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Board Interpretations of Regulation T

5-468

ARRANGING—Loan from Bank

The Board has recently had occasion to express opinions regarding the requirements which apply when a person subject to Regulation T—for convenience, called here simply a broker—arranges for a bank to extend credit.
The matter is treated generally in section 7(a) of Regulation T, and is also subject to the general rule of law that any person who aids or abets a violation of law by another is himself guilty of a violation. It may be stated as a general principle that any person who arranges for credit to be extended by someone else has a responsibility so to conduct his activities as not to be a participant in a violation of Regulation T which applies to brokers, or Regulation U, which applies to banks.
More specifically, in arranging an extension of credit that may be subject to Regulation U, a broker must act in good faith and, therefore, must question the accuracy of any nonpurpose statement (i.e., a statement that the loan is not for the purpose of purchasing or carrying registered stocks) given in connection with the loan where the circumstances are such that the broker from any source knows or has reason to know that the statement is incomplete or otherwise inaccurate as to the true purpose of the credit. The requirement of “good faith” is of vital importance. While the application of the requirement will necessarily vary with the facts of the particular case, the broker, like the bank for whom the loan is arranged to be made, must be alert to the circumstances surrounding the loan. Thus, for example, if a broker or dealer is to deliver registered stocks to secure the loan or is to receive the proceeds of the loan, the broker arranging the loan and the bank making it would be put on notice that the loan would probably be subject to Regulation U. In any such circumstances they could not in good faith accept or rely upon a statement to the contrary without obtaining a reliable and satisfactory explanation of the situation. The foregoing, of course, applies the principles published at page 27 of the 1947 Federal Reserve Bulletin (interpretation at 5-821).
In addition, when a broker is approached by another broker to arrange extensions of credit for customers of the approaching broker, the broker approached has a responsibility not to arrange any extension of credit which the approaching broker could not himself arrange. Accordingly, in such cases the statutes and regulations forbid the approached broker to arrange extensions of credit on unregistered securities for the purpose of purchasing or carrying either registered or unregistered securities. The approaching broker would also be violating the applicable requirements if he initiated or otherwise participated in any such forbidden transactions.
The above expression of views to the effect that certain specific transactions are forbidden, of course, should not in any way be understood to indicate approval of any other transactions which are not mentioned. 1953 Fed. Res. Bull. 950; 12 CFR 220.111 and 221.105.
Now covered by section 220.13 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-470.1

ARRANGING—Broker-Dealer Activities Under SEC Rule 144A

The Board has been asked whether the purchase by a broker-dealer of debt securities for resale in reliance on Rule 144A of the Securities and Exchange Commission (17 CFR 230.144A) may be considered an arranging of credit permitted as an “investment banking service” under section 220.13(a) of Regulation T.
SEC Rule 144A (55 Fed. Reg. 17933) provides a safe-harbor exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 for resales of restricted securities to “qualified institutional buyers,” as defined in the rule. In general, a “qualified institutional buyer” is an institutional investor that in the aggregate owns and invests on a discretionary basis at least $100 million in securities of issuers that are not affiliated with the buyer. Registered broker-dealers need only own and invest on a discretionary basis at least $10 million of securities in order to purchase as principal under the rule. Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 provides an exemption from the registration requirements for “transactions by an issuer not involving any public offering.” Securities acquired in a transaction under section 4(2) cannot be resold without registration under the act or an exemption therefrom. Rule 144A provides a safe-harbor exemption for resales of such securities. Accordingly, broker-dealers that previously acted only as agents in intermediating between issuers and purchasers of privately placed securities, due to the lack of such a safe harbor, now may purchase privately placed securities from issuers as principal and resell such securities to “qualified institutional buyers” under Rule 144A.
The Board has consistently treated the purchase of a privately placed debt security as an extension of credit subject to the margin regulations. If the issuer uses the proceeds to buy securities, the purchase of the privately placed debt security by a creditor represents an extension of “purpose credit” to the issuer. Section 7(c) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 prohibits the extension of purpose credit by a creditor if the credit is unsecured, se cured by collateral other than securities, or secured by any security (other than an exempted security) in contravention of Federal Reserve regulations. If a debt security sold pursuant to Rule 144A represents purpose credit and is not properly collateralized by securities, the statute and Regulation T can be viewed as preventing the broker-dealer from taking the security into inventory in spite of the fact that the broker-dealer intends to immediately resell the debt security.
Under section 220.13 of Regulation T, a creditor may arrange credit it cannot itself extend if the arrangement is an “investment banking service” and the credit does not violate Regulations G and U. Investment banking services are defined to include, but not be limited to, “underwritings, private placements, and advice and other services in connection with exchange offers, mergers, or acquisitions, except for underwritings that involve the public distribution of an equity security with installment or other deferred-payment provisions.” To comply with Regulations G and U where the proceeds of debt securities sold under Rule 144A may be used to purchase or carry margin stock and the debt securities are secured in whole or in part, directly or indirectly by margin stock (see 12 CFR 207.2(f), 207.112, and 221.2(g)), the margin requirements of the regulations must be met.
The SEC’s objective in adopting Rule 144A is to achieve “a more liquid and efficient institutional resale market for unregistered securities.” To further this objective, the Board believes it is appropriate for Regulation T purposes to characterize the participation of broker-dealers in this unique and limited market as an “investment banking service.” The Board is therefore of the view that the purchase by a creditor of debt securities for resale pursuant to SEC Rule 144A may be considered an investment banking service under the arranging section of Regulation T. The market-making activities of broker-dealers who hold themselves out to other institutions as willing to buy and sell Rule 144A securities on a regular and continuous basis may also be considered an arranging of credit permissible under section 220.13(a) of Regulation T. 12 CFR 220.131; 1990 Fed. Res. Bull. 753.
Since the adoption of this interpretation, Regulation G has been rescinded and all lenders other than brokers and dealers have been made subject to Regulation U. The arranging provision of Regulation T has been further amended and is currently found in section 220.3(g) of Regulation T.

5-472

BORROWING AND LENDING SECURITIES—Borrowing from Private Individual

The Board of Governors has been asked for a ruling as to whether section 6(h) of Regulation T which deals with borrowing and lending of securities, applies to a borrowing of securities if the lender is a private individual, as contrasted with a member of a national securities exchange or a broker or dealer.
Section 6(h) does not require that the lender of the securities in such a case be a member of a national securities exchange or a broker or dealer. Therefore, a borrowing of securities may be able to qualify under the provision even though the lender is a private individual, and this is true whether the security is registered on a national securities exchange or is unregistered. In borrowing securities from a private individual under section 6(h), however, it becomes especially important to bear in mind two limitations that are contained in the section.
The first limitation is that the section applies only if the broker borrows the securities for the purpose specified in the provision, that is, “for the purpose of making delivery of such securities in the case of short sales, failure to receive securities he is required to deliver, or other similar cases.” The present language of the provision does not require that the delivery for which the securities are borrowed must be on a transaction which the borrower has himself made, either as agent or as principal; he may borrow under the provision in order to relend to someone else for the latter person to make such a delivery. However, the borrowing must be related to an actual delivery of the type specified—a delivery in connection with a specific transaction that has already occurred or is in immediate prospect. The provision does not authorize a broker to borrow securities (or make the related deposit) merely in order that he or some other broker may have the securities “on hand” or may anticipate some need that may or may not arise in the future.
The ruling in the 1940 Federal Reserve Bulletin, at page 647, is an example of a borrowing which, on the facts as given, did not meet the requirement. There, the broker wished to borrow stocks with the understanding that he “would offer to lend this stock in the ‘loan crowd’ on a national securities exchange.” There was no assurance that the stocks would be used for the purpose specified in section 6(h); they might be, or they might merely be held idle while the person lending the stocks had the use of the funds deposited against them. The ruling held in effect that since the borrowing could not qualify under section 6(h) it must comply with other applicable provisions of the regulation.
The second requirement is that the deposit of cash against the borrowed securities must be “bona fide.” This requirement naturally cannot be spelled out in detail, but it requires at least that the purpose of the broker in making the deposit should be to obtain the securities for the specified purpose, and that he should not use the arrangement as a means of accommodating a customer who is seeking to obtain more funds than he could get in a general [now margin] account.
The Board recognizes that even with these requirements there is still some possibility that the provision may be misapplied. The Board is reluctant to impose additional burdens on legitimate transactions by tightening the provision. If there should be evidence of abuses developing under the provision, however, it would become necessary to consider making it more restricted. 1947 Fed. Res. Bull. 981; 12 CFR 220.103.
Now covered by section 220.16 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-473

BORROWING BY MEMBERS, BROKERS, AND DEALERS—Repeal of Certain Restrictions

The National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-290, 110 Stat. 3416) restricts the Board’s margin authority by repealing section 8(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act) and amending section 7 of the Exchange Act (15 USC 78g) to exclude the borrowing by a member of a national securities exchange or a registered broker or dealer “a substantial portion of whose business consists of transactions with persons other than brokers or dealers” and borrowing by a member of a national securities exchange or a registered broker or dealer to finance its activities as a market maker or an underwriter. Notwithstanding this exclusion, the Board may impose such rules and regulations if it determines they are “necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors.”
The Board has not found that it is necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors to impose rules and regulations regarding loans to brokers and dealers covered by the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996. 1997 Fed. Res. Bull. 30; 12 CFR 220.132 and 221.125.

5-474.4

BROKER-DEALER CREDIT ACCOUNT—Broker-Dealer as Customer

The Board has recently considered certain questions regarding transactions of customers who are brokers or dealers.
The first question was whether delivery and payment under section 4(f)(3) must be exactly simultaneous (such as in sight draft shipments), or whether it is sufficient if the broker-dealer customer, “as promptly as practicable in accordance with the ordinary usage of the trade,” mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a check in settlement of the transaction, the check being accompanied by instructions for transfer or delivery of the security. The Board ruled that the latter method of settling the transaction is permissible.
*     *     *     *     *
The third question was, in effect, whether a purchase and a sale of an unissued security under section 4(f)(3) may be offset against each other, or whether each must be settled separately by what would amount to delivery of the security to settle one transaction and its redelivery to settle the other. The answer is that it is permissible to offset the transactions against each other without physical delivery and redelivery of the security. 1947 Fed. Res. Bull. 27; 12 CFR 220.101.
Now covered by section 220.11(a)(1) of Regulation T (as revised in 1983).

5-475

“CREDITOR”—Individual Partner of Broker

Section 2(b) of Regulation T defines the term “creditor” to include, among others, “any member of a national securities exchange.” Section 3(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as incorporated in Regulation T, provides in part that “[t]he term ‘member’ when used with respect to an exchange . . . includes any firm transacting a business as broker or dealer of which a member is a partner, and any partner of any such firm.”
In a case recently considered by the Board, A and B were partners of a firm which was a member firm of a national securities exchange. Transactions in the account of C, a customer of the firm, on a given day created an excess of the adjusted debit balance of the account over the maximum loan value of the securities in the account, and, therefore, required the brokerage firm to obtain a deposit of margin. The inquiry related to an advance of cash which A, in his individual capacity, proposed to make to C in the amount of the required margin. If the advance were made by A, neither his nor B’s capital or drawing account would be altered.
Inasmuch as Partner A is clearly a “creditor” within the meaning of that term as used in Regulation T, it is clear that such an advance which he might make to C would be subject to the usual margin requirements of the regulation. 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 763.

“CREDITOR”—Transfer of Accounts

See 5-511.

5-476

EXEMPTED SECURITIES—World Bank Securities

Section 2 of the act of June 29, 1949 (Public Law 142—81st Congress), amended the Bretton Woods Agreements Act by adding a new section numbered 15 providing, in part, that—
[a]ny securities issued by International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (including any guaranty by the bank, whether or not limited in scope), and any securities guaranteed by the bank as to both principal and interest, shall be deemed to be exempted securities within the meaning of . . . paragraph (a)(12) of section 3 of the [Securities Exchange] Act of June 6, 1934, as amended (U.S.C., title 15, sec. 78c).
In response to inquiries with respect to the applicability of the margin requirements of Regulation T to securities issued or guaranteed by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank), the Board has replied that, as a result of this enactment, securities issued by the bank are now classified as exempted securities under section 2(e) of Regulation T. Such securities are now in the same category under this regulation as are United States government, state, and municipal bonds. Accordingly, the specific percentage limitations prescribed by the regulation with respect to maximum loan value and margin requirements are no longer applicable thereto. 1949 Fed. Res. Bull. 1082; 12 CFR 220.108.

EXEMPTED SECURITIES—Loan Value

See 5-486.5.

5-478

EXTENSION OF TIME—Jurisdiction of Committee of Exchange

The jurisdiction of the business conduct committee or other suitable committee of a national securities exchange to grant extensions of time in connection with “cash transactions” is not confined to members of that exchange or to transactions on that exchange. If the circumstances warrant an extension of time, the committee may grant an extension to any member of its exchange or to any broker or dealer who transacts a business in securities through the medium of a member of that exchange and it may grant such an extension of time to these persons not only in connection with transactions effected on the exchange but also in connection with transactions not effected on the exchange, including transactions in unregistered securities. Digest of 1934 Fed. Res. Bull. 815; 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 87.
Now covered by section 220.8(d) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-479

EXTENSION OF TIME—For Deposit in General Account

Section 3(b) of Regulation T provides that when a customer effects transactions in a general [now margin] account the creditor must obtain the deposit of certain cash or securities in the account, and must obtain such cash or securities before the expiration of the three full business days* following the date of the transaction. Section 3(e) provides that if such cash or securities are not obtained within the specified period, certain liquidations must be effected in the account during the period. Section 3(f) provides, however, as follows:
Extensions of time.—In exceptional cases, the three-day period specified in section 3(b) may, on application of the creditor, be extended for one or more limited periods commensurate with the circumstances by any regularly constituted committee of a national securities exchange having jurisdiction over the business conduct of its members, of which exchange the creditor is a member or through which his transactions are effected, provided such committee is satisfied that the creditor is acting in good faith in making the application and that the circumstances are in fact exceptional and warrant such action.
*     *     *     *     *
 The Board has recently been asked whether an application for such an extension of time pursuant to section 3(f) . . . may be approved by a business conduct committee after the expiration of the period originally applicable to the transaction.
It is the view of the Board that such an application may not be granted after such period has expired.
Thus an application for an extension of the three-day period applicable to a transaction in the general account could not be approved by the committee after midnight of the third full business day following the date of the transaction. . . . In case an extension of time has been granted for a particular transaction, any application for a further extension . . . should be received and acted upon before the expiration of the prior extension.
In order to facilitate its consideration of the applications, each business conduct committee may, of course, further limit the period following a transaction within which it will receive any such application. 1939 Fed. Res. Bull. 253.
Now covered by section 220.4(c)(3) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

*
The three full business days noted herein has since been extended to seven business days.
5-480

EXTENSION OF TIME—For Deposit in Cash Account

Section 4(c) relating to the cash account provides that, in general, if a customer does not make full cash payment for a security purchased by him in the account within seven days after the date on which the security was purchased, the creditor shall promptly cancel or otherwise liquidate the transaction. Another paragraph of the section specifies different periods of time for certain special types of transactions, and the section then provides:
If any regularly constituted committee of a national securities exchange having jurisdiction over the business conduct of its members, of which exchange the creditor is a member or through which his transactions are effected, is satisfied that the creditor is acting in good faith in making the application, that the application relates to a bona fide cash transaction, and that exceptional circumstances warrant such action, such committee, on application of the creditor, may (A) extend any period specified in the two preceding paragraphs for one or more limited periods commensurate with the circumstances, or (B) in the case of the purchase of a registered or exempted security which has been effected by the customer in the account, authorize the transfer of the transaction to a general account or special omnibus account and the completion of the transaction pursuant to the provisions of this regulation relating to such accounts.
The Board has recently been asked whether an application . .  . for an extension of time or transfer of a transaction pursuant to section 4(c), may be approved by a business conduct committee after the expiration of the period originally applicable to the transaction.
It is the view of the Board that such an application may not be granted after such period has expired.
. . . [I]n the case of a transaction in the cash account to which the standard seven-day period is applicable, an application for an extension of time or for a transfer of the transaction should be passed upon by the committee not later than midnight of the seventh calendar day after the date of the transaction. In case an extension of time has been granted for a particular transaction, any application for a further extension or for a transfer of the transaction should be received and acted upon before the expiration of the prior extension.
In order to facilitate its consideration of the applications, each business conduct committee may, of course, further limit the period following a transaction within which it will receive any such application. 1939 Fed. Res. Bull. 253.
Now covered by section 220.8 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

EXTENSION OF TIME—Transfer of Transaction During

See 5-512.

5-481

FOREIGN ACCOUNT

When a creditor having a foreign branch office which is carrying securities for a foreign customer executes within the United States an order for the purchase of a registered security for such foreign customer, such transaction is subject to the provisions of Regulation T. A creditor borrowing in the United States on any registered security in the ordinary course of business as a broker or dealer must comply with the provisions of Regulation T and of the act with respect to such borrowing, regardless of whether or not the security is held for the account of a foreign customer. Digest of 1934 Fed. Res. Bull. 692.

5-483

INTEREST, SERVICE CHARGES, ETC.—Transfer Tax

The first paragraph of section 6(g) of Regulation T, as revised effective January 1, 1938, provides:
 Interest on credit maintained in a general account, communication charges with respect to transactions in the account, shipping charges, premiums on securities borrowed in connection with short sales or to effect delivery, dividends or other distributions due on borrowed securities, and any service charges (other than commissions) which the creditor may impose, may be debited to the account in accordance with the usual practice and without regard to the other provisions of this regulation, but such items so debited shall be taken into consideration in calculating the net credit or net debit balance of the account.
The Board recently considered a case in which it was necessary for a broker to reborrow securities which had been sold short in a customer’s account, and to pay the amount of the federal stock transfer tax which is incident to such borrowing. The adjusted debit balance of the customer’s account exceeded the maximum loan value of the securities in the account, and the question presented was whether in such circumstances the amount of this tax could be debited to the customer’s account pursuant to section 6(g) without obtaining additional margin in the amount of the tax. The Board expressed the opinion that this would be permissible. 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 90.
Now covered by section 220.4(f) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-484

JOINT ACCOUNT—Combination with Individual Account

An individual’s proportionate share of the excess loan value in a joint account carried for such individual and certain other persons jointly may not be combined with the individual’s personal account carried simultaneously with the same broker. Digest of 1934 Fed. Res. Bull. 751; 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 87.

5-485

JOINT ACCOUNT—As Customer

The Board has recently been asked whether extensions of credit in a joint account between two brokerage firms, a member of a national securities exchange (“Firm X”) and a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers (“Firm Y”), are subject to the margin requirements of the Board’s Regulation T, “Credit by Brokers, Dealers, and Members of National Securities Exchanges.” It is understood that similar joint accounts are not uncommon, and it appears that the margin requirements of the regulation are not consistently applied to extensions of credit in the accounts.
When the account in question was opened, Firm Y deposited $5,000 with Firm X and has made no further deposit in the account, except for the monthly settlement described below. Both firms have the privilege of buying and selling specified securities in the account, but it appears that Firm X initiates most of the transactions therein. Trading volume may run from half a million to a million dollars a month. Firm X carries the “official” ledger of the account and sends Firm Y a monthly statement with a complete record of all transactions effected during the month. Settlement is then made in accordance with the agreement between the two firms, which provides that profits and losses shall be shared equally on a 50-50 basis. However, all transactions are confirmed and reconfirmed between the two on a daily basis.
Section 220.3(a) of Regulation T provides that “[a]ll financial relations between a creditor and a customer, whether recorded in one record or in more than one record, shall be included in and be deemed to be part of the customer’s general [now margin] account with the creditor,” and section 220.2(c) defines the term “customer” to include “any person, or any group of persons acting jointly, . . . to or for whom a creditor is extending or maintaining any credit. . . .” In the course of a normal month’s operations, both Firm X and Firm Y are at one time or another extending credit to the joint account, since both make purchases for the account that are not “settled” until the month’s end. Consequently, the account would be a “customer” within the above definition.
Section 220.6(b) provides, with respect to the account of a joint adventure in which a creditor participates, that—
 the adjusted debit balance of the account shall include, in addition to the items specified in section 220.3(d), any amount by which the creditor’s contribution to the joint adventure exceeds the contribution which he would have made if he had contributed merely in proportion to his right to share in the profits of the joint venture.
In addition, the final paragraph of section 220.2(c) states that the definition of “customer” “includes any joint adventure in which a creditor participates and which would be considered a customer of the creditor if the creditor were not a participant.”
The above provisions clearly evince the Board’s intent that the regulation shall cover trading accounts in which a creditor participates. If additional confirmation were needed, it is supplied by the fact that the Board found it needful specifically to exempt from ordinary margin requirements credit extended to certain joint accounts in which a creditor participates. These include the account in which transactions of odd-lot dealers may be financed under section 220.4(f)(4), and the specialist’s [ now market functions] account under section 220.4(g). Accordingly, the Board concluded that the joint account between Firm X and Firm Y is a “customer” within the meaning of the regulation, and that extensions of credit in the account are subject to margin requirements. 1966 Fed. Res. Bull. 807; 12 CFR 220.121.
Now covered by sections 220.2(c), 220.4(a), 220.5(e), and 220.12 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-486

LIQUIDATION—In Lieu of Deposit

Where a creditor allows a customer to effect a transaction in an account which would create an excess of the adjusted debit balance of the account over the maximum loan value of the securities in the account and fails to obtain, within the specified three-day period,* the margin required for such transaction, such failure will constitute a violation of Regulation T unless within such three-day period the liquidation specified by section 3(e) of the revised regulation is effected or within such period an extension of time is obtained as provided in section 3(f). Digest of 1934 Fed. Res. Bull. 687; 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 87.
Now covered by section 220.4(c) and (d) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

*
The three-day period noted herein has since been extended to seven business days.
5-486.5

LOAN VALUE—Exempted Securities

The “good faith loan value” specified for an exempted security means the amount which the broker would customarily lend on the security, and that the figure cannot be arbitrarily reduced merely for the purpose of permitting a later substitution of registered securities for exempted securities. 1959 Fed. Res. Bull. 590.

5-487

OPTIONS—Deep-in-the-Money Put and Call

The Board of Governors has been asked to determine whether the business of selling instruments described as “deep-in-the-money put and call options” would involve an extension of credit for the purposes of the Board’s regulations governing margin requirements for securities transactions. Most of such options would be of the “call” type, such as the following proposal that was presented to the Board for its consideration:
If X stock is selling at $100 per share, the customer would pay about $3,250 for a contract to purchase 100 shares of X at $70 per share within a 30-day period. The contract would be guaranteed by an exchange member, as are standard “puts” and “calls.” When the contract is made with the customer, the seller, who will also be the writer of the contract, will immediately purchase 100 shares of X at $100 per share through the guarantor member firm in a margin account. If the customer exercises the option, the shares will be delivered to him; if the option is not exercised, the writer will sell the shares in the margin account to close out the transaction. As a practical matter, it is anticipated that the customer will exercise the option in almost every case.
An ordinary “put” is an option given to a person to sell to the writer of the put a specified amount of securities at a stated price within a certain time. A “call” is an option given to a person to buy from the writer a specified amount of securities at a stated price within a certain time. To be freely saleable, options must be indorsed, or guaranteed, by a member firm of the exchange on which the security is registered. The guarantor charges a fee for this service.
The option embodied in the normal put or call is exercisable either at the market price of the security at the time the option is written, or some “points away” from the market. The price of a normal option is modest by comparison with the margin required to take a position. Writers of normal options are persons who are satisfied with the current price of a security, and are prepared to purchase or sell at that price, with the small profit provided by the fee. Moreover, since a large proportion of all options are never exercised, a person who customarily writes normal options can anticipate that the fee would be clear profit in many cases, and he will not be obliged to buy or sell the stock in question.
The stock exchanges require that the writer of an option deposit and maintain in his margin account with the indorser 30 percent of the current market price in the case of a call (unless he has a long position in the stock) and 25 percent in the case of a put (unless he has a short position in the stock). Many indorsing firms in fact require larger deposits. Under section 220.3(a) of Regulation T, all financial relations between a broker and his customer must be included in the customer’s general [now margin] account, unless specifically eligible for one of the special accounts authorized by section 220.4. Accordingly, the writer, as a customer of the member firm, must make a deposit, which is included in his general account.
In order to prevent the deposit from being available against other margin purchases, and in effect counted twice, section 220.3(d)(5) requires that in computing the customer’s adjusted debit balance, there shall be included “the amount of any margin customarily required by the creditor in connection with his indorsement or guarantee of any put, call, or other option”. No other margin deposit is required in connection with a normal put or call option under Regulation T.
Turning to the “deep in the money” proposed option contract described above, the price paid by the buyer can be divided into (1) a deposit of 30 percent of the current market value of the stock, and (2) an additional fixed charge, or fee. To the extent that the price of the stock rose during the 30 ensuing days the proposed instrument would produce results similar to those in the case of an ordinary profitable call, and the contract right would be exercised. But even if the price fell, unlike the situation with a normal option, the buyer would still be virtually certain to exercise his right to purchase before it expired, in order to minimize his loss. The result would be that the buyer would not have a genuine choice whether or not to buy. Rather, the instrument would have made it possible for him, in effect, to purchase stock as of the time the contract was written by depositing 30 percent of the stock’s current market price.
It was suggested that the proposed contract is not unusual, since there are examples of ordinary options selling at up to 28 percent of current market value. However, such examples are of options running for 12 months, and reflect expectations of changes in the price of the stock over that period. The 30-day contracts discussed above are not comparable to such 12-month options, because instances of true expectations of price changes of this magnitude over a 30-day period would be exceedingly rare. And a contract that does not reflect such true expectations of price change, plus a reasonable fee for the services of the writer, is not an option in the accepted meaning of the term.
Because of the virtual certainty that the contract right would be exercised under the proposal described above, the writer would buy the stock in a margin account with an indorsing firm immediately on writing the contract. The indorsing firm would extend credit in the amount of 20 percent of the current market price of the stock, the maximum permitted by the current section 220.8 (supplement to Regulation T). The writer would deposit the 30 percent supplied by the buyer, and furnish the remaining 50 percent out of his own working capital. His account with the indorsing firm would thus be appropriately margined.
As to the buyer, however, the writer would function as a broker. In effect, he would purchase the stock for the account, or use, of the buyer, on what might be described as a deferred payment arrangement. Like an ordinary broker, the writer of the contract described above would put up funds to pay for the difference between the price of securities the customer wished to purchase and the customer’s own contribution. His only risk would be that the price of the securities would decline in excess of the customer’s contribution. True, he would be locked in, and could not liquidate the customer’s collateral for 30 days even if the market price should fall in excess of 30 percent, but the risk of such a decline is extremely slight.
Like any other broker who extends credit in a margin account, the writer who was in the business of writing and selling such a contract would be satisfied with a fixed predetermined amount of return on his venture, since he would realize only the fee charged. Unlike a writer of ordinary puts and calls, he would not receive a substantial part of his income from fees on unexercised contract rights. The similarity of his activities to those of a broker, and the dissimilarity to a writer of ordinary options, would be underscored by the fact that his fee would be a fixed predetermined amount of return similar to an interest charge, rather than a fee arrived at individually for each transaction according to the volatility of the stock and other individual considerations.
The buyer’s general account with the writer would in effect reflect a debit for the purchase price of the stock and, on the credit side, a deposit of cash in the amount of 30 percent of that price, plus an extension of credit for the remaining 70 percent, rather than the maximum permissible 20 percent.
For the reason stated above, the Board concluded that the proposed contracts would involve extensions of credit by the writer as broker in an amount exceeding that permitted by the current supplement to Regulation T. Accordingly, the writing of such contracts by a brokerage firm is presently prohibited by such regulation, and any brokerage firm that indorses such a contract would be arranging for credit in an amount greater than the firm itself could extend, a practice that is prohibited by section 220.7(a). 1970 Fed. Res. Bull. 280; 12 CFR 220.122.
There have been many developments since this interpretation was issued, notably a reduction in initial and maintenance margins and the introduction of exchange-traded options. The Board’s reasoning is still valid for options not traded on an exchange. Now covered by sections 220.4(a), 220.13, and 220.18 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-490

PURPOSE CREDIT—Retirement of Stock

The Board of Governors has been asked whether its Regulation T was violated when a dealer in securities transferred to a corporation 4,161 shares of the stock of such corporation for a consideration of $33,288, of which only 10 percent was paid in cash.
If the transaction was of a kind that must be included in the corporation’s “general [now margin] account” with the dealer (section 220.3 of Regulation T), it would involve an excessive extension of credit in violation of section 220.3(b)(1). However, the transaction would be permissible if the transaction came within the scope of section 220.4(f)(8), which permits a “creditor” (such as the dealer) to “extend and maintain credit to or for any customer without collateral or on any collateral whatever for any purpose other than purchasing or carrying or trading in securities.” Accordingly, the crucial question is whether the corporation, in this transaction, was “purchasing” the 4,161 shares of its stock, within the meaning of that term as used in Regulation T.
Upon first examination, it might seem apparent that the transaction was a purchase by the corporation. From the viewpoint of the dealer the transaction was a sale, and ordinarily, at least, a sale by one party connotes a purchase by the other. Furthermore, other indicia of a sale/purchase transaction were present, such as a transfer of property for a pecuniary consideration. However, when the underlying objectives of the margin regulations are considered, it appears that they do not encompass a transaction of this nature, where securities are transferred on credit to the issuer thereof for the purpose of retirement.
Section 7(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires the Board of Governors to prescribe margin regulations “For the purpose of preventing the excessive use of credit for the purchase or carrying of securities.” Accordingly, the provisions of Regulation T are not intended to prevent the use of credit where the transaction will not have the effect of increasing the volume of credit in the securities markets.
It appears that the instant transactions would have no such effect. When the transaction was completed, the equity interest of the dealer was transmuted into a dollar-obligation interest; in lieu of its status as a stockholder of the corporation, the dealer became a creditor of that corporation. The corporation did not become the owner of any securities acquired through the use of credit; its outstanding stock was simply reduced by 4,161 shares.
The meaning of “sale” and “purchase” in the Securities Exchange Act has been considered by the federal courts in a series of decisions dealing with corporate “insiders” profits under section 16(b) of that act. Although the statutory purpose sought to be effectuated in those cases is quite different from the purpose of the margin regulations, the decisions in question support the propriety of not regarding a transaction as a “purchase” where this accords with the probable legislative intent, even though, literally, the statutory definition seems to include the particular transaction. See Robert v. Eaton (CA 2 1954) 212 F. 2d 82, and cases and other authorities there cited. The governing principle, of course, is to effectuate the purpose embodied in the statutory or regulatory provision being interpreted, even where that purpose may conflict with the literal words. U.S. v. Amer. Trucking Ass’ns., 310 U.S. 534, 543, (1940); 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction (3d ed. 1943) ch. 45.
There can be little doubt that an extension of credit to a corporation to enable it to retire debt securities would not be for the purpose of “purchasing . . . securities” and therefore would come within section 220.4(f)(8), regardless of whether the retirement was obligatory (e.g., at maturity) or was a voluntary “call” by the issuer. If this is true, it is difficult to see any valid distinction, for this purpose, between (a) voluntary retirement of an indebtedness security and (b) voluntary retirement of an equity security.
For the reasons indicated above, it is the opinion of the Board of Governors that the extension of credit here involved is not of the kind which the margin requirements are intended to regulate and that the transaction described does not involve an unlawful extension of credit as far as Regulation T is concerned.
The foregoing interpretation relates, of course, only to cases of the type described. It should not be regarded as governing any other situations; for example, the interpretation does not deal with cases where securities are being transferred to someone other than the issuer, or to the issuer for a purpose other than immediate retirement. Whether the margin requirements are inapplicable to any such situations would depend upon the relevant facts of actual cases presented. 1962 Fed. Res. Bull. 1589; 12 CFR 220.119.
Regulation T was revised in 1983. The general account was renamed the margin account and the rule stated in section 220.4(f)(8) was used to create a nonsecurities credit account. See sections 220.4 and 220.9 of Regulation T.

5-490.1

PURPOSE CREDIT—Capital-Contribution Loan

The Board recently considered a case in which a capital-contribution loan was originally made between partners in the same firm, but the lender later proposed to withdraw from the partnership. [At the time of the interpretation, the lender and the borrower had to be in the same partnership. ] The Board was asked whether the loan might be continued after the lender’s withdrawal from the partnership, or whether the loan must then be terminated if it is not authorized by some other provision of the regulation.
For the sake of completing the answer to the question presented, it is necessary to consider the possibility that the loan could qualify under section 4(f)(8) of the regulation, which provides for loans that are “for any purpose other than purchasing or carrying or trading in securities.”
The reason section 4(f)(8) may be relevant to the question presented in this case is that while the exact relation of the instant loan to the business of the borrower’s firm was not entirely clear, it appeared that the borrower’s firm was engaged not only in the securities business but also, and to a very considerable extent, in the commodity business. There would, therefore, be at least some possibility that the loan in question could qualify as a loan for a “purpose other than purchasing or carrying or trading in securities.”
Whether the loan could in fact so qualify would depend, of course, upon the facts of the particular case, and instances where capital-contribution loans could so qualify would be rather rare. In certain cases, of which the present case involving a considerable amount of commodity business might turn out to be an example, it might be possible for a loan to be made under such conditions that it could actually be identified as being for a “purpose other than purchasing or carrying or trading in securities.” It is evident, however, that it would be rather unusual for a capital-contribution loan to be thus identifiable. The business of the average securities brokerage firm is so bound up with purchasing, carrying or trading in securities—either for its own account or for the account of customers—that a loan to a partner in such a firm to enable him to make a contribution of capital to the firm usually could not qualify as being for a “purpose other than purchasing or carrying or trading in securities.” 1939 Fed. Res. Bull. 722.
Capital contributions are now covered by section 220.11(a)(3) of Regulation T (as revised 1983). Nonsecurities credit is now covered by section 220.9.

5-492

SHORT SALES—Simultaneous Borrowing of Securities

The Board recently considered a case in which a member of a national securities exchange sold short on the exchange certain securities at a price of $1,000. The buying member later agreed to accept a due bill for the securities and a check for $1,000. Pursuant to the rules of the clearing house of the particular exchange, the selling member delivered the due bill and the check to the clearing house, and the transaction was settled. As a part of the settlement, the selling member received payment for the sale in the usual manner.
The Board was asked whether Regulation T would require the selling member to deposit with the buying member the usual margin on a $1,000 short sale ($500 under present requirements). The question was raised both as to a short sale for the selling member’s own account and a short sale for the account of a customer of the selling member.
The Board expressed the view that the transaction in question might properly be considered to consist of two parts, first, a sale of securities and its completion by delivery of the securities, and second, a borrowing of securities for the purpose of effecting the delivery. It appeared that the method of settlement was such that the acceptance by the buying member of the due bill was in effect a loan of the securities for the purpose of completing delivery. It was understood that, as a practical matter, the buying member’s books often would not differentiate between such a receipt of the due bill and the making of an ordinary loan of securities.
Section 6(h) of the regulation provides that:
Without regard to the other provisions of this regulation, a creditor (1) may make a bona fide deposit of cash in order to borrow securities (whether registered or unregistered) for the purpose of making delivery of such securities in the case of short sales, failure to receive securities he is required to deliver, or other similar cases, and (2) may lend securities for such purpose against such a deposit.
Accordingly, in the circumstances cited the selling member need not deposit margin with the buying member, and it is immaterial whether the sale is for the member’s own account or for the account of a customer. 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 763.
Borrowing and lending securities is now covered by section 220.16 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-496

SHORT SALES—Against the Box; Puts and Calls

The Board was recently asked whether under Regulation T, “Credit by Brokers and Dealers” (12 CFR 220), if there are simultaneous long and short positions in the same security in the same margin account (often referred to as a short sale “against the box”), such positions may be used to supply the place of the deposit of margin ordinarily required in connection with the guarantee by a creditor of a put or call option or combination thereof on such stock.
Rule 431 of the New York Stock Exchange permits a short position in the stock to serve in lieu of the required deposit in the case of a put and a long position to serve in the case of a call. Thus, where the appropriate position is held in an account, that position may serve as the margin required by section 220.3(d)(5).
In a short sale “against the box”, however, the customer is both long and short the same security. He may have established either position, properly margined, prior to taking the other, or he may have deposited fully paid securities in his margin account on the same day he makes a short sale of such securities. In either case, he will have directed his broker to borrow securities elsewhere in order to make delivery on the short sale rather than using his long position for this purpose (see also 17 CFR 240.3b-3).
Generally speaking, a customer makes a short sale “against the box” for tax reasons. Regulation T, however, provides in section 220.3(g) that the two positions must be “netted out” for the purposes of the calculations required by the regulation. Thus, the Board concludes that neither position would be available to serve as the deposit of margin required in connection with the endorsement by the creditor of an option.
A similar conclusion obtains under section 220.3(d)(3). That section provides, in essence, that the margin otherwise required in connection with a short sale need not be included in the account if the customer has in the account a long position in the same security. In section 220.3(g)(4), however, it is provided that “[a]ny transaction which . . . serves to permit any offsetting transaction in an account shall, to that extent, be unavailable to permit any other transaction in such account.” Thus, if a customer has, for example, a long position in a security and that long position has been used to supply the margin required in connection with a short sale of the same security, then the long position is unavailable to serve as the margin required in connection with the creditor’s endorsement of a call option on such security.
A situation was also described in which a customer has purported to establish simultaneous offsetting long and short positions by executing a “cross” or wash sale of the security on the same day. In this situation, no change in the beneficial ownership of stock has taken place. Since there is no actual “contra” party to either transaction, and no stock has been borrowed or delivered to accomplish the short sale, such fictitious positions would have no value for purposes of the Board’s margin regulations. Indeed, the adoption of such a scheme in connection with an overall strategy involving the issuance, endorsement or guarantee of put or call options or combinations thereof appears to be manipulative and may have been employed for the purpose of circumventing the requirements of the regulations. 1973 Fed. Res. Bull. 358; 12 CFR 220.128.
Now covered by sections 220.4(c)(4) and 220.5(b) and (c) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-497

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Payment by Sale of Another Security*

The Board recently had occasion to consider two questions regarding transactions in the cash account.
The first question arose from a case in which a customer proposed to purchase a security in the cash account and then to make the necessary prompt payment by selling in the account another security of sufficient value and using the proceeds of sale for the purpose. The question was whether such a proposal for making payment disqualified the purchase for inclusion in the cash account.
The exact answer to this question would depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. In some circumstances, such a combination of transactions might be evidence of an attempt to evade or circumvent the regulation, and if the purchase was part of such an attempt its inclusion in the cash account would, of course, be forbidden, because section 4(a) of the regulation provides in part that “[a] special account established pursuant to this section shall not be used in any way for the purpose of evading or circumventing any of the provisions of this regulation.”
It is the view of the Board, however, that, while a proposal to effect such a combination of transactions should be carefully scrutinized, the effecting of the proposed purchase in the special cash account would not necessarily be prohibited if the purchase complied in other respects with the requirements of the regulation and there was in fact no attempt to evade or circumvent the regulation. This would require, among other things, that the proposed purchase be in fact a “bona fide cash transaction” as that term is ordinarily used in the trade and that the proposed sale be one that is to be made and settled promptly.
The second question arose from a permissible instance of the type described above in which the security to be sold was deposited with the creditor and sold promptly, well within seven days after the date of the purchase, and the creditor was to receive the proceeds of sale promptly in the usual course of business but not until more than seven days after the date of the purchase. This presented the question whether in such circumstances it might be considered that the security purchased by the customer had been paid for by him within seven days after the purchase.
Assuming that the purchase was one which, as indicated above, could properly be effected in the cash account, the question whether it might be considered that payment had been made within seven days should be answered in the affirmative. When a customer has sold a security in a cash account, section 4(c) permits the broker to make the proceeds of the sale of the security available to the customer upon the receipt of the security in the cash account even though this be prior to the date on which the broker is to receive the proceeds of the sale. Accordingly, in the instant case the creditor could have paid the customer the proceeds of sale within the seven-day period and the customer could in turn have used such proceeds to make full cash payment to the creditor for the security purchased. In the circumstances, such payment could properly be treated as having been made by the customer without the necessity for the mechanical passage of funds from the creditor to the customer and back again to the creditor. 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 1043.
Now covered by section 220.8 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

*
The 1983 revision of Regulation T renamed this account the cash account.
5-498

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Payment by Sale of Another Security

The Board recently considered several questions regarding the provisions of Regulation T which relate to the maximum time permitted for obtaining payment in a cash account under section 4(c) of the regulation.
Paying for sale of another security. One inquiry related to the application of this provision to a question that may be described as follows:
 A customer effects a purchase in a cash account established pursuant to section 4(c) of the regulation. On the same day the customer sells in the account another security which he owns but which he has not yet deposited in the account. The proceeds of the sale, which was effected “seller 10,” are sufficient to make full cash payment for the purchase, but such proceeds will not be available to the broker until after the time applicable under section 4(c) for obtaining payment for the purchase. May the sale be considered to constitute payment for the security purchased, and thus make it unnecessary to take alternative action?
It is to be noted that a similar question was considered by the Board in the ruling published at page 1043 of the December 1938 Federal Reserve Bulletin (at 5-497). In that case the security sold was deposited in the account prior to the expiration of the time permitted for obtaining payment of the securities purchased. In the present case, although the sale was made within the required period, the securities so sold were not delivered into the account within that time.
It is recognized that such transactions might be evidence of an effort to evade the regulation in violation of section 4(a) which provides that “ [a] special account established pursuant to this section shall not be used in any way for the purpose of evading or circumventing any of the provisions of this regulation.” Naturally, any such transaction should be carefully scrutinized for any such possibility, and any repetition of such a method of making payment by a customer would be especially subject to question. Assuming, however, that there is no such evasion or circumvention of the regulation, it is the view of the Board that the broker may, at his option, treat the customer as having made payment for the purchased security at the time when the other security was sold, and that this would be permissible even though the security sold had not been deposited in the account. The same conclusion would, of course, follow if the security sold had been deposited in the account but happened not to be in form for “good delivery.” 1940 Fed. Res. Bull. 772.
Now covered by section 220.8 of Regulation T (as revised 1983)

5-499

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Prompt Payment

An inquiry was presented as to a situation in which a broker or dealer does not obtain full cash payment within the period applicable to the transaction but is offered payment promptly after the period and before he has cancelled or otherwise liquidated the transaction. The question was whether the broker or dealer in such circumstances may accept such payment and consider the provisions requiring cancellation or liquidation for failure to obtain payment to have been met.
The section provides various exceptions for cases where a period other than the seven-day period would be more appropriate. These exceptions do not include any provision for a payment which is offered promptly after the period applicable to the transaction, and it does not appear why any additional time should be permissible in such circumstances if there is no other ground for additional time. The provision for cancelling or otherwise liquidating the transaction when payment has not been obtained within the applicable period is explicit. There are various exceptions, including provision for an extension of time under certain conditions by an appropriate committee of a national securities exchange, and it is the view of the Board that in the circumstances described the delayed payment by the customer may not be accepted as a substitute for the cancellation or liquidation of the transaction. This would be the case whether a brokerage or a dealer transaction was involved. 1940 Fed. Res. Bull. 772.

5-500

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Shipment of Securities

Subdivision (4) of section 4(c) provides that—
 (4) [i]f any shipment of securities is incidental to the consummation of the transaction, the period applicable to the transaction under subdivision (2) of this section 4(c) shall be deemed to be extended by the number of days required for all such shipments, but not by more than seven days.
Questions were raised as to whether certain periods required for the shipment of securities were covered by this provision, and whether they might be added together (to a total such extension not exceeding the seven days specified in the provision). Such questions were presented as to the time of shipment from the place of purchase to the broker, from the broker to the customer, and to and from the transfer office.
Assuming that such shipments are not a subterfuge but actually are incidental to the consummation of the transaction, it is the view of the Board that each such period is covered by the provision. In addition, all such periods may be added together, provided, of course, that the total such extension for any transaction does not exceed the seven-day maximum specified in the provision. 1940 Fed. Res. Bull. 772.
Now covered by section 220.8(b)(3) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-501

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—COD Transactions

The Board has recently considered certain questions involving the cash account under section 4(c) of Regulation T, and especially the provisions of section 4(c)(5) relating to so-called “cash on delivery” or “COD” transactions.
In general. The problems were ones relating, under section 4(c)(5), to the time of delivering a security to a customer and obtaining cash payment against the delivery. The rulings on the particular cases may be understood more readily in the light of certain general principles which apply to section 4(c) and particularly to the COD transactions under section 4(c)(5).
It should be noted at the outset that it is not the purpose of section 4(c)(5) to allow additional time to customers for making payment. The “prompt delivery” described in section 4(c)(5) is delivery which is to be made as soon as the broker or dealer can reasonably make it in view of the mechanics of the securities business and the bona fide usages of the trade. The provision merely recognizes the fact that in certain circumstances it is an established bona fide practice in the trade to obtain payment against delivery of the security to the customer, and the further fact that the mechanics of the trade, unrelated to the customer’s readiness to pay, may sometimes delay such delivery to the customer.
The customer should have the necessary means of payment readily available when he purchases a security in the special cash account. He should expect to pay for it immediately or in any event within the period (of not more than a very few days) that is as long as is usually required to carry through the ordinary securities transaction.
Such an undertaking is a necessary part of the customer’s agreement, under section 4(c) (1)(A), that he “will promptly make full cash payment.” Furthermore, any delay by the customer may cast doubt on the original status of the transaction and should be explainable by exceptional circumstances that justify the delay. Repetition of delays by the customer would be especially hard to justify. Such repetition would almost conclusively label his transactions as unable to qualify as bona fide cash transactions and would almost conclusively disqualify them for inclusion in the cash account.
These general principles are illustrated by the specific cases to which the Board has given consideration.
Broker “failed to receive” security. A typical example of a case in which the delivery to the customer is delayed because of conditions in the trade is one in which the broker has “failed to receive” the security which the customer has purchased. Assuming that no evasion of the regulation is involved and that the failure to receive the security is an ordinary incident to the usual operation of the securities business, section 4(c)(5) would cover the time, not exceeding the 35-day maximum specified in the provision, reasonably required for the broker to obtain the security and deliver it to the customer.
Purchasing for delivery security already sold to customer. It sometimes happens that a dealer will sell a security to a customer although the dealer does not have the security on hand for delivery and expects to purchase it in the market in order to make delivery to the customer. A special case of this type is one in which an institutional investor such as an insurance company, trust fund, or the like, will purchase a block of a particular issue of securities—usually bonds—as a unit, and will request that the entire block of securities be delivered at one time in order to avoid unreasonable duplication of clerical or administrative operations.
Questions as to the time allowed the dealer to acquire the securities in the market for delivery to the customer under section 4(c)(5) are essentially questions of reasonableness, and must necessarily depend on the circumstances of the particular case.
As indicated above, the dealer could not delay acquiring the securities he did not have on hand if such delay was for the purpose of giving additional time to the customer. Assuming, however, that no such evasion is involved and that there is complete good faith, the dealer would have a reasonable time for acquiring the securities and could take into account the general state of the market, the effect of forcing a sudden purchase of the securities, and similar factors. He would not have to force through a sizable purchase in a market that is temporarily thin or disorganized. But on the other hand he should proceed to acquire and deliver the securities with all reasonable dispatch.
Unissued securities. The question was raised whether section 4(c)(5) applies to securities which at the time of the transaction are unissued. The answer is that it does, but that, as in other cases, the broker should deliver the security and complete the transaction as soon as he can in view of the mechanics of the trade. This being the case, it seems that there would be very few instances in which section 4(c)(5) would, in practice, authorize any more time for delivering such a security and obtaining payment therefor than would section 4(c)(3) which, in the following terms, specifically provides for most situations involving unissued securities—
 (3) [i]f the security when so purchased is an unissued security, the period applicable to the transaction under subdivision (2) of this section 4(c) shall be seven days after the date on which the security is made available by the issuer for delivery to purchasers.
*     *     *     *     *
1940 Fed. Res. Bull. 1172.
Now covered by section 220.8(b)(1) and (2) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-502

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Applicability of 90-Day Freeze Provision to Broker-Dealer as Customer

The Board has recently considered certain questions regarding transactions of customers who are brokers or dealers.
*     *     *     *     *
 The second question was, in effect, whether the limitations of section 4(c)(8) apply to the account of a customer who is himself a broker or dealer. The answer is that the provision applies to any cash account, regardless of the type of customer. 1947 Fed. Res. Bull. 27; 12 CFR 220.101.
The 90-day freeze provision is now section 220.8(c) (as revised 1983).

5-503

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—90-Day Freeze

Section 4(c)(8) of Regulation T places a limitation on a cash account if a security other than an exempted security has been purchased in the account and “without having been previously paid for in full by the customer . . . has been . . . delivered out to any broker or dealer.” The limitation is that during the succeeding 90 days the customer may not purchase a security in the account other than an exempted security unless funds sufficient for the purpose are held in the account. In other words, the privilege of delayed payment in such an account is withdrawn during the 90-day period.
The Board recently considered a question as to whether the following situation makes an account subject to the 90-day disqualification: A customer purchases registered security ABC in a cash account. The broker executes the order in good faith as a bona fide cash transaction, expecting to obtain full cash payment promptly. The next day, the customer sells registered security XYZ in the account, promising to deposit it promptly in the account. The proceeds of the sale are equal to or greater than the cost of security ABC. After both sale and purchase have been made, the customer requests the broker to deliver security ABC to a different broker, to receive security XYZ from that broker at about the same time, and to settle with the other broker— such settlement to be made either by paying the cost of security XYZ to the other broker and receiving from him the cost of security ABC, or by merely settling any difference between these amounts.
The Board expressed the view that the account becomes subject to the 90-day disqualification in section 4(c)(8). In the instant case, unlike that described at 1940 Federal Reserve Bulletin 772 (interpretation at 5-499), the security sold is not held in the account and is not to be deposited in it unconditionally. It is to be obtained only against the delivery to the other broker of the security which had been purchased. Hence payment cannot be said to have been made prior to such delivery; the purchased security has been delivered out to a broker without previously having been paid for in full, and the account becomes subject to the 90-day disqualification. 1948 Fed. Res. Bull. 517; 12 CFR 220.105.
The 90-day freeze provision is now section 220.8(c) (as revised 1983).

5-504

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Prompt Payment

The Board recently received an inquiry concerning whether purchases of securities by certain municipal employees’ retirement or pension systems on the basis of arrangements for delayed delivery and payment might properly be effected by a creditor subject to Regulation T in a cash account under section 4(c) of the regulation.
It appears that in a typical case the supervisors of the retirement system meet only once or twice each month, at which times decisions are made to purchase any securities wished to be acquired for the system. Although the securities are available for prompt delivery by the broker-dealer firm selected to effect the system’s purchase, it is arranged in advance with the firm that the system will not accept delivery and pay for the securities before some date more than seven business days after the date on which the securities are purchased. Apparently, such an arrangement is occasioned by the monthly or semimonthly meetings of the system’s supervisors. It was indicated that a retirement system of this kind may be supervised by officials who administer it as an incidental part of their regular duties, and that meetings requiring joint action by two or more supervisors may be necessary under the system’s rules and procedures to authorize issuance of checks in payment for the securities purchased. It was indicated also that the purchases do not involve exempted securities, securities of the kind covered by section 4(c)(3) of the regulation, or any shipment of securities as described in section 4(c)(4).
Regulation T provides that a creditor subject thereto may not effect for a customer a purchase in a cash account under section 4(c) unless the use of the account meets the limitations of section 4(a) and the purchase constitutes a “bona fide cash transaction” which complies with the eligibility requirements of section 4(c)(1)(A). One such requirement is that the purchase be made “in reliance upon an agreement accepted by the creditor [broker-dealer] in good faith” that the customer will “promptly” make full cash payment for the security, if funds sufficient for the purpose are not already in the account; and, subject to certain exceptions, section 4(c)(2) provides that the creditor shall promptly cancel or liquidate the transaction if payment is not made by the customer within seven business days after the date of purchase. As indicated in the Board’s interpretation at 1940 Federal Reserve Bulletin 1172 (at 5-501), a necessary part of the customer’s undertaking pursuant to section 4(c)(1)(A) is that he “should have the necessary means of payment readily available when he purchases a security in the cash account. He should expect to pay for it immediately or in any event within the period (of not more than a very few days) that is as long as is usually required to carry through the ordinary securities transaction.”
The arrangements for delayed delivery and payment in the case presented to the Board and outlined above clearly would be inconsistent with the requirement of section 4(c)(1)(A) that the purchase be made in reliance upon an agreement accepted by the creditor in good faith that the customer will “promptly” make full cash payment for the security. Accordingly, the Board said that transactions of the kind in question would not qualify as a “bona fide cash transaction” and, therefore, could not properly be effected in a cash account, unless a contrary conclusion would be justified by the exception in section 4(c)(5).
Section 4(c)(5) provides that if the creditor, “acting in good faith in accordance with” section 4(c)(1), purchases a security for a customer “with the understanding that he is to deliver the security promptly to the customer, and the full cash payment to be made promptly by the customer is to be made against such delivery,” the creditor may at his option treat the transaction as one to which the period applicable under section 4(c)(2) is not the seven days therein specified but 35 days after the date of such purchase. It will be observed that the application of section 4(c)(5) is specifically conditioned on the creditor acting in good faith in accordance with section 4(c)(1). As noted above, the existence of the arrangements for delayed delivery and payment in the case presented would prevent this condition from being met, since the customer could not be regarded as having agreed to make full cash payment “promptly.” Furthermore, such arrangements clearly would be inconsistent with the requirement of section 4(c)(5) that the creditor “deliver the security promptly to the customer.”
Section 4(c)(5) was discussed in the Board’s published interpretation referred to above, which states that “it is not the purpose of section 4(c)(5) to allow additional time to customers for making payment. The ‘prompt delivery’ described in section 4(c)(5) is delivery which is to be made as soon as the broker or dealer can reasonably make it in view of the mechanics of the securities business and the bona fide usages of the trade. The provision merely recognizes the fact that in certain circumstances it is an established bona fide practice in the trade to obtain payment against delivery of the security to the customer, and the further fact that the mechanics of the trade, unrelated to the customer’s readiness to pay, may sometimes delay such delivery to the customer.”
In the case presented, it appears that the only reason for the delay is related solely to the customer’s readiness to pay and is in no way attributable to the mechanics of the securities business. Accordingly, it is the Board’s view that the exception in section 4(c)(5) should not be regarded as permitting the transactions in question to be effected in a cash account. 1957 Fed. Res. Bull. 911; 12 CFR 220.113.
Now covered by section 220.8 of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-505

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—90-Day Freeze and Payment of Check

The Board of Governors has recently interpreted certain of the provisions of section 220.4(c) (8) of the Board’s Regulation T, with respect to the withdrawal of proceeds of a sale of stock in a cash account when the stock has been sold out of the account prior to payment for its purchase.
The specific factual situation presented may be summarized as follows:
Customer purchased stock in a cash account with a member firm on Day 1. On Day 3 customer sold the same stock at a profit. On Day 8 customer delivered his check for the cost of the purchase to the creditor (member firm). On Day 9 the creditor mailed to the customer a check for the proceeds of the sale.
Section 220.4(c)(8) prohibits a creditor, as a general rule, from effecting a purchase of a security in a customer’s cash account if any security has been purchased in that account during the preceding 90 days and has then been sold in the account or delivered out to any broker or dealer without having been previously paid for in full by the customer. One exception to this general rule reads as follows:
The creditor may disregard for the purposes of this subparagraph [section 220.4(c) (8)] a sale without prior payment provided full cash payment is received within the period described by subparagraph (2) of this paragraph [seven days after the date of purchase] and the customer has not withdrawn the proceeds of sale on or before the day on which such payment (and also final payment of any check received in that connection) is received. . . .
Final payment of customer’s check. The first question is: When is the creditor to be regarded as having received “final payment of any check received” in connection with the purchase?
The clear purpose of section 220.4(c)(8) is to prevent the use of the proceeds of sale of a stock by a customer to pay for its purchase—i.e., to prevent him from trading on the creditor’s funds by being able to deposit the sale proceeds prior to presentment of his own check to the drawee bank. Thus, when a customer undertakes to pay for a purchase by check, that check does not constitute payment for the purchase, within the language and intent of the above-quoted exception in section 220.4(c)(8), until it has been honored by the drawee bank, indicating the sufficiency of his account to pay the check.
The phrase “final payment of any check” is interpreted as above notwithstanding section 220.6(f), which provides that—
[f]or the purposes of this part [Regulation T], a creditor may, at his option (1) treat the receipt in good faith of any check or draft drawn on a bank which in the ordinary course of business is payable on presentation, . . . as receipt of payment of the amount of such check, draft or order; . . .
This is a general provision substantially the same as language found in section 4(f) of Regulation T as originally promulgated in 1934. The language of the subject exception to the 90-day rule of section 220.4(c)(8)—i.e., the exception based expressly on “final payment of any check”—was added to the regulation in 1949 by an amendment directed at a specific type of situation. Because the exception is a special, more recent provision, and because section 220.6(f), if controlling, would permit the exception to undermine, to some extent, the effectiveness of the 90-day rule, sound principles of construction require that the phrase “final payment of any check” be given its literal and intended effect.
There is no fixed period of time from the moment of receipt by the payee, or of deposit, within which it is certain that any check will be paid by the drawee bank. Therefore, in the rare case where the operation of the subject exception to section 220.4(c)(8) is necessary to avoid application of the 90-day rule, a creditor should ascertain (from his bank of deposit or otherwise) the fact of payment of a customer’s check given for the purchase. Having so determined the day of final payment, the creditor can permit withdrawal on any subsequent day.
Mailing as “withdrawal.” Also presented is the question whether the mailing to the customer of the creditor’s check for the sale proceeds constitutes a withdrawal of such proceeds by the customer at the time of mailing so that, if the check for the sale proceeds is mailed on or before the day on which the customer’s check for the purchase is finally paid, the 90-day rule applies. It may be that a check mailed one day will not ordinarily be received by the customer until the next. The Board is of the view, however, that when the check for sale proceeds is issued and released into the mails, the proceeds are to be regarded as withdrawn by the customer; a more liberal interpretation would open a way for circumvention. Accordingly, the creditor’s check should not be mailed nor the sale proceeds otherwise released to the customer “on or before the day” on which payment for the purchase, including final payment of any check given for such payment, is received by the creditor, as determined in accordance with the principles stated herein.
Applying the above principles to the schedule of transactions described in the second paragraph of this interpretation, the mailing of the creditor’s check on day 9 would be consistent with the subject exception to section 220.4(c)(8), as interpreted herein, only if the customer’s check was paid by the drawee bank on day 8. 1962 Fed. Res. Bull. 399; 12 CFR 220.117.
Now covered by sections 220.8(c) and 220.3(e)(1) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-506

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Prompt Payment for Mutual Fund Shares

The Board has recently considered the question whether, in connection with the purchase of mutual fund shares in a cash account under Regulation T, the seven-day period with respect to liquidation for nonpayment is that described in section 220.4(c)(2) or that described in section 220.4(c)(3).
Section 220.4(c)(2) provides as follows:
 In case a customer purchases a security (other than an exempted security) in the special cash account and does not make full cash payment for the security within seven days after the date on which the security is so purchased, the creditor shall, except as provided in subparagraphs (3)-(7) of this paragraph, promptly cancel or otherwise liquidate the transaction or the unsettled portion thereof. (Emphasis supplied)
Section 220.4(c)(3), one of the exceptions referred to, provides in relevant part as follows:
 If the security when so purchased is an unissued security, the period applicable to the transaction under subparagraph (2) of this paragraph shall be 7 days after the date on which the security is made available by the issuer for delivery to purchasers. (Emphasis supplied)
In the case presented, the shares of the mutual fund (open-end investment company) are technically not issued at the time they are sold by the underwriter and distributor. Several days may elapse from the date of sale before a certificate can be delivered by the transfer agent. The specific inquiry to the Board was, in effect, whether the seven-day period after which a purchase transaction must be liquidated or canceled for nonpayment should run, in the case of mutual fund shares, from the time when a certificate for the purchased shares is available for delivery to the purchaser, instead of from the date of the purchase.
Under the general rule of section 220.4(c) (2) that is applicable to purchases of outstanding securities, the seven-day period runs from the date of purchase without regard to the time required for the mechanical acts of transfer of ownership and delivery of a certificate. This rule is based on the principles governing the use of cash accounts in accordance with which, in the absence of special circumstances, payment is to be made promptly upon the purchase of securities.
The purpose of section 220.4(c)(3) is to recognize the fact that, when an issue of securities is to be issued at some fixed future date, a security that is a part of such issue can be purchased on a “when-issued” basis and that payment may reasonably be delayed until after such date of issue, subject to other basic conditions for transactions in a special cash account. Thus, unissued securities should be regarded as “made available for delivery to purchasers” on the date when they are substantially as available as outstanding securities are available upon purchase, and this would ordinarily be the designated date of issuance or, in the case of a stock dividend, the “payment date.” In any case, the time required for the mechanics of transfer and delivery of a certificate is not material under section 220.4(c)(3) any more than it is under section 220.4(c)(2).
Mutual fund shares are essentially available upon purchase to the same extent as outstanding securities. The mechanics of their issuance and of the delivery of certificates are not significantly different from the mechanics of transfer and delivery of certificates for shares of outstanding securities, and the issuance of mutual fund shares is not a future event in a sense that would warrant the extension of the time for payment beyond that afforded in the case of outstanding securities. Consequently, the Board has concluded that a purchase of mutual fund shares is not a purchase of an “unissued security” to which section 220.4(c) (3) applies, but is a transaction to which section 220.4(c)(2) applies. 1962 Fed. Res. Bull. 1427; 12 CFR 220.118.
Now covered by section 220.8(b) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

SPECIAL CASH ACCOUNT—Extension of Time

See Extension of Time.

5-508

SPECIAL MEMORANDUM ACCOUNT—Excess Margin

Section 4(f)(4) of Regulation T provides for a special miscellaneous [now special memorandum] account in which, subject to certain conditions, money or securities may be received from or for any customer and paid out or delivered to or for the customer without regard to his general [now margin] account. Section 4(a) of the regulation provides that if a customer has with a creditor both a general account and one or more special accounts, the creditor shall treat each special account as if the customer had with the creditor no general account.
The Board recently considered a case in which a member of a national securities exchange demanded additional margin of a customer, the additional margin being demanded because of declines in the market value of the securities in the customer’s general account and not because of any transaction in the account. In other words, the margin was demanded merely for the broker’s own protection and not because of any requirement of the regulation. The question presented was whether cash deposited by the customer in response to such a demand for margin may, without violation of the regulation, be placed in a special miscellaneous account. The Board expressed the view that such a deposit of cash in the special miscellaneous account would not constitute a violation of Regulation T. 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 89.
Now covered by section 220.6(b)(2) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).
[The interpretation previously at 5-509, dealing with capital-contribution loans, has been redesignated 5-490.1. The interpretation previously at 5-510, dealing with broker-dealers as customers, has been redesignated 5-474.4.]

5-511

TRANSFER OF ACCOUNTS—“Creditor”

The first paragraph of section 6(d) of the revised regulation refers to transfers from one “creditor” to another “creditor,” and the term “creditor,” as defined in section 2(b) of the regulation does not include a bank which is not a member of a national securities exchange. Digest of 1934 Fed. Res. Bull. 688; 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 87.
Transfer of accounts is now covered by section 220.5(f) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-512

TRANSFER OF TRANSACTIONS—Before Expiration of Time Extension

A business conduct committee of a national securities exchange, having, on proper application, granted a creditor an extension of time in which to receive payment from a customer who has purchased registered securities in a bona fide cash transaction, may, in appropriate circumstances on further application and before the expiration of the extension, authorize the creditor to transfer the transaction from the customer’s cash account to his margin account or omnibus account and to complete the transaction pursuant to the provisions of the regulation applicable to such accounts. Digest of 1935 Fed. Res. Bull. 536; 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 87.

5-515

WHEN-ISSUED SECURITIES—Partial Delayed-Issue Contracts

During recent years, it has become customary for portions of new issues of nonconvertible bonds and preferred stocks to be sold subject to partial delayed-issue contracts, which have customarily been referred to in the industry as “delayed-delivery” contracts, and the Board of Governors has been asked for its views as to whether such transactions involve any violations of the Board’s margin regulations.
The practice of issuing a portion of a debt (or equivalent) security issue at a date subsequent to the main underwriting has arisen where market conditions made it difficult or impossible, in a number of instances, to place an entire issue simultaneously. In instances of this kind, institutional investors (e.g., insurance companies or pension funds) whose cash flow is such that they expect to have funds available some months in the future, have been willing to subscribe to a portion, to be issued to them at a future date. The issuer has been willing to agree to issue the securities in two or more stages because it did not immediately need the proceeds to be realized from the deferred portion, because it could not raise funds on better terms, or because it preferred to have a certain portion of the issue taken down by an investor of this type.
In the case of such a delayed-issue contract, the underwriter is authorized to solicit from institutional customers offers to purchase from the issuer, pursuant to contracts of the kind described above, and the agreement becomes binding at the underwriters’ closing, subject to specified conditions. When securities are issued pursuant to the agreement, the purchase price includes accrued interest or dividends, and until they are issued to it, the purchaser does not, in the case of bonds, have rights under the trust indenture, or, in the case of preferred stocks, voting rights.
Securities sold pursuant to such arrangements are high-quality debt issues (or their equivalent). The purchasers buy with a view to investment and do not resell or otherwise dispose of the contract prior to its completion. Delayed-issue arrangements are not acceptable to issuers unless a substantial portion of an issue, not less than ten percent, is involved.
Sections 3(a)(13) and (14) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 provide that an agreement to purchase is equivalent to a purchase, and an agreement to sell to a sale. The Board has hitherto expressed the view that credit is extended at the time when there is a firm agreement to extend such credit (1968 Fed. Res. Bull. 328; 12 CFR 221.102 (at 5-798.2). Accordingly, in instances of the kind described above, the issuer may be regarded as extending credit to the institutional purchaser at the time of the underwriters’ closing, when the obligations of both become fixed.
Section 220.7(a) of the Board’s Regulation T, with an exception not applicable here, forbids a creditor subject to that regulation to arrange for credit on terms on which the creditor could not itself extend the credit. Sections 220.4(c)(1) and (2) provide that a creditor may not sell securities to a customer except in good faith reliance upon an agreement that the customer will promptly, and in no event in more than seven full business days, make full cash payment for the securities. Since the underwriters in question are creditors subject to the regulation, unless some specific exception applies, they are forbidden to arrange for the credit described above. This result follows because payment is not made until more than seven full business days have passed from the time the credit is extended.
However, section 220.4(c)(3) provides that—
[i]f the security when so purchased is an unissued security, the period applicable to the transaction under subparagraph (2) of this paragraph shall be seven days after the date on which the security is made available by the issuer for delivery to purchasers.
In interpreting section 220.4(c)(3), the Board has stated that the purpose of the provision—
is to recognize the fact that, when an issue of securities is to be issued at some future fixed date, a security that is part of such issue can be purchased on a “when-issued” basis and that payment may reasonably be delayed until after such date of issue, subject to other basic conditions for transactions in a cash account. (1962 Fed. Res. Bull. 1427; 12 CFR 220.118 at 5-506)
In that situation, the Board distinguished the case of mutual fund shares, which technically are not issued until the certificate can be delivered by the transfer agent. The Board held that mutual fund shares must be regarded as issued at the time of purchase because they are—
essentially available upon purchase to the same extent as outstanding securities. The mechanics of their issuance and of the delivery of certificates are not significantly different from the mechanics of transfer and delivery of certificates for shares of outstanding securities, and the issuance of mutual fund shares is not a future event in the sense that would warrant the extension of the time for payment beyond that afforded in the case of outstanding securities. (ibid.)
The issuance of debt securities subject to delayed-issue contracts, by contrast with that of mutual fund shares, which are in a status of continual underwriting, is a specific single event taking place at a future date fixed by the issuer with a view to its need for funds and the availability of those funds under current market conditions.
For the reasons stated above the Board concluded that the nonconvertible debt and preferred stock subject to delayed-issue contracts of the kind described above should not be regarded as having been issued until delivered, pursuant to the agreement, to the institutional purchaser. This interpretation does not apply, of course, to fact situations different from that described above. 1971 Fed. Res. Bull. 127; 12 CFR 220.123.
Now covered by section 220.8(b)(1)(ii) of Regulation T (as revised 1983).

5-516

WITHDRAWALS—Followed by Transactions on Same Day

The second paragraph of section 3(b) of Regulation T provides, in part, as follows:
A transaction consisting of a withdrawal of cash or registered or exempted securities from a general [now margin] account shall be permissible only on condition that . . . the transactions (including such withdrawal) on the day of such withdrawal would not create an excess of the adjusted debit balance of the account over the maximum loan value of the securities in the account or increase any such excess.
In order to insure compliance with this provision many brokers make it a practice to permit no withdrawals from the account without being assured that trading in the account has been concluded for the day. The Board, however, recently received inquiries regarding two situations in which a broker, having failed to take this precaution, permitted a withdrawal that was followed by transactions which, in combination with the withdrawal, would create or increase an excess of the adjusted debit balance of the account unless margin was deposited in the account on the same day.
For simplicity of exposition these cases may be assumed to be alike in that at the beginning of the day the adjusted debit balance of the account exactly equalled the maximum loan value of the securities in the account, and that early in the day $2,500 of registered nonexempted securities were sold. Under present loan values of 60 percent, this released margin in the complementary percentage of 40 percent, i.e., $1,000. The creditor permitted the customer to withdraw this $1,000 in cash.
Later in the day other securities were purchased in the account.
In one case $2,000 of registered nonexempted securities were purchased, requiring $800 of margin, i.e., $200 less than the $1,000 withdrawn.
In the other case $4,000 of such securities were purchased, requiring $1,600 of margin, i.e., $600 more than the amount withdrawn.
The question in each case related to the time within which the required margin must be obtained from the customer.
The provisions of section 3(b) quoted above clearly forbid a withdrawal of cash or securities if the withdrawal, in combination with the other transactions on the same day, would create or increase an excess of the adjusted debit balance of the account. Accordingly, in the case of the subsequent transaction requiring $800 margin it would be necessary for the creditor to obtain the full amount of such margin before the end of the day on which the withdrawal took place.
In the other case, in which the subsequent transaction required $1,600 margin or $600 more than that originally withdrawn, it would be necessary to obtain, on the date of the transactions in question, the $1,000 which had been withdrawn. The remaining $600 required could be obtained, as provided for ordinary transactions by the first paragraph of section 3(b), “as promptly as possible and in any event before the expiration of three full business days* following the date of such transaction.” 1938 Fed. Res. Bull. 951.

*
The three full business days noted herein has since been extended to five business days.
5-517

WITHDRAWALS—And Substitution; Fungibility

A client has two certificates representing an identical number of shares of the same stock. One certificate is held by his broker as collateral. The other is in the client’s safety deposit box. The client desires to sell the shares represented by the certificate held by the broker. The question is whether he can replace the certificate held by the broker with the certificate from his safety deposit box without violating the second paragraph of section 3(b) of Regulation T which provides that no “withdrawal” of listed securities shall be permissible if the account, after such withdrawal, would be undermargined.
In speaking of a “withdrawal” of securities, the regulation has reference to a withdrawal of securities which were held as collateral. The mere substitution of certificates representing an identical number of shares of the same stock is not a transaction of a kind contemplated by the regulation. In the circumstances, the Board is of the opinion that the substitution of one certificate for another in the circumstances described need not be regarded as subject in any way to the provisions of Regulation T. 1945 Fed. Res. Bull. 1197.

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