94-29006. Self-Regulatory Organizations; Pacific Stock Exchange, Inc.; Order Granting Approval to Proposed Rule Change To Adopt Functional Separation Procedures for Specialists and Affiliated Firms  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 226 (Friday, November 25, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-29006]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: November 25, 1994]
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    [Release No. 34- 34981; File No. SR-PSE-93-36]
    
     
    
    Self-Regulatory Organizations; Pacific Stock Exchange, Inc.; 
    Order Granting Approval to Proposed Rule Change To Adopt Functional 
    Separation Procedures for Specialists and Affiliated Firms
    
    November 16, 1994.
    
    I. Introduction
    
        On December 29, 1993, the Pacific Stock Exchange, Inc. (``PSE'' or 
    ``Exchange'') submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission 
    (``SEC'' or ``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act''\1\ and Rule 19b-4 
    thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule change to adopt a set of procedures 
    addressing specialist member organizations affiliated with an upstairs 
    firm. On May 25, 1994, the Exchange submitted Amendment No. 1 to the 
    proposed rule change.\3\
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        \1\15 U.S.C. Sec. 78s(b)(1) (1988).
        \2\17 CFR 240.19b-4 (1991).
        \3\See letter from Michael D. Pierson, Senior Attorney, PSE, to 
    Amy Bilbija, Attorney, Commission, dated May 23, 1994. This 
    amendment, which is available in the Commission's Public Reference 
    Room, codified a provision enabling the Exchange to request 
    information from specialists relating to transactions in a specialty 
    security.
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        The proposed rule change was published for comment in Securities 
    Exchange Act Release No. 33751 (March 10, 1993), 59 FR 12631 (March 17, 
    1993). No comments were received on the proposal.
    
    II. Description
    
        The proposed rule change consists of Exchange guidelines that 
    outline the minimum requirements that an Exchange specialist firm 
    affiliated with an upstairs firm\4\ will be expected to demonstrate to 
    provide for a functional separation (``Information Barrier'')\5\ of its 
    specialist activity from its retail and proprietary business.
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        \4\The Proposal specifies that the functional separation must be 
    established (1) between a specialist firm and any associated 
    approved person; and (2) between a specialist and any associated 
    integrated member organization. The approved person or integrated 
    member organization are collectively referred to as an ``affiliated 
    upstairs firm.'' An ``approved person'' is defined in PSE Rule 
    4.1(n) as a party who is not an employee, a member or an allied 
    member of a member firm, and who is a director of a member firm, or 
    who beneficially owns, directly or indirectly, 5% or more of the 
    outstanding equity securities of a member firm, and who has been 
    approved by the Exchange as an approved person.
        \5\Functional separation of specialist activity from its 
    affiliated upstairs firm business is often times referred to as a 
    ``Chinese Wall.''
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        In addition to requiring affiliated upstairs firms to establish a 
    Information Barrier, the proposal also requires that they establish, 
    maintain and enforce written procedures reasonably designed to prevent 
    the misuse of material, nonpublic information. Finally the proposal 
    requires an affiliated upstairs firm to obtain prior written approval 
    of the Exchange that it has complied with the requirements to establish 
    functional separation as appropriate to its operation and that it has 
    established proper compliance and audit procedures to ensure the 
    maintenance of the functional separation.\6\
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        \6\In addition, a copy of these Chinese Wall procedures, and any 
    amendments thereto, must be filed with the Exchange Financial 
    Compliance Department.
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        The proposal identifies certain minimum procedural and maintenance 
    requirements. First the specialist's book must be kept confidential. 
    Second, the affiliated upstairs firm can have no influence on specific 
    specialist trading decisions. Third, material, non-public corporate or 
    market information obtained by the affiliated upstairs firm from the 
    issuer may not be made available to the specialist. Fourth, clearing 
    and margin financing information regarding the specialist may be routed 
    only to employees engaged in such work and managerial employees engaged 
    in overseeing operations of the affiliated upstairs firm and specialist 
    entities. Fifth, the Exchange may from time to time request that 
    specialists file information and reports in a specialty security.
        In addition, the proposal places limitations on the information 
    which may pass between a broker associated with an affiliated upstairs 
    firm and the specialist, such that they are limited to that exchange of 
    information which would occur in the normal course of business with a 
    comparable unaffiliated individual. Thus, the broker may make available 
    to the specialist only the market information he would make available 
    to an unaffiliated specialist in the normal course of his trading and 
    ``market probing'' activity. The specialist may divulge to the broker 
    only the information about market conditions in specialty stocks that 
    he would make available in the normal course of his specialist duties 
    to any other broker, and in the same manner. The specialist, however, 
    is further restricted in that he may provide market information to the 
    broker only upon request of that broker and not on his own initiative.
        The proposal permits an affiliated upstairs firm to popularize\7\ a 
    specialty stock provided it makes adequate disclosure about the 
    existence of possible conflicts of interest.
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        \7\``Popularizing'' generally refers to the practice by 
    specialists, their member organizations and their corporate parents, 
    of making recommendations and providing research coverage regarding 
    their specialty securities. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 
    23768 (November 3, 1986), 51 FR 41183 (November 13, 1986) (``NYSE/
    Amex Order'').
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        In addition, the proposal provides specific procedures that will 
    apply if a specialist becomes privy to material non-public information. 
    In such a case, the specialist must promptly inform his firm's 
    compliance officer, or other designated official, of such communication 
    and seek guidance from such officer or official as to what procedures 
    he should subsequently follow. Such officer or official must maintain 
    appropriate records, including the action taken and a summary of the 
    information received by the specialist. If the specialist is required 
    to give up the ``book,'' then such transfer must be done in a neutral 
    fashion to ensure that the transfer itself does not disclose the 
    information, and the Exchange must be informed.\8\
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        \8\The compliance officer is also required to keep a record of 
    the time the specialist reacquired the book, reflecting 
    acknowledgement by the compliance officer that the reacquisition was 
    appropriate.
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        Finally, with respect to compliance, the Exchange will periodically 
    examine the Information Barrier procedures established hereunder and 
    will conduct surveillance of proprietary trades effected by an 
    affiliated upstairs firm and its affiliated specialist or specialist 
    firm. The Exchange will monitor specifically the trading activities of 
    affiliated upstairs firms and affiliated specialists in the specialist 
    firm's specialty stock in order to monitor the possible trading while 
    in possession of material, non-public information through the periodic 
    review of trade and comparison reports generated by the Exchange.
    
    III. Discussion
    
        The Commission recognizes that significant conflicts of interest 
    can arise between an approved person and the affiliated specialist unit 
    which, if not addressed by appropriate Information Barrier procedures 
    and the monitoring and surveillance of the continuing adequacy of such 
    procedures, could result in potential manipulative market activity and 
    informational advantages benefitting the affiliated upstairs firm, 
    specialist unit, or the customers of either, all in contravention of 
    Section 6(b) of the Act.\9\ The Commission further believes that the 
    procedures the Exchange intends to implement with respect to approving 
    and monitoring the Information Barrier address these concerns, and 
    therefore are consistent with the requirements of the Act and the rules 
    and regulations thereunder applicable to a national securities 
    exchange. In particular, the Commission believes the proposal is 
    consistent with the Section 6(b)(5) requirements that the rules of an 
    exchange be designed to promote just and equitable principles of trade, 
    to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts, and, in general, to 
    protect investors and the public, in that the procedures proposed by 
    the PSE are designed to prevent the misuse of material, non-public 
    information by specialist units affiliated with an affiliated upstairs 
    firm. Further, the Commission believes the proposal is consistent with 
    the Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(ii) Congressional finding\10\ in that it aids 
    in assuring fair competition among brokers and dealers.
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        \9\15 U.S.C. Sec. 78f(b) (1988).
        \10\15 U.S.C. Sec. 78k-1(a)(C)(ii) (1988).
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        The Commission initially addressed the necessity and viability of 
    Information Barriers in approving the amendments to New York Stock 
    Exchange (``NYSE'') and American Stock Exchange (``Amex'') Rules 98 and 
    193 respectively, which created the present Information Barrier scheme 
    in effect today on those exchanges.\11\ At that time, the Commission 
    expressed its belief that it is also desirable for the regional 
    exchanges to consider requiring specialists affiliated with integrated 
    firms to establish an adequate Information Barrier and generally to 
    review the efficacy of their surveillance and compliance procedures 
    regarding those specialists. In this regard, the Commission thus far 
    has approved two filings submitted by regional exchanges to adopt such 
    procedures.\12\
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        \11\See NYSE/Amex Order.
        \12\See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 34076 (May 18, 
    1994), 59 FR 26822 (May 24, 1994) (approving the Boston Stock 
    Exchange Chinese Wall proposal); and 34449 (July 27, 1994), 59 FR 
    39611 (August 3, 1994) (approving the Cincinnati Stock Exchange 
    Chinese Wall proposal).
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        Organizational separation between different departments of a 
    broker-dealer is one of several means of preventing the 
    interdepartmental communication of material, non-public 
    information.\13\ The NYSE/Amex Order noted that, for example, in view 
    of the diverse functions performed by a multi-service firm and the 
    material, non-public information that may be obtained by any one 
    department of the firm, the firm often may be required to restrict 
    access to information to the department receiving it, in order to avoid 
    potential liability under Sections 10(b) and 14(e) of the Act\14\ and 
    Rules 10b-5 and 14e-3 thereunder. Moreover, two years after approval of 
    the Amex's and NYSE's Information Barrier procedures, Congress enacted 
    the Insider Trading and Securities Fraud Enforcement Act of 1988 
    (``ITSFEA''), designed primarily to prevent, deter, and prosecute 
    insider trading.\15\ Among other provisions, ITSFEA created a specific 
    requirement for broker-dealers to maintain procedures designed to 
    prevent the misuse of material, non-public information.\16\ In response 
    to the promulgation thereof, many firms redrafted their internal 
    Information Barrier procedures to ensure compliance.\17\ 
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        \13\See e.g., Securities and Exchange Act Release No. 23768, 
    (November 3, 1986) 51 FR 41183 (November 13, 1986), citing SEC 
    Institutional Investor Study, H.R. Doc. No. 9264, 92d Cong., 1st 
    Sess. 2539 (1971). The Study urged financial institutions to 
    ``consider the necessity of segregating information flows arising 
    from a business relationship with a company as distinct from 
    information received in an investor or shareholder capacity.''
        \14\15 U.S.C. Secs. 78j(b), 78n(e) (1982).
        \15\Pub. L. No. 100-704.
        \16\15 U.S.C. Sec. 78o(f).
        \17\Several SRO's (Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Chicago Board 
    Options Exchange, Pacific Stock Exchange, and Boston Stock Exchange) 
    have adopted the substance of the ITSFEA procedures under their 
    rules applicable to members and member firms (See Securities and 
    Exchange Act Release Nos. 30122 (December 30, 1991), 57 FR 729 
    (January 8, 1992); 30557 (April 6, 1992), 57 FR 13393 (April 16, 
    1992); 33171 (November 9, 1993), 58 FR 60892 (November 18, 1993); 
    34284 (June 30, 1994) 59 34876 (July 7, 1994)
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        The Commission notes that a number of firms with regional 
    specialist operations have established Information Barrier procedures 
    between the specialist and its affiliated firm. Nevertheless, such 
    procedures have not necessarily been adopted by all specialist 
    affiliates, have not been adopted pursuant to any specific regional 
    exchange requirements, and have not been subject to specific exchange 
    surveillance and oversight.
        The NYSE/Amex Order, in addressing the need for regional exchanges 
    to participate in the regulation of affiliations between specialist 
    operations and diversified broker-dealer firms, took into account the 
    fact that regional exchanges differ from the primary exchanges in terms 
    of order flow and market information. While noting that overall 
    regional exchange volume is small compared to primary market volume, 
    and regional exchange pricing of orders is generally derived from 
    primary market quotations, the Commission expressed its concern that 
    the diversion by a large retail broker-dealer of all or a significant 
    portion of order flow in specialty stocks to an affiliated regional 
    specialist could raise certain regulatory concerns similar to those 
    raised by such affiliations on the primary exchanges. Moreover, the 
    Commission noted that even if regional exchange specialists continue to 
    set their prices based on primary market quotations, a regional 
    specialist affiliated with an integrated retail firm could obtain 
    significant access to material, non-public information.
        The Commission continues to believe that Information Barriers, with 
    effective controls, may be useful in restricting information flow 
    between the various departments of broker-dealers with affiliated 
    specialists. The Commission has monitored the NYSE and Amex Information 
    Barrier rules since their inception, and generally believes they have 
    proven effective in the context of specialists and affiliated approved 
    persons.
        The Commission believes that the PSE proposal effectively addresses 
    the potential for market abuses resulting from the ongoing relationship 
    between specialists and affiliated approved persons. The effectiveness 
    of the procedures set forth in the PSE guidelines is reinforced by the 
    Exchange's existing surveillance of specialists and the marketplace as 
    well as the specialist's highly visible position in the marketplace. 
    These factors, along with the specialist's existing statutory duty to 
    maintain a fair and orderly market, should help to enhance the 
    effectiveness of the proposed Information Barrier.
        Finally, the Commission notes that the structural adequacy of the 
    Information Barrier is only one part of evaluating whether the 
    procedures established by the Exchange will detect and deter potential 
    improper activity by either the approved person or the specialist. 
    Appropriate surveillance procedures are critical to ensure that the 
    Information Barrier is maintained. To this end, the Exchange has 
    submitted to the Commission proposed procedures for monitoring the 
    Information Barrier.\18\ The Commission also notes that the Exchange 
    has represented that it believes that it has adequate staffing capacity 
    to monitor compliance and conduct independent reviews of member 
    firms.\19\
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        \18\The Exchange has requested that these procedures be accorded 
    confidential treatment by the Commission.
        \19\The Exchange believes that it will have its procedures in 
    place by February 1, 1995.
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    IV. Conclusion
    
        It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the 
    Act,\20\ that the proposed rule change (SR-PSE-93-36) is approved.
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        \20\15 U.S.C. Sec. 78s(b)(2)(1988).
    
        For the Commission, by the Division of Market Regulation, 
    pursuant to delegated authority.\21\
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        \21\17 CFR 200.30-3 (a)(12)(1991).
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    Jonathan G. Katz,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 94-29006 Filed 11-23-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
11/25/1994
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Document Number:
94-29006
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: November 25, 1994, Release No. 34- 34981, File No. SR-PSE-93-36