TITLE 21. SECURITIES AND RETAILFRANCHISING
                REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The  State Corporation Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative  Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4002 A 2 of the Code of Virginia,  which exempts courts, any agency of the Supreme Court, and any agency that by  the Constitution is expressly granted any of the powers of a court of record.
         Title of Regulation: 21VAC5-20. Broker-Dealers,  Broker-Dealer Agents and Agents of the Issuer (amending 21VAC5-20-280, 21VAC5-20-285). 
    Statutory Authority: §§ 12.1-13 and 13.1-523 of the Code  of Virginia.
    Effective Date: December 1, 2014. 
    Agency Contact: Hazel Stewart, Section Chief, Securities  Division, State Corporation Commission, Tyler Building, 9th Floor, P.O. Box  1197, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 371-9685, FAX (804) 371-9911, or  email hazel.stewart@scc.virginia.gov.
    Summary:
    The amendments make several changes to 21VAC5-20-280 that  previously were adopted in 2013. Overall, the revisions change 21VAC5-20-280 to  more closely match the language of the rule prior to the amendments in 2013.  The amendments (i) remove several provisions of 21VAC5-20-280 A governing the  conduct of broker-dealers and broker-dealer agents and create a new subsection  that is similar to the former 21VAC5-20-280 E that was removed in 2013, (ii)  reintroduce language to specify that certain provisions apply only in  connection with the solicitation of a purchase or sale of over-the-counter  unlisted non-NASDAQ equity securities, and (iii) include typographical and  stylistic changes and corresponding revisions to 21VAC5-20-285.
    AT RICHMOND, NOVEMBER 19, 2014
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ex rel.
    STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
    CASE NO. SEC-2014-00041
    Ex Parte: In the matter of 
  Adopting a Revision to the Rules
  Governing the Virginia Securities Act
    ORDER ADOPTING AMENDED RULES
    By Order to Take Notice ("Order") entered on  September 12, 20141, all interested persons were ordered to take  notice that the State Corporation Commission ("Commission") would  consider the adoption of a revision to Sections 280 and 285 of Chapter 20 of  Title 21 of the Virginia Administrative Code ("Regulations") entitled  "Prohibited Business Conduct."  On September 19, 2014, the  Division of Securities and Retail Franchising ("Division") mailed and  emailed the Order of the proposed Regulations to all interested parties  pursuant to the Virginia Securities Act, § 13.1-501 et seq. of the Code of  Virginia. The Order described the proposed amendments and afforded interested  parties an opportunity to file comments and request a hearing by November 5,  2014, with the Clerk of the Commission ("Clerk"). 
    No comments were filed nor were any requests for hearing made  in this matter.
    NOW THE COMMISSION, upon consideration of the proposed  amendments to the Regulations, the recommendations of the Division, and the  record in this case, finds that the proposed amendments to the Regulations  should be adopted.
    Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED THAT:
    (1) The proposed Regulations are attached hereto, made a  part hereof, and are hereby ADOPTED effective December 1, 2014.
    (2) AN ATTESTED COPY hereof, together with a copy of the  adopted Rules, shall be sent by the Clerk to the Division in care of Ron  Thomas, who forthwith shall give further notice of the adopted Rules by mailing  a copy of this Order, to all interested persons.
    (3) This Order and the attached adopted Rules shall be  posted on the Commission's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case.
    (4) The Commission's Division of Information Resources  forthwith shall cause a copy of this Order, together with the adopted Rules, to  be forwarded to the Virginia Registrar of Regulations for appropriate  publication in the Virginia Register of Regulations.
    (5) This case is dismissed from the Commission's docket,  and the papers herein shall be placed in the file for ended causes.
    _____________________
    1 Doc. Con. Cen. No. 140920097.
    21VAC5-20-280. Prohibited business conduct.
    A. Every broker-dealer is required to observe high standards  of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct  of its business. The acts and practices described below are considered contrary  to such standards and may constitute grounds for denial, suspension, or  revocation of registration or such other action authorized by the Act. No  broker-dealer who is registered or required to be registered shall:
    1. Engage in a pattern of unreasonable and unjustifiable  delays in the delivery of securities purchased by any of its customers or in  the payment upon request of free credit balances reflecting completed  transactions of any of its customers, or take any action that directly or  indirectly interferes with a customer's ability to transfer his account;  provided that the account is not subject to any lien for moneys owed by the  customer or other bona fide claim, including, but not limited to, seeking a  judicial order or decree that would bar or restrict the submission, delivery or  acceptance of a written request from a customer to transfer his account;
    2. Induce trading in a customer's account which is excessive  in size or frequency in view of the financial resources and character of the  account;
    3. Recommend to a customer the purchase, sale or exchange of  any security without reasonable grounds to believe that the recommendation is  suitable for the customer. The reasonable basis to recommend any such  transaction to a customer shall be based upon the risks associated with a  particular security, and the information obtained through the diligence and  inquiry of the broker-dealer to ascertain the customer's investment profile. A  customer's investment profile includes, but is not limited to, the customer's  investment objectives, financial situation, risk tolerance and needs, tax  status, age, other investments, investment experience, investment time horizon,  liquidity needs, and any other relevant information known by the broker-dealer  or of which the broker-dealer is otherwise made aware in connection with such  recommendation;
    4. Execute a transaction on behalf of a customer without  authority to do so or, when securities are held in a customer's account, fail  to execute a sell transaction involving those securities as instructed by a  customer, without reasonable cause;
    5. Exercise any discretionary power in effecting a transaction  for a customer's account without first obtaining written discretionary  authority from the customer, unless the discretionary power relates solely to  the time or price for the execution of orders;
    6. Execute any transaction in a margin account without  securing from the customer a properly executed written margin agreement  promptly after the initial transaction in the account, or fail, prior to or at  the opening of a margin account, to disclose to a noninstitutional customer the  operation of a margin account and the risks associated with trading on margin  at least as comprehensively as required by FINRA Rule 2264;
    7. Fail to segregate customers' free securities or securities  held in safekeeping;
    8. Hypothecate a customer's securities without having a lien  thereon unless the broker‑dealer secures from the customer a properly  executed written consent promptly after the initial transaction, except as  permitted by Rules of the SEC;
    9. Enter into a transaction with or for a customer at a price  not reasonably related to the current market price of a security or receiving  an unreasonable commission or profit;
    10. Fail to furnish to a customer purchasing securities in an  offering, no later than the date of confirmation of the transaction, either a  final prospectus or a preliminary prospectus and an additional document, which  together include all information set forth in the final prospectus, by the  following means: (i) hard copy prospectus delivery or (ii) electronic  prospectus delivery.
    When a broker-dealer delivers a prospectus electronically, it  must first allow its clients to affirmatively opt-in to the program. The acknowledgement  acknowledgment of the opt-in may be by any written or electronic means,  but the broker-dealer is required to acknowledge the opt-in. For any client  that chooses not to opt-in to electronic delivery, the broker-dealer shall  continue to deliver to the client a hard copy of the prospectus;
    11. Introduce customer transactions on a "fully  disclosed" basis to another broker-dealer that is not exempt under § 13.1-514  B 6 of the Act;
    12. a. Charge unreasonable and inequitable fees for services  performed, including miscellaneous services such as collection of moneys due  for principal, dividends or interest, exchange or transfer of securities,  appraisals, safekeeping, or custody of securities and other services related to  its securities business;
    b. Charge a fee based on the activity, value or contents (or  lack thereof) of a customer account unless written disclosure pertaining to the  fee, which shall include information about the amount of the fee, how  imposition of the fee can be avoided and any consequence of late payment or  nonpayment of the fee, was provided no later than the date the account was  established or, with respect to an existing account, at least 60 days prior to  the effective date of the fee;
    13. Offer to buy from or sell to any person any security at a  stated price unless the broker-dealer is prepared to purchase or sell at the price  and under such conditions as are stated at the time of the offer to buy or  sell;
    14. Represent that a security is being offered to a customer  "at a market" or a price relevant to the market price unless the  broker-dealer knows or has reasonable grounds to believe that a market for the  security exists other than that made, created or controlled by the  broker-dealer, or by any person for whom he is acting or with whom he is  associated in the distribution, or any person controlled by, controlling or under  common control with the broker-dealer;
    15. Offer Effect any transaction in, or  induce the purchase or sale of, or effect any transaction in, any  security by means of any manipulative, deceptive or fraudulent device,  practice, plan, program, design or contrivance, which may include but not be  limited to:
    a. Effecting any transaction in a security which involves no  change in the beneficial ownership thereof;
    b. Entering an order or orders for the purchase or sale of any  security with the knowledge that an order or orders of substantially the same  size, at substantially the same time and substantially the same price, for the  sale of any security, has been or will be entered by or for the same or  different parties for the purpose of creating a false or misleading appearance  of active trading in the security or a false or misleading appearance with  respect to the market for the security; however, nothing in this subdivision  shall prohibit a broker-dealer from entering bona fide agency cross  transactions for its customers; or
    c. Effecting, alone or with one or more other persons, a  series of transactions in any security creating actual or apparent active  trading in the security or raising or depressing the price of the security, for  the purpose of inducing the purchase or sale of the security by others;
    d. Entering into a transaction with a customer in any  security at an unreasonable price or at a price not reasonably related to the  current market price of the security or receiving an unreasonable commission or  profit;
    e. Contradicting or negating the importance of any  information contained in a prospectus or other offering materials that would  deceive or mislead or using any advertising or sales presentation in a  deceptive or misleading manner;
    f. Leading a customer to believe that the broker-dealer or  agent is in possession of material, nonpublic information that would affect the  value of the security;
    g. Engaging in a pattern or practice of making  contradictory recommendations to different investors of similar investment  objective for some to sell and others to purchase the same security, at or  about the same time, when not justified by the particular circumstances of each  investor;
    h. Failing to make a bona fide public offering of all the  securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution by, among other things,  (i) transferring securities to a customer, another broker-dealer or a  fictitious account with the understanding that those securities will be  returned to the broker-dealer or its nominees or (ii) parking or withholding  securities;
    i. Effecting any transaction in or inducing the purchase or  sale of any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive, or other  fraudulent device or contrivance including but not limited to the use of boiler  room tactics or use of fictitious or nominee accounts;
    j. Failing to comply with any prospectus delivery  requirements promulgated under federal law or the Act;
    k. Failing to promptly provide the most current prospectus  or the most recently filed periodic report filed under § 13 of the Securities  Exchange Act when requested to do so by a customer;
    l. Marking any order tickets or confirmations as  unsolicited when in fact the transaction was solicited; or
    m. Failing to comply with the following provisions in  connection with the solicitation of a purchase or sale of a designated  security:
    (1) Failing to disclose to the customer the bid and ask  price at which the broker-dealer effects transactions with individual, retail  customers of the designated security as well as its spread in both percentage  and dollar amounts at the time of solicitation and on the trade confirmation  documents; or
    (2) Failing to include with the confirmation, the notice  disclosure contained under 21VAC5-20-285, except the following shall be exempt  from this requirement:
    (a) Transactions in which the price of the designated  security is $5.00 or more, exclusive of costs or charges; however, if the  designated security is a unit composed of one or more securities, the unit  price divided by the number of components of the unit other than warrants,  options, rights, or similar securities must be $5.00 or more, and any component  of the unit that is a warrant, option, right, or similar securities, or a  convertible security must have an exercise price or conversion price of $5.00  or more;
    (b) Transactions that are not recommended by the  broker-dealer or agent;
    (c) Transactions by a broker-dealer: (i) whose commissions,  commission equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in designated securities  during each of the preceding three months, and during 11 or more of the  preceding 12 months, did not exceed 5.0% of its total commissions,  commission-equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in securities during  those months; and (ii) who has not executed principal transactions in  connection with the solicitation to purchase the designated security that is  the subject of the transaction in the preceding 12 months; and
    (d) Any transaction or transactions that, upon prior  written request or upon its own motion, the commission conditionally or  unconditionally exempts as not encompassed within the purposes of this section;
    (3) For purposes of this section, the term "designated  security" means any equity security other than a security:
    (a) Registered, or approved for registration upon notice of  issuance, on a national securities exchange and makes transaction reports  available pursuant to 17 CFR 11Aa3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
    (b) Authorized, or approved for authorization upon notice  of issuance, for quotation in the NASDAQ system;
    (c) Issued by an investment company registered under the  Investment Company Act of 1940;
    (d) That is a put option or call option issued by The  Options Clearing Corporation; or
    (e) Whose issuer has net tangible assets in excess of  $4,000,000 as demonstrated by financial statements dated within no less than 15  months that the broker-dealer has reviewed and has a reasonable basis to  believe are true and complete in relation to the date of the transaction with  the person; and
    (i) In the event the issuer is other than a foreign private  issuer, are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been  audited and reported on by an independent public accountant in accordance with  the provisions of 17 CFR 210.2-02 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or
    (ii) In the event the issuer is a foreign private issuer,  are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been filed  with the SEC; furnished to the SEC pursuant to 17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b) under the  Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or prepared in accordance with generally  accepted accounting principles in the country of incorporation, audited in  compliance with the requirements of that jurisdiction, and reported on by an  accountant duly registered and in good standing in accordance with the  regulations of that jurisdiction.
    16. Guarantee a customer against loss in any securities  account of the customer carried by the broker-dealer or in any securities  transaction effected by the broker-dealer with or for the customer;
    17. Publish or circulate, or cause to be published or  circulated, any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, investment  service, or communication of any kind which purports to report any transaction  as a purchase or sale of any security unless the broker-dealer believes that  the transaction was a bona fide purchase or sale of the security; or which  purports to quote the bid price or asked price for any security, unless the  broker-dealer believes that the quotation represents a bona fide bid for, or  offer of, the security;
    18. Use any advertising or sales presentation in such a  fashion as to be deceptive or misleading. An example of such practice would be  a distribution of any nonfactual data, material or presentation based on  conjecture, unfounded or unrealistic claims or assertions in any brochure,  flyer, or display by words, pictures, graphs or otherwise designed to  supplement, detract from, supersede or defeat the purpose or effect of any  prospectus or disclosure;
    19. Fail to make reasonably available upon request to any  person expressing an interest in a solicited transaction in a security, not  listed on a registered securities exchange or quoted on an automated quotation  system operated by a national securities association approved by regulation of  the commission, a balance sheet of the issuer as of a date within 18 months of  the offer or sale of the issuer's securities and a profit and loss statement  for either the fiscal year preceding that date or the most recent year of  operations, the names of the issuer's proprietor, partners or officers, the  nature of the enterprises of the issuer and any available information  reasonably necessary for evaluating the desirability or lack of desirability of  investing in the securities of an issuer. All transactions in securities  described in this subdivision shall comply with the provisions of § 13.1-507 of  the Act;
    20. Fail to disclose that the broker-dealer is controlled by,  controlling, affiliated with or under common control with the issuer of any  security before entering into any contract with or for a customer for the  purchase or sale of the security, the existence of control to the customer, and  if disclosure is not made in writing, it shall be supplemented by the giving or  sending of written disclosure at or before the completion of the transaction;
    21. Fail to make a bona fide public offering of all of the  securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution, whether acquired as an  underwriter, a selling group member, or from a member participating in the  distribution as an underwriter or selling group member;
    22. Fail or refuse to furnish a customer, upon reasonable  request, information to which the customer is entitled, or to respond to a  formal written request or complaint; 
    23. Fail to clearly and separately disclose to its customer,  prior to any security transaction, providing investment advice for compensation  or any materially related transaction that the customer's funds or securities  will be in the custody of an investment advisor or contracted custodian, in a  manner that does not provide Securities Investor Protection Corporation  protection, or equivalent third-party coverage over the customer's assets;
    24. Market broker-dealer services that are associated with  financial institutions in a manner that is misleading or confusing to customers  as to the nature of securities products or risks; 
    25. In transactions subject to breakpoints, fail to:
    a. Utilize advantageous breakpoints without reasonable basis  for their exclusion;
    b. Determine information that should be recorded on the books  and records of a member or its clearing firm, which is necessary to determine  the availability and appropriateness of breakpoint opportunities; or
    c. Inquire whether the customer has positions or transactions  away from the member that should be considered in connection with the pending  transaction, and apprise the customer of the breakpoint opportunities; 
    26. Use a certification or professional designation in  connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of securities, that  indicates or implies that the user has special certification or training in  advising or servicing senior citizens or retirees in such a way as to mislead  any person.
    a. The use of such certification or professional designation  includes, but is not limited to, the following:
    (1) Use of a certification or designation by a person who has  not actually earned or is otherwise ineligible to use such certification or  designation;
    (2) Use of a nonexistent or self-conferred certification or  professional designation;
    (3) Use of a certification or professional designation that  indicates or implies a level of occupational qualifications obtained through  education, training, or experience that the person using the certification or  professional designation does not have; or
    (4) Use of a certification or professional designation that  was obtained from a designating or certifying organization that:
    (a) Is primarily engaged in the business of instruction in  sales and/or or marketing;
    (b) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for  assuring the competency of its designees or certificants;
    (c) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for  monitoring and disciplining its designees or certificants for improper or  unethical conduct; or
    (d) Does not have reasonable continuing education requirements  for its designees or certificants in order to maintain the designation or  certificate.
    b. There is a rebuttable presumption that a designating or  certifying organization is not disqualified solely for purposes of subdivision  26 a (4) of this subsection, when the organization has been accredited by: 
    (1) The American National Standards Institute;
    (2) The Institute for Credentialing Excellence (formerly the  National Commission for Certifying Agencies); or
    (3) An organization that is on the United States Department of  Education's list entitled "Accrediting Agencies Recognized for Title IV  Purposes" and the designation or credential issued therefrom does not  primarily apply to sales and/or or marketing.
    c. In determining whether a combination of words (or an  acronym standing for a combination of words) constitutes a certification or  professional designation indicating or implying that a person has special  certification or training in advising or servicing senior citizens or retirees,  factors to be considered shall include: 
    (1) Use of one or more words such as "senior,"  "retirement," "elder," or like words, combined with one or  more words such as "certified," "chartered,"  "adviser," "specialist," "consultant," "planner,"  or like words, in the name of the certification or professional designation;  and 
    (2) The manner in which those words are combined. 
    d. For purposes of this section, a certification or  professional designation does not include a job title within an organization  that is licensed or registered by a state or federal financial services  regulatory agency when that job title: 
    (1) Indicates seniority within the organization; or 
    (2) Specifies an individual's area of specialization within  the organization. 
    For purposes of this subdivision d, "financial services  regulatory agency" includes, but is not limited to, an agency that  regulates broker-dealers, investment advisers, or investment companies as  defined under 
  § 3 (a)(1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 USC § 80a-3(a)(1)).
    e. Nothing in this regulation shall limit the commission's  authority to enforce existing provisions of law;
    27. Represent that securities will be listed or that  application for listing will be made on a securities exchange or the NASDAQ  system or other quotation system without reasonable basis in fact for the  representation;
    28. Falsify or alter so as to make false or misleading any  record or document or any information provided to the commission;
    29. Negotiate, facilitate, or otherwise execute a transaction  on behalf of an investor involving securities issued by a third party pursuant  to a claim for exemption under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act  unless the broker-dealer intends to report the securities owned and the value  of such securities on at least a quarterly basis to the investor;
    30. Offer or sell securities pursuant to a claim for exemption  under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act without having first verified  the information relating to the securities offered or sold, which shall  include, but not be limited to, ascertaining the risks associated with  investing in the respective security;
    31. Allow any person to represent or utilize its name as a  trading platform without conspicuously disclosing the name of the registered  broker-dealer in effecting or attempting to effect purchases and sales of  securities;
    32. Fail to advise the customer, both at the time of  solicitation and on the confirmation, of any and all compensation related to a  specific securities transaction to be paid to the agent including commissions,  sales charges, or concessions;
    33. Fail to disclose, both at the time of solicitation and  on the confirmation in connection with a principal transaction, a short  inventory position in the firm's account of more than 3.0% of the issued and  outstanding shares of that class of securities of the issuer; 
    34. Conduct sales contests in a particular security without  regard to an investor's suitability;
    35. Fail or refuse to promptly execute sell orders in  connection with a principal transaction after a solicited purchase by a  customer;
    36. Solicit a secondary market transaction when there has  not been a bona fide distribution in the primary market;
    37. Compensate an agent in different amounts for effecting  sales and purchases in the same security;
    38. Fail to provide each customer with a statement of  account with respect to all securities in the account, containing a value for  each such security based on the closing market bid on a date certain for any month  in which activity has occurred in a customer's account, but in no event less  than three months;
    39. Fail to comply with any applicable provision of the  FINRA Rules or any applicable fair practice or ethical standard promulgated by  the SEC or by a self-regulatory organization approved by the SEC; or
    40. 32. Engage in any conduct that constitutes a  dishonest or unethical practice including, but not limited to, forgery,  embezzlement, nondisclosure, incomplete disclosure or material omissions or  untrue statements of material facts, manipulative or deceptive practices, or  fraudulent course of business.
    B. Every agent is required to observe high standards of  commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct of  his business. The acts and practices described below are considered contrary to  such standards and may constitute grounds for denial, suspension, or revocation  of registration or such other action authorized by the Act. No agent who is  registered or required to be registered shall:
    1. Engage in the practice of lending or borrowing money or  securities from a customer, or acting as a custodian for money, securities or  an executed stock power of a customer;
    2. Effect any securities transaction not recorded on the  regular books or records of the broker-dealer which the agent represents,  unless the transaction is authorized in writing by the broker-dealer prior to  execution of the transaction;
    3. Establish or maintain an account containing fictitious  information in order to execute a transaction which would otherwise be unlawful  or prohibited;
    4. Share directly or indirectly in profits or losses in the  account of any customer without the written authorization of the customer and  the broker-dealer which the agent represents;
    5. Divide or otherwise split the agent's commissions, profits  or other compensation from the purchase or sale of securities in this state  with any person not also registered as an agent for the same broker-dealer, or  for a broker-dealer under direct or indirect common control;
    6. Engage in conduct specified in subdivision A 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,  10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 30, 31, or 32, 34, 35, 36,  39, or 40 of this section;
    7. Fail to comply with the continuing education requirements  under 21VAC5-20-150 C; or
    8. Hold oneself out as representing any person other than the  broker-dealer with whom the agent is registered and, in the case of an agent  whose normal place of business is not on the premises of the broker-dealer,  failing to conspicuously disclose the name of the broker-dealer for whom the  agent is registered when representing the dealer in effecting or attempting to  effect the purchases or sales of securities.
    C. No person shall publish, give publicity to, or circulate  any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, letter, investment  service or communication which, though not purporting to offer a security for  sale, describes the security, for a consideration received or to be received,  directly or indirectly, from an issuer, underwriter, or dealer, without fully  disclosing the receipt, whether past or prospective, of such consideration and  the amount thereof.
    D. The purpose of this subsection is to identify practices  in the securities business that are generally associated with schemes to  manipulate and to identify prohibited business conduct of broker-dealers or  sales agents who are registered or required to be registered.
    1. Entering into a transaction with a customer in any  security at an unreasonable price or at a price not reasonably related to the  current market price of the security or receiving an unreasonable commission or  profit.
    2. Contradicting or negating the importance of any  information contained in a prospectus or other offering materials with intent  to deceive or mislead or using any advertising or sales presentation in a  deceptive or misleading manner.
    3. In connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of a  security, falsely leading a customer to believe that the broker-dealer or agent  is in possession of material, nonpublic information that would affect the value  of the security.
    4. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or  purchase of a security, engaging in a pattern or practice of making  contradictory recommendations to different investors of similar investment  objective for some to sell and others to purchase the same security, at or  about the same time, when not justified by the particular circumstances of each  investor.
    5. Failing to make a bona fide public offering of all the  securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution by, among other things,  (i) transferring securities to a customer, another broker-dealer, or a  fictitious account with the understanding that those securities will be  returned to the broker-dealer or its nominees or (ii) parking or withholding securities.
    6. Although nothing in this subsection precludes  application of the general antifraud provisions against anyone for practices  similar in nature to the practices discussed below, the following subdivisions  a through f specifically apply only in connection with the solicitation of a  purchase or sale of over the counter (OTC) unlisted non-NASDAQ equity  securities:
    a. Failing to advise the customer, both at the time of  solicitation and on the confirmation, of any and all compensation related to a  specific securities transaction to be paid to the agent including commissions,  sales charges, or concessions.
    b. In connection with a principal transaction, failing to  disclose, both at the time of solicitation and on the confirmation, a short  inventory position in the firm's account of more than 3.0% of the issued and  outstanding shares of that class of securities of the issuer; however,  subdivision 6 of this subsection shall apply only if the firm is a market maker  at the time of the solicitation.
    c. Conducting sales contests in a particular security.
    d. After a solicited purchase by a customer, failing or  refusing, in connection with a principal transaction, to promptly execute sell  orders.
    e. Soliciting a secondary market transaction when there has  not been a bona fide distribution in the primary market.
    f. Engaging in a pattern of compensating an agent in  different amounts for effecting sales and purchases in the same security.
    7. Effecting any transaction in, or inducing the purchase  or sale of, any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive, or other  fraudulent device or contrivance including but not limited to the use of boiler  room tactics or use of fictitious or nominee accounts.
    8. Failing to comply with any prospectus delivery  requirements promulgated under federal law or the Act.
    9. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or  purchase of an OTC unlisted non-NASDAQ security, failing to promptly provide  the most current prospectus or the most recently filed periodic report filed  under § 13 of the Securities Exchange Act when requested to do so by a  customer.
    10. Marking any order tickets or confirmations as  unsolicited when in fact the transaction was solicited.
    11. For any month in which activity has occurred in a  customer's account, but in no event less than every three months, failing to  provide each customer with a statement of account with respect to all OTC  non-NASDAQ equity securities in the account, containing a value for each such  security based on the closing market bid on a date certain; however, this  subdivision shall apply only if the firm has been a market maker in the  security at any time during the month in which the monthly or quarterly  statement is issued.
    12. Failing to comply with any applicable provision of the  FINRA Rules or any applicable fair practice or ethical standard promulgated by  the SEC or by a self-regulatory organization approved by the SEC.
    13. In connection with the solicitation of a purchase or  sale of a designated security:
    a. Failing to disclose to the customer the bid and ask  price, at which the broker-dealer effects transactions with individual, retail  customers, of the designated security as well as its spread in both percentage  and dollar amounts at the time of solicitation and on the trade confirmation documents;  or
    b. Failing to include with the confirmation, the notice  disclosure contained under 21VAC5-20-285, except the following shall be exempt  from this requirement:
    (1) Transactions in which the price of the designated  security is $5.00 or more, exclusive of costs or charges; however, if the  designated security is a unit composed of one or more securities, the unit  price divided by the number of components of the unit other than warrants,  options, rights, or similar securities must be $5.00 or more, and any component  of the unit that is a warrant, option, right, or similar securities, or a  convertible security must have an exercise price or conversion price of $5.00  or more.
    (2) Transactions that are not recommended by the  broker-dealer or agent.
    (3) Transactions by a broker-dealer: (i) whose commissions,  commission equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in designated securities  during each of the preceding three months, and during 11 or more of the  preceding 12 months, did not exceed 5.0% of its total commissions,  commission-equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in securities during  those months; and (ii) who has not executed principal transactions in  connection with the solicitation to purchase the designated security that is  the subject of the transaction in the preceding 12 months.
    (4) Any transaction or transactions that, upon prior  written request or upon its own motion, the commission conditionally or  unconditionally exempts as not encompassed within the purposes of this section.
    c. For purposes of this section, the term "designated  security" means any equity security other than a security:
    (1) Registered, or approved for registration upon notice of  issuance, on a national securities exchange and makes transaction reports  available pursuant to 17 CFR 11Aa3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
    (2) Authorized, or approved for authorization upon notice  of issuance, for quotation in the NASDAQ system;
    (3) Issued by an investment company registered under the  Investment Company Act of 1940;
    (4) That is a put option or call option issued by The  Options Clearing Corporation; or
    (5) Whose issuer has net tangible assets in excess of $4  million as demonstrated by financial statements dated within no less than 15  months that the broker-dealer has reviewed and has a reasonable basis to  believe are true and complete in relation to the date of the transaction with  the person, and
    (a) In the event the issuer is other than a foreign private  issuer, are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been  audited and reported on by an independent public accountant in accordance with  the provisions of 17 CFR 210.2-02 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or
    (b) In the event the issuer is a foreign private issuer,  are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been filed  with the SEC; furnished to the SEC pursuant to 17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b) under the  Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or prepared in accordance with generally  accepted accounting principles in the country of incorporation, audited in  compliance with the requirements of that jurisdiction, and reported on by an  accountant duly registered and in good standing in accordance with the  regulations of that jurisdiction.
    21VAC5-20-285. Customer notice for designated securities.
    A. Broker-dealers that solicit the purchase and sale of  designated securities shall provide the following notice to customers:
    IMPORTANT CUSTOMER NOTICE-READ CAREFULLY
    You have just entered into a solicited transaction involving a  security which may not trade on an active national market. The following should  help you understand this transaction and be better able to follow and protect  your investment.
    Q. What is meant by the BID and ASK price and the spread?
    A. The BID is the price at which you could sell your  securities at this time. The ASK is the price at which you bought. Both are  noted on your confirmation. The difference between these prices is the  "spread," which is also noted on the confirmation, in both a dollar  amount and a percentage relative to the ASK price.
    Q. How can I follow the price of my security?
    A. For the most part, you are dependent on broker-dealers that  trade in your security for all price information. You may be able to find a  quote in the newspaper, but you should keep in mind that the quote you see will  be for dealer-to-dealer transactions (essentially wholesale prices and will not  necessarily be the prices at which you could buy or sell).
    Q. How does the spread relate to my investments?
    A. The spread represents the profit made by your broker-dealer  and is the amount by which your investment must increase (the BID must rise)  for you to break even. Generally, a greater spread indicates a higher risk.
    Q. How do I compute the spread?
    A. If you bought 100 shares at an ASK price of $1.00, you  would pay $100 (100 shares X $1.00 = $100). If the BID price at the time you  purchased your stock was $.50, you could sell the stock back to the  broker-dealer for $50 (100 shares X $.50 = $50). In this example, if you sold  at the BID price, you would suffer a loss of 50%.
    Q. Can I sell at any time?
    A. Maybe. Some securities are not easy to sell because there  are few buyers, or because there are no broker-dealers who buy or sell them on  a regular basis.
    Q. Why did I receive this notice?
    A. The laws of some states require your broker-dealer or sales  agent to disclose the BID and ASK price on your confirmation and include this  notice in some instances. If the BID and ASK were not explained to you at the  time you discussed this investment with your broker, you may have further  rights and remedies under both state and federal law.
    Q. Where do I go if I have a problem?
    A. If you cannot work the problem out with your broker-dealer,  you may contact the Virginia State Corporation Commission or the securities  commissioner in the state in which you reside, the United States Securities and  Exchange Commission, or FINRA.
    B. For the purpose of this section, the term "designated  security" shall be defined as in subdivision A 15 m 3 under  21VAC5-20-280 D 13 c.
    
        VA.R. Doc. No. R15-4148; Filed November 19, 2014, 2:58 p.m.