Code of Maine Rules
02 - DEPARTMENT OF PROFESSIONAL AND FINANCIAL REGULATION
032 - OFFICE OF SECURITIES
Chapter 506 - FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND BROKER-DEALERS ENGAGING IN THIRD PARTY BROKERAGE ARRANGEMENTS
- Section 032-506-1 - Purpose
- Section 032-506-2 - Definitions
- Section 032-506-3 - General authorization for third party brokerage arrangements
- Section 032-506-4 - Provisions applicable to financial institutions
- Section 032-506-5 - Third party broker-dealer agreement
- Section 032-506-6 - Disclosures, advertising and physical setting
- Section 032-506-7 - Broker-dealer unethical practice defined
- Section 032-506-8 - Third party broker-dealer failure to supervise defined
- Section 032-506-9 - Federal and state rules and regulations
HISTORICAL SUMMARY:
On June 1, 1994, the Bureau of Financial Institutions ("the Bureau") issued Regulation 29, Securities Activities in Financial Institutions, and the Office of Securities ("the Office") issued Rule 506, Broker-Dealers Transacting Business on the Premises of Financial Institutions. Since that date, there have been a number of changes in both state and federal law regarding securities activities by financial institutions. Federal legislation, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 ("GLB"), repealed the long-standing prohibitions in federal banking law on mixing banking and securities activities. GLB also removed provisions of federal law that exempted financial institutions from broker-dealer registration and from many broker-dealer regulations. One of the exemptions that GLB did retain was for third party broker-dealer networking arrangements that allow financial institutions to enter into agreements with registered broker-dealers to offer securities transactions to customers of the financial institution and pay compensation to the financial institution without a requirement that the financial institution register as a broker-dealer. In 2000, the Revised Maine Securities Act was amended to incorporate some of the broker-dealer registration exemptions of GLB, including the exemption for third party broker-dealer networking arrangements. This exemption remains in force under the Maine Uniform Securities Act ("the Act"), effective on December 31, 2005.
STATUTORY AUTHORITY: 9-B M.R.S.A. §§111 and 241 ; 32 M.R.S.A. §16605