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Reminder
Regarding MSRB Rule G-14 Transaction Reporting Requirements
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking
Board (“MSRB”) and NASD would like to remind brokers, dealers and municipal
securities dealers (collectively “dealers”) about the requirements of MSRB Rule
G-14, on transaction reporting. This
document also describes services provided by the MSRB designed to assist
dealers in complying with Rule G-14.
Transactions reported to the MSRB
under Rule G-14 are made available to the NASD and other regulators for their
market surveillance and enforcement activities. The MSRB also makes public price information on municipal
securities transactions using data reported by dealers. One product is the Daily Report of
Frequently Traded Securities (“Daily Report”) that is made available to
subscribers each morning by 7:00 am.
Currently, it includes details of transactions in municipal securities
issues that were “frequently traded” the previous business day.[1] The Daily Report is one of the primary
public sources of municipal securities price information and is used by a
variety of industry participants to evaluate municipal securities. [2]
Dealers can
monitor their municipal transaction reporting compliance in several ways. For customer and inter-dealer transaction
reporting, the MSRB Dealer Feedback System (“DFS”) provides monthly statistical
information on transactions reported by a dealer to the MSRB and information
about individual transactions reported by a dealer to the MSRB. For daily feedback on customer trades
reported, the MSRB provides dealers a “customer report edit register” on the
day after trades were submitted. This
product indicates trades successfully submitted and those that contained errors
or possible errors.[3] For inter-dealer transactions, National
Securities Clearing Corporation (“NSCC”) provides to its members daily files,
sometimes called “contract sheets,” that can be used to check the content and
status of the transactions the member has submitted.
Inter-Dealer Transactions
Even before Rule G-14 imposed
requirements for transaction reporting, MSRB Rule G-12(f), on use of automated
comparison, clearance and settlement systems, required dealers to submit data
on their inter-dealer transactions in municipal securities to a registered
clearing agency for automated comparison on trade date (“T”). NSCC provides the automated comparison
services for transactions in municipal securities. The same inter-dealer trade record dealers submit to NSCC for
comparison also is used to satisfy the requirements of MSRB Rule G-14 to report
inter-dealer transactions to the MSRB.
NSCC forwards the transaction data it receives from dealers to the MSRB
so that dealers do not have to send a separate record to the MSRB. However, satisfying the requirements for
successful trade comparison under Rule G-12(f) does not, by itself, necessarily
satisfy a dealer’s Rule G-14 transaction reporting requirements. In addition to the trade information
necessary for a successful trade comparison, Rule G-14 requires dealers to
submit accrued interest, time of trade (in military format) and the effecting
brokers’ (both buy and sell side) four-letter identifiers, also known as
executing broker symbols (“EBS”).
Failure to include accrued interest, time of trade and EBS when
submitting transaction information to NSCC’s automated comparison system is a
violation of MSRB Rule G-14 on transaction reporting even though the trade may
compare on T.
As noted above, the MSRB provides dealers with statistical measures of compliance
with some important aspects of MSRB Rules G-12 and G-14 through its Dealer
Feedback System.[4] The statistics
available for inter-dealer trades include:
- Late or Stamped – The frequency with which a dealer causes an
inter-dealer trade not to compare on trade date is reflected in the “late
or stamped” statistic. Trades that do not compare on trade date are ineligible
for the Daily Report. The statistic is an indication of how often a dealer
submits a trade late or stamps its contra-party’s advisory, and is expressed
as a percentage of the dealer’s total compared trades. Because this statistic
includes both “when, as and if issued” and regular-way trades, it provides
a comprehensive analysis of the timeliness with which a dealer reports its
trades.
- Invalid Time of Trade – This statistic reflects the total number
of trade records submitted by a dealer in which the time of trade is null
or not within the hours of 0600 to 2100. Accurate times of trade are essential
to regulatory surveillance because they provide an audit trail of trading
activity.
- Uncompared Input – A high percentage of uncompared trades may
indicate that a dealer is submitting duplicative trade information, inaccurate
information, or is erroneously submitting buy-side reports against syndicate
takedowns.[5] The uncompared input statistic reflects trade records that
a dealer inputs for comparison that never compare and are expressed as a
percentage of a dealer’s total number of compared trades.
It is a violation of Rule G-14 to submit trade reports that do not accurately
represent trades. Moreover, Rule G-12(f) requires that dealers follow-up
on inter-dealer trade submissions that do not compare in the initial trade
cycle by using the post-original comparison procedures at NSCC. Trade reports
made to MSRB and NSCC that never compare are a concern because they either
represent inaccurate trade input or indicate that the dealer is not following-up
on uncompared trades using the post-original comparison procedures provided
by NSCC.
- Compared
but Deleted or Withheld – This statistic represents deleted or
withheld trade records and is a percentage of all compared trade
records. Compared trade records
that are subsequently deleted or withheld are a concern because these
trades may have previously appeared on the Daily Report. While it is sometimes necessary to
correct erroneous trade submissions using delete or withhold procedures,
this will be an infrequent occurrence if proper attention is paid to
transaction reporting procedures.
Dealers that have a high percentage of such trades should review
their procedures to determine why transaction data is being entered
inaccurately.
- Executing
Broker Symbol (EBS) Statistics – These statistics indicate the
percentage of trade submissions for which the field identifying the dealer
that effected the trade is either empty or contains an invalid entry. These statistics are compiled for every
member of NSCC.[6] It provides information on three types
of EBS errors: 1) null EBS, where
a dealer left the EBS field blank; 2) numeric EBS, where a dealer entered
a number in the EBS field; and 3) unknown EBS, where a dealer populated
the EBS field with a symbol that is not a valid NASD-assigned EBS. A large number of EBS errors may
indicate that both clearing firm and correspondent dealer reporting
procedures and/or software need to be reviewed to ensure that the EBS is
entered correctly and does not “drop out” of the data during the
submission process. The
compatibility of correspondent dealer and clearing broker reporting
systems also may need to be examined.
Note on Stamped Advisories
Firms often stamp advisories on T+1
after failing to submit accurate inter-dealer transaction information on trade
date. A stamped advisory essentially is
a message sent through the NSCC comparison system by the clearing firm on one
side of a trade indicating that it agrees with the trade details submitted by
the contra party.
A significant percentage of stamped advisories is a
concern for two reasons. First, trades
compared via a stamped advisory cannot be published in the Daily Report because
they do not compare on trade date.
Second, unless the dealer stamping the advisory verifies every data
element submitted by the contra party (including accrued interest, time of
trade and EBS) stamping the advisory may effectively confirm erroneous data
about the trade, which will be included in the surveillance data provided to
market regulators. With particular
respect to EBS, both the MSRB and the NASD have observed that dealers do not
always include accurate contra parties’ EBSs in transaction reports. As a result, when a firm “stamps” a contra
party’s submission, its own EBS may not be correctly included in the
transaction report sent to the MSRB.
In lieu of stamping an advisory, it is possible for
a dealer to submit an “as of” trade record to match an advisory pending against
it. This serves the same purpose as
stamping an advisory but in addition allows the dealer to input its own EBS (and
other data elements) and thus ensure the accuracy of the information about its
side of the trade. While the trade will
still be reported late, the data about the trade will be more likely to be
correct.
Note on Clearing Broker-Correspondent Issues
While Rule G-14 notes that accurate
and timely transaction reporting is primarily a responsibility of the firm that
effected a trade, it also notes that a firm may use an agent or intermediary to
submit trade information on its behalf.
For inter-dealer trades, a direct member of NSCC must be used to input
transaction data if the dealer effecting the transaction is not itself a direct
member. This Rule G-14 requirement that
a clearing broker and correspondent work together to submit transaction
reporting data in a timely and accurate manner is the same as exists in Rule
G-12(f) on inter-dealer comparison.
Where there is a
clearing-correspondent relationship between dealers, timely and accurate
submission of trade data to NSCC generally requires specific action by both the
direct member of NSCC (who clears the trade) as well as the correspondent
firm. The MSRB has noted that the
responsibility for proper trade submission is shared between the correspondent
and its clearing broker.[7] Clearing brokers, their correspondents and
their contra-parties all have a responsibility to work together to resolve
inaccurate or untimely information on transactions in municipal
securities. A clearing firm’s use of a
large number of stamped advisories may indicate systemic problems with the
clearing broker’s procedures, the correspondents’ procedures, or both.[8]
Customer Transactions
Dealers that engage in municipal
securities transactions with customers also are required to submit accurate and
complete trade information to the MSRB by midnight of trade date under Rule
G-14. MSRB customer transaction
reporting requirements include the reporting of time of trade and the dealer’s
EBS for each trade.
Dealers have flexibility in the way
they report customer transactions to the MSRB Transaction Reporting
System. The three options available
allow dealers to: 1) transmit customer transaction data directly to NSCC,
which, using its communications line with MSRB, forwards trade data to the MSRB
the evening on which it is received; 2) send the data via an intermediary, such
as a clearing broker or service bureau, to NSCC, which forwards the data to the
MSRB; or 3) submit the data directly to the MSRB using a PC dial-up connection
and software provided by the MSRB.
The MSRB Dealer Feedback System
also provides dealers with performance statistics for customer trade
reporting. These statistics include:
- Ineligible
– This statistic reflects the percentage of a dealer’s initial
customer trade records that were ineligible for the Daily Report, because
either the trade reports were submitted after trade date or they contained
some other dealer error that caused it to be rejected by the MSRB
Transaction Reporting System.
- Late
– Initial customer trade records that were submitted after trade date are
indicated in this statistic and are a subset of ineligible trades. This percentage is reported separately
because late reporting is the most common reason for trade records to be
ineligible for the Daily Report.
- Cancelled
– This is the percentage of a dealer’s initial customer trade records
that were cancelled by the dealer after initial submission. Cancelled trades are a cause for
concern because the data in the trade record submitted prior to
cancellation may have already been included in the Daily Report.
- Amended – This is the percentage of a dealer’s initial customer
trade records that were amended by the dealer after initial submission.
Amended trades are a cause for concern because the data in the trade record
may have already been included in the Daily Report. While it is important
that customer trades be immediately amended if any of the required information
was incorrectly reported, dealers sometimes amend customer trade records
unnecessarily. If trade details solely for internal dealer recordkeeping
or delivery are changed, the dealer should ensure that its processing systems
do not automatically send MSRB an “amend” record. For example, if a transaction
is reported correctly to the MSRB on trade date, the dealer should not amend
the transaction (or cancel and resubmit another transaction record to the
MSRB) simply because customer account numbers or allocation and delivery
information is added or changed in the dealer’s own records.[9]
Amendments to change settlement dates for when-issued transaction also are
generally unnecessary. Since MSRB monitors settlement dates for new issues
through other sources, dealers should not send amended trade records merely
because the settlement date becomes known. Dealers may find that their
automated systems are sending amended trade records to the MSRB in these
cases, even though amendments are unneeded.
Attention to these areas could greatly reduce the number of amendments sent
to MSRB by some dealers.
- Invalid
Time of Trade – This statistic reflects the total number of trade records
submitted by a dealer in which the time of trade is null or not within the
hours of 0600 to 2100. Accurate
times of trade are essential to regulatory surveillance as they provide an
audit trail of trading activity.
Questions / Further Information
Questions about this notice may be directed to staff
at either MSRB or NASD. At MSRB,
contact P. John Baughman, Senior Data Analyst, or Justin R. Pica, Uniform
Practice Specialist, at (703) 797-6600.
At NASD’s Department of Member Regulation, contact Malcolm Northam,
Director, Fixed Income Securities, at (202) 728-8085, or Cynthia Friedlander,
Regulatory Specialist, at (202) 728-8133.
For more information on transaction reporting, including questions and
answers and the customer transaction reporting system user guide, or to sign up
for the Dealer Feedback System, we encourage dealers to visit the MSRB Web site
at www.msrb.org, particularly the Municipal
Price Reporting / Transaction Reporting System section.
[1] The Daily Report is available by subscription at no
cost. Currently, “frequently traded”
securities are those that traded two or more times during a trading day. As noted below, inter-dealer transactions
must be compared on trade date to be eligible for this report.
[2] The MSRB also publishes a “Daily Comprehensive Report,”
providing details of all municipal securities transactions that were effected
during the trading day one week earlier.
The Daily Comprehensive Report is available by subscription for $2,000
per year. Along with trades in issues
that are not “frequently traded,” this report includes transactions reported to
the MSRB late, inter-dealer trades compared after trade date, and transaction
data corrected by dealers after trade date.
[3] A dealer may call the MSRB at (703) 797-6600 and ask to
speak with a Transaction Reporting Assistant who can check to see if its firm
is signed up for this free service.
[4] A complete description of the service is available at www.msrb.org
in the Municipal Price Reporting / Transaction Reporting System section. NASD also has informed dealers of this
service in “Municipal Transaction Reporting Compliance Information,” Regulatory
and Compliance Alert (Summer
2002).
[5] Under NSCC procedures, no buy-side trade report should be
submitted for comparison against a syndicate “takedown” trade submitted by the
syndicate manager. Syndicate
transactions are “one-sided submissions” and compare automatically after being
submitted by the syndicate manager.
Paragraph (a) (ii) of Rule G-14 procedures
thus requires that only the syndicate manager submit the trade.
[6] The EBS statistics reflect the aggregate number of
such errors found in transaction data submitted by a particular NSCC member
firm for itself and/or for its correspondents.
This statistic cannot be generated individually for each correspondent
because the EBS needed to identify the correspondent is itself missing or invalid. EBS statistics only measure the validity of
the input the submitter provides to identify its own side of the trade and do
not measure the accuracy with which a dealer uses EBSs to identify its
contra-parties.
[7] In 1994, the MSRB stated that, “introducing brokers share
the responsibility for complying with [Rule G-12(f)] with their clearing
brokers. Introducing brokers who fail
to submit transaction information in a timely and accurate manner could subject
either or both parties to enforcement action for violating [Rule
G-12(f)].” See “Enforcement
Initiative,” MSRB Reports, Vol. 14, No. 3 (June 1994) at 35. NASD has since reiterated this policy; see
the following articles in Regulatory and Compliance Alert: “Introducing
Firm Responsibility When Reporting Municipal Trades Through Service Bureaus and
Clearing Firms” (Winter 2000)
and “Municipal Securities Transaction Reporting Compliance Information” (Spring 2001).
[8] As explained above,
one of the problems often associated with stamped advisories is that the EBS on
transaction records may be missing or inaccurate. Since a clearing broker may have many correspondents, stamping an
advisory can make it impossible for market regulators to know which
correspondent actually effected the trade.
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