Subject: S7-18-21: WebForm Comments from Anonymous
From: Anonymous
Affiliation:

Oct. 19, 2022

October 19, 2022

 Let me begin by clarifying an error in the factsheet posted to the SEC website. It states that
securities loans are transactions that are vital to fair, orderly, and efficient markets. This is
simply not true. Securities lending enables the multiplication of shares in circulation. When
brokers lend the shares being held for retail investors, for example, it is equivalent to
replacing the bought and paid for shares with an IOU. Securities lending ignores the
investors right to vote in matters of corporate governance and to receive tax-qualified
dividends. Further, a fail-to-deliver (FTD) that is closed with a borrowed share is not really
closed  it leaves open that IOU with the lender. Therefore, securities lending harms market
efficiency by inflating the number of shares in circulation, which hampers true price
discovery by artificially increasing supply.
I can think of no other industry in which anything of value is lent without a due date for its
return. Why is securities lending different? Of course, none of this would be an issue if
broker-dealers and banks kept track of whose shares they were lending. Nothing in this
proposed rule fixes the problem that voting rights and payments in lieu of dividends
continue to be allocated in processes that are completely opaque to investors.
It seems likely that the Proposed Rule will increase the cost and reporting burden of
borrowing securities, regardless of the reason for taking the loan (e.g., to cover short sales,
to close a fail-to-deliver, to access voting rights, etc.). An unintended consequence could be
to tilt the brokers cost/benefit analysis in favor of fails to deliver.
The subject proposed rule enables and perpetuates on-going systemic problems. Real
reform for securities lending must include:
(1) Notifying the public about who is borrowing and lending shares (not just which
companys shares are being borrowed or lent).
(2) Notifying retail investors with street name shares that their shares are being lent,
(because (a) they don't get to vote and (b) they don't get tax-qualified dividends). SEC must
adopt a more consistent interest in regulating, monitoring, and enforcing rules that require
brokers to keep accurate records of ownership.
(3) Sharing any revenue earned from lending shares held for retail investors with those retail
investors.
(4) Eliminating Onward Lending completely (public companies and transfer agents have
opposed this for decades, even pointing to it as a source of phantom shares and overvoting in matters of corporate governance).
(5) Requiring every loan to have a due date (not just if applicable). When securities loans
without due dates are tolerated, the loan may be allowed to remain unsettled indefinitely.
The Dodd-Frank Act directed the SEC to seek transparency for brokers, dealers, and
investors. But the retail investor has been given short shrift with this Proposed Rule. The
disclosure of lending inventory and near-real-time position reporting will only make it
possible for broker-dealers to discriminate against companies who are already bearing an
onslaught of phantom shares in capital markets.