General Rules and Regulations
promulgated
under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Rule 15b7-3T -- Operational Capability in a Year 2000 Environment
This section applies to every broker or dealer
registered pursuant to Section 15 of the
Act, that uses computers in the conduct of its business as a broker or dealer.
If you have a material Year 2000 problem, then you do not have operational
capability within the meaning of Section
15(b)(7) of the Act.
You have a material Year 2000 problem under
paragraph (a) of this section if, at any time on or after August 31, 1999:
Any of your mission critical computer
systems incorrectly identifies any date in the Year 1999 or the Year
2000; and
The error impairs or, if uncorrected,
is likely to impair, any of your mission critical systems.
You will be presumed to have a material Year
2000 problem if, at any time on or after August 31, 1999, you:
Do not have written procedures reasonably
designed to identify, assess, and remediate any Year 2000 problems
in mission critical systems under your control;
Have not verified your Year 2000 remediation
efforts through reasonable internal testing of mission critical systems
under your control;
Have not verified your Year 2000
remediation efforts by satisfying Year 2000 testing requirements imposed
by self-regulatory organizations to which you are subject; or
Have not remediated all exceptions
related to your mission critical systems contained in any independent
public accountant's report prepared on your behalf pursuant to Rule
17a-5(e)(5)(vi).
If you have or are presumed to have a material
Year 2000 problem, you must immediately notify the Commission and your designated
examining authority of the problem. You must send this notice to the Commission
by overnight delivery to the Division of Market Regulation, U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-6628 Attention:
Y2K Compliance.
If you are a broker or dealer that is not
operationally capable because you have or are presumed to have a material
Year 2000 problem, you may not, on or after August 31, 1999:
Effect any transaction in, or induce
the purchase or sale of, any security; or
Receive or hold customer funds or
securities, or carry customer accounts.
Notwithstanding paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, you may continue to effect transactions in, or induce the purchase
or sale of, a security, receive or hold customer funds or securities,
or carry customer accounts:
Until December 1, 1999, if you have
submitted a certificate to the Commission in compliance with paragraph
(e) of this section; or
Solely to the extent necessary to
effect an orderly cessation or transfer of these functions.
If you are a broker or dealer that
is not operationally capable because you have or are presumed to have
a material Year 2000 problem, you may, in addition to providing the
Commission the notice required by paragraph (c) of this section, provide
the Commission and your designated examining authority a certificate
signed by your chief executive officer (or an individual with similar
authority) stating:
You are in the process of remediating
your material Year 2000 problem;
You have scheduled testing of
your affected mission critical systems to verify that the material
Year 2000 problem has been remediated, and specify the testing
dates;
The date by which you anticipate
completing remediation of the material Year 2000 problem in your
mission critical systems, and will therefore be operationally
capable; and
Based on inquiries and to the
best of the chief executive officer's knowledge, you do not anticipate
that the existence of the material Year 2000 problem in your mission
critical systems will impair your ability, depending on the nature
of your business, to ensure prompt and accurate processing of
securities transactions, including order entry, execution, comparison,
allocation, clearance and settlement of securities transactions,
the maintenance of customer accounts, or the delivery of funds
and securities; and you anticipate that the steps referred to
in paragraphs (e)(1)(i)(A) through (C) of this section will result
in remedying the material Year 2000 problem on or before November
15, 1999.
If the information contained in any
certificate provided to the Commission pursuant to paragraph (e) of
this section is or becomes misleading or inaccurate for any reason,
you must promptly file an updated certificate correcting such information.
In addition to the information contained in the certificate, you may
provide the Commission with any other information necessary to establish
that your mission critical systems will not have material Year 2000
problems on or after November 15, 1999.
If you have submitted a certificate pursuant
to paragraph (e)(1) of this section, you must submit a certificate to
the Commission and your designated examining authority signed by your
chief executive officer (or an individual with similar authority) on or
before November 15, 1999, stating that, based on inquiries and to the
best of the chief executive officer's knowledge, you have remediated your
Year 2000 problem or that you will cease operations. This certificate
must be sent to the Commission by overnight delivery to the Division of
Market Regulation, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-6628 Attention: Y2K Compliance.
Notwithstanding paragraph (d)(2)
of this section, you must comply with the requirements of paragraph
(d)(1) of this section if you have been so ordered by the Commission or
by a court.
For the purposes of this section:
The term mission critical system means any
system that is necessary, depending on the nature of your business, to
ensure prompt and accurate processing of securities transactions, including
order entry, execution, comparison, allocation, clearance and settlement
of securities transactions, the maintenance of customer accounts, and
the delivery of funds and securities; and
The term customer includes a broker or dealer.
This temporary section will expire on July
1, 2001.
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