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SEC Regulations
17 CFR PARTs 240 and 242
[Release No. 34-44992 ; File No. S7-26-98]
RIN 3235-AH04
Books and Records Requirements for Brokers and Dealers Under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Agency: Securities and Exchange Commission.
Action: Final rule; Request
for Comments on Paperwork Reduction Act Burden Estimate.
Summary: The Securities and
Exchange Commission today is adopting amendments to its broker-dealer books and
records rules. The amendments clarify and expand recordkeeping requirements
with respect to purchase and sale documents, customer records, associated
person records, customer complaints, and certain other matters. In addition,
the amendments expand the types of records that broker-dealers must maintain
and require broker-dealers to maintain or promptly produce certain records at
each office to which those records relate. These amendments are specifically
designed to assist securities regulators when conducting sales practice
examinations of broker-dealers, particularly examinations of local offices.
Effective
Date:
The release will publish on November 2, 2001. The effective date is May 2,
2003.
For
Further Information Contact: Michael A. Macchiaroli, Associate Director,
at (202) 942-0131; Thomas K. McGowan, Assistant Director, at (202) 942-4886; or
Bonnie L. Gauch, Attorney, at (202) 942-0765; Office of Risk Management and
Control, Division of Market Regulation, United States Securities and Exchange
Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549-1001.
Supplementary
Information:
I. Introduction
The
Securities and Exchange Commission's (the "Commission") books and
records rules, Rule 17a-3
and Rule 17a-4
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange
Act")(hereinafter the "Books and Records Rules"), specify
minimum requirements with respect to the records that broker-dealers must make,
and how long those records and other documents relating to a broker-dealer's
business must be kept. The Commission has required that broker-dealers create
and maintain certain records so that, among other things, the Commission,
self-regulatory organizations ("SROs"), and State Securities
Regulators
(collectively "securities regulatory authorities") may conduct
effective examinations of broker-dealers.
The
Commission originally proposed amending the Books and Records Rules in 1996 in
response to concerns raised by members of the North American Securities
Administrator's Association ("NASAA") regarding the adequacy of those
Rules.
On October 11, 1996, the National Securities Market Improvement Act of 1996
("NSMIA") was enacted.
NSMIA prohibits States from establishing books and records rules that differ
from, or are in addition to, the Commission's rules. Prior to NSMIA many States
had laws or rules that required broker-dealers to make and keep certain books
and records that allowed the State Securities Regulators to conduct
examinations and investigations to review for, among other things, sales
practice violations.
NSMIA also provides that the Commission must consult periodically with the
States concerning the adequacy of the Commission's Books and Records Rules,
particularly relating to the need by State Securities Regulators to have
records readily accessible for their examinations.
The
Commission, recognizing the vital role that State regulators play in providing
for customer protection, issued the Proposing Release, in part, to enhance the
ability of the State Securities Regulators to conduct effective and efficient
sales practice examinations of activities within their respective States,
including those involving smaller broker-dealer offices. By adopting these
rules, the Commission enables the State regulators to adopt and enforce similar
rules on a State level, to support their examination responsibilities, and
investigatory and enforcement requirements. An important aspect of the
amendments is that broker-dealers are required to produce records at offices
within a State. Moreover, many of these amendments require broker-dealers to
make or keep records currently kept by broker-dealers as a matter of business
practice or to comply with SRO rules. However, unless these requirements are
adopted as Commission rules, the State regulators are unable to apply or
enforce them at the State level.
II. Proposing and Reproposing Releases
In response to the comments received on the Proposing Release, the Commission substantially
modified the amendments, and reproposed them to allow for public comment on the
modifications.
In response to the reproposal, the Commission received approximately 115
comment letters from various groups, including broker-dealers, law firms representing broker-dealers, industry associations, and State Securities Regulators. Generally, State
Securities Regulators supported the rules as reproposed, but suggested some minor
changes. While broker-dealers generally supported the Commission's efforts to
adopt uniform books and records rules, they opposed various sections of the
reproposed rules. In particular, firms were opposed to the requirements to
periodically update the customer account record and to maintain records at
local offices. As discussed in the respective sections throughout this release,
the Commission has substantially modified the content of the re-proposed
amendments and incorporated many of the suggested changes into the final rules.
To a significant degree, the amendments to Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4 adopted by the
Commission track existing SRO requirements and certain State regulations that
were in place prior to NSMIA. In addition, they largely represent a codification of prudent recordkeeping practices of many broker-dealers. Accordingly, many
portions of the Books and Records Rule amendments should not present additional burdens for most broker-dealers.
III. Amendments to Rule 17a-3
In brief, the amendments to present Rule 17a-3 include revisions to the information that
must be recorded on order tickets, and new requirements to: create certain
records relating to associated persons; collect certain account record
information and verify that information with customers periodically; create a
record of customer complaints; create a record indicating compliance with
applicable advertising rules; and create records identifying persons
responsible for establishing procedures and persons able to explain the broker-dealer's
records to a regulator.
A. Memoranda of Brokerage Orders and Dealer Transactions
Rule 17a-3 has been amended to require that a brokerage order ticket contain the identity
of the associated person, if any, responsible for the account and any other person
who entered or accepted the order on behalf of the customer, and whether it was
entered subject to discretionary authority. In addition, a brokerage order
ticket must include the time at which the broker-dealer received a customer
order, even if the order is subsequently transmitted for execution.
A dealer ticket must include information regarding any modifications to the
order.
This will allow securities regulators to better focus their examinations and
investigations because they will be able to identify certain types of violative
activities and the individuals responsible for those activities more easily.
The Commission clarified that the identity of the associated person responsible for
the account must be included only if the broker-dealer assigns to an associated
person responsibility for certain accounts. This modification was made in
response to broker-dealer comment letters that noted some firms do not assign a
particular associated person to each account, and some firms allow customers to
enter orders directly into a broker-dealer's systems, such as through an
on-line trading account. Further, this modification addresses the concerns of
some commenters that without a qualifying phrase, such as "if any,"
the rule may be interpreted erroneously as placing on firms an affirmative
obligation to assign an associated person to each account.
If a firm has assigned identification numbers or codes to the persons entering customer
orders to comply with the requirement to record the identity of the person
entering customer orders, a broker-dealer may record the identification number
or code on the order ticket instead of the associated person's name. Further,
if the person entering a customer order has been assigned to a computer
terminal but does not have a specific identification number or code, it is
acceptable for the broker-dealer to identify the number or code of a computer
terminal at which an order was entered. In either case, upon request by a representative of a securities regulatory authority, the firm must provide the actual identity of the
person who entered the order. Either of these alternatives may be satisfied by
using a companion record to the order tickets.
With these amendments, paragraphs (a)(6) and (a)(7) require that broker-dealers record the
identity of "any [person other than the associated person responsible for
the account] who entered or accepted the order on behalf of the customer."
In response to comments by the online brokerage community, the Commission
included, after this requirement, the phrase, "if a customer entered the
order on an electronic system, a notation of such entry." Because most
firms that accept orders through an electronic system already identify, for
supervisory purposes, which orders were entered directly by a customer, this
requirement will not create much additional burden on the firms. Further, it
will assist them in identifying for securities regulatory authorities why
certain tickets do not identify the associated person who received the order
from the customer.
One commenter argued that firms that primarily accept "unsolicited"
orders and do not pay transaction-based commissions should not be required to
include on the order ticket information regarding associated persons because no
sales practice concerns would be implicated in these types of transactions.
However, the Commission believes that recording the identity of the associated
person on a broker-dealer's order tickets is essential for adequate
surveillance of, and accountability for, transactions.
One commenter wrote that for some transactions the time of entry frequently is
simultaneous or nearly simultaneous with the time the order is received, and
suggested that under these conditions, the firm should not have to make a
separate entry for each time. In those situations, it must be clear from the
order ticket that the time of receipt was the same as the time of entry.
However, the time recorded must be accurate and this should not be construed as
an exception to allow firms to use an approximate time for one or both entries.
Finally, the Commission recognizes that for some types of transactions, such as
purchases of mutual funds or variable annuities, the customer may simply fill
out an application or a subscription agreement that the broker-dealer then
forwards directly to the issuer.
These documents would include the information that is important for and
specific to the particular type of transaction. Hence, the Commission has added
paragraph (a)(6)(ii) under Rule 17a-3 to allow firms to keep a copy of the
application or subscription document instead of making a separate record as to transactions described in
the exemption. This paragraph would also exempt transactions such as automatic
dividend reinvestments. The Commission views this additional paragraph as a
codification of current industry practice, and it is limited to these types of
transactions.
B.
Associated Person Records
1.
New Records Concerning Associated Persons
Rule 17a-3(a)(12) requires a firm to make records relating to associated persons of
the firm, including information regarding the associated person's employment
and disciplinary history. The amendments require a
record listing all of a firm's associated persons showing every office where
each associated person regularly conducts business, and listing all internal
identification numbers and the CRD number assigned to each associated person.
This will allow securities regulators to identify where associated persons
work, and to read various records which may identify the associated persons
solely through the use of identification numbers. Also, three technical changes
were made from the rule as reproposed.
2.The Definition of Associated Person
The Commission had proposed to eliminate from Rule 17a-3 a definition of
"associated person" and instead use the definition of
"associated person" as defined in sections 3(a)(18) and 3(a)(21) of
the Exchange Act. However, the statutory definition of "associated person
of a broker or dealer" in section 3(a)(18) specifically excludes those
persons whose functions are clerical or ministerial from the definition solely
for purposes of section 15(b) of the Exchange Act. Current Rule 17a-3 excludes
those persons from the recordkeeping requirements. The Commission has
determined that those persons should continue to be exempt from the
recordkeeping requirements of Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4. Therefore, the Commission
believes it is appropriate to retain a definition of the term "associated
person" in the rule. This definition has been moved to paragraph (g),
however, and has been modified for the sake of uniformity to incorporate the
definitions of "associated person of a member" and "associated
person of a broker or dealer" as set forth in sections 3(a)(21) and
3(a)(18) of the Exchange Act.
In addition, for purposes of Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4, the Commission has excluded
from the definition persons whose functions are solely clerical or ministerial.
In order to avoid redundancy and achieve greater consistency in interpretation,
this phrase shall be interpreted in the same manner as the phrase "solely
clerical and ministerial" is interpreted under section 3(a)(18) of the
Exchange Act.
The Exchange Act provisions define an associated person to include any partner,
officer, director, or branch manager of a broker-dealer (any person occupying a
similar status or performing similar functions), any person directly or
indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with a
broker-dealer, or any employee of a broker-dealer. This includes order-takers.
The Commission interprets the term associated person to include any independent
contractor, consultant, franchisee, or other person providing services to a
broker-dealer equivalent to those services provided by the persons specifically
referenced in the statute.
C. Customer Account Record
The Commission is adopting new Rule 17a-3(a)(17)
under the Exchange Act, which requires broker-dealers to create a record
containing certain minimum information as to each customer. The primary purpose
of Rule 17a-3(a)(17) is to provide regulators, particularly State Securities
Regulators, with access to books and records which enable them to review for
compliance with suitability rules.
Rule 17a-3(a)(17) also requires broker-dealers to furnish that information to
each customer on a periodic basis. The rule should not be construed to affect
or supersede any federal, State, or SRO requirement, including those relating
to "know your customer," suitability, or supervisory obligations.
1.
Account Record Information
The
information required under new Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i)(A) for each account with a
natural person as a customer includes the customer's name, tax identification
number, address, telephone number, date of birth, employment status (including
occupation and whether the customer is an associated person of a member, broker
or dealer), annual income, net worth (excluding value of primary residence),
and investment objectives. Most broker-dealers already collect this information
to assist them in assessing customers' suitability or to comply with other
rules. For accounts with more than one owner, the record should include
personal information for each owner of the account; however, the record should
reflect the investment objectives for the account and not the individual
investment objectives for each "joint" owner named on the account.
Further, financial information for the owners can be combined. For
discretionary accounts, firms also must include as part of the account record
the dated signature of each customer granting the discretionary authority and
the dated signature of each natural person
to whom discretionary authority was granted. In response to comments received,
the Commission did not adopt the reproposed requirement that the account record
include information regarding a customer's marital status and number of
dependents.
Under the
final rule, the account record must indicate whether it has been signed by the
associated person responsible for the account, and approved or accepted by a
principal of the firm.
This will identify for regulators the persons responsible for accepting a
particular account on behalf of the firm. Similar to the comments made
regarding order tickets, some commenters stated that they do not always assign
an associated person to each account. Therefore, the Commission has added the
phrase "if any" to the requirement that the account record indicate
whether it has been approved by an associated person. The account record still
must indicate whether it has been approved by a principal.
In the
Reproposal, the Commission specifically sought comment on whether, for joint
accounts, the firm should obtain the account record information for each
individual. Most commenters that addressed this issue did not object to
maintaining personal information for each owner of joint accounts. However,
some commenters pointed out that it would be unnecessary and redundant to
obtain individual information for certain types of joint accounts, such as a
joint account of two spouses with similar information regarding income and net
worth. These commenters also contended that the investment objectives should
reflect the objectives for the account and not the objectives of the individual
owners. In those cases, it is sufficient under paragraph (a)(17) of Rule 17a-3
that the account record reflect that portions of the account record information
are the same for each owner of the account. It is acceptable for firms to
combine joint owners' financial information as opposed to obtaining and
maintaining that information separately for each of the joint owners. Lastly,
the investment objectives recorded should be those for the account, and not
those of the individual owners.
Some commenters
requested clarification as to how this information must be maintained and
whether all the information and signatures must be included on the same form.
Although a broker-dealer must create a single record for each account, that
record may consist of more than one document, such as two or more account
applications.
A
broker-dealer is not required to furnish a copy of a customer's account record
to the customer within thirty days when obtaining new information to complete
the initial account record, required under Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i)(A),
for an account in existence on the effective date of the rule amendments.
However, as stated in Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i)(B)(1),
broker-dealers must create a record indicating that the broker-dealer furnished
these customers with a copy of the account record information within three
years of the effective date of the rule.
2.
Furnishing the Account Record Information
Rule
17a-3(a)(17) requires that the firm periodically furnish account record
information to the customer.
The new requirement allows the customer to review the information regarding the
account that the firm has on file and from which the associated person or the
firm is making investment recommendations or suitability determinations for the
account. The requirement to furnish this record to customers is designed to
reduce the number of misunderstandings between customers and broker-dealers
regarding the customer's situation or investment objectives. Firms may, of
course, elect to provide this information to customers more frequently in order
to coincide with other mailings.
Paragraph
(a)(17) of the rule identifies four provisions that trigger the requirement
that a broker-dealer furnish to a customer a copy of information contained in
the account record.
Those provisions include (i) the opening of a new account;
(ii) the periodic updating of an account that must occur at least once every 36
months;
(iii) a change of customer name or address;
and (iv) a change of other customer information.
Although paragraph
(a)(17)(i) of Rule 17a-3 requires broker-dealers to periodically update
customer records, the rule does not affect a broker-dealer's obligations under
any SRO "know your customer" rules. It may be appropriate in certain
circumstances for broker-dealers to obtain updated information from customers
more often than once every 36 months.
Because
different terms ascribed to categories of investment objectives may vary among
firms, the firms must describe these terms when furnishing the account record to
customers. When opening an account, the customer has the opportunity to
question the meaning of the investment objective terms, but when the customer
receives a copy of the account record at home, that customer may have forgotten
or misunderstood the meaning of those terms. This requirement to describe
investment objective terminology should help ensure that the customer and the
firm have a mutual understanding of the meaning of each term.
Paragraph
(a)(17) of Rule 17a-3 also provides that a broker-dealer is not required to
include the customer's tax identification number and date of birth with the
information provided to the customer. Several commenters suggested that
unauthorized access to such information could facilitate the perpetration of
fraud against the customer.
The
Commission did not adopt the portion of the rule as reproposed that would have
required firms to send a notification of change of address to both the old and
new addresses. This change was in response to comments that prudent business
practice requires that this notification be sent only to the old address to
prevent misdirection of account information. Therefore, as adopted, firms are
required to send a notification of a change of address only to the old address.
Some
commenters sought clarification as to whether the amendment required a separate
mailing of the customer account record information. This rule does not require
a separate mailing, and the Commission anticipates that firms will combine this
mailing with other mailings. Further, the account record information may be
printed on a customer's account statement. Finally, a firm may mail the
customer a copy of the customer's complete account record reflecting any change
of other account record information
on or before the 30th day after the date the member, broker or dealer received
notice of any change, or it may choose to send this notification with the next
statement scheduled to be mailed to the customer.
3.
Explanation of the Neglect, Refusal, or Inability of a Customer to Provide
Required Information
As adopted,
Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i)(C) does not require broker-dealers to include an
explanation of the customer's neglect, refusal, or inability to provide the
required information. However, a broker-dealer is required to make a good faith
effort to collect this information. If the account record does not include the
required information, the broker-dealer would bear the burden of explaining why
this information is not available. Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i)(C) is specifically
limited in application to paragraph (a)(17), and does not apply to any other
federal or SRO rules regarding collections of information (e.g., Rule
17a-3(a)(9)).
4.
Exemption from Account Record Information Requirements
A number of
broker-dealer firms argued that the Commission should create an exemption from
the account record information requirements of Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i), contending
that this record is intended to allow examiners to review for suitability, but
broker-dealers are not subject to SRO suitability requirements for all of their
accounts.
Therefore, they argue, where they have no suitability obligation, they should
not be required to obtain account record information. The Commission is
adopting the account record requirements with an exemption for certain
accounts,
such that a broker-dealer is not required to create an account record for an
account if the firm is not required (under any federal or SRO rules) to make a
suitability determination as to the account. However, the obligation to collect
and record information of the type enumerated in Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i)(A) may
arise under SRO rules and interpretations. If, after the account is opened, the
firm or its associated person engage in conduct that would subject the firm to
any requirement to make a suitability determination, the firm must obtain the
information before making such a recommendation. The firm would have to comply
thereafter with the requirement to furnish customers with a copy of their
account record for verification, under paragraph (a)(17)(i)(B)(1) of
Rule 17a-3, but the account could re-qualify for the exemption.
For
accounts existing on the effective date of these amendments, a broker-dealer
will not be required to create or update the account record if, within the
36-month period beginning on the effective date of this rule, the firm has not
been required to make a suitability determination as to that account.
For the
purposes of paragraph (a)(17)(i)(D) of Rule 17a-3, the term "suitability
determination" should be interpreted broadly. A broker-dealer may have an
obligation to perform a suitability determination under the Exchange Act,
Commission rules,
SRO rules,
or common law.
Rule 17a-3(a)(17) does not change or limit a broker-dealer's obligation to make
a suitability determination.
It is
important to note that even if a broker-dealer is not required to create an
account record under Rule 17a-3(a)(17) for an account, the firm must still
comply with federal laws and regulations and SRO rules requiring collections of
information regarding customer accounts, including paragraph (a)(9) of Rule
17a-3,
NYSE Rule 405, and MSRB Rule G-8(a)(xi).
5.
Applicability of Account Record Requirements and 36-Month Grace Period
The
requirement to create an account record applies to both new and existing
accounts. For accounts opened on or after the effective date of these
amendments ("new accounts"), the firm must obtain the account record
information required under Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i)(A) when the account is opened.
As
originally proposed, the grace period to obtain the customer account record
information for accounts existing on the effective date of these amendments would
have been one year. However, many commenters
stated that with a large number of accounts it would be unduly burdensome to
obtain the account record information within one year. Therefore, the
Commission has provided broker-dealers with a 36-month grace period.
Specifically, under paragraph (B)(1) of Rule 17a-3(a)(17)(i), for
accounts existing on the effective date of these amendments, a firm will have
36 months to obtain the information required on the account record under
paragraph (a)(17)(i)(A) of Rule 17a-3. The new 36-month furnishing cycle under
paragraph (a)(17)(i)(B) of Rule 17a-3 will begin when the firm obtains the
account record information within the initial 36-month grace period.
6.
Written Customer Agreements
New
paragraph (a)(17)(iii) of Rule 17a-3 requires each broker-dealer to create a
record for each account indicating that each customer
was furnished with a copy of any written agreement entered into on or after the
effective date of this paragraph pertaining to that account. This will allow
customers to review the terms of agreements to which they are subject, and to
better understand their rights and responsibilities (and those of the
broker-dealer) under these agreements. In addition, if any customer
specifically requests a copy of an agreement relating to their account, this
paragraph would require that the broker-dealer maintain a record that it was
provided to the customer.
D.
Complaints
New
paragraph (a)(18)(i) of Rule 17a-3
requires firms to make a record as to each associated person that includes
every written customer complaint received by the firm concerning that
associated person.
This will allow securities regulators to quickly identify any trends, and focus
examinations. This record must include complaints received electronically from
customers. The rule requires that the record include the complainant's name,
address, and account number; the date the complaint was received; the name of
each associated person identified in the complaint; a description of the nature
of the complaint; and the disposition of the complaint. However, because firms
already are required to keep originals of incoming written complaints,
rather than make a separate record, firms have the option under this rule to
keep the original complaint along with a record of the disposition of the
complaint, if kept by name of associated person. This rule does not limit a
broker-dealer's responsibilities under SRO and other regulations that may
require creation and maintenance of records regarding, or reporting of, oral
complaints.
Paragraph
(ii) of Rule 17a-3(a)(18) requires firms to make a record indicating that each
customer has been provided with a notice of the address and telephone number of
the department of the firm to which any complaints may be directed.
This will assist both customers and broker-dealers to ensure that complaints
reach the proper person or department so they can be recorded, reported (if
necessary), and answered. Some commenters requested clarification of whether,
in an introducing/clearing relationship,
the contact information should be that of the introducing firm, the clearing firm,
or both. To the extent not otherwise required, this should be a matter of
negotiation between the introducing firm and the clearing firm.
If contact information is provided for both firms, the notification should
clearly indicate which firm the customer should contact and for what purposes.
Two other commenters requested clarification as to whether this notification
could take the form of a notice on customer statements.
The Commission believes that firms should have flexibility as to how they may
deliver this notice to customers, and inserting the notice on a customer
statement is one acceptable alternative.
E.
Compensation
Paragraph
(a)(19)(i) of Rule 17a-3 requires firms to make a record as to each associated
person listing each purchase and sale of a security
attributable, for compensation purposes, to that associated person. Again, the
purpose for this requirement is to allow securities regulators to quickly
identify compensation trends and focus examinations. The record must include
the amount of compensation (if monetary) and a description of the compensation
(if non-monetary). Under this requirement, firms must make records of all
commissions, concessions, overrides, and other compensation to the extent they
are earned or accrued for transactions. In addition, if the compensation is
non-monetary, that description should include an estimate of its value.
The term
"non-monetary compensation" includes compensation such as sales
incentives, gifts, or trips that would be provided to associated persons if
certain sales goals were achieved. Such non-monetary compensation should be
recorded if directly related to sales. If sales would be counted toward
achieving these goals, then a notation of the sales should be made regardless
of whether that goal is actually achieved. Non-monetary compensation does not
include items of little value distributed by the firm.
Paragraph
(ii) of new Rule 17a-3(a)(19)
requires that firms maintain a record of all agreements pertaining to the
relationship between each associated person and the broker-dealer, including a
summary of each associated person's compensation arrangement or plan. Further,
to the extent that compensation is based on factors other than remuneration on
a per trade basis, the firm must make a record that describes the method by
which compensation is to be determined.
It should
be noted that the requirement under paragraph (ii) that a broker-dealer
maintain a record of all agreements between itself and each associated person
includes verbal agreements and records, such as commission schedules, which may
change on a periodic basis.
The term
"relationship," as used in paragraph (a)(19) of Rule 17a-3, solely
refers to the employment or contractual relationship between the associated
person and the broker-dealer. It would not relate to personal relationships
unrelated to the firm's business.
F. Compliance with Requirements for Communications with the
Public
New paragraph
(a)(20) of Rule 17a-3
requires each firm to make a record documenting that the firm has complied
with, or adopted policies and procedures reasonably designed to establish
compliance with, applicable federal regulations and SRO rules which require
that a principal approve any advertisements, sales literature, or other
communications with the public.
This paragraph would apply to marketing materials, sales scripts, and other
paper or electronic material, such as audio or video tapes, used by
broker-dealers in communicating with the public. This paragraph, which is
designed to allow State Securities Regulators to examine broker-dealers for
compliance with SRO rules relating to communications with the public, does not
establish a new
source of
supervisory responsibility. In addition, a broker-dealer has many options as to
how it may create this record.
The
Commission did not adopt the portion of this rule as reproposed that referenced
specific types of advertisements or sales literature. Instead, the Commission
will defer to SRO rules as to which communications with the public must be
approved by a principal of the firm.
G.
Persons to Explain Records and Their Content
Paragraph
(a)(21) of Rule 17a-3 requires a record listing, by name or title, all personnel
at an office who, without delay, can explain the types of records the firm
maintains at that office, and the information contained in those records.
Commenters, particularly the States, indicated that this requirement is
important because recordkeeping practices typically vary from firm to firm in
ways ranging from format and presentation to the name of a record. Therefore,
each firm must be able to promptly explain how it makes, keeps, and titles its
records. To comply with this rule, a firm may identify more than one person and
list which records each person is able to explain.
Because it
may be burdensome for firms to keep this record current if it lists each person
by name, a firm may satisfy this requirement by recording the persons capable
of explaining the firm's records by either name or title.
H.
Record Listing Principals of the Firm
New
paragraph (a)(22) of Rule 17a-3 requires firms to make a record listing each
principal of the firm responsible for establishing policies and procedures reasonably
designed to ensure compliance with any applicable securities regulatory
authority requirements that require acceptance or approval of a record by a
principal. This requirement is unchanged from the reproposal, and is intended
to assist securities regulators by identifying individuals responsible for
designing a broker-dealer's compliance procedures and managing the firm.
I. Definition of Principal
Paragraph
17a-3(g)(2) defines the term "principal" to include any individual
registered with a registered national securities association as a principal or
branch manager of a member, broker or dealer, or any other person who has been
delegated supervisory responsibility for the firm or its associated persons. By
including any person who has been delegated supervisory responsibility in the
definition of the term "principal," the rule has been modified from
the reproposal to include the definitions of "principal" used by
other securities regulatory authorities.
J.
Definition of Securities Regulatory Authority
The
definition of "securities regulatory authority" in paragraph (g)(3)
of Rule 17a-3 is substantially similar to that in the Reproposing Release,
except that State Securities Regulators are identified as "the securities
commissions (or any agency or office performing like functions) of the
States...,"
mirroring the language that Congress used in NSMIA.
K.
Miscellaneous
The
Commission has not adopted reproposed paragraph (a)(20) of Rule 17a-3, which
would have required firms to make a record as to each associated person listing
chronologically all customer purchase or sale transactions for which the
associated person entered the order or was primarily responsible. Commenters
stated that the information required in this record would already be maintained
in other records, although not necessarily in the chronological format that
this paragraph would have required. The Commission also has not adopted
reproposed paragraph (a)(23) of Rule 17a-3, which would have required a firm to
make a record listing each office of the firm and whether that office had been
designated as a State record depository, since firms need no longer designate a
State record depository for any purpose. This proposed record also would have
required firms to list each associated person working out of or storing records
at each office. The Commission has not adopted this requirement because firms
are required to make a record of similar information under new paragraph (ii)
of Rule 17a-3(a)(12).
IV.Office Records
The
Reproposing Release would have required that broker-dealers make certain
records for each local office and maintain copies of those records at the
office to which the records relate. These requirements were designed to assist
securities regulators when conducting sales practice examinations at particular
offices. The Commission has adopted the requirements regarding the creation of
these records substantially as reproposed, but has materially altered the
alternatives for maintenance of those records.
Generally,
State Securities Regulators supported a requirement that records as to a
particular office be maintained at that office, even if only electronically.
The State Securities Regulators stated, in their comment letters, that they had
encountered excessive and costly delays when conducting examinations when
records were kept at another office. In sum, they stated that although firms
generally had the records available in local offices, the firms preferred to
funnel all records requested by examiners through their centralized compliance
departments in order to assure accuracy, anticipate any potential violations,
review material for applicable privileges, and make a record of documents
reviewed by regulators.
While the State regulators have the power to impose fines and penalties on
firms that fail to timely produce records, the delays still result in
unnecessary, wasted examination time at firms waiting for the records
production. The delay is costly for regulators, particularly when they travel
to remote areas to conduct surprise examinations at an office where they may
spend numerous days awaiting the records.
The
broker-dealer commenters were strongly opposed to this requirement for two main
reasons. First, they stated that the requirement to maintain copies of
documents at all local offices would be costly and burdensome because they
would need to create and maintain two sets of records. They stated that even
with the flexibility of being able to maintain the records electronically, this
requirement would be costly because many firms do not currently have computer
systems capable of retaining and producing all the required records. Second,
firms stated that maintaining records at all local offices would force them to
decentralize their recordkeeping, which would potentially compromise their
controls on recordkeeping and supervisory practices.
Requiring
records to be maintained at each local office was the requirement most
seriously disputed by the firms. The reproposal has been altered to allow a
firm, rather than to maintain records at an office, to produce the records
promptly at the request of a representative of a securities regulatory
authority at the office to which the records relate or at such other place as
is agreed to by the representative. These alternative methods for complying
with paragraph (k) of Rule 17a-4 were added in response to comments that the
requirement, as reproposed, would have forced firms to decentralize their
recordkeeping systems and would have compromised their internal controls and
supervisory practices.
The
Commission believes that the amendments to Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4 adopted today,
which set forth, (i) the definition of "office," (ii) what records
must be created as to each office,
and (iii) what records must be maintained at each office,
address the concerns of both regulators and broker-dealers.
A.
Definition of Office
For both
creation and maintenance of records, the definition of "office"
adopted by the Commission includes any location where an associated person
regularly conducts business.
However, an office would not include a customer's office that an associated
person may visit on a regular basis.
The
Commission has also addressed concerns that arise when an associated person's
residence is an office. Rule 17a-4(k) states that a broker-dealer is not
required to produce records at an office that is a private residence, provided
that (i) only one associated person, or multiple associated persons who reside
at that location and are members of the same immediate family,
regularly conduct business at the office; (ii) the office is not held out to
the public as an office; and (iii) neither customer funds nor securities are
handled at that office. Instead, Rule 17a-4(k) allows a broker-dealer to either
maintain those records at some other location within the same State as that
office as the broker-dealer chooses, or to promptly produce those records at an
agreed upon location.
For
purposes of paragraph (f) of Rule 17a-3
and paragraph (k) of Rule 17a-4,
in circumstances where an associated person works out of multiple offices, such
as bank circuit riders, a firm may treat all the locations where the associated
person regularly works as a single office.
B.
Records "As To" Each Office
New
paragraph (f) of Rule 17a-3 requires firms to make and keep current, separately
for each office, certain books and records that reflect the activities of the
office.
It should be noted that 75% of broker-dealers have reported that they have no
branch locations.
The definition of "office" may be broader and more inclusive than the
definition of "branch," however.
The
Commission removed the sentence, "This requirement may be satisfied by
demonstrating that the data is maintained in a system which is capable of
promptly generating records for each office upon request", because the
requirement to either maintain the specified records at each location or
produce them on the same day a request is made has been changed to allow firms
to produce these records promptly.
C.
Records to be Maintained at Office Locations
There have
been two major changes to new paragraph (k) of Rule 17a-4 from the reproposal.
First, the requirement to maintain certain records at the office locations has
been expanded from one year to two years. This was done to establish parity
with the retention requirements for the separate sections as provided under
paragraph (b) of Rule 17a-4.
Second,
under paragraph (k) of Rule 17a-4, if a broker-dealer does not maintain records
at an office, but instead chooses to produce the records upon request, the
broker-dealer must produce the records "promptly."
The word "promptly" has deliberately not been defined in the rule.
Generally, requests for records which are readily available at the office
(either on-site or electronically) should be filled on the day the request is
made. If a request is unusually large or complex, then the firm should discuss
with the regulator a mutually agreeable time-frame for production.
Based on
the foregoing, the Commission has not adopted the reproposed provision of Rule
17a-4(k) that would have allowed firms to maintain records at a State records
depository in lieu of maintaining the records at the office to which the
records relate.
One
commenter requested guidance on how this paragraph relates to a foreign office
of a U.S. registered broker-dealer.
Under paragraph (f) of Rule17a-3, a broker-dealer must make certain records for
a foreign office; however, a broker-dealer is not required to maintain or
produce those records at the foreign office under paragraph (k). Instead, those
records would be maintained at the broker-dealer's main office.
V. Rule 17a-4
A.
General Record Retention Requirements
Paragraphs
(a) and (b)(1) of Rule 17a-4 list certain records required under Rule 17a-3
that must be kept for six and three years, respectively. The amendments to
these two paragraphs have been modified from the reproposal to remain
consistent with the modifications to Rule 17a-3.
B.
Retention of Communications
Paragraph
(b)(4) of Rule 17a-4 previously required that each broker-dealer keep originals
of all communications received and copies of all communications sent by the firm relating to its business as a broker-dealer, including inter-office memoranda
and communications. With respect to memoranda, including e-mail messages, the
Commission has stated that the content and audience of the message determine
whether a copy must be preserved, regardless of whether the message was sent on paper or sent electronically.
The amendments to this paragraph adopted today will require firms to retain
communications that are subject to SRO rules regarding "communications
with the public" (such as advertising) as well, a requirement reproposed
separately as paragraph (b)(10) of Rule 17a-4. This requirement is designed to
provide State Securities Regulators with the ability to access these public
communications records so they can enforce their laws relating to the form and
use of public communications.
It should
be noted that a written advertisement that is never released to the public
would not be covered by this rule; however, a sales script that is used by an
associated person when communicating with the public would be covered even if
the script itself is not delivered to the public.
The
requirement, as reproposed, that "any written procedures [a broker-dealer]
uses for reviewing the communications received or sent" has been moved to
new paragraph (e)(7) of Rule 17a-4, which requires firms to keep all
compliance, supervisory, and procedures manuals, including any written
procedures for reviewing communications.
C.
Organizational Documents
The
Commission has modified paragraph (d) of Rule 17a-4, which require a
broker-dealer to maintain certain organizational records. Specifically, the
Commission has added language to clarify that organizational records of legal
entities not specifically delineated in the present rule
are still required to be preserved under this rule. Various State statutes use
different terms to describe the legal entities that may be created under their
rules and the organizational documents necessary to create those entities;
accordingly, the Commission has included in this paragraph generic terms to describe
the types of records that firms must keep. The Commission believes that
generally broker-dealers that are not formed as corporations or partnerships
are already keeping these types of records and that this amendment codifies
current business practices. Similar to the amendment to paragraph (g)(3) of
Rule 17a-3 noted above, the Commission has replaced the phrase "state
securities jurisdictions and self-regulatory organizations" in the
Reproposing Release with the term "securities regulatory authorities."
Under this
paragraph, every broker-dealer is also required to maintain copies of its Form
BD and all amendments thereto. To comply with this requirement with respect to
amendments to Form BD, a broker-dealer is required to retain a copy of only
those portions of the Form that were amended. The Commission believes that
generally broker-dealers are already keeping these records and that this
amendment codifies current business practices.
D.
Account Record Information
New
paragraph (e)(5) of Rule 17a-4 requires broker-dealers to retain account record
information for six years. The six-year period begins either at the time the
account is closed or when the information is replaced or updated. This
provision will allow regulators to review account record information for at
least the six years immediately prior to the examination or investigation.
Broker-dealers generally maintain account record information for at least the
life of the account to facilitate a number of business purposes, including
suitability determinations and supervision of accounts and representatives.
E.
Special Reports
New
paragraph (e)(6) of Rule 17a-4 requires a firm to keep for three years a copy
of all reports that a securities regulatory authority has requested or required
a specific firm to create. Such special reports would include those reports
that are requested or required under an order or settlement that requires the
firm to produce the report as part of the terms of the order or settlement. The
purpose of this paragraph is to clarify that these records must be kept and to
provide guidance as to how long firms are expected to maintain these records.
This
requirement is not designed to limit the ability of securities regulatory
authorities to obtain records that are otherwise required to be created and
maintained, such as records of internal communications required to be
maintained under paragraph (b)(4) of Rule 17a-4.
F.
Compliance, Supervisory and Procedure Manuals
The
Commission is also adopting, as reproposed, new paragraph (e)(7) of Rule 17a-4.
This paragraph requires firms to retain a copy of all compliance, supervisory,
and procedures manuals describing the firm's policies and practices with
respect to compliance and supervision, as currently in use and for three years
after the termination of the use of each manual, including any updates,
modifications, and revisions to the manuals. This will ensure that securities
regulators are able to obtain information as to what policies and procedures
were in place at a given time.
G. Exception
Reports
New
paragraph (e)(8)(ii) of Rule 17a-4 requires firms to maintain copies of reports
produced to review for unusual activity in customer accounts (commonly referred
to as "exception reports"). This paragraph does not obligate
broker-dealers to create exception reports. Exception reports would include
reports that identify exceptional numerical occurrences, such as frequent
trading in customer accounts, unusually high commissions, or an unusually high
number of trade corrections or cancelled transactions. These reports will help
securities regulators discover sales practice problems such as churning,
unauthorized trading, or other indications of micro-cap fraud, and will also
provide securities regulators with information as to what type of data may have
been available to the broker-dealer.
In lieu of
retaining copies of the reports, a member, broker or dealer may choose to
promptly re-create the reports upon request by a securities regulatory
authority. If the broker-dealer elects to re-create exception reports instead
of maintaining a copy of the report, but the firm has changed its systems so
that it cannot re-create the same report, the broker-dealer may provide a copy
of the report in the format presently available using historical data,
but must also provide a record explaining each system change that affected each
report.
Lastly, if the firm is unable to re-create the report in any format for the
most recent 18 months, due to changes, for example, in a database, software, or
physical system, the rule provides that the broker-dealer may instead provide a
record of the parameters that were used to generate the report for the time
period specified by the representative of the securities regulatory authority.
The Commission provided these alternatives in order to make this rule less
burdensome on broker-dealers.
Many firms
commented that this requirement would be potentially counter-productive
because, if firms are required to retain copies of all reports that they
create, they would create fewer reports. However, the Commission believes that
broker-dealers will continue to create those exception reports that are
necessary to adequately supervise their business, and that retaining these
reports will increase the efficiency of examinations by regulators and may
reduce the examination burden on broker-dealers.
VI. Effective Date
The final
rules adopted today shall become effective 18 months after date of publication
in the Federal Register. The release will publish on November 2, 2001.
The effective date is May 2, 2003.
VII. Technical Amendments
A.
Electronic Storage Media
On February
5, 1997, the Commission amended Rule 17a-4 to allow broker-dealers to employ,
under certain conditions, electronic storage media to maintain its records.
The Commission proposed and is now adopting technical amendments to that rule.
The Electronic Storage Media Release requires a broker-dealer that employs
micrographic or electronic storage media to be ready at all times to
immediately provide a facsimile enlargement upon request by the Commission or
its representatives.
It also requires a broker-dealer that exclusively uses electronic storage media
to fulfill some or all of its record preservation requirements to contract with
a third party download provider that will file undertakings with the
broker-dealer's designated examining authority indicating that the download
provider will furnish promptly to the Commission, its designees or representatives, the information necessary to download information kept on the broker-dealer's
electronic storage media.
Because SROs and State Securities Regulators are neither representatives nor designees of the Commission but, to the extent that they have jurisdiction over
the broker-dealer serviced by the third party download provider, are
organizations that should have access to facsimile enlargements and download
information, the Commission is adopting these technical amendments to provide
them with access to these records. The Commission is also adopting
these technical amendments so that when broker-dealers use the undertaking
option under Regulation ATS, SROs and State Securities Regulators will have
access to those records.
B. Other
Technical Amendments
The
Commission is adopting amendments to Rule 17a-3(a)(12)(i) to update the list of
stock exchanges for which an associated person's application for registration
or approval may be used to satisfy the requirements under that paragraph. This
amendment is a codification of current practices. The Commission is also
adopting amendments to the language throughout Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4 that
eliminate masculine references, and replace them with gender neutral
references.
VIII. Costs and Benefits of the Amendments
In the
Reproposing Release, the Commission requested comment on the costs and benefits
associated with the reproposed rules and rule amendments.
Of the comments received by the Commission, fifty-seven commenters discussed
the benefits and costs associated with the reproposal. Of those commenters,
thirty were broker-dealers,
twenty-two were States,
two were consumer groups,
two were other groups,
and one was an individual.
Most of the commenters (including all of the broker-dealer commenters) argued
that the costs outweighed the benefits of the reproposed amendments and that
the cost estimates provided in the Reproposing Release were too low. Although
most of those arguments were general in nature, twenty-three commenters
specifically referenced paragraph (a)(17)(i) of Rule 17a-3,
and fifteen commenters specifically referenced paragraph (k) of Rule 17a-4.
All the States and the consumer groups that commented argued that most
broker-dealers presently maintained most, if not all, the records required
under the reproposed amendments, and that the benefits, although difficult to
quantify, justified any costs which might be incurred.
One
commenter stated that well-organized firms are less likely to experience the
potentially catastrophic losses that result from serious securities violations.
Many State Securities Regulators indicated in their comment letters that their
agencies generally found that firms with inadequate books and records were more
likely to have other problems, such as inadequate supervisory systems and
selling-away issues. According to the NASD's Office of Dispute Resolution, $126
million and $76 million were awarded by NASD arbitrators in 1999 and 2000
respectively in customer claimant cases, of which $48 million and $21 million
respectively constituted punitive damages.
The vast majority of claims filed for arbitration with the NASD's Office of
Dispute Resolution during this time period related to sales practice issues. In
addition, two industry participants estimated that they presently pay outside counsel approximately $50 million and $25 million respectively each year to
deal with sales practice complaints.
Many States
indicated that they believed the amendments would impose only minimal
additional costs to broker-dealers because, in their experience, many broker-dealers
already maintain the records required by the amendments in order to comply with
SRO rules, State laws that applied prior to NSMIA, or simply to properly manage
costs and supervise offices. Further, some States indicated that they believed
that broker-dealers were exaggerating the potential costs of the reproposed
amendments.
In fact,
the States of Connecticut
and Florida
conducted special reviews, in conjunction with their examination programs, to
determine the extent to which broker-dealers already maintained the records
required under the Reproposal at office locations. The State of Connecticut
concluded that its review "overwhelmingly indicate[d] that all the books
and records that would be required by the re-proposed rule proposal are, at the
present time, being maintained in offices within Connecticut and similarly
outside the state." Further, Connecticut stated, "During this review
process the records were immediately available for inspection upon
request," and "the types of records required by the reproposed rule
would not be burdensome in that the firms retained substantially more records
than required." Connecticut also stated, "[t]he retention schedules
listed in the firms' compliance [manuals] were consistent with the requirements
under the reproposed rule." Florida stated, "[t]he reviews indicated
that based on records maintained most branch offices met or exceeded the
records requirement for the [re-]proposed rule, and "[a] vast majority of
the branch offices maintained the records on-site for periods of at least 2
years (and in some cases up to 6 years)." Further, Connecticut stated,
"[t]he firms' recordkeeping requirements did not vary from location to
location or even state to state because they were required by the firms' own
compliance manuals," and "[i]n certain instances, the firms'
compliance manuals indicated that these additional records were necessary to
adequately supervise its branch operations." Similarly, Florida stated,
"[m]anagement of several firms visited reported that record creation and
retention is a nationwide requirement; the same for all offices in all states,
not specific to the state of Florida...[t]his information was verified by the
firms' Operational/Supervisory Compliance Manuals."
A number of
the States contend that investors are defrauded of millions and millions of
dollars every year as a result of sales practice violations by broker-dealers.
Further, Commission staff found through "The Large Firm Project"
"25% of the branch office examinations conducted in this project resulted
in referrals for enforcement investigation and possible disciplinary
action," and "[t]he examinations also revealed that some branch
office managers were not implementing firm procedures adequately," and
recommended that "the Commission should develop better means of
identifying sales practice problems."
The enhanced recordkeeping requirements would help make available critical
information necessary for securities regulatory authorities to discover and
take appropriate action for various securities violations, particularly sales
practice violations. The cost to securities regulatory authorities to obtain
the same information and evidence that otherwise would be available by these
rules from other methods would be high. In addition, the possibility exists
that government regulatory authorities would be unable to obtain certain
information by any other means if the information is not required to be kept.
Investigatory delays often lead to additional investor losses. The State of New Jersey contended that these delays could lead to an erosion of public confidence in the
industry, which can be exacerbated by the public's belief that securities
regulatory authorities lack the ability to properly oversee broker-dealers and enforce
securities regulations.
NASAA commented that lack of public confidence in the marketplace can lead to
an inability of issuers to raise capital.
Most
broker-dealer commenters indicated that two of the reproposed amendments would
cause them to incur substantial additional costs. These two amendments were
paragraph (k) of Rule 17a-4, which required that records be maintained at local
offices or that firms produce those records at the local office on the same day
a request for records was made by a regulator at that local office, and
paragraph (a)(17)(i) of Rule 17a-3, which required that a broker-dealer provide
customers with a copy of their account record at specified times. As a result
of comments received in response to the Reproposing Release, the Commission
substantially modified those two amendments as described above.
The only
other paragraphs broker-dealers specifically identified as resulting in
increased costs were (a)(6) and (a)(7) of Rule 17a-3, which require that
brokerage order tickets include the time of receipt, and that dealer order
tickets include a notation of any modifications to an order. The Commission
addressed some of these comments by modifying paragraph (a)(6) to provide an
exemption for mutual fund and variable contract orders processed on a
subscription-way basis. Further, for certain securities, the receipt time and
notation of modification are already required under SRO rules.
The only cost to firms resulting from these paragraphs relate to assuring that
processes for recording this information will record the information for all
orders that are not exempt and not just those orders covered by SRO rules.
A few
commenters attempted to provide alternative cost estimates for use in
calculating the costs of the amendments. Some firms provided specific numbers,
but provided no explanation as to the source of their estimates or their reason
for believing that they would be more accurate than the Commission's estimates.
In addition, certain costs are no longer relevant because the Commission
substantially modified the amendments in response to comments. Accordingly,
after consideration of all of the circumstances, the Commission has altered its
cost estimates to reflect the fact that changes were made to the amendments in
response to the comments received. Further, where the amendments were not
altered significantly, the Commission has substantially increased estimates of
costs that commenters argued were significantly underestimated.
The
Commission estimates that the aggregate cost of these amendments will be
approximately between $78.2 million and $84.3 million in the first year, and
between $52.5 and $58.6 million per year thereafter (depending on what
estimated postage cost is included in the calculations). Dollar costs relating
to specific amendments are detailed below.
For
purposes of this cost-benefit analysis, the amendments to Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4
are divided into three groups: (i) those pertaining to the maintenance of
office records and alternatives to these requirements; (ii) those pertaining to
the periodic updating of customer information; and (iii) all other new
requirements covered by the amendments.
A.
Changes to Rule 17a-4, Including Maintenance of Office Records and Alternatives
to these Requirements
As amended,
Rule 17a-4 requires broker-dealers to maintain certain records at each office.
As discussed above, new Rule 17a-4(k) was modified from the reproposal to
provide broker-dealers with the alternative of "promptly" producing
certain records pertaining to a particular office at that office or at a
mutually agreeable alternative location. This modification should significantly
reduce the compliance costs associated with the amendments.
The
amendments standardize the amount of time broker-dealers must maintain certain
records, and may thereby increase the amount of time these records are kept by
certain firms. Broker-dealers generally maintain these records already to
comply with Federal laws or regulations, SRO rules, or in the normal course of
business. These records include, (i) information relating to the principals
responsible for reviewing and updating policies and procedures, (ii) copies of
Forms BD, BDW and amendments thereto, (iii) copies of compliance, supervisory,
and procedures manuals, (iv) customer account records, (v) order ticket
information, (vi) records relating to compensation of associated persons, (vii)
evidence of compliance with SRO advertising and sales literature rules, (viii)
exception reports, and (ix) specialized reports produced pursuant to an order
or settlement.
The
amendments will also standardize the type of records that must be kept by
broker-dealers and the manner in which those records must be produced during
examinations. Before NSMIA, States had various books and records requirements.
Although these requirements were similar to Commission and SRO requirements,
differences existed that broker-dealers had to track and comply with. As one
commenter stated, "the cost savings to industry of moving from compliance
in the pre-NSMIA days with a variety of State laws to a new uniform should be
equally substantial and should more than make up for any [additional] burden
imposed by the [amendments]."
The uniformity provided by NSMIA and these amendments to Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4
should result in significant cost savings to broker-dealers that operate in
multiple jurisdictions.
1.
Benefits
The
amendments should result in increased efficiency and effectiveness of
broker-dealer examinations, especially with respect to small offices.
Increasing the efficiency of examinations tends to decrease the costs incurred
by both regulators, whose staff spends time conducting examinations, and
broker-dealers, whose personnel may be inconvenienced for the period the
examiners are present in their offices. One State estimated that the average
cost for them to perform an office examination was $1,300 to $1,500 per day.
Another State suggested that a local office with well organized records
normally takes 2 to 3 days to complete, but that an office with incomplete
records takes an additional 2 or more days.
While average costs and time periods may vary from State to State, their
operations tend to be similar and the Commission expects the amendments to
reduce the time and costs of State securities examinations. This will also
allow regulators to identify abusive practices earlier during inspections and
perform more targeted examinations. In addition, broker-dealers should benefit
by having their operations interrupted for shorter time periods. Costs of
examinations may also be further reduced due to the uniformity of the
recordkeeping provided by the amendments, because regulators and broker-dealers
will know what records the firms should have on hand.
2.
Costs
The
amendments were drafted to permit flexible methods for the creation and
maintenance of records in order to reduce the burdens on broker-dealers. This
gives broker-dealers the flexibility to choose the least costly method to
comply with the rules based upon their present processes and systems
capabilities.
The
Commission believes that the amendments to Rule 17a-4 will not impose
significant cost burdens because, in order to comply with federal laws or
regulations, SRO rules, or in the normal course of business, broker-dealers
already maintain most of the records specified in the amended rule. Similarly,
broker-dealers already are required to provide regulators with books and
records on demand. The Commission estimates that the amendments to Rule 17a-4
could result in additional costs for some broker-dealers who do not presently maintain certain items for the prescribed periods of time or in a manner where they can
be easily segregated by office. On average, the Commission estimates these
additional costs incurred by each broker-dealer to ensure compliance with the
amendments to Rule 17a-4 to be approximately $405.00
per year, resulting in an overall cost to the industry of about $2.9 million
per year.
Also, as
mentioned previously, the State of Connecticut concluded in its study that,
"the types of records required by the re-proposed rule would not be
burdensome in that the firms retained substantially more records than
required."
B.
Periodic Updating of Customer Account Record Information
Paragraph
(a)(17) of Rule 17a-3 requires broker-dealers to obtain additional account
record information. Present federal and SRO rules require that firms obtain and
maintain that same information in many circumstances,
and many broker-dealers presently obtain and maintain this information as a
prudent business practice to avoid disputes with customers, or for other
business reasons.
The
amendments also require that broker-dealers send account record information
to customers for verification within thirty days of account opening and at
least every thirty-six months thereafter
and to require that broker-dealers provide customers with certain account
record information when changes are made.
Many broker-dealers already send customers notification of address changes,
and some also send a copy of a customer's new account form to the customer when
an account is opened.
While there is presently no requirement to send a copy of the customer account
record at least once every 36 months to verify the information, broker-dealers
are required to keep their records current.
1.
Benefits
The
amendments should benefit broker-dealers by assuring that they have up-to-date
information when making investment recommendations and reviewing suitability of
certain transactions or investment strategies. Further, both broker-dealers and
their customers will benefit by assuring that there is mutual understanding of
the customer's financial position and objectives for the account. Indeed,
requiring broker-dealers to update customer account records may assist less
well managed firms in better supervising their operations to identify potential
problems before they lead to regulatory or legal exposure and monetary losses.
Moreover,
the amendments have been modified to exempt corporate accounts, inactive
accounts, and accounts not requiring a determination of suitability. These
changes reduce the total number of accounts covered by the updating
requirements by over 25,000,000.
2.
Costs
The
requirement to send account record information to customers will cause firms to
incur costs to update their processes, and, with respect to the individual
mailings, will add preparation expenses and additional postage charges.
Further, firms will incur additional costs to update account information when
customers notify the firm that their account record information has changed.
Because broker-dealer processes, systems capabilities, and customer bases vary
so widely, it is difficult to provide an estimated cost with which all parties
will agree; however, the Commission estimates that for each of the 23,500,000
accounts to which a copy of the account record must be sent each year,
broker-dealers will spend an average of approximately 3.28 minutes
(including time for processing and any updating) costing between $1.36 and
$1.62 per piece,
including postage. Thus the aggregate cost of Rule 17a-3(a)(17) is estimated to
be between $32 million and $38.1 million (depending on what estimated postage
cost is included in the calculations). In addition, the Commission estimates
that all broker-dealers will, on average, incur a one-time cost of approximately
$312.00 each
to update their forms, resulting in an aggregate cost of approximately $2.25
million.
As
described more fully below, the Commission estimates that large broker-dealers
(broker-dealers having over 100,000 accounts) will, on average, incur startup
costs and ongoing costs to purchase and maintain additional equipment and
develop systems of $.31 per account and $.25 per account respectively. Based upon
the comment letters,
the Commission believes that the additional costs for smaller broker-dealers is
included in the hourly burden costs delineated above.
Two large
broker-dealers estimated the start-up costs of purchasing equipment and
modifying systems to range from $1,000,000
to $1,300,000.
These two firms had a total of approximately 7,500,000 accounts which appeared
to be subject to the updating requirement. The start-up costs per account,
based upon these figures, is approximately $0.31 (($1,000,000 + $1,300,000) /
7,500,000 accounts). It is important to note that the firms' estimates were
based upon the assumption that they would have to update all of their accounts.
Since the amendments adopted today provide an exemption for corporate accounts,
inactive accounts, and accounts for which no suitability determination must be
made, the actual costs will probably be much lower. These two firms further
estimate that ongoing costs for equipment and systems development would range
from $300,000
to about $1,600,000
per year. The ongoing costs per account would be $0.25 per account (($300,000 +
$1,600,000) / 7,500,000 accounts). Therefore, the total additional start-up and
ongoing costs to obtain equipment and develop systems for these two large firms
would be $0.56 per account ($0.31 + $0.25).
Of the
70,500,000 accounts, 68,385,000 (97%) belong to large broker-dealers that have
more than 100,000 accounts, therefore the total start-up costs for large
broker-dealers to purchase equipment and develop their systems is about $21.2
million (68,385,000 x $0.31). Similarly, the ongoing equipment and systems
development costs for large broker-dealers would be about $17.1 million per
year (68,385,000 x $0.25).
C. Other
New Requirements Covered by the Amendments
Paragraphs
(a)(12) and (a)(19) of Rule 17a-3 require broker-dealers to keep certain
records regarding each associated person, including all agreements pertaining
to the associated person's relationship with the broker-dealer and a summary of
each associated person's compensation arrangement,
a record delineating all identification numbers relating to each associated
person,
a record of the office at which each associated person regularly conducts
business,
and a record as to each associated person listing transactions for which that
person will be compensated.
The Commission believes that broker-dealers generally create and maintain these
records already under prudent recordkeeping procedures.
The list of transactions for which each associated person will be compensated
can be created at the time of an examination.
Paragraph
(a)(18) of Rule 17a-3 requires broker-dealers to keep a record relating to
written customer complaints and maintain a record of whether customers were
provided with an address where they should direct complaints. Firms may,
instead of creating a separate record of complaints, simply maintain a copy of
each complaint, along with a record of the disposition of the complaint.
Paragraphs
(a)(6) and (a)(7) of Rule 17a-3 have been amended to require that
broker-dealers also record the identity of the associated person responsible
for an account and the identity of the person who accepted the order, and
whether the order was entered pursuant to discretionary authority. In addition,
the amendment to paragraph (a)(6) requires that firms record the time an order
was received from a customer, and the amendments to paragraph (a)(7) require
that firms make a record of any modifications to an order. Paragraph (a)(6) now
contains an exception providing that, for transactions done on a
"subscription-way" basis, where an application or subscription
agreement is sent to the issuer in place of an order ticket, broker-dealers may
keep the application or subscription agreement in place of the order ticket. In
addition, SRO rules already require that firms record and maintain certain of
this information,
and firms, to assist in their supervision of the activities of their associated
persons and to assure that commissions are properly paid, already record the
identity of persons as required under the amendments.
The
amendments also require broker-dealers to make records indicating that they
have complied with applicable regulations of certain securities regulatory
authorities,
listing persons who can explain the information in the broker-dealer's records
and listing principals who are responsible for establishing compliance policies
and procedures.
The Commission believes that these amendments will cause broker-dealers to
incur only minimal additional costs. Firms presently maintain records to
evidence compliance with SRO and other rules, they presently maintain lists of
principals or branch managers responsible for supervising each of their offices
under other SRO rules, and they maintain lists of associated persons operating
out of each office location. Firms must, as part of their supervisory system,
identify principals responsible for reviewing the firm's procedures and taking
action to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws, regulations and
rules.
1.
Benefits
The records
required by these sections are either presently required under other federal
laws or rules or SRO rules or currently maintained by many firms as a prudent
business practice. These amendments codify current recordkeeping practices and
make clear what records broker-dealers may be required to provide to State and
other regulators. These records are expected to assist firms in better
supervising their operations and identifying potential problems before they
lead to regulatory or legal exposure and monetary losses.
2.
Costs
The
Commission has endeavored to codify present broker-dealer business practices in
these amendments and has adjusted the amendments based upon comments received
in response to the Proposal and Reproposal, as discussed above. Thus, these
amendments are not expected to change market or industry behavior
significantly. For example, firms are presently required to maintain copies of
all communications under Exchange Act Rule 17a-4(b)(4), and certain SRO rules
require that members maintain copies of all written complaints and a record of
the actions taken by the broker-dealer with respect to each complaint.
Therefore, the Commission believes that amending Rule 17a-3 to require this
information will not cause broker-dealers to incur any additional costs.
Similarly, the Commission does not believe that the amendments to Rules
17a-3(a)(6) and 17a-3(a)(7) will cause any additional cost.
Nevertheless,
broker-dealers may incur costs in assuring that their present practices comply
with the amendments. For example, the Commission believes that the requirement
to provide customers with an address where they can send complaints will cause
firms to incur a one-time cost of approximately $312.00
each, resulting in an aggregate cost of approximately $2.25 million. In
addition, the Commission estimates that it will cost each firm an average of
$50.83 per year to ensure compliance with paragraphs (a)(12) and (a)(19) of
Rule 17a-3 (regarding associated person records),
resulting in an aggregate cost of approximately $0.4 million per year. Finally,
the Commission estimates that each firm will spend an average of approximately
$16.88 per year to ensure compliance with other requirements,
resulting in an aggregate cost of approximately $0.1 million per year.
IX. Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
Section
23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act
requires the Commission, in adopting Exchange Act rules, to consider the impact
any such rule would have on competition and to not adopt a rule that would
impose a burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in furthering the
purposes of the Exchange Act. Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act
provides that whenever the Commission is engaged in rulemaking and is required
to consider or determine whether an action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, the Commission shall consider, in addition to the protection
of investors, whether the action will promote efficiency, competition, and
capital formation. The Commission has considered the amendments to Rules 17a-3
and 17a-4 in light of the standards in Sections 23(a)(2) and 3(f) of the
Exchange Act.
In the
Reproposing Release, the Commission requested comment on the effect of the
reproposed rule amendments on competition, efficiency, and capital formation.
The Commission received 115 substantive comment letters
in response to the Reproposal. Approximately 44% were from broker-dealers
opposing particular amendments and approximately 37% were from State Securities
Regulators supporting the amendments. Few commenters provided any information
on how these amendments would affect competition, efficiency, or capital
formation. One commenter argued that, "[c]ompetition among broker-dealers
is facilitated by the amendments to the [Books and Records Rules]" because
they "[allow] firms to create and maintain records by alternative
means...."
Conversely, a few of commenters argued that; (i) the requirement to maintain
records at local offices would place an unfair competitive burden upon smaller
broker-dealers who do not have the resources to utilize imaging technology,
and (ii) the amendments would have a disparate impact on non-traditionally
organized broker-dealers with limited businesses.
In addition, a number of commenters, while not specifically addressing this
issue, did argue that it would be duplicative to maintain records at a local
office while also maintaining the same documents at a main office. In response
to these concerns and others, the Commission has modified the amendments to
allow firms the flexibility to promptly produce records at the offices to which
they relate instead of maintaining those records at the offices,
and has added exemptions in recognition of present business practices.
The
Commission believes that any burden imposed by the amendments is justified by
the enhanced investor protections described above. Further, as NASAA pointed
out in its comment letter, when addressing Section 23(a) concerns, "the
[amendments] to Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4, pursuant to a directive by Congress,
must also reflect the needs of the State Securities Regulators as well as
federal regulators."
In addition, by improving examination capabilities of all securities regulatory
authorities, the amendments should improve investor confidence in broker-dealer
firms and help to maintain fair and orderly markets.
Broker-dealers
with larger customer bases would have correspondingly greater obligations under
the amendments than smaller broker-dealers. Accordingly, any burden on
competition should be slight, especially in light of the significant regulatory
benefits discussed above.
X. Summary of Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
A Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis ("FRFA") regarding the amendments to
Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4 under the Exchange Act,
which require broker-dealers to maintain certain additional records, specify
that certain books and records must be maintained at each office, and set forth
the length of time these records must be kept, has been prepared in accordance
with the provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 604).
A. Need
for the Rules and Rule Amendments
As
discussed more fully in the FRFA, these amendments are intended to provide the
Commission, SROs, and State Securities Regulators
with timely access to broker-dealers' books and records to conduct effective
examinations, investigations and enforcement actions. NSMIA prohibits States
from establishing books and records rules that differ from, or are in addition
to, the Commission's rules, and provides that the Commission must consult
periodically with the States concerning the adequacy of the Commission's books
and records rules,
particularly with regard to whether the Commission's rules satisfy State
Securities Regulators' need to have records readily accessible for their
examinations.
If these
amendments are not adopted, the Commission believes that the Commission staff
and State Securities Regulators will be hampered in their efforts to obtain
documentation, because the books and records that broker-dealers maintain may
not always be sufficient or in such order as to enable regulators to conduct
thorough and effective examinations, investigations, and enforcement
proceedings. The Commission further believes that a failure to re-establish
certain customer protection safeguards present in the marketplace prior to the
enactment of NSMIA would reduce the regulatory oversight of broker-dealers. In
addition, the Commission believes that this may also reduce customer confidence
in the marketplace, which would be detrimental to market integrity and capital
formation.
B. Small
Entities Subject to the Rule
It is
expected that these amendments will affect the approximately 1,000
broker-dealers that fall within the category of "small business"
("Small Business Broker-Dealers"). The amendments would affect these
Small Business' Broker-Dealers because they, like other broker-dealers, would
have to create and maintain certain additional books and records and would have
to provide access to specific books and records at each office. An OTC
Derivatives Dealer would not be considered a small entity because of the
minimum net capital requirement.
A summary
of the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis ("IRFA") appeared in
the Reproposing Release,
where the Commission specifically requested comment with respect to the IRFA.
In response to the Reproposing Release, the Commission received only one
comment letter specifically concerning the IRFA.
In addition, three other commenters addressed aspects of the reproposed rules
and rule amendments that could potentially affect small businesses.
The
commenter that did specifically discuss the IRFA stated, "The Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis does not give careful consideration to the
economic impact on [broker-dealers that limit their business in certain ways]
of the new account cards, blotter records, and signatures of principals on
account cards." However, the Commission has carefully considered the
economic impact of these rules on various types of broker-dealers. Furthermore,
the Commission notes that the commenter does not take into account the fact
that, even with respect to broker-dealers that limit their business, existing
NASD rules
require that broker-dealers maintain certain customer account information,
including the signature of a principal accepting the account, and that Rule
17a-3(a)(1)
presently requires that broker-dealers retain blotter records. The Commission
has amended new paragraph 17a-3(a)(17) to provide an exemption from obtaining
certain information where broker-dealers have no federal or SRO suitability
requirement and are therefore not otherwise required to obtain that
information.
Of the
three commenters that addressed aspects of the reproposed rules and rule
amendments that could potentially affect small businesses, one stated,
"[t]he proposal to require blotters in local offices may cause an initial
financial burden to firms which have...three or less broker offices."
Another argued that the requirement to maintain records at local offices
"place[s] an unfair competitive burden on smaller broker-dealers who do
not have the resources to image the required documents and place them upon a
network that is available to both the firm's principal office and the local
branch."
While the amendments as reproposed would require that firms maintain certain
records in each local office or produce those records within the same business
day that they are requested, the amendments have been changed in order to give
firms the flexibility to produce those records promptly when they are requested
by a representative of a securities regulatory authority. This change
significantly reduces the cost of the amendments for most firms. In addition,
recognizing that broker-dealers may not be required to maintain those records
under SRO rules or other regulations, the Commission has attempted to reduce
the impact of these amendments on firms that engage in certain specialized
types of businesses by changing the amendments to allow those broker-dealers to
utilize records they presently create and maintain in compliance with SRO or
other rules and prudent business practices.
Another
firm contended that the requirement to update account records is unduly
burdensome on smaller firms because such firms lack the automation to perform
that task quickly and without additional personnel.
The Commission has attempted to make these amendments sufficiently flexible to
accommodate different types of operational systems, and broker-dealers may
choose the operational methods that best suit their business in order to comply
with the amendments.
Lastly,
another firm disagreed with the Commission's statement in the Reproposing
Release that, "[l]arger broker dealers would have correspondingly greater
obligations under the amendments,"
stating, "the `wire house' firms will be virtually unaffected by this
proposal," because "wire houses...have very few small offices."
To the extent that Small Business Broker-Dealers service fewer customer
accounts, employ fewer associated persons, and operate fewer offices than
larger broker-dealers, they will be affected by the rule in proportion to their
size.
C.
Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance Requirements
Most
broker-dealers, including Small Business Broker-Dealers, already maintain many
of the records specified in the amendments in the ordinary course of business.
The Commission's intent has been to minimize the impact of the amendments on
all broker-dealers by limiting, consistent with the objectives of the
amendments, the number of instances in which broker-dealers would be obligated
to create or maintain records that they do not already maintain in the ordinary
course of business. In addition, the amendments were designed to be
sufficiently flexible to accommodate different types of recordkeeping systems,
and broker-dealers may choose the format in which they wish to maintain those
records.
D.
Agency Action to Minimize Effect on Small Entities
As
discussed further in the FRFA, the Commission has attempted to minimize the
economic impact these amendments might have on broker-dealers, including Small
Business Broker-Dealers, while still achieving the overall objective of
assuring that regulators have the ability to perform effective examinations,
including examinations for sales practice issues. In response to comments
elicited by the Reproposing Release, many significant changes were made to the
amendments to reduce the burdens associated with these amendments.
The
Regulatory Flexibility Act directs the Commission to consider significant
alternatives that would accomplish the stated objective, while minimizing any
significant adverse impact on small entities. The Commission considered the
following alternatives: (i) the establishment of differing compliance or
reporting requirements or timetables that take into account the resources
available to small entities; (ii) the clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of compliance and reporting requirements under the rules for
small entities; (iii) the use of performance rather than design standards; and
(iv) an exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for small
entities. The Commission also considered whether these alternatives to the
reproposed rules and rule amendments would accomplish the stated objectives of
improving the effectiveness of the Commission's and State regulatory agencies'
ability to perform investigations, examinations and enforcement actions.
The
additional burdens placed on Small Business Broker-Dealers will vary depending
upon the number of customer accounts at the firm, the number of associated
persons employed by the firm, and the number of offices that the firm operates.
Further, the rule provides substantial flexibility in the manner in which firms
may comply with the amendments. Additionally, the Commission believes that
obtaining essential information regarding the sales practices of all broker-dealers,
including Small Business Broker-Dealers, is necessary to permit securities
regulators to effectively oversee the securities markets and protect investors;
therefore, the Commission does not believe that establishing differing
compliance or reporting requirements for Small Business Broker-Dealers would be
appropriate.
The
Commission believes that the proposal could not be formulated differently for
Small Business Broker-Dealers and still achieve the stated objectives. The
Commission has considered Small Business Broker-Dealers in developing the
amendments and has determined that all types of broker-dealers, including Small
Business Broker-Dealers, engage in sales practice abuses; therefore, the
Commission does not believe that further clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of the proposed amendments would be appropriate. As stated
previously, however, the Commission has made every effort to assure that, to
the extent possible, the amendments require broker-dealers to maintain the same
types of records required under other federal and SRO rules or that firms
usually maintain as part of their present business practices, and has
highlighted instances where records that broker-dealers presently maintain may serve to fulfill the requirements under these amendments.
The
Commission does not believe that it would be appropriate to use performance
standards, rather than design standards, with relation to these amendments.
Because information must be collected and maintained in a uniform manner to be
useful, design standards are necessary to achieve the objectives of the
proposal. Any additional burden placed on broker-dealers by these amendments is
dependent on the number of accounts serviced, the number of associated persons
employed, and the number of offices operated. Thus, although the use of
performance standards would be an inappropriate measure with relation to these
amendments, the standards used do take into account the size of each firm. The
Commission also notes that the recordkeeping requirements permit broker-dealers
to keep records in different formats or systems as long as specified
information can be sorted and produced upon request.
Lastly,
customers may be exposed to fraud and sales practice violations by Small
Business Broker-Dealers as well as other firms. Exempting Small Business
Broker-Dealers from coverage of the rules, or any part thereof, would create a
gap in industry oversight, where regulatory authorities may be unable to obtain
documentation necessary to conduct comprehensive examinations of Small Business
Broker-Dealers. Therefore, the Commission believes that it should not exempt
Small Business Broker-Dealers from the requirements of the amendments.
The
Commission believes that enacting the amendments in their present form is the best way to assure that regulators have the ability to perform effective
examinations, including examinations for sales practice issues, and that no
less burdensome alternatives are available to accomplish the objectives of the
amendments. As stated previously, after NSMIA, States were constrained from
"establishing books and records rules that differ from, or are in addition
to the Commission's rules."
The States play an integral role in achieving customer protection by performing
examinations on broker-dealers within their jurisdiction and reviewing for
sales practice violations. Without these amendments, the States may be unable
to obtain those books and records necessary to conduct comprehensive
examinations. Finally, the Commission believes that most Small Business
Broker-Dealers currently maintain certain of the additional records specified
in the amendments.
A copy of
the FRFA may be obtained by contacting Bonnie L. Gauch, Attorney, United States Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549-1001.
XI. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain
provisions of the amendments contain "collection of information"
requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
The Commission has submitted the amendments to the Office of Management and
Budget ("OMB") for review in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5
CFR 1320.11 under the title "Books and Records Rule Amendments." The
rules being amended contain currently approved collections of information under
OMB control numbers 3235-0033 and 3235-0279 respectively. The collections and
maintenance of information, and the reports made to the SEC and others that are
required pursuant to Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4 are mandatory. An agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a currently valid control number.
A. Collection of Information Under the Amendments
As
discussed previously in this release, the Books and Records Rule Amendments
would require registered broker-dealers to maintain additional records with
respect to purchase and sale documents, customer information, associated person
information, customer complaints and certain other matters.
B.
Proposed Use of Information
The
information collected pursuant to the Books and Records Rule Amendments would
be used by the Commission, SROs, and other securities regulatory authorities
for examinations, investigations, and enforcement proceedings regarding
broker-dealers and associated persons. No governmental agency would regularly
receive any of the information described above. Instead, the information would
be stored by the registered broker-dealer and made available to the various
securities regulatory authorities as required to facilitate examinations,
investigations, and enforcement proceedings. To comply with the amendments that
require broker-dealers to update customer account records at least once every
36 months, broker-dealers would have to furnish the customers with copies of
their account records. This requirement and the estimated burden associated
with it are discussed in detail below.
C.
Respondents
The Books
and Records Rule Amendments would apply to all of the approximately 7,217
active broker-dealers that are registered with the Commission.
D. Total
Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Burden
The hour
burden of the Books and Records Rule Amendments is difficult to ascertain,
because any additional burdens would vary widely due to differences in
broker-dealer activity levels and current recordkeeping systems employed by the
broker-dealers. Therefore, the estimates in this section are based on averages
among the various types and sizes of broker-dealers. Recognizing that large
broker-dealers maintaining over 100,000 customer accounts are generally more
automated than small broker-dealers maintaining less than 100,000 customer
accounts with relation to certain of the amendments, the Commission has
attempted to provide for these differences in its calculations.
Most of the
requirements of the Books and Records Rule Amendments involve collections of
information that broker-dealers already maintain pursuant to prudent business
practices or to comply with existing SRO regulations. While some of the comment
letters argued that the Commission's estimates set forth in the Reproposing
Release were low, few contained actual alternative cost estimates, and none
contained estimates which could be applied generally to broker-dealer firms.
The Commission has increased its estimation of the expected burden of the
amendments where, in general, commenters felt that the estimates were too low,
and has provided a more detailed explanation of its estimates where it believes
the amendments will impose little or no additional burden on broker-dealers. In
addition, in response to the comments received relating to the Reproposing
Release, the Commission modified its proposal and adopted amendments that
reduce the amount of additional records that firms will be required to create
and maintain.
1. Rule 17a-3
The
amendments modify Rule 17a-3 by, among other things, requiring broker-dealers
to send account information to customers for verification within 30 days of
account opening and at least once every 36 months thereafter. As stated above,
the total number of accounts that would need to be contacted for updating is
70,500,000.
Approximately 70 of the 7,217 active, registered broker-dealers maintain over
100,000 accounts, and the remaining broker-dealers (7,147) maintain less than
100,000 accounts each. Of the 70,500,000 accounts which may be affected by
these amendments, approximately 68,385,000 (or 97%) are maintained at these
large broker-dealers, and 2,115,000 (or 3%) are maintained at broker-dealers
with less than 100,000 accounts each.
The
Commission estimates that, as their processes are more automated, it will take
large broker-dealers an average of 1½ additional minutes per account every
three years, thus requiring large broker-dealers to spend an additional 569,875 hours per
year (68,385,000 account records / 3 years x 1.5 minutes / 60 minutes) to send account
information to customers. As small broker-dealers utilize processes which are more
manual in nature, the Commission estimates that it will take small broker-dealers an average of 7
minutes per account every three years, thus requiring small broker-dealers to spend an additional
82,250 hours per year (2,115,000 account records / 3 years x 7 minutes / 60
minutes) to send account records to customers. Thus the total additional burden
on the industry to send account records to customers is 652,125 hours.
The
Commission estimates that approximately 20%
of the customers from whom information is requested will update their account
record resulting in 4,700,000 updated account records each year (70,500,000 / 3
years x 20%). The Commission estimates that it would take, on average, 5
minutes for large broker-dealers to update each account and 10 minutes
for small broker-dealers to update each account, resulting in an additional
burden of 403,417 hours per year ((4,559,000 account records x 5 minutes / 60
minutes) + (141,000 account records x 10 minutes / 60 minutes)). This estimate
takes into account the amount of time it would take to receive the returned
data and input any changes into the account record. While it is acknowledged
that some customers will provide broker-dealers with changes to their account
information outside of this update process, as those are changes broker-dealers
must contend with in the present environment, the amendments create no
additional burden in this regard. Broker-dealers presently maintain current
account records in the ordinary course of their business because existing SRO
rules require them to maintain current information about their customers.
If a
customer has provided the broker-dealer with updated account record
information, under paragraphs (a)(17)(i)(B)(2) and (3) of Rule
17a-3 the broker-dealer must send a copy of the revised account record to the
customer within 30 days after it received notification of the change or, under
paragraph (a)(17)(i)(B)(3), the broker-dealer may send the notification
with the next statement mailed to the customer. The Commission estimates that,
in addition to the 70,500,000 updated account records discussed above,
3,525,000 customers (5% of the 70,500,000 accounts for which firms will be
required to make the account record) will initiate changes to their account
records on a yearly basis, just as they do now, with no prompting from any
account record mailing. The Commission estimates, as stated above, that it will
take large broker-dealers 1½ minutes and smaller broker-dealers 7 minutes to send
out account information to each customer who updated their account. The Commission
estimates that 8,225,000 (4,700,000 + 3,525,000) customers will update their
account record, and that broker-dealers will spend an additional 228,244 hours
each year ((7,978,250 account records x 1.5 minutes / 60 minutes) + (246,750
account records x 7 minutes / 60 minutes)) sending the updated account records
to customers.
The
amendments also impose a requirement that broker-dealers obtain the following
additional information for each account with a natural person as the customer:
the customer name, tax identification number, address, telephone number, date
of birth, employment status, annual income, net worth, investment objectives,
and the signature of the associated person and a principal. Present Rule 17a-3(a)(9)
already requires that a firm maintain a record of a customer's name and
address. Further, SRO rules require that firms obtain and maintain records of:
whether a customer is of legal age (firms usually obtain a customer's date of
birth to satisfy this requirement), the signature of the registered representative
and principal, a customer's tax identification number, the customer's occupation, and
whether or not the customer is associated with another broker-dealer.
In addition, certain SRO rules require that before making any recommendations
to customers, broker-dealers obtain information, regarding the customer's
annual income, net worth, and the investment objectives for the account in
question in order to formulate a basis for any recommendation.
In
addition, the amendments require that, if the account is a discretionary
account, the firm must obtain (i) the signature of the customer granting
discretion, (ii) the date discretion was granted, and (iii) the signature of
the person to whom discretion was granted. Certain SRO rules require that for
discretionary accounts, broker-dealers must obtain the signature of the person
who was granted discretion, and the date discretion was granted,
while other SRO rules require that firms obtain written authorization of the
customer before exercising discretion in an account.
Further, the Commission believes that obtaining these records is a prudent
business practice followed by most broker-dealers to avoid disputes with customers.
In addition
to the account record requirements, the amendments require broker-dealers to
keep certain records regarding their associated persons, including all
agreements pertaining to the associated persons relationship with the
broker-dealer and a summary of each associated person's compensation
arrangement, a record delineating all identification numbers relating to each associated
person, a record of the office at which each associated person regularly conducts
business, and a record as to each associated person listing transactions for which that
person will be compensated.
The Commission believes that broker-dealers generally create and maintain these
records under prudent recordkeeping procedures. Therefore, the Commission
estimates that, on average, these records would require each broker-dealer to
spend approximately 30 minutes each year to ensure that it is in compliance
with these amendments, a total of about 3,609 hours ((7,217 broker-dealers x 30
minutes / 60 minutes).
The
amendments also require broker-dealers to keep a record relating to written
customer complaints that includes: the complainant's name, address, and account
number; the date the complaint was received; the name of any associated person
identified in the complaint; a description of the nature of the complaint; and,
the disposition of the complaint. In order to account for differing
broker-dealer practices, the Commission has provided broker-dealers with an
alternative; instead of creating what may be a new record, broker-dealers can
simply maintain a copy of each complaint, along with a record of the
disposition of the complaint.
Firms are presently required to maintain copies of all communications under
Rule 17a-4(b)(4), and certain SRO rules require that members maintain copies of
all written complaints and a record of the actions taken by the broker-dealer
in specified offices, and that copies of options-related complaints be
maintained in both the main office and in the branch office to which they
relate.
Most firms maintain copies of all complaints and related information and
documents at their headquarters, and some already maintain both option and
non-option complaints at all offices as well. While the Reproposal would have
required that complaints relating to an office be maintained in that office or
be produced on the business day they are requested, the amendments as adopted
require only that records of complaints for an office be produced promptly at
the office to which the complaints relate.
The
amendments also require broker-dealers to make records which indicate that they
have complied with applicable regulations of certain securities regulatory
authorities, which list persons who can explain the information in the broker-dealer's
records, and that list principals responsible for establishing compliance policies and
procedures. Firms presently maintain records to evidence compliance with SRO and other
rules; therefore, no additional burden is created by this amendment. The
Commission believes that broker-dealers presently maintain lists of principals
or branch managers responsible for supervising each of their offices under
applicable SRO rules, and that they also have lists of associated persons
operating out of each office location. Under certain SRO rules, broker-dealers
must presently have supervisory systems in place that include identification of
principals responsible for reviewing the firm's procedures and taking action to
achieve compliance with applicable securities laws, regulations and rules.
The Commission estimates, therefore, that on average each broker-dealer would
spend 10 minutes each year to ensure compliance with these requirements,
yielding a total additional burden of about 1,203 hours ((7,217 broker-dealers
x 10 minutes / 60 minutes).
The
amendments relating to order tickets require that broker-dealers note, in
addition to information already required, the identity of the associated person
responsible for an account and the identity of the person who accepted the
order, and whether the order was entered pursuant to discretionary authority.
In addition, the amendments to Rule 17a-3(a)(6) require that firms record the
time an order was received from a customer, and the amendments to Rule
17a-3(a)(7) require that firms make a record of any modifications to an order.
SRO rules already require that firms record, maintain, and in some cases
report, the time an order was received, and information regarding modification
and cancellation including instructions and the time.
Further, firms who assign associated persons to particular accounts usually
refer the customer to that person to initiate transactions. The identity of the
person who accepted the order from the customer, whether or not it was the
person assigned to the account, is generally recorded and maintained at the present
time by firms as a prudent business practice that assists the firm in properly supervising
the activities of their associated persons and assuring that commissions are
properly paid. In addition, the amendment to Rule 17a-3(a)(6) contains an exception
for transactions done on a "subscription-way" basis, where an
application or subscription agreement is sent to the issuer in place of an
order ticket. For these types of transactions, broker-dealers may keep the
application or subscription agreement in the place of the order ticket. Thus
the Commission does not believe that the amendments to Rules 17a-3(a)(6) and
17a-3(a)(7) will cause any additional burden.
In total,
the Commission estimates that compliance with the amendments to Rule 17a-3 will
require an additional 1,288,598 hours (1,283,786
+ 3,609
+ 1,203).
2. Rule 17a-4
The
amendments modify Rule 17a-4 by requiring broker-dealers to maintain certain
additional books and records, including a record listing all persons who are qualified
to explain a broker-dealer's books and records. The amendments also require
broker-dealers to make available certain records at each office. As discussed
above, new Rule 17a-4(k) was modified to provide that, instead of requiring
that firms either maintain copies of records in the office to which they
pertain, broker-dealers now have the option of producing certain records which
relate to a particular office "promptly." This significantly reduces
the additional burden caused by the amendments to
Rule 17a-4.
The
amendments also increase the amount of time broker-dealers must maintain
certain records. Broker-dealers generally maintain these records to comply with
other federal or SRO Rules or in the normal course of business. These records include, (i) information relating to the
principals responsible for reviewing and updating policies and procedures, (ii)
copies of Forms BD, BDW and amendments thereto, (iii) copies of compliance,
supervisory, and procedures manuals, (iv) customer account records, (v) order
ticket information, (vi) records relating to compensation of associated
persons, (vii) evidence of compliance with SRO advertising and sales literature
rules, (viii) exception reports, and (ix) specialized reports produced pursuant
to an order or settlement.
Based upon
the information above, and due to the fact that the amendments to Rule 17a-4
require only that information be kept for prescribed periods of time, the
Commission estimates that, on average, each broker-dealer would spend four
hours each year to ensure that it is in compliance with the amendments to Rule
17a-4 and to produce required records promptly at an office when so required.
Therefore, the Commission estimates that compliance with the amendments for
Rule 17a-4 would require an additional 28,868 hours each year ((7,217
broker-dealers x 4 hours).
E. Request for Comment
Pursuant to
44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), the Commission solicits comments to - (i) Evaluate
whether the proposed collections of information are necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including whether the information shall have
practical utility; (ii) Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the
burden of the proposed collections of information; (iii) Enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; (iv) Minimize the
burden of the collections of information on those who are to respond, including
through the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of
information technology. The Commission encourages commenters to identify and
supply any relevant data, analysis and estimates concerning the burden of the
proposed rules, especially where any commenter believes the Commission's
estimates to be inaccurate.
Persons
desiring to submit comments on the collection of information requirements
proposed above should direct them to the following persons: (1) Desk Officer
for the Securities and Exchange Commission, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Room 10102, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503; and (2) Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC
20549-0609 with reference to File No. S7-26-98. OMB is required to make a
decision concerning the collections of information between 30 and 60 days after
publication, so a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full effect if
OMB receives it within 30 days of publication. The Commission has submitted the
proposed collections of information to OMB for approval. Requests for the
materials submitted to OMB by the Commission with regard to these collections
of information should be in writing, refer to File No. S7-26-98, and be
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission, Records Management, Office
of Filings and Information Services, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC
20549.
XII. Statutory Basis
The
amendments are proposed pursuant to the authority conferred on the Commission
by the Exchange Act, including Sections 17(a) and 23(a).
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 240 and 242
Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
For the
reasons set forth in the preamble, Title 17 Chapter II of the Code of Federal
Regulation is amended as follows:
PART 240 - GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
1. The
authority citation for Part 240 is amended by adding the following citation:
Authority:
15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j, 77s, 77z-2, 77z-3, 77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn, 77sss,
77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 78i, 78j, 78j-1, 78k, 78k-1, 78l, 78m,
78n, 78o, 78p, 78q, 78s, 78u-5, 78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm, 79q, 79t,
80a-20, 80a-23, 80a-29, 80a-37, 80b-3, 80b-4 and 80b-11, unless otherwise
noted.
* * * * *
Section
240.17a-4 also issued under secs. 2, 17, 23(a), 48 Stat. 897, as amended; 15
U.S.C. 78a, 78d-1, 78d-2; sec. 14, Pub. L. 94-29, 89 Stat.137 (15 U.S.C. 78a);
sec. 18, Pub. L. 94-29, 89 Stat. 155 (15 U.S.C. 78w);
* * * * *
2. The authority citations following §§ 240.17a-3 and 240.17a-4 are removed.
3. Section 240.17a-3 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (a)(6) and (a)(7);
b. Revising the introductory text of paragraph (a)(12)(i);
c. Revising paragraph (a)(12)(ii);
d.
Redesignating paragraphs (a)(12)(i)(a) through (a)(12)(i)(h) as
paragraphs (a)(12)(i)(A) through (a)(12)(i)(H); and
e. Adding paragraphs (a)(17), (a)(18), (a)(19), (a)(20), (a)(21), (a)(22), (f) and (g).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
§ 240.17a-3 Records to be made by certain exchange members, brokers and dealers.
(a) * * *
(6)(i) A
memorandum of each brokerage order, and of any other instruction, given or
received for the purchase or sale of securities, whether executed or
unexecuted. The memorandum shall show the terms and conditions of the order or
instructions and of any modification or cancellation thereof; the account for
which entered; the time the order was received; the time of entry; the price at
which executed; the identity of each associated person, if any, responsible for
the account; the identity of any other person who entered or accepted the order
on behalf of the customer or, if a customer entered the order on an electronic
system, a notation of that entry; and, to the extent feasible, the time of
execution or cancellation. The memorandum need not show the identity of any
person, other than the associated person responsible for the account, who may
have entered or accepted the order if the order is entered into an electronic
system that generates the memorandum and if that system is not capable of
receiving an entry of the identity of any person other than the responsible
associated person; in that circumstance, the member, broker or dealer shall
produce upon request by a representative of a securities regulatory authority a
separate record which identifies each other person. An order entered pursuant
to the exercise of discretionary authority by the member, broker or dealer, or
associated person thereof, shall be so designated. The term instruction
shall include instructions between partners and employees of a member, broker
or dealer. The term time of entry shall mean the time when the member,
broker or dealer transmits the order or instruction for execution.
(ii) This
memorandum need not be made as to a purchase, sale or redemption of a security
on a subscription way basis directly from or to the issuer, if the member,
broker or dealer maintains a copy of the customer's subscription agreement
regarding a purchase, or a copy of any other document required by the issuer
regarding a sale or redemption.
(7) A
memorandum of each purchase and sale for the account of the member, broker, or
dealer showing the price and, to the extent feasible, the time of execution;
and, in addition, where the purchase or sale is with a customer other than a
broker or dealer, a memorandum of each order received, showing the time of
receipt; the terms and conditions of the order and of any modification thereof;
the account for which it was entered; the identity of each associated person,
if any, responsible for the account; the identity of any other person who entered
or accepted the order on behalf of the customer or, if a customer entered the
order on an electronic system, a notation of that entry. The memorandum need
not show the identity of any person other than the associated person
responsible for the account who may have entered the order if the order is
entered into an electronic system that generates the memorandum and if that
system is not capable of receiving an entry of the identity of any person other
than the responsible associated person: in that circumstance, the member,
broker or dealer shall produce upon request by a representative of a securities
regulatory authority a separate record which identifies each other person. An
order with a customer other than a member, broker or dealer entered pursuant to
the exercise of discretionary authority by the member, broker or dealer, or
associated person thereof, shall be so designated.
* * * * *
(12)(i) A
questionnaire or application for employment executed by each "associated
person" (as defined in § 17a-3(g)(4)) of the member, broker or dealer,
which questionnaire or application shall be approved in writing by an
authorized representative of the member, broker or dealer and shall contain at
least the following information with respect to the associated person:
* * * * *
(ii) A
record listing every associated person of the member, broker or dealer which
shows, for each associated person, every office of the member, broker or dealer
where the associated person regularly conducts the business of handling funds
or securities or effecting any transactions in, or inducing or attempting to
induce the purchase or sale of any security for the member, broker or dealer,
and the Central Registration Depository number, if any, and every internal
identification number or code assigned to that person by the member, broker or
dealer.
* * * * *
(17) For
each account with a natural person as a customer or owner:
(i)(A) An
account record including the customer's or owner's name, tax identification
number, address, telephone number, date of birth, employment status (including
occupation and whether the customer is an associated person of a member, broker
or dealer), annual income, net worth (excluding value of primary residence),
and the account's investment objectives. In the case of a joint account, the
account record must include personal information for each joint owner who is a
natural person; however, financial information for the individual joint owners
may be combined. The account record shall indicate whether it has been signed
by the associated person responsible for the account, if any, and approved or
accepted by a principal of the member, broker or dealer. For accounts in
existence on the effective date of this section, the member, broker or dealer
must obtain this information within three years of the effective date of the
section.
(B) A
record indicating that:
(1)
The member, broker or dealer has furnished to each customer or owner within
three years of the effective date of this section, and to each customer or
owner who opened an account after the effective date of this section within
thirty days of the opening of the account, and thereafter at intervals no
greater than thirty-six months, a copy of the account record or an alternate
document with all information required by paragraph (a)(17)(i)(A) of this
section. The member, broker or dealer may elect to send this notification with
the next statement mailed to the customer or owner after the opening of the
account. The member, broker or dealer may choose to exclude any tax
identification number and date of birth from the account record or alternative
document furnished to the customer or owner. The member, broker or dealer shall
include with the account record or alternative document provided to each
customer or owner an explanation of any terms regarding investment objectives.
The account record or alternate document furnished to the customer or owner
shall include or be accompanied by prominent statements that the customer or
owner should mark any corrections and return the account record or alternate
document to the member, broker or dealer, and that the customer or owner should
notify the member, broker or dealer of any future changes to information
contained in the account record.
(2)
For each account record updated to reflect a change in the name or address of
the customer or owner, the member, broker or dealer furnished a notification of
that change to the customer's old address, or to each joint owner, and the
associated person, if any, responsible for that account, on or before the 30th
day after the date the member, broker or dealer received notice of the change.
(3)
For each change in the account's investment objectives the member, broker or
dealer has furnished to each customer or owner, and the associated person, if
any, responsible for that account a copy of the updated customer account record
or alternative document with all information required to be furnished by
paragraph (a)(17)(i)(B)(1) of this section, on or before the 30th day
after the date the member, broker or dealer received notice of any change, or,
if the account was updated for some reason other than the firm receiving notice
of a change, after the date the account record was updated. The member, broker
or dealer may elect to send this notification with the next statement scheduled
to be mailed to the customer or owner.
(C) For
purposes of this paragraph (a)(17), the neglect, refusal, or inability of a
customer or owner to provide or update any account record information required
under paragraph (a)(17)(i)(A) of this section shall excuse the member, broker
or dealer from obtaining that required information.
(D) The
account record requirements in paragraph (a)(17)(i)(A) of this section shall
only apply to accounts for which the member, broker or dealer is, or has within
the past 36 months been, required to make a suitability determination under the
federal securities laws or under the requirements of a self-regulatory
organization of which it is a member. Additionally, the furnishing requirement
in paragraph (a)(17)(i)(B)(1) of this section shall not be applicable to
an account for which, within the last 36 months, the member, broker or dealer
has not been required to make a suitability determination under the federal
securities laws or under the requirements of a self-regulatory organization of
which it is a member. This paragraph (a)(17)(i)(D) does not relieve a member,
broker or dealer from any obligation arising from the rules of a
self-regulatory organization of which it is a member regarding the collection
of information from a customer or owner.
(ii) If an
account is a discretionary account, a record containing the dated signature of
each customer or owner granting the authority and the dated signature of each
natural person to whom discretionary authority was granted.
(iii) A
record for each account indicating that each customer or owner was furnished
with a copy of each written agreement entered into on or after the effective
date of this paragraph pertaining to that account and that, if requested by the
customer or owner, the customer or owner was furnished with a fully executed
copy of each agreement.
(18) A record:
(i) As to
each associated person of each written customer complaint received by the
member, broker or dealer concerning that associated person. The record shall
include the complainant's name, address, and account number; the date the
complaint was received; the name of any other associated person identified in
the complaint; a description of the nature of the complaint; and the disposition
of the complaint. Instead of the record, a member, broker or dealer may
maintain a copy of each original complaint in a separate file by the associated
person named in the complaint along with a record of the disposition of the
complaint.
(ii)
Indicating that each customer of the member, broker or dealer has been provided
with a notice containing the address and telephone number of the department of
the member, broker or dealer to which any complaints as to the account may be
directed.
(19) A record:
(i) As to
each associated person listing each purchase and sale of a security
attributable, for compensation purposes, to that associated person. The record
shall include the amount of compensation if monetary and a description of the
compensation if non-monetary. In lieu of making this record, a member, broker
or dealer may elect to produce the required information promptly upon request
of a representative of a securities regulatory authority.
(ii) Of all
agreements pertaining to the relationship between each associated person and
the member, broker or dealer including a summary of each associated person's
compensation arrangement or plan with the member, broker or dealer, including
commission and concession schedules and, to the extent that compensation is based
on factors other than remuneration per trade, the method by which the
compensation is determined.
(20) A record, which need not be separate from the
advertisements, sales literature, or communications, documenting that the
member, broker or dealer has complied with, or adopted policies and procedures
reasonably designed to establish compliance with, applicable federal
requirements and rules of a self-regulatory organization of which the member,
broker or dealer is a member which require that advertisements, sales
literature, or any other communications with the public by a member, broker or
dealer or its associated persons be approved by a principal.
(21) A
record for each office listing, by name or title, each person at that office
who, without delay, can explain the types of records the firm maintains at that
office and the information contained in those records.
(22) A
record listing each principal of a member, broker or dealer responsible for
establishing policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to ensure
compliance with any applicable federal requirements or rules of a
self-regulatory organization of which the member, broker or dealer is a member
that require acceptance or approval of a record by a principal.
* * * * *
(f) Every
member, broker or dealer shall make and keep current, as to each office, the
books and records described in paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(6), (a)(7), (a)(12),
(a)(17), (a)(18)(i), (a)(19), (a)(20), (a)(21), and (a)(22) of this section.
(g) When used in this section:
(1) The
term office means any location where one or more associated persons
regularly conduct the business of handling funds or securities or effecting any
transactions in, or inducing or attempting to induce the purchase or sale of,
any security.
(2) The
term principal means any individual registered with a registered
national securities association as a principal or branch manager of a member,
broker or dealer or any other person who has been delegated supervisory
responsibility over associated persons by the member, broker or dealer.
(3) The
term securities regulatory authority means the Commission, any
self-regulatory organization, or any securities commission (or any agency or
office performing like functions) of the States.
(4) The term associated person means an "associated
person of a member" or "associated person of a broker or dealer"
as defined in sections 3(a)(21) and 3(a)(18) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(21)
and (a)(18))respectively, but shall not include persons whose functions are
solely clerical or ministerial.
§ 240.17a-3 [Amended]
4. Section 240.17a-3 is amended by:
a. Removing
from the introductory text of paragraph (a) and paragraph (a)(5) the word
"his" and in its place adding "its";
b. Removing
from paragraph (a)(11)(ii) the word "he" and in its place adding
"it";
c. Removing
from redesignated paragraphs (a)(12)(i)(A) and (a)(12)(i)(B) the word
"His" and in its place adding "The associated person's";
d. Removing
from redesignated paragraphs (a)(12)(i)(A), (a)(12)(i)(C), and (a)(12)(i)(H)
the word "his" and in its place adding "the associated
person's";
e. Removing
from redesignated paragraphs (a)(12)(i)(D) and (a)(12)(i)(F) the word
"him" and in its place adding "the associated person";
f. Removing
from redesignated paragraphs (a)(12)(i)(D), (a)(12)(i)(E), (a)(12)(i)(F) and
(a)(12)(i)(H) the word "he" and in its place adding "the
associated person"; and
g. Removing
from redesignated paragraph (a)(12)(i)(H) the phrase "or the American
Stock Exchange, the Boston Stock Exchange, the Midwest Stock Exchange, the New
York Stock Exchange, the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange, or the
Philadelphia-Baltimore Stock Exchange" and in its place adding "the
American Stock Exchange LLC, the Boston Stock Exchange, Inc., the Chicago Stock
Exchange, Inc., the New York Stock Exchange, Inc., the Pacific Exchange, Inc.,
the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Inc., the Chicago Board Options Exchange,
Inc., the Cincinnati Stock Exchange, Inc. or the International Securities
Exchange".
5. Section 240.17a-4 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraph (a);
b. Revising the introductory text of paragraph (b);
c. Revising paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(4), (c) and (d);
d. Revising the introductory text of paragraph (e);
e. Adding paragraphs (e)(5), (e)(6), (e)(7), (e)(8);
f. Revising paragraph (j); and
g. Adding paragraphs (k) and (l).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
§
240.17a-4 Records to be preserved by certain exchange members, brokers and
dealers.
(a) Every
member, broker and dealer subject to § 240.17a-3 shall preserve for a period of
not less than six years, the first two years in an easily accessible place, all
records required to be made pursuant to paragraphs § 240.17a-3(a)(1), (a)(2),
(a)(3), (a)(5), (a)(21), (a)(22), and analogous records created pursuant to
paragraph § 240.17a-3(f).
(b) Every
member, broker and dealer subject to § 240.17a-3 shall preserve for a period of
not less than three years, the first two years in an easily accessible place:
(1) All
records required to be made pursuant to § 240.17a-3(a)(4), (a)(6), (a)(7), (a)(8),
(a)(9), (a)(10), (a)(16), (a)(18), (a)(19), (a)(20), and analogous records
created pursuant to § 240.17a-3(f).
* * * * *
(4)
Originals of all communications received and copies of all communications sent (and any approvals thereof) by the member, broker or dealer (including inter-office
memoranda and communications) relating to its business as such, including all
communications which are subject to rules of a self-regulatory organization of
which the member, broker or dealer is a member regarding communications with
the public. As used in this paragraph, the term communications includes sales
scripts.
* * * * *
(c) Every
member, broker and dealer subject to § 240.17a-3 shall preserve for a period of
not less than six years after the closing of any customer's account any account
cards or records which relate to the terms and conditions with respect to the
opening and maintenance of the account.
* * * * *
(d) Every
member, broker and dealer subject to § 240.17a-3 shall preserve during the life
of the enterprise and of any successor enterprise all partnership articles or,
in the case of a corporation, all articles of incorporation or charter, minute
books and stock certificate books (or, in the case of any other form of legal
entity, all records such as articles of organization or formation, and minute
books used for a purpose similar to those records required for corporations or
partnerships), all Forms BD (§ 249.501 of this chapter), all Forms BDW (§
249.501a of this chapter), all amendments to these forms, all licenses or other
documentation showing the registration of the member, broker or dealer with any
securities regulatory authority.
(e) Every
member, broker and dealer subject to § 240.17a-3 shall maintain and preserve in
an easily accessible place:
* * * * *
(5) All
account record information required pursuant to § 240.17a-3(a)(17) until at
least six years after the earlier of the date the account was closed or the
date on which the information was replaced or updated.
(6) Each
report which a securities regulatory authority has requested or required the
member, broker or dealer to make and furnish to it pursuant to an order or
settlement, and each securities regulatory authority examination report until
three years after the date of the report.
(7) Each
compliance, supervisory, and procedures manual, including any updates,
modifications, and revisions to the manual, describing the policies and
practices of the member, broker or dealer with respect to compliance with
applicable laws and rules, and supervision of the activities of each natural
person associated with the member, broker or dealer until three years after the
termination of the use of the manual.
(8) All
reports produced to review for unusual activity in customer accounts until
eighteen months after the date the report was generated. In lieu of maintaining
the reports, a member, broker or dealer may produce promptly the reports upon
request by a representative of a securities regulatory authority. If a report
was generated in a computer system that has been changed in the most recent
eighteen month period in a manner such that the report cannot be reproduced
using historical data in the same format as it was originally generated, the
report may be produced by using the historical data in the current system, but
must be accompanied by a record explaining each system change which affected
the reports. If a report is generated in a computer system that has been
changed in the most recent eighteen month period in a manner such that the
report cannot be reproduced in any format using historical data, the member,
broker or dealer shall promptly produce upon request a record of the parameters
that were used to generate the report at the time specified by a representative
of a securities regulatory authority, including a record of the frequency with which
the reports were generated.
* * * * *
(j) Every
member, broker and dealer subject to this section shall furnish promptly to a
representative of the Commission legible, true, complete, and current copies of
those records of the member, broker or dealer that are required to be preserved
under this section, or any other records of the member, broker or dealer
subject to examination under section 17(b) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78q(b))
that are requested by the representative of the Commission.
(k) Records
for the most recent two year period required to be made pursuant to §
240.17a-3(f) and paragraphs (b)(4) and (e)(7) of this section which relate to
an office shall be maintained at the office to which they relate. If an office
is a private residence where only one associated person (or multiple associated
persons who reside at that location and are members of the same immediate
family) regularly conducts business, and it is not held out to the public as an
office nor are funds or securities of any customer of the member, broker or
dealer handled there, the member, broker or dealer need not maintain records at
that office, but the records must be maintained at another location within the
same State as the member, broker or dealer may select. Rather than maintain the
records at each office, the member, broker or dealer may choose to produce the
records promptly at the request of a representative of a securities regulatory
authority at the office to which they relate or at another location agreed to
by the representative.
(l) When used in this section:
(1) The term office shall have the meaning set forth in § 240.17a-3(g)(1).
(2) The term principal shall have the meaning set forth in § 240.17a-3(g)(2).
(3) The
term securities regulatory authority shall have the meaning set forth in
§ 240.17a-3(g)(3).
(4) The term associated person shall have the meaning set forth in § 240.17a-3(g)(4).
§ 240.17a-4 [Amended]
6. Section 240.17a-4 is amended by:
a. Removing
from paragraph (b)(7) the word "his" and in its place adding
"its"; and
b. Removing
from paragraph (e)(1) the phrase "the "associated person" has
terminated his employment and any other connection with the member, broker or
dealer." and in its place adding "the associated person's employment
and any other connection with the member, broker or dealer has
terminated.".
c. Removing
from paragraph (f)(3)(ii) the phrase "the Commission or its representatives"
and in its place adding "the staffs of the Commission, any self-regulatory
organization of which it is a member, or any State securities regulator having
jurisdiction over the member, broker or dealer".
d. Removing from paragraph (f)(3)(vii):
i. The
phrase "the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
("Commission"), its designees or representatives," and in its
place adding "the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
("Commission"), its designees or representatives, any self-regulatory
organization of which it is a member, or any State securities regulator having
jurisdiction over the member, broker or dealer,";
ii. The
phrase "the Commission's or designee's staff" and in its place adding
"the staffs of the Commission, any self-regulatory organization of which
it is a member, or any State securities regulator having jurisdiction over the
member, broker or dealer"; and
iii. From
each place it appears, the phrase "the Commission's staff or its
designee" and in its place adding "the staffs of the Commission, any
self-regulatory organization of which it is a member, or any State securities
regulator having jurisdiction over the member, broker or dealer".
PART 242 - REGULATIONS M and ATS
7. The authority citation for part 242 continues to read as follows:
Authority:
15 U.S.C. 77g, 77q(a), 77s(a), 78b, 78c, 78i(a), 78j, 78k-1(c), 78l,
78m, 78mm, 78n, 78o(b), 78o(c), 78o(g), 78q(a), 78q(b), 78q(h), 78w(a), 78dd-1,
80a-23, 80a-29, and 80a-37.
8. In §
242.303, paragraph (d) is amended by removing the phrase "representatives or
designees of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and to promptly furnish to
the Commission or its designee" and in its place adding "the staff of
the Securities and Exchange Commission, any self-regulatory organization of
which the alternative trading system is a member, or any State securities regulator
having jurisdiction over the alternative trading system, and to promptly
furnish to the Commission, self-regulatory organization of which the
alternative trading system is a member, or any State securities regulator
having jurisdiction over the alternative trading system".
By the Commission.
Jonathan G. Katz
Secretary
Dated: October 26, 2001
Endnotes
17 CFR 240.17a-3.
17 CFR 240.17a-4.
For purposes of this
release, "State Securities Regulators" include, as described in
Section 15(h) of the Exchange Act, "the securities commissions (or any
agency or office performing like functions) of the States." 15 U.S.C. 78o(h).
See Exchange Act
Release No. 37850 (October 22, 1996), 61 FR 55593 (Oct. 28, 1996)
("Proposing Release" and/or "Proposal") (File No.
S7-27-96).
Pub. L. No. 104-290, 110 Stat. 3416 (1996).
E.g., violations of State suitability and fraud laws, or federal regulations.
15 U.S.C. 78o(h).
142 Cong.Rec.S.
12093, S12094 (October 1, 1996) (statement of Sen. Dodd) ("It is the
intent of the conferees that the SEC work closely with the States to determine
what records should be maintained at branch offices and to establish a
mechanism so that States could require such records be kept in the branch
office, rather than at a back office halfway across the Nation.").
Exchange Act Release
No. 40518 (Oct. 2, 1998), 63 FR 54404 (Oct. 9, 1998) (the "Reproposing
Release" and/or "Reproposal"). The staff of the Division of
Market Regulation has prepared a summary of the comment letters received on the
reproposed rules and rule amendments (hereinafter referred to as "Comment
Summary"). Copies of the comment letters and the Comment Summary have been
placed in Public Reference File No. S7-26-98 and are available for inspection
in the Commission's Public Reference Room.
17 CFR
240.17a-3(a)(6). Most broker-dealers are currently required to record the time
the order was received from a customer under the National Association of
Securities Dealers' ("NASD") Order Audit Trail System
("OATS") rules (NASD rules 6950 through 6957 and 3110) (hereinafter
"OATS rules") (See specifically NASD rules 6954(b)(16) and
3110(h)), and New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") rules 123 and 410A.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(7).
E.g., a firm may satisfy
this requirement by using the record listing any internal identification number
or code assigned to associated persons which is required under new Rule
17a-3(a)(12)(ii) (17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(12)(ii)). Additionally, the Commission
believes this requirement is consistent with the NASD's OATS rules.
A number of firms
have asked for guidance on the meaning of the term "to the extent
feasible." The time of execution should be included on the order ticket
except for situations in which it may be impossible to determine the precise
time when the transaction was executed; however, in that case the broker-dealer
must note the approximate time of execution. Exchange Act Release No. 3040
(Oct. 13, 1941), 11 FR 10984. The Commission has stated that the "phrase
`to the extent feasible' was intended to be applicable only in exceptional
circumstances where it might be actually impossible to determine the exact time
of execution." Exchange Act Release No. 13508 (May 5, 1977) 42 FR 25318.
However, in that case the broker-dealer must note the approximate time of
execution.
This is referred to
elsewhere in the rules as a "subscription-way basis" transaction. See
17 CFR.15c3-1(a)(2)(v).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(12)(ii).
First, reproposed
paragraphs (a)(12)(ii) and (a)(12)(iii) have been moved to paragraph (a)(19) of
Rule 17a-3 to keep all requirements relating to compensation records in the
same section (most agreements between associated persons and broker-dealers
relate to compensation in some manner). Second, reproposed paragraphs
(a)(12)(iv) and (a)(12)(v) have been combined into new paragraph (a)(12)(ii).
And finally, the Commission has deleted the references to local offices and
state record depositories to make this paragraph consistent with the changes to
the definition of "office" in paragraph (g)(1) of Rule 17a-3.
15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(21) and 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(18).
The Commission has
consistently taken the position that independent contractors (who are not
themselves registered as broker-dealers) involved in the sale of securities on
behalf of a broker-dealer are "controlled by" the broker-dealer, and,
therefore, are associated persons of the broker-dealer. See, e.g., In
the Matter of William V. Giordano, 61 S.E.C. Dkt. 345, Exchange Act Release
No. 36742 (Jan. 19, 1996) (in finding that an officer of a broker-dealer firm
failed reasonably to supervise an independent contractor, the Commission found
that the independent contractor was an "associated person" of the
firm within the meaning of Section 3(a)(18) of the Exchange Act). See, also,
Letter from Douglas Scarff, Director, Division of Market Regulation, to Gordon
S. Macklin, NASD; Charles J. Henry, Chicago Board Options Exchange; Robert J.
Birnbaum, American Stock Exchange; and John J. Phelan, NYSE, [1982-1983
Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P77,303 at P77,116 (Jun. 18, 1982); Hollinger
v. Titan Capital Corp., 974 F.2d 1564, 1572-76 (9th Cir. 1990), cert.
denied, 111 S. Ct. 1621 (1991). A similar analysis would be applicable to
other persons, such as consultants and franchisees, performing securities
activities with or for the broker-dealer.
This provision was reproposed as Rule 17a-3(a)(16).
Generally,
suitability rules require that broker-dealers and their associated persons
refrain from recommending transactions or investment strategies to a customer
that would be "unsuitable" for that customer based upon the
customer's situation. Factors that may be considered in assessing a customer's
situation include the customer's age, financial situation, and investment
experience or knowledge of the industry.
See NYSE Rule 408 and NASD Rule 2510(b).
See, e.g., Comment Letters
from Raymond James, p. 4; Investment Management and Research, p. 3, and Mayer,
Brown & Platt, pp. 6-7.
17 CFR
240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(A). This requirement is consistent with SRO rules regarding
the signatures of associated persons and principals when opening customer
accounts. See NYSE Rule 405(3) and NASD Rule 3110(c)(1)(C).
The Commission
believes that this requirement is consistent with SRO requirements regarding
customer accounts such as those discussed above in footnote 23.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17).
See Comment Letters from
Donaldson, Lufkin and Jenrette, p. 9, and the International Association for
Financial Planning, pp. 2-3.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(A).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(B)(1).
Certain SRO rules
already require that customer account records be sent to customers who open
options accounts. See NASD Rule 2860(b)(16)(C) and IM-2860-2, and NYSE
Rule 721(c) and Supplemental Material at .30 regarding options accounts.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(B)(1) through (B)(3).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(B)(1).
Id.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(B)(2).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(B)(3).
See Comment Letters
from Fidelity Investments, p. 5, Benefits Communication Corporation, p. 1,
American Express Financial Advisors, Inc., p. 4, and Comerica Securities, p. 3.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(B)(4).
See, e.g., NASD Rules 2310
and 2860(b)(16)(B), NYSE Rule 723, Chicago Board Options Exchange Rule 9.9, and
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board Rule G-19.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(D).
Sections 10(b) and
15(c) (15 U.S.C. 78j(b) and 15 U.S.C. 78o(c)). See e.g., Hanley
v. SEC, 415 F.2d 589, 596 (2d Cir. 1969); F.J. Kaufman and Co., 50
S.E.C. 164 (1989); O'Connor v. R.F.Lafferty & Co., 965 F.2d 893
(10th Cir. 1992).
17 CFR 240.10b-5 and 17 CFR 240.15c1-2.
See supra note 37.
If a recommendation
is made, a suitability obligation arises irrespective of the medium used to
deliver that recommendation. For example, a broker-dealer can make a
recommendation in person, on a website, via telephone, mail, or email. A
broker-dealer also can recommend a security online regardless of whether that
recommendation is attributable to a specific registered representative. Whether a
broker-dealer has made a recommendation is a question that can only be
answered by considering all of the facts and circumstances. (See
"Suitability Hypotheticals," Report of Commissioner Laura S. Unger,
Online Brokerage: Keeping Apace of Cyberspace, pp. 32-4. (Nov. 1999))
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(9).
See, e.g., Comment Letter of Salomon Smith Barney, pp. 3-4.
This paragraph was proposed as paragraph (a)(17) of Rule 17a-3.
This requirement is
in addition to other recordkeeping requirements such as Rule 17a-4(b)(4), which
requires firms to keep originals of all correspondence received. For example,
if a broker-dealer firm received a written complaint regarding the firm itself,
the firm would be required to keep that complaint under Rule 17a-4(b)(4). If
the complaint related to a particular associated person, the firm would also be
required to make a record of the complaint as to that associated person under Rule
17a-3(a)(18); however, the firm may keep one copy of the complaint to satisfy
both Rules 17a-3(a)(18)(i) and 17a-4(b)(4).
See 17 CFR 240.17a-4(b)(4), and NASD Rule 3110(d).
This requirement
expands on an existing interpretation of the Commission's financial
responsibility rules and the Securities Investor Protection Act of 1970, which
states that, for purposes of custody of securities, for a firm to qualify as an
introducing firm with a lesser net capital requirement than a clearing firm,
its customers must be treated as customers of the clearing firm. In addition,
under that interpretation, the clearing firm must issue account statements
directly to customers, and each account statement must contain the name,
address, and telephone number of a responsible individual at the clearing firm
whom a customer can contact with inquiries and complaints regarding the
customer's account.
See, e.g., Comment Letter
from Lawrence M. Lowman, p. 1.
See supra note 48; Exchange
Act Release No. 31511 at note 21 and accompanying text, (Nov. 24, 1992), 57 FR
56973 (Dec. 2, 1992).
See Comment Letters
from the Discount Brokers, p. 7, and Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, p. 10.
The phrase "and
the specific security," which appeared in the Reproposing Release, was not
included in the Rule as adopted because it is redundant. The record
"listing all purchases and sales of securities for which the associated
person was compensated" must provide enough information to identify that
purchase or sale to which the compensation was attributable.
This Rule was
reproposed as Rule 17a-3(a)(12)(ii) and Rule 17a-3(a)(12)(iii).
This paragraph was
reproposed as paragraph (a)(19) of Rule 17a-3.
See e.g., NASD Rule 2210(b)
and NYSE Rule 472.
E.g., the record may
consist of a principal's signature or initials on the communication, or a
signed memo from the principal granting permission for use of the
communication. Further, a firm may have policies and procedures designed to
establish compliance with applicable federal regulations and SRO rules which
require that a principal approve any advertisements, sales literature, or other
communications with the public. Thus, records presently used to evidence
compliance with SRO rules may also be used to fulfill this requirement.
Supra note 7.
New paragraph
(a)(12)(ii) of Rule 17a-3 requires firms to make a record showing, for each
associated person, every office where the associated person regularly conducts
a securities business and certain other information.
See Comment Letter from
Citicorp, p. 3, "RRs in all local offices would have to be trained to do a
function outside their current job responsibilities, namely to review material
for applicable privileges and make records of documents reviewed by
regulators."
See, e.g., Comment Letters
from Arkansas Securities Department, pp. 1-3; Department of Financial
Institutions, Commonwealth of Kentucky, p. 6; and Securities Division, State of
Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, p. 1.
This does not
relieve broker-dealers from any other federal or SRO requirements to maintain
records at office locations. See, e.g., NASD Rule 3110(d) which requires
firms to keep at each Office of Supervisory Jurisdiction (defined at NASD Rule
3010(g)(1)), either a separate file of all written complaints of customers and
action taken by the firm, or a separate record of such complaints and a clear
reference to the files containing the correspondence connected with such
complaint maintained in such office.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(f).
17 CFR 240.17a-4(k).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(g)(1).
The term
"immediate family," as used in paragraph (k), should be interpreted
to have the same meaning as it does in NASD IM-2110-1(l)(2).
New paragraph (f) of
Rule 17a-3 requires firms to make and keep current separately as to each
office, the books and records required under various paragraphs in Rule 17a-3.
New paragraph (k) of
Rule 17a-4 requires firms to either keep certain records at each office or
produce them at that office or at another agreeable location.
Firms need not apply
to or notify securities regulators as to which office it selects as the
associated person's "office." However, pursuant to paragraph
(a)(12)(iii) of Rule 17a-3, the firm must identify the office as such.
The specific
paragraphs of Rule 17a-3 that are included in this requirement are (a)(1),
(a)(6), (a)(7), (a)(12), (a)(16), (a)(17), (a)(18), (a)(19), (a)(20), (a)(21),
and (a)(22).
Per Schedule 1
data filed by broker-dealers as of year-ending December 31, 1998. Pursuant to
17 CFR 240.17a-10, Broker-dealers are required to file Schedule 1, which
requires the reporting of general information designed to measure certain
economic and financial characteristics.
Supra note 61.
Valid reasons for
delays in producing the requested records do not include the need to send the
records to the firm's compliance office for review prior to providing the records.
See Comment Letter from
A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc., p. 8.
Exchange Act Release
No. 38245 (Jan. 31, 1997), 62 FR 6469 (Feb. 12, 1997).
For instance, limited
liability companies ("LLCs") would be covered.
For example, if the
original report includes customer name, account number, social security number,
and transactional information, however the report that can be re-created at a
later date does not include social security numbers, the firm should provide
the re-created report to the regulator with an explanation that although social
security numbers appeared on the original report, the firm is unable to
re-create the report including that information.
This includes
changes to hardware, software, or changes to the database used to produce the
exception reports.
Exchange Act Release
No. 38245 (Feb. 5, 1997), 62 FR 6469 (Feb. 12, 1997) ("Electronic Storage
Media Release").
17 CFR 240.17a-4(f).
See 17 CFR 240.17a-4(f)(3)(i).
See 17 CFR 240.17a-4(f)(3)(vii).
Exchange Act Release No. 40760 (Dec. 8, 1998), 63 FR 70844 (Dec. 22, 1998).
See supra note 9, at p. 54411.
See Comment Letters
from Mutual Service Corporation, p. 6; Titan Value Equities Group, Inc., pp. 2
and 4; USAA, pp. 2 and 6; MetLife, p. 4; A.G. Edwards and Sons, Inc., p. 6;
MONY, p. 4; Capital West, p. 2; Comerica Securities, p. 2; Nationwide
Investment Services Corporation, p. 2; Edward Jones, pp. 1 and 3; Advest, p. 1;
Salomon Smith Barney, pp. 1 to 2; NyLife Securities, pp. 6 to 7; HD Vest, p. 2;
American Express Financial Advisors, pp. 2 to 5; First Union, pp. 3 to 4;
Charles Schwab, pp. 3 to 4; MML Investors Services, Inc., pp. 2 to 4; National
Planning Corporation, p. 1; Pumphrey Securities, p. 2; Citicorp Investment
Services, pp. 2 to 3; Discount Brokers, pp. 4 to 5; M & T Securities, pp. 1
and 2; Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, p. 6; Investment Management &
Research, Inc., p. 4; John Hancock Distributors, Inc., pp. 3 to 4; Southwest
Securities, p. 2; the Securities Industry Association, p. 10; Merrill Lynch,
pp. 1, 6 to 7, and 11; and Raymond James, p. 5.
See Comment Letters
from Michigan, pp. 1 to 2; Idaho, pp. 1 and 4; Kansas, pp. 1 to 2; Delaware,
pp. 1 to 2; Colorado, p. 2; North Dakota, p. 1; Ohio, p. 1; Texas, pp. 1, 2 to
3, and 6; Hawaii, pp. 1 to 2; Rhode Island, pp. 1 to 2; New Hampshire, pp. 1
and 2; Nebraska, p. 1; Utah, pp. 1 and 3; NASAA, pp. 3 to 5 and 22; New York,
pp. 1 and 3; Virginia, pp. 1 to 3; New Jersey, pp. 2 to 7; Washington, pp. 2
and 6; Arkansas, pp. 1, 3, and 5; New Mexico, p. 1; North Carolina, pp. 1 to 2;
and Montana, pp. 1, and 3 to 5.
See Comment Letters
from AARP, p. 2; and the Consumer Federation of America, pp. 2 to 3.
See Comment Letters
from American Council of Life Insurance, pp. 12 to 13; and International
Association of Financial Planning, p. 6.
See Comment Letter from
Thomas Koutris, p. 1.
This paragraph
provides that broker-dealers must obtain certain information relating to the
accounts of natural customers, and that customer account records must be
updated regularly.
In the reproposed
rule this paragraph provided that certain records had to be maintained at the
local office, or that they had to be produced at the local office to which they
related on the same day a request for those records was made by a representative of a securities regulatory authority.
See Comment Letter from
State of Virginia, pp. 1 to 3.
Per NASD Dispute
Resolution, Inc. website: www.nasdradr.com/statistics.asp .
It should be noted
that these estimates do not include any internal compliance, operational,
and/or legal costs incurred by these firms in dealing with these complaints.
See, e.g., Comment Letter
from the State of New Jersey, p. 5.
See Second Comment
Letter from State of Connecticut. The State of Connecticut performed
examinations of forty-nine office locations of twenty-three broker-dealers in
five States. Seventeen of these offices had two or less associated persons
working there. In addition, the State reviewed the most recent 100 examinations
it had performed, and as well as investigatory materials from the prior two
years wherein subpoenas were issued to obtain broker-dealer records.
See Second Comment
Letter from NASAA. The State of Florida performed examinations on 19
broker-dealers.
Four States provided
specific information regarding investor losses. Illinois indicated (in its
Comment Letter, p. 2) that over the past 8 years, 29 enforcement cases were
brought in which Illinois investors lost over $38.9 million dollars. Kansas
indicated (in the attachment to its Comment Letter) that, with respect to cases they
have brought over the past ten years, Kansas customers have lost over $6.4
million dollars. Ohio indicated (in its Comment Letter, p. 3) that in one
particular case Ohio investors lost over $60 million dollars. Lastly,
Connecticut indicated (in its Comment Letter, p. 2) that, with respect to cases they have
brought where the investors' relationship was established through small
offices, Connecticut investors have lost over $12 million.
Report by the
Division of Market Regulation and the Division of Enforcement, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, The Large Firm Project: A Review of Hiring,
Retention and Supervisory Practices (May 1994).
Id., at pp. 5 and 7
See, Comment Letter from the State of New Jersey, p. 3.
See, Comment Letter from NASAA, pp. 7-8.
E.g., the NASD's OATS rules, and NYSE rules 123 and 410A.
See, Comment Letter from the Consumer Federation of America, p. 3, note 4.
See Comment Letter from State of Michigan Department of Consumer & Industry Services, p. 1.
See Comment Letter from State of Texas' State Securities Board, pp. 2-3.
The Commission
estimates that these amendments to Rule 17a-4 will take broker-dealers an
additional four hours each per year. In the Reproposal the Commission estimated
that these amendments would take an additional eight hours. Since the
amendments being adopted today allow broker-dealers the option of not
maintaining records at each office or producing records to the office to which
they relate on the same day they are requested, the original estimate was
reduced by one-half. The Commission believes that firms will have senior compliance personnel ensure compliance with these amended rules. According to the
Securities Industry Association ("SIA") Management and
Professional Earnings 2000 report, Table 051, the hourly cost of a
Compliance Manager + 35% overhead is $101.25. ($101.25 x 4) = approximately
$405.00 for each respondent, per year.
($405.00 per respondent x (7,217 broker-dealers) = approximately $2.9 million per year.
Supra at note 95.
17 CFR
240.17a-3(a)(9), NASD Rules 2310(b), 3110(c) and IM-2860-2, and NYSE Rules 405,
407, 408, 410A, and 721.10.
Including customer
name, address, telephone number, employment status, annual income, net worth,
and the investment objectives for the account.
The Commission
originally proposed that broker-dealers verify customer account information at
least once each year (See Proposing Release), however this was modified
and reproposed as once every thirty-six months in the Reproposal based upon
comments received from broker-dealers who contended that it would be too costly
to send account information to customers yearly.
Broker-dealers must
furnish notification of a change in the name or address information to the
customer's old address, and must furnish a copy of new account record
information to the customer if some other information component is changed.
See e.g., Comment Letter from Raymond James Financial, Inc., p. 4.
See e.g., Comment Letter from Investment Management & Research, Inc., p. 4.
Supra note 1.
See infra note117.
Broker-dealers
reported, in their 12/31/00 Schedule 1 filings (required to be filed
pursuant to 17 CFR 240.17a-10), that they maintained a total of 97,600,000
customer accounts. The Commission estimates that at least 27,100,000 of these
accounts are excluded from the provisions of Rule 17a-3(a)(17) because they are
either not accounts of natural persons, inactive, or accounts for which the
broker-dealer does not have a suitability requirement (the Commission arrived
at this number using estimates provided by the firms, in their comment letters
and otherwise, as to how many of their accounts would fit into one or more of
these categories. See Rule 17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(i)(D)). Accordingly,
the total number of accounts which would need to be contacted for updating is
70,500,000 every three years. 70,500,000 / 3 = 23,500,000 per year.
Of the 23,500,000
accounts to which a copy of the account agreement must be sent each year,
22,975,000 (or 97%) of those accounts are attributable to 70 large
broker-dealers which maintain over 100,000 customer accounts. Based upon the
comment letters and other communications, large broker-dealers are more
automated and small broker-dealers have more manual processes. The estimated
additional time to send out customer account information is 1½ minutes per
account for large broker-dealers and 7 minutes per account for small
broker-dealers. The estimated number of customers who will provide updated
account record information is 4,700,000 (or 20% of customers to which
notification is sent - this estimate is based on a comment letter sent by Merrill
Lynch) (4,559,000 the 4,700,000 are estimated to be maintained at large
broker-dealers). The estimated time to update these account records is 5
minutes per account record for large broker-dealers and 10 minutes per account
for small broker-dealers, and the estimated time to send updated account record
to customer to notify of change is 1½ minutes for large broker-dealers and 7
minutes for small broker-dealers. The estimated number of customers who will
change their account record without being prompted by a mailing is 3,525,000
(3,419,250 of which are maintained at large broker-dealers), and the estimated
time to send updated account record information to those customers is 1½
minutes per account for large broker-dealers and 7 minutes per account for
small broker-dealers. Thus it would take approximately 2.25 minutes per account
contacted each year to send account records (((22,795,000 x 1½) + (705,000 x
7)) + ((4,559,000 x 1½) + (141,000 x 7)) + ((3,419,250 x 1½) + (105,750 x 7)))
/ 23,500,000 accounts contacted yearly. In addition, it would take approximately
1.03 minutes per account contacted each year to update the account records
(((4,559,000 x 5) + (141,000 x 10)) / 23,500,000 accounts contacted yearly. In
total, the Staff estimates that it would take 3.28 minutes per account
contacted each year for processing and any updating.
The estimated total
additional hours to provide customers with account record information is
880,369 hours ((((22,795,000 x 1½) + (705,000 x 7)) + ((4,559,000 x 1½) +
(141,000 x 7)) + ((3,419,250 x 1½) + (105,750 x 7))) / 60 minutes). The
estimated total additional hours to update customers accounts is 403,417 hours
(((4,559,000 x 5) + (141,000 x 10))/ 60 minutes in an hour). The hourly wage of
the average person who would be providing customers with account record
information is $22.70 per hour (per the SIA Report on Office Salaries In the
Securities Industry 2000, Table 082 (Retail Sales Assistant, Registered)
and including 35% in overhead charges). The hourly wage of the average person
who would be updating account record information is $25.90 per hour (per the
SIA Report on Office Salaries In the Securities Industry 2000, Table 086
(Data Entry Clerk, Senior) and including 35% in overhead charges). Thus the
aggregate cost of these hours is about $30.4 million ((880,369 hours x $22.70)
+ (403,417 hours x $25.90)). The estimated additional cost of paper, printing,
and postage to provide this information to customers is between $.05 and $.244 per
record sent, or between $1.6 million and $7.7 million (($.05 or $.244) x
(23,500,000 + 4,700,000 + 3,525,000 )). Yielding a total cost per record sent of
between $1.36 and $1.62(($30.4 million + ($1.6 million or $7.7 million))/23,500,000
records sent per year).
It is estimated that
it will take firms 2 hours each, on average, to update their forms to include
information regarding the meaning of investment objective terms. The Commission
believes that firms will have an attorney perform this task. According to the
SIA Management and Professional Earnings 2000 report, Tables 107
(Attorney) and 108 (Compliance Attorney), the hourly cost of an attorney + 35%
overhead is $156.00 per hour. ($156.00 x 2) = approximately $312.00 per
broker-dealer.
One small
broker-dealer stated, "smaller firms lack the automation to do this type
of action...without additional personnel,"(See Comment Letter from
Titan Value Equities Group, Inc., p. 2) another stated, "[w]e do not have
electronic account records,"(See Comment Letter from Capital West
Securities, Inc., p. 2) and another stated, "for most firms [the] initial
identification process would be manual" and "compiling the account
record to send would require...pulling out a paper file for the account and
making photo copies of the documents or pulling up the account on a computer
system and printing out the required account information screens."(See
Comment Letter from Comerica Securities, p. 2.) No smaller broker-dealer
provided information regarding any increased equipment or systems development
costs.
See Comment Letter from Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, p. 4.
See Comment Letter from Merrill Lynch, p. 7 ($630,000 + $370,000 + $300,000).
See Comment Letter from Dean Witter, p. 4.
See Comment Letter from
Merrill Lynch, p. 7. Merrill Lynch's estimate that they would spend $3.8
million for ongoing costs was reduced to account for the fact that the
Commission has included costs to send account records to customers, costs to
update customer account records, costs to send notification of updates to
customers, and postage costs, which are included in Merrill's $3.8 million
figure, elsewhere.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(19)(ii).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(12)(ii).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(12)(iii).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(19)(i).
See supra text accompanying notes 95 and 96.
See supra note 102.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(ii) and 17 CFR 240.17a-4(b)(4).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(21).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(22).
See e.g., NASD Rule 3010.
See e.g., NASD Rule 3110(d), and for options complaints NASD Rule 2860(b)(17).
The Commission
estimates that it will take each broker-dealer, on average, two hours to update
its forms to include the address to which complaints should be sent. This is a
very conservative estimate, since it will probably take much less than 2 hours
to write down the broker-dealer's address and where it should be placed on the
form, but additional time was added to account for supervisory review. The
Commission believes broker-dealers would have an attorney perform this task.
According to the SIA Management and Professional Earnings 2000 report,
Tables 107 (Attorney) and 108 (Compliance Attorney), the hourly cost of an
attorney + 35% overhead is $156.00 per hour. ($156.00 x 2) = approximately
$312.00 per broker-dealer.
The Commission
estimated in its Reproposal that, on average, this requirement will obligate a
broker-dealer to spend approximately 30 minutes each year to ensure that the
records are in compliance with these amendments. The Commission received no
specific comments relating to this estimate. The Commission believes firms may have
senior compliance personnel perform this task. According to the SIA Management
and Professional Earnings 2000 report, Table 051, the hourly cost of a
Compliance Manager + 35% overhead is $101.25. ($101.25 x ½ hour) =
approximately $50.63 per broker-dealer.
The Commission
estimated in its Reproposal that it will take each firm 10 additional minutes
each year to assure compliance with the amendments, and it received no specific
comments relating to this estimate. The Commission believes that firms will
have senior compliance personnel perform this task. According to the SIA Management
and Professional Earnings 2000 report, Table 051, the hourly cost of a
Compliance Manager + 35% overhead is $101.25. ($101.25 x 10 minutes / 60
minutes in an hour) = approximately $16.88 per broker-dealer.
15 U.S.C. 78w(a)(2)
15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
Supra note 9, at 54411.
Of the 144 total
"comment letters" on file, seventeen are memos by the staff of the
Commission relating to meetings with various industry groups, and twelve simply
request that the comment period be extended.
See, Comment Letter from NASAA, p. 7.
See, Comment Letters from Titan Value Equities Groups, Inc., p. 3; BenefitsCorp Equities, Inc., p.
2; and One Orchard Equities, Inc. p. 2.
See, Comment Letter from MML Investor Services, Inc., pp. 5 to 6.
Paragraph (k) of Rule 17a-4.
See paragraphs
(a)(6)(ii) and (a)(17)(i)(D) of Rule 17a-3. In addition, paragraph (a)(17) of
Rule 17a-3 was modified to limit the requirement to accounts with a natural
person as the customer.
See Comment Letter from NASAA, p. 4.
15 U.S.C. 78a
et. seq., adopted on October 11, 1996.
15 U.S.C. 78o(h).
See supra note 8.
Pursuant to 17 CFR
240.0-10, the term "small business" or "small organization"
when used with reference to a broker or dealer means a broker or dealer that:
(i) had total capital (net worth plus subordinated liabilities) of less than
$500,000 on the date its audited financial statements for the prior fiscal year
were prepared pursuant to 17 CFR 240.17-5(d) or, if not required to file such
statements, a broker-dealer that had total net capital (net worth plus
subordinated liabilities) of less than $500,000 on the last business day of the
preceding fiscal year (or in the time that it has been in business, if
shorter); and (ii) is not affiliated with any person (other than a natural
person) that is not a small business or small organization as defined in 17 CFR
240.0-10. In addition, Exchange Act Release No. 40122 (June 24, 1998) 63 FR
35508 (June 30, 1998) recently amended standard that defines what it means to
be "affiliated" with any person that is not a small business.
See supra note 9.
See Comment Letter from American Council of Life Insurance, p. 16.
See Comment Letters
from Titan Value Equities Group, Inc., pp. 2-3; Lawrence Lowman, p. 1; and John
Hancock Distributors, Inc., p. 3.
E.g., broker-dealers
which only facilitate transactions in certain types of products or
broker-dealers which do not make recommendations.
See e.g., NASD Rule 3110(c).
17 CFR 240.17a-4(a)(1).
See Comment Letter from Lawrence Lowman, p. 1.
See Comment Letter from Titan Value Equities, p. 3.
Id., p. 2.
See Comment Letter from John Hancock Distributors, Inc., p. 3
Id.
15 U.S.C. 78o(h).
44 U.S.C. 3502 et seq.
Of approximately
7,739 broker-dealers registered with the Commission, approximately 341 are not
yet active because their registration is pending SRO approval and approximately
181 are inactive because they have ceased doing a securities business and have
filed a Form BDW with the Commission. Of these 7, 217 active, registered
broker-dealers, three are registered OTC Derivatives Dealers. OTC Derivatives
Dealers are a special class of broker-dealers that limit their business to
dealer activities in eligible over-the-counter derivative instruments and that
meet certain financial responsibility and other requirements.
Supra note 117.
The Commission, in
its Reproposal, estimated that it would take broker-dealers 10 seconds to
furnish the account record to customers. Because many commenters contended that
this estimate was too low, the Commission raised its estimates.
Supra note 121.
See Comment Letter from Comerica Securities, p. 2.
See Comment Letter from Merrill Lynch, p. 7.
See Comment Letter from Titan Value Equities, Inc., p. 2.
See NASD Rules 3110(c) and IM-2860-2, and NYSE Rules 405, 407, 410A, and 721.10.
See e.g., NASD Rule 2310(b) and IM-2860-2.
Supra note 158.
See e.g., NYSE Rule 408.
Supra note 126.
Supra note 127.
Supra note 128.
Supra note 129.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(18)(i).
Supra note 136.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17)(ii) and 17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(20).
Supra note 133.
Supra note 134.
Supra note 135.
Supra note 102.
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(17).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(12) and (19).
17 CFR 240.17a-3(a)(20) to (22).
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