Section 218.701 includes an exemption
that permits a bank, subject to a variety of conditions, to pay its
employees a higher-than-nominal contingent fee for the referral of
a high-net-worth or an institutional customer to a broker-dealer.
A high-net-worth customer is defined as a natural person who
has at least $5 million in net worth (either individually or together
with the person’s spouse), excluding the primary residence and associated
liabilities of the person and, if applicable, the spouse. An institutional
customer is any corporation, partnership, limited-liability company,
trust, or other non-natural person that has, or is controlled by,
a non-natural person that has at least (1) $10 million in investments,
(2) $20 million in revenues, or (3) $15 million in revenues if the
bank employee refers the customer to the broker-dealer for investment
banking services.
Under the exemption, a referral fee that a bank employee
receives may be a dollar amount based on a fixed percentage of the
revenues received by the broker-dealer for investment banking services
provided to the customer. Alternatively, the referral fee may be a
predetermined dollar amount, or a dollar amount determined in accordance
with a predetermined formula, so long as the amount does not vary
on the basis of (1) the revenue generated by, or the profitability
of, securities transactions conducted by the customer with the broker-dealer;
(2) the quantity, price, or identity of securities purchased or sold
over time by the customer with the broker-dealer; or (3) the number
of customer referrals made.
The conditions that must be satisfied for a bank employee
to receive a higher-than-nominal contingent referral fee include the
following:
- Written agreement. The bank and broker-dealer
must enter into a written agreement that governs the networking arrangement.
- Bank employee eligibility. The bank employee
must be predominantly engaged in activities other than making referrals
to broker-dealers; must encounter the high-net-worth or institutional
customer in the ordinary course of the employee’s assigned duties;
and must not be qualified or required to be qualified under the rules
of a self-regulatory organization. In addition, the broker-dealer
must determine that the bank employee making the referral is not subject
to statutory disqualification under the Exchange Act.
- Customer eligibility. Before a referral fee
is paid to the employee, the bank or broker-dealer must have a reasonable
basis to believe that the customer is a high-net-worth customer or
an institutional customer.
- Disclosures. The bank must provide a high-net-worth
or an institutional customer with the required disclosures, either
orally or in writing, before or at the time of the referral.2 If the disclosures are initially provided orally,
then the bank or the broker-dealer must provide the disclosures
to the customer in writing within certain time periods specified in
the exemption.
- Suitability or sophistication analysis. When
a referral fee is contingent on a transaction, the broker-dealer must
perform a suitability analysis, in accordance with the rules of its
self-regulatory organization, as if a recommendation had been made.
When the referral fee is not contingent on a transaction, the broker-dealer
must perform either a suitability or sophistication analysis.
A bank that acts in good faith and that has reasonable
policies and procedures in place to comply with the requirements of
the exemption will not be considered a broker solely because the bank
fails, in a particular instance, to meet the requirements of section
218.701.