SEC Amends Emergency Order Regarding Short Sales Of Securities Of Certain Financial Firms And Provides Additional Guidance And FAQs

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Earlier this evening, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) issued amendments clarifying and providing certain relief regarding the Emergency Order (the “Order”) it issued on July 15, 2008 regarding “naked” short sales of the securities of 19 specified financial firms, including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
United States Finance and Banking
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Earlier this evening, the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") issued amendments clarifying and providing certain relief regarding the Emergency Order (the "Order") it issued on July 15, 2008 regarding "naked" short sales of the securities of 19 specified financial firms, including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  A list of the 19 specified financial firms covered by the Order (the "Specified Securities") is included at the end of this Alert.  The Order goes into effect after midnight (EST) on Monday July 21, 2008 and terminates at 11:59 pm (EST) Tuesday July 29, 2008, but the SEC can, and has indicated it may, extend the order for up to 30 days.  The SEC staff also this evening issued Frequently Asked Questions ("FAQs") regarding the Order.  This Client Alert discusses and analyzes the Order, the amendments to the Order and the FAQs.

The July 15th Order

 Citing "extraordinary and unusual circumstances," the SEC issued the July 15th Order following a week in which Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were the subject of numerous rumors regarding their solvency, and the prices of their stocks suffered dramatic decreases attributable in part to significant short selling activity.  The SEC stated that the Order was intended to "eliminate any possibility that naked short selling may contribute to the disruption of markets in" the Specified Securities.

The main operative provision of the Order requires that "no person may effect a short sale [in any of the Specified Securities] ... unless such person or its agent has borrowed or arranged to borrow the security or otherwise has the security available to borrow in its inventory prior to effecting such short sale and delivers the security on settlement date." (Emphasis added).  This is a substantial change from the current "locate" requirement of Regulation SHO, which applies to brokers or dealers effecting short sales for customers or for their own proprietary accounts and permits a broker or dealer to comply with the rule either (i) by borrowing the security, or entering into a bona-fide arrangement to borrow the security, or (ii) having "reasonable grounds to believe" that the security can be borrowed for delivery on settlement date. 

While it seemed clear from the Order that a broker could no longer rely on a reasonable belief that a customer had "located" shares for delivery on a short sale of a Specified Security, numerous other interpretive questions and issues were left open.  Today's amendments and FAQs answer some of those questions, but others remain unaddressed.

Amendments To The Order And FAQs

Today's amendments to the Order and the FAQs provide the following relief, guidance and additional clarifications:

  1. When engaging in bona-fide market making and hedging, registered equities market makers, option market makers, ETF market makers, specialists and block positioners as well as "other market makers obligated to quote in the over-the-counter market" are exempted from the Order's borrow or arrange-to-borrow requirements with respect to short sales in (i) the Specified Securities, (ii) derivative securities based on Specified Securities, including standardized options, and (iii) ETFs of which any of the Specified Securities are a component.  However, the requirement imposed by the Order that the Specified Securities be delivered by settlement date is still fully applicable to each of these categories of persons.

  2. An "arrangement to borrow" means a bona fide agreement to borrow the security whereby the security being borrowed is set aside at the time of the arrangement solely for the person requesting the security.

  3. A broker effecting a short sale for a customer in a Specified Security can rely upon an assurance from the customer that the customer has borrowed or arranged to borrow the security from another identified source, provided the broker (i) documents that it is relying on the customer's assurance and (ii) has reasonable grounds to believe that the customer has borrowed or arranged to borrow the security.

  4. While a broker is required by the Order to document compliance with the borrow and arrangement-to-borrow requirement of the Order, it may use the same processes and procedures to document compliance with the Order as used for compliance with the "locate" requirements of Regulation SHO.

  5. If a person has borrowed or arranged to borrow a Specified Security prior to effecting a short sale in that security, the borrow or arrangement-to-borrow may be reapplied by that person's broker for short sales following a buy-to-cover trade in that same security on the same trading day.

  6. The Order applies to any short sale transaction in a Specified Security if the short sale is agreed to in the United States, even if the trade is booked overseas.  The Order also applies to any short sale of a Specified Security involving a customer located in the United States as well as any broker-dealer who uses any means or instrumentalities of interstate commerce in the United States to effect short sales in a Specified Security.

  7. The Order does not apply to short sales effected pursuant to (i) Rule 144 of the Securities Act of 1933, (ii) underwriters or members of a syndicate or group participating in distributions of the relevant securities in connection with an over-allotment of securities, or any lay-off sale through a rights or a standby underwriting commitment.

Analysis And Remaining Issues

The Order, as amended, represents a fairly remarkable and dramatic intervention by the SEC into the operation and functioning of the US equity markets.  It is curious that only 19 financial firms were selected for this protection, and it remains to be seen how the Order or a future rule may expand the coverage of this emergency action.  In this regard, we understand that certain banking and other financial industry groups are pushing to have the list of financial firms covered by the Order expanded to include regional banks and other financial firms beyond the 19 firms dubbed "substantial financial firms" by the SEC in the Order.  We note further that the SEC is still in discussions with industry groups and market participants and may amend the operative provisions of the Order further or provide additional relief.  In addition, we note that the SEC in the FAQs explains how anyone can comment on "any potential rulemaking the Commission may undertake to expand the duration of the naked short sale protections or the number of companies covered."  We see this as indicative of the SEC's future intentions to adopt an emergency rule covering all publicly traded equities in the United States.

The Order also represents a stark change of regulatory position with respect to who is directly liable for the locate/borrowing requirements associated with short selling.  Unlike Regulation SHO, which imposes the locate or borrow requirement only on brokers or dealers effecting short sales, the Order's requirement to borrow or arrange to borrow applies to any person who shorts a Specified Security, meaning that hedge funds, mutual funds, banks, and other investors who short those securities are now subject to direct enforcement action with respect to the borrowing requirements (we note that these persons were always directly liable for manipulative or fraudulent short selling practices, such as misleading their brokers regarding the sources of a locate or whether they were long a security).  Of course, customers can still rely on brokers to borrow or arrange to borrow Specified Securities when placing short sale orders with their brokers, but it seems likely that brokers are now going to demand that customers who short Specified Securities (based on the customer's own borrow or arrangement-to-borrow) provide brokers with some kind of written or electronic evidence or other strong basis to believe that the customer has in fact borrowed or arranged to borrow the securities.  Despite assurances in today's amendments that brokers can rely upon the same processes and procedures for documenting "locates" under the Order as for Regulation SHO, it remains to be seen if the Order will result in recordkeeping and documentation battles between brokers and customers, particularly given the current regulatory environment where short selling activities are in the direct line of regulatory fire.  At a minimum, the safest course appears for both short sellers and their brokers to document all sources of borrows and arrangements to borrow Specified Securities.

Further, although the FAQs make it clear that shares must by "set aside" for the "sole" use of a borrower for such borrower to be deemed to have "arranged to borrow" the security in compliance with the Order, there is still room for interpretation as to what exactly constitutes a "set aside," or even an "arrangement-to-borrow" for that matter.  In this regard, we note that traditional "pay-for-hold" arrangements entered into between borrowers and lending agents may not be sufficient unless such arrangements also include some type of express set aside condition or term pursuant to which the securities held for the borrower cannot be lent out to other customers of the lending agent.  The Order raises other difficult practical, accounting and recordkeeping issues for borrowers and lending agents, such as the form these arrangements must take, whether segregation or "blocking" of securities is required, and how revenue and rebates are to be allocated amongst the parties.  Of additional concern is that, without more specific guidance regarding what exactly constitutes a "set aside," a borrower has no assurance that a particular arrangement will not be retroactively deemed by the SEC to not constitute an adequate arrangement-to-borrow if a lender recalls the loaned securities (which is normally the right of the lender under traditional securities lending agreements) and the borrower fails to deliver on a short sale because shares that were arranged to be borrowed are no longer available to the borrower for delivery on settlement date.  We believe that valid a "pay-for-hold" arrangement whereby a borrower pays a fee for the lender to hold or "set aside" shares should be sufficient, even if the lender recalls the lent securities before the borrower requests them under the agreement.  This needs to be addressed by the SEC, however.

In addition to these open issues and concerns, we expect that our clients may have other questions or considerations that have not yet been addressed.  If you have any questions, comments or concerns regarding the Order or any matters discussed in this Alert, you can contact the author, Sean P. O'Malley at 212-813-8831 or any other member of Goodwin Procter's Financial Services or Investment Management practice groups.  We are also happy to assist any of our clients who want to submit formal comments to the SEC regarding the Order or the possibility of an expanded rule.

The list of financial firms whose stocks are covered by the Order are:

Financial Services Firm

Ticker Symbol

BNP Paribas Securities Corp.

BNPQF or BNPNY

Bank of America Corporation

BAC

Barclays PLC

BCS

Citigroup Inc.

C

Credit Suisse Group

CS

Daiwa Securities Group Inc.

DSECY

Deutsche Bank Group AG

DB

Allianz SE

AZ

Goldman, Sachs Group Inc

GS

Royal Bank ADS

RBS

HSBC Holdings PLC ADS

HBC and HSI

J. P. Morgan Chase & Co.

JPM

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

LEH

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

MER

Mizuho Financial Group, Inc.

MFG

Morgan Stanley

MS

UBS AG

UBS

Freddie Mac

FRE

Fannie Mae

FNM



Links to the original Order, the amended Order and the FAQs can be found at:

Original Order

http://www.sec.gov/rules/other/2008/34-58166.pdf

Amended Order

http://www.sec.gov/rules/other/2008/34-58190.pdf

FAQs

http://www.sec.gov/divisions/marketreg/emordershortsalesfaq.htm

Goodwin Procter LLP is one of the nation's leading law firms, with a team of 700 attorneys and offices in Boston, Los Angeles, New York, San Diego, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. The firm combines in-depth legal knowledge with practical business experience to deliver innovative solutions to complex legal problems. We provide litigation, corporate law and real estate services to clients ranging from start-up companies to Fortune 500 multinationals, with a focus on matters involving private equity, technology companies, real estate capital markets, financial services, intellectual property and products liability.

This article, which may be considered advertising under the ethical rules of certain jurisdictions, is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute the rendering of legal advice or other professional advice by Goodwin Procter LLP or its attorneys. © 2008 Goodwin Procter LLP. All rights reserved.

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