[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 12, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 12CFR220.113]

[Page 21-22]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 220_CREDIT BY BROKERS AND DEALERS (REGULATION T)--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 220.113  Necessity for prompt payment and delivery in special 
cash accounts.

    (a) The Board of Governors 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 this part in a special cash account under Sec. 220.4(c).
    (b) 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 Sec. 220.4(c)(3), or any shipment of securities as 
described in Sec. 220.4(c).
    (c) This part provides that a creditor subject thereto may not 
effect for a customer a purchase in a special cash account under Sec. 
220.4(c) unless the use of the account meets the limitations of Sec. 
220.4(a) and the purchase constitutes a ``bona fide cash transaction'' 
which complies with the eligibility requirements of Sec. 
220.4(c)(1)(i). 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

[[Page 22]]

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, Sec. 220.4(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, a necessary part of the customer's undertaking 
pursuant to Sec. 220.4(c)(1)(i) is that he ``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.''
    (d) 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 Sec. 220.4(c)(1)(i) 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 special cash account, 
unless a contrary conclusion would be justified by the exception in 
Sec. 220.4(c)(5).
    (e) Section 220.4(c)(5) provides that if the creditor, ``acting in 
good faith in accordance with'' Sec. 220.4(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 is 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 Sec. 220.4(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 Sec. 220.4 (c)(5) is specifically 
conditioned on the creditor acting in good faith in accordance with 
Sec. 220.4(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 Sec. 
220.4(c)(5) that the creditor ``deliver the security promptly to the 
customer''.
    (f) Section 220.4(c)(5) was discussed in the Board's published 
interpretation, referred to above, which states that ``it is not the 
purpose of (Sec. 220.4 (c)(5)) to allow additional time to customers 
for making payment. The `prompt delivery' described in (Sec. 220.4 
(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''.
    (g) 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 Sec. 
220.4(c)(5) should not be regarded as permitting the transactions in 
question to be effected in a special cash account.

[22 FR 5954, July 27, 1957]