[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 12, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 12CFR220.131]

[Page 33-34]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 220--CREDIT BY BROKERS AND DEALERS (REGULATION T)--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 220.131  Application of the arranging section to broker-dealer activities under SEC Rule 144A.

    (a) 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) \1\ may be considered an 
arranging of credit permitted as an ``investment banking service'' under 
Sec. 220.13(a) of Regulation T.
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    \1\ Rule 144A, 17 CFR 230.144A, was originally published in the 
Federal Register at 55 FR 17933, April 30, 1990.
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    (b) SEC Rule 144A 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.
    (c) 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, secured 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.
    (d) Under Sec. 220.13 of Regulation T, a creditor may arrange credit 
it cannot itself extend if the arrangement is an

[[Page 34]]

``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.
    (e) 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 Sec. 220.13(a) of 
Regulation T.

[Reg. T, 55 FR 29566, July 20, 1990]