transaction-based compensation. The
receipt of transaction-based compensation has been considered by courts
as a factor indicating that registration as a broker may be
required.\23\ Absent an exception or exemption, a municipal advisor
engaging in this activity could be required to register under Section
15(a) of the Exchange Act.\24\ There is currently no exception or
exemption promulgated by the Commission applicable to these situations
and as noted above, the Commission has not previously addressed this
issue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See, e.g., Registration Requirements for Foreign Broker-
Dealers, Exchange Act Release No. 27017 (Jul. 11, 1989), 54 FR
30013, at 30014-15 (Jul. 18, 1989). Section 15(a)(1) of the Exchange
Act prohibits any broker or dealer from making ``use of the mails or
any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce to effect any
transactions in, or to induce or attempt to induce the purchase or
sale of, any security [] unless such broker or dealer is registered
in accordance with'' Section 15(b) of the Exchange Act. 15 U.S.C.
78o(a)(1). Section 3(a)(4)(A) of the Exchange Act defines broker
generally as ``any person engaged in the business of effecting
transactions in securities for the account of others.'' 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(4)(A).
\22\ See, e.g., SEC v. Century Inv. Transfer Corp., et al., No.
71-cv-3384, 1971 WL 297, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 5, 1971) (Century
``engaged in the brokerage business by soliciting customers through
ads in the Wall Street Journal, and engaging in sales activities
designed to bring about mergers between private corporations and
publically held shells controlled by'' a co-defendant); SEC v.
Hansen, No. 83-cv-3692, 1984 WL 2413, at *4 (Apr. 6, 1984)
(defendant engaged in unregistered broker activity when he ``sold or
attempted to sell interest in the five [securities] by use of the
mails, the telephone, advertisements in publications distributed
nationally and by other interstate means of communication''); SEC v.
National Executive Planners, Ltd., et al., 503 F. Supp. 1066, 1072-
73 (M.D.N.C. 1980) (defendant engaged in unregistered broker
activity by using the mails and telephone to ``solicit[] clients
actively'' in the offer and sale of securities); SEC v. Earthly
Mineral Solutions, Inc., No. 2:07-cv-1057, 2011 WL 1103349, at *2
(D. Nev. Mar. 23, 2011) (defendant engaged in unregistered broker
activity when, among other things, he ``conducted general
solicitations through newspaper advertisements''); SEC v. Deyon, 977
F. Supp. 510, 518 (D. Maine 1997) (defendants engaged in
unregistered broker activity when they ``solicited investors by
phone and in person,'' ``distributed documents and . . . prepared
and distributed sales circulars'').
\23\ See, e.g., SEC v. Helms, No. 13-cv-01036, 2015 WL 5010298,
at *17 (W.D. Tex. Aug. 21, 2015) (``In determining whether a person
`effected transactions [for purposes of the Exchange Act
registration requirements],' courts consider several factors, such
as whether the person: (1) Solicited investors to purchase
securities, (2) was involved in negotiations between the issuer and
the investor, and (3) received transaction-related compensation.'')
(citing cases initiated by the Commission).
\24\ Although Section 15(a) applies to both brokers and dealers,
the proposed exemption would apply only to activities that
historically have been associated with broker activity; that is,
effecting securities transactions for the account of others.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is mindful that the municipal advisor regulatory
scheme established a framework for comprehensive regulation of those
entities in connection with their business of providing advice to or on
behalf of a municipal entity or obligated person with respect to
municipal financial products or the issuance of municipal securities,
including advice with respect to the structure, timing, terms, and
other similar matters concerning such financial products or issues. The
Commission, as noted above, has described the role of a municipal
advisor as assisting municipal entities in developing a financing plan,
assisting in evaluating different financing options and structures,
assisting in selecting other parties to the financing (such as bond
counsel and underwriters), coordinating the rating process, ensuring
adequate disclosure, and/or evaluating and negotiating the financing
terms. The Commission has not previously addressed, however, whether
and under what circumstances a registered municipal advisor may
interact or negotiate with potential investors on behalf of its
municipal entity client without being required to register as a
[[Page 54065]]
broker, with respect to direct placements or other issuances of
municipal securities.
The Commission preliminarily believes that there are certain
limited circumstances in which a registered municipal advisor should be
permitted to solicit investors in connection with the direct placement
of municipal securities by its Municipal Issuer client, without
registering as a broker under Section 15 of the Exchange Act.
Accordingly, the Commission is proposing to grant exemptive relief
pursuant to Sections 15(a)(2) and 36(a)(1) of the Exchange Act \25\ to
permit such activity without registration as a broker, subject to
certain conditions described below. For purposes of this exemption,
``Municipal Issuer'' would be defined as either a municipal entity or
an obligated person, consistent with Exchange Act Sections 15B(e)(8)
and 15B(e)(10), respectively.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o(a)(2); 15 U.S.C. 78mm.
\26\ See supra n. 3 and 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed exemption would apply only to a registered municipal
advisor's activities in connection with the ``direct placement'' by a
Municipal Issuer of an entire issuance of municipal securities with a
single ``Qualified Provider,'' which we propose to define as (i) a
bank, savings and loan association, insurance company, or registered
investment company; or (ii) an investment adviser registered with the
Commission or with a state; or (iii) any other institution with total
assets of at least $50 million.\27\ The proposed exemption thus would
not be available in transactions involving retail investors, including
public offerings of municipal securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ The Commission's proposed definition of Qualified Provider
tracks the definition of Institutional Accounts under FINRA rules
and the definition of Sophisticated Municipal Market Professionals
under MSRB rules, with the exception that a Qualified Provider could
not be a natural person. This is consistent with the Commission's
preliminary view that for purposes of the exemption permitted
transaction participants should be limited to an institutional
investor purchasing the entire issuance for its own investment
purposes. See FINRA Rule 4512(c) and MSRB Rule D-15(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is proposing to limit the universe of Qualified
Providers to entities that otherwise would be ``institutional
investors'' for purposes of FINRA rules or ``sophisticated municipal
market professionals'' (other than natural persons) under MSRB rules, a
status that is equated with a certain level of investor
sophistication.\28\ The Commission recognizes that there may be an
inherent conflict between the interests of a municipal advisor on one
hand, acting on behalf of its Municipal Issuer client, and those of a
potential investor on the other. As discussed below, the proposed
exemption is subject to conditions, including the requirement that the
investor be a Qualified Provider, that are intended to mitigate
investor protection concerns.\29\ Further, nothing in the proposed
relief would preclude a Qualified Provider (or any other transaction
participant) from engaging a registered broker or other intermediary
for the transaction. The condition that the entire issuance be placed
with a single Qualified Provider also reflects the Commission's
understanding of how these transactions are structured currently.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See FINRA Rule 2111(b), which provides an exemption to
customer-specific suitability for institutional investors if certain
conditions are met. MSRB Rule G-48(c) provides a similar exemption.
\29\ See infra pp. 14-15 (describing required disclosures to the
Qualified Provider) and 16 (describing the municipal advisor's duty
of fair dealing and the Commission's antifraud protections). The
Commission is seeking comment on questions related to potential
investor protection concerns associated with this proposed
exemption. Among other things, it is the Commission's understanding
that in a direct placement the institutional investor--often a
bank--performs its own due diligence on the issuer subject to the
institution's own underwriting standards and generally does not rely
on a broker to perform that service.
\30\ See MSRB Regulatory Notice 2016-12, Direct Purchases and
Bank Loans as Alternatives to Public Financing in the Municipal
Securities Market (April 4, 2016) (``The MSRB and FINRA are aware of
the increasing practice of privately placing municipal securities
directly with a single purchaser (sometimes referred to as ``direct
purchases'') and of the use of bank loans as alternatives to
traditional public offerings in the municipal securities market.'')
(emphasis added).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, the proposed exemption would permit registered
municipal advisors to solicit investors so long as (1) those investors
meet the definition of Qualified Provider and (2) the solicitation is
in connection only with a potential direct placement of an entire
issuance of municipal securities with a single Qualified Provider by
the registered municipal advisor's Municipal Issuer client. The
proposed exemption does not prescribe the means of solicitation.
Permitted solicitation could take a variety of forms. For example,
Qualified Providers could be identified and assessed in several ways:
Based upon the Municipal Issuer's or registered municipal advisor's
prior knowledge and experience, the use of publicly-available
information sources, or identification of Qualified Providers through
broader solicitation activities.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ The solicitation activities would be in addition to the
core advisory activities in which a registered municipal advisor
might otherwise engage, identified by the Commission in the
Municipal Advisor Adopting Release as typical of municipal advisory
activities with respect to the issuance of municipal securities,
namely assisting municipal entities and/or obligated person clients
in: (i) Developing a financing plan; (ii) assisting in evaluating
different financing options and structures; (iii) assisting in
selecting other parties to the financing, such as bond counsel; (iv)
coordinating the rating process, if applicable; (v) ensuring
adequate disclosure; and/or (vi) evaluating and negotiating the
financing terms with other parties to the financing, including the
provider of the direct placement. See Municipal Advisor Adopting
Release, 78 FR at 67472.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A registered municipal advisor wishing to rely on the proposed
exemption would be subject to certain conditions:
First, the registered municipal advisor would be required to make
written disclosures to the Qualified Provider stating that the
registered municipal advisor represents solely the interests of the
Municipal Issuer and not the Qualified Provider. The registered
municipal advisor would also be required to obtain from the Qualified
Provider written acknowledgment of receipt of those disclosures.
Second, the registered municipal advisor would also need to obtain
a written representation from the Qualified Provider that the Qualified
Provider is capable of independently evaluating the investment risks of
the transaction. This condition is consistent with the established
framework for the institutional investor exemption from a broker's
customer-specific suitability obligations under FINRA rules as well as
the analogous exemption under MSRB rules.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See FINRA Rule 2111(b) and Supplementary Material .07
(deeming a broker's customer-specific suitability obligation
fulfilled in instances where the member or associated person has a
reasonable basis to believe that the institutional customer is
capable of evaluating investment risks independently, both in
general and with regard to particular transactions and investment
strategies involving a security or securities and the institutional
customer affirmatively indicates that it is exercising independent
judgment in evaluating the member's or associated person's
recommendations). See also MSRB Rule G-48(c) (eliminating the
broker, dealer, or municipal securities dealer's obligation to
perform a customer-specific suitability analysis if it reasonably
concludes the customer is a Sophisticated Municipal Market
Professional as defined in MSRB Rule D-15).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, the proposed exemption would apply only with respect to
the limited activities, and subject to the conditions described above,
including that the entire issuance of municipal securities be placed
with a single Qualified Provider and that the municipal advisor comply
with all applicable Commission and MSRB rules. A registered municipal
advisor that complies with the conditions of the exemption would be
permitted to solicit Qualified Providers on behalf of its Municipal
Issuer client and receive transaction-based compensation for
[[Page 54066]]
services provided in connection with a direct placement as described
above without being required to register as a broker under Section
15(a) of the Exchange Act.\33\ These functions are some of the most
relevant to a determination of broker status, which may therefore
require registration.\34\ Accordingly, if any of the conditions are not
met--for example, the municipal advisor fails to comply with the
disclosure conditions described above--the municipal advisor could not
rely on the exemption and would need to consider whether it is required
to register with the Commission as a broker under Section 15(a) of the
Exchange Act. The exemption would apply only with respect to the
defined activities. A registered municipal advisor could not rely on
this proposed exemption to engage in broker activity relating to
municipal securities offerings beyond the scope of the proposed
exemption, such as facilitating a public offering or the sale of
securities to a retail investor. Further, a registered municipal
advisor seeking to rely on the exemption would need to make and keep
the records required by Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1-8(a)(1). Finally,
consistent with the narrow scope of activities contemplated by the
proposed exemption, a registered municipal advisor seeking to rely on
this proposed exemption could not bind the Municipal Issuer client, or
handle funds or securities in connection with the direct placement. The
Commission preliminarily believes that these types of activities would
implicate the policies underlying the broker regulatory framework.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ The Commission preliminarily believes that this exemption
will also benefit firms that are dually registered as municipal
advisors and brokers. A dually-registered firm that is acting in a
municipal advisory capacity advising a Municipal Issuer client on a
direct placement of municipal securities would be permitted as well
to engage in limited solicitation activities in accordance with the
terms and conditions of the proposed exemption without being
required to comply with broker requirements, such as books and
records requirements, with respect to those activities. Instead, so
long as the terms and conditions of the exemption are met, the
municipal advisor will be acting in the municipal advisory capacity
through the completion of the transaction. The Commission believes
disclosure clarifying the role of the municipal advisor is
particularly critical for dual registrants to avoid confusion on the
part of potential Qualified Providers as to the capacity in which
the firm is acting with respect to a direct placement.
\34\ See, e.g., Definition of Terms in and Specific Exemptions
for Banks, Savings Associations, and Savings Banks Under Section
3(a)(4) and 3(a)(5) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Exchange
Act Rel. No. 44291, 66 FR 27760, 27772-73 at n.124 (May 18, 2001)
(``Solicitation is one of the most relevant factors in determining
whether a person is effecting transactions.''), cited in
Registration Process for Security-Based Swap Dealers and Major
Security-Based Swap Participants, Exchange Act Rel. No. 75611 (Aug.
5, 2015), 80 FR 48964, 48976 (Aug. 14, 2015) (``The Commission has
previously interpreted the term `effecting transactions' in the
context of securities transactions to include a number of
activities, ranging from identifying potential purchasers to
settlement and confirmation of a transaction.''); Cornhusker Energy
Lexington, LLC v. Prospect Street Ventures, No. 8:04CV586, 2006 WL
2620985, at *6 (D. Neb. Sept. 12, 2006) (``Transaction-based
compensation, or commissions are one of the hallmarks of being a
broker-dealer.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission preliminarily believes that the proposed conditions
with respect to transaction participants, disclosure requirements, and
transaction type--in combination with applicable regulatory
protections--should sufficiently restrict the scope of the proposed
exemption such that permitting solicitation activities in this limited
context would not implicate the need for additional regulation of these
activities under the broker regulatory framework. For example, like
brokers, registered municipal advisors have an obligation to deal
fairly with all persons--which, as relevant here, includes any
potential Qualified Providers.\35\ Also, the antifraud provisions of
the Exchange Act as well as the Securities Act of 1933 apply equally to
any person, including registered municipal advisors and brokers.\36\
The Commission preliminarily believes these are important safeguards
that operate as a constraint on the conduct of registered municipal
advisors, independent of whether they are registered as a broker.
Additionally, as stated above, the proposed exemption would be limited
to dealings with Qualified Providers, which are entities that meet an
established threshold of investor sophistication, and the required
disclosures include an affirmative representation by the Qualified
Provider that it is capable of independently evaluating the risks,
which is consistent with the institutional suitability exemption under
existing FINRA rules.\37\ Finally, the Commission notes that the
proposed conditional exemption would not preclude any transaction
participant in a direct placement from engaging a registered broker or
other intermediary for the transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See, e.g., MSRB Rule G-17 (requiring municipal advisors to
``deal fairly with all persons and . . . not engage in any
deceptive, dishonest, or unfair practice''); FINRA Rule 2010
(prohibiting brokers from effecting transactions in, or inducing the
purchase or sale of, securities ``by means of any manipulative,
deceptive or other fraudulent device or contrivance''); FINRA Rule
2111 Supplementary Material .01 (``Implicit in all member and
associated person relationships with customers and others is the
fundamental responsibility for fair dealing.'')
\36\ See 15 U.S.C. 78j and 17 CFR 240.10b-5; see also 15 U.S.C.
77q.
\37\ See FINRA Rule 2111(b) and Supplementary Material .07.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, for the reasons discussed above, the Commission
preliminarily believes that the proposed conditional exemption would be
consistent with the public interest and the protection of investors and
would be necessary or appropriate in the public interest.
III. Request for Comments
The Commission is seeking comment on all aspects of the proposed
exemption. In particular, the Commission requests comment on the
following questions. When responding to the request for comment, please
explain your reasoning.
1. Has the Commission appropriately identified the activities in
which a registered municipal advisor would be able to engage when
representing a municipal entity or obligated person in connection with
direct placements pursuant to the exemption? Please explain.
2. Should any of the identified activities proposed to be included
be eliminated or modified? Please explain.
3. Has the Commission appropriately defined Qualified Provider? If
not, what would be a more appropriate definition and why?
4. Should the definition of Qualified Provider be edited to add
``credit unions''? If so, please explain.
5. Does the definition of Qualified Provider, together with the
required conditions, provide adequate assurance that the potential
investors included in such definition will be sufficiently able to
evaluate the creditworthiness of the Municipal Issuer and the relevant
terms of the direct placement offering, among other things? If not,
please explain.
6. Should the Commission limit the exemption to direct placements
of a specific size threshold--e.g., limited by aggregate principal
amount or by Municipal Issuers with a limited aggregate amount of
municipal securities outstanding? If so, why and how should the
Commission define such thresholds?
7. Should the exemption for municipal advisors with respect to
direct placements be conditioned on municipal advisors being precluded
from engaging in solicitation activities on behalf of their Municipal
Issuer clients? If so, which activities and why? Please explain.
8. Has the Commission appropriately defined the conditions that
should apply to the proposed exemption? Please explain.
[[Page 54067]]
9. Should any of the proposed conditions be eliminated or modified?
Please explain.
10. Are there other or different conditions that should apply to
the proposed exemption? Please explain.
11. Are there any specific written disclosures to Qualified
Providers that should be required, beyond those that are a condition of
the proposed exemption? For example, should the municipal advisor be
required to provide a written disclosure to the Qualified Provider that
it may elect to engage a registered broker or other intermediary for
the transaction? Please explain.
12. Should the exemption be expanded to include transactions in
which multiple Qualified Providers purchase portions of the entire
municipal securities offering directly from the Municipal Issuer? What
are the relevant issues for the Commission to consider in determining
whether such an expansion is necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, and consistent with the protection of investors? For example,
would the participation of multiple purchasers necessitate additional
or different conditions or present heightened investor protection
concerns? Please explain.
13. Is the type of direct placement contemplated by this proposed
exemptive order typically resold into the secondary market? If so, how
often and to what type of investor? Does the possibility of such a
resale raise any investor protection concerns? If so, please explain.
How should the Commission address those concerns?
14. Under the proposed definition of ``Municipal Issuers,'' the
exemption would apply to conduit transactions involving obligated
persons--i.e., the issuance of municipal securities by a municipal
entity to finance a project to be used primarily by a third-party
obligated person, such as a non-profit hospital or private university.
Are there reasons the exemption should not apply with respect to
obligated persons? If so, why not? If the exemption should apply,
should the Commission impose additional or different conditions
concerning those transactions? Should the exemption be conditioned on
additional or different disclosure requirements for transactions
involving obligated persons? Please explain.
15. Should the Commission, instead of granting the conditional
exemption, require municipal advisors wishing to solicit Qualified
Providers for direct placements on behalf of their Municipal Issuer
clients to also register as brokers? For example, would a broker
registration requirement provide necessary protections for investors,
and if so, what specific protections would result from broker
registration with respect to direct placement transactions? What would
be the impact of such a requirement on municipal advisors operating in
this space, in terms of both cost and competitive considerations?
Please explain.
16. With respect only to direct placement transactions described
above, what are the practical implications of the requirements
resulting from broker registration, for example those related to any
due diligence or other investor protection obligations, that are not
applicable to municipal advisors? What are the practical implications
of the differences between broker obligations and municipal advisors'
fair dealing obligations? Please be specific and limit the context of
the response to direct placements in which a single institutional
investor purchases the entire issuance.
17. Would the proposed exemption have a competitive impact--either
positive or negative--on municipal advisors and/or brokers? For
example, would this proposed exemption facilitate capital formation for
smaller Municipal Issuers? Are the costs of engaging a broker for
direct placements burdensome for smaller Municipal Issuers? Please
explain.
By the Commission.
Dated: October 2, 2019.
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-21882 Filed 10-8-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P