Securities & Exchange Commission v. Miller

495 F. Supp. 465
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 14, 1980
Docket75 Civ. 3391 (JMC)
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 495 F. Supp. 465 (Securities & Exchange Commission v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Miller, 495 F. Supp. 465 (S.D.N.Y. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

CANNELLA, District Judge:

After a bench trial, the Court finds that the plaintiff has failed to prove its entitlement to an injunction against the defendant pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 77t(b), and, accordingly, judgment is entered for the defendant.

Jurisdiction is based upon the federal securities laws. 15 U.S.C. § 77t(b).

FACTS

Background

This is a Rule 10b-5 case involving allegations of deceptive conduct in connection with a highly specialized type of securities transaction, one which is used exclusively by a relatively small class of sophisticated investors. It is therefore essential to develop an understanding of the nature and purposes of such transactions, the market in which they occur, and the expectations of the persons and institutions that engage in them. 1

The transaction is commonly known as a “repurchase agreement,” or “repo” for *467 short, although it is sometimes also called a “buy/buy back.” It involves two parties, who, for reasons that may become clearer, may be deemed the “borrower” and “lender.” Each agreement may also be viewed as comprising two distinguishable transactions, which, although agreed upon simultaneously, are performed at different times: (1) the borrower agrees to sell, and the lender agrees to buy, upon immediate payment and delivery, specified securities at a specified price; and (2) the borrower agrees to buy and the lender agrees to sell, with payment and delivery at a specified future date — or, if the agreement is “open,” on demand — the same securities for the same price plus interest on the price. The parties customarily provide that any interest accruing on the securities between the dates of the initial purchase and subsequent “repurchase” remains the borrower’s property.

From a purely economic perspective, therefore, a repo is essentially a short-term collateralized loan, and the parties to these transactions tend to perceive them as such. 2 The element of the transaction over which the most bargaining usually occurs is the interest rate. 3 The parties customarily refer to the underlying securities as “collateral,” 4 and the risk of a change in the value of the collateral remains with the borrower, even though the lender “owns” it for the term of the agreement.

Why, then, are these deals structured as sales and repurchases rather than straight loans? The answer appears to be threefold: (1) certain regulations of the Federal Reserve Bank [the “Fed”], which treat repos differently from ordinary loans; 5 (2) a desire to circumvent the U.C.C. requirements and other legal obstacles to using ordinary collateralized loans; 6 and (3) market convention.

In order to understand the repo market, a brief discussion of the “federal funds” market may be helpful, since the development of repos is by and large related to that of *468 federal funds transactions, which they resemble considerably. Since the early days of the Fed, member banks have traded reserve balances 7 as a means of allowing those with reserves below their legal requirements to borrow reserves from those with reserves in excess of their legal requirements. This enables the borrowing bank to meet its reserve requirements without having to sell securities from its portfolio, and at relatively lost cost. Since reserve deficits and surpluses can often be brief, 8 most member banks prefer to borrow or lend reserves for relatively short periods, usually overnight, which is possible since such loans are effected over the federal wire. 9 These transactions also benefit the lending banks, since any reserves in excess of their legal requirements are unnecessarily idle assets. And because of their short duration, they do not significantly impair the lending banks’ liquidity. As with repos, such transactions are referred to as sales and purchases rather than loans. A borrowing of reserve balances — which came to be known as “federal funds” or “fed funds” —is usually characterized as a “purchase” with an agreement to resell, and a loan as a “sale” with an agreement to repurchase. 10

Apparently because of their purpose, the Fed treats fed funds transactions differently from either ordinary loans or deposits. Unlike ordinary loans, “sales” of federal funds are exempt from loan limits, 11 and unlike ordinary deposits, “purchases” of federal funds are exempt from reserve re *469 quirements. 12 The Fed has also acknowledged that certain borrowings by member banks from other institutions, such as savings banks, are essentially identical, and consequently, it has ruled that these, too, are exempt from reserve requirements. 13 The phrase “federal funds transactions,” therefore, now generally encompasses all unsecured “loans made in immediately usable funds, against which a commercial bank borrower isn’t required to maintain reserves.” 14

Repos are different from federal funds transactions in essentially only two ways. First, fed funds by definition can be traded only by institutions whose unsecured loans to member banks are exempt from reserve requirements, 15 whereas repos can be done by anyone with enough money. Second, a fed funds transaction is essentially an unsecured loan, whereas a repo is essentially a secured loan. In all other respects, however, they are identical. Both are for very short duration, usually overnight. Both are settled in immediately available funds. And since one day’s interest is a rather small fraction, both are done only for large amounts of money. 16 Nevertheless, because of the speed with which they must be concluded, they are both done on the basis of an oral contract subject to a written confirmation. 17 Moreover, so long as the collateral consists exclusively of government or agency securities, 18 repos are exempt from loan limits 19 and reserve requirements. 20

Repos also contain provisions for the treatment of collateral, which, of course, need not be included in fed funds agreements.

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