Close-Out: Buy-Ins, Sell-Outs, COD, and Rights/Warrants
Quick Answer
The buy-in procedure lets a buyer close out a contract when the seller fails to deliver. The buy-in notice must be delivered no later than 12:00 p.m. ET at least two business days before execution; the buy-in is for the account and risk of the defaulting seller. The sell-out procedure lets a seller close out a contract without notice when the buyer fails to accept delivery, with notification by 6:00 p.m. ET on the day of execution. The reclamation windows are: 15 days for minor or currency irregularities, 45 days for foreign securities, 30 months for lost/stolen/confiscated. The COD/POD settlement rule governs COD/DVP-RVP orders; the firm must collect customer/agent identification before accepting and deliver a confirmation by end of trade date.
Close-out is the final step in the Uniform Practice Code framework: when delivery breaks down, who closes the trade out and on what timeline. The principal must understand the buy-in (buyer's remedy for seller fail), the sell-out (seller's remedy for buyer fail), the reclamation windows, and the COD/DVP-RVP order requirements.
Buy-In Procedures
When a seller fails to deliver securities by settlement date, the buyer may close out the contract by purchasing securities of like kind and quantity in the open market at the seller's risk.
Notice Requirement
The written buy-in notice must be delivered:
- No later than 12:00 p.m. ET, AND
- At least two business days before the buy-in execution
The two-business-day window gives the failing seller time to source the securities or arrange substitute delivery. A buy-in notice that arrives the morning of execution (no notice period) is invalid.
Risk and Cost Allocation
The buy-in is for the account and risk of the defaulting (selling) broker-dealer. That means:
- The buyer purchases substitute securities in the open market
- The defaulting seller pays the buy-in price
- If the buy-in price is higher than the original contract price, the seller owes the difference
- If the buy-in price is lower, the seller still pays (the contract is closed out at the buy-in price)
In practice, buy-ins almost always close at a price unfavorable to the defaulting seller, because the buy-in pressure is well known to the market.
Operational Requirements
Members must maintain a buy-in section/desk that is adequately staffed to:
- Process and research buy-in notices within the rule's time frames
- Issue buy-in notices on time
- Coordinate with stock-loan and trading desks to source substitute securities
A firm without an operational buy-in capability has not satisfied the rule's expectations.
Retransmitted Notices
Buy-in notices may be retransmitted in some cases when the failing seller is itself awaiting delivery from another counterparty. The retransmission moves the buy-in pressure up the chain to the original failing party.
Exam Tip: Gotchas
- Buy-in notice must be delivered by 12:00 p.m. ET at least TWO BUSINESS DAYS before execution. Not "the next day," not "as soon as the fail occurs."
- The buy-in is for the account and risk of the DEFAULTING SELLER. The buyer is the executor; the seller bears the cost.
- A buy-in is the BUYER's remedy for SELLER's failure to deliver. The exam will reverse this in fact patterns; map "who failed" to "who closes out."
- Members must maintain a buy-in desk capable of meeting the rule's time frames. Not having operational capability is a structural violation.
Selling-Out
When the buyer fails to accept delivery in accordance with the contract and has not delivered a properly executed Uniform Reclamation Form, the seller may, without notice, "sell out" the securities in the best available market at the account and risk of the defaulting buyer.
Key Differences from a Buy-In
| Element | Buy-In | Sell-Out |
|---|---|---|
| Failing party | Seller fails to deliver | Buyer fails to accept delivery |
| Closing party | Buyer | Seller |
| Notice requirement | 12:00 p.m. ET, two business days before execution | NO notice required |
| Notification after | N/A | By 6:00 p.m. ET on day of execution, in writing or electronic with immediate-receipt capability |
| Risk and cost | Defaulting seller's account and risk | Defaulting buyer's account and risk |
Why No Notice for Sell-Outs
The sell-out is symmetric to the buy-in but does not require advance notice. The asymmetry exists because:
- A failing seller (no delivery) has the burden of finding the security to deliver
- A failing buyer (no acceptance of delivery) has already received the goods or refused them; the seller has no remedy other than disposing of the held securities
The seller's recourse is immediate: sell the securities and pursue the difference from the buyer.
Notification Form
The seller must notify the buyer by 6:00 p.m. ET on the day of execution, in writing or electronic form with immediate-receipt capability, including the quantity and price. Formal confirmation follows.
Exam Tip: Gotchas
- Sell-outs require NO advance notice. The seller can sell out the same day the buyer fails to accept.
- Sell-out notification by 6:00 p.m. ET on the day of execution. Not the next morning, not "promptly"; same-day, evening cutoff.
- A sell-out is the SELLER's remedy for BUYER's failure to accept delivery. Mirror image of the buy-in.
Reclamation
A reclamation is the right to return improperly delivered securities. The reclamation rules set the windows by category:
| Type of Defect | Reclamation Window |
|---|---|
| Minor or currency irregularities | 15 days |
| Foreign securities | 45 days |
| Lost / stolen / confiscated | 30 months after settlement |
What Happens Without a Proper Reclamation Form
A security returned without a properly executed Uniform Reclamation Form may be sold out by the receiving broker, no later than 3 business days after receipt.
The Uniform Reclamation Form is the procedural document that supports a return. A return without the form is treated as an improper delivery; the receiver can sell out the held securities and pursue the difference.
Why the 30-Month Window for Lost/Stolen
The 30-month window for lost, stolen, or confiscated securities is unusually long. The reason: these certificate problems often surface only when the buyer attempts to sell or transfer the security and the transfer agent flags it. The 30-month window covers the typical interval between original purchase and discovery.
Exam Tip: Gotchas
- Minor/currency irregularities = 15-day reclamation. Foreign securities = 45 days. Lost/stolen/confiscated = 30 MONTHS. Memorize the three windows.
- A return without a Uniform Reclamation Form can be SOLD OUT by the receiver within 3 business days. No reclamation form = no proper return.
- The 30-month window is FROM SETTLEMENT, not from discovery of the defect. A defect discovered 31 months later is outside the reclamation window.
Rights and Warrants
Special close-out rules apply to fails involving rights and warrants because of their short exercise windows. Close-outs must be timed before expiration of the exercise period, or the value evaporates.
If a fail involves rights or warrants, the principal must accelerate the close-out timeline to ensure the buyer (or the selling-out seller) can exercise the rights before expiration. A buy-in that completes after the exercise window expires has closed out the trade but lost the underlying value.
Exam Tip: Gotchas
- Rights and warrants close-outs must be TIMED before expiration of the exercise period. A late close-out destroys the value.
- The buy-in notice timeline (12:00 p.m. ET, two business days) still applies, but the firm must coordinate the timing to land before expiration. No carve-out from the notice rule; just operational urgency.
COD / DVP-RVP Orders
A COD (Collect on Delivery) or POD (Payment on Delivery) order is a customer order where settlement happens through the customer's agent or custodian (DVP/RVP arrangement). The COD/POD settlement rule sets the procedural requirements.
Marking the Order
Each order accepted under a COD or POD arrangement must be marked as such. The marking flags the operational pathway; orders are routed to the customer's custodian for settlement, not to the firm's own customer account.
Before Accepting a COD/DVP Order
Before accepting a COD/DVP order, the member must obtain from the customer:
- Name and address of the customer's agent/custodian
- Customer's account number at that agent
- Institution number (where appropriate)
Without this information, the firm cannot route the trade for settlement; the rule requires the data up front.
Confirmation Delivery
The member must deliver to the customer a confirmation (or all relevant data customarily on a confirmation) by end of the trade date. This is a same-day requirement, parallel to the same-day affirmation framework.
Same-Day Affirmation Linkage
The member must have entered into the written agreement OR maintained written policies and procedures required by the same-day-allocation rule for the resulting transaction. COD/DVP orders are precisely the post-trade-allocation case that the same-day affirmation framework was designed to support.
Exam Tip: Gotchas
- Before accepting a COD/DVP order, the firm must collect agent/custodian name, address, account number, and institution number. Pre-acceptance, not post.
- COD/DVP confirmations must be delivered to the customer by END OF TRADE DATE. Not T+1, not "promptly"; trade date.
- The COD/POD settlement rule ties to the same-day affirmation framework: the firm must have either a written agreement or WSPs for same-day allocation. The two rules operate together.
How the Close-Out Pieces Connect
The close-out framework operates as a structured framework for resolving fails:
| Failure Type | Closing Party | Mechanism | Notice Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seller fails to deliver | Buyer | Buy-in | 12:00 p.m. ET, two business days before |
| Buyer fails to accept | Seller | Sell-out | None (notify 6:00 p.m. ET day of) |
| Improper delivery (return without reclamation form) | Receiver | Reclamation sell-out | 3 business days after receipt |
| Failure to mark | Demanding member | Close-out | Standard buy-in/sell-out timing |
| Rights/warrants fail | Either side | Accelerated close-out | Standard, but must beat expiration |
The principal supervising operations must:
- Verify WSPs cover each close-out type
- Verify the firm has operational capability to issue notices on time
- Verify recordkeeping captures every close-out (buy-in notice, execution, defaulting party billing)
- Verify the COD/DVP pre-acceptance and confirmation requirements are met for every COD/DVP order
Exam Tip: Gotchas
- Buy-in = buyer closes out seller's failure to deliver. Sell-out = seller closes out buyer's failure to accept. Map "who failed" to "who closes out."
- Buy-in notice deadline: 12:00 p.m. ET, TWO business days before execution. Sell-out: NO advance notice; notify same-day by 6:00 p.m. ET. Different rules for different directions.
- Reclamation windows: 15 days minor, 45 days foreign, 30 MONTHS lost/stolen/confiscated. Three distinct windows; the exam tests this.
- COD/DVP orders require pre-acceptance customer/agent info, end-of-trade-date confirmation, and same-day-allocation procedures. All three pieces.