Order Granting a Conditional Exemption From Exchange Act Section 11(D)(1) and Exchange Act Rules 10B-10, 15C1-5, 15C1-6, and 14E-5 for Certain Exchange Traded Funds, 57089-57094 [2019-21515]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 206 / Thursday, October 24, 2019 / Notices
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSE–2019–56 and should
be submitted on or before November 14,
2019.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.20
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–23164 Filed 10–23–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–87110]
Order Granting a Conditional
Exemption From Exchange Act Section
11(D)(1) and Exchange Act Rules 10B–
10, 15C1–5, 15C1–6, and 14E–5 for
Certain Exchange Traded Funds
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Exemptive order.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘SEC’’)
is issuing an order granting an
exemption from compliance with
certain provisions of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’)
and the rules thereunder to brokerdealers and certain other persons
engaging in certain transactions in
securities of exchange-traded funds
(‘‘ETFs’’) relying on rule 6c–11 under
the Investment Company Act of 1940
(‘‘Investment Company Act’’).
DATES: This exemptive order is effective
December 23, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Darren Vieira, Special Counsel, Brandon
Hill, Special Counsel, or Joanne
Rutkowski, Assistant Chief Counsel, at
(202) 551–5550; in the Division of
Trading and Markets; Daniel Duchovny,
Special Counsel, Office of Mergers and
Acquisitions, at (202) 551–3440, in the
Division of Corporation Finance;
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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I. Introduction
The Commission adopted rule 6c–11
under the Investment Company Act,
which permits ETFs that satisfy certain
conditions to operate without the
expense and delay of obtaining an
exemptive order from the Commission
20 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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under the Investment Company Act.1
Rule 6c–11 is designed to create a
consistent, transparent, and efficient
regulatory framework for ETFs and to
facilitate greater competition and
innovation among ETFs.
While the relief under rule 6c–11 is
limited to exemptions under the
Investment Company Act,2 commenters
on proposed rule 6c–11 also
recommended that the Commission
harmonize with rule 6c–11 certain
Exchange Act relief that ETFs currently
rely on in order to operate, including
relief from section 11(d)(l) of the
Exchange Act and Exchange Act rules
10b–10, 15c1–5, 15c1–6, and 14e–5.3
Commenters expressed concern that the
conditions that have been associated
with Exchange Act relief are duplicative
or, in some cases, inconsistent with
other requirements applicable to ETFs.4
The Commission agrees that such
relief could further reduce regulatory
complexity and administrative delay,
and eliminate potential inconsistencies
between rule 6c–11 and the related
Exchange Act relief that ETFs have
obtained to operate.5 The Commission
1 Exchange Traded Funds, Investment Company
Act Release No. 33646 (Sep. 25, 2019) (‘‘Rule 6c–
11 Adopting Release’’).
2 In the Rule 6c–11 Adopting Release, the
Commission also provided an interpretation of
certain other Exchange Act rules containing
exemptions for transactions in redeemable
securities issued by open-end companies and unit
investment trusts as follows:
After considering comments, we believe that it is
appropriate to make all ETFs, including those that
do not rely on rule 6c–11, eligible for the
redeemable securities exceptions in rules 101(c)(4)
and 102(d)(4) of Regulation M and rule 10b–17(c)
under the Exchange Act in connection with
secondary market transactions in ETF shares and
the creation or redemption of creation units and the
exemption in rule 11d1–2 under the Exchange Act
for a registered open-end investment company or
unit investment trust.
3 See Comment Letter of Blackrock, Inc. at 21
(Sept. 26, 2018) (‘‘BlackRock Comment Letter’’);
Comment Letter of the Investment Company
Institute at 32 (Sept. 21, 2018) (‘‘ICI Comment
Letter’’); Comment Letter of Fidelity Management &
Research Company at 12 (Sept. 28, 2018); Comment
Letter of Dechert LLP at 8 (Sept. 28, 2018) (‘‘Dechert
Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter of the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association—Asset
Management Group at 22 and 23 (Sept. 28, 2018)
(‘‘SIFMA AMG Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter
of Vanguard at 2 (Sept. 28, 2018); Comment Letter
of WisdomTree Asset Management at 2 (Oct. 1,
2018); Comment Letter of the American Bar
Association at 4 (Oct. 11, 2018); Comment Letter of
John Hancock Investments at 5 (Oct. 1, 2018); and
Comment Letter of Flow Traders US LLP at 2 (Oct.
1, 2018).
4 See, e.g., BlackRock Comment Letter. See also,
e.g., ICI Comment Letter (‘‘Currently, ETFs often
must satisfy multiple and sometimes conflicting
requirements from different divisions within the
SEC.’’). Commenters also expressed concerns about
delays in obtaining such additional relief. See, e.g.,
SIFMA AMG Comment Letter I.
5 Although the exemption granted by this order
applies only to transactions in securities of ETFs
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57089
has considered the issues raised and
believes that it is appropriate to grant
relief from section 11(d)(1) and rules
10b–10, 15c1–5, 15c1–6, and 14e–5
because broker-dealers and certain other
persons that engage in these
transactions and satisfy the conditions
below, as applicable, would not raise
the issues or concerns that underlie
those provisions. Accordingly, the
Commission finds that it is necessary
and appropriate in the public interest
and consistent with the protection of
investors to grant an exemption from
section 11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act and
Exchange Act rules 10b–10, 15c1–5,
15c1–6, and 14e–5,to broker-dealers and
certain other persons, as applicable, that
engage in certain transactions with ETFs
relying on rule 6c–11, subject to the
conditions below.
II. Background
An ETF issues shares that can be
bought or sold throughout the day in the
secondary market at a marketdetermined price. Like other investment
companies, an ETF pools the assets of
multiple investors and invests those
assets according to its investment
objective and principal investment
strategies. Each share of an ETF
represents an undivided interest in the
underlying assets of the ETF. Similar to
mutual funds, ETFs continuously offer
their shares for sale.
Unlike mutual funds, however, ETFs
do not sell or redeem individual shares.
Instead, ‘‘authorized participants’’ that
have contractual arrangements with the
ETF, or one of its service providers,
purchase and redeem ETF shares
directly from the ETF in blocks called
‘‘creation units.’’ 6 An authorized
participant may act as a principal for its
own account when purchasing or
redeeming creation units from the ETF.
Authorized participants also may act as
agent for others, such as market makers,
proprietary trading firms, hedge funds
or other institutional investors, and
receive fees for processing creation units
that meet certain requirements and conditions, the
beneficiaries of the relief, other than the relief
under Exchange Act rule 14e–5, are broker-dealers
that engage in transactions subject to the relevant
provisions of the Exchange Act and rules
thereunder. The beneficiaries of the relief under
Exchange Act rule 14e–5 are ETFs, the legal entity
of which the ETF is a series, and authorized
participants, as described below.
6 Rule 6c–11(a)(1) defines ‘‘authorized
participant’’ as a member or participant of a
clearing agency registered with the Commission,
which has a written agreement with the ETF or one
of its service providers that allows the authorized
participant to place orders for the purchase and
redemption of creation units. See Rule 6c–11
Adopting Release.
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on their behalf.7 Market makers,
proprietary trading firms, and hedge
funds provide additional liquidity to the
ETF market through their trading
activity. Institutional investors may
engage in primary market transactions
with an ETF through an authorized
participant as a way to efficiently hedge
a portion of their portfolio or balance
sheet or to gain exposure to a strategy
or asset class.8 Redemptions from ETFs
are often made in kind (that is, by
delivering certain assets from the ETF’s
portfolio), rather than in cash, thereby
avoiding the need for the ETF to sell
assets and potentially realize capital
gains that are distributed to its
shareholders. Similarly, ETF creations
may be made in kind by delivering
certain assets to the ETF’s portfolio,
rather than solely delivering cash.
An authorized participant that
purchases a creation unit of ETF shares
directly from the ETF deposits with the
ETF a ‘‘basket’’ of securities and other
assets identified by the ETF that day,
and then receives the creation unit of
ETF shares in return for those assets.9
The basket is generally representative of
the ETF’s portfolio,10 and together with
a cash balancing amount, it is equal in
value to the aggregate net asset value
(‘‘NAV’’) of the ETF shares in the
creation unit.11 After purchasing a
creation unit, the authorized participant
may hold the individual ETF shares, or
sell some or all of them in secondary
market transactions.12 Investors then
7 See David J. Abner, The ETF Handbook: How to
Value and Trade Exchange Traded Funds, 2nd ed.
(2016).
8 Id.
9 An ETF may impose fees in connection with the
purchase or redemption of creation units that are
intended to defray operational processing and
brokerage costs to prevent possible shareholder
dilution (‘‘transaction fees’’).
10 The basket might not reflect a pro rata slice of
an ETF’s portfolio holdings. Subject to the terms of
the applicable exemptive relief, an ETF may
substitute other securities or cash in the basket for
some (or all) of the ETF’s portfolio holdings.
Conditions related to flexibility in baskets have
varied over time. See Rule 6c–11 Adopting Release,
at section II.C.5.
11 An open-end fund is required by law to redeem
its securities on demand from shareholders at a
price approximating their proportionate share of the
fund’s NAV at the time of redemption. See 15
U.S.C. 80a–22(d). 17 CFR 270.22c–1 (‘‘rule 22c–1’’)
generally requires that funds calculate their NAV
per share at least once daily Monday through
Friday. See rule 22c–1(b)(1). Today, most funds
calculate NAV per share as of the time the major
U.S. stock exchanges close (typically at 4:00 p.m.
Eastern Time). Under rule 22c–1, an investor who
submits an order before the 4:00 p.m. pricing time
receives that day’s price, and an investor who
submits an order after the pricing time receives the
next day’s price. See also 17 CFR 270.2a–4 (‘‘rule
2a–4’’) (defining ‘‘current net asset value’’).
12 ETFs register offerings of shares under the
Securities Act of 1933 (the ‘‘Securities Act’’), and
list their shares for trading under the Exchange Act.
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purchase individual ETF shares in the
secondary market.
By this order, the Commission is
seeking to reduce the complexities and
burden that may otherwise be associated
with the ETF creation and redemption
process, subject to appropriate
conditions intended to ensure investor
protections.
III. Discussion of the Exemption
The Commission is granting a
conditional exemption from Exchange
Act section 11(d)(1) and Exchange Act
rules 10b–10, 15c1–5, 15c1–6, and 14e–
5 as discussed further below. The
exemption should help to simplify the
offering and operating process for ETFs.
The exemption will provide relief to
broker-dealers from these provisions of
the Exchange Act with respect to ETFs
relying on rule 6c–11.13 In order for a
broker-dealer to rely on the relief, other
than the relief from rule 14e–5, a
transaction must involve an ETF that
further satisfies the diversification
requirement below. In addition, a
broker-dealer relying on this relief must
meet certain conditions specific to each
applicable Exchange Act provision or
rule. Finally, except as provided in
Sections III.E.2 and III.F below, this
relief does not apply to purchases or
sales of ETF shares in the secondary
market.14
The Commission is limiting relief
under this exemption to transactions in
securities issued by ETFs that rely on
rule 6c–11 because the specific findings
in support of the exemptive order are
based, in part, on the conditions in rule
6c–11. The Commission believes that
Depending on the facts and circumstances,
authorized participants that purchase a creation
unit and sell the shares may be deemed to be
participants in a distribution, which could render
them statutory underwriters and subject them to the
prospectus delivery and liability provisions of the
Securities Act. See 15 U.S.C. 77b(a)(11) (defining
the term ‘‘underwriter’’).
13 Going forward, this exemptive order will
provide exemptive relief from section 11(d)(1) and
rules 10b–10, 15c1–5, 15c1–6, and 14e–5 in
connection with transactions in securities issued by
newly formed ETFs that rely on rule 6c–11.
Commission staff will continue to consider requests
with respect to the relevant Exchange Act
provisions in connection with transactions in
securities issued by newly formed ETFs that do not
rely on rule 6c–11 or otherwise do not satisfy the
conditions of this exemption.
14 As discussed below, this order provides an
exemption from section 11(d)(1) for a Non-AP
Broker-Dealer (defined below) that transacts in
shares of an ETF that relies on rule 6c–11,
exclusively in the secondary market, when it
extends or maintains or arranges for the extension
or maintenance of credit to or for customers on such
ETF shares. This order also provides an exemption
that allows certain specified ‘‘covered persons’’
with respect to a tender offer to engage in creation
and redemption transactions with an ETF that relies
on rule 6c–11 subject to certain conditions
described below.
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the portfolio and other transparency
requirements in rule 6c–11, when
combined with the conditions in this
order, address the policy concerns
underlying the relevant statutory
provision and rules. For example, rule
6c–11 requires ETFs to disclose their
portfolio holdings each day through
their website. This portfolio
transparency, along with the availability
of information regarding ETFs through
the National Securities Clearing
Corporation (‘‘NSCC’’), other
intermediaries, and the ETF itself,
should provide customers engaging in
creation or redemption transactions an
opportunity to identify or inquire about
potential conflicts of interest involving
a component security a broker-dealer
would otherwise be required to disclose.
These requirements should also help
customers determine if they should
request that their broker-dealer provide
any omitted information.
A. Reliance on Rule 6c–11
The exemption from Exchange Act
section 11(d)(1) and Exchange Act rules
10b–10, 15c1–5, 15c1–6, and 14e–5 is
only available with respect to
transactions involving securities of an
ETF relying on rule 6c–11. The rule
defines an ETF as a registered open-end
management investment company that:
(i) Issues (and redeems) creation units to
(and from) authorized participants in
exchange for a basket and a cash
balancing amount (if any); and (ii)
issues shares that are listed on a
national securities exchange and traded
at market-determined prices.15 Among
the requirements to rely on rule 6c–11
are:
1. The ETF is structured as an openend management investment company;
2. The ETF discloses portfolio
holdings each business day on its
website before the opening of regular
trading on the primary listing exchange
of the ETF’s shares in a standardized
manner;
3. The ETF provides website
disclosure of (i) the ETF’s current NAV
per share, market price, and premium or
discount, each as of the end of the prior
business day; (ii) a table showing the
number of days the ETF’s shares traded
at a premium or discount during the
most recently completed calendar year
and calendar quarters of the current
year; (iii) a line graph showing ETF
premiums and discounts for the most
recently completed year and calendar
15 Rule 6c–11(a)(1). Under the rule, the term
‘‘basket’’ means the securities, assets, or other
positions in exchange for which an ETF issues (or
in return for which it redeems) creation units. See
id. ETFs will therefore transact on an in-kind basis,
on a cash basis, or both.
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quarter of the current year; (iv) for ETFs
whose premium or discount was greater
than two percent for more than seven
consecutive trading days, disclosure of
this premium or discount, along with a
discussion of the factors that are
reasonably believed to have materially
contributed to the premium or discount;
and (iv) the ETF’s median bid-ask
spread over the most recent thirty
calendar days;
4. The ETF adopts and implement
written policies and procedures that
govern the construction of baskets and
the process that will be used for the
acceptance of baskets. If the ETF utilizes
custom baskets, these policies and
procedures must (i) set forth detailed
parameters for the construction and
acceptance of custom baskets that are in
the best interest of the ETF and its
shareholders, including the process for
any revisions to, or deviations from,
those parameters; and (ii) specify the
titles or roles of the employees of the
ETF’s investment adviser who are
required to review each custom basket
for compliance with those parameters;
and
5. The ETF preserves and maintains
copies of all written agreements
between an authorized participant and
the ETF (or one of the ETF’s service
providers) that allow the authorized
participant to purchase or redeem
creation units.
Consistent with our approach in Rule
6c–11, the exemption provided by this
order will be available regardless of
whether the ETF is actively managed 16
and without regard to the number of
ETF shares in the ETF’s creation or
redemption baskets or the value of those
creation and redemption baskets.17
B. Minimum Diversification
Requirement
The exemption provided by this order
from Exchange Act section 11(d)(1) and
Exchange Act rules 10b–10, 15c1–5, and
15c1–6 is available only with respect to
transactions involving an ETF that
meets the diversification requirement
applicable to a regulated investment
company in Internal Revenue Code
(‘‘IRC’’) Sec. 851(b)(3)(B), 26 U.S.C.
851(b)(3)(B) (the ‘‘IRC diversification
requirement’’).18 Diversification is a
16 Rule
6c–11 Adopting Release, sec. II.A.2.
at sec. II.C.1.
18 IRC Section 851(b)(3)(B) provides that a
‘‘regulated investment company’’ must have:
not more than 25 percent of the value of its total
assets is invested in—(i) the securities (other than
Government securities or the securities of other
regulated investment companies) of any one issuer,
(ii) the securities (other than the securities of other
regulated investment companies) of two or more
issuers which the taxpayer controls and which are
determined, under regulations prescribed by the
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17 Id.
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consideration with respect to each
requirement from which the
Commission is granting exemption in
this order, except for rule 14e–5.
Creation and redemption transactions in
diversified ETFs involve the exchange
of a basket that contains numerous
securities, which in turn implicates
disclosure requirements, as discussed
below, under rules 10b–10, 15c1–5, and
15c1–6. At the same time, the composite
nature of a diversified basket means that
the securities of any one issuer will
account for a relatively small share of
the basket. Diversification thus should
mitigate any conflicts that a brokerdealer would otherwise be required to
disclose under rules 15c1–5 and 15c–6,
and minimize the incentive for a brokerdealer to seek to use an ETF to evade the
new issue lending restriction in
Exchange Act section 11(d)(1).19
Diversification, together with the
conditions discussed below, forms the
basis for the Commission’s conclusion
that relief from section 11(d)(1) and
rules 10b–10, 15c1–5, and 15c1–6 is
necessary and appropriate in the public
interest and consistent with investor
protection.
C. Exemption From Exchange Act Rule
10b–10
Exchange Act rule 10b–10 generally
requires a broker or dealer that effects a
securities transaction for a customer to
send to the customer, at or before the
completion of the transaction, a written
notification (‘‘confirmation’’) disclosing
certain information, including among
other items, the identity, price, and
number of share or units (or principal
amount) of the security purchased or
sold by the customer. The confirmation
requirement provides basic investor
protections by conveying information
that allows investors to verify the terms
of their transactions; alerting investors
to potential conflicts of interest with
their broker-dealers; acting as a
safeguard against fraud; and providing
investors a means to evaluate the costs
of their transactions and the quality of
Secretary [of the Treasury], to be engaged in the
same or similar trades or businesses or related
trades or businesses, or (iii) the securities of one or
more qualified publicly traded partnerships (as
defined in subsection (h)).
19 A commenter on proposed Rule 6c–11 also
noted that ETFs generally must comply with the
IRC diversification requirement, which imposes a
practical limit on the concentration of an ETF’s
portfolio. Dechert Comment Letter at 12–13. The
commenter stated that it would be impractical and
inefficient for a broker-dealer to utilize an ETF as
a mechanism for distribution of a particular security
or for accumulating substantial positions in one or
more of an ETF’s underlying securities in a
magnitude that would trigger disclosure. Id.
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their broker-dealer’s execution.20 When
an authorized participant that is a
registered broker-dealer (‘‘Broker-Dealer
AP’’) engages in creation and
redemption transactions for its
customers, each tender or receipt of a
component security as part of a basket
is a purchase 21 or sale 22 of a security,
and each purchase or sale requires
confirmation pursuant to Exchange Act
rule 10b–10.
The Commission is granting an
exemption from Exchange Act rule 10b–
10 that will allow a broker-dealer that is
effecting an in-kind creation or
redemption transaction on behalf of a
customer to confirm the transaction
without providing a contemporaneous
statement of the identity, price or
number of shares or units (or principal
amount) of each component security
tendered to or delivered by the ETF,
subject to the following conditions:
1. Confirmation statements of
issuance and redemption transactions in
ETF shares will contain all of the
information specified in paragraph (a) of
rule 10b–10 other than identity, price,
and number of shares or units (or
principal amount) of each component
security tendered or received by the
customer in the transaction.
2. Any confirmation statement of an
issuance or redemption transaction in
ETF shares that omits the identity,
price, or number of shares or units (or
principal amount) of component
securities will contain a statement that
such omitted information will be
provided to the customer upon request;
and
3. All such requests will be fulfilled
in a timely manner in accordance with
paragraph (c) of rule 10b–10.
The requirement that confirmation
statements include all of the
information specified in paragraph (a) of
rule 10b–10 other than the identity,
price, and number of shares or units (or
principal amount) of each component
security tendered or received in the
transaction preserves a customer’s right
to receive other important information
from the confirmation about the terms of
the customer’s transaction at or before
the completion of the transaction. The
statement that the omitted information
will be provided upon request informs
the customer of the right to receive the
omitted information. The requirement
for a broker-dealer to fulfill such
requests in a timely manner in
accordance with paragraph (c) of rule
10b–10 clarifies that a broker-dealer
20 Exchange Act Release No. 34962 (November 10,
1994), 59 FR 59612, 59613 (November 17, 1994).
21 Exchange Act Sec. 3(a)(13).
22 Exchange Act Sec. 3(a)(14).
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must fulfill the request within a
prescribed period (i.e., within five
business days of receipt of the request,
or within 15 business days of a request
pertaining to a transaction effected more
than 30 days prior to the receipt of the
request) so that customers can be
assured that they receive the requested
information in a timely manner.
The Commission also believes that, in
general, information regarding ETFs is
accessible through a variety of sources,
including the NSCC, intermediaries and
the ETFs themselves. The Commission
believes that the conditions above will
allow any customers who would like
additional information regarding
identity, price, or number of shares or
units (or principal amount) to receive
the information in a timely manner.
This exemption reduces the burden that
may otherwise be associated with
creation and redemption transactions
while preserving a customer’s ability to
access the omitted information upon
request.
D. Exemption From Exchange Act Rules
15c1–5 and 15c1–6
Exchange Act rule 15c1–5 requires a
broker-dealer effecting a transaction to
disclose any control relationship with
an issuer of a security that it purchases
for or sells to a customer. Similarly,
Rule 15c1–6 requires a broker-dealer to
disclose its participation or interest in a
primary or secondary distribution of a
security that it purchases for or sells to
a customer. The Commission is granting
a conditional exemption from Exchange
Act rules 15c1–5 and 15c1–6 that will
allow a broker-dealer that is effecting an
in-kind creation or redemption
transaction on behalf of a customer to
effect that transaction without providing
disclosure regarding a control
relationship with an issuer or
participation in a distribution of a
component security tendered to or
delivered by the ETF.
As discussed above, the composite
nature of diversified ETF portfolios and
the relatively small proportionate share
of any component security in a basket
mean that any individual ETF portfolio
security that would be subject to
disclosure under rules 15c1–5 or 15c1–
6 will be a small portion of the portfolio.
This diversification should reduce the
impact that any potential conflicts of
interest involving a component security
that a broker-dealer may have and
mitigate the concern that a broker-dealer
could use an ETF to avoid disclosure of
a conflict of interest that would
otherwise be required to be disclosed
under rules 15c1–5 and 15c–6.
Rule 6c–11 provides ETFs with
flexibility to use custom baskets that
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contain a non-representative selection of
the ETFs’ portfolio securities.23 To the
extent the contents of custom creation
or redemption baskets are negotiated
between an authorized participant and
the ETF, the customer, via the
authorized participant, should have
visibility into the contents of the basket.
This visibility should provide a
customer seeking to engage in creation
or redemption transactions an
opportunity to identify or otherwise
inquire about control relationships with
the issuer or interest in a distribution of
a component security that a brokerdealer would otherwise be required to
disclose pursuant to these rules.
The exemption from rules 15c1–5 and
15c1–6 is subject to a further condition
that requires the broker-dealer to
provide any information to which a
customer is entitled under rule 15c1–5
or 15c1–6 upon request and to fulfill
such requests in a timely manner. The
Commission believes that this condition
will ensure that any customers who
would like to access this information for
any of the investor protections needs
described above will be able to receive
it.
Similar to rule 10b–10 above, the
Commission believes that the general
availability of information regarding
ETFs through a variety of sources,
including the NSCC, intermediaries and
the ETFs themselves, supports this
exemption. This access allows market
participants that use basket information
to obtain information regarding
securities they will exchange in a
creation or redemption transaction. The
Commission believes that this
information also should provide market
participants seeking to engage in
creation or redemption transactions an
opportunity to identify or otherwise
inquire about the control relationships
or interest in a distribution that a
broker-dealer would otherwise be
required to disclose pursuant to these
rules.
E. Exemption From Section 11(d)(1)
Exchange Act section 11(d)(1)
generally prohibits a person that is both
a broker and a dealer from extending or
maintaining credit, or arranging for the
extension or maintenance of credit, to or
for a customer on any security (other
than an exempted security) which was
part of a distribution of a new issue of
securities in which the broker-dealer
participated. Because ETFs are in
continuous distribution, broker-dealers
23 If different baskets are used in transactions on
the same business day, each basket after the initial
representative basket would constitute a custom
basket. See Rule 6c–11 Adopting Release, sec.
II.C.5.
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effecting creation and redemption
transactions on behalf of customers are
participating in the distribution of new
issue securities with respect to shares of
ETFs, and thus are continuously subject
to the restrictions of section 11(d)(1).
Section 11(d)(1) issues arise both with
Broker-Dealer APs and with brokerdealers who effect only secondary
market transactions (‘‘Non-AP BrokerDealers’’).
1. Conditions for Broker-Dealer
Authorized Participants
As noted in section II above, a BrokerDealer AP is a registered broker-dealer
that has entered into a contractual
arrangement with an ETF or one of its
service providers that allows the BrokerDealer AP to place orders for the
purchase or redemption of creation
units, but Broker-Dealer APs are not
compensated by ETFs in connection
with the creation or redemption of ETF
shares. Broker-Dealers may have
different reasons for becoming
authorized participants, including for
their own proprietary trading, to
facilitate customer trades, to hedge or
otherwise manage their own risk, or to
arbitrage differences between the ETF’s
market price and its NAV.
The Commission is granting an
exemption from the new issue lending
restriction in section 11(d)(1) for a
Broker-Dealer AP that extends or
maintains credit, or arranges for the
extension or maintenance of credit, on
ETF shares subject to the following two
conditions:
1. Neither the Broker-Dealer AP, nor
any natural person associated with such
Broker-Dealer AP, directly or indirectly
(including through any affiliate of such
Broker-Dealer AP), receives from the
‘‘Fund Complex’’ 24 any payment,
compensation, or other economic
incentive to promote or sell the shares
of the ETF to persons outside the fund
complex, other than non-cash
compensation currently permitted
under Financial Industry and
Regulatory Authority (‘‘FINRA’’) rule
2341(l)(5)(A), (B), or (C) (‘‘non-cash
compensation’’).25
24 For purposes of this order, a ‘‘Fund Complex’’
is the issuer of the ETF shares, any other issuer of
ETF shares that holds itself out to investors as a
related company for purposes of investment or
investor services; any investment adviser,
distributor, sponsor, or depositor of any such issuer;
or any ‘‘affiliated person’’ (as defined in the
Investment Company Act section 2(a)(3)) of any
such issuer or any such investment adviser,
distributor, sponsor, or depositor.
25 Non-cash compensation currently permitted
under FINRA rule 2341(l)(5)(A), (B), or (C) is
limited to:
(A) Gifts that do not exceed an annual amount per
person fixed periodically by FINRA and are not
preconditioned on achievement of a sales target;
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2. The Broker-Dealer AP does not
extend, maintain or arrange for the
extension or maintenance of credit to or
for a customer on shares of the ETF
before thirty days have passed from the
date that the ETF’s shares initially
commence trading (except to the extent
that such extension, maintenance, or
arranging of credit is otherwise
permitted pursuant to rule 11d1–1).
The exemption permits a BrokerDealer AP to accept only limited forms
of non-cash compensation that do not
present broker-dealers with the types of
potential conflicts of interest in their
sale of securities that section 11(d)(1)
addresses.26 This absence of any special
compensation to distribute shares
mitigates the potential conflicts of
interest that section 11(d)(1) addresses.
In addition, requiring a Broker-Dealer
AP to wait thirty days before margining
its customers’ ETF shares is consistent
with the section 11(d)(1) prohibition
against a broker-dealer extending credit
on securities that were part of a new
issue, if the broker-dealer participated
in the distribution of the new issue
securities within the preceding thirty
days. Thus, this condition ensures that
Broker-Dealer APs do not use credit to
induce customers to buy ETF shares for
at least a 30-day period following
launch of the ETF, similar to the
prohibition against extending credit that
applies to other types of new issue
securities under section 11(d)(1).
2. Conditions for Non-AP BrokerDealers
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Many broker-dealers effect ETF
securities transactions solely on the
secondary market, whether for
themselves or as agent for their
customers. They do not enter
contractual arrangements to effect
creation or redemption transactions
with the ETF or one of its service
providers. Thus, these Non-AP BrokerDealers have not undertaken to
distribute ETF shares and generally do
not receive any compensation for selling
ETF shares, other than, in some cases,
limited forms of non-cash
compensation. Non-AP Broker-Dealers
(B) An occasional meal, a ticket to a sporting
event or the theater, or comparable entertainment
which is neither so frequent nor so extensive as to
raise any question of propriety and is not
preconditioned on achievement of a sales target;
[and]
(C) Payment or reimbursement by offerors in
connection with meetings held by an offeror or by
a member for the purpose of training or education
of associated persons of a member, subject to
certain conditions.
26 See Exchange Act Release No. 21557 (Dec. 18,
1984), 49 FR 50172 at 50173–74 (Dec. 27, 1984)
(available at: https://cdn.loc.gov/service/ll/fedreg/
fr049/fr049250/fr049250.pdf).
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17:34 Oct 23, 2019
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may reasonably be considered not to be
participating in the distribution of new
issue securities within the meaning of
section 11(d)(1). However, to remove
any ambiguity about the circumstances
when Non-AP Broker-Dealers may offer
margin on ETF securities the
Commission is granting this exemption
from section 11(d)(1).
The Commission believes this relief is
appropriate because, as stated above,
Non-AP Broker-Dealers do not engage in
creation and redemption transactions
with ETFs and, thus, may reasonably be
considered not to be participating in the
distribution of the ETFs’ securities. In
addition, this relief is subject to the
condition that Non-AP Broker-Dealers
do not (and their associated persons
who are natural persons do not),
directly or indirectly (including through
any affiliate of such Non-AP BrokerDealer), receive from the Fund Complex
any payment, compensation or other
economic incentive to promote or sell
the shares of the ETF to persons outside
the Fund Complex, other than non-cash
compensation. For the foregoing
reasons, the Commission believes it is
necessary and appropriate and in the
public interest and consistent with
investor protection to grant this
exemption.
F. Exemption From Rule 14e–5
Exchange Act rule 14e–5 prohibits
‘‘covered persons’’ from directly or
indirectly purchasing or arranging to
purchase any securities that are the
subject of a tender offer (‘‘subject
securities’’) 27 or any securities that are
immediately convertible into,
exchangeable for, or exercisable for
subject securities (‘‘related
securities’’) 28 except as part of such
tender offer. The term ‘‘covered person’’
includes, among others, a dealermanager of a tender offer and any
person acting, directly or indirectly, in
concert with other covered persons in
connection with any purchase or
arrangement to purchase any subject
securities or any related securities.29
Therefore, the prohibitions of rule 14e–
5 may apply to authorized participants
who are broker-dealers and acting as
dealer-managers in tender offers, the
ETF, and any legal entity of which the
ETF is a series.
The Commission is granting a
conditional exemption from rule 14e–5
to an ETF, the legal entity of which the
ETF is a series, and authorized
participants and any other persons who
create and redeem shares of the ETF in
27 Exchange
Act rule 14e–5(c)(7).
Act rule 14e–5(c)(6).
29 Exchange Act rule 14e–5(c)(3).
28 Exchange
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57093
creation units pursuant to contractual
arrangements pertaining to such legal
entity and the ETF, and who are covered
persons with respect to a tender offer
involving an ETF’s component
securities. The conditional exemption
will allow such persons (i) to redeem
ETF shares in creation unit sizes for a
redemption basket that may include a
subject security or related security, (ii)
to engage in secondary market
transactions with respect to the ETF
shares after the first public
announcement of the tender offer and
during such tender offer given that such
transactions could include, or be
deemed to include, purchases of, or
arrangements to purchase, subject
securities or related securities, and (iii)
make purchases of, or arrangements to
purchase, subject securities or related
securities in the secondary market for
the purpose of transferring such
securities to purchase one or more
creation units of ETF shares. The
exemption from rule 14e–5 is subject to
the following conditions:
1. No purchases of subject securities
or related securities made by brokerdealers acting as dealer-managers of a
tender offer would be effected for the
purpose of facilitating a tender offer;
2. If there is a change in the
composition of a ETF’s portfolio of
component securities and a brokerdealer acting as a dealer-manager of a
tender offer is unable to rely on the
exception found in rule 14e–5(b)(5) for
basket transactions because (i) the
basket of subject securities or related
securities contains fewer than 20
securities or (ii) the subject securities
and related securities make up more
than 5% of the value of the basket, then
any purchases of an ETF component
security by such dealer-manager during
a tender offer will be effected for the
purpose of adjusting a basket of
securities in the ordinary course of its
business and not for the purpose of
facilitating a tender offer; and
3. Except for the relief specifically
granted herein, any broker-dealer acting
as a dealer-manager of a tender offer
will comply with rule 14e–5.
The Commission believes this
exemption will facilitate the ability of
authorized participants and others to
engage in creation or redemption
transactions between the public
announcement of a tender offer and its
expiration, thereby permitting the ETF
to operate as intended for the benefit of
its holders and as disclosed in publicly
filed documents. The conditions
applicable to the relief will ensure that
authorized participants and other
recipients of the relief do not effect
creation or redemption transactions
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 206 / Thursday, October 24, 2019 / Notices
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
during the relevant tender offer period
in an effort to facilitate the tender offer.
For the foregoing reasons, the
Commission believes it is necessary and
appropriate and in the public interest
and consistent with investor protection
to grant this exemption.
IV. Conclusion
In light of the above, and in
accordance with Exchange Act Section
36, the Commission finds that
conditionally exempting broker-dealers
that engage in certain transactions in
securities of ETFs that can rely on
Investment Company Act rule 6c–11
from the requirements of section
11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act and
Exchange Act rules 10b–10, 15c1–5,
15c1–6, and 14e–5 necessary and
appropriate in the public interest, and
consistent with the protection of
investors.
Therefore, it is hereby ordered,
pursuant to section 36 of the Exchange
Act, subject to the conditions described
in Sections III.A, B, and C above, that a
broker or dealer is exempt from
Exchange Act rule 10b–10 with respect
to creation or redemption transactions
on behalf of customers in securities
issued by ETFs relying on Investment
Company Act rule 6c–11.
It is further ordered, pursuant to
section 36 of the Exchange Act, subject
to the conditions described in Sections
III.A, B, and D above, that a broker or
dealer is exempt from Exchange Act rule
15c1–5 with respect to creation or
redemption transactions on behalf of
customers in securities issued by ETFs
relying on Investment Company Act
rule 6c–11.
It is further ordered, pursuant to
section 36 of the Exchange Act, subject
to the conditions described in Sections
III.A, B, and D above, that a broker or
dealer is exempt from Exchange Act rule
15c1–6 with respect to creation or
redemption transactions on behalf of
customers in securities issued by ETFs
relying on Investment Company Act
rule 6c–11.
It is further ordered, pursuant to
section 36 of the Exchange Act, subject
to the conditions described in Sections
III.A, B, and E.1. above, that an AP
Broker-Dealer in a particular ETF
relying on Investment Company Act
rule 6c–11 is exempt from section
11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act with
respect to the extension or maintenance
of credit, or the arranging of the
extension or maintenance of credit, on
securities issued by such ETF.
It is further ordered, pursuant to
section 36 of the Exchange Act, subject
to the conditions described in Section
III.A, B, and E.2 above, that a Non-AP
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17:34 Oct 23, 2019
Jkt 250001
Broker-Dealer that effects transactions in
shares of an ETF relying on Investment
Company Act rule 6c–11, exclusively in
the secondary market, is exempt from
section 11(d)(1) when it extends or
maintains, or arranges for the extension
or maintenance of credit to or for
customers on such ETF shares.
It is further ordered, pursuant to
section 36 of the Exchange Act, subject
to the conditions described in Sections
III.A and F above, the ETF and other
persons described in Section III.F are
exempt from Exchange Act rule 14e–5
with respect to the transactions
described in Section III.F above.
This exemption is subject to
modification or revocation at any time
the Commission determines that such
action is necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act. In addition, persons
relying on this exemption are directed
to the anti-fraud and anti-manipulation
provisions of the federal securities laws,
particularly section 10(b) of the
Exchange Act and rule 10b–5
thereunder.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to extend the
current pilot program related to Rule
7.10–E (Clearly Erroneous Executions)
to the close of business on April 20,
2020. The proposed rule change is
available on the Exchange’s website at
www.nyse.com, at the principal office of
the Exchange, and at the Commission’s
Public Reference Room.
By the Commission.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
[FR Doc. 2019–21515 Filed 10–23–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–87355; File No. SR–
NYSEARCA–2019–75]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change To Extend the Current
Pilot Program Related to Rule 7.10–E
October 18, 2019.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that, on October
16, 2019, NYSE Arca, Inc. (‘‘NYSE
Arca’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the self-regulatory organization. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
2 15
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II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of,
and basis for, the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
1. Purpose
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to extend the current pilot
program related to Rule 7.10–E (Clearly
Erroneous Executions) to the close of
business on April 20, 2020. The pilot
program is currently due to expire on
October 18, 2019.
On September 10, 2010, the
Commission approved, on a pilot basis,
changes to Rule 7.10–E that, among
other things: (i) Provided for uniform
treatment of clearly erroneous execution
reviews in multi-stock events involving
twenty or more securities; and (ii)
reduced the ability of the Exchange to
deviate from the objective standards set
forth in the rule.4 In 2013, the Exchange
adopted a provision designed to address
the operation of the Plan.5 Finally, in
2014, the Exchange adopted two
additional provisions providing that: (i)
A series of transactions in a particular
security on one or more trading days
may be viewed as one event if all such
transactions were effected based on the
same fundamentally incorrect or grossly
misinterpreted issuance information
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62886
(Sept. 10, 2010), 75 FR 56613 (Sept. 16, 2010) (SR–
NYSEArca–2010–58).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68809
(Feb. 1, 2013), 78 FR 9081 (Feb. 7, 2013) (SR–
NYSEArca–2013–12).
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 206 (Thursday, October 24, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57089-57094]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-21515]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-87110]
Order Granting a Conditional Exemption From Exchange Act Section
11(D)(1) and Exchange Act Rules 10B-10, 15C1-5, 15C1-6, and 14E-5 for
Certain Exchange Traded Funds
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Exemptive order.
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SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'' or
``SEC'') is issuing an order granting an exemption from compliance with
certain provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange
Act'') and the rules thereunder to broker-dealers and certain other
persons engaging in certain transactions in securities of exchange-
traded funds (``ETFs'') relying on rule 6c-11 under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (``Investment Company Act'').
DATES: This exemptive order is effective December 23, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Darren Vieira, Special Counsel,
Brandon Hill, Special Counsel, or Joanne Rutkowski, Assistant Chief
Counsel, at (202) 551-5550; in the Division of Trading and Markets;
Daniel Duchovny, Special Counsel, Office of Mergers and Acquisitions,
at (202) 551-3440, in the Division of Corporation Finance; Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The Commission adopted rule 6c-11 under the Investment Company Act,
which permits ETFs that satisfy certain conditions to operate without
the expense and delay of obtaining an exemptive order from the
Commission under the Investment Company Act.\1\ Rule 6c-11 is designed
to create a consistent, transparent, and efficient regulatory framework
for ETFs and to facilitate greater competition and innovation among
ETFs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Exchange Traded Funds, Investment Company Act Release No.
33646 (Sep. 25, 2019) (``Rule 6c-11 Adopting Release'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the relief under rule 6c-11 is limited to exemptions under
the Investment Company Act,\2\ commenters on proposed rule 6c-11 also
recommended that the Commission harmonize with rule 6c-11 certain
Exchange Act relief that ETFs currently rely on in order to operate,
including relief from section 11(d)(l) of the Exchange Act and Exchange
Act rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, 15c1-6, and 14e-5.\3\ Commenters expressed
concern that the conditions that have been associated with Exchange Act
relief are duplicative or, in some cases, inconsistent with other
requirements applicable to ETFs.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ In the Rule 6c-11 Adopting Release, the Commission also
provided an interpretation of certain other Exchange Act rules
containing exemptions for transactions in redeemable securities
issued by open-end companies and unit investment trusts as follows:
After considering comments, we believe that it is appropriate to
make all ETFs, including those that do not rely on rule 6c-11,
eligible for the redeemable securities exceptions in rules 101(c)(4)
and 102(d)(4) of Regulation M and rule 10b-17(c) under the Exchange
Act in connection with secondary market transactions in ETF shares
and the creation or redemption of creation units and the exemption
in rule 11d1-2 under the Exchange Act for a registered open-end
investment company or unit investment trust.
\3\ See Comment Letter of Blackrock, Inc. at 21 (Sept. 26, 2018)
(``BlackRock Comment Letter''); Comment Letter of the Investment
Company Institute at 32 (Sept. 21, 2018) (``ICI Comment Letter'');
Comment Letter of Fidelity Management & Research Company at 12
(Sept. 28, 2018); Comment Letter of Dechert LLP at 8 (Sept. 28,
2018) (``Dechert Comment Letter''); Comment Letter of the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association--Asset Management Group
at 22 and 23 (Sept. 28, 2018) (``SIFMA AMG Comment Letter'');
Comment Letter of Vanguard at 2 (Sept. 28, 2018); Comment Letter of
WisdomTree Asset Management at 2 (Oct. 1, 2018); Comment Letter of
the American Bar Association at 4 (Oct. 11, 2018); Comment Letter of
John Hancock Investments at 5 (Oct. 1, 2018); and Comment Letter of
Flow Traders US LLP at 2 (Oct. 1, 2018).
\4\ See, e.g., BlackRock Comment Letter. See also, e.g., ICI
Comment Letter (``Currently, ETFs often must satisfy multiple and
sometimes conflicting requirements from different divisions within
the SEC.''). Commenters also expressed concerns about delays in
obtaining such additional relief. See, e.g., SIFMA AMG Comment
Letter I.
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The Commission agrees that such relief could further reduce
regulatory complexity and administrative delay, and eliminate potential
inconsistencies between rule 6c-11 and the related Exchange Act relief
that ETFs have obtained to operate.\5\ The Commission has considered
the issues raised and believes that it is appropriate to grant relief
from section 11(d)(1) and rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, 15c1-6, and 14e-5
because broker-dealers and certain other persons that engage in these
transactions and satisfy the conditions below, as applicable, would not
raise the issues or concerns that underlie those provisions.
Accordingly, the Commission finds that it is necessary and appropriate
in the public interest and consistent with the protection of investors
to grant an exemption from section 11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act and
Exchange Act rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, 15c1-6, and 14e-5,to broker-dealers
and certain other persons, as applicable, that engage in certain
transactions with ETFs relying on rule 6c-11, subject to the conditions
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Although the exemption granted by this order applies only to
transactions in securities of ETFs that meet certain requirements
and conditions, the beneficiaries of the relief, other than the
relief under Exchange Act rule 14e-5, are broker-dealers that engage
in transactions subject to the relevant provisions of the Exchange
Act and rules thereunder. The beneficiaries of the relief under
Exchange Act rule 14e-5 are ETFs, the legal entity of which the ETF
is a series, and authorized participants, as described below.
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II. Background
An ETF issues shares that can be bought or sold throughout the day
in the secondary market at a market-determined price. Like other
investment companies, an ETF pools the assets of multiple investors and
invests those assets according to its investment objective and
principal investment strategies. Each share of an ETF represents an
undivided interest in the underlying assets of the ETF. Similar to
mutual funds, ETFs continuously offer their shares for sale.
Unlike mutual funds, however, ETFs do not sell or redeem individual
shares. Instead, ``authorized participants'' that have contractual
arrangements with the ETF, or one of its service providers, purchase
and redeem ETF shares directly from the ETF in blocks called ``creation
units.'' \6\ An authorized participant may act as a principal for its
own account when purchasing or redeeming creation units from the ETF.
Authorized participants also may act as agent for others, such as
market makers, proprietary trading firms, hedge funds or other
institutional investors, and receive fees for processing creation units
[[Page 57090]]
on their behalf.\7\ Market makers, proprietary trading firms, and hedge
funds provide additional liquidity to the ETF market through their
trading activity. Institutional investors may engage in primary market
transactions with an ETF through an authorized participant as a way to
efficiently hedge a portion of their portfolio or balance sheet or to
gain exposure to a strategy or asset class.\8\ Redemptions from ETFs
are often made in kind (that is, by delivering certain assets from the
ETF's portfolio), rather than in cash, thereby avoiding the need for
the ETF to sell assets and potentially realize capital gains that are
distributed to its shareholders. Similarly, ETF creations may be made
in kind by delivering certain assets to the ETF's portfolio, rather
than solely delivering cash.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Rule 6c-11(a)(1) defines ``authorized participant'' as a
member or participant of a clearing agency registered with the
Commission, which has a written agreement with the ETF or one of its
service providers that allows the authorized participant to place
orders for the purchase and redemption of creation units. See Rule
6c-11 Adopting Release.
\7\ See David J. Abner, The ETF Handbook: How to Value and Trade
Exchange Traded Funds, 2nd ed. (2016).
\8\ Id.
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An authorized participant that purchases a creation unit of ETF
shares directly from the ETF deposits with the ETF a ``basket'' of
securities and other assets identified by the ETF that day, and then
receives the creation unit of ETF shares in return for those assets.\9\
The basket is generally representative of the ETF's portfolio,\10\ and
together with a cash balancing amount, it is equal in value to the
aggregate net asset value (``NAV'') of the ETF shares in the creation
unit.\11\ After purchasing a creation unit, the authorized participant
may hold the individual ETF shares, or sell some or all of them in
secondary market transactions.\12\ Investors then purchase individual
ETF shares in the secondary market.
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\9\ An ETF may impose fees in connection with the purchase or
redemption of creation units that are intended to defray operational
processing and brokerage costs to prevent possible shareholder
dilution (``transaction fees'').
\10\ The basket might not reflect a pro rata slice of an ETF's
portfolio holdings. Subject to the terms of the applicable exemptive
relief, an ETF may substitute other securities or cash in the basket
for some (or all) of the ETF's portfolio holdings. Conditions
related to flexibility in baskets have varied over time. See Rule
6c-11 Adopting Release, at section II.C.5.
\11\ An open-end fund is required by law to redeem its
securities on demand from shareholders at a price approximating
their proportionate share of the fund's NAV at the time of
redemption. See 15 U.S.C. 80a-22(d). 17 CFR 270.22c-1 (``rule 22c-
1'') generally requires that funds calculate their NAV per share at
least once daily Monday through Friday. See rule 22c-1(b)(1). Today,
most funds calculate NAV per share as of the time the major U.S.
stock exchanges close (typically at 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time). Under
rule 22c-1, an investor who submits an order before the 4:00 p.m.
pricing time receives that day's price, and an investor who submits
an order after the pricing time receives the next day's price. See
also 17 CFR 270.2a-4 (``rule 2a-4'') (defining ``current net asset
value'').
\12\ ETFs register offerings of shares under the Securities Act
of 1933 (the ``Securities Act''), and list their shares for trading
under the Exchange Act. Depending on the facts and circumstances,
authorized participants that purchase a creation unit and sell the
shares may be deemed to be participants in a distribution, which
could render them statutory underwriters and subject them to the
prospectus delivery and liability provisions of the Securities Act.
See 15 U.S.C. 77b(a)(11) (defining the term ``underwriter'').
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By this order, the Commission is seeking to reduce the complexities
and burden that may otherwise be associated with the ETF creation and
redemption process, subject to appropriate conditions intended to
ensure investor protections.
III. Discussion of the Exemption
The Commission is granting a conditional exemption from Exchange
Act section 11(d)(1) and Exchange Act rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, 15c1-6, and
14e-5 as discussed further below. The exemption should help to simplify
the offering and operating process for ETFs. The exemption will provide
relief to broker-dealers from these provisions of the Exchange Act with
respect to ETFs relying on rule 6c-11.\13\ In order for a broker-dealer
to rely on the relief, other than the relief from rule 14e-5, a
transaction must involve an ETF that further satisfies the
diversification requirement below. In addition, a broker-dealer relying
on this relief must meet certain conditions specific to each applicable
Exchange Act provision or rule. Finally, except as provided in Sections
III.E.2 and III.F below, this relief does not apply to purchases or
sales of ETF shares in the secondary market.\14\
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\13\ Going forward, this exemptive order will provide exemptive
relief from section 11(d)(1) and rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, 15c1-6, and
14e-5 in connection with transactions in securities issued by newly
formed ETFs that rely on rule 6c-11. Commission staff will continue
to consider requests with respect to the relevant Exchange Act
provisions in connection with transactions in securities issued by
newly formed ETFs that do not rely on rule 6c-11 or otherwise do not
satisfy the conditions of this exemption.
\14\ As discussed below, this order provides an exemption from
section 11(d)(1) for a Non-AP Broker-Dealer (defined below) that
transacts in shares of an ETF that relies on rule 6c-11, exclusively
in the secondary market, when it extends or maintains or arranges
for the extension or maintenance of credit to or for customers on
such ETF shares. This order also provides an exemption that allows
certain specified ``covered persons'' with respect to a tender offer
to engage in creation and redemption transactions with an ETF that
relies on rule 6c-11 subject to certain conditions described below.
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The Commission is limiting relief under this exemption to
transactions in securities issued by ETFs that rely on rule 6c-11
because the specific findings in support of the exemptive order are
based, in part, on the conditions in rule 6c-11. The Commission
believes that the portfolio and other transparency requirements in rule
6c-11, when combined with the conditions in this order, address the
policy concerns underlying the relevant statutory provision and rules.
For example, rule 6c-11 requires ETFs to disclose their portfolio
holdings each day through their website. This portfolio transparency,
along with the availability of information regarding ETFs through the
National Securities Clearing Corporation (``NSCC''), other
intermediaries, and the ETF itself, should provide customers engaging
in creation or redemption transactions an opportunity to identify or
inquire about potential conflicts of interest involving a component
security a broker-dealer would otherwise be required to disclose. These
requirements should also help customers determine if they should
request that their broker-dealer provide any omitted information.
A. Reliance on Rule 6c-11
The exemption from Exchange Act section 11(d)(1) and Exchange Act
rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, 15c1-6, and 14e-5 is only available with respect
to transactions involving securities of an ETF relying on rule 6c-11.
The rule defines an ETF as a registered open-end management investment
company that: (i) Issues (and redeems) creation units to (and from)
authorized participants in exchange for a basket and a cash balancing
amount (if any); and (ii) issues shares that are listed on a national
securities exchange and traded at market-determined prices.\15\ Among
the requirements to rely on rule 6c-11 are:
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\15\ Rule 6c-11(a)(1). Under the rule, the term ``basket'' means
the securities, assets, or other positions in exchange for which an
ETF issues (or in return for which it redeems) creation units. See
id. ETFs will therefore transact on an in-kind basis, on a cash
basis, or both.
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1. The ETF is structured as an open-end management investment
company;
2. The ETF discloses portfolio holdings each business day on its
website before the opening of regular trading on the primary listing
exchange of the ETF's shares in a standardized manner;
3. The ETF provides website disclosure of (i) the ETF's current NAV
per share, market price, and premium or discount, each as of the end of
the prior business day; (ii) a table showing the number of days the
ETF's shares traded at a premium or discount during the most recently
completed calendar year and calendar quarters of the current year;
(iii) a line graph showing ETF premiums and discounts for the most
recently completed year and calendar
[[Page 57091]]
quarter of the current year; (iv) for ETFs whose premium or discount
was greater than two percent for more than seven consecutive trading
days, disclosure of this premium or discount, along with a discussion
of the factors that are reasonably believed to have materially
contributed to the premium or discount; and (iv) the ETF's median bid-
ask spread over the most recent thirty calendar days;
4. The ETF adopts and implement written policies and procedures
that govern the construction of baskets and the process that will be
used for the acceptance of baskets. If the ETF utilizes custom baskets,
these policies and procedures must (i) set forth detailed parameters
for the construction and acceptance of custom baskets that are in the
best interest of the ETF and its shareholders, including the process
for any revisions to, or deviations from, those parameters; and (ii)
specify the titles or roles of the employees of the ETF's investment
adviser who are required to review each custom basket for compliance
with those parameters; and
5. The ETF preserves and maintains copies of all written agreements
between an authorized participant and the ETF (or one of the ETF's
service providers) that allow the authorized participant to purchase or
redeem creation units.
Consistent with our approach in Rule 6c-11, the exemption provided
by this order will be available regardless of whether the ETF is
actively managed \16\ and without regard to the number of ETF shares in
the ETF's creation or redemption baskets or the value of those creation
and redemption baskets.\17\
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\16\ Rule 6c-11 Adopting Release, sec. II.A.2.
\17\ Id. at sec. II.C.1.
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B. Minimum Diversification Requirement
The exemption provided by this order from Exchange Act section
11(d)(1) and Exchange Act rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, and 15c1-6 is available
only with respect to transactions involving an ETF that meets the
diversification requirement applicable to a regulated investment
company in Internal Revenue Code (``IRC'') Sec. 851(b)(3)(B), 26 U.S.C.
851(b)(3)(B) (the ``IRC diversification requirement'').\18\
Diversification is a consideration with respect to each requirement
from which the Commission is granting exemption in this order, except
for rule 14e-5. Creation and redemption transactions in diversified
ETFs involve the exchange of a basket that contains numerous
securities, which in turn implicates disclosure requirements, as
discussed below, under rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, and 15c1-6. At the same
time, the composite nature of a diversified basket means that the
securities of any one issuer will account for a relatively small share
of the basket. Diversification thus should mitigate any conflicts that
a broker-dealer would otherwise be required to disclose under rules
15c1-5 and 15c-6, and minimize the incentive for a broker-dealer to
seek to use an ETF to evade the new issue lending restriction in
Exchange Act section 11(d)(1).\19\
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\18\ IRC Section 851(b)(3)(B) provides that a ``regulated
investment company'' must have:
not more than 25 percent of the value of its total assets is
invested in--(i) the securities (other than Government securities or
the securities of other regulated investment companies) of any one
issuer, (ii) the securities (other than the securities of other
regulated investment companies) of two or more issuers which the
taxpayer controls and which are determined, under regulations
prescribed by the Secretary [of the Treasury], to be engaged in the
same or similar trades or businesses or related trades or
businesses, or (iii) the securities of one or more qualified
publicly traded partnerships (as defined in subsection (h)).
\19\ A commenter on proposed Rule 6c-11 also noted that ETFs
generally must comply with the IRC diversification requirement,
which imposes a practical limit on the concentration of an ETF's
portfolio. Dechert Comment Letter at 12-13. The commenter stated
that it would be impractical and inefficient for a broker-dealer to
utilize an ETF as a mechanism for distribution of a particular
security or for accumulating substantial positions in one or more of
an ETF's underlying securities in a magnitude that would trigger
disclosure. Id.
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Diversification, together with the conditions discussed below,
forms the basis for the Commission's conclusion that relief from
section 11(d)(1) and rules 10b-10, 15c1-5, and 15c1-6 is necessary and
appropriate in the public interest and consistent with investor
protection.
C. Exemption From Exchange Act Rule 10b-10
Exchange Act rule 10b-10 generally requires a broker or dealer that
effects a securities transaction for a customer to send to the
customer, at or before the completion of the transaction, a written
notification (``confirmation'') disclosing certain information,
including among other items, the identity, price, and number of share
or units (or principal amount) of the security purchased or sold by the
customer. The confirmation requirement provides basic investor
protections by conveying information that allows investors to verify
the terms of their transactions; alerting investors to potential
conflicts of interest with their broker-dealers; acting as a safeguard
against fraud; and providing investors a means to evaluate the costs of
their transactions and the quality of their broker-dealer's
execution.\20\ When an authorized participant that is a registered
broker-dealer (``Broker-Dealer AP'') engages in creation and redemption
transactions for its customers, each tender or receipt of a component
security as part of a basket is a purchase \21\ or sale \22\ of a
security, and each purchase or sale requires confirmation pursuant to
Exchange Act rule 10b-10.
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\20\ Exchange Act Release No. 34962 (November 10, 1994), 59 FR
59612, 59613 (November 17, 1994).
\21\ Exchange Act Sec. 3(a)(13).
\22\ Exchange Act Sec. 3(a)(14).
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The Commission is granting an exemption from Exchange Act rule 10b-
10 that will allow a broker-dealer that is effecting an in-kind
creation or redemption transaction on behalf of a customer to confirm
the transaction without providing a contemporaneous statement of the
identity, price or number of shares or units (or principal amount) of
each component security tendered to or delivered by the ETF, subject to
the following conditions:
1. Confirmation statements of issuance and redemption transactions
in ETF shares will contain all of the information specified in
paragraph (a) of rule 10b-10 other than identity, price, and number of
shares or units (or principal amount) of each component security
tendered or received by the customer in the transaction.
2. Any confirmation statement of an issuance or redemption
transaction in ETF shares that omits the identity, price, or number of
shares or units (or principal amount) of component securities will
contain a statement that such omitted information will be provided to
the customer upon request; and
3. All such requests will be fulfilled in a timely manner in
accordance with paragraph (c) of rule 10b-10.
The requirement that confirmation statements include all of the
information specified in paragraph (a) of rule 10b-10 other than the
identity, price, and number of shares or units (or principal amount) of
each component security tendered or received in the transaction
preserves a customer's right to receive other important information
from the confirmation about the terms of the customer's transaction at
or before the completion of the transaction. The statement that the
omitted information will be provided upon request informs the customer
of the right to receive the omitted information. The requirement for a
broker-dealer to fulfill such requests in a timely manner in accordance
with paragraph (c) of rule 10b-10 clarifies that a broker-dealer
[[Page 57092]]
must fulfill the request within a prescribed period (i.e., within five
business days of receipt of the request, or within 15 business days of
a request pertaining to a transaction effected more than 30 days prior
to the receipt of the request) so that customers can be assured that
they receive the requested information in a timely manner.
The Commission also believes that, in general, information
regarding ETFs is accessible through a variety of sources, including
the NSCC, intermediaries and the ETFs themselves. The Commission
believes that the conditions above will allow any customers who would
like additional information regarding identity, price, or number of
shares or units (or principal amount) to receive the information in a
timely manner. This exemption reduces the burden that may otherwise be
associated with creation and redemption transactions while preserving a
customer's ability to access the omitted information upon request.
D. Exemption From Exchange Act Rules 15c1-5 and 15c1-6
Exchange Act rule 15c1-5 requires a broker-dealer effecting a
transaction to disclose any control relationship with an issuer of a
security that it purchases for or sells to a customer. Similarly, Rule
15c1-6 requires a broker-dealer to disclose its participation or
interest in a primary or secondary distribution of a security that it
purchases for or sells to a customer. The Commission is granting a
conditional exemption from Exchange Act rules 15c1-5 and 15c1-6 that
will allow a broker-dealer that is effecting an in-kind creation or
redemption transaction on behalf of a customer to effect that
transaction without providing disclosure regarding a control
relationship with an issuer or participation in a distribution of a
component security tendered to or delivered by the ETF.
As discussed above, the composite nature of diversified ETF
portfolios and the relatively small proportionate share of any
component security in a basket mean that any individual ETF portfolio
security that would be subject to disclosure under rules 15c1-5 or
15c1-6 will be a small portion of the portfolio. This diversification
should reduce the impact that any potential conflicts of interest
involving a component security that a broker-dealer may have and
mitigate the concern that a broker-dealer could use an ETF to avoid
disclosure of a conflict of interest that would otherwise be required
to be disclosed under rules 15c1-5 and 15c-6.
Rule 6c-11 provides ETFs with flexibility to use custom baskets
that contain a non-representative selection of the ETFs' portfolio
securities.\23\ To the extent the contents of custom creation or
redemption baskets are negotiated between an authorized participant and
the ETF, the customer, via the authorized participant, should have
visibility into the contents of the basket. This visibility should
provide a customer seeking to engage in creation or redemption
transactions an opportunity to identify or otherwise inquire about
control relationships with the issuer or interest in a distribution of
a component security that a broker-dealer would otherwise be required
to disclose pursuant to these rules.
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\23\ If different baskets are used in transactions on the same
business day, each basket after the initial representative basket
would constitute a custom basket. See Rule 6c-11 Adopting Release,
sec. II.C.5.
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The exemption from rules 15c1-5 and 15c1-6 is subject to a further
condition that requires the broker-dealer to provide any information to
which a customer is entitled under rule 15c1-5 or 15c1-6 upon request
and to fulfill such requests in a timely manner. The Commission
believes that this condition will ensure that any customers who would
like to access this information for any of the investor protections
needs described above will be able to receive it.
Similar to rule 10b-10 above, the Commission believes that the
general availability of information regarding ETFs through a variety of
sources, including the NSCC, intermediaries and the ETFs themselves,
supports this exemption. This access allows market participants that
use basket information to obtain information regarding securities they
will exchange in a creation or redemption transaction. The Commission
believes that this information also should provide market participants
seeking to engage in creation or redemption transactions an opportunity
to identify or otherwise inquire about the control relationships or
interest in a distribution that a broker-dealer would otherwise be
required to disclose pursuant to these rules.
E. Exemption From Section 11(d)(1)
Exchange Act section 11(d)(1) generally prohibits a person that is
both a broker and a dealer from extending or maintaining credit, or
arranging for the extension or maintenance of credit, to or for a
customer on any security (other than an exempted security) which was
part of a distribution of a new issue of securities in which the
broker-dealer participated. Because ETFs are in continuous
distribution, broker-dealers effecting creation and redemption
transactions on behalf of customers are participating in the
distribution of new issue securities with respect to shares of ETFs,
and thus are continuously subject to the restrictions of section
11(d)(1). Section 11(d)(1) issues arise both with Broker-Dealer APs and
with broker-dealers who effect only secondary market transactions
(``Non-AP Broker-Dealers'').
1. Conditions for Broker-Dealer Authorized Participants
As noted in section II above, a Broker-Dealer AP is a registered
broker-dealer that has entered into a contractual arrangement with an
ETF or one of its service providers that allows the Broker-Dealer AP to
place orders for the purchase or redemption of creation units, but
Broker-Dealer APs are not compensated by ETFs in connection with the
creation or redemption of ETF shares. Broker-Dealers may have different
reasons for becoming authorized participants, including for their own
proprietary trading, to facilitate customer trades, to hedge or
otherwise manage their own risk, or to arbitrage differences between
the ETF's market price and its NAV.
The Commission is granting an exemption from the new issue lending
restriction in section 11(d)(1) for a Broker-Dealer AP that extends or
maintains credit, or arranges for the extension or maintenance of
credit, on ETF shares subject to the following two conditions:
1. Neither the Broker-Dealer AP, nor any natural person associated
with such Broker-Dealer AP, directly or indirectly (including through
any affiliate of such Broker-Dealer AP), receives from the ``Fund
Complex'' \24\ any payment, compensation, or other economic incentive
to promote or sell the shares of the ETF to persons outside the fund
complex, other than non-cash compensation currently permitted under
Financial Industry and Regulatory Authority (``FINRA'') rule
2341(l)(5)(A), (B), or (C) (``non-cash compensation'').\25\
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\24\ For purposes of this order, a ``Fund Complex'' is the
issuer of the ETF shares, any other issuer of ETF shares that holds
itself out to investors as a related company for purposes of
investment or investor services; any investment adviser,
distributor, sponsor, or depositor of any such issuer; or any
``affiliated person'' (as defined in the Investment Company Act
section 2(a)(3)) of any such issuer or any such investment adviser,
distributor, sponsor, or depositor.
\25\ Non-cash compensation currently permitted under FINRA rule
2341(l)(5)(A), (B), or (C) is limited to:
(A) Gifts that do not exceed an annual amount per person fixed
periodically by FINRA and are not preconditioned on achievement of a
sales target;
(B) An occasional meal, a ticket to a sporting event or the
theater, or comparable entertainment which is neither so frequent
nor so extensive as to raise any question of propriety and is not
preconditioned on achievement of a sales target; [and]
(C) Payment or reimbursement by offerors in connection with
meetings held by an offeror or by a member for the purpose of
training or education of associated persons of a member, subject to
certain conditions.
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[[Page 57093]]
2. The Broker-Dealer AP does not extend, maintain or arrange for
the extension or maintenance of credit to or for a customer on shares
of the ETF before thirty days have passed from the date that the ETF's
shares initially commence trading (except to the extent that such
extension, maintenance, or arranging of credit is otherwise permitted
pursuant to rule 11d1-1).
The exemption permits a Broker-Dealer AP to accept only limited
forms of non-cash compensation that do not present broker-dealers with
the types of potential conflicts of interest in their sale of
securities that section 11(d)(1) addresses.\26\ This absence of any
special compensation to distribute shares mitigates the potential
conflicts of interest that section 11(d)(1) addresses. In addition,
requiring a Broker-Dealer AP to wait thirty days before margining its
customers' ETF shares is consistent with the section 11(d)(1)
prohibition against a broker-dealer extending credit on securities that
were part of a new issue, if the broker-dealer participated in the
distribution of the new issue securities within the preceding thirty
days. Thus, this condition ensures that Broker-Dealer APs do not use
credit to induce customers to buy ETF shares for at least a 30-day
period following launch of the ETF, similar to the prohibition against
extending credit that applies to other types of new issue securities
under section 11(d)(1).
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\26\ See Exchange Act Release No. 21557 (Dec. 18, 1984), 49 FR
50172 at 50173-74 (Dec. 27, 1984) (available at: https://cdn.loc.gov/service/ll/fedreg/fr049/fr049250/fr049250.pdf).
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2. Conditions for Non-AP Broker-Dealers
Many broker-dealers effect ETF securities transactions solely on
the secondary market, whether for themselves or as agent for their
customers. They do not enter contractual arrangements to effect
creation or redemption transactions with the ETF or one of its service
providers. Thus, these Non-AP Broker-Dealers have not undertaken to
distribute ETF shares and generally do not receive any compensation for
selling ETF shares, other than, in some cases, limited forms of non-
cash compensation. Non-AP Broker-Dealers may reasonably be considered
not to be participating in the distribution of new issue securities
within the meaning of section 11(d)(1). However, to remove any
ambiguity about the circumstances when Non-AP Broker-Dealers may offer
margin on ETF securities the Commission is granting this exemption from
section 11(d)(1).
The Commission believes this relief is appropriate because, as
stated above, Non-AP Broker-Dealers do not engage in creation and
redemption transactions with ETFs and, thus, may reasonably be
considered not to be participating in the distribution of the ETFs'
securities. In addition, this relief is subject to the condition that
Non-AP Broker-Dealers do not (and their associated persons who are
natural persons do not), directly or indirectly (including through any
affiliate of such Non-AP Broker-Dealer), receive from the Fund Complex
any payment, compensation or other economic incentive to promote or
sell the shares of the ETF to persons outside the Fund Complex, other
than non-cash compensation. For the foregoing reasons, the Commission
believes it is necessary and appropriate and in the public interest and
consistent with investor protection to grant this exemption.
F. Exemption From Rule 14e-5
Exchange Act rule 14e-5 prohibits ``covered persons'' from directly
or indirectly purchasing or arranging to purchase any securities that
are the subject of a tender offer (``subject securities'') \27\ or any
securities that are immediately convertible into, exchangeable for, or
exercisable for subject securities (``related securities'') \28\ except
as part of such tender offer. The term ``covered person'' includes,
among others, a dealer-manager of a tender offer and any person acting,
directly or indirectly, in concert with other covered persons in
connection with any purchase or arrangement to purchase any subject
securities or any related securities.\29\ Therefore, the prohibitions
of rule 14e-5 may apply to authorized participants who are broker-
dealers and acting as dealer-managers in tender offers, the ETF, and
any legal entity of which the ETF is a series.
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\27\ Exchange Act rule 14e-5(c)(7).
\28\ Exchange Act rule 14e-5(c)(6).
\29\ Exchange Act rule 14e-5(c)(3).
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The Commission is granting a conditional exemption from rule 14e-5
to an ETF, the legal entity of which the ETF is a series, and
authorized participants and any other persons who create and redeem
shares of the ETF in creation units pursuant to contractual
arrangements pertaining to such legal entity and the ETF, and who are
covered persons with respect to a tender offer involving an ETF's
component securities. The conditional exemption will allow such persons
(i) to redeem ETF shares in creation unit sizes for a redemption basket
that may include a subject security or related security, (ii) to engage
in secondary market transactions with respect to the ETF shares after
the first public announcement of the tender offer and during such
tender offer given that such transactions could include, or be deemed
to include, purchases of, or arrangements to purchase, subject
securities or related securities, and (iii) make purchases of, or
arrangements to purchase, subject securities or related securities in
the secondary market for the purpose of transferring such securities to
purchase one or more creation units of ETF shares. The exemption from
rule 14e-5 is subject to the following conditions:
1. No purchases of subject securities or related securities made by
broker-dealers acting as dealer-managers of a tender offer would be
effected for the purpose of facilitating a tender offer;
2. If there is a change in the composition of a ETF's portfolio of
component securities and a broker-dealer acting as a dealer-manager of
a tender offer is unable to rely on the exception found in rule 14e-
5(b)(5) for basket transactions because (i) the basket of subject
securities or related securities contains fewer than 20 securities or
(ii) the subject securities and related securities make up more than 5%
of the value of the basket, then any purchases of an ETF component
security by such dealer-manager during a tender offer will be effected
for the purpose of adjusting a basket of securities in the ordinary
course of its business and not for the purpose of facilitating a tender
offer; and
3. Except for the relief specifically granted herein, any broker-
dealer acting as a dealer-manager of a tender offer will comply with
rule 14e-5.
The Commission believes this exemption will facilitate the ability
of authorized participants and others to engage in creation or
redemption transactions between the public announcement of a tender
offer and its expiration, thereby permitting the ETF to operate as
intended for the benefit of its holders and as disclosed in publicly
filed documents. The conditions applicable to the relief will ensure
that authorized participants and other recipients of the relief do not
effect creation or redemption transactions
[[Page 57094]]
during the relevant tender offer period in an effort to facilitate the
tender offer. For the foregoing reasons, the Commission believes it is
necessary and appropriate and in the public interest and consistent
with investor protection to grant this exemption.
IV. Conclusion
In light of the above, and in accordance with Exchange Act Section
36, the Commission finds that conditionally exempting broker-dealers
that engage in certain transactions in securities of ETFs that can rely
on Investment Company Act rule 6c-11 from the requirements of section
11(d)(1) of the Exchange Act and Exchange Act rules 10b-10, 15c1-5,
15c1-6, and 14e-5 necessary and appropriate in the public interest, and
consistent with the protection of investors.
Therefore, it is hereby ordered, pursuant to section 36 of the
Exchange Act, subject to the conditions described in Sections III.A, B,
and C above, that a broker or dealer is exempt from Exchange Act rule
10b-10 with respect to creation or redemption transactions on behalf of
customers in securities issued by ETFs relying on Investment Company
Act rule 6c-11.
It is further ordered, pursuant to section 36 of the Exchange Act,
subject to the conditions described in Sections III.A, B, and D above,
that a broker or dealer is exempt from Exchange Act rule 15c1-5 with
respect to creation or redemption transactions on behalf of customers
in securities issued by ETFs relying on Investment Company Act rule 6c-
11.
It is further ordered, pursuant to section 36 of the Exchange Act,
subject to the conditions described in Sections III.A, B, and D above,
that a broker or dealer is exempt from Exchange Act rule 15c1-6 with
respect to creation or redemption transactions on behalf of customers
in securities issued by ETFs relying on Investment Company Act rule 6c-
11.
It is further ordered, pursuant to section 36 of the Exchange Act,
subject to the conditions described in Sections III.A, B, and E.1.
above, that an AP Broker-Dealer in a particular ETF relying on
Investment Company Act rule 6c-11 is exempt from section 11(d)(1) of
the Exchange Act with respect to the extension or maintenance of
credit, or the arranging of the extension or maintenance of credit, on
securities issued by such ETF.
It is further ordered, pursuant to section 36 of the Exchange Act,
subject to the conditions described in Section III.A, B, and E.2 above,
that a Non-AP Broker-Dealer that effects transactions in shares of an
ETF relying on Investment Company Act rule 6c-11, exclusively in the
secondary market, is exempt from section 11(d)(1) when it extends or
maintains, or arranges for the extension or maintenance of credit to or
for customers on such ETF shares.
It is further ordered, pursuant to section 36 of the Exchange Act,
subject to the conditions described in Sections III.A and F above, the
ETF and other persons described in Section III.F are exempt from
Exchange Act rule 14e-5 with respect to the transactions described in
Section III.F above.
This exemption is subject to modification or revocation at any time
the Commission determines that such action is necessary or appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act. In addition,
persons relying on this exemption are directed to the anti-fraud and
anti-manipulation provisions of the federal securities laws,
particularly section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and rule 10b-5
thereunder.
By the Commission.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-21515 Filed 10-23-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P