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Chief Executive Officers and Compliance Officers of All National Banks, Department and Division Heads, and All Examining Personnel
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This issuance is to notify you that the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System (Board) have jointly issued final
rules that define the extent to which securities brokerage
activities of banks are subject to SEC regulation.1 The final rules,
known as “Regulation R,” will implement provisions of the
Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act of 1999 (GLBA) that set forth certain
exceptions for banks from the broker-dealer registration
requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act).2
In developing the final rules, the SEC and the Board consulted with
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS).
When finalizing the rules, the SEC and the Board also considered the comments received on the proposed rules issued in December 2006.
Regulation R supersedes the SEC’s previous related proposals issued after the enactment of GLBA.3
Prior to GLBA, banks were excluded from the
definition of “broker” contained in the Exchange Act and were exempt
from the Exchange Act’s broker rules and registration requirements.
GLBA provided that banks are excluded from the definition of
“broker” only to the extent that their securities activities fall
within one or more of GLBA’s exceptions. These exceptions cover
banks’ securities activities in connection with third-party
brokerage arrangements, trust and fiduciary activities, permissible
securities transactions, certain stock purchase plans, sweep
accounts, affiliate transactions, private securities offerings,
safekeeping and custody activities, identified banking products,
municipal securities, and a de minimis number of other securities
transactions. To the extent a bank plans to engage in the business
of effecting securities transactions for others’ accounts and does
not qualify for GLBA’s statutory exceptions or the exemptions
adopted by the SEC and the Federal Reserve, the bank will be
required to either register with the SEC as a broker or will have to
“push out” these activities to a registered affiliate or third-party
brokerage firm.
REGULATION
R Regulation R defines the terms used in several
of GLBA’s statutory exceptions and includes certain related
exemptions. Specifically, the final rules implement the statutory
exceptions that allow a bank, subject to certain conditions, to
continue to conduct securities transactions for its customers as
part of the bank’s trust and fiduciary, custodial, and deposit sweep
functions, and to refer customers to a securities broker-dealer
pursuant to a networking arrangement with the broker-dealer.
Regulation R also includes certain exemptions related to foreign
securities transactions, non-custodial securities lending
transactions conducted in an agency capacity, and the execution of
transactions other than through a broker-dealer.
The effective date of most of Regulation R’s provisions is
September 28, 2007. Banks are exempt from complying with the rules
and the “broker” exceptions in Section 3(a)(4)(B) of the Exchange
Act until the first day of their first fiscal year that commences
after September 30, 2008. For most national banks the compliance
date will be January 1, 2009. Regulation R was published in the
Federal Register on October 3, 2007, and is available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/2007/34-56501fr.pdf.
SEC
COMPANION RULES Simultaneously, the SEC also
amended and adopted related rules regarding exemptions from the
definition of “broker” and “dealer” for certain securities
activities conducted by banks. In particular, the SEC is adopting a
conditional exemption that will allow banks to effect riskless
principal transactions with non-U.S. persons pursuant to Regulation
S under the Securities Act of 1933. The SEC is also amending an
existing exemption from the definition of “dealer” for banks’
conduit securities lending activities. Additionally, the SEC amended
its rules governing brokers to align these rules with the new bank
broker and dealer provisions.
The effective date of these final rules is November 2, 2007. The
SEC’s companion release was also published in the Federal
Register on October 3, 2007, and is available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/2007/34-56502fr.pdf
NEXT STEPS FOR BANKING
AGENCIES As required by GLBA, the banking agencies
(Federal Reserve, OCC, FDIC, and OTS) will develop, and request
public comment on, record keeping rules for banks that operate under
the broker exceptions in the Exchange Act. These rules will be
developed in consultation with the SEC and will establish record
keeping requirements to enable banks to demonstrate compliance with
GLBA’s statutory exceptions and the newly finalized
rules.
The banking agencies
also are revisiting the Interagency Statement on Retail Sales of
Nondeposit Investment Products to determine the appropriate
revisions based on changes implemented by the GLBA and implementing
regulations.
The
SEC and Federal Reserve will jointly issue any interpretations and
responses to requests for no-action letters or other interpretative
guidance concerning the scope or terms of the exceptions and
requirements of Regulation R. The SEC, Federal Reserve, and the
appropriate federal banking agencies will consult and coordinate to
the extent appropriate on any proposed formal enforcement actions
taken against a bank for violations of Regulation R.
The
SEC and banking agencies also expect to continue the dialogue with
the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority concerning potential
modifications to the Authority’s Rule 3040, Private Securities
Transactions. The discussion will focus upon Rule 3040’s
applicability to “dual employees,” in situations when individuals
are employees of both a bank and a broker-dealer.
NEXT STEPS FOR
BANKERS National banks should assess how these new
requirements will affect their securities activities. Based upon
this assessment, many banks will likely conclude that they need to
develop a strategic initiative that focuses on how to organize and
conduct bank securities activities in compliance with the new
requirements. This strategic initiative should cover comprehensively
the effected lines of business and their associated risk control
functions. Actions should include establishing effective compliance,
internal audit, and record keeping systems to ensure conformance
with the regulatory provisions. Banks should also implement
effective bank employee training and ongoing supervision and
monitoring of bank employee activities covered by the new regulatory
requirements. Banks that do not establish effective compliance
systems risk exposing the bank to violations of law and regulations
for conducting unauthorized securities activities in an unregistered
securities broker or dealer.
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION Should
you have any questions regarding these rules and their impact on
national banks, please contact Stephanie Boccio or Joel Miller in
the Asset Management Group at (202) 874-4447, or Bill Dehnke or Ted
Dowd in the Securities and Corporate Practices Division at (202)
874-5210.
/signed/
Kerri Corn
Director for Credit and Market Risk
/signed/
Ellen Broadman Director for Securities and Corporate
Practices
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Attachments: Final
Rule
[http://www.occ.treas.gov/fr/fedregister/72fr56514.pdf]
Final
Rule: Exemptions
[http://www.occ.treas.gov/fr/fedregister/72fr56562.pdf]
1 The Financial Services Regulatory Relief Act of 2006, among other things, required the SEC and the Board to adopt jointly a single set of rules to implement the bank broker exceptions in section 3(a)(4) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
2The Federal Reserve amended Title 12, Chapter II of the Code of Federal Regulations by adding a new Part 218, “Exceptions for Banks from the Definition of Broker in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Regulation R).” The SEC amended Title 17, Chapter II of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 240, “General Rules and Regulations, Securities Exchange Act of 1934” and added Part 247, “Regulation R.”
3This includes proposed Regulation B and the Interim Final Rules. With the finalization of Regulation R, the OCC is rescinding OCC Bulletins 2007-5, 2004-31 and 2001-30 that respectively provided notification of the previously proposed: Regulation R; Regulation B; and the Interim Final Rules.
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