Rule 15c2-2 just 2007

Rule 15c2-2 just 2007.doc

Rule 15c2-2 Confirmation of transactions in open-end management investment company shares, unit investment trust interests and municipal fund securities used for education savings.

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Rule 15c2-2

Supporting Statement


A. Justification


1. Necessity For Information Collection


Proposed rule 15c2-2 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) is intended to improve investors’ ability to obtain information about costs and conflicts arising from transactions in mutual fund shares, UIT interests,1 and college savings plan interests used for education savings. Open-end management investment company shares and UIT interests are securities issued by investment companies that are registered with the Commission under the Investment Company Act. College savings plan interets – which are popularly known as “529” plans after the section of the Internal Revenue Code that governs the federal tax treatment of those securities – are issued by tuition programs that are sponsored by state governments to provide investment vehicles that parents and others can use to save for educational expenses. While 529 plan securities differ from mutual fund shares because the states that issue those securities are not registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, college savings plan interests can provide investors with investment alternatives that are similar to those provided by mutual fund shares. Moreover, the assets that underlie college savings plan interests may be invested in shares of registered investment companies.

Mutual fund investors may, directly or indirectly, incur distribution-related costs that can reduce their investment returns. The type and amount of those costs often vary among funds and among share classes issued by the same fund. Some mutual funds issue share classes that impose sales fees, or loads, on investors when they purchase the fund shares (“front-end” sales loads). Mutual funds may also sell share classes with sales loads that investors must pay when they redeem fund shares (“deferred” or “back-end” sales loads). The amount of the deferred sales load, generally calculated as the lesser of a percentage of the value of the initial investment or the account’s value upon redemption, typically declines each year that the investor holds the shares, and eventually disappears entirely. Some mutual funds also use their assets to pay distribution-related expenses, including compensation of broker-dealers in connection with distributing fund shares, under plans adopted pursuant to rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act (“12b-1 fees”). Sales loads and asset-based sales charges and service fees reduce the returns that investors earn on their mutual fund investments. Not all mutual funds are sold subject to front-end or deferred sales loads or impose asset-based sales charges and service fees.

Broker-dealers that sell mutual fund shares to customers may participate in distribution arrangements that create conflicts of interest for the broker-dealers as well as their personnel. Those arrangements can give broker-dealers a heightened financial incentive to sell particular funds or share classes, and therefore may lead a broker-dealer to provide some groups of funds with heightened visibility and access to the broker-dealer’s sales force, or otherwise influence the way that broker-dealers and their associated persons market those funds or share classes to customers. Those arrangements therefore pose special confirmation disclosure issues. Moreover, some of those arrangements may violate NASD rules, and the failure to disclose relevant information about those arrangements – regardless of whether disclosure specifically is required by the confirmation rules – also may violate the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws.

As part of those distribution arrangements, broker-dealers that sell mutual fund shares generally earn sales fees from the fund’s principal underwriter at the time of sale. Alternatively, the principal underwriter may pay the selling broker-dealer sales fees attributable to a particular sales transaction over time, for as long as the customer holds the shares purchased. The amount of those sales fees is not uniform, however, and a broker-dealer may receive a higher fee for selling a particular dollar amount of shares issued by one fund rather than shares issued by another fund, or for selling one share class rather than other share classes issued by the same fund and available to the customer.

Broker-dealers also may be paid in other ways for distributing fund shares, such as through revenue sharing payments from a fund’s investment adviser. In some cases, a broker-dealer may receive payments from a fund or a fund’s affiliates that are characterized as service fees, recordkeeping and transfer fees, seminar sponsorships or other types of payments that ostensibly compensate the broker-dealer for costs that it incurs as part of its mutual fund distribution activities. Broker-dealers may also be compensated for distribution through receiving commissions for portfolio transactions executed on behalf of the fund or affiliated funds, even though the broker-dealer may not necessarily execute those transactions.

These types of distribution-related arrangements may give broker-dealers heightened incentives to market the shares of particular mutual funds, or particular classes of fund shares. Those incentives may be reflected in a broker-dealer’s use of “preferred lists” that explicitly favor the distribution of certain funds, or they may be reflected in other ways, including incentives or instructions that the broker-dealer provides to its managers or its salespersons. Such incentives create conflicts between broker-dealers’ financial interests and their agency duties to customers.

In addition to conflicts of interest at the firm level, associated persons of broker-dealers face conflicts arising from financial incentives that promote the sale of some shares or share classes – or “differential compensation.” Associated persons may receive higher commissions when they sell shares of a particular fund than they would if they sold the same dollar amount of the shares of another fund. They may also receive higher commissions when they sell a particular class of shares within a fund than they would if they sold the same dollar amount of another share class within that same fund. Other forms of differential compensation may include a broker-dealer waiving certain fees or reimbursement of certain expenses ordinarily borne by an associated person, when the associated person sells the shares of particular mutual funds. Broker-dealers may also sponsor sales contests that provide cash compensation to representatives and managers for meeting certain sales goals. Associated persons, moreover, may receive additional fees in the years after a sale, such as fees that some funds pay to broker-dealers for providing shareholder services. Each of those types of arrangements may motivate broker-dealer personnel to promote the sale of some funds over others. The funds that are favored by those arrangements may include proprietary funds that are affiliated with the broker-dealer, or funds whose advisers pay revenue sharing to the broker-dealer. Differential compensation may give the associated person an incentive to improperly limit the range of mutual fund choices presented to customers, or may affect the associated person’s recommendations.

UITs, which include certain insurance company separate accounts that issue variable insurance products (i.e., variable annuity contracts and variable life insurance policies), are subject to similar distribution-related costs and conflicts.

Compensation practices for college savings plan interests used for education savings, or “529” plans, raise many of the same issues. Those securities may be sold subject to loads that can reduce the returns they produce. At times, brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers that distribute college savings plan interests also may participate in distribution-related arrangements that create conflicts of interest for them, including revenue sharing payments and the use of portfolio commissions to reward distribution. In some cases, a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer chooses to distribute only the college savings plan interests issued by a particular state, and does not provide its customers with the opportunity to invest in 529 plans issued by other states, even though those other plans may have lower loads or lower expense ratios, or may provide state income tax benefits that are absent from the plans being offered.

The associated persons of brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers selling 529 plans may also receive incentives, such as differential compensation, that create conflicts of interest for them. Moreover, in contrast to NASD rules applicable to the distribution of mutual fund shares, associated persons of brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers are not generally precluded from receiving non-cash compensation for selling college savings plan interests.

2. Purpose of, and Consequences of Not Requiring, the Information Collection


The purpose of proposed rule 15c2-2 is to provide investors in mutual fund shares, UIT interests and 529 plan securities with information in transaction confirmations, including information about certain distribution-related costs and certain distribution arrangements that create conflicts of interest for brokers, dealers, municipal securities dealers, and their associated persons. Proposed rule 15c2-2 specifically would require confirmation disclosure of information about loads and other distribution-related costs that directly impact the returns earned by investors in those securities. It also would require brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers to disclose their compensation for selling those securities, and to disclose information about revenue sharing arrangements and portfolio brokerage arrangements that create conflicts of interest for them. Moreover, the proposed rule would require brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers to inform customers about whether their salespersons or other associated persons receive extra compensation for selling certain covered securities.

In addition, the Commission, the self-regulatory organizations, and other securities regulatory authorities would be able to use records of confirmations delivered pursuant to proposed rule 15c2-2 in the course of examinations, and investigations, as well as enforcement proceedings against brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers. However, no governmental agency would regularly receive any of the information described above.

3. Role of Improved Information Technology and Obstacles to Reducing Burden


Proposed Rule 15c2-2 would not require that a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer file information or documents via electronic submission. However, most customer confirmations are generated by automated systems, which allow confirmations to be generated in a fraction of the time it would take to generate a confirmation manually.


4. Efforts To Identify Duplication


No duplication is apparent.

5. Effects On Small Entities


The requirements of proposed rule 15c2-2 are not unduly burdensome on smaller broker-dealers. Proposed rule 15c2-2 would require additional information to be provided to investors in transaction confirmations. As a general matter, small brokerage firms use third-party service providers, or vendors, to generate the data necessary to send confirmations. They may also use vendors to actually send confirmations to investors. Therefore, the firms’ vendors would be required to reprogram their software and update their systems to generate the data that would allow their clients to comply with proposed rule 15c2-2. The staff understands from discussions with vendors that the allocation of costs would coincide roughly with the volume of the client’s transactions, so that a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer that executes fewer transactions involving covered securities would be allocated less of its vendor’s costs than a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer that executes more such transactions. Small brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers typically execute fewer transactions than larger brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers.

6. Consequences of Less Frequent Collection

One of the primary purposes of proposed rule 15c2-2 is to provide customers with immediate written notification of their securities transactions so that they can monitor the trading activity in their accounts. Less frequent dissemination of trade information to customers would substantially lessen the rule’s investor protection functions.

7. Inconsistencies With Guidelines In 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2)


The collection of information would not be conducted in a manner that is inconsistent with 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2).


8. Consultations Outside the Agency


All Commission rule proposals are published in the Federal Register for public comment. The comment period for the release that discussed proposed Rule 15c2-2 was 60 days. This comment period afforded the public an opportunity to respond to proposal.


9. Payment or Gift to Respondents


Not applicable.


10. Assurance of Confidentiality


Not applicable.

11. Sensitive Questions


Not applicable. Questions of a sensitive nature are not asked.


12. Estimate of Respondent Reporting Burden


Annual burden. Proposed rule 15c2-2 potentially would apply to all of the approximately 5,338 brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers that are registered with the Commission and that are members of NASD. It would also potentially apply to approximately 62 additional municipal securities dealers. It is important to note, however, that the confirmation is a customary document used by the industry.

Based on discussions with industry representatives, the Commission staff estimates that there are 1 billion confirmations delivered annually to customers in connection with securities transactions involving mutual fund shares, UIT interests and 529 plan securities.

The Commission anticipates on-going burdens for complying with the requirements of proposed rule 15c2-2, including calculating revenue sharing and portfolio brokerage amounts required under rule 15c2-2. Based upon discussions with industry representatives, the Commission staff understands that, once completed, this reprogramming and systems updating would permit brokers, dealers, and municipal securities dealers to have automated access to the information that would be required to be disclosed in confirmations delivered pursuant to proposed rule 15c2-2. As a result, the burden associated with obtaining data to be included in confirmations would be de minimis. The Commission staff estimates from information provided by industry participants that the annual burden to brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers, and their vendors, to comply with the requirements under proposed rule 15c2-2 to calculate revenue sharing and portfolio brokerage amounts and to maintain and further update the confirmation delivery systems, would be 2 million hours.2

The Commission staff estimates from information provided by industry participants that it takes about one minute to generate and send a confirmation. Based on the estimate that there are 1 billion transactions annually in the covered securities, the Commission staff estimates that the annual burden to brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers to generate and send confirmations to customers pursuant to proposed rule 15c2-2 would be 16.7 million hours.3 It is important to note, however, that confirmations for transactions in covered securities are currently required to be delivered pursuant to rule 10b-10 or MSRB rule G-15, as applicable. As a result, the burden for generating and sending confirmations would not be entirely new, but would reflect a shift of burdens from rule 10b-10 to proposed rule 15c2-2. In addition, brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers routinely send customers account statements pursuant to self-regulatory organizations’ requirements and for reasons of prudent business practice. Nonetheless, the Commission staff estimates that the total annual burden for complying with the requirements of proposed rule 15c2-2 would be 18.7 million hours.4 Broker-dealers routinely use confirmations for billing purposes. In addition, broker-dealers would send customers some type of statement regardless of the requirements of proposed rule 15c2-2. The number of confirmations sent and the cost of the confirmations vary from firm to firm. Smaller firms typically send fewer confirmations than larger firms because they effect fewer transactions.

One-time burden. The Commission staff estimates that brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers would have a one-time burden associated with reprogramming software and otherwise updating systems in order to enable confirmation delivery systems to generate the information required under proposed rule 15c2-2. Firms’ vendors would be required to reprogram their software and update their systems to generate the data that would allow their clients to comply with proposed rule 15c2-2. Some, if not all, of the cost for this reprogramming and systems upgrading would be allocated to the vendors’ clients – the brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers. The staff understands from discussions with vendors that the allocation of costs would coincide roughly with the volume of the client’s transactions, so that a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer that executes fewer transactions involving covered securities would be allocated less of its vendor’s costs than a broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer that executes more transactions.

The Commission staff estimates from information provided by industry participants that the one-time burden to brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers, and their vendors, for reprogramming software and otherwise updating systems to permit the confirmation delivery systems required under proposed rule 15c2-2 would be 15 million hours.5 The staff anticipates that this burden will be incurred within the first year after proposed rule 15c2-2 is adopted and not in later years.

13. Estimate of Total Annualized Cost Burden


Annual costs. The Commission staff estimates that brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers send approximately 1 billion confirmations annually. Based on discussions with industry representatives, the staff estimates the average cost per confirmation under proposed rule 15c2-2 to be $1.05, including postage. The annual cost to the industry is therefore estimated to be $1.05 billion. 6

One-time cost. Based upon discussions with industry participants, the Commission staff anticipates that there would be one-time external costs for upgrading and reprogramming printing systems for brokers, dealers municipal securities dealers who use out-sourced printing and other out-sourced services. The staff anticipates that these costs would be passed on to brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers in the form of higher fees. While the staff is currently unable to determine the number of brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers that utilize such outsourced services, based on discussions with industry representatives the staff estimates that the cost per broker, dealer or municipal securities would be approximately $18,500. Assuming that all of the approximately 5,400 brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers subject to proposed rule 15c2-2 use such out-sourced services, the total one-time external cost would be about $100 million. We note that this assumption may result in a significant overstatement of these external costs. This cost is not included in the annualized burden because the staff estimates that it be incurred within the first year after proposed rule 15c2-2 is adopted and not in later years.

14. Estimate of Cost to Federal Government


Proposed rule 15c2-2 would not require that any documents be submitted to the federal government, thus no costs to the federal government are imposed directly by the rule. Costs to the federal government are attributable to ensuring compliance with and enforcing the rule. The cost to the federal government attributable to the operation of proposed rule 15c2-2 is estimated at $20,000 per year (500 reviews at one hour at a cost of $40.00 per hour, including overhead). It should be noted that the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. and the New York Stock Exchange conduct their own examinations to determine compliance with confirmation rules.

15. Explanation of Changes in Burden


Not applicable. Proposed Rule 15c2-2 would be a new rule.


16. Information Collection Planned for Statistical Purposes


Not applicable. There is no intention to publish the information for any purpose.


17. Explanation as to Why Expiration Date Will Not Be Displayed


Not applicable.


18. Exceptions to Certification


Not applicable.


B. Collection of Information Employing Statistical Methods


The collection of information does not employ statistical methods, nor would the implementation of such methods reduce the burden or improve the accuracy of results.

1 "Unit investment trust" means an investment company which (A) is organized under a trust indenture, contract of custodianship or agency, or similar instrument, (B) does not have a board of directors, and (C) issues only redeemable securities, each of which represents an undivided interest in a unit of specified securities; but does not include a voting trust.

2 Some brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers have developed their own proprietary confirmation delivery systems, which would need to be reprogrammed and updated to comply with proposed rule 15c2-2. As a general matter, medium-sized and smaller firms, but also some larger firms, use third-party service providers, or vendors, to generate the data necessary to send confirmations. They may also use vendors to actually send confirmations to investors.

The staff estimates that the burden to the 10 vendors to maintain their systems would be 500,000 million hours annually, or 50,000 hours per vendor. The staff estimates that the burden allocated to each client on a pro rata basis would be 100 hours annually per broker, dealer or municipal security dealer that uses vendors’ services (500,000 hours/5,000 = 100 hours). The staff estimates, based on discussions with industry representatives, that the 400 brokers dealers and municipal securities dealers that use proprietary confirmation delivery systems, on average, would have a burden of 3,750 hours annually for maintaining systems. Thus, the annual burden for maintaining systems is estimated to be 2 million hours ((5,000 x 100) + (400 x 3,750) = 2,000,000 hours).

3 (1 billion confirmations at one minute per confirmation = 1 billion minutes; 1 billion minutes/60 minutes per hour = 16.7 million hours.)

4 (16.7 million hours to generate and send confirmations to customers + 2 million hours to calculate revenue sharing and portfolio brokerage amounts and to maintain and further update the confirmation delivery systems = 18.7 million hours.) The staff notes that due to the rounding limitations of Form 83I, the total annual burden on Form 83I is 17,999,982 hours.

5 This estimate is based on the staff’s understanding that 5,000 brokers, dealers and municipal securities dealers, including virtually all small entities, directly or indirectly through clearing brokers, use the services of 10 vendors. The staff estimates that the total one-time burden to the 10 vendors would be 1,580,000 hours, or 158,000 hours per vendor. Although the staff understands from discussions with vendors that this burden would be allocated to all of the vendors’ clients in a manner that reflects the volume of transactions the broker, dealer or municipal securities dealer effects, the staff assumes for purposes of estimating the total burden that the burden would be allocated to each client on a pro rata basis (316 hours per broker, dealer or municipal security dealer that uses vendors’ services). In addition, the staff estimates, based on discussions with industry representatives, that 400 brokers dealers and municipal securities dealers use proprietary confirmation delivery systems that each of them, on average, would have a one-time burden of 33,550 hours. Thus, the total one-time burden is estimated to be 15 million hours ((5,000 x 316) + (400 x 33,550) = 15,000,000).

6 Although the staff estimated the burden to be $1.05 billion and the proposing release correctly reflected that estimation, the estimate placed on Form 83I was $1.1 billion. We have corrected this error. In addition, due to rounding limitations on the new Form 83I, the annual cost submitted for renewal is $1,049,998,950.00. The staff would also like to note that confirmations for transactions in covered securities are currently required to be delivered pursuant to rule 10b-10 or MSRB rule G-15, as applicable. As a result, this estimated cost is not entirely a new cost, but reflects a shift of costs from rule 10b-10 to proposed rule 15c2-2. This estimated cost also reflects an incremental increase in the cost of generating confirmations from 89 cents under rule 10b-10 to $1.05 under proposed rule 15c2-2. This incremental cost is associated with generating the two-page confirmation that would be required under proposed rule 15c2-2, as compared to a half-page or one-page confirmation that is currently permitted under rule 10b-10.

File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleSUPPORTING STATEMENT
AuthorU.S.
Last Modified Bymartinsons
File Modified2007-03-21
File Created2007-03-21

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