95-1682. Amendments to Regulations for the Government Securities Act of 1986  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 15 (Tuesday, January 24, 1995)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 4576-4581]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-1682]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    Office of the Under Secretary for Domestic Finance
    
    17 CFR Parts 404 and 405
    
    RIN 1505-AA53
    
    
    Amendments to Regulations for the Government Securities Act of 
    1986
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Under Secretary for Domestic Finance, Treasury.
    
    ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Government Securities Act Amendments of 1993 authorize the 
    Secretary of the Treasury (Treasury) to prescribe rules requiring 
    persons holding, maintaining or controlling large positions in to-be-
    issued or recently issued Treasury securities to keep records and file 
    reports of such large positions. The Treasury is issuing this Advance 
    Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) to advise market participants of 
    our intention to issue large position recordkeeping and reporting 
    regulations, describe the purposes of, and objectives to be achieved 
    by, such rules and identify key elements related to any rule proposal. 
    We invite comments, advice and recommendations from interested parties 
    regarding how the large position recordkeeping and reporting 
    requirements should be structured. To assist in the solicitation of 
    comments and to facilitate in the development of rules, responses to 
    specific questions are requested.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before April 24, 1995.
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent to: Government Securities 
    Regulations Staff, Bureau of the Public Debt, Department of the 
    Treasury, 999 E Street NW., Room 515, Washington, D.C. 20239-0001. 
    Comments received will be available for public inspection and copying 
    at the Treasury Department Library, Room 5030, Main Treasury Building, 
    1500 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington, D.C. 20220.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ken Papaj (Director) or Don Hammond 
    (Assistant Director), Government Securities Regulations Staff, at 202-
    219-3632. (TDD for the hearing impaired is 202-219-3988.)
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        The U.S. government securities market is the largest and most 
    liquid securities market in the world. The enormous liquidity and 
    pricing efficiency of this market provide incalculable benefits to 
    other financial markets in the United States, and throughout the world, 
    by providing a continuous benchmark for interest rates on dollar-
    denominated instruments across the maturity spectrum. The government 
    securities market has consistently demonstrated its ability to absorb 
    the large amounts of Treasury securities that must be issued to finance 
    the operations of the U.S. Government in a cost-effective manner for 
    the taxpayer, which is the market's primary public purpose. However, 
    certain events that occurred in 1991, specifically a ``short 
    squeeze''1 in two different Treasury securities led to the 
    realization that Federal financial regulators need, from time to time, 
    more information about holdings of very large amounts of Treasury 
    securities.
    
        \1\A short squeeze can occur when an event unanticipated by 
    short sellers reduces the supply of securities available in the 
    marketplace. It can also occur as a result of deliberate behavior by 
    one or more market participants to restrict the supply of 
    securities, thereby driving up prices.
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    A. Events Giving Rise to Large Position Reporting Authority
    
        The occurrence of short squeezes in the government securities 
    market in 1991 is discussed in some detail in the Joint Report on the 
    Government Securities Market (Joint Report).2 While yields of 
    Treasury securities of similar maturity vary constantly, there were two 
    instances during the Spring of 1991 in which particular securities 
    traded well below the corresponding yields for similar securities for 
    an extended period of time. In the first case, a short squeeze 
    developed in the two-year note auctioned on April 24, 1991. When the 
    squeeze first became evident in mid-May, the yield on the April two-
    year [[Page 4577]] note had moved considerably out of line from 
    surrounding market rates, and the notes were ``on special'' in the 
    repurchase agreement (repo) market.3
    
        \2\Department of the Treasury, Securities and Exchange 
    Commission and Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    Joint Report on the Government Securities Market, January 1992.
        \3\ A security is said the be ``on special'' when, due to its 
    scarcity, a holder can enter into a repo involving that specific 
    security at a lower rate of interest, and thus a lower financing 
    cost, than the prevailing or general repo rate.
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        The second incident involved the two-year Treasury note auctioned 
    on May 22, 1991. In that auction, Salomon Brothers Inc. (Salomon), a 
    major participant in the market, submitted large, aggressive bids for 
    itself and two of its customers and was awarded a large portion of the 
    amount sold. As a result of these awards and additional purchases in 
    the market, there was a concentration of holdings of the May two-year 
    notes and the prices of the notes in the cash and financing markets 
    were distorted. At that time, a number of market participants contacted 
    the Treasury and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) 
    expressing concern about a shortage in the May two-year note.4
    
        \4\Information about primary dealers' positions in Treasury 
    securities is collected routinely by the Federal Reserve Bank of New 
    York.
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        The apparent short squeeze was serious enough that Treasury 
    officials informed staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission 
    (SEC) of possible problems and trading irregularities stemming from the 
    auction and subsequent trading. Following that notification, the 
    Treasury and the FRBNY actively monitored the market for the May two-
    year notes and the SEC and Justice began investigations. The government 
    investigations, and Salomon's internal review that was conducted in 
    response to these investigations, ultimately resulted in a series of 
    disclosures by Salomon in August 1991 that it had submitted 
    unauthorized customer bids in several auctions in 1990 and 1991.5
    
        \5\See Salomon Press Releases dated August 9 and 14, 1991.
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        The events involving the bidding improprieties of Salomon and the 
    squeezes of Treasury notes also focused attention on large investment 
    entities (``hedge funds''\6\ being one of the more prominent types) 
    that play a major role in the government securities market. Many of 
    these investment funds, however, are exempt from most types of U.S. 
    regulatory oversight.
    
        \6\For a detailed discussion of hedge funds, see the Joint 
    Report, at B-64.
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        While large investment funds have regularly placed bids in Treasury 
    auctions in the past, it was not until late 1990 that these funds began 
    to be awarded large amounts of securities in Treasury auctions, 
    suggesting that they had highly leveraged positions. Like most 
    investors, they typically bid through major primary dealers. The 
    combined awards of the investment fund and the dealer which submitted 
    such bids would often represent a significant portion of the publicly 
    offered amount of securities.
        Regulators had little, if any, authority to gain access to 
    information about the holdings of many major investors. Investment 
    funds, other than those required to register under the Investment 
    Company Act, e.g., mutual funds, are not generally subject to SEC 
    oversight.7 The SEC also has little authority to obtain regular 
    information on the government securities activities of large investors. 
    Treasury also has little access to information on their activities, 
    other than auction-related information. The CFTC is the only regulatory 
    agency with regular reporting contact with certain large investors. 
    However, the CFTC's responsibilities extend primarily to the futures 
    market.
    
        \7\ Most investment interests in investment partnerships are not 
    registered pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933; hedge fund 
    structures are such that they claim an exemption from registering as 
    securities dealers under Section 15(a) of the Securities Exchange 
    Act of 1934; and a hedge fund is usually structured so as not to be 
    an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940. 
    However, the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws do 
    apply to hedge funds whether or not they are registered with the 
    SEC.
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    B. Regulatory Agencies Responses to Market Problems
    
        Beginning in September 1991, the Treasury, the SEC and the Federal 
    Reserve conducted a thorough examination and review of the government 
    securities market and published the Joint Report in January 1992. This 
    report contained many legislative and regulatory recommendations for 
    strengthening oversight of the market.8 One recommendation, which 
    is the focus of this advance notice of proposed rulemaking, involved 
    clarifying and expanding Treasury's authority under the Government 
    Securities Act of 1986 (GSA) to require reporting by all holders of 
    large positions in Treasury securities. The Treasury's authority to 
    prescribe recordkeeping and reporting rules under the GSA, prior to the 
    amendments of 1993, permitted a large position reporting system 
    designed to monitor concentrations of positions at government 
    securities brokers and dealers.
    
        \8\Joint Report at xv-xvi and 6-34.
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        The Treasury also took administrative and regulatory actions to 
    strengthen oversight and surveillance of the market and maintain a 
    fully competitive auction process.9 A few of the more significant 
    reforms that are related to the issues addressed in this notice 
    involved improved surveillance of the market and the establishment of 
    an automated system of auctioning Treasury securities. A new 
    surveillance working group (comprised of Treasury, FRBNY, SEC, Federal 
    Reserve Board, and CFTC officials) was formed to improve surveillance 
    and strengthen regulatory coordination. FRBNY, acting as Treasury's 
    fiscal agent, as well as to support their monetary policy operations, 
    has enhanced and expanded its market oversight efforts for collecting 
    and analyzing information needed for surveillance purposes. In 
    addition, the Treasury increased the maximum amount from $1 million to 
    $5 million for noncompetitive tenders; published a thoroughly revised, 
    comprehensive Uniform Offering Circular for Treasury securities to 
    codify and clarify Treasury auction rules; and in August of 1992, began 
    auctioning 2- and 5-year notes using a single price auction (or so-
    called ``Dutch auction'') experiment.
    
        \9\See Joint Report, at xiii-xv, for a description of the 
    administrative and regulatory actions taken by the regulatory 
    agencies.
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    C. Congressional Response to Market Problems--Government Securities Act 
    Amendments of 1993
    
        The short squeezes of the Spring of 1991 and the revelations in 
    August 1991 of wrongdoing by Salomon in the purchase and sale of 
    Treasury securities occurred during a period when Congress was 
    considering government securities legislation to, among other things, 
    reauthorize Treasury's rulemaking authority under the GSA, which was 
    set to expire on October 1, 1991.10 These events in the government 
    securities market sparked an extensive review of the operations of the 
    market and the need for additional reforms to strengthen its 
    regulation. Numerous Congressional committee hearings and legislative 
    mark-up sessions were held in both the Senate and House of 
    Representatives from May 1991 through the Fall of 1993.
    
        \10\ Treasury's rulemaking authority did expire and it was 
    without such authority from October 1, 1991, until December 17, 
    1993, when the Government Securities Act Amendments of 1993 (P.L. 
    103-202, 107 Stat. 2344 (1993)) was signed into law.
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        Although, as noted, the Treasury instituted several reforms in 
    response to the Salomon violations and short squeezes, the Treasury 
    also requested expanded and strengthened regulatory power over the 
    government securities market which was realized in the Government 
    Securities Act Amendments of 1993 (GSAA), which [[Page 4578]] was 
    signed into law by President Clinton on December 17, 1993. One of the 
    major provisions of the GSAA authorizes the Treasury to write rules for 
    large position reporting.11 This provision is intended to improve 
    the information available to regulators regarding very large positions 
    of recently issued Treasury securities held by market participants and 
    to assure that regulators have the tools necessary to monitor the 
    Treasury securities market.
    
        \11\In addition to large position reporting, some of the key 
    provisions of the GSAA are: Permanent reauthorization of Treasury's 
    rulemaking authority; authorization to prescribe sales practice 
    rules for the government securities market; increased authority to 
    the SEC to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices; 
    prohibition on false and misleading statements in government 
    securities offerings; and authority to the SEC to receive records of 
    government securities transactions for trade reconstruction 
    purposes.
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        Section 104 of the GSAA, which amended Section 15C of the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934, authorizes the Treasury to adopt rules 
    requiring specified persons holding, maintaining, or controlling large 
    positions in to-be-issued or recently issued Treasury securities to 
    file reports regarding such positions.12 As explained in a floor 
    statement on this legislation, this grant of authority ``* * * rests on 
    the belief that the Secretary of the Treasury is well positioned to 
    determine whether large position reporting is necessary and appropriate 
    in order to monitor the impact in the Treasury securities market of 
    concentrations of positions and to assist the SEC in its enforcement of 
    the Exchange Act. It is our expectation that substantial deference will 
    be accorded to any determination that Treasury makes in this 
    regard.''13
    
        \12\ P.L. 103-202, Sec. 104; 15 U.S.C. 78o-5(f).
        \13\ Floor statement on S. 422, The Government Securities Act 
    Amendments of 1993, representing the views of the Chairman and 
    Ranking Minority Member of the House Committee on Energy and 
    Commerce and the Chairman and Ranking Minority Member of the House 
    Subcommittee on Telecommunications and Finance, Congressional 
    Record, (November 22, 1993) at H. 10967. For other legislative 
    history, see S. Rpt. 103-109 (July 27, 1993); Congressional Record 
    (July 27, 1993) at S. 9863-9866; H. Rpt. 103-255 (September 23, 
    1993); and Congressional Record (October 5, 1993) at H. 7390-7405.
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        Unless otherwise specified by the Treasury, the large position 
    reports are to be filed with the FRBNY, acting as Treasury's agent. 
    Such reports will in turn be provided to the SEC by the FRBNY. The 
    legislation also authorizes Treasury to prescribe recordkeeping rules 
    for holders of large positions to ensure that they can comply with the 
    reporting requirements. It also permits the Treasury to exempt, 
    consistent with the public interest and the protection of investors, 
    any person or class of persons, or any transaction or class of 
    transactions, from the large position reporting rules. The legislation 
    grants Treasury flexibility and discretion in determining the key 
    requirements and features to be addressed in the rules--defining which 
    persons (individually or as a group) hold positions; the size and types 
    of positions to be reported; the securities to be covered; the 
    aggregation of positions and accounts; and the form, manner and timing 
    of reporting.
         To provide the reader with a sense of the Congressional intent and 
    importance associated with large position reporting, the following are 
    excerpts from House Report 103-255.14
    
        \14\ House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Report to Accompany 
    H.R. 618, H.R. Rep. No. 103-255, 103d Cong., 1st Sess. (September 
    23, 1993), at 24, 25 and 44.
    
        In order to monitor developments in the Treasury securities 
    marketplace and better police against fraud or manipulation, the 
    Committee believes that the government needs surveillance tools 
    similar to those employed in other financial markets. One of the 
    more useful tools that regulators in the commodities and equities 
    market[s] currently have is the ability to obtain information 
    regarding the trading activities of major market participants. In 
    the government securities market, no similar statutory authority has 
    existed which would authorize federal regulators to require all 
    market participants to make information available regarding large 
    positions being assumed in the marketplace, and currently government 
    securities brokers and dealers only report such information on a 
    voluntary basis.
        * * * The purpose of such reporting would be similar to the 
    purpose of the position reporting that is done in the commodity 
    futures market--it would enable government agencies to monitor 
    market developments, particularly those associated with concentrated 
    positions.
        * * * Large position reporting also would be useful in assuring 
    that regulators can monitor the positions of major market 
    participants other than government securities brokers and dealers 
    under certain circumstances. In particular, it will provide 
    assurance that the government can compel disclosure of position 
    information when necessary from all large market participants, 
    including a group of relatively unregulated entities called 'hedge 
    funds'.
        * * * The Committee expects the Secretary to take into account 
    the costs and burdens of the reporting requirement to the investor 
    and its shareholders or beneficial owners as well as the impact on 
    the efficiency and liquidity of the Treasury market. The Committee 
    also expects that in prescribing such rules, the Secretary will 
    consider the views of, and consult with, the Commission, the Federal 
    Reserve Board, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
    
        The Treasury intends to prescribe large position reporting rules 
    that meet the intent of Congress, are not overly burdensome or costly, 
    do not impair the liquidity of the market and do not increase borrowing 
    costs to the Federal government. Accordingly, the Treasury is 
    soliciting input from market participants and other interested parties, 
    and requesting answers to the specific questions set out below, as to 
    how large position rules should be structured.
    
    D. Large Position and Large Trader Reporting in Other Markets
    
        Large position and/or large trader reporting rules are currently in 
    place or being developed in several other U.S. markets (e.g., futures 
    and equity markets). Readers may wish to familiarize themselves with 
    these large trader and large position reporting requirements in order 
    to better understand how such reporting systems operate and to assist 
    the reader in commenting on this notice.
        CFTC rules require position reporting by a variety of entities or 
    groups--commodity brokers, contract markets and traders.15 The 
    CFTC regulations require reports when individuals or groups acquire 
    specified levels of futures and options positions in the commodity 
    markets. The levels are determined by the CFTC and there are different 
    amounts for each targeted commodity area.
    
        \15\ 17 CFR Parts 15.00-18.06.
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        The Market Reform Act of 199016 authorized the SEC to create a 
    large trader recordkeeping and reporting system for publicly traded 
    equities and options on equities. The SEC proposed a large trader 
    reporting rule on August 22, 1991, and reproposed it on February 9, 
    1994.17
    
        \16\ P.L. No. 101-432, 104 Stat. 963 (1990).
        \17\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 29593 (August 22, 
    1991), 56 FR 42550 (August 28, 1991); and Securities Exchange Act 
    Release No. 33608 (February 9, 1994), 59 FR 7917 (February 17, 
    1994).
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        Under the proposed SEC rules, these large traders would be required 
    to report certain information to the SEC and would be assigned large 
    trader identification numbers to provide to each brokerage firm where 
    the traders have accounts. The firms would then be required to 
    maintain, and to report to the SEC on request, records of transactions 
    by large traders.
        Large position reporting rules are currently in place in the equity 
    securities market. The SEC requires owners that, directly or 
    indirectly, acquire beneficial control of more than five percent of a 
    class of a corporation's equity securities to make a public disclosure 
    of this information.18 The [[Page 4579]] beneficial owner must 
    file its report within 10 business days with the SEC, the issuer and 
    the exchange on which the securities are traded.
    
        \18\ 15 U.S.C. 78m(d), SEC Rule 13D, 17 CFR 240.13d-1--240.13d-
    102.
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        In addition, the FRBNY requires primary dealers in Treasury 
    securities to submit several position reports on a regular basis. These 
    include weekly reports of positions (with separate reporting for each 
    when-issued and recently issued security), cumulative transactions, and 
    financing transactions (repos, reverse repos, securities borrowed and 
    lent, collateralized loans and matched-book transactions) and a daily 
    report of when-issued transactions.
    
    II. Purposes, Objectives and Features of Treasury Large Position Rules
    
        The Treasury actively supported large position reporting during the 
    legislative process that resulted in the passage of the GSAA and is 
    committed to implementation of rules that make sense from both a 
    regulatory and market efficiency perspective. As the agency of the 
    Federal government most concerned with minimizing the interest cost on 
    the public debt, Treasury believes that the U.S. is best served by an 
    efficient and liquid market for Treasury securities that is not 
    overburdened with regulation but, at the same time, is not viewed as 
    being subject to manipulation.
        Large position rulemaking is a complex and important task. For 
    example, defining a ``reporting entity'' (i.e., persons holding, 
    maintaining or controlling large positions) or determining what 
    constitutes a position in a Treasury security will be very difficult 
    given the many issues that need to be considered. Although everyone 
    would likely agree that a position would include securities owned by 
    and in the possession or control of the reporting entity, there are 
    many views as to whether, and if so how, repos, reverse repos, when-
    issued trades, futures, forwards, options, bonds borrowed and fails 
    should be included in a position. Determining how to treat repos and 
    reverse repos is likely to be particularly complex, given the potential 
    for duplicate reporting of the same security in both counterparties' 
    positions, and the difficulty of defining control for different types 
    of repo arrangements, such as tri-party repos.
        Treasury plans to take a measured approach in exercising its large 
    position reporting authority, including the related recordkeeping 
    requirements, and to actively involve market participants in the 
    rulemaking process. Treasury will take into consideration the costs to 
    market participants, the potential impact on the efficiency and 
    liquidity of the market for Treasury securities and any implications on 
    the Federal government's cost of borrowing.
        The principal purpose of large position reporting is to enable 
    Treasury and the other regulators to better understand the possible 
    reasons for apparent significant price distortions in to-be-issued and 
    recently issued Treasury securities. This information would enable 
    policymakers to make better decisions concerning any possible 
    government actions that might be taken in response to apparent price 
    anomalies. The ability to identify concentrations of ownership and to 
    obtain information on large positions being held or controlled in to-
    be-issued or recently issued Treasury securities is important in 
    enabling regulators responsible for market surveillance and enforcement 
    to understand the causes of market shortages.
        Another important goal of large position reporting is to assist 
    securities regulators in conducting market surveillance. The enactment 
    of this authority was largely based on a belief that the government 
    needs surveillance tools, similar to those employed in other financial 
    markets, in order to monitor developments in the Treasury securities 
    market and to better police against fraud and manipulation. Information 
    about large positions may be critical to the SEC in carrying out its 
    enforcement duties under the federal securities laws. Large position 
    reporting will also enable regulators to monitor the positions of major 
    market participants other than government securities brokers and 
    dealers (e.g., large investment funds that are largely unregulated, 
    custodians, and foreign and domestic customers) under certain 
    circumstances.
        Large position records and reports could also provide regulatory 
    agencies early warning of potential market problems. If a problem 
    develops, such records and reports could assist regulators in, and 
    reduce the cost of, any investigation.
        It is important to recognize that large position reporting merely 
    creates a requirement to maintain records and report information about 
    such positions. Large positions are not inherently harmful and there is 
    no presumption of manipulative or illegal intent solely because a 
    position is large enough to be subject to reporting rules that may be 
    prescribed by the Treasury. Additionally, there is no intention of 
    establishing trading or position limits as part of any rulemaking. Nor 
    is the Treasury planning to institute a recordkeeping and reporting 
    system that would require the identification of large traders or the 
    reporting of large trades.
        The statutory provision regarding the minimum size of a position 
    subject to reporting is meant to ensure that the minimum size will be 
    large enough to require reports only of positions that could be used to 
    significantly affect the market for a particular security. It is 
    Treasury's current view that the size of a reportable position would 
    most likely be in the billions of dollars and much larger than the 
    reporting thresholds in the futures market. As a result, it is expected 
    that very few entities would likely have to file large position 
    reports.
        The GSAA specifically provides that the Treasury shall not be 
    compelled to disclose publicly any information required to be kept or 
    reported for large position reporting. In particular, such information 
    is exempt from disclosure pursuant to Exemption 3 of the Freedom of 
    Information Act.\19\
    
        \19\ 5 U.S.C. 552.
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        The Treasury contemplates granting exemptions from the large 
    position recordkeeping and reporting rules for foreign central bank, 
    foreign government and official international financial institution 
    holdings at the FRBNY.
    
    III. Specific Considerations and Questions
    
        The Treasury welcomes comments, reactions and suggestions on the 
    above issues. Additionally, advice and recommendations regarding an 
    approach and structure for a large position recordkeeping and reporting 
    system that meet the purposes, objectives and features addressed above 
    are invited from all interested persons. Specifically, in developing 
    such recommendations, suggestions and advice, commenters are requested 
    to consider the following questions.
        A. Reporting Entities--Persons holding, maintaining or controlling 
    large positions, as yet to be defined, are reporting entities. The 
    questions in this section are directed toward determining which 
    entities should be affected by the regulations. In particular, the 
    questions focus on how affiliated entities are to be treated, what 
    entities should be exempt and whether classes of entities may warrant 
    special treatment.
        1. How should we define a ``reporting entity''? Should it be 
    similar to the definition of a bidder in Treasury's rules governing the 
    sale and issue of Treasury bills, notes and bonds (i.e., Uniform 
    Offering Circular at 31 CFR Part 356)?
        2. What aggregation rules should apply for affiliated entities? 
    Assuming there are aggregation rules, should there be an exception for 
    affiliates that cannot or do not share information? For example, how 
    should different funds [[Page 4580]] within a mutual fund family be 
    treated? Should customer securities that are subject to a broker-
    dealer's investment discretion be included? Should any exception be the 
    same as the exception provided for in Appendix A to the Uniform 
    Offering Circular?
        3. Should reporting entities that are foreign-based be treated 
    differently than domestic entities given the potential enforcement 
    difficulty and geographic separation? Are any exemptions needed for 
    foreign-based entities regarding items such as affiliation rules, 
    location of records, form of reporting, or reporting time frames? What 
    would be the complications of requiring foreign-based entities to 
    comply with such rules as if they were U.S. domestic entities?
        4. What exemptions should be considered beyond any for foreign 
    central banks, foreign governments and official international financial 
    institutions holding at the FRBNY?
        B. What constitutes ``control''? For the purposes of this ANPR, 
    ``control'' includes the statutory terms ``holding'' and 
    ``maintaining''. The following questions are designed to provide 
    guidance on when these three statutory conditions may be met.
        1. Is control evidenced by beneficial ownership, investment 
    discretion, custody or any combination of the three? Is there the 
    possibility of extensive double counting? If so, is it a problem?
        2. Should custodial accounts for which the custodian has no 
    investment discretion be the reporting responsibility of the custodian, 
    the customer or both? If the custodian is responsible for reporting, 
    should all custody holdings in a specific security be aggregated, or 
    should the threshold amount established for reporting be applied 
    individually to each customer?
        C. What securities should be covered and what size is ``large''? 
    The questions in this section seek guidance on the securities to which 
    the rule should apply and how to determine the reporting threshold.
        1. How long should a security be outstanding before it is no longer 
    considered recently issued? Should the reopening date of notes and 
    bonds that are reopened by the Treasury, be the date from which 
    ``recent'' is measured?
        2. Should any securities be excluded, e.g., Treasury bills, due to 
    the cost/complexity of calculating a position in them versus the 
    expected benefits of reporting?
        3. How should the ``large'' threshold be determined--a percentage 
    of the issue? A standard dollar amount? Should different classes of 
    securities--notes vs. bonds, short-term notes vs. intermediate notes--
    have different definitions of ``large''? Should there be a different 
    reporting threshold for pre- and post-issuance? Should there be a 
    different reporting threshold for securities reopened by the Treasury?
        D. What transactions should be included in a ``position''?
        1. Should the definition of ``position'' developed for this 
    rulemaking be consistent with the definition of ``net long position'' 
    in the Uniform Offering Circular? If they are generally consistent, the 
    following questions should be considered as possible exceptions.
        2. How should when-issued positions in outstanding securities with 
    the same CUSIP be treated (i.e., reopenings)?
        3. How should financing transactions, such as repurchase and 
    reverse repurchase agreements, dollar rolls and bonds borrowed, be 
    treated in defining a position? Should more than one counterparty to 
    the transaction be required to include the transaction in its position? 
    Should contract terms, such as maturity, right to substitute, tri-party 
    relationships and termination notice, be considered?
        4. Should large short positions be included in ``position''? What 
    amount of netting should be permitted or should gross long (short) 
    positions be reported?
        5. Should forward contracts, options, futures, and open fails be 
    included? Should some of these items only be included under certain 
    circumstances? For example, only include written (sold) options or only 
    include fails to deliver but not fails to receive. If so, what might 
    these circumstances be?
        6. Should the various components of a large position, such as 
    outright holdings, repos, forward contracts, etc., be separately 
    identified in any required reports?
        E. Recordkeeping.
        1. What records should be kept by a reporting entity? Should the 
    recordkeeping requirement be dependent on whether the reporting entity 
    is regulated? Should the reporting entity keep copies only of any 
    reports it has filed, or, in addition, documents and other records 
    sufficient to reconstruct the size of its position?
        2. Should there be a requirement to maintain a calculation/
    worksheet supporting the determination of a large position by detailing 
    the elements comprising any large positions?
        3. How long should large position calculations and supporting 
    records be retained?
        4. Should the records be kept in a standardized format? Would a 
    requirement to maintain records in electronic form be feasible and 
    practical?
        5. Should unregulated entities be required to submit some form of 
    independent verification that they have in place an appropriate record 
    maintenance system, e.g., an accountant's letter?
        F. Reporting.
        1. Should the reporting requirement be automatic, whereby the 
    reporting entity would file a report any time it has reached the 
    threshold for a particular issue?
        2. If reports are periodic at the request of the Treasury, what 
    mechanism should be used to communicate a request to the market? How 
    can it be assured that a potential ``reporting entity'' receives notice 
    of the request for a report? How much lead time would be necessary to 
    assure that everyone who needs to get the notice will receive it?
        3. Would it be reasonable for a reporting entity to comply with a 
    request for a large position report on the business day immediately 
    following receipt of the request? If not, what would be a reasonable 
    time period?
        4. Should requests for reports follow a sequential process whereby 
    dealers and custodians would be asked to report initially followed, 
    where appropriate, by a more targeted follow-up as to specific 
    customers? For example, an initial report indicates that custodian A 
    has 75% of an issue. A subsequent request is made only to the 
    custodian's customers to determine if any of them have large positions.
        5. Is there a need for the reports to be filed using a standardized 
    format? If so, should they be made in machine readable form?
        6. Is there a reason for the Secretary to specify that reports 
    would be submitted to parties other than the FRBNY?
        7. Should a request for reports on a specific security be: (i) a 
    one-time request (snapshot as of a given date); (ii) an initial report 
    with a continuing obligation to report subsequent significant changes 
    until further notice; or (iii) an individually specified request (i.e., 
    report on any large positions in a specific security for the next 6 
    business days)?
        8. Should there be a responsibility for a broker-dealer to report 
    the name of any customer whose trading activity in the specified 
    security may indicate that the customer could be a holder of a large 
    position even if the customer does not hold such a position at the 
    broker-dealer?
        G. Implementation. [[Page 4581]] 
        1. How much lead-time is necessary for market participants to be 
    able to comply with such a new regulation?
        Treasury staff consulted with staff of the SEC, Federal Reserve 
    Board, FRBNY and CFTC in developing the questions that are contained in 
    this ANPR. As the rulemaking process continues in the months ahead, we 
    will continue to solicit the views of these agencies, share information 
    with them and include them in the deliberative process.
        The preliminary views expressed in this notice may change in light 
    of comments received. In any case, the Treasury will publish proposed 
    large position reporting rules for public comment after we have had an 
    opportunity to review the comments that we receive in response to this 
    ANPR.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    17 CFR Part 404
    
        Banks, banking, Brokers, Government securities, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    17 CFR Part 405
    
        Brokers, Government securities, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
        Authority: Sec. 101, Pub.L. 99-571, 100 Stat. 3209; Sec. 4(b), 
    Pub.L. 101-432, 104 Stat. 963; Sec. 102, Sec. 106, Pub.L. 103-202, 
    107 Stat. 2344 (15 U.S.C. 78o-5 (b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(C), (b)(4)).
    
        Dated: January 17, 1995.
    Frank N. Newman,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-1682 Filed 1-23-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4810-39-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/24/1995
Department:
Treasury Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
95-1682
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before April 24, 1995.
Pages:
4576-4581 (6 pages)
RINs:
1505-AA53: Amendments Under the Government Securities Act; Large Position Reporting
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1505-AA53/amendments-under-the-government-securities-act-large-position-reporting
PDF File:
95-1682.pdf
CFR: (2)
17 CFR 404
17 CFR 405