Supporting Statement

Supporting Statement.pdf

Form S-6 [17 CFR 239.19], for registration under the Securities Act of 1933 of Unit Investment Trusts registered on Form N-8B-2

OMB: 3235-0184

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SUPPORTING STATEMENT
For the Paperwork Reduction Act Information Collection for
Form S-6
A. JUSTIFICATION
1. Necessity for the Information Collection
Form S-6 1 is a form used for registration under the Securities Act of 1933
(“Securities Act”) 2 of securities of any unit investment trust (“UIT”) registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“Investment Company Act”) 3 on Form
N-8B-2. 4 Section 5 of the Securities Act requires the filing of a registration statement
prior to the offer of securities to the public and that the statement be effective before
any securities are sold. 5 Section 5(b) of the Securities Act requires that investors be
provided with a prospectus containing the information required in a registration
statement prior to the sale or at the time of confirmation or delivery of the securities.
Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act provides that when a prospectus is used
more than nine months after the effective date of the registration statement, the
information therein shall be as of a date not more than sixteen months prior to such
use. 6 As a result, most UITs update their registration statements under the Securities
Act on an annual basis in order that their sponsors may continue to maintain a
secondary market in the units. UITs that are registered under the Investment
Company Act on Form N-8B-2 file post-effective amendments to their registration
statements on Form S-6 in order to update their prospectuses.
2. Purpose and Use of the Information Collection
The purpose of Form S-6 is to meet the filing and disclosure requirements of the
Securities Act and to enable filers to provide investors with information necessary to
evaluate an investment in the security. This information collection differs
significantly from many other federal information collections, which are primarily
1

17 CFR 239.16.

2

15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.

3

15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq.

4

17 CFR 274.12. Form N-8B-2 is the form used by UITs other than separate accounts that
are currently issuing securities, including UITs that are issuers of periodic payment plan
certificates and UITs of which a management investment company is the sponsor or
depositor to register under the Investment Company Act pursuant to Section 8 thereof.

5

15 U.S.C. 77e.

6

15 U.S.C. 77j(a)(3).

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for the use and benefit of the collecting agency. The information required to be filed
with the Commission permits verification of compliance with securities law
requirements and assures the public availability and dissemination of the
information.
3. Consideration Given to Information Technology
The Commission’s Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval
(“EDGAR”) automates the filing, processing, and dissemination of full disclosure
filings. This automation has increased the speed, accuracy, and availability of
information, generating benefits to investors and financial markets. Form S-6 is
required to be filed with the Commission electronically on EDGAR. 7 The public
may access filings on EDGAR through the Commission’s website
(http://www.sec.gov) or at EDGAR terminals located at the Commission’s public
reference rooms. Prospectuses may be sent to investors by electronic means so long
as certain requirements are met. 8
4. Duplication
The Commission periodically evaluates rule-based reporting and recordkeeping
requirements for duplication and reevaluates them whenever it proposes a rule or a
change in a rule. Form S-6 requires a prospectus that includes much of the
information requested in Form N-8B-2. Form N-8B-2, however, is filed only once to
register the UIT under the Investment Company Act. 9

7

See rule 101(a)(1)(i) of Regulation S-T [17 CFR 232.101(a)(1)(i)].

8

See Investment Company Act Release No. 21399 (Oct. 6, 1995) [60 FR 53458 (Oct. 13,
1995)].

9

To eliminate the duplicative information presented in the registration forms used by
UITs, the Commission has proposed and reproposed, but has not yet adopted, Form
N-7, an integrated disclosure form under the Securities Act and the Investment
Company Act. See Investment Company Act Release No. 14513 (May 14, 1985)
[50 FR 21282 (May 23, 1985)]; Investment Company Act Release No. 15612 (Mar. 9,
1987) [52 FR 8268 (March 17, 1987)].
Duplication has been lessened for insurance company separate accounts organized as
UITs that offer variable annuity or variable life insurance contracts, because each such
entity registers offerings of securities under the Securities Act and registers as an
investment company under the Investment Company Act using a single form, Form N-4
(for insurance company separate accounts organized as UITs that offer variable annuity
contracts) or Form N-6 (for insurance company separate accounts organized as UITs
that offer variable life insurance contracts).

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5. Effect on Small Entities
The Commission reviews all rules periodically, as required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 10 to identify methods to minimize recordkeeping or reporting
requirements affecting small businesses. The current disclosure requirements for
registration statements on Form S-6 do not distinguish between small entities and
other investment companies. The burden on smaller investment companies of
preparing and filing registration statements may be proportionately greater than for
larger investment companies. This burden includes the cost of producing, printing,
filing, and disseminating prospectuses. The Commission believes, however, that
imposing different requirements on smaller investment companies would not be
consistent with investor protection and the purposes of the registration statements.
6. Consequences of Not Conducting Collection
The purpose of Form S-6 is to meet the filing and disclosure requirements of
the Securities Act and to enable filers to provide investors with information necessary
to evaluate an investment in the security. Less frequent filing would be inconsistent
with the filing and disclosure requirements of the Securities Act. In addition, if the
form were to be filed less frequently, investors may not be provided with the
information necessary to evaluate an investment in the security.
7. Inconsistencies with Guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2)
This collection is not inconsistent with 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2).
8. Consultation Outside the Agency
The Commission and the staff of the Division of Investment Management
participate in an ongoing dialogue with representatives of the investment company
industry through public conferences, meetings, and informal exchanges. These
various forums provide the Commission and staff with a means of ascertaining and
acting upon paperwork burdens confronting the industry. The Commission requested
public comment on the collection of information requirements in Form S-6 before it
submitted this request for extension and approval to the Office of Management and
Budget. The Commission received no comments in response to its request.
9. Payment or Gift
No payment or gift to respondents was provided.

10

5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.

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10. Assurance of Confidentiality
No assurance of confidentiality was provided.
11. Sensitive Questions
No questions of a sensitive nature are involved. The information collection does
not include personally identifiable information. The system of records notice for this
form may be found here: https://www.sec.gov/about/privacy/sorn/secsorn1.pdf.
12. Burden of Information Collection
The following estimates of average burden hours and costs are made solely for
purposes of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 11 and are not derived from a
comprehensive or even representative survey or study of the cost of Commission
rules and forms. Compliance with Form S-6 is mandatory. Responses to the
collection of information will not be kept confidential.
The estimated number of annual initial registration statements filed on Form S-6
and the estimated number of annual post-effective amendments to previously
effective registration statements filed on Form S-6 are based on filings with the
Commission in 2014. The hour burden estimates for preparing and filing Form S-6
are based on the Commission’s experience with the contents of the form. The
number of burden hours may vary depending on, among other things, the complexity
of the filing and whether preparation of the forms is performed by internal staff or
outside counsel.
Form S-6 imposes two types of reporting burdens on UITs that are registered
under the Investment Company Act on Form N-8B-2: (1) the burden of preparing
and filing the initial registration statement; and (2) the burden of preparing and filing
post-effective amendments to a previously effective registration statement. The
Commission estimates that the burden hours that will be imposed by Form S-6 are as
follows:
CALCULATION OF HOUR BURDEN OF INITIAL FORM S-6 FILINGS
Number of initial filings on Form S-6 annually....................................1,340
Number of portfolios in initial Form S-6 filings annually .......................... 1
Current hour burden per portfolio for initial filings on Form S-6 .............45
Total annual hour burden for initial Form S-6 filings
(1,340 filings × 45 hours per filing) ...................................................60,300

11

44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.

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CALCULATION OF HOUR BURDEN OF POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENTS
Number of post-effective amendments filed annually ..........................1,158
Number of portfolios in post-effective amendments to filings
on Form S-6 filed annually ..........................................................................1
Current hour burden per portfolio for post-effective
amendment filings ......................................................................................40
Total annual hour burden to prepare post-effective
amendments (1,158 filings × 40 hour per filing) ................................46,320
TOTAL ANNUAL HOUR BURDEN
Total annual hours for Form S-6 filings (60,300 hours
for initial filings + 46,320 hours for post-effective
amendment filings) ...........................................................................106,620
Based on the Commission’s estimate of 106,620 burden hours and an estimated
wage rate of approximately $318.50 per year, 12 the total annual cost to registrants of
the hour burden for complying with Form S-6 is approximately $34 million. 13
13. Cost to Respondents
Cost burden is the cost of goods and services purchased to prepare and update
registration statements on Form S-6, such as for the services of independent auditors
and outside counsel. The cost burden does not include the hour burden discussed in
Item 12 above. Estimates are based on the Commission’s experience with the filing
of registration forms.

12

The Commission’s estimate concerning the wage rate is based on salary information for
the securities industry compiled by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association. The estimated wage figure is based on published rates for compliance
attorneys and senior programmers, modified to account for an 1,800-hour work-year and
multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size, employee benefits, and overhead,
yielding effective hourly rates of $334 and $303, respectively. See Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association, Report on Management & Professional Earnings in the
Securities Industry 2013. We estimate that compliance attorneys and senior
programmers would divide their time equally, yielding an estimated hourly wage rate of
$318.50. ($334 per hour for compliance attorneys + $303 per hour for senior
programmers) ÷ 2 = $318.50 per hour.

13

106,620 hours × $318.50 per hour = $33,958,470 per year.

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The current estimated cost burden for preparing and filing an initial registration
statement on Form S-6 is $30,000 and for preparing and filing a post-effective
amendment to a previously effective registration statement filed on Form S-6 is
$18,000. The current estimate is based on discussions with industry participants in
2013. We are updating the estimated cost burden of Form S-6 to $33,104 for an
initial registration statement and $19,862 for a post-effective amendment to account
for the effects of inflation. 14 The new total cost burden allocated to Form S-6 is
therefore:
COST BURDEN OF PREPARING AND FILING INITIAL FORM S-6
Cost burden per portfolio of preparing and filing initial
filings on Form S-6 ...........................................................................$33,104
Number of initial filings on Form S-6 filed annually ...........................1,340
Cost burden of preparing and filing initial Form S-6
($33,104 per filing × 1,340 filings)............................................$44,359,360
COST BURDEN OF PREPARING AND FILING POST-EFFECTIVE
AMENDMENTS
Cost burden per portfolio of preparing and filing posteffective amendments .......................................................................$19,862
Number of post-effective amendments filed annually ..........................1,158
Cost burden of preparing and filing post-effective
amendments ($19,862 per filing × 1,158 filings) ......................$23,000,196
TOTAL ANNUAL COST BURDEN
Total annual cost burden for Form S-6 filings
($44,359,360 for initial filings + $22,824,000 for
post-effective amendments) .......................................................$67,359,556
14. Costs to Federal Government
The annual cost of reviewing and processing disclosure documents, including
new registration statements, post-effective amendments, proxy statements,
shareholder reports, and other filings of investment companies amounted to
approximately $19.2 million in fiscal year 2014, based on the Commission’s
computation of the value of staff time devoted to this activity and related overhead.

14

This adjustment was computed using the personal consumption expenditures index. See
FRED Economic Data available at http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/.

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15. Changes in Burden
The estimated hourly burden associated with Form S-6 has decreased from
108,634 to 106,620 (a decrease of 2,014). This decrease is due to a decrease in the
number of estimated annual filings. The estimated cost burden associated with Form
S-6 has increased from $61,434,000 to $67,359,556 (an increase of $5,925,556). This
increase is due to the effects of inflation and is partially offset by a decrease in the
number of estimated annual filings.
16. Information Collection Planned for Statistical Purposes
The results of any information collected will not be published.
17. Approval to Omit OMB Expiration Date
The Commission is not seeking approval to not display the expiration date for
OMB approval.
18. Exceptions to Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submission
The Commission is not seeking an exception to the certification statement.
B. COLLECTION OF INFORMATION EMPLOYING STATISTICAL
METHODS
The collection of information will not employ statistical methods.

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File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleSUPPORTING STATEMENT
Authorabernethyd
File Modified2016-04-22
File Created2016-04-22

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