Self-Regulatory Organizations; National Securities Clearing Corporation; Notice of Filing of Advance Notice to Establish the Securities Financing Transaction Clearing Service and Make Other Changes, 44530-44571 [2021-17075]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 153 / Thursday, August 12, 2021 / Notices
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–92568; File No. SR–NSCC–
2021–803]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
National Securities Clearing
Corporation; Notice of Filing of
Advance Notice to Establish the
Securities Financing Transaction
Clearing Service and Make Other
Changes
August 5, 2021.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
entitled the Payment, Clearing, and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4(n)(1)(i) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’),2 notice is
hereby given that on July 22, 2021,
National Securities Clearing Corporation
(‘‘NSCC’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
the advance notice as described in Items
I, II and III below, which Items have
been prepared by the clearing agency.3
The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the
advance notice from interested persons.
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This advance notice consists of
proposed modifications to the NSCC
Rules & Procedures (‘‘Rules’’) 4 that
would (i) establish new membership
categories and requirements for
sponsoring members and sponsored
members whereby existing Members
would be permitted to sponsor certain
institutional firms into membership, (ii)
establish a new membership category
and requirements for agent clearing
members whereby existing Members
would be permitted to submit, on behalf
of their customers, transactions to NSCC
for novation, (iii) establish the securities
financing transaction clearing service
(‘‘Securities Financing Transaction
Clearing Service’’ or ‘‘SFT Clearing
Service’’) to make central clearing
available at NSCC for equity securities
financing transactions, which are,
broadly speaking, transactions where
1 12
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i).
3 NSCC filed this advance notice as a proposed
rule change (SR–NSCC–2021–010) with the
Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act,
15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), and Rule 19b–4 thereunder, 17
CFR 240.19b–4. A copy of the proposed rule change
is available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/sec-rulefilings.aspx.
4 Capitalized terms not defined herein are defined
in the Rules, available at https://www.dtcc.com/∼/
media/Files/Downloads/legal/rules/nscc_rules.pdf.
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the parties exchange equity securities
against cash and simultaneously agree
to exchange the same securities and
cash, plus or minus a rate payment, on
a future date (collectively, ‘‘Securities
Financing Transactions’’ or ‘‘SFTs’’),
and (iv) make other amendments and
clarifications to the Rules, as described
in greater detail below.
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, the
clearing agency included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the Advance Notice and discussed any
comments it received on the Advance
Notice. The text of these statements may
be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The clearing agency has
prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A and B below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Advance Notice
Received From Members, Participants,
or Others
NSCC reviewed the proposal with
various Members and market
participants (e.g., agent lenders, brokers,
matching service providers, and books
and records service providers) in order
to benefit from their expertise and
industry knowledge. Written comments
relating to this proposal have not been
received from Members or any other
person. If any written comments are
received, they will be publicly filed as
an Exhibit 2 to this filing, as required by
Form 19b–4 and the General
Instructions thereto.
Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that, according to Section IV
(Solicitation of Comments) of the
Exhibit 1A in the General Instructions to
Form 19b–4, the Commission does not
edit personal identifying information
from comment submissions.
Commenters should submit only
information that they wish to make
available publicly, including their
name, email address, and any other
identifying information.
All prospective commenters should
follow the Commission’s instructions on
how to submit comments, available at
https://www.sec.gov/regulatory-actions/
how-to-submit-comments. General
questions regarding the rule filing
process or logistical questions regarding
this filing should be directed to the
Main Office of the Commission’s
Division of Trading and Markets at
tradingandmarkets@sec.gov or 202–
551–5777.
NSCC reserves the right not to
respond to any comments received.
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(B) Advance Notice Filed Pursuant to
Section 806(e) of the Clearing
Supervision Act
Nature of the Proposed Change
The purpose of this proposed rule
change is to (i) establish new
membership categories and
requirements for sponsoring members
and sponsored members whereby
existing Members would be permitted to
sponsor certain institutional firms into
membership, (ii) establish a new
membership category and requirements
for agent clearing members whereby
existing Members would be permitted to
submit, on behalf of their customers,
transactions to NSCC for novation, (iii)
establish the SFT Clearing Service to
make central clearing available at NSCC
for SFTs, and (iv) make other
amendments and clarifications to the
Rules, as described in greater detail
below.
(i) Background
NSCC is proposing to introduce
central clearing for SFTs, which are,
broadly speaking, securities lending
transactions where parties exchange
equity securities against cash and
simultaneously agree to exchange the
same securities and cash, plus or minus
a rate payment, on a future date. In
particular, the proposed SFT Clearing
Service would expand central clearing
at NSCC to include SFTs with a one
Business Day term (i.e., overnight SFTs)
in eligible equity securities that are
entered into by Members, institutional
firms that are sponsored into NSCC by
a Sponsoring Member (as defined below
and in the proposed rule change), or
Agent Clearing Members (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
on behalf of Customers (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change),
as applicable.
SFTs involve the owner of securities
(typically a registered investment
company, pension plan, sovereign
wealth fund or other institutional firm)
transferring those securities temporarily
to a borrower (typically a hedge fund).
SFTs are often facilitated and
intermediated by broker-dealers and
agent lenders (i.e., custodial banks or
other institutions that lend out
securities as agent on behalf of
institutional firms). In return for the lent
securities, the borrower transfers
collateral, and a net rate payment is
typically transferred to either the lender
or the borrower that reflects the
liquidity of the lent securities, as well
as interest on any cash collateral.5 NSCC
5 This rate payment is typically calculated in a
manner similar to interest on the principal balance
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understands that SFTs provide liquidity
to markets and facilitates the ability of
market participants to make delivery on
short-sales, and thereby avoid failures to
deliver, ‘‘naked’’ shorts, and similar
situations. On a typical Business Day,
The Depository Trust Company
(‘‘DTC’’), an NSCC affiliate, processes
deliver orders related to securities
lending transactions on securities
having a value of approximately $150
billion.
Capital Efficiency Opportunities
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The Basel III 6 capital and leverage
requirements, as implemented by the
U.S. banking regulators, constrain the
ability of agent lenders and brokers to
intermediate and facilitate SFTs.7 NSCC
believes central clearing of SFTs would
be able to address these constraints,
which may otherwise impair market
participants’ ability to engage in SFTs.
For example, NSCC believes it is
uniquely positioned to create balance
sheet netting opportunities for market
participants (i.e., the ability to offset
cash payables and receivables versus
NSCC) by becoming the legal
counterparty to both pre-novation
counterparties to an SFT through
novation. Specifically, market
participants that borrow securities
through NSCC and then onward lend
those securities, or other securities, to
another NSCC Member through the
proposed SFT Clearing Service may
have the ability to net down the cash
collateral return obligations and
entitlements related to such SFTs. By
contrast, for bilateral SFTs, market
participants may be required to record
those payables and receivables on their
balance sheets on a gross (rather than
netted) basis. A netted balance sheet can
create significant capital benefits for
market participants because it can
reduce the amount of regulatory capital
they must hold against SFTs under the
U.S. ‘‘supplementary leverage ratio’’ and
of a loan and accrues on a daily basis. As a result,
the rate payment is typically calculated as the
product of a specified balance (typically the amount
of cash collateral unless the collateral consists of
securities) and a specified rate (reflecting both the
liquidity of the securities and the ability of the
lender to re-use the cash collateral), divided by 360
or a similar day count fraction.
6 Basel III is an internationally agreed set of
measures developed by the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision in response to the financial
crisis of 2007–2009.
7 See, e.g., 12 CFR part 3 (Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency—Capital Adequacy
Standards); 12 CFR part 217 (Federal Reserve—
Capital Adequacy of Bank Holding Companies,
Savings and Loan Holding Companies, and State
Member Banks); 12 CFR part 252, subpart Q (Single
Counterparty Credit Limits); 12 CFR part 324
(Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation—Capital
Adequacy of FDIC-Supervised Institutions).
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other capital requirements that favor a
netted balance sheet.8
In addition, under Basel III, bank
holding companies that have brokerdealer subsidiary borrowers are required
to reserve capital against their exposures
to institutional firm lenders of securities
in relation to the cash collateral posted
by such borrowers. Those capital
requirements can vary depending on the
credit profile of the institutional firm
lender, and generally are well in excess
of those applied to exposures to
qualifying central counterparties, such
as NSCC.9 The counterparty risk weight
of a qualifying central counterparty, like
NSCC, is 2%,10 which may result in
considerable capital savings to these
bank holding companies, to the extent
they participate in central clearing.
Moreover, agent lending banks and
bank holding company parents of
broker-dealer borrowers that participate
in central clearing could receive
beneficial treatment under the single
counterparty credit limits, which
exempt exposures to qualifying central
counterparties.11
In light of the potential for central
clearing to alleviate the aforementioned
capital constraints otherwise applicable
to bilateral SFTs, NSCC believes that
central clearing of SFTs may increase
the capacity of market participants to
engage in SFTs.12
Fire Sale Risk Mitigation
In addition to creating capital
efficiency opportunities for market
participants, NSCC believes that
broadening the scope of central clearing
at NSCC to SFTs would also reduce the
potential for market disruption from fire
sales.
In the case of securities lending
transactions, the primary risk of fire
sales 13 relates to the reinvestment of
cash collateral by institutional firms that
are the lenders in securities lending
transactions. Those institutional firms
will typically reinvest the cash
collateral they receive from the
borrower into other securities. If the
borrower of the securities thereafter
defaults, the institutional firm lenders
generally need to quickly liquidate the
securities representing the reinvestment
in order to raise cash to purchase the
originally lent security. A substantial
number of disconnected and competing
8 See
12 CFR 217.10(c)(4)(ii)(E)–(F).
12 CFR 217.32 and 217.37 generally.
10 See 12 CFR 217.35(c)(3).
11 See 12 CFR 252.77(a)(3).
12 Members should discuss this matter with their
accounting and regulatory capital experts.
13 Fire sale risk is the risk of rapid sales of assets
in large amounts that temporarily depress market
prices of such assets and create financial instability.
9 See
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liquidations by multiple lenders can
create fire sale conditions for the
securities being liquidated, which can
harm not only the institutional firm
lenders by potentially lowering the
amount of cash they can raise in the sale
of such securities, but also create market
losses for all holders of such
securities.14
Moreover, if an institutional firm
lender should default and fail to return
the cash collateral back to its borrowers,
the borrowers would typically be
looking to liquidate the borrowed
securities in order to make themselves
whole for the cash collateral they
delivered to the institutional firm
lender. Competing and disconnected
sales of such securities could similarly
create fire sale conditions and not only
harm the borrowers to the extent the
value of the securities decline, but also
create market losses for all holders of
the borrowed securities.
NSCC believes that broadening the
scope of central clearing at NSCC to
SFTs would reduce the potential for
market disruption from fire sales for a
number of reasons. First, in the event of
a default, NSCC would conduct a
centralized, orderly liquidation of the
defaulter’s SFT Positions (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change).
Such an organized liquidation should
result in substantially less price
depreciation and market disruption than
multiple independent non-defaulting
parties racing against one another to
liquidate the positions. Second, NSCC
would only need to liquidate the
defaulter’s net positions. By contrast, in
the context of a default by a brokerdealer intermediary that runs a matched
book in the bilateral securities market,
both the ultimate lender and the
ultimate borrower need to liquidate the
defaulter’s gross positions. Limiting the
positions that need to be liquidated to
the defaulter’s net positions should
reduce the volume of required sales
activity, which in turn should limit the
price and market impact of the close-out
of the defaulter’s positions. Lastly,
NSCC would use its risk management
resources to provide confidence to
market participants that they will
receive back their cash or securities, as
14 See Financial Stability Board, Strengthening
Oversight and Regulation of Shadow Banking:
Policy Framework for Addressing Shadow Banking
Risks in Securities Lending and Repos, at 5 (August
29, 2013) available at https://www.fsb.org/wpcontent/uploads/r_130829b.pdf?page_moved=1.
See also United States Securities and Exchange
Commission: Securities Lending and Short Sale
Roundtable Transcript (September 29, 2009),
Former Chairman Schapiro’s Remarks, at 2–3,
available at https://www.sec.gov/news/
openmeetings/2009/roundtable-transcript092909.pdf.
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applicable, which should limit the
propensity for market participants to
seek to unwind their transactions in a
stressed market scenario.
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Liquidity Drain Risk Mitigation
Liquidity risk may also arise if, in the
context of a stressed market scenario,
borrowers or lenders concerned about
their counterparties’ creditworthiness
seek to unwind their securities lending
transactions and obtain the return of
their cash collateral or securities. This
occurred to a certain extent in 2008,
when borrowers began demanding to
return borrowed securities in exchange
for the cash collateral the borrowers had
posted to institutional firm lenders.15
These ‘‘runs’’ may require institutional
firm lenders to quickly sell off securities
that are the subject of their cash
reinvestments to raise cash to return to
the borrowers, thereby also creating
potential fire sale conditions with
respect to the reinvestment securities, as
described above. Similarly, borrowers
may need to purchase or re-borrow
securities in stressed market conditions,
leading to potentially significant losses.
NSCC believes that having SFTs be
centrally cleared by NSCC would lower
the risk of a liquidity drain in a stress
scenario. Specifically, NSCC believes
that having it clear SFT activity would
provide confidence to borrowers and
lenders that they will receive back their
cash or securities and thereby lessen
parties’ inclination to rush to unwind
their transactions in a stressed market
scenario.
Addition of New Membership
Categories for Institutional Firm SFT
Activity
When evaluating the opportunity to
expand its cleared offerings to SFTs,
NSCC engaged in extensive discussions
with numerous market participants,
including agent lenders, brokers,
institutional firms, and critical third
parties, such as matching service
providers and books and records service
providers. NSCC also organized several
industry working groups to discuss the
possibility of clearing SFTs. Each
constituency has a unique perspective
on the proposed SFT Clearing Service.
By capturing their differing viewpoints
in the design, NSCC has sought to
ensure that the proposed SFT Clearing
Service would reflect their needs and
facilitate industry adoption of the
proposed SFT Clearing Service.
There was a considerable amount of
discussion between NSCC and market
participants regarding the appropriate
model(s) through which institutional
15 See,
e.g., id.
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firms should access central clearing.
Some market participants expressed
interest in allowing Members to sponsor
institutional firms into NSCC
membership in a manner similar to that
provided for under the sponsoring
member/sponsored member program at
the Government Securities Division
(‘‘GSD’’) of Fixed Income Clearing
Corporation (‘‘FICC’’), an NSCC affiliate
(‘‘FICC’s Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program’’).16 Under
FICC’s Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Program, sponsoring members
may submit to FICC transactions entered
into on a principal-to-principal basis
between the sponsoring member and the
sponsored member.17 On the other
hand, certain other market participants,
including in particular certain agent
lending banks, requested that the central
clearing service accommodate agentstyle trading (i.e., where the agent
lender enters into the transaction on
behalf of the institutional firm, rather
than as principal counterparty). As
NSCC understands it, agent-style trading
is the way such agent lenders are
typically approved to transact in
securities lending transactions on behalf
of their institutional firm clients
today.18
NSCC considered all of this input, as
well as the recent experiences of FICC
in expanding the suite of both
transactions and participants eligible for
FICC’s Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Program,19 and ultimately
decided to incorporate both the
sponsoring/sponsored membership type
(to facilitate principal style trading for
institutional firms and their sponsoring
16 See Rule 3A (Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members) of the FICC GSD Rulebook
(‘‘GSD Rules’’), available at https://dtcc.com/
∼media/Files/Downloads/legal/rules/ficc_gov_
rules.pdf.
17 FICC’s Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program also allows sponsoring members to submit
to FICC transactions entered into between a
sponsored member and a third-party netting
member. However, based on feedback from market
participants, NSCC has decided to address this type
of trading via the proposed agent clearing model for
SFT.
18 In addition, certain other agent lenders who are
not themselves banks or broker-dealers (and so are
not eligible to become Members of NSCC) preferred
a model where the institutional firm client becomes
the direct member of NSCC with no obligations
running between the agent lender and the clearing
agency.
19 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
80563 (May 1, 2017), 82 FR 21284 (May 5, 2017)
(SR–FICC–2017–003) (Expand the types of entities
that are eligible to participate in FICC as Sponsored
Members), 85470 (March 29, 2019), 84 FR 13328
(April 4, 2019) (SR–FICC–2018–013) (Expand
Sponsoring Member Eligibility in the GSD
Rulebook), and 88262 (February 21, 2020), 85 FR
11401 (February 27, 2020) (SR–FICC–2019–007)
(Close-Out and Funds-Only Settlement Processes
Associated with the Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Service).
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members) as well as the Agent Clearing
Member membership type (to facilitate
agent-style trading by agent lenders on
behalf of institutional firm clients) into
the proposed SFT Clearing Service.20
NSCC expects these proposed new
membership types would help expand
access to central clearing for
institutional firms and facilitate
industry adoption of the proposed SFT
Clearing Service.
The proposed SFT Clearing Service
would also allow for the submission of
broker-to-broker activity as well as
client-to-client activity (credit
intermediated by Sponsoring Members
and/or Agent Clearing Members) into
the NSCC system.
(ii) Key Parameters of the Proposed SFT
Clearing Service
Overnight SFTs
NSCC is proposing central clearing for
SFTs with a one Business Day term (i.e.,
overnight SFTs) in eligible equity
securities that are entered into by
Members, institutional firms that are
sponsored into NSCC by Sponsoring
Members, or Agent Clearing Members
on behalf of customers. NSCC has
determined that overnight term SFTs
with a daily pair off option are more
appropriate for the proposed SFT
Clearing Service than open transactions
with mark-to-market collections. This is
because, as NSCC understands it, open
transactions are not eligible for balance
sheet netting given they do not have a
scheduled off-leg/settlement date. As
described above, the proposed SFT
Clearing Service is designed to offer
both balance sheet netting and capital
efficiency opportunities to market
participants. NSCC therefore finds it
appropriate to make overnight term
SFTs with a scheduled date for Final
Settlement (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) of the next
Business Day, rather than open
transactions, eligible for central clearing
through the proposed SFT Clearing
Service.
For example, assume that a Transferor
(as defined below and in the proposed
rule change) and Transferee (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
20 NSCC decided at this time not to incorporate
a direct model for institutional firm clearing into
the proposed SFT Clearing Service because in its
experience with a similar model in FICC (the CCIT
Service), the requirements that a clearing agency,
such as NSCC, would be required to apply to an
institutional firm that participated as a direct
member (e.g., Clearing Fund and loss allocation)
would, as a general matter, not likely be compatible
with the regulatory requirements and investment
guidelines applicable to many of the regulated
institutional firms that NSCC anticipates would be
interested in participating in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service.
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enter into an SFT pursuant to which: (i)
In the Initial Settlement (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
on Monday, the Transferor will transfer
100 shares of security X to the
Transferee against $100 per share; and
(ii) in the Final Settlement on Tuesday,
the Transferee will transfer 100 shares
of security X to the Transferor against
$100 per share. After the Initial
Settlement occurs on Monday, the Final
Settlement of the SFT is novated to
NSCC. In the Final Settlement on
Tuesday, the Transferee will return 100
shares of security X to the Transferor for
$100 per share. The Rate Payment (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change) would be passed by NSCC as
between the Transferor and Transferee
on Tuesday as part of NSCC’s end-ofday final money settlement process.
SFT Counterparties
The proposed SFT Clearing Service
would only be available for SFTs
entered into between (i) a Member and
another Member, (ii) a Sponsoring
Member and its Sponsored Member (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change), and (iii) an Agent Clearing
Member acting on behalf of a Customer
and either (x) a Member or (y) the same
or another Agent Clearing Member
acting on behalf of a Customer. As used
in the Rules, ‘‘Member’’ includes fullservice NSCC clearing members, but not
Sponsored Members.21 In addition, as
proposed, the only SFTs entered into by
Sponsored Members that would be
eligible for novation to NSCC would be
SFTs between the Sponsored Member
and its Sponsoring Member.22
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Approved SFT Submitters
Consistent with the manner in which
NSCC accepts cash market transactions,
SFTs would be required to be submitted
to NSCC on a locked-in/matched basis
by an Approved SFT Submitter (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change) in accordance with the
communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose. Approved SFT
Submitters would be selected by the
SFT Members (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change), subject to
NSCC’s approval. An Approved SFT
Submitter could either be a Member or
a third-party vendor. SFTs submitted to
21 As defined in Rule 1 (Definitions and
Descriptions), the term ‘‘Member’’ means any
Person specified in Section 2.(i) of Rule 2 who has
qualified pursuant to the provisions of Rule 2A. As
such, the term ‘‘Member’’ does not include a
Sponsored Member. Supra note 4.
22 See Section 5 of proposed Rule 56, which
provides that a Sponsoring Member shall be
permitted to submit to NSCC SFTs between itself
and its Sponsored Members.
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NSCC by an Approved SFT Submitter
would be valid and binding obligations
of each SFT Member designated by the
Approved SFT Submitter as a party
thereto.
Eligible Equity Securities and Per Share
Price Minimum
NSCC will maintain eligibility criteria
for the securities that may underlie an
SFT that NSCC will accept for novation.
Consistent with NSCC’s general
approach to eligibility for securities, the
eligibility criteria would not be a rule,
but a separate document maintained by
NSCC and available to Members. It is
currently contemplated that eligible
securities for SFTs in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service will be limited to CNSeligible securities.
In light of the fact that central clearing
of SFTs would be a new service for
NSCC, and market participants would
be able to elect which of their eligible
SFTs to novate to NSCC (i.e., central
clearing of SFTs would not be
mandatory for Members), NSCC is not
able to anticipate at this time the size
and composition of the SFT portfolios
that would be novated to NSCC. Due to
this lack of history, NSCC would, as an
initial matter, provide proposed SFT
Clearing Service for only those SFTs
where the underlying securities are
CNS-eligible equity securities that have
a per share price of $5 or more. NSCC
selected $5 as the per share price
minimum for underlying equity
securities that could be the subject of a
novated SFT because $5 is a common
share price minimum adopted in
brokerage margin eligibility schedules.
This proposed share price limitation
would be implemented systemically by
NSCC as one of the eligibility criteria for
determining whether an equity security
is eligible to be the subject of a novated
SFT (rather than as a rule), and such per
share price limitation could be modified
by NSCC 23 at a later date after NSCC
gains more experience with the nature
of the SFT portfolios submitted for
clearing. In addition, if the share price
of underlying securities of an SFT that
has already been novated to NSCC falls
below $5, such SFT would continue to
be novated to NSCC, but the Required
SFT Deposit (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change) for the
affected Members would include an
amount equal to 100% of the market
value of such underlying securities until
such time as the per share price of the
23 The per share price limitation could be
modified by NSCC without any regulatory filings;
however, any change in the per share price
limitation would be announced by NSCC via an
Important Notice posted to its website.
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underlying securities equals or exceeds
$5.
Cash Collateral
Consistent with the cash market
transactions NSCC clears today where
cash is used to satisfy Members’
purchase obligations in eligible
securities, cash would likewise be the
only eligible form of collateral for
novated SFTs under the proposed SFT
Clearing Service.24 More specifically,
NSCC would limit the SFTs that it is
willing to novate to SFTs that have SFT
Cash (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) equal to or
greater than 100% market value of the
lent securities, and would not novate
any obligations to return collateral
consisting of securities.25
NSCC would novate the Final
Settlement obligations of an SFT as of
the time the Initial Settlement of such
SFT is completed, unless the SFT is a
Bilaterally Initiated SFT (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
or a Sponsored Member Transaction (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change), in which case novation of the
Final Settlement obligations would
occur upon NSCC reporting to the
Approved SFT Submitter that the SFT
has been validated and novated to
NSCC.
As described above, each SFT would
be collateralized by cash equal to no less
than 100% of the market value of the
lent securities. In addition, in order to
address regulatory and investment
guideline requirements applicable to
certain institutional firms,26 a Member
would be permitted (but not required) to
transfer an additional cash haircut
above 100% (e.g., 102%) to such
institutional firms, i.e., Independent
Amount SFT Cash (as defined below
and in the proposed rule change), as
part of the Initial Settlement of the SFT.
The Sponsoring Member or Agent
Clearing Member, as applicable, that
receives the Independent Amount SFT
Cash in the Initial Settlement would
also receive a commensurate Clearing
Fund call, i.e., an Independent Amount
SFT Cash Deposit Requirement (as
24 This is referred to as ‘‘SFT Cash’’ in the
proposed rule text.
25 See Section 5(a) of proposed Rule 56 and the
definition of ‘‘Securities Financing Transaction’’.
26 As an example, a registered investment
company that lends securities through an agent may
be required under Section 17(f) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940 and Rule 17f–2 thereunder
to collect cash collateral equal to no less than 102%
of the market value of the lent securities. See, e.g.,
The Adams Express Company, SEC No-Action
Letter (Oct. 8, 1984). Other institutional firms may
be subject to similar requirements under their
established investment guidelines or applicable
rules, regulations or guidance.
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defined below and in the proposed rule
change), from NSCC to reflect the value
received by such Member above the
market price of the equity security lent.
NSCC’s novation of Final Settlement
obligations related to Independent
Amount SFT Cash would be tied to the
time the Sponsoring Member or Agent
Clearing Member, as applicable, satisfies
the related Independent Amount SFT
Cash Deposit Requirement in cash.
RVP/DVP Settlement at DTC
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The Final Settlement obligations of
each SFT, other than a Sponsored
Member Transaction, that is novated to
NSCC would settle receive-versuspayment/delivery-versus-payment
(‘‘RVP/DVP’’) at DTC.27 SFT deliver
orders would be processed in
accordance with DTC’s rules and
procedures, including provisions
relating to risk controls. DTC would
accept delivery instructions for an SFT
from NSCC, as agent for DTC
participants that are SFT Members.28
Pre-novation counterparties to an SFT
that is due to settle may elect to pair off
(i.e., offset) the Final Settlement
obligations of such SFT against the
Initial Settlement obligations of a new
SFT between the same parties on the
same securities. NSCC believes that
such offsets would minimize the
operational burden of settling overnight
obligations. NSCC would calculate and
process the difference in cash collateral
between the paired off SFTs, i.e., Price
Differential (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change). Price Differential
would also be processed in accordance
with DTC rules and procedures,
including provisions relating to risk
controls. DTC would accept Price
Differential payment orders for an SFT
from NSCC, as agent for DTC
participants that are SFT Members.
Settlement of the Rate Payment
obligations and payment obligations
arising from certain mandatory
corporate actions and cash dividends
would be processed as part of NSCC’s
end-of-day final money settlement
process.
As an example of an SFT with a full
pair off (i.e., offset), assume that a
27 As described below, the Final Settlement and
other obligations of each Sponsored Member
Transaction would, at the direction of NSCC, settle
on the books and records of the relevant Sponsoring
Member.
28 On July 22, 2021, DTC submitted a proposed
rule change to provide DTC participants that are
also NSCC Members with settlement services in
connection with NSCC’s proposed SFT Clearing
Service. See SR–DTC–2021–014, which was filed
with the Commission but has not yet been
published in the Federal Register. A copy of this
proposed rule change is available at https://
www.dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx.
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Transferor and Transferee enter into an
SFT pursuant to which: (i) In the Initial
Settlement on Monday, the Transferor
will transfer 100 shares of security X to
the Transferee against $100 per share;
and (ii) in the Final Settlement on
Tuesday, the Transferee will transfer
100 shares of security X to the
Transferor against $100 per share. After
the Initial Settlement occurs on
Monday, the Final Settlement of the
SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of
day on Monday, the share price of
security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday,
the Approved SFT Submitter, on behalf
of the Transferor and the Transferee,
instructs NSCC to pair off the parties’
Final Settlement obligations on the
Settling SFT (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change) with a Linked
SFT (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) pursuant to
which (i) in the Initial Settlement on
Tuesday, the Transferor will transfer
100 shares of security X to the
Transferee against $99 per share; and (ii)
in the Final Settlement on Wednesday,
the Transferee will transfer 100 shares
of security X to the Transferor against
$99 per share. NSCC would, on
Tuesday, collect $1 per share in Price
Differential from the Transferor and pay
$1 per share in Price Differential to the
Transferee in connection with the pair
off. In addition, the Rate Payment for
the Settling SFT would be passed by
NSCC as between the Transferor and
Transferee on Tuesday as part of NSCC’s
end-of-day final money settlement
process. In the Final Settlement on
Wednesday, the Transferee will return
100 shares of security X to the
Transferor for $99 per share. The Rate
Payment for the Linked SFT would be
passed by NSCC as between the
Transferor and Transferee on
Wednesday as part of NSCC’s end-ofday final money settlement process.
As an example of an SFT with a
partial pair off (i.e., offset), assume that
a Transferor and Transferee enter into
an SFT pursuant to which: (i) in the
Initial Settlement on Monday, the
Transferor will transfer 100 shares of
security X to the Transferee against $100
per share; and (ii) in the Final
Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferee
will transfer 100 shares of security X to
the Transferor against $100 per share.
After the Initial Settlement occurs on
Monday, the Final Settlement of the
SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of
day on Monday, the share price of
security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday,
the Approved SFT Submitter, on behalf
of the Transferor and the Transferee,
instructs NSCC to partially pair off the
parties’ Final Settlement obligations on
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the Settling SFT with a Linked SFT
pursuant to which (i) in the Initial
Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferor
will transfer 25 shares of security X to
the Transferee against $99 per share;
and (ii) in the Final Settlement on
Wednesday, the Transferee will transfer
25 shares of security X to the Transferor
against $99 per share. In the Final
Settlement on Tuesday for the
remaining Settling SFT, the Transferee
will return 75 shares of security X to the
Transferor for $100 per share. NSCC
would, on Tuesday, collect $1 per share
in Price Differential from the Transferor
and pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the Transferee in relation
to the shares subject to pair off (i.e., 25
shares of security X). In addition, the
Rate Payment for the Settling SFT (i.e.,
100 shares of security X) would be
passed by NSCC as between the
Transferor and Transferee on Tuesday
as part of NSCC’s end-of-day final
money settlement process. In the Final
Settlement on Wednesday for the
Linked SFT, the Transferee will return
25 shares of security X to the Transferor
for $99 per share. The Rate Payment on
the Linked SFT (i.e., 25 shares of
security X) would be passed by NSCC as
between the Transferor and Transferee
on Wednesday as part of NSCC’s end-ofday final money settlement process.
Buy-In, Recall and Accelerated
Settlement
It is occasionally the case in the
securities lending market that a
borrower is solvent and able to satisfy
its general obligations as they become
due but unable to deliver the lent
securities to the lender within the
timeline requested by the lender. The
contractual remedy that has developed
in the bilateral securities lending market
for these situations is a ‘‘buy-in.’’ Under
this remedy, the lender may purchase
securities equivalent to the borrowed
securities in the market and charge the
borrower for the cost of this purchase.
This serves to benefit the lender because
it allows the lender to recover the
securities within its required timeline,
and it benefits the borrower by avoiding
a situation in which the borrower’s
failure to perform under a single
transaction results in an event of default
and close-out of all of its securities
lending transactions (and potentially
other positions through a cross-default).
Similarly, in the bilateral space,
securities borrowers may have the need
to accelerate settlement of securities
lending transactions if they lose a
‘‘permitted purpose’’ for such loans
under Regulation T. The proposed SFT
Clearing Service would seek to retain
the buy-in and acceleration
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mechanisms, as they ensure the smooth
functioning of securities markets
without causing unnecessary and
disorderly defaults or regulatory
violations.29
Consistent with their rights under
industry-standard documentation for
bilateral SFTs, as proposed, Transferors
would have the right to submit a Recall
Notice (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) to NSCC in
respect of a novated SFT for which
Final Settlement obligations have not
yet been satisfied. If the Transferee does
not return the lent securities by the
Recall Date (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) specified in such
notice, and the Transferor would be
eligible to Buy-In (as defined below and
in the proposed rule change), in
accordance with such timeframes and
deadlines as established by NSCC for
such purpose, such securities.
For example, assume that a Transferor
and Transferee enter into an SFT
pursuant to which: (i) In the Initial
Settlement on Monday, the Transferor
will transfer 100 shares of security X to
the Transferee against $100 per share;
and (ii) in the Final Settlement on
Tuesday, the Transferee will transfer
100 shares of security X to the
Transferor against $100 per share. After
the Initial Settlement occurs on
Monday, the Final Settlement of the
SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of
day on Monday, the share price of
security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday,
the Approved SFT Submitter, on behalf
of the Transferor and the Transferee,
instructs NSCC to pair off (i.e., offset)
the parties’ Final Settlement obligations
on the Settling SFT with a Linked SFT
pursuant to which (i) in the Initial
Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferor
will transfer 100 shares of security X to
the Transferee against $99 per share;
and (ii) in the Final Settlement on
Wednesday, the Transferee will transfer
100 shares of security X to the
Transferor against $99 per share. NSCC
would, on Tuesday, collect $1 per share
in Price Differential from the Transferor
and pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the Transferee in
connection with the pair off. In
addition, the Rate Payment for the
Settling SFT would be passed by NSCC
as between the Transferor and
Transferee on Tuesday as part of NSCC’s
29 NSCC does not believe retaining the buy-in and
acceleration mechanisms would undermine
novation because NSCC would remain the obligor
and obligee in respect of the Final Settlement, Rate
Payment, and Distribution Payment (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
entitlements and obligations. These mechanisms
simply affect the timing and manner in which those
obligations are discharged.
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end-of-day final money settlement
process.
Later in the day on Tuesday, the
Transferor determines it now needs 100
shares of security X back in its
inventory, and so the Approved SFT
Submitter submits a Recall Notice to
NSCC, prior to the deadline established
by NSCC, on behalf of the Transferor for
100 shares of security X with a Recall
Date of Thursday. At the end of day on
Tuesday, the share price of security X is
$98 per share. Upon receipt of the
Recall Notice, the SFT would be treated
as a Non-Returned SFT (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
by NSCC pursuant to Section 9(e) of
proposed Rule 56 (Securities Financing
Transaction Clearing Service).
Accordingly, pursuant to Section 9(a) of
proposed Rule 56, the Final Settlement
Date (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) of the SFT would
be rescheduled to Thursday, and NSCC
would, on Wednesday collect $1 per
share in Price Differential from the
Transferor and pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the Transferee on the
Non-Returned SFT. The Rate Payment
for the Non-Returned SFT would also be
passed by NSCC as between the
Transferor and Transferee on
Wednesday as part of NSCC’s end-ofday final money settlement process.
Assume further that the Transferee
does not transfer the 100 shares of
security X on Wednesday and that the
end of day price of security X on
Wednesday is $97 per share. On
Thursday, NSCC would again collect $1
per share in Price Differential from the
Transferor and pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the Transferee on the
Non-Returned SFT. The Rate Payment
for the Non-Returned SFT would also be
passed by NSCC as between the
Transferor and Transferee on Thursday
as part of NSCC’s end-of-day final
money settlement process. In addition,
since the Recall Notice specified
Thursday as the Recall Date, the
Transferor would be entitled to
purchase (or deem itself to have
purchased) 100 shares of security X in
accordance with the provisions of
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 56.
Assuming that the Transferor paid a
price of $95 per share for security X and
submitted a written notice to NSCC of
its Buy-In Costs (as defined below and
in the proposed rule change) on
Thursday, the Transferor would owe
NSCC a Buy-In Amount (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
of $2 per share ($100 per share of SFT
Cash received by the Transferor at the
Initial Settlement of the SFT, less the
$95 per share Buy-In Costs of the
Transferor, minus $3 per share Price
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44535
Differential paid by the Transferor to
NSCC), and such Buy-In Amount would
be debited by NSCC from the Transferor
and credited to the Transferee as part of
NSCC’s end-of-day final money
settlement process on Friday.
Similarly, consistent with their rights
under industry-standard documentation
for bilateral SFTs, Transferees would
have the right to accelerate the
scheduled Final Settlement of a novated
SFT through notice from the Approved
SFT Submitter to NSCC of such
accelerated settlement.
For example, assume that a Transferor
and Transferee enter into an SFT
pursuant to which: (i) In the Initial
Settlement on Monday, the Transferor
will transfer 100 shares of security X to
the Transferee against $100 per share;
and (ii) in the Final Settlement on
Tuesday, the Transferee will transfer
100 shares of security X to the
Transferor against $100 per share. After
the Initial Settlement occurs on
Monday, the Final Settlement of the
SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of
day on Monday, the share price of
security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday,
the Approved SFT Submitter, on behalf
of the Transferor and the Transferee,
instructs NSCC to net the parties’ Final
Settlement obligations on the Settling
SFT with a Linked SFT pursuant to
which (i) in the Initial Settlement on
Tuesday, the Transferor will transfer
100 shares of security X to the
Transferee against $99 per share; and (ii)
in the Final Settlement on Wednesday,
the Transferee will transfer 100 shares
of security X to the Transferor against
$99 per share. NSCC would, on
Tuesday, collect $1 per share in Price
Differential from the Transferor and pay
$1 per share in Price Differential to the
Transferee in connection with the pair
off. Later in the day on Tuesday, the
Transferee loses permitted purpose
under Regulation T for the borrowing of
100 shares of security X. Therefore,
pursuant to Section 11 of proposed Rule
56 (Securities Financing Transaction
Clearing Service), the Approved SFT
Submitter submits a notice to NSCC on
behalf of the Transferee to accelerate the
Final Settlement of the Linked SFT to
Tuesday. The Transferee then on
Tuesday returns 100 shares of security
X to NSCC for $99 per share, and NSCC
returns 100 shares of security X to the
Transferor for $99 per share. The Rate
Payment would be passed by NSCC for
the Settling SFT as between the
Transferor and Transferee on Tuesday
as part of NSCC’s end-of-day final
money settlement process.
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Risk Management of SFT Positions
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Under the proposal, NSCC is
requiring a deposit to the Clearing
Fund 30 for SFT Positions, i.e., Required
SFT Deposit. From a market risk
standpoint, SFT activity would be risk
managed by NSCC in a manner
consistent with Members’ CNS positions
but would be margined independently
of the Member’s other positions,31 and
a Required SFT Deposit would be
collected by NSCC for all SFT activity
of an SFT Member, subject to a $250,000
minimum deposit.32 Specifically, NSCC
is proposing to calculate an SFT
Member’s Required SFT Deposit by
applying the sections of Procedure XV
(Clearing Fund Formula and Other
Matters) specified in Section 12 of
proposed Rule 56 (i.e., Sections
I.(A)(1)(a), (b), (d), (f), (g), (h) of
Procedure XV as well as the additional
Clearing Fund formula in Section
I.(B)(5) (Intraday Mark-to-Market
Charge) of Procedure XV as such
sections apply to CNS Transactions, and
the additional Clearing Fund formula in
Sections I.(B)(1) (Additional Deposits
for Members on the Watch List); (2)
(Excess Capital Premium), (3)
(Backtesting Charge), (4) (Bank Holiday
Charge); Minimum Clearing Fund and
Additional Deposit Requirements in
Sections II.(A)1(a)–(b), II.(B), II.(C); as
well as Section III (Collateral Value of
Eligible Clearing Fund Securities) of
Procedure XV, as such sections apply to
Members). Furthermore, NSCC would
require an additional Required SFT
Deposit for Non-Returned SFTs that is
intended to mirror the premium charged
for CNS Fails Positions. NSCC would
also apply the Independent Amount
SFT Cash Deposit Requirement for SFTs
that have Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash. NSCC
is also proposing that, for the purpose
of applying Section I.(A)(1)(h) of
Procedure XV (Margin Liquidity
Adjustment (‘‘MLA’’) charge), SFT
30 As currently defined in Rule 1 (Definitions and
Descriptions), the term ‘‘Clearing Fund’’ means the
fund created pursuant to Rule 4. Supra note 4.
31 NSCC is not proposing at this time to portfolio
margin a Member’s SFT Positions with any CNS
positions of the Member. NSCC may reconsider this
position after it obtains a reasonable amount of
experience observing the nature and volume of SFT
activity submitted by Members to NSCC for
novation through the proposed SFT Clearing
Service.
32 This $250,000 minimum deposit is a
requirement that is separate from NSCC’s proposed
change to a Member’s minimum (non-SFT) Clearing
Fund deposit requirement, although it is designed
to be consistent with such proposed change. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91809 (May
10, 2021), 86 FR 26588 (May 14, 2021) (SR–NSCC–
2021–005).
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Positions shall be netted with Net
Unsettled Positions.33
Consistent with the manner in which
clearing fund requirements are satisfied
by members of FICC for their cleared
securities financing transactions, NSCC
would require that (i) a minimum of
40% of an SFT Member’s Required SFT
Deposit consist of a combination of cash
and Eligible Clearing Fund Treasury
Securities and (ii) the lesser of
$5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT Member’s
Required SFT Deposit (but not less than
$250,000) 34 consist of cash.35 NSCC
would also have the discretion to
require an SFT Member to post its
Required SFT Deposit in proportion of
cash higher than would otherwise be
required as described above. NSCC’s
determination to impose any such
requirement would be made in view of
market conditions and other financial
and operational capabilities of the
relevant SFT Member. For example, as
proposed in Section 12 of Rule 56, if
NSCC had specific concerns about a
particular SFT Member’s financial or
operational capabilities, but NSCC had
not yet come to the determination that
ceasing to act for the SFT Member
would be appropriate (but could
potentially become appropriate within
the near term), NSCC may request that
a greater portion of the SFT Member’s
Required SFT Deposit to the Clearing
33 ‘‘Net Unsettled Positions’’ include a Member’s
net of unsettled Regular Way, When-Issued and
When-Distributed pending positions (i.e., net
positions that have not yet passed Settlement Date)
and fail positions (i.e., net positions that did not
settle on Settlement Date). See Procedure XV, supra
note 4.
34 This $250,000 minimum cash deposit
requirement is designed to be consistent with
NSCC’s proposed change to the minimum amount
of cash that must be used to satisfy a Member’s
(non-SFT) Clearing Fund deposit requirement. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91809 (May
10, 2021), 86 FR 26588 (May 14, 2021) (SR–NSCC–
2021–005). NSCC believes a $250,000 minimum
cash deposit would serve to strengthen NSCC’s
liquidity resources. Cash may also be easier to
access upon a Member’s default, further reducing
the risk of losses and using non-defaulting
Member’s securities or funds, or NSCC funds.
35 These requirements are designed to be
consistent with FICC GSD’s clearing fund
requirements of its members given that NSCC
anticipates that there would be considerable
overlap between the membership of FICC GSD that
participate in FICC for purposes of clearing their
securities financing transaction activity (including
in particular sponsored repo activity) and the
Members that would elect to participate in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service. Specifically, FICC
GSD Rule 4, Section 3 requires (i) a minimum of
40 percent of a member’s required fund deposit to
be in the form of cash and/or eligible clearing fund
treasury securities and (ii) the lesser of $5,000,000
or 10 percent of the required fund deposit, with a
minimum of $100,000, be made and maintained in
cash. See Rule 4 (Clearing Fund and Loss
Allocation) of the FICC GSD Rulebook, supra note
16
.
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Fund be in the form of cash in order to
simplify any potential close-out
liquidation required in the event of that
SFT Member’s default. Separately,
pursuant to Section II.(A)1(a) of
Procedure XV, if an SFT Member’s
deposit of Eligible Clearing Fund
Agency Securities or Eligible Clearing
Fund Mortgage-Backed Securities is in
excess of 25% of the SFT Member’s
Required Fund Deposit, NSCC would
subject the deposit to an additional
haircut.
The Sponsoring Member Required
Fund Deposits (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change) and Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposits (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) would each be
calculated on a gross basis, and no
offsets for netting of positions as
between different Sponsored Members
or different Customers,36 as applicable,
would be permitted. This is to ensure
that NSCC’s volatility-based Clearing
Fund deposit requirements represent
the sum of each individual institutional
firm’s activity.
As proposed, the SFT Clearing
Service would mitigate NSCC’s liquidity
risk associated with satisfaction of Final
Settlement obligations owing to nondefaulting SFT Members on novated
SFTs in the event of an SFT Member
default by providing for satisfaction of
such Final Settlement obligations to
occur in accordance with the normal
settlement cycle for the purchase or sale
of securities, as applicable.37 NSCC
would accordingly be able to satisfy
such Final Settlement obligations
through market action (if necessary)
rather than through its own liquidity
resources. More specifically, NSCC
would be able to sell the securities lent
by a Defaulting SFT Member (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
and/or purchase the securities borrowed
by a Defaulting SFT Member and use
the proceeds of such sales and/or the
securities purchased to satisfy the
Defaulting SFT Member’s Final
Settlement obligations to non-defaulting
SFT Members. In the absence of this
provision, NSCC would need to rely
exclusively on its liquidity resources to
satisfy Final Settlement obligations
owing to non-defaulting SFT Members,
since it would not receive the proceeds
of any market action to liquidate the
Defaulting SFT Member’s SFT Positions
until after Final Settlement obligations
were due.
The proposal would also provide that
NSCC could further delay its
36 See Section 7(c) of proposed Rule 2C and
Section 6(c) of proposed 2D.
37 See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
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satisfaction of Final Settlement
obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement
cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC
determines that taking market action to
close-out some or all of the defaulted
SFT Member’s novated SFT Positions
would create a disorderly market in the
relevant SFT Securities.38 For example,
to the extent that market action is
required by NSCC to close-out the
positions of a Defaulting SFT Member,
and selling out or buying in (as
applicable) the entire quantity of
securities would move the market and
create disorder, NSCC would adhere to
pre-determined market volume limits as
set forth in NSCC’s internal procedures
and execute its hedging strategy in order
to meet its default management
objectives. In such a situation, nondefaulting SFT Members would not be
able to effect a recall or an associated
buy-in, since such market activity
would exacerbate the disorderly
conditions that NSCC’s delay is
designed to prevent, nor would nondefaulting SFT Members otherwise be
able to or accelerate the delayed Final
Settlement obligations, as any such
acceleration would frustrate the purpose
of the delay, i.e., to avoid creating a
disorderly market in the relevant SFT
Securities.
However, in any case, until NSCC has
satisfied the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT
Members, NSCC would continue paying
to and receiving from non-defaulting
SFT Members the applicable Price
Differential (i.e., the change in market
value of the relevant securities) with
respect to their novated SFTs.39 By
continuing to process these Price
Differential payments until Final
Settlement occurs, NSCC would ensure
that non-defaulting SFT Members are
kept in the same position as if the
Defaulting SFT Member had not
defaulted and the pre-novation
counterparties had instead agreed to roll
the SFTs. To the extent NSCC is
required to pay a Price Differential to a
non-defaulting SFT Member, NSCC
would rely on the NSCC Clearing Fund,
including the Required SFT Deposit, in
order to cover the liquidity need
associated with any such Price
Differential obligation.40 In addition,
38 Id.
39 See
proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
example, assume that a Transferor and
Transferee enter into an SFT pursuant to which: (i)
In the Initial Settlement on Monday, the Transferor
will transfer 100 shares of security X to the
Transferee against $100 per share; and (ii) in the
Final Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferee will
transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferor
40 For
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NSCC would anticipate being in regular
communication with the non-defaulting
SFT Members as to the timing of the
satisfaction of any Final Settlement
obligations related to a defaulting SFT
Member.
(iii) Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members
NSCC is proposing a sponsored
membership program to allow Members
to play the role of pre-novation
counterparty and credit intermediary for
their institutional firm clients in
clearing.
NSCC has modeled a number of the
aspects of the proposed sponsored
member program, including the
eligibility criteria and many of the risk
management requirements, on FICC’s
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program. FICC’s Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program allows an
FICC Netting Member to sponsor an
entity that satisfies certain requirements
and submit to FICC for novation certain
securities transactions between the
Netting Member and the sponsored
entity. These securities transactions
generally include the off-leg of
repurchase transactions on U.S.
government or agency securities or
straight purchase and sales of such
against $100 per share. Assume further that at
midnight on Monday, NSCC ceases to act for the
Transferor.
On Tuesday, NSCC executes a sale of 100 shares
of security X for $99 per share. In accordance with
the regular way settlement cycle for purchases and
sales of equity securities, this sale will settle on
Thursday.
Pursuant to Section 14(b)(viii) of proposed Rule
56 (Securities Financing Transaction Clearing
Service), NSCC would likewise settle the Final
Settlement obligations of the defaulting Transferor’s
SFT with the non-defaulting Transferee on
Thursday.
Assume further that the end-of-day price of
security X on Tuesday is $99 per share. On
Wednesday, NSCC would pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the non-defaulting Transferee
pursuant to Section 14(b)(ix) of proposed Rule 56.
Assume further that the end-of-day price of security
X on Wednesday is $98 per share.
On Thursday, NSCC would pay an additional $1
per share in Price Differential to the non-defaulting
Transferee pursuant to Section 14(b)(ix) of proposed
Rule 56. The Transferee would then return 100
shares of security X to NSCC and receive $98 per
share (i.e., the current market price for security X)
from NSCC. As such, the non-defaulting Transferee
would be made whole by NSCC for the $100 per
share it transferred in the Initial Settlement of the
Defaulted-Related SFT (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) since NSCC would have
transferred to it $98 per share in Final Settlement
plus an additional $2 per share in Price Differential.
NSCC would incur a net loss of $1 per share in
this example since it would have sold security X
for $99 per share and paid the non-defaulting
Transferee a total of $100 per share (i.e., $98 per
share in Final Settlement proceeds plus $2 per
share in Price Differential). NSCC would be entitled
to deduct this amount from the defaulted
Transferor’s Clearing Fund deposits (including its
SFT Deposit).
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44537
securities. Such transactions present
similar risk management, legal,
accounting, and operation
considerations to SFTs, as both involve
an obligation of a sponsored member
and a sponsoring member to exchange
cash against securities. Since 2005, FICC
has worked with its members to
improve its Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program to address
these considerations. Based on feedback
from Members and its own internal
assessments, NSCC believes that
leveraging the provisions of FICC’s
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
program and the learning over the past
decade and a half would allow NSCC to
provide a sponsored member program
that has a solid risk management,
accounting, legal and operational
foundation.
Sponsoring Members
Under the proposal, all Members
would be eligible to apply to become
Sponsoring Members in NSCC, subject
to credit criteria that are designed to be
substantially similar to those applicable
to category 2 sponsoring members in
FICC’s Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Program for the reasons
described above in Item II(B)(iii)
‘‘Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members.’’ 41 A Member whose
41 If a Member is a Registered Broker-Dealer, then
such Member would only be eligible to apply to
become a Sponsoring Member if it satisfies the
credit criteria in proposed Rule 2C (Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members) (i.e., if it has (i)
Net Worth of at least $25 million and (ii) excess net
capital over the minimum net capital requirement
imposed by the SEC (or such higher minimum
capital requirement imposed by the Member’s
designated examining authority) of at least $10
million). Such credit criteria are comparable to the
credit criteria applicable to category 2 sponsoring
members that are registered broker-dealers in FICC’s
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program.
A Sponsoring Member applicant would be viewed
and surveilled as the credit counterparty to NSCC
in respect to its Sponsored Member Sub-Account(s)
(as defined below and in the proposed rule change)
in light of its responsibility to NSCC as the
processing agent and unconditional guarantor of its
Sponsored Members’ performance to NSCC.
In addition, NSCC may require that a Person be
a Member for a time period deemed necessary by
NSCC before that Person may be considered to
become a Sponsoring Member. This requirement
may be imposed by NSCC on a new Member that
has yet to demonstrate a track record of financial
responsibility and operational capability.
Furthermore, as proposed, the application of a
Member to be a Sponsoring Member at NSCC that
is an Agent Clearing Member or an existing FICC
sponsoring member would not be required to be
approved by the NSCC Board of Directors. NSCC
believes this approach to Board of Director’s
approval for Sponsoring Members is appropriate in
light of the fact that the critical components of the
FICC sponsoring member application as well as the
NSCC Sponsoring Member and Agent Clearing
Member applications and the criteria that the
respective boards assess when determining whether
to admit a Member in such respective capacities are
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application to become a Sponsoring
Member has been approved by the
Board of Directors or NSCC, as
applicable, pursuant to proposed Rule
2C (‘‘Sponsoring Member’’) would be
permitted to sponsor their institutional
firm clients into membership as
Sponsored Members. Such Sponsoring
Members would then be able to
facilitate their institutional firm clients’
cleared activity via two back-to-back
principal SFTs, i.e., client-toSponsoring Member and Sponsoring
Member-to-broker (or to another
institutional firm client that the
Sponsoring Member has sponsored into
membership), and each of such
transactions would be eligible for
novation to NSCC.
Consistent with the requirements
applicable to sponsoring members in
FICC’s Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Program for the reasons
described above in Item II(B)(iii)
‘‘Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members,’’ a Sponsoring Member would
be responsible for (i) submitting data on
its Sponsored Members’ SFTs to NSCC
or appointing a third-party Approved
SFT Submitter to do so, (ii) posting to
NSCC all of the Clearing Fund
associated with the SFT activity of its
Sponsored Members, which would be
calculated on a gross basis (i.e., SFT
activity would not be netted across
Sponsored Members for Clearing Fund
purposes), (iii) providing an
unconditional guaranty to NSCC for its
Sponsored Members’ Final Settlement
and other obligations to NSCC, and (iv)
covering any default loss allocable to its
Sponsored Members (in addition to its
own default loss allocation as a
Member).
Specifically, as proposed, a
Sponsoring Member would be permitted
to submit to NSCC for novation
Sponsored Member Transactions,
subject to an activity limit designed to
be substantially similar to that
applicable to category 2 sponsoring
members in FICC’s Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program for the
reasons described above in Item II(B)(iii)
‘‘Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members.’’ Under the proposal, if the
sum of the Volatility Charges (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
applicable to a Sponsoring Member’s
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change) and its other accounts at NSCC
exceeds its Net Member Capital (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
substantially similar. Nonetheless, NSCC would
apply the same rigorous counterparty credit review
process to any Member applying to be a Sponsoring
Member at NSCC, whether or not the Member is an
existing FICC sponsoring member.
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change), the Sponsoring Member would
not be permitted to submit activity into
its Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts,
unless otherwise determined by NSCC
in order to promote orderly settlement.
As defined in Section 5 of proposed
Rule 2C, Sponsored Member
Transactions are SFTs between a
Sponsoring Member and its Sponsored
Members.
The Sponsoring Member would
establish one or more accounts at NSCC
for its Sponsored Members’ positions
arising from such Sponsored Member
Transactions, i.e., Sponsored Member
Sub-Accounts, which would be separate
from the Sponsoring Member’s
proprietary accounts. For operational
and administrative purposes, NSCC
would interact solely with the
Sponsoring Member as agent of its
Sponsored Members.
Sponsoring Members would be
responsible for providing NSCC with a
Sponsoring Member Guaranty (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change) whereby the Sponsoring
Member guarantees to NSCC the
payment and performance by its
Sponsored Members of their obligations
under the Sponsored Member
Transactions submitted by the
Sponsoring Member for novation.
Although Sponsored Members are
principally liable to NSCC for their own
settlement obligations under such
transactions in accordance with the
Rules, the Sponsoring Member Guaranty
requires the Sponsoring Member to
satisfy those settlement obligations on
behalf of a Sponsored Member if the
Sponsored Member defaults and fails
perform its settlement obligations.
In addition, a Sponsoring Member
would be responsible for posting to
NSCC all of the Clearing Fund
associated with the Sponsored Member
Transactions (which would not be
netted across Sponsored Members for
Clearing Fund purposes) and covering
any default loss allocable to its
Sponsored Members, as well as its own
default loss allocation as a Member.42
42 The following example illustrates how loss
allocation would occur with respect to Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members: Assume NSCC
incurs a $100 million aggregate loss from a
Defaulting Member Event. In addition, assume that
the Corporate Contribution amount that NSCC
would first apply to any loss from a Defaulting
Member Event is $25 million. This means NSCC
would allocate the remaining $75 million losses
(i.e., $100 million minus $25 million) to Members
pursuant to Section 4 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund),
including Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts as if
each were a Member. If the allocated losses to a
Sponsoring Member’s Sponsored Member SubAccounts is $1 million and the allocated losses to
its Sponsoring Member in its capacity as a Member
is $2 million, the Sponsoring Member would be
responsible for a total of $3 million loss allocation
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As proposed, consistent with FICC’s
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program for the reasons described above
in Item II(B)(iii) ‘‘Sponsoring Members
and Sponsored Members,’’ NSCC would
also provide a mechanism by which a
Sponsoring Member may cause the
termination and liquidation of a
Sponsored Member’s positions arising
from Sponsored Member Transactions
between the Sponsoring Member and
such Sponsored Member that have been
novated to NSCC.43
Sponsored Members
Consistent with the requirements
applicable to sponsored members in
FICC’s Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Program for the reasons
described above in Item II(B)(iii)
‘‘Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members,’’ any Person that has been
approved by NSCC to be sponsored into
membership by a Sponsoring Member
pursuant to proposed Rule 2C
(‘‘Sponsored Member’’) would be
required to be either a ‘‘qualified
institutional buyer’’ as defined by Rule
144A44 under the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended (‘‘Securities Act’’),45 or a
legal entity that, although not organized
as an entity specifically listed in
paragraph (a)(1)(i)(H) of Rule 144A
under the Securities Act, satisfies the
financial requirements necessary to be a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
specified in that paragraph.
(iv) Agent Clearing Members and
Customers
NSCC is proposing an agent clearing
membership designed to allow Members
to play the role of agent and credit
intermediary for their institutional firm
clients in clearing. This membership
type is being proposed in response to
the request of certain market
participants, including in particular
certain agent lending banks, that the
proposed SFT Clearing Service
accommodate agent-style trading (i.e.,
where the agent lender enters into the
transactions on behalf of its institutional
firm clients with a third-party market
participant, rather than acting as its
institutional firm clients’ principal prenovation counterparty). Agent-style
trading is the manner in which such
agent lenders are typically approved to
transact in securities lending
transactions on behalf of their
institutional firm clients. Under the
($1 million for its Sponsored Member Sub-Account
loss allocation amount and $2 million for its own
default loss allocation as a Member).
43 See Section 14 of proposed Rule 2C
(Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members).
44 17 CFR 230.144A.
45 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
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proposal, a Member that enters into
transactions on behalf of its institutional
firm clients in accordance with the
provisions of proposed Rule 2D (‘‘Agent
Clearing Member’’) would be permitted
to submit SFTs executed by it (as agent
on behalf of its institutional firm clients,
with each such client referred to as a
‘‘Customer’’) with a Member
participating in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service (which could include a
Member acting in a proprietary capacity
within the proposed SFT Clearing
Service as well as an Agent Clearing
Member).
All Members would be eligible to
apply to become Agent Clearing
Members in NSCC, subject to credit
criteria that are substantially similar to
those applicable to Sponsoring Members
as well as category 2 sponsoring
members in FICC’s Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program.46
Under the proposal, the requirements
to be imposed on Agent Clearing
Members would largely mirror those
imposed on Sponsoring Members.
However, NSCC is not proposing to
impose the same types of requirements
on an Agent Clearing Member’s
Customers as it does on Sponsored
46 If a Member is a Registered Broker-Dealer, then
such Member would only be eligible to apply to
become an Agent Clearing Member if it satisfies the
credit criteria in proposed Rule 2D (i.e., if it has (i)
Net Worth of at least $25 million and (ii) excess net
capital over the minimum net capital requirement
imposed by the SEC (or such higher minimum
capital requirement imposed by the Member’s
designated examining authority) of at least $10
million). Such credit criteria are comparable to the
credit criteria applicable to sponsoring members
that are registered broker-dealers in FICC’s
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program.
Similar to the review of a Sponsoring Member
applicant, an Agent Clearing Member applicant
would also be viewed and surveilled as the credit
counterparty to NSCC in light of its role as the
Member with respect to its Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account(s).
In addition, NSCC may require a Person be a
Member for a time period deemed necessary by
NSCC before that Person may be considered to
become an Agent Clearing Member. This
requirement may be imposed by NSCC on a new
Member that has yet to demonstrate a track record
of financial responsibility and operational
capability.
Furthermore, as proposed, the application of a
Member to be an Agent Clearing Member at NSCC
that is a Sponsoring Member or an existing FICC
sponsoring member would not be required to be
approved by the NSCC Board of Directors. NSCC
believes this approach to the Board of Director’s
approval for Agent Clearing Members is appropriate
in light of the fact that the critical components of
the FICC sponsoring member application as well as
the NSCC Sponsoring Member and Agent Clearing
Member applications and the criteria that the
respective boards assess when determining whether
to admit a Member in such respective capacities are
substantially similar. Nonetheless, NSCC would
apply the same rigorous counterparty credit review
process to any Member applying to be an Agent
Clearing Member at NSCC, whether or not the
Member is an existing FICC sponsoring member.
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Members because a Customer would not
be a direct member of NSCC.
Specifically, as proposed, an Agent
Clearing Member would be permitted to
submit to NSCC for novation Agent
Clearing Member Transactions (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change), on behalf of one or more of its
Customers, subject to an activity limit.
Specifically, under the proposal, if the
sum of the Volatility Charges applicable
to an Agent Clearing Member’s Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Account(s) (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) and its other
accounts at NSCC exceeds its Net
Member Capital, the Agent Clearing
Member would not be permitted to
submit activity into its Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account(s),
unless otherwise determined by NSCC
in order to promote orderly settlement.
As defined in Section 4 of proposed
Rule 2D, Agent Clearing Member
Transactions are SFTs that an Agent
Clearing Member submits to NSCC on
behalf of one or more Customers.
The Agent Clearing Member would
establish one or more accounts at NSCC
for its Customers’ positions, i.e., an
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account, that would be in the
name of the Agent Clearing Member for
the benefit of its Customers; however,
each Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account may only contain
activity where the Agent Clearing
Member is acting as Transferor on
behalf of its Customers, or as Transferee
on behalf of its Customers, but not both
(i.e., activity would not be netted across
Customers for Clearing Fund purposes).
Under the proposal, the Agent Clearing
Member would act solely as agent of its
Customers in connection with the
clearing of Agent Clearing Member
Transactions; however, the Agent
Clearing Member would remain fully
liable for the performance of all
obligations to NSCC arising in
connection with Agent Clearing Member
Transactions.
In addition, as proposed under the
sponsoring/sponsored membership
model, the Agent Clearing Member
would be responsible for posting to
NSCC all of the Clearing Fund
associated with the activity of its
Customers and covering any default loss
allocable to its Customers, as well as its
own default loss allocation as a
Member; 47 however, unlike a
47 The following example illustrates how loss
allocation would occur with respect to Agent
Clearing Members: Assume NSCC incurs a $100
million aggregate loss from a Defaulting Member
Event. In addition, assume that the Corporate
Contribution amount that NSCC would first apply
to any loss from a Defaulting Member Event is $25
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44539
Sponsoring Member, an Agent Clearing
Member would not be required to
provide an unconditional guaranty to
NSCC for its Customer’s obligations.
This is because, as described above, the
Agent Clearing Member would be fully
liable for all obligations of its Customers
under the Agent Clearing Member
Transactions that it submitted to NSCC
as the Member.
As proposed, NSCC would also
provide a mechanism by which an
Agent Clearing Member may, upon a
default of a Customer and consent of
NSCC, transfer Agent Clearing Member
Transactions of the Customer
established in one or more of the Agent
Clearing Member’s Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts
from such Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Accounts to the
Agent Clearing Member’s proprietary
account at NSCC as a Member.48
(v) Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member vs. Agent Clearing Member/
Customers
The direct costs of central clearing
(i.e., Clearing Fund, loss allocation, fees
and performance on behalf of an
institutional firm clients) would be
largely equivalent as between what
NSCC proposes to apply to a Sponsoring
Member and what NSCC proposes to
apply to an Agent Clearing Member.
Likewise, the capital costs to
Sponsoring Members and Agent
Clearing Members of intermediating
institutional firm activity as between the
two buy-side clearing models would be
largely equivalent. That being said,
because Sponsoring Members would be
required to ensure that (i) each of their
clients separately onboards with NSCC
as a Sponsored Member (which NSCC
understands is generally required from
an accounting perspective in order for
the Sponsoring Member to net on its
balance sheet its SFTs with Sponsored
Members against the Sponsoring
Member’s other NSCC-cleared SFTs),49
(ii) each of their client’s SFTs is
individually submitted to NSCC for
million. This means NSCC would allocate the
remaining $75 million losses (i.e., $100 million
minus $25 million) to Members pursuant to Section
4 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund), including Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts as if
each were a Member. If the allocated losses to an
Agent Clearing Member’s Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account is $1 million and the
allocated losses to the Agent Clearing Member in its
capacity as a Member is $2 million, the Agent
Clearing Member would be responsible for a total
of $3 million loss allocation ($1 million for its
Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Account loss allocation amount and $2 million for
its own default loss allocation as a Member).
48 See Section 11 of proposed Rule 2D (Agent
Clearing Members).
49 Supra note 11.
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clearing, and (iii) each Sponsored
Member continues to remain in
compliance with the financial standards
applicable to Sponsored Members
throughout the course of its
membership, Sponsoring Members may
incur more legal, onboarding,
operational and ongoing administrative
costs than Agent Clearing Members with
respect to their institutional firm
clearing activity.
However, the sponsoring/sponsored
membership model allows for principalstyle trading between a Sponsoring
Member and its Sponsored Member
where the Sponsoring Member and
Sponsored Member are pre-novation
counterparties, which would generally
create the opportunity for a Sponsoring
Member to make an economic spread
between its trade with its Sponsored
Member and its offsetting trades with
other NSCC Members or Sponsored
Members. The opportunity for such
economic spread and the ability of a
Sponsoring Member to achieve balance
sheet netting and capital efficiency on
such trading activity through the
novation of SFTs to NSCC could, for
some market participants, offset the
indirect additional costs associated with
acting as a Sponsoring Member, rather
than acting as an Agent Clearing
Member.
On the other hand, as NSCC
understands it, for some market
participants, particularly agent lenders,
their business models are not typically
predicated on principal-style trading.
Rather, these agency businesses
typically charge fees for their services
(rather than taking economic spreads)
and their business models and their
agreed upon investment guidelines with
their institutional firm customers may
only permit agented (rather than
principal-style) trading for securities
lending transactions. So, for such
market participants, participating in
clearing at NSCC as an Agent Clearing
Member may be a better fit for their
overall business model.
From the perspective of an
institutional firm client, the costs of
clearing that may be passed through to
it by its intermediary (depending on
their commercial arrangements) would
be largely equivalent. That said, some
institutional firms that engage in
securities lending may be prohibited
from acting as Sponsored Members and
engaging in principal-style trading with
their intermediary in clearing for
regulatory and/or investment guideline
reasons. For those institutional firms,
being able to transact SFTs as a
Customer within an Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account
would offer them a means to access
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central clearing that would otherwise
not be available to them if the
sponsoring/sponsored membership
model were the only model available for
buy-side clearing.
(vi) Proposed Rule Changes
(A) Proposed Rule 2C—Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members
NSCC is proposing to add Rule 2C,
entitled ‘‘Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members.’’ This new rule
would govern the proposed sponsored
membership and would be comprised of
14 sections, each of which is described
below.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 1 (General)
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2C would
be a general provision regarding the
Rules applicable to Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2C would
provide that NSCC will permit the
establishment of a sponsored
membership relationship between a
Member that is approved as a
Sponsoring Member and one or more
Persons that are accepted by NSCC as
Sponsored Members of that particular
Sponsoring Member. Section 1 of
proposed Rule 2C would further provide
that the rights, liabilities and obligations
of Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members shall be governed by proposed
Rule 2C, and that references to the term
‘‘Member’’ in other Rules would not
apply to Sponsoring Members and to
Sponsored Members, in their respective
capacities as such, unless specifically
noted as such in proposed Rule 2C or in
such other Rules.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2C would
also provide that a Sponsoring Member
shall continue to have all of the rights,
liabilities and obligations as set forth in
the Rules and in any agreement between
it and NSCC pertaining to its status as
a Member, and such rights, liabilities
and obligations shall be separate from
its rights, liabilities and obligations as a
Sponsoring Member except as
contemplated under Sections 7, 8 and 9
of proposed Rule 2C and under the
Sponsoring Member Guaranty.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 2
(Qualifications of Sponsoring Members,
the Application Process and
Continuance Standards)
Section 2 of proposed Rule 2C would
establish the eligibility requirements for
Members that wish to become
Sponsoring Members, the membership
application process that would be
required of each Member to become a
Sponsoring Member, the on-going
membership requirements that would
apply to Sponsoring Members, as well
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as the requirements regarding a
Sponsoring Member’s election to
voluntarily terminate its membership.
Under Section 2(a) of proposed Rule
2C, any Member would be eligible to
apply to become a Sponsoring Member;
however, if a Member is a Registered
Broker-Dealer, such Member would only
be permitted to apply to become a
Sponsoring Member if it has (1) Net
Worth (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) of at least $25
million and (2) excess net capital over
the minimum net capital requirement
imposed by the Commission (or such
higher minimum capital requirement
imposed by the Member’s designated
examining authority) of at least $10
million.50 In connection therewith,
NSCC is proposing ‘‘Net Worth’’ to
mean, as of a particular date, the
amount equal to the excess of the assets
of a Person over the liabilities of such
Person, computed in accordance with
generally accepted accounting
principles, and for Registered BrokerDealers, Net Worth shall include
liabilities that are subordinated to the
claims of creditors pursuant to a
satisfactory subordination agreement, as
defined in Appendix D to Rule 15c3–1
of the Act.51 As proposed, NSCC may
require that a Person be a Member for
a certain time period before that Person
may be considered to become a
Sponsoring Member.
Section 2(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that each Member
applicant to become a Sponsoring
Member would be required to provide
an application and other information
requested by NSCC. Sponsoring Member
applications shall first be reviewed by
NSCC and would require the Board of
Directors’ approval, unless the Member
applicant is already an Agent Clearing
Member under proposed Rule 2D or a
50 NSCC is proposing these financial minimums
for Registered Broker-Dealer Sponsoring Member
applicants to reflect the additional responsibility
that the applicant would undertake as a Sponsoring
Member. These financial minimums are determined
based on NSCC’s assessment of the minimum
capital that would be necessary for a broker-dealer
to conduct meaningful level of NSCC-cleared
activity while serving as a credit counterparty in
respect of others’ trades. In its assessment, NSCC
considered various factors, such as the amount of
a Registered Broker-Dealer Member’s capital and its
impact on such Member’s financial responsibility
and operational capability, comparability with the
financial requirements of other clearing agencies,
and the desire to strike a balance between credit
risk mitigation and member accessibility. For the
reasons described above in Item II(B)(iii)
‘‘Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members,’’
these financial minimums are also designed to be
consistent with the requirements applicable to
registered broker/dealers that are sponsoring
members in FICC’s Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Program.
51 17 CFR 240.15c3–1d.
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sponsoring member of FICC.52 NSCC
believes this approach to the Board of
Director’s approval for Sponsoring
Members is appropriate in light of the
fact that the critical components of the
FICC sponsoring member application as
well as the NSCC Sponsoring Member
and Agent Clearing Member
applications and the criteria that the
respective boards assess when
determining whether to admit a Member
in such respective capacities are
substantially similar.
Under Section 2(c) of proposed Rule
2C, if the Sponsoring Member
application is denied, such denial
would be handled in accordance with
Section 1 of Rule 2A (Initial
Membership Requirements).
As proposed in Section 2(d) of
proposed Rule 2C, NSCC may impose
additional financial requirements on a
Sponsoring Member applicant based
upon the level of the anticipated
positions and obligations of such
applicant, the anticipated risk
associated with the volume and types of
transaction such applicant proposes to
process through NSCC as a Sponsoring
Member and the overall financial
condition of such applicant. Under the
proposal, with respect to an application
of a Member to become a Sponsoring
Member that requires the Board of
Directors’ approval, the Board of
Directors shall also approve any
increased financial requirements
imposed by NSCC in connection with
the approval of the application, and
NSCC would thereafter regularly review
such Sponsoring Member regarding its
compliance with the increased financial
requirements.53
In addition, under Section 2(e) of
proposed Rule 2C, NSCC may require
each Sponsoring Member or any
Sponsoring Member applicant to furnish
adequate assurances of such Sponsoring
52 It is NSCC’s understanding that FICC is
evaluating a change to the GSD Rules to provide
that the application of an FICC sponsoring member
applicant that is already an NSCC Sponsoring
Member or Agent Clearing Member would not
require approval of FICC’s board of directors.
53 If the increased financial requirements are
imposed in connection with a Sponsoring Member
application that does not require the Board of
Directors’ approval, the increased financial
requirements would not be subject to the Board of
Directors’ approval. Nonetheless, once a Sponsoring
Member application is approved with increased
financial requirements, NSCC would thereafter
regularly review such Sponsoring Member
regarding its continued adherence to such increased
financial requirements as well as determine
whether such increased financial requirements are
still appropriate. If the Sponsoring Member is
unable to adhere to the increased financial
requirements, the Board of Directors may, pursuant
to Section 10 of proposed Rule 2C, suspend,
prohibit or limit the Sponsoring Member’s access to
NSCC’s services.
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Member or Sponsoring Member
applicant’s financial responsibility and
operational capability within the
meaning of Rule 15 (Assurances of
Financial Responsibility and
Operational Capability), as NSCC may at
any time or from time to time deem
necessary or advisable in order to
protect NSCC, its participants, creditors
or investors, to safeguard securities and
funds in the custody or control of NSCC
and for which NSCC is responsible, or
to promote the prompt and accurate
clearance, settlement and processing of
securities transactions.54
Section 2(f) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that each Member whose
Sponsoring Member application is
approved would sign and deliver to
NSCC (i) an agreement between NSCC
and the Member and specifies the terms
and conditions deemed by NSCC to be
necessary in order to protect itself and
its participants (‘‘Sponsoring Member
Agreement’’), (ii) a guaranty, in the form
and substance acceptable to NSCC,
whereby the Member, in its capacity as
a Sponsoring Member, guarantees to
NSCC the payment and performance by
its Sponsored Members of their
obligations under the Rules in respect of
the Sponsoring Member’s Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts, including,
without limitation all of the settlement
obligations of its Sponsored Members in
respect of such Sponsored Member SubAccounts (‘‘Sponsoring Member
Guaranty’’), and a related legal opinion
in a form satisfactory to NSCC. In
addition, Section 2(f) of proposed Rule
2C would provide that nothing in the
Rules shall prohibit a Sponsoring
Member from seeking reimbursement
from a Sponsored Member for payments
made by the Sponsoring Member
(whether pursuant to the Sponsoring
Member Guaranty, out of Clearing Fund
deposits or otherwise) with respect to
obligations as to which the Sponsored
Member is a principal obligor under the
Rules, or as otherwise may be agreed by
the Sponsored Member and Sponsoring
Member.
Section 2(g) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that each Sponsoring
Member shall submit to NSCC, within
the timeframes and in the formats
required by NSCC, the reports and
information that all Members are
required to submit regardless of type of
Member and the reports and
54 As an example, NSCC may require a
Sponsoring Member or a Sponsoring Member
applicant to furnish adequate assurances of such
Sponsoring Member or Sponsoring Member
applicant’s financial responsibility and operational
capability if NSCC has concerns about such
Sponsoring Member or Sponsoring Member
applicant’s overall financial health or credit rating.
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44541
information required to be submitted for
its respective type of Member, all
pursuant to Section 2 of Rule 2B
(Ongoing Membership Requirements
and Monitoring) and, if applicable,
Addendum O (Admission of Non-US
Entities as Direct NSCC Members).
Section 2(h) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsoring
Member’s books and records, insofar as
they relate to the Sponsored Member
Transactions submitted to NSCC, shall
be open to the inspection of the duly
authorized representatives of NSCC to
the same extent provided in Rule 2A
(Initial Membership Requirements) for
other Members.
Section 2(i) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall promptly inform NSCC,
both orally and in writing, if it is no
longer in compliance with the relevant
standards and qualifications for
applying to become a Sponsoring
Member set forth in the proposed Rule
2C. Notification must take place
immediately and in no event later than
2 Business Days from the date on which
the Sponsoring Member first learns of
its non-compliance. As proposed, NSCC
would assess a fine in accordance with
the Fine Schedule in Addendum P
against any Sponsoring Member that
fails to so notify NSCC.55 If the
Sponsoring Member fails to remain in
compliance with the relevant standards
and qualifications, NSCC would, if
necessary, undertake appropriate action
to determine the status of the
Sponsoring Member and its continued
eligibility as such. In addition, NSCC
may review the financial responsibility
and operational capability of the
Sponsoring Member, and otherwise
require from the Sponsoring Member
additional reports of its financial or
operational condition at such intervals
and in such detail as NSCC shall
determine. In addition, if NSCC has
reason to believe that a Sponsoring
Member may fail to comply with any of
the Rules applicable to Sponsoring
Members, it may require the Sponsoring
Member to provide it, within such
timeframe, and in such detail, and
pursuant to such manner as NSCC shall
determine, with assurances in writing of
a credible nature that the Sponsoring
Member shall not, in fact, violate any of
the Rules.
Section 2(j) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that in the event that a
Sponsoring Member fails to remain in
compliance with the relevant
requirements of the Rules, the
Sponsoring Member Agreement or the
55 See
Addendum P (Fine Schedule), supra note
4.
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Sponsoring Member Guaranty, NSCC
shall have the right to cease to act for
the Sponsoring Member in its capacity
as a Sponsoring Member pursuant to
Section 10 of proposed Rule 2C, unless
the Sponsoring Member requests that
such action not be taken and NSCC
determines that, depending upon the
specific circumstances and the record of
the Sponsoring Member, it is
appropriate instead to establish for such
Sponsoring Member a time period,
which shall be determined by NSCC and
which shall be no longer than 30
calendar days unless otherwise
determined by NSCC, during which the
Sponsoring Member must resume
compliance with such requirements. As
proposed, in the event that the
Sponsoring Member is unable to satisfy
such requirements within the time
period specified by NSCC, NSCC shall,
pursuant to the Rules, cease to act for
the Sponsoring Member in its capacity
as a Sponsoring Member pursuant to
Section 10 of the proposed Rule 2C.
Section 2(k) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that if the sum of the
Volatility Charges applicable to a
Sponsoring Member’s Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts and its other
accounts at NSCC exceeds its Net
Member Capital (as defined below and
in the proposed rule change), the
Sponsoring Member shall not be
permitted to submit activity into its
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts,
unless otherwise determined by NSCC
in order to promote orderly
settlement.56 As proposed, ‘‘Volatility
Charge’’ would mean, in respect to a
Member, the amount of its Required
Fund Deposit calculated by NSCC by
applying Sections I.(A)(1)(a)(i)–(iv) of
Procedure XV (Clearing Fund Formula
and Other Matters); ‘‘Net Member
Capital’’ would mean Net Capital (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change), net assets or equity capital, as
applicable to a Member, based on the
type of regulation, and in particular the
capital requirements, to which the
Member is subject; and ‘‘Net Capital’’
would mean, as of a particular date, the
amount equal to the net capital of a
Registered Broker-Dealer as defined in
Rule 15c3–1(c)(2) of the Act,57 or any
successor rule or regulation thereto.
56 NSCC selected the Volatility Charges and Net
Member Capital as the criteria for purposes of
establishing the activity limit for Sponsoring
Members. This is because a Sponsoring Member’s
total Volatility Charges being in excess of its Net
Member Capital is an important indicator that the
Sponsoring Member’s financial resources, as
measured by its Net Capital, net assets or equity
capital, may be insufficient to meet the largest
component of its Required Fund Deposit (i.e.,
Volatility Charges).
57 17 CFR 240.15c3–1(c)(2).
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Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsoring
Member may voluntarily elect to
terminate its status as a Sponsoring
Member, with respect to all Sponsored
Members or with respect to one or more
Sponsored Members from time to time,
by providing NSCC with a written
notice from a Sponsoring Member to
NSCC that the Sponsoring Member is
voluntarily electing to terminate its
status as a Sponsoring Member with
respect to all of its Sponsored Members
or with respect to one or more of its
Sponsored Members (‘‘Sponsoring
Member Voluntary Termination
Notice’’). The Sponsoring Member shall
specify in the Sponsoring Member
Voluntary Termination Notice the
Sponsored Member(s) in respect of
which the Sponsoring Member is
terminating its status (the ‘‘Former
Sponsored Members’’) and a desired
date for such termination, which date
shall not be prior to the scheduled Final
Settlement Date of any remaining
obligation owed by the Sponsoring
Member to NSCC with respect to the
Former Sponsored Members as of the
time such Sponsoring Member
Voluntary Termination Notice is
submitted to NSCC, unless otherwise
approved by NSCC.
Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2C
would also provide that such
termination would not be effective until
accepted by NSCC, which shall be no
later than 10 Business Days after the
receipt of the Sponsoring Member
Voluntary Termination Notice from
such Sponsoring Member. NSCC’s
acceptance shall be evidenced by a
notice to NSCC’s participants
announcing the termination of the
Sponsoring Member’s status as such
with respect to the Former Sponsored
Members and the date on which the
termination of the Sponsoring Member’s
status as a Sponsoring Member becomes
effective (‘‘Sponsoring Member
Termination Date’’). As proposed, after
the close of business on the Sponsoring
Member Termination Date, the
Sponsoring Member shall no longer be
eligible to submit Sponsored Member
Transactions on behalf of the Former
Sponsored Members, and each Former
Sponsored Member shall cease to be a
Sponsored Member unless it is the
Sponsored Member of another
Sponsoring Member. If any Sponsored
Member Transactions is submitted to
NSCC by the Sponsoring Member on
behalf of a Former Sponsored Member
that is scheduled to settle after the
Sponsoring Member Termination Date,
such Sponsoring Member’s Sponsoring
Member Voluntary Termination Notice
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would be deemed void, and the
Sponsoring Member would remain
subject to the proposed Rule 2C as if it
had not given such Sponsoring Member
Voluntary Termination Notice.
Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsoring
Member’s voluntary termination of its
status as such, in whole or in part, shall
not affect its obligations to NSCC, or the
rights of NSCC, including under the
Sponsoring Member Guaranty, with
respect to Sponsored Member
Transactions submitted to NSCC before
the applicable Sponsoring Member
Termination Date. Any such Sponsored
Member Transactions that have been
novated to NSCC shall continue to be
processed by NSCC. The return of the
Sponsoring Member’s Clearing Fund
deposit shall be governed by Section 7
of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund). If an Event
Period were to occur after a Sponsoring
Member has submitted the Sponsoring
Member Voluntary Termination Notice
but on or prior to the Sponsoring
Member Termination Date, in order for
the Sponsoring Member to benefit from
its Loss Allocation Cap pursuant to
Section 4 of Rule 4, the Sponsoring
Member would need to comply with the
provisions of Section 6 of Rule 4 and
submit a Loss Allocation Withdrawal
Notice, which notice, upon submission,
shall supersede and void any pending
Sponsoring Member Voluntary
Termination Notice previously
submitted by the Sponsoring Member.
Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that any non-public
information furnished to NSCC
pursuant to proposed Rule 2C shall be
held in confidence as may be required
under the laws, rules and regulations
applicable to NSCC that relate to the
confidentiality of records. Section 2(n)
would also provide that each
Sponsoring Member shall maintain
DTCC Confidential Information in
confidence to the same extent and using
the same means it uses to protect its
own confidential information, but no
less than a reasonable standard of care,
and shall not use DTCC Confidential
Information or disclose DTCC
Confidential Information to any third
party except as necessary to perform
such Sponsoring Member’s obligations
under the Rules or as otherwise required
by applicable law. Section 2(n) would
further provide that each Sponsoring
Member acknowledges that a breach of
its confidentiality obligations under the
Rules may result in serious and
irreparable harm to NSCC and/or DTCC
for which there is no adequate remedy
at law. In addition, Section 2(n) would
provide that in the event of such a
breach by the Sponsoring Member,
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Member and the Person seeking to
become a Sponsored Member.
Section 3(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that each Person to
become a Sponsored Member shall sign
and deliver to NSCC an agreement
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 3
whereby the Person shall agree to any
(Qualifications of Sponsored Members,
terms and conditions deemed by NSCC
Approval Process and Continuance
to be necessary in order to protect itself
Standards)
and its participants (the ‘‘Sponsored
Member Agreement’’). Each Person to
Section 3 of proposed Rule 2C would
establish the eligibility requirements for become a Sponsored Member that shall
be an FFI Member must be FATCA
Sponsored Members, the membership
Compliant.
application process that would be
Section 3(d) of proposed Rule 2C
required of each Sponsored Member, the
on-going membership requirements that would provide that a Sponsored
Member shall immediately inform its
would apply to Sponsored Members, as
Sponsoring Member, both orally and in
well as the requirements regarding a
writing, if the Sponsored Member is no
Sponsored Member’s election to
longer in compliance with the
voluntarily terminate its membership.
requirements of Section 3(a) of proposed
Section 3(a) of proposed Rule 2C
Rule 2C. A Sponsoring Member shall
would provide that a Person shall be
promptly inform NSCC, both orally and
eligible to apply to become a Sponsored in writing, if a Sponsored Member is no
Member if: (x) It is sponsored into
longer in compliance with the
membership by a Sponsoring Member,
requirements of Section 3(a) of proposed
and (y) it (1) is a ‘‘qualified institutional Rule 2C. Notification to NSCC by the
59
buyer’’ as defined by Rule 144A under Sponsoring Member must take place
the Securities Act,60 or (2) is a legal
within one (1) Business Day from the
entity that, although not organized as an date on which the Sponsoring Member
entity specifically listed in paragraph
first learns of the Sponsored Member’s
(a)(1)(i)(H) of Rule 144A under the
non-compliance. NSCC would assess a
Securities Act, satisfies the financial
fine in accordance with the Fine
requirements necessary to be a
Schedule in Addendum P against any
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
Sponsoring Member that fails to so
specified in that paragraph. NSCC
notify NSCC.61
would have the right to rely on the
Section 3(e) of proposed Rule 2C
representation provided by the
would provide that a Sponsored
Sponsoring Member regarding
Member may voluntarily elect to
satisfaction of (y).
terminate its membership by providing
Section 3(b) of proposed Rule 2C
NSCC with a written notice from the
would provide that each time that a
Sponsored Member to NSCC that the
Sponsoring Member wishes to sponsor a Sponsored Member is voluntarily
Person into membership, it shall
electing to terminate its membership
provide NSCC with the representation
(‘‘Sponsored Member Voluntary
referred to in Section 3(a) of proposed
Termination Notice’’). The Sponsored
Rule 2C, as well as any additional
Member shall specify in the Sponsored
information in such form as may be
Member Voluntary Termination Notice
prescribed by NSCC. NSCC shall
a desired date for the termination,
approve or disapprove Persons as
which date shall not be prior to the
Sponsored Members. If NSCC denies the scheduled Final Settlement Date of any
request of a Sponsoring Member to add
remaining obligation owed by the
a Person as a Sponsored Member, such
Sponsored Member to NSCC as of the
denial shall be handled in the same
time such Sponsored Member Voluntary
manner as set forth in Section 1 of Rule
Termination Notice is submitted to
2A (Initial Membership Requirements)
NSCC, unless otherwise approved by
with respect to membership
NSCC.
In addition, Section 3(e) of proposed
applications except that the written
Rule 2C would provide that such
statement referred to therein shall be
termination would not be effective until
provided to both the Sponsoring
accepted by NSCC, which shall be no
58 Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2C is designed
later than 10 Business Days after the
to be consistent with NSCC’s proposed change to
receipt of the Sponsored Member
revise certain provisions in the Rules relating to the
Voluntary Termination Notice from
confidentiality of information furnished by
such Sponsored Member. NSCC’s
participants. See Securities Exchange Act Release
acceptance shall be evidenced by a
No. 92334 (July 7, 2021), 86 FR 36815 (July 13,
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NSCC and/or DTCC shall be entitled to
seek any temporary or permanent
injunctive or other equitable relief in
addition to any monetary damages
thereunder.58
2021) (SR–NSCC–2021–007).
59 17 CFR 230.144A.
60 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
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61 See
Addendum P (Fine Schedule), supra note
4.
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44543
notice to NSCC’s participants
announcing the termination of the
Sponsored Member and the date on
which the termination of the Sponsored
Member becomes effective (‘‘Sponsored
Member Termination Date’’). After the
close of business on the Sponsored
Member Termination Date, the relevant
Sponsoring Member shall no longer be
eligible to submit Sponsored Member
Transactions on behalf of the Sponsored
Member. If any Sponsored Member
Transaction is submitted to NSCC by the
relevant Sponsoring Member on behalf
of the Sponsored Member that is
scheduled to settle after the Sponsored
Member Termination Date, such
Sponsored Member’s Sponsored
Member Voluntary Termination Notice
would be deemed void, and the
Sponsored Member would remain
subject to the proposed Rule 2C as if it
had not given such Sponsored Member
Voluntary Termination Notice.
Section 3(f) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsored
Member’s voluntary termination shall
not affect its obligations to NSCC, or the
rights of NSCC, including under the
Sponsoring Member Guaranty, with
respect to Sponsored Member
Transactions submitted to NSCC before
the Sponsored Member Termination
Date, and the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty shall remain in effect to cover
all outstanding obligations of the
Sponsored Member to NSCC that are
within the scope of such Sponsoring
Member Guaranty.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 4
(Compliance With Laws)
Section 4 of proposed Rule 2C would
provide that each Sponsoring Member
and Sponsored Member shall comply in
all material respects with all applicable
laws, including applicable laws relating
to securities, taxation and money
laundering, as well as global sanctions
laws, in connection with the use of
NSCC’s services.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 5 (Sponsored
Member Transactions)
Section 5 of proposed Rule 2C would
provide that a Sponsoring Member shall
be permitted to submit to NSCC SFTs
between itself and its Sponsored
Members (‘‘Sponsored Member
Transactions’’) in accordance with
proposed Rule 56, as described below.
Section 5 of proposed Rule 2C would
further provide that NSCC directs each
Sponsored Member and Sponsoring
Member to settle all Final Settlement,
Rate Payment, Price Differential, and
other securities delivery and payment
obligations arising under a Sponsored
Member Transaction that has been
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novated to NSCC by causing the
relevant cash and securities to be
transferred to the Transferor or
Transferee, as applicable, on the books
and records of the Sponsoring Member,
and each Sponsored Member and
Sponsoring Member agrees that any
such transfer shall satisfy NSCC’s
corresponding obligation with respect to
such Sponsored Member Transaction.
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Proposed Rule 2C, Section 6
(Sponsoring Member Agent Obligations)
Section 6 of proposed Rule 2C would
provide that a Sponsored Member shall
appoint its Sponsoring Member to act as
agent with respect to the Sponsored
Member’s satisfaction of its settlement
obligations arising under Sponsored
Member Transactions between the
Sponsored Member and the Sponsoring
Member and for performing all
functions and receiving reports and
information set forth in the Rules.
NSCC’s provision of such reports and
information to the Sponsoring Member
shall constitute satisfaction of any
obligation of NSCC to provide such
reports and information to the affected
Sponsored Members. As proposed,
notwithstanding the foregoing and any
other activities the Sponsoring Member
may perform in its capacity as agent for
Sponsored Members, each Sponsored
Member shall be obligated as principal
to NSCC with respect to all settlement
obligations under the Rules, and the
Sponsoring Member shall not be a
principal under the Rules with respect
to settlement obligations of its
Sponsored Members.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 7 (Clearing
Fund Obligations)
Section 7 of proposed Rule 2C would
set forth the Clearing Fund obligations.
Section 7(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that NSCC shall
maintain a ledger maintained on the
books and records of NSCC for a
Sponsoring Member that reflects the
outstanding SFTs that a Sponsoring
Member enters into in respect of a
Sponsored Member and that have been
novated to NSCC, the SFT Positions or
SFT Cash associated with those
transactions and any debits or credits of
cash associated with such transactions
effected pursuant to Rule 12
(Settlement) (each a ‘‘Sponsored
Member Sub-Account’’). Each
Sponsoring Member shall make and
maintain so long as such Member is a
Sponsoring Member a deposit to the
Clearing Fund as a Required Fund
Deposit to support the activity in its
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts (the
‘‘Sponsoring Member Required Fund
Deposit’’). Deposits to the Clearing Fund
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would be held by NSCC or its
designated agents, to be applied as
provided in the Rules.
Section 7(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that, in the ordinary
course, for purposes of satisfying the
Sponsoring Member’s Clearing Fund
requirements under the Rules for its
Member activity, its Sponsoring
Member activity, and, to the extent
applicable, its Agent Clearing Member
activity, the Sponsoring Member’s
proprietary accounts, its Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts, and its Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Account(s), if any, shall be treated
separately, as if they were accounts of
separate entities. Notwithstanding the
previous sentence, however, NSCC may,
in its sole discretion, at any time and
without prior notice to the Sponsoring
Member (but being obligated to give
notice to the Sponsoring Member as
soon as possible thereafter) and whether
or not the Sponsoring Member or any of
its Sponsored Members is in default of
its obligations to NSCC, treat the
Sponsoring Member’s accounts as a
single account for the purpose of
applying Clearing Fund deposits; apply
Clearing Fund deposits made by the
Sponsoring Member with respect to any
account as necessary to ensure that the
Sponsoring Member meets all of its
obligations to NSCC under any other
account(s); and otherwise exercise all
rights to offset and net against the
Clearing Fund deposits any net
obligations among any or all of the
accounts, whether or not any other
Person is deemed to have any interest in
such account.62
62 NSCC believes it unlikely that it would exercise
this authority, as the Clearing Fund deposits
associated with each Sponsored Member SubAccount, Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account and proprietary account of a
Sponsoring Member are designed to be sufficient to
cover the obligations of such account or subaccount. However, if a Sponsoring Member defaults
or fails to perform and the Clearing Fund deposits
associated with a given account or sub-account of
such Sponsoring Member are not sufficient to
discharge the Sponsoring Member’s obligations in
relation to such account or sub-account, NSCC
would look to the Clearing Fund deposits related
to the Sponsoring Member’s other accounts or subaccounts. For example, if NSCC ceased to act for a
Sponsoring Member and the close-out of the SFT
Positions established in the Sponsoring Member’s
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts resulted in a loss
to NSCC in excess of the Clearing Fund previously
posted by the Sponsoring Member in relation to
such SFT Positions, NSCC may apply to the excess
any other Clearing Fund deposits posted by the
Sponsoring Member to NSCC, such as Clearing
Fund posted in connection with the proprietary
positions of the Sponsoring Member. Similarly, if
a Sponsoring Member failed to perform under the
Sponsoring Member Guaranty outside the context of
a cease-to-act situation and the Clearing Fund
previously posted by the Sponsoring Member in
relation to the SFT Positions established in the
Sponsoring Member’s Sponsored Member Sub-
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Section 7(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that the Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit for each
Sponsored Member Sub-Account shall
be calculated separately based on the
Sponsored Member Transactions in
such Sponsored Member Sub-Account,
and the Sponsoring Member shall, as
principal, be required to satisfy the
Sponsoring Member Required Fund
Deposit for each of the Sponsoring
Member’s Sponsored Member SubAccounts.
Section 7(d) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that Sections 1, 2, 4, 5,
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 of Rule 4
(Clearing Fund) shall apply to the
Sponsoring Member Required Fund
Deposit with respect to obligations of a
Sponsoring Member under the Rules,
including its obligations arising under
the Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts,
and the obligations of a Sponsoring
Member under its Sponsoring Member
Guaranty to the same extent as such
sections apply to any Required Fund
Deposit and any other obligations of a
Member. For purposes of Section 1 of
Rule 4, obligations and liabilities of a
Member to NSCC that shall be secured
shall include, without limitation, a
Member’s obligations as a Sponsoring
Member under the Rules, including,
without limitation, any obligation of any
such Sponsoring Member to provide the
Sponsoring Member Required Fund
Deposit, such Sponsoring Member’s
obligations arising under the Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts of such
Sponsoring Member and such
Sponsoring Member’s obligations under
its Sponsoring Member Guaranty.
Section 7(e) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall be subject to such fines as
may be imposed in accordance with the
Rules for any late satisfaction of a
Clearing Fund deficiency call.
Accounts was not sufficient to satisfy the
obligations under the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty, NSCC may apply to the remainder any
other Clearing Fund deposits posted by the
Sponsoring Member to NSCC.
NSCC believes this is appropriate because the
Clearing Fund deposits of a Sponsoring Member are
the proprietary assets of the Sponsoring Member,
and NSCC generally has the right to apply the
Clearing Fund deposits of a Member to any of the
Member’s obligations to NSCC, regardless of
whether those were the obligations that generated
the Clearing Fund deposit requirement. NSCC
therefore believes that, consistent with the FICC
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program
for the reasons described above in Item II(B)(iii)
‘‘Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members,’’ a
Sponsoring Member’s Clearing Fund deposits
should be available to satisfy any of the Sponsoring
Member’s guaranty or other obligations to NSCC.
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Proposed Rule 2C, Section 8 (Right of
Offset)
Section 8 of proposed Rule 2C would
provide that in the ordinary course,
with respect to satisfaction of any
Sponsored Member’s obligations under
the Rules, the Sponsoring Member’s
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts, the
Sponsoring Member’s proprietary
accounts, and the Sponsoring Member’s
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts, if any, at NSCC
shall be treated separately, as if they
were accounts of separate entities.
Notwithstanding the previous sentence,
however, NSCC may, in its sole
discretion, at any time any obligation of
the Sponsoring Member arises under the
Sponsoring Member Guaranty to pay or
perform thereunder with respect to any
Sponsored Member, exercise a right of
offset and net any such obligation of the
Sponsoring Member under its
Sponsoring Member Guaranty against
any obligations of NSCC to the
Sponsoring Member in respect of such
Sponsoring Member’s proprietary
accounts at NSCC.63 NSCC would
generally anticipate exercising this right
if, upon a Sponsoring Member default,
the Sponsoring Member owed an
amount under the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty and was owed an amount by
NSCC in relation to the Sponsoring
Member’s proprietary or other
obligations.
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Proposed Rule 2C, Section 9 (Loss
Allocation Obligations)
Section 9 of proposed Rule 2C would
establish loss allocation obligations
under the sponsored membership
model.
Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that Sponsored Members
shall not be obligated for allocations,
pursuant to Rule 4 (Clearing Fund), of
loss or liability incurred by NSCC. To
the extent that a loss or liability is
determined by NSCC to arise in
connection with Sponsored Member
Transactions (i.e., in connection with
the insolvency or default of a
Sponsoring Member), the Sponsored
Members shall not be responsible for or
considered in the loss allocation
calculation, but rather such loss shall be
63 NSCC believes the most likely circumstance in
which it would exercise this authority would be in
the context of a Sponsoring Member default. If, in
such circumstance, NSCC realizes a profit in closing
out the positions associated with a proprietary
account of the Sponsoring Member, but incurs a
loss in closing out the positions associated with the
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts of the
Sponsoring Member, it would offset its obligation
to turn over to the Sponsoring Member the gains in
relation to the Sponsoring Member’s proprietary
account against the obligations of the Sponsoring
Member under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty.
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allocated to other Members in
accordance with the principles set forth
in Section 4 of Rule 4.
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that, to the extent NSCC
incurs a loss or liability from a
Defaulting Member Event or a Declared
Non-Default Loss Event and a loss
allocation obligation arises, that would
be the responsibility of a Sponsored
Member Sub-Account as if the
Sponsored Member Sub-Account were a
Member, NSCC shall calculate such loss
allocation obligation as if the affected
Sponsored Member were subject to such
allocations pursuant to Section 4 of Rule
4, but the Sponsoring Member shall be
responsible for satisfying such
obligations.
Section 9(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that the entire amount of
the Required Fund Deposit associated
with the Sponsoring Member’s
proprietary accounts at NSCC and the
entire amount of the Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit may be
used to satisfy any amount allocated
against a Sponsoring Member, whether
in its capacity as a Member, a
Sponsoring Member, or otherwise. With
respect to an obligation to make
payment due to any loss allocation
amounts assessed on a Sponsoring
Member pursuant to Section 9(b) of
proposed Rule 2C, the Sponsoring
Member may instead elect to terminate
its membership in NSCC pursuant to
Section 6 of Rule 4 and thereby benefit
from its Loss Allocation Cap pursuant to
Section 4 of Rule 4; however, for the
purpose of determining the Loss
Allocation Cap for such Sponsoring
Member, its Required Fund Deposit
shall be the sum of its Required Fund
Deposits associated with its proprietary
accounts at NSCC (including its
proprietary SFT Account (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
pursuant to proposed Rule 56), its
Sponsoring Member Required Fund
Deposit, and its Agent Clearing Member
Required Fund Deposits, if any, for each
of its Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 10
(Restrictions on Access to Services by a
Sponsoring Member)
Section 10 of proposed Rule 2C would
establish the rights of NSCC to restrict
a Sponsoring Member’s access to
NSCC’s services.
Section 10(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that the Board of
Directors may at any time, upon NSCC
providing notice to a Sponsoring
Member pursuant to Section 5 of Rule
45 (Notices), suspend a Sponsoring
Member in its capacity as a Sponsoring
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Member from any service provided by
NSCC either with respect to a particular
transaction or transactions or with
respect to transactions generally or
prohibit or limit such Sponsoring
Member’s access to services offered by
NSCC in the event that one or more of
the factors set forth in Section 1 of Rule
46 (Restrictions on Access to Services)
is present with respect to the
Sponsoring Member.
Section 10(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that Rule 46 shall apply
with respect to a Sponsoring Member in
the same way as it applies to Members,
including the Board of Directors’ right to
summarily suspend the Sponsoring
Member and to cease to act for such
Sponsoring Member. As under Rule 46,
the Board of Directors would need to
make the determination of whether to
suspend, prohibit or limit a Sponsoring
Member’s access to services offered by
NSCC on the basis of the factors set
forth in that rule.
Section 10(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that if NSCC ceases to
act for a Sponsoring Member in its
capacity as a Sponsoring Member,
Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 shall
apply and NSCC shall decline to accept
or process data from the Sponsoring
Member on Sponsored Member
Transactions and NSCC shall cease to
act for all of the Sponsored Members of
the affected Sponsoring Member (unless
such Sponsored Members are also
Sponsored Members of other
Sponsoring Members). Section 10(c)
would also provide that if NSCC
suspends, prohibits or limits a
Sponsoring Member in its capacity as a
Sponsoring Member with respect to
such Sponsoring Member’s access to
services offered by NSCC, NSCC shall
decline to accept or process data from
the Sponsoring Member on Sponsored
Member Transactions and shall suspend
the Sponsored Members of the affected
Sponsoring Member (unless they are
also Sponsored Members of other
Sponsoring Members) for so long as
NSCC is suspending, prohibiting or
limiting the Sponsoring Member. Any
Sponsored Member Transactions which
have been novated to NSCC shall
continue to be processed by NSCC. In
addition, Section 10(c) would provide
that NSCC, in in sole discretion, shall
determine whether to close-out the
affected Sponsored Member
Transactions or permit the Sponsored
Members to complete their settlement.
This is different from how NSCC
would treat Agent Clearing Member
Transactions of an Agent Clearing
Member under Section 9 of proposed
Rule 2D if NSCC ceased to act for the
Agent Clearing Member. Specifically,
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for Agent Clearing Member
Transactions, as proposed, NSCC would
close-out any Agent Clearing Member
Transactions which have been novated
to NSCC; however, with respect to
Sponsored Member Transactions,
consistent with FICC’s Sponsoring
Member/Sponsored Member Program
for the reasons described above in Item
II(B)(iii) ‘‘Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members,’’ NSCC would
have the option to either terminate or
settle a Sponsored Member’s novated
positions after ceasing to act for the
Sponsoring Member. NSCC would have
the practical and legal capability to
make such an election because each
Sponsored Member would be a limitedpurpose member of NSCC. Accordingly,
NSCC would have the requisite
information about each of the
Sponsored Member’s novated positions
(by virtue of each Sponsored Member’s
novated portfolio represented as a
different sub-account of the Sponsoring
Member (i.e., Sponsored Member SubAccount) on the books and records of
NSCC) to make such an election. By
contrast, an Agent Clearing Member’s
Customers would not be limitedpurpose members of NSCC nor would
NSCC know which transactions within
an Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account belong to which
Customers. As such, NSCC would not be
able to separately terminate or complete
settlement with respect to Customers’
novated positions.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 11
(Restrictions on Access to Services by a
Sponsored Member)
Section 11 of proposed Rule 2C would
establish the rights of NSCC to restrict
a Sponsored Member’s access to NSCC’s
services.
Section 11(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that the Board of
Directors may at any time upon NSCC
providing notice to a Sponsored
Member and its Sponsoring Member
pursuant to Section 5 of Rule 45
(Notices), suspend a Sponsored Member
from any service provided by NSCC
either with respect to a particular
transaction or transactions or with
respect to transactions generally, or
prohibit or limit such Sponsored
Member with respect to access to
services offered by NSCC in the event
that one or more of the factors set forth
in Section 1 of Rule 46 (Restrictions on
Access to Services) is present with
respect to the Sponsored Member.
Section 11(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that Rule 46 shall apply
with respect to a Sponsored Member in
the same way as it applies to Members,
including the Board of Directors’ right to
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summarily suspend a Sponsored
Member and to cease to act for such
Sponsored Member. As under Rule 46,
the Board of Directors would need to
make the determination of whether to
suspend, prohibit or limit a Sponsored
Member’s access to services offered by
NSCC on the basis of the factors set
forth in that rule.
Section 11(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that if NSCC ceases to
act for a Sponsored Member, Section 14
of proposed Rule 56 shall apply.
Section 11(d) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that NSCC shall cease to
act for a Sponsored Member that is no
longer in compliance with the
requirements of Section 3(a) of proposed
Rule 2C.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 12
(Insolvency of a Sponsoring Member)
Section 12(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall be obligated to
immediately notify NSCC that (a) it
fails, or is unable, to perform its
contracts or obligations or (b) it is
insolvent, as required by Section 1 of
Rule 20 (Insolvency) for other Members.
A Sponsoring Member shall be treated
by NSCC in all respects as insolvent
under the same circumstances set forth
in Section 2 of Rule 20 for other
Members. Section 3 of Rule 20 shall
apply, in the same manner in which
such section applies to other Members,
in the case where NSCC treats a
Sponsoring Member as insolvent.
Section 12(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that in the event that
NSCC determines to treat a Sponsoring
Member as insolvent pursuant to Rule
20 (Insolvency), NSCC shall have the
right to cease to act for the insolvent
Sponsoring Member pursuant to Section
10 of the proposed Rule 2C. If NSCC
ceases to act for the insolvent
Sponsoring Member, NSCC shall
decline to accept or process data from
the Sponsoring Member, including
Sponsored Member Transactions, and
NSCC shall terminate the membership
of all of the insolvent Sponsoring
Member’s Sponsored Members unless
they are the Sponsored Members of
another Sponsoring Member. Any
Sponsored Member Transactions which
have been novated to NSCC shall
continue to be processed by NSCC.
NSCC, in its sole discretion, shall
determine whether to close-out the
affected Sponsored Member
Transactions and/or permit the
Sponsored Members to complete their
settlement. This is different from how
NSCC would treat Agent Clearing
Member Transactions. As described
above, NSCC would close-out any Agent
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Clearing Member Transactions which
have been novated to NSCC. However,
with respect to Sponsored Member
Transactions, consistent with FICC’s
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program for the reasons described above
in Item II(B)(iii) ‘‘Sponsoring Members
and Sponsored Members,’’ NSCC would
have the option to either terminate or
settle a Sponsored Member’s novated
positions after ceasing to act for the
Sponsoring Member. This is because
NSCC would have the practical and
legal capability to make such an election
because each Sponsored Member would
be a limited-purpose member of NSCC.
Accordingly, NSCC would have the
requisite information about each of the
Sponsored Member’s novated positions
(by virtue of each Sponsored Member’s
novated portfolio represented as a
different sub-account of the Sponsoring
Member (i.e., Sponsored Member SubAccount) on the books and records of
NSCC) to make such an election. By
contrast, an Agent Clearing Member’s
Customers would not be limitedpurpose members of NSCC nor would
NSCC know which transactions within
an Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account belong to which
Customers. As such, NSCC would not be
able to separately terminate or complete
settlement with respect to Customers’
novated positions.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 13
(Insolvency of a Sponsored Member)
Section 13 of proposed Rule 2C would
establish NSCC’s rights in the event of
an insolvency of a Sponsored Member.
Section 13(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that a Sponsored
Member and its Sponsoring Member (to
the extent it has knowledge thereof)
shall be obligated to immediately notify
NSCC that the Sponsored Member is
insolvent or that the Sponsored Member
would be unable to perform any of its
material contracts, obligations or
agreements in the same manner as
required by Section 1 of Rule 20
(Insolvency) for other Members. For
purposes of Section 13 of proposed Rule
2C, a Sponsoring Member shall be
deemed to have knowledge that a
Sponsored Member is insolvent or
would be unable to perform on any of
its material contracts, obligations or
agreements if one or more duly
authorized representatives of the
Sponsoring Member, in its capacity as
such, has knowledge of such matters. A
Sponsored Member shall be treated by
NSCC in all respects as insolvent under
the same circumstances set forth in
Section 2 of Rule 20 for other Members.
Section 3 of Rule 20 shall apply, in the
same manner in which such section
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applies to other Members, in the case
where NSCC treats a Sponsored Member
as insolvent.
Section 13(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that in the event that
NSCC determines to treat a Sponsored
Member as insolvent pursuant to Rule
20 (Insolvency), NSCC shall have the
right to cease to act for the insolvent
Sponsored Member pursuant to Section
11 of the proposed Rule 2C. If NSCC
ceases to act for the insolvent Sponsored
Member, Section 14 of proposed Rule 56
shall apply with respect to the close-out
of the insolvent Sponsored Member’s
Sponsored Member Transactions.
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Proposed Rule 2C, Section 14
(Liquidation of Sponsored Member and
Related Sponsoring Member Positions)
Section 14 of proposed Rule 2C would
provide a mechanism by which a
Sponsoring Member may cause the
termination and liquidation of a
Sponsored Member’s positions arising
from Sponsored Member Transactions
between the Sponsoring Member and its
Sponsored Member that have been
novated to NSCC. Specifically, in the
event (i) the Sponsoring Member
triggers the termination of a Sponsored
Member’s positions or (ii) NSCC ceases
to act for the Sponsored Member and
the Sponsoring Member does not
continue to perform the obligations of
the Sponsored Member, both the
Sponsored Member’s positions and the
Sponsoring Member’s corresponding
positions arising from the Sponsored
Member Transactions between the
Sponsoring Member and the Sponsored
Member would be terminated.
Thereupon, the Sponsoring Member
would calculate a net liquidation value
of such terminated positions, which
liquidation value would be paid either
to or by the Sponsored Member by or to
the Sponsoring Member. NSCC would
not, as a practical matter, be involved in
such settlement and would not need to
take any market action because the
termination of the Sponsored Member’s
positions and the corresponding
Sponsoring Member’s positions would
leave NSCC flat. Additionally, the
Sponsoring Member would indemnify
NSCC for any claim by a Sponsored
Member arising out of the Sponsoring
Member’s calculation of the net
liquidation value.
Section 14(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would specify the scope of positions to
which Section 14 of proposed Rule 2C
applies. It would state that Section 14
only applies with respect to the
liquidation of positions resulting from
Sponsored Member Transactions that
have been novated to NSCC.
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Section 14(a) of proposed Rule 2C
would further state that such section
would only apply if (i) a Sponsoring
Member is a Defaulting Member and
NSCC has not ceased to act for the
Sponsoring Member and (ii) a
Corporation Default has not occurred.
This is because, as described above in
Section 12(b) of proposed Rule 2C,
NSCC would have discretion in the
event it ceases to act for a Sponsoring
Member to close-out the positions of
Sponsored Members for which the
defaulting Sponsoring Member was
responsible or to allow them to settle. If
NSCC does close-out such positions, it
would do so in accordance with Section
14 of proposed Rule 56. If a Corporation
Default has occurred with respect to
NSCC, each Sponsored Member’s
positions would be closed out in
accordance with Section 17 of proposed
Rule 56.
Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would set out the process by which a
Sponsoring Member or NSCC may cause
the termination of a Sponsored
Member’s positions. It would provide
that on any Business Day, the
Sponsoring Member or NSCC may cause
such termination by delivering a notice
to NSCC or the Sponsoring Member,
respectively. NSCC anticipates that each
Sponsored Member and Sponsoring
Member would agree in the bilateral
documentation between them as to what
circumstances or events give rise to the
ability of the Sponsoring Member to
deliver a notice to NSCC terminating the
Sponsored Member’s positions.64
The notice submitted by a Sponsoring
Member to NSCC (or vice versa) would
cause the termination of all of the SFT
Positions of the Sponsored Member
established in the Sponsored Member
Sub-Account. The notice would also
cause the immediate termination of the
corresponding SFT Positions of the
Sponsoring Member established in the
Sponsoring Member’s proprietary SFT
Account. The effect of such
64 It bears noting in this regard that termination
of the Sponsored Member’s positions would not be
the exclusive mechanism by which a Sponsoring
Member may limit its credit risk. As described
above, under Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2C, a
Sponsoring Member may voluntarily elect to
terminate its status as a Sponsoring Member in
respect of one or more Sponsored Members. Such
a termination would not affect the settlement of the
Sponsored Member’s existing positions but would
restrict the ability of the Sponsored Member to have
its future trades accepted for novation by NSCC
through such Sponsoring Member. The proposed
rule change in Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would not affect the functioning of the proposed
rule change in Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2C or
the general ability of a Sponsoring Member and the
Sponsored Member to agree on the circumstances
of when the Sponsoring Member may terminate its
status as Sponsoring Member for the Sponsored
Member.
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44547
terminations would be to leave NSCC
flat.
Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 2C
would also provide that the termination
of the Sponsored Member’s positions
(and the Sponsoring Member’s
corresponding positions) would be
effected by the Sponsoring Member’s
establishment of a final net settlement
position for each eligible security with
a distinct CUSIP number (‘‘Final Net
Settlement Position’’).
Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would specify how the Final Net
Settlement Positions established
pursuant to Section 14(b) of proposed
Rule 2C would be liquidated (i.e., how
such positions would be converted into
an amount payable). It would also
provide how the amount payable arising
from the liquidation of the Final Net
Settlement Positions would be
discharged.
Specifically, Section 14(c) of
proposed Rule 2C would first provide
that the Sponsoring Member would
liquidate the Final Net Settlement
Positions established pursuant to
Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 2C by
establishing (i) a single liquidation
amount in respect of the Sponsored
Member’s Final Net Settlement
Positions (a ‘‘Sponsored Member
Liquidation Amount’’) and (ii) a single
liquidation amount in respect of the
Sponsoring Member’s Final Net
Settlement Positions (a ‘‘Sponsoring
Member Liquidation Amount’’). The
Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount
would be owed either by NSCC to the
Sponsored Member or by the Sponsored
Member to NSCC because it would
relate to the Sponsored Member’s Final
Net Settlement Positions with NSCC,
while the Sponsoring Member
Liquidation Amount would be owed
either by NSCC to the Sponsoring
Member or by the Sponsoring Member
to NSCC because it would relate to the
Sponsoring Member’s Final Net
Settlement Positions with NSCC.
Because the Final Net Settlement
Positions of the Sponsoring Member
would be identical to, but in the
opposite direction of, the Final Net
Settlement Positions of the Sponsored
Member, the Sponsored Member
Liquidation Amount would equal the
Sponsoring Member Liquidation
Amount. Therefore, if NSCC were to
owe the Sponsored Member Liquidation
Amount to the Sponsored Member, the
Sponsoring Member would owe the
Sponsoring Member Liquidation
Amount to NSCC. By the same token, if
the Sponsored Member were to owe the
Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount
to NSCC, NSCC would owe the
Sponsoring Member the Sponsoring
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Member Liquidation Amount. In all
instances, NSCC would owe and be
owed the same amount of money.
Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would also provide how the Sponsoring
Member may calculate the Sponsoring
Member Liquidation Amount. It would
state that the Sponsoring Member may
calculate the Sponsoring Member
Liquidation Amount based on
prevailing market prices of the relevant
securities and/or the gains realized and
losses incurred by the Sponsoring
Member in hedging its risk associated
with the liquidation of the Sponsoring
Member’s Final Net Settlement
Positions. Section 14(c) of proposed
Rule 2C would further clarify that such
Sponsoring Member Liquidation
Amount may also take into account any
losses and expenses incurred by the
Sponsoring Member in connection with
the liquidation of the positions.
Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would further provide that, if a
Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount
is due to NSCC, the Sponsoring Member
would be obligated to pay such
Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount
to NSCC under the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty and that this obligation would,
automatically and without further
action, be set off against the obligation
of NSCC to pay the corresponding
Sponsoring Member Liquidation
Amount to the Sponsoring Member. By
virtue of such setoff, the Sponsored
Member’s obligation to NSCC would be
discharged, as would NSCC’s obligation
to the Sponsoring Member. The
Sponsoring Member would, however,
have a reimbursement claim against the
Sponsored Member in an amount equal
to the Sponsored Member Liquidation
Amount. This reimbursement claim
would arise as a matter of law by virtue
of the Sponsoring Member’s
performance under Sponsoring Member
Guaranty, though Sponsoring Members
and Sponsored Members may specify
terms related to the reimbursement
claim in their bilateral submission.
NSCC would have no rights or
obligations in respect of any such
reimbursement claim.
If a Sponsored Member Liquidation
Amount were owed by NSCC to the
Sponsored Member, Section 14(c) of
proposed Rule 2C would provide for the
Sponsoring Member to satisfy that
obligation by transferring the Sponsored
Member Liquidation Amount to the
Sponsoring Member’s account at its
Settling Bank (‘‘Sponsoring Member
Settling Bank Omnibus Account’’).
Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C
would state that, to the extent the
Sponsoring Member makes such a
transfer, it would discharge NSCC’s
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obligation to transfer the Sponsored
Member Liquidation Amount to the
Sponsored Member and the Sponsoring
Member’s corresponding obligation to
transfer the Sponsoring Member
Liquidation Amount to NSCC.
Section 14(d) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide for the Sponsoring
Member to indemnify NSCC and its
employees, officers, directors,
shareholders, agents, and Members
(collectively, the ‘‘Sponsoring/
Sponsored Membership Program
Indemnified Parties’’ or ‘‘SMP
Indemnified Parties’’) for any and all
losses, liability, or expenses arising from
any claim by an affected Sponsored
Member disputing the Sponsoring
Member’s calculation of any Sponsored
Member Liquidation Amount or
Sponsoring Member Liquidation
Amount.
Section 14(e) of proposed Rule 2C
would provide that NSCC acknowledges
that a Sponsoring Member may take a
security interest in NSCC’s obligations
to a Sponsored Member in respect of its
transactions that have been novated to
NSCC by such Sponsoring Member and
established in the Sponsoring Member’s
Sponsored Member Sub-Account for the
Sponsored Member. Such security
interest would not impose new
obligations on NSCC but could allow
the Sponsoring Member to direct NSCC
to submit payments due to the
Sponsored Member to the Sponsoring
Member, so that the Sponsoring Member
can apply such amounts to the
Sponsored Member’s unsatisfied
obligations to the Sponsoring Member.
(B) Proposed Rule 2D—Agent Clearing
Members
NSCC is proposing to add Rule 2D,
entitled ‘‘Agent Clearing Members.’’
This new rule would govern the
proposed agent clearing membership
and would be comprised of 12 sections,
each of which is described below.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 1 (General)
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2D would
be a general provision regarding the
Rules applicable to Agent Clearing
Members.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2D would
provide that NSCC will permit a
Member that is approved to be an Agent
Clearing Member to submit transactions
to NSCC for novation on behalf of one
or more of the Agent Clearing Member’s
Customers. Section 1 of proposed Rule
2D would further provide that the
rights, liabilities and obligations of
Agent Clearing Members shall be
governed by proposed Rule 2D, and that
references to the term ‘‘Member’’ in
other Rules would not apply to Agent
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Clearing Members, in their respective
capacities as such, unless specifically
noted as such in proposed Rule 2D or
in such other Rules.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2D would
also provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall continue to have all of the
rights, liabilities and obligations as set
forth in the Rules and in any agreement
between it and NSCC pertaining to its
status as a Member, and such rights,
liabilities and obligations shall be
separate from its rights, liabilities and
obligations as an Agent Clearing
Member except as contemplated under
Sections 6, 7 and 8 of proposed Rule 2D.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 2
(Qualifications of Agent Clearing
Members, the Application Process and
Continuance Standards)
Section 2 of proposed Rule 2D would
establish the eligibility requirements for
Members that wish to become Agent
Clearing Members, the membership
application process that would be
required of each Member to become an
Agent Clearing Member, the on-going
membership requirements that would
apply to Agent Clearing Members, as
well as the requirements regarding an
Agent Clearing Member’s election to
voluntarily terminate its membership.
Under Section 2(a) of proposed Rule
2D, any Member would be eligible to
apply to become an Agent Clearing
Member; however, if a Member is a
Registered Broker-Dealer, such Member
would only be permitted to apply to
become an Agent Clearing Member if it
has (1) Net Worth of at least $25 million
and (2) excess net capital over the
minimum net capital requirement
imposed by the Commission (or such
higher minimum capital requirement
imposed by the Member’s designated
examining authority) of at least $10
million.65 As proposed, NSCC may
65 NSCC is proposing these financial minimums
for Registered Broker-Dealer Agent Clearing
Member applicants to reflect the additional
responsibility that the applicant would undertake
as an Agent Clearing Member. These financial
minimums are determined based on NSCC’s
assessment of the minimum capital that would be
necessary for a broker-dealer to conduct meaningful
level of NSCC-cleared activity while serving as a
credit counterparty in respect of others’ trades. In
addition, NSCC is proposing these financial
minimums for Registered Broker-Dealer Agent
Clearing Member applicants to be consistent with
proposed requirements applicable to Registered
Broker-Dealer Sponsoring Member applicants.
NSCC believes this approach to financial
minimums is appropriate because both Sponsoring
Members and Agent Clearing Members would be
viewed and surveilled as the credit counterparties
to NSCC in respect of the transactions that they
submit for clearing in respect of Sponsoring
Member Sub-Accounts and Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Accounts, respectively.
Although the model of clearing would differ as
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require that a Person be a Member for
a certain time period before that Person
may be considered to become an Agent
Clearing Member.
Section 2(b) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that each Member
applicant to become an Agent Clearing
Member would be required to provide
an application and other information
requested by NSCC. Agent Clearing
Member applications shall first be
reviewed by NSCC and would require
the Board of Directors’ approval, unless
the Member applicant is already a
Sponsoring Member under proposed
Rule 2C or a sponsoring member of
FICC. NSCC believes this approach to
the Board of Directors’ approval for
Agent Clearing Members is appropriate
in light of the fact that the critical
components of the FICC sponsoring
member applications as well as the
NSCC Agent Clearing Member and
Sponsoring Member applications and
the criteria that the respective boards
assess when determining whether to
admit a Member in such respective
capacities are substantially similar.
Under Section 2(c) of proposed Rule
2D, if the Agent Clearing Member
application is denied, such denial
would be handled in accordance with
Section 1 of Rule 2A (Initial
Membership Requirements).
As proposed in Section 2(d) of
proposed Rule 2D, NSCC may impose
additional financial requirements on an
Agent Clearing Member applicant based
upon the level of the anticipated
positions and obligations of such
applicant, the anticipated risk
associated with the volume and types of
transaction such applicant proposes to
process through NSCC as an Agent
Clearing Member and the overall
financial condition of such applicant.
Under the proposal, with respect to an
application of a Member to become an
Agent Clearing Member that requires the
Board of Directors’ approval, the Board
of Directors shall also approve any
increased financial requirements
imposed by NSCC in connection with
the approval of the application, and
NSCC would thereafter regularly review
such Agent Clearing Member regarding
its compliance with the increased
financial requirements.66
between Sponsoring Members and Agent Clearing
Members, both would be types of Members that
would be standing behind the credit of their clients.
Accordingly, NSCC believes it is appropriate to use
consistent financial minimums.
66 If the increased financial requirements are
imposed in connection with an Agent Clearing
Member application that does not require the Board
of Directors’ approval, the increased financial
requirements would not be subject to the Board of
Directors’ approval. Nonetheless, once an Agent
Clearing Member application is approved with
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In addition, under Section 2(e) of
proposed Rule 2D, NSCC may require
each Agent Clearing Member or any
Agent Clearing Member applicant to
furnish adequate assurances of such
Agent Clearing Member or Agent
Clearing Member applicant’s financial
responsibility and operational capability
within the meaning of Rule 15
(Assurances of Financial Responsibility
and Operational Capability), as NSCC
may at any time or from time to time
deem necessary or advisable in order to
protect NSCC, its participants, creditors
or investors, to safeguard securities and
funds in the custody or control of NSCC
and for which NSCC is responsible, or
to promote the prompt and accurate
clearance, settlement and processing of
securities transactions.67
Section 2(f) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that each Member whose
Agent Clearing Member application is
approved would sign and deliver to
NSCC an agreement between NSCC and
the Member and specifies the terms and
conditions deemed by NSCC to be
necessary in order to protect itself and
its participants (‘‘Agent Clearing
Member Agreement’’) and a related legal
opinion in a form satisfactory to NSCC.
Section 2(g) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that each Agent Clearing
Member shall submit to NSCC, within
the timeframes and in the formats
required by NSCC, the reports and
information that all Members are
required to submit regardless of type of
Member and the reports and
information required to be submitted for
its respective type of Member, all
pursuant to Section 2 of Rule 2B
(Ongoing Membership Requirements
and Monitoring) and, if applicable,
Addendum O (Admission of Non-US
Entities as Direct NSCC Members).
Section 2(h) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member’s books and records, insofar as
they relate to the Agent Clearing
Member Transactions submitted to
NSCC, shall be open to the inspection
increased financial requirements, NSCC would
thereafter regularly review such Agent Clearing
Member regarding its continued adherence to such
increased financial requirements as well as
determine whether such increased financial
requirements are still appropriate. If the Agent
Clearing Member is unable to adhere to the
increased financial requirements, the Board of
Directors may, pursuant to Section 9 of proposed
Rule 2D, suspend, prohibit or limit the Agent
Clearing Member’s access to NSCC’s services.
67 As an example, NSCC may require an Agent
Clearing Member or an Agent Clearing Member
applicant to furnish adequate assurances of such
Agent Clearing Member or Agent Clearing Member
applicant’s financial responsibility and operational
capability if NSCC has concerns about such Agent
Clearing Member or Agent Clearing Member
applicant’s overall financial health or credit rating.
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44549
of the duly authorized representatives of
NSCC to the same extent provided in
Rule 2A (Initial Membership
Requirements) for other Members.
Section 2(i) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall promptly inform NSCC,
both orally and in writing, if it is no
longer in compliance with the relevant
standards and qualifications for
applying to become an Agent Clearing
Member set forth in the proposed Rule
2D. Notification must take place
immediately and in no event later than
2 Business Days from the date on which
the Agent Clearing Member first learns
of its non-compliance. As proposed,
NSCC would assess a fine in accordance
with the Fine Schedule in Addendum P
against any Agent Clearing Member that
fails to so notify NSCC.68 If the Agent
Clearing Member fails to remain in
compliance with the relevant standards
and qualifications, NSCC would, if
necessary, undertake appropriate action
to determine the status of the Agent
Clearing Member and its continued
eligibility as such. In addition, NSCC
may review the financial responsibility
and operational capability of the Agent
Clearing Member, and otherwise require
from the Agent Clearing Member
additional reports of its financial or
operational condition at such intervals
and in such detail as NSCC shall
determine. In addition, if NSCC has
reason to believe that an Agent Clearing
Member may fail to comply with any of
the Rules applicable to Agent Clearing
Members, it may require the Agent
Clearing Member to provide it, within
such timeframe, and in such detail, and
pursuant to such manner as NSCC shall
determine, with assurances in writing of
a credible nature that the Agent Clearing
Member shall not, in fact, violate any of
the Rules.
Section 2(j) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that in the event that an
Agent Clearing Member fails to remain
in compliance with the relevant
requirements of the Rules or the Agent
Clearing Member Agreement, NSCC
shall have the right to cease to act for
the Agent Clearing Member in its
capacity as an Agent Clearing Member
in accordance with Section 9 of
proposed Rule 2D or as a Member more
generally, unless the Agent Clearing
Member requests that such action not be
taken and NSCC determines that,
depending upon the specific
circumstances and the record of the
Agent Clearing Member, it is
appropriate instead to establish for such
Agent Clearing Member a time period,
68 See
Addendum P (Fine Schedule), supra note
4.
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which shall be determined by NSCC and
which shall be no longer than 30
calendar days unless otherwise
determined by NSCC, during which the
Agent Clearing Member must resume
compliance with such requirements. As
proposed, in the event that the Agent
Clearing Member is unable to satisfy
such requirements within the time
period specified by NSCC, NSCC shall,
pursuant to the Rules, cease to act for
the Agent Clearing Member in its
capacity as an Agent Clearing Member
pursuant to Section 9 of the proposed
Rule 2D or as a Member more generally.
Section 2(k) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that if the sum of the
Volatility Charges applicable to an
Agent Clearing Member’s Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Account(s) and its other accounts at
NSCC exceeds its Net Member Capital,
the Agent Clearing Member shall not be
permitted to submit activity into its
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account(s), unless otherwise
determined by NSCC in order to
promote orderly settlement.69 As
proposed, an ‘‘Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account’’ would
mean a ledger maintained on the books
and records of NSCC that reflects the
outstanding Agent Clearing Member
Transactions that an Agent Clearing
Member enters into on behalf of
Customers and that have been novated
to NSCC, the SFT Positions or SFT Cash
associated with those transactions, and
any debits or credits of cash associated
with such transactions effected pursuant
to Rule 12 (Settlement).
Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member may voluntarily elect to
terminate its status as an Agent Clearing
Member by providing NSCC with a
written notice from an Agent Clearing
Member to NSCC that the Agent
Clearing Member is voluntarily electing
to terminate its status as an Agent
Clearing Member (‘‘Agent Clearing
Member Voluntary Termination
Notice’’). The Agent Clearing Member
shall specify in the Agent Clearing
Member Voluntary Termination Notice
a desired date for such termination,
which date shall not be prior to the
scheduled Final Settlement Date of any
remaining obligation owed by the Agent
69 NSCC selected the Volatility Charges and Net
Member Capital as the criteria for purposes of
establishing the activity limit for Agent Clearing
Members. This is because an Agent Clearing
Member’s total Volatility Charges being in excess of
its Net Member Capital is an important indicator
that the Agent Clearing Member’s financial
resources, as measured by its Net Capital, net assets
or equity capital, may be insufficient to meet the
largest component of its Required Fund Deposit
(i.e., Volatility Charges).
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Clearing Member to NSCC as of the time
such Agent Clearing Member Voluntary
Termination Notice is submitted to
NSCC, unless otherwise approved by
NSCC.
Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2D
would also provide that such
termination would not be effective until
accepted by NSCC, which shall be no
later than 10 Business Days after the
receipt of the Agent Clearing Member
Voluntary Termination Notice from
such Agent Clearing Member. NSCC’s
acceptance shall be evidenced by a
notice to NSCC’s participants
announcing the termination of the
Agent Clearing Member’s status as such
and the date on which the termination
of the Agent Clearing Member’s status as
an Agent Clearing Member becomes
effective (‘‘Agent Clearing Member
Termination Date’’). As proposed, after
the close of business on the Agent
Clearing Member Termination Date, the
Agent Clearing Member shall no longer
be eligible to submit Agent Clearing
Member Transactions. If any Agent
Clearing Member Transaction is
submitted to NSCC by the Agent
Clearing Member that is scheduled to
settle after the Agent Clearing Member
Termination Date, such Agent Clearing
Member’s Agent Clearing Member
Voluntary Termination Notice would be
deemed void, and the Agent Clearing
Member would remain subject to the
proposed Rule 2D as if it had not given
such Agent Clearing Member Voluntary
Termination Notice.
Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member’s voluntary termination of its
status as such shall not affect its
obligations to NSCC, or the rights of
NSCC, with respect to Agent Clearing
Member Transactions submitted to
NSCC before the applicable Agent
Clearing Member Termination Date.
Any such Agent Clearing Member
Transactions that have been novated to
NSCC shall continue to be processed by
NSCC. The return of the Agent Clearing
Member’s Clearing Fund deposit shall
be governed by Section 7 of Rule 4
(Clearing Fund). If an Event Period were
to occur after an Agent Clearing Member
has submitted the Agent Clearing
Member Voluntary Termination Notice
but on or prior to the Agent Clearing
Member Termination Date, in order for
the Agent Clearing Member to benefit
from its Loss Allocation Cap pursuant to
Section 4 of Rule 4, the Agent Clearing
Member would need to comply with the
provisions of Section 6 of Rule 4 and
submit a Loss Allocation Withdrawal
Notice, which notice, upon submission,
shall supersede and void any pending
Agent Clearing Member Voluntary
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Termination Notice previously
submitted by the Agent Clearing
Member.
Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that any non-public
information furnished to NSCC
pursuant to proposed Rule 2D shall be
held in confidence as may be required
under the laws, rules and regulations
applicable to NSCC that relate to the
confidentiality of records. Section 2(n)
would also provide that each Agent
Clearing Member shall maintain DTCC
Confidential Information in confidence
to the same extent and using the same
means it uses to protect its own
confidential information, but no less
than a reasonable standard of care, and
shall not use DTCC Confidential
Information or disclose DTCC
Confidential Information to any third
party except as necessary to perform
such Agent Clearing Member’s
obligations under the Rules or as
otherwise required by applicable law.
Section 2(n) would further provide that
each Agent Clearing Member
acknowledges that a breach of its
confidentiality obligations under the
Rules may result in serious and
irreparable harm to NSCC and/or DTCC
for which there is no adequate remedy
at law. In addition, Section 2(n) would
provide that in the event of such a
breach by the Agent Clearing Member,
NSCC and/or DTCC shall be entitled to
seek any temporary or permanent
injunctive or other equitable relief in
addition to any monetary damages
thereunder.70
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 3
(Compliance With Laws)
Section 3 of proposed Rule 2D would
provide that each Agent Clearing
Member shall comply in all material
respects with all applicable laws,
including applicable laws relating to
securities, taxation and money
laundering, as well as global sanctions
laws, in connection with the use of
NSCC’s services.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 4 (Agent
Clearing Member Transactions)
Section 4 of proposed Rule 2D would
provide that an Agent Clearing Member
shall be permitted to submit to NSCC on
behalf of one or more Customers’
Securities Financing Transactions
(‘‘Agent Clearing Member
70 Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2D is designed
to be consistent with NSCC’s proposed change to
revise certain provisions in the Rules relating to the
confidentiality of information furnished by
participants. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 92334 (July 7, 2021), 86 FR 36815 (July 13,
2021) (SR–NSCC–2021–007).
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Transactions’’) in accordance with
proposed Rule 56, as described below.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 5 (Agent
Clearing Member Agent Obligations)
Section 5 of proposed Rule 2D would
establish rules-based obligations for
Agent Clearing Members and the
establishment of Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts.
Section 5(a) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall be permitted to submit to
NSCC for novation Agent Clearing
Member Transactions entered into by
the Agent Clearing Member as agent on
behalf of one or more Customers. Any
such submission shall be in accordance
with proposed Rule 2D. As proposed,
subject to the provisions of the Rules, an
Agent Clearing Member’s clearing of
Agent Clearing Member Transactions for
Customers (‘‘Customer Clearing
Service’’) may be provided by an Agent
Clearing Member to its Customers on
any terms and conditions mutually
agreed to by the Agent Clearing Member
and its Customers; provided, that each
Agent Clearing Member shall, before
providing Customer Clearing Service to
any Customer, enter into an agreement
with that Customer that binds the
Customer to the provisions of the Rules
applicable to Agent Clearing Member
Transactions and Customers.
Section 5(b) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that, with respect to an
Agent Clearing Member that submits
Agent Clearing Member Transactions to
NSCC for novation on behalf of its
Customers, NSCC shall maintain one or
more Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts in the name of the
Agent Clearing Member for the benefit
of its Customers. Each Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account
would be permitted to contain only (i)
SFTs entered into by the Agent Clearing
Member, on behalf of a Customer, as
Transferor or (ii) SFTs entered into by
the Agent Clearing Member, on behalf of
a Customer, as a Transferee. An Agent
Clearing Member would not be
permitted to combine SFTs entered into
as Transferee and Transferor in the same
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account. This is designed to
ensure that NSCC’s volatility-based
Clearing Fund deposit requirements
represent the sum of each individual
Customer’s activity (i.e., that the
positions are margined on a gross
basis).71
71 If an Agent Clearing Member were permitted to
maintain SFTs entered into as both Transferee and
Transferor in the same Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account, the Required Fund
Deposit obligations of the Agent Clearing Member
could potentially be reduced by offsetting SFT
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Section 5(c) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall act solely as agent of its
Customers in connection with the
clearing of Agent Clearing Member
Transactions; provided that the Agent
Clearing Member shall remain fully
liable for the performance of all
obligations to NSCC arising in
connection with Agent Clearing Member
Transactions; and provided further, that
the liabilities and obligations of NSCC
with respect to Agent Clearing Member
Transactions entered into by the Agent
Clearing Member shall extend only to
the Agent Clearing Member. Section 5(c)
of proposed Rule 2D would further
provide that, without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, NSCC shall
not have any liability or obligation
arising out of or with respect to any
Agent Clearing Member Transaction to
any Customer on behalf of whom an
Agent Clearing Member entered into the
Agent Clearing Member Transaction.
Section 5(d) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that nothing in the Rules
shall prohibit an Agent Clearing
Member from seeking reimbursement
from a Customer for payments made by
the Agent Clearing Member (whether
out of Clearing Fund deposits or
otherwise) under the Rules, or as
otherwise may be agreed between the
Agent Clearing Member and the
Customer.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 6 (Clearing
Fund Obligations)
Section 6 of proposed Rule 2D would
set forth the Clearing Fund obligations.
Section 6(a) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that NSCC shall
maintain one or more Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts
for an Agent Clearing Member. Each
Agent Clearing Member shall make and
maintain so long as such Member is an
Agent Clearing Member a deposit to the
Clearing Fund as a Required Fund
Deposit to support the activity in its
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account(s) (the ‘‘Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposit’’). Deposits to the Clearing Fund
would be held by NSCC or its
designated agents, to be applied as
provided in the Rules.
Section 6(b) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that, in the ordinary
course, for purposes of satisfying the
Agent Clearing Member’s Clearing Fund
requirements under the Rules for its
Member activity, its Agent Clearing
Member activity, and, to the extent
applicable, its Sponsoring Member
Positions of different Customers in the same SFT
Security.
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44551
activity, the Agent Clearing Member’s
proprietary accounts, its Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account(s),
and its Sponsored Member SubAccounts, if any, shall be treated
separately, as if they were accounts of
separate entities. Notwithstanding the
previous sentence, however, NSCC may,
in its sole discretion, at any time and
without prior notice to the Agent
Clearing Member (but being obligated to
give notice to the Agent Clearing
Member as soon as possible thereafter)
and whether or not the Agent Clearing
Member is in default of its obligations
to NSCC, treat the Agent Clearing
Member’s accounts as a single account
for the purpose of applying Clearing
Fund deposits; apply Clearing Fund
deposits made by the Agent Clearing
Member with respect to any account as
necessary to ensure that the Agent
Clearing Member meets all of its
obligations to NSCC under any other
account(s); and otherwise exercise all
rights to offset and net against the
Clearing Fund deposits any net
obligations among any or all of the
accounts, whether or not any other
Person is deemed to have any interest in
such account.72
Section 6(c) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that the Agent Clearing
Member Required Fund Deposit for each
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account shall be calculated
separately based on the Agent Clearing
Member Transactions in such Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Account, and the Agent Clearing
Member shall, as principal, be required
to satisfy the Agent Clearing Member
Required Fund Deposit for each of the
Agent Clearing Member’s Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts.
Section 6(d) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that Sections 1, 2, 4, 5,
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 of Rule 4
(Clearing Fund) shall apply to the Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposit with respect to obligations of an
Agent Clearing Member under the
Rules, including its obligations arising
under the Agent Clearing Member
72 NSCC believes this is appropriate because the
Clearing Fund deposits of an Agent Clearing
Member are the proprietary assets of the Agent
Clearing Member and NSCC generally has the right
to apply the Clearing Fund deposits of a Member
to any of the Member’s obligations to NSCC,
regardless of whether those were the obligations
that generated the Clearing Fund deposit
requirement. NSCC therefore believes that,
consistent with the FICC Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program for the reasons
described above in Item II(B)(iii) ‘‘Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members,’’ an Agent
Clearing Member’s Clearing Fund deposits should
be available to satisfy any of the Agent Clearing
Member’s obligations to NSCC.
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Customer Omnibus Account(s), to the
same extent as such sections apply to
any Required Fund Deposit and any
other obligations of a Member. For
purposes of Section 1 of Rule 4,
obligations and liabilities of a Member
to NSCC that shall be secured shall
include, without limitation, a Member’s
obligations as an Agent Clearing
Member under the Rules, including,
without limitation, any obligation of any
such Agent Clearing Member to provide
the Agent Clearing Member Required
Fund Deposit and such Agent Clearing
Member’s obligations arising under
SFTs established in the Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts
of such Agent Clearing Member.
Section 6(e) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall be subject to such fines as
may be imposed in accordance with the
Rules for any late satisfaction of a
Clearing Fund deficiency call.
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Proposed Rule 2D, Section 7 (Right of
Offset)
Section 7 of proposed Rule 2D would
provide that in the ordinary course,
with respect to satisfaction of any Agent
Clearing Member’s obligations under the
Rules, the Agent Clearing Member’s
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts, the Agent Clearing
Member’s proprietary accounts, and the
Agent Clearing Member’s Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts, if any, at NSCC
shall be treated separately, as if they
were accounts of separate entities.
Notwithstanding the previous sentence,
however, NSCC may, in its sole
discretion, at any time any obligation of
the Agent Clearing Member arises in
respect of any Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account, exercise a
right of offset and net any such
obligation against any obligations of
NSCC to the Agent Clearing Member in
respect of such Agent Clearing
Member’s proprietary accounts at NSCC.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 8 (Loss
Allocation Obligations)
Section 8 of proposed Rule 2D would
establish loss allocation obligations for
Agent Clearing Members.
Section 8(a) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that, to the extent NSCC
incurs a loss or liability from a
Defaulting Member Event or a Declared
Non-Default Loss Event and a loss
allocation obligation arises, that would
be the responsibility of the Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Account as if the Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account
were a Member, NSCC shall calculate
such loss allocation obligation and the
Agent Clearing Member shall be, as
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principal, responsible for satisfying
such obligations.
Section 8(b) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that the entire amount of
the Required Fund Deposit associated
with the Agent Clearing Member’s
proprietary accounts at NSCC and the
entire amount of the Agent Clearing
Member Required Fund Deposit may be
used to satisfy any amount allocated
against an Agent Clearing Member,
whether in its capacity as a Member, an
Agent Clearing Member, or otherwise.
With respect to an obligation to make
payment due to any loss allocation
amounts assessed on an Agent Clearing
Member pursuant to Section 8(a) of
proposed Rule 2D, the Agent Clearing
Member may instead elect to terminate
its membership in NSCC pursuant to
Section 6 of Rule 4 and thereby benefit
from its Loss Allocation Cap pursuant to
Section 4 of Rule 4; however, for the
purpose of determining the Loss
Allocation Cap for such Agent Clearing
Member, its Required Fund Deposit
shall be the sum of its Required Fund
Deposits associated with its proprietary
accounts at NSCC (including its
proprietary SFT Account pursuant to
proposed Rule 56), its Agent Clearing
Member Required Fund Deposit for each
of its Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts, and its Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit, if any.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 9
(Restrictions on Access to Services by
an Agent Clearing Member)
Section 9 of proposed Rule 2D would
establish the rights of NSCC to restrict
an Agent Clearing Member’s access to
NSCC’s services.
Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that the Board of
Directors may at any time upon NSCC
providing notice to an Agent Clearing
Member pursuant to Section 5 of Rule
45 (Notices), suspend an Agent Clearing
Member in its capacity as an Agent
Clearing Member from any service
provided by NSCC either with respect to
a particular transaction or transactions
or with respect to transactions generally,
or prohibit or limit such Agent Clearing
Member’s access to services offered by
NSCC in the event that one or more of
the factors set forth in Section 1 of Rule
46 (Restrictions on Access to Services)
is present with respect to the Agent
Clearing Member.
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that Rule 46 shall apply
with respect to an Agent Clearing
Member in the same way as it applies
to Members, including the Board of
Directors’ right to summarily suspend
the Agent Clearing Member and to cease
to act for such Agent Clearing Member.
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As under Rule 46, the Board of Directors
would need to make the determination
of whether to suspend, prohibit or limit
an Agent Clearing Member’s access to
services offered by NSCC on the basis of
the factors set forth in that rule.
Section 9(c) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that if NSCC ceases to
act for an Agent Clearing Member in its
capacity as an Agent Clearing Member,
Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 shall
apply and NSCC shall decline to accept
or process data from the Agent Clearing
Member on Agent Clearing Member
Transactions and close-out any Agent
Clearing Member Transactions that have
been novated to NSCC. Section 9(c)
would also provide that if NSCC
suspends, prohibits or limits an Agent
Clearing Member in its capacity as an
Agent Clearing Member with respect to
such Agent Clearing Member’s access to
services offered by NSCC, NSCC shall
decline to accept or process data from
the Agent Clearing Member on Agent
Clearing Member Transactions for so
long as NSCC is suspending, prohibiting
or limiting the Agent Clearing Member.
Furthermore, Section 9(c) would state
that, in addition, NSCC would close-out
any Agent Clearing Member
Transactions which have been novated
to NSCC.
This is different from how NSCC
would treat Sponsored Member
Transactions of a Sponsoring Member
under Section 10 of proposed Rule 2C
if NSCC ceases to act for the Sponsoring
Member. With respect to such
transactions, NSCC would have the
option to either terminate or settle a
Sponsored Member’s positions after
ceasing to act for the Sponsoring
Member. The reason for this difference
is that NSCC would have the practical
and legal capability to make such an
election because each Sponsored
Member would be a limited-purpose
member of NSCC. Accordingly, NSCC
would have the requisite information
about each of the Sponsored Member’s
novated positions (by virtue of each
Sponsored Member’s novated portfolio
represented as a different sub-account of
the Sponsoring Member (i.e., Sponsored
Member Sub-Account) on the books and
records of NSCC) to make such an
election. By contrast, an Agent Clearing
Member’s Customers would not be
limited-purpose members of NSCC nor
would NSCC know which transactions
within an Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account belong to
which Customers. As such, NSCC
would not be able to separately
terminate or complete settlement with
respect to Customer’s novated positions.
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Proposed Rule 2D, Section 10
(Insolvency of an Agent Clearing
Member)
Section 10(a) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall be obligated to
immediately notify NSCC that (a) it
fails, or is unable, to perform its
contracts or obligations or (b) it is
insolvent as required by Section 1 of
Rule 20 (Insolvency) for other Members.
An Agent Clearing Member shall be
treated by NSCC in all respects as
insolvent under the same circumstances
set forth in Section 2 of Rule 20 for
other Members. Section 3 of Rule 20
shall apply, in the same manner in
which such section applies to other
Members, in the case where NSCC treats
an Agent Clearing Member as insolvent.
Section 10(b) of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that in the event that
NSCC determines to treat an Agent
Clearing Member as insolvent pursuant
to Rule 20 (Insolvency), NSCC shall
have the right to cease to act for the
insolvent Agent Clearing Member
pursuant to Section 9 of proposed Rule
2D. If NSCC ceases to act for the
insolvent Agent Clearing Member,
NSCC shall decline to accept or process
data from the Agent Clearing Member,
including Agent Clearing Member
Transactions. As proposed, NSCC
would close-out any Agent Clearing
Member Transactions which have been
novated to NSCC.
This is different from how NSCC
would treat Sponsored Member
Transactions. As described above, NSCC
would have the option to either
terminate or settle a Sponsored
Member’s novated positions after
ceasing to act for the Sponsoring
Member. However, with respect to
Agent Clearing Member Transactions,
NSCC would close-out any such
transactions which have been novated
to NSCC. This is because NSCC would
have the practical and legal capability to
make such an election with respect to
Sponsored Member Transactions
because each Sponsored Member would
be a limited-purpose member of NSCC.
Accordingly, NSCC would have the
requisite information about each of the
Sponsored Member’s novated positions
(by virtue of each Sponsored Member’s
novated portfolio represented as a
different sub-account of the Sponsoring
Member (i.e., Sponsored Member SubAccount) on the books and records of
NSCC) to make such an election. By
contrast, an Agent Clearing Member’s
Customers would not be limitedpurpose members of NSCC nor would
NSCC know which transactions within
an Agent Clearing Member Customer
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Omnibus Account belong to which
Customers. As such, NSCC would not be
able to separately terminate or complete
settlement with respect to Customers’
novated positions.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 11 (Transfer
of Agent Clearing Member Transactions
in Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts)
Section 11 of proposed Rule 2D
would (i) permit an Agent Clearing
Member, upon a default of a Customer
and consent of NSCC, to transfer Agent
Clearing Member Transactions of the
Customer established in one or more of
the Agent Clearing Member’s Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts from such Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts
to the Agent Clearing Member’s
proprietary account at NSCC as a
Member and (ii) govern how the transfer
would be effectuated.
Section 11(a) of proposed Rule 2D
would clarify the scope to which
Section 11 of proposed Rule 2D applies.
It would state that Section 11 would not
apply if either (i) the relevant Agent
Clearing Member is a Defaulting
Member or (ii) a Corporation Default has
occurred. This is because, as described
above with respect to Section 10(b) of
proposed Rule 2D, NSCC would closeout all Agent Clearing Member
Transactions for which the defaulting
Agent Clearing Member was
responsible. If a Corporation Default has
occurred with respect to NSCC, each
Agent Clearing Member’s positions
would be closed out in accordance with
Section 17 of proposed Rule 56.
Section 11(b) of proposed Rule 2D
would set out the process by which an
Agent Clearing Member may transfer the
Agent Clearing Member Transactions of
a defaulting Customer in one or more of
Agent Clearing Member’s Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts. It would provide that, to the
extent permitted under applicable laws
and regulations, an Agent Clearing
Member may, upon a default of a
Customer and the consent of NSCC,
transfer the Agent Clearing Member
Transactions of the Customer
established in one or more of the Agent
Clearing Member’s Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts
from such Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Accounts to the
Agent Clearing Member’s proprietary
account at NSCC as a Member. As
proposed, any such transfer shall occur
by novation, such that the obligations
between NSCC and the relevant
Customer in respect of the Agent
Clearing Member Transactions shall be
terminated and replaced with identical
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44553
obligations between NSCC and the
Agent Clearing Member, acting as
principal. Section 11(b) would also
provide the Agent Clearing Member
shall indemnify NSCC, and its
employees, officers, directors,
shareholders, agents, and Members, for
any and all losses, liability, or expenses
incurred by them arising from, or in
relation to, any such transfer.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 12 (Customer
Acknowledgments)
Section 12 of proposed Rule 2D
would provide that each Agent Clearing
Member on behalf of each of its
Customers agrees that such Customer,
by participating in and entering into
Agent Clearing Member Transactions
through the Agent Clearing Member,
understands, acknowledges, and agrees
that: (a) The service provided by NSCC
with regard to the Customer Clearing
Service would be subject to and
governed by the Rules; (b) the Rules
shall govern the novation of Agent
Clearing Member Transactions and all
transactions between the Customer and
its Agent Clearing Member resulting in
the novation of such transactions, and at
the time of novation of an Agent
Clearing Member Transaction, the
Customer on whose behalf it was
submitted would be bound by the Agent
Clearing Member Transaction
automatically and without any further
action by the Customer or by its Agent
Clearing Member, and the Customer
agrees to be bound by the applicable
provisions of the Rules in all respects;
(c) NSCC shall be under no obligation to
deal directly with the Customer, and
NSCC may deal exclusively with the
Customer’s Agent Clearing Member; (d)
NSCC shall have no obligations to the
Customer with respect to any Agent
Clearing Member Transactions
submitted by an Agent Clearing Member
on behalf of the Customer, including
with respect to any payment or delivery
obligations; and (e) the Customer shall
have no right to receive from NSCC, or
any right to assert a claim against NSCC
with respect to, nor shall NSCC be liable
to the Customer for, any payment or
delivery obligation in connection with
any Agent Clearing Member
Transactions submitted by an Agent
Clearing Member on behalf of the
Customer, and NSCC shall make any
such payments or redeliveries solely to
the relevant Agent Clearing Member.
(C) Proposed Rule 56—Securities
Financing Transaction Clearing Service
NSCC is proposing to add Rule 56,
entitled ‘‘Securities Financing
Transaction Clearing Service.’’ This new
rule would govern the proposed SFT
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Clearing Service and would be
comprised of 18 sections, each of which
is described below.
In connection with the proposed SFT
Clearing Service, NSCC is proposing to
add the following terms and definitions,
as described below.
The term ‘‘Aggregate Net SFT Closeout Value’’ would mean, with respect to
an SFT Member, the sum of the SFT
Close-out Value (as defined below and
in the proposed rule change) for each
SFT Position to which the SFT Member
is a party.
The term ‘‘Approved SFT Submitter’’
would mean a provider of transaction
data on an SFT that the parties to the
SFT have selected and NSCC has
approved, subject to such terms and
conditions as to which the Approved
SFT Submitter and NSCC may agree.
The term ‘‘Bilaterally Initiated SFT’’
would mean an SFT, the Initial
Settlement of which occurred prior to
the submission of such SFT to NSCC.
The term ‘‘Buy-In Amount’’ would
mean a net amount equal to (x) the BuyIn Costs or Deemed Buy-In Costs (as
defined below and in the proposed rule
change) of the SFT Securities in respect
of which a Transferor has effected a
Buy-In, less (y) the amount of the SFT
Cash for the relevant SFT (unless the
Transferor effected a Buy-In in respect
of some, but not all, of the SFT
Securities that are the subject of the
SFT, in which case (y) shall be the
amount of the Corresponding SFT Cash
(as defined below and in the proposed
rule change)).
The term ‘‘Contract Price’’ would
mean, with respect to SFT Securities
subject to an SFT, the price of such
securities at the time the SFT is
submitted to NSCC for novation, which
price shall be determined by the SFT
Member parties to the relevant SFT and
provided by an Approved SFT
Submitter to NSCC in accordance with
the communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose; provided that if
no such price is provided by the time
required by NSCC, the ‘‘Contract Price’’
shall be the Current Market Price of the
SFT Securities.
The term ‘‘Corresponding SFT Cash’’
would mean (a) in respect of a Recalled
SFT (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) for which a
Transferor has effected a Buy-In in
respect of some, but not all, of the SFT
Securities that are the subject of the
SFT, the portion of the SFT Cash for
such SFT equal to the product of (i) the
percentage of the SFT Securities in
respect of which the Transferor effected
a Buy-In and (ii) the SFT Cash of the
SFT; and (b) in respect of a Settling SFT
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which has a greater quantity of SFT
Securities as its subject than the
corresponding Linked SFT, the portion
of the SFT Cash of the Settling SFT
equal to the product of (i) the percentage
of the SFT Securities of the Settling SFT
that the Linked SFT has as its subject
and (ii) the SFT Cash of the Settling
SFT.
The term ‘‘Deemed Buy-In Costs’’
would mean the product of the number
of SFT Securities subject to the relevant
Buy-In and the per-share price therefor
on the date of the Buy-In obtained from
a generally recognized source or the last
bid quotation from such a source at the
most recent close of trading for the SFT
Security.
The term ‘‘Defaulting SFT Member’’
would mean an SFT Member for which
NSCC has declined or ceased to act in
accordance with Section 14 of proposed
Rule 56, as described below.
The term ‘‘Distribution’’ would mean,
with respect to any SFT Security at any
time, any cash payment of amounts
equivalent to dividends and other
distributions on the SFT Security.
The term ‘‘Distribution Amount’’
would mean, in respect of an SFT, an
amount of cash equal to the product of:
(a) The amount per security in respect
of (x) a cash dividend on the SFT
Securities that are the subject of the SFT
or (y) an exchange of the SFT Securities
that are the subject of the SFT for cash;
and (b) the number of the relevant SFT
Securities subject to the SFT.
The term ‘‘Distribution Payment’’
would mean an amount payable by one
party to an SFT to the other party to the
SFT during the term of the SFT in
respect of a Distribution on the SFT
Securities subject to the SFT.
The term ‘‘Existing Master
Agreement’’ would mean, in respect of
an SFT, a written agreement that (i)
exists at the time transaction data for the
SFT is submitted to NSCC by an
Approved SFT Submitter, (ii) provides
for, among other things, terms governing
the payment and delivery obligations of
the parties and (iii) the parties have
established (by written agreement, oral
agreement, course of conduct or
otherwise) would govern such SFT.
The term ‘‘Final Settlement’’ would
mean the exchange of SFT Securities for
SFT Cash described in clause (b) of the
proposed definition of Securities
Financing Transaction.
The term ‘‘Final Settlement Date’’
would mean the Business Day on which
the final settlement of a transaction is
scheduled to occur. If the transaction is
an SFT, the Final Settlement Date
means the Business Day on which the
Final Settlement of the SFT is
scheduled to occur in accordance with
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proposed Rule 56 or, if the SFT is
accelerated in accordance with
proposed Rule 56, the date to which the
Final Settlement obligations have been
accelerated.
The term ‘‘Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash’’ would
mean, (a) in respect of a Linked SFT, the
excess, if any, of the Independent
Amount SFT Cash of the Linked SFT
over the Independent Amount SFT Cash
of the Settling SFT; (b) in respect of a
Non-Returned SFT, the portion of the
Price Differential payable by the
Transferee, if any, that is attributable to
the Independent Amount SFT Cash of
the SFT (which shall be calculated by
multiplying such Priced Differential by
the excess, if any, of the Independent
Amount Percentage (as defined below
and in the proposed rule change) over
100%); and (c) in respect of any other
SFT, the Independent Amount SFT
Cash of such SFT.
The term ‘‘Independent Amount
Percentage’’ would mean, in respect of
an SFT, a percentage obtained by
dividing the SFT Cash of such SFT by
the Market Value SFT Cash (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change)
of such SFT.
The term ‘‘Independent Amount SFT
Cash’’ would mean the portion, if any,
of the SFT Cash for an SFT equal to the
amount by which the SFT Cash for such
SFT at the time of the Initial Settlement
exceeds the Contract Price of the SFT
Securities that are the subject of such
SFT.
The term ‘‘Ineligibility Date’’ would
mean, with respect to an SFT, the date
on which the SFT Security that is the
subject of the SFT becomes an Ineligible
SFT Security (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change).
The term ‘‘Ineligible SFT’’ would
mean an SFT that has, as its subject,
SFT Securities that have become
Ineligible SFT Securities.
The term ‘‘Ineligible SFT Security’’
would mean an SFT Security that is not
eligible to be the subject of a novated
SFT.
The term ‘‘Initial Settlement’’ would
mean the exchange of SFT Securities for
SFT Cash described in clause (a) of the
proposed definition of Securities
Financing Transaction.
The term ‘‘Linked SFT’’ would mean
an SFT entered into by the pre-novation
SFT Member parties to a Settling SFT
that has the same Transferor, Transferee
and subject SFT Securities (including
CUSIP) as the Settling SFT. As
proposed, a Linked SFT would include
an SFT that has as its subject fewer SFT
Securities than the corresponding
Settling SFT but would not include an
SFT that has as its subject more SFT
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Securities than the corresponding
Settling SFT.
The term ‘‘Market Value SFT Cash’’
would mean the portion of the SFT Cash
for an SFT equal to the amount of the
SFT Cash for such SFT minus the
Independent Amount SFT Cash of such
SFT.
The term ‘‘Price Differential’’ would
mean (a) for purposes of the discharge
of offsetting Final Settlement and Initial
Settlement obligations, (i) the SFT Cash
for the Settling SFT (or if the Settling
SFT has a greater quantity of SFT
Securities as its subject than the
corresponding Linked SFT, the
Corresponding SFT Cash) minus (ii) the
SFT Cash for the Linked SFT; and (b) for
all other purposes, (i) the SFT Cash for
the SFT minus (ii) the product of the
Independent Amount Percentage, if any,
and the Current Market Price of the SFT
Securities.
The term ‘‘Rate Payment’’ would
mean an amount payable from one party
to an SFT to the other party to the SFT
at the Final Settlement expressed as a
percentage of the amount of SFT Cash
for the SFT. As an example, if the Rate
Payment is specified as 0.02%, the
amount payable would be the product
0.02% and the SFT Cash for the SFT.
The term ‘‘Recall Date’’ would mean,
in respect of a Recall Notice, the second
Business Day following NSCC’s receipt
of such Recall Notice.
The term ‘‘Recall Notice’’ would mean
a notice that triggers the provisions of
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 56,
relating to a Buy-In in respect of an SFT
and that is submitted by an Approved
SFT Submitter on behalf of a Transferor
in accordance with the communication
links, formats, timeframes and deadlines
established by NSCC for such purpose.
The term ‘‘Recalled SFT’’ would mean
an SFT that has been novated to NSCC
in respect of which a Recall Notice has
been submitted.
The term ‘‘Securities Financing
Transaction’’ or ‘‘SFT’’ would mean a
transaction between two SFT Members
pursuant to which (a) one SFT Member
agrees to transfer specified SFT
Securities to another SFT Member
versus the SFT Cash; and (b) the
Transferee agrees to retransfer such
specified SFT Securities or equivalent
SFT Securities (including quantity and
CUSIP) to the Transferor versus the SFT
Cash on the following Business Day.
The term ‘‘Settling SFT’’ would mean,
as of any Business Day, an SFT that has
been novated to NSCC, the Final
Settlement of which is scheduled to
occur on that Business Day.
The term ‘‘SFT Account’’ would mean
a ledger maintained on the books and
records of NSCC that reflects the
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outstanding SFTs that an SFT Member
enters into and that have been novated
to NSCC, the SFT Positions or SFT Cash
associated with those transactions and
any debits or credits of cash associated
with such transactions effected pursuant
to Rule 12 (Settlement). As proposed,
the term ‘‘SFT Account’’ would include
any Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account and any Sponsored
Member Sub-Account.
The term ‘‘SFT Cash’’ would mean the
specified amount of U.S. dollars that the
Transferee agrees to transfer to the
Transferor at the Initial Settlement of an
SFT, (i) plus any Price Differential paid
by NSCC to the SFT Member as
Transferor or by the SFT Member as
Transferee to NSCC during the term of
the SFT and (ii) less any Price
Differential paid by NSCC to the SFT
Member as Transferee or by the SFT
Member as Transferor to NSCC during
the term of the SFT.
The term ‘‘SFT Close-out Value’’
would mean, with respect to an SFT
Position of an SFT Member, an amount
equal to: (i) If the SFT Member is the
Transferor of the SFT Securities that are
the subject of such SFT, (a) the CNS
Market Value of the SFT Securities that
are the subject of such SFT minus (b)
the SFT Cash for such SFT; and (ii) if
the SFT Member is a Transferee of the
SFT Securities that are the subject of
such SFT, (a) the SFT Cash for such SFT
minus (b) the CNS Market Value of the
SFT Securities that are the subject of
such SFT.
The term ‘‘SFT Long Position’’ would
mean the number of units of an SFT
Security which an SFT Member is
entitled to receive from NSCC at Final
Settlement of an SFT against payment of
the SFT Cash.
The term ‘‘SFT Member’’ would mean
any Member, Sponsored Member acting
in its principal capacity, Sponsoring
Member acting in its principal capacity
or Agent Clearing Member acting on
behalf of a Customer, in each case that
is a party to an SFT, permitted to
participate in NSCC’s SFT Clearing
Service.
The term ‘‘SFT Position’’ would mean
an SFT Member’s SFT Long Position or
SFT Short Position (as defined below
and in the proposed rule change) in an
SFT Security that is the subject of an
SFT that has been novated to NSCC.
The term ‘‘SFT Security’’ would mean
a security that is eligible to be the
subject of an SFT novated to NSCC and
is included in the list for which
provision is made in proposed Section
1(g) of Rule 3 (Lists to be Maintained),
as described below. As proposed, if any
new or different security is exchanged
for any SFT Security in connection with
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44555
a recapitalization, merger, consolidation
or other corporate action, such new or
different security shall, effective upon
such exchange, become an SFT Security
in substitution for the former SFT
Security for which such exchange is
made.
The term ‘‘SFT Short Position’’ would
mean the number of units of an SFT
Security that an SFT Member is
obligated to deliver to NSCC at Final
Settlement of an SFT against payment of
the SFT Cash.
The term ‘‘Transferee’’ would mean
the SFT Member party to an SFT that
agrees to receive SFT Securities from
the other SFT Member party to the SFT
in exchange for SFT Cash in connection
with the Initial Settlement of the SFT.
The term ‘‘Transferor’’ would mean
the SFT Member party to an SFT that
agrees to transfer SFT Securities to the
other SFT Member party to the SFT in
exchange for SFT Cash in connection
with the Initial Settlement of the SFT.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 1 (General)
Section 1 of proposed Rule 56 would
be a general provision regarding the SFT
Clearing Service applicable to Members,
Sponsoring Members and Agent
Clearing Members that participate in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Section 1(a) of proposed Rule 56
would establish that NSCC may accept
for novation SFTs entered into between
(i) a Member and another Member, (ii)
a Sponsoring Member and its Sponsored
Member, or (iii) an Agent Clearing
Member acting on behalf of a Customer
and either (x) a Member or (y) the same
or another Agent Clearing Member
acting on behalf of a Customer.
Section 1(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that any SFT that is
submitted to NSCC for novation, and
any Member and Sponsored Member
that enters into an SFT (and any
Customer on behalf of whom an Agent
Clearing Member enters into an SFT)
shall be subject to the provisions of
proposed Rule 56; provided that
Sections 15 and 16 of proposed Rule 56
shall only apply to Sponsoring
Members, Agent Clearing Members,
Sponsored Members and Customers, as
applicable.
Section 1(c) of proposed Rule 56
would further provide that any amount
of cash described in proposed Rule 56
may be rounded up to the nearest one
cent, five cents, 10 cents, 25 cents or
dollar according to the rounding
convention requested by the SFT
Member parties to the relevant SFT as
conveyed to NSCC in accordance with
the communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose.
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Proposed Rule 56, Section 2 (Eligibility
for SFT Clearing Service: SFT Member)
Section 2 of proposed Rule 56 would
establish the eligibility requirements for
using the proposed SFT Clearing
Service.
Under Section 2 of proposed Rule 56,
NSCC may permit any Member acting in
its principal capacity, Sponsored
Member acting in its principal capacity,
or Agent Clearing Member acting on
behalf of a Customer to be an SFT
Member and participate in the proposed
SFT Clearing Service.
Section 2 of proposed Rule 56 would
provide that the rights, liabilities and
obligations of SFT Members in their
capacity as such shall be governed by
the proposed Rule 56. References to a
Member would not apply to an SFT
Member in its capacity as such, unless
specifically noted in the proposed Rule
56 or in such other Rules as applicable
to an SFT Member.
Section 2 of proposed Rule 56 would
also provide that an SFT Member that
participates in NSCC in another
capacity pursuant to another Rule, or
which has entered into an agreement
with NSCC independent from proposed
Rule 56, shall continue to have all the
rights, liabilities and obligations set
forth in such other Rule or pursuant to
such agreement, and such rights,
liabilities and obligations shall be
separate from its rights, liabilities and
obligations as an SFT Member, except as
contemplated under Sections 15 and 16
of proposed Rule 56, as described
below.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 3
(Membership Documents)
Section 3 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the documents that SFT Member
applicants would be required to
complete and deliver to NSCC.
Specifically, Section 3 of proposed Rule
56 would provide that to become an
SFT Member, each applicant shall
complete and deliver to NSCC
documents in such forms as may be
prescribed by NSCC from time to time
and any other information requested by
NSCC.
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Proposed Rule 56, Section 4 (Securities
Financing Transaction Data Submission)
Section 4 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the submission of transaction
data for SFTs into NSCC for novation by
Approved SFT Submitters on behalf of
Transferors (e.g., lenders) and
Transferees (e.g., borrowers).
Section 4(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that in order for an SFT
to be submitted to NSCC, the transaction
data for the SFT must be submitted to
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NSCC by an Approved SFT Submitter in
accordance with the communication
links, formats, timeframes and deadlines
established by NSCC for such purpose.
Any such transaction data shall be
submitted to NSCC on a locked-in basis.
In determining whether to accept
transaction data from an Approved SFT
Submitter, NSCC may require the
Approved SFT Submitter to provide a
Cybersecurity Confirmation. This is
consistent with the existing requirement
in Section 6 of Rule 7 (Comparison and
Trade Recording Operation (Including
Special Representative/Index Receipt
Agent)) for organizations reporting trade
data to NSCC.73
Section 4(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that NSCC would not act
upon any instruction received from an
Approved SFT Submitter in respect of
an SFT unless each SFT Member (other
than an SFT Member that is a
Sponsored Member) designated by the
Approved SFT Submitter as a party to
such SFT has consented, in a writing
delivered to NSCC, to the Approved
SFT Submitter acting on behalf of the
SFT Member in respect of SFTs.
Section 4(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the obligations
reflected in the transaction data on an
SFT shall be deemed to have been
confirmed and acknowledged by each
SFT Member designated by the
Approved SFT Submitter as a party
thereto and to have been adopted by
such SFT Member and, for the purposes
of determining the rights and
obligations between NSCC and such
SFT Member under the proposed Rule
56 and such other Rules applicable to
SFTs, shall be valid and binding upon
such SFT Member. In addition, Section
4(c) would provide that an SFT Member
which has been so designated by an
Approved SFT Submitter shall resolve
any differences or claims regarding the
rights and obligations reflected in the
transaction data submitted by the
Approved SFT Submitter with the
Approved SFT Submitter, and NSCC
shall have no responsibility in respect
thereof or to adjust its records or the
accounts of the SFT Member in any
way, other than pursuant to the
instructions of the Approved SFT
Submitter. Section 4(c) would also
provide that any such adjustment shall
be in the sole discretion of NSCC.
Section 4(d) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that NSCC makes no
73 Section 6 of Rule 7 (Comparison and Trade
Recording Operation (Including Special
Representative/Index Receipt Agent)) provides that
NSCC may require organizations that deliver trade
data to NSCC as described in that Rule to provide
a Cybersecurity Confirmation before agreeing to
accept such trade data. Supra note 4.
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Sfmt 4703
representation, whether expressed or
implied, as to the complete and timely
performance of an Approved SFT
Submitter’s duties and obligations.
Section 4(d) would also provide that
NSCC assumes no liability to any SFT
Member for any act or failure to act by
an Approved SFT Submitter in
connection with any information
received by NSCC or given to the SFT
Member by NSCC via the Approved SFT
Submitter, as the case may be.
Section 4(e) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the submission of
each SFT to NSCC and the performance
of any obligation under such SFT shall
constitute a representation to NSCC and
covenant by the Transferor and the
Transferee, any Sponsoring Member that
is acting on behalf of the Transferor or
Transferee and any Agent Clearing
Member that is acting on behalf of a
Customer in connection with such SFT
that its participation in such SFT is in
compliance, and would continue to
comply, with all applicable laws and
regulations, including without
limitation Rule 15c3–3 and all other
applicable rules and regulations of the
Commission, any applicable provisions
of Regulation T, Regulation U and
Regulation X of the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, and the
rules of FINRA and any other regulatory
or self-regulatory organization to which
the Transferor, the Transferee, any
Sponsoring Member that is acting on
behalf of the Transferor or Transferee or
any Agent Clearing Member that is
acting on behalf of a Customer is
subject.
Section 4(f) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the submission of
each SFT to NSCC shall constitute an
authorization to NSCC by the
Transferor, the Transferee and any
Agent Clearing Member that is acting on
behalf of a Customer for NSCC to give
instructions regarding the SFT to DTC
in respect of the relevant accounts of the
Transferor, Transferee and Agent
Clearing Member at DTC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 5 (Novation
of Securities Financing Transactions)
Section 5 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the nature and timing of the
novation to NSCC of obligations related
to an SFT.
Section 5(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that NSCC to only novate
an SFT if, at the time of novation, the
Final Settlement of such transaction is
scheduled to occur one Business Day
following the Initial Settlement and the
SFT Cash is no less than 100% of the
Contract Price of the SFT.
Section 5(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that each SFT that is a
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Bilaterally Initiated SFT, including any
Sponsored Member Transaction, and
validated pursuant to the Rules shall be
novated to NSCC as of the time NSCC
provides the Approved SFT Submitter
for such SFT a report confirming such
novation in accordance with the
communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose. Section 5(b)
would also provide that each SFT that
is neither a Bilaterally Initiated SFT nor
a Sponsored Member Transaction and
that is validated pursuant to the Rules
shall be novated to NSCC as of the time
(x) the Initial Settlement of such SFT
has completed by (i) the Transferor
instructing DTC to deliver from the
relevant DTC account of the Transferor
to NSCC’s account at DTC the subject
SFT Securities versus payment of the
amount of the SFT Cash, (ii) NSCC
instructing DTC to deliver from NSCC’s
account at DTC to the relevant DTC
account of the Transferee the subject
SFT Securities versus payment of the
amount of SFT Cash and (iii) DTC
processes the deliveries in accordance
with the rules and procedures of DTC,
or (y) the Initial Settlement obligations
of such SFT have been discharged in
accordance with Section 8 of proposed
Rule 56, as described below. In
addition, Section 5(b) would provide
that if the Initial Settlement obligations
of an SFT that is neither a Bilaterally
Initiated SFT nor a Sponsored Member
Transaction are not discharged in
accordance with clause (x) or (y), then
such SFT shall be deemed void ab
initio.
Section 5(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that, subject to Sections
5(d) and 5(e) of proposed Rule 56 as
described below, the novation of SFTs
shall consist of the termination of the
Final Settlement, Rate Payment and
Distribution Payment obligations and
entitlements between the parties to the
SFT with respect to such SFT and their
replacement with obligations and
entitlements to and from NSCC to
perform, in accordance with the Rules,
the Final Settlement, Rate Payment, and
Distribution Payment obligations and
entitlements under the SFT.
Section 5(d) of proposed Rule 56
would govern the novation of SFTs
having Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash and
provides when the obligation to return
Independent Amount SFT Cash for
which an associated Clearing Fund
deposit has not been made will be
novated away from a Transferor to
NSCC. Specifically, Section 5(d)(i) of
proposed Rule 56 would provide that if
an SFT has Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash, then,
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unless the SFT is a Sponsored Member
Transaction and the Sponsoring
Member is the Transferee,74 the
obligation of the Transferor to return the
Incremental Additional Independent
Amount SFT Cash to the Transferee
shall not be terminated and novated to
NSCC (nor shall NSCC otherwise be
required to return such Incremental
Additional Independent Amount SFT
Cash), except to the extent that the
Transferor, Sponsoring Member or
Agent Clearing Member, as applicable,
has satisfied the associated Independent
Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement.
As proposed, to the extent the
associated Clearing Fund deposit has
not been made in respect of
Independent Amount SFT Cash at the
time of the Initial Settlement, the
obligation to return the Independent
Amount SFT Cash would not be
novated to NSCC.
Section 5(d)(ii) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that to the extent the
Transferor, Sponsoring Member or
Agent Clearing Member has not satisfied
the associated Independent Amount
SFT Cash Deposit Requirement, the
Transferor’s (or in the case of a NonReturned SFT, NSCC’s) obligation to
return the Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash shall:
(1) If the SFT is an Agent Clearing
Member Transaction for which the
Agent Clearing Member, acting on
behalf of the Customer, is the
Transferor, be terminated and replaced
with an obligation of the Agent Clearing
Member, in its capacity as principal, to
return the Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash to the
Transferee; or (2) otherwise, remain (or
in the context of a Non-Returned SFT,
be terminated and replaced with) a
bilateral obligation of the Transferor to
the Transferee. As proposed, if the
associated Clearing Fund deposit has
not been made in respect of
Independent Amount SFT Cash, the
Independent Amount SFT Cash would
be owed by the Transferor to the
Transferee as a bilateral principal-toprincipal obligation, unless the
Transferor is a Customer of an Agent
Clearing Member, in which case the
obligation to return the Independent
Amount SFT Cash in respect of which
the Clearing Fund has not been made
would be novated from the Customer to
74 Where the Transferor is a Sponsored Member
receiving Independent Amount SFT Cash, NSCC
would not be requiring Independent Amount SFT
Cash Deposit Requirement. This is because in the
case of the Sponsored Member’s default, the party
giving the Independent Amount SFT Cash, i.e.,
Sponsoring Member, is the guarantor of the
settlement obligation of the Sponsored Member
Independent Amount SFT Cash back to NSCC.
PO 00000
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44557
the Agent Clearing Member, and the
Agent Clearing Member would owe the
Independent Amount SFT Cash back to
the Transferee as principal.75
Section 5(d)(iii) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that each SFT Member
agrees that any obligation to return
Incremental Additional Independent
Amount SFT Cash that is novated to an
Agent Clearing Member or that remains
(or becomes) a bilateral obligation of the
Transferor to the Transferee in
accordance with Section 5(d)(ii) of
proposed Rule 56, is a binding and
enforceable obligation of the Agent
Clearing Member or Transferor, as
applicable, regardless of whether the
Transferee has entered into an Existing
Master Agreement with the Agent
Clearing Member or Transferor. In
addition, Section 5(d)(iii) would
provide that each SFT Member further
agrees that any such obligation shall
only be due and payable to the
Transferee upon the final discharge of
NSCC’s Final Settlement obligations to
the Transferor under the portion of the
SFT that has been novated to NSCC in
accordance with Section 5(b) of
proposed Rule 56, as described above.
Section 5(d)(iv) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that, until the Transferor,
Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing
Member has satisfied in full its
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirement, the SFT Cash of the SFT
shall, for purposes of determining the
obligations owing to and from NSCC
under such SFT, equal the SFT Cash of
the SFT less the Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash.
Section 5(d)(v) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that once the Transferor,
Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing
Member, as applicable, has satisfied in
full its Independent Amount SFT Cash
Deposit Requirement, the obligation of
the Transferor to return the Incremental
Additional Independent Amount SFT
Cash to the Transferee (or, in the case
of an SFT that is an Agent Clearing
Member Transaction, any obligation of
the Agent Clearing Member to return the
Incremental Additional Independent
Amount SFT Cash to the Transferee)
shall be novated to NSCC, and the SFT
Cash of the SFT shall, for purposes of
determining the obligations owing to
and from NSCC under the SFT, include
the full amount of the SFT Cash of such
SFT.
Section 5(e) of proposed Rule 56
would govern novation in respect of
certain corporate actions and provide
75 This interim novation is designed to avoid any
credit concerns that would manifest if the Customer
and the Transferee had to have a principal bilateral
obligation to each other for the Independent
Amount SFT Cash.
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that NSCC would (i) have an obligation
to pay the cash distribution to the
Transferor and the Transferee would
have an obligation to pay the cash
distribution to NSCC, and (ii) not novate
any obligations related to unsupported
corporate actions and distributions.
Specifically, Section 5(e)(i) of proposed
Rule 56 would provide that regardless of
anything to the contrary in any Existing
Master Agreement (including a
provision addressing when an issuer
pays different amounts to different
security holders due to withholding tax
or other reasons), the Distribution
Payment obligations and entitlements
between NSCC and each party to an SFT
that has been novated to NSCC shall be
the obligation of NSCC to pay to the
Transferor and the obligation of the
Transferee to pay to NSCC the
Distribution Amount in respect of each
Distribution and the corresponding
entitlements of the Transferor and
NSCC, in each case, in accordance with
the Rules.
Section 5(e)(ii) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that NSCC shall
maintain a list of corporate actions and
distributions that NSCC does not
support with respect to SFTs. Section
5(e)(ii) would further provide that no
Final Settlement, Rate Payment,
Distribution Payment or other obligation
resulting from a corporate action or
distribution that is not supported by
NSCC shall be novated to NSCC. In
addition, Section 5(e)(ii) would provide
that none of such unsupported
corporate action shall modify the Final
Settlement, Rate Payment, Distribution
Payment or other obligations of NSCC,
Transferor and Transferee under an SFT
that has been novated to NSCC. Section
5(e)(ii) would also provide that each
SFT Member agrees that any obligation
under an SFT resulting from a corporate
action or distribution not supported by
NSCC shall remain a binding and
enforceable bilateral obligation between
the Transferor and the Transferee,
regardless of whether the Transferor and
Transferee have entered into an Existing
Master Agreement.
Section 5(f) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the novation of SFTs
shall not affect the fundamental
substance of the SFT as a transfer of
securities by one party in exchange for
a transfer of cash by the other party and
an agreement by each party to return the
property it received and shall not affect
the economic obligations or
entitlements of the parties under the
SFT except that following novation, the
Final Settlement, Rate Payment and
Distribution Payment obligations and
entitlements shall be owed to and by
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NSCC rather than the original
counterparty under the SFT.
Section 5(g) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the representations
and warranties made by each of the
parties to an SFT that has been novated
to NSCC under the parties’ Existing
Master Agreement, if any, shall (x) to
the extent that they are inconsistent
with the Rules, be eliminated and
replaced with the Rules and (y) to the
extent that they are not inconsistent
with the Rules, remain in effect as
between the parties to the original SFT,
but shall not impose any additional
obligations on NSCC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 6 (Rate and
Distributions)
Section 6 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the settlement of Rate Payments
and supported Distributions by NSCC
for novated SFTs. Section 6(a) of
proposed Rule 56 would provide that
NSCC shall debit and credit the Rate
Payment from and to the SFT Accounts
of the SFT Member parties to an SFT
that has been novated to NSCC as part
of its end of day final money settlement
process in accordance with Rule 12
(Settlement) and Procedure VIII (Money
Settlement Service) on the scheduled
Final Settlement Date for the SFT,
irrespective of whether Final Settlement
of such SFT occurs on such date.
Section 6(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that if (x) a cash
dividend is made on or in respect of an
SFT Security that is the subject of an
SFT that has been novated to NSCC or
(y) cash is exchanged, in whole or in
part, for such an SFT Security in a
merger, consolidation or similar
transaction, and the Transferor under
the SFT would have been entitled to a
cash payment related to the event
described in clause (x) or (y) had it not
transferred the SFT Securities that are
the subject of the SFT to the Transferee
in the Initial Settlement, then NSCC
shall, within the time period
determined by NSCC from time to time,
credit the Distribution Amount to the
Transferor’s SFT Account and debit the
Distribution Amount from the
Transferee’s SFT Account as part of its
end of day final money settlement
process in accordance with Rule 12 and
Procedure VIII. Section 6(b) would
further provide that if cash is exchanged
in whole for such an SFT Security, then
the completion of the actions described
in the preceding sentence shall
discharge NSCC’s Final Settlement
obligations to the relevant Transferor
and the Transferee’s Final Settlement
obligations to NSCC.
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Proposed Rule 56, Section 7 (Final
Settlement of Securities Financing
Transactions)
Section 7 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the mechanics of Final
Settlement of SFTs by providing that,
subject to Section 11 of proposed Rule
56, as described below, the Final
Settlement of an SFT that has been
novated to NSCC shall be scheduled to
occur on the Business Day immediately
following the date the SFT was novated
to NSCC. Section 7 would further
provide that unless the Final Settlement
obligations under such an SFT are
discharged in accordance with Section 8
of proposed Rule 56, as described
below, Final Settlement of the SFT shall
occur by (x) NSCC instructing DTC to (i)
deliver from the relevant DTC account
of the Transferee to NSCC’s account at
DTC the subject SFT Securities versus
payment of the amount of SFT Cash and
(ii) deliver from NSCC’s account at DTC
to the relevant DTC account of the
Transferor the subject SFT Securities
versus payment of the amount of SFT
Cash, and (y) the processing of such
deliveries by DTC in accordance to the
rules and procedures of DTC; provided
that if such transfers do not occur and
a Buy-In does not occur in respect of the
SFT, then the Final Settlement Date
shall be rescheduled for the following
Business Day as described in Section 9
of proposed Rule 56, as described
below. The obligation of a Transferor (or
a Sponsoring Member that guarantees to
NSCC the obligation of a Transferor or
an Agent Clearing Member that is
responsible for the performance of the
obligation under an SFT that is an Agent
Clearing Member Transaction to return
SFT Cash to NSCC) in respect of the
Final Settlement of an SFT that has been
novated to NSCC shall be to pay the SFT
Cash and, if applicable, the Rate
Payment to NSCC against the transfer of
the relevant SFT Securities by NSCC.
The obligation of a Transferee (or a
Sponsoring Member that guarantees to
NSCC the obligation of a Transferee or
an Agent Clearing Member that is
responsible for the performance of the
obligation under an SFT that is an Agent
Clearing Member Transaction to return
SFT Securities to NSCC) in respect of
the Final Settlement of an SFT that has
been novated to NSCC shall be to
transfer the SFT Securities and, if
applicable, the Rate Payment to NSCC
against the transfer of SFT Cash by
NSCC.
Section 7 of proposed Rule 56 would
also provide that an SFT, or a portion
thereof, shall be deemed complete and
final upon Final Settlement of the SFT,
or such portion, whether pursuant to
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and Procedure VIII (Money Settlement
Service). If the Price Differential is
positive, NSCC shall (x) credit an
amount equal to the Price Differential to
the Transferee’s SFT Account and (y)
debit an amount equal to the Price
Differential from the Transferor’s SFT
Account. If the Price Differential is
negative, NSCC shall (x) credit an
amount equal to the absolute value of
the Price Differential to the Transferor’s
SFT Account and (y) debit an amount
equal to the absolute value of the Price
Differential from the Transferee’s SFT
Proposed Rule 56, Section 8 (Discharge
Account. However, if the Linked SFT
of Offsetting Final Settlement and Initial has as its subject fewer SFT Securities
Settlement Obligations)
than the Settling SFT, then only the
following Final Settlement obligations
Section 8 of proposed Rule 56 would
under the Settling SFT shall be
govern the ‘‘roll’’ (i.e., pair off or offset)
discharged in accordance with Section 8
process whereby the Final Settlement
obligations on one SFT (i.e., the Settling of proposed Rule 56: (i) The Transferee’s
and NSCC’s Final Settlement obligations
SFT) between two parties can be offset
in respect of a quantity of SFT
with the Initial Settlement obligations
Securities equal to the quantity of SFT
on another SFT between the same
parties (i.e., the Linked SFT) through the Securities that are the subject of the
Linked SFT and (ii) the Transferor’s and
debiting and crediting of the difference
NSCC’s Final Settlement obligations in
in cash collateral between the two
respect of the Corresponding SFT Cash.
offsetting SFTs (i.e., the Price
Section 8(b) of proposed Rule 56
Differential).
would provide that if the Price
Section 8(a) of proposed Rule 56
Differential is positive, NSCC shall (x)
would provide that, subject to the
instruct DTC to debit an amount equal
provisions of Section 13(c) of proposed
to the Price Differential from NSCC’s
Rule 56, as described below, if, on any
account at DTC and credit such amount
Business Day, the pre-novation SFT
to the relevant DTC account of the
Member parties to a Settling SFT enter
Transferee and (y) instruct DTC to debit
into a Linked SFT and the Approved
an amount equal to the Price Differential
SFT Submitter provides an appropriate
instruction to NSCC in accordance with from the relevant DTC account of the
Transferor and credit such amount to
the communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by NSCC’s account at DTC. If the Price
Differential is negative, NSCC shall (x)
NSCC for such purpose, the Final
instruct DTC to debit an amount equal
Settlement obligations of the parties to
to the absolute value of the Price
the Settling SFT and the Initial
Differential from NSCC’s account at
Settlement obligations of the parties to
the Linked SFT shall be discharged once DTC and credit such amount to the
relevant DTC account of the Transferor
NSCC has instructed DTC to debit and
credit the relevant DTC accounts, of the and (y) instruct DTC to debit an amount
SFT Member parties, as described below equal to the absolute value of the Price
in Section 8(b) of proposed Rule 56, and Differential from the relevant DTC
account of the Transferee and credit
DTC processes such debits and credits
such amount to NSCC’s account at DTC.
in accordance with the rules and
procedures of DTC. To the extent the
Proposed Rule 56, Section 9 (NonPrice Differential is not processed by
Returned Securities Financing
DTC in accordance with the rules and
Transactions and Recalls)
procedures of DTC, NSCC shall debit
Section 9 of proposed Rule 56 would
and credit the Price Differential from
govern the processing of a novated SFT
and to the SFT Accounts of the SFT
for which the Final Settlement
Member parties as part of its end of day
obligations have not been discharged
final money settlement process in
either through Final Settlement in
accordance with Rule 12 (Settlement)
accordance with Section 7 of proposed
Rule 56 (as described above) or a pair
76 With respect to an SFT between a Sponsoring
off in accordance with Section 8 of
Member and its Sponsored Member, the SFT would
proposed Rule 56 (as described above),
settle on the books of the Sponsoring Member
because the Sponsored Member are not participants
and the recall and buy-in process for
at DTC and thus would not have accounts at DTC.
such an SFT.
Accordingly, the finality of the settlement of such
Specifically, Section 9(a) of proposed
SFT would occur when the Sponsoring Member
Rule 56 would provide that if (x) the
credits the securities and cash on its or the relevant
custodian’s books and records.
Transferee does not satisfy its Final
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Sections 7, 8, 9(d) or 13(c) of proposed
Rule 56. Section 7 would also provide
that from and after the Final Settlement
of an SFT, or a portion thereof, pursuant
to any Sections 7, 8, 9(d) or 13(c) of
proposed Rule 56, NSCC shall be
discharged from its obligations to the
Transferor and the Transferee, and
NSCC shall have no further obligation in
respect of the SFT or such portion. This
is to make it clear to SFT Members the
point at which settlement of an SFT is
deemed to be complete and final.76
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Settlement obligations in respect of an
SFT that has been novated to NSCC on
the Final Settlement Date, (y) such Final
Settlement obligations have not been
discharged in accordance with the
provisions of Section 8 of proposed Rule
56, as described above, and (z) a BuyIn has not occurred in respect of such
SFT or a portion thereof (such SFT, a
‘‘Non-Returned SFT’’), the Final
Settlement Date of the Non-Returned
SFT shall be rescheduled for the
following Business Day, and NSCC shall
instruct DTC to debit and credit the
relevant DTC accounts of the SFT
Member parties, as described in
subsection (b) of Section 8 above. To the
extent the Price Differential is not
processed by DTC in accordance with
the rules and procedures of DTC, NSCC
shall debit and credit the Price
Differential from and to the SFT
Accounts of the SFT Member parties to
the Non-Returned SFT as part of its end
of day final money settlement process in
accordance with Rule 12 (Settlement)
and Procedure VIII (Money Settlement
Service). Section 9(a) would further
provide that if the Price Differential is
positive, NSCC shall (x) credit an
amount equal to the Price Differential to
the Transferee’s SFT Account and (y)
debit an amount equal to the Price
Differential from the Transferor’s SFT
Account; if the Price Differential is
negative, NSCC shall (x) credit an
amount equal to the absolute value of
the Price Differential to the Transferor’s
SFT Account and (y) debit an amount
equal to the absolute value of the Price
Differential from the Transferee’s SFT
Account. This process would continue
until Final Settlement, a pair off in
accordance with Section 8 of proposed
Rule 56 (as discussed above), or a BuyIn.
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that if NSCC receives a
Recall Notice in respect of an SFT that
has been novated to NSCC and the
Transferee does not satisfy its Final
Settlement obligations by the Recall
Date for the Recall Notice, the
Transferor may, in a commercially
reasonable manner,77 purchase some or
all of the SFT Securities that are the
77 The requirement that a party exercising buy-in
rights do so in a ‘‘commercially reasonable manner’’
is market standard. See, e.g., Section 13.1 of the
Master Securities Loan Agreement published by
Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association (‘‘SIFMA’’). NSCC has proposed to
include this language in order to align the standards
applicable to an exercise of remedies in relation to
SFTs with those applicable in the bilateral
uncleared space. NSCC believes that such
alignment will increase certainty for SFT Members
and allow them to follow standards with which
they are familiar.
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subject of the SFT 78 or elect to be
deemed to have purchased the SFT
Securities, in each case in accordance
with such timeframes and deadlines as
established by NSCC for such purpose (a
‘‘Buy-In’’). Following such purchase or
deemed purchase, the Transferor shall
(x) give written notice to NSCC of the
Transferor’s costs to purchase the
relevant SFT Securities (including the
price paid by the Transferor and any
broker’s fees and commissions and
reasonable out-of-pocket transaction
costs, fees or interest expenses incurred
in connection with such purchase)
(such costs, the ‘‘Buy-In Costs’’) or, if
the Transferor elects to be deemed to
have purchased the SFT Securities, the
Deemed Buy-In Costs, and (y) indemnify
NSCC, and its employees, officers,
directors, shareholders, agents and
Members (collectively the ‘‘Buy-In
Indemnified Parties’’), for any and all
losses, liability or expenses of a Buy-In
Indemnified Party arising from any
claim disputing the calculation of the
Buy-In Costs, the Deemed Buy-In Costs
or the method or manner of effecting the
Buy-In. Section 9(b) would further
provide that each SFT Member
acknowledges and agrees that each SFT
Security is of a type traded in a
recognized market and that, in the
absence of a generally recognized source
for prices or bid or offer quotations for
any SFT Security, the Transferor may,
for purposes of a Buy-In, establish the
source therefor in its commercially
reasonable discretion. In addition,
Section 9(b) would provide that each
SFT Member further acknowledges and
agrees that NSCC would not calculate
any Buy-In Costs or Deemed Buy-In
Costs and shall have no liability for any
such calculation. Section 9(b) would
also provide that NSCC would assign to
any Transferee whose SFT is subject to
a Buy-In any rights it may have against
the Transferor to dispute the
Transferor’s calculation of the Buy-In
Costs or Deemed Buy-In Costs.
Section 9(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that on the Business Day
following NSCC’s receipt of written
notice of the Transferor’s Buy-In Costs,
NSCC shall debit and credit the Buy-In
Amount from and to the SFT Accounts
of the SFT Member parties to the SFT
as part of its end of day final money
settlement process in accordance with
Rule 12 (Settlement) and Procedure VIII
(Money Settlement Service). Section
9(c) would provide that if the Buy-In
Amount is positive, NSCC would (x)
credit the value of the Buy-In Amount
to the Transferor’s SFT Account and (y)
78 The Transferor would purchase these securities
from one or more third parties.
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debit the value of the Buy-In Amount
from the Transferee’s SFT Account.
Section 9(c) would further provide that
if the Buy-In Amount is negative, NSCC
would (x) credit the value of the BuyIn Amount to the Transferee’s SFT
Account and (y) debit the value of the
Buy-In Amount from the Transferor’s
SFT Account.
Section 9(d) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that following the
application of such Buy-In Amount, the
Final Settlement obligations under the
SFT shall be discharged; provided that
if the Transferor effected a Buy-In in
respect of some but not all of the SFT
Securities that are the subject of an SFT,
then only the following obligations shall
be discharged: (i) The Transferee’s and
NSCC’s Final Settlement obligations in
respect of the SFT Securities for which
the Transferor effected the Buy-In and
(ii) the Transferor’s and NSCC’s Final
Settlement obligations in respect of the
Corresponding SFT Cash.
Section 9(e) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that a Recalled SFT shall
be treated as a Non-Returned SFT by
NSCC until the earlier of the time that
the SFT settles or a Buy-In is processed
by NSCC in accordance with Section 9
of proposed Rule 56, except that the
additional SFT Deposit required for
Non-Returned SFTs under Section 12(c)
of proposed Rule 56, as described
below, shall not apply. Section 9(e)
would further provide that if the
Transferor effects the Buy-In in respect
of some, but not all, of the SFT
Securities that are the subject of a
Recalled SFT, the Final Settlement
obligations of the Recalled SFT that are
not discharged in accordance with
Section 9(d) of proposed Rule 56 shall
be treated as a Non-Returned SFT until
the SFT settles or a Buy-In is processed
by NSCC in accordance with Section 9
of proposed Rule 56, and the additional
SFT Deposit required under Section
12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described
below, for Non-Returned SFTs shall
apply.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 10
(Cancellation, Modification and
Termination of Securities Financing
Transactions)
Section 10 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the process for cancellations,
modifications and terminations of SFTs
in NSCC’s systems.
Section 10(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that transaction data on
an SFT that has not been novated to
NSCC may be cancelled upon receipt by
NSCC of appropriate instructions from
the Approved SFT Submitter with
respect to such SFT on behalf of both
SFT Member parties thereto, submitted
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in accordance with the communication
links, formats, timeframes and deadlines
established by NSCC for such purpose.
Section 10(a) would further provide that
an SFT that is so cancelled by NSCC
would be deemed to be void ab initio.
Section 10(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide the Rate Payment on an
SFT that has been novated to NSCC may
be modified upon receipt by NSCC of
appropriate instructions from the
Approved SFT Submitter with respect
to such SFT, submitted in accordance
with the communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose. Section 10(b)
would further provide that any
instructions submitted by an Approved
SFT Submitter to modify the Rate
Payment of an SFT must be submitted
on behalf of both SFT Member parties
to the SFT.
Section 10(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide an SFT that has been
novated to NSCC in accordance with
Section 5 of proposed Rule 56, as
described above, may be terminated
upon receipt by NSCC of appropriate
instructions from the Approved SFT
Submitter with respect to such SFT on
behalf of both SFT Member parties
thereto, submitted in accordance with
the communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purposes. Section 10(c)
would further provide that following
any such termination, no amounts or
further obligations shall be owing in
respect of the SFT between NSCC and
Transferor or NSCC and the Transferee.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 11
(Accelerated Final Settlement)
Section 11 of proposed Rule 56 would
allow a Transferee (i.e., the borrower) to
do a same day return of borrowed
securities, if necessary, to satisfy its
regulatory purpose requirements by
accelerating the Final Settlement of an
SFT that has been novated to NSCC.
Specifically, Section 11 would provide
that the Transferee may accelerate the
scheduled Final Settlement of an SFT
that has been novated to NSCC upon
receipt by NSCC of appropriate
instruction from the Approved SFT
Submitter with respect to such SFT,
submitted in accordance with the
communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose. Section 11
would further provide that such
accelerated Final Settlement shall be
effected by NSCC in accordance with
the provisions of Section 7 of proposed
Rule 56, as described above.
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Proposed Rule 56, Section 12 (Clearing
Fund Requirements)
Section 12 of proposed Rule 56 would
set out the Clearing Fund requirements
for SFT Members with respect to their
SFT activity.
Section 12(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide each SFT Member, other
than an SFT Member that is a
Sponsored Member, shall make and
maintain on an ongoing basis a deposit
to the Clearing Fund with respect to its
SFT Positions (the ‘‘SFT Deposit’’).
Section 12(a) would provide that, for the
avoidance of doubt, the SFT Positions
for an SFT Member that is a Sponsoring
Member shall include all SFT Positions
held in its Sponsored Member SubAccount(s) in addition to its proprietary
account(s).
Section 12(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the SFT Deposit
shall be held by NSCC or its designated
agents as part of the Clearing Fund, to
be applied as provided in Sections 1
through 12 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund).
Section 12(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that NSCC shall
calculate the amount of each such SFT
Member’s required deposit for SFT
Positions, subject to a $250,000 79
minimum (excluding the minimum
contribution to the Clearing Fund as
required by Procedure XV (Clearing
Fund Formula and Other Matters),
Section II.(A)), by applying the Clearing
Fund formula for CNS Transactions in
Sections I.(A)(1)(a), (b), (d), (f) (g), (h) of
Procedure XV as well as the additional
Clearing Fund formula in Section
I.(B)(5) (Intraday Mark-to-Market
Charge) of Procedure XV in the same
manner as such sections apply to CNS
Transactions submitted to NSCC for
regular way settlement, plus, with
respect to any Non-Returned SFT, an
additional charge that is calculated by
(x) multiplying the Current Market Price
of the SFT Securities that are the subject
of such Non-Returned SFTs by the
number of such SFT Securities that are
the subject of the SFT and (y)
multiplying such product by (i) 5% for
SFT Members rated 1 through 4 on the
Credit Risk Rating Matrix, (ii) 10% for
SFT Members rated 5 or 6 on the Credit
Risk Rating Matrix, or (iii) 20% for SFT
Members rated 7 on the Credit Risk
Rating Matrix shall be applied to each
SFT Member that is a party thereto 80
79 Supra
note 32.
Required SFT Deposit multipliers
proposed for Non-Returned SFTs are identical to
the Required Fund Deposit multipliers applied to
CNS Fails Positions. See Procedure XV (Clearing
Fund Formula and Other Matters), Section
I.(A)(1)(e)), supra note 4. While the concept of a
‘‘fail’’ does not exist in the securities lending
market in the same manner as it does in the cash
80 The
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(collectively and includes any and all
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirements, the ‘‘Required SFT
Deposit’’); provided, however,
notwithstanding anything to the
contrary, (A) a minimum of 40% of an
SFT Member’s Required SFT Deposit
shall be made in the form of cash and/
or Eligible Clearing Fund Treasury
Securities and (y) the lesser of
$5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT Member’s
Required SFT Deposit, with a minimum
of $250,000,81 must be made and
maintained in cash; provided, further,
the additional Clearing Fund formula in
Sections I.(B)(1) (Additional Deposits
for Members on the Watch List); (2)
(Excess Capital Premium); (3)
(Backtesting Charge); (4) (Bank Holiday
Charge); Minimum Clearing Fund and
Additional Deposit Requirements in
Sections II.(A)1(a)–(b), II.(B), and II.(C);
as well as Section III (Collateral Value
of Eligible Clearing Fund Securities) of
Procedure XV shall apply to SFT
Members in the same manner as such
sections apply to Members. As noted in
the proposed rule text, for the purpose
of applying Section I.(A)(1)(h) of
Procedure XV (Margin Liquidity
Adjustment (‘‘MLA’’) charge), SFT
Positions shall be netted with Net
Unsettled Positions, as defined in
Procedure XV.82
Section 12(d) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that NSCC shall have the
discretion to require an SFT Member to
post its Required SFT Deposit in
proportion of cash higher than as
required under subsection (c) of
proposed Section 12, as determined by
NSCC from time to time in view of
market, to the extent that the Final Settlement of an
SFT is scheduled on a particular date but does not
occur, whether directly or through a pair off as
described in Section 8 of proposed Rule 56 (as
discussed above), that could potentially be a result
of a ‘‘squeeze’’ or other market dislocation whereby
NSCC may face increased market risk in the event
of the default of either the Transferor or the
Transferee. As a result, NSCC believes it is prudent
to apply the same Required Fund Deposit multiplier
to a Non-Returned SFT as it does to CNS Fails
Positions.
The Credit Risk Rating Matrix is a financial
model utilized by NSCC in its ongoing monitoring
of Members based on various risk criteria. Each
Member is rated by the Credit Risk Rating Matrix
on a 7-point rating system, with ‘‘1’’ being the
strongest credit rating and ‘‘7’’ being the weakest
credit rating. As described above, to the extent that
the Final Settlement of an SFT is scheduled on a
particular date but does not occur, NSCC, as a
central counterparty, is exposed to market risks.
Such exposures generally increase when the SFT
Member’s risk of default increases, as reflected by
the SFT Member’s Credit Risk Rating Matrix credit
rating. As such, the Required SFT Deposit
multipliers proposed for Non-Returned SFTs vary
based on the SFT Member’s credit rating to reflect
the potential increase in market risk from SFT
Members with higher risk of default.
81 Supra note 34.
82 Supra note 33.
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market conditions and other financial
and operational capabilities of the SFT
Member. Section 12(d) would further
provide that NSCC shall make any such
determination based on such factors as
NSCC determines to be appropriate from
time to time.
Section 12(e) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that if an SFT has
Incremental Additional Independent
Amount SFT Cash, the Transferor shall
make an additional deposit to the
Clearing Fund that equals the amount of
the Incremental Additional Independent
Amount SFT Cash for such SFT
(‘‘Independent Amount SFT Cash
Deposit, and such requirement the
‘‘Independent Amount SFT Cash
Deposit Requirement’’). Section 12(e)
would also provide that the
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirement must be satisfied in cash
and may, at the discretion of NSCC, be
satisfied using Independent Amount
SFT Cash Deposits that have previously
been made by the Transferor in respect
of SFTs with the same Transferee that
have since settled.83 Section 12(e)
would further provide that the
Transferor shall satisfy any Independent
Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement
in respect of an SFT on the date that the
SFT is novated to NSCC pursuant to the
timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose. In addition,
Section 12(e) would provide that if, on
a given day, the Transferor satisfies its
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirement for some, but not all, SFTs
novated to NSCC on that day, NSCC will
consider the Transferor to have satisfied
its Independent Amount SFT Cash
Deposit Requirement for none of the
SFTs that were novated to NSCC on that
day.
Section 12(f) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that references to
Clearing Fund in the other Rules shall
include and apply to SFT Deposit, and
references to Required Fund Deposit
shall include and apply to Required SFT
Deposit, unless specifically noted
otherwise in proposed Rule 56 or in
such other Rules.
83 This could occur in a situation in which an
existing SFT settles and then the Transferor enters
into a new SFT with the same Transferee (e.g., in
a pair off as described in Section 8 of proposed Rule
56, discussed above). In that situation, if the
Transferee (or Sponsoring Member or Agent
Clearing Member) has not yet called back the
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit it posted in
respect of the Settling SFT, then NSCC may apply
the deposit to the Independent Amount SFT Cash
Deposit obligation associated with the new SFT.
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Proposed Rule 56, Section 13 (Ineligible
SFT Securities and Supported Corporate
Actions)
Section 13 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the processing of SFTs where the
underlying securities become ineligible
SFT Securities and the processing of
SFTs in the context of supported
corporate actions.
Specifically, Section 13(a) of
proposed Rule 56 would provide that
NSCC would remove an Ineligible SFT
Security from the list maintained by
NSCC as set forth in Rule 3 (Lists to be
Maintained); provided that NSCC may
not be able to identify that an SFT
Security is an Ineligible SFT Security
and remove such SFT Security from the
list maintained by NSCC if the reason
for the ineligibility is that the SFT
Security is undergoing a corporate
action or distribution not supported by
NSCC and NSCC is not in receipt of
reasonably advanced notice of such
corporate action or distribution.
Section 13(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that notwithstanding
Section 12 of proposed Rule 56, as
described above, if an SFT Security
becomes an Ineligible SFT Security
because the Current Market Price of the
SFT Security falls below the threshold
established by NSCC from time to time,
the Required SFT Deposit of each SFT
Member party to an SFT which has such
Ineligible SFT Security as its subject
shall include an additional amount
equal to the product of 100% of the
Current Market Price of such Ineligible
SFT Security and the number of such
Ineligible SFT Securities that the SFT
has as its subject.84 The threshold that
would be established by NSCC is
currently $5.00, which could be
modified by NSCC 85 at a later date after
NSCC gains more experience with the
nature of the SFT portfolios submitted
for clearing, as discussed above.
Section 13(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that if NSCC declares
that an SFT Security has or would
become an Ineligible SFT Security
because the security is or would become
ineligible for processing or is or would
be undergoing a corporate action or
distribution that is not supported by
NSCC, the Final Settlement of all SFTs
that have been novated to NSCC and
have such SFT Security as their subject
must occur before the Ineligibility
Date.86 In addition, Section 13(c) would
84 If the Current Market Price of the SFT Security
falls below the threshold established by NSCC from
time to time, NSCC would assess the additional
amount as part of the Required SFT Deposit.
85 Supra note 23.
86 The duration between the declaration and
Ineligibility Date would vary. If the ineligibility is
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provide that if following such
declaration the Transferee does not
satisfy its Final Settlement obligations
in respect of any such SFT as provided
in Section 7 of proposed Rule 56, as
described above, by the Ineligibility
Date, NSCC shall, unless NSCC has
previously debited and credited the
Price Differential from and to the SFT
Accounts of the SFT Member parties to
the SFT in accordance with Section 8 of
proposed Rule 56, as described above,
on Ineligibility Date, debit and credit
the Price Differential from and to the
SFT Accounts of the SFT Member
parties to the SFT as part of its end of
day final money settlement process in
accordance with Rule 12 (Settlement)
and Procedure VIII (Money Settlement
Service).87 Section 13(c) would further
provide that if the Price Differential is
positive, NSCC shall (x) credit an
amount equal to the Price Differential to
the Transferee’s SFT Account and (y)
debit an amount equal to the Price
Differential from the Transferor’s SFT
Account. Section 13(c) would also
provide that if the Price Differential is
negative, NSCC shall (x) credit an
amount equal to the absolute value of
the Price Differential to the Transferor’s
SFT Account and (y) debit an amount
equal to the absolute value of the Price
Differential from the Transferee’s SFT
Account. Furthermore, Section 13(c)
would provide that following the
application of Price Differential to an
Ineligible SFT on or after the relevant
Ineligibility Date, all rights and
obligations as between NSCC and the
SFT Member parties thereto with
respect to such SFT shall be discharged.
Section 13(d) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that if a corporate action
supported by NSCC in respect of the
SFT Securities that are the subject of an
SFT is scheduled to occur, NSCC may
because the SFT Security will become ineligible for
processing (i.e., no longer CNS eligible), the
duration would depend on the timing of the CNS
ineligibility triggering event (e.g., compliance with
regulatory orders, risk concerns, trading
suspension, etc.).
If the ineligibility is because the SFT Security
will be undergoing an unsupported corporate action
or distribution, then it would depend on when the
issuer of the relevant SFT Security announces the
particular corporate action or distribution event and
the record date for such corporate action or
distribution. Specifically, when announcements
from the issuers are received by DTC, DTC would
announce the corporate action or distribution event.
NSCC would notify Members of such event when
it is announced by DTC and would generally tie the
Ineligibility Date to shortly before or on the record
date for the corporate action or distribution.
87 NSCC is proposing this simplified process for
applying Price Differentials to Ineligible SFTs
because NSCC anticipates such instances would
occur on a much less frequent basis than those in
connection with Linked SFTs pursuant to Section
8(a) of proposed Rule 56 and Non-Returned SFTs
pursuant to Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 56.
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cease to permit the discharge of the
SFT’s Final Settlement obligations,
whether pursuant to Section 8 of
proposed Rule 56, as described above,
or otherwise, and treat the SFT as a
Non-Returned SFT for such period of
time determined by NSCC as necessary
to process the corporate action, except
that the additional SFT Deposit required
for Non-Returned SFTs under Section
12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described
above, shall not apply. Section 13(d)
would further provide that
notwithstanding the foregoing, NSCC
shall not limit the ability of a Member
to accelerate the Final Settlement of an
SFT in accordance with Section 11 of
proposed Rule 56, as described above,
provided that any Price Differential for
the SFT has settled in accordance with
Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 56, as
described above, and that such
accelerated Final Settlement is
permitted in accordance with the rules
and procedures of DTC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 14 (Cease To
Act Procedures for SFT Members With
Open Securities Financing
Transactions)
Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 would
establish NSCC’s procedures for when it
ceases to act for an SFT Member with
open SFTs, including recalling a nondefaulting SFT Member that is a
Transferee and liquidating the
Defaulting SFT Member’s SFT Positions
by deeming NSCC to have bought in or
sold out some or all the SFT Securities
that are the subject of such SFTs at
prevailing market price or by crossing
(including on a delayed basis).
Section 14(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the provisions of
Rule 18 (Procedures for When the
Corporation Declines or Ceases to Act)
shall not apply to the SFTs except for
Sections 1 and 8 of Rule 18.
Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that if NSCC has
declined or ceased to act for an SFT
Member and subject to Section 14 of
proposed Rule 2C, as described above:
(i) Except as otherwise may be
determined by the Board of Directors,
any SFT entered into by the SFT
Member that, at the time NSCC declined
or ceased to act for such SFT Member,
has not been novated to NSCC pursuant
to proposed Rule 56, shall be excluded
from all operations of NSCC applicable
to such SFT.
(ii) NSCC may decline to act upon any
instructions, transaction data or notices
submitted by such SFT Member or an
Approved SFT Submitter on behalf of
such SFT Member.
(iii) NSCC shall close-out such SFT
Member’s proprietary SFT Positions as
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well as any SFT Positions established in
the SFT Member’s Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account by
(x) buying in or selling out, as
applicable, some or all of the SFT
Securities that are the subject of each
SFT of the SFT Member that has been
novated to NSCC but for which the
Final Settlement has not occurred, (y)
deeming NSCC to have bought in or sold
out some or all such SFT Securities at
the bid or ask price therefor,
respectively, from a generally
recognized source or at such price or
prices as NSCC is able to purchase or
sell, respectively, some such SFT
Securities, or (z) otherwise liquidating
such SFT Member’s SFT Positions;
provided, however, if in the opinion of
NSCC, the close-out of such SFT
Member’s SFT Position would create a
disorderly market in the relevant SFT
Security, then the timing of the
completion of such close-out shall be in
the discretion of NSCC.
(iv) Any Sponsored Member
Transactions for which a Defaulting SFT
Member is the Sponsoring Member and
which have been novated to NSCC shall
continue to be processed by NSCC.
NSCC, in its sole discretion, would
determine whether to close-out the SFT
Positions established in a Defaulting
SFT Member’s Sponsored Member SubAccounts (if any), which close out shall
be effected in accordance with the
provisions of Section 14(b)(iii), as
described above, or instead permit the
relevant Sponsored Members to
complete settlement of the relevant
Sponsored Member Transactions.
(v) If, in the aggregate, the close-out of
a Defaulting SFT Member’s proprietary
SFT Positions results in a profit to
NSCC, such profit shall be applied to
any loss to NSCC arising from the
closing out of such Defaulting SFT
Member (including losses arising from
closing out the SFT Positions
established in any of the Defaulting SFT
Member’s Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Accounts or
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts or
losses arising from closing out any Net
Close Out Positions of the Defaulting
SFT Member). If, in the aggregate, the
close-out of a Defaulting SFT Member’s
proprietary SFT Positions results in a
loss to NSCC, such loss shall be netted
against, or otherwise applied to, any
amounts owed by NSCC to such SFT
Member in its proprietary capacity and
thereafter debited from such Defaulting
SFT Member’s Clearing Fund deposit at
NSCC.
(vi) If, in the aggregate, the close-out
of the SFT Positions established in the
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts of a Defaulting SFT
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Member results in a profit to NSCC,
such profit shall be credited to the
Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts. If, in the aggregate,
the close-out of the SFT Positions
established in the Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts
of a Defaulting SFT Member results in
a loss to NSCC, such loss shall be netted
against, or otherwise applied to, any
amounts owed by the NSCC to such SFT
Member in its proprietary capacity, and
thereafter debited from the Defaulting
SFT Member’s Clearing Fund deposit at
NSCC.
(vii) If, in the aggregate, the close-out
of the SFT Positions established in a
Defaulting SFT Member’s Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts results in a profit
to NSCC, such profit shall be credited to
the Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts.
If, in the aggregate, the closing out of the
SFT Positions established in a
Defaulting SFT Member’s Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts results in a loss
to NSCC, such loss shall be netted
against, or otherwise applied to, any
amounts owed by NSCC to such SFT
Member in its proprietary capacity and
thereafter debited from such Defaulting
SFT Member’s Clearing Fund deposit at
NSCC.
(viii) The Final Settlement of each
SFT that has been novated to NSCC and
that, prior to novation, was with a
Defaulting SFT Member (each, a
‘‘Default-Related SFT’’) shall occur in
accordance with the normal settlement
cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities, as applicable; provided that
NSCC may in its discretion accelerate
Final Settlement of a Default-Related
SFT to a Business Day no earlier than
the scheduled Final Settlement Date of
the Default-Related SFT; and provided
further that, if NSCC delays the closeout of any or all of a Defaulting SFT
Member’s SFT Positions on the basis
that such a close-out would create a
disorderly market in the relevant SFT
Securities, then NSCC may elect to
correspondingly delay Final Settlement
of any Default-Related SFTs that have
the same SFT Securities as their subject.
As proposed, if doing an immediate
buy-in or sell-out (as applicable) of a
defaulter’s novated SFT Positions would
create a disorderly market, then NSCC
may delay in executing such buy-in or
sell-out. This is because, as a
systemically important financial market
utility, NSCC has regulatory obligations
not to create disorderly markets or fire
sale risk in the course of its liquidation
of a defaulted Member. If NSCC were to
delay in executing any buy-in or sellout, NSCC may correspondingly delay
physical settlement of the SFTs with the
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44563
Defaulting Member’s pre-novation
counterparties.
(ix) Until Final Settlement, each
Default-Related SFT shall be treated as
a Non-Returned SFT, and NSCC would
pay and collect the Price Differential
amounts described in Section 9(a) of
proposed Rule 56, as described above.
NSCC shall have all of the rights of a
Transferor in relation to any DefaultRelated SFT in respect of which the
Defaulting SFT Member was the
Transferor, including the ability to
deliver a Recall Notice in relation to
such Default-Related SFT and to effect
a Buy-In. However, no additional SFT
Deposit required for Non-Returned SFTs
under Section 12(c) of proposed Rule
56, as described above, shall apply to
any Default-Related SFT, and no Rate
Payments shall accrue on DefaultRelated SFTs after the date on which
NSCC ceases to act for the Defaulting
SFT Member.
Accordingly, as proposed, during the
pendency of any delay in executing any
buy-in or sell-out, NSCC would
continue to satisfy any Price Differential
(i.e., the mark-to-market of the SFT
Securities) owing to the non-defaulting
party.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 15
(Sponsored Member SFT Clearing)
Section 15 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the requirements for Sponsored
Member participation in the proposed
SFT Clearing Service.
Section 15(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall be permitted to submit,
either directly as an Approved SFT
Submitter or via another Approved SFT
Submitter, to NSCC Sponsored Member
Transactions between itself and its
Sponsored Member in accordance with
the provisions of proposed Rule 56 and
proposed Rule 2C.
Section 15(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that NSCC shall
maintain for the Sponsoring Member
one or more Sponsored Member SubAccounts. Section 15(b) would further
provide that the SFT Deposits for each
Sponsored Member Sub-Account shall
be calculated separately based on the
SFT Positions in such Sponsored
Member Sub-Account, and the
Sponsoring Member, as principal, shall
be required to satisfy the SFT Deposits
for each of the Sponsoring Member’s
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts.
Section 15(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that settlement of the
Final Settlement, Rate Payment, Price
Differential, Distribution Payment and
other obligations of a Sponsored
Member Transaction that have been
novated to NSCC shall be effected by the
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Sponsoring Member, as settlement agent
for the relevant Sponsored Member,
crediting and debiting the account the
Sponsoring Member maintains for the
Sponsored Member on the Sponsoring
Member’s books and records.
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Proposed Rule 56, Section 16 (Customer
SFT Clearing)
Section 16 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the requirements for
participation by Agent Clearing
Members and their Customers in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Section 16(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall be permitted to submit,
either directly as an Approved SFT
Submitter or via another Approved SFT
Submitter, to NSCC for novation SFTs
that are Agent Clearing Member
Transactions. Section 16(a) would
further provide that any such
submission shall be in accordance with
proposed Rule 56 and proposed Rule
2D.
Section 16(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that with respect to an
Agent Clearing Member that submits
SFTs to NSCC for novation on behalf of
its Customers, NSCC shall maintain one
or more Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Accounts in the
name of the Agent Clearing Member for
the benefit of its Customers in which all
SFT Positions and SFT Cash carried by
the Agent Clearing Member on behalf of
its Customers are reflected; provided,
that each Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account may only
contain activity where the Agent
Clearing Member is acting as Transferor
on behalf of its Customers, or as
Transferee on behalf of its Customers,
but not both.
Section 16(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that with respect to SFTs
entered into on behalf of its Customers
and maintained in the Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account,
the Agent Clearing Member shall act
solely as agent of its Customers in
connection with the clearing of such
SFTs; provided, that the Agent Clearing
Member shall remain fully liable for the
performance of all obligations to NSCC
arising in connection with such SFTs;
and provided further, that the liabilities
and obligations of NSCC with respect to
such SFTs entered into by the Agent
Clearing Member on behalf of its
Customers shall extend only to the
Agent Clearing Member. Without
limiting the generality of the foregoing,
NSCC shall not have any liability or
obligation arising out of or with respect
to any SFT to any Customer of an Agent
Clearing Member.
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Section 16(d) of proposed Rule 56
would provide the SFT Deposits for
each Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account shall be calculated
separately based on the SFT Positions in
such Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account, and the Agent
Clearing Member shall, as principal, be
required to satisfy the SFT Deposit for
each of Agent Clearing Member’s Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 17
(Corporation Default)
Section 17 of proposed Rule 56 would
govern the close-out netting process that
would apply with respect to SFTs that
have been novated to NSCC in the event
of a default of NSCC.
Section 17(a) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that if a ‘‘Corporation
Default’’ occurs pursuant to Section 2 of
Rule 41 (Corporation Default), all SFTs
that have been novated to NSCC but not
yet settled, and all obligations and rights
arising thereunder which have been
assumed by NSCC pursuant to proposed
Rule 56, shall be immediately
terminated, and the Board of Directors
shall determine the Aggregate Net SFT
Close-out Value owed by or to each SFT
Member with respect to each of its SFT
Positions.
Section 17(b) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that for purposes of
Section 17 of proposed Rule 56, a
Member shall be considered a different
SFT Member in respect of each of (i) its
proprietary SFT Positions; (ii) the SFT
Positions established in its Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts (if any); and (iii) the SFT
Positions established in its Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts (if any).
Section 17(c) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that each SFT Member’s
Aggregate Net SFT Close-out Value shall
be netted and offset as described in
Section 14(b)(iv) through Section
14(b)(vi) of proposed Rule 56, as though
NSCC had ceased to act for each SFT
Member.
Section 17(d) of proposed Rule 56
would provide that the Board of
Directors shall notify each SFT Member
of the Aggregate SFT Close-out Value,
taking into account the netting and
offsetting provided for above. SFT
Members that have been notified that
they owe an amount to NSCC shall pay
that amount on or prior to the date
specified by the Board of Directors,
subject to any applicable setoff rights.
SFT Members who have a net claim
against NSCC shall be entitled to
payment thereof along with other
Members’ and any other creditors’
claims pursuant to the underlying
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contracts with respect thereto, the Rules
and applicable law. Section 17(d) would
further provide that nothing therein
shall limit the rights of NSCC upon an
SFT Member default (including
following a Corporation Default),
including any rights under any Clearing
Agency Cross-Guaranty Agreement or
otherwise.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 18 (Other
Applicable Rules, Procedures, and
Addendums)
Section 18 of proposed Rule 56 would
establish certain other Rules as being
applicable to SFTs and SFT Members,
unless expressly stated otherwise.
Specifically, Section 18 of proposed
Rule 56 would provide that Rule 1
(Definitions and Descriptions), Rule 2
(Members, Limited Members and
Sponsored Members), Rule 5 (General
Provisions), Rule 12 (Settlement), Rule
13 (Exception Processing), Rule 17 (Fine
Payments), Rule 19 (Miscellaneous
Rights of the Corporation), Rule 21
(Honest Broker), Rule 22 (Suspension of
Rules), Rule 23 (Action by the
Corporation), Rule 24 (Charges for
Services Rendered), Rule 26 (Bills
Rendered), Rule 27 (Admission to
Premises of the Corporation—Powers of
Attorney, Etc.), Rule 28 (Forms), Rule 29
(Qualified Securities Depositories), Rule
32 (Signatures), Rule 33 (Procedures),
Rule 34 (Insurance), Rule 35 (Financial
Reports), Rule 36 (Rule Changes), Rule
37 (Hearing Procedures), Rule 38
(Governing Law and Captions), Rule 39
(Reliance on Instructions), Rule 40
(Wind-Down of a Member, Fund
Member or Insurance Carrier/Retirement
Services Member), Rule 41 (Corporation
Default), Rule 42 (Wind-down of the
Corporation), Rule 45 (Notice), Rule 47
(Interpretation of Rules), Rule 48
(Disciplinary Proceedings), Rule 49
(Release of Clearing Data and Clearing
Fund Data), Rule 55 (Settling Banks and
AIP Settling Banks), Rule 58
(Limitations on Liability), Rule 60
(Market Disruption and Force Majeure),
Rule 60A (Systems Disconnect: Threat
of Significant Impact to the
Corporation’s Systems), Rule 63 (SRO
Regulatory Reporting), Procedure I
(Introduction), Procedure VIII (Money
Settlement Service), Procedure XII
(Time Schedule), Procedure XIII
(Definitions), Procedure XIV (Forms,
Media and Technical Specifications),
Procedure XV (Clearing Fund Formula
and Other Matters), Addendum B
(Qualifications and Standards of
Financial Responsibility, Operational
Capability and Business History),
Addendum H (Interpretation of the
Board of Directors Release of Clearing
Data), Addendum L (Statement of Policy
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Pertaining to Information Sharing), and
Addendum P (Fine Schedule) shall
apply to SFTs and SFT Members, unless
the context otherwise requires.
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(D) Other Rule Changes
In connection with proposed Rules
2C, 2D and 56, NSCC is also proposing
to make conforming and technical
changes to the following Rules to
accommodate the proposed introduction
of the new membership categories and
the proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Rule 1 (Definitions and Descriptions)
In connection with proposed Rules
2C, 2D and 56, NSCC is proposing to
add the following defined terms to Rule
1, in alphabetical order: Agent Clearing
Member, Agent Clearing Member
Agreement, Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account, Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposit, Agent Clearing Member
Termination Date, Agent Clearing
Member Transaction, Agent Clearing
Member Voluntary Termination Notice,
Aggregate Net SFT Close-out Value,
Approved SFT Submitter, Bilaterally
Initiated SFT, Buy-In, Buy-In Amount,
Buy-In Costs, Buy-In Indemnified
Parties, Contract Price, Corresponding
SFT Cash, Customer, Customer Clearing
Service, Deemed Buy-In Costs,
Defaulting SFT Member, Default-Related
SFT, Distribution, Distribution Amount,
Distribution Payment, Existing Master
Agreement, Final Net Settlement
Position, Final Settlement, Final
Settlement Date, Former Sponsored
Member, Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash,
Independent Amount Percentage,
Independent Amount SFT Cash,
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit,
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirement, Ineligibility Date,
Ineligible SFT, Ineligible SFT Security,
Initial Settlement, Linked SFT, Market
Value SFT Cash, Net Capital, Net
Member Capital, Net Worth, NonReturned SFT, Price Differential, Rate
Payment, Recall Date, Recall Notice,
Recalled SFT, Required SFT Deposit,
Securities Financing Transaction or
SFT, Securities Financing Transaction
Clearing Service or SFT Clearing
Service, Settling SFT, SFT Account,
SFT Cash, SFT Close-out Value, SFT
Deposit, SFT Long Position, SFT
Member, SFT Position, SFT Security,
SFT Short Position, Sponsored Member,
Sponsored Member Agreement,
Sponsored Member Liquidation
Amount, Sponsored Member SubAccount, Sponsored Member
Termination Date, Sponsored Member
Transaction, Sponsored Member
Voluntary Termination Notice,
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Sponsoring Member, Sponsoring
Member Agreement, Sponsoring
Member Guaranty, Sponsoring Member
Liquidation Amount, Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit,
Sponsoring Member Settling Bank
Omnibus Account, Sponsoring Member
Termination Date, Sponsoring Member
Voluntary Termination Notice,
Sponsoring/Sponsored Membership
Program Indemnified Parties or SMP
Indemnified Parties, Transferee,
Transferor and Volatility Charge.
In addition, NSCC is proposing to add
three defined terms: ‘‘CNS Market
Value’’, which is already defined in
Rule 41 (Corporation Default), ‘‘CNS
Transaction’’, which is already defined
in Rule 11 (CNS System), and
‘‘Corporation Default’’, which is already
defined in Rule 41 (Corporation
Default).
NSCC is also proposing to add the
defined term ‘‘FICC’’ to mean Fixed
Income Clearing Corporation. The term
‘‘FICC’’ is already used in Addendum P
(Fine Schedule) but has not been
defined.
Furthermore, NSCC is proposing to
reorder the defined term Index Receipt
Agent so it would be in alphabetical
order.
In connection with proposed Rules
2C, 2D and 56, NSCC is also proposing
to modify the definitions for the
following defined terms in Rule 1, in
alphabetical order: Clearing Fund, FFI
Member, Qualified Securities
Depository, and Required Fund Deposit.
Specifically, NSCC is proposing to
expand the definition of Clearing Fund
to include SFT Deposit, unless noted
otherwise in the Rules. NSCC is also
proposing to revise the definition of FFI
Member and the proposed definition of
Tax Certification 88 to add references to
Sponsored Members. Furthermore,
NSCC is proposing to revise the
definition of Qualified Securities
Depository to include a reference to
transfer of securities in respect of the
proposed SFT Clearing Service. Lastly,
NSCC is proposing to expand the
definition of Required Fund Deposit to
include Sponsoring Member Required
Fund Deposit, the Agent Clearing
Member Required Fund Deposit, and
the Required SFT Deposit, unless noted
otherwise in the Rules.
88 NSCC has proposed to add Tax Certification as
a defined term in Rule 1 (Definitions and
Descriptions) under a separate proposal. See SR–
NSCC–2021–009, which was filed with the
Commission but has not yet been published in the
Federal Register. A copy of this proposed rule
change is available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/
sec-rule-filings.aspx.
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44565
Rule 2 (Members and Limited Members)
NSCC is proposing to revise the title
of Rule 2 to include a reference to
Sponsored Members. As proposed, Rule
2 would be retitled as ‘‘Members,
Limited Members and Sponsored
Members’’.
NSCC is also proposing to revise
Section 2 of Rule 2. Specifically, NSCC
is proposing to clarify in Section 2(i)
that a Member shall include a Member
in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member
to the extent specified in proposed Rule
2C and an Agent Clearing Member to the
extent specified in proposed Rule 2D. In
addition, NSCC is proposing to add a
new subsection (iii) to Section 2 that
would describe Sponsored Members as
any Person that has been approved by
NSCC to become a Sponsored Member
and only participates in NSCC’s SFT
Clearing Service as provided for in
proposed Rule 56. In addition, NSCC is
proposing to add references to
Sponsored Members in the last
paragraph of Section 2, Sections 4(i) and
4(ii), and proposed Section 5 89 of Rule
2.
Rule 3 (Lists to be Maintained)
NSCC is proposing to add subsection
(g) to Section 1 of Rule 3 to provide that
NSCC shall maintain a list of the
securities that may be the subject of a
novated SFT and may from time to time
add securities to such list or remove
securities therefrom.
NSCC is also proposing to modify
Sections 3(b) and 4 of Rule 3 to include
references to Sponsored Members.
Rule 4 (Clearing Fund)
NSCC is proposing to modify Section
1 of Rule 4 in order to make it clear that
the minimum Required Fund Deposit
amount provided therein shall not
include Required SFT Deposit, which is
subject to a separate minimum $250,000
deposit requirement pursuant to Section
12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described
above.
Rule 5 (General Provisions)
NSCC is proposing to modify Section
1 of Rule 5 in order to provide that
delivery of SFT Securities and SFT Cash
to NSCC shall be made through the
facilities of a Qualified Securities
Depository. In addition, NSCC is also
proposing changes in Section 1 of Rule
5 to provide that delivery and payment
with respect to SFT Securities and SFT
Cash shall be effected as prescribed in
89 NSCC has proposed to add Section 5 to Rule
2 in a separate proposal that has been filed with the
Commission. See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 92334 (July 7, 2021), 86 FR 36815 (July 13,
2021) (SR–NSCC–2021–007).
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the Rules and regulations as NSCC may
from time to time adopt.
Rule 24 (Charges for Services Rendered)
NSCC is proposing to modify Section
1 of Rule 24 to include a reference to
Sponsored Members. In addition, NSCC
is proposing to add an additional
paragraph in Section 1 to clarify that
Members shall be responsible for all fees
pertaining to their respective
Sponsoring Member activity or Agent
Clearing Member activity, if applicable,
as set forth in NSCC’s Fee Structure.90
Rule 26 (Bills Rendered)
NSCC is proposing to modify the first
paragraph of Rule 26 to include a
reference to Sponsored Members. In
addition, NSCC is proposing to add a
sentence in that paragraph to clarify that
Members shall receive bills for their
respective aggregate Sponsoring
Member activity and Agent Clearing
Member activity, if applicable, as set
forth in NSCC’s Fee Structure.91
Rule 39 (Reliance on Instructions)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 39
to include references to Sponsored
Member and Approved SFT Submitter,
where applicable. Specifically, NSCC is
proposing to modify the first paragraph
of Rule 39 to provide that NSCC may
accept or rely upon instructions given to
NSCC by a Sponsored Member or
Approved SFT Submitter, in addition to
the various participant types currently
provided in Rule 39. Similarly, NSCC is
proposing to add references to
Approved SFT Submitter in the second
and last paragraphs of Rule 39 so that
those paragraphs would also apply to
instructions submitted by an Approved
SFT Submitter.
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Rule 42 (Wind-Down of the
Corporation)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 42
to include references to Sponsored
Members. Specifically, for purposes of
Rule 42, NSCC is proposing to revise the
defined term ‘‘Limited Member’’ to
include Sponsored Members.
Rule 49 (Release of Clearing Data and
Clearing Fund Data)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 49
to clarify that NSCC would release
Clearing Data of a Sponsored Member to
its Sponsoring Member upon the
Sponsoring Member’s written request.
Specifically, as proposed, Section (a) of
Rule 49 would provide that if the
participant is a Sponsored Member,
NSCC would also release Clearing Data
90 See
Addendum A (Fee Structure), supra note
4.
91 Id.
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relating to transactions of such
participant to such participant’s
Sponsoring Member upon the
Sponsoring Member’s written request.
Rule 58 (Limitations on Liability)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 58
to clarify that NSCC would not be
responsible for the completeness or
accuracy of the transaction data
received from the Approved SFT
Submitters, nor shall NSCC, absent
gross negligence on NSCC’s part, be
responsible for any errors, omissions or
delays that may occur in the
transmission of transaction data from an
Approved SFT Submitter.
Rule 64 (DTCC Shareholders
Agreement)
The proposed changes to Section 4 of
Rule 64 and footnote 1 thereto would
provide that Rule 64 would not be
applicable to a Sponsored Member.
However, if the Sponsored Member is
also a member or participant of another
clearing agency subsidiary of DTCC, the
Sponsored Member may be a Mandatory
Purchaser Participant or a Voluntary
Purchaser Participant pursuant to the
terms of the Shareholders Agreement
and the rules and procedures of such
other subsidiary.
Procedure XV (Clearing Fund Formula
and Other Matters)
NSCC is proposing to modify
subsection A of Section II (Minimum
Clearing Fund and Additional Deposit
Requirements) in Procedure XV in order
to make it clear that the minimum
contribution amount provided therein
shall not include Required SFT Deposit,
which is subject to a separate minimum
$250,000 deposit requirement pursuant
to Section 12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as
described above. In addition, NSCC is
proposing to modify Section II.A of
Procedure XV to make it clear that
calculation of a Member’s Required
Fund Deposit amount that must be in
cash shall exclude the Required SFT
Deposit, which is subject to a separate
$250,000 minimum cash requirement
pursuant to Section 12(c) of proposed
Rule 56, as described above.
Addendum B (Qualifications and
Standards of Financial Responsibility,
Operational Capability and Business
History)
NSCC is proposing an additional
section for the Sponsored Members.
Specifically, NSCC is proposing to add
Section 13 to Addendum B that would
describe the qualification and
operational capability that NSCC would
require from Sponsored Members.
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In addition, NSCC is proposing a
conforming change to replace ‘‘net
worth’’ in Section 3.B.4. with ‘‘Net
Worth’’ to reflect the proposed defined
term in Rule 1 (Definitions).
Furthermore, NSCC is proposing a
technical change to correct a footnote
numbering in Section 12.B.
Addendum P (Fine Schedule)
NSCC is proposing to modify
paragraph (2) of Addendum P to reflect
the proposed notification obligations of
Sponsoring Members, Sponsored
Members and Agent Clearing Members
as proposed under Sections 2(i) and 3(d)
of proposed Rule 2C and Section 2(i) of
proposed Rule 2D.
(vii) Impact of the Proposed SFT
Clearing Service on Various Persons
The proposed SFT Clearing Service
would be voluntary. Institutional firm
clients that wish to become Sponsored
Members, and Members that wish to
participate in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service would have an
opportunity to review the proposed rule
change and determine if they would like
to participate. Choosing to participate
would make these entities subject to all
of the rule changes that would be
applicable to the proposed SFT Clearing
Service and membership type, as
described below.
The proposed SFT Clearing Service
would affect institutional firm clients
that choose to become Sponsored
Members because it would impose
various requirements on them. These
requirements include, but are not
limited to, proposed Rule 56 and the
following sections of proposed Rule 2C:
(1) Eligibility, approval process and ongoing membership requirements as
specified in Sections 3 and 4, (2)
requirements related to restriction on
access to NSCC services in Section 11,
(3) requirements related to insolvency of
a Sponsored Member in Section 13, and
(4) requirements related to liquidation
of positions resulting from Sponsored
Member Transactions in Section 14.
Specific details on the requirements and
the manner in which the proposed SFT
Clearing Service would affect
institutional firm clients that choose to
become Sponsored Members can be
found above in Item II(B)(vi)(A)—
Proposed Rule Changes—Proposed Rule
2C—Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members.
The proposed SFT Clearing Service
would affect Members that choose to
participate in the service because it
would impose various requirements on
them, depending on whether they are
participating in the service as a
Sponsoring Member, an Agent Clearing
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Member and/or as a Member. These
requirements include, but are not
limited to, the requirements specified in
proposed Rule 2C for Members
participating in the service as a
Sponsoring Member; the requirements
specified in proposed Rule 2D for
Members participating in the service as
an Agent Clearing Member; and for all
Members participating in the service,
the requirements specified in proposed
Rule 56. Specific details on these
requirements and the manner in which
the proposed SFT Clearing Service
would affect Members that choose to
participate in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service are described above in
Items II(B)(vi)(A)—Proposed Rule
Changes—Proposed Rule 2C—
Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members, (vi)(B)—Proposed Rule
Changes—Proposed Rule 2D—Agent
Clearing Members, and (vi)(C)—
Proposed Rule Changes—Proposed Rule
56—Securities Financing Transaction
Clearing Service.
The proposed SFT Clearing Service
would not materially affect existing
Members that do not choose to
participate in it. First, the proposed SFT
Clearing Service would not materially
affect the operation of CNS or any other
services offered by NSCC. In addition,
SFT Members would be subject to the
same or higher credit standards and
market risk management requirements
as those applicable to Members that
choose not to participate in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service, as
described above. Moreover, although
Members who choose not to participate
in the proposed SFT Clearing Service
would be subject to potential loss
allocation in the event of an SFT
Member default (just as SFT Members
would be subject to potential loss
allocation in the event of the default of
a Member that chooses not to participate
in the proposed SFT Clearing Service),
the underlying securities that would be
subject of any such default-related
liquidation of an SFT Member are a
subset of the same CNS-eligible
securities with respect to which NSCC
today guarantees settlement in the cash
equity market, thus not materially
affecting the nature of the loss allocation
risk applicable to Members.
Expected Effect on, and Management of,
Risks to the Clearing Agency, Its
Participants and the Market
NSCC expects certain market,
liquidity, credit and operational risks
may be presented by the establishment
of the proposed SFT Clearing Service
and the additional membership
categories proposed in connection
therewith. Accordingly, NSCC proposes
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to address and manage each of these
risks as detailed below.
Market Risk
The proposal is structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated market risk. SFT
activity would be risk managed by
NSCC in a manner consistent with
Members’ CNS positions. Moreover, all
SFT Positions would be margined
independently of the Member’s other
positions, i.e., Required SFT Deposit.
The Required SFT Deposit would
generally be calculated using the same
procedure applicable to CNS positions,
but with a separate $250,000
minimum.92
As described above, consistent with
the manner in which clearing fund
requirements are satisfied by members
of FICC for their cleared securities
financing transactions, NSCC would
require that (i) a minimum of 40% of an
SFT Member’s Required SFT Deposit
consist of a combination of cash and
Eligible Clearing Fund Treasury
Securities and (ii) the lesser of
$5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT Member’s
Required SFT Deposit (but not less than
$250,000) 93 consist of cash.94 NSCC
would also have the discretion to
require a Member to post its Required
SFT Deposit in proportion of cash
higher than would otherwise be
required. NSCC’s determination to
impose any such requirement would be
made in view of market conditions and
other financial and operational
capabilities of the relevant SFT Member.
Furthermore, NSCC would require
additional Clearing Fund deposits to
address two situations that may present
unique risk. First, if the share price of
underlying securities of an SFT that has
already been novated to NSCC falls
below the threshold established by
NSCC from time to time, NSCC would
require both pre-novation counterparties
to the SFT to post Clearing Fund equal
to 100% of the market value of such
underlying securities until such time as
the per share price of the underlying
securities equals or exceeds such
threshold. Second, in the event an SFT
is subject to a collateral haircut (i.e., the
SFT Cash exceeds the market value of
the securities), NSCC would require the
Transferor (or in the case of an Agent
Clearing Member Transaction, the Agent
Clearing Member) to post Clearing Fund
equal to such excess.
Additionally, the Sponsoring Member
Required Fund Deposits and Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund
92 Supra
note 32.
note 34.
94 Supra note 35.
44567
Deposits would each be calculated on a
gross basis, and no offsets for netting of
positions as between different
Sponsored Members or different
Customers, as applicable, would be
permitted. Moreover, any Member that
opts to apply to become a Sponsoring
Member or an Agent Clearing Member
would be subject to an activity limit (as
described above).
NSCC is also proposing to limit the
SFTs eligible for clearing to overnight
transactions on securities that are CNSeligible equity securities with a share
price that equals or exceeds the
threshold established by NSCC from
time to time and that are fully
collateralized by cash. NSCC believes
these limitations, in addition to the
Clearing Fund requirements, would
limit the potential market risk
associated with SFTs.
Liquidity Risk
The proposal is also structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated liquidity risk.
Specifically, the proposal would
mitigate NSCC’s liquidity risk
associated with an SFT Member default
by providing that the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT
Members under SFTs to which the
Defaulting SFT Member was a party will
be settled in accordance with the
normal settlement cycle for the
purchase or sale of securities, as
applicable.95 NSCC would accordingly
be able to satisfy such Final Settlement
obligations through market action (if
necessary) rather than through its own
liquidity resources. More specifically,
NSCC would be able to sell the
securities lent by a Defaulting SFT
Member and/or purchase the securities
borrowed by a Defaulting SFT Member
and use the proceeds of such sales and/
or the securities purchased to satisfy the
Defaulting SFT Member’s Final
Settlement obligations to non-defaulting
SFT Members. In the absence of this
provision, NSCC would need to rely
exclusively on its liquidity resources to
satisfy Final Settlement obligations
owing to non-defaulting SFT Members,
since it would not receive the proceeds
of any market action to liquidate the
Defaulting SFT Member’s SFT Positions
until after Final Settlement obligations
were due.
The proposal would also provide that
NSCC could further delay its
satisfaction of Final Settlement
obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement
cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC
93 Supra
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95 See
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proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
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determines that taking market action to
close-out some or all of the Defaulting
SFT Member’s novated SFT Positions
would create a disorderly market in the
relevant SFT Securities.96
However, in any case, until NSCC has
satisfied the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT
Members, NSCC would continue paying
to and receiving from non-defaulting
SFT Members the applicable Price
Differential (i.e., the change in market
value of the relevant securities) with
respect to their novated SFTs.97 NSCC
would take into account such Price
Differential payment obligations when
calculating the amount of liquidity
resources that NSCC may require in the
event of the default of the participant
family that would generate the largest
aggregate payment obligation for NSCC
in extreme but plausible market
conditions.98 99 By continuing to process
these Price Differential payments until
Final Settlement occurs, NSCC would
ensure that non-defaulting SFT
Members are kept in the same position
as if the Defaulting SFT Member had not
defaulted and the pre-novation
counterparties had instead agreed to roll
the SFTs. To the extent NSCC is
required to pay a Price Differential to a
non-defaulting SFT Member, NSCC
would rely on the NSCC Clearing Fund,
including the Required SFT Deposit, in
order to cover the liquidity need
associated with any such Price
Differential obligation.
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Credit Risk
The proposal is also structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated credit risk. In
addition to the Clearing Fund
requirements discussed above, any
Member that elects to participate in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service would
be subject to the same initial
membership requirements and ongoing
membership requirements and
monitoring as any other Member.
Moreover, any Member that opts to
apply to become a Sponsoring Member
or an Agent Clearing Member would be
subject to an activity limit (as described
above) in addition to an approval
process that is separate from its original
Member applications, as well as ongoing
credit surveillance in its capacity as a
Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing
Member, as applicable.
96 Id.
97 See
The proposal is also structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated operational risk.
NSCC proposes to utilize to a significant
extent the same processes and
infrastructure as it has used for many
years to clear and settle cash market
transactions for purposes of clearing and
settling SFTs. NSCC staff is well versed
in such processes and infrastructure and
has been actively involved in the
development of the proposed SFT
Clearing Service, thereby allowing for
ready integration of support for the
proposed SFT Clearing Service into
NSCC staff’s current workflows.
Accordingly, NSCC believes that,
taken as a whole, the proposal would
not have any risks to NSCC, its Members
and the market overall that cannot be
prudently managed or mitigated.
Consistency With the Clearing
Supervision Act
The proposed rule change would be
consistent with Section 805(b) of Title
VIII of the Clearing Supervision Act.100
The objectives and principles of Section
805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act
are to promote robust risk management,
promote safety and soundness, reduce
systemic risks, and support the stability
of the broader financial system.101
NSCC believes that the proposal
would promote robust risk management,
promote safety and soundness, reduce
systemic risks, and support the stability
of the broader financial system,
consistent with the objectives and
principles of Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act.
Promoting Robust Risk Management and
Promoting Safety and Soundness
NSCC believes that the proposal is
consistent with promoting robust risk
management and promoting safety and
soundness, particularly management of
market risks, liquidity risks, credit risks
and operational risks presented to
NSCC.
The proposal is structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated market risk. SFT
activity would be risk managed by
NSCC in a manner consistent with
Members’ CNS positions. Moreover, all
SFT Positions would be margined
independently of the Member’s other
positions, i.e., Required SFT Deposit.
The Required SFT Deposit would
generally be calculated using the same
procedure applicable to CNS positions,
proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
98 Id.
99 17
Operational Risk
102 Supra
100 12
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(7).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:18 Aug 11, 2021
note 32.
note 34.
104 Supra note 35.
U.S.C. 5464(b).
103 Supra
101 Id.
Jkt 253001
but with a separate $250,000
minimum.102
As described above, consistent with
the manner in which clearing fund
requirements are satisfied by members
of FICC for their cleared securities
financing transactions, NSCC would
require that (i) a minimum of 40% of an
SFT Member’s Required SFT Deposit
consist of a combination of cash and
Eligible Clearing Fund Treasury
Securities and (ii) the lesser of
$5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT Member’s
Required SFT Deposit (but not less than
$250,000) 103 consist of cash.104 NSCC
would also have the discretion to
require a Member to post its Required
SFT Deposit in proportion of cash
higher than would otherwise be
required. NSCC’s determination to
impose any such requirement would be
made in view of market conditions and
other financial and operational
capabilities of the relevant SFT Member.
Furthermore, NSCC would require
additional Clearing Fund deposits to
address two situations that may present
unique risk. First, if the share price of
underlying securities of an SFT that has
already been novated to NSCC falls
below the threshold established by
NSCC from time to time, NSCC would
require both pre-novation counterparties
to the SFT to post Clearing Fund equal
to 100% of the market value of such
underlying securities until such time as
the per share price of the underlying
securities equals or exceeds such
threshold. Second, in the event an SFT
is subject to a collateral haircut (i.e., the
SFT Cash exceeds the market value of
the securities), NSCC would require the
Transferor (or in the case of an Agent
Clearing Member Transaction, the Agent
Clearing Member) to post Clearing Fund
equal to such excess.
Additionally, the Sponsoring Member
Required Fund Deposits and Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposits would each be calculated on a
gross basis, and no offsets for netting of
positions as between different
Sponsored Members or different
Customers, as applicable, would be
permitted. Moreover, any Member that
opts to apply to become a Sponsoring
Member or an Agent Clearing Member
would be subject to an activity limit (as
described above).
NSCC is also proposing to limit the
SFTs eligible for clearing to overnight
transactions on securities that are CNSeligible equity securities with a share
price that equals or exceeds the
threshold established by NSCC from
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\12AUN3.SGM
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time to time and that are fully
collateralized by cash. NSCC believes
these limitations, in addition to the
Clearing Fund requirements, would
limit the potential market risk
associated with SFTs.
The proposal is also structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated liquidity risk.
Specifically, the proposed rule change
would mitigate NSCC’s liquidity risk
associated with an SFT Member default
by providing that the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT
Members under SFTs to which the
Defaulting SFT Member was a party will
be settled in accordance with the
normal settlement cycle for the
purchase or sale of securities, as
applicable.105 NSCC would accordingly
be able to satisfy such Final Settlement
obligations through market action (if
necessary) rather than through its own
liquidity resources. More specifically,
NSCC would be able to sell the
securities lent by a Defaulting SFT
Member and/or purchase the securities
borrowed by a Defaulting SFT Member
and use the proceeds of such sales and/
or the securities purchased to satisfy the
Defaulting SFT Member’s Final
Settlement obligations to non-defaulting
SFT Members. In the absence of this
provision, NSCC would need to rely
exclusively on its liquidity resources to
satisfy Final Settlement obligations
owing to non-defaulting SFT Members,
since it would not receive the proceeds
of any market action to liquidate the
Defaulting SFT Member’s SFT Positions
until after Final Settlement obligations
were due.
The proposal would also provide that
NSCC could further delay its
satisfaction of Final Settlement
obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement
cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC
determines that taking market action to
close-out some or all of the Defaulting
SFT Member’s novated SFT Positions
would create a disorderly market in the
relevant SFT Securities.106
However, in any case, until NSCC has
satisfied the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT
Members, NSCC would continue paying
to and receiving from non-defaulting
SFT Members the applicable Price
Differential (i.e., the change in market
value of the relevant securities) with
respect to their novated SFTs.107 NSCC
would take into account such Price
Differential payment obligations when
105 See
proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
106 Id.
107 See
calculating the amount of liquidity
resources that NSCC may require in the
event of the default of the participant
family that would generate the largest
aggregate payment obligation for NSCC
in extreme but plausible market
conditions.108 109 By continuing to
process these Price Differential
payments until Final Settlement occurs,
NSCC would ensure that non-defaulting
SFT Members are kept in the same
position as if the Defaulting SFT
Member had not defaulted and the prenovation counterparties had instead
agreed to roll the SFTs. To the extent
NSCC is required to pay a Price
Differential to a non-defaulting SFT
Member, NSCC would rely on the NSCC
Clearing Fund, including the Required
SFT Deposit, in order to cover the
liquidity need associated with any such
Price Differential obligation. The
proposal is also structured in a manner
that allows NSCC to protect itself from
associated credit risk. In addition to the
Clearing Fund requirements discussed
above, any Member that elects to
participate in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service would be subject to the
same initial membership requirements
and ongoing membership requirements
and monitoring as any other Member.
Moreover, any Member that opts to
apply to become a Sponsoring Member
or an Agent Clearing Member would be
subject to an activity limit (as described
above) in addition to an approval
process that is separate from its original
Member applications, as well as ongoing
credit surveillance in its capacity as a
Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing
Member, as applicable.
The proposal is also structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated operational risk.
NSCC proposes to utilize to a significant
extent the same processes and
infrastructure as it has used for many
years to clear and settle cash market
transactions for purposes of clearing and
settling SFTs. NSCC staff is well versed
in such processes and infrastructure and
has been actively involved in the
development of the proposed SFT
Clearing Service, thereby allowing for
ready integration of support for the
proposed SFT Clearing Service into
NSCC staff’s current workflows.
For these reasons NSCC believes the
proposal would help promote robust
risk management at NSCC, consistent
with the objective and principles of
Section 805(b) of the Clearing
Supervision Act.
44569
Reducing Systemic Risks and
Supporting the Stability of the Broader
Financial System
NSCC also believes that the proposal
is consistent with reducing systemic
risks and supporting the stability of the
broader financial system. As described
above, the proposal would lower the
risk of liquidity drain in the U.S. equity
securities financing market by lessening
counterparties’ likely inclination to
unwind transactions in a stressed
market scenario. NSCC would use its
risk management resources to provide
confidence to market participants that
they will receive back their cash or
securities, as applicable, which should
limit the propensity for market
participants to seek to unwind their
transactions in a stressed market
scenario.
In addition, the proposal would
protect against fire sale risk. As
described above, in the event of a
default, NSCC would conduct a
centralized, orderly liquidation of the
defaulter’s SFT Positions. Such an
organized liquidation should result in
substantially less price depreciation and
market disruption than multiple
independent non-defaulting parties
racing against one another to liquidate
the positions. In addition, NSCC would
only need to liquidate the defaulter’s net
positions. Limiting the positions that
need to be liquidated to the defaulter’s
net positions should reduce the volume
of required sales activity, which in turn
should limit the price and market
impact of the close-out of the defaulter’s
positions. NSCC would also use its risk
management resources to provide
confidence to market participants that
they will receive back their cash or
securities, as applicable, which should
limit the propensity for market
participants to seek to unwind their
transactions in a stressed market
scenario. By lowering the risk of
liquidity drain in the U.S. equity
securities financing market and
protecting against fire sale risk, NSCC
believes the proposal would help reduce
systemic risks, which in turn helps
support the stability of the broader
financial system, consistent with the
objectives and principles of Section
805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act.
NSCC also believes that the proposed
rule change is consistent with Rules
17Ad–22(e)(7), 17Ad–22(e)(8), and
17Ad–22(e)(18), promulgated under the
Act,110 for the reasons stated below.
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(7) under the Act
requires NSCC to establish, implement,
maintain, and enforce written policies
108 Id.
proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
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109 17
PO 00000
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(7).
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4703
110 17
E:\FR\FM\12AUN3.SGM
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(7), (e)(8), and (e)(18).
12AUN3
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 153 / Thursday, August 12, 2021 / Notices
and procedures reasonably designed to
effectively measure, monitor, and
manage the liquidity risk that arises in
or is borne by the covered clearing
agency.111 NSCC believes that the
proposed changes to establish the SFT
Clearing Service are consistent with
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(7) because, as
described above, the proposal is
structured in a manner that allows
NSCC to protect itself from associated
liquidity risk. Specifically, the proposal
would mitigate NSCC’s liquidity risk
associated with an SFT Member default
by providing that the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT
Members under SFTs to which the
Defaulting SFT Member was a party will
be settled in accordance with the
normal settlement cycle for the
purchase or sale of securities, as
applicable.112 NSCC would accordingly
be able to satisfy such Final Settlement
obligations through market action (if
necessary) rather than through its own
liquidity resources. More specifically,
NSCC would be able to sell the
securities lent by a Defaulting SFT
Member and/or purchase the securities
borrowed by a Defaulting SFT Member
and use the proceeds of such sales and/
or the securities purchased to satisfy the
Defaulting SFT Member’s Final
Settlement obligations to non-defaulting
SFT Members. In the absence of this
provision, NSCC would need to rely
exclusively on its liquidity resources to
satisfy Final Settlement obligations
owing to non-defaulting SFT Members,
since it would not receive the proceeds
of any market action to liquidate the
Defaulting SFT Member’s SFT Positions
until after Final Settlement obligations
were due.
The proposal would also provide that
NSCC could further delay its
satisfaction of Final Settlement
obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement
cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC
determines that taking market action to
close-out some or all of the Defaulting
SFT Member’s novated SFT Positions
would create a disorderly market in the
relevant SFT Securities.113 However, in
any case, until NSCC has satisfied the
Final Settlement obligations owing to
non-defaulting SFT Members, NSCC
would continue paying to and receiving
from non-defaulting SFT Members the
applicable Price Differential (i.e., the
change in market value of the relevant
securities) with respect to their novated
111 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(7).
proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
112 See
113 Id.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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SFTs.114 NSCC would take into account
such Price Differential payment
obligations when calculating the
amount of liquidity resources that NSCC
may require in the event of the default
of the participant family that would
generate the largest aggregate payment
obligation for NSCC in extreme but
plausible market conditions.115 116 By
continuing to process these Price
Differential payments until Final
Settlement occurs, NSCC would ensure
that non-defaulting SFT Members are
kept in the same position as if the
Defaulting SFT Member had not
defaulted and the pre-novation
counterparties had instead agreed to roll
the SFTs. To the extent NSCC is
required to pay a Price Differential to a
non-defaulting SFT Member, NSCC
would rely on the NSCC Clearing Fund,
including the Required SFT Deposit, in
order to cover the liquidity need
associated with any such Price
Differential obligation. Therefore, NSCC
believes that the proposed changes to
establish the SFT Clearing Service are
consistent with Rule 17Ad–22(e)(7)
under the Act.117
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(8) under the Act 118
requires NSCC to establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
define the point at which settlement is
final to be no later than the end of the
day on which the payment or obligation
is due. NSCC believes that the proposed
changes to establish the SFT Clearing
Service are consistent with Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(8) because, as described above, the
proposal would make it clear to SFT
Members the point at which settlement
is final with respect to SFTs cleared
through NSCC. Specifically, Section 7 in
the proposed Rule 56 (Securities
Financing Transaction Clearing Service)
provides that an SFT, or a portion
thereof, shall be deemed complete and
final upon Final Settlement of the SFT,
or such portion.119 Having clear
114 See
proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
115 Id.
116 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(7).
117 Id.
118 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(8).
proposed changes to establish the SFT
Clearing Service would provide that NSCC may
delay the close-out of a Defaulting SFT Member’s
SFT Positions if such a close-out would create a
disorderly market. In such a situation, the proposed
changes would allow NSCC to correspondingly
delay Final Settlement of any Default-Related SFTs
on the same SFT Securities. NSCC does not believe
this provision would affect settlement finality
because if NSCC delays Final Settlement following
an SFT Member Default, the Non-Defaulting
Member’s related payment or delivery obligation is
correspondingly delayed. As a result, the provision
would not allow a settlement to be final after the
due date of the relevant payment obligations.
Rather, consistent with the approach of many
119 The
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Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4703
provisions in this regard would enable
SFT Members to better identify the
point at which settlement is final with
respect to their SFTs. As such, NSCC
believes the proposed changes to
establish the SFT Clearing Service are
consistent with Rule 17Ad–22(e)(8)
under the Act.120
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(18) under the Act
requires, in part, that NSCC establish,
implement, maintain and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to establish
objective, risk-based, and publicly
disclosed criteria for participation.121
NSCC believes the proposed changes to
establish new membership categories
and requirements for Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members
would establish objective, risk-based,
and publicly disclosed criteria for
participation in NSCC as Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members.
Specifically, as proposed, in order for an
applicant to become a Sponsoring
Member, the applicant would be
required to satisfy a number of objective
and risk-based eligibility criteria. First,
the applicant must be a Member. In
addition, if the applicant is a RegisteredBroker-Dealer, then it would be required
to have (i) Net Worth of at least $25
million and (ii) excess net capital over
the minimum net capital requirement
imposed by the SEC (or such higher
minimum capital requirement imposed
by the applicant’s designated examining
authority) of at least $10 million.
Likewise, in order for an applicant to
become a Sponsored Member, the
applicant would be required to meet
certain objective, risk-based eligibility
criteria. Specifically, an applicant
would be eligible to apply to become a
Sponsored Member if it is either a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
defined by Rule 144A 122 under the
Securities Act,123 or a legal entity that,
although not organized as an entity
specifically listed in paragraph
(a)(1)(i)(H) of Rule 144A under the
Securities Act, satisfies the financial
requirements necessary to be a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
specified in that paragraph. If approved,
the requirements for proposed new
clearing agency and derivatives clearing
organization rules, it simply allows NSCC to
postpone those due dates in order to minimize
market destabilization. See, e.g., The Options
Clearing Corporation (‘‘OCC’’) Rule 903 (Obligation
to Deliver) (https://www.theocc.com/getmedia/
9d3854cd-b782-450f-bcf7-33169b0576ce/occ_
rules.pdf) and ICE Clear Credit LLC Rule 20–605(e)
(https://www.theice.com/publicdocs/clear_credit/
ICE_Clear_Credit_Rules.pdf).
120 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(8).
121 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(18).
122 17 CFR 230.144A.
123 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
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Sponsoring Member and Sponsored
Member membership categories would
become part of the Rules, which are
publicly available on DTCC’s website
(www.dtcc.com), and market
participants would be able to review
them in connection with their
evaluation of potential participation in
NSCC as Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members. Therefore, NSCC
believes that the proposed changes to
establish new membership categories
and requirements for Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members are
consistent with Rule 17Ad–22(e)(18)
under the Act.124
Similarly, NSCC believes the
proposed changes to establish new a
membership category and requirements
for Agent Clearing Members would
establish objective, risk-based, and
publicly disclosed criteria for
participation in NSCC as Agent Clearing
Members. Specifically, as proposed, in
order for an applicant to become an
Agent Clearing Member, the applicant
would be required to satisfy a number
of objective and risk-based eligibility
criteria. First, the applicant must be a
Member. In addition, if the applicant is
a Registered-Broker-Dealer, then it
would be required to have (i) Net Worth
of at least $25 million and (ii) excess net
capital over the minimum net capital
requirement imposed by the SEC (or
such higher minimum capital
requirement imposed by the applicant’s
designated examining authority) of at
least $10 million. If approved, the
requirements for proposed new Agent
Clearing Member membership category
would become part of the Rules, which
are publicly available on DTCC’s
website (www.dtcc.com), and market
participants would be able to review
them in connection with their
evaluation of potential participation in
NSCC as Agent Clearing Members.
Therefore, NSCC believes that the
proposed changes to establish a new
membership category and requirements
for Agent Clearing Members are
consistent with Rule 17Ad–22(e)(18)
under the Act.125
124 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(18).
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125 Id.
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III. Date of Effectiveness of the Advance
Notice, and Timing for Commission
Action
The proposed change may be
implemented if the Commission does
not object to the proposed change
within 60 days of the later of (i) the date
that the proposed change was filed with
the Commission or (ii) the date that any
additional information requested by the
Commission is received. The clearing
agency shall not implement the
proposed change if the Commission has
any objection to the proposed change.
The Commission may extend the
period for review by an additional 60
days if the proposed change raises novel
or complex issues, subject to the
Commission providing the clearing
agency with prompt written notice of
the extension. A proposed change may
be implemented in less than 60 days
from the date the advance notice is
filed, or the date further information
requested by the Commission is
received, if the Commission notifies the
clearing agency in writing that it does
not object to the proposed change and
authorizes the clearing agency to
implement the proposed change on an
earlier date, subject to any conditions
imposed by the Commission.
The clearing agency shall post notice
on its website of proposed changes that
are implemented.
The proposal shall not take effect
until all regulatory actions required
with respect to the proposal are
completed.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the advance notice is
consistent with the Clearing
Supervision Act. Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NSCC–2021–803 on the subject line.
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
44571
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE,
Washington, DC 20549.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NSCC–2021–803. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the advance notice that
are filed with the Commission, and all
written communications relating to the
advance notice between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of NSCC and on DTCC’s website
(https://dtcc.com/legal/sec-rulefilings.aspx). All comments received
will be posted without change. Persons
submitting comments are cautioned that
we do not redact or edit personal
identifying information from comment
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–NSCC–
2021–803 and should be submitted on
or before August 27, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.126
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–17075 Filed 8–11–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
126 17
E:\FR\FM\12AUN3.SGM
CFR 200.30–3(a)(91).
12AUN3
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 153 (Thursday, August 12, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 44530-44571]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-17075]
[[Page 44529]]
Vol. 86
Thursday,
No. 153
August 12, 2021
Part III
Securities and Exchange Commission
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Self-Regulatory Organizations; National Securities Clearing
Corporation; Notice of Filing of Advance Notice To Establish the
Securities Financing Transaction Clearing Service and Make Other
Changes; Notice
Federal Register / Vol. 86 , No. 153 / Thursday, August 12, 2021 /
Notices
[[Page 44530]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-92568; File No. SR-NSCC-2021-803]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; National Securities Clearing
Corporation; Notice of Filing of Advance Notice to Establish the
Securities Financing Transaction Clearing Service and Make Other
Changes
August 5, 2021.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act entitled the Payment,
Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act of 2010 (``Clearing
Supervision Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4(n)(1)(i) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act''),\2\ notice is hereby given that on July
22, 2021, National Securities Clearing Corporation (``NSCC'') filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the
advance notice as described in Items I, II and III below, which Items
have been prepared by the clearing agency.\3\ The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit comments on the advance notice from
interested persons.
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\1\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(n)(1)(i).
\3\ NSCC filed this advance notice as a proposed rule change
(SR-NSCC-2021-010) with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(1)
of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), and Rule 19b-4 thereunder, 17 CFR
240.19b-4. A copy of the proposed rule change is available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx.
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I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This advance notice consists of proposed modifications to the NSCC
Rules & Procedures (``Rules'') \4\ that would (i) establish new
membership categories and requirements for sponsoring members and
sponsored members whereby existing Members would be permitted to
sponsor certain institutional firms into membership, (ii) establish a
new membership category and requirements for agent clearing members
whereby existing Members would be permitted to submit, on behalf of
their customers, transactions to NSCC for novation, (iii) establish the
securities financing transaction clearing service (``Securities
Financing Transaction Clearing Service'' or ``SFT Clearing Service'')
to make central clearing available at NSCC for equity securities
financing transactions, which are, broadly speaking, transactions where
the parties exchange equity securities against cash and simultaneously
agree to exchange the same securities and cash, plus or minus a rate
payment, on a future date (collectively, ``Securities Financing
Transactions'' or ``SFTs''), and (iv) make other amendments and
clarifications to the Rules, as described in greater detail below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Capitalized terms not defined herein are defined in the
Rules, available at https://www.dtcc.com/~/media/Files/Downloads/
legal/rules/nscc_rules.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, the clearing agency included
statements concerning the purpose of and basis for the Advance Notice
and discussed any comments it received on the Advance Notice. The text
of these statements may be examined at the places specified in Item IV
below. The clearing agency has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A and B below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
(A) Clearing Agency's Statement on Comments on the Advance Notice
Received From Members, Participants, or Others
NSCC reviewed the proposal with various Members and market
participants (e.g., agent lenders, brokers, matching service providers,
and books and records service providers) in order to benefit from their
expertise and industry knowledge. Written comments relating to this
proposal have not been received from Members or any other person. If
any written comments are received, they will be publicly filed as an
Exhibit 2 to this filing, as required by Form 19b-4 and the General
Instructions thereto.
Persons submitting comments are cautioned that, according to
Section IV (Solicitation of Comments) of the Exhibit 1A in the General
Instructions to Form 19b-4, the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from comment submissions. Commenters should
submit only information that they wish to make available publicly,
including their name, email address, and any other identifying
information.
All prospective commenters should follow the Commission's
instructions on how to submit comments, available at https://www.sec.gov/regulatory-actions/how-to-submit-comments. General
questions regarding the rule filing process or logistical questions
regarding this filing should be directed to the Main Office of the
Commission's Division of Trading and Markets at
[email protected] or 202-551-5777.
NSCC reserves the right not to respond to any comments received.
(B) Advance Notice Filed Pursuant to Section 806(e) of the Clearing
Supervision Act
Nature of the Proposed Change
The purpose of this proposed rule change is to (i) establish new
membership categories and requirements for sponsoring members and
sponsored members whereby existing Members would be permitted to
sponsor certain institutional firms into membership, (ii) establish a
new membership category and requirements for agent clearing members
whereby existing Members would be permitted to submit, on behalf of
their customers, transactions to NSCC for novation, (iii) establish the
SFT Clearing Service to make central clearing available at NSCC for
SFTs, and (iv) make other amendments and clarifications to the Rules,
as described in greater detail below.
(i) Background
NSCC is proposing to introduce central clearing for SFTs, which
are, broadly speaking, securities lending transactions where parties
exchange equity securities against cash and simultaneously agree to
exchange the same securities and cash, plus or minus a rate payment, on
a future date. In particular, the proposed SFT Clearing Service would
expand central clearing at NSCC to include SFTs with a one Business Day
term (i.e., overnight SFTs) in eligible equity securities that are
entered into by Members, institutional firms that are sponsored into
NSCC by a Sponsoring Member (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change), or Agent Clearing Members (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) on behalf of Customers (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change), as applicable.
SFTs involve the owner of securities (typically a registered
investment company, pension plan, sovereign wealth fund or other
institutional firm) transferring those securities temporarily to a
borrower (typically a hedge fund). SFTs are often facilitated and
intermediated by broker-dealers and agent lenders (i.e., custodial
banks or other institutions that lend out securities as agent on behalf
of institutional firms). In return for the lent securities, the
borrower transfers collateral, and a net rate payment is typically
transferred to either the lender or the borrower that reflects the
liquidity of the lent securities, as well as interest on any cash
collateral.\5\ NSCC
[[Page 44531]]
understands that SFTs provide liquidity to markets and facilitates the
ability of market participants to make delivery on short-sales, and
thereby avoid failures to deliver, ``naked'' shorts, and similar
situations. On a typical Business Day, The Depository Trust Company
(``DTC''), an NSCC affiliate, processes deliver orders related to
securities lending transactions on securities having a value of
approximately $150 billion.
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\5\ This rate payment is typically calculated in a manner
similar to interest on the principal balance of a loan and accrues
on a daily basis. As a result, the rate payment is typically
calculated as the product of a specified balance (typically the
amount of cash collateral unless the collateral consists of
securities) and a specified rate (reflecting both the liquidity of
the securities and the ability of the lender to re-use the cash
collateral), divided by 360 or a similar day count fraction.
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Capital Efficiency Opportunities
The Basel III \6\ capital and leverage requirements, as implemented
by the U.S. banking regulators, constrain the ability of agent lenders
and brokers to intermediate and facilitate SFTs.\7\ NSCC believes
central clearing of SFTs would be able to address these constraints,
which may otherwise impair market participants' ability to engage in
SFTs.
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\6\ Basel III is an internationally agreed set of measures
developed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in response
to the financial crisis of 2007-2009.
\7\ See, e.g., 12 CFR part 3 (Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency--Capital Adequacy Standards); 12 CFR part 217 (Federal
Reserve--Capital Adequacy of Bank Holding Companies, Savings and
Loan Holding Companies, and State Member Banks); 12 CFR part 252,
subpart Q (Single Counterparty Credit Limits); 12 CFR part 324
(Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation--Capital Adequacy of FDIC-
Supervised Institutions).
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For example, NSCC believes it is uniquely positioned to create
balance sheet netting opportunities for market participants (i.e., the
ability to offset cash payables and receivables versus NSCC) by
becoming the legal counterparty to both pre-novation counterparties to
an SFT through novation. Specifically, market participants that borrow
securities through NSCC and then onward lend those securities, or other
securities, to another NSCC Member through the proposed SFT Clearing
Service may have the ability to net down the cash collateral return
obligations and entitlements related to such SFTs. By contrast, for
bilateral SFTs, market participants may be required to record those
payables and receivables on their balance sheets on a gross (rather
than netted) basis. A netted balance sheet can create significant
capital benefits for market participants because it can reduce the
amount of regulatory capital they must hold against SFTs under the U.S.
``supplementary leverage ratio'' and other capital requirements that
favor a netted balance sheet.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See 12 CFR 217.10(c)(4)(ii)(E)-(F).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, under Basel III, bank holding companies that have
broker-dealer subsidiary borrowers are required to reserve capital
against their exposures to institutional firm lenders of securities in
relation to the cash collateral posted by such borrowers. Those capital
requirements can vary depending on the credit profile of the
institutional firm lender, and generally are well in excess of those
applied to exposures to qualifying central counterparties, such as
NSCC.\9\ The counterparty risk weight of a qualifying central
counterparty, like NSCC, is 2%,\10\ which may result in considerable
capital savings to these bank holding companies, to the extent they
participate in central clearing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See 12 CFR 217.32 and 217.37 generally.
\10\ See 12 CFR 217.35(c)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, agent lending banks and bank holding company parents of
broker-dealer borrowers that participate in central clearing could
receive beneficial treatment under the single counterparty credit
limits, which exempt exposures to qualifying central
counterparties.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 12 CFR 252.77(a)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In light of the potential for central clearing to alleviate the
aforementioned capital constraints otherwise applicable to bilateral
SFTs, NSCC believes that central clearing of SFTs may increase the
capacity of market participants to engage in SFTs.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Members should discuss this matter with their accounting
and regulatory capital experts.
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Fire Sale Risk Mitigation
In addition to creating capital efficiency opportunities for market
participants, NSCC believes that broadening the scope of central
clearing at NSCC to SFTs would also reduce the potential for market
disruption from fire sales.
In the case of securities lending transactions, the primary risk of
fire sales \13\ relates to the reinvestment of cash collateral by
institutional firms that are the lenders in securities lending
transactions. Those institutional firms will typically reinvest the
cash collateral they receive from the borrower into other securities.
If the borrower of the securities thereafter defaults, the
institutional firm lenders generally need to quickly liquidate the
securities representing the reinvestment in order to raise cash to
purchase the originally lent security. A substantial number of
disconnected and competing liquidations by multiple lenders can create
fire sale conditions for the securities being liquidated, which can
harm not only the institutional firm lenders by potentially lowering
the amount of cash they can raise in the sale of such securities, but
also create market losses for all holders of such securities.\14\
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\13\ Fire sale risk is the risk of rapid sales of assets in
large amounts that temporarily depress market prices of such assets
and create financial instability.
\14\ See Financial Stability Board, Strengthening Oversight and
Regulation of Shadow Banking: Policy Framework for Addressing Shadow
Banking Risks in Securities Lending and Repos, at 5 (August 29,
2013) available at https://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/r_130829b.pdf?page_moved=1. See also United States Securities and
Exchange Commission: Securities Lending and Short Sale Roundtable
Transcript (September 29, 2009), Former Chairman Schapiro's Remarks,
at 2-3, available at https://www.sec.gov/news/openmeetings/2009/roundtable-transcript-092909.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, if an institutional firm lender should default and fail
to return the cash collateral back to its borrowers, the borrowers
would typically be looking to liquidate the borrowed securities in
order to make themselves whole for the cash collateral they delivered
to the institutional firm lender. Competing and disconnected sales of
such securities could similarly create fire sale conditions and not
only harm the borrowers to the extent the value of the securities
decline, but also create market losses for all holders of the borrowed
securities.
NSCC believes that broadening the scope of central clearing at NSCC
to SFTs would reduce the potential for market disruption from fire
sales for a number of reasons. First, in the event of a default, NSCC
would conduct a centralized, orderly liquidation of the defaulter's SFT
Positions (as defined below and in the proposed rule change). Such an
organized liquidation should result in substantially less price
depreciation and market disruption than multiple independent non-
defaulting parties racing against one another to liquidate the
positions. Second, NSCC would only need to liquidate the defaulter's
net positions. By contrast, in the context of a default by a broker-
dealer intermediary that runs a matched book in the bilateral
securities market, both the ultimate lender and the ultimate borrower
need to liquidate the defaulter's gross positions. Limiting the
positions that need to be liquidated to the defaulter's net positions
should reduce the volume of required sales activity, which in turn
should limit the price and market impact of the close-out of the
defaulter's positions. Lastly, NSCC would use its risk management
resources to provide confidence to market participants that they will
receive back their cash or securities, as
[[Page 44532]]
applicable, which should limit the propensity for market participants
to seek to unwind their transactions in a stressed market scenario.
Liquidity Drain Risk Mitigation
Liquidity risk may also arise if, in the context of a stressed
market scenario, borrowers or lenders concerned about their
counterparties' creditworthiness seek to unwind their securities
lending transactions and obtain the return of their cash collateral or
securities. This occurred to a certain extent in 2008, when borrowers
began demanding to return borrowed securities in exchange for the cash
collateral the borrowers had posted to institutional firm lenders.\15\
These ``runs'' may require institutional firm lenders to quickly sell
off securities that are the subject of their cash reinvestments to
raise cash to return to the borrowers, thereby also creating potential
fire sale conditions with respect to the reinvestment securities, as
described above. Similarly, borrowers may need to purchase or re-borrow
securities in stressed market conditions, leading to potentially
significant losses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See, e.g., id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSCC believes that having SFTs be centrally cleared by NSCC would
lower the risk of a liquidity drain in a stress scenario. Specifically,
NSCC believes that having it clear SFT activity would provide
confidence to borrowers and lenders that they will receive back their
cash or securities and thereby lessen parties' inclination to rush to
unwind their transactions in a stressed market scenario.
Addition of New Membership Categories for Institutional Firm SFT
Activity
When evaluating the opportunity to expand its cleared offerings to
SFTs, NSCC engaged in extensive discussions with numerous market
participants, including agent lenders, brokers, institutional firms,
and critical third parties, such as matching service providers and
books and records service providers. NSCC also organized several
industry working groups to discuss the possibility of clearing SFTs.
Each constituency has a unique perspective on the proposed SFT Clearing
Service. By capturing their differing viewpoints in the design, NSCC
has sought to ensure that the proposed SFT Clearing Service would
reflect their needs and facilitate industry adoption of the proposed
SFT Clearing Service.
There was a considerable amount of discussion between NSCC and
market participants regarding the appropriate model(s) through which
institutional firms should access central clearing. Some market
participants expressed interest in allowing Members to sponsor
institutional firms into NSCC membership in a manner similar to that
provided for under the sponsoring member/sponsored member program at
the Government Securities Division (``GSD'') of Fixed Income Clearing
Corporation (``FICC''), an NSCC affiliate (``FICC's Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program'').\16\ Under FICC's Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program, sponsoring members may submit to FICC
transactions entered into on a principal-to-principal basis between the
sponsoring member and the sponsored member.\17\ On the other hand,
certain other market participants, including in particular certain
agent lending banks, requested that the central clearing service
accommodate agent-style trading (i.e., where the agent lender enters
into the transaction on behalf of the institutional firm, rather than
as principal counterparty). As NSCC understands it, agent-style trading
is the way such agent lenders are typically approved to transact in
securities lending transactions on behalf of their institutional firm
clients today.\18\
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\16\ See Rule 3A (Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members) of
the FICC GSD Rulebook (``GSD Rules''), available at https://dtcc.com/
~media/Files/Downloads/legal/rules/ficc_gov_rules.pdf.
\17\ FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program also
allows sponsoring members to submit to FICC transactions entered
into between a sponsored member and a third-party netting member.
However, based on feedback from market participants, NSCC has
decided to address this type of trading via the proposed agent
clearing model for SFT.
\18\ In addition, certain other agent lenders who are not
themselves banks or broker-dealers (and so are not eligible to
become Members of NSCC) preferred a model where the institutional
firm client becomes the direct member of NSCC with no obligations
running between the agent lender and the clearing agency.
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NSCC considered all of this input, as well as the recent
experiences of FICC in expanding the suite of both transactions and
participants eligible for FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program,\19\ and ultimately decided to incorporate both the sponsoring/
sponsored membership type (to facilitate principal style trading for
institutional firms and their sponsoring members) as well as the Agent
Clearing Member membership type (to facilitate agent-style trading by
agent lenders on behalf of institutional firm clients) into the
proposed SFT Clearing Service.\20\ NSCC expects these proposed new
membership types would help expand access to central clearing for
institutional firms and facilitate industry adoption of the proposed
SFT Clearing Service.
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\19\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 80563 (May 1,
2017), 82 FR 21284 (May 5, 2017) (SR-FICC-2017-003) (Expand the
types of entities that are eligible to participate in FICC as
Sponsored Members), 85470 (March 29, 2019), 84 FR 13328 (April 4,
2019) (SR-FICC-2018-013) (Expand Sponsoring Member Eligibility in
the GSD Rulebook), and 88262 (February 21, 2020), 85 FR 11401
(February 27, 2020) (SR-FICC-2019-007) (Close-Out and Funds-Only
Settlement Processes Associated with the Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Service).
\20\ NSCC decided at this time not to incorporate a direct model
for institutional firm clearing into the proposed SFT Clearing
Service because in its experience with a similar model in FICC (the
CCIT Service), the requirements that a clearing agency, such as
NSCC, would be required to apply to an institutional firm that
participated as a direct member (e.g., Clearing Fund and loss
allocation) would, as a general matter, not likely be compatible
with the regulatory requirements and investment guidelines
applicable to many of the regulated institutional firms that NSCC
anticipates would be interested in participating in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed SFT Clearing Service would also allow for the
submission of broker-to-broker activity as well as client-to-client
activity (credit intermediated by Sponsoring Members and/or Agent
Clearing Members) into the NSCC system.
(ii) Key Parameters of the Proposed SFT Clearing Service
Overnight SFTs
NSCC is proposing central clearing for SFTs with a one Business Day
term (i.e., overnight SFTs) in eligible equity securities that are
entered into by Members, institutional firms that are sponsored into
NSCC by Sponsoring Members, or Agent Clearing Members on behalf of
customers. NSCC has determined that overnight term SFTs with a daily
pair off option are more appropriate for the proposed SFT Clearing
Service than open transactions with mark-to-market collections. This is
because, as NSCC understands it, open transactions are not eligible for
balance sheet netting given they do not have a scheduled off-leg/
settlement date. As described above, the proposed SFT Clearing Service
is designed to offer both balance sheet netting and capital efficiency
opportunities to market participants. NSCC therefore finds it
appropriate to make overnight term SFTs with a scheduled date for Final
Settlement (as defined below and in the proposed rule change) of the
next Business Day, rather than open transactions, eligible for central
clearing through the proposed SFT Clearing Service.
For example, assume that a Transferor (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) and Transferee (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change)
[[Page 44533]]
enter into an SFT pursuant to which: (i) In the Initial Settlement (as
defined below and in the proposed rule change) on Monday, the
Transferor will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferee
against $100 per share; and (ii) in the Final Settlement on Tuesday,
the Transferee will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferor
against $100 per share. After the Initial Settlement occurs on Monday,
the Final Settlement of the SFT is novated to NSCC. In the Final
Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferee will return 100 shares of
security X to the Transferor for $100 per share. The Rate Payment (as
defined below and in the proposed rule change) would be passed by NSCC
as between the Transferor and Transferee on Tuesday as part of NSCC's
end-of-day final money settlement process.
SFT Counterparties
The proposed SFT Clearing Service would only be available for SFTs
entered into between (i) a Member and another Member, (ii) a Sponsoring
Member and its Sponsored Member (as defined below and in the proposed
rule change), and (iii) an Agent Clearing Member acting on behalf of a
Customer and either (x) a Member or (y) the same or another Agent
Clearing Member acting on behalf of a Customer. As used in the Rules,
``Member'' includes full-service NSCC clearing members, but not
Sponsored Members.\21\ In addition, as proposed, the only SFTs entered
into by Sponsored Members that would be eligible for novation to NSCC
would be SFTs between the Sponsored Member and its Sponsoring
Member.\22\
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\21\ As defined in Rule 1 (Definitions and Descriptions), the
term ``Member'' means any Person specified in Section 2.(i) of Rule
2 who has qualified pursuant to the provisions of Rule 2A. As such,
the term ``Member'' does not include a Sponsored Member. Supra note
4.
\22\ See Section 5 of proposed Rule 56, which provides that a
Sponsoring Member shall be permitted to submit to NSCC SFTs between
itself and its Sponsored Members.
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Approved SFT Submitters
Consistent with the manner in which NSCC accepts cash market
transactions, SFTs would be required to be submitted to NSCC on a
locked-in/matched basis by an Approved SFT Submitter (as defined below
and in the proposed rule change) in accordance with the communication
links, formats, timeframes and deadlines established by NSCC for such
purpose. Approved SFT Submitters would be selected by the SFT Members
(as defined below and in the proposed rule change), subject to NSCC's
approval. An Approved SFT Submitter could either be a Member or a
third-party vendor. SFTs submitted to NSCC by an Approved SFT Submitter
would be valid and binding obligations of each SFT Member designated by
the Approved SFT Submitter as a party thereto.
Eligible Equity Securities and Per Share Price Minimum
NSCC will maintain eligibility criteria for the securities that may
underlie an SFT that NSCC will accept for novation. Consistent with
NSCC's general approach to eligibility for securities, the eligibility
criteria would not be a rule, but a separate document maintained by
NSCC and available to Members. It is currently contemplated that
eligible securities for SFTs in the proposed SFT Clearing Service will
be limited to CNS-eligible securities.
In light of the fact that central clearing of SFTs would be a new
service for NSCC, and market participants would be able to elect which
of their eligible SFTs to novate to NSCC (i.e., central clearing of
SFTs would not be mandatory for Members), NSCC is not able to
anticipate at this time the size and composition of the SFT portfolios
that would be novated to NSCC. Due to this lack of history, NSCC would,
as an initial matter, provide proposed SFT Clearing Service for only
those SFTs where the underlying securities are CNS-eligible equity
securities that have a per share price of $5 or more. NSCC selected $5
as the per share price minimum for underlying equity securities that
could be the subject of a novated SFT because $5 is a common share
price minimum adopted in brokerage margin eligibility schedules.
This proposed share price limitation would be implemented
systemically by NSCC as one of the eligibility criteria for determining
whether an equity security is eligible to be the subject of a novated
SFT (rather than as a rule), and such per share price limitation could
be modified by NSCC \23\ at a later date after NSCC gains more
experience with the nature of the SFT portfolios submitted for
clearing. In addition, if the share price of underlying securities of
an SFT that has already been novated to NSCC falls below $5, such SFT
would continue to be novated to NSCC, but the Required SFT Deposit (as
defined below and in the proposed rule change) for the affected Members
would include an amount equal to 100% of the market value of such
underlying securities until such time as the per share price of the
underlying securities equals or exceeds $5.
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\23\ The per share price limitation could be modified by NSCC
without any regulatory filings; however, any change in the per share
price limitation would be announced by NSCC via an Important Notice
posted to its website.
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Cash Collateral
Consistent with the cash market transactions NSCC clears today
where cash is used to satisfy Members' purchase obligations in eligible
securities, cash would likewise be the only eligible form of collateral
for novated SFTs under the proposed SFT Clearing Service.\24\ More
specifically, NSCC would limit the SFTs that it is willing to novate to
SFTs that have SFT Cash (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change) equal to or greater than 100% market value of the lent
securities, and would not novate any obligations to return collateral
consisting of securities.\25\
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\24\ This is referred to as ``SFT Cash'' in the proposed rule
text.
\25\ See Section 5(a) of proposed Rule 56 and the definition of
``Securities Financing Transaction''.
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NSCC would novate the Final Settlement obligations of an SFT as of
the time the Initial Settlement of such SFT is completed, unless the
SFT is a Bilaterally Initiated SFT (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) or a Sponsored Member Transaction (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change), in which case novation of the
Final Settlement obligations would occur upon NSCC reporting to the
Approved SFT Submitter that the SFT has been validated and novated to
NSCC.
As described above, each SFT would be collateralized by cash equal
to no less than 100% of the market value of the lent securities. In
addition, in order to address regulatory and investment guideline
requirements applicable to certain institutional firms,\26\ a Member
would be permitted (but not required) to transfer an additional cash
haircut above 100% (e.g., 102%) to such institutional firms, i.e.,
Independent Amount SFT Cash (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change), as part of the Initial Settlement of the SFT. The Sponsoring
Member or Agent Clearing Member, as applicable, that receives the
Independent Amount SFT Cash in the Initial Settlement would also
receive a commensurate Clearing Fund call, i.e., an Independent Amount
SFT Cash Deposit Requirement (as
[[Page 44534]]
defined below and in the proposed rule change), from NSCC to reflect
the value received by such Member above the market price of the equity
security lent. NSCC's novation of Final Settlement obligations related
to Independent Amount SFT Cash would be tied to the time the Sponsoring
Member or Agent Clearing Member, as applicable, satisfies the related
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement in cash.
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\26\ As an example, a registered investment company that lends
securities through an agent may be required under Section 17(f) of
the Investment Company Act of 1940 and Rule 17f-2 thereunder to
collect cash collateral equal to no less than 102% of the market
value of the lent securities. See, e.g., The Adams Express Company,
SEC No-Action Letter (Oct. 8, 1984). Other institutional firms may
be subject to similar requirements under their established
investment guidelines or applicable rules, regulations or guidance.
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RVP/DVP Settlement at DTC
The Final Settlement obligations of each SFT, other than a
Sponsored Member Transaction, that is novated to NSCC would settle
receive-versus-payment/delivery-versus-payment (``RVP/DVP'') at
DTC.\27\ SFT deliver orders would be processed in accordance with DTC's
rules and procedures, including provisions relating to risk controls.
DTC would accept delivery instructions for an SFT from NSCC, as agent
for DTC participants that are SFT Members.\28\
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\27\ As described below, the Final Settlement and other
obligations of each Sponsored Member Transaction would, at the
direction of NSCC, settle on the books and records of the relevant
Sponsoring Member.
\28\ On July 22, 2021, DTC submitted a proposed rule change to
provide DTC participants that are also NSCC Members with settlement
services in connection with NSCC's proposed SFT Clearing Service.
See SR-DTC-2021-014, which was filed with the Commission but has not
yet been published in the Federal Register. A copy of this proposed
rule change is available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx.
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Pre-novation counterparties to an SFT that is due to settle may
elect to pair off (i.e., offset) the Final Settlement obligations of
such SFT against the Initial Settlement obligations of a new SFT
between the same parties on the same securities. NSCC believes that
such offsets would minimize the operational burden of settling
overnight obligations. NSCC would calculate and process the difference
in cash collateral between the paired off SFTs, i.e., Price
Differential (as defined below and in the proposed rule change). Price
Differential would also be processed in accordance with DTC rules and
procedures, including provisions relating to risk controls. DTC would
accept Price Differential payment orders for an SFT from NSCC, as agent
for DTC participants that are SFT Members.
Settlement of the Rate Payment obligations and payment obligations
arising from certain mandatory corporate actions and cash dividends
would be processed as part of NSCC's end-of-day final money settlement
process.
As an example of an SFT with a full pair off (i.e., offset), assume
that a Transferor and Transferee enter into an SFT pursuant to which:
(i) In the Initial Settlement on Monday, the Transferor will transfer
100 shares of security X to the Transferee against $100 per share; and
(ii) in the Final Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferee will transfer
100 shares of security X to the Transferor against $100 per share.
After the Initial Settlement occurs on Monday, the Final Settlement of
the SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of day on Monday, the share
price of security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday, the Approved SFT
Submitter, on behalf of the Transferor and the Transferee, instructs
NSCC to pair off the parties' Final Settlement obligations on the
Settling SFT (as defined below and in the proposed rule change) with a
Linked SFT (as defined below and in the proposed rule change) pursuant
to which (i) in the Initial Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferor will
transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferee against $99 per
share; and (ii) in the Final Settlement on Wednesday, the Transferee
will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferor against $99
per share. NSCC would, on Tuesday, collect $1 per share in Price
Differential from the Transferor and pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the Transferee in connection with the pair off. In
addition, the Rate Payment for the Settling SFT would be passed by NSCC
as between the Transferor and Transferee on Tuesday as part of NSCC's
end-of-day final money settlement process. In the Final Settlement on
Wednesday, the Transferee will return 100 shares of security X to the
Transferor for $99 per share. The Rate Payment for the Linked SFT would
be passed by NSCC as between the Transferor and Transferee on Wednesday
as part of NSCC's end-of-day final money settlement process.
As an example of an SFT with a partial pair off (i.e., offset),
assume that a Transferor and Transferee enter into an SFT pursuant to
which: (i) in the Initial Settlement on Monday, the Transferor will
transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferee against $100 per
share; and (ii) in the Final Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferee will
transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferor against $100 per
share. After the Initial Settlement occurs on Monday, the Final
Settlement of the SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of day on Monday,
the share price of security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday, the
Approved SFT Submitter, on behalf of the Transferor and the Transferee,
instructs NSCC to partially pair off the parties' Final Settlement
obligations on the Settling SFT with a Linked SFT pursuant to which (i)
in the Initial Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferor will transfer 25
shares of security X to the Transferee against $99 per share; and (ii)
in the Final Settlement on Wednesday, the Transferee will transfer 25
shares of security X to the Transferor against $99 per share. In the
Final Settlement on Tuesday for the remaining Settling SFT, the
Transferee will return 75 shares of security X to the Transferor for
$100 per share. NSCC would, on Tuesday, collect $1 per share in Price
Differential from the Transferor and pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the Transferee in relation to the shares subject to
pair off (i.e., 25 shares of security X). In addition, the Rate Payment
for the Settling SFT (i.e., 100 shares of security X) would be passed
by NSCC as between the Transferor and Transferee on Tuesday as part of
NSCC's end-of-day final money settlement process. In the Final
Settlement on Wednesday for the Linked SFT, the Transferee will return
25 shares of security X to the Transferor for $99 per share. The Rate
Payment on the Linked SFT (i.e., 25 shares of security X) would be
passed by NSCC as between the Transferor and Transferee on Wednesday as
part of NSCC's end-of-day final money settlement process.
Buy-In, Recall and Accelerated Settlement
It is occasionally the case in the securities lending market that a
borrower is solvent and able to satisfy its general obligations as they
become due but unable to deliver the lent securities to the lender
within the timeline requested by the lender. The contractual remedy
that has developed in the bilateral securities lending market for these
situations is a ``buy-in.'' Under this remedy, the lender may purchase
securities equivalent to the borrowed securities in the market and
charge the borrower for the cost of this purchase. This serves to
benefit the lender because it allows the lender to recover the
securities within its required timeline, and it benefits the borrower
by avoiding a situation in which the borrower's failure to perform
under a single transaction results in an event of default and close-out
of all of its securities lending transactions (and potentially other
positions through a cross-default). Similarly, in the bilateral space,
securities borrowers may have the need to accelerate settlement of
securities lending transactions if they lose a ``permitted purpose''
for such loans under Regulation T. The proposed SFT Clearing Service
would seek to retain the buy-in and acceleration
[[Page 44535]]
mechanisms, as they ensure the smooth functioning of securities markets
without causing unnecessary and disorderly defaults or regulatory
violations.\29\
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\29\ NSCC does not believe retaining the buy-in and acceleration
mechanisms would undermine novation because NSCC would remain the
obligor and obligee in respect of the Final Settlement, Rate
Payment, and Distribution Payment (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) entitlements and obligations. These mechanisms
simply affect the timing and manner in which those obligations are
discharged.
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Consistent with their rights under industry-standard documentation
for bilateral SFTs, as proposed, Transferors would have the right to
submit a Recall Notice (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change) to NSCC in respect of a novated SFT for which Final Settlement
obligations have not yet been satisfied. If the Transferee does not
return the lent securities by the Recall Date (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change) specified in such notice, and the Transferor
would be eligible to Buy-In (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change), in accordance with such timeframes and deadlines as
established by NSCC for such purpose, such securities.
For example, assume that a Transferor and Transferee enter into an
SFT pursuant to which: (i) In the Initial Settlement on Monday, the
Transferor will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferee
against $100 per share; and (ii) in the Final Settlement on Tuesday,
the Transferee will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferor
against $100 per share. After the Initial Settlement occurs on Monday,
the Final Settlement of the SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of day
on Monday, the share price of security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday,
the Approved SFT Submitter, on behalf of the Transferor and the
Transferee, instructs NSCC to pair off (i.e., offset) the parties'
Final Settlement obligations on the Settling SFT with a Linked SFT
pursuant to which (i) in the Initial Settlement on Tuesday, the
Transferor will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferee
against $99 per share; and (ii) in the Final Settlement on Wednesday,
the Transferee will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferor
against $99 per share. NSCC would, on Tuesday, collect $1 per share in
Price Differential from the Transferor and pay $1 per share in Price
Differential to the Transferee in connection with the pair off. In
addition, the Rate Payment for the Settling SFT would be passed by NSCC
as between the Transferor and Transferee on Tuesday as part of NSCC's
end-of-day final money settlement process.
Later in the day on Tuesday, the Transferor determines it now needs
100 shares of security X back in its inventory, and so the Approved SFT
Submitter submits a Recall Notice to NSCC, prior to the deadline
established by NSCC, on behalf of the Transferor for 100 shares of
security X with a Recall Date of Thursday. At the end of day on
Tuesday, the share price of security X is $98 per share. Upon receipt
of the Recall Notice, the SFT would be treated as a Non-Returned SFT
(as defined below and in the proposed rule change) by NSCC pursuant to
Section 9(e) of proposed Rule 56 (Securities Financing Transaction
Clearing Service). Accordingly, pursuant to Section 9(a) of proposed
Rule 56, the Final Settlement Date (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) of the SFT would be rescheduled to Thursday, and
NSCC would, on Wednesday collect $1 per share in Price Differential
from the Transferor and pay $1 per share in Price Differential to the
Transferee on the Non-Returned SFT. The Rate Payment for the Non-
Returned SFT would also be passed by NSCC as between the Transferor and
Transferee on Wednesday as part of NSCC's end-of-day final money
settlement process.
Assume further that the Transferee does not transfer the 100 shares
of security X on Wednesday and that the end of day price of security X
on Wednesday is $97 per share. On Thursday, NSCC would again collect $1
per share in Price Differential from the Transferor and pay $1 per
share in Price Differential to the Transferee on the Non-Returned SFT.
The Rate Payment for the Non-Returned SFT would also be passed by NSCC
as between the Transferor and Transferee on Thursday as part of NSCC's
end-of-day final money settlement process. In addition, since the
Recall Notice specified Thursday as the Recall Date, the Transferor
would be entitled to purchase (or deem itself to have purchased) 100
shares of security X in accordance with the provisions of Section 9(b)
of proposed Rule 56. Assuming that the Transferor paid a price of $95
per share for security X and submitted a written notice to NSCC of its
Buy-In Costs (as defined below and in the proposed rule change) on
Thursday, the Transferor would owe NSCC a Buy-In Amount (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change) of $2 per share ($100 per share
of SFT Cash received by the Transferor at the Initial Settlement of the
SFT, less the $95 per share Buy-In Costs of the Transferor, minus $3
per share Price Differential paid by the Transferor to NSCC), and such
Buy-In Amount would be debited by NSCC from the Transferor and credited
to the Transferee as part of NSCC's end-of-day final money settlement
process on Friday.
Similarly, consistent with their rights under industry-standard
documentation for bilateral SFTs, Transferees would have the right to
accelerate the scheduled Final Settlement of a novated SFT through
notice from the Approved SFT Submitter to NSCC of such accelerated
settlement.
For example, assume that a Transferor and Transferee enter into an
SFT pursuant to which: (i) In the Initial Settlement on Monday, the
Transferor will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferee
against $100 per share; and (ii) in the Final Settlement on Tuesday,
the Transferee will transfer 100 shares of security X to the Transferor
against $100 per share. After the Initial Settlement occurs on Monday,
the Final Settlement of the SFT is novated to NSCC. At the end of day
on Monday, the share price of security X is $99 per share. On Tuesday,
the Approved SFT Submitter, on behalf of the Transferor and the
Transferee, instructs NSCC to net the parties' Final Settlement
obligations on the Settling SFT with a Linked SFT pursuant to which (i)
in the Initial Settlement on Tuesday, the Transferor will transfer 100
shares of security X to the Transferee against $99 per share; and (ii)
in the Final Settlement on Wednesday, the Transferee will transfer 100
shares of security X to the Transferor against $99 per share. NSCC
would, on Tuesday, collect $1 per share in Price Differential from the
Transferor and pay $1 per share in Price Differential to the Transferee
in connection with the pair off. Later in the day on Tuesday, the
Transferee loses permitted purpose under Regulation T for the borrowing
of 100 shares of security X. Therefore, pursuant to Section 11 of
proposed Rule 56 (Securities Financing Transaction Clearing Service),
the Approved SFT Submitter submits a notice to NSCC on behalf of the
Transferee to accelerate the Final Settlement of the Linked SFT to
Tuesday. The Transferee then on Tuesday returns 100 shares of security
X to NSCC for $99 per share, and NSCC returns 100 shares of security X
to the Transferor for $99 per share. The Rate Payment would be passed
by NSCC for the Settling SFT as between the Transferor and Transferee
on Tuesday as part of NSCC's end-of-day final money settlement process.
[[Page 44536]]
Risk Management of SFT Positions
Under the proposal, NSCC is requiring a deposit to the Clearing
Fund \30\ for SFT Positions, i.e., Required SFT Deposit. From a market
risk standpoint, SFT activity would be risk managed by NSCC in a manner
consistent with Members' CNS positions but would be margined
independently of the Member's other positions,\31\ and a Required SFT
Deposit would be collected by NSCC for all SFT activity of an SFT
Member, subject to a $250,000 minimum deposit.\32\ Specifically, NSCC
is proposing to calculate an SFT Member's Required SFT Deposit by
applying the sections of Procedure XV (Clearing Fund Formula and Other
Matters) specified in Section 12 of proposed Rule 56 (i.e., Sections
I.(A)(1)(a), (b), (d), (f), (g), (h) of Procedure XV as well as the
additional Clearing Fund formula in Section I.(B)(5) (Intraday Mark-to-
Market Charge) of Procedure XV as such sections apply to CNS
Transactions, and the additional Clearing Fund formula in Sections
I.(B)(1) (Additional Deposits for Members on the Watch List); (2)
(Excess Capital Premium), (3) (Backtesting Charge), (4) (Bank Holiday
Charge); Minimum Clearing Fund and Additional Deposit Requirements in
Sections II.(A)1(a)-(b), II.(B), II.(C); as well as Section III
(Collateral Value of Eligible Clearing Fund Securities) of Procedure
XV, as such sections apply to Members). Furthermore, NSCC would require
an additional Required SFT Deposit for Non-Returned SFTs that is
intended to mirror the premium charged for CNS Fails Positions. NSCC
would also apply the Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement
for SFTs that have Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash.
NSCC is also proposing that, for the purpose of applying Section
I.(A)(1)(h) of Procedure XV (Margin Liquidity Adjustment (``MLA'')
charge), SFT Positions shall be netted with Net Unsettled
Positions.\33\
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\30\ As currently defined in Rule 1 (Definitions and
Descriptions), the term ``Clearing Fund'' means the fund created
pursuant to Rule 4. Supra note 4.
\31\ NSCC is not proposing at this time to portfolio margin a
Member's SFT Positions with any CNS positions of the Member. NSCC
may reconsider this position after it obtains a reasonable amount of
experience observing the nature and volume of SFT activity submitted
by Members to NSCC for novation through the proposed SFT Clearing
Service.
\32\ This $250,000 minimum deposit is a requirement that is
separate from NSCC's proposed change to a Member's minimum (non-SFT)
Clearing Fund deposit requirement, although it is designed to be
consistent with such proposed change. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 91809 (May 10, 2021), 86 FR 26588 (May 14, 2021) (SR-
NSCC-2021-005).
\33\ ``Net Unsettled Positions'' include a Member's net of
unsettled Regular Way, When-Issued and When-Distributed pending
positions (i.e., net positions that have not yet passed Settlement
Date) and fail positions (i.e., net positions that did not settle on
Settlement Date). See Procedure XV, supra note 4.
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Consistent with the manner in which clearing fund requirements are
satisfied by members of FICC for their cleared securities financing
transactions, NSCC would require that (i) a minimum of 40% of an SFT
Member's Required SFT Deposit consist of a combination of cash and
Eligible Clearing Fund Treasury Securities and (ii) the lesser of
$5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT Member's Required SFT Deposit (but not less
than $250,000) \34\ consist of cash.\35\ NSCC would also have the
discretion to require an SFT Member to post its Required SFT Deposit in
proportion of cash higher than would otherwise be required as described
above. NSCC's determination to impose any such requirement would be
made in view of market conditions and other financial and operational
capabilities of the relevant SFT Member. For example, as proposed in
Section 12 of Rule 56, if NSCC had specific concerns about a particular
SFT Member's financial or operational capabilities, but NSCC had not
yet come to the determination that ceasing to act for the SFT Member
would be appropriate (but could potentially become appropriate within
the near term), NSCC may request that a greater portion of the SFT
Member's Required SFT Deposit to the Clearing Fund be in the form of
cash in order to simplify any potential close-out liquidation required
in the event of that SFT Member's default. Separately, pursuant to
Section II.(A)1(a) of Procedure XV, if an SFT Member's deposit of
Eligible Clearing Fund Agency Securities or Eligible Clearing Fund
Mortgage-Backed Securities is in excess of 25% of the SFT Member's
Required Fund Deposit, NSCC would subject the deposit to an additional
haircut.
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\34\ This $250,000 minimum cash deposit requirement is designed
to be consistent with NSCC's proposed change to the minimum amount
of cash that must be used to satisfy a Member's (non-SFT) Clearing
Fund deposit requirement. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
91809 (May 10, 2021), 86 FR 26588 (May 14, 2021) (SR-NSCC-2021-005).
NSCC believes a $250,000 minimum cash deposit would serve to
strengthen NSCC's liquidity resources. Cash may also be easier to
access upon a Member's default, further reducing the risk of losses
and using non-defaulting Member's securities or funds, or NSCC
funds.
\35\ These requirements are designed to be consistent with FICC
GSD's clearing fund requirements of its members given that NSCC
anticipates that there would be considerable overlap between the
membership of FICC GSD that participate in FICC for purposes of
clearing their securities financing transaction activity (including
in particular sponsored repo activity) and the Members that would
elect to participate in the proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Specifically, FICC GSD Rule 4, Section 3 requires (i) a minimum of
40 percent of a member's required fund deposit to be in the form of
cash and/or eligible clearing fund treasury securities and (ii) the
lesser of $5,000,000 or 10 percent of the required fund deposit,
with a minimum of $100,000, be made and maintained in cash. See Rule
4 (Clearing Fund and Loss Allocation) of the FICC GSD Rulebook,
supra note 16
.
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The Sponsoring Member Required Fund Deposits (as defined below and
in the proposed rule change) and Agent Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposits (as defined below and in the proposed rule change) would each
be calculated on a gross basis, and no offsets for netting of positions
as between different Sponsored Members or different Customers,\36\ as
applicable, would be permitted. This is to ensure that NSCC's
volatility-based Clearing Fund deposit requirements represent the sum
of each individual institutional firm's activity.
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\36\ See Section 7(c) of proposed Rule 2C and Section 6(c) of
proposed 2D.
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As proposed, the SFT Clearing Service would mitigate NSCC's
liquidity risk associated with satisfaction of Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members on novated SFTs in the
event of an SFT Member default by providing for satisfaction of such
Final Settlement obligations to occur in accordance with the normal
settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of securities, as
applicable.\37\ NSCC would accordingly be able to satisfy such Final
Settlement obligations through market action (if necessary) rather than
through its own liquidity resources. More specifically, NSCC would be
able to sell the securities lent by a Defaulting SFT Member (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change) and/or purchase the securities
borrowed by a Defaulting SFT Member and use the proceeds of such sales
and/or the securities purchased to satisfy the Defaulting SFT Member's
Final Settlement obligations to non-defaulting SFT Members. In the
absence of this provision, NSCC would need to rely exclusively on its
liquidity resources to satisfy Final Settlement obligations owing to
non-defaulting SFT Members, since it would not receive the proceeds of
any market action to liquidate the Defaulting SFT Member's SFT
Positions until after Final Settlement obligations were due.
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\37\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
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The proposal would also provide that NSCC could further delay its
[[Page 44537]]
satisfaction of Final Settlement obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC determines that taking market action to
close-out some or all of the defaulted SFT Member's novated SFT
Positions would create a disorderly market in the relevant SFT
Securities.\38\ For example, to the extent that market action is
required by NSCC to close-out the positions of a Defaulting SFT Member,
and selling out or buying in (as applicable) the entire quantity of
securities would move the market and create disorder, NSCC would adhere
to pre-determined market volume limits as set forth in NSCC's internal
procedures and execute its hedging strategy in order to meet its
default management objectives. In such a situation, non-defaulting SFT
Members would not be able to effect a recall or an associated buy-in,
since such market activity would exacerbate the disorderly conditions
that NSCC's delay is designed to prevent, nor would non-defaulting SFT
Members otherwise be able to or accelerate the delayed Final Settlement
obligations, as any such acceleration would frustrate the purpose of
the delay, i.e., to avoid creating a disorderly market in the relevant
SFT Securities.
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\38\ Id.
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However, in any case, until NSCC has satisfied the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members, NSCC would continue
paying to and receiving from non-defaulting SFT Members the applicable
Price Differential (i.e., the change in market value of the relevant
securities) with respect to their novated SFTs.\39\ By continuing to
process these Price Differential payments until Final Settlement
occurs, NSCC would ensure that non-defaulting SFT Members are kept in
the same position as if the Defaulting SFT Member had not defaulted and
the pre-novation counterparties had instead agreed to roll the SFTs. To
the extent NSCC is required to pay a Price Differential to a non-
defaulting SFT Member, NSCC would rely on the NSCC Clearing Fund,
including the Required SFT Deposit, in order to cover the liquidity
need associated with any such Price Differential obligation.\40\ In
addition, NSCC would anticipate being in regular communication with the
non-defaulting SFT Members as to the timing of the satisfaction of any
Final Settlement obligations related to a defaulting SFT Member.
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\39\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
\40\ For example, assume that a Transferor and Transferee enter
into an SFT pursuant to which: (i) In the Initial Settlement on
Monday, the Transferor will transfer 100 shares of security X to the
Transferee against $100 per share; and (ii) in the Final Settlement
on Tuesday, the Transferee will transfer 100 shares of security X to
the Transferor against $100 per share. Assume further that at
midnight on Monday, NSCC ceases to act for the Transferor.
On Tuesday, NSCC executes a sale of 100 shares of security X for
$99 per share. In accordance with the regular way settlement cycle
for purchases and sales of equity securities, this sale will settle
on Thursday.
Pursuant to Section 14(b)(viii) of proposed Rule 56 (Securities
Financing Transaction Clearing Service), NSCC would likewise settle
the Final Settlement obligations of the defaulting Transferor's SFT
with the non-defaulting Transferee on Thursday.
Assume further that the end-of-day price of security X on
Tuesday is $99 per share. On Wednesday, NSCC would pay $1 per share
in Price Differential to the non-defaulting Transferee pursuant to
Section 14(b)(ix) of proposed Rule 56. Assume further that the end-
of-day price of security X on Wednesday is $98 per share.
On Thursday, NSCC would pay an additional $1 per share in Price
Differential to the non-defaulting Transferee pursuant to Section
14(b)(ix) of proposed Rule 56. The Transferee would then return 100
shares of security X to NSCC and receive $98 per share (i.e., the
current market price for security X) from NSCC. As such, the non-
defaulting Transferee would be made whole by NSCC for the $100 per
share it transferred in the Initial Settlement of the Defaulted-
Related SFT (as defined below and in the proposed rule change) since
NSCC would have transferred to it $98 per share in Final Settlement
plus an additional $2 per share in Price Differential.
NSCC would incur a net loss of $1 per share in this example
since it would have sold security X for $99 per share and paid the
non-defaulting Transferee a total of $100 per share (i.e., $98 per
share in Final Settlement proceeds plus $2 per share in Price
Differential). NSCC would be entitled to deduct this amount from the
defaulted Transferor's Clearing Fund deposits (including its SFT
Deposit).
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(iii) Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members
NSCC is proposing a sponsored membership program to allow Members
to play the role of pre-novation counterparty and credit intermediary
for their institutional firm clients in clearing.
NSCC has modeled a number of the aspects of the proposed sponsored
member program, including the eligibility criteria and many of the risk
management requirements, on FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program. FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program allows an
FICC Netting Member to sponsor an entity that satisfies certain
requirements and submit to FICC for novation certain securities
transactions between the Netting Member and the sponsored entity. These
securities transactions generally include the off-leg of repurchase
transactions on U.S. government or agency securities or straight
purchase and sales of such securities. Such transactions present
similar risk management, legal, accounting, and operation
considerations to SFTs, as both involve an obligation of a sponsored
member and a sponsoring member to exchange cash against securities.
Since 2005, FICC has worked with its members to improve its Sponsoring
Member/Sponsored Member Program to address these considerations. Based
on feedback from Members and its own internal assessments, NSCC
believes that leveraging the provisions of FICC's Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member program and the learning over the past decade and a
half would allow NSCC to provide a sponsored member program that has a
solid risk management, accounting, legal and operational foundation.
Sponsoring Members
Under the proposal, all Members would be eligible to apply to
become Sponsoring Members in NSCC, subject to credit criteria that are
designed to be substantially similar to those applicable to category 2
sponsoring members in FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program
for the reasons described above in Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members
and Sponsored Members.'' \41\ A Member whose
[[Page 44538]]
application to become a Sponsoring Member has been approved by the
Board of Directors or NSCC, as applicable, pursuant to proposed Rule 2C
(``Sponsoring Member'') would be permitted to sponsor their
institutional firm clients into membership as Sponsored Members. Such
Sponsoring Members would then be able to facilitate their institutional
firm clients' cleared activity via two back-to-back principal SFTs,
i.e., client-to-Sponsoring Member and Sponsoring Member-to-broker (or
to another institutional firm client that the Sponsoring Member has
sponsored into membership), and each of such transactions would be
eligible for novation to NSCC.
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\41\ If a Member is a Registered Broker-Dealer, then such Member
would only be eligible to apply to become a Sponsoring Member if it
satisfies the credit criteria in proposed Rule 2C (Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members) (i.e., if it has (i) Net Worth of at
least $25 million and (ii) excess net capital over the minimum net
capital requirement imposed by the SEC (or such higher minimum
capital requirement imposed by the Member's designated examining
authority) of at least $10 million). Such credit criteria are
comparable to the credit criteria applicable to category 2
sponsoring members that are registered broker-dealers in FICC's
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program. A Sponsoring Member
applicant would be viewed and surveilled as the credit counterparty
to NSCC in respect to its Sponsored Member Sub-Account(s) (as
defined below and in the proposed rule change) in light of its
responsibility to NSCC as the processing agent and unconditional
guarantor of its Sponsored Members' performance to NSCC.
In addition, NSCC may require that a Person be a Member for a
time period deemed necessary by NSCC before that Person may be
considered to become a Sponsoring Member. This requirement may be
imposed by NSCC on a new Member that has yet to demonstrate a track
record of financial responsibility and operational capability.
Furthermore, as proposed, the application of a Member to be a
Sponsoring Member at NSCC that is an Agent Clearing Member or an
existing FICC sponsoring member would not be required to be approved
by the NSCC Board of Directors. NSCC believes this approach to Board
of Director's approval for Sponsoring Members is appropriate in
light of the fact that the critical components of the FICC
sponsoring member application as well as the NSCC Sponsoring Member
and Agent Clearing Member applications and the criteria that the
respective boards assess when determining whether to admit a Member
in such respective capacities are substantially similar.
Nonetheless, NSCC would apply the same rigorous counterparty credit
review process to any Member applying to be a Sponsoring Member at
NSCC, whether or not the Member is an existing FICC sponsoring
member.
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Consistent with the requirements applicable to sponsoring members
in FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program for the reasons
described above in Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members,'' a Sponsoring Member would be responsible for (i) submitting
data on its Sponsored Members' SFTs to NSCC or appointing a third-party
Approved SFT Submitter to do so, (ii) posting to NSCC all of the
Clearing Fund associated with the SFT activity of its Sponsored
Members, which would be calculated on a gross basis (i.e., SFT activity
would not be netted across Sponsored Members for Clearing Fund
purposes), (iii) providing an unconditional guaranty to NSCC for its
Sponsored Members' Final Settlement and other obligations to NSCC, and
(iv) covering any default loss allocable to its Sponsored Members (in
addition to its own default loss allocation as a Member).
Specifically, as proposed, a Sponsoring Member would be permitted
to submit to NSCC for novation Sponsored Member Transactions, subject
to an activity limit designed to be substantially similar to that
applicable to category 2 sponsoring members in FICC's Sponsoring
Member/Sponsored Member Program for the reasons described above in Item
II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members.'' Under the
proposal, if the sum of the Volatility Charges (as defined below and in
the proposed rule change) applicable to a Sponsoring Member's Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts (as defined below and in the proposed rule change)
and its other accounts at NSCC exceeds its Net Member Capital (as
defined below and in the proposed rule change), the Sponsoring Member
would not be permitted to submit activity into its Sponsored Member
Sub-Accounts, unless otherwise determined by NSCC in order to promote
orderly settlement. As defined in Section 5 of proposed Rule 2C,
Sponsored Member Transactions are SFTs between a Sponsoring Member and
its Sponsored Members.
The Sponsoring Member would establish one or more accounts at NSCC
for its Sponsored Members' positions arising from such Sponsored Member
Transactions, i.e., Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts, which would be
separate from the Sponsoring Member's proprietary accounts. For
operational and administrative purposes, NSCC would interact solely
with the Sponsoring Member as agent of its Sponsored Members.
Sponsoring Members would be responsible for providing NSCC with a
Sponsoring Member Guaranty (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change) whereby the Sponsoring Member guarantees to NSCC the payment
and performance by its Sponsored Members of their obligations under the
Sponsored Member Transactions submitted by the Sponsoring Member for
novation. Although Sponsored Members are principally liable to NSCC for
their own settlement obligations under such transactions in accordance
with the Rules, the Sponsoring Member Guaranty requires the Sponsoring
Member to satisfy those settlement obligations on behalf of a Sponsored
Member if the Sponsored Member defaults and fails perform its
settlement obligations.
In addition, a Sponsoring Member would be responsible for posting
to NSCC all of the Clearing Fund associated with the Sponsored Member
Transactions (which would not be netted across Sponsored Members for
Clearing Fund purposes) and covering any default loss allocable to its
Sponsored Members, as well as its own default loss allocation as a
Member.\42\
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\42\ The following example illustrates how loss allocation would
occur with respect to Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members:
Assume NSCC incurs a $100 million aggregate loss from a Defaulting
Member Event. In addition, assume that the Corporate Contribution
amount that NSCC would first apply to any loss from a Defaulting
Member Event is $25 million. This means NSCC would allocate the
remaining $75 million losses (i.e., $100 million minus $25 million)
to Members pursuant to Section 4 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund),
including Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts as if each were a Member. If
the allocated losses to a Sponsoring Member's Sponsored Member Sub-
Accounts is $1 million and the allocated losses to its Sponsoring
Member in its capacity as a Member is $2 million, the Sponsoring
Member would be responsible for a total of $3 million loss
allocation ($1 million for its Sponsored Member Sub-Account loss
allocation amount and $2 million for its own default loss allocation
as a Member).
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As proposed, consistent with FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored
Member Program for the reasons described above in Item II(B)(iii)
``Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members,'' NSCC would also provide a
mechanism by which a Sponsoring Member may cause the termination and
liquidation of a Sponsored Member's positions arising from Sponsored
Member Transactions between the Sponsoring Member and such Sponsored
Member that have been novated to NSCC.\43\
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\43\ See Section 14 of proposed Rule 2C (Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members).
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Sponsored Members
Consistent with the requirements applicable to sponsored members in
FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program for the reasons
described above in Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members,'' any Person that has been approved by NSCC to be sponsored
into membership by a Sponsoring Member pursuant to proposed Rule 2C
(``Sponsored Member'') would be required to be either a ``qualified
institutional buyer'' as defined by Rule 144A\44\ under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended (``Securities Act''),\45\ or a legal entity
that, although not organized as an entity specifically listed in
paragraph (a)(1)(i)(H) of Rule 144A under the Securities Act, satisfies
the financial requirements necessary to be a ``qualified institutional
buyer'' as specified in that paragraph.
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\44\ 17 CFR 230.144A.
\45\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
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(iv) Agent Clearing Members and Customers
NSCC is proposing an agent clearing membership designed to allow
Members to play the role of agent and credit intermediary for their
institutional firm clients in clearing. This membership type is being
proposed in response to the request of certain market participants,
including in particular certain agent lending banks, that the proposed
SFT Clearing Service accommodate agent-style trading (i.e., where the
agent lender enters into the transactions on behalf of its
institutional firm clients with a third-party market participant,
rather than acting as its institutional firm clients' principal pre-
novation counterparty). Agent-style trading is the manner in which such
agent lenders are typically approved to transact in securities lending
transactions on behalf of their institutional firm clients. Under the
[[Page 44539]]
proposal, a Member that enters into transactions on behalf of its
institutional firm clients in accordance with the provisions of
proposed Rule 2D (``Agent Clearing Member'') would be permitted to
submit SFTs executed by it (as agent on behalf of its institutional
firm clients, with each such client referred to as a ``Customer'') with
a Member participating in the proposed SFT Clearing Service (which
could include a Member acting in a proprietary capacity within the
proposed SFT Clearing Service as well as an Agent Clearing Member).
All Members would be eligible to apply to become Agent Clearing
Members in NSCC, subject to credit criteria that are substantially
similar to those applicable to Sponsoring Members as well as category 2
sponsoring members in FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program.\46\
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\46\ If a Member is a Registered Broker-Dealer, then such Member
would only be eligible to apply to become an Agent Clearing Member
if it satisfies the credit criteria in proposed Rule 2D (i.e., if it
has (i) Net Worth of at least $25 million and (ii) excess net
capital over the minimum net capital requirement imposed by the SEC
(or such higher minimum capital requirement imposed by the Member's
designated examining authority) of at least $10 million). Such
credit criteria are comparable to the credit criteria applicable to
sponsoring members that are registered broker-dealers in FICC's
Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program. Similar to the review of
a Sponsoring Member applicant, an Agent Clearing Member applicant
would also be viewed and surveilled as the credit counterparty to
NSCC in light of its role as the Member with respect to its Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account(s).
In addition, NSCC may require a Person be a Member for a time
period deemed necessary by NSCC before that Person may be considered
to become an Agent Clearing Member. This requirement may be imposed
by NSCC on a new Member that has yet to demonstrate a track record
of financial responsibility and operational capability.
Furthermore, as proposed, the application of a Member to be an
Agent Clearing Member at NSCC that is a Sponsoring Member or an
existing FICC sponsoring member would not be required to be approved
by the NSCC Board of Directors. NSCC believes this approach to the
Board of Director's approval for Agent Clearing Members is
appropriate in light of the fact that the critical components of the
FICC sponsoring member application as well as the NSCC Sponsoring
Member and Agent Clearing Member applications and the criteria that
the respective boards assess when determining whether to admit a
Member in such respective capacities are substantially similar.
Nonetheless, NSCC would apply the same rigorous counterparty credit
review process to any Member applying to be an Agent Clearing Member
at NSCC, whether or not the Member is an existing FICC sponsoring
member.
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Under the proposal, the requirements to be imposed on Agent
Clearing Members would largely mirror those imposed on Sponsoring
Members. However, NSCC is not proposing to impose the same types of
requirements on an Agent Clearing Member's Customers as it does on
Sponsored Members because a Customer would not be a direct member of
NSCC.
Specifically, as proposed, an Agent Clearing Member would be
permitted to submit to NSCC for novation Agent Clearing Member
Transactions (as defined below and in the proposed rule change), on
behalf of one or more of its Customers, subject to an activity limit.
Specifically, under the proposal, if the sum of the Volatility Charges
applicable to an Agent Clearing Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account(s) (as defined below and in the proposed rule change)
and its other accounts at NSCC exceeds its Net Member Capital, the
Agent Clearing Member would not be permitted to submit activity into
its Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account(s), unless otherwise
determined by NSCC in order to promote orderly settlement. As defined
in Section 4 of proposed Rule 2D, Agent Clearing Member Transactions
are SFTs that an Agent Clearing Member submits to NSCC on behalf of one
or more Customers.
The Agent Clearing Member would establish one or more accounts at
NSCC for its Customers' positions, i.e., an Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account, that would be in the name of the Agent
Clearing Member for the benefit of its Customers; however, each Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account may only contain activity
where the Agent Clearing Member is acting as Transferor on behalf of
its Customers, or as Transferee on behalf of its Customers, but not
both (i.e., activity would not be netted across Customers for Clearing
Fund purposes). Under the proposal, the Agent Clearing Member would act
solely as agent of its Customers in connection with the clearing of
Agent Clearing Member Transactions; however, the Agent Clearing Member
would remain fully liable for the performance of all obligations to
NSCC arising in connection with Agent Clearing Member Transactions.
In addition, as proposed under the sponsoring/sponsored membership
model, the Agent Clearing Member would be responsible for posting to
NSCC all of the Clearing Fund associated with the activity of its
Customers and covering any default loss allocable to its Customers, as
well as its own default loss allocation as a Member; \47\ however,
unlike a Sponsoring Member, an Agent Clearing Member would not be
required to provide an unconditional guaranty to NSCC for its
Customer's obligations. This is because, as described above, the Agent
Clearing Member would be fully liable for all obligations of its
Customers under the Agent Clearing Member Transactions that it
submitted to NSCC as the Member.
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\47\ The following example illustrates how loss allocation would
occur with respect to Agent Clearing Members: Assume NSCC incurs a
$100 million aggregate loss from a Defaulting Member Event. In
addition, assume that the Corporate Contribution amount that NSCC
would first apply to any loss from a Defaulting Member Event is $25
million. This means NSCC would allocate the remaining $75 million
losses (i.e., $100 million minus $25 million) to Members pursuant to
Section 4 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund), including Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Accounts as if each were a Member. If the allocated
losses to an Agent Clearing Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account is $1 million and the allocated losses to the Agent
Clearing Member in its capacity as a Member is $2 million, the Agent
Clearing Member would be responsible for a total of $3 million loss
allocation ($1 million for its Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account loss allocation amount and $2 million for its own
default loss allocation as a Member).
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As proposed, NSCC would also provide a mechanism by which an Agent
Clearing Member may, upon a default of a Customer and consent of NSCC,
transfer Agent Clearing Member Transactions of the Customer established
in one or more of the Agent Clearing Member's Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Accounts from such Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts to the Agent Clearing Member's proprietary account at
NSCC as a Member.\48\
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\48\ See Section 11 of proposed Rule 2D (Agent Clearing
Members).
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(v) Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member vs. Agent Clearing Member/
Customers
The direct costs of central clearing (i.e., Clearing Fund, loss
allocation, fees and performance on behalf of an institutional firm
clients) would be largely equivalent as between what NSCC proposes to
apply to a Sponsoring Member and what NSCC proposes to apply to an
Agent Clearing Member. Likewise, the capital costs to Sponsoring
Members and Agent Clearing Members of intermediating institutional firm
activity as between the two buy-side clearing models would be largely
equivalent. That being said, because Sponsoring Members would be
required to ensure that (i) each of their clients separately onboards
with NSCC as a Sponsored Member (which NSCC understands is generally
required from an accounting perspective in order for the Sponsoring
Member to net on its balance sheet its SFTs with Sponsored Members
against the Sponsoring Member's other NSCC-cleared SFTs),\49\ (ii) each
of their client's SFTs is individually submitted to NSCC for
[[Page 44540]]
clearing, and (iii) each Sponsored Member continues to remain in
compliance with the financial standards applicable to Sponsored Members
throughout the course of its membership, Sponsoring Members may incur
more legal, onboarding, operational and ongoing administrative costs
than Agent Clearing Members with respect to their institutional firm
clearing activity.
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\49\ Supra note 11.
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However, the sponsoring/sponsored membership model allows for
principal-style trading between a Sponsoring Member and its Sponsored
Member where the Sponsoring Member and Sponsored Member are pre-
novation counterparties, which would generally create the opportunity
for a Sponsoring Member to make an economic spread between its trade
with its Sponsored Member and its offsetting trades with other NSCC
Members or Sponsored Members. The opportunity for such economic spread
and the ability of a Sponsoring Member to achieve balance sheet netting
and capital efficiency on such trading activity through the novation of
SFTs to NSCC could, for some market participants, offset the indirect
additional costs associated with acting as a Sponsoring Member, rather
than acting as an Agent Clearing Member.
On the other hand, as NSCC understands it, for some market
participants, particularly agent lenders, their business models are not
typically predicated on principal-style trading. Rather, these agency
businesses typically charge fees for their services (rather than taking
economic spreads) and their business models and their agreed upon
investment guidelines with their institutional firm customers may only
permit agented (rather than principal-style) trading for securities
lending transactions. So, for such market participants, participating
in clearing at NSCC as an Agent Clearing Member may be a better fit for
their overall business model.
From the perspective of an institutional firm client, the costs of
clearing that may be passed through to it by its intermediary
(depending on their commercial arrangements) would be largely
equivalent. That said, some institutional firms that engage in
securities lending may be prohibited from acting as Sponsored Members
and engaging in principal-style trading with their intermediary in
clearing for regulatory and/or investment guideline reasons. For those
institutional firms, being able to transact SFTs as a Customer within
an Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account would offer them a
means to access central clearing that would otherwise not be available
to them if the sponsoring/sponsored membership model were the only
model available for buy-side clearing.
(vi) Proposed Rule Changes
(A) Proposed Rule 2C--Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members
NSCC is proposing to add Rule 2C, entitled ``Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members.'' This new rule would govern the proposed sponsored
membership and would be comprised of 14 sections, each of which is
described below.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 1 (General)
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2C would be a general provision
regarding the Rules applicable to Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2C would provide that NSCC will permit
the establishment of a sponsored membership relationship between a
Member that is approved as a Sponsoring Member and one or more Persons
that are accepted by NSCC as Sponsored Members of that particular
Sponsoring Member. Section 1 of proposed Rule 2C would further provide
that the rights, liabilities and obligations of Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members shall be governed by proposed Rule 2C, and that
references to the term ``Member'' in other Rules would not apply to
Sponsoring Members and to Sponsored Members, in their respective
capacities as such, unless specifically noted as such in proposed Rule
2C or in such other Rules.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2C would also provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall continue to have all of the rights, liabilities and
obligations as set forth in the Rules and in any agreement between it
and NSCC pertaining to its status as a Member, and such rights,
liabilities and obligations shall be separate from its rights,
liabilities and obligations as a Sponsoring Member except as
contemplated under Sections 7, 8 and 9 of proposed Rule 2C and under
the Sponsoring Member Guaranty.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 2 (Qualifications of Sponsoring Members, the
Application Process and Continuance Standards)
Section 2 of proposed Rule 2C would establish the eligibility
requirements for Members that wish to become Sponsoring Members, the
membership application process that would be required of each Member to
become a Sponsoring Member, the on-going membership requirements that
would apply to Sponsoring Members, as well as the requirements
regarding a Sponsoring Member's election to voluntarily terminate its
membership.
Under Section 2(a) of proposed Rule 2C, any Member would be
eligible to apply to become a Sponsoring Member; however, if a Member
is a Registered Broker-Dealer, such Member would only be permitted to
apply to become a Sponsoring Member if it has (1) Net Worth (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change) of at least $25 million and (2)
excess net capital over the minimum net capital requirement imposed by
the Commission (or such higher minimum capital requirement imposed by
the Member's designated examining authority) of at least $10
million.\50\ In connection therewith, NSCC is proposing ``Net Worth''
to mean, as of a particular date, the amount equal to the excess of the
assets of a Person over the liabilities of such Person, computed in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and for
Registered Broker-Dealers, Net Worth shall include liabilities that are
subordinated to the claims of creditors pursuant to a satisfactory
subordination agreement, as defined in Appendix D to Rule 15c3-1 of the
Act.\51\ As proposed, NSCC may require that a Person be a Member for a
certain time period before that Person may be considered to become a
Sponsoring Member.
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\50\ NSCC is proposing these financial minimums for Registered
Broker-Dealer Sponsoring Member applicants to reflect the additional
responsibility that the applicant would undertake as a Sponsoring
Member. These financial minimums are determined based on NSCC's
assessment of the minimum capital that would be necessary for a
broker-dealer to conduct meaningful level of NSCC-cleared activity
while serving as a credit counterparty in respect of others' trades.
In its assessment, NSCC considered various factors, such as the
amount of a Registered Broker-Dealer Member's capital and its impact
on such Member's financial responsibility and operational
capability, comparability with the financial requirements of other
clearing agencies, and the desire to strike a balance between credit
risk mitigation and member accessibility. For the reasons described
above in Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members,'' these financial minimums are also designed to be
consistent with the requirements applicable to registered broker/
dealers that are sponsoring members in FICC's Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Program.
\51\ 17 CFR 240.15c3-1d.
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Section 2(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that each Member
applicant to become a Sponsoring Member would be required to provide an
application and other information requested by NSCC. Sponsoring Member
applications shall first be reviewed by NSCC and would require the
Board of Directors' approval, unless the Member applicant is already an
Agent Clearing Member under proposed Rule 2D or a
[[Page 44541]]
sponsoring member of FICC.\52\ NSCC believes this approach to the Board
of Director's approval for Sponsoring Members is appropriate in light
of the fact that the critical components of the FICC sponsoring member
application as well as the NSCC Sponsoring Member and Agent Clearing
Member applications and the criteria that the respective boards assess
when determining whether to admit a Member in such respective
capacities are substantially similar.
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\52\ It is NSCC's understanding that FICC is evaluating a change
to the GSD Rules to provide that the application of an FICC
sponsoring member applicant that is already an NSCC Sponsoring
Member or Agent Clearing Member would not require approval of FICC's
board of directors.
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Under Section 2(c) of proposed Rule 2C, if the Sponsoring Member
application is denied, such denial would be handled in accordance with
Section 1 of Rule 2A (Initial Membership Requirements).
As proposed in Section 2(d) of proposed Rule 2C, NSCC may impose
additional financial requirements on a Sponsoring Member applicant
based upon the level of the anticipated positions and obligations of
such applicant, the anticipated risk associated with the volume and
types of transaction such applicant proposes to process through NSCC as
a Sponsoring Member and the overall financial condition of such
applicant. Under the proposal, with respect to an application of a
Member to become a Sponsoring Member that requires the Board of
Directors' approval, the Board of Directors shall also approve any
increased financial requirements imposed by NSCC in connection with the
approval of the application, and NSCC would thereafter regularly review
such Sponsoring Member regarding its compliance with the increased
financial requirements.\53\
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\53\ If the increased financial requirements are imposed in
connection with a Sponsoring Member application that does not
require the Board of Directors' approval, the increased financial
requirements would not be subject to the Board of Directors'
approval. Nonetheless, once a Sponsoring Member application is
approved with increased financial requirements, NSCC would
thereafter regularly review such Sponsoring Member regarding its
continued adherence to such increased financial requirements as well
as determine whether such increased financial requirements are still
appropriate. If the Sponsoring Member is unable to adhere to the
increased financial requirements, the Board of Directors may,
pursuant to Section 10 of proposed Rule 2C, suspend, prohibit or
limit the Sponsoring Member's access to NSCC's services.
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In addition, under Section 2(e) of proposed Rule 2C, NSCC may
require each Sponsoring Member or any Sponsoring Member applicant to
furnish adequate assurances of such Sponsoring Member or Sponsoring
Member applicant's financial responsibility and operational capability
within the meaning of Rule 15 (Assurances of Financial Responsibility
and Operational Capability), as NSCC may at any time or from time to
time deem necessary or advisable in order to protect NSCC, its
participants, creditors or investors, to safeguard securities and funds
in the custody or control of NSCC and for which NSCC is responsible, or
to promote the prompt and accurate clearance, settlement and processing
of securities transactions.\54\
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\54\ As an example, NSCC may require a Sponsoring Member or a
Sponsoring Member applicant to furnish adequate assurances of such
Sponsoring Member or Sponsoring Member applicant's financial
responsibility and operational capability if NSCC has concerns about
such Sponsoring Member or Sponsoring Member applicant's overall
financial health or credit rating.
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Section 2(f) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that each Member
whose Sponsoring Member application is approved would sign and deliver
to NSCC (i) an agreement between NSCC and the Member and specifies the
terms and conditions deemed by NSCC to be necessary in order to protect
itself and its participants (``Sponsoring Member Agreement''), (ii) a
guaranty, in the form and substance acceptable to NSCC, whereby the
Member, in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member, guarantees to NSCC the
payment and performance by its Sponsored Members of their obligations
under the Rules in respect of the Sponsoring Member's Sponsored Member
Sub-Accounts, including, without limitation all of the settlement
obligations of its Sponsored Members in respect of such Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts (``Sponsoring Member Guaranty''), and a related
legal opinion in a form satisfactory to NSCC. In addition, Section 2(f)
of proposed Rule 2C would provide that nothing in the Rules shall
prohibit a Sponsoring Member from seeking reimbursement from a
Sponsored Member for payments made by the Sponsoring Member (whether
pursuant to the Sponsoring Member Guaranty, out of Clearing Fund
deposits or otherwise) with respect to obligations as to which the
Sponsored Member is a principal obligor under the Rules, or as
otherwise may be agreed by the Sponsored Member and Sponsoring Member.
Section 2(g) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that each Sponsoring
Member shall submit to NSCC, within the timeframes and in the formats
required by NSCC, the reports and information that all Members are
required to submit regardless of type of Member and the reports and
information required to be submitted for its respective type of Member,
all pursuant to Section 2 of Rule 2B (Ongoing Membership Requirements
and Monitoring) and, if applicable, Addendum O (Admission of Non-US
Entities as Direct NSCC Members).
Section 2(h) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsoring
Member's books and records, insofar as they relate to the Sponsored
Member Transactions submitted to NSCC, shall be open to the inspection
of the duly authorized representatives of NSCC to the same extent
provided in Rule 2A (Initial Membership Requirements) for other
Members.
Section 2(i) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall promptly inform NSCC, both orally and in writing, if it is
no longer in compliance with the relevant standards and qualifications
for applying to become a Sponsoring Member set forth in the proposed
Rule 2C. Notification must take place immediately and in no event later
than 2 Business Days from the date on which the Sponsoring Member first
learns of its non-compliance. As proposed, NSCC would assess a fine in
accordance with the Fine Schedule in Addendum P against any Sponsoring
Member that fails to so notify NSCC.\55\ If the Sponsoring Member fails
to remain in compliance with the relevant standards and qualifications,
NSCC would, if necessary, undertake appropriate action to determine the
status of the Sponsoring Member and its continued eligibility as such.
In addition, NSCC may review the financial responsibility and
operational capability of the Sponsoring Member, and otherwise require
from the Sponsoring Member additional reports of its financial or
operational condition at such intervals and in such detail as NSCC
shall determine. In addition, if NSCC has reason to believe that a
Sponsoring Member may fail to comply with any of the Rules applicable
to Sponsoring Members, it may require the Sponsoring Member to provide
it, within such timeframe, and in such detail, and pursuant to such
manner as NSCC shall determine, with assurances in writing of a
credible nature that the Sponsoring Member shall not, in fact, violate
any of the Rules.
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\55\ See Addendum P (Fine Schedule), supra note 4.
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Section 2(j) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that in the event
that a Sponsoring Member fails to remain in compliance with the
relevant requirements of the Rules, the Sponsoring Member Agreement or
the
[[Page 44542]]
Sponsoring Member Guaranty, NSCC shall have the right to cease to act
for the Sponsoring Member in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member
pursuant to Section 10 of proposed Rule 2C, unless the Sponsoring
Member requests that such action not be taken and NSCC determines that,
depending upon the specific circumstances and the record of the
Sponsoring Member, it is appropriate instead to establish for such
Sponsoring Member a time period, which shall be determined by NSCC and
which shall be no longer than 30 calendar days unless otherwise
determined by NSCC, during which the Sponsoring Member must resume
compliance with such requirements. As proposed, in the event that the
Sponsoring Member is unable to satisfy such requirements within the
time period specified by NSCC, NSCC shall, pursuant to the Rules, cease
to act for the Sponsoring Member in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member
pursuant to Section 10 of the proposed Rule 2C.
Section 2(k) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that if the sum of
the Volatility Charges applicable to a Sponsoring Member's Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts and its other accounts at NSCC exceeds its Net
Member Capital (as defined below and in the proposed rule change), the
Sponsoring Member shall not be permitted to submit activity into its
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts, unless otherwise determined by NSCC in
order to promote orderly settlement.\56\ As proposed, ``Volatility
Charge'' would mean, in respect to a Member, the amount of its Required
Fund Deposit calculated by NSCC by applying Sections I.(A)(1)(a)(i)-
(iv) of Procedure XV (Clearing Fund Formula and Other Matters); ``Net
Member Capital'' would mean Net Capital (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change), net assets or equity capital, as applicable to a
Member, based on the type of regulation, and in particular the capital
requirements, to which the Member is subject; and ``Net Capital'' would
mean, as of a particular date, the amount equal to the net capital of a
Registered Broker-Dealer as defined in Rule 15c3-1(c)(2) of the
Act,\57\ or any successor rule or regulation thereto.
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\56\ NSCC selected the Volatility Charges and Net Member Capital
as the criteria for purposes of establishing the activity limit for
Sponsoring Members. This is because a Sponsoring Member's total
Volatility Charges being in excess of its Net Member Capital is an
important indicator that the Sponsoring Member's financial
resources, as measured by its Net Capital, net assets or equity
capital, may be insufficient to meet the largest component of its
Required Fund Deposit (i.e., Volatility Charges).
\57\ 17 CFR 240.15c3-1(c)(2).
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Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsoring
Member may voluntarily elect to terminate its status as a Sponsoring
Member, with respect to all Sponsored Members or with respect to one or
more Sponsored Members from time to time, by providing NSCC with a
written notice from a Sponsoring Member to NSCC that the Sponsoring
Member is voluntarily electing to terminate its status as a Sponsoring
Member with respect to all of its Sponsored Members or with respect to
one or more of its Sponsored Members (``Sponsoring Member Voluntary
Termination Notice''). The Sponsoring Member shall specify in the
Sponsoring Member Voluntary Termination Notice the Sponsored Member(s)
in respect of which the Sponsoring Member is terminating its status
(the ``Former Sponsored Members'') and a desired date for such
termination, which date shall not be prior to the scheduled Final
Settlement Date of any remaining obligation owed by the Sponsoring
Member to NSCC with respect to the Former Sponsored Members as of the
time such Sponsoring Member Voluntary Termination Notice is submitted
to NSCC, unless otherwise approved by NSCC.
Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2C would also provide that such
termination would not be effective until accepted by NSCC, which shall
be no later than 10 Business Days after the receipt of the Sponsoring
Member Voluntary Termination Notice from such Sponsoring Member. NSCC's
acceptance shall be evidenced by a notice to NSCC's participants
announcing the termination of the Sponsoring Member's status as such
with respect to the Former Sponsored Members and the date on which the
termination of the Sponsoring Member's status as a Sponsoring Member
becomes effective (``Sponsoring Member Termination Date''). As
proposed, after the close of business on the Sponsoring Member
Termination Date, the Sponsoring Member shall no longer be eligible to
submit Sponsored Member Transactions on behalf of the Former Sponsored
Members, and each Former Sponsored Member shall cease to be a Sponsored
Member unless it is the Sponsored Member of another Sponsoring Member.
If any Sponsored Member Transactions is submitted to NSCC by the
Sponsoring Member on behalf of a Former Sponsored Member that is
scheduled to settle after the Sponsoring Member Termination Date, such
Sponsoring Member's Sponsoring Member Voluntary Termination Notice
would be deemed void, and the Sponsoring Member would remain subject to
the proposed Rule 2C as if it had not given such Sponsoring Member
Voluntary Termination Notice.
Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsoring
Member's voluntary termination of its status as such, in whole or in
part, shall not affect its obligations to NSCC, or the rights of NSCC,
including under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty, with respect to
Sponsored Member Transactions submitted to NSCC before the applicable
Sponsoring Member Termination Date. Any such Sponsored Member
Transactions that have been novated to NSCC shall continue to be
processed by NSCC. The return of the Sponsoring Member's Clearing Fund
deposit shall be governed by Section 7 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund). If an
Event Period were to occur after a Sponsoring Member has submitted the
Sponsoring Member Voluntary Termination Notice but on or prior to the
Sponsoring Member Termination Date, in order for the Sponsoring Member
to benefit from its Loss Allocation Cap pursuant to Section 4 of Rule
4, the Sponsoring Member would need to comply with the provisions of
Section 6 of Rule 4 and submit a Loss Allocation Withdrawal Notice,
which notice, upon submission, shall supersede and void any pending
Sponsoring Member Voluntary Termination Notice previously submitted by
the Sponsoring Member.
Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that any non-public
information furnished to NSCC pursuant to proposed Rule 2C shall be
held in confidence as may be required under the laws, rules and
regulations applicable to NSCC that relate to the confidentiality of
records. Section 2(n) would also provide that each Sponsoring Member
shall maintain DTCC Confidential Information in confidence to the same
extent and using the same means it uses to protect its own confidential
information, but no less than a reasonable standard of care, and shall
not use DTCC Confidential Information or disclose DTCC Confidential
Information to any third party except as necessary to perform such
Sponsoring Member's obligations under the Rules or as otherwise
required by applicable law. Section 2(n) would further provide that
each Sponsoring Member acknowledges that a breach of its
confidentiality obligations under the Rules may result in serious and
irreparable harm to NSCC and/or DTCC for which there is no adequate
remedy at law. In addition, Section 2(n) would provide that in the
event of such a breach by the Sponsoring Member,
[[Page 44543]]
NSCC and/or DTCC shall be entitled to seek any temporary or permanent
injunctive or other equitable relief in addition to any monetary
damages thereunder.\58\
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\58\ Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2C is designed to be
consistent with NSCC's proposed change to revise certain provisions
in the Rules relating to the confidentiality of information
furnished by participants. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
92334 (July 7, 2021), 86 FR 36815 (July 13, 2021) (SR-NSCC-2021-
007).
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Proposed Rule 2C, Section 3 (Qualifications of Sponsored Members,
Approval Process and Continuance Standards)
Section 3 of proposed Rule 2C would establish the eligibility
requirements for Sponsored Members, the membership application process
that would be required of each Sponsored Member, the on-going
membership requirements that would apply to Sponsored Members, as well
as the requirements regarding a Sponsored Member's election to
voluntarily terminate its membership.
Section 3(a) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Person shall
be eligible to apply to become a Sponsored Member if: (x) It is
sponsored into membership by a Sponsoring Member, and (y) it (1) is a
``qualified institutional buyer'' as defined by Rule 144A \59\ under
the Securities Act,\60\ or (2) is a legal entity that, although not
organized as an entity specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i)(H) of
Rule 144A under the Securities Act, satisfies the financial
requirements necessary to be a ``qualified institutional buyer'' as
specified in that paragraph. NSCC would have the right to rely on the
representation provided by the Sponsoring Member regarding satisfaction
of (y).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ 17 CFR 230.144A.
\60\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 3(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that each time that
a Sponsoring Member wishes to sponsor a Person into membership, it
shall provide NSCC with the representation referred to in Section 3(a)
of proposed Rule 2C, as well as any additional information in such form
as may be prescribed by NSCC. NSCC shall approve or disapprove Persons
as Sponsored Members. If NSCC denies the request of a Sponsoring Member
to add a Person as a Sponsored Member, such denial shall be handled in
the same manner as set forth in Section 1 of Rule 2A (Initial
Membership Requirements) with respect to membership applications except
that the written statement referred to therein shall be provided to
both the Sponsoring Member and the Person seeking to become a Sponsored
Member.
Section 3(c) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that each Person to
become a Sponsored Member shall sign and deliver to NSCC an agreement
whereby the Person shall agree to any terms and conditions deemed by
NSCC to be necessary in order to protect itself and its participants
(the ``Sponsored Member Agreement''). Each Person to become a Sponsored
Member that shall be an FFI Member must be FATCA Compliant.
Section 3(d) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsored
Member shall immediately inform its Sponsoring Member, both orally and
in writing, if the Sponsored Member is no longer in compliance with the
requirements of Section 3(a) of proposed Rule 2C. A Sponsoring Member
shall promptly inform NSCC, both orally and in writing, if a Sponsored
Member is no longer in compliance with the requirements of Section 3(a)
of proposed Rule 2C. Notification to NSCC by the Sponsoring Member must
take place within one (1) Business Day from the date on which the
Sponsoring Member first learns of the Sponsored Member's non-
compliance. NSCC would assess a fine in accordance with the Fine
Schedule in Addendum P against any Sponsoring Member that fails to so
notify NSCC.\61\
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\61\ See Addendum P (Fine Schedule), supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 3(e) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsored
Member may voluntarily elect to terminate its membership by providing
NSCC with a written notice from the Sponsored Member to NSCC that the
Sponsored Member is voluntarily electing to terminate its membership
(``Sponsored Member Voluntary Termination Notice''). The Sponsored
Member shall specify in the Sponsored Member Voluntary Termination
Notice a desired date for the termination, which date shall not be
prior to the scheduled Final Settlement Date of any remaining
obligation owed by the Sponsored Member to NSCC as of the time such
Sponsored Member Voluntary Termination Notice is submitted to NSCC,
unless otherwise approved by NSCC.
In addition, Section 3(e) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that
such termination would not be effective until accepted by NSCC, which
shall be no later than 10 Business Days after the receipt of the
Sponsored Member Voluntary Termination Notice from such Sponsored
Member. NSCC's acceptance shall be evidenced by a notice to NSCC's
participants announcing the termination of the Sponsored Member and the
date on which the termination of the Sponsored Member becomes effective
(``Sponsored Member Termination Date''). After the close of business on
the Sponsored Member Termination Date, the relevant Sponsoring Member
shall no longer be eligible to submit Sponsored Member Transactions on
behalf of the Sponsored Member. If any Sponsored Member Transaction is
submitted to NSCC by the relevant Sponsoring Member on behalf of the
Sponsored Member that is scheduled to settle after the Sponsored Member
Termination Date, such Sponsored Member's Sponsored Member Voluntary
Termination Notice would be deemed void, and the Sponsored Member would
remain subject to the proposed Rule 2C as if it had not given such
Sponsored Member Voluntary Termination Notice.
Section 3(f) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsored
Member's voluntary termination shall not affect its obligations to
NSCC, or the rights of NSCC, including under the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty, with respect to Sponsored Member Transactions submitted to
NSCC before the Sponsored Member Termination Date, and the Sponsoring
Member Guaranty shall remain in effect to cover all outstanding
obligations of the Sponsored Member to NSCC that are within the scope
of such Sponsoring Member Guaranty.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 4 (Compliance With Laws)
Section 4 of proposed Rule 2C would provide that each Sponsoring
Member and Sponsored Member shall comply in all material respects with
all applicable laws, including applicable laws relating to securities,
taxation and money laundering, as well as global sanctions laws, in
connection with the use of NSCC's services.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 5 (Sponsored Member Transactions)
Section 5 of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall be permitted to submit to NSCC SFTs between itself and its
Sponsored Members (``Sponsored Member Transactions'') in accordance
with proposed Rule 56, as described below. Section 5 of proposed Rule
2C would further provide that NSCC directs each Sponsored Member and
Sponsoring Member to settle all Final Settlement, Rate Payment, Price
Differential, and other securities delivery and payment obligations
arising under a Sponsored Member Transaction that has been
[[Page 44544]]
novated to NSCC by causing the relevant cash and securities to be
transferred to the Transferor or Transferee, as applicable, on the
books and records of the Sponsoring Member, and each Sponsored Member
and Sponsoring Member agrees that any such transfer shall satisfy
NSCC's corresponding obligation with respect to such Sponsored Member
Transaction.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 6 (Sponsoring Member Agent Obligations)
Section 6 of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsored Member
shall appoint its Sponsoring Member to act as agent with respect to the
Sponsored Member's satisfaction of its settlement obligations arising
under Sponsored Member Transactions between the Sponsored Member and
the Sponsoring Member and for performing all functions and receiving
reports and information set forth in the Rules. NSCC's provision of
such reports and information to the Sponsoring Member shall constitute
satisfaction of any obligation of NSCC to provide such reports and
information to the affected Sponsored Members. As proposed,
notwithstanding the foregoing and any other activities the Sponsoring
Member may perform in its capacity as agent for Sponsored Members, each
Sponsored Member shall be obligated as principal to NSCC with respect
to all settlement obligations under the Rules, and the Sponsoring
Member shall not be a principal under the Rules with respect to
settlement obligations of its Sponsored Members.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 7 (Clearing Fund Obligations)
Section 7 of proposed Rule 2C would set forth the Clearing Fund
obligations.
Section 7(a) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that NSCC shall
maintain a ledger maintained on the books and records of NSCC for a
Sponsoring Member that reflects the outstanding SFTs that a Sponsoring
Member enters into in respect of a Sponsored Member and that have been
novated to NSCC, the SFT Positions or SFT Cash associated with those
transactions and any debits or credits of cash associated with such
transactions effected pursuant to Rule 12 (Settlement) (each a
``Sponsored Member Sub-Account''). Each Sponsoring Member shall make
and maintain so long as such Member is a Sponsoring Member a deposit to
the Clearing Fund as a Required Fund Deposit to support the activity in
its Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts (the ``Sponsoring Member Required
Fund Deposit''). Deposits to the Clearing Fund would be held by NSCC or
its designated agents, to be applied as provided in the Rules.
Section 7(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that, in the
ordinary course, for purposes of satisfying the Sponsoring Member's
Clearing Fund requirements under the Rules for its Member activity, its
Sponsoring Member activity, and, to the extent applicable, its Agent
Clearing Member activity, the Sponsoring Member's proprietary accounts,
its Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts, and its Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account(s), if any, shall be treated separately, as if
they were accounts of separate entities. Notwithstanding the previous
sentence, however, NSCC may, in its sole discretion, at any time and
without prior notice to the Sponsoring Member (but being obligated to
give notice to the Sponsoring Member as soon as possible thereafter)
and whether or not the Sponsoring Member or any of its Sponsored
Members is in default of its obligations to NSCC, treat the Sponsoring
Member's accounts as a single account for the purpose of applying
Clearing Fund deposits; apply Clearing Fund deposits made by the
Sponsoring Member with respect to any account as necessary to ensure
that the Sponsoring Member meets all of its obligations to NSCC under
any other account(s); and otherwise exercise all rights to offset and
net against the Clearing Fund deposits any net obligations among any or
all of the accounts, whether or not any other Person is deemed to have
any interest in such account.\62\
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\62\ NSCC believes it unlikely that it would exercise this
authority, as the Clearing Fund deposits associated with each
Sponsored Member Sub-Account, Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Account and proprietary account of a Sponsoring Member are designed
to be sufficient to cover the obligations of such account or sub-
account. However, if a Sponsoring Member defaults or fails to
perform and the Clearing Fund deposits associated with a given
account or sub-account of such Sponsoring Member are not sufficient
to discharge the Sponsoring Member's obligations in relation to such
account or sub-account, NSCC would look to the Clearing Fund
deposits related to the Sponsoring Member's other accounts or sub-
accounts. For example, if NSCC ceased to act for a Sponsoring Member
and the close-out of the SFT Positions established in the Sponsoring
Member's Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts resulted in a loss to NSCC in
excess of the Clearing Fund previously posted by the Sponsoring
Member in relation to such SFT Positions, NSCC may apply to the
excess any other Clearing Fund deposits posted by the Sponsoring
Member to NSCC, such as Clearing Fund posted in connection with the
proprietary positions of the Sponsoring Member. Similarly, if a
Sponsoring Member failed to perform under the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty outside the context of a cease-to-act situation and the
Clearing Fund previously posted by the Sponsoring Member in relation
to the SFT Positions established in the Sponsoring Member's
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts was not sufficient to satisfy the
obligations under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty, NSCC may apply to
the remainder any other Clearing Fund deposits posted by the
Sponsoring Member to NSCC.
NSCC believes this is appropriate because the Clearing Fund
deposits of a Sponsoring Member are the proprietary assets of the
Sponsoring Member, and NSCC generally has the right to apply the
Clearing Fund deposits of a Member to any of the Member's
obligations to NSCC, regardless of whether those were the
obligations that generated the Clearing Fund deposit requirement.
NSCC therefore believes that, consistent with the FICC Sponsoring
Member/Sponsored Member Program for the reasons described above in
Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members,'' a
Sponsoring Member's Clearing Fund deposits should be available to
satisfy any of the Sponsoring Member's guaranty or other obligations
to NSCC.
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Section 7(c) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that the Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit for each Sponsored Member Sub-Account
shall be calculated separately based on the Sponsored Member
Transactions in such Sponsored Member Sub-Account, and the Sponsoring
Member shall, as principal, be required to satisfy the Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit for each of the Sponsoring Member's
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts.
Section 7(d) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that Sections 1, 2,
4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund) shall apply
to the Sponsoring Member Required Fund Deposit with respect to
obligations of a Sponsoring Member under the Rules, including its
obligations arising under the Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts, and the
obligations of a Sponsoring Member under its Sponsoring Member Guaranty
to the same extent as such sections apply to any Required Fund Deposit
and any other obligations of a Member. For purposes of Section 1 of
Rule 4, obligations and liabilities of a Member to NSCC that shall be
secured shall include, without limitation, a Member's obligations as a
Sponsoring Member under the Rules, including, without limitation, any
obligation of any such Sponsoring Member to provide the Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit, such Sponsoring Member's obligations
arising under the Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts of such Sponsoring
Member and such Sponsoring Member's obligations under its Sponsoring
Member Guaranty.
Section 7(e) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall be subject to such fines as may be imposed in accordance
with the Rules for any late satisfaction of a Clearing Fund deficiency
call.
[[Page 44545]]
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 8 (Right of Offset)
Section 8 of proposed Rule 2C would provide that in the ordinary
course, with respect to satisfaction of any Sponsored Member's
obligations under the Rules, the Sponsoring Member's Sponsored Member
Sub-Accounts, the Sponsoring Member's proprietary accounts, and the
Sponsoring Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts, if
any, at NSCC shall be treated separately, as if they were accounts of
separate entities. Notwithstanding the previous sentence, however, NSCC
may, in its sole discretion, at any time any obligation of the
Sponsoring Member arises under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty to pay or
perform thereunder with respect to any Sponsored Member, exercise a
right of offset and net any such obligation of the Sponsoring Member
under its Sponsoring Member Guaranty against any obligations of NSCC to
the Sponsoring Member in respect of such Sponsoring Member's
proprietary accounts at NSCC.\63\ NSCC would generally anticipate
exercising this right if, upon a Sponsoring Member default, the
Sponsoring Member owed an amount under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty
and was owed an amount by NSCC in relation to the Sponsoring Member's
proprietary or other obligations.
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\63\ NSCC believes the most likely circumstance in which it
would exercise this authority would be in the context of a
Sponsoring Member default. If, in such circumstance, NSCC realizes a
profit in closing out the positions associated with a proprietary
account of the Sponsoring Member, but incurs a loss in closing out
the positions associated with the Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts of
the Sponsoring Member, it would offset its obligation to turn over
to the Sponsoring Member the gains in relation to the Sponsoring
Member's proprietary account against the obligations of the
Sponsoring Member under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty.
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Proposed Rule 2C, Section 9 (Loss Allocation Obligations)
Section 9 of proposed Rule 2C would establish loss allocation
obligations under the sponsored membership model.
Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that Sponsored
Members shall not be obligated for allocations, pursuant to Rule 4
(Clearing Fund), of loss or liability incurred by NSCC. To the extent
that a loss or liability is determined by NSCC to arise in connection
with Sponsored Member Transactions (i.e., in connection with the
insolvency or default of a Sponsoring Member), the Sponsored Members
shall not be responsible for or considered in the loss allocation
calculation, but rather such loss shall be allocated to other Members
in accordance with the principles set forth in Section 4 of Rule 4.
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that, to the extent
NSCC incurs a loss or liability from a Defaulting Member Event or a
Declared Non-Default Loss Event and a loss allocation obligation
arises, that would be the responsibility of a Sponsored Member Sub-
Account as if the Sponsored Member Sub-Account were a Member, NSCC
shall calculate such loss allocation obligation as if the affected
Sponsored Member were subject to such allocations pursuant to Section 4
of Rule 4, but the Sponsoring Member shall be responsible for
satisfying such obligations.
Section 9(c) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that the entire
amount of the Required Fund Deposit associated with the Sponsoring
Member's proprietary accounts at NSCC and the entire amount of the
Sponsoring Member Required Fund Deposit may be used to satisfy any
amount allocated against a Sponsoring Member, whether in its capacity
as a Member, a Sponsoring Member, or otherwise. With respect to an
obligation to make payment due to any loss allocation amounts assessed
on a Sponsoring Member pursuant to Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 2C,
the Sponsoring Member may instead elect to terminate its membership in
NSCC pursuant to Section 6 of Rule 4 and thereby benefit from its Loss
Allocation Cap pursuant to Section 4 of Rule 4; however, for the
purpose of determining the Loss Allocation Cap for such Sponsoring
Member, its Required Fund Deposit shall be the sum of its Required Fund
Deposits associated with its proprietary accounts at NSCC (including
its proprietary SFT Account (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change) pursuant to proposed Rule 56), its Sponsoring Member Required
Fund Deposit, and its Agent Clearing Member Required Fund Deposits, if
any, for each of its Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 10 (Restrictions on Access to Services by a
Sponsoring Member)
Section 10 of proposed Rule 2C would establish the rights of NSCC
to restrict a Sponsoring Member's access to NSCC's services.
Section 10(a) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that the Board of
Directors may at any time, upon NSCC providing notice to a Sponsoring
Member pursuant to Section 5 of Rule 45 (Notices), suspend a Sponsoring
Member in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member from any service provided
by NSCC either with respect to a particular transaction or transactions
or with respect to transactions generally or prohibit or limit such
Sponsoring Member's access to services offered by NSCC in the event
that one or more of the factors set forth in Section 1 of Rule 46
(Restrictions on Access to Services) is present with respect to the
Sponsoring Member.
Section 10(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that Rule 46 shall
apply with respect to a Sponsoring Member in the same way as it applies
to Members, including the Board of Directors' right to summarily
suspend the Sponsoring Member and to cease to act for such Sponsoring
Member. As under Rule 46, the Board of Directors would need to make the
determination of whether to suspend, prohibit or limit a Sponsoring
Member's access to services offered by NSCC on the basis of the factors
set forth in that rule.
Section 10(c) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that if NSCC ceases
to act for a Sponsoring Member in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member,
Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 shall apply and NSCC shall decline to
accept or process data from the Sponsoring Member on Sponsored Member
Transactions and NSCC shall cease to act for all of the Sponsored
Members of the affected Sponsoring Member (unless such Sponsored
Members are also Sponsored Members of other Sponsoring Members).
Section 10(c) would also provide that if NSCC suspends, prohibits or
limits a Sponsoring Member in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member with
respect to such Sponsoring Member's access to services offered by NSCC,
NSCC shall decline to accept or process data from the Sponsoring Member
on Sponsored Member Transactions and shall suspend the Sponsored
Members of the affected Sponsoring Member (unless they are also
Sponsored Members of other Sponsoring Members) for so long as NSCC is
suspending, prohibiting or limiting the Sponsoring Member. Any
Sponsored Member Transactions which have been novated to NSCC shall
continue to be processed by NSCC. In addition, Section 10(c) would
provide that NSCC, in in sole discretion, shall determine whether to
close-out the affected Sponsored Member Transactions or permit the
Sponsored Members to complete their settlement.
This is different from how NSCC would treat Agent Clearing Member
Transactions of an Agent Clearing Member under Section 9 of proposed
Rule 2D if NSCC ceased to act for the Agent Clearing Member.
Specifically,
[[Page 44546]]
for Agent Clearing Member Transactions, as proposed, NSCC would close-
out any Agent Clearing Member Transactions which have been novated to
NSCC; however, with respect to Sponsored Member Transactions,
consistent with FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Program for
the reasons described above in Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members,'' NSCC would have the option to either terminate or
settle a Sponsored Member's novated positions after ceasing to act for
the Sponsoring Member. NSCC would have the practical and legal
capability to make such an election because each Sponsored Member would
be a limited-purpose member of NSCC. Accordingly, NSCC would have the
requisite information about each of the Sponsored Member's novated
positions (by virtue of each Sponsored Member's novated portfolio
represented as a different sub-account of the Sponsoring Member (i.e.,
Sponsored Member Sub-Account) on the books and records of NSCC) to make
such an election. By contrast, an Agent Clearing Member's Customers
would not be limited-purpose members of NSCC nor would NSCC know which
transactions within an Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account
belong to which Customers. As such, NSCC would not be able to
separately terminate or complete settlement with respect to Customers'
novated positions.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 11 (Restrictions on Access to Services by a
Sponsored Member)
Section 11 of proposed Rule 2C would establish the rights of NSCC
to restrict a Sponsored Member's access to NSCC's services.
Section 11(a) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that the Board of
Directors may at any time upon NSCC providing notice to a Sponsored
Member and its Sponsoring Member pursuant to Section 5 of Rule 45
(Notices), suspend a Sponsored Member from any service provided by NSCC
either with respect to a particular transaction or transactions or with
respect to transactions generally, or prohibit or limit such Sponsored
Member with respect to access to services offered by NSCC in the event
that one or more of the factors set forth in Section 1 of Rule 46
(Restrictions on Access to Services) is present with respect to the
Sponsored Member.
Section 11(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that Rule 46 shall
apply with respect to a Sponsored Member in the same way as it applies
to Members, including the Board of Directors' right to summarily
suspend a Sponsored Member and to cease to act for such Sponsored
Member. As under Rule 46, the Board of Directors would need to make the
determination of whether to suspend, prohibit or limit a Sponsored
Member's access to services offered by NSCC on the basis of the factors
set forth in that rule.
Section 11(c) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that if NSCC ceases
to act for a Sponsored Member, Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 shall
apply.
Section 11(d) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that NSCC shall
cease to act for a Sponsored Member that is no longer in compliance
with the requirements of Section 3(a) of proposed Rule 2C.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 12 (Insolvency of a Sponsoring Member)
Section 12(a) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall be obligated to immediately notify NSCC that (a) it fails,
or is unable, to perform its contracts or obligations or (b) it is
insolvent, as required by Section 1 of Rule 20 (Insolvency) for other
Members. A Sponsoring Member shall be treated by NSCC in all respects
as insolvent under the same circumstances set forth in Section 2 of
Rule 20 for other Members. Section 3 of Rule 20 shall apply, in the
same manner in which such section applies to other Members, in the case
where NSCC treats a Sponsoring Member as insolvent.
Section 12(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that in the event
that NSCC determines to treat a Sponsoring Member as insolvent pursuant
to Rule 20 (Insolvency), NSCC shall have the right to cease to act for
the insolvent Sponsoring Member pursuant to Section 10 of the proposed
Rule 2C. If NSCC ceases to act for the insolvent Sponsoring Member,
NSCC shall decline to accept or process data from the Sponsoring
Member, including Sponsored Member Transactions, and NSCC shall
terminate the membership of all of the insolvent Sponsoring Member's
Sponsored Members unless they are the Sponsored Members of another
Sponsoring Member. Any Sponsored Member Transactions which have been
novated to NSCC shall continue to be processed by NSCC. NSCC, in its
sole discretion, shall determine whether to close-out the affected
Sponsored Member Transactions and/or permit the Sponsored Members to
complete their settlement. This is different from how NSCC would treat
Agent Clearing Member Transactions. As described above, NSCC would
close-out any Agent Clearing Member Transactions which have been
novated to NSCC. However, with respect to Sponsored Member
Transactions, consistent with FICC's Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member
Program for the reasons described above in Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members,'' NSCC would have the option to either
terminate or settle a Sponsored Member's novated positions after
ceasing to act for the Sponsoring Member. This is because NSCC would
have the practical and legal capability to make such an election
because each Sponsored Member would be a limited-purpose member of
NSCC. Accordingly, NSCC would have the requisite information about each
of the Sponsored Member's novated positions (by virtue of each
Sponsored Member's novated portfolio represented as a different sub-
account of the Sponsoring Member (i.e., Sponsored Member Sub-Account)
on the books and records of NSCC) to make such an election. By
contrast, an Agent Clearing Member's Customers would not be limited-
purpose members of NSCC nor would NSCC know which transactions within
an Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account belong to which
Customers. As such, NSCC would not be able to separately terminate or
complete settlement with respect to Customers' novated positions.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 13 (Insolvency of a Sponsored Member)
Section 13 of proposed Rule 2C would establish NSCC's rights in the
event of an insolvency of a Sponsored Member.
Section 13(a) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that a Sponsored
Member and its Sponsoring Member (to the extent it has knowledge
thereof) shall be obligated to immediately notify NSCC that the
Sponsored Member is insolvent or that the Sponsored Member would be
unable to perform any of its material contracts, obligations or
agreements in the same manner as required by Section 1 of Rule 20
(Insolvency) for other Members. For purposes of Section 13 of proposed
Rule 2C, a Sponsoring Member shall be deemed to have knowledge that a
Sponsored Member is insolvent or would be unable to perform on any of
its material contracts, obligations or agreements if one or more duly
authorized representatives of the Sponsoring Member, in its capacity as
such, has knowledge of such matters. A Sponsored Member shall be
treated by NSCC in all respects as insolvent under the same
circumstances set forth in Section 2 of Rule 20 for other Members.
Section 3 of Rule 20 shall apply, in the same manner in which such
section
[[Page 44547]]
applies to other Members, in the case where NSCC treats a Sponsored
Member as insolvent.
Section 13(b) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that in the event
that NSCC determines to treat a Sponsored Member as insolvent pursuant
to Rule 20 (Insolvency), NSCC shall have the right to cease to act for
the insolvent Sponsored Member pursuant to Section 11 of the proposed
Rule 2C. If NSCC ceases to act for the insolvent Sponsored Member,
Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 shall apply with respect to the close-
out of the insolvent Sponsored Member's Sponsored Member Transactions.
Proposed Rule 2C, Section 14 (Liquidation of Sponsored Member and
Related Sponsoring Member Positions)
Section 14 of proposed Rule 2C would provide a mechanism by which a
Sponsoring Member may cause the termination and liquidation of a
Sponsored Member's positions arising from Sponsored Member Transactions
between the Sponsoring Member and its Sponsored Member that have been
novated to NSCC. Specifically, in the event (i) the Sponsoring Member
triggers the termination of a Sponsored Member's positions or (ii) NSCC
ceases to act for the Sponsored Member and the Sponsoring Member does
not continue to perform the obligations of the Sponsored Member, both
the Sponsored Member's positions and the Sponsoring Member's
corresponding positions arising from the Sponsored Member Transactions
between the Sponsoring Member and the Sponsored Member would be
terminated. Thereupon, the Sponsoring Member would calculate a net
liquidation value of such terminated positions, which liquidation value
would be paid either to or by the Sponsored Member by or to the
Sponsoring Member. NSCC would not, as a practical matter, be involved
in such settlement and would not need to take any market action because
the termination of the Sponsored Member's positions and the
corresponding Sponsoring Member's positions would leave NSCC flat.
Additionally, the Sponsoring Member would indemnify NSCC for any claim
by a Sponsored Member arising out of the Sponsoring Member's
calculation of the net liquidation value.
Section 14(a) of proposed Rule 2C would specify the scope of
positions to which Section 14 of proposed Rule 2C applies. It would
state that Section 14 only applies with respect to the liquidation of
positions resulting from Sponsored Member Transactions that have been
novated to NSCC.
Section 14(a) of proposed Rule 2C would further state that such
section would only apply if (i) a Sponsoring Member is a Defaulting
Member and NSCC has not ceased to act for the Sponsoring Member and
(ii) a Corporation Default has not occurred. This is because, as
described above in Section 12(b) of proposed Rule 2C, NSCC would have
discretion in the event it ceases to act for a Sponsoring Member to
close-out the positions of Sponsored Members for which the defaulting
Sponsoring Member was responsible or to allow them to settle. If NSCC
does close-out such positions, it would do so in accordance with
Section 14 of proposed Rule 56. If a Corporation Default has occurred
with respect to NSCC, each Sponsored Member's positions would be closed
out in accordance with Section 17 of proposed Rule 56.
Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 2C would set out the process by
which a Sponsoring Member or NSCC may cause the termination of a
Sponsored Member's positions. It would provide that on any Business
Day, the Sponsoring Member or NSCC may cause such termination by
delivering a notice to NSCC or the Sponsoring Member, respectively.
NSCC anticipates that each Sponsored Member and Sponsoring Member would
agree in the bilateral documentation between them as to what
circumstances or events give rise to the ability of the Sponsoring
Member to deliver a notice to NSCC terminating the Sponsored Member's
positions.\64\
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\64\ It bears noting in this regard that termination of the
Sponsored Member's positions would not be the exclusive mechanism by
which a Sponsoring Member may limit its credit risk. As described
above, under Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2C, a Sponsoring Member
may voluntarily elect to terminate its status as a Sponsoring Member
in respect of one or more Sponsored Members. Such a termination
would not affect the settlement of the Sponsored Member's existing
positions but would restrict the ability of the Sponsored Member to
have its future trades accepted for novation by NSCC through such
Sponsoring Member. The proposed rule change in Section 14(b) of
proposed Rule 2C would not affect the functioning of the proposed
rule change in Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2C or the general
ability of a Sponsoring Member and the Sponsored Member to agree on
the circumstances of when the Sponsoring Member may terminate its
status as Sponsoring Member for the Sponsored Member.
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The notice submitted by a Sponsoring Member to NSCC (or vice versa)
would cause the termination of all of the SFT Positions of the
Sponsored Member established in the Sponsored Member Sub-Account. The
notice would also cause the immediate termination of the corresponding
SFT Positions of the Sponsoring Member established in the Sponsoring
Member's proprietary SFT Account. The effect of such terminations would
be to leave NSCC flat.
Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 2C would also provide that the
termination of the Sponsored Member's positions (and the Sponsoring
Member's corresponding positions) would be effected by the Sponsoring
Member's establishment of a final net settlement position for each
eligible security with a distinct CUSIP number (``Final Net Settlement
Position'').
Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C would specify how the Final Net
Settlement Positions established pursuant to Section 14(b) of proposed
Rule 2C would be liquidated (i.e., how such positions would be
converted into an amount payable). It would also provide how the amount
payable arising from the liquidation of the Final Net Settlement
Positions would be discharged.
Specifically, Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C would first provide
that the Sponsoring Member would liquidate the Final Net Settlement
Positions established pursuant to Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 2C by
establishing (i) a single liquidation amount in respect of the
Sponsored Member's Final Net Settlement Positions (a ``Sponsored Member
Liquidation Amount'') and (ii) a single liquidation amount in respect
of the Sponsoring Member's Final Net Settlement Positions (a
``Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount''). The Sponsored Member
Liquidation Amount would be owed either by NSCC to the Sponsored Member
or by the Sponsored Member to NSCC because it would relate to the
Sponsored Member's Final Net Settlement Positions with NSCC, while the
Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount would be owed either by NSCC to
the Sponsoring Member or by the Sponsoring Member to NSCC because it
would relate to the Sponsoring Member's Final Net Settlement Positions
with NSCC.
Because the Final Net Settlement Positions of the Sponsoring Member
would be identical to, but in the opposite direction of, the Final Net
Settlement Positions of the Sponsored Member, the Sponsored Member
Liquidation Amount would equal the Sponsoring Member Liquidation
Amount. Therefore, if NSCC were to owe the Sponsored Member Liquidation
Amount to the Sponsored Member, the Sponsoring Member would owe the
Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount to NSCC. By the same token, if the
Sponsored Member were to owe the Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount to
NSCC, NSCC would owe the Sponsoring Member the Sponsoring
[[Page 44548]]
Member Liquidation Amount. In all instances, NSCC would owe and be owed
the same amount of money.
Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C would also provide how the
Sponsoring Member may calculate the Sponsoring Member Liquidation
Amount. It would state that the Sponsoring Member may calculate the
Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount based on prevailing market prices
of the relevant securities and/or the gains realized and losses
incurred by the Sponsoring Member in hedging its risk associated with
the liquidation of the Sponsoring Member's Final Net Settlement
Positions. Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C would further clarify that
such Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount may also take into account
any losses and expenses incurred by the Sponsoring Member in connection
with the liquidation of the positions.
Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C would further provide that, if a
Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount is due to NSCC, the Sponsoring
Member would be obligated to pay such Sponsored Member Liquidation
Amount to NSCC under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty and that this
obligation would, automatically and without further action, be set off
against the obligation of NSCC to pay the corresponding Sponsoring
Member Liquidation Amount to the Sponsoring Member. By virtue of such
setoff, the Sponsored Member's obligation to NSCC would be discharged,
as would NSCC's obligation to the Sponsoring Member. The Sponsoring
Member would, however, have a reimbursement claim against the Sponsored
Member in an amount equal to the Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount.
This reimbursement claim would arise as a matter of law by virtue of
the Sponsoring Member's performance under Sponsoring Member Guaranty,
though Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members may specify terms
related to the reimbursement claim in their bilateral submission. NSCC
would have no rights or obligations in respect of any such
reimbursement claim.
If a Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount were owed by NSCC to the
Sponsored Member, Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C would provide for
the Sponsoring Member to satisfy that obligation by transferring the
Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount to the Sponsoring Member's account
at its Settling Bank (``Sponsoring Member Settling Bank Omnibus
Account''). Section 14(c) of proposed Rule 2C would state that, to the
extent the Sponsoring Member makes such a transfer, it would discharge
NSCC's obligation to transfer the Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount
to the Sponsored Member and the Sponsoring Member's corresponding
obligation to transfer the Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount to
NSCC.
Section 14(d) of proposed Rule 2C would provide for the Sponsoring
Member to indemnify NSCC and its employees, officers, directors,
shareholders, agents, and Members (collectively, the ``Sponsoring/
Sponsored Membership Program Indemnified Parties'' or ``SMP Indemnified
Parties'') for any and all losses, liability, or expenses arising from
any claim by an affected Sponsored Member disputing the Sponsoring
Member's calculation of any Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount or
Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount.
Section 14(e) of proposed Rule 2C would provide that NSCC
acknowledges that a Sponsoring Member may take a security interest in
NSCC's obligations to a Sponsored Member in respect of its transactions
that have been novated to NSCC by such Sponsoring Member and
established in the Sponsoring Member's Sponsored Member Sub-Account for
the Sponsored Member. Such security interest would not impose new
obligations on NSCC but could allow the Sponsoring Member to direct
NSCC to submit payments due to the Sponsored Member to the Sponsoring
Member, so that the Sponsoring Member can apply such amounts to the
Sponsored Member's unsatisfied obligations to the Sponsoring Member.
(B) Proposed Rule 2D--Agent Clearing Members
NSCC is proposing to add Rule 2D, entitled ``Agent Clearing
Members.'' This new rule would govern the proposed agent clearing
membership and would be comprised of 12 sections, each of which is
described below.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 1 (General)
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2D would be a general provision
regarding the Rules applicable to Agent Clearing Members.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2D would provide that NSCC will permit a
Member that is approved to be an Agent Clearing Member to submit
transactions to NSCC for novation on behalf of one or more of the Agent
Clearing Member's Customers. Section 1 of proposed Rule 2D would
further provide that the rights, liabilities and obligations of Agent
Clearing Members shall be governed by proposed Rule 2D, and that
references to the term ``Member'' in other Rules would not apply to
Agent Clearing Members, in their respective capacities as such, unless
specifically noted as such in proposed Rule 2D or in such other Rules.
Section 1 of proposed Rule 2D would also provide that an Agent
Clearing Member shall continue to have all of the rights, liabilities
and obligations as set forth in the Rules and in any agreement between
it and NSCC pertaining to its status as a Member, and such rights,
liabilities and obligations shall be separate from its rights,
liabilities and obligations as an Agent Clearing Member except as
contemplated under Sections 6, 7 and 8 of proposed Rule 2D.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 2 (Qualifications of Agent Clearing Members,
the Application Process and Continuance Standards)
Section 2 of proposed Rule 2D would establish the eligibility
requirements for Members that wish to become Agent Clearing Members,
the membership application process that would be required of each
Member to become an Agent Clearing Member, the on-going membership
requirements that would apply to Agent Clearing Members, as well as the
requirements regarding an Agent Clearing Member's election to
voluntarily terminate its membership.
Under Section 2(a) of proposed Rule 2D, any Member would be
eligible to apply to become an Agent Clearing Member; however, if a
Member is a Registered Broker-Dealer, such Member would only be
permitted to apply to become an Agent Clearing Member if it has (1) Net
Worth of at least $25 million and (2) excess net capital over the
minimum net capital requirement imposed by the Commission (or such
higher minimum capital requirement imposed by the Member's designated
examining authority) of at least $10 million.\65\ As proposed, NSCC may
[[Page 44549]]
require that a Person be a Member for a certain time period before that
Person may be considered to become an Agent Clearing Member.
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\65\ NSCC is proposing these financial minimums for Registered
Broker-Dealer Agent Clearing Member applicants to reflect the
additional responsibility that the applicant would undertake as an
Agent Clearing Member. These financial minimums are determined based
on NSCC's assessment of the minimum capital that would be necessary
for a broker-dealer to conduct meaningful level of NSCC-cleared
activity while serving as a credit counterparty in respect of
others' trades. In addition, NSCC is proposing these financial
minimums for Registered Broker-Dealer Agent Clearing Member
applicants to be consistent with proposed requirements applicable to
Registered Broker-Dealer Sponsoring Member applicants. NSCC believes
this approach to financial minimums is appropriate because both
Sponsoring Members and Agent Clearing Members would be viewed and
surveilled as the credit counterparties to NSCC in respect of the
transactions that they submit for clearing in respect of Sponsoring
Member Sub-Accounts and Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts, respectively. Although the model of clearing would differ
as between Sponsoring Members and Agent Clearing Members, both would
be types of Members that would be standing behind the credit of
their clients. Accordingly, NSCC believes it is appropriate to use
consistent financial minimums.
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Section 2(b) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that each Member
applicant to become an Agent Clearing Member would be required to
provide an application and other information requested by NSCC. Agent
Clearing Member applications shall first be reviewed by NSCC and would
require the Board of Directors' approval, unless the Member applicant
is already a Sponsoring Member under proposed Rule 2C or a sponsoring
member of FICC. NSCC believes this approach to the Board of Directors'
approval for Agent Clearing Members is appropriate in light of the fact
that the critical components of the FICC sponsoring member applications
as well as the NSCC Agent Clearing Member and Sponsoring Member
applications and the criteria that the respective boards assess when
determining whether to admit a Member in such respective capacities are
substantially similar.
Under Section 2(c) of proposed Rule 2D, if the Agent Clearing
Member application is denied, such denial would be handled in
accordance with Section 1 of Rule 2A (Initial Membership Requirements).
As proposed in Section 2(d) of proposed Rule 2D, NSCC may impose
additional financial requirements on an Agent Clearing Member applicant
based upon the level of the anticipated positions and obligations of
such applicant, the anticipated risk associated with the volume and
types of transaction such applicant proposes to process through NSCC as
an Agent Clearing Member and the overall financial condition of such
applicant. Under the proposal, with respect to an application of a
Member to become an Agent Clearing Member that requires the Board of
Directors' approval, the Board of Directors shall also approve any
increased financial requirements imposed by NSCC in connection with the
approval of the application, and NSCC would thereafter regularly review
such Agent Clearing Member regarding its compliance with the increased
financial requirements.\66\
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\66\ If the increased financial requirements are imposed in
connection with an Agent Clearing Member application that does not
require the Board of Directors' approval, the increased financial
requirements would not be subject to the Board of Directors'
approval. Nonetheless, once an Agent Clearing Member application is
approved with increased financial requirements, NSCC would
thereafter regularly review such Agent Clearing Member regarding its
continued adherence to such increased financial requirements as well
as determine whether such increased financial requirements are still
appropriate. If the Agent Clearing Member is unable to adhere to the
increased financial requirements, the Board of Directors may,
pursuant to Section 9 of proposed Rule 2D, suspend, prohibit or
limit the Agent Clearing Member's access to NSCC's services.
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In addition, under Section 2(e) of proposed Rule 2D, NSCC may
require each Agent Clearing Member or any Agent Clearing Member
applicant to furnish adequate assurances of such Agent Clearing Member
or Agent Clearing Member applicant's financial responsibility and
operational capability within the meaning of Rule 15 (Assurances of
Financial Responsibility and Operational Capability), as NSCC may at
any time or from time to time deem necessary or advisable in order to
protect NSCC, its participants, creditors or investors, to safeguard
securities and funds in the custody or control of NSCC and for which
NSCC is responsible, or to promote the prompt and accurate clearance,
settlement and processing of securities transactions.\67\
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\67\ As an example, NSCC may require an Agent Clearing Member or
an Agent Clearing Member applicant to furnish adequate assurances of
such Agent Clearing Member or Agent Clearing Member applicant's
financial responsibility and operational capability if NSCC has
concerns about such Agent Clearing Member or Agent Clearing Member
applicant's overall financial health or credit rating.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 2(f) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that each Member
whose Agent Clearing Member application is approved would sign and
deliver to NSCC an agreement between NSCC and the Member and specifies
the terms and conditions deemed by NSCC to be necessary in order to
protect itself and its participants (``Agent Clearing Member
Agreement'') and a related legal opinion in a form satisfactory to
NSCC.
Section 2(g) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that each Agent
Clearing Member shall submit to NSCC, within the timeframes and in the
formats required by NSCC, the reports and information that all Members
are required to submit regardless of type of Member and the reports and
information required to be submitted for its respective type of Member,
all pursuant to Section 2 of Rule 2B (Ongoing Membership Requirements
and Monitoring) and, if applicable, Addendum O (Admission of Non-US
Entities as Direct NSCC Members).
Section 2(h) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member's books and records, insofar as they relate to the
Agent Clearing Member Transactions submitted to NSCC, shall be open to
the inspection of the duly authorized representatives of NSCC to the
same extent provided in Rule 2A (Initial Membership Requirements) for
other Members.
Section 2(i) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member shall promptly inform NSCC, both orally and in writing,
if it is no longer in compliance with the relevant standards and
qualifications for applying to become an Agent Clearing Member set
forth in the proposed Rule 2D. Notification must take place immediately
and in no event later than 2 Business Days from the date on which the
Agent Clearing Member first learns of its non-compliance. As proposed,
NSCC would assess a fine in accordance with the Fine Schedule in
Addendum P against any Agent Clearing Member that fails to so notify
NSCC.\68\ If the Agent Clearing Member fails to remain in compliance
with the relevant standards and qualifications, NSCC would, if
necessary, undertake appropriate action to determine the status of the
Agent Clearing Member and its continued eligibility as such. In
addition, NSCC may review the financial responsibility and operational
capability of the Agent Clearing Member, and otherwise require from the
Agent Clearing Member additional reports of its financial or
operational condition at such intervals and in such detail as NSCC
shall determine. In addition, if NSCC has reason to believe that an
Agent Clearing Member may fail to comply with any of the Rules
applicable to Agent Clearing Members, it may require the Agent Clearing
Member to provide it, within such timeframe, and in such detail, and
pursuant to such manner as NSCC shall determine, with assurances in
writing of a credible nature that the Agent Clearing Member shall not,
in fact, violate any of the Rules.
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\68\ See Addendum P (Fine Schedule), supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 2(j) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that in the event
that an Agent Clearing Member fails to remain in compliance with the
relevant requirements of the Rules or the Agent Clearing Member
Agreement, NSCC shall have the right to cease to act for the Agent
Clearing Member in its capacity as an Agent Clearing Member in
accordance with Section 9 of proposed Rule 2D or as a Member more
generally, unless the Agent Clearing Member requests that such action
not be taken and NSCC determines that, depending upon the specific
circumstances and the record of the Agent Clearing Member, it is
appropriate instead to establish for such Agent Clearing Member a time
period,
[[Page 44550]]
which shall be determined by NSCC and which shall be no longer than 30
calendar days unless otherwise determined by NSCC, during which the
Agent Clearing Member must resume compliance with such requirements. As
proposed, in the event that the Agent Clearing Member is unable to
satisfy such requirements within the time period specified by NSCC,
NSCC shall, pursuant to the Rules, cease to act for the Agent Clearing
Member in its capacity as an Agent Clearing Member pursuant to Section
9 of the proposed Rule 2D or as a Member more generally.
Section 2(k) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that if the sum of
the Volatility Charges applicable to an Agent Clearing Member's Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account(s) and its other accounts at
NSCC exceeds its Net Member Capital, the Agent Clearing Member shall
not be permitted to submit activity into its Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account(s), unless otherwise determined by NSCC in
order to promote orderly settlement.\69\ As proposed, an ``Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account'' would mean a ledger
maintained on the books and records of NSCC that reflects the
outstanding Agent Clearing Member Transactions that an Agent Clearing
Member enters into on behalf of Customers and that have been novated to
NSCC, the SFT Positions or SFT Cash associated with those transactions,
and any debits or credits of cash associated with such transactions
effected pursuant to Rule 12 (Settlement).
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\69\ NSCC selected the Volatility Charges and Net Member Capital
as the criteria for purposes of establishing the activity limit for
Agent Clearing Members. This is because an Agent Clearing Member's
total Volatility Charges being in excess of its Net Member Capital
is an important indicator that the Agent Clearing Member's financial
resources, as measured by its Net Capital, net assets or equity
capital, may be insufficient to meet the largest component of its
Required Fund Deposit (i.e., Volatility Charges).
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Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member may voluntarily elect to terminate its status as an
Agent Clearing Member by providing NSCC with a written notice from an
Agent Clearing Member to NSCC that the Agent Clearing Member is
voluntarily electing to terminate its status as an Agent Clearing
Member (``Agent Clearing Member Voluntary Termination Notice''). The
Agent Clearing Member shall specify in the Agent Clearing Member
Voluntary Termination Notice a desired date for such termination, which
date shall not be prior to the scheduled Final Settlement Date of any
remaining obligation owed by the Agent Clearing Member to NSCC as of
the time such Agent Clearing Member Voluntary Termination Notice is
submitted to NSCC, unless otherwise approved by NSCC.
Section 2(l) of proposed Rule 2D would also provide that such
termination would not be effective until accepted by NSCC, which shall
be no later than 10 Business Days after the receipt of the Agent
Clearing Member Voluntary Termination Notice from such Agent Clearing
Member. NSCC's acceptance shall be evidenced by a notice to NSCC's
participants announcing the termination of the Agent Clearing Member's
status as such and the date on which the termination of the Agent
Clearing Member's status as an Agent Clearing Member becomes effective
(``Agent Clearing Member Termination Date''). As proposed, after the
close of business on the Agent Clearing Member Termination Date, the
Agent Clearing Member shall no longer be eligible to submit Agent
Clearing Member Transactions. If any Agent Clearing Member Transaction
is submitted to NSCC by the Agent Clearing Member that is scheduled to
settle after the Agent Clearing Member Termination Date, such Agent
Clearing Member's Agent Clearing Member Voluntary Termination Notice
would be deemed void, and the Agent Clearing Member would remain
subject to the proposed Rule 2D as if it had not given such Agent
Clearing Member Voluntary Termination Notice.
Section 2(m) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member's voluntary termination of its status as such shall not
affect its obligations to NSCC, or the rights of NSCC, with respect to
Agent Clearing Member Transactions submitted to NSCC before the
applicable Agent Clearing Member Termination Date. Any such Agent
Clearing Member Transactions that have been novated to NSCC shall
continue to be processed by NSCC. The return of the Agent Clearing
Member's Clearing Fund deposit shall be governed by Section 7 of Rule 4
(Clearing Fund). If an Event Period were to occur after an Agent
Clearing Member has submitted the Agent Clearing Member Voluntary
Termination Notice but on or prior to the Agent Clearing Member
Termination Date, in order for the Agent Clearing Member to benefit
from its Loss Allocation Cap pursuant to Section 4 of Rule 4, the Agent
Clearing Member would need to comply with the provisions of Section 6
of Rule 4 and submit a Loss Allocation Withdrawal Notice, which notice,
upon submission, shall supersede and void any pending Agent Clearing
Member Voluntary Termination Notice previously submitted by the Agent
Clearing Member.
Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that any non-public
information furnished to NSCC pursuant to proposed Rule 2D shall be
held in confidence as may be required under the laws, rules and
regulations applicable to NSCC that relate to the confidentiality of
records. Section 2(n) would also provide that each Agent Clearing
Member shall maintain DTCC Confidential Information in confidence to
the same extent and using the same means it uses to protect its own
confidential information, but no less than a reasonable standard of
care, and shall not use DTCC Confidential Information or disclose DTCC
Confidential Information to any third party except as necessary to
perform such Agent Clearing Member's obligations under the Rules or as
otherwise required by applicable law. Section 2(n) would further
provide that each Agent Clearing Member acknowledges that a breach of
its confidentiality obligations under the Rules may result in serious
and irreparable harm to NSCC and/or DTCC for which there is no adequate
remedy at law. In addition, Section 2(n) would provide that in the
event of such a breach by the Agent Clearing Member, NSCC and/or DTCC
shall be entitled to seek any temporary or permanent injunctive or
other equitable relief in addition to any monetary damages
thereunder.\70\
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\70\ Section 2(n) of proposed Rule 2D is designed to be
consistent with NSCC's proposed change to revise certain provisions
in the Rules relating to the confidentiality of information
furnished by participants. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
92334 (July 7, 2021), 86 FR 36815 (July 13, 2021) (SR-NSCC-2021-
007).
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Proposed Rule 2D, Section 3 (Compliance With Laws)
Section 3 of proposed Rule 2D would provide that each Agent
Clearing Member shall comply in all material respects with all
applicable laws, including applicable laws relating to securities,
taxation and money laundering, as well as global sanctions laws, in
connection with the use of NSCC's services.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 4 (Agent Clearing Member Transactions)
Section 4 of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent Clearing
Member shall be permitted to submit to NSCC on behalf of one or more
Customers' Securities Financing Transactions (``Agent Clearing Member
[[Page 44551]]
Transactions'') in accordance with proposed Rule 56, as described
below.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 5 (Agent Clearing Member Agent Obligations)
Section 5 of proposed Rule 2D would establish rules-based
obligations for Agent Clearing Members and the establishment of Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts.
Section 5(a) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member shall be permitted to submit to NSCC for novation Agent
Clearing Member Transactions entered into by the Agent Clearing Member
as agent on behalf of one or more Customers. Any such submission shall
be in accordance with proposed Rule 2D. As proposed, subject to the
provisions of the Rules, an Agent Clearing Member's clearing of Agent
Clearing Member Transactions for Customers (``Customer Clearing
Service'') may be provided by an Agent Clearing Member to its Customers
on any terms and conditions mutually agreed to by the Agent Clearing
Member and its Customers; provided, that each Agent Clearing Member
shall, before providing Customer Clearing Service to any Customer,
enter into an agreement with that Customer that binds the Customer to
the provisions of the Rules applicable to Agent Clearing Member
Transactions and Customers.
Section 5(b) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that, with respect
to an Agent Clearing Member that submits Agent Clearing Member
Transactions to NSCC for novation on behalf of its Customers, NSCC
shall maintain one or more Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts in the name of the Agent Clearing Member for the benefit of
its Customers. Each Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account
would be permitted to contain only (i) SFTs entered into by the Agent
Clearing Member, on behalf of a Customer, as Transferor or (ii) SFTs
entered into by the Agent Clearing Member, on behalf of a Customer, as
a Transferee. An Agent Clearing Member would not be permitted to
combine SFTs entered into as Transferee and Transferor in the same
Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account. This is designed to
ensure that NSCC's volatility-based Clearing Fund deposit requirements
represent the sum of each individual Customer's activity (i.e., that
the positions are margined on a gross basis).\71\
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\71\ If an Agent Clearing Member were permitted to maintain SFTs
entered into as both Transferee and Transferor in the same Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account, the Required Fund Deposit
obligations of the Agent Clearing Member could potentially be
reduced by offsetting SFT Positions of different Customers in the
same SFT Security.
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Section 5(c) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member shall act solely as agent of its Customers in
connection with the clearing of Agent Clearing Member Transactions;
provided that the Agent Clearing Member shall remain fully liable for
the performance of all obligations to NSCC arising in connection with
Agent Clearing Member Transactions; and provided further, that the
liabilities and obligations of NSCC with respect to Agent Clearing
Member Transactions entered into by the Agent Clearing Member shall
extend only to the Agent Clearing Member. Section 5(c) of proposed Rule
2D would further provide that, without limiting the generality of the
foregoing, NSCC shall not have any liability or obligation arising out
of or with respect to any Agent Clearing Member Transaction to any
Customer on behalf of whom an Agent Clearing Member entered into the
Agent Clearing Member Transaction.
Section 5(d) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that nothing in the
Rules shall prohibit an Agent Clearing Member from seeking
reimbursement from a Customer for payments made by the Agent Clearing
Member (whether out of Clearing Fund deposits or otherwise) under the
Rules, or as otherwise may be agreed between the Agent Clearing Member
and the Customer.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 6 (Clearing Fund Obligations)
Section 6 of proposed Rule 2D would set forth the Clearing Fund
obligations.
Section 6(a) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that NSCC shall
maintain one or more Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts
for an Agent Clearing Member. Each Agent Clearing Member shall make and
maintain so long as such Member is an Agent Clearing Member a deposit
to the Clearing Fund as a Required Fund Deposit to support the activity
in its Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account(s) (the ``Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund Deposit''). Deposits to the Clearing Fund
would be held by NSCC or its designated agents, to be applied as
provided in the Rules.
Section 6(b) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that, in the
ordinary course, for purposes of satisfying the Agent Clearing Member's
Clearing Fund requirements under the Rules for its Member activity, its
Agent Clearing Member activity, and, to the extent applicable, its
Sponsoring Member activity, the Agent Clearing Member's proprietary
accounts, its Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account(s), and
its Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts, if any, shall be treated separately,
as if they were accounts of separate entities. Notwithstanding the
previous sentence, however, NSCC may, in its sole discretion, at any
time and without prior notice to the Agent Clearing Member (but being
obligated to give notice to the Agent Clearing Member as soon as
possible thereafter) and whether or not the Agent Clearing Member is in
default of its obligations to NSCC, treat the Agent Clearing Member's
accounts as a single account for the purpose of applying Clearing Fund
deposits; apply Clearing Fund deposits made by the Agent Clearing
Member with respect to any account as necessary to ensure that the
Agent Clearing Member meets all of its obligations to NSCC under any
other account(s); and otherwise exercise all rights to offset and net
against the Clearing Fund deposits any net obligations among any or all
of the accounts, whether or not any other Person is deemed to have any
interest in such account.\72\
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\72\ NSCC believes this is appropriate because the Clearing Fund
deposits of an Agent Clearing Member are the proprietary assets of
the Agent Clearing Member and NSCC generally has the right to apply
the Clearing Fund deposits of a Member to any of the Member's
obligations to NSCC, regardless of whether those were the
obligations that generated the Clearing Fund deposit requirement.
NSCC therefore believes that, consistent with the FICC Sponsoring
Member/Sponsored Member Program for the reasons described above in
Item II(B)(iii) ``Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members,'' an
Agent Clearing Member's Clearing Fund deposits should be available
to satisfy any of the Agent Clearing Member's obligations to NSCC.
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Section 6(c) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that the Agent
Clearing Member Required Fund Deposit for each Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account shall be calculated separately based on the
Agent Clearing Member Transactions in such Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account, and the Agent Clearing Member shall, as
principal, be required to satisfy the Agent Clearing Member Required
Fund Deposit for each of the Agent Clearing Member's Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts.
Section 6(d) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that Sections 1, 2,
4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 of Rule 4 (Clearing Fund) shall apply
to the Agent Clearing Member Required Fund Deposit with respect to
obligations of an Agent Clearing Member under the Rules, including its
obligations arising under the Agent Clearing Member
[[Page 44552]]
Customer Omnibus Account(s), to the same extent as such sections apply
to any Required Fund Deposit and any other obligations of a Member. For
purposes of Section 1 of Rule 4, obligations and liabilities of a
Member to NSCC that shall be secured shall include, without limitation,
a Member's obligations as an Agent Clearing Member under the Rules,
including, without limitation, any obligation of any such Agent
Clearing Member to provide the Agent Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposit and such Agent Clearing Member's obligations arising under SFTs
established in the Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts of
such Agent Clearing Member.
Section 6(e) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member shall be subject to such fines as may be imposed in
accordance with the Rules for any late satisfaction of a Clearing Fund
deficiency call.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 7 (Right of Offset)
Section 7 of proposed Rule 2D would provide that in the ordinary
course, with respect to satisfaction of any Agent Clearing Member's
obligations under the Rules, the Agent Clearing Member's Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts, the Agent Clearing Member's
proprietary accounts, and the Agent Clearing Member's Sponsored Member
Sub-Accounts, if any, at NSCC shall be treated separately, as if they
were accounts of separate entities. Notwithstanding the previous
sentence, however, NSCC may, in its sole discretion, at any time any
obligation of the Agent Clearing Member arises in respect of any Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account, exercise a right of offset
and net any such obligation against any obligations of NSCC to the
Agent Clearing Member in respect of such Agent Clearing Member's
proprietary accounts at NSCC.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 8 (Loss Allocation Obligations)
Section 8 of proposed Rule 2D would establish loss allocation
obligations for Agent Clearing Members.
Section 8(a) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that, to the extent
NSCC incurs a loss or liability from a Defaulting Member Event or a
Declared Non-Default Loss Event and a loss allocation obligation
arises, that would be the responsibility of the Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account as if the Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Account were a Member, NSCC shall calculate such loss
allocation obligation and the Agent Clearing Member shall be, as
principal, responsible for satisfying such obligations.
Section 8(b) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that the entire
amount of the Required Fund Deposit associated with the Agent Clearing
Member's proprietary accounts at NSCC and the entire amount of the
Agent Clearing Member Required Fund Deposit may be used to satisfy any
amount allocated against an Agent Clearing Member, whether in its
capacity as a Member, an Agent Clearing Member, or otherwise. With
respect to an obligation to make payment due to any loss allocation
amounts assessed on an Agent Clearing Member pursuant to Section 8(a)
of proposed Rule 2D, the Agent Clearing Member may instead elect to
terminate its membership in NSCC pursuant to Section 6 of Rule 4 and
thereby benefit from its Loss Allocation Cap pursuant to Section 4 of
Rule 4; however, for the purpose of determining the Loss Allocation Cap
for such Agent Clearing Member, its Required Fund Deposit shall be the
sum of its Required Fund Deposits associated with its proprietary
accounts at NSCC (including its proprietary SFT Account pursuant to
proposed Rule 56), its Agent Clearing Member Required Fund Deposit for
each of its Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts, and its
Sponsoring Member Required Fund Deposit, if any.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 9 (Restrictions on Access to Services by an
Agent Clearing Member)
Section 9 of proposed Rule 2D would establish the rights of NSCC to
restrict an Agent Clearing Member's access to NSCC's services.
Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that the Board of
Directors may at any time upon NSCC providing notice to an Agent
Clearing Member pursuant to Section 5 of Rule 45 (Notices), suspend an
Agent Clearing Member in its capacity as an Agent Clearing Member from
any service provided by NSCC either with respect to a particular
transaction or transactions or with respect to transactions generally,
or prohibit or limit such Agent Clearing Member's access to services
offered by NSCC in the event that one or more of the factors set forth
in Section 1 of Rule 46 (Restrictions on Access to Services) is present
with respect to the Agent Clearing Member.
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that Rule 46 shall
apply with respect to an Agent Clearing Member in the same way as it
applies to Members, including the Board of Directors' right to
summarily suspend the Agent Clearing Member and to cease to act for
such Agent Clearing Member. As under Rule 46, the Board of Directors
would need to make the determination of whether to suspend, prohibit or
limit an Agent Clearing Member's access to services offered by NSCC on
the basis of the factors set forth in that rule.
Section 9(c) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that if NSCC ceases
to act for an Agent Clearing Member in its capacity as an Agent
Clearing Member, Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 shall apply and NSCC
shall decline to accept or process data from the Agent Clearing Member
on Agent Clearing Member Transactions and close-out any Agent Clearing
Member Transactions that have been novated to NSCC. Section 9(c) would
also provide that if NSCC suspends, prohibits or limits an Agent
Clearing Member in its capacity as an Agent Clearing Member with
respect to such Agent Clearing Member's access to services offered by
NSCC, NSCC shall decline to accept or process data from the Agent
Clearing Member on Agent Clearing Member Transactions for so long as
NSCC is suspending, prohibiting or limiting the Agent Clearing Member.
Furthermore, Section 9(c) would state that, in addition, NSCC would
close-out any Agent Clearing Member Transactions which have been
novated to NSCC.
This is different from how NSCC would treat Sponsored Member
Transactions of a Sponsoring Member under Section 10 of proposed Rule
2C if NSCC ceases to act for the Sponsoring Member. With respect to
such transactions, NSCC would have the option to either terminate or
settle a Sponsored Member's positions after ceasing to act for the
Sponsoring Member. The reason for this difference is that NSCC would
have the practical and legal capability to make such an election
because each Sponsored Member would be a limited-purpose member of
NSCC. Accordingly, NSCC would have the requisite information about each
of the Sponsored Member's novated positions (by virtue of each
Sponsored Member's novated portfolio represented as a different sub-
account of the Sponsoring Member (i.e., Sponsored Member Sub-Account)
on the books and records of NSCC) to make such an election. By
contrast, an Agent Clearing Member's Customers would not be limited-
purpose members of NSCC nor would NSCC know which transactions within
an Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account belong to which
Customers. As such, NSCC would not be able to separately terminate or
complete settlement with respect to Customer's novated positions.
[[Page 44553]]
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 10 (Insolvency of an Agent Clearing Member)
Section 10(a) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member shall be obligated to immediately notify NSCC that (a)
it fails, or is unable, to perform its contracts or obligations or (b)
it is insolvent as required by Section 1 of Rule 20 (Insolvency) for
other Members. An Agent Clearing Member shall be treated by NSCC in all
respects as insolvent under the same circumstances set forth in Section
2 of Rule 20 for other Members. Section 3 of Rule 20 shall apply, in
the same manner in which such section applies to other Members, in the
case where NSCC treats an Agent Clearing Member as insolvent.
Section 10(b) of proposed Rule 2D would provide that in the event
that NSCC determines to treat an Agent Clearing Member as insolvent
pursuant to Rule 20 (Insolvency), NSCC shall have the right to cease to
act for the insolvent Agent Clearing Member pursuant to Section 9 of
proposed Rule 2D. If NSCC ceases to act for the insolvent Agent
Clearing Member, NSCC shall decline to accept or process data from the
Agent Clearing Member, including Agent Clearing Member Transactions. As
proposed, NSCC would close-out any Agent Clearing Member Transactions
which have been novated to NSCC.
This is different from how NSCC would treat Sponsored Member
Transactions. As described above, NSCC would have the option to either
terminate or settle a Sponsored Member's novated positions after
ceasing to act for the Sponsoring Member. However, with respect to
Agent Clearing Member Transactions, NSCC would close-out any such
transactions which have been novated to NSCC. This is because NSCC
would have the practical and legal capability to make such an election
with respect to Sponsored Member Transactions because each Sponsored
Member would be a limited-purpose member of NSCC. Accordingly, NSCC
would have the requisite information about each of the Sponsored
Member's novated positions (by virtue of each Sponsored Member's
novated portfolio represented as a different sub-account of the
Sponsoring Member (i.e., Sponsored Member Sub-Account) on the books and
records of NSCC) to make such an election. By contrast, an Agent
Clearing Member's Customers would not be limited-purpose members of
NSCC nor would NSCC know which transactions within an Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account belong to which Customers. As such,
NSCC would not be able to separately terminate or complete settlement
with respect to Customers' novated positions.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 11 (Transfer of Agent Clearing Member
Transactions in Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts)
Section 11 of proposed Rule 2D would (i) permit an Agent Clearing
Member, upon a default of a Customer and consent of NSCC, to transfer
Agent Clearing Member Transactions of the Customer established in one
or more of the Agent Clearing Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer
Omnibus Accounts from such Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus
Accounts to the Agent Clearing Member's proprietary account at NSCC as
a Member and (ii) govern how the transfer would be effectuated.
Section 11(a) of proposed Rule 2D would clarify the scope to which
Section 11 of proposed Rule 2D applies. It would state that Section 11
would not apply if either (i) the relevant Agent Clearing Member is a
Defaulting Member or (ii) a Corporation Default has occurred. This is
because, as described above with respect to Section 10(b) of proposed
Rule 2D, NSCC would close-out all Agent Clearing Member Transactions
for which the defaulting Agent Clearing Member was responsible. If a
Corporation Default has occurred with respect to NSCC, each Agent
Clearing Member's positions would be closed out in accordance with
Section 17 of proposed Rule 56.
Section 11(b) of proposed Rule 2D would set out the process by
which an Agent Clearing Member may transfer the Agent Clearing Member
Transactions of a defaulting Customer in one or more of Agent Clearing
Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts. It would
provide that, to the extent permitted under applicable laws and
regulations, an Agent Clearing Member may, upon a default of a Customer
and the consent of NSCC, transfer the Agent Clearing Member
Transactions of the Customer established in one or more of the Agent
Clearing Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts from
such Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts to the Agent
Clearing Member's proprietary account at NSCC as a Member. As proposed,
any such transfer shall occur by novation, such that the obligations
between NSCC and the relevant Customer in respect of the Agent Clearing
Member Transactions shall be terminated and replaced with identical
obligations between NSCC and the Agent Clearing Member, acting as
principal. Section 11(b) would also provide the Agent Clearing Member
shall indemnify NSCC, and its employees, officers, directors,
shareholders, agents, and Members, for any and all losses, liability,
or expenses incurred by them arising from, or in relation to, any such
transfer.
Proposed Rule 2D, Section 12 (Customer Acknowledgments)
Section 12 of proposed Rule 2D would provide that each Agent
Clearing Member on behalf of each of its Customers agrees that such
Customer, by participating in and entering into Agent Clearing Member
Transactions through the Agent Clearing Member, understands,
acknowledges, and agrees that: (a) The service provided by NSCC with
regard to the Customer Clearing Service would be subject to and
governed by the Rules; (b) the Rules shall govern the novation of Agent
Clearing Member Transactions and all transactions between the Customer
and its Agent Clearing Member resulting in the novation of such
transactions, and at the time of novation of an Agent Clearing Member
Transaction, the Customer on whose behalf it was submitted would be
bound by the Agent Clearing Member Transaction automatically and
without any further action by the Customer or by its Agent Clearing
Member, and the Customer agrees to be bound by the applicable
provisions of the Rules in all respects; (c) NSCC shall be under no
obligation to deal directly with the Customer, and NSCC may deal
exclusively with the Customer's Agent Clearing Member; (d) NSCC shall
have no obligations to the Customer with respect to any Agent Clearing
Member Transactions submitted by an Agent Clearing Member on behalf of
the Customer, including with respect to any payment or delivery
obligations; and (e) the Customer shall have no right to receive from
NSCC, or any right to assert a claim against NSCC with respect to, nor
shall NSCC be liable to the Customer for, any payment or delivery
obligation in connection with any Agent Clearing Member Transactions
submitted by an Agent Clearing Member on behalf of the Customer, and
NSCC shall make any such payments or redeliveries solely to the
relevant Agent Clearing Member.
(C) Proposed Rule 56--Securities Financing Transaction Clearing Service
NSCC is proposing to add Rule 56, entitled ``Securities Financing
Transaction Clearing Service.'' This new rule would govern the proposed
SFT
[[Page 44554]]
Clearing Service and would be comprised of 18 sections, each of which
is described below.
In connection with the proposed SFT Clearing Service, NSCC is
proposing to add the following terms and definitions, as described
below.
The term ``Aggregate Net SFT Close-out Value'' would mean, with
respect to an SFT Member, the sum of the SFT Close-out Value (as
defined below and in the proposed rule change) for each SFT Position to
which the SFT Member is a party.
The term ``Approved SFT Submitter'' would mean a provider of
transaction data on an SFT that the parties to the SFT have selected
and NSCC has approved, subject to such terms and conditions as to which
the Approved SFT Submitter and NSCC may agree.
The term ``Bilaterally Initiated SFT'' would mean an SFT, the
Initial Settlement of which occurred prior to the submission of such
SFT to NSCC.
The term ``Buy-In Amount'' would mean a net amount equal to (x) the
Buy-In Costs or Deemed Buy-In Costs (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change) of the SFT Securities in respect of which a
Transferor has effected a Buy-In, less (y) the amount of the SFT Cash
for the relevant SFT (unless the Transferor effected a Buy-In in
respect of some, but not all, of the SFT Securities that are the
subject of the SFT, in which case (y) shall be the amount of the
Corresponding SFT Cash (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change)).
The term ``Contract Price'' would mean, with respect to SFT
Securities subject to an SFT, the price of such securities at the time
the SFT is submitted to NSCC for novation, which price shall be
determined by the SFT Member parties to the relevant SFT and provided
by an Approved SFT Submitter to NSCC in accordance with the
communication links, formats, timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose; provided that if no such price is provided by
the time required by NSCC, the ``Contract Price'' shall be the Current
Market Price of the SFT Securities.
The term ``Corresponding SFT Cash'' would mean (a) in respect of a
Recalled SFT (as defined below and in the proposed rule change) for
which a Transferor has effected a Buy-In in respect of some, but not
all, of the SFT Securities that are the subject of the SFT, the portion
of the SFT Cash for such SFT equal to the product of (i) the percentage
of the SFT Securities in respect of which the Transferor effected a
Buy-In and (ii) the SFT Cash of the SFT; and (b) in respect of a
Settling SFT which has a greater quantity of SFT Securities as its
subject than the corresponding Linked SFT, the portion of the SFT Cash
of the Settling SFT equal to the product of (i) the percentage of the
SFT Securities of the Settling SFT that the Linked SFT has as its
subject and (ii) the SFT Cash of the Settling SFT.
The term ``Deemed Buy-In Costs'' would mean the product of the
number of SFT Securities subject to the relevant Buy-In and the per-
share price therefor on the date of the Buy-In obtained from a
generally recognized source or the last bid quotation from such a
source at the most recent close of trading for the SFT Security.
The term ``Defaulting SFT Member'' would mean an SFT Member for
which NSCC has declined or ceased to act in accordance with Section 14
of proposed Rule 56, as described below.
The term ``Distribution'' would mean, with respect to any SFT
Security at any time, any cash payment of amounts equivalent to
dividends and other distributions on the SFT Security.
The term ``Distribution Amount'' would mean, in respect of an SFT,
an amount of cash equal to the product of: (a) The amount per security
in respect of (x) a cash dividend on the SFT Securities that are the
subject of the SFT or (y) an exchange of the SFT Securities that are
the subject of the SFT for cash; and (b) the number of the relevant SFT
Securities subject to the SFT.
The term ``Distribution Payment'' would mean an amount payable by
one party to an SFT to the other party to the SFT during the term of
the SFT in respect of a Distribution on the SFT Securities subject to
the SFT.
The term ``Existing Master Agreement'' would mean, in respect of an
SFT, a written agreement that (i) exists at the time transaction data
for the SFT is submitted to NSCC by an Approved SFT Submitter, (ii)
provides for, among other things, terms governing the payment and
delivery obligations of the parties and (iii) the parties have
established (by written agreement, oral agreement, course of conduct or
otherwise) would govern such SFT.
The term ``Final Settlement'' would mean the exchange of SFT
Securities for SFT Cash described in clause (b) of the proposed
definition of Securities Financing Transaction.
The term ``Final Settlement Date'' would mean the Business Day on
which the final settlement of a transaction is scheduled to occur. If
the transaction is an SFT, the Final Settlement Date means the Business
Day on which the Final Settlement of the SFT is scheduled to occur in
accordance with proposed Rule 56 or, if the SFT is accelerated in
accordance with proposed Rule 56, the date to which the Final
Settlement obligations have been accelerated.
The term ``Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash''
would mean, (a) in respect of a Linked SFT, the excess, if any, of the
Independent Amount SFT Cash of the Linked SFT over the Independent
Amount SFT Cash of the Settling SFT; (b) in respect of a Non-Returned
SFT, the portion of the Price Differential payable by the Transferee,
if any, that is attributable to the Independent Amount SFT Cash of the
SFT (which shall be calculated by multiplying such Priced Differential
by the excess, if any, of the Independent Amount Percentage (as defined
below and in the proposed rule change) over 100%); and (c) in respect
of any other SFT, the Independent Amount SFT Cash of such SFT.
The term ``Independent Amount Percentage'' would mean, in respect
of an SFT, a percentage obtained by dividing the SFT Cash of such SFT
by the Market Value SFT Cash (as defined below and in the proposed rule
change) of such SFT.
The term ``Independent Amount SFT Cash'' would mean the portion, if
any, of the SFT Cash for an SFT equal to the amount by which the SFT
Cash for such SFT at the time of the Initial Settlement exceeds the
Contract Price of the SFT Securities that are the subject of such SFT.
The term ``Ineligibility Date'' would mean, with respect to an SFT,
the date on which the SFT Security that is the subject of the SFT
becomes an Ineligible SFT Security (as defined below and in the
proposed rule change).
The term ``Ineligible SFT'' would mean an SFT that has, as its
subject, SFT Securities that have become Ineligible SFT Securities.
The term ``Ineligible SFT Security'' would mean an SFT Security
that is not eligible to be the subject of a novated SFT.
The term ``Initial Settlement'' would mean the exchange of SFT
Securities for SFT Cash described in clause (a) of the proposed
definition of Securities Financing Transaction.
The term ``Linked SFT'' would mean an SFT entered into by the pre-
novation SFT Member parties to a Settling SFT that has the same
Transferor, Transferee and subject SFT Securities (including CUSIP) as
the Settling SFT. As proposed, a Linked SFT would include an SFT that
has as its subject fewer SFT Securities than the corresponding Settling
SFT but would not include an SFT that has as its subject more SFT
[[Page 44555]]
Securities than the corresponding Settling SFT.
The term ``Market Value SFT Cash'' would mean the portion of the
SFT Cash for an SFT equal to the amount of the SFT Cash for such SFT
minus the Independent Amount SFT Cash of such SFT.
The term ``Price Differential'' would mean (a) for purposes of the
discharge of offsetting Final Settlement and Initial Settlement
obligations, (i) the SFT Cash for the Settling SFT (or if the Settling
SFT has a greater quantity of SFT Securities as its subject than the
corresponding Linked SFT, the Corresponding SFT Cash) minus (ii) the
SFT Cash for the Linked SFT; and (b) for all other purposes, (i) the
SFT Cash for the SFT minus (ii) the product of the Independent Amount
Percentage, if any, and the Current Market Price of the SFT Securities.
The term ``Rate Payment'' would mean an amount payable from one
party to an SFT to the other party to the SFT at the Final Settlement
expressed as a percentage of the amount of SFT Cash for the SFT. As an
example, if the Rate Payment is specified as 0.02%, the amount payable
would be the product 0.02% and the SFT Cash for the SFT.
The term ``Recall Date'' would mean, in respect of a Recall Notice,
the second Business Day following NSCC's receipt of such Recall Notice.
The term ``Recall Notice'' would mean a notice that triggers the
provisions of Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 56, relating to a Buy-In in
respect of an SFT and that is submitted by an Approved SFT Submitter on
behalf of a Transferor in accordance with the communication links,
formats, timeframes and deadlines established by NSCC for such purpose.
The term ``Recalled SFT'' would mean an SFT that has been novated
to NSCC in respect of which a Recall Notice has been submitted.
The term ``Securities Financing Transaction'' or ``SFT'' would mean
a transaction between two SFT Members pursuant to which (a) one SFT
Member agrees to transfer specified SFT Securities to another SFT
Member versus the SFT Cash; and (b) the Transferee agrees to retransfer
such specified SFT Securities or equivalent SFT Securities (including
quantity and CUSIP) to the Transferor versus the SFT Cash on the
following Business Day.
The term ``Settling SFT'' would mean, as of any Business Day, an
SFT that has been novated to NSCC, the Final Settlement of which is
scheduled to occur on that Business Day.
The term ``SFT Account'' would mean a ledger maintained on the
books and records of NSCC that reflects the outstanding SFTs that an
SFT Member enters into and that have been novated to NSCC, the SFT
Positions or SFT Cash associated with those transactions and any debits
or credits of cash associated with such transactions effected pursuant
to Rule 12 (Settlement). As proposed, the term ``SFT Account'' would
include any Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account and any
Sponsored Member Sub-Account.
The term ``SFT Cash'' would mean the specified amount of U.S.
dollars that the Transferee agrees to transfer to the Transferor at the
Initial Settlement of an SFT, (i) plus any Price Differential paid by
NSCC to the SFT Member as Transferor or by the SFT Member as Transferee
to NSCC during the term of the SFT and (ii) less any Price Differential
paid by NSCC to the SFT Member as Transferee or by the SFT Member as
Transferor to NSCC during the term of the SFT.
The term ``SFT Close-out Value'' would mean, with respect to an SFT
Position of an SFT Member, an amount equal to: (i) If the SFT Member is
the Transferor of the SFT Securities that are the subject of such SFT,
(a) the CNS Market Value of the SFT Securities that are the subject of
such SFT minus (b) the SFT Cash for such SFT; and (ii) if the SFT
Member is a Transferee of the SFT Securities that are the subject of
such SFT, (a) the SFT Cash for such SFT minus (b) the CNS Market Value
of the SFT Securities that are the subject of such SFT.
The term ``SFT Long Position'' would mean the number of units of an
SFT Security which an SFT Member is entitled to receive from NSCC at
Final Settlement of an SFT against payment of the SFT Cash.
The term ``SFT Member'' would mean any Member, Sponsored Member
acting in its principal capacity, Sponsoring Member acting in its
principal capacity or Agent Clearing Member acting on behalf of a
Customer, in each case that is a party to an SFT, permitted to
participate in NSCC's SFT Clearing Service.
The term ``SFT Position'' would mean an SFT Member's SFT Long
Position or SFT Short Position (as defined below and in the proposed
rule change) in an SFT Security that is the subject of an SFT that has
been novated to NSCC.
The term ``SFT Security'' would mean a security that is eligible to
be the subject of an SFT novated to NSCC and is included in the list
for which provision is made in proposed Section 1(g) of Rule 3 (Lists
to be Maintained), as described below. As proposed, if any new or
different security is exchanged for any SFT Security in connection with
a recapitalization, merger, consolidation or other corporate action,
such new or different security shall, effective upon such exchange,
become an SFT Security in substitution for the former SFT Security for
which such exchange is made.
The term ``SFT Short Position'' would mean the number of units of
an SFT Security that an SFT Member is obligated to deliver to NSCC at
Final Settlement of an SFT against payment of the SFT Cash.
The term ``Transferee'' would mean the SFT Member party to an SFT
that agrees to receive SFT Securities from the other SFT Member party
to the SFT in exchange for SFT Cash in connection with the Initial
Settlement of the SFT.
The term ``Transferor'' would mean the SFT Member party to an SFT
that agrees to transfer SFT Securities to the other SFT Member party to
the SFT in exchange for SFT Cash in connection with the Initial
Settlement of the SFT.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 1 (General)
Section 1 of proposed Rule 56 would be a general provision
regarding the SFT Clearing Service applicable to Members, Sponsoring
Members and Agent Clearing Members that participate in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service.
Section 1(a) of proposed Rule 56 would establish that NSCC may
accept for novation SFTs entered into between (i) a Member and another
Member, (ii) a Sponsoring Member and its Sponsored Member, or (iii) an
Agent Clearing Member acting on behalf of a Customer and either (x) a
Member or (y) the same or another Agent Clearing Member acting on
behalf of a Customer.
Section 1(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that any SFT that is
submitted to NSCC for novation, and any Member and Sponsored Member
that enters into an SFT (and any Customer on behalf of whom an Agent
Clearing Member enters into an SFT) shall be subject to the provisions
of proposed Rule 56; provided that Sections 15 and 16 of proposed Rule
56 shall only apply to Sponsoring Members, Agent Clearing Members,
Sponsored Members and Customers, as applicable.
Section 1(c) of proposed Rule 56 would further provide that any
amount of cash described in proposed Rule 56 may be rounded up to the
nearest one cent, five cents, 10 cents, 25 cents or dollar according to
the rounding convention requested by the SFT Member parties to the
relevant SFT as conveyed to NSCC in accordance with the communication
links, formats, timeframes and deadlines established by NSCC for such
purpose.
[[Page 44556]]
Proposed Rule 56, Section 2 (Eligibility for SFT Clearing Service: SFT
Member)
Section 2 of proposed Rule 56 would establish the eligibility
requirements for using the proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Under Section 2 of proposed Rule 56, NSCC may permit any Member
acting in its principal capacity, Sponsored Member acting in its
principal capacity, or Agent Clearing Member acting on behalf of a
Customer to be an SFT Member and participate in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service.
Section 2 of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the rights,
liabilities and obligations of SFT Members in their capacity as such
shall be governed by the proposed Rule 56. References to a Member would
not apply to an SFT Member in its capacity as such, unless specifically
noted in the proposed Rule 56 or in such other Rules as applicable to
an SFT Member.
Section 2 of proposed Rule 56 would also provide that an SFT Member
that participates in NSCC in another capacity pursuant to another Rule,
or which has entered into an agreement with NSCC independent from
proposed Rule 56, shall continue to have all the rights, liabilities
and obligations set forth in such other Rule or pursuant to such
agreement, and such rights, liabilities and obligations shall be
separate from its rights, liabilities and obligations as an SFT Member,
except as contemplated under Sections 15 and 16 of proposed Rule 56, as
described below.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 3 (Membership Documents)
Section 3 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the documents that SFT
Member applicants would be required to complete and deliver to NSCC.
Specifically, Section 3 of proposed Rule 56 would provide that to
become an SFT Member, each applicant shall complete and deliver to NSCC
documents in such forms as may be prescribed by NSCC from time to time
and any other information requested by NSCC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 4 (Securities Financing Transaction Data
Submission)
Section 4 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the submission of
transaction data for SFTs into NSCC for novation by Approved SFT
Submitters on behalf of Transferors (e.g., lenders) and Transferees
(e.g., borrowers).
Section 4(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that in order for an
SFT to be submitted to NSCC, the transaction data for the SFT must be
submitted to NSCC by an Approved SFT Submitter in accordance with the
communication links, formats, timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose. Any such transaction data shall be submitted to
NSCC on a locked-in basis. In determining whether to accept transaction
data from an Approved SFT Submitter, NSCC may require the Approved SFT
Submitter to provide a Cybersecurity Confirmation. This is consistent
with the existing requirement in Section 6 of Rule 7 (Comparison and
Trade Recording Operation (Including Special Representative/Index
Receipt Agent)) for organizations reporting trade data to NSCC.\73\
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\73\ Section 6 of Rule 7 (Comparison and Trade Recording
Operation (Including Special Representative/Index Receipt Agent))
provides that NSCC may require organizations that deliver trade data
to NSCC as described in that Rule to provide a Cybersecurity
Confirmation before agreeing to accept such trade data. Supra note
4.
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Section 4(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC would not
act upon any instruction received from an Approved SFT Submitter in
respect of an SFT unless each SFT Member (other than an SFT Member that
is a Sponsored Member) designated by the Approved SFT Submitter as a
party to such SFT has consented, in a writing delivered to NSCC, to the
Approved SFT Submitter acting on behalf of the SFT Member in respect of
SFTs.
Section 4(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the obligations
reflected in the transaction data on an SFT shall be deemed to have
been confirmed and acknowledged by each SFT Member designated by the
Approved SFT Submitter as a party thereto and to have been adopted by
such SFT Member and, for the purposes of determining the rights and
obligations between NSCC and such SFT Member under the proposed Rule 56
and such other Rules applicable to SFTs, shall be valid and binding
upon such SFT Member. In addition, Section 4(c) would provide that an
SFT Member which has been so designated by an Approved SFT Submitter
shall resolve any differences or claims regarding the rights and
obligations reflected in the transaction data submitted by the Approved
SFT Submitter with the Approved SFT Submitter, and NSCC shall have no
responsibility in respect thereof or to adjust its records or the
accounts of the SFT Member in any way, other than pursuant to the
instructions of the Approved SFT Submitter. Section 4(c) would also
provide that any such adjustment shall be in the sole discretion of
NSCC.
Section 4(d) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC makes no
representation, whether expressed or implied, as to the complete and
timely performance of an Approved SFT Submitter's duties and
obligations. Section 4(d) would also provide that NSCC assumes no
liability to any SFT Member for any act or failure to act by an
Approved SFT Submitter in connection with any information received by
NSCC or given to the SFT Member by NSCC via the Approved SFT Submitter,
as the case may be.
Section 4(e) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the submission
of each SFT to NSCC and the performance of any obligation under such
SFT shall constitute a representation to NSCC and covenant by the
Transferor and the Transferee, any Sponsoring Member that is acting on
behalf of the Transferor or Transferee and any Agent Clearing Member
that is acting on behalf of a Customer in connection with such SFT that
its participation in such SFT is in compliance, and would continue to
comply, with all applicable laws and regulations, including without
limitation Rule 15c3-3 and all other applicable rules and regulations
of the Commission, any applicable provisions of Regulation T,
Regulation U and Regulation X of the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, and the rules of FINRA and any other regulatory or
self-regulatory organization to which the Transferor, the Transferee,
any Sponsoring Member that is acting on behalf of the Transferor or
Transferee or any Agent Clearing Member that is acting on behalf of a
Customer is subject.
Section 4(f) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the submission
of each SFT to NSCC shall constitute an authorization to NSCC by the
Transferor, the Transferee and any Agent Clearing Member that is acting
on behalf of a Customer for NSCC to give instructions regarding the SFT
to DTC in respect of the relevant accounts of the Transferor,
Transferee and Agent Clearing Member at DTC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 5 (Novation of Securities Financing
Transactions)
Section 5 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the nature and timing of
the novation to NSCC of obligations related to an SFT.
Section 5(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC to only
novate an SFT if, at the time of novation, the Final Settlement of such
transaction is scheduled to occur one Business Day following the
Initial Settlement and the SFT Cash is no less than 100% of the
Contract Price of the SFT.
Section 5(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that each SFT that
is a
[[Page 44557]]
Bilaterally Initiated SFT, including any Sponsored Member Transaction,
and validated pursuant to the Rules shall be novated to NSCC as of the
time NSCC provides the Approved SFT Submitter for such SFT a report
confirming such novation in accordance with the communication links,
formats, timeframes and deadlines established by NSCC for such purpose.
Section 5(b) would also provide that each SFT that is neither a
Bilaterally Initiated SFT nor a Sponsored Member Transaction and that
is validated pursuant to the Rules shall be novated to NSCC as of the
time (x) the Initial Settlement of such SFT has completed by (i) the
Transferor instructing DTC to deliver from the relevant DTC account of
the Transferor to NSCC's account at DTC the subject SFT Securities
versus payment of the amount of the SFT Cash, (ii) NSCC instructing DTC
to deliver from NSCC's account at DTC to the relevant DTC account of
the Transferee the subject SFT Securities versus payment of the amount
of SFT Cash and (iii) DTC processes the deliveries in accordance with
the rules and procedures of DTC, or (y) the Initial Settlement
obligations of such SFT have been discharged in accordance with Section
8 of proposed Rule 56, as described below. In addition, Section 5(b)
would provide that if the Initial Settlement obligations of an SFT that
is neither a Bilaterally Initiated SFT nor a Sponsored Member
Transaction are not discharged in accordance with clause (x) or (y),
then such SFT shall be deemed void ab initio.
Section 5(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that, subject to
Sections 5(d) and 5(e) of proposed Rule 56 as described below, the
novation of SFTs shall consist of the termination of the Final
Settlement, Rate Payment and Distribution Payment obligations and
entitlements between the parties to the SFT with respect to such SFT
and their replacement with obligations and entitlements to and from
NSCC to perform, in accordance with the Rules, the Final Settlement,
Rate Payment, and Distribution Payment obligations and entitlements
under the SFT.
Section 5(d) of proposed Rule 56 would govern the novation of SFTs
having Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash and provides
when the obligation to return Independent Amount SFT Cash for which an
associated Clearing Fund deposit has not been made will be novated away
from a Transferor to NSCC. Specifically, Section 5(d)(i) of proposed
Rule 56 would provide that if an SFT has Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash, then, unless the SFT is a Sponsored Member
Transaction and the Sponsoring Member is the Transferee,\74\ the
obligation of the Transferor to return the Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash to the Transferee shall not be terminated
and novated to NSCC (nor shall NSCC otherwise be required to return
such Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash), except to the
extent that the Transferor, Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing Member,
as applicable, has satisfied the associated Independent Amount SFT Cash
Deposit Requirement. As proposed, to the extent the associated Clearing
Fund deposit has not been made in respect of Independent Amount SFT
Cash at the time of the Initial Settlement, the obligation to return
the Independent Amount SFT Cash would not be novated to NSCC.
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\74\ Where the Transferor is a Sponsored Member receiving
Independent Amount SFT Cash, NSCC would not be requiring Independent
Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement. This is because in the case of
the Sponsored Member's default, the party giving the Independent
Amount SFT Cash, i.e., Sponsoring Member, is the guarantor of the
settlement obligation of the Sponsored Member Independent Amount SFT
Cash back to NSCC.
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Section 5(d)(ii) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that to the
extent the Transferor, Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing Member has
not satisfied the associated Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirement, the Transferor's (or in the case of a Non-Returned SFT,
NSCC's) obligation to return the Incremental Additional Independent
Amount SFT Cash shall: (1) If the SFT is an Agent Clearing Member
Transaction for which the Agent Clearing Member, acting on behalf of
the Customer, is the Transferor, be terminated and replaced with an
obligation of the Agent Clearing Member, in its capacity as principal,
to return the Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash to the
Transferee; or (2) otherwise, remain (or in the context of a Non-
Returned SFT, be terminated and replaced with) a bilateral obligation
of the Transferor to the Transferee. As proposed, if the associated
Clearing Fund deposit has not been made in respect of Independent
Amount SFT Cash, the Independent Amount SFT Cash would be owed by the
Transferor to the Transferee as a bilateral principal-to-principal
obligation, unless the Transferor is a Customer of an Agent Clearing
Member, in which case the obligation to return the Independent Amount
SFT Cash in respect of which the Clearing Fund has not been made would
be novated from the Customer to the Agent Clearing Member, and the
Agent Clearing Member would owe the Independent Amount SFT Cash back to
the Transferee as principal.\75\
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\75\ This interim novation is designed to avoid any credit
concerns that would manifest if the Customer and the Transferee had
to have a principal bilateral obligation to each other for the
Independent Amount SFT Cash.
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Section 5(d)(iii) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that each SFT
Member agrees that any obligation to return Incremental Additional
Independent Amount SFT Cash that is novated to an Agent Clearing Member
or that remains (or becomes) a bilateral obligation of the Transferor
to the Transferee in accordance with Section 5(d)(ii) of proposed Rule
56, is a binding and enforceable obligation of the Agent Clearing
Member or Transferor, as applicable, regardless of whether the
Transferee has entered into an Existing Master Agreement with the Agent
Clearing Member or Transferor. In addition, Section 5(d)(iii) would
provide that each SFT Member further agrees that any such obligation
shall only be due and payable to the Transferee upon the final
discharge of NSCC's Final Settlement obligations to the Transferor
under the portion of the SFT that has been novated to NSCC in
accordance with Section 5(b) of proposed Rule 56, as described above.
Section 5(d)(iv) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that, until the
Transferor, Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing Member has satisfied in
full its Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement, the SFT Cash
of the SFT shall, for purposes of determining the obligations owing to
and from NSCC under such SFT, equal the SFT Cash of the SFT less the
Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash.
Section 5(d)(v) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that once the
Transferor, Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing Member, as applicable,
has satisfied in full its Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirement, the obligation of the Transferor to return the Incremental
Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash to the Transferee (or, in the
case of an SFT that is an Agent Clearing Member Transaction, any
obligation of the Agent Clearing Member to return the Incremental
Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash to the Transferee) shall be
novated to NSCC, and the SFT Cash of the SFT shall, for purposes of
determining the obligations owing to and from NSCC under the SFT,
include the full amount of the SFT Cash of such SFT.
Section 5(e) of proposed Rule 56 would govern novation in respect
of certain corporate actions and provide
[[Page 44558]]
that NSCC would (i) have an obligation to pay the cash distribution to
the Transferor and the Transferee would have an obligation to pay the
cash distribution to NSCC, and (ii) not novate any obligations related
to unsupported corporate actions and distributions. Specifically,
Section 5(e)(i) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that regardless of
anything to the contrary in any Existing Master Agreement (including a
provision addressing when an issuer pays different amounts to different
security holders due to withholding tax or other reasons), the
Distribution Payment obligations and entitlements between NSCC and each
party to an SFT that has been novated to NSCC shall be the obligation
of NSCC to pay to the Transferor and the obligation of the Transferee
to pay to NSCC the Distribution Amount in respect of each Distribution
and the corresponding entitlements of the Transferor and NSCC, in each
case, in accordance with the Rules.
Section 5(e)(ii) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC shall
maintain a list of corporate actions and distributions that NSCC does
not support with respect to SFTs. Section 5(e)(ii) would further
provide that no Final Settlement, Rate Payment, Distribution Payment or
other obligation resulting from a corporate action or distribution that
is not supported by NSCC shall be novated to NSCC. In addition, Section
5(e)(ii) would provide that none of such unsupported corporate action
shall modify the Final Settlement, Rate Payment, Distribution Payment
or other obligations of NSCC, Transferor and Transferee under an SFT
that has been novated to NSCC. Section 5(e)(ii) would also provide that
each SFT Member agrees that any obligation under an SFT resulting from
a corporate action or distribution not supported by NSCC shall remain a
binding and enforceable bilateral obligation between the Transferor and
the Transferee, regardless of whether the Transferor and Transferee
have entered into an Existing Master Agreement.
Section 5(f) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the novation of
SFTs shall not affect the fundamental substance of the SFT as a
transfer of securities by one party in exchange for a transfer of cash
by the other party and an agreement by each party to return the
property it received and shall not affect the economic obligations or
entitlements of the parties under the SFT except that following
novation, the Final Settlement, Rate Payment and Distribution Payment
obligations and entitlements shall be owed to and by NSCC rather than
the original counterparty under the SFT.
Section 5(g) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the
representations and warranties made by each of the parties to an SFT
that has been novated to NSCC under the parties' Existing Master
Agreement, if any, shall (x) to the extent that they are inconsistent
with the Rules, be eliminated and replaced with the Rules and (y) to
the extent that they are not inconsistent with the Rules, remain in
effect as between the parties to the original SFT, but shall not impose
any additional obligations on NSCC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 6 (Rate and Distributions)
Section 6 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the settlement of Rate
Payments and supported Distributions by NSCC for novated SFTs. Section
6(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC shall debit and credit
the Rate Payment from and to the SFT Accounts of the SFT Member parties
to an SFT that has been novated to NSCC as part of its end of day final
money settlement process in accordance with Rule 12 (Settlement) and
Procedure VIII (Money Settlement Service) on the scheduled Final
Settlement Date for the SFT, irrespective of whether Final Settlement
of such SFT occurs on such date.
Section 6(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if (x) a cash
dividend is made on or in respect of an SFT Security that is the
subject of an SFT that has been novated to NSCC or (y) cash is
exchanged, in whole or in part, for such an SFT Security in a merger,
consolidation or similar transaction, and the Transferor under the SFT
would have been entitled to a cash payment related to the event
described in clause (x) or (y) had it not transferred the SFT
Securities that are the subject of the SFT to the Transferee in the
Initial Settlement, then NSCC shall, within the time period determined
by NSCC from time to time, credit the Distribution Amount to the
Transferor's SFT Account and debit the Distribution Amount from the
Transferee's SFT Account as part of its end of day final money
settlement process in accordance with Rule 12 and Procedure VIII.
Section 6(b) would further provide that if cash is exchanged in whole
for such an SFT Security, then the completion of the actions described
in the preceding sentence shall discharge NSCC's Final Settlement
obligations to the relevant Transferor and the Transferee's Final
Settlement obligations to NSCC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 7 (Final Settlement of Securities Financing
Transactions)
Section 7 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the mechanics of Final
Settlement of SFTs by providing that, subject to Section 11 of proposed
Rule 56, as described below, the Final Settlement of an SFT that has
been novated to NSCC shall be scheduled to occur on the Business Day
immediately following the date the SFT was novated to NSCC. Section 7
would further provide that unless the Final Settlement obligations
under such an SFT are discharged in accordance with Section 8 of
proposed Rule 56, as described below, Final Settlement of the SFT shall
occur by (x) NSCC instructing DTC to (i) deliver from the relevant DTC
account of the Transferee to NSCC's account at DTC the subject SFT
Securities versus payment of the amount of SFT Cash and (ii) deliver
from NSCC's account at DTC to the relevant DTC account of the
Transferor the subject SFT Securities versus payment of the amount of
SFT Cash, and (y) the processing of such deliveries by DTC in
accordance to the rules and procedures of DTC; provided that if such
transfers do not occur and a Buy-In does not occur in respect of the
SFT, then the Final Settlement Date shall be rescheduled for the
following Business Day as described in Section 9 of proposed Rule 56,
as described below. The obligation of a Transferor (or a Sponsoring
Member that guarantees to NSCC the obligation of a Transferor or an
Agent Clearing Member that is responsible for the performance of the
obligation under an SFT that is an Agent Clearing Member Transaction to
return SFT Cash to NSCC) in respect of the Final Settlement of an SFT
that has been novated to NSCC shall be to pay the SFT Cash and, if
applicable, the Rate Payment to NSCC against the transfer of the
relevant SFT Securities by NSCC. The obligation of a Transferee (or a
Sponsoring Member that guarantees to NSCC the obligation of a
Transferee or an Agent Clearing Member that is responsible for the
performance of the obligation under an SFT that is an Agent Clearing
Member Transaction to return SFT Securities to NSCC) in respect of the
Final Settlement of an SFT that has been novated to NSCC shall be to
transfer the SFT Securities and, if applicable, the Rate Payment to
NSCC against the transfer of SFT Cash by NSCC.
Section 7 of proposed Rule 56 would also provide that an SFT, or a
portion thereof, shall be deemed complete and final upon Final
Settlement of the SFT, or such portion, whether pursuant to
[[Page 44559]]
Sections 7, 8, 9(d) or 13(c) of proposed Rule 56. Section 7 would also
provide that from and after the Final Settlement of an SFT, or a
portion thereof, pursuant to any Sections 7, 8, 9(d) or 13(c) of
proposed Rule 56, NSCC shall be discharged from its obligations to the
Transferor and the Transferee, and NSCC shall have no further
obligation in respect of the SFT or such portion. This is to make it
clear to SFT Members the point at which settlement of an SFT is deemed
to be complete and final.\76\
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\76\ With respect to an SFT between a Sponsoring Member and its
Sponsored Member, the SFT would settle on the books of the
Sponsoring Member because the Sponsored Member are not participants
at DTC and thus would not have accounts at DTC. Accordingly, the
finality of the settlement of such SFT would occur when the
Sponsoring Member credits the securities and cash on its or the
relevant custodian's books and records.
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Proposed Rule 56, Section 8 (Discharge of Offsetting Final Settlement
and Initial Settlement Obligations)
Section 8 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the ``roll'' (i.e., pair
off or offset) process whereby the Final Settlement obligations on one
SFT (i.e., the Settling SFT) between two parties can be offset with the
Initial Settlement obligations on another SFT between the same parties
(i.e., the Linked SFT) through the debiting and crediting of the
difference in cash collateral between the two offsetting SFTs (i.e.,
the Price Differential).
Section 8(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that, subject to the
provisions of Section 13(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described below,
if, on any Business Day, the pre-novation SFT Member parties to a
Settling SFT enter into a Linked SFT and the Approved SFT Submitter
provides an appropriate instruction to NSCC in accordance with the
communication links, formats, timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose, the Final Settlement obligations of the parties
to the Settling SFT and the Initial Settlement obligations of the
parties to the Linked SFT shall be discharged once NSCC has instructed
DTC to debit and credit the relevant DTC accounts, of the SFT Member
parties, as described below in Section 8(b) of proposed Rule 56, and
DTC processes such debits and credits in accordance with the rules and
procedures of DTC. To the extent the Price Differential is not
processed by DTC in accordance with the rules and procedures of DTC,
NSCC shall debit and credit the Price Differential from and to the SFT
Accounts of the SFT Member parties as part of its end of day final
money settlement process in accordance with Rule 12 (Settlement) and
Procedure VIII (Money Settlement Service). If the Price Differential is
positive, NSCC shall (x) credit an amount equal to the Price
Differential to the Transferee's SFT Account and (y) debit an amount
equal to the Price Differential from the Transferor's SFT Account. If
the Price Differential is negative, NSCC shall (x) credit an amount
equal to the absolute value of the Price Differential to the
Transferor's SFT Account and (y) debit an amount equal to the absolute
value of the Price Differential from the Transferee's SFT Account.
However, if the Linked SFT has as its subject fewer SFT Securities than
the Settling SFT, then only the following Final Settlement obligations
under the Settling SFT shall be discharged in accordance with Section 8
of proposed Rule 56: (i) The Transferee's and NSCC's Final Settlement
obligations in respect of a quantity of SFT Securities equal to the
quantity of SFT Securities that are the subject of the Linked SFT and
(ii) the Transferor's and NSCC's Final Settlement obligations in
respect of the Corresponding SFT Cash.
Section 8(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if the Price
Differential is positive, NSCC shall (x) instruct DTC to debit an
amount equal to the Price Differential from NSCC's account at DTC and
credit such amount to the relevant DTC account of the Transferee and
(y) instruct DTC to debit an amount equal to the Price Differential
from the relevant DTC account of the Transferor and credit such amount
to NSCC's account at DTC. If the Price Differential is negative, NSCC
shall (x) instruct DTC to debit an amount equal to the absolute value
of the Price Differential from NSCC's account at DTC and credit such
amount to the relevant DTC account of the Transferor and (y) instruct
DTC to debit an amount equal to the absolute value of the Price
Differential from the relevant DTC account of the Transferee and credit
such amount to NSCC's account at DTC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 9 (Non-Returned Securities Financing
Transactions and Recalls)
Section 9 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the processing of a
novated SFT for which the Final Settlement obligations have not been
discharged either through Final Settlement in accordance with Section 7
of proposed Rule 56 (as described above) or a pair off in accordance
with Section 8 of proposed Rule 56 (as described above), and the recall
and buy-in process for such an SFT.
Specifically, Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that
if (x) the Transferee does not satisfy its Final Settlement obligations
in respect of an SFT that has been novated to NSCC on the Final
Settlement Date, (y) such Final Settlement obligations have not been
discharged in accordance with the provisions of Section 8 of proposed
Rule 56, as described above, and (z) a Buy-In has not occurred in
respect of such SFT or a portion thereof (such SFT, a ``Non-Returned
SFT''), the Final Settlement Date of the Non-Returned SFT shall be
rescheduled for the following Business Day, and NSCC shall instruct DTC
to debit and credit the relevant DTC accounts of the SFT Member
parties, as described in subsection (b) of Section 8 above. To the
extent the Price Differential is not processed by DTC in accordance
with the rules and procedures of DTC, NSCC shall debit and credit the
Price Differential from and to the SFT Accounts of the SFT Member
parties to the Non-Returned SFT as part of its end of day final money
settlement process in accordance with Rule 12 (Settlement) and
Procedure VIII (Money Settlement Service). Section 9(a) would further
provide that if the Price Differential is positive, NSCC shall (x)
credit an amount equal to the Price Differential to the Transferee's
SFT Account and (y) debit an amount equal to the Price Differential
from the Transferor's SFT Account; if the Price Differential is
negative, NSCC shall (x) credit an amount equal to the absolute value
of the Price Differential to the Transferor's SFT Account and (y) debit
an amount equal to the absolute value of the Price Differential from
the Transferee's SFT Account. This process would continue until Final
Settlement, a pair off in accordance with Section 8 of proposed Rule 56
(as discussed above), or a Buy-In.
Section 9(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if NSCC
receives a Recall Notice in respect of an SFT that has been novated to
NSCC and the Transferee does not satisfy its Final Settlement
obligations by the Recall Date for the Recall Notice, the Transferor
may, in a commercially reasonable manner,\77\ purchase some or all of
the SFT Securities that are the
[[Page 44560]]
subject of the SFT \78\ or elect to be deemed to have purchased the SFT
Securities, in each case in accordance with such timeframes and
deadlines as established by NSCC for such purpose (a ``Buy-In'').
Following such purchase or deemed purchase, the Transferor shall (x)
give written notice to NSCC of the Transferor's costs to purchase the
relevant SFT Securities (including the price paid by the Transferor and
any broker's fees and commissions and reasonable out-of-pocket
transaction costs, fees or interest expenses incurred in connection
with such purchase) (such costs, the ``Buy-In Costs'') or, if the
Transferor elects to be deemed to have purchased the SFT Securities,
the Deemed Buy-In Costs, and (y) indemnify NSCC, and its employees,
officers, directors, shareholders, agents and Members (collectively the
``Buy-In Indemnified Parties''), for any and all losses, liability or
expenses of a Buy-In Indemnified Party arising from any claim disputing
the calculation of the Buy-In Costs, the Deemed Buy-In Costs or the
method or manner of effecting the Buy-In. Section 9(b) would further
provide that each SFT Member acknowledges and agrees that each SFT
Security is of a type traded in a recognized market and that, in the
absence of a generally recognized source for prices or bid or offer
quotations for any SFT Security, the Transferor may, for purposes of a
Buy-In, establish the source therefor in its commercially reasonable
discretion. In addition, Section 9(b) would provide that each SFT
Member further acknowledges and agrees that NSCC would not calculate
any Buy-In Costs or Deemed Buy-In Costs and shall have no liability for
any such calculation. Section 9(b) would also provide that NSCC would
assign to any Transferee whose SFT is subject to a Buy-In any rights it
may have against the Transferor to dispute the Transferor's calculation
of the Buy-In Costs or Deemed Buy-In Costs.
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\77\ The requirement that a party exercising buy-in rights do so
in a ``commercially reasonable manner'' is market standard. See,
e.g., Section 13.1 of the Master Securities Loan Agreement published
by Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
(``SIFMA''). NSCC has proposed to include this language in order to
align the standards applicable to an exercise of remedies in
relation to SFTs with those applicable in the bilateral uncleared
space. NSCC believes that such alignment will increase certainty for
SFT Members and allow them to follow standards with which they are
familiar.
\78\ The Transferor would purchase these securities from one or
more third parties.
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Section 9(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that on the Business
Day following NSCC's receipt of written notice of the Transferor's Buy-
In Costs, NSCC shall debit and credit the Buy-In Amount from and to the
SFT Accounts of the SFT Member parties to the SFT as part of its end of
day final money settlement process in accordance with Rule 12
(Settlement) and Procedure VIII (Money Settlement Service). Section
9(c) would provide that if the Buy-In Amount is positive, NSCC would
(x) credit the value of the Buy-In Amount to the Transferor's SFT
Account and (y) debit the value of the Buy-In Amount from the
Transferee's SFT Account. Section 9(c) would further provide that if
the Buy-In Amount is negative, NSCC would (x) credit the value of the
Buy-In Amount to the Transferee's SFT Account and (y) debit the value
of the Buy-In Amount from the Transferor's SFT Account.
Section 9(d) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that following the
application of such Buy-In Amount, the Final Settlement obligations
under the SFT shall be discharged; provided that if the Transferor
effected a Buy-In in respect of some but not all of the SFT Securities
that are the subject of an SFT, then only the following obligations
shall be discharged: (i) The Transferee's and NSCC's Final Settlement
obligations in respect of the SFT Securities for which the Transferor
effected the Buy-In and (ii) the Transferor's and NSCC's Final
Settlement obligations in respect of the Corresponding SFT Cash.
Section 9(e) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that a Recalled SFT
shall be treated as a Non-Returned SFT by NSCC until the earlier of the
time that the SFT settles or a Buy-In is processed by NSCC in
accordance with Section 9 of proposed Rule 56, except that the
additional SFT Deposit required for Non-Returned SFTs under Section
12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described below, shall not apply. Section
9(e) would further provide that if the Transferor effects the Buy-In in
respect of some, but not all, of the SFT Securities that are the
subject of a Recalled SFT, the Final Settlement obligations of the
Recalled SFT that are not discharged in accordance with Section 9(d) of
proposed Rule 56 shall be treated as a Non-Returned SFT until the SFT
settles or a Buy-In is processed by NSCC in accordance with Section 9
of proposed Rule 56, and the additional SFT Deposit required under
Section 12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described below, for Non-Returned
SFTs shall apply.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 10 (Cancellation, Modification and
Termination of Securities Financing Transactions)
Section 10 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the process for
cancellations, modifications and terminations of SFTs in NSCC's
systems.
Section 10(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that transaction
data on an SFT that has not been novated to NSCC may be cancelled upon
receipt by NSCC of appropriate instructions from the Approved SFT
Submitter with respect to such SFT on behalf of both SFT Member parties
thereto, submitted in accordance with the communication links, formats,
timeframes and deadlines established by NSCC for such purpose. Section
10(a) would further provide that an SFT that is so cancelled by NSCC
would be deemed to be void ab initio.
Section 10(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide the Rate Payment on
an SFT that has been novated to NSCC may be modified upon receipt by
NSCC of appropriate instructions from the Approved SFT Submitter with
respect to such SFT, submitted in accordance with the communication
links, formats, timeframes and deadlines established by NSCC for such
purpose. Section 10(b) would further provide that any instructions
submitted by an Approved SFT Submitter to modify the Rate Payment of an
SFT must be submitted on behalf of both SFT Member parties to the SFT.
Section 10(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide an SFT that has
been novated to NSCC in accordance with Section 5 of proposed Rule 56,
as described above, may be terminated upon receipt by NSCC of
appropriate instructions from the Approved SFT Submitter with respect
to such SFT on behalf of both SFT Member parties thereto, submitted in
accordance with the communication links, formats, timeframes and
deadlines established by NSCC for such purposes. Section 10(c) would
further provide that following any such termination, no amounts or
further obligations shall be owing in respect of the SFT between NSCC
and Transferor or NSCC and the Transferee.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 11 (Accelerated Final Settlement)
Section 11 of proposed Rule 56 would allow a Transferee (i.e., the
borrower) to do a same day return of borrowed securities, if necessary,
to satisfy its regulatory purpose requirements by accelerating the
Final Settlement of an SFT that has been novated to NSCC. Specifically,
Section 11 would provide that the Transferee may accelerate the
scheduled Final Settlement of an SFT that has been novated to NSCC upon
receipt by NSCC of appropriate instruction from the Approved SFT
Submitter with respect to such SFT, submitted in accordance with the
communication links, formats, timeframes and deadlines established by
NSCC for such purpose. Section 11 would further provide that such
accelerated Final Settlement shall be effected by NSCC in accordance
with the provisions of Section 7 of proposed Rule 56, as described
above.
[[Page 44561]]
Proposed Rule 56, Section 12 (Clearing Fund Requirements)
Section 12 of proposed Rule 56 would set out the Clearing Fund
requirements for SFT Members with respect to their SFT activity.
Section 12(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide each SFT Member,
other than an SFT Member that is a Sponsored Member, shall make and
maintain on an ongoing basis a deposit to the Clearing Fund with
respect to its SFT Positions (the ``SFT Deposit''). Section 12(a) would
provide that, for the avoidance of doubt, the SFT Positions for an SFT
Member that is a Sponsoring Member shall include all SFT Positions held
in its Sponsored Member Sub-Account(s) in addition to its proprietary
account(s).
Section 12(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the SFT
Deposit shall be held by NSCC or its designated agents as part of the
Clearing Fund, to be applied as provided in Sections 1 through 12 of
Rule 4 (Clearing Fund).
Section 12(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC shall
calculate the amount of each such SFT Member's required deposit for SFT
Positions, subject to a $250,000 \79\ minimum (excluding the minimum
contribution to the Clearing Fund as required by Procedure XV (Clearing
Fund Formula and Other Matters), Section II.(A)), by applying the
Clearing Fund formula for CNS Transactions in Sections I.(A)(1)(a),
(b), (d), (f) (g), (h) of Procedure XV as well as the additional
Clearing Fund formula in Section I.(B)(5) (Intraday Mark-to-Market
Charge) of Procedure XV in the same manner as such sections apply to
CNS Transactions submitted to NSCC for regular way settlement, plus,
with respect to any Non-Returned SFT, an additional charge that is
calculated by (x) multiplying the Current Market Price of the SFT
Securities that are the subject of such Non-Returned SFTs by the number
of such SFT Securities that are the subject of the SFT and (y)
multiplying such product by (i) 5% for SFT Members rated 1 through 4 on
the Credit Risk Rating Matrix, (ii) 10% for SFT Members rated 5 or 6 on
the Credit Risk Rating Matrix, or (iii) 20% for SFT Members rated 7 on
the Credit Risk Rating Matrix shall be applied to each SFT Member that
is a party thereto \80\ (collectively and includes any and all
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirements, the ``Required SFT
Deposit''); provided, however, notwithstanding anything to the
contrary, (A) a minimum of 40% of an SFT Member's Required SFT Deposit
shall be made in the form of cash and/or Eligible Clearing Fund
Treasury Securities and (y) the lesser of $5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT
Member's Required SFT Deposit, with a minimum of $250,000,\81\ must be
made and maintained in cash; provided, further, the additional Clearing
Fund formula in Sections I.(B)(1) (Additional Deposits for Members on
the Watch List); (2) (Excess Capital Premium); (3) (Backtesting
Charge); (4) (Bank Holiday Charge); Minimum Clearing Fund and
Additional Deposit Requirements in Sections II.(A)1(a)-(b), II.(B), and
II.(C); as well as Section III (Collateral Value of Eligible Clearing
Fund Securities) of Procedure XV shall apply to SFT Members in the same
manner as such sections apply to Members. As noted in the proposed rule
text, for the purpose of applying Section I.(A)(1)(h) of Procedure XV
(Margin Liquidity Adjustment (``MLA'') charge), SFT Positions shall be
netted with Net Unsettled Positions, as defined in Procedure XV.\82\
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\79\ Supra note 32.
\80\ The Required SFT Deposit multipliers proposed for Non-
Returned SFTs are identical to the Required Fund Deposit multipliers
applied to CNS Fails Positions. See Procedure XV (Clearing Fund
Formula and Other Matters), Section I.(A)(1)(e)), supra note 4.
While the concept of a ``fail'' does not exist in the securities
lending market in the same manner as it does in the cash market, to
the extent that the Final Settlement of an SFT is scheduled on a
particular date but does not occur, whether directly or through a
pair off as described in Section 8 of proposed Rule 56 (as discussed
above), that could potentially be a result of a ``squeeze'' or other
market dislocation whereby NSCC may face increased market risk in
the event of the default of either the Transferor or the Transferee.
As a result, NSCC believes it is prudent to apply the same Required
Fund Deposit multiplier to a Non-Returned SFT as it does to CNS
Fails Positions.
The Credit Risk Rating Matrix is a financial model utilized by
NSCC in its ongoing monitoring of Members based on various risk
criteria. Each Member is rated by the Credit Risk Rating Matrix on a
7-point rating system, with ``1'' being the strongest credit rating
and ``7'' being the weakest credit rating. As described above, to
the extent that the Final Settlement of an SFT is scheduled on a
particular date but does not occur, NSCC, as a central counterparty,
is exposed to market risks. Such exposures generally increase when
the SFT Member's risk of default increases, as reflected by the SFT
Member's Credit Risk Rating Matrix credit rating. As such, the
Required SFT Deposit multipliers proposed for Non-Returned SFTs vary
based on the SFT Member's credit rating to reflect the potential
increase in market risk from SFT Members with higher risk of
default.
\81\ Supra note 34.
\82\ Supra note 33.
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Section 12(d) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC shall
have the discretion to require an SFT Member to post its Required SFT
Deposit in proportion of cash higher than as required under subsection
(c) of proposed Section 12, as determined by NSCC from time to time in
view of market conditions and other financial and operational
capabilities of the SFT Member. Section 12(d) would further provide
that NSCC shall make any such determination based on such factors as
NSCC determines to be appropriate from time to time.
Section 12(e) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if an SFT has
Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash, the Transferor
shall make an additional deposit to the Clearing Fund that equals the
amount of the Incremental Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash for
such SFT (``Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit, and such requirement
the ``Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement''). Section 12(e)
would also provide that the Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit
Requirement must be satisfied in cash and may, at the discretion of
NSCC, be satisfied using Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposits that have
previously been made by the Transferor in respect of SFTs with the same
Transferee that have since settled.\83\ Section 12(e) would further
provide that the Transferor shall satisfy any Independent Amount SFT
Cash Deposit Requirement in respect of an SFT on the date that the SFT
is novated to NSCC pursuant to the timeframes and deadlines established
by NSCC for such purpose. In addition, Section 12(e) would provide that
if, on a given day, the Transferor satisfies its Independent Amount SFT
Cash Deposit Requirement for some, but not all, SFTs novated to NSCC on
that day, NSCC will consider the Transferor to have satisfied its
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement for none of the SFTs
that were novated to NSCC on that day.
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\83\ This could occur in a situation in which an existing SFT
settles and then the Transferor enters into a new SFT with the same
Transferee (e.g., in a pair off as described in Section 8 of
proposed Rule 56, discussed above). In that situation, if the
Transferee (or Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing Member) has not
yet called back the Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit it posted in
respect of the Settling SFT, then NSCC may apply the deposit to the
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit obligation associated with the
new SFT.
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Section 12(f) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that references to
Clearing Fund in the other Rules shall include and apply to SFT
Deposit, and references to Required Fund Deposit shall include and
apply to Required SFT Deposit, unless specifically noted otherwise in
proposed Rule 56 or in such other Rules.
[[Page 44562]]
Proposed Rule 56, Section 13 (Ineligible SFT Securities and Supported
Corporate Actions)
Section 13 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the processing of SFTs
where the underlying securities become ineligible SFT Securities and
the processing of SFTs in the context of supported corporate actions.
Specifically, Section 13(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that
NSCC would remove an Ineligible SFT Security from the list maintained
by NSCC as set forth in Rule 3 (Lists to be Maintained); provided that
NSCC may not be able to identify that an SFT Security is an Ineligible
SFT Security and remove such SFT Security from the list maintained by
NSCC if the reason for the ineligibility is that the SFT Security is
undergoing a corporate action or distribution not supported by NSCC and
NSCC is not in receipt of reasonably advanced notice of such corporate
action or distribution.
Section 13(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that
notwithstanding Section 12 of proposed Rule 56, as described above, if
an SFT Security becomes an Ineligible SFT Security because the Current
Market Price of the SFT Security falls below the threshold established
by NSCC from time to time, the Required SFT Deposit of each SFT Member
party to an SFT which has such Ineligible SFT Security as its subject
shall include an additional amount equal to the product of 100% of the
Current Market Price of such Ineligible SFT Security and the number of
such Ineligible SFT Securities that the SFT has as its subject.\84\ The
threshold that would be established by NSCC is currently $5.00, which
could be modified by NSCC \85\ at a later date after NSCC gains more
experience with the nature of the SFT portfolios submitted for
clearing, as discussed above.
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\84\ If the Current Market Price of the SFT Security falls below
the threshold established by NSCC from time to time, NSCC would
assess the additional amount as part of the Required SFT Deposit.
\85\ Supra note 23.
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Section 13(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if NSCC
declares that an SFT Security has or would become an Ineligible SFT
Security because the security is or would become ineligible for
processing or is or would be undergoing a corporate action or
distribution that is not supported by NSCC, the Final Settlement of all
SFTs that have been novated to NSCC and have such SFT Security as their
subject must occur before the Ineligibility Date.\86\ In addition,
Section 13(c) would provide that if following such declaration the
Transferee does not satisfy its Final Settlement obligations in respect
of any such SFT as provided in Section 7 of proposed Rule 56, as
described above, by the Ineligibility Date, NSCC shall, unless NSCC has
previously debited and credited the Price Differential from and to the
SFT Accounts of the SFT Member parties to the SFT in accordance with
Section 8 of proposed Rule 56, as described above, on Ineligibility
Date, debit and credit the Price Differential from and to the SFT
Accounts of the SFT Member parties to the SFT as part of its end of day
final money settlement process in accordance with Rule 12 (Settlement)
and Procedure VIII (Money Settlement Service).\87\ Section 13(c) would
further provide that if the Price Differential is positive, NSCC shall
(x) credit an amount equal to the Price Differential to the
Transferee's SFT Account and (y) debit an amount equal to the Price
Differential from the Transferor's SFT Account. Section 13(c) would
also provide that if the Price Differential is negative, NSCC shall (x)
credit an amount equal to the absolute value of the Price Differential
to the Transferor's SFT Account and (y) debit an amount equal to the
absolute value of the Price Differential from the Transferee's SFT
Account. Furthermore, Section 13(c) would provide that following the
application of Price Differential to an Ineligible SFT on or after the
relevant Ineligibility Date, all rights and obligations as between NSCC
and the SFT Member parties thereto with respect to such SFT shall be
discharged.
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\86\ The duration between the declaration and Ineligibility Date
would vary. If the ineligibility is because the SFT Security will
become ineligible for processing (i.e., no longer CNS eligible), the
duration would depend on the timing of the CNS ineligibility
triggering event (e.g., compliance with regulatory orders, risk
concerns, trading suspension, etc.).
If the ineligibility is because the SFT Security will be
undergoing an unsupported corporate action or distribution, then it
would depend on when the issuer of the relevant SFT Security
announces the particular corporate action or distribution event and
the record date for such corporate action or distribution.
Specifically, when announcements from the issuers are received by
DTC, DTC would announce the corporate action or distribution event.
NSCC would notify Members of such event when it is announced by DTC
and would generally tie the Ineligibility Date to shortly before or
on the record date for the corporate action or distribution.
\87\ NSCC is proposing this simplified process for applying
Price Differentials to Ineligible SFTs because NSCC anticipates such
instances would occur on a much less frequent basis than those in
connection with Linked SFTs pursuant to Section 8(a) of proposed
Rule 56 and Non-Returned SFTs pursuant to Section 9(a) of proposed
Rule 56.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 13(d) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if a corporate
action supported by NSCC in respect of the SFT Securities that are the
subject of an SFT is scheduled to occur, NSCC may cease to permit the
discharge of the SFT's Final Settlement obligations, whether pursuant
to Section 8 of proposed Rule 56, as described above, or otherwise, and
treat the SFT as a Non-Returned SFT for such period of time determined
by NSCC as necessary to process the corporate action, except that the
additional SFT Deposit required for Non-Returned SFTs under Section
12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described above, shall not apply. Section
13(d) would further provide that notwithstanding the foregoing, NSCC
shall not limit the ability of a Member to accelerate the Final
Settlement of an SFT in accordance with Section 11 of proposed Rule 56,
as described above, provided that any Price Differential for the SFT
has settled in accordance with Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 56, as
described above, and that such accelerated Final Settlement is
permitted in accordance with the rules and procedures of DTC.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 14 (Cease To Act Procedures for SFT Members
With Open Securities Financing Transactions)
Section 14 of proposed Rule 56 would establish NSCC's procedures
for when it ceases to act for an SFT Member with open SFTs, including
recalling a non-defaulting SFT Member that is a Transferee and
liquidating the Defaulting SFT Member's SFT Positions by deeming NSCC
to have bought in or sold out some or all the SFT Securities that are
the subject of such SFTs at prevailing market price or by crossing
(including on a delayed basis).
Section 14(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the provisions
of Rule 18 (Procedures for When the Corporation Declines or Ceases to
Act) shall not apply to the SFTs except for Sections 1 and 8 of Rule
18.
Section 14(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if NSCC has
declined or ceased to act for an SFT Member and subject to Section 14
of proposed Rule 2C, as described above:
(i) Except as otherwise may be determined by the Board of
Directors, any SFT entered into by the SFT Member that, at the time
NSCC declined or ceased to act for such SFT Member, has not been
novated to NSCC pursuant to proposed Rule 56, shall be excluded from
all operations of NSCC applicable to such SFT.
(ii) NSCC may decline to act upon any instructions, transaction
data or notices submitted by such SFT Member or an Approved SFT
Submitter on behalf of such SFT Member.
(iii) NSCC shall close-out such SFT Member's proprietary SFT
Positions as
[[Page 44563]]
well as any SFT Positions established in the SFT Member's Agent
Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account by (x) buying in or selling
out, as applicable, some or all of the SFT Securities that are the
subject of each SFT of the SFT Member that has been novated to NSCC but
for which the Final Settlement has not occurred, (y) deeming NSCC to
have bought in or sold out some or all such SFT Securities at the bid
or ask price therefor, respectively, from a generally recognized source
or at such price or prices as NSCC is able to purchase or sell,
respectively, some such SFT Securities, or (z) otherwise liquidating
such SFT Member's SFT Positions; provided, however, if in the opinion
of NSCC, the close-out of such SFT Member's SFT Position would create a
disorderly market in the relevant SFT Security, then the timing of the
completion of such close-out shall be in the discretion of NSCC.
(iv) Any Sponsored Member Transactions for which a Defaulting SFT
Member is the Sponsoring Member and which have been novated to NSCC
shall continue to be processed by NSCC. NSCC, in its sole discretion,
would determine whether to close-out the SFT Positions established in a
Defaulting SFT Member's Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts (if any), which
close out shall be effected in accordance with the provisions of
Section 14(b)(iii), as described above, or instead permit the relevant
Sponsored Members to complete settlement of the relevant Sponsored
Member Transactions.
(v) If, in the aggregate, the close-out of a Defaulting SFT
Member's proprietary SFT Positions results in a profit to NSCC, such
profit shall be applied to any loss to NSCC arising from the closing
out of such Defaulting SFT Member (including losses arising from
closing out the SFT Positions established in any of the Defaulting SFT
Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts or Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts or losses arising from closing out any Net Close
Out Positions of the Defaulting SFT Member). If, in the aggregate, the
close-out of a Defaulting SFT Member's proprietary SFT Positions
results in a loss to NSCC, such loss shall be netted against, or
otherwise applied to, any amounts owed by NSCC to such SFT Member in
its proprietary capacity and thereafter debited from such Defaulting
SFT Member's Clearing Fund deposit at NSCC.
(vi) If, in the aggregate, the close-out of the SFT Positions
established in the Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts of a
Defaulting SFT Member results in a profit to NSCC, such profit shall be
credited to the Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts. If, in
the aggregate, the close-out of the SFT Positions established in the
Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts of a Defaulting SFT
Member results in a loss to NSCC, such loss shall be netted against, or
otherwise applied to, any amounts owed by the NSCC to such SFT Member
in its proprietary capacity, and thereafter debited from the Defaulting
SFT Member's Clearing Fund deposit at NSCC.
(vii) If, in the aggregate, the close-out of the SFT Positions
established in a Defaulting SFT Member's Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts
results in a profit to NSCC, such profit shall be credited to the
Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts. If, in the aggregate, the closing out of
the SFT Positions established in a Defaulting SFT Member's Sponsored
Member Sub-Accounts results in a loss to NSCC, such loss shall be
netted against, or otherwise applied to, any amounts owed by NSCC to
such SFT Member in its proprietary capacity and thereafter debited from
such Defaulting SFT Member's Clearing Fund deposit at NSCC.
(viii) The Final Settlement of each SFT that has been novated to
NSCC and that, prior to novation, was with a Defaulting SFT Member
(each, a ``Default-Related SFT'') shall occur in accordance with the
normal settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of securities, as
applicable; provided that NSCC may in its discretion accelerate Final
Settlement of a Default-Related SFT to a Business Day no earlier than
the scheduled Final Settlement Date of the Default-Related SFT; and
provided further that, if NSCC delays the close-out of any or all of a
Defaulting SFT Member's SFT Positions on the basis that such a close-
out would create a disorderly market in the relevant SFT Securities,
then NSCC may elect to correspondingly delay Final Settlement of any
Default-Related SFTs that have the same SFT Securities as their
subject.
As proposed, if doing an immediate buy-in or sell-out (as
applicable) of a defaulter's novated SFT Positions would create a
disorderly market, then NSCC may delay in executing such buy-in or
sell-out. This is because, as a systemically important financial market
utility, NSCC has regulatory obligations not to create disorderly
markets or fire sale risk in the course of its liquidation of a
defaulted Member. If NSCC were to delay in executing any buy-in or
sell-out, NSCC may correspondingly delay physical settlement of the
SFTs with the Defaulting Member's pre-novation counterparties.
(ix) Until Final Settlement, each Default-Related SFT shall be
treated as a Non-Returned SFT, and NSCC would pay and collect the Price
Differential amounts described in Section 9(a) of proposed Rule 56, as
described above. NSCC shall have all of the rights of a Transferor in
relation to any Default-Related SFT in respect of which the Defaulting
SFT Member was the Transferor, including the ability to deliver a
Recall Notice in relation to such Default-Related SFT and to effect a
Buy-In. However, no additional SFT Deposit required for Non-Returned
SFTs under Section 12(c) of proposed Rule 56, as described above, shall
apply to any Default-Related SFT, and no Rate Payments shall accrue on
Default-Related SFTs after the date on which NSCC ceases to act for the
Defaulting SFT Member.
Accordingly, as proposed, during the pendency of any delay in
executing any buy-in or sell-out, NSCC would continue to satisfy any
Price Differential (i.e., the mark-to-market of the SFT Securities)
owing to the non-defaulting party.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 15 (Sponsored Member SFT Clearing)
Section 15 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the requirements for
Sponsored Member participation in the proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Section 15(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that a Sponsoring
Member shall be permitted to submit, either directly as an Approved SFT
Submitter or via another Approved SFT Submitter, to NSCC Sponsored
Member Transactions between itself and its Sponsored Member in
accordance with the provisions of proposed Rule 56 and proposed Rule
2C.
Section 15(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that NSCC shall
maintain for the Sponsoring Member one or more Sponsored Member Sub-
Accounts. Section 15(b) would further provide that the SFT Deposits for
each Sponsored Member Sub-Account shall be calculated separately based
on the SFT Positions in such Sponsored Member Sub-Account, and the
Sponsoring Member, as principal, shall be required to satisfy the SFT
Deposits for each of the Sponsoring Member's Sponsored Member Sub-
Accounts.
Section 15(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that settlement of
the Final Settlement, Rate Payment, Price Differential, Distribution
Payment and other obligations of a Sponsored Member Transaction that
have been novated to NSCC shall be effected by the
[[Page 44564]]
Sponsoring Member, as settlement agent for the relevant Sponsored
Member, crediting and debiting the account the Sponsoring Member
maintains for the Sponsored Member on the Sponsoring Member's books and
records.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 16 (Customer SFT Clearing)
Section 16 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the requirements for
participation by Agent Clearing Members and their Customers in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Section 16(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that an Agent
Clearing Member shall be permitted to submit, either directly as an
Approved SFT Submitter or via another Approved SFT Submitter, to NSCC
for novation SFTs that are Agent Clearing Member Transactions. Section
16(a) would further provide that any such submission shall be in
accordance with proposed Rule 56 and proposed Rule 2D.
Section 16(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that with respect
to an Agent Clearing Member that submits SFTs to NSCC for novation on
behalf of its Customers, NSCC shall maintain one or more Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts in the name of the Agent Clearing
Member for the benefit of its Customers in which all SFT Positions and
SFT Cash carried by the Agent Clearing Member on behalf of its
Customers are reflected; provided, that each Agent Clearing Member
Customer Omnibus Account may only contain activity where the Agent
Clearing Member is acting as Transferor on behalf of its Customers, or
as Transferee on behalf of its Customers, but not both.
Section 16(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that with respect
to SFTs entered into on behalf of its Customers and maintained in the
Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account, the Agent Clearing
Member shall act solely as agent of its Customers in connection with
the clearing of such SFTs; provided, that the Agent Clearing Member
shall remain fully liable for the performance of all obligations to
NSCC arising in connection with such SFTs; and provided further, that
the liabilities and obligations of NSCC with respect to such SFTs
entered into by the Agent Clearing Member on behalf of its Customers
shall extend only to the Agent Clearing Member. Without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, NSCC shall not have any liability or
obligation arising out of or with respect to any SFT to any Customer of
an Agent Clearing Member.
Section 16(d) of proposed Rule 56 would provide the SFT Deposits
for each Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Account shall be
calculated separately based on the SFT Positions in such Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account, and the Agent Clearing Member shall,
as principal, be required to satisfy the SFT Deposit for each of Agent
Clearing Member's Agent Clearing Member Customer Omnibus Accounts.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 17 (Corporation Default)
Section 17 of proposed Rule 56 would govern the close-out netting
process that would apply with respect to SFTs that have been novated to
NSCC in the event of a default of NSCC.
Section 17(a) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that if a
``Corporation Default'' occurs pursuant to Section 2 of Rule 41
(Corporation Default), all SFTs that have been novated to NSCC but not
yet settled, and all obligations and rights arising thereunder which
have been assumed by NSCC pursuant to proposed Rule 56, shall be
immediately terminated, and the Board of Directors shall determine the
Aggregate Net SFT Close-out Value owed by or to each SFT Member with
respect to each of its SFT Positions.
Section 17(b) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that for purposes
of Section 17 of proposed Rule 56, a Member shall be considered a
different SFT Member in respect of each of (i) its proprietary SFT
Positions; (ii) the SFT Positions established in its Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Accounts (if any); and (iii) the SFT Positions
established in its Sponsored Member Sub-Accounts (if any).
Section 17(c) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that each SFT
Member's Aggregate Net SFT Close-out Value shall be netted and offset
as described in Section 14(b)(iv) through Section 14(b)(vi) of proposed
Rule 56, as though NSCC had ceased to act for each SFT Member.
Section 17(d) of proposed Rule 56 would provide that the Board of
Directors shall notify each SFT Member of the Aggregate SFT Close-out
Value, taking into account the netting and offsetting provided for
above. SFT Members that have been notified that they owe an amount to
NSCC shall pay that amount on or prior to the date specified by the
Board of Directors, subject to any applicable setoff rights. SFT
Members who have a net claim against NSCC shall be entitled to payment
thereof along with other Members' and any other creditors' claims
pursuant to the underlying contracts with respect thereto, the Rules
and applicable law. Section 17(d) would further provide that nothing
therein shall limit the rights of NSCC upon an SFT Member default
(including following a Corporation Default), including any rights under
any Clearing Agency Cross-Guaranty Agreement or otherwise.
Proposed Rule 56, Section 18 (Other Applicable Rules, Procedures, and
Addendums)
Section 18 of proposed Rule 56 would establish certain other Rules
as being applicable to SFTs and SFT Members, unless expressly stated
otherwise.
Specifically, Section 18 of proposed Rule 56 would provide that
Rule 1 (Definitions and Descriptions), Rule 2 (Members, Limited Members
and Sponsored Members), Rule 5 (General Provisions), Rule 12
(Settlement), Rule 13 (Exception Processing), Rule 17 (Fine Payments),
Rule 19 (Miscellaneous Rights of the Corporation), Rule 21 (Honest
Broker), Rule 22 (Suspension of Rules), Rule 23 (Action by the
Corporation), Rule 24 (Charges for Services Rendered), Rule 26 (Bills
Rendered), Rule 27 (Admission to Premises of the Corporation--Powers of
Attorney, Etc.), Rule 28 (Forms), Rule 29 (Qualified Securities
Depositories), Rule 32 (Signatures), Rule 33 (Procedures), Rule 34
(Insurance), Rule 35 (Financial Reports), Rule 36 (Rule Changes), Rule
37 (Hearing Procedures), Rule 38 (Governing Law and Captions), Rule 39
(Reliance on Instructions), Rule 40 (Wind-Down of a Member, Fund Member
or Insurance Carrier/Retirement Services Member), Rule 41 (Corporation
Default), Rule 42 (Wind-down of the Corporation), Rule 45 (Notice),
Rule 47 (Interpretation of Rules), Rule 48 (Disciplinary Proceedings),
Rule 49 (Release of Clearing Data and Clearing Fund Data), Rule 55
(Settling Banks and AIP Settling Banks), Rule 58 (Limitations on
Liability), Rule 60 (Market Disruption and Force Majeure), Rule 60A
(Systems Disconnect: Threat of Significant Impact to the Corporation's
Systems), Rule 63 (SRO Regulatory Reporting), Procedure I
(Introduction), Procedure VIII (Money Settlement Service), Procedure
XII (Time Schedule), Procedure XIII (Definitions), Procedure XIV
(Forms, Media and Technical Specifications), Procedure XV (Clearing
Fund Formula and Other Matters), Addendum B (Qualifications and
Standards of Financial Responsibility, Operational Capability and
Business History), Addendum H (Interpretation of the Board of Directors
Release of Clearing Data), Addendum L (Statement of Policy
[[Page 44565]]
Pertaining to Information Sharing), and Addendum P (Fine Schedule)
shall apply to SFTs and SFT Members, unless the context otherwise
requires.
(D) Other Rule Changes
In connection with proposed Rules 2C, 2D and 56, NSCC is also
proposing to make conforming and technical changes to the following
Rules to accommodate the proposed introduction of the new membership
categories and the proposed SFT Clearing Service.
Rule 1 (Definitions and Descriptions)
In connection with proposed Rules 2C, 2D and 56, NSCC is proposing
to add the following defined terms to Rule 1, in alphabetical order:
Agent Clearing Member, Agent Clearing Member Agreement, Agent Clearing
Member Customer Omnibus Account, Agent Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposit, Agent Clearing Member Termination Date, Agent Clearing Member
Transaction, Agent Clearing Member Voluntary Termination Notice,
Aggregate Net SFT Close-out Value, Approved SFT Submitter, Bilaterally
Initiated SFT, Buy-In, Buy-In Amount, Buy-In Costs, Buy-In Indemnified
Parties, Contract Price, Corresponding SFT Cash, Customer, Customer
Clearing Service, Deemed Buy-In Costs, Defaulting SFT Member, Default-
Related SFT, Distribution, Distribution Amount, Distribution Payment,
Existing Master Agreement, Final Net Settlement Position, Final
Settlement, Final Settlement Date, Former Sponsored Member, Incremental
Additional Independent Amount SFT Cash, Independent Amount Percentage,
Independent Amount SFT Cash, Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit,
Independent Amount SFT Cash Deposit Requirement, Ineligibility Date,
Ineligible SFT, Ineligible SFT Security, Initial Settlement, Linked
SFT, Market Value SFT Cash, Net Capital, Net Member Capital, Net Worth,
Non-Returned SFT, Price Differential, Rate Payment, Recall Date, Recall
Notice, Recalled SFT, Required SFT Deposit, Securities Financing
Transaction or SFT, Securities Financing Transaction Clearing Service
or SFT Clearing Service, Settling SFT, SFT Account, SFT Cash, SFT
Close-out Value, SFT Deposit, SFT Long Position, SFT Member, SFT
Position, SFT Security, SFT Short Position, Sponsored Member, Sponsored
Member Agreement, Sponsored Member Liquidation Amount, Sponsored Member
Sub-Account, Sponsored Member Termination Date, Sponsored Member
Transaction, Sponsored Member Voluntary Termination Notice, Sponsoring
Member, Sponsoring Member Agreement, Sponsoring Member Guaranty,
Sponsoring Member Liquidation Amount, Sponsoring Member Required Fund
Deposit, Sponsoring Member Settling Bank Omnibus Account, Sponsoring
Member Termination Date, Sponsoring Member Voluntary Termination
Notice, Sponsoring/Sponsored Membership Program Indemnified Parties or
SMP Indemnified Parties, Transferee, Transferor and Volatility Charge.
In addition, NSCC is proposing to add three defined terms: ``CNS
Market Value'', which is already defined in Rule 41 (Corporation
Default), ``CNS Transaction'', which is already defined in Rule 11 (CNS
System), and ``Corporation Default'', which is already defined in Rule
41 (Corporation Default).
NSCC is also proposing to add the defined term ``FICC'' to mean
Fixed Income Clearing Corporation. The term ``FICC'' is already used in
Addendum P (Fine Schedule) but has not been defined.
Furthermore, NSCC is proposing to reorder the defined term Index
Receipt Agent so it would be in alphabetical order.
In connection with proposed Rules 2C, 2D and 56, NSCC is also
proposing to modify the definitions for the following defined terms in
Rule 1, in alphabetical order: Clearing Fund, FFI Member, Qualified
Securities Depository, and Required Fund Deposit. Specifically, NSCC is
proposing to expand the definition of Clearing Fund to include SFT
Deposit, unless noted otherwise in the Rules. NSCC is also proposing to
revise the definition of FFI Member and the proposed definition of Tax
Certification \88\ to add references to Sponsored Members. Furthermore,
NSCC is proposing to revise the definition of Qualified Securities
Depository to include a reference to transfer of securities in respect
of the proposed SFT Clearing Service. Lastly, NSCC is proposing to
expand the definition of Required Fund Deposit to include Sponsoring
Member Required Fund Deposit, the Agent Clearing Member Required Fund
Deposit, and the Required SFT Deposit, unless noted otherwise in the
Rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ NSCC has proposed to add Tax Certification as a defined
term in Rule 1 (Definitions and Descriptions) under a separate
proposal. See SR-NSCC-2021-009, which was filed with the Commission
but has not yet been published in the Federal Register. A copy of
this proposed rule change is available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 2 (Members and Limited Members)
NSCC is proposing to revise the title of Rule 2 to include a
reference to Sponsored Members. As proposed, Rule 2 would be retitled
as ``Members, Limited Members and Sponsored Members''.
NSCC is also proposing to revise Section 2 of Rule 2. Specifically,
NSCC is proposing to clarify in Section 2(i) that a Member shall
include a Member in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member to the extent
specified in proposed Rule 2C and an Agent Clearing Member to the
extent specified in proposed Rule 2D. In addition, NSCC is proposing to
add a new subsection (iii) to Section 2 that would describe Sponsored
Members as any Person that has been approved by NSCC to become a
Sponsored Member and only participates in NSCC's SFT Clearing Service
as provided for in proposed Rule 56. In addition, NSCC is proposing to
add references to Sponsored Members in the last paragraph of Section 2,
Sections 4(i) and 4(ii), and proposed Section 5 \89\ of Rule 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ NSCC has proposed to add Section 5 to Rule 2 in a separate
proposal that has been filed with the Commission. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 92334 (July 7, 2021), 86 FR 36815 (July 13,
2021) (SR-NSCC-2021-007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 3 (Lists to be Maintained)
NSCC is proposing to add subsection (g) to Section 1 of Rule 3 to
provide that NSCC shall maintain a list of the securities that may be
the subject of a novated SFT and may from time to time add securities
to such list or remove securities therefrom.
NSCC is also proposing to modify Sections 3(b) and 4 of Rule 3 to
include references to Sponsored Members.
Rule 4 (Clearing Fund)
NSCC is proposing to modify Section 1 of Rule 4 in order to make it
clear that the minimum Required Fund Deposit amount provided therein
shall not include Required SFT Deposit, which is subject to a separate
minimum $250,000 deposit requirement pursuant to Section 12(c) of
proposed Rule 56, as described above.
Rule 5 (General Provisions)
NSCC is proposing to modify Section 1 of Rule 5 in order to provide
that delivery of SFT Securities and SFT Cash to NSCC shall be made
through the facilities of a Qualified Securities Depository. In
addition, NSCC is also proposing changes in Section 1 of Rule 5 to
provide that delivery and payment with respect to SFT Securities and
SFT Cash shall be effected as prescribed in
[[Page 44566]]
the Rules and regulations as NSCC may from time to time adopt.
Rule 24 (Charges for Services Rendered)
NSCC is proposing to modify Section 1 of Rule 24 to include a
reference to Sponsored Members. In addition, NSCC is proposing to add
an additional paragraph in Section 1 to clarify that Members shall be
responsible for all fees pertaining to their respective Sponsoring
Member activity or Agent Clearing Member activity, if applicable, as
set forth in NSCC's Fee Structure.\90\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ See Addendum A (Fee Structure), supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 26 (Bills Rendered)
NSCC is proposing to modify the first paragraph of Rule 26 to
include a reference to Sponsored Members. In addition, NSCC is
proposing to add a sentence in that paragraph to clarify that Members
shall receive bills for their respective aggregate Sponsoring Member
activity and Agent Clearing Member activity, if applicable, as set
forth in NSCC's Fee Structure.\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 39 (Reliance on Instructions)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 39 to include references to
Sponsored Member and Approved SFT Submitter, where applicable.
Specifically, NSCC is proposing to modify the first paragraph of Rule
39 to provide that NSCC may accept or rely upon instructions given to
NSCC by a Sponsored Member or Approved SFT Submitter, in addition to
the various participant types currently provided in Rule 39. Similarly,
NSCC is proposing to add references to Approved SFT Submitter in the
second and last paragraphs of Rule 39 so that those paragraphs would
also apply to instructions submitted by an Approved SFT Submitter.
Rule 42 (Wind-Down of the Corporation)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 42 to include references to
Sponsored Members. Specifically, for purposes of Rule 42, NSCC is
proposing to revise the defined term ``Limited Member'' to include
Sponsored Members.
Rule 49 (Release of Clearing Data and Clearing Fund Data)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 49 to clarify that NSCC would
release Clearing Data of a Sponsored Member to its Sponsoring Member
upon the Sponsoring Member's written request. Specifically, as
proposed, Section (a) of Rule 49 would provide that if the participant
is a Sponsored Member, NSCC would also release Clearing Data relating
to transactions of such participant to such participant's Sponsoring
Member upon the Sponsoring Member's written request.
Rule 58 (Limitations on Liability)
NSCC is proposing to modify Rule 58 to clarify that NSCC would not
be responsible for the completeness or accuracy of the transaction data
received from the Approved SFT Submitters, nor shall NSCC, absent gross
negligence on NSCC's part, be responsible for any errors, omissions or
delays that may occur in the transmission of transaction data from an
Approved SFT Submitter.
Rule 64 (DTCC Shareholders Agreement)
The proposed changes to Section 4 of Rule 64 and footnote 1 thereto
would provide that Rule 64 would not be applicable to a Sponsored
Member. However, if the Sponsored Member is also a member or
participant of another clearing agency subsidiary of DTCC, the
Sponsored Member may be a Mandatory Purchaser Participant or a
Voluntary Purchaser Participant pursuant to the terms of the
Shareholders Agreement and the rules and procedures of such other
subsidiary.
Procedure XV (Clearing Fund Formula and Other Matters)
NSCC is proposing to modify subsection A of Section II (Minimum
Clearing Fund and Additional Deposit Requirements) in Procedure XV in
order to make it clear that the minimum contribution amount provided
therein shall not include Required SFT Deposit, which is subject to a
separate minimum $250,000 deposit requirement pursuant to Section 12(c)
of proposed Rule 56, as described above. In addition, NSCC is proposing
to modify Section II.A of Procedure XV to make it clear that
calculation of a Member's Required Fund Deposit amount that must be in
cash shall exclude the Required SFT Deposit, which is subject to a
separate $250,000 minimum cash requirement pursuant to Section 12(c) of
proposed Rule 56, as described above.
Addendum B (Qualifications and Standards of Financial Responsibility,
Operational Capability and Business History)
NSCC is proposing an additional section for the Sponsored Members.
Specifically, NSCC is proposing to add Section 13 to Addendum B that
would describe the qualification and operational capability that NSCC
would require from Sponsored Members.
In addition, NSCC is proposing a conforming change to replace ``net
worth'' in Section 3.B.4. with ``Net Worth'' to reflect the proposed
defined term in Rule 1 (Definitions).
Furthermore, NSCC is proposing a technical change to correct a
footnote numbering in Section 12.B.
Addendum P (Fine Schedule)
NSCC is proposing to modify paragraph (2) of Addendum P to reflect
the proposed notification obligations of Sponsoring Members, Sponsored
Members and Agent Clearing Members as proposed under Sections 2(i) and
3(d) of proposed Rule 2C and Section 2(i) of proposed Rule 2D.
(vii) Impact of the Proposed SFT Clearing Service on Various Persons
The proposed SFT Clearing Service would be voluntary. Institutional
firm clients that wish to become Sponsored Members, and Members that
wish to participate in the proposed SFT Clearing Service would have an
opportunity to review the proposed rule change and determine if they
would like to participate. Choosing to participate would make these
entities subject to all of the rule changes that would be applicable to
the proposed SFT Clearing Service and membership type, as described
below.
The proposed SFT Clearing Service would affect institutional firm
clients that choose to become Sponsored Members because it would impose
various requirements on them. These requirements include, but are not
limited to, proposed Rule 56 and the following sections of proposed
Rule 2C: (1) Eligibility, approval process and on-going membership
requirements as specified in Sections 3 and 4, (2) requirements related
to restriction on access to NSCC services in Section 11, (3)
requirements related to insolvency of a Sponsored Member in Section 13,
and (4) requirements related to liquidation of positions resulting from
Sponsored Member Transactions in Section 14. Specific details on the
requirements and the manner in which the proposed SFT Clearing Service
would affect institutional firm clients that choose to become Sponsored
Members can be found above in Item II(B)(vi)(A)--Proposed Rule
Changes--Proposed Rule 2C--Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members.
The proposed SFT Clearing Service would affect Members that choose
to participate in the service because it would impose various
requirements on them, depending on whether they are participating in
the service as a Sponsoring Member, an Agent Clearing
[[Page 44567]]
Member and/or as a Member. These requirements include, but are not
limited to, the requirements specified in proposed Rule 2C for Members
participating in the service as a Sponsoring Member; the requirements
specified in proposed Rule 2D for Members participating in the service
as an Agent Clearing Member; and for all Members participating in the
service, the requirements specified in proposed Rule 56. Specific
details on these requirements and the manner in which the proposed SFT
Clearing Service would affect Members that choose to participate in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service are described above in Items
II(B)(vi)(A)--Proposed Rule Changes--Proposed Rule 2C--Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members, (vi)(B)--Proposed Rule Changes--Proposed
Rule 2D--Agent Clearing Members, and (vi)(C)--Proposed Rule Changes--
Proposed Rule 56--Securities Financing Transaction Clearing Service.
The proposed SFT Clearing Service would not materially affect
existing Members that do not choose to participate in it. First, the
proposed SFT Clearing Service would not materially affect the operation
of CNS or any other services offered by NSCC. In addition, SFT Members
would be subject to the same or higher credit standards and market risk
management requirements as those applicable to Members that choose not
to participate in the proposed SFT Clearing Service, as described
above. Moreover, although Members who choose not to participate in the
proposed SFT Clearing Service would be subject to potential loss
allocation in the event of an SFT Member default (just as SFT Members
would be subject to potential loss allocation in the event of the
default of a Member that chooses not to participate in the proposed SFT
Clearing Service), the underlying securities that would be subject of
any such default-related liquidation of an SFT Member are a subset of
the same CNS-eligible securities with respect to which NSCC today
guarantees settlement in the cash equity market, thus not materially
affecting the nature of the loss allocation risk applicable to Members.
Expected Effect on, and Management of, Risks to the Clearing Agency,
Its Participants and the Market
NSCC expects certain market, liquidity, credit and operational
risks may be presented by the establishment of the proposed SFT
Clearing Service and the additional membership categories proposed in
connection therewith. Accordingly, NSCC proposes to address and manage
each of these risks as detailed below.
Market Risk
The proposal is structured in a manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated market risk. SFT activity would be risk managed
by NSCC in a manner consistent with Members' CNS positions. Moreover,
all SFT Positions would be margined independently of the Member's other
positions, i.e., Required SFT Deposit. The Required SFT Deposit would
generally be calculated using the same procedure applicable to CNS
positions, but with a separate $250,000 minimum.\92\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ Supra note 32.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described above, consistent with the manner in which clearing
fund requirements are satisfied by members of FICC for their cleared
securities financing transactions, NSCC would require that (i) a
minimum of 40% of an SFT Member's Required SFT Deposit consist of a
combination of cash and Eligible Clearing Fund Treasury Securities and
(ii) the lesser of $5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT Member's Required SFT
Deposit (but not less than $250,000) \93\ consist of cash.\94\ NSCC
would also have the discretion to require a Member to post its Required
SFT Deposit in proportion of cash higher than would otherwise be
required. NSCC's determination to impose any such requirement would be
made in view of market conditions and other financial and operational
capabilities of the relevant SFT Member.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ Supra note 34.
\94\ Supra note 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, NSCC would require additional Clearing Fund deposits
to address two situations that may present unique risk. First, if the
share price of underlying securities of an SFT that has already been
novated to NSCC falls below the threshold established by NSCC from time
to time, NSCC would require both pre-novation counterparties to the SFT
to post Clearing Fund equal to 100% of the market value of such
underlying securities until such time as the per share price of the
underlying securities equals or exceeds such threshold. Second, in the
event an SFT is subject to a collateral haircut (i.e., the SFT Cash
exceeds the market value of the securities), NSCC would require the
Transferor (or in the case of an Agent Clearing Member Transaction, the
Agent Clearing Member) to post Clearing Fund equal to such excess.
Additionally, the Sponsoring Member Required Fund Deposits and
Agent Clearing Member Required Fund Deposits would each be calculated
on a gross basis, and no offsets for netting of positions as between
different Sponsored Members or different Customers, as applicable,
would be permitted. Moreover, any Member that opts to apply to become a
Sponsoring Member or an Agent Clearing Member would be subject to an
activity limit (as described above).
NSCC is also proposing to limit the SFTs eligible for clearing to
overnight transactions on securities that are CNS-eligible equity
securities with a share price that equals or exceeds the threshold
established by NSCC from time to time and that are fully collateralized
by cash. NSCC believes these limitations, in addition to the Clearing
Fund requirements, would limit the potential market risk associated
with SFTs.
Liquidity Risk
The proposal is also structured in a manner that allows NSCC to
protect itself from associated liquidity risk. Specifically, the
proposal would mitigate NSCC's liquidity risk associated with an SFT
Member default by providing that the Final Settlement obligations owing
to non-defaulting SFT Members under SFTs to which the Defaulting SFT
Member was a party will be settled in accordance with the normal
settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of securities, as
applicable.\95\ NSCC would accordingly be able to satisfy such Final
Settlement obligations through market action (if necessary) rather than
through its own liquidity resources. More specifically, NSCC would be
able to sell the securities lent by a Defaulting SFT Member and/or
purchase the securities borrowed by a Defaulting SFT Member and use the
proceeds of such sales and/or the securities purchased to satisfy the
Defaulting SFT Member's Final Settlement obligations to non-defaulting
SFT Members. In the absence of this provision, NSCC would need to rely
exclusively on its liquidity resources to satisfy Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members, since it would not
receive the proceeds of any market action to liquidate the Defaulting
SFT Member's SFT Positions until after Final Settlement obligations
were due.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal would also provide that NSCC could further delay its
satisfaction of Final Settlement obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC
[[Page 44568]]
determines that taking market action to close-out some or all of the
Defaulting SFT Member's novated SFT Positions would create a disorderly
market in the relevant SFT Securities.\96\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\96\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, in any case, until NSCC has satisfied the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members, NSCC would continue
paying to and receiving from non-defaulting SFT Members the applicable
Price Differential (i.e., the change in market value of the relevant
securities) with respect to their novated SFTs.\97\ NSCC would take
into account such Price Differential payment obligations when
calculating the amount of liquidity resources that NSCC may require in
the event of the default of the participant family that would generate
the largest aggregate payment obligation for NSCC in extreme but
plausible market conditions.98 99 By continuing to process
these Price Differential payments until Final Settlement occurs, NSCC
would ensure that non-defaulting SFT Members are kept in the same
position as if the Defaulting SFT Member had not defaulted and the pre-
novation counterparties had instead agreed to roll the SFTs. To the
extent NSCC is required to pay a Price Differential to a non-defaulting
SFT Member, NSCC would rely on the NSCC Clearing Fund, including the
Required SFT Deposit, in order to cover the liquidity need associated
with any such Price Differential obligation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\97\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
\98\ Id.
\99\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(7).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Credit Risk
The proposal is also structured in a manner that allows NSCC to
protect itself from associated credit risk. In addition to the Clearing
Fund requirements discussed above, any Member that elects to
participate in the proposed SFT Clearing Service would be subject to
the same initial membership requirements and ongoing membership
requirements and monitoring as any other Member. Moreover, any Member
that opts to apply to become a Sponsoring Member or an Agent Clearing
Member would be subject to an activity limit (as described above) in
addition to an approval process that is separate from its original
Member applications, as well as ongoing credit surveillance in its
capacity as a Sponsoring Member or Agent Clearing Member, as
applicable.
Operational Risk
The proposal is also structured in a manner that allows NSCC to
protect itself from associated operational risk. NSCC proposes to
utilize to a significant extent the same processes and infrastructure
as it has used for many years to clear and settle cash market
transactions for purposes of clearing and settling SFTs. NSCC staff is
well versed in such processes and infrastructure and has been actively
involved in the development of the proposed SFT Clearing Service,
thereby allowing for ready integration of support for the proposed SFT
Clearing Service into NSCC staff's current workflows.
Accordingly, NSCC believes that, taken as a whole, the proposal
would not have any risks to NSCC, its Members and the market overall
that cannot be prudently managed or mitigated.
Consistency With the Clearing Supervision Act
The proposed rule change would be consistent with Section 805(b) of
Title VIII of the Clearing Supervision Act.\100\ The objectives and
principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act are to
promote robust risk management, promote safety and soundness, reduce
systemic risks, and support the stability of the broader financial
system.\101\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
\101\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSCC believes that the proposal would promote robust risk
management, promote safety and soundness, reduce systemic risks, and
support the stability of the broader financial system, consistent with
the objectives and principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing
Supervision Act.
Promoting Robust Risk Management and Promoting Safety and Soundness
NSCC believes that the proposal is consistent with promoting robust
risk management and promoting safety and soundness, particularly
management of market risks, liquidity risks, credit risks and
operational risks presented to NSCC.
The proposal is structured in a manner that allows NSCC to protect
itself from associated market risk. SFT activity would be risk managed
by NSCC in a manner consistent with Members' CNS positions. Moreover,
all SFT Positions would be margined independently of the Member's other
positions, i.e., Required SFT Deposit. The Required SFT Deposit would
generally be calculated using the same procedure applicable to CNS
positions, but with a separate $250,000 minimum.\102\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ Supra note 32.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described above, consistent with the manner in which clearing
fund requirements are satisfied by members of FICC for their cleared
securities financing transactions, NSCC would require that (i) a
minimum of 40% of an SFT Member's Required SFT Deposit consist of a
combination of cash and Eligible Clearing Fund Treasury Securities and
(ii) the lesser of $5,000,000 or 10% of an SFT Member's Required SFT
Deposit (but not less than $250,000) \103\ consist of cash.\104\ NSCC
would also have the discretion to require a Member to post its Required
SFT Deposit in proportion of cash higher than would otherwise be
required. NSCC's determination to impose any such requirement would be
made in view of market conditions and other financial and operational
capabilities of the relevant SFT Member.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ Supra note 34.
\104\ Supra note 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, NSCC would require additional Clearing Fund deposits
to address two situations that may present unique risk. First, if the
share price of underlying securities of an SFT that has already been
novated to NSCC falls below the threshold established by NSCC from time
to time, NSCC would require both pre-novation counterparties to the SFT
to post Clearing Fund equal to 100% of the market value of such
underlying securities until such time as the per share price of the
underlying securities equals or exceeds such threshold. Second, in the
event an SFT is subject to a collateral haircut (i.e., the SFT Cash
exceeds the market value of the securities), NSCC would require the
Transferor (or in the case of an Agent Clearing Member Transaction, the
Agent Clearing Member) to post Clearing Fund equal to such excess.
Additionally, the Sponsoring Member Required Fund Deposits and
Agent Clearing Member Required Fund Deposits would each be calculated
on a gross basis, and no offsets for netting of positions as between
different Sponsored Members or different Customers, as applicable,
would be permitted. Moreover, any Member that opts to apply to become a
Sponsoring Member or an Agent Clearing Member would be subject to an
activity limit (as described above).
NSCC is also proposing to limit the SFTs eligible for clearing to
overnight transactions on securities that are CNS-eligible equity
securities with a share price that equals or exceeds the threshold
established by NSCC from
[[Page 44569]]
time to time and that are fully collateralized by cash. NSCC believes
these limitations, in addition to the Clearing Fund requirements, would
limit the potential market risk associated with SFTs.
The proposal is also structured in a manner that allows NSCC to
protect itself from associated liquidity risk. Specifically, the
proposed rule change would mitigate NSCC's liquidity risk associated
with an SFT Member default by providing that the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members under SFTs to which the
Defaulting SFT Member was a party will be settled in accordance with
the normal settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of securities, as
applicable.\105\ NSCC would accordingly be able to satisfy such Final
Settlement obligations through market action (if necessary) rather than
through its own liquidity resources. More specifically, NSCC would be
able to sell the securities lent by a Defaulting SFT Member and/or
purchase the securities borrowed by a Defaulting SFT Member and use the
proceeds of such sales and/or the securities purchased to satisfy the
Defaulting SFT Member's Final Settlement obligations to non-defaulting
SFT Members. In the absence of this provision, NSCC would need to rely
exclusively on its liquidity resources to satisfy Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members, since it would not
receive the proceeds of any market action to liquidate the Defaulting
SFT Member's SFT Positions until after Final Settlement obligations
were due.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal would also provide that NSCC could further delay its
satisfaction of Final Settlement obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC determines that taking market action to
close-out some or all of the Defaulting SFT Member's novated SFT
Positions would create a disorderly market in the relevant SFT
Securities.\106\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, in any case, until NSCC has satisfied the Final Settlement
obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members, NSCC would continue
paying to and receiving from non-defaulting SFT Members the applicable
Price Differential (i.e., the change in market value of the relevant
securities) with respect to their novated SFTs.\107\ NSCC would take
into account such Price Differential payment obligations when
calculating the amount of liquidity resources that NSCC may require in
the event of the default of the participant family that would generate
the largest aggregate payment obligation for NSCC in extreme but
plausible market conditions.108 109 By continuing to process
these Price Differential payments until Final Settlement occurs, NSCC
would ensure that non-defaulting SFT Members are kept in the same
position as if the Defaulting SFT Member had not defaulted and the pre-
novation counterparties had instead agreed to roll the SFTs. To the
extent NSCC is required to pay a Price Differential to a non-defaulting
SFT Member, NSCC would rely on the NSCC Clearing Fund, including the
Required SFT Deposit, in order to cover the liquidity need associated
with any such Price Differential obligation. The proposal is also
structured in a manner that allows NSCC to protect itself from
associated credit risk. In addition to the Clearing Fund requirements
discussed above, any Member that elects to participate in the proposed
SFT Clearing Service would be subject to the same initial membership
requirements and ongoing membership requirements and monitoring as any
other Member. Moreover, any Member that opts to apply to become a
Sponsoring Member or an Agent Clearing Member would be subject to an
activity limit (as described above) in addition to an approval process
that is separate from its original Member applications, as well as
ongoing credit surveillance in its capacity as a Sponsoring Member or
Agent Clearing Member, as applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
\108\ Id.
\109\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(7).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal is also structured in a manner that allows NSCC to
protect itself from associated operational risk. NSCC proposes to
utilize to a significant extent the same processes and infrastructure
as it has used for many years to clear and settle cash market
transactions for purposes of clearing and settling SFTs. NSCC staff is
well versed in such processes and infrastructure and has been actively
involved in the development of the proposed SFT Clearing Service,
thereby allowing for ready integration of support for the proposed SFT
Clearing Service into NSCC staff's current workflows.
For these reasons NSCC believes the proposal would help promote
robust risk management at NSCC, consistent with the objective and
principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act.
Reducing Systemic Risks and Supporting the Stability of the Broader
Financial System
NSCC also believes that the proposal is consistent with reducing
systemic risks and supporting the stability of the broader financial
system. As described above, the proposal would lower the risk of
liquidity drain in the U.S. equity securities financing market by
lessening counterparties' likely inclination to unwind transactions in
a stressed market scenario. NSCC would use its risk management
resources to provide confidence to market participants that they will
receive back their cash or securities, as applicable, which should
limit the propensity for market participants to seek to unwind their
transactions in a stressed market scenario.
In addition, the proposal would protect against fire sale risk. As
described above, in the event of a default, NSCC would conduct a
centralized, orderly liquidation of the defaulter's SFT Positions. Such
an organized liquidation should result in substantially less price
depreciation and market disruption than multiple independent non-
defaulting parties racing against one another to liquidate the
positions. In addition, NSCC would only need to liquidate the
defaulter's net positions. Limiting the positions that need to be
liquidated to the defaulter's net positions should reduce the volume of
required sales activity, which in turn should limit the price and
market impact of the close-out of the defaulter's positions. NSCC would
also use its risk management resources to provide confidence to market
participants that they will receive back their cash or securities, as
applicable, which should limit the propensity for market participants
to seek to unwind their transactions in a stressed market scenario. By
lowering the risk of liquidity drain in the U.S. equity securities
financing market and protecting against fire sale risk, NSCC believes
the proposal would help reduce systemic risks, which in turn helps
support the stability of the broader financial system, consistent with
the objectives and principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing
Supervision Act.
NSCC also believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with
Rules 17Ad-22(e)(7), 17Ad-22(e)(8), and 17Ad-22(e)(18), promulgated
under the Act,\110\ for the reasons stated below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(7), (e)(8), and (e)(18).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(7) under the Act requires NSCC to establish,
implement, maintain, and enforce written policies
[[Page 44570]]
and procedures reasonably designed to effectively measure, monitor, and
manage the liquidity risk that arises in or is borne by the covered
clearing agency.\111\ NSCC believes that the proposed changes to
establish the SFT Clearing Service are consistent with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(7) because, as described above, the proposal is structured in a
manner that allows NSCC to protect itself from associated liquidity
risk. Specifically, the proposal would mitigate NSCC's liquidity risk
associated with an SFT Member default by providing that the Final
Settlement obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members under SFTs
to which the Defaulting SFT Member was a party will be settled in
accordance with the normal settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities, as applicable.\112\ NSCC would accordingly be able to
satisfy such Final Settlement obligations through market action (if
necessary) rather than through its own liquidity resources. More
specifically, NSCC would be able to sell the securities lent by a
Defaulting SFT Member and/or purchase the securities borrowed by a
Defaulting SFT Member and use the proceeds of such sales and/or the
securities purchased to satisfy the Defaulting SFT Member's Final
Settlement obligations to non-defaulting SFT Members. In the absence of
this provision, NSCC would need to rely exclusively on its liquidity
resources to satisfy Final Settlement obligations owing to non-
defaulting SFT Members, since it would not receive the proceeds of any
market action to liquidate the Defaulting SFT Member's SFT Positions
until after Final Settlement obligations were due.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(7).
\112\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(viii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal would also provide that NSCC could further delay its
satisfaction of Final Settlement obligations to non-defaulting SFT
Members beyond the normal settlement cycle for the purchase or sale of
securities to the extent NSCC determines that taking market action to
close-out some or all of the Defaulting SFT Member's novated SFT
Positions would create a disorderly market in the relevant SFT
Securities.\113\ However, in any case, until NSCC has satisfied the
Final Settlement obligations owing to non-defaulting SFT Members, NSCC
would continue paying to and receiving from non-defaulting SFT Members
the applicable Price Differential (i.e., the change in market value of
the relevant securities) with respect to their novated SFTs.\114\ NSCC
would take into account such Price Differential payment obligations
when calculating the amount of liquidity resources that NSCC may
require in the event of the default of the participant family that
would generate the largest aggregate payment obligation for NSCC in
extreme but plausible market conditions.115 116 By
continuing to process these Price Differential payments until Final
Settlement occurs, NSCC would ensure that non-defaulting SFT Members
are kept in the same position as if the Defaulting SFT Member had not
defaulted and the pre-novation counterparties had instead agreed to
roll the SFTs. To the extent NSCC is required to pay a Price
Differential to a non-defaulting SFT Member, NSCC would rely on the
NSCC Clearing Fund, including the Required SFT Deposit, in order to
cover the liquidity need associated with any such Price Differential
obligation. Therefore, NSCC believes that the proposed changes to
establish the SFT Clearing Service are consistent with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(7) under the Act.\117\
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\113\ Id.
\114\ See proposed Rule 56, Section 14(b)(ix).
\115\ Id.
\116\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(7).
\117\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(8) under the Act \118\ requires NSCC to establish,
implement, maintain and enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to define the point at which settlement is final to
be no later than the end of the day on which the payment or obligation
is due. NSCC believes that the proposed changes to establish the SFT
Clearing Service are consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(8) because, as
described above, the proposal would make it clear to SFT Members the
point at which settlement is final with respect to SFTs cleared through
NSCC. Specifically, Section 7 in the proposed Rule 56 (Securities
Financing Transaction Clearing Service) provides that an SFT, or a
portion thereof, shall be deemed complete and final upon Final
Settlement of the SFT, or such portion.\119\ Having clear provisions in
this regard would enable SFT Members to better identify the point at
which settlement is final with respect to their SFTs. As such, NSCC
believes the proposed changes to establish the SFT Clearing Service are
consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(8) under the Act.\120\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\118\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(8).
\119\ The proposed changes to establish the SFT Clearing Service
would provide that NSCC may delay the close-out of a Defaulting SFT
Member's SFT Positions if such a close-out would create a disorderly
market. In such a situation, the proposed changes would allow NSCC
to correspondingly delay Final Settlement of any Default-Related
SFTs on the same SFT Securities. NSCC does not believe this
provision would affect settlement finality because if NSCC delays
Final Settlement following an SFT Member Default, the Non-Defaulting
Member's related payment or delivery obligation is correspondingly
delayed. As a result, the provision would not allow a settlement to
be final after the due date of the relevant payment obligations.
Rather, consistent with the approach of many clearing agency and
derivatives clearing organization rules, it simply allows NSCC to
postpone those due dates in order to minimize market
destabilization. See, e.g., The Options Clearing Corporation
(``OCC'') Rule 903 (Obligation to Deliver) (https://www.theocc.com/getmedia/9d3854cd-b782-450f-bcf7-33169b0576ce/occ_rules.pdf) and ICE
Clear Credit LLC Rule 20-605(e) (https://www.theice.com/publicdocs/clear_credit/ICE_Clear_Credit_Rules.pdf).
\120\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(18) under the Act requires, in part, that NSCC
establish, implement, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to establish objective, risk-based, and
publicly disclosed criteria for participation.\121\ NSCC believes the
proposed changes to establish new membership categories and
requirements for Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members would
establish objective, risk-based, and publicly disclosed criteria for
participation in NSCC as Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members.
Specifically, as proposed, in order for an applicant to become a
Sponsoring Member, the applicant would be required to satisfy a number
of objective and risk-based eligibility criteria. First, the applicant
must be a Member. In addition, if the applicant is a Registered-Broker-
Dealer, then it would be required to have (i) Net Worth of at least $25
million and (ii) excess net capital over the minimum net capital
requirement imposed by the SEC (or such higher minimum capital
requirement imposed by the applicant's designated examining authority)
of at least $10 million. Likewise, in order for an applicant to become
a Sponsored Member, the applicant would be required to meet certain
objective, risk-based eligibility criteria. Specifically, an applicant
would be eligible to apply to become a Sponsored Member if it is either
a ``qualified institutional buyer'' as defined by Rule 144A \122\ under
the Securities Act,\123\ or a legal entity that, although not organized
as an entity specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i)(H) of Rule 144A
under the Securities Act, satisfies the financial requirements
necessary to be a ``qualified institutional buyer'' as specified in
that paragraph. If approved, the requirements for proposed new
[[Page 44571]]
Sponsoring Member and Sponsored Member membership categories would
become part of the Rules, which are publicly available on DTCC's
website (www.dtcc.com), and market participants would be able to review
them in connection with their evaluation of potential participation in
NSCC as Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members. Therefore, NSCC
believes that the proposed changes to establish new membership
categories and requirements for Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members are consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(18) under the Act.\124\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(18).
\122\ 17 CFR 230.144A.
\123\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
\124\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(18).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, NSCC believes the proposed changes to establish new a
membership category and requirements for Agent Clearing Members would
establish objective, risk-based, and publicly disclosed criteria for
participation in NSCC as Agent Clearing Members. Specifically, as
proposed, in order for an applicant to become an Agent Clearing Member,
the applicant would be required to satisfy a number of objective and
risk-based eligibility criteria. First, the applicant must be a Member.
In addition, if the applicant is a Registered-Broker-Dealer, then it
would be required to have (i) Net Worth of at least $25 million and
(ii) excess net capital over the minimum net capital requirement
imposed by the SEC (or such higher minimum capital requirement imposed
by the applicant's designated examining authority) of at least $10
million. If approved, the requirements for proposed new Agent Clearing
Member membership category would become part of the Rules, which are
publicly available on DTCC's website (www.dtcc.com), and market
participants would be able to review them in connection with their
evaluation of potential participation in NSCC as Agent Clearing
Members. Therefore, NSCC believes that the proposed changes to
establish a new membership category and requirements for Agent Clearing
Members are consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(18) under the Act.\125\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\125\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Advance Notice, and Timing for
Commission Action
The proposed change may be implemented if the Commission does not
object to the proposed change within 60 days of the later of (i) the
date that the proposed change was filed with the Commission or (ii) the
date that any additional information requested by the Commission is
received. The clearing agency shall not implement the proposed change
if the Commission has any objection to the proposed change.
The Commission may extend the period for review by an additional 60
days if the proposed change raises novel or complex issues, subject to
the Commission providing the clearing agency with prompt written notice
of the extension. A proposed change may be implemented in less than 60
days from the date the advance notice is filed, or the date further
information requested by the Commission is received, if the Commission
notifies the clearing agency in writing that it does not object to the
proposed change and authorizes the clearing agency to implement the
proposed change on an earlier date, subject to any conditions imposed
by the Commission.
The clearing agency shall post notice on its website of proposed
changes that are implemented.
The proposal shall not take effect until all regulatory actions
required with respect to the proposal are completed.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the advance
notice is consistent with the Clearing Supervision Act. Comments may be
submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-NSCC-2021-803 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE, Washington, DC 20549.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NSCC-2021-803. This file
number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To help
the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the advance notice that are filed with the
Commission, and all written communications relating to the advance
notice between the Commission and any person, other than those that may
be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions of 5
U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in the
Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of NSCC and on DTCC's website
(https://dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx). All comments received
will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR-NSCC-2021-803 and should be submitted on
or before August 27, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\126\
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\126\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(91).
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Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021-17075 Filed 8-11-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P